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Early Letters of George William Curtis
Early Letters To John S. Dwight   Early Letters To John S. Dwight - Chapter 31
George William Curtis
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       _ Early Letters To John S. Dwight
       Chapter XXXI
       N.Y., April 12th, 1846.
       My dear Friend,--I meant to have given you some verses when you were here as you asked, but I forgot it. Now I send this. It is so different from Wentworth Higginson's that I do not feel as if the same road had been run over by us[1]. And as each Phalanx will be a centre of innumerable railroads in the age of harmony, why not its paper of paper railroads now? This was written in Concord some time since.
       [Footnote 1: This refers to a poem by T.W. Higginson with the same title, which had been printed in the Harbinger, a few weeks previously.]
       Since you went I have done little but study French and Italian. We meet Cranch, and his wife of course, three times a week at that, and I drop into his studio now and then. To-day I was there, and he was hard at work upon a sunset composition, which he hopes to finish for the exhibition of the Boston Athenaeum. He has sent the large landscape, "The Summer Shower," and "The Old Mill with the Bridge and Ducks," to the National Academy, which exhibition opens this week. He has sold one in Washington to a member of Congress for $100, and if he can continue to improve as rapidly as he has for a year or two past he will be a fine painter.
       These soft, gushing spring days make me yearn for the country. I shall hope to be emancipated from Masters and Mistresses by the first or middle of May and take my place with the other cattle in the pastures. When I do not exactly know. Let me hear from you and about the Farm and its prospects. Burrill's eyes have given out again. He is bound head and foot, for his ankle has a habit of breaking down occasionally. Rest and warm weather and the country may strengthen them all. Give my love
       "und vergiss nicht euer treur,"
       G.W.C.
       THE RAILROAD
       A bright November day. The morning light
       Shone through the city's mist against my eyes,
       Soft, chiding them from sleep. Unfolding them
       They raised their lids and--gave me a new day.
       A day not freshly breaking on the fields,
       And waking with a morning kiss the streams
       That slept beneath the vapor, but on streets,
       Piles of great majesty and human skill,
       Stone veins where human passion swiftly runs.
       Thereon I gazed with tenderness and awe,
       Remembering the heavy debt I owed
       To the dim arches of the dingy bricks,
       Which sternly smiled upon my youngest years
       And gravely greeted now, as through the crowd
       By all unknown and knowing none, I passed.
       The warning whistle thrilled the misty air,
       And stately forth we rode into the morn,
       Subduing airy distance silently;
       The shadow glided by us on the grass,
       The sole companion of our lonely speed,
       And all the landscape changing as we went,
       A shifting picture, of like hues and forms
       But ever various, trees, rocks, and hills,
       Rising sublime and stretching pastoral--
       How like a noble countenance which shows
       Endless expression and eternal charm.
       I leaned against the window as we went.
       And saw the city mist recede afar,
       And lost the busy hum which haunts the mind
       As a voice inarticulate, the tone
       Of many men whose mouths speak distinct words
       Which blend in grim confusion, till the sound
       Like a vague aspiration climbs the sky.
       The muffled murmur of the iron wheels,
       And the sharp tinkle of the hurried bell,
       And a few words between were all the sounds
       Which peopled that else silent morning air.
       A busy city darting o'er the plains
       Across the turnpikes and through hawthorne lanes,
       O'er wide morasses and profound ravines--
       Through stately woods where red deer only run,
       And grassy lawn and farmer's planted field--
       Was that swift train that flashed along the hills,
       And smoked through sloping valleys, and surprised
       The mild-eyed milk-maid with her morning pail.
       I dreamed my dreams until the village lay
       White in the morning light, and holding up
       Its modest steeples in the crystal air.
       A moment, and the picture changed no more,
       But wore a serious constancy and showed
       Its bare-boughed trees immovable. I rose,
       And stepping from the train, it glided on,
       Sweeping around the hill; the whistle shrill
       Rang through the stricken air. A moment more
       It rolled along the iron out of sight. _
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本书目录

Early Life At Brook Farm And Concord
   Early Life At Brook Farm And Concord - Intro
   Early Life At Brook Farm And Concord - Chapter 1
   Early Life At Brook Farm And Concord - Chapter 2
   Early Life At Brook Farm And Concord - Chapter 3
   Early Life At Brook Farm And Concord - Chapter 4
   Early Life At Brook Farm And Concord - Chapter 5
   Early Life At Brook Farm And Concord - Chapter 6
   Early Life At Brook Farm And Concord - Chapter 7
Early Letters To John S. Dwight
   Early Letters To John S. Dwight - Chapter 1
   Early Letters To John S. Dwight - Chapter 2
   Early Letters To John S. Dwight - Chapter 3
   Early Letters To John S. Dwight - Chapter 4
   Early Letters To John S. Dwight - Chapter 5
   Early Letters To John S. Dwight - Chapter 6
   Early Letters To John S. Dwight - Chapter 7
   Early Letters To John S. Dwight - Chapter 8
   Early Letters To John S. Dwight - Chapter 9
   Early Letters To John S. Dwight - Chapter 10
   Early Letters To John S. Dwight - Chapter 11
   Early Letters To John S. Dwight - Chapter 12
   Early Letters To John S. Dwight - Chapter 13
   Early Letters To John S. Dwight - Chapter 14
   Early Letters To John S. Dwight - Chapter 15
   Early Letters To John S. Dwight - Chapter 16
   Early Letters To John S. Dwight - Chapter 17
   Early Letters To John S. Dwight - Chapter 18
   Early Letters To John S. Dwight - Chapter 19
   Early Letters To John S. Dwight - Chapter 20
   Early Letters To John S. Dwight - Chapter 21
   Early Letters To John S. Dwight - Chapter 22
   Early Letters To John S. Dwight - Chapter 23
   Early Letters To John S. Dwight - Chapter 24
   Early Letters To John S. Dwight - Chapter 25
   Early Letters To John S. Dwight - Chapter 26
   Early Letters To John S. Dwight - Chapter 27
   Early Letters To John S. Dwight - Chapter 28
   Early Letters To John S. Dwight - Chapter 29
   Early Letters To John S. Dwight - Chapter 30
   Early Letters To John S. Dwight - Chapter 31
   Early Letters To John S. Dwight - Chapter 32
   Early Letters To John S. Dwight - Chapter 33
   Early Letters To John S. Dwight - Chapter 34
   Early Letters To John S. Dwight - Chapter 35
   Early Letters To John S. Dwight - Chapter 36
   Early Letters To John S. Dwight - Chapter 37
   Early Letters To John S. Dwight - Chapter 38
   Early Letters To John S. Dwight - Chapter 39
   Early Letters To John S. Dwight - Chapter 40
   Early Letters To John S. Dwight - Chapter 41
Letters Of Later Date
   Letters Of Later Date - Chapter 1
   Letters Of Later Date - Chapter 2
   Letters Of Later Date - Chapter 3
   Letters Of Later Date - Chapter 4
   Letters Of Later Date - Chapter 5
   Letters Of Later Date - Chapter 6
   Letters Of Later Date - Chapter 7
   Letters Of Later Date - Chapter 8
   Letters Of Later Date - Chapter 9
   Letters Of Later Date - Chapter 10
   Letters Of Later Date - Chapter 11
   Letters Of Later Date - Chapter 12
   Letters Of Later Date - Chapter 13
   Letters Of Later Date - Chapter 14
   Letters Of Later Date - Chapter 15
   Letters Of Later Date - Chapter 16
   Letters Of Later Date - Chapter 17
   Letters Of Later Date - Chapter 18
   Letters Of Later Date - Chapter 19
   Letters Of Later Date - Chapter 20
   Letters Of Later Date - Chapter 21