< Page:The clerk of the woods.djvu
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How still and happy the boulders look,

with friendly bushes and ferns gathered about them, and parti-colored lichens giving them tones of beauty! Men call them dead. "Dead as a stone," has even passed into a proverb. "Stone dead," we say. But I doubt. They would smile, inwardly, I think to hear us. We have small idea, the wisest of us, what we mean by life and death. Men who hurry to and fro, scraping money together or chasing a ball, consider themselves alive. The trees, and even the stones, know better.

Yes, that is a crow, cawing; but far, far off. Distance softens sound as it softens the landscape, and as time, which is only another kind of distance, softens grief. A cricket at my elbow plays his tune, irregularly and slowly. The low temperature slackens his tempo. Now he is done. There is only the stirring of leaves. Some of the birch leaves, I see, are already turning yellow, and once in a while, as the wind whispers to one of them, it lets go its hold and drops. "Good-by," I seem to hear it say; "my summer is done." How tenderly the

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