An Inland Voyage eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 138 pages of information about An Inland Voyage.

An Inland Voyage eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 138 pages of information about An Inland Voyage.

And we must all set our pocket-watches by the clock of fate.  There is a headlong, forthright tide, that bears away man with his fancies like a straw, and runs fast in time and space.  It is full of curves like this, your winding river of the Oise; and lingers and returns in pleasant pastorals; and yet, rightly thought upon, never returns at all.  For though it should revisit the same acre of meadow in the same hour, it will have made an ample sweep between-whiles; many little streams will have fallen in; many exhalations risen towards the sun; and even although it were the same acre, it will no more be the same river of Oise.  And thus, O graces of Origny, although the wandering fortune of my life should carry me back again to where you await death’s whistle by the river, that will not be the old I who walks the street; and those wives and mothers, say, will those be you?

There was never any mistake about the Oise, as a matter of fact.  In these upper reaches it was still in a prodigious hurry for the sea.  It ran so fast and merrily, through all the windings of its channel, that I strained my thumb, fighting with the rapids, and had to paddle all the rest of the way with one hand turned up.  Sometimes it had to serve mills; and being still a little river, ran very dry and shallow in the meanwhile.  We had to put our legs out of the boat, and shove ourselves off the sand of the bottom with our feet.  And still it went on its way singing among the poplars, and making a green valley in the world.  After a good woman, and a good book, and tobacco, there is nothing so agreeable on earth as a river.  I forgave it its attempt on my life; which was after all one part owing to the unruly winds of heaven that had blown down the tree, one part to my own mismanagement, and only a third part to the river itself, and that not out of malice, but from its great preoccupation over its business of getting to the sea.  A difficult business, too; for the detours it had to make are not to be counted.  The geographers seem to have given up the attempt; for I found no map represent the infinite contortion of its course.  A fact will say more than any of them.  After we had been some hours, three if I mistake not, flitting by the trees at this smooth, break-neck gallop, when we came upon a hamlet and asked where we were, we had got no farther than four kilometres (say two miles and a half) from Origny.  If it were not for the honour of the thing (in the Scots saying), we might almost as well have been standing still.

We lunched on a meadow inside a parallelogram of poplars.  The leaves danced and prattled in the wind all round about us.  The river hurried on meanwhile, and seemed to chide at our delay.  Little we cared.  The river knew where it was going; not so we:  the less our hurry, where we found good quarters and a pleasant theatre for a pipe.  At that hour, stockbrokers were shouting in Paris Bourse for two or three per cent.; but we minded them as little as the sliding stream, and sacrificed a hecatomb of minutes to the gods of tobacco and digestion.  Hurry is the resource of the faithless.  Where a man can trust his own heart, and those of his friends, to-morrow is as good as to-day.  And if he die in the meanwhile, why then, there he dies, and the question is solved.

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An Inland Voyage from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.