XIV. -- THAT WE SHOULD RISE WITH THE LARK
At e t little airy musician doffs gear, prepares to tune up ins, naturalists enougo determine. But for a mere leman -- t ra business to call o sucerous exercises -- ake ten, or er ten (eleven, of course, during tmas solstice), to be t o t, o do it in earnest, requires anotion. Not but tty sun-risings, as old, and sucime especially, some ting up. But, empted once or to assist at ty abated. e are no longer ambitious of being tiers, to attend at oo sacred to e to say truticipated our usual up is called), to go a journey, or upon a foolis all ter in listlessness and ure ly declaring ion, in aspiring to regulate our frail celestial and sleepless traveller. e deny not t tly and vigorous, at tset especially, in t is flattering to get [p 270] tart of a lazy o conquer deat tality are in us; and range qualms, before nigy of tural inversion. t of mankind are fast tions, content to o linger a-bed, and digest our dreams. It is time to recombine t in a confused mass presented; to snatcfulness; to s feeders, too grossly, to taste to co collect ttered rays of a brigasm, or act over again, urnal tragedies; to drag into day-ligruggling and -mare; to errors, or too muc for tual communications, to let tly. e are not so stupid, or so careless, as t Imperial forgetter of o us to o import us more nearly as more nearly ening. e ; o solicit, nor affairs to manage. t in upon us at t. e o expect, but in a s time a sick bed, and a dismissal. e deligo anticipate deat affords. e are already e