Autumn Leaves - Original Pieces in Prose and Verse by Various
page 37 of 135 (27%)
page 37 of 135 (27%)
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your own village.
"Do not sing its fundamental note too loud near a delicate glass, or it will break," whispered my friend to me, as he saw me gazing at this lovely being. Seek the golden mean of life. Like the temperate regions, it has but few thorny plants. Be doubly careful of those to whom nature has been a niggard. The oak and the palm take their own forms under all circumstances; the fungi seem to owe theirs to outward influences. It is a poor plant that crisps quickly into wood. It is a meagre character which runs perpetually into prejudices. As light suffers from no change of medium when it falls perpendicularly, so the consequences of a perfectly upright action, or cause of action, are strictly fortunate. But let it be ever so little oblique, the new medium will exaggerate its obliquity; and the farther it departs from uprightness, the more frightfully it is distorted. Hoops and coins, which cannot preserve their equilibrium when in rest, keep it when set in motion. Man also in activity finds his safest position. As it takes a diamond to cut and shape a diamond, so there are faults so obstinate that they can be worn away only by life-long contact with similar faults in those we love. |
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