This is about as inspiring as it gets. It is a famous story, but I hadn't read it before. About a quiet man who spent his days planting trees in the mountains, ending up revitalizing a whole region. Having arrived at the place he had been heading for, he begin to pound his iron rod into the ground. This made a hole in which he placed an acorn, whereupon he covered over the hole again. He was planting oak trees. I asked him if the land belonged to him. He answered no. Did he know whose land it was? He did not know. He supposed that it was communal land, or perhaps it belonged to someone who did not care about it. He himself did not care to know who the owners were. In this way he planted his one hundred acorns with great care.
After the noon meal, he began once more to pick over his acorns. I must have put enough insistence into my questions, because he answered them. For three years now he had been planting trees in this solitary way. He had planted one hundred thousand. Of these one hundred thousand, twenty thousand had come up. He counted on losing another half of them to rodents and to everything else that is unpredictable in the designs of Providence. That left ten thousand oaks that would grow in this place where before there was nothing. The full text is below in the More link, or you can find it here. It is translated from French, and you find the French version here. It is in the public domain, so you can copy it as much as you want. [ Inspiration | 2005-04-25 13:47 | | PermaLink ] More >
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