The search for the Ideal Place is, at bottom, a search for Home (whatever that is). Being of a melancholy turn of mind, Edward Thomas was wont to express a longing for a missing "home" or "land" that seemed always out of reach. But, because he was a wise and a sensitive man, Thomas knew that he was kidding himself. The Ideal Place -- the Home we long for -- is a chimera. And the old saw (traceable to Socrates via Montaigne) beckons: "wherever you go, there you are."
Home
Not the end: but there's nothing more.
Sweet Summer and Winter rude
I have loved, and friendship and love,
The crowd and solitude:
But I know them: I weary not;
But all that they mean I know.
I would go back again home
Now. Yet how should I go?
This is my grief. That land,
My home, I have never seen;
No traveller tells of it,
However far he has been.
And could I discover it,
I fear my happiness there,
Or my pain, might be dreams of return
Here, to these things that were.
Remembering ills, though slight
Yet irremediable,
Brings a worse, an impurer pang
Than remembering what was well.
No: I cannot go back,
And would not if I could.
Until blindness come, I must wait
And blink at what is not good.
Richard Eurich, "Seabound" (1984)
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2 comments:
Chimera is one of my favourite words, not that I get a chance to use it in daily conversation very often
I like the fact that it has evolved from a mythological beast into our current usage. As always, thanks for looking in, zmkc.
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