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farm; dogs and crowing cocks contend together in 

defiance; and yet from this Olympian station; except for 

the whispering rumour of a train; the world has fallen 

into a dead silence; and the business of town and country 

grown voiceless in your ears。  A crying hill…bird; the 

bleat of a sheep; a wind singing in the dry grass; seem 

not so much to interrupt; as to accompany; the stillness; 

but to the spiritual ear; the whole scene makes a music 

at once human and rural; and discourses pleasant 

reflections on the destiny of man。  The spiry habitable 

city; ships; the divided fields; and browsing herds; and 

the straight highways; tell visibly of man's active and 

comfortable ways; and you may be never so laggard and 

never so unimpressionable; but there is something in the 

view that spirits up your blood and puts you in the vein 

for cheerful labour。



Immediately below is Fairmilehead; a spot of roof 

and a smoking chimney; where two roads; no thicker than 

packthread; intersect beside a hanging wood。  If you are 

fanciful; you will be reminded of the gauger in the 

story。  And the thought of this old exciseman; who once 

lipped and fingered on his pipe and uttered clear notes 

from it in the mountain air; and the words of the song he 

affected; carry your mind 'Over the hills and far away' 

to distant countries; and you have a vision of Edinburgh 

not; as you see her; in the midst of a little 

neighbourhood; but as a boss upon the round world with 

all Europe and the deep sea for her surroundings。  For 

every place is a centre to the earth; whence highways 

radiate or ships set sail for foreign ports; the limit of 

a parish is not more imaginary than the frontier of an 

empire; and as a man sitting at home in his cabinet and 

swiftly writing books; so a city sends abroad an 

influence and a portrait of herself。  There is no 

Edinburgh emigrant; far or near; from China to Peru; but 

he or she carries some lively pictures of the mind; some 

sunset behind the Castle cliffs; some snow scene; some 

maze of city lamps; indelible in the memory and 

delightful to study in the intervals of toil。  For any 

such; if this book fall in their way; here are a few more 

home pictures。  It would be pleasant; if they should 

recognise a house where they had dwelt; or a walk that 

they had taken。









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