You are here

قراءة كتاب Days Off, and Other Digressions

تنويه: تعرض هنا نبذة من اول ١٠ صفحات فقط من الكتاب الالكتروني، لقراءة الكتاب كاملا اضغط على الزر “اشتر الآن"

‏اللغة: English
Days Off, and Other Digressions

Days Off, and Other Digressions

تقييمك:
0
No votes yet
المؤلف:
دار النشر: Project Gutenberg
الصفحة رقم: 1


DAYS OFF

AND OTHER DIGRESSIONS


By

HENRY VAN DYKE

I do not count the hours I spend

In wandering by the sea;

The forest is my loyal friend,

Like God it useth me:

Or on the mountain-crest sublime,

Or down the oaken glade,

O what have I to do with Time?

For this the day was made.

Ralph Waldo Emerson


ILLUSTRATED

NEW YORK
CHARLES SCRIBNER'S SONS
MDCCCCVII

Copyright, 1907, by Charles Scribner's Sons

Printed in October, 1907
Reprinted in November, 1907
Reprinted in December, 1907

To
MY FRIEND AND NEIGHBOUR
GROVER CLEVELAND
WHOSE YEARS OF GREAT WORK
AS A STATESMAN
HAVE BEEN CHEERED BY DAYS OF GOOD PLAY
AS A FISHERMAN
THIS BOOK IS DEDICATED
WITH WARM AND DEEP REGARDS

Avalon,
July 10th, 1907.


CONTENTS

I. Days Off 1
II. A Holiday in a Vacation 23
III. His Other Engagement 57
IV. Books that I Loved as a Boy 101
V. Among the Quantock Hills 117
VI. Between the Lupin and the Laurel 139
VII. Little Red Tom 177
VIII. Silverhorns 193
IX. Notions about Novels 221
X. Some Remarks on Gulls 233
XI. Leviathan 271
XII. The Art of Leaving Off 309



ILLUSTRATIONS

Our canoes go with the river, but no longer easily or lazily Frontispiece
  Facing page
On such a carry travel is slow 36
A notion to go down stream struck the salmon 88
There was the gleam of an immense mass of silver in its meshes 94
Tannery Combe, Holford 126
"Billy began to call, and it was beautiful" 206
There he stood defiant, front feet planted wide apart 218
She took the oars and rowed me slowly around the shore 266

 

DAYS OFF

"A DAY OFF" said my Uncle Peter, settling down in his chair before the open wood-fire, with that air of complacent obstinacy which spreads over him when he is about to confess and expound his philosophy of life,—"a day off is a day that a man takes to himself."

"You mean a day of luxurious solitude," I said, "a stolen sweet of time, which he carries away into some hidden corner to enjoy alone,—a little-Jack-Horner kind of a day?"

"Not at all," said my Uncle Peter; "solitude is a thing which a man hardly ever enjoys by himself. He may practise it from a sense of duty. Or he may take refuge in it from other things that are less tolerable. But nine times out of ten he will find that he can't get a really good day to himself unless he shares it with some one else; if he takes it alone, it will be a heavy day, a chain-and-ball day,—anything but a day off."

"Just what do you mean, then?" I asked, knowing that nothing would please him better than the chance to discover his own meaning against a little background of apparent misunderstanding and opposition.

"I mean," said my Uncle Peter, in that deliberate manner which lends a flavour of deep wisdom to the most obvious remarks, "I mean that every man owes it to himself to have some days in his life when he escapes from bondage, gets away from routine, and does something which

Pages