In literature The phrase was popular in England in the early 20th century. In
Swallows and Amazons, published in 1930 by the English children's author
Arthur Ransome, the theft and eventual return of "Captain Flint's" memoirs
Mixed Moss by A Rolling Stone, forms an important narrative in the story. In
The Rolling Stones, a 1952 novel by science fiction author
Robert A. Heinlein, a family travels throughout the Solar System looking for adventure and money. Hazel Stone, the grandmother, justifies the initiation of their rootless existence saying: "this city life is getting us covered with moss", when they buy their ship, with the theme carrying throughout the book. In
The Return of the King (1955) by
J.R.R. Tolkien,
Gandalf tells the
hobbits that
Tom Bombadil "...is a moss-gatherer, and I have been a stone doomed to rolling. But my rolling days are ending, and now we shall have much to say to one another." Though the two are both ancient figures, Gandalf has remained involved throughout history, until here where his story is beginning to recede from the realms of men.
Philip K. Dick's
science fiction novel
We Can Build You, written in 1962, features a fictionalized psychiatric test for
schizophrenia in which a person is asked for the meaning of the proverb (see below).
In music Union activist
Joe Hill's last will, written in the form of a song in 1915, states: "My kin don't need to fuss and moan / Moss does not cling to rolling stone."
Hank Williams's "
Lost Highway" (1948) opened with the line "I'm a rolling stone/All alone and lost", inspiring later songs to use the
rolling stone metaphor, many of which dropped the reference to moss. "
Rollin' Stone" is a 1950 song recorded by blues legend
Muddy Waters, which inspired the band name
The Rolling Stones, and the 1965 song "
Like a Rolling Stone" by
Bob Dylan, which in turn inspired the magazine
Rolling Stone.
Don McLean's "
American Pie" (1971) includes the lyrics "Now for ten years we've been on our own / And moss grows fat on a rollin' stone".
The Temptations released a notable cover of the song "
Papa Was a Rollin' Stone" in 1972 about an absent father.
Dave Matthew's "
Busted Stuff" (2002) verse shares "Rolling Stone gathers no moss, but leaves a trail of busted stuff". "
Flames", a 2019 song by
ZAYN,
R3HAB and Jungleboi contains the line "'Cause I'm a rolling stone / And I keep rolling on". "
Start Nowhere", a song released in 2022 by
Sam Hunt includes the lyrics "Well I don't know but I've been told / Moss don't grow on a rolling stone".
In psychiatry Because it is so well known, the saying is one of the most common proverbs used in psychological tests for mental illness. American psychiatric research conducted in the 1950s between control groups of healthy Air Force personnel against hospitalized Veterans Administration patients with
schizophrenia found that the lack of
abstraction ability was statistically higher in the VA patients. This led researchers to believe that persons with mental illness were only capable of "concrete" thinking, or interpreting metaphorical or abstract concepts literally, often simply restating the proverb in different words. The American writer
Ken Kesey, who had participated in Air Force mental health studies using
LSD, derided what he felt were the simplistic conclusions of these psychiatrists in a scene in his 1962 novel ''
One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest''. The protagonist, asked by a psychologist what he thinks the proverb means, guesses "It's hard for something to grow on something that's moving." At the end of the novel he is forced to submit to a
lobotomy, partially "justified" by the perceived "pathology" indicated by his "concrete" response. The research results have, in practice, often been improperly generalized to suggest a lack of metaphorical understanding of proverbs alone can be an indicator of mental illness.
In film and TV The 1975 film ''
One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest'' included the book's scene with McMurphy ridiculing the psychologist. In 2005 the television show
MythBusters rolled a stone constantly for six months, and did not measure any moss growth during that time. One of the limousines says the proverb in the last scene of Leos Carax's
Holy Motors (2012).
In comics A gag of
George Herriman's
Krazy Kat has Krazy run behind a rolling stone on
Ignatz Mouse's account, to literally see whether "it gathers any moss?" ==See also==