12.5.12

Paths vs Roads

”A metaphor illustrating this contrast is found in Wendell Berry’s essay “A Native Hill.” Berry writes:

“The difference between a path and a road is not only the obvious one. A path is little more than a habit that comes with knowledge of a place. It is a sort of ritual familiarity. As a form, it is a form of contact with a known landscape. It is not destructive. It is the perfect adaptation, through experience and familiarity, of movement to place; it obeys the natural contours; such obstacles as it meets it goes around. A road, on the other hand, even the most primitive road, embodies a resistance against the landscape. Its reason is not simply the necessity for movement, but haste. Its wish is to avoid contact with the landscape; it seeks so far as possible to go over the country, rather than through it; its aspiration, as we see clearly in the example of our modern freeways, is to be a bridge; its tendency is to translate place into space in order to traverse it with the least effort. It is destructive, seeking to remove or destroy all obstacles in its way.”

http://gramercyimages.com/blog1/2011/02/14/wendell-berry-c-s-lewis-j-r-r-tolkien-and-the-dangers-of-a-technological-mindset/

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