Capitolo 31
Wheat-field of Kentucky. After the owner has taken from them his
last sheaf I enter and I also gather my crop--one whom he did
doesn't see, and undoubtedly it would not envy me--the crop of the beauty.
Or I walk close to tufted hemp-field aromatic, as along the beaches
to slightly foam emerald seas; or over the troop of fields
of Indian-corn that stand as manages that you/they had become ready
to march, but continues to wait for the further orders, up to that finally
the soldiers had been gotten tired, as the most cheerful wish, of their yellow
pens and green ribbons, and he/she let their great hands fall down heavily
to their sides. There the white and you redden him morning-glories
hangs their long festoons and opens to twenty midnight and soft them
trumpets of elf.
This year how come before I have heard the beauty of the world.
And with the new brightness in which you/he/she has been every common scene
apparelled has mixed there inside me a need of human company
unknown of past. It is as if Nature had scattered out her last
beauty and motto: "Sees! You have Him first now everybody that You
can ever get from me! Enough it is not. Realizes this in duration. ME
it is Your Mother. Love me as a child. But remembers! such love is able
both only a small part of Your life."
Therefore I have spent the month without rest, in the eve of change,
attracted to Nature, checked by her. In September it will be different,
for there are then more things to do on small my farm, and I see
people on account of my grape of grape and my pears. My illness this August
you/he/she has been an inactive mind--so it idles about that a Georgian letter seems
his/her principal event. This was written from the old house of Audubon on
the Hudson, where they had gone sight-seeing. It is due to be
to her very as a pilgrimage to a shrine. You informally wrote,
telling me on the place and including a twig of cedar from one
of the trees in the enclosure. His/her mind you/he/she was evidently flooding on
the subject. It was rather pleasant to have the flood turned