Afoot in England eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 290 pages of information about Afoot in England.

Afoot in England eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 290 pages of information about Afoot in England.
most intelligent and responsive people of their class I had ever encountered.  It was a delightful experience to go into their cottages, not to read them a homily or to present them with a book or a shilling, nor to inquire into their welfare, material and spiritual, but to converse intimately with a human interest in them, as would be the case in a country where there are no caste distinctions.  It was delightful, because they were so responsive, so sympathetic, so alive.  Now it was just at this time, when the subject was in my mind, that the book of sonnets came into my hands—­given to me by the generous caretaker—­and I read in it this one on “Innocent Amusements":-

   There lacks a something to complete the round
     Of our fair England’s homely happiness
     A something, yet how oft do trifles bless
   When greater gifts by far redound
   To honours lone, but no responsive sound
     Of joy or mirth awake, nay, oft oppress,
     While gifts of which we scarce the moment guess
   In never-failing joys abound. 
   No nation can be truly great
     That hath not something childlike in its life
     Of every day; it should its youth renew
   With simple joys that sweetly recreate
     The jaded mind, conjoined in friendly strife
     The pleasures of its childhood days pursue.

What wise and kindly thoughts he had—­the old squire of Norton!  Surely, when telling me the story of his life, they had omitted something!  I questioned them on the point.  Did he not in all the years he was at Norton House, and later when he lived among them in a cottage in the village—­did he not go into their homes and meet them as if he knew and felt that they were all of the same flesh, children of one universal Father, and did he not make them feel this about him—­that the differences in fortune and position and education were mere accidents?  And the answer was:  No, certainly not! as if I had asked a preposterous question.  He was the squire, a gentleman—­any one might understand that he could not come among them like that!  That is what a parson can do because he is, so to speak, paid to keep an eye on them, and besides it’s religion there and a different thing.  But the squire!—­their squire, that dignified old gentleman, so upright in his saddle, so considerate and courteous to every one—­but he never forgot his position—­never in that way!  I also asked if he had never tried to establish, or advocated, or suggested to them any kind of reunions to take place from time to time, or an entertainment or festival to get them to come pleasantly together, making a brightness in their lives—­something which would not be cricket or football, nor any form of sport for a few of the men, all the others being mere lookers-on and the women and children left out altogether; something which would be for and include everyone, from the oldest grey labourer no longer able to work to the toddling little ones; something of their own invention, peculiar to Norton, which would be their pride and make their village dearer to them?  And the answer was still no, and no, and no.  He had never attempted, never suggested, anything of the sort.  How could he—­the squire!  Yet he wrote those wise words:—­

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Afoot in England from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.