Intially, we’ll frame our inquiry through an existential and poetic prism. To quote Eliot: “Do not ask what is it, Let us go and make our visit.”
Is the narrator telling us, or advising us, not to inquire as to identity of X in advance of experiencing X for ourselves? After the experience, after the visit, can we, should we, are we positioned to, answer the question “what is it”? Or does the very act of asking the question alter the answer? Does the question impair or influence an open-minded visit? But surely if, after we have experienced the subject of the question, experienced it however we do, experienced it with all that happens, however it happens, then the very process, to be understood, is the answer. How we describe our answer, how we act in response to it, reflects our answer, whether or not the words we use to do so do in fact so. In the acting we find new questions that in the act, and through the acting, we answer again.
The range of potential interpretations of Eliot’s lines extends from an oft-repeated cliche – Which came first? The chicken or the egg? – to the conundrum: how can we question “its” identity before or until we have engaged with, or visited, it? Yet, how will we know it when we see it if we have suspended our inquiry and reserved our conceptualization of what the “it” is?
We reframe our inquiry. Questions must be asked and each question entails an answer – or multiple or alternative answers – even if the answer (or each answer) is (or appears as) inability to answer the question. How will we know the answer when we have it? A question-answer loop. Or is it an endless linear series where, to quote Eliot again: “In a moment there is time, For decisions and revisions, Which a moment will reverse?” How can we know the answer from the question; and thus how can we know the question from the answer? Let’s visit and search for an answer.
We reframe our reframe: questions posed rest on, or emerge out of, answers given. The answers are the soil in which questions take root, these roots yield questions, blossom-like, that fertilize the soil in which new roots germinate. Cycling and recycling.
Has Frost gone on a visit: “Whose woods are these, I think I know, His house is in the village though……The woods are lovely, dark and deep…” Frost has “promises to keep.” His journey; his answers, tentative, his promises, whatever they are, are not our answers, are not our promises; our answers, tentative too, may resemble his but they are not his. Will our promises align? Overlap?
Let’s swivel: we are pragmatic. We have no choice. Conclusions must be reached, actions will be taken, with or without us. With us, we contribute; through us, we shape actions. We confront our responsibility. Will we acquit ourselves well? Only we can answer, and we will as we must.
And yet, at another level and in another direction: “It was as if she wanted him to name whatever it was they had, but if he did that he would kill that very same thing.” (Richard Flanagan, The Narrow Road to the Deep North)