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قراءة كتاب Of Walks and Walking Tours An Attempt to find a Philosophy and a Creed

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Of Walks and Walking Tours
An Attempt to find a Philosophy and a Creed

Of Walks and Walking Tours An Attempt to find a Philosophy and a Creed

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دار النشر: Project Gutenberg
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OF WALKS AND
WALKING TOURS

BY THE SAME AUTHOR
GOLDWIN SMITH
His Life and Opinions
Illustrated with many Important Portraits
Demy 8vo, cloth gilt. 18s. net

"A thoroughly readable book."—London Times.

"Of its human and literary interest we could hardly speak too highly."—Birmingham Post.


UNIFORM WITH THE ABOVE
THE CORRESPONDENCE OF
GOLDWIN SMITH

Illustrated with many Important Portraits
Demy 8vo, cloth gilt. 18s. net.

All Rights Reserved


ON THE BANKS OF THE RHONE

OF WALKS AND
WALKING TOURS

An Attempt to find a Philosophy
and a Creed

BY
ARNOLD HAULTAIN
Author of "Hints for Lovers"
"The Mystery of Golf"
"Goldwin Smith: His Life and Opinions"
Etc.

LONDON
T. WERNER LAURIE LTD.
8 ESSEX STREET, STRAND
1914

"De naturâ Rationis est res sub quâdam
aeternitatis specie percipere."
Spinoza, Ethics, Part II.,
Proposition xliv., Corollary ii.

PREFACE

The writing of this little book has given me a great deal of pleasure. That is why I hope that, here and there, it may give pleasure to others.

And yet it was not an easy task. Nature's lessons are hard to learn. Harder still is it to translate Nature's lessons to others. Besides, the appeal of Nature is to the Emotions; and words are weak things (save in the hands of a great Poet) by which to convey or to evoke emotion. Words seem to be the vehicles rather of ratiocination than of emotion. Is not even the Poet driven to link words to music? And always le mot juste, the exact word, is so difficult to find! Yet found it must be if the appeal is to avail.


If, in these pages, there are scattered speculations semi-mystical, semi-intelligible, perhaps even transcending the boundaries of rigid logic, I must simply aver that I put in writing that only which was given me to say. How or whence it came, I do not know.—And this, notwithstanding (or, perhaps, in a way, corroborative of) my own belief that no thought is autogenous, but has parents and a pedigree.

I have tried, quite humbly, to follow, as motto, the sentence chosen from Spinoza. Yet, with that sentence always should be read this other, taken from Pascal: "La dernière démarche de la raison, c'est de reconnaître qu'il y a une infinité de choses qui la surpassent."—Always emotion, imagination, feeling, faith, try to soar above reason; and always they feel the inadequacy of words.

I have incorporated in this book some parts of my "Two Country Walks in Canada"—now long out of print (itself comprising an article from The Nineteenth Century and another from Blackwood's); also (with the permission of the editor) an article in The Atlantic Monthly Magazine; and Sections 22 and 23 first appeared in The Canadian Magazine.

Geneva, 1914.

CONTENTS

CHAPTER PAGE
I. Golf and Walking 1
II. The Essence of a Walk 5
III. Notable Walkers 9
IV. My Earliest Walks 15
V. India 17
VI. English Byways 21
VII. A Spring Morning in England 25
VIII. Autumn Reveries 29
IX. Spirituality of Nature 34
X. Practical Transcendentalism 40
XI. Spring in Canada 45
XII. Autumn in Canada 53
XIII. Winter in Canada

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