
“The longest journey ends where apathy begins.”
Ron English's Fauxlosophy (2016)
Marcus Porcius Cato on Agriculture : Marcus Terentius Varro on Agriculture. W.D. Hooper & H.B. Ash. (translation). Harvard University Press, 1993. Bk. 1, ch. 2;
De Re Rustica
Portam itineri dici longissimam esse.
“The longest journey ends where apathy begins.”
Ron English's Fauxlosophy (2016)
“The longest journey begins with a single step, not with the turn of an ignition key.”
“Walking” p. 205
The Journey Home (1977)
Context: The longest journey begins with a single step, not with the turn of an ignition key. That’s the best thing about walking, the journey itself. It doesn’t much matter whether you get where you’re going or not. You’ll get there anyway. Every good hike brings you eventually back home. Right where you started.
Variant translation: The longest journey is the journey inward, for he who has chosen his destiny has started upon his quest for the source of his being.
Markings (1964)
Source: Translations, The Aeneid of Virgil (1866), Book VI, p. 191
“Truth is an arrow, and the gate is narrow that it passes through.”
Song lyrics, Slow Train Coming (1979), When He Returns
“Who will remember, passing through this Gate,
The unheroic Dead who fed the guns?”
"On Passing the New Menin Gate" (1927-1928)
Collected Poems (1949)
Context: Who will remember, passing through this Gate,
The unheroic Dead who fed the guns?
Who shall absolve the foulness of their fate, —
Those doomed, conscripted, unvictorious ones?
Crudely renewed, the Salient holds its own.
Paid are its dim defenders by this pomp;
Paid, with a pile of peace-complacent stone,
The armies who endured that sullen swamp.
The Divine Commodity: Discovering A Faith Beyond Consumer Christianity (2009, Zondervan)