It's long been said we should avoid hiding our light beneath a bushel. And sometimes perhaps we ought remind and encourage those few proverbial dark horses among us to do their utmost to follow that wise entreaty.
Here's some beautiful light I chanced upon recently: it's an operatic piece called Echo.
Libretto is a poem by Christina Rossetti, set to music by William Kersten, sung by soprano Lori Trustman, music rendered digitally by William Kersten using VSL sample libraries.
This video was posted on YouTube in 2014. I'm amazed and dumbfounded that it hasn't become better known since then. The mass of utter garbage masquerading as art that gets shoved in our faces every day on social platforms - while this lovely piece remains virtually hidden - tells a very disturbing story about western cultures nowadays.
What must artistic talent do today to shine forth? I absolutely refuse to accept that narcissism is the way - it's become a pandemic disease, grievously afflicting and threatening to disfigure most if not all western cultures now.
One thing is for sure though. It does not serve modesty - nor any other virtue - to hide one's light beneath a bushel. There are already way too many people out there busy trying to hide, devalue or cancel everyone else's light in an effort to give undue prominence to their own dubious glimmer.