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Page 12 text:
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THE WAYFARING NUMBER HE editors of the Artisan have informed me that this is to be a NVayfaring Number of the book. N o doubt they mean to commemorate particularly the Pilgrims who blazed a trail on the shores of Massachusetts Bay three hundred years ago. They probably also have in mind the Daniel Boones, the Sons of the Middle Border, the men and women of the Oregon Trail, the Overland Trail, and the Forty-Niners who came to the western sea after the Mission Fathers. For countless ages, wave after wave of migration has emanated from the east and to the west, from the birthplace of the race some- where in Central Asia. With the conquest of the Pacific, the circle is complete. Here East meets West. Even the Far North and Far South have been discovered and ex- plored. Surely Alexander would now have occasion to weep because there are no more worlds to conquer. Far journeys into the field of microcosm or macrocosm by microscope or telescope are also familiar to high school students. However, despite our proud record of discovery and exploration, we are informed that the known is to the unknown world about us as a mere speck. On account of the considerable achievements of the past, neverthe- less, for most of us, journeys in any direction will be but tracing the footsteps of others. In my armchair I recently took a journey on foot some two thous- and rniles, Vagabonding down the Andes, with Mr. Harry A. Franck. I felt a little cramped after several hours reading, when the author told about having put forty miles into his legs in a day. Yet that is the way many of us do our traveling. Some people develop a hearty aversion to any form of wayfaring. I would consider them n1ost unfortunate. Travel in foreign lands was formerly considered a necessary partof a liberal education. There is one form of wayfaring that none may escape. It is a dif- ferent journey for each and every one. It is the type of wayfaring de- scribed in Bunyan's Pilgrim's Progress. A. E. XVILSON.
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