[Rose in Bloom by Louisa May Alcott]@TWC D-Link bookRose in Bloom CHAPTER 17 AMONG THE HAYCOCKS 12/18
I would rather ride on earth in an oxcart, with free circulation, than go to heaven in the fancy car of an excursion train, and breathe malaria all the way.' "I've tried both and quite agree with him," laughed Mac, and skimming down another page, gave her a paragraph here and there. "'Read the best books first, or you may not have a chance to read them at all.' "'We do not learn much from learned books, but from sincere human books: frank, honest biographies.' "'At least let us have healthy books.
Let the poet be as vigorous as the sugar maple, with sap enough to maintain his own verdure, besides what runs into the trough; and not like a vine which, being cut in the spring, bears no fruit, but bleeds to death in the endeavor to heal its wounds.'" "That will do for you," said Rose, still thinking of the new suspicion which pleased her by its very improbability. Mac flashed a quick look at her and shut the book, saying quietly, although his eyes shone, and a conscious smile lurked about his mouth: "We shall see, and no one need meddle, for, as my Thoreau says, "Whate'er we leave to God, God does And blesses us: The work we choose should be our own God lets alone." Rose sat silent, as if conscious that she deserved his poetical reproof. "Come, you have catechized me pretty well; now I'll take my turn and ask you why you look 'uplifted,' as you call it.
What have you been doing to make yourself more like your namesake than ever ?" asked Mac, carrying war into the enemy's camp with the sudden question. "Nothing but live, and enjoy doing it.
I actually sit here, day after day, as happy and contented with little things as Dulce is and feel as if I wasn't much older than she," answered the girl, feeling as if some change was going on in that pleasant sort of pause but unable to describe it. "As if a rose should shut and be a bud again," murmured Mac, borrowing from his beloved Keats. "Ah, but I can't do that! I must go on blooming whether I like it or not, and the only trouble I have is to know what leaf I ought to unfold next," said Rose, playfully smoothing out the white gown, in which she looked very like a daisy among the green. "How far have you got ?" asked Mac, continuing his catechism as if the fancy suited him. "Let me see.
Since I came home last year, I've been gay, then sad, then busy, and now I am simply happy.
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