RCNelson said:
I just googled and found Paladin of the Lost Hour on the web.
Thanks. I just read it. I had never done so, although I saw Ellison get the award at Worldcon. It comes across to me as a fairly cynical manipulation of the wish-fulfillment formula. It's almost as if Ellison thought to himself, "Ha ha! I'll sit down and write a tearjerker."
Also in the wish-fulfillment category, but to me not as cynical, is the last line in Ray Bradbury's
I Sing the Body Electric. Also from Bradbury, the scene where the father decides to laugh at the Dust Witch, the story about the boy with the birthday and the stars as candles, the story about the luggage shop on Mars, and many others.
From Dick, the scene in
Flow My Tears, the Policeman Said, in which Felix, after having passed through to a gentler universe, lands at the filling station and presents the picture to the black man.
From Pohl, the last chapter in
Gateway.
From Fitzgerald, the scene in
The Great Gatsby with the shirts.
From the unknown author of the
Poema de Mio Cid, the one line (in modern translation) "de los sus ojos tan fuertamente llorando," roughly, "from those his eyes so strongly crying." Mostly because of the viewpoint of Spanish culture, that crying and expressing emotion is an essential property of masculine strengh, in contrast to the stiff upper lip of Anglo culture.
I have to reread Don Marquis. A lot of good stuff in there.
From Nietzsche, "The Grave Song" and the pre-penultimate line, "Only where there are graves are there resurrections."
This is only the crying and spine-shivering stuff. Projectile vomiting is also a physical reaction, and I'm sure there's more literature that would support that.