In old age we are like a batch of letters that someone has sent. We are no longer in the past, we have arrived.
From Knut Hamsun
For I mean to roam and think and make great irons red-hot.
I have gone to the forest.
There is nothing like being left alone again, to walk peacefully with oneself in the woods. To boil one's coffee and fill one's pipe, and to think idly and slowly as one does it.
Heaven knows that there are plenty of opportunities in later life, too, for being carried away. What of it? We remain what we are and, no doubt, it is all very good for us!
However, I must not indulge in homespun wisdom here before so distinguished an assembly, especially as I am to be followed by a representative of science.
I have had much to learn from Sweden's poetry and, more especially, from her lyrics of the last generation.
In my solitude, many miles from men and houses, I am in a childishly happy and carefree state of mind, which you are incapable of understanding unless someone explains it to you.
It is as well perhaps that this is not the first time I have been swept off my feet. In the days of my blessed youth there were such occasions; in what young person's life do they not occur?
No worse fate can befall a young man or woman than becoming prematurely entrenched in prudence and negation.
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