[Under the Trees and Elsewhere by Hamilton Wright Mabie]@TWC D-Link book
Under the Trees and Elsewhere

CHAPTER XXI
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there's no clock in the forest.
There were a great many days in Arden when we did absolutely nothing; we awoke without plans; we fell asleep without memories.

This was especially true of the earlier part of our stay in the Forest; the stage of intense enjoyment of new-found freedom and repose.

There was a kind of rapture in the possession of our days that was new to us; a sense of ownership of time of which we had never so much as dreamed when we lived by the clock.

Those tiny ornamental hands on the delicately painted dial were our taskmasters, disguised under forms so dainty and fragile that, while we felt their tyranny, we never so much as suspected their share in our servitude.

Silent themselves, they issued their commands in tones we dared not disregard; fashioned so cunningly, they ruled us as with iron sceptres; moving within so small a circle, they sent us hither and yon on every imaginable service.
They severed eternity into minute fragments, and dealt it out to us minute by minute like a cordial, given drop by drop to the dying; they marked with relentless exactness the brief periods of our leisure and indicated the hours of our toil.


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