< Page:Familiar letters of Henry David Thoreau.djvu
This page needs to be proofread.

affr.38.] TO HARRISON BLAKE. 327

As for compliments, even the stars praise me, and I praise them. They and I sometimes be long to a mutual admiration society. Is it not so with you ? I know you of old. Are you not tough and earnest to be talked at, praised, or blamed ? Must you go out of the room because you are the subject of conversation? Where will you go to, pray ? Shall we look into the " Letter Writer " to see what compliments are admissible ? I am not afraid of praise, for I have practiced it on myself. As for my deserts, I never took an account of that stock, and in this connection care not whether I am deserving or not. When I hear praise coming, do I not ele vate and arch myself to hear it like the sky, and as impersonally ? Think I appropriate any of it to my weak legs ? No. Praise away till all is blue.

I see by the newspapers that the season for making sugar is at hand. Now is the time, whether you be rock, or white-maple, or hickory. I trust that you have prepared a store of sap- tubs and sumach-spouts, and invested largely in kettles. Early the first frosty morning, tap your

maples, the sap will not run in summer, you

    This article is issued from Wikisource. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.