Page:Winter - from the Journal of Henry D. Thoreau.djvu/218

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204
WINTER.

ticularly distinct. They were all as regularly arranged as the lines on a melon, arid with much straighter sides, as if cut with a knife. I hear that it attracted the attention of those who were abroad at 7 p. m., and now at 9 p. m. it is scarcely less remarkable. On one side of the heavens, N. or S., the intervals of blue look almost black by contrast. There is now, at nine, a strong wind from the N. W. Why do these bars extend east and west? Is it the influence of the sun which set so long ago? or of the rotation of the earth? The bars which I notice so often morning and evening are apparently connected with the sun at those periods.

Jan. 20, 1841. Disappointment will make us conversant with the nobler part of our nature. It will chasten us and prepare us to meet accident on higher ground the next time. As Hannibal taught the Romans the art of war, so is all misfortune only a stepping-stone to fortune. The desultory moments which are the grimmest feature of misfortune are a step before me on which I should set foot, and not stumbling-blocks in the path. To extract its whole good, I must be disappointed with the best fortune, and not be bribed by sunshine or health.

O Happiness, what is the stuff thou art made of?—Is it not gossamer and floating spider's webs? a crumpled sunbeam—a coiled