| The Columbia World of Quotations. 1996. |
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| NUMBER: | 39817 |
| QUOTATION: | The redwood forest, the remains of a virgin sequoia forest. The interiors of certain Gothic cathedralsStrasbourg, for examplereplicate mans smallness and helplessness in his middle zone between hell and heaven, amid the columns of the primeval forests which still covered large areas of Europe when the cathe drals were built. But Europe never had trees like the redwoods, whose life span number over two thousand years. This forest is the idea of forest, a prototype drawn by God; no church columns attain that height, and never does a churchs semi-darkness contrast so sharply with a ray slanting in from above the reach of sight. |
| ATTRIBUTION: | Czeslaw Milosz (b. 1911), Lithuanianborn Polish poet. Symbolic Mountains and Forests, Visions from San Francisco Bay, Farrar Straus (1982). |
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| | | The Columbia World of Quotations. Copyright © 1996 Columbia University Press. |
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