Page:Anti-slavery and reform papers by Thoreau, Henry David.djvu/109

 98 A nil- Slavery and Reform Papers.

a common racer or dray horse would have drawn it.

And how many crazy structures on our globe^s surface, of the same dimensions, would wait for dry-rot if the traces of one horse were hatched to them, even to their windward side ? Plainly this is not the principle of com- parison. But even the steady and constant force of the horse may be rated as equal to his weight at least. Yet we should prefer to let the zephyrs and gales bear, with all their weight, upon our fences, than that Dobbin, with feet braced, should lean ominously against them for a season.

Nevertlieless, here is an almost incalculable power at our disposal, yet how trifling the use we make of it ! It only serves to turn a few mills, blow a few vessels across the ocean, and a few trivial ends besides. What a poor compliment do we pay to our indefatigable and energetic servant ! Men having discovered the power of falling water, which, after all, is comparatively slight, how eagerly do they seek out and improve these privileges ? Let a difference of but a few feet in level be discovered on some stream near a populous town, some slight occasion for gravity to act, and the whole economy of the neigh- bourhood is changed at once. Men do indeed speculate about and with this power as if it were the only privilege.

But meanwhile this aerial stream is falling from far greater heights with more constant flow, never shrunk by drought, offering mill-sites wherever the wind blows ; a Niagara in the air, with no Canada side ; — only the application is hard.

There are the powers, too, of the tide and waves, con- stantly ebbing and flowing, lapsing and relapsing, but