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Time & Perspective Quote by Xavier Herbert

"In the bush, time loses its continuity, its steadiness. In the bush, time becomes an event rather than a procession"

About this Quote

Herbert turns “the bush” into a solvent: step into it and the most modern of comforts, clock-time, starts to dissolve. The first clause is almost bureaucratic in its phrasing - “continuity,” “steadiness” - as if he’s describing a malfunctioning machine. Then he swaps the machine out for weather. Time doesn’t “pass” out there; it happens. That pivot from “procession” to “event” is the engine of the line, flipping a familiar metaphor of orderly forward motion into something episodic, even ambush-like.

The intent is less pastoral awe than cultural critique. Herbert, writing out of a settler society obsessed with schedules, progress narratives, and the myth of “developing” land, suggests the bush refuses to cooperate with imported notions of linear advancement. A “procession” implies civic order: a parade, a calendar, a nation moving somewhere on purpose. An “event” is discontinuous, demanding attention, not compliance. It’s the difference between time as administration and time as experience.

The subtext carries an Australian anxiety: that beyond the coastal grid, the continent doesn’t validate European expectations. Isolation, heat, distance, and risk reshape perception; days blur, then suddenly sharpen around storms, injuries, encounters. You’re not escorted by minutes; you’re interrupted by realities.

Context matters because Herbert’s work often wrestles with how landscape pressures identity and morality. Here, the bush isn’t a backdrop. It’s a narrative force that breaks the storyline of progress and reminds you that “steady” time is, in part, a social agreement.

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APA Style (7th ed.)
Herbert, Xavier. (2026, January 15). In the bush, time loses its continuity, its steadiness. In the bush, time becomes an event rather than a procession. FixQuotes. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/in-the-bush-time-loses-its-continuity-its-171562/

Chicago Style
Herbert, Xavier. "In the bush, time loses its continuity, its steadiness. In the bush, time becomes an event rather than a procession." FixQuotes. January 15, 2026. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/in-the-bush-time-loses-its-continuity-its-171562/.

MLA Style (9th ed.)
"In the bush, time loses its continuity, its steadiness. In the bush, time becomes an event rather than a procession." FixQuotes, 15 Jan. 2026, https://fixquotes.com/quotes/in-the-bush-time-loses-its-continuity-its-171562/. Accessed 21 Feb. 2026.

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In the bush time becomes an event not a procession
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About the Author

Xavier Herbert

Xavier Herbert (May 15, 1901 - November 10, 1984) was a Writer from Australia.

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