The Lost Art of Reading
(eBook)

Book Cover
Average Rating
Contributors:
Published:
[United States] : Otbebookpublishing, 2019.
Format:
eBook
Content Description:
1 online resource (441 pages)
Status:
Description

Excerpt: "The population of the civilized world to-day may be divided into two classes, -millionaires and those who would like to be millionaires. The rest are artists, poets, tramps, and babies-and do not count. Poets and artists do not count until after they are dead. Tramps are put in prison. Babies are expected to get over it. A few more summers, a few more winters-with short skirts or with down on their chins-they shall be seen burrowing with the rest of us. One almost wonders sometimes, why it is that the sun keeps on year after year and day after day turning the globe around and around, heating it and lighting it and keeping things growing on it, when after all, when all is said and done (crowded with wonder and with things to live with, as it is), it is a comparatively empty globe. No one seems to be using it very much, or paying very much attention to it, or getting very much out of it. There are never more than a very few men on it at a time, who can be said to be really living on it. They are engaged in getting a living and in hoping that they are going to live sometime. They are also going to read sometime. When one thinks of the wasted sunrises and sunsets-the great free show of heaven-the door opens every night-of the little groups of people straggling into it-of the swarms of people hurrying back and forth before it, jostling their getting-a-living lives up and down before it, not knowing it is there, -one wonders why it is there. Why does it not fall upon us, or its lights go suddenly out upon us? We stand in the days and the nights like stalls-suns flying over our heads, stars singing through space beneath our feet. But we do not see. Every man's head in a pocket, -boring for his living in a pocket-or being bored for his living in a pocket, -why should he see? True we are not without a philosophy for this-to look over the edge of our stalls with. "Getting a living is living," we say. We whisper it to ourselves-in our pockets. Then we try to get it. When we get it, we try to believe it-and when we get it we do not believe anything. Let every man under the walled-in heaven, the iron heaven, speak for his own soul. No one else shall speak for him. We only know what we know-each of us in our own pockets. The great books tell us it has not always been an iron heaven or a walled-in heaven. But into the faces of the flocks of the children that come to us, year after year, we look, wondering. They shall not do anything but burrowing-most of them. Our very ideals are borrowings. So are our books. Religion burrows. It barely so much as looks at heaven. Why should a civilized man-a man who has a pocket in civilization -a man who can burrow-look at heaven? It is the glimmering boundary line where burrowing leaves off. Time enough. In the meantime, the shovel. Let the stars' wheel. Do men look at stars with shovels?"

Also in This Series
More Like This
Other Editions and Formats
More Details
Language:
English
ISBN:
9783965376816, 3965376810

Notes

Restrictions on Access
Instant title available through hoopla.
Description
Excerpt: "The population of the civilized world to-day may be divided into two classes, -millionaires and those who would like to be millionaires. The rest are artists, poets, tramps, and babies-and do not count. Poets and artists do not count until after they are dead. Tramps are put in prison. Babies are expected to get over it. A few more summers, a few more winters-with short skirts or with down on their chins-they shall be seen burrowing with the rest of us. One almost wonders sometimes, why it is that the sun keeps on year after year and day after day turning the globe around and around, heating it and lighting it and keeping things growing on it, when after all, when all is said and done (crowded with wonder and with things to live with, as it is), it is a comparatively empty globe. No one seems to be using it very much, or paying very much attention to it, or getting very much out of it. There are never more than a very few men on it at a time, who can be said to be really living on it. They are engaged in getting a living and in hoping that they are going to live sometime. They are also going to read sometime. When one thinks of the wasted sunrises and sunsets-the great free show of heaven-the door opens every night-of the little groups of people straggling into it-of the swarms of people hurrying back and forth before it, jostling their getting-a-living lives up and down before it, not knowing it is there, -one wonders why it is there. Why does it not fall upon us, or its lights go suddenly out upon us? We stand in the days and the nights like stalls-suns flying over our heads, stars singing through space beneath our feet. But we do not see. Every man's head in a pocket, -boring for his living in a pocket-or being bored for his living in a pocket, -why should he see? True we are not without a philosophy for this-to look over the edge of our stalls with. "Getting a living is living," we say. We whisper it to ourselves-in our pockets. Then we try to get it. When we get it, we try to believe it-and when we get it we do not believe anything. Let every man under the walled-in heaven, the iron heaven, speak for his own soul. No one else shall speak for him. We only know what we know-each of us in our own pockets. The great books tell us it has not always been an iron heaven or a walled-in heaven. But into the faces of the flocks of the children that come to us, year after year, we look, wondering. They shall not do anything but burrowing-most of them. Our very ideals are borrowings. So are our books. Religion burrows. It barely so much as looks at heaven. Why should a civilized man-a man who has a pocket in civilization -a man who can burrow-look at heaven? It is the glimmering boundary line where burrowing leaves off. Time enough. In the meantime, the shovel. Let the stars' wheel. Do men look at stars with shovels?"
System Details
Mode of access: World Wide Web.
Reviews from GoodReads
Loading GoodReads Reviews.
Citations
APA Citation (style guide)

Lee, G. S. (2019). The Lost Art of Reading. [United States], Otbebookpublishing.

Chicago / Turabian - Author Date Citation (style guide)

Lee, Gerald Stanley. 2019. The Lost Art of Reading. [United States], Otbebookpublishing.

Chicago / Turabian - Humanities Citation (style guide)

Lee, Gerald Stanley, The Lost Art of Reading. [United States], Otbebookpublishing, 2019.

MLA Citation (style guide)

Lee, Gerald Stanley. The Lost Art of Reading. [United States], Otbebookpublishing, 2019.

Note! Citation formats are based on standards as of July 2022. Citations contain only title, author, edition, publisher, and year published. Citations should be used as a guideline and should be double checked for accuracy.
Staff View
Grouped Work ID:
d6fe649c-e811-ab3d-23a5-775570c4fe33
Go To GroupedWork

Hoopla Extract Information

hooplaId12702568
titleThe Lost Art Of Reading
kindEBOOK
price0.49
active1
pa0
profanity0
children0
demo0
rating
abridged0
dateLastUpdatedApr 30, 2020 08:21:15 PM

Record Information

Last File Modification TimeNov 22, 2023 11:49:02 PM
Last Grouped Work Modification TimeApr 15, 2024 10:18:01 PM

MARC Record

LEADER04253nam a22003735a 4500
001MWT12702568
003MWT
00520231028013918.1
006m     o  d        
007cr cn|||||||||
008231028s2019    xxu    eo     000 1 eng d
020 |a 9783965376816|q (electronic bk.)
020 |a 3965376810|q (electronic bk.)
02842|a MWT12702568
029 |a https://d2snwnmzyr8jue.cloudfront.net/ins_9783965376816_180.jpeg
037 |a 12702568|b Midwest Tape, LLC|n http://www.midwesttapes.com
040 |a Midwest|e rda
099 |a eBook hoopla
1001 |a Lee, Gerald Stanley,|e author.
24514|a The Lost Art of Reading|h [electronic resource] /|c Gerald Stanley Lee.
264 1|a [United States] :|b Otbebookpublishing,|c 2019.
264 2|b Made available through hoopla
300 |a 1 online resource (441 pages)
336 |a text|b txt|2 rdacontent
337 |a computer|b c|2 rdamedia
338 |a online resource|b cr|2 rdacarrier
347 |a text file|2 rda
506 |a Instant title available through hoopla.
520 |a Excerpt: "The population of the civilized world to-day may be divided into two classes, -millionaires and those who would like to be millionaires. The rest are artists, poets, tramps, and babies-and do not count. Poets and artists do not count until after they are dead. Tramps are put in prison. Babies are expected to get over it. A few more summers, a few more winters-with short skirts or with down on their chins-they shall be seen burrowing with the rest of us. One almost wonders sometimes, why it is that the sun keeps on year after year and day after day turning the globe around and around, heating it and lighting it and keeping things growing on it, when after all, when all is said and done (crowded with wonder and with things to live with, as it is), it is a comparatively empty globe. No one seems to be using it very much, or paying very much attention to it, or getting very much out of it. There are never more than a very few men on it at a time, who can be said to be really living on it. They are engaged in getting a living and in hoping that they are going to live sometime. They are also going to read sometime. When one thinks of the wasted sunrises and sunsets-the great free show of heaven-the door opens every night-of the little groups of people straggling into it-of the swarms of people hurrying back and forth before it, jostling their getting-a-living lives up and down before it, not knowing it is there, -one wonders why it is there. Why does it not fall upon us, or its lights go suddenly out upon us? We stand in the days and the nights like stalls-suns flying over our heads, stars singing through space beneath our feet. But we do not see. Every man's head in a pocket, -boring for his living in a pocket-or being bored for his living in a pocket, -why should he see? True we are not without a philosophy for this-to look over the edge of our stalls with. "Getting a living is living," we say. We whisper it to ourselves-in our pockets. Then we try to get it. When we get it, we try to believe it-and when we get it we do not believe anything. Let every man under the walled-in heaven, the iron heaven, speak for his own soul. No one else shall speak for him. We only know what we know-each of us in our own pockets. The great books tell us it has not always been an iron heaven or a walled-in heaven. But into the faces of the flocks of the children that come to us, year after year, we look, wondering. They shall not do anything but burrowing-most of them. Our very ideals are borrowings. So are our books. Religion burrows. It barely so much as looks at heaven. Why should a civilized man-a man who has a pocket in civilization -a man who can burrow-look at heaven? It is the glimmering boundary line where burrowing leaves off. Time enough. In the meantime, the shovel. Let the stars' wheel. Do men look at stars with shovels?"
538 |a Mode of access: World Wide Web.
650 0|a Electronic books.
7102 |a hoopla digital.
85640|u https://www.hoopladigital.com/title/12702568?utm_source=MARC&Lid=hh4435|z Instantly available on hoopla.
85642|z Cover image|u https://d2snwnmzyr8jue.cloudfront.net/ins_9783965376816_180.jpeg