Winter Sunshine eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 218 pages of information about Winter Sunshine.

Winter Sunshine eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 218 pages of information about Winter Sunshine.
seeking rest and finding none, that go by in the carriages! while your pedestrian is always cheerful, alert, refreshed, with his heart in his hand and his hand free to all.  He looks down upon nobody; he is on the common level.  His pores are all open, his circulation is active, his digestion good.  His heart is not cold, nor are his faculties asleep.  He is the only real traveler; he alone tastes the “gay, fresh sentiment of the road.”  He is not isolated, but is at one with things, with the farms and the industries on either hand.  The vital, universal currents play through him.  He knows the ground is alive; he feels the pulses of the wind, and reads the mute language of things.  His sympathies are all aroused; his senses are continually reporting messages to his mind.  Wind, frost, rain, heat, cold, are something to him.  He is not merely a spectator of the panorama of nature, but a participator in it.  He experiences the country he passes through,—­tastes it, feels it, absorbs it; the traveler in his fine carriage sees it merely.  This gives the fresh charm to that class of books that may be called “Views Afoot,” and to the narratives of hunters, naturalists, exploring parties, etc.  The walker does not need a large territory.  When you get into a railway car you want a continent, the man in his carriage requires a township; but a walker like Thoreau finds as much and more along the shores of Walden Pond.  The former, as it were, has merely time to glance at the headings of the chapters, while the latter need not miss a line, and Thoreau reads between the lines.  Then the walker has the privilege of the fields, the woods, the hills, the byways.  The apples by the roadside are for him, and the berries, and the spring of water, and the friendly shelter; and if the weather is cold, he eats the frost grapes and the persimmons, or even the white-meated turnip, snatched from the field he passed through, with incredible relish.

Afoot and in the open road, one has a fair start in life at last.  There is no hindrance now.  Let him put his best foot forward.  He is on the broadest human plane.  This is on the level of all the great laws and heroic deeds.  From this platform he is eligible to any good fortune.  He was sighing for the golden age; let him walk to it.  Every step brings him nearer.  The youth of the world is but a few days’ journey distant.  Indeed, I know persons who think they have walked back to that fresh aforetime of a single bright Sunday in autumn or early spring.  Before noon they felt its airs upon their cheeks, and by nightfall, on the banks of some quiet stream, or along some path in the wood, or on some hilltop, aver they have heard the voices and felt the wonder and the mystery that so enchanted the early races of men.

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Project Gutenberg
Winter Sunshine from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.