That was the name of a play, the script of which I once took out of a library, but never got around to reading it.
It sparked a momentary interest in Eugene O’Neill’s work, but I found it a little hard to understand. Of course, back then, when I knew little about anything, it was basically a mystery.
It did fuel a brief dalliance with books with a deeper meaning for a short time, one of which was Alan Sillitoe’s Saturday Night and Sunday Morning, but more intriguing of his works was called The Loneliness of the Long-Distance Runner.
While it could be said the literal meaning of that title was rather true, having done a little long-distance running mostly in the final years of school, and realizing it was a lonely sport, it was probably the first time I discovered allegory.
But aside from all that, it led to a foray into more salacious books such as The Postman Always Rings Twice.
And, don’t get me started on D H Lawrence’s Lady Chatterley’s Lover.
However, I’m doing my usual digression, so back to the point…
Taking it in the literal sense, you can do a long day’s work, not get finished by the time you are supposed to go home, and then decide to burn the midnight oil, i.e., work on into the night.
And some days, you know the ones, where time literally drags, and it feels like forever before it’s time to go home, sometimes in darkness, for a variety of reasons, not just the obvious!
Other times, like when reading a good book, you pick it up in the morning, and the next thing you know, it’s night, and the day is gone. That was a ‘journey’ but a pleasant one. Long ago, that used to happen to me a lot.
Now, I hardly get time to read, let alone write, and for some strange reason, retirement is much harder than being at work.
Perhaps I should have taken those time management courses when they were offered.