Raise High the Roof Beam, Carpenters and Seymour: an Introduction Isolation Quotes

How we cite our quotes: Citations follow this format: (Story.Section.Paragraph)

Quote #10

One of the few things left in the world, aside from the world itself, that sadden me every day is an awareness that you get upset if Boo Boo or Walt tells you you're saying something that sounds like me. You sort of take it as an accusation of piracy, a little slam at your individuality. Is it so bad that we sometimes sound like each other? The membrane is so thin between us. Is it so important for us to keep in mind which is worse? That time, two summers ago when I was out so long, I was able to trace that you and Z. and I have been brothers for no fewer than four incarnations, maybe more. Is there no beauty in that? For us, doesn't each of our individualities begin right at the point where we own up to our extremely close connections and accept the inevitability of borrowing one another's jokes, talents, idiocies? ("Seymour" 1.35)

It really seems that the only break from isolation for either Buddy or Seymour was in each other. Now that Seymour is dead, Buddy still seeks him out (through all this writing) as a companion.