We Are on a Journey
American|Henry Van Dyke
Wherever you are, and whoever you may be, there is one thing in which you and I are just alike at this moment, and in all the moments of our existence: we are not at rest; we are on a journey.
Our life is a movement, a tendency1, a steady, ceaseless progress towards an unseen goal. We are gaining something, or losing something, everyday. Even when our position and our character seem to remain precisely the same, they are changing. For the mere advance of time is a change. It is not the same thing to have a bare field in January and in July. The season makes the difference. The limitations that are childlike2 in the child are childish in the man.
Everything that we do is a step in one direction or another. Even the failure to do something is in itself a deed. It sets us forward or backward. The action of the negative pole of a magnetic needle is just as real as the action of the positive pole. To decline is to accept—the other alternative.
Are you nearer to your port today than you were yesterday? Yes—you must be a little nearer to some port or other; for since your ship was the first launched upon the sea of life, you have never been still for a single moment; the sea is too deep, you could not find an anchorage if you would; there can be no pause until you come into port.
热词天地
1.tendency ['tendənsɪ] n.倾向,趋势
2.childlike['tʃaɪldlaɪk] adj.孩子般的;天真的