[The Log School-House on the Columbia by Hezekiah Butterworth]@TWC D-Link book
The Log School-House on the Columbia

CHAPTER III
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The odd event was quite excusable on any ground of rule and propriety in the primitive school.
"It no harm; let it go," said the boy on his return; and the spirit of the incident was good and educational in the hearts of the school.
The charm of his life was Gretchen's violin.

It transfigured him; it changed the world to him.

His father was a forest philosopher; the boy caught a like spirit, and often said things that were a revelation to Mr.
Mann.
"Why do you like the violin so much ?" said the latter to him one day.
"It brings to me the thing longed for--the thing I long to know." "Why, what is that ?" "I can't tell it--I feel it here--I sense it--I shall know--something better--yonder--the thing we long for, but do not know.

Don't you long for it?
Don't you feel it ?" The tall schoolmaster said "Yes," and was thoughtful.

The poor Indian had tried to express that something beyond his self of which he could only now have a dim conception, and about which even science is dumb.


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