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Joy Quote by Lewis J. Bates

"The joy late coming late departs"

About this Quote

A single line that behaves like a warning label: delay your happiness and it will slip through your fingers twice. Bates compresses a whole moral psychology into a tight, almost proverbial rhythm. The repetition of "late" isn’t decorative; it’s the mechanism. First "late" frames joy as something postponed - not denied, just deferred. The second "late" arrives like a verdict, turning procrastination into consequence. The line moves from arrival to exit in eight words, making time feel predatory and impatient.

The subtext is less about punctuality than about readiness. Joy, in this view, isn’t a stable possession you can schedule like a meeting. It’s a visitor with its own timetable, one that depends on conditions: attention, openness, the willingness to take a moment seriously when it shows up. If you keep telling yourself you’ll celebrate after the next milestone, the next fix, the next promotion, you don’t just miss joy; you train yourself to distrust it. By the time it finally appears, you’re practiced at deferring - and the feeling can’t take root.

Contextually, Bates reads like a minor late-19th-century or early-20th-century moralist-poet, working in that tradition of aphoristic verse meant to be memorized, recited, and used as self-governance. The line’s economy is the point: joy is fleeting, and the language refuses to indulge. It hurries you, on purpose.

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TopicJoy
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The joy late coming late departs
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Lewis J. Bates is a notable figure.

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