Life's Enthusiasms eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 22 pages of information about Life's Enthusiasms.

Life's Enthusiasms eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 22 pages of information about Life's Enthusiasms.
sweep of the surf, the darting of the fishes, the drifting of the snow, the white crystals of the frost, the shrieking of the ice, the boom of the bittern, the barking of the sea lions, the honk of the wild geese, the skulking coyote who knows that each beast is his enemy and has not even a flea to help him “forget that he is a dog,” the leap of the salmon, the ecstasy of the mocking-bird and bobolink, the nesting of the field-mice, the chatter of the squirrel, the gray lichen of the oak, the green moss on the log, the poppies of the field and the Mariposa lilies of the cliff—­all these and ten thousand more pictures which could be called up equally at random and from every foot of land on the globe—­all these are objects of nature.  All these represent a point of human contact and the reaction which makes for youth, for virtue and for enthusiasm.

To travel is merely to increase the variety of contact by giving our time to it, and by extending the number of points at which contact is possible.  It may be that “he who wanders widest, lifts no more of beauty’s jealous veils than he who from his doorway sees the miracle of flowers and trees.”  It is true, however, that the experiences of the traveler cover a wider range and fill his mind with a larger and more varied store of remembered delights.  The very names of beloved regions call up each one its own picture.  The South Seas; to have wandered among their green isles is to have seen a new world, a new heaven and a new earth.  The white reef with its whiter rim of plunging surf, the swaying palms, the flashing waterfall, the joyous people, straight as Greeks and colored like varnished leather, the bread-fruit tree and the brown orange, the purple splendor of the vine called Bougainvillia, and above all the volcanic mountains, green fringed with huge trees, with tree ferns and palms, the whole tied together into an impenetrable jungle by the long armed lianas.  The Sierra Nevada, sweeping in majestic waves of stone, alive with color and steeped in sunshine.  Switzerland, Norway, Alaska, Tyrol, Japan, Venice, the Windward Islands and the Gray Azores, Chapultepec with its dream of white-cloaked volcanoes, Enoshima and Gotemba with their peerless Fujiyama, Nikko with its temples, Loch Lomond, Lake Tahoe, Windermere, Tintagel by the Cornish Sea, the Yellowstone and the Canyon of the Colorado, the Crater Lake of Oregon, Sorrento with its Vesuvius, Honolulu with its Pali, the Yosemite, Banff with its Selkirks, Prince Frederick’s Sound with its green fjords, the Chamounix with its Mont Blanc, Bern with its Oberland, Zermatt with its Matterhorn, Simla with “the, great silent wonder of the snows.”

“Even now as I write,” says Whymper the master mountain climber, “they rise before me an endless series of pictures magnificent in effect, in form and color.  I see great peaks with clouded tops, seeming to mount upward for ever and ever.  I hear the music of distant herds, the peasant’s yodel and the solemn church bells.  And after these have passed away, another train of thought succeeds, of those who have been brave and true, of kind hearts and bold deeds, of courtesies received from strangers’ hands, trifles in themselves but expressive of that good-will which is the essence of charity.”

Copyrights
Project Gutenberg
Life's Enthusiasms from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.