Arnold Bennett - Sacred and Profane Love (1905)
Most of us must have experienced something similar, that apparent glimpse of the secret meaning of human existence. Even mundane moments such as gazing down on an empty street from an upstairs window late at night, even quiet suburban moments may catch these glimpses.
In my experience they tend to occur at night when human clamour has subsided, but not always. Walking along a silent, deserted valley or the sight of rain sweeping across distant hills. Brief but unmistakable. Nothing permanent seems to be left behind apart from a sense that perhaps we ought to seek them out more often.
What is the secret meaning of human existence? I don't know. These moments don't tell us but they tell us there is one.
2 comments:
Yes, I like the idea that they don't tell us what it is, but they tell us there is one. They are, I think, extraordinarily difficult to communicate in prose. Poets are more inclined to have a go, but prose brings out the fact that they are - as Bennett captures very effectively - rather, well...prosaic.
I wonder if all people experience them, but most just lack the words and the curiosity to remark on them...
Sam - I suspect all people experience them but as you say, most just lack the words and the curiosity to remark on them. Maybe we lack the social confidence too.
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