“You mean, perhaps, that you like reading, if you may choose your own books.”
“Or rather, if I may choose my own time to read them, and that would not be on bright summer days.”
“Without sacrificing bright summer days, one finds one has made little progress when the long winter nights come.”
“Yes, sir. But must the sacrifice be paid in books? I fancy I learned as much in the play-ground as I did n the schoolroom, and for the last few months, in much my own master, reading hard in the forenoon, it is true, for many hours at a stretch, and yet again for a few hours at evening, but rambling also through the streets, or listening to a few friends whom I have contrived to make,—I think, if I can boast of any progress at all, the books have the smaller share in it.”
“You would, then, prefer an active life to a studious one?”
“Oh, yes—yes.”
“Dinner is served,” said the decorous Mr. Mills, throwing open the door.
CHAPTER III.
In our happy country every man’s house is his castle. But however
stoutly he fortify it, Care enters, as surely as she did in Horace’s
time, through the porticos of a Roman’s villa. Nor, whether
ceilings be fretted with gold and ivory, or whether only coloured
with whitewash, does it matter to Care any more than it does to a
house-fly. But every tree, be it cedar or blackthorn, can harbour
its singing-bird; and few are the homes in which, from nooks least
suspected, there starts not a music. Is it quite true that, “non
avium citharaeque cantus somnum reducent”? Would not even Damocles
himself have forgotten the sword, if the lute-player had chanced on
the notes that lull?