The Pleasures of Life by Sir John Lubbock
page 77 of 277 (27%)
page 77 of 277 (27%)
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CHAPTER VII. THE PLEASURES OF TRAVEL. "I am a part of all that I have seen."--TENNYSON. I am sometimes disposed to think that there are few things in which we of this generation enjoy greater advantages over our ancestors than in the increased facilities of travel; but I hesitate to say this, not because our advantages are not great, but because I have already made the same remark with reference to several other aspects of life. The very word "travel" is suggestive. It is a form of "travail"--excessive labor; and, as Skeat observes, it forcibly recalls the toil of travel in olden days. How different things are now! It is sometimes said that every one should travel on foot "like Thales, Plato, and Pythagoras"; we are told that in these days of railroads people rush through countries and see nothing. It may be so, but that is not the fault of the railways. They confer upon us the inestimable advantage of being able, so rapidly and with so little fatigue, to visit countries which were much less accessible to our ancestors. What a blessing it is that not our own islands only--our smiling fields and rich woods, the mountains that are full of peace and the rivers of joy, the lakes and heaths and hills, castles and cathedrals, and many a spot immortalized in the history of our country:--not these only, but the sun and scenery of the South, the Alps the palaces of Nature, the blue Mediterranean, and the |
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