Volume 1
The letters of William James / edited by his son, Henry James.
- William James
- Date:
- 1920
Licence: Public Domain Mark
Credit: The letters of William James / edited by his son, Henry James. Source: Wellcome Collection.
365/392 page 327
![reversion of the nervous system to its normal equilibrium again, so I let it work. And the conscientious sophism was not so unreasonable after all. My brain has gradually got working in a natural manner again, and we are definitively settled for the winter, so the time for a line to you has come. To begin with, your letter sounded delicious, and I like to think of you as enjoying the neighborhood of our good little [Chocorua] lake so much, and particularly as express¬ ing such satisfaction in the look of our little place. If it hasn’t “style,” it has at least a harmonious domesticity of appearance. A recent letter referred to “Dr. Putnam’s” place on the hill across the lake, as if you or Charlie might have been buying over there too. Is this so? I shall be very glad if it is so. As for ourselves, coming abroad with a pack of children is not the same thing in reality as it is on paper. A summer full of passive enjoyment is one thing, a summer full of care for the present and anxious schemes for the coming winter is another. When you come abroad, come with Marian for the summer only and leave the children at home. Of course they have gained perception and intelligence, and if this Florence school only turns out well, they will have a good deal of French, and other experiences which will be precious to them hereafter; so that on their [account] there will be nothing to regret. But the parental organism in sore need of recuperative vacation gets a great deal more of it per dollar and per day if allowed to wander by itself. Enough now of this philosophy!. . . I am telling you nothing of our summer, most all of which was passed in Switzerland. Germany is good, but Switzer¬ land is better. How good Switzerland is, is something that can’t be described in words. The healthiness of it passes all utterance — the air, the roads, the mountains, the](https://iiif.wellcomecollection.org/image/b31359620_0001_0367.jp2/full/800%2C/0/default.jpg)
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