Wednesday, January 30, 2019

A D-train Passenger Views Outside :: Land Beauty Essays

A D-train Passenger Views OutsideThe passenger realizesas the at large(p) of the sunset passesthrough the gaps in the disposescrapersthat what he sees is good.The glittering reddish skyslowly disappears as the clouds flythe train descends as the view passes byinto the darkness of the underground.It is a scene most of us will occur if we ever take the New York subway over the Manhattan Bridge at sunset. Many times I have seen this panorama, but it still does non fail to capture me, to draw me away from my book, and to the window. Then while the bridge-columns newsflash by the windows, in the gaps, like an old movie, the view unrolls in either its beauty. How did our antediluvian patriarch ancestors feel when they saw this spectacular sight? (I mean the ancient of a few decades ago.) I re every(prenominal)y cant discern you, because I never was an ancient, and if I saw one, that is not one of the topics that we discussed. still I can tell you how a very intelligent innovative man thinks of it. (That would be me. I am also very humble.) I feel that it is a wondrous sight, if you think about it. But lone(prenominal) if you think about it. A being less cultured, in a specific way, would not regard the sight as beautiful, inspiring, wondrous, exalting or stupefying. He probably would not blush know if those words exist. He would probably say that it is, well, big. To him it is not necessarily beautiful. We can only check that it must be beautiful since so much work was tell into it, so many people contributed to it and built it, so many breakthroughs had to be achieved prior to the conception, that this site is the culmination of the millennia of human history and science that came in advance it. Now isnt that inspiring? (It sure sounds inspiring if you ask me. It even has some pretty long words, so it better be inspiring.) I look at the unfolding view and, subliminally, I think of all the things mentioned above, and only then do I consider the view be autiful. The aforementioned(prenominal) uncultured being looks at it, and finds it big.In his essay A First American Views His Land, N. Scott Momaday tried to express the beauty of that shore that he lived in, and the feelings he personally, and Native Americans in general, had toward that land.

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