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# 2025-08-19 - A Handy Guide For Beggars by Vachel Lindsay | |
I found this a quick and enjoyable read. Below are Vachel Lindsay's | |
rules of the road, my favorite poem in the book, and my favorite | |
chapter of the book. | |
# Vachel Lindsay's Rules Of The Road | |
(1) Keep away from the Cities; | |
(2) Keep away from the railroads; | |
(3) Have nothing to do with money and carry no baggage; | |
(4) Ask for dinner about quarter after eleven; | |
(5) Ask for supper, lodging and breakfast about quarter of five; | |
(6) Travel alone; | |
(7) Be neat, deliberate, chaste and civil; | |
(8) Preach the Gospel of Beauty. | |
# Follow The Thistledown | |
I asked her "Is Aladdin's Lamp | |
Hidden anywhere?" | |
"Look into your heart," she said, | |
"Aladdin's Lamp is there." | |
She took my heart with glowing hands. | |
It burned to dust and air | |
And smoke and rolling thistledown, | |
Blowing everywhere. | |
"Follow the thistledown," she said, | |
"Till doomsday if you dare, | |
Over the hills and far away. | |
Aladdin's Lamp is there." | |
# The Falls Of Tallulah | |
(North Georgia) | |
Tallulah Gorge | |
## I. The Call Of The Water | |
The dust of many miles was upon me. I felt uncouth in the presence of | |
the sun-dried stones. Here was a natural bathing-place. Who could | |
resist it? | |
I climbed further down the cañon, holding to the bushes. The cliff | |
along which the water rushed to the fall's foot was smooth and seemed | |
artificially made, though it had been so hewn by the fury of the | |
cataclysm in ages past. | |
I took off my clothes and put my shoulders against the granite, being | |
obliged to lean back a little to conform to its angle. I was standing | |
with my left shoulder almost touching the perilous main column of | |
water. A little fall that hurried along by itself a bit nearer | |
the bank flowed over me. It came with headway. Though it looked so | |
innocent, I could scarcely hold up against its power. | |
But it gave me delight to maintain myself. The touch of the stone was | |
balm to my walk-worn body and dust-fevered feet. Like a sacerdotal robe | |
the water flowed over my shoulders and I thought myself priest of the | |
solitude. | |
I stepped out into the air. With unwonted energy I was able to throw | |
off the coldness of my wet frame. The water there at the fall's foot | |
was like a thousand elves singing. "Joy to all creatures!" cried the | |
birds. "Joy to all creatures! Glory, glory, glory to the wild falls!" | |
## II. The Piping Of Pan | |
I was getting myself sunburned, stretched out on the warm dry rocks. | |
Down over the steep edge, somewhere near the foot of the next descent I | |
heard the pipes of Pan. Why should I dress and go? | |
I made my shoes and clothes into a bundle, and threw them down the | |
cliff and climbed over, clinging to the steep by mere twigs. I seemed | |
to hear the piping as I approached the terrace at the fall's base. Then | |
the sound of music blended with the stream's strange voice and I turned | |
to merge myself again with its waters. | |
Against the leaning wall of the cliff I placed my shoulders. The | |
descending current smote me, wrestling with wildwood laughter, | |
threatening to crush me and hurl me to the base of the mountain. But | |
just as before my feet were well set in a notch of the cliff that went | |
across the stream, cut there a million years ago. | |
It was a curious combination to discover, this stream-wide notch, and | |
above it this wall with the water spread like a crystal robe over | |
it. In the centre of the fall a Cyclops could have stood to bathe, | |
and on the edge was the same provision in miniature for feeble man. | |
And it was the more curious to find this plan repeated in detail by | |
successive cataracts of the cañon, unmistakably wrought by the slow | |
hand of geologic ages. And to see the water of the deep central stream | |
undisturbed in the midst of the fall and still crystalline, and to see | |
it slide down the steep incline and strike each notch at the foot with | |
sudden music and appalling foam, was more wonderful than the simple | |
telling can explain. | |
Each sheet of crystal that came over my shoulders seemed now to pour | |
into them rather than over them. I lifted my mouth and drank as a | |
desert bird drinks rain. My downstretched arms and extended fingers and | |
the spreading spray seemed one. My heart with its exultant blood seemed | |
but the curve of a cataract over the cliff of my soul. | |
## III. Peril, Vanity, And Adoration | |
Led by the pipes of Pan, I again descended. Once more that sound, | |
almost overtaken, interwove itself with the water's cry, and I merged | |
body and soul with the stream and the music. The margin of another | |
cataract crashed upon me. In the recklessness of pleasure, one arm | |
swung into the main current. Then the water threatened my life. To save | |
myself, I was kneeling on one knee. I reached out blindly and found | |
a hold at last in a slippery cleft, and later, it seemed an age, with | |
the other hand I was able to reach one leaf. The leaf did not break. At | |
last its bough was in my grasp and I crawled frightened into the sun. I | |
sat long on a warm patch of grass. | |
But the cliffs and the water were not really my enemies. They sent a | |
wind to give me delight. Never was the taste of the air so sweet as | |
then. The touch of it was on my lips like fruit. There was a flattery | |
in the tree-limbs bending near my shoulders. They said, "There is | |
brotherhood in your footfall on our roots and the touch of your hand on | |
our boughs." | |
The spray of the splashed foam was wine. I was the unchallenged | |
possessor of all of nature my body and soul could lay hold upon. It | |
was the fair season between spring and summer when no one came to | |
this place. Like Selkirk, I was monarch of all I surveyed. In my | |
folly I seemed to feel strange powers creeping into my veins from the | |
sod. I forgot my near-disaster. I said in my heart, "O Mother Earth | |
majestical, the touch of your creatures has comforted me, and I feel | |
the strength of the soil creeping up into my dust. From this patch of | |
soft grass, power and courage come up into me from your bosom, from the | |
foundation of your continents. I feel within me the soul of iron from | |
your iron mines, and the soul of lava from your deepest fires." | |
## IV. The Blood Unquenchable | |
The satyrs in the bushes were laughing at me and daring me to try the | |
water again. | |
I stood on the edge of the rapids where were many stones coming up out | |
of the foam. I threw logs across. The rocks held them in place. I lay | |
down between the logs in the liquid ice. I defied it heartily. And my | |
brother the river had mercy upon me, and slew me not. | |
Amid the shout of the stream the birds were singing: "Joy, joy, joy to | |
all creatures, and happiness to the whole earth. Glory, glory, glory to | |
the wild falls." | |
I struggled out from between the logs and threw my bundle over the | |
cliff, and again descended, for I heard the pipes of Pan, just below me | |
there, too plainly for delay. They seemed to say "Look! Here is a more | |
exquisite place." | |
The sun beat down upon me. I felt myself twin brother to the sun. | |
My body was lit with an all-conquering fever. I had walked through | |
tropical wildernesses for many a mile, gathering sunshine. And now in | |
an afternoon I was gambling my golden heat against the icy silver of | |
the river and winning my wager, while all the leaves were laughing on | |
all the trees. | |
And again I stood in a Heaven-prepared place, and the water poured in | |
glory upon my shoulders. | |
* * * | |
Why was it so dark? Was a storm coming? I was dazed as a child in the | |
theatre beholding the crowd go out after the sudden end of a solemn | |
play. My clothes, it appeared, were half on. I was kneeling, looking | |
up. I counted the falls to the top of the cañon. It was night, and I | |
had wrestled with them all. My spirit was beyond all reason happy. | |
This was a day for which I had not planned. I felt like one crowned. | |
My blood was glowing like the blood of the crocus, the blood of | |
the tiger-lily. And so I meditated, and then at last the chill of | |
weariness began to touch me and in my heart I said, "Oh Mother Earth, | |
for all my vanity, I know I am but a perishable flower in a cleft of | |
the rock. I give thanks to you who have fed me the wild milk of this | |
river, who have upheld me like a child of the gods throughout this day." | |
Around a curve in the cañon, down stream, growing each moment sweeter, | |
I heard the pipes of Pan. | |
## V. The Gift OF Tallulah | |
Go, you my brothers, whose hearts are in sore need of delight, and | |
bathe in the falls of Tallulah. That experience will be for the | |
foot-sore a balm, for the languid a lash, for the dry-throated pedant | |
the very cup of nature. To those crushed by the inventions of cities, | |
wounded by evil men, it will be a washing away of tears and of blood. | |
Yea, it will be to them all, what it was to my heart that day, the | |
sweet, sweet blowing of the reckless pipes of Pan. | |
author: Lindsay, Vachel, 1879-1931 | |
detail: gopher://gopherpedia.com/0/Vachel_Lindsay | |
LOC: PS3523.I58 H3 | |
source: gopher://gopher.pglaf.org/1/6/7/9/4/67947/ | |
tags: ebook,outdoor,poem,travel,vagabond | |
title: A Handy Guide For Beggars | |
# Tags | |
ebook | |
outdoor | |
poem | |
travel | |
vagabond |