From The Sorrows of Young Werther

All the high-flown schoolteachers and tutors agree that children do not know why they want; but that grown-ups too tumble around like children on the face of earth, not knowing where they come from or where they are going, acting as little from true purpose, and just as ruled by biscuits and cakes and birch rods: no one really wants to believe that, but it seems to me something you can grasp with your hands.

Goethe, Johann Wolfgang von, and Burton Pike. The Sorrows of Young Werther. New York: Modern Library, 2004.

Book Review

Timely review here.

This quote from the book, though, about museums and memorials, was money:

I was surrounded by the specter of 10,000 people moving through the galleries in a manner I had witnessed elsewhere, in other exhibitions: examining, with wistful, beatific expressions, each artifact…emblems of a shameful chapter which had, to them, closed; shaking their heads but ultimately marveling—often with childlike fascination—at how such a thing could have happened, when, amidst calls for it to never happen again, it is happening all the time everywhere.

Shimoda, Brandon. The Afterlife Is Letting Go. San Francisco: City Lights Books, 2024.