Pauline Johnson The Gipsy Trail Rudyard Kipling Wanderlust Gerald Gould The Footpath Way Katherine Tynan A Maine Trail Gertrude Huntington McGiffert Afoot Charles G.
I wondered if Jerry in the city could be feeling the call of the wanderlust as I did.
The old French Aydelot blood had something of the wanderlust in it.
So the wanderlust and spirit of adventure in the Aydelot blood got you after all," Asher Aydelot said as he looked across the breakfast table at his son.
Something of the wanderlust in his blood, however, kept him from rooting too firmly at once.
Wanderlust THE highways and the byways, the kind sky folding all, And never a care to drag me back and never a voice to call; Only the call of the long, white road to the far horizon's wall.
He had been the guest of equally famous brother artists in the cities of two hemispheres, and, since sincere painting had been his pole-star, he had gone where his art's wanderlust beckoned.
As the day wore on, they fell to talking, and the boy again found himself speaking of his fettered restiveness in the confinement of his life; of the wanderlust which stirred him, and of which he had been taught to feel ashamed.
Wanderlust has saturated my system, yea, to the very marrow in my bones.
The Swede sat up and anathematized passionately the wanderlust in man that sent him tramping and suffering hardships such as that.
I became a tramp--well, because of the life that was in me, of the wanderlust in my blood that would not let me rest.
The others--partly spurred by a natural wanderlust of youth and partly driven by irritable parents that were expecting new babies and had no time for the old--had gone into the swamp.
Smart and crafty, he had never offered allegiance to anything save his own wanderlust and he feared nothing.
Out in Illinois, when the wanderlust used to catch the evolving youth, who was neither a boy nor a man, he ran away and went Out West.
The boy in a village who works, and then gets out into a wider sphere at that critical period when the wanderlust strikes him, is in the line of evolution.
Thus matters went on until Jim was in his eighteenth year, when the wanderlust got hold of the young man.
Children, who, in the best of circumstances, habitually are attacked by a wanderlust and run away from home, or suffer from fits of naughtiness, are samples of such endocrine lability.
Adolescence for them, however, is more apt to be stormy and episodic, adjustment to the new world of people and things is much more difficult, wanderlust is acute.
The strange light of his eyes grew brighter, the wine of quickened wanderlust mounted in deepening glow upward to heart and brain.
And do you smell with me the rare perfume of the wet asphalt and feel with me the wanderlust in the spirit soul of the Seine?
The wanderlust was not stifled any more than a fire is stifled by giving it air.
The Wanderlust will claim me at the finish for its own.
When you get right down to cases, it's King's Grub that rules the races, And the Wanderlust will help you understand.
The Wanderlust The Wanderlust has lured me to the seven lonely seas, Has dumped me on the tailing-piles of dearth; The Wanderlust has haled me from the morris chairs of ease, Has hurled me to the ends of all the earth.