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IDLENESS
Unamuno, the Spanish philosopher, tells about the Roman aqueduct at Segovia, in his
native Spain. It was built in 109 A.D. For eighteen hundred years, it carried cool water
from the mountains to the hot and thirsty city. Nearly sixty generations of men drank from
its flow.
Then came another generation, a recent one, who said, "This aqueduct is so great a
marvel that it ought to be preserved for our children, as a museum piece. We shall relieve
it of its centuries-long labor." They did; they laid modern iron pipes. They gave the
ancient bricks and mortar a reverent rest. And the aqueduct began to fall apart. The sun
beating on the dry mortar caused it to crumble. The bricks and stone sagged and threatened
to fall. What ages of service could not destroy idleness disintegrated.
Resource, Sept./ Oct., 1992, p. 4.
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