In the Catskills Quotes
In the Catskills: Selections from the Writings of John Burroughs
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John Burroughs60 ratings, 4.07 average rating, 7 reviews
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In the Catskills Quotes
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“Go to the sea or climb the mountain, and with the ruggedest and the savagest you will find likewise the fairest and the most delicate. The greatness and the minuteness of nature pass all understanding.”
― In the Catskills Selections from the Writings of John Burroughs
― In the Catskills Selections from the Writings of John Burroughs
“In winter the stars seem to have rekindled their fires, the moon achieves a fuller triumph, and the heavens wear a look of a more exalted simplicity.”
― In the Catskills: Selections from the Writings of John Burroughs
― In the Catskills: Selections from the Writings of John Burroughs
“A nation always begins to rot first in its great cities, is indeed perhaps always rotting there, and is saved only by the antiseptic virtues of fresh supplies of country blood.”
― In the Catskills Selections from the Writings of John Burroughs
― In the Catskills Selections from the Writings of John Burroughs
“Vague rumors are afloat in the air of a great and coming change. We are eager for Winter to be gone, since he, too, is fugitive and cannot keep his place. Invisible hands deface his icy statuary; his chisel has lost its cunning. The drifts, so pure and exquisite, are now earth-stained and weather-worn,—the flutes and scallops, and fine, firm lines, all gone; and what was a grace and an ornament to the hills is now a disfiguration. Like worn and unwashed linen appear the remains of that spotless robe with which he clothed the world as his bride.”
― In the Catskills: Selections from the Writings of John Burroughs: Enriched edition.
― In the Catskills: Selections from the Writings of John Burroughs: Enriched edition.
“But certainly labor is no fetich of his, and he has a real genius for loafing. In another man his leisurely rambling with its pauses to rest on rock or grassy bank or fallen tree, his mind meanwhile absolutely free from the feeling that he ought to be up and doing, might be shiftlessness. But how else could he have acquired his delightful intimacy with the”
― In the Catskills Selections from the Writings of John Burroughs
― In the Catskills Selections from the Writings of John Burroughs
