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       # 2021-05-27 - Annie Besant, An Autobiography
       
       The author grew up in a sheltered childhood and started out as an
       ardent Christian.  She married a Christian priest and experienced a
       rude awakening.  After certain experiences, she converted to atheism.
       This autobiography tracks the experiences and thoughts of Annie
       Besant as she progresses through several such conversions, from
       Christian, to atheist free-thinker, to socialist, and finally to
       theosophist.  It is half biography and half philosophical discussion.
       
       I enjoyed the earnestness and intelligence of the author, and i know
       that i would have enjoyed a conversation with her.
       
       Below she gives an analogy to argue the case that consciousness is a
       result of the arrangement of matter, or in other words, to justify a
       materialist description of life.
       
       "Every one knows the exquisite iridiscence of mother-of-pearl, the
       tender, delicate hues which melt into each other, glowing with soft
       radiance.  How different is the dull, dead surface of a piece of wax.
       Yet take that dull, black wax and mould it so closely to the surface
       of the mother-of-pearl that it shall take every delicate marking of
       the shell, and when you raise it the seven-hued glory shall smile at
       you from the erstwhile colourless surface.  For, though it be to the
       naked eye imperceptible, all the surface of the mother-of-pearl is in
       delicate ridges and furrows, like the surface of a newly-ploughed
       field; and when the waves of light come dashing up against the ridged
       surface, they are broken like the waves on a shingly shore, and are
       flung backwards, so that they cross each other and the oncoming
       waves; and, as every ray of white light is made up of waves of seven
       [let's just say "many"] colours, and these waves differ in length
       each from the others, the fairy ridges fling them backward
       separately, and each ray reaches the eye by itself; so that the
       colour of the mother-of-pearl is really the spray of the light waves,
       and comes from arrangement of matter once again.  Give the dull,
       black wax the same ridges and furrows, and its glory shall differ in
       nothing from that of the shell."
       
       When the author fell into hard times and was beginning to take an
       atheist worldview, she received little empathy from her Christian
       peers.  For example, after seeking to clarify her thoughts in a
       conversation with Dr. Pusey, she wrote:
       
       "Little feeling of pride was there in me just then, but only a
       despairful feeling that in this rigid, unyielding dogmatism there was
       no comprehension of my difficulties, no help for me in my
       strugglings."
       
       She did find a few rare exceptions of Christian empathy.
       
       Below is a quote from a Christian clergyman's letter to Annie Besant.
       He opted for human connection rather than quoting scriptures.
       
       "But when I talk face to face with one who is in sore need of them,
       my faith in them suddenly becomes so vast and heart-stirring that I
       think I must help most by talking naturally, and letting the faith
       find its own way from soul to soul."
       
       Below is a similar liberal sentiment from Dean Stanley:
       
       "He finally told me that conduct was far more important than theory,
       and that he regarded all as Christians who recognised and tried to
       follow the moral law of Christ.  On the question of the absolute
       Deity of Jesus he laid but little stress; Jesus was ``in a special
       sense the Son of God,'' but it was folly to quarrel over words with
       only human meanings when dealing with the mystery of the Divine
       existence, and, above all, it was folly to make such words into
       dividing walls between earnest souls.  The one important matter was
       the recognition of ``duty to God and man,'' and all who were one in
       that recognition might rightfully join in an act of worship, the
       essence of which was not acceptance of dogma, but love of God and
       self-sacrifice for man."
       
       Below are interesting quotes from the book.
       
       "... read opinions you disagree with, and you will catch aspects of
       truth you do not readily see." -- Charles Bradlaugh
       
       "The contemplation of the ideal is true prayer; it inspires, it
       strengthens, it ennobles.  The other part of prayer is work; from
       contemplation to labour, from the forest [meditation in solitude] to
       the street [service in everyday life].  Study nature's laws, conform
       to them, work in harmony with them, and work becomes a prayer and a
       thanksgiving, an adoration of the universal wisdom, and a true
       obedience to the universal law."
       
       "... you serve warmly a God unknown and invisible, in a sense the
       projected shadow of your own imaginings, and can only serve coldly
       your brother whom you see at your side?"
       
       "Things are better now, but in those days temperance hotels were for
       the most part lacking in cleanliness."
       
       See also:
 (TXT) Coffee palace @Wikipedia
        
       "Passing out of the slums into the streets of the town, only a few
       steps separating the horror and the beauty, I felt, with a vividness
       more intense than ever, the fearful contrasts between the lots of
       men; and with more pressing urgency the question seemed to ring in my
       ears, 'Is there no remedy?  Must there always be rich and poor?' Some
       say that it must be so; that the palace and the slum will for ever
       exist as the light and the shadow.  Not so do I believe.  I believe
       that the poverty is the result of ignorance and of bad social
       arrangements, and that therefore it may be eradicated by knowledge
       and by social change.  I admit that for many of these adult dwellers
       in the slums there is no hope.  Poor victims of a civilisation that
       hides its brutality beneath a veneer of culture and of grace, for
       them individually there is, alas! no salvation.  But for their
       children, yes!  Healthy surroundings, good food, mental and physical
       training, plenty of play, and carefully chosen work--these might save
       the young and prepare them for happy life."
       
       "... how strong the conviction was growing that there was something
       to be sought to which the service of man was the road..."
       
       "If there be a faith that can remove the mountains of ignorance and
       evil, it is surely that faith in the ultimate triumph of Right in the
       final enthronement of Justice, which alone makes life worth the
       living, and which gems the blackest cloud of depression with the
       rainbow-coloured arch of an immortal hope."
       
       author: Besant, Annie, 1847-1933
 (TXT) detail: gopher://gopherpedia.com/0/Annie_Besant
       LOC:    PR585.B3 A3 & BP585.B3 A3
 (DIR) source: gopher://gopher.pglaf.org/1/1/2/0/8/12085/
       tags:   biography,ebook,history,non-fiction
       title:  Annie Besant, An Autobiography
       
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 (DIR) biography
 (DIR) ebook
 (DIR) history
 (DIR) non-fiction