One day I would be a better hand at the game. One day I would learn how to laugh. Pablo was waiting for me, and Mozart too.O restless spirits! We search and struggle and strive only to come to a place that lets us know we should have valued more the place of our starting, our home. The boy in the Alchemist has to wander all over the desert and to the farthest reaches of the earth, even to the pyramids to realize that his dream is at home. Myths are about the hero who leaves the home in order to return and be more fully at home. Why must this be? Why can't the genius burrow like a worm into his own soil? Why must he always be the sustenance of birds before he can know his knowledge?
He was, in spite of all, a real Christian and a real martyr. As for others and the world around him he never ceased in his heroic and earnest endeavor to love them, to be just to them, to do them no harm, for the love of his neighbor was as deeply in him as the hatred of himself, and so his whole life was an example that love of one's neighbor is not possible without love of oneself, and that self-hate is really the same thing as sheer egoism, and in the long run breeds the same cruel isolation and despair.
Obeying is like eating and drinking. There's nothing like it if you've been without it too long.
You have a picture of life within you, a faith, a challenge, and you were ready for deeds and sufferings and sacrifices, and then you became aware by degrees that the world asked no deeds and no sacrifices of you whatever, and that life is no poem of heroism with heroic parts to play and so on, but a comfortable room where people are quite content with eating and drinking, coffee and knitting, cards and wireless. And whoever wants more and has got it in him--the heroic and the beautiful, and the reverence for the great poets or for the saints--is a fool and a Don Quixote.
For half an hour I've known that you're called Harry. I know it because I asked you. But you don't care to know my name.
I had played Don Quixote often enough in my difficult, crazed life, had put honor before comfort, and heroism before reason. There was an end of it!
In reality, however, every ego, so far form being a unity is in the highest degree a manifold world, a constellated heaven, a chaos of forms, of states and stages, of inheritances and potentialities.
All interpretation, all psychology, all attempts to make to make things comprehensible, require the medium of theories, mythologies and lies; and a self-respecting author should not omit, at the close of an exposition, to dissipate these lies so far as may be in his power.
Ah, Harry, we have to stumble through so much dirt and humbug before we reach home. And we have no one to guide us. Our only guide is our homesickness.
Is it the pearl again? Are these the echoes of that milky smooth sphere?
And why must the pursuit of the deepest and most meaningful make the trivial but most necessary seem so foolish? Does the sage have to wander lost and lonely his whole life to finally realize: "But, then, I rather fancy it has more to do with this skill of bantering"? To know how to flirt, to banter, to joke and be easy, to know how to interact as a person of chemistry and sparkle is directly opposed to the pursuit of genius and art.
So it's necessary to be dead, Steppenwolf?