Vanishing Roads and Other Essays

Richard Le Gallienne
Roads and Other Essays, by
Richard Le Gallienne

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Title: Vanishing Roads and Other Essays
Author: Richard Le Gallienne
Release Date: March 22, 2004 [EBook #11675]
Language: English
Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
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Vanishing Roads And Other Essays
By
Richard Le Gallienne

1915

TO
ROBERT HOBART DAVIS
DEAR BOB: It is quite a long time now since you and I first caught
sight of each other and became fellow wayfarers on this Vanishing
Road of the world. O quite a lot of years now, Bob! Yet I control my
tendency to shiver at their number from the fact that we have travelled
them, always within hailing distance of each other, I with the
comfortable knowledge that near by I had so good a comrade, so true a
friend.
For this once, by your leave, we won't "can" the sentiment,--to use an
idiom in which you are the master-artist on this continent,--but I, at
least, will luxuriate in retrospect, as I write your name by way of
dedication to this volume of essays, for some of which your
quick-firing mind is somewhat more than editorially responsible. You
were one of the first to make me welcome to a country of which, even
as a boy, I used prophetically to dream as my "promised land," little
knowing that it was indeed to be my home, the home of my spirit, as
well as the final resting-place of my household gods; and, having you
so early for my friend, is it to be wondered at if I soon came to regard
the American humourist as the noblest work of God?
There is yet, I trust, much left of the Vanishing Road for us to travel
together; and I hope that, when the time comes for us both to vanish
over the horizon line, we may exit still within hail of each other,--so
that we may have a reasonable chance of hitting the trail together on the
next route, whatever it is going to be.
Always yours, RICHARD LE GALLIENNE.
Rowayton, December 25, 1914.

For their discernment in giving the following essays their first
opportunity with the reader the writer desires to thank the editors of
The North American Review, Harper's Magazine, The Century, The
Smart Set, Munsey's, The Out-Door World, and The Forum.

CONTENTS
CHAPTER I.
--VANISHING ROADS II.--WOMAN AS A SUPERNATURAL
BEING III.--THE LACK OF IMAGINATION AMONG
MILLIONAIRES IV.--THE PASSING OF MRS. GRUNDY
V.--MODERN AIDS TO ROMANCE VI.--THE LAST CALL
VII.--THE PERSECUTIONS OF BEAUTY VIII.--THE MANY
FACES--THE ONE DREAM IX.--THE SNOWS OF YESTER-YEAR
X.--THE PSYCHOLOGY OF GOSSIP XI.--THE PASSING AWAY
OF THE EDITOR XII.--THE SPIRIT OF THE OPEN XIII.--AN OLD
AMERICAN TOW-PATH XIV.--A MODERN SAINT FRANCIS
XV.--THE LITTLE GHOST IN THE GARDEN XVI.--THE
ENGLISH COUNTRYSIDE XVII.--LONDON--CHANGING AND
UNCHANGING XVIII.--THE HAUNTED RESTAURANT
XIX.--THE NEW PYRAMUS AND THISBE XX.--TWO
WONDERFUL OLD LADIES XXI.--A CHRISTMAS MEDITATION
XXII.--ON RE-READING WALTER PATER XXIII.--THE
MYSTERY OF "FIONA MACLEOD"
XXIV.--FORBES-ROBERTSON: AN APPRECIATION XXV.--A
MEMORY OF FRÉDÉRIC MISTRAL XXVI.--IMPERISHABLE
FICTION XXVII.--THE MAN BEHIND THE PEN XXVIII.--BULLS
IN CHINA-SHOPS XXIX.--THE BIBLE AND THE BUTTERFLY

Vanishing Roads

I

VANISHING ROADS
Though actually the work of man's hands--or, more properly speaking,
the work of his travelling feet,--roads have long since come to seem so
much a part of Nature that we have grown to think of them as a feature
of the landscape no less natural than rocks and trees. Nature has
adopted them among her own works, and the road that mounts the hill
to meet the sky-line, or winds away into mystery through the woodland,
seems to be veritably her own highway leading us to the stars, luring us
to her secret places. And just as her rocks and trees, we know not how
or why, have come to have for us a strange spiritual suggestiveness, so
the vanishing road has gained a meaning for us beyond its use as the
avenue of mortal wayfaring, the link of communication between village
and village and city and city; and some roads indeed seem so lonely,
and so beautiful in their loneliness, that one feels they were meant to be
travelled only by the soul. All roads indeed lead to Rome, but theirs
also is a more mystical destination, some bourne of which no traveller
knows the name, some city, they all seem to hint, even more eternal.
Never more than when we tread some
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