The Book of the Damned - Charles Fort-pages

Page 3 of 376

Page 3 of 376
The Book of the Damned - Charles Fort-pages

Page Content (OCR)

is excluded. The irresistibleness of things that neither threaten nor jeer nor defy, but arrange themselves in mass- formations that pass and pass and keep on passing. So, by the damned, | mean the excluded. But by the excluded | mean that which will some day be the excluding. Or everything that is, won't be. And everything that isn't, will be-- But, of course, will be that which won't be-- It is our expression that the flux between that which isn't and that which won't be, or the state that is commonly and absurdly called "existence," is a rhythm of heavens and hells: that the damned won't stay damned; that salvation only precedes perdition. The inference is that some day our accursed tatterdemalions will be sleek angels. Then the sub-inference is that some later day, back they'll go whence they came. It is our expression that nothing can attempt to be, except by attempting to exclude something else: that that which is commonly called "being" is a state that is wrought more or less definitely proportionately to the appearance of positive difference between that which is included and that which But it is our expression that there are no positive differences: that all things are like a mouse and a bug in the heart of a cheese. Mouse and a bug: no two things could seem more unlike. They're there a week, or they stay there a month: both are then only transmutations of cheese. | think we're all bugs and mice, and are only different expressions of an all-inclusive cheese.