Cemetery World (1973)
Context: The sun was setting, throwing a fog-like dusk across the stream and trees, and there was a coolness in the air. It was time, I knew, to be getting back to camp. But I did not want to move. For I had the feeling that this was a place, once seen, that could not be seen again. If I left and then came back, it would not be the same; no matter how many times I might return to this particular spot the place and feeling would never be the same, something would be lost or something would be added, and there never would exist again, through all eternity, all the integrated factors that made it what it was in this magic moment.
“This is what I want to do forever, each one thought. Rise in the morning, come to the mill, and work all day with him beside me. Never mind that the wish was impossible. Never mind that they might never see each other again, once the boy left for his apprenticeship back in the place of his birth. That only added to the sweetness of the moment, which would soon become a memory, would soon become a dream.”
Source: The Tales of Alvin Maker, Seventh Son (1987), Chapter 15 (closing words).
Help us to complete the source, original and additional information
Do you have more details about the quote "This is what I want to do forever, each one thought. Rise in the morning, come to the mill, and work all day with him b…" by Orson Scott Card?
Orson Scott Card 586
American science fiction novelist 1951Related quotes
Mathew Roydon
(1583–1622) English poet
An Elegie; or Friend's Passion for his Astrophill, reported in Bartlett's Familiar Quotations, 10th ed. (1919).