Juliana Horatia Ewing And Her Books eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 318 pages of information about Juliana Horatia Ewing And Her Books.

Juliana Horatia Ewing And Her Books eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 318 pages of information about Juliana Horatia Ewing And Her Books.

I do not know that there is in the early chapters anything that can be called “petty,” more than in the speech of the devils to our Lord, and His suffering them to go into the swine.

We must, however, beware that we do not, when we say “petty,” merely mean at bottom what is altogether different from our ordinary notions, formed by daily and general experience of life, as we ourselves find it.

All this long yarn, and not a word about your health, which is shameful.  We both do heartily rejoice that you are better, and only hope for everybody’s sake and your own, you will nurse and husband your strength....

Your affectionate old friend,
JOHN FREDERICTON.

TO A.E.

April 10, 1880.

* * * * *

The night before last I dined with Jean Ingelow.  I went in to dinner with Alfred Hunt (a water-colour painter to whose work Ruskin is devoted).  A very unaffected, intelligent, agreeable man; we had a very pleasant chat.  On my other side sat a dear old Arctic Explorer, old Ray.  I fell quite in love with him, and with the nice Scotch accent that overtook him when he got excited.  Born and bred in the Orkneys, almost, as he said, in the sea; this wild boyhood of familiarity with winds and waves, and storms and sports, was the beginning of the life of adventure and exploration he has led.  He told me some very interesting things about Sir John Franklin.  He said that great and good as he was there were qualities which he had not, the lack of which he believed cost him his life.  He said Sir John went well and gallantly at his end, if he could keep to the lines he had laid down; but he had not “fertility of resource for the unforeseen,” and didn’t adapt himself.  As an instance, he said, he always made his carriers march along a given line.  If stores were at A, and the point to be reached B, by the straight line from A to B he would send the local men he had hired through bog and over boulder, whereas if he said to any of them, “B is the place you must meet me at,” with the knowledge of natives and the instinct of savages they would have gone with half the labour and twice the speed.  He said too that Franklin’s party suffered terribly because none of his officers were sportsmen, which, he said, simply means starvation if your stores fail you.  We had a long talk about scientific men and their deductions, and he said quaintly, “Ye see, I’ve just had a lot of rough expeerience from me childhood; and things have happened now and again that make me not just put implicit faith in all scientific dicta.  I must tell you, Mrs. Ewing, that when I was a young man, and just back from America and the Arctic Regions, where I’d lived and hunted from a mere laddie, I went to a lecture delivered by one of the verra first men of the day (whose name for that reason

Copyrights
Project Gutenberg
Juliana Horatia Ewing And Her Books from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.