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.

Yet, after all, the truly efficient laborer will not crowd his day with work, but will saunter to his task surrounded by a wide halo of ease and leisure, and then do but what he loves best.  He is anxious only about the fruitful kernels of time.  Though the hen should sit all day, she could lay only one egg, and, besides, would not have picked up materials for another.  Let a man take time enough for the most trivial deed, though it be but the paring of his nails.  The buds swell imperceptibly, without hurry or confusion, as if the short spring days were an eternity.

     Then spend an age in whetting thy desire,
     Thou needs’t not hasten if thou dost stand fast.

Some hours seem not to be occasion for any deed, but for resolves to draw breath in.  We do not directly go about the execution of the purpose that thrills us, but shut our doors behind us and ramble with prepared mind, as if the half were already done.  Our resolution is taking root or hold on the earth then, as seeds first send a shoot downward which is fed by their own albumen, ere they send one upward to the light.

There is a sort of homely truth and naturalness in some books which is very rare to find, and yet looks cheap enough.  There may be nothing lofty in the sentiment, or fine in the expression, but it is careless country talk.  Homeliness is almost as great a merit in a book as in a house, if the reader would abide there.  It is next to beauty, and a very high art.  Some have this merit only.  The scholar is not apt to make his most familiar experience come gracefully to the aid of his expression.  Very few men can speak of Nature, for instance, with any truth.  They overstep her modesty, somehow or other, and confer no favor.  They do not speak a good word for her.  Most cry better than they speak, and you can get more nature out of them by pinching than by addressing them.  The surliness with which the woodchopper speaks of his woods, handling them as indifferently as his axe, is better than the mealy-mouthed enthusiasm of the lover of nature.  Better that the primrose by the river’s brim be a yellow primrose, and nothing more, than that it be something less.  Aubrey relates of Thomas Fuller that his was “a very working head, insomuch that, walking and meditating before dinner, he would eat up a penny loaf, not knowing that he did it.  His natural memory was very great, to which he added the art of memory.  He would repeat to you forwards and backwards all the signs from Ludgate to Charing Cross.”  He says of Mr. John Hales, that, “He loved Canarie,” and was buried “under an altar monument of black marble--------with a too long epitaph”; of Edmund Halley, that he “at sixteen could make a dial, and then, he said, he thought himself a brave fellow”; of William Holder, who wrote a book upon his curing one Popham who was deaf and dumb, “he was beholding to no author; did only consult with nature.”  For the most

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