SHAWORDS

It is only your habitual late riser who takes in the full flavor of Na — Thomas Bailey Aldrich

"It is only your habitual late riser who takes in the full flavor of Nature at those rare intervals when he gets up to go a-fishing. He brings virginal emotions and unsatiated eyes to the sparkling freshness of earth and stream and sky."
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Thomas Bailey Aldrich
Thomas Bailey Aldrich
author

Thomas Bailey Aldrich was an American writer, poet, critic, and editor. He is notable for his long editorship of The Atlantic Monthly, during which he published writers including Charles W. Chesnutt. He was also known for his semi-autobiographical book The Story of a Bad Boy, which established the "bad boy's book" subgenre in nineteenth-century American literature, and for his poetry.

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"My dear Mr. Morse: It was very pleasant to me to get a letter from you the other day. Perhaps I should have found it pleasanter if I had been able to decipher it. I dont think that I mastered anything beyond the date (which I knew) and the signature (which I guessed at). Theres a singular and a perpetual charm in a letter of yours; it never grows old, it never loses its novelty. One can say to ones self every morning: "Theres that letter of Morses. I havent read it yet. I think Ill take another shy at it to-day, and maybe I shall be able in the course of a few years to make out what he means by those ts that look like ws and those is that havent any eyebrows." Other letters are read and thrown away and forgotten, but yours are kept forever—unread. One of them will last a reasonable man a lifetime."
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Thomas Bailey Aldrich