p. 114
”’Everything passes,’ his father said huskily. ‘This too shall pass away’ are words more comforting than any I ever found in the Bible. Abraham Lincoln said them, in a speech before the war between the states. He was referring to a story about an Eastern potentate who asked wise men for a sentence that would be good for all occasions, and that’s what they came up with. ‘This, too, shall pass away.’ It’s good when you’re high and good when you’re low.”
Categorized In Life
In the Beauty of the Lilies
Updike, John | Knopf, 1996