Search      Hot    Newest Novel
HOME > Inspiring Novel > Goose-Quill Papers > ON THE GOOD REPUTE OF THE APPLE.
Font Size:【Large】【Middle】【Small】 Add Bookmark  
ON THE GOOD REPUTE OF THE APPLE.
 FOR the sake of an apple Atalanta lost her nigh-won victory; and that other apple, thrown for the fairest, moved all Olympus into . Bragi, the north-god, and his peers renewed their youth with one touch of its cool juices. Dragons circled it in the garden; "the daughters three" stood about it in a sacred ring, and none but Hercules was its captor. The marbles of the Greeks are dug out of earth,—"Praxitelean shapes!"—with its rounded beauty yet in their outstretched hands. What a superb pedigree! What noble mention (each worth an immortality) from old poets, romancers, historians! All heterodoxy thee, apple of mine eye. It was reserved for true-church traditions to thee.  
Thou who art full of , what is this of thy defection in Eden, thy remote causing of all contemporaneous ? Thou who art fair without as a cherub's cheek, how couldst thou be abettor to the spirit? Shall the fault of our ancestress rest upon thy head? "That the forbidden fruit of Paradise was an apple," saith a grave and learned author, "is commonly believed, confirmed by tradition, by writings, verses, pictures; and some are so bad prosodians as thence to the Latin word malum, because that fruit was the first occasion of evil: wherein, notwithstanding determinations are , many, I perceive, are of another belief." Let the personal argument stand, in default of a bolder plea. Mephisto, who hath had no chance of reformation, and who may be supposed to keep his early leanings, is in modern times no frequenter of-11- . Not by farmer, nor wayside , nor loitering sweethearts at dusk, hath he ever been detected prowling about an innocent apple-tree.
 
It hath, on the other hand, been affirmed by an ingenious clerk, that apple-eating is a masculine passion, and that no woman hath a dominating natural for this fruit; which, proven, would seem to indicate (as a burnt child the fire, according to the proverb) that Eve's mindful daughters by instinct the immemorial enemy. If, indeed, it needs must be demonstrated by some unborn , that our happiness was by else, beyond the serpent's , than a Gilliflower or a Greening, hanging on the representative tree, and criterion of obedience,—then there exist of her descendants with the ancestral weakness, who shall look on our abused common mother with new and tender consideration, such as her connection with a plum, or a currant, or a quince, could never have .
 
The apple is the only fruit which deserveth the name of . A peach is but a Capuan dish; the lime approacheth with cold infrequency; the pear hath too little character; the grape is chiefly suggestive, of its hereafter, as the larva of the gorgeous butterfly. But Apple standeth on her own merits. , jelly, fritters, dumpling, enter not into the imagination of her possessor. , nor even cider, that fretful disempurpled wine,—wine, as it were, with the bar . Apple hath not the flippant gayety of the cherry; her glad humor is somewhat dashed with cynicism: she warmeth the heart, and trippeth up the tongue, and is, in the accepted phrase of artists, "a good fellow;" to unrighteous , as Laurentius , and . She should have had Horace for her court-poet. One can conceive of poor, Fielding loving her at the modest ratio of three dozen a day; and of little Mr. Pope brushing her aside with fastidious .
 
The friends of Apple, your sworn familiars, who offend not her sun-mottled with barbaric divisions of the knife, may be known by their ready wit and their bright glances. Hath not the autumn light, which filtered into the fruit they affect, their moral ? They must needs be sound, , , and fit to with every wind that blows. "Man is that he eats," we read among the bewilderments of German . But of her and subtle cup, with gold or , as Nature willed, the elect drink invigoration.
 
" me about with apples," saith the Canticle, "for I am sick with love;" which, driven to its bare and literal sense, implies that apples are to and over-fondness. Apple, be it said, is a Platonist.
 
Bake her not. Take her in her gypsy wildness, in the homespun, lovelier so than pomegranates in their : not too untimely, either, lest she be , and become the apothecary's friend rather than thine. Learn to trace her growth among her cheery sisters, from some gnarled seat. Deny her not the arm-chair with thee before the hearth-fire; and in thy most , thy rapt brooding--14-hours, trust her that she shall not distract thee. Out of gardens, in the tender Cappadocian legend, maid Dorothy's angel brought apples to Theophilus; to him, indeed, the fruit of . Yet, having lost the sweet grace of yore, she comes ever , and without . October's , to thy fancy other seasons yet to make glad the earth, she, more than any other, is the staunch stand-by, the winter friend. Her native orchards lifelessly in snows; but, like a fair deed, she surviveth mortality, a kind and vital influence still. Darling of the tourist and the huntsman that she is, never was there creature so absolutely adapted to the student. Her happy moisture fructifieth the brain.
 
Only our neighboring , far back in the Athenian beginnings of the present school, sought her intellectual aid in vain. They, and the listening element, met for conversation,—Emerson, Thoreau, Alcott, Curtis, even Hawthorne, with his shyness about him. There were breaks, "flashes of silence," such as were to Macaulay. The philosophers sat , and struggled; then the narrator tells us how, with Olympic sweetness, the host, Ralph Waldo Emerson, brought out a dish of russets,—magna spes altera, genius having failed,—which were consumed, unavailingly, in silence. The ally was wistfully courted on after occasions; but the club solemnly on the third night.
 
If Apple, ! hath her freaks, let them be on philosophers. For her humbler , she hath too constant a good-will. To us, at least, she is faithful, recompensing our old affection for every branch of her house. We are no specialist, but cherish her to the twentieth remove: all her pale and soured graftings, her windfalls, her eccentric hangers-on, her disregarded poor relations.
 
Yea, till our and our gallantry us, be thou our , Pomona!
 
"Candles we'll give to thee,
And a new altar."
 
Nothing shall divert our . and in cold blood, we ourself thy pagan.

All The Data From The Network AND User Upload, If Infringement, Please Contact Us To Delete! Contact Us
About Us | Terms of Use | Privacy Policy | Tag List | Recent Search  
©2010-2018 wenovel.com, All Rights Reserved