Арнольд Холтейн

«О прогулках и пеших турах: попытка найти философию и кредо»

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Euripides, quoted, 194

Evening walks, 78 et seq.

Evil, origin of, 97 et seq.

F

Fatigue, a fictitious, 148

Fire, the nomad, 137 et seq.

Food, 140;

importance of, 149 et seq.; 154 et seq.;

details concerning, 153 et seq.

G

Georgian Bay, the, 53

Glacial epoch, the, 138, 139

Goethe, quoted, 194

Golf and walking, 1 et seq.;

обвинительные акты против, ibid.;

vindication of, 2;

misapprehension concerning, 2, 3

Guérin, Eugénie de, quoted, 211

Guérin, Maurice de, quoted, 186, 187; 225, 226

H

Haig, Dr Alexander, 145

Harte, Bret, quoted, 159, 160

Hassocks, 25

Hearth, the, 137, 139

Hurstpierpoint, 25

I

Ideal, unrealisability of, 132

Impedimenta, 151

India, 17 et seq.

Infinite, the, 128;

how that all things point to the, 188 et seq.

Instincts, primitive, 162 et seq.

J

Jefferies, Richard, 12;

quoted, 184, 185

K

Kipling, Rudyard, quoted, 170

Kingston Road, the, 119, 120

Knapsack, contents of, 152 et seq.

L

Landscape, the beauty of, 159 et seq.

Life, a process, 37 et seq.;

omnipresent, 42; 95;

an absolute, 96

Literature, modern, 218, 219

M

Mabie, Hamilton Wright, 12, 13

MacLane, Mary, quoted, 160

Meditations, evening, 78 et seq.

Memories, cosmic, 162

Memory, idea of time dependent on, 92, 93

Milk, value of, 147

Milky Way, the, 56

Morning air, a steriliser, 210

Morning walk, an early, 205; 208

Morning walks, 72 et seq.

Mountains, peacefulness of, 173, 174

Müller, Max, 112

Multiplicity, subjective character of, 95

Mystery, the, of nature, 39; 85;

Carlyle on, 196, 197

N

Nature, spirituality of, 34 et seq.;

a universe of subsistences, 51;

unity of, 91; 93;

beauty of, 164 et seq.;

man's primæval habitat, 171;

the language of, 193, 194;

companionship of, 213

Neo-Platonists, 90

Nilgiris, the, 17

O

"Oberland Chalet, An," quoted, 143

Ontario, lake, 118, 119

Otonabee, river, 48

P

Pantry, the antiquity of the, 155

Pascal, quoted, 101

Plato, quoted, 165

Plotinus, 89, 90

Poynings, village, 25

R

Reason, inadequacy of, 97;

and moral progress, 101, 102

Religious tenets, criterion of, 102

Responsibility, 96, 97

Rhône, the, 167

Rousseau, Jean-Jacques, quoted, 202-204

Ruskin, John, quoted, 161; 220, 221

S

Salève, the Grand, 167 et seq.

Savoie, Haute, 172

Science, 191

Seclusion, benefits of, 117

Self-consciousness, 217, 218

Sénancour, quoted, 161

Sense, a seventh, 186

Solar system, motion of, 176, 177

«Сын болот, А», 13

Soul, the, 113

Space, subjective character of, 91; 95

Spirit of eternal things, the, 39, 85

Stayner, 53

Stephen, Sir Leslie, 14

Strife, universality of, 176

Sunday in a country town, 121 et seq.

Sunshine, Canadian, 70, 71

T

Tea, as a stimulant, 145 et seq.

Tennyson, quoted, 190

Thatcher, T., quoted, 75

Thoreau, Henry D., 12;

quoted, 200, 201

Thought, a struggle to conceive the infinite, 131

Time, subjective character of, 91, 92, 95

Toronto, 119

Tragedies, 124 et seq.

Transcendentalism, practical, 40 et seq.

Troglodytic families, 138

U

Unity, a spiritual, 112, 113

Universe, the, imagined as a sphere, 91

Uxbridge, 23

V

Van Dyke, Henry, 13

W

Walk, the essence of a, 5 et seq.;

a woeful, 105 et seq.

Walkers, notable, 9 et seq.

Walking tour, preparations for a, 133 et seq.

Walking tours, 133 et seq.

Walks and walking, effects of golf upon, 2 et seq.;

essence of, 5 et seq.;

правильное душевное состояние для, ibid.;

the mood for, 72 et seq.;

the rivals of angling, 75;

instinct for, 103, 104;

the pleasures of, 198 et seq.

Walks, my earliest, 15 et seq.;

в Бирме, ibid.;

in India, 17 et seq.;

in England, 21 et seq.;

on the Sussex Downs, 25 et seq.;

in Buckinghamshire, 31 et seq.;

in Canada, 45 et seq.;

on the banks of the Otonabee, 47 et seq.;

by the Georgian Bay, 53 et seq.;

on the outskirts of an Ontarian country town, 59 et seq.;

a woeful walk, 105, 106;

from Toronto, along the Kingston Road, 107 et seq.;

over one of the Passes of the Jura, 149, 150;

on the Grand Salève, 167 et seq.;

early on Monday mornings, 205, 206;

of a Sunday before breakfast, 208 et seq.

Walton, Izaak, quoted, 72, 73, 74

Warnings, 180

Whiting, Charles Goodrich, 13

Will, 96, 97;

freedom of the, 99 et seq.

Winter in Canada, 62 et seq.

Wood, Edith Elmer, quoted, 143 et seq.

Woods, Canadian, 63 et seq.

Wordsworth, William, quoted, 7, 111, 112

THE RIVERSIDE PRESS LIMITED, ЭДИНБУРГ

[1] See Henry D. Thoreau's "Walden"; "A Week on the Concord and Merrimack Rivers"; "Winter"; etc.

[2] See John Burroughs, his "Birds and Poets"; "Locusts and Wild Honey"; "Pepacton"; "Signs and Seasons"; "Wake Robin"; "Winter Sunshine"; etc.

[3] See Richard Jefferies, his "Amateur Poaching"; "Field and Hedgerow"; "Wild Life in a Southern County"; "Nature near London"; "Round about a Great Estate"; "Wood Magic"; "The Story of my Heart."

[4] See Hamilton Wright Mabie's "In the Forest of Arden"; "Under the Trees and Elsewhere"; etc.

[5] See Henry Van Dyke's "Fisherman's Luck, and some other Uncertain Things"; "Little Rivers: A Book of Essays in Profitable Idleness"; "Days Off, and other Digressions"; etc.

[6] See "In the Green Leaf and the Sere," by "A Son of the Marshes." Edited by J. A. Owen. Illustrated by G. C. Haïté and D. C. Nicholl. Also "Drift from Longshore," by the same author and editor.

[7] See Charles C. Abbott's "Upland and Meadow"; "Wasteland Wanderings"; "The Birds About Us"; "A Naturalist's Rambles about Home"; "Outings at Odd Times"; "Recent Rambles, or, In Touch with Nature"; "Travels in a Tree Top"; "Birdland Echoes"; "Notes of the Night, and other Outdoor Sketches"; etc.

[8] See Charles Goodrich Whiting's "Walks in New England"; etc.

[9] See George Borrow's "Wild Wales: Its People, Language and Scenery."

[10] "Obermann," lettre ii.

[11] See his "In Praise of Walking," in The Monthly Review (London: Murray) of August, 1901.

[12] Mr Robert F. Stupart, in the "Handbook of Canada," published by the Publication Committee of the Local Executive [of the British Association for the Advancement of Science], Toronto: 1897, p. 78.

[13] See "The Compleat Angler," chapter i.

[14] Ibid.

[15] See a delightful letter to The Publishers' Circular of September the 27th, 1902; vol. lxxvii., p. 325, on "A Plea for a Long Walk," by T. Thatcher, of 44 College Green, Bristol, England. Also another letter by the same writer on "42 Miles on 2d. at the Age of 64," in the same periodical in its issue of April the 25th, 1903; vol. lxxviii., p. 457. The "2d." means that his food consisted of dry brown-bread crusts only, the cost of which he computes at twopence.

[16] "Pepacton," Foot Paths, p. 205.

[17] Confer.—"The primal One, from which all things are, is everywhere and nowhere. As being the cause of all things, it is everywhere. As being other than all things, it is nowhere.... No predicate of Being can be properly applied to it.... It is greatest of all, not by magnitude, but by potency.... It is to be regarded as infinite, not because of the impossibility of measuring or counting it, but because of the impossibility of comprehending its power. It is perfectly all-sufficing."—"The Neo-Platonists: A Study in the History of Hellenism." By Thomas Whittaker. Cambridge, 1901. Chapter v., pp. 58, 59.

[18] See his General Introduction to Ward's "English Poets," vol. i., p. xvii. London and New York: Macmillan, 1880.

[19] "The Mystery of Golf." By Arnold Haultain. Second Edition. Pp. 153, 154. London and New York: Macmillan, 1910.

[20] Pascal, "Pensees," XVI. iv.

[21] Ibid. iii.

[22] Tennyson, "The Ancient Sage."

[23] See his "Farthest North," ii. 73 et seq.; 76 et seq.; et passim.

[24] "An Oberland Chalet." By Edith Elmer Wood. London: T. Werner Laurie. No date, but probably circa 1912. Pp. 256-260.

[25] And I thank you, C.B.L.

[26] "The Path to Rome," p. 16.

[27] Ibid., p. 341.

[28] For these I am entirely indebted to my younger brother, Professor Herbert E. T. Haultain, A.M.Inst.C.E., etc.

[29] Quoted in The Academy and Literature (London) of October the 4th, 1902, p. 340.

[30] "The Story of Mary MacLane," by Herself. Chicago: Herbert S. Stone & Company, 1902.

[31] In The New York World of September the 14th, 1902, p. 7.

[32] "Wild Wales," Introduction.

[33] "The Seven Lamps of Architecture," chapter vi., The Lamp of Memory, §i.

[34] Obermann, Lettre XXXVI.

[35] And his bride complained of the damp! (βαλλεις εις αμαραν με, και ειματα καλα μιαινεις.—Theocritus, Idyll XXVII. 52).

[36] Browning, "Two in the Campagna."

[37] Confer Edward Carpenter: "The Drama of Love and Death: A Study of Human Evolution and Transfiguration," page 51. London: George Allen, 1912. Also Mr Havelock Ellis, his "Studies in the Psychology of Sex," vol. vi., p. 558.

[38] See Plato, Symposium, 180:—"παντες γαρ ισμεν, οτι ουκ εστιν ανευ Ερωτος Αφροδιτη, κ. τ. λ."

[39] "Sussex," first stanza.—"The Five Nations," p. 69. New York: Doubleday, Page & Co., 1903.

[40] "The Voyage of the Beagle," chapter xx.

[41] Professor W. W. Campbell, of the Lick Observatory, California, computes the velocity of the Solar System through space at approximately nineteen kilomètres per second (see Lick Observatory Bulletin, No. 195, vol. vi. (1910-1911), p. 123. See also Bulletin No. 196, vol. vi., pp. 125 et seq.). What, in interstellar space, the precise curve described by my finger nail was, especially if to rotation, revolution, and the approach to Hercules, we add nutation, tidal drag, and the precession of the equinoxes, to say nothing of earth tremours, I should much like to know.

[42] All my figures are, of course, rough in the extreme; and I give Professor Campbell the benefit of about fifty miles a minute because he says approximately.

[43] "The Pageant of Summer."

[44] "The Pleasures of Life," Part II., chapter viii.

[45] "Journal, Lettres, et Poemes," p. 17. Paris, 1880.

[46] "Das Schöne ist ein Urphänomen, das zwar nie selber zur Erscheinung kommt."—"Dichtung und Wahrheit."

[47] "Hippolytus."

[48] "Prometheus Unbound."

[49] "Towards Democracy." Third Edition, pp. 149, 151. London: Fisher Unwin, 1892.

[50] Essay on Characteristics. Works (Shilling Edition), ix. 15.

[51] Essay on Diderot. Works, x. 26. The italics are Carlyle's.

[52] Additions to the "Confessions of an Opium-Eater," p. 381. Boston: Houghton, Mifflin & Co., 1876.

[53] "Walden," pp. 98, 99, in David Douglas's Edinburgh Edition, 1884.

[54] "Journal Intime," p. 45. London: The Macmillan Co., 1890.—I avail myself of Mrs Humphry Ward's admirable translation.

[55] "Confessions," Partie I. Livre IV. Paris: Lefevre's Edition; 1819, vol. i., pp. 259, 260.

[56] Thirty-four years separated the tour of which he speaks from the date when he penned these words.

[57] The fine phrase of Mrs Humphry Ward. See her preface to her translation of Amiel's "Journal," last paragraph.

[58] Eugénie de Guérin, "Journal et Fragments," p. 181. Twenty-fourth Edition. Paris: Didier et Cie, 1879.

[59] "Modern Painters," Part VI., chapter i., paragraph 7.—Vol. v., pp. 5 and 6 of Messrs George Allen & Sons' edition.

[60] 1 John ii. 16.

[61] Exodus xxxiv. 8.

[62] "Cette immense circulation de vie qui s'opère dans l'ample sein de la nature; ... cette vie qui sourd d'une fontaine invisible et gonfle les veines de cet univers."—Maurice de Guérin, Journal, p. 22. Paris, 1880.

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