methinks I should hear with indifference if a trustworthy messenger were to inform me that the sun drowned himself last night
12.31.2006
Thoreau's Journal: 31-Dec-1853
The notes of the wood thrush and the sounds of a vibrating chord, these affect me as many sounds once did often, and as almost all should. The strains of the aolian harp and of the wood are the truest and loftiest preachers that I know now left on this earth. I know of no missionaries to us heathen comparable to them. They, as it were, lift us up in spite of ourselves. They intoxicate, they charm us. Where was that strain mixed into which this world was dropped but as a lump of sugar to sweeten the draught? I would be drunk, drunk, drunk, dead drunk to this world with it forever. He that hath ears, let him hear. The contact of sound with a human ear whose hearing is pure and unimpaired is coincident with an ecstasy. Sugar is not so sweet to the palate, as sound to the healthy ear; the hearing of it makes men brave.
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1 comment:
Happy New Year, Henry. Thanks for a year of poetry. Thanks for reminding us to listen for the song of the thrush. It will be months before we hear it again in Ohio, yet the memory of its music intoxicates.
(Happy New Year, Greg:0)
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