The Aran Islands By John M. Synge





































































































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The absence of the heavy boot of Europe has preserved to these
people the agile walk of the wild animal - Page 26
The Aran Islands By John M. Synge - Page 26 of 190 - First - Home

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The Absence Of The Heavy Boot Of Europe Has Preserved To These People The Agile Walk Of The Wild Animal, While The General Simplicity Of Their Lives Has Given Them Many Other Points Of Physical Perfection.

Their way of life has never been acted on by anything much more artificial than the nests and burrows

Of the creatures that live round them, and they seem, in a certain sense, to approach more nearly to the finer types of our aristocracies - who are bred artificially to a natural ideal - than to the labourer or citizen, as the wild horse resembles the thoroughbred rather than the hack or cart-horse. Tribes of the same natural development are, perhaps, frequent in half-civilized countries, but here a touch of the refinement of old societies is blended, with singular effect, among the qualities of the wild animal.

While I am walking with Michael some one often comes to me to ask the time of day. Few of the people, however, are sufficiently used to modern time to understand in more than a vague way the convention of the hours, and when I tell them what o'clock it is by my watch they are not satisfied, and ask how long is left them before the twilight.

The general knowledge of time on the island depends, curiously enough, on the direction of the wind. Nearly all the cottages are built, like this one, with two doors opposite each other, the more sheltered of which lies open all day to give light to the interior. If the wind is northerly the south door is opened, and the shadow of the door-post moving across the kitchen floor indicates the hour; as soon, however, as the wind changes to the south the other door is opened, and the people, who never think of putting up a primitive dial, are at a loss.

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