"The allure of travel gradually faded away from my roman. Once upon a time my heart danced just by imaging any of its symbols, a train, a steamship, towns of unknown foreign lands. Nonetheless, my past experiences taught me that travel is no more than the simple "movement of the same thing within the same space." No matter where you go, you find the same kinds of people live, repeating the same kinds of monotonous lives, in the same kinds of villages or towns. In any small town in the countryside, the merchant is fiddling with his abacus at his storefront, looking out at the whitish street all day, the public servant is smoking in his office, thinking about things like vegetables in his lunch box, as they live each tasteless, monotonous day the same way, day after day, watching their lives gradually grow old. The allure of travel came merely to project in my tired heart the image of an endlessly bored landscape like a Chinese parasol tree that grows in some vacant lot, making me feel a tasteless hatred and leeriness for human life in which identical rules repeat themselves no matter where you turn. In short, I lost interest in any kind of travel, the romance of it."
Quote Details
Added by wikiquote-import-bot
Unverified quote
0 likes
Original Language: English
Available Languages (1)
Sources
Chapter 1
https://en.wikiquote.org/wiki/Sakutar%C5%8D_Hagiwara
Revision History
No revisions have been submitted for this quote.
Categories
Sakutarō Hagiwara
55 quotes on TrueQuotesView all quotes by Sakutarō Hagiwara →
Related Quotes
"A person, individually, is always terribly lonely forever and ever."
"Poetry is the intellect's product of one second. A certain type of sentiment that one ordinarily has touches somethin…"
"Poetry is neither a mystery nor a symbol nor a demon. Poetry is nothing more than a lonely consolation for the owner …"
"When I think of poetry, I become teary, without meaning to, because of the wretchedness of human sentiments."
"The past is a painful memory to me. The past was an ominous nightmare of frustrations, inaction, and a suffering body…"
"The dog that howls at the moon howls suspicious and fearful of his own shadow. To the dog's ailing heart, the moon is…"
"I want to nail my own gloomy shadow into the moonlit earth. Lest the shadow follow me forever."
"Behold all sins have been inscribed, yet not all are mine, verily manifest to me are only phantoms of blue flames wit…"
"During the long illness and pain, spiders have covered his face with webs, his body below the waist has faded like a …"
"When I think of poetry, I feel its fierce human suffering and its joy."