February 11, 2021 "Information
Clearing House" - After a night of
haunting dreams that flowed as if they were
written like running water, written on air, as
the Roman poet Catullus once said, in the depth
of a dark winter morning, I decided that I would
take a walk in the afternoon, hoping that the
sun would then appear, and it did, so I went
walking toward the woods through deep white
new-fallen snow all around me and entered a path
into the woods across from my house that led
toward a deep ravine below which were deep dark
caves that once sheltered runaway slaves
searching for the happiness of freedom, and I
thought of them as I poked under the snow on the
odd chance that I might find the green stick of
happiness that Leo Tolstoy’s beloved brother,
ten-year-old Nikolai, had once told the
five-year-old Leo was buried by a ravine on the
edge of the forest, a stick upon which were
written the secret words that would bring love,
peace, and happiness to everyone, and would do
away with death, for their mother had died three
years earlier and their father would die four
years later, but I saw nothing and continued
deeper into the forest to try to shed a sad
feeling from a lock-down that had brought my
spirits low as I tried to understand why so many
people I knew were so enslaved, their minds
forged in manacles, and how sad and dispirited
it made me knowing that they were locked away
from me in some conventional reality sold to
them by liars, but perhaps you like the word
depressed and you can use it if you want, but
all I know is that the spirit of happiness had
escaped me as I trudged deeper into the forest
between the high pine trees until the trail I
walked was intersected by another and a man met
me there, as if he knew I was coming, a man with
a long white beard and piercing eyes and we
nodded and then he continued beside me and asked
me what I was looking for, which startled me,
and I was speechless and he said he’s been
through here many times, especially by the
ravine, and Leo told me he never could find the
green stick of happiness his brother once told
him was buried there but he was not giving up,
he never would do that since he loved his
brother who would never lie, he knew the stick
existed and that’s why he himself was buried
there, and he told me to continue seeking,
because the stick was real and yes, those slaves
knew it and were in that ravine for a reason, so
we walked on as a man approached us who said his
name was Albert, and I said Camus, and he said
yes, let’s walk together guys,
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for these woods are dark and deep I know, but
look up at the sky, the clouds have parted and the
sparkling sky is speaking to us, right Leo, who said
yes, I remember when Andrei in my book War and Peace
lay wounded on the battlefield and looked at the
sky, I wrote that he realized then that that lofty
sky was infinite and that happiness was possible,
that especially in the midst of battle you have to
look up and realize that, that there are deeper
reasons for things and petty concerns shield the
spirit of truth and that even in the midst of war
you can glimpse that reality, and it sounded good, I
had heard their spiels before, or had read them to
be accurate, they were great writers but this was my
life and I couldn’t live in their books, but I
wasn’t reading, I was walking, or was I dreaming,
and then we came to the end of the path leading out
of the woods and the sky opened out from the vast
tree cover and they were gone and I was all alone
again as usual, dispirited and heading back home on
the road by the lake when I looked up at the
sparkling blue sky and light that radiated off the
snowy frozen lake and rose back to the sky in
columns of undulating glory and felt the sun that
had warmed the day and heard birds in the trees and
was overwhelmed with a rush of happiness I can’t
describe but it was not a dream and I walked in joy
for a few minutes, knowing I had found the stick and
that in the depth of winter, as Albert said, I had
finally learned that there was in me an invincible
summer, but that it came and went like running
water, like flowing air, but it was enough for now.
Albert Camus with his best friend Michel
Gallimard, both of whom died from a car crash on 4
January 1960. On the right is Jeannine, Michel’s
wife, who survived the crash.
“Albert Camus, Michel y Jeannine Gallimard”
by
Antonio Marín Segovia is licensed under
CC BY-NC-ND 2.0
Edward Curtin is an
independent writer whose work has appeared widely
over many years. His website is
edwardcurtin.com
and his new book is
Seeking Truth in a Country of
Lies
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