After the shipwreck of our species, which is as inevitable as our own individual deaths, everything in James’s human cloud bank will go, but this blessed earth will live on, and the clouds and sun will continue to radiate for a season, and the beauty that pulses in our senses will continue to pulse to other senses or just to itself, and that will be enough. Knowing that this beauty will persist gives some comfort. When we go, natality might well bring something new forth. There might be long periods of anoxic oceans and arid wastelands, but something will happen and eventually wildflowers might sprout in the ash we left behind. The end of the human species is a comic prospect, not only a tragic one, in the strict sense that comedy involves the regeneration of life. Melville wrote: “Yet there is hope. Time and tide flow wide.”15 Perhaps some other intelligent species will evolve after millions and millions of years, and will do a better job. Time and tide flow wide! As long as we have the clouds, we have hope and fight and love. Knowing that we have their beauty and each other now is too much to take. It is enough and to spare.