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This is a growing collection of interesting thoughts and musings about travel. If you know of memorable quotes relating to travel that do not appear here, please email them to me at i@leonidfotos.com and I will include them.Search Travel Thoughts:
Cited Authors:
A.E. Housman Adam Smith Agatha Christie Alain de Botton Alan Alda Alan Keightley Alan Watts Albert Camus Albert Einstein Aldous Huxley Alemu Aga Alexander Kinglake Alexander Solzhenitsyn Alex Garland Alfred Korzybski Alfred Lord Tennyson Alfred Whitehead Alvaro Mutis Amelia Barr Anais Nin Anatole France Andre Gide Andrei Tarkovsky Anne Dillard Anonymous Anthony Bourdain Antoine de Saint-Exupery Antonio Machado Apsley Cherry-Garrard Arthur Rimbaud Augustus Hare Basho Benjamin Desraeli Ben Mawby Beryl Markham Blaise Pascal Blind Willie Johnson Brad Newsham Brahman Bruce Chatwin Buddha Burton Holmes Carl Burns Carson McCullers Cartola Caskie Stinnett Catherine Deneuve Catullus Cesare Pavese Charles Baudelaire Charles Bukowski Charles Cooley Charles Darwin Charles Dickens Charles Dudley Warner Chateaubriand Cherylynn Alfonso Chris McCandless Christopher Woodward Claud Cockburn Claude Levi-Strauss Clive Irving Colette Constantine Cavafy D.H. Lawrence Dagobert Runes Daniel Boorstin Danny Kaye Dante David Yeadon Dea Birkett Denis Diderot Diane Ackermann Diane Johnson Douglas Adams Duane Allman E. Heine Edward Abbey Edward Dahlberg Edward Streeter Elias Loennrot Elizabeth Drew Ella Maillart Eric Leed Ernest Hemingway Ernesto Che Guevara Everret Rues Ezra Pound Fanny Burney Ferdinand Magellan Fitzhugh Mullan Francis Bacon Frank Herbert Frank Tatchell Freya Stark G.K. Chesterton Gail Bereny Genji Geoffrey Moorhouse George Bernard Shaw George Byron George Curzon George Eliot George Herbert George Mallory George Moore George Santayana Gerald Gould Gertrude Bell Gertrude Stein Gilgamesh Giuseppe di Lampedusa Goethe Graham Greene Gustave Flaubert Hank Williams Sr. Hans Enzensberger Harold Stephens Harriet Beecher Stowe Havelock Ellis Helen Carr Helen Keller Hellen Keller Henry David Thoreau Henry David Thoureau Henry Miller Herman Melville Hermann Hesse Hillaire Belloc Hiram Bingham Homer Horace Hugh Honour Hugo of St. Victor Ian Baruma Ian Sinclair Ibn Battuta Ibn Khaldoun Isabelle Eberhardt Italo Calvino J.R.R. Tolkien Jack Kerouac James Allen James Baldwin James Buzard James Lowell Jane Hirshfield Jan Myrdal Jawaharlal Nehru Jean-Paul Sartre Jeffrey Kottler Jeremy Swift Joachim du Bellay John Berryman John Burroughs John Clare John Donne John Glasworthy John Hatt John Hildebrand John Keats John Masefield John Muir John Shedd John Steinbeck John Urry Jonathan Swift Jorge Luis Borges Joseph Campbell Joseph Conrad Joseph Stine Jose Saramago Juan Mascaro Judith Thurman Judith Wylie Juvenal Katherine Routeledge Keath Fraser Kenneth White Kerzy Kosinski Kevin Charbonneau Kurt Vonnegut Lao Tzu Laurence Durrell Laurence Sterne Laurens van der Post Lawrence Durrell Lewis Carroll Li Bai Lillian Smith Lin Yutang Li Po Lord Byron Lord Chesterfield Louis L'Amour Louis MacNeice Malcolm Muggeridge Marcel Proust Marc Newson Mark Jenkins Mark Twain Martha Gellhorn Martin Buber Mary Morris Mary Shelley Mason Cooley Maya Angelou Meister Eckhart Michel de Montaigne Michelle Leigh Miguel de Cervantes Milton Glaser Minor White Miriam Beard Moslih Saadi Mrs. William Beckman Muhammad Muriel Rukeyser Natalie Goldberg Neal Ascherson Nicholas Shakespeare Nils Kjaer Noel Coward Noran Bakrie Oliver Cromwell Oscar Wilde Pat Conroy Paul Bowles Paul Fussell Paul Theroux Percy Bysshe Shelley Peter Fleming Peter Hoeg Peter Hulme Phil Cousineau Pico Iyer Pink Floyd Primo Levi Rainer Maria Rilke Ralph Waldo Emerson Ramakrishna Ray Bradbury Rebecca Solnit Regina Nadelson Reinhold Messner Rene Descartes Richard Francis Burton Richard Halliburton Richard Long Richard Sterling Robert Allen Robert Byron Robert Dessaix Robert Frost Robert Louis Stevenson Robin Jarvis Robyn Davidson Rosalia de Castro Roy Bridges Rudolf Raspe Rudyard Kipling Rumi Russian Proverb Ryszard Kapuscinski Sam Keene Samuel Johnson Samuel Taylor Coleridge Scott Cameron Seneca Seneca the Younger Sigmund Freud Sinclair Lewis Soeren Kierkegaard Sophia Dembling Soren Kierkegaard St. Augustine Susan Sontag Sydney Harris T.E. Lawrence T.S. Eliot Tao Te Ching Tennessee Williams The Dhammapada Theophile Gautier Thomas Browne Thomas Carlyle Thomas Fuller Thomas Hardy Thomas Knox Thomas Nugent Tim Cahill Tom Waits Vladimir Mayakovsky Vladimir Nabokov von Humboldt W.H. Auden Walt Whitman Wilfred Thesiger Will Durant William Blake William Cowper William Hazlitt William Moon William Shakespeare William Sherman William Wordsworth Will Kommen Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart Xun Zi Yasunori Kawabata Yogi Berra-
Travel Gallery:
Category Archives: Inspiration
Samuel Johnson
He that would bring home the wealth of the Indies, must carry the wealth of the Indies with him.
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Henry David Thoreau
The man whose horse trots a mile in a minute does not carry the most important messages.
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T.S. Eliot
Each venture is a new beginning, what there is to conquer has already been discovered, once or twice, or several times, by men whom one cannot hope to emulate, but there is no competition, there is only the fight to recover what has been lost and found and lost again and again.
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Yasunori Kawabata — Beauty and Sadness
Time passed. But time flows in many streams. Like a river, an inner stream of time will flow rapidly at some places and sluggishly at others, or perhaps even stand hopelessly stagnant. Cosmic time is the same for everyone, but human time differs with each person. Time flows in the same way for all human beings; every human being flows through time in a different way.
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Jane Hirshfield — The Heart of Haiku
Paths mattered to Bashō, who could — like Wordsworth or John Muir — cover twenty or thirty miles a day by foot. In his youth, it seems he traveled only as circumstances required. In mid-life, he traveled by choice, following the example of earlier poet-wanderers he admired. By the end of his life, his journeying gives off the scent of an irrefutable restlessness, a simple incapacity to stay long at home.
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Basho — Narrow Road to the Interior
The moon and sun are travelers of a hundred generations. The years, coming and going, are wanderers too. Spending a lifetime adrift on boat decks, greeting old age while holding a horse by the mouth—for such a person, each day is a journey, and the journey itself becomes home.
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Basho
Do not follow the ancient masters, seek what they sought
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Ryszard Kapuscinski — Travels with Herodotus
Yes, the world teaches humility. I returned from this journey embarrassed by my own ignorance, at how ill read I was. I realized then what now seems obvious: a culture would not reveal its mysteries to me at a mere wave of my hand; one has to prepare oneself thoroughly and at length for such an encounter.
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Ryszard Kapuscinski — Travels with Herodotus
I tried to forget India, which signified to me my failure: its enormity and diversity, its poverty and riches, its mystery and incomprehensibility had crushed, stunned, and finally defeated me. Once again I was glad to travel only around Poland.
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Ryszard Kapuscinski — Travels with Herodotus
Herodotus was therefore a Greek Carian, an ethnic half-breed. Such people who grow up amid different cultures, as a blend of different bloodlines, have their worldview determined by such concepts as border, distance, difference, diversity. We encounter the widest array of human types among them, from fanatical, fierce sectarians, to passive, apathetic provincials, to open, receptive wanderers — citizens of the world.
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Ryszard Kapuscinski — Travels with Herodotus
With each new title I read, I felt as if I were undertaking a new journey to India, recalling places I had visited and discovering new depths and aspects, fresh meanings, of things which earlier I had assumed I knew. These journeys were much more multidimensional than my original one. I discovered also that these expeditions could be further prolonged, repeated, augmented by reading more books, studying maps, looking at paintings and photographs.
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Ryszard Kapuscinski — Travels with Herodotus
The Great Wall! People come from the ends of the earth to see it. It is one of the wonders of the world, a unique, almost mythical, and in some sense unfathomable creation. The Chinese constructed it, with interruptions, over the course of two thousand years. They commenced when the Buddha and Herodotus were alive and were still building it when Leonardo da Vinci, Titian, and Johann Sebastian Bach were at their labors in Europe.
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Ryszard Kapuscinski — Travels with Herodotus
To become a Hindu scholar, a Sinologist, an Arabist, or a Hebraist is a lofty, all-consuming pursuit, leaving no space or time for anything else. Whereas I had the urge to submit to such seductions, I also remained attracted to what lay beyond the confines of their respective worlds — I was tempted by people still unmet, roads yet untraveled, skies yet unseen. The desire to cross the border, to look at what is beyond it, stirred in me still.
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Ryszard Kapuscinski — Travels with Herodotus
People who dislike budging from their homes or walking beyond their own backyards — and they are always and everywhere in the majority — treat Herodotus’s sort, fundamentally unconnected to anyone or anything, as freaks, fanatics, lunatics even.
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Ryszard Kapuscinski — Travels with Herodotus
A journey, after all, neither begins in the instant we set out, nor ends when we have reached our doorstep once again. It starts much earlier and is really never over, because the film of memory continues running on inside of us long after we have come to a physical standstill. Indeed, there exists something like a contagion of travel, and the disease is essentially incurable.
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Ryszard Kapuscinski — Travels with Herodotus
As a tourist? No, tourists travel to rest, whereas Herodotus works hard on the road — he is a reporter, an anthropologist, an ethnographer, a historian. And he is at the same time a typical wanderer, or, as others like him will later be called in medieval Europe, a pilgrim. But this wandering of his is no picaresque, carefree passage from one place to another. Herodotus’s journeys are purposeful—they are the means by which he hopes to learn about the world and its inhabitants, to gather the knowledge he will feel compelled, later, to describe.
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Ryszard Kapuscinski — Travels with Herodotus
But with each new expedition the world expands on him, multiplies, assumes enormous proportions.
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Ryszard Kapuscinski — Travels with Herodotus
For the cities which were formerly great have most of them become insignificant; and such as are at present powerful, were weak in the olden time. I shall therefore discourse equally of both, convinced that human happiness never continues long in one stay.
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Ryszard Kapuscinski — Travels with Herodotus
It was because he traveled to where they were, asked, observed, and collected his information from what he himself saw and what others told him. His first act, therefore, was the journey. But is that not the case for all reporters? Is not our first thought to go on the road? The road is our source, our vault of treasures, our wealth. Only on the road does the reporter feel like himself, at home. What set him into motion? Made him act? Compelled him to undertake the hardships of travel, to subject himself to the hazards of one expedition after another? I think that it was simply curiosity about the world. The desire to be there, to see it at any cost, to experience it no matter what. It is actually a seldom encountered passion. Man is by nature a sedentary creature; from the moment he began cultivating the land and left behind the perilous and uncertain existence of a hunter or gatherer, he settled down happily, naturally, on his particular patch of earth and fenced himself off from others with a wall or a ditch, prepared to shed blood, even give his life to defend what was his. If he moved, it was only under duress, because he was driven by hunger, disease, or war, or by the search for better work, or for professional reasons—because he was a sailor, an itinerant merchant, leader of a caravan. But to traverse the world for years on end of his own free will, in order to get to know it, to plumb it, to understand it? And then, later, to put all his findings into words? Such people have always been uncommon.
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Ryszard Kapuscinski — Travels with Herodotus
His most important discovery? That there are many worlds. And that each is different. Each is important. And that one must learn about them, because these other worlds, these other cultures, are mirrors in which we can see ourselves, thanks to which we understand ourselves better—for we cannot define our own identity until having confronted that of others, as comparison.
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Ryszard Kapuscinski — Travels with Herodotus
A fact that he discovered and ascertained today no longer fascinates him tomorrow, and so he must walk (or ride) elsewhere, further away. Such people, while useful, even agreeable, to others, are, if truth be told, frequently unhappy—lonely in fact. Yes, they seek out others, and it may even seem to them that in a certain country or city they have managed to find true kindred and fellowship, having come to know and learn about a people; but they wake up one day and suddenly feel that nothing actually binds them to these people, that they can leave here at once. They realize that another country, some other people, have now beguiled them, and that yesterday’s most riveting event now pales and loses all meaning and significance. For all intents and purposes, they do not grow attached to anything, do not put down deep roots. Their empathy is sincere, but superficial. If asked which of the countries they have visited they like best, they are embarrassed—they do not know how to answer. Which one? In a certain sense—all of them. There is something compelling about each. To which country would they like to return once more? Again, embarrassment—they had never asked themselves such a question. The one certainty is that they would like to be back on the road, going somewhere. To be on their way again—that is the dream. We do not really know what draws a human being out into the world. Is it curiosity? A hunger for experience? An addiction to wonderment? The man who ceases to be astonished is hollow, possessed of an extinguished heart. If he believes that everything has already happened, that he has seen it all, then something most precious has died within him—the delight in life.
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Ryszard Kapuscinski — Travels with Herodotus
He does not concern himself with the future, for the future is simply another today. He is interested in yesterday, in the past that is vanishing, and in peril of fading from memory, of being lost to us forever—a prospect that fills him with panic. We are human because we recount stories and myths; the past—that is what differentiates us from animals.
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Will Durant — The Lessons of History
If progress is real despite our whining, it is not because we are born any healthier, better, or wiser than infants were in the past, but because we are born to a richer heritage, born on a higher level of that pedestal which the accumulation of knowledge and art raises as the ground and support of our being. The heritage rises, and man rises in proportion as he receives it.
History is, above all else, the creation and recording of that heritage; progress is its increasing abundance, preservation, transmission, and use. To those of us who study history not merely as a warning reminder of man’s follies and crimes, but also as an encouraging remembrance of generative souls, the past ceases to be a depressing chamber of horrors; it becomes a celestial city, a spacious country of the mind, wherein a thousand saints, statesmen, inventors, scientists, poets, artists, musicians, lovers, and philosophers still live and speak, teach and carve and sing. The historian will not mourn because he can see no meaning in human existence except that which man puts into it; let it be our pride that we ourselves may put meaning into our lives, and sometimes a significance that transcends death. If a man is fortunate he will, before he dies, gather up as much as he can of his civilized heritage and transmit it to his children. And to his final breath he will be grateful for this inexhaustible legacy, knowing that it is our nourishing mother and our lasting life.
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Rainer Maria Rilke — Letters to a Young Poet
Things aren’t all so tangible and sayable as people would usually have us believe; most experiences are unsayable, they happen in a space that no word has ever entered, and more unsayable than all other things are works of art, those mysterious existences, whose life endures beside our own small, transitory life.
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Rainer Maria Rilke — Letters to a Young Poet
For ultimately, and precisely in the deepest and most important matters, we are unspeakably alone.
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Rainer Maria Rilke — Letters to a Young Poet
And one slowly learns to recognize the very few Things in which something eternal endures that one can love and something solitary that one can gently take part in.
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Rainer Maria Rilke — Letters to a Young Poet
And as for the rest, let life happen to you. Believe me: life is in the right, always.
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Rainer Maria Rilke — Letters to a Young Poet
Everything that makes more of you than you have ever been, even in your best hours, is right. Every intensification is good, if it is in your entire blood, if it isn’t intoxication or muddiness, but joy which you can see into, clear to the bottom.
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Robyn Davidson — Desert Places
[Y]ou have been walking through a wilderness of sand. The silence and the rhythm of the walking have sent you into a reverie in which you seem behind yourself, watching yourself watching reality. The wrinkling action of water on sand brings a thought to the surface which echoes the pattern itself. What is the force driving matter into ever more complicated, ever more improbable forms. Why does it do this and why are you here to observe it? What you see is so astonishing that you are grateful simply to have life, to have senses with which to witness the event, even though the seeing hearing smelling touching wondering must end in nothing-at-all. Then another thought washes up through that thought and you recognize the rightness of it, of yourself being one of an infinite series of forms coalescing out of matter, returning to it, so that before and after lose their meaning and their terror, and the soul is allowed, for the time it takes for a sparkle to flash on the sea, to feel connected to everything that ever was or ever will be. Something solid forms in you again and holds you strongly to life.
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Robyn Davidson — Desert Places
Somewhere in the midst of that tremendous restlessness I had lost the sense of a gravitational centre, a place with which to compare elsewhere.
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Robyn Davidson — Desert Places
Sometimes it seems as if a larger power gives a damn what you do with your life. One minute you are meandering along the road you have chosen, then suddenly you are shoved up a side street where small enticements, like crumbs laid down for a bird, encourage you to believe that you are meant to travel in this direction though you can see nothing familiar up ahead.
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Wilfred Thesiger — Arabian Sands
For me, exploration was a personal venture. I did not go to the Arabian desert to collect plants nor to make a map; such things were incidental. At heart I knew that to write or even to talk of my travels was to tarnish the achievement. I went there to find peace in the hardship of desert travel and the company of desert peoples. I set myself a goal on these journeys, and, although the goal itself was unimportant, its attainment had to be worth every effort and sacrifice. Scott had gone to the South Pole in order to stand for a few minutes on one particular and almost inaccessible sport on the earth’s surface. He and his companions died on their way back, but even as they were dying he never doubted that the journey had been worthwhile. Everyone knew that there was nothing to be found on the top of Everest, but even in this materialistic age few people asked, ‘What point is there in climbing Everest? What good will it do anyone when they get there?’ They recognized that even today there are experiences that do not need to be justified in terms of material profit.
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Wilfred Thesiger — Arabian Sands
No, it is not the goal but the way there that matters, and the harder the way the more worth while the journey. Who, after all, would dispute that it is more satisfying to climb to the top of a mountain than to go there in a funicular railway? Perhaps this was one reason why I resented modern inventions; they made the road too easy. I felt instinctively that it was better to fail on Everest without oxygen than to attain the summit with its use. If climbers used oxygen, why should they not have their supplies dropped to them from aeroplanes, or landed by helicopter? Yet to refuse mechanical aids as unsporting reduced exploration to the level of a sport, like big-game shooting in Kenya when the hunter is allowed to drive up to within sight of the animal but must get out of the car to shoot it. I would not myself have wished to cross the Empty Quarter in a car. Luckily this was impossible when I did my journeys, for to have done the journey on a camel when I could have done it in a car would have turned the venture into a stunt.
Some people maintain that they will be better off when they have exchanged the hardship and poverty of the desert for the security of a materialistic world. This I do not believe. I shall always remember how often I was humbled by those illiterate herdsmen who possessed, in so much greater measure than I, generosity and courage, endurance, patience, and lighthearted gallantry. Among no other people have I ever felt the same sense of personal inferiority.
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Wilfred Thesiger — Arabian Sands
On the last evening, as bin Kabina and bin Ghabaisha were tying up the few things they had brought, Codrai said, looking at the two small bundles, ‘It is rather pathetic that this is all they have.’ I understood what he meant; I had often felt the same. Yet I knew that for them the danger lay, not in the hardship of their lives, but in the boredom and frustration they would feel when they renounced it. The tragedy was that the choice would not be theirs; economic forces beyond their control would eventually drive them into the towns to hang about street-corners as ‘unskilled labour’.
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Wilfred Thesiger — Arabian Sands
Here life moved in time with the past. These people still valued leisure and courtesy and conversation. They did not live their lives at second hand, dependent on cinemas and wireless. I would willingly have consorted with them, but I now wore European clothes. As I wandered through the town I knew that they regarded me as an intruder; I myself felt that I was little better than a tourist.
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Wilfred Thesiger — Arabian Sands
Listening to them talk while a wireless blared in a corner and the barman served drinks, I realized that these officers could have as little understanding of Bedu life as bin Kabina or bin Ghabaisha had of theirs. I could now move without effort from one world to the other as easily as I could change my clothes, but I appreciated that I was in danger of belonging to neither. When I was among my own people, a shadowy figure was always at my side watching them with critical, intolerant eyes.
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Wilfred Thesiger — Arabian Sands
It was too late in the season to attempt a journey into Oman that year, and anyway I needed to rest. My mind was taut with the strain of living too long among Arabs.
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Wilfred Thesiger — Arabian Sands
It was cosy and very friendly, and pleasing to feel that for a while we had no further need of traveling, that we could eat and sleep at will. I wondered why people ever cluttered up their rooms with furniture, for this bare simplicity seemed to me infinitely preferable.
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Wilfred Thesiger — Arabian Sands
It took us only ten minutes to load, and as we moved off I though how pleasant it was to be free from the burden of possessions.
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Wilfred Thesiger — Arabian Sands
As I listened I though once again how precarious was the existence of the Bedu. Their way of life naturally made them fatalists; so much was beyond their control. It was impossible for them to provide for a morrow when everything depended on a chance fall of rain or when raiders sickness, or any one of a hundred chance happenings might at any time leave them destitute, or end their lives. They did what they could, and no people were more self reliant, but if things went wrong they accepted their fate without bitterness, and with dignity as the will of God.
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Wilfred Thesiger — Arabian Sands
Fifteen years earlier, watching the coronation of Haile Selassie as King of Kings of Ethiopia, I had been fascinated by the continuity, however tenuous, which linked that ceremony with Solomon and Sheba. Now watching these half naked, indigo-smeared figures, sitting beneath the dying palms of the Wadi Jiza, discussing our movements in a language which had once been spoken b y Menaeans, Sabaeans, and Himyarites, I realized that here was a link with the past even older and more authentic, for scholars believe that the Mahra are descended from the ancient Habasha, who colonized Ethiopia as long ago as the first millennium b.c. and gave their name to the Abyssinians.
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Wilfred Thesiger — Arabian Sands
Feeling thoroughly ill-tempered I lay down to sleep, but this was impossible. The others, excited by this meeting with their fellow-tribesmen, talked incessantly within a few yards of my head. I wondered irritably why Bedu must always shout. Gradually I relaxed. I tried the old spell of asking myself, ‘Would I really wish to be anywhere else?’ and having decided that I would not, I felt better.
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Wilfred Thesiger — Arabian Sands
No, I would rather be here starving as I was than sitting in a chair, replete with food, listening to the wireless, and dependent upon cars to take me through Arabia. I clung desperately to this conviction. It seemed infinitely important. Even to doubt it was to admit defeat, to forswear everything to which I held.
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Wilfred Thesiger — Arabian Sands
For years the Empty Quarter had represented to me the final, unattainable challenge which the desert offered. Suddenly it had come within my reach. I remembered my excitement when Lean had casually offered me the chance to go there, the immediate determination to cross it, and then the doubts and fears, the frustrations, and the moments of despair. Now I had crossed it. To others my journey would have little importance. It would produce nothing except a rather inaccurate map which no one was ever likely to use. It was a personal experience, and the reward had been a drink of clean, nearly tasteless water. I was content with that.
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Wilfred Thesiger — Arabian Sands
But I knew that for me the hardest test would be to live with them in harmony and not to let my impatience master me; neither to withdraw into myself, nor to become critical of standards and ways of life different from my own. I knew from experience that the conditions under which we lived would slowly wear me down, mentally if not physically, and that I should be often provoked and irritated by my companions. I also knew with equal certainty that when this happened the fault would be mine not theirs.
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Wilfred Thesiger — Arabian Sands
On the second day at sunset we saw the Sands stretching across our front, a shimmering rose-coloured wall, seemingly as intangible as a mirage. The Arabs, roused from the nodding torpor of weary, empty hours, pointed with their sticks, shouted, and broke into a sudden spate of talk. But I was content to look in silence upon that long-awaited vision, as excited as a mountaineer who sees above the Indian foothills the remote white challenge of the Himalayas.
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Wilfred Thesiger — Arabian Sands
As I rode along I reflected that nowhere in the world was there such continuity as in the Arabian desert. Here Semitic nomads, resembling my companions, must have herded their flocks before the Pyramids were built or the Flood wiped out all trace of man in the Euphrates valley. Successive civilizations rose and fell around the desert’s edge: the Minaeans, Sabaeans, and Himyarites in southern Arabia; Egypt of the Pharaohs; Sumeria, Babylonia, Assyria; the Hebrews, the Phoenicians; Greeks and Romans; the Persians; the Muslim Empire of the Arabs, and finally the Turks. They lasted a few hundred or a thousand years and vanished; new races were evolved and later disappeared; religions rose and fell; men changed, adapting themselves to a changing world; but in the desert the nomad tribes lived on, the pattern of their lives but little changed over this enormous span of time.
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Wilfred Thesiger — Arabian Sands
Whatever may have been their purpose, these piles of uncut stones are among the few tangible monuments which the Arabs of the past have left behind them in Arabia. They seemed to me a fitting memorial to the ancestors of a people who, at their best, have cared little for material things.
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Wilfred Thesiger — Arabian Sands
We rode across a somber land. The rocks beneath our feet and the broken scattered fragments were dark with age, sepia-coloured. They looked as if they had been scorched by the sun and polished by the wind ever since they first emerged from beneath the sea. It was difficult to think that this stark land had ever been other than it was, that flowers and crops may once have flourished here. Now it was dead; the earth’s bared bones lay round us, sand-scoured beneath a glaring sky.
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Wilfred Thesiger — Arabian Sands
As we rose to go an old man approached. He mumbled a salutation and we replied. He stood and stared at me, wrinkling his eyes; he wore a short dirty loin-cloth and carried a stick – he was evidently to poor to own a dagger. Grey hair sprouted on his chest and eldritch locks fell round his emaciated face; a single tooth wobbled as he spoke. He looked at me for some time and then mumbled again, ‘I came to see the Christian’. Sultan said to me, ‘He is a Shahara’. I wondered what he saw as he peered at me with bleary eyes, this old man whose ancestors were tabled in genesis. Perhaps dimly he foresaw the end. As we went down the hillside I asked my companions who he was. ‘He is mad’, one of them answered, and parodied ‘I came to see the Christian’, and they laughed. Yet I wondered fancifully if he had seen more clearly than they did, had sensed the threat which my presence implied – the approaching disintegration of his society and the destruction of his beliefs.
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Wilfred Thesiger — Arabian Sands
But more wearing still is the nervous tension. I was to learn how hard it is to live crowded together with people of another faith, speech, and culture in the solitude of the desert, how easy to be provoked to senseless wrath by the importunities and improvidence.
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Wilfred Thesiger — Arabian Sands
I went there with a belief in my own racial superiority, but in their tents I felt like an uncouth, inarticulate barbarian, an intruder from a shoddy and materialistic world. Yet from them I learnt how welcoming are the Arabs and how generous is their hospitality.
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Wilfred Thesiger — Arabian Sands
The deserts in which I had travelled had been blanks in time as well as in space. They had no intelligible history, the nomads who inhabited them had no known past. Some bushmen paintings, a few disputed references in Herodotus and Ptolemy, and tribal legends of the recent past were all that had come down to us.
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Wilfred Thesiger — Arabian Sands
In the desert I had found a freedom unattainable in civilization; a life unhampered by possessions, since everything that was not a necessity was an encumbrance. I had found, too, a comradeship inherent in the circumstances, and the belief that tranquility was to be found there. I had learnt the satisfaction which comes from hardship and the pleasure which springs from abstinence: the contentment of a full belly; the richness of meat; the taste of clean water; the ecstasy of surrender when the craving for sleep becomes a torment; the warmth of a fire in the chill of dawn.
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Wilfred Thesiger — Arabian Sands
For this was the real desert where differences of race and colour, of wealth and social standing, are almost meaningless; where coverings of pretence are stripped away and basic truths emerge. It was a place where men live close together.
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Wilfred Thesiger — Arabian Sands
I craved for the past, resented the present, and dreaded the future.
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Wilfred Thesiger — Arabian Sands
For the first two days we saw occasional white oryx and a few ostriches; after that there was nothing. Hour after hour, day after day, we moved forward and nothing changed; the desert, me, the empty sky always the same distance ahead of us. Time and space were one. Round us was a silence in which only the winds played, and a cleanness which was infinitely remote from the world of men.
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Wilfred Thesiger — Arabian Sands
I was often tired and thirsty, sometimes frightened and lonely, but I tasted freedom and a way of life from which there could be no recall.
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Wilfred Thesiger — Arabian Sands
Many who venture into dangerous places have found this comradeship among members of their own race; a few find it more easily among people from other lands, the very differences which separate them binding them ever more closely. I found it among the Bedu. Without it these journeys would have been a meaningless penance.
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Wilfred Thesiger — Arabian Sands
Far below me a yellow haze hid the desert to the east. Yet it was there that my fancies ranged, planning new journeys while I wondered at this strange compulsion which drove me back to a life that was barely possible. It would, I felt, have been understandable if I had been working in some London office, dreaming of freedom and adventure; but here, surely, I had all that I could possibly desire on much easier terms. But I knew instinctively that it was the very hardness of life in the desert which drew me back there – it was the same pull which takes men back to the polar ice, to high mountains, and to the sea.
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Denis Diderot
The ideas aroused within me by ruins are lofty. Everything vanishes, everything perishes, everything passes away; the world alone remains, time alone continues. How old this world is! I walk between these two eternities . . . . What is my ephemeral existence compared to that of this crumbling stone?
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John Clare
There’s not a foot of ground we daily tread . . . but holds some fragment of the human dead; Like yours, awaits for me that common lot; ‘Tis mine to be of every hope bereft; A few more years and I shall be forgot; And not a vestige of my memory left.
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Chateaubriand
It is thus that we are warned at each step of our nothingness; man goes to meditate on the ruins of empires; he forgets that he is himself a ruin still more unsteady, and that he will fall before these remains do.
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Christopher Woodward — In Ruins
What Shelley’s experience shows is that the vegetation which grows on ruins appeals to the depths of our consciousness, for it represents the hand of time, and the contest between the individual and the universe.
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Chrisopher Woodward — In Ruins
Pausing before the crumbling façade [Henry] James seems to have glimpsed an understanding of the ‘perversity’ by which we find a pleasure in contemplating decay.
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Christopher Woodward — In Ruins
If I am lonely in a foreign country I search for ruins.
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Christopher Woodward — In Ruins
In ruins movement is halted and time suspended.
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Christopher Woodward — In Ruins
Furthermore, the magnitude of its ruins overturned visitors’ assumptions about the inevitability of human progress over time.
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Christopher Woodward — In Ruins
When we contemplate ruins, we contemplate our own future. To statesmen, ruins predict the fall of Empires, and to philosophers the futility of man’s aspirations. To a poet, the decay of a monument represents the dissolution of the individual ego in the flow of Time; to a painter or architect, the fragments of a stupendous antiquity call into question the purpose of their art. Why struggle with a brush or chisel to create the beauty of wholeness when far greater works have been destroyed by Time?
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Tales of Genji
In this world, which place can I say is mine? Wherever I end up I’ll call it my inn.
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Katherine Routeledge
[G]ipsy outdoor life grows upon one for its own sake, and after all if one lays in nothing but numberless fresh impressions and interests, the time will not have been wasted.
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Katherine Routeledge
[G]et as many contrasts as you can. Lead the simpler, the luxurious, the sensuous, the strenuous, the intellectual lives till you have as many, or nearly as many, lives as a cat.
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Paul Throux — The Old Patagonian Express
This was a discovery—the look of it. I thought: Nowhere is a place.
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Paul Theroux — The Old Patagonian Express
The temporariness of travel often intensifies friendship and turns it into intimacy.
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Paul Theroux — The Old Patagonian Express
But traveling alone, a selfish addiction, is very hard to justify or explain.
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Paul Theroux — The Old Patagonian Express
Perhaps this explained my need to seek out the inscrutable magnetisms of the exotic: in the wildest places everyone looked so marginal, so temporary, so uncomfortable, so hungry and tired, it was possible as a traveler to be anonymous or even paradoxically, to fit in, in the same temporary way.
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Paul Theroux — The Old Patagonian Express
More melancholy than the thought of Homesick: The Travel Book was something I read about Jack Kerouac. At the age of fifty, with On the Road well behind him, he decided to hitchhike across America again. He was fatter now and felt defeated, but he was convinced he could repeat his cross-country epic. So he left New York, seeking California. His menacing features were ineradicable, and times had changed. The lugubrious man reached New Jersey; there he stood for hours in the rain, trying to thumb a ride, until at last he gave up and took a bus home.
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Paul Theroux — The Old Patagonian Express
Time is made visible, and it moves as the landscape moves.
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Paul Throux — The Old Patagonian Express
Travel is a vanishing act, a solitary trip down a pinched line of geography to oblivion.
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Paul Theroux — The Old Patagonian Express
Of course, some of it is painful, but travel—its very motion—ought to suggest hope. Despair is the armchair; it is indifference and glazed, incurious eyes. I think travelers are essentially optimists, or else they would never go anywhere.
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Paul Theroux — The Old Patagonian Express
Most travelers, however dreary and plonkingly pedestrian, see themselves as solitary and rather heroic adventurers.
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Alfred Lord Tennyson — Ulysses
Come my friends,
‘Tis not too late to seek a newer world.
Push off, and sitting well in order smite
The sounding furrows; for my purpose holds
To sail beyond the sunset, and the baths
Of all the western stars, until I die.
It may be that the gulfs will wash us down:
It may be we shall touch the Happy Isles,
And see the great Achilles, whom we knew.
Tho’ much is taken, much abides; and tho’
We are not now that strength which in old days
Moved earth and heaven; that which we are, we are;
One equal temper of heroic hearts,
Made weak by time and fate, but strong in will
To strive, to seek, to find, and not to yield.
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Robert Louis Stevenson — An Inland Voyage
How he longed to be somewhere else, and see the round world before he went into the grave. Poor cage bird! Do I not remember the time when I myself haunted the station, to watch train after train carry its complement of free men into the night, and read the names of distant places on the time-bills with indescribable longings?
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Harold Stephens — Who Needs A Road?
Many of the travelers at the Thai Song Greet are no more than runners, long distance runners who chase madly around the globe, running away from discipline, responsibility, respectability and the square world. But others sitting around the time-worn tables – and it is hard to tell which ones until you hear them speak, until you hear how they lovingly caress the sounds of Jaipur and Jahalabad, Matsuyama and Miyajimaguchi, until you understand they are journeying toward rather than from – these are the true travelers, the ones to whom the world is a way of life rather than an escape from life, the ones to whom travel is a full-time love rather than a part-time affair. They know the world as well as most people know their hometowns, and live it far more. They are the restless, the adventurous, the insatiable curious, so much like Lord Jim . . .
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Harold Stephens — Who Needs A Road?
“You can change your life,” goes the last line of a Rilke poem. Once upon a time, that was part of the reason people traveled – to welcome the unknown and wrestle transformation from it. Today this sort of traveler is rare. We travel abroad to enjoy what is quaint and to change – or avoid – what is challenging. Wrapped in a robe of dollars and dogmas, we keep the world from our skin.
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Rainer Maria Rilke
[A]t bottom the only courage that is demanded of us: to have courage for the most strange, the most singular and the most inexplicable that we may encounter.
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Bruce Chatwin
Tierra del Fuego was the last place man had wandered to on foot. There is some way in which Patagonia is the ultimate symbol of restlessness for the human condition.
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Nicholas Shakespeare
Bruce [Chatwin] would be moved most by the dreamers and adventurers whose dreams had failed them.
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Nicholas Shakespeare
Travelers from Darwin onwards noted how this bleakness seized the imagination. Patagonia’s nothingness forces the mid in on itself.
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Hans Enzensberger
What Am I Doing Here is a title which can do without the question mark, the summary of someone who never found a definite place for himself, a man forever on the move, both in terms of space and social context.
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Bruce Chatwin
I am exasperated without having begun. One’s independence is so fragile a thing.
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Bruce Chatwin
The best travelers are illiterate. Narratives of travel are pale compensations for the journey itself, and merely proclaim the traveler’s inadequacy as a traveler. The best travelers do not pause to record their second-rate impressions, to be read third hand. Their experience is primal; their minds are uncongealed by the written word.
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Bruce Chatwin
I know myself too well. Once in Morocco the footsteps lead to another horizon. I am a bum and I do not believe in work of any kind.
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Bruce Chatwin
They [Nemadi Tribe] are the greatest storytellers and they make a virtue of their sudden departures for the unknown.
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Jeremy Swift
He [Bruce Chatwin] wasn’t a nomad in the sense that nomads would talk about being nomads. A real nomad would move to places that he or she knew about, would understand the space involved, would not go in search of sensations. . . . Bruce’s theory about people moving because movement is a natural condition is wrong. I’ve spent lots and lots of time with lots of groups. All say it’s nice to move on: you don’t have the quarrels you get in villages or cities, you go to pretty places, you get up in the cool mountains in summer and the plains in winter. But it’s hell on wheels doing it, taking all your possessions and children. I remember the Bakhtiari women on the last bit of their migration, a high mountain pass though snow and a woman crying, sobbing with pain: ‘Why do we have to do this?’ The prospect of Bruce offering a lift in his Land Rover would have delighted them. It meant they did not have to walk. . . . He lumps together hunters, herders, gypsies. Everyone who moves is a nomad. In fact, what separates them is greater. Nomads move because their animals require fresh pasturing, not because of an innate neurosis. It doesn’t mean movement is unimportant: it’s enshrined in their way of life and they write songs about it—but it’s secondary, something you do because your dependence on animals requires it. So many of them have said to me: ‘If there was more pasture for our animals we would move less.’ All over the world nomads are moving less and are not notably unhappy about it. Nomads have a strong sense of home and place. The notion of them moving around randomly is completely false.
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Bruce Chatwin
I feel I have achieved virtually nothing on this journey. No sense of a path traveled, just an aimless flailing around, a pointless, dispiriting succession of visits to Kabul punctuated by occasional relief journeys into the hinterland. The peaks beyond seem far more exciting. Search for a paradise which is elusive.
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Bruce Chatwin
I’ve always been interested in the marvelous.
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Bruce Chatwin
Change is the only thing worth living for. Never sit your life out at a desk. Ulcers and heart condition follow.
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Bruce Chatwin
My subsequent travels, imaginary or real, are of course relatively unimportant. But I would say at the outset that I value my ambivalence highly. I avoid head-on collisions, and attack surreptitiously or just walk out. I accumulate things rapidly and with financial success, then suddenly dispose of them in an ill-tempered and impulsive way. I have never felt any real attachment to a home and fail to produce the normal emotive response when the word is mentioned—except when traveling. . . .
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Bruce Chatwin
This book is written in answer to a need to explain my own restlessness—coupled with a morbid preoccupation with roots.
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