Newspapers / Mars Hill University Student … / April 1, 1951, edition 1 / Page 7
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ted her garment. participants viea tor tne execution cross-making contract of Rome. lul ev( 'rencr ,n pa:^ new as dent; 1 ;; and I The ire ini lid E| inn istaceJ Potts, r :kson,| ler, n and I initiatl BStS Joan )up aid . 13, t| FrencI ome s of lion ompaJ Meet ilatioi ■ch ij biogri werl unisti for eir bJ the pi ok, T| ram irectil nell ti prc consil ex-Col le follT le R| :as; angerI inches! lb will irch rhe p^ of 950. 3n by ;hese ly the I Shawl etcher! Vince! nclair | and ke. Uean hee, Mr. .Tames ably substituting r,j.„ IVT * and /^ati4/ie Give me the country and warm fields in May. Give me the scent of freshly mown hay. And high tempered horse to gallop upon. And wide open spaces on which to run. Let the wind my sweaty forehead fan. 01 h. tl And roughen my features and cause them to tan. n is belo' t “With Nature I Would Choose To Live” Show me a forest where tall pines grow. Where green velvet moss spreads a carpet Let me lie by a brook babbling on to the sea And dream of things that might someday be. Then send the birds their songs to sing. And through the woods their anthems ring. Paint me a sunset with rich, vivid hue. Then follow with dusk and its shower of dew. Hang me a sliver of moon in the sky To remind me at night that God is nigh. These things, 0 God in heaven give; With nature I would choose to live. —Anne Tunst»| h( rs m /e e s "ik lii Mountain Meditations of the mountain. On one si • ;e( surface was dominated by e. Often a person likes to go off alone to some place where he can admire the beauties of nature and meditate upon them. Through the mind pass some very abstract ideals and thoughts that often drive home with force great truths of life and morality. It seems each thing the person sees with the eyes is pictured as something en tirely different in the mind. These mental pictures usually are related by a common general theme. the cove encircled by Little Moun tain. This suggested the shining possibilities of a new born baby and a shelter from the evils of the world. When I reached the famili ar picnic site on the crest, many objects attracted my eye and set my mind in motion. The great fallen tree appeared as one whose life had been great but had ceased; the usefulness, however, endures as does the tree, which serves as a on the other, by wild gi'^^pg, dense weeds. This to me illu®-sl how people are divided i^’*;ir ferent type groups even they are on the same t living. Beyond the fence tl’jjj became paths, paths wande* and fro and running up an' lily the sloping sides of the As I rambled up the side of Little Mountain, my thoughts also rambled. They were of beauty and the peaceful quietness of nature, which seems always ready to com mune with people who long to rest both body and soul after periods of work and the pressure of human life. As I neared the top my subconscious self began to compare each object I saw with some phase of human life and achievement. rTTTTTTTTTTXXXXXZIXXXXXXJ Homer Myers rxXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXJ The first sight that brought to my mind a suggestion of human achievement was a shiny roof on a barn snuggled in the very depth of quiet place of restful enjoyment for both meditators and lovers. The neat pile of brush lazily wait ing to burst into flame reminded me that the apparently insignific- and and useless can serve a very definite purpose to others—in this case for heat, light, and a means of preparing food. While sitting on the fallen tree trunk I observed a torn wire fence roving crookedly across the crest These paths, like the climbing mountain roads, s* suggest the uneasiness of the diligent search for P®ati satisfaction of mind, soul. 2ti As I leisurely started the crowning summit lii mountain where the top®H of the surrounding terriW'jri be easily surveyed, the le majestic mountains loorne'lht the great people, success io pie, who challenge us to 1 new heights in living. Tb^>r( hills appear to typify the *ps to gain a higher and a bet 1, of service, while the va' ill resent the class of P®®** have either failed to se higher goal or set a very ns and reached it with ease’ land suggests the poor, but contented people wh® ^ (Continued on Pag® HILLTOP—PAGE SIX will b| jme
Mars Hill University Student Newspaper
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April 1, 1951, edition 1
7
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