1.06.2006

Thoreau's Journal: 06-Jan-1857

A man asked me the other night whether such and such persons were not as happy as anybody, being conscious, as I perceived, of such unhappiness himself and not aspiring to much more than an animal content. “Why!” said I, speaking to his condition, “the stones are happy. Concord River is happy, and I am happy too. When I took up a fragment of a walnut-shell this morning, I saw by its very grain and composition, the form and color, etc., that it was made for happiness. The most brutish and inanimate objects that are made suggest an everlasting and thorough satisfaction; they are the homes of content. Wood, earth, mould, etc., exist for joy. Do you think that Concord River would have continued to flow these millions of years by Clamshell Hill and round Hunt’s Island, if it had not been happy,—if it had been miserable in its channel, tired of existence, and cursing its maker and the hour that it sprang?”

1 comment:

Anonymous said...

‘Because the moment
when the word happy
is pronounced
never is the moment of happiness.’

Further Reasons Why Poets Do Not Tell the Truth,
Hans Magnus Enzenberger

What a great blog and my first hit what a great entry. And so much wiser than say Christopher Stone who would give rights to trees and stones. Jabber