I wouldn't have expected to hear Robert Browning quoted in an episode of The X-Files, but in episode 5 of season 4 he was! The episode is titled The Field Where I Died.
Hang on a mo 'til I explain how I come to be posting, yet again, on an X-Files episode.
My intention for today was to scribble a bit about The Pleiades star cluster, aka The Seven Sisters or to astronomy geeks, Messier 45 or M45 - the cluster is located currently on the cusp of Taurus/Gemini. However, after skimming through a variety of ever more fantastical ramblings on the subject, entertaining as they may have been, I decided to give the topic a miss. Then, that same evening we watched the aforementioned episode of X-Files - The Field Where I Died. I enjoyed it. We decided the writers had stitched together ideas from some real life events and characters (Waco, Jonestown, and the Bridie Murphy stories) then added a touch of the ol' X-Files magic. The name of a cult in the episode, reflection of those involved in the Waco and Jonestown events, was The Temple of the Seven Stars. Hmmm - Seven Stars? The Pleiades by any other name? Alrighty then, this has to be my alternative blog post!
The episode opens with Mulder (David Duchovny) reciting words from Paracelsus, a long poem by Robert Browning. The passage refers clearly to the concept of reincarnation. As he speaks, Mulder gazes at two vintage photographs from the time of the US Civil War .
Wikipedia's page, here, outlines the episode's full storyline.
Fascinating stuff - the idea of reincarnation has always intrigued me, even though I'm not sure I can give the concept full credence. The version of reincarnation depicted in this story indicates that not only do our spirits live on in other bodies, time after time, throughout history, but that we associate with the same group of spirits in each incarnation, though in different ways, different "roles". I've come across this idea before - don't recall exactly where....the movie Cloud Atlas was a recent example, but I'm trying to recall something earlier.
Melissa, one of the cult members and a wife of cult leader of The Temple of the Seven Stars, during investigation and questioning by Mulder and Scully, had been displaying periodical lapses into what appeared to be some kind of multiple personality disorder; her voice and attitude would change abruptly and dramatically. Mulder suspects there's more to it than multiple-personality disorder. He feels something mysterious himself, and undergoes deep hypnosis. He discovers that he was once a soldier, Sullivan Biddle, in the Civil War killed in battle while his wife watched. His then wife is now Melissa of the cult. Dana Scully, Mulder's current FBI partner was, back then, his father. He progresses through other lifetimes outlining how Scully and Melissa, and others known to viewers fitted in various "roles". Scully, in another lifetime, was Mulder's sibling, with Melissa playing some other part.....and so on. Later, Scully is able to establish, from documentation, that Sullivan Biddle and his wife Sarah did indeed exist in that area at the time of the Civil War, and the photographs seen in the opening scene were among the records of that period. The soldier's portrait bears an eery resemblance to....yep - Mulder.
It's a romantic notion, and one I want to believe, but can't -not quite. A wee story from my own experience. The first time I met my now husband ("anyjazz"), face to face, was at the airport in Oklahoma City when I ventured to OK for a week's vacation, after having corresponded with him online for quite some time. Husband is in no way given to flights of metaphysical or supernatural fancy, but just about the first thing he said to me after "Hello" and a chaste kiss was along the lines of, "You know I do really think we have met before". (Yeah, I know - classic pick-up line!) I think I mumbled something about other lifetimes, then laughed nervously. Who knows? Maybe I was his mother, father, brother, sister, or the woman who washed his shirts in the 1920s, or a fellow-prisoner on a prison ship from Scotland, sailing to the USA in the early 1700s; or perhaps we were friends as Roman soldiers during the Roman invasion of Britain... don't get me started! Believing or imagining such things could make for a harmless enough pastime. There are far worse things to believe in.
Previous posts touching on reincarnation can be read HERE, HERE and HERE.
Hang on a mo 'til I explain how I come to be posting, yet again, on an X-Files episode.
My intention for today was to scribble a bit about The Pleiades star cluster, aka The Seven Sisters or to astronomy geeks, Messier 45 or M45 - the cluster is located currently on the cusp of Taurus/Gemini. However, after skimming through a variety of ever more fantastical ramblings on the subject, entertaining as they may have been, I decided to give the topic a miss. Then, that same evening we watched the aforementioned episode of X-Files - The Field Where I Died. I enjoyed it. We decided the writers had stitched together ideas from some real life events and characters (Waco, Jonestown, and the Bridie Murphy stories) then added a touch of the ol' X-Files magic. The name of a cult in the episode, reflection of those involved in the Waco and Jonestown events, was The Temple of the Seven Stars. Hmmm - Seven Stars? The Pleiades by any other name? Alrighty then, this has to be my alternative blog post!
The episode opens with Mulder (David Duchovny) reciting words from Paracelsus, a long poem by Robert Browning. The passage refers clearly to the concept of reincarnation. As he speaks, Mulder gazes at two vintage photographs from the time of the US Civil War .
"At times I almost dream
I too have spent a life the sages' way,
And tread once more familiar paths. Perchance
I perished in an arrogant self-reliance
An age ago; and in that act, a prayer
For one more chance went up so earnest, so
Instinct with better light let in by Death,
That life was blotted out — not so completely
But scattered wrecks enough of it remain,
Dim memories; as now, when seems once more
The goal in sight again."
Wikipedia's page, here, outlines the episode's full storyline.
Fascinating stuff - the idea of reincarnation has always intrigued me, even though I'm not sure I can give the concept full credence. The version of reincarnation depicted in this story indicates that not only do our spirits live on in other bodies, time after time, throughout history, but that we associate with the same group of spirits in each incarnation, though in different ways, different "roles". I've come across this idea before - don't recall exactly where....the movie Cloud Atlas was a recent example, but I'm trying to recall something earlier.
Melissa, one of the cult members and a wife of cult leader of The Temple of the Seven Stars, during investigation and questioning by Mulder and Scully, had been displaying periodical lapses into what appeared to be some kind of multiple personality disorder; her voice and attitude would change abruptly and dramatically. Mulder suspects there's more to it than multiple-personality disorder. He feels something mysterious himself, and undergoes deep hypnosis. He discovers that he was once a soldier, Sullivan Biddle, in the Civil War killed in battle while his wife watched. His then wife is now Melissa of the cult. Dana Scully, Mulder's current FBI partner was, back then, his father. He progresses through other lifetimes outlining how Scully and Melissa, and others known to viewers fitted in various "roles". Scully, in another lifetime, was Mulder's sibling, with Melissa playing some other part.....and so on. Later, Scully is able to establish, from documentation, that Sullivan Biddle and his wife Sarah did indeed exist in that area at the time of the Civil War, and the photographs seen in the opening scene were among the records of that period. The soldier's portrait bears an eery resemblance to....yep - Mulder.
It's a romantic notion, and one I want to believe, but can't -not quite. A wee story from my own experience. The first time I met my now husband ("anyjazz"), face to face, was at the airport in Oklahoma City when I ventured to OK for a week's vacation, after having corresponded with him online for quite some time. Husband is in no way given to flights of metaphysical or supernatural fancy, but just about the first thing he said to me after "Hello" and a chaste kiss was along the lines of, "You know I do really think we have met before". (Yeah, I know - classic pick-up line!) I think I mumbled something about other lifetimes, then laughed nervously. Who knows? Maybe I was his mother, father, brother, sister, or the woman who washed his shirts in the 1920s, or a fellow-prisoner on a prison ship from Scotland, sailing to the USA in the early 1700s; or perhaps we were friends as Roman soldiers during the Roman invasion of Britain... don't get me started! Believing or imagining such things could make for a harmless enough pastime. There are far worse things to believe in.
Previous posts touching on reincarnation can be read HERE, HERE and HERE.