Context:
Among
the
hard
rock
stones
at
the
core
of
human
sentience,
of
human
consciousness,
the
rock
of
repetition
is
at
the
center.
Repetition
is
the
gateway
to
memories
and
the
throughway
to
the
space-time
of
human
self-understanding.
Here
then
is
the
repeated
memory
of
Albert
Camus.
The Myth Of Sisyphus
The
gods
had
condemned
Sisyphus
to
ceaselessly
rolling
a
rock
to
the
top
of
a
mountain,
whence
the
stone
would
fall
back
of
its
own
weight.
They
had
thought
with
some
reason
that
there
is
no
more
dreadful
punishment
than
futile
and
hopeless
labor.
If
one
believes
Homer,
Sisyphus
was
the
wisest
and
most
prudent
of
mortals.
According
to
another
tradition,
however,
he
was
disposed
to
practice
the
profession
of
highwayman.
I
see
no
contradiction
in
this.
Opinions
differ
as
to
the
reasons
why
he
became
the
futile
laborer
of
the
underworld.
To
begin
with,
he
is
accused
of
a
certain
levity
in
regard
to
the
gods.
He
stole
their
secrets.
Egina,
the
daughter
of
Esopus,
was
carried
off
by
Jupiter.
The
father
was
shocked
by
that
disappearance
and
complained
to
Sisyphus.
He,
who
knew
of
the
abduction,
offered
to
tell
about
it
on
condition
that
Esopus
would
give
water
to
the
citadel
of
Corinth.
To
the
celestial
thunderbolts
he
preferred
the
benediction
of
water.
He
was
punished
for
this
in
the
underworld.
Homer
tells
us
also
that
Sisyphus
had
put
Death
in
chains.
Pluto
could
not
endure
the
sight
of
his
deserted,
silent
empire.
He
dispatched
the
god
of
war,
who
liberated
Death
from
the
hands
of
her
conqueror.
It
is
said
that
Sisyphus,
being
near
to
death,
rashly
wanted
to
test
his
wife's
love.
He
ordered
her
to
cast
his
unburied
body
into
the
middle
of
the
public
square.
Sisyphus
woke
up
in
the
underworld.
And
there,
annoyed
by
an
obedience
so
contrary
to
human
love,
he
obtained
from
Pluto
permission
to
return
to
earth
in
order
to
chastise
his
wife.
But
when
he
had
seen
again
the
face
of
this
world,
enjoyed
water
and
sun,
warm
stones
and
the
sea,
he
no
longer
wanted
to
go
back
to
the
infernal
darkness.
Recalls,
signs
of
anger,
warnings
were
of
no
avail.
Many
years
more
he
lived
facing
the
curve
of
the
gulf,
the
sparkling
sea,
and
the
smiles
of
earth.
A
decree
of
the
gods
was
necessary.
Mercury
came
and
seized
the
impudent
man
by
the
collar
and,
snatching
him
from
his
joys,
lead
him
forcibly
back
to
the
underworld,
where
his
rock
was
ready
for
him.
You
have
already
grasped
that
Sisyphus
is
the
absurd
hero.
He
is,
as
much
through
his
passions
as
through
his
torture.
His
scorn
of
the
gods,
his
hatred
of
death,
and
his
passion
for
life
won
him
that
unspeakable
penalty
in
which
the
whole
being
is
exerted
toward
accomplishing
nothing.
This
is
the
price
that
must
be
paid
for
the
passions
of
this
earth.
Nothing
is
told
us
about
Sisyphus
in
the
underworld.
Myths
are
made
for
the
imagination
to
breathe
life
into
them.
As
for
this
myth,
one
sees
merely
the
whole
effort
of
a
body
straining
to
raise
the
huge
stone,
to
roll
it,
and
push
it
up
a
slope
a
hundred
times
over;
one
sees
the
face
screwed
up,
the
cheek
tight
against
the
stone,
the
shoulder
bracing
the
clay-covered
mass,
the
foot
wedging
it,
the
fresh
start
with
arms
outstretched,
the
wholly
human
security
of
two
earth-clotted
hands.
At
the
very
end
of
his
long
effort
measured
by
skyless
space
and
time
without
depth,
the
purpose
is
achieved.
Then
Sisyphus
watches
the
stone
rush
down
in
a
few
moments
toward
that
lower
world
whence
he
will
have
to
push
it
up
again
toward
the
summit.
He
goes
back
down
to
the
plain.
It
is
during
that
return,
that
pause,
that
Sisyphus
interests
me.
A
face
that
toils
so
close
to
stones
is
already
stone
itself!
I
see
that
man
going
back
down
with
a
heavy
yet
measured
step
toward
the
torment
of
which
he
will
never
know
the
end.
That
hour
like
a
breathing-space
which
returns
as
surely
as
his
suffering,
that
is
the
hour
of
consciousness.
At
each
of
those
moments
when
he
leaves
the
heights
and
gradually
sinks
toward
the
lairs
of
the
gods,
he
is
superior
to
his
fate.
He
is
stronger
than
his
rock.
If
this
myth
is
tragic,
that
is
because
its
hero
is
conscious.
Where
would
his
torture
be,
indeed,
if
at
every
step
the
hope
of
succeeding
upheld
him?
The
workman
of
today
works
everyday
in
his
life
at
the
same
tasks,
and
his
fate
is
no
less
absurd.
But
it
is
tragic
only
at
the
rare
moments
when
it
becomes
conscious.
Sisyphus,
proletarian
of
the
gods,
powerless
and
rebellious,
knows
the
whole
extent
of
his
wretched
condition:
it
is
what
he
thinks
of
during
his
descent.
The
lucidity
that
was
to
constitute
his
torture
at
the
same
time
crowns
his
victory.
There
is
no
fate
that
can
not
be
surmounted
by
scorn.
If
the
descent
is
thus
sometimes
performed
in
sorrow,
it
can
also
take
place
in
joy.
This
word
is
not
too
much.
Again
I
fancy
Sisyphus
returning
toward
his
rock,
and
the
sorrow
was
in
the
beginning.
When
the
images
of
earth
cling
too
tightly
to
memory,
when
the
call
of
happiness
becomes
too
insistent,
it
happens
that
melancholy
arises
in
man's
heart:
this
is
the
rock's
victory,
this
is
the
rock
itself.
The
boundless
grief
is
too
heavy
to
bear.
These
are
our
nights
of
Gethsemane.
But
crushing
truths
perish
from
being
acknowledged.
Thus,
Edipus
at
the
outset
obeys
fate
without
knowing
it.
But
from
the
moment
he
knows,
his
tragedy
begins.
Yet
at
the
same
moment,
blind
and
desperate,
he
realizes
that
the
only
bond
linking
him
to
the
world
is
the
cool
hand
of
a
girl.
Then
a
tremendous
remark
rings
out:
"Despite
so
many
ordeals,
my
advanced
age
and
the
nobility
of
my
soul
make
me
conclude
that
all
is
well."
Sophocles'
Edipus,
like
Dostoevsky's
Kirilov,
thus
gives
the
recipe
for
the
absurd
victory.
Ancient
wisdom
confirms
modern
heroism.
One
does
not
discover
the
absurd
without
being
tempted
to
write
a
manual
of
happiness.
"What!---by
such
narrow
ways--?"
There
is
but
one
world,
however.
Happiness
and
the
absurd
are
two
sons
of
the
same
earth.
They
are
inseparable.
It
would
be
a
mistake
to
say
that
happiness
necessarily
springs
from
the
absurd.
discovery.
It
happens
as
well
that
the
felling
of
the
absurd
springs
from
happiness.
"I
conclude
that
all
is
well,"
says
Edipus,
and
that
remark
is
sacred.
It
echoes
in
the
wild
and
limited
universe
of
man.
It
teaches
that
all
is
not,
has
not
been,
exhausted.
It
drives
out
of
this
world
a
god
who
had
come
into
it
with
dissatisfaction
and
a
preference
for
futile
suffering.
It
makes
of
fate
a
human
matter,
which
must
be
settled
among
men.
All
Sisyphus'
silent
joy
is
contained
therein.
His
fate
belongs
to
him.
His
rock
is
a
thing
Likewise,
the
absurd
man,
when
he
contemplates
his
torment,
silences
all
the
idols.
In
the
universe
suddenly
restored
to
its
silence,
the
myriad
wondering
little
voices
of
the
earth
rise
up.
Unconscious,
secret
calls,
invitations
from
all
the
faces,
they
are
the
necessary
reverse
and
price
of
victory.
There
is
no
sun
without
shadow,
and
it
is
essential
to
know
the
night.
The
absurd
man
says
yes
and
his
efforts
will
henceforth
be
unceasing.
If
there
is
a
personal
fate,
there
is
no
higher
destiny,
or
at
least
there
is,
but
one
which
he
concludes
is
inevitable
and
despicable.
For
the
rest,
he
knows
himself
to
be
the
master
of
his
days.
At
that
subtle
moment
when
man
glances
backward
over
his
life,
Sisyphus
returning
toward
his
rock,
in
that
slight
pivoting
he
contemplates
that
series
of
unrelated
actions
which
become
his
fate,
created
by
him,
combined
under
his
memory's
eye
and
soon
sealed
by
his
death.
Thus,
convinced
of
the
wholly
human
origin
of
all
that
is
human,
a
blind
man
eager
to
see
who
knows
that
the
night
has
no
end,
he
is
still
on
the
go.
The
rock
is
still
rolling.
I
leave
Sisyphus
at
the
foot
of
the
mountain!
One
always
finds
one's
burden
again.
But
Sisyphus
teaches
the
higher
fidelity
that
negates
the
gods
and
raises
rocks.
He
too
concludes
that
all
is
well.
This
universe
henceforth
without
a
master
seems
to
him
neither
sterile
nor
futile.
Each
atom
of
that
stone,
each
mineral
flake
of
that
night
filled
mountain,
in
itself
forms
a
world.
The
struggle
itself
toward
the
heights
is
enough
to
fill
a
man's
heart.
One
must
imagine
Sisyphus
happy.
Albert Camus
Context:
One must imagine that one is happy.
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