Eugene Delacroix pinpoints one of the seldom-mentioned riches of creative work:
To feel that you have done what should be done raises you in your own eyes. After that, if you have no other reason for pleasure, you enjoy that chief of pleasures, which is self-content. The satisfaction of the man who has worked and made good use of his day is immense. When I am in that state, it is delightful for me, afterward, to enjoy my rest and even the mildest recreations. Indeed, I can find myself in the company of the most tiresome people, and feel no regret about it. The memory of the task that I have accomplished comes back to me and preserves me from boredom and sadness.
(Quoted from page 294 of The Life of the Creative Spirit, by H. Charles Romesburg. Xlibris, 2001.)
For a brief biography of Eugene Delacroix, click here. For images of or relating to Eugene Delacroix, click here.
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