Long-time readers of Torpedo the Ark might recall a post published on a sparkling ice-cold morning in December 2018, just days before Christmas, and which featured a horrific photo of a disembowelled fox ...
The post - which can be accessed by clicking here - was what my artist friend Heide Hatry would term a memento mori (i.e., something that acts as a stark reminder of the inevitability of death).
And, like it or not, what I said then is just as true today; pain, grief, and despair remain ever-present in this world and fundamentally determine the tragic (if extremely rare and unusual) phenomenon that people call life.
In other words, chaos continues to reign - and the obscenely mutilated bodies of red foxes (and other native creatures) continue to litter the roadside [1], reminding us that the wheel is the first principle of evil [2].
Notes
[1] An estimated 100,000 foxes are killed on UK roads each year (i.e., about 274 foxes per day).
[2] See the verse 'What then is Evil?' by D. H. Lawrence, The Poems Vol. I, ed. Christopher Pollnitz (Cambridge University Press, 2013), p. 626.
Though the art of freewheeling may remind us that it also offers us a glint of freedom.
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