Friday 19 July 2024

Mortui Vivos Docent. - The Dead Teach the Living

 

We left our hotel in the morning and drove to the museum in Haroldswick. It was a long drive that included two ferry rides, one from Toft to Ulsta and one from Gutcher to Belmont to reach cold and windy Muness to see the remnants of a castle. There was hardly anyone around and when we came across someone, an occasional car, or a small group of cycling enthusiasts, we waved at each other earnestly. My wife and I were with Dr Abe and Dr Elizabeth vacationing in the Shetland Islands, an archipelago in Scotland, the northernmost region of the UK.

It was cold, windy, and wet. I love visiting museums and old buildings. Museums, for many, are like cemeteries, resting places for relics, reminders of tragedies and some made-up stories. Museums, to me, are roads to the past and windows to the future.  I call it, ‘Mortui Vivos Docent.’ or 'The dead teach the living', a phrase I picked up from a book I read recently. In Latin, ‘mortui’ means ‘dead,’ ‘vivo’ means alive, and ‘docent’ means ‘guide or teach.’ Pathologists of the yore thus justified cadaver dissection. When I leave a museum, at times after spending the whole day, I feel very enriched and connected.

Every piece in the museum is a cadaver of sorts. For those inclined to listen, each exhibit is an unsaid story. For those who can visualise, exhibits can become the means to a journey in time to the generations before us and witness their struggles, trials, and tribulations and their triumphs or failures. Each boat, fishing tool, and other items on display that day had an individual story to narrate. Collectively it was a moving story of grit, grime, sweat, blood, and triumph. I could visualise the noisy landings of the herring-laden boats, the splashing sounds of countless feminine hands and the unkind words of their masters. I could hear them haggling about their wages and smell their smoky cabins. I could see some beautiful eyes sparkling through weatherbeaten faces and sense romance even amid hardships. I was there experiencing the poverty and misery of a people and their undying hopes kept alive by indomitable will.  The sunset well after 10 at night helped us with a day far longer than I had ever seen. The next day we spent time in Lerwick museum. In the three days we stayed on the Island, I travelled back in time, two centuries. I was amazed at the way the museum had been curated. some of the places I visited were run mostly by volunteers. It was a treat to the eyes. I recalled my trips to museums back home and the difference in how we maintain and curate relics.

We set sails, out of Lerwick in the evening and berthed at Aberdeen as the day broke. The next day we pulled into the car park of an inn at Bradon Mill, Hexham, to commence our walk to The Hadrian Wall. Running over 73 miles, it was built on the lines of the Great Wall of China, on the orders of Emperor Hadrian way back in AD122, to demarcate and guard his borders. It was built during the ascend of the great Roman Empire, known for its strong legal and administrative systems. Over time the state acquired unquestioned authority over the people. Corruption became rampant. Unable to cope with it, people looked for alternative socio-political and religious systems, setting in motion the fall of the Roman Empire. One thing led to another and the great Empire bit the dust. The Hadrian Wall, the largest Roman archaeological feature in England, remains a testimony to the rise and fall of the Empire.

Standing next to the wall, or its remnants, I was transported 1900 years back to witness the mighty Emperor's perception of threat and how he planned to secure his kingdom. An audacious construction for those times, rudimentary and primitive for contemporary defence, the wall hit me hard with the realisation of the transient nature of our authority and how irrelevant our wealth of material possessions becomes with time. The memory of a powerful emperor, once the world under his feet, now rests on a lifeless piece of primitive stonework. The beauty of the area around me captivated me so much that I forgot about the wall, standing next to it. That much for the ancient authority!

On our climb down the hill, I realised that our assets or authority neither make us immortal nor guarantee eternity. Men of intellect like Socrates, Plato, and Aristotle with hardly a material belonging, are revered far beyond all rulers of the past combined. This is one reason why despots attempt to manipulate history while they reign, little realising the futility of trying to make or alter history. 

Memento mori, quare ne obliviscaris vivere,” a Latin phrase translated literally: “Remember you must die, therefore do not forget to live,”  is the lesson I learnt.

 

23 comments:

  1. “Let the dead bury the dead” (Luke 9:60) This indicates that there is nothing after death. It is the godmen who proclaim that there is a Godly judgement, heaven, moksha and rebirth.

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    1. Fear of the unknown...
      Drives us all or almost all of us.
      Fear is the key they say and religious teachers know how very well to use it

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  2. Amazing perspective sir

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  3. Hi Sir
    Great travelogue
    Very vivid
    Sreekumar

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  4. This reminds me of a hindi song...Marne ke darr se mere dil..jeena na tu chod dena...
    Always a pleasure to go through your blogs my dear Jacob Sir..

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    1. Thank you very much Anurag. Let me remind you of the famous dialogue in Munna Bhai MBBS, "Pagle yeh mat dekh Zindagi mein kitne pal hein
      Yeh dekh is pal mein kitne Zindagi hein."

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  5. Very well written.

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  6. Great messages for mankind of the century. Keep going and wishing you all the best . Jose Eappen & family Mvk

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  7. From time immemorial,man had to fight for survival.It is the same God ,which created both good and evil ,only to perish on reaching its life span.
    Mankind has to struggle each day for survival.Construction of the 21196 KM long Great wall of China over a period of 2000 years or thousands of hill forts existed in Scotland around 3000 years ago could not save the one who made it.While some benevolent despots made forts around their kingdoms ,the despotic tyrants made forts around their palace as seen in India.Both didn't survive too long.
    Adam Smith wrote, "It is not from the benevolence of the butcher, the brewer, or the baker, that we expect our dinner, but from their regard to their own interest." He meant that:people work for the benefit of others because it benefits them to do so.
    Take it that man is born selfish;probably God created us that way so that atleast we take care of ourselves .Things standing tall shall fall and keep on holding on to life as long as possible before the inevitable happens . While doing so,if you can find happiness,that is success.
    Omnes horas complectere.(That way you will depend less on tomorrow, if you grasp today with your hand.)
    Live everyday as if it were your last."That don't dwell in the past, don't worry about the future and live and enjoy in the present"
    Thank you general for enlightening us with your well researched write up.
    Jagajeeve, Pala

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    1. You have enriched me as an author with your benevolent consistent presence. Thank you for your time. The only take away for me as an author from this platform is the readership. Thank you.

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  8. Excellent article, Sir. It is a fascinating blend of travelogue and reflection on history and mortality. It beautifully captures the essence of exploring museums and historical sites, emphasizing how relics of the past teach valuable lessons to the living. The vivid descriptions of the Shetland Islands and Hadrian's Wall bring history to life, while the philosophical insights on the transient nature of power and the importance of living in the moment add depth to the narrative. An enriching and thought-provoking read!

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    1. Thank you very much. Your comments are beautifully crafted, it's Indeed motivating.

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  9. Excellent as usual. Look fwd to more

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