Gus: What’s to love? Where is the Whopper? Or the soul
that jumps in the living river – where is it? And where are these sages and
buddhas holing up, now that we really need them?
Titus: Would you know one if you met one? Have you even
looked? How hard did you look? How easy should they be to find? … Look, Gus:
why can’t a duffer like me catch fish? Isn’t the answer obvious? Isn’t it
because at my present level of skill the fish would have to be so damned dumb
and easily duped and utterly unelusive that they wouldn’t be worth catching?
How much more elusive should a thing so wondrous as the soul be? It’s not a
hatchery trout! And are you sure it’s never flashed inside you? What was it in
you that loved to watch Thomas Bigeater fish? What healed you and made you happy
the night you remembered Bill Bob’s pine knot and our elusive twins? What
nearly jumped out of your rib cage and ravaged your brain the day you met the
elusive Eddy?
Fisherman should be the easiest of men to convince to commence the search for the soul, because fishing is nothing but the pursuit of the elusive. Fish invisible to laymen like me are visible to anglers like you by a hundred subtle signs. How can you be so sagacious and patient in seeking fish, and so hasty and thick as to write off your soul because you can’t see it?
- David James Duncan, from The River Why
The book is always better (and this is one of the best), but the movie isn't bad ... and the music is outstanding.
Fisherman should be the easiest of men to convince to commence the search for the soul, because fishing is nothing but the pursuit of the elusive. Fish invisible to laymen like me are visible to anglers like you by a hundred subtle signs. How can you be so sagacious and patient in seeking fish, and so hasty and thick as to write off your soul because you can’t see it?
- David James Duncan, from The River Why
The book is always better (and this is one of the best), but the movie isn't bad ... and the music is outstanding.
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