There
were two heavy facts that Nick accepted and lived with: life is hard,
full of work and pain and weariness, and at the end of it a man has got
to go farther than he can imagine from any place he knows. And yet
within the confines of those acknowledged facts,
he was a man rich in pleasures. They were not large pleasures, they
cost little or nothing, often they could not be anticipated, and yet
they surrounded him; they were possible at almost any time, or at odd
times, or at off times. They were pleasures to which
a man had to be acutely and intricately attentive, or he could not have
them at all. There were the elemental pleasures of eating and drinking
and resting, of being dry while it is raining, of getting dry after
getting wet, of getting warm again after getting
cold, of cooling off after getting hot. There was pleasure to be taken
in good work animals, as long as you remembered the bother and
irritation of using the other kind. There was pleasure in the appetites
and in the well-being of good animals. There was pleasure
in quitting work. There were certain pleasures in the work itself.
There was pleasure in hunting and in going to town, and in visiting and
in having company. There was pleasure in observing and remembering the
behavior of things, and in telling about it. There
was pleasure in knowing where a fox lived, and in planning to run it,
and in running it. And… Nick knew how to use his mind for pleasure; he
remembered and thought and pondered and imagined. He was a master of
what William Carlos Williams called the customs
of necessity.
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