On Waiting
Posted on August 22, 2007
Filed Under Aphorisms |
Waiting. It happens so often, so imperceptibly, and in the strangest locations—at elevators and intersections, by bedsides and telephones, in dentists’ offices and train stations. Stop whatever you are doing, even for an instant, and waiting instantly takes its place. It leaks in, like water, to fill up every available space. But waiting is not a passive state. Is a seed waiting before it germinates? Is a bird waiting as it incubates its eggs? These little intervals—between one breath and the next, between a missed opportunity and a second chance—are hard work, periods of intense activity, frantic preparation.
He also serves who only stands and waits
John Milton wrote in Paradise Lost.
What we do while doing nothing cannot be done in haste.
This abbreviated essay originally appeared in the September issue of Ode, on newsstands now.
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The late Hungarian-born British author George Mikes (1912–1987) once said: “All English shop assistants are Miltonists. A Miltonist firmly believes that ‘they also serve who only stand and wait’.”
The Milton line comes in two versions: the one cited by James Geary from “Paradise Lost” and the Gorge Mikes quotation, cited by Max, which comes from his sonnet generally called “On His Blindness”.
A.E. Housman thought malt could do more than Milton can “to justify God’s ways to man,” the last a phrase echoed from the opening lines of “Paradise Lost.