Page:Writings of Henry David Thoreau (1906) v7.djvu/182

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100
JOURNAL
[Dec.

space ere it can reach our earth to eclipse it. Always the system shines with uninterrupted light, for, as the sun is so much larger than any planet, no shadow can travel far into space. We may bask always in the light of the system, always may step back out of the shade. No man's shadow is as large as his body, if the rays make a right angle with the reflecting surface. Let our lives be passed under the equator, with the sun in the meridian.

There is no ill which may not be dissipated like the dark, if you let in a stronger light upon it. Overcome evil with good. Practice no such narrow economy as they whose bravery amounts to no more light than a farthing candle, before which most objects cast a shadow wider than themselves.[1]

It was a conceit of Plutarch, accounting for the preferences given to signs observed on the left hand, that men may have thought "things terrestrial and mortal directly over against heavenly and divine things, and do conjecture that the things which to us are on the left hand, the gods send down from their right hand."[2] If we are not blind, we shall see how a right hand is stretched over all, as well the unlucky as lucky, and that the ordering soul is only right-handed, distributing with one palm all our fates.[3]

Men have made war from a deeper instinct than peace. War is but the compelling of peace.[4]

  1. [Week, p. 376; Riv. 465. The Service, pp. 8, 9.]
  2. [Plutarch's Morals, "Roman Questions," lxviii.]
  3. [The Service, p. 9.]
  4. [The Service, p. 12.]