It was difficult to imagine that a full day hadn't yet passed since we boarded the airliner in New York. I paused. Medieval man believed that one was placed beyond the touch of time, and therefore aging, while attending Mass. What, I wondered, would he have made of those hours we left up in the sky? I would not change my watch until I gave the matter more thought. Tod Wodicka
About This Quote

Alfred Lord Tennyson expressed his thoughts on the passage of time in the above quote. He was born in 1809, so he would have recognized that this was a very important issue. He believed that time was something that came to an end with death. Even though he lived through the Industrial Revolution that began in England, he believed that everything had to be done in a particular way to preserve the past.

At the same time, he understood how much progress has been made in the world. Of course, it is impossible for him to know what things will become in the future.

Source: All Shall Be Well; And All Shall Be Well; And All Manner Of Things Shall Be Well

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