A Visionary Recital is a reconstruction of the life of Plotinus, based on a close study of the Enneads. “Our time,” wrote Kathleen Raine, “presents us with problems closely parallel to the times of Plotinus, who was something far other, and far more, than a philosopher in the diminished modern sense of the term. He was a true ‘lover of wisdom’—of the spiritual knowledge that has been virtually forgotten in the secular world of the modern West.”
Mary Casey’s book is a vivid evocation of the Mediterranean world of the third century, mediated through a finely-tempered prose that reflects a unique personal vision. It is an inner journey through the mind of a poet to the heart of timeless truth.
“Generations of Jewish, Christian, and Islamic philosophers and theologians have expressed immeasurable indebtedness to Plotinus, for whom the Cosmos is a living being, the Eternal is apprehended as Beauty, and the supreme aim of human spirituality is union with ‘the One.’ The British writer and Kenyan farmer Mary Casey loved the classic MacKenna translation of the Enneads, yet took things into a different form. She lived into the heart and soul of Plotinian life, death, thought, work, solitude, and creativity. Years later she emerged with what has been called a visionary recital of the life of the Neo-Platonic master, illumined with an innate understanding of divergent worlds, schools of thought, the redemptive acts of human interiority. Casey movingly reconciles the Plotinian sense of the microcosmic and macrocosmic, Plato and Origen, Greek and Christian, Alexandria and Egypt, classroom and altar, prayer and thought, philosophy and theology, nature and spirit, self-knowledge and avoidance, recollection and Lethe, Gaia and Cosmos, humility and dignity, binding and loosening, and ultimately, life and death. She does so with hermetic and alchemical insight, poetic nuance, and startling authority, and thus she has accomplished things for Plotinus that previous scholars have not, however much we appreciate and revere them. There is something about A Visionary Recital that is more epiphany than fiction, more remembrance than reportage, more heartbreaking jolt than comfy read, and more intelligent than smart. Casey’s canticle is both haunting and healing, and very warmly recommended.”—THERESE SCHROEDER-SHEKER, The Chalice of Repose Project