[Two Thousand Miles On An Automobile by Arthur Jerome Eddy]@TWC D-Link book
Two Thousand Miles On An Automobile

CHAPTER FOURTEEN LEXINGTON AND CONCORD
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All reports indicate that he had a wonderful facility in the off-hand expression of abstruse thought, but he had no faculty whatsoever for so ordering and systematizing his thoughts as to furnish explosive material for belligerent followers; the intellectual ammunition he put up was not in the convenient form of cartridges, nor even in kegs or barrels, but just poured out on the ground, where it disintegrated before it could be used.
Leaning on the gate that bright, warm, summer afternoon, it was not difficult to picture the venerable, white-haired philosopher seated by the doorstep arguing eloquently with some congenial visitor, or chatting with his daughter.

One could almost see a small throng of serious men and women wending their way up the still plainly marked path to the chapel, and catch the measured tones of the lecturer as he expounded theories too recondite for this practical age and generation.
Philosophy is the sarcophagus of truth; and most systems of philosophy are like the pyramids,--impressive piles of useless intellectual masonry, erected at prodigious cost of time and labor to secrete from mankind the truth.
A little farther on we came to the fork in the road where Lincoln Street branches off to the southeast.

Emerson's house fronts on Lincoln and is a few rods from the intersection with Lexington Street.

Here Emerson lived from 1835 until his death in 1882.
It is singular the fascination exercised by localities and things identified with great men.

It is not enough to simply see, but in so far as possible we wish to place ourselves in their places, to walk where they walked, sit where they sat, sleep where they slept, to merge our petty and obscure individualities for the time being in theirs, to lose our insignificant selves in the atmosphere they created and left behind.


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