[Afoot in England by W.H. Hudson]@TWC D-Link bookAfoot in England CHAPTER Fourteen: The Return of the Native 2/10
It is greatest of all when we return to a childhood's or boyhood's home.
Many writers have occupied themselves with this mournful theme, and I imagine that a person of the proper Amiel-like tender and melancholy moralizing type of mind, by using his own and his friends' experiences, could write a charmingly sad and pretty book on the subject. The really happy returns of this kind must be exceedingly rare.
I am almost surprised to think that I am able to recall as many as two, but they hardly count, as in both instances the departure or exile from home happens at so early a time of life that no recollections of the people survived--nothing, in fact, but a vague mental picture of the place. One was of a business man I knew in London, who lost his early home in a village in the Midlands, as a boy of eight or nine years of age, through the sale of the place by his father, who had become impoverished.
The boy was trained to business in London, and when a middle-aged man, wishing to retire and spend the rest of his life in the country, he revisited his native village for the first time, and discovered to his joy that he could buy back the old home.
He was, when I last saw him, very happy in its possession. The other case I will relate more fully, as it is a very curious one, and came to my knowledge in a singular way. At a small station near Eastleigh a man wearing a highly pleased expression on his face entered the smoking-carriage in which I was travelling to London.
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