Hello.
The quotation is actually from John Butler Yeats, father of W.B.
Yeats.
In a long letter dated June 2, 1909, John Butler Yeats wrote to a Miss
Grierson:
"It is only when time hangs heavy on our hands that we turn to art and
deman the right thing from artists and dramatists and poets and
painters. Here they are too busy with the material conditions of
happiness, as yet they have not addressed themselves directly to
happiness. And happiness... what is it? I say it is neither virtue nor
pleasure nor this thing or that, but simply growth. We are happy when
we are growing. It is the primal law of all nature and the universe,
and literature and art are the cosmic movements working in the
conscious mind."
From: Page 121 of J.B. Yeats' "Letters to His Son W.B. Yeats and
Others 1869-1922" (E.P. Dutton & Co., 1946).
Copies of this book are widely available at libraries and from used
book dealers such as those listed on Alibris:
http://www.alibris.com/search/detail.cfm?chunk=25&qauth=Yeats%20Jack&qtit=J%20B%20Yeats%20Letters%20to%20His%20Son&S=R&bid=8034725075&pqtynew=&page=1&matches=1&qsort=p
search strategy: a google search of the quotation located a document
that credit the quotation to WB Yeats, but cited Lewis Mumford's book
"The Conduct of Life" (1951) as a source. I looked at that book and it
actually attributed the quotation to the letters of J.B. Yeats.
I hope this helps. |