Higher Laws
As I came ring of fish,
trailing my pole, it being noe dark, I caught a glimpse of a
a strange thrill of
savage deligrongly tempted to seize and devour him
ra t I wildness which he
represented. Once or the pond, I
found myself ranging tarved h a
strange abandonment, seeking some kind of venison w
devour, and no morsel could oo savage for me. the
scenes ably familiar. I found in
myself, and still find, an instinct toward a is
named, spiritual life, as do most men, and anotoward a
primitive rank and savage one, and I reverence th. I love
t less ture t
are in fisill recommended it to me. I like sometimes to take
rank he animals do. Perhaps
I o t and to ing, we young, my
closest acquaintance ure. troduce us to and
detain us in scenery t age, we should
tle acquaintance. Fisers, woodchoppers, and
othe fields and woods, in a peculiar
sense a part of Nature ten in a more favorable
mood for observing ervals of ts, than
ps even, ion. She
is not afraid to ex o traveller on the
prairie is naturally a er, on ters of the Missouri
and Columbia a trapper, and at t. Mary a fisherman.
raveller learns t second-he
y. e are most interested when science
reports ically or instinctively,
for t alone is a true y, or account of human experience.
take ts,
because