A Week on the Concord and Merrimack Rivers eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 434 pages of information about A Week on the Concord and Merrimack Rivers.

A Week on the Concord and Merrimack Rivers eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 434 pages of information about A Week on the Concord and Merrimack Rivers.
were so little considered, so shallow and flimsy, that I thought the very texture of the paper must be weaker in that part and tear the more easily.  The advertisements and the prices current were more closely allied to nature, and were respectable in some measure as tide and meteorological tables are; but the reading-matter, which I remembered was most prized down below, unless it was some humble record of science, or an extract from some old classic, struck me as strangely whimsical, and crude, and one-idea’d, like a school-boy’s theme, such as youths write and after burn.  The opinions were of that kind that are doomed to wear a different aspect to-morrow, like last year’s fashions; as if mankind were very green indeed, and would be ashamed of themselves in a few years, when they had outgrown this verdant period.  There was, moreover, a singular disposition to wit and humor, but rarely the slightest real success; and the apparent success was a terrible satire on the attempt; the Evil Genius of man laughed the loudest at his best jokes.  The advertisements, as I have said, such as were serious, and not of the modern quack kind, suggested pleasing and poetic thoughts; for commerce is really as interesting as nature.  The very names of the commodities were poetic, and as suggestive as if they had been inserted in a pleasing poem,—­Lumber, Cotton, Sugar, Hides, Guano, Logwood.  Some sober, private, and original thought would have been grateful to read there, and as much in harmony with the circumstances as if it had been written on a mountain-top; for it is of a fashion which never changes, and as respectable as hides and logwood, or any natural product.  What an inestimable companion such a scrap of paper would have been, containing some fruit of a mature life.  What a relic!  What a recipe!  It seemed a divine invention, by which not mere shining coin, but shining and current thoughts, could be brought up and left there.

As it was cold, I collected quite a pile of wood and lay down on a board against the side of the building, not having any blanket to cover me, with my head to the fire, that I might look after it, which is not the Indian rule.  But as it grew colder towards midnight, I at length encased myself completely in boards, managing even to put a board on top of me, with a large stone on it, to keep it down, and so slept comfortably.  I was reminded, it is true, of the Irish children, who inquired what their neighbors did who had no door to put over them in winter nights as they had; but I am convinced that there was nothing very strange in the inquiry.  Those who have never tried it can have no idea how far a door, which keeps the single blanket down, may go toward making one comfortable.  We are constituted a good deal like chickens, which taken from the hen, and put in a basket of cotton in the chimney-corner, will often peep till they die, nevertheless, but if you put in a book, or anything heavy, which will press down the

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A Week on the Concord and Merrimack Rivers from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.