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  • #1
    Samuel Beckett
    “The sun shone, having no alternative, on the nothing new.”
    Samuel Beckett, Murphy

  • #2
    Thomas Mann
    “Solitude produces originality, bold & astonishing beauty, poetry. But solitude also produces perverseness, the disproportionate, the absurd, and the forbidden.”
    Thomas Mann, Death in Venice

  • #3
    Yukio Mishima
    “Do I, then, belong to the heavens?
    Why, if not so, should the heavens
    Fix me thus with their ceaseless blue stare,
    Luring me on, and my mind, higher
    Ever higher, up into the sky,
    Drawing me ceaselessly up
    To heights far, far above the human?
    Why, when balance has been strictly studied
    And flight calculated with the best of reason
    Till no aberrant element should, by rights, remain-
    Why, still, should the lust for ascension
    Seem, in itself, so close to madness?
    Nothing is that can satify me;
    Earthly novelty is too soon dulled;
    I am drawn higher and higher, more unstable,
    Closer and closer to the sun's effulgence.
    Why do these rays of reason destroy me?
    Villages below and meandering streams
    Grow tolerable as our distance grows.
    Why do they plead, approve, lure me
    With promise that I may love the human
    If only it is seen, thus, from afar-
    Although the goal could never have been love,
    Nor, had it been, could I ever have
    Belonged to the heavens?
    I have not envied the bird its freedom
    Nor have I longed for the ease of Nature,
    Driven by naught save this strange yearning
    For the higher, and the closer, to plunge myself
    Into the deep sky's blue, so contrary
    To all organic joys, so far
    From pleasures of superiority
    But higher, and higher,
    Dazzled, perhaps, by the dizzy incandescence
    Of waxen wings.

    Or do I then
    Belong, after all, to the earth?
    Why, if not so, should the earth
    Show such swiftness to encompass my fall?
    Granting no space to think or feel,
    Why did the soft, indolent earth thus
    Greet me with the shock of steel plate?
    Did the soft earth thus turn to steel
    Only to show me my own softness?
    That Nature might bring home to me
    That to fall, not to fly, is in the order of things,
    More natural by far than that improbable passion?
    Is the blue of the sky then a dream?
    Was it devised by the earth, to which I belonged,
    On account of the fleeting, white-hot intoxication
    Achieved for a moment by waxen wings?
    And did the heavens abet the plan to punish me?
    To punish me for not believing in myself
    Or for believing too much;
    Too earger to know where lay my allegiance
    Or vainly assuming that already I knew all;
    For wanting to fly off
    To the unknown
    Or the known:
    Both of them a single, blue speck of an idea?”
    Yukio Mishima, Sun & Steel



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