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قراءة كتاب Recreations of Christopher North, Volume 1
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RECREATIONS
OF
CHRISTOPHER NORTH
A NEW EDITION IN TWO VOLUMES
VOL. I.
WILLIAM BLACKWOOD AND SONS
EDINBURGH AND LONDON
MDCCCLXVIII
CONTENTS OF VOL. I.
PAGE | |
CHRISTOPHER IN HIS SPORTING JACKET:— | |
FYTTE FIRST, | 1 |
FYTTE SECOND, | 29 |
FYTTE THIRD, | 52 |
TALE OF EXPIATION, | 75 |
MORNING MONOLOGUE, | 104 |
THE FIELD OF FLOWERS, | 121 |
COTTAGES, | 135 |
AN HOUR'S TALK ABOUT POETRY, | 179 |
INCH-CRUIN, | 231 |
A DAY AT WINDERMERE, | 242 |
THE MOORS!— | |
PROLOGUE, | 262 |
FLIGHT FIRST—GLEN-ETIVE, | 290 |
FLIGHT SECOND—THE COVES OF CRUACHAN, | 316 |
FLIGHT THIRD—STILL LIFE, | 335 |
FLIGHT FOURTH—DOWN RIVER AND UP LOCH, | 365 |
HIGHLAND SNOW-STORM, | 390 |
THE HOLY CHILD, | 410 |
OUR PARISH, | 422 |
PREFATORY NOTE.
Like most of Professor Wilson's miscellaneous writings, the articles contained in the two following volumes appeared originally in "Blackwood's Magazine." Having been revised and considerably remodelled by their Author, they were published in three volumes, 8vo, in 1842, under the general title, "The Recreations of Christopher North." In the reprint, the special titles of some of the articles are different from those which the same papers bear in the Magazine.
RECREATIONS
OF
CHRISTOPHER NORTH.
CHRISTOPHER IN HIS SPORTING JACKET.
FYTTE FIRST.
There is a fine and beautiful alliance between all pastimes pursued on flood, field, and fell. The principles in human nature on which they depend, are in all the same; but those principles are subject to infinite modifications and varieties, according to the difference of individual and national character. All such pastimes, whether followed merely as pastimes, or as professions, or as the immediate means of sustaining life, require sense, sagacity, and knowledge of nature and nature's laws; nor less, patience, perseverance, courage even, and bodily strength or activity, while the spirit which animates and supports them is a spirit of anxiety, doubt, fear, hope, joy, exultation, and triumph—in the heart of the young a fierce passion—in the heart of the old a passion still, but subdued and tamed down, without, however, being much dulled or deadened, by various experience of all the mysteries of the calling, and by the gradual subsiding of all impetuous impulses in the frames of all mortal men beyond perhaps three-score, when the blackest head will be becoming grey, the most nervous knee less firmly knit, the most steely-springed instep less elastic, the keenest eye less of a far-keeker, and, above all, the most boiling heart less like a caldron or a crater—yea, the whole man subject to some dimness or decay, and, consequently, the whole duty of man like the new edition of a book, from which many passages that formed the chief glory of the editio princeps have been expunged—the whole character of the style corrected without being thereby improved—just like the later editions of the Pleasures of Imagination, which were written by Akenside when he was about twenty-one, and altered by him at forty—to the exclusion or destruction of many most splendida vitia, by which process the poem, in our humble opinion, was shorn of its brightest beams, and suffered disastrous twilight and eclipse—perplexing critics.
Now, seeing that such pastimes are in number almost infinite, and infinite the varieties of human