Wednesday, January 7, 2009

The Rather Peculiar Case of a Clock.

When this little boy grew up, he was rather compelled to follow the path of his father's path of a clockwork artisan. But as he did, he found that there was a pretty handful of issues to contend to.

This boy knew not the world and likewise did the world, as he was himself a much more latent person, and was never the sociable little player. And in all his free time, he used to think. And thinking soon became a practice to him, and long before he knew it, he found that rather this clockwork workshop, his father had, is a very interesting yet it was not what he had wanted.

He grew up then, as a precocious child and soon found that he was not the only one who lived off the lane, he find that in all the years of helping his father, he has understood how each piece of gear fits into a clock precisely, and how it was that these whole gears work together as a clock.

"This is my large clock", he thought," And maybe I would make changes to its little gears and make this clock different." He set out and never looked back. He knew that being a clockwork artisan wasn't at all the life he wanted, but as a settlement for his soul for a little bit of peace.

He pushed the little gears, changed them, and see that his works of precious clockworks coming to life, yet he was unable to change that large clock he had. The clock would always ring the same, and it would always end up the same, however more he push and clanked, the clock was ever the same. He tried changing all the gears but to no avail, he tried refining the gears but also to naught.

The gears chinked on and the world moved on, and that little artisan that continued to work on. He changed the clock, in his little ways, yet he found that the clock were not derived of its original behaviour, which proved to foil his efforts. Rather later then, he found out the truth. It was this little gears which proved to be of a difference, yet the clock as a whole wasn't. He realised, "If it is the clock that is not working, change the gears only, it will only put it back upon the state it were before it dislodged. But if to change the clock itself, is to change its entirety, then do so, but never stop, or it will fall back to what it was."

Commentary: To be exact, if it weren't metaphorical, this would make no sense. And it would also make no sense, if you can barely read the title. He also said,"I relish radish."

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