Antoine de
Saint-Exupery (1900 ~ 1944) was a renowned French aviator and author
whose writings possess a musical, poetic quality that comes from the
heart and aims at contacting the deepest, most humane aspects of existence.
For example, in one of his works Saint-Exupery states, "It is only
with the heart that one can see rightly; what is essential is invisible
to the eye."
While working as a mail pilot, Saint-Exupery became
fascinated with the stars, all the time trying to spot the tiny, glittering
windows on the earth by night. The stars are "awakened souls,"
he wrote, that eagerly look to discover the secret of life and help
humankind gain this knowledge as well. He also understood the desert,
and entered a deep, serene state while flying over the barren North
African wastes, where few beings dwell. While writing, Antoine de Saint-Exupery
continuously penetrated his subconscious and introspected on his life.
This inward-directedness gives his novels a philosophical tone, but
his style is smooth and easy-going. When reading his works, one can
embark on a literary journey with the author to the farthest points
of the planet and at the same time to the inside of oneself.
The circumstances surrounding Saint-Exupery's
death are still a mystery. One day he boarded his plane, took flight
and never landed. A year before, in 1943, he wrote his most prophetic
and widely read book, The Little Prince. The plot involves a pilot who
has a plane crash in the desert and is left without much food or water.
(Actually, Saint-Exupery had the same experience in real life.) Then
a Little Prince from a tiny asteroid far from Earth appears before him
and the pilot starts up a conversation, forgetting all his troubles.
They talk in a metaphorical way, touching on the most vital questions
of human existence.
At the novel's conclusion, the mysterious boy
departs, the pilot manages to repair his plane and everything seems
to be all right. Nonetheless one feels like crying as if experiencing
a great inner loss; because during his talk with the Little Prince the
pilot succeeds in going beyond his trivial worldly existence, stops
being preoccupied with personal survival and opens up to a deeper understanding
of life. He returns to the ordinary world "safe and sound"
but longs to maintain contact with this other dimension he has discovered.
At least the Little Prince promised that they would always be in touch
through the sound of the stars: "Now my sorrow is comforted a little.
That is to say - not entirely. But I know that he did go back to his
planet, because I did not find his body at daybreak. It was not such
a heavy body and at night I love to listen to the stars. It is like
five hundred million little bells. "
In a similar vein, Master once responded as follows
to a question about whether She will show us how to listen to the stars:
"Yes, this is exactly what I'm going to do." When I heard
this comment by Master, I immediately thought of Saint-Exupery and realized
what a revelation he must have had in the desert. Thus, meditation on
the inner Sound might be poetically termed "listening to the music
of the stars." The last sentences of his novel go like this:
"Look at it [the surrounding landscape] carefully
so that you will be sure to recognize it in case you travel some day
to the African desert. And, if you should come upon this spot, please
do not hurry on. Wait for a time, exactly under the star. Then, if a
little man appears who laughs, who has golden hair and who refuses to
answer questions, you will know whohe is. If this should happen, please
comfort me. Send me word that he has come back. "
So, today I am thrilled to dedicate the following
lines to one of my favorite authors:
Dear,
Antoine de Saint-Exupery,
I
don't know where you are now, but I hope that my comforting words can
reach you. Yes, the Little Prince has come back, and at present there
are many of us who are able to listen with you to the music of the stars.
The stars talk to us in various melodic sounds, and our Little Prince
is as charming, joyful and charismatic as you could ever wish!