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Great Possessions

David Grayson

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Contents

 CHAPTER I. THE WELL-FLAVOURED EARTH
 CHAPTER II. OF GOOD AND EVIL ODOURS
 CHAPTER III. FOLLOW YOUR NOSE!
 CHAPTER IV. THE GREEN PEOPLE
 CHAPTER V. PLACES OF RETIREMENT
 CHAPTER VI. NO TRESPASS
 CHAPTER VII. LOOK AT THE WORLD!
 CHAPTER VIII. A GOOD APPLE
 CHAPTER IX. I GO TO THE CITY
 CHAPTER X. THE OLD STONE MASON
 CHAPTER XI. AN AUCTION OF ANTIQUES
 CHAPTER XII. A WOMAN OF FORTY-FIVE
 CHAPTER XIII. HIS MAJESTY—BILL RICHARDS
 CHAPTER XIV. ON LIVING IN THE COUNTRY

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CHAPTER I.
THE WELL-FLAVOURED EARTH


“Sweet as Eden is the air
    And Eden-sweet the ray.
No Paradise is lost for them
Who foot by branching root and stem,
And lightly with the woodland share
    The change of night and day.”

For these many years, since I have lived here in the country, I have
had it in my mind to write something about the odour and taste of this
well-flavoured earth. The fact is, both the sense of smell and the
sense of taste; have been shabbily treated in the amiable rivalry of
the senses. Sight and hearing have been the swift and nimble brothers,
and sight especially, the tricky Jacob of the family, is keen upon the
business of seizing the entire inheritance, while smell, like hairy
Esau, comes late to the blessing, hungry from the hills, and willing to
trade its inheritance for a mess of pottage.

I have always had a kind of errant love for the improvident and
adventurous Esaus of the Earth. I think they smell a wilder fragrance
than I do, and taste sweeter things, and I have thought, therefore, of
beginning a kind of fragrant autobiography, a chronicle of all the good
odours and flavours that ever I have had in my life.

As I grow older, a curious feeling comes often to me in the spring, as
it comes this spring more poignantly than ever before, a sense of the
temporariness of all things, the swiftness of life, the sadness of a
beauty that vanishes so soon, and I long to lay hold upon it as it
passes by all the handles that I can. I would not only see it and hear
it, but I would smell it and taste it and touch it, and all with a new
kind of intensity and eagerness.

Harriet says I get more pleasure out of the smell of my supper than I
get out of the supper itself.

“I never need to ring for you,” says she, “but only open the kitchen
door. In a few minutes I’ll see you straighten up, lift your head,
sniff a little, and come straight for the house.”

“The odour of your suppers, Harriet,” I said, “after a day in the
fields, would lure a man out of purgatory.”

My father before me had a singularly keen nose. I remember well when I
was a boy and drove with him in the wild North Country, often through
miles of unbroken forest, how he would sometimes break a long silence,
lift his head with sudden awareness, and say to me:

“David, I smell open fields.”

In a few minutes we were sure to come to a settler’s cabin, a log barn,
or a clearing. Among the free odours of the forest he had caught, afar
off, the common odours of the work of man.

When we were tramping or surveying in that country, I have seen him
stop suddenly, draw in a long breath, and remark:

“Marshes,” or, “A stream yonder.”

Part of this strange keenness of sense, often noted by those who knew
that sturdy old cavalryman, may have been based, as so many of our
talents are, upon a defect. My father gave all the sweet sounds of the
world, the voices of his sons, the songs of his daughters, to help free
the Southern slaves. He was deaf.

It is well known that when one sense is defective the others fly to the
rescue, and my father’s singular development of the sense of smell may
have been due in part to this defect, though I believe it to have been,
to a far larger degree, a native gift. Me had a downright good nose.
All his life long he enjoyed with more than ordinary keenness the odour
of flowers, and would often pick a sprig of wild rose and carry it
along with him in his hand, sniffing at it from time to time, and he
loved the lilac, as I do after him. To ill odours he was not less
sensitive, and was impatient of rats in the barn, and could smell them,
among other odours, the moment the door was opened. He always had a
peculiar sensitiveness to the presence of animals, as of dogs, cats,
muskrats, cattle, horses, and the like, and would speak of them long
before he had seen them or could know that they were about.

I recall once on a wild Northern lake, when we were working along the
shore in a boat, how he stopped suddenly and exclaimed:

“David, do you hear anything?”—for I, a boy, was ears for him in those
wilderness places.

“No, Father. What is it?”

“Indians.”

And, sure enough, in a short time I heard the barking of their dogs and
we came soon upon their camp, where, I remember, they were drying deer
meat upon a frame of poplar poles over an open fire. He told me that
the smoky smell of the Indians, tanned buckskin, parched wild rice, and
the like, were odours that carried far and could not be mistaken.

My father had a big, hooked nose with long, narrow nostrils, I suppose
that this has really nothing to do with the matter, although I have
come, after these many years, to look with a curious interest upon
people’s noses, since I know what a vehicle of delight they often are.
My own nose is nothing to speak of, good enough as noses go—but I think
I inherited from my father something of the power of enjoyment he had
from that sense, though I can never hope to become the accomplished
smeller he was.

I am moved to begin this chronicle because of my joy this morning
early—a May morning!—just after sunrise, when the shadows lay long and
blue to the west and the dew was still on the grass, and I walked in
the pleasant spaces of my garden. It was so still...so still...that
birds afar off could be heard singing, and once through the crystal air
came the voice of a neighbour calling his cows. But the sounds and the
silences, the fair sights of meadow and hill I soon put aside, for the
lilacs were in bloom and the bush-honeysuckles and the strawberries.
Though no movement of the air was perceptible, the lilacs well knew the
way of the wind, for if I stood to the north of them the odour was less
rich and free than to the south, and I thought I might pose as a
prophet of wind and weather upon the basis of this easy magic, and
predict that the breezes of the day would be from the north—as, indeed,
they later appeared to be.

I went from clump to clump of the lilacs testing and comparing them
with great joy and satisfaction. They vary noticeably in odour; the
white varieties being the most delicate, while those tending to deep
purple are the richest. Some of the newer double varieties seem less
fragrant—and I have tested them now many times—than the old-fashioned
single varieties which are nearer the native stock. Here I fancy our
smooth Jacob has been at work, and in the lucrative process of
selection for the eye alone the cunning horticulturist has cheated us
of our rightful heritage of fragrance. I have a mind some time to
practise the art of burbankry or other kind of wizardy upon the old
lilac stock and select for odour alone, securing ravishing original
varieties—indeed, whole new gamuts of fragrance.

I should devise the most animating names for my creations, such as the
Double Delicious, the Air of Arcady, the Sweet Zephyr, and others even
more inviting, which I should enjoy inventing. Though I think surely I
could make my fortune out of this interesting idea, I present it freely
to a scent-hungry world—here it is, gratis!—for I have my time so fully
occupied during all of this and my next two or three lives that I
cannot attend to it.

I have felt the same defect in the cultivated roses. While the odours
are rich, often of cloying sweetness, or even, as in certain white
roses, having a languor as of death, they never for me equal the
fragrance of the wild sweet rose that grows all about these hills, in
old tangled fence rows, in the lee of meadow boulders, or by some
unfrequented roadside. No other odour I know awakens quite such a
feeling—light like a cloud, suggesting free hills, open country, sunny
air; and none surely has, for me, such an after-call. A whiff of the
wild rose will bring back in all the poignancy of sad happiness a train
of ancient memories old faces, old scenes, old loves—and the wild
thoughts I had when a boy. The first week of the wild-rose blooming,
beginning here about the twenty-fifth of June, is always to me a
memorable time.

I was a long time learning how to take hold of nature, and think now
with some sadness of all the life I lost in former years. The
impression the earth gave me was confused: I was as one only half
awake. A fine morning made me dumbly glad, a cool evening, after the
heat of the day, and the work of it, touched my spirit restfully; but I
could have explained neither the one nor the other. Gradually as I
looked about me I began to ask myself, “Why is it that the sight of
these common hills and fields gives me such exquisite delight? And if
it is beauty, why is it beautiful? And if I am so richly rewarded by
mere glimpses, can I not increase my pleasure with longer looks?”

I tried longer looks both at nature and at the friendly human creatures
all about me. I stopped often in the garden where I was working, or
loitered a moment in the fields, or sat down by the roadside, and
thought intently what it was that so perfectly and wonderfully
surrounded me; and thus I came to have some knowledge of the Great
Secret. It was, after all, a simple matter, as such matters usually are
when we penetrate them, and consisted merely in shutting out all other
impressions, feelings, thoughts, and concentrating the full energy of
the attention upon what it was that I saw or heard at that instant.

At one moment I would let in all the sounds of the earth, at another
all the sights. So we practise the hand at one time, the foot at
another, or learn how to sit or to walk, and so acquire new grace for
the whole body. Should we do less in acquiring grace for the spirit? It
will astonish one who has not tried it how full the world is of sounds
commonly unheard, and of sights commonly unseen, but in their nature,
like the smallest blossoms, of a curious perfection and beauty.

Out of this practice grew presently, and as it seems to me
instinctively, for I cannot now remember the exact time of its
beginning, a habit of repeating under my breath, or even aloud, and in
a kind of singsong voice, fragmentary words and sentences describing
what it was that I saw or felt at the moment, as, for example:

“The pink blossoms of the wild crab-apple trees I see from the hill....
The reedy song of the wood thrush among the thickets of the wild
cherry.... The scent of peach leaves, the odour of new-turned soil in
the black fields.... The red of the maples in the marsh, the white of
apple trees in bloom.... I cannot find Him out—nor know why I am
here....”

Some form of expression, however crude, seemed to reenforce and
intensify the gatherings of the senses; and these words, afterward
remembered, or even written down in the little book I sometimes carried
in my pocket, seemed to awaken echoes, however faint, of the exaltation
of that moment in the woods or fields, and enabled me to live twice
where formerly I had been able to live but once.

It was by this simple process of concentrating upon what I saw or heard
that I increased immeasurably my own joy of my garden and fields and
the hills and marshes all about. A little later, for I was a slow
learner, I began to practise the same method with the sense of smell,
and still later with the sense of taste. I said to myself, “I will no
longer permit the avid and eager eye to steal away my whole attention.
I will learn to enjoy more completely all the varied wonders of the
earth.”

So I tried deliberately shutting the doorways of both sight and
hearing, and centring the industry of my spirit upon the flavours of
the earth. I tested each odour narrowly, compared it well with
remembered odours, and often turned the impression I had into such poor
words as I could command.

What a new and wonderful world opened to me then! My takings of nature
increased tenfold, a hundredfold, and I came to a new acquaintance with
my own garden, my own hills, and all the roads and fields around
about—and even the town took on strange new meanings for me. I cannot
explain it rightly, but it was as though I had found a new earth here
within the old one, but more spacious and beautiful than any I had
known before. I have thought, often and often, that this world we live
in so dumbly, so carelessly, would be more glorious than the tinsel
heaven of the poets if only we knew how to lay hold upon it, if only we
could win that complete command of our own lives which is the end of
our being.

At first, as I said, I stopped my work, or loitered as I walked, in
order to see, or hear, or smell—and do so still, for I have entered
only the antechamber of the treasure-house; but as I learned better the
modest technic of these arts I found that the practice of them went
well with the common tasks of the garden or farm, especially with those
that were more or less monotonous, like cultivating corn, hoeing
potatoes, and the like.

The air is just as full of good sights and good odours for the worker
as for the idler, and it depends only upon the awareness, the
aliveness, of our own spirits whether we toil like dumb animals or
bless our labouring hours with the beauty of life. Such enjoyment and a
growing command of our surroundings are possible, after a little
practice, without taking much of that time we call so valuable and
waste so sinfully. “I haven’t time,” says the farmer, the banker, the
professor, with a kind of disdain for the spirit of life, when, as a
matter of fact, he has all the time there is, all that anybody has—to
wit, _this_ moment, this great and golden moment!—but knows not how to
employ it. He creeps when he might walk, walks when he might run, runs
when he might fly—and lives like a woodchuck in the dark body of
himself.

Why, there are men in this valley who scout the idea that farming,
carpentry, merchantry, are anything but drudgery, defend all the evils
known to humankind with the argument that “a man must live,” and laugh
at any one who sees beauty or charm in being here, in working with the
hands, or, indeed, in just living! While they think of themselves
cannily as “practical” men, I think them the most impractical men I
know, for in a world full of boundless riches they remain obstinately
poor. They are unwilling to invest even a few of their dollars unearned
in the real wealth of the earth. For it is only the sense of the spirit
of life, whether in nature or in other human beings, that lifts men
above the beasts and curiously leads them to God, who is the spirit
both of beauty and of friendliness. I say truly, having now reached the
point in my life where it seems to me I care only for writing that
which is most deeply true for me, that I rarely walk in my garden or
upon the hills of an evening without thinking of God. It is in my
garden that all things become clearer to me, even that miracle whereby
one who has offended may still see God; and this I think a wonderful
thing. In my garden I understand dimly why evil is in the world, and in
my garden learn how transitory it is.

Just now I have come in from work, and will note freshly one of the
best odours I have had to-day. As I was working in the corn, a lazy
breeze blew across the meadows from the west, and after loitering a
moment among the blackberry bushes sought me out where I was busiest.
Do you know the scent of the blackberry? Almost all the year round it
is a treasure-house of odours, even when the leaves first come out; but
it reaches crescendo in blossom time when, indeed, I like it least, for
being too strong. It has a curious fragrance, once well called by a
poet “the hot scent of the brier,” and aromatically hot it is and sharp
like the briers themselves. At times I do not like it at all, for it
gives me a kind of faintness, while at other times, as to-day, it fills
me with a strange sense of pleasure as though it were the very breath
of the spicy earth. It is also a rare friend of the sun, for the hotter
and brighter the day, the hotter and sharper the scent of the brier.

Many of the commonest and least noticed of plants, flowers, trees,
possess a truly fragrant personality if once we begin to know them. I
had an adventure in my own orchard, only this spring, and made a fine
new acquaintance in a quarter least of all expected. I had started down
the lane through the garden one morning in the most ordinary way, with
no thought of any special experience, when I suddenly caught a whiff of
pure delight that stopped me short.

“What now can _that_ be?” and I thought to myself that nature had
played some new prank on me.

I turned into the orchard, following my nose. It was not the peach
buds, nor the plums, nor the cherries, nor yet the beautiful new
coloured leaves of the grape, nor anything I could see along the grassy
margin of the pasture. There were other odours all about, old friends
of mine, but this was some shy and pleasing stranger come venturing
upon my land.

A moment later I discovered a patch of low green verdure upon the
ground, and dismissed it scornfully as one of my ancient enemies. But
it is this way with enemies, once we come to know them, they often turn
out to have a fragrance that is kindly.

Well, this particular fierce enemy was a patch of chickweed. Chickweed!
Invader of the garden, cossack of the orchard! I discovered, however,
that it was in full bloom and covered with small, star-like white
blossoms.

“Well, now,” said I, “are you the guilty rascal?”

So I knelt there and took my delight of it and a rare, delicate good
odour it was. For several days afterward I would not dig out the patch,
for I said to myself, “What a cheerful claim it makes these early days,
when most of the earth is still cold and dead, for a bit of
immortality.”

The bees knew the secret already, and the hens and the blackbirds! And
I thought it no loss, but really a new and valuable pleasure, to divert
my path down the lane for several days that I might enjoy more fully
this new odour, and make a clear acquaintance with something fine upon
the earth I had not known before.

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CHAPTER II.
OF GOOD AND EVIL ODOURS


Of all times of the day for good odours I think the early morning the
very best, although the evening just after sunset, if the air falls
still and cool, is often as good. Certain qualities or states of the
atmosphere seem to favour the distillation of good odours and I have
known times even at midday when the earth was very wonderful to smell.
There is a curious, fainting fragrance that comes only with sunshine
and still heat. Not long ago I was cutting away a thicket of wild
spiraea which was crowding in upon the cultivated land. It was a hot
day and the leaves wilted quickly, giving off such a penetrating,
fainting fragrance that I let the branches lie where they fell the
afternoon through and came often back to smell of them, for it was a
fine thing thus to discover an odour wholly new to me.

I like also the first wild, sweet smell of new-cut meadow grass, not
the familiar odour of new-mown hay, which comes a little later, and is
worthy of its good report, but the brief, despairing odour of grass
just cut down, its juices freshly exposed to the sun. One, as it richly
in the fields at the mowing. I like also the midday smell of peach
leaves and peach-tree bark at the summer priming: and have never let
any one else cut out the old canes from the blackberry rows in my
garden for the goodness of the scents which wait upon that work.

Another odour I have found animating is the odour of burning wastage in
new clearings or in old fields, especially in the evening when the
smoke drifts low along the land and takes to itself by some strange
chemical process the tang of earthy things. It is a true saying that
nothing will so bring back the emotion of a past time as a remembered
odour. I have had from a whiff of fragrance caught in a city street
such a vivid return of an old time and an old, sad scene that I have
stopped, trembling there, with an emotion long spent and I thought
forgotten.

Once in a foreign city, passing a latticed gateway that closed in a
narrow court, I caught the odour of wild sweet balsam. I do not know
now where it came from, or what could have caused it—but it stopped me
short where I stood, and the solid brick walls of that city rolled
aside like painted curtains, and the iron streets dissolved before my
eyes, and with the curious dizziness of nostalgia, I was myself upon
the hill of my youth—with the gleaming river in the valley, and a hawk
sailing majestically in the high blue of the sky, and all about and
everywhere the balsams—and the balsams—full of the sweet, wild odours
of the north, and of dreaming boyhood.

And there while my body, the shell of me, loitered in that strange
city, I was myself four thousand miles and a quarter of a century away,
reliving, with a conscious passion that boyhood never knew, a moment
caught up, like a torch, out of the smouldering wreckage of the past.

Do not tell me that such things die! They all remain with us-all the
sights, and sounds, and thoughts of by-gone times awaiting only the
whiff from some latticed gateway, some closed-in court to spring again
into exuberant life. If only we are ready for the great moment!

As for the odour of the burning wastage of the fields at evening I
scarcely know if I dare say it. I find it produces in the blood of me a
kind of primitive emotion, as though it stirred memories older than my
present life. Some drowsy cells of the brain awaken to a familiar
stimulus—the odour of the lodge-fire of the savage, the wigwam of the
Indian. Racial memories!

But it is not the time of the day, nor the turn of the season, nor yet
the way of the wind that matters most but the ardour and glow we
ourselves bring to the fragrant earth. It is a sad thing to reflect
that in a world so overflowing with goodness of smell, of fine sights
and sweet sounds, we pass by hastily and take so little of them. Days
pass when we see no beautiful sight, hear no sweet sound, smell no
memorable odour: when we exchange no single word of deeper
understanding with a friend. We have lived a day and added nothing to
our lives! A blind, grubbing, senseless life—that!

It is a strange thing, also, that instead of sharpening the tools by
which we take hold of life we make studied efforts to dull them. We
seem to fear life and early begin to stop our ears and close our eyes
lest we hear and see too much: we clog our senses and cloud our minds.
We seek dull security and ease and cease longer to desire adventure and
struggle. And then—the tragedy of it—the poet we all have in us in
youth begins to die, the philosopher in us dies, the martyr in us dies,
so that the long, long time beyond youth with so many of us becomes a
busy death. And this I think truer of men than of women: beyond forty
many women just begin to awaken to power and beauty, but most men
beyond that age go on dying. The task of the artist, whether poet, or
musician, or painter, is to keep alive the perishing spirit of free
adventure in men: to nourish the poet, the prophet, the martyr, we all
have in us.

One’s sense of smell, like the sense of taste, is sharpest when he is
hungry, and I am convinced also that one sees and hears best when
unclogged with food, undulled with drink, undrugged with smoke. For me,
also, weariness, though not exhaustion, seems to sharpen all the
senses. Keenness goes with leanness. When I have been working hard or
tramping the country roads in the open air and come in weary and hungry
at night and catch the fragrance of the evening along the road or upon
the hill, or at barn-doors smell the unmilked cows, or at the doorway,
the comfortable odours of cooking supper how good that all is! At such
times I know Esau to the core: the forthright, nature-loving, simple
man he was, coming in dabbled with the blood of hunted animals and
hungry for the steaming pottage.

It follows that if we take excessive joys of one sense, as of taste,
nature, ever seeking just balances, deprives us of the full enjoyment
of the others, “I am stuffed, cousin,” cries Beatrice in the play, “I
cannot smell.” “I have drunk,” remarks the Clown in Arcady, “what are
roses to me?” We forget that there are five chords in the great scale
of life—sight, hearing, smell, taste, touch and—few of us ever master
the chords well enough to get the full symphony of life, but are
something like little pig-tailed girls playing Peter Piper with one
finger while all the music of the universe is in the Great Instrument,
and all to be had for the taking.

Of most evil odours, it can be said that they are temporary or
unnecessary: and any unpleasant odour, such as that of fruit sprays in
spring, or fertilizer newly spread on the land, can be borne and even
welcomed if it is appropriate to the time and place. Some smells, evil
at first, become through usage not unpleasant. I once stopped with a
wolf-trapper in the north country, who set his bottle of bait outside
when I came in. He said it was “good and strong” and sniffed it with
appreciation. I agreed with him that it was strong. To him it was not
unpleasant, though made of the rancid fat of the muscallonge. All
nature seems to strive against evil odours, for when she warns us of
decay she is speeding decay: and a manured field produces later the
best of all odours. Almost all shut-in places sooner or later acquire
an evil odour: and it seems a requisite for good smells that there be
plenty of sunshine and air; and so it is with the hearts and souls of
men. If they are long shut in upon themselves they grow rancid.

[Illustration]




CHAPTER III.
FOLLOW YOUR NOSE!


“Listen to the Exhortation of the Dawn—
Look to this day! For it is Life,
The very Life of Life!”

On a spring morning one has only to step out into the open country,
lift his head to the sky—and follow his nose....

It was a big and golden morning, and Sunday to boot, and I walked down
the lane to the lower edge of the field, where the wood and the marsh
begin. The sun was just coming up over the hills and all the air was
fresh and clear and cool. High in the heavens a few fleecy clouds were
drifting, and the air was just enough astir to waken the hemlocks into
faint and sleepy exchanges of confidence.

It seemed to me that morning that the world was never before so high,
so airy, so golden, All filled to the brim with the essence of sunshine
and spring morning—so that one’s spirit dissolved in it, became a part
of it. Such a morning! Such a morning!

From that place and just as I was I set off across the open land.

It was the time of all times for good odours—soon after sunrise—before
the heat of the day had drawn off the rich distillations of the night.

In that keen moment I caught, drifting, a faint but wild fragrance upon
the air, and veered northward full into the way of the wind. I could
not at first tell what this particular odour was, nor separate it from
the general good odour of the earth; but I followed it intently across
the moor-like open land. Once I thought I had lost it entirely, or that
the faint northern airs had shifted, but I soon caught it clearly
again, and just as I was saying to myself, “I’ve got it, I’ve got
it!”—for it is a great pleasure to identify a friendly odour in the
fields—I saw, near the bank of the brook, among ferns and raspberry
bushes, a thorn-apple tree in full bloom.

“So there you are!” I said.

I hastened toward it, now in the full current and glory of its
fragrance. The sun, looking over the taller trees to the east, had
crowned the top of it with gold, so that it was beautiful to see; and
it was full of honey bees as excited as I.

A score of feet onward toward the wind, beyond the thorn-apple tree, I
passed wholly out of the range of its fragrance into another world, and
began trying for some new odour. After one or two false scents, for
this pursuit has all the hazards known to the hunter, I caught an odour
long known to me, not strong, nor yet very wonderful, but distinctive.
It led me still a little distance northward to a sunny slope just
beyond a bit of marsh, and, sure enough, I found an old friend, the
wild sweet geranium, a world of it, in full bloom, and I sat down there
for some time to enjoy it fully.

Beyond that, and across a field wild with tangles of huckleberry bushes
and sheep laurel where the bluets and buttercups were blooming, and in
shady spots the shy white violet, I searched for the odour of a certain
clump of pine trees I discovered long ago. I knew that I must come upon
it soon, but could not tell just when or where. I held up a moistened
finger to make sure of the exact direction of the wind, and bearing,
then, a little eastward, soon came full upon it—as a hunter might
surprise a deer in the forest. I crossed the brook a second time and
through a little marsh, making it the rule of the game never to lose
for an instant the scent I was following—even though I stopped in a low
spot to admire a mass of thrifty blue flags, now beginning to bloom—and
came thus to the pines I was seeking. They are not great trees, nor
noble, but gnarled and angular and stunted, for the soil in that place
is poor and thin, and the winds in winter keen; but the brown blanket
of needles they spread and the shade they offer the traveller are not
less hospitable; nor the fragrance they give off less enchanting. The
odour of the pine is one I love.

I sat down there in a place I chose long ago—a place already as
familiar with pleasing memories as a favourite room—so that I wonder
that some of the notes I have written there do not of themselves exhale
the very odour of the pines.

And all about was hung a fair tapestry of green, and the earthy floor
was cleanly carpeted with brown, and the roof above was in arched
mosaic, the deep, deep blue of the sky seen through the gnarled and
knotted branches of the pines. Through a little opening among the
trees, as through a window, I could see the cattle feeding in the wide
meadows, all headed alike, and yellow butterflies drifted across the
open spaces, and there were bumblebees and dragonflies. And presently I
heard some one tapping, tapping, at the door of the wood and glancing
up quickly I saw my early visitor. There he was, as neighbourly as you
please, and not in the least awed by my intrusion; there he was, far
out on the limb of a dead tree, stepping energetically up and down,
like a sailor reefing a sail, and rapping and tapping as he worked—a
downy woodpecker.

“Good morning, sir,” I said.

He stopped for scarcely a second, cocked one eye at me, and went back
to his work again. Who was I that I should interrupt his breakfast?

And I was glad I was there, and I began enumerating, as though I were
the accredited reporter for the _Woodland Gazette_, all the good news
of the day.

“The beech trees.” said aloud, “have come at last to full leafage. The
wild blackberries are ready to bloom, the swamp roses are budded. Brown
planted fields I see, and drooping elms, and the young crows cry from
their nests on the knoll.... I know now that, whoever I am, whatever I
do, I am welcome here; the meadows are as green this spring for Tom the
drunkard, and for Jim the thief, as for Jonathan the parson, or for
Walt the poet: the wild cherry blooms as richly, and the odour of the
pine is as sweet—”

At that moment, like a flame for clearness, I understood some of the
deep and simple things of life, as that we are to be like the friendly
pines, and the elm trees, and the open fields, and reject no man and
judge no man. Once, a long time ago, I read a sober treatise by one who
tried to prove with elaborate knowledge that, upon the whole, good was
triumphant in this world, and that probably there was a God, and I
remember going out dully afterward upon the hill, for I was weighed
down with a strange depression, and the world seemed to me a hard,
cold, narrow place where good must be heavily demonstrated in books.
And as I sat there the evening fell, a star or two came out in the
clear blue of the sky, and suddenly it became all simple to me, so that
I laughed aloud at that laborious big-wig for spending so many futile
years in seeking doubtful proof of what he might have learned in one
rare home upon my hill. And far more than he could prove far more.

As I came away from that place I knew I should never again be quite the
same person I was before.

[Illustration]

Well, we cannot remain steadily upon the heights. At least I cannot,
and would not if I could. After I have been out about so long on such
an adventure as this, something lets go inside of me, and I come down
out of the mountain—and yet know deeply that I have been where the bush
was burning; and have heard the Voice in the Fire.

So it was yesterday morning. I realized suddenly that I was
hungry—commonly, coarsely hungry. My whole attention, I was going to
say my whole soul, shifted to the thought of ham and eggs! This may
seem a tremendous anti-climax, but it is, nevertheless, a sober report
of what happened. At the first onset of this new mood, the ham-and-eggs
mood, let us call it, I was a little ashamed or abashed at the
remembrance of my wild flights, and had a laugh at the thought of
myself floundering around in the marshes and fields a mile from home,
when Harriet, no doubt, had breakfast waiting for me! What absurd,
contradictory, inconsistent, cowardly creatures we are, anyway!

The house seemed an inconceivable distance away, and the only real
thing in the world the gnawing emptiness under my belt. And I was wet
to my knees, and the tangled huckleberry bushes and sheep laurel and
hardback I had passed through so joyously a short time before now clung
heavily about my legs as I struggled through them. And the sun was hot
and high—and there were innumerable small, black buzzing flies.

To cap the climax, whom should I meet as I was crossing the fence into
the lower land but my friend Horace, He had been out early looking for
a cow that had dropped her calf in the woods, and was now driving them
slowly up the lane, the cow a true pattern of solicitous motherhood,
the calf a true pattern of youth, dashing about upon uncertain legs.

“Takin’ the air, David?”

I amuse Horace. Horace is an important man in this community. He has
big, solid barns, and money in the bank, and a reputation for
hardheadedness. He is also known as a “driver”; and has had sore
trouble with a favourite son. He believes in “goin’ it slow” and
“playin’ safe,” and he is convinced that “ye can’t change human
nature.”

His question came to me with a kind of shock. I imagined with a
vividness impossible to describe what Horace would think if I answered
him squarely and honestly, if I were to say:

“I’ve been down in the marshes following my nose—enjoying the thorn
apples and the wild geraniums, talking with a woodpecker and reporting
the morning news of the woods for an imaginary newspaper.”

I was hungry, and in a mood to smile at myself anyway (good-humouredly
and forgivingly as we always smile at ourselves!) before I met Horace,
and the flashing vision I had of Horace’s dry, superior smile finished
me. Was there really anything in this world but cows and calves, and
great solid barns, and oatcrops, and cash in the bank?

“Been in the brook?” asked Horace, observing my wet legs.

Talk about the courage to face cannon and Cossacks! It is nothing to
the courage required to speak aloud in broad daylight of the finest
things we have in us! I was not equal to it.

“Oh, I’ve been down for a tramp in the marsh,” I said, trying to put
him off.

But Horace is a Yankee of the Yankees and loves nothing better than to
chase his friends into corners with questions, and leave them
ultimately with the impression that they are somehow less sound,
sensible, practical, than he is and he usually proves it, not because
he is right, but because he is sure, and in a world of shadowy
halt-beliefs and half-believers he is without doubts.

“What ye find down there?” asked Horace.

“Oh, I was just looking around to see how the spring was coming on.”

“Hm-m,” said Horace, eloquently, and when I did not reply, he
continued, “Often git out in the morning as early as this?”

“Yes,” I said, “often.”

“And do you find things any different now from what they would be later
in the day?”

At this the humour of the whole situation dawned on me and I began to
revive. When things grow hopelessly complicated, and we can’t laugh, we
do either one of two things: we lie or we die. But if we can laugh, we
can fight! And be honest!

“Horace,” I said, “I know what you are thinking about.”

Horace’s face remained perfectly impassive, but there was a glint of
curiosity in his eye.

“You’ve been thinking I’ve been wasting my time beating around down
there in the swamp just to look at things and smell of things—which you
wouldn’t do. You think I’m a kind of impractical dreamer, now, don’t
you, Horace? I’ll warrant you’ve told your wife just that more than
once. Come, now!”

I think I made a rather shrewd hit, for Horace looked uncomfortable and
a little foolish.

“Come now, honest!” I laughed and looked him in the eye.

“Waal, now, ye see—”

“Of course you do, and I don’t mind it in the least.”

A little dry gleam of humour came in his eye.

“Ain’t ye?”

It’s a fine thing to have it straight out with a friend.

“No,” I said, “I’m the practical man and you’re the dreamer. I’ve
rarely known in all my life, Horace, such a confirmed dreamer as you
are, nor a more impractical one.”

Horace laughed.

“How do ye make that out?”

With this my spirit returned to me and I countered with a question as
good as his. It is as valuable in argument as in war to secure the
offensive.

“Horace, what are you working for, anyhow?”

This is always a devastating shot. Ninety-nine out of every hundred
human beings are desperately at work grubbing, sweating, worrying,
thinking, sorrowing, enjoying, without in the least knowing why.

“Why, to make a living—same as you,” said Horace.

“Oh, come now, if I were to spread the report in town that a poor
neighbour of mine, that’s you, Horace, was just making his living, that
he himself had told me so, what would you say? Horace, what are you
working for? It’s something more than a mere living.”

“Waal, now, I’ll tell ye, if ye want it straight, I’m layin’ aside a
little something for a rainy day.”

“A little something!” this in the exact inflection of irony by which
here in the country we express our opinion that a friend has really a
good deal more laid aside than anybody knows about. Horace smiled also
in the exact manner of one so complimented.

“Horace, what are you going to do with that thirty thousand dollars?”

“Thirty thousand!” Horace looks at me and smiles, and I look at Horace
and smile.

“Honest now!”

“Waal, I’ll tell ye—a little peace and comfort for me and Josie in our
old age, and a little something to make the children remember us when
we’re gone. Isn’t that worth working for?”

He said this with downright seriousness. I did not press him further,
but if I had tried I could probably have got the even deeper admission
of that faith that lies, like bed rock, in the thought of most men—that
honesty and decency here will not be without its reward there, however
they may define the “there.” Some “prophet’s paradise to come!”

“I knew it!” I said. “Horace, you’re a dreamer, too. You are dreaming
of peace and comfort in your old age, a little quiet house in town
where you won’t have to labour as hard as you do now, where you won’t
be worried by crops and weather, and where Mrs. Horace will be able to
rest after so many years of care and work and sorrow—a kind of earthly
heaven! And you are dreaming of leaving a bit to your children and
grandchildren, and dreaming of the gratitude they will express. All
dreams, Horace!”

“Oh, waal——”

“The fact is, you are working for a dream, and living on dreams—isn’t
that true?”

“Waal, now, if you mean it that way——”

“I see I haven’t got you beaten yet, Horace!”

He smiled broadly,

“We are all amiable enough with our own dreams. You think that what you
are working for—your dream—is somehow sounder and more practical than
what I am working for.”

Horace started to reply, but had scarcely debouched from his trenches
when I opened on him with one of my twenty-fours.

“How do you know that you are ever going to be old?”

It hit.

“And if you do grow old, how do you know that thirty thousand
dollars—oh, we’ll call it that—is really enough, provided you don’t
lose it before, to buy peace and comfort for you, or that what you
leave your children will make either you or them any happier? Peace and
comfort and happiness are terribly expensive, Horace—and prices have
been going up fast since this war began!”

Horace looked at me uncomfortably, as men do in the world when you
shake the foundations of the tabernacle. I have thought since that I
probably pressed him too far; but these things go deep with me.

“No, Horace,” I said, “you are the dreamer—and the impractical dreamer
at that!”

For a moment Horace answered nothing; and we both stood still there in
the soft morning sunshine with the peaceful fields and woods all about
us, two human atoms struggling hotly with questions too large for us.
The cow and the new calf were long out of sight. Horace made a motion
as if to follow them up the lane, but I held him with my glittering
eye—as I think of it since, not without a kind of amusement at my own
seriousness.

“I’m the practical man, Horace, for I want my peace now, and my
happiness now, and my God now. I can’t wait. My barns may burn or my
cattle die, or the solid bank where I keep my deferred joy may fail, or
I myself by to-morrow be no longer here.”

So powerfully and vividly did this thought take possession of me that I
cannot now remember to have said a decent good-bye to Horace (never
mind, he knows me!). At least when I was halfway up the hill I found
myself gesticulating with one clenched fist and saying to myself with a
kind of passion: “Why wait to be peaceful? Why not be peaceful now? Why
not be happy now? Why not be rich now?”

For I think it truth that a life uncommanded now is uncommanded; a life
unenjoyed now is unenjoyed; a life not lived wisely now is not lived
wisely: for the past is gone and no one knows the future.

As for Horace is he convinced that he is an impractical dreamer. Not a
bit of it! He was merely flurried for a moment in his mind, and
probably thinks me now, more than ever before, just what I think him.
Absurd place, isn’t it, this world?

So I reached home at last. You have no idea, unless you have tried it
yourself, how good breakfast tastes alter a three-mile tramp in the
sharp morning air. The odour of ham and eggs, and new muffins, and
coffee, as you come up the hill, there is an odour for you! And it was
good to see Harriet.

“Harriet,” I said, “you are a sight for tired eyes.”

[Illustration]




CHAPTER IV.
THE GREEN PEOPLE


I have always had a fondness, when upon my travels about the world of
the near-by woods and fields, for nipping a bit of a twig here and
there and tasting the tart or bitter quality of it. I suppose the
instinct descends to me from the herbivorous side of my distant
ancestry. I love a spray of white cedar, especially the spicy, sweet
inside bark, or a pine needle, or the tender, sweet, juicy end of a
spike of timothy grass drawn slowly from its close-fitting sheath, or a
twig of the birch that tastes like wintergreen.

I think this no strange or unusual instinct, for I have seen many other
people doing it, especially farmers around here, who go through the
fields nipping the new oats, testing the red-top, or chewing a bit of
sassafras bark. I have in mind a clump of shrubbery in the town road,
where an old house once stood, of the kind called here by some the
“sweet-scented shrub,” and the brandies of it nearest the road are
quite clipped and stunted I’m being nipped at by old ladies who pass
that way and take to it like cat to catnip.

For a long time this was a wholly unorganized, indeed all but
unconscious, pleasure, a true pattern of the childish way we take hold
of the earth; but when I began to come newly alive to all things as I
have already related—I chanced upon this curious, undeveloped instinct.

“What is it I have here?” I asked myself, for I thought this might be a
new handle for getting hold of nature.

Along one edge of my field is a natural hedge of wild cherry, young
elms and ashes, dogwood, black raspberry bushes and the like, which has
long been a pleasure to the eye, especially in the early morning when
the shadows of it lie long and cool upon the meadow. Many times I have
walked that way to admire it, or to listen for the catbirds that nest
there, or to steal upon a certain gray squirrel who comes out from his
home in the chestnut tree on a fine morning to inspect his premises.

It occurred to me one day that I would make the acquaintance of this
hedge in a new way; so I passed slowly along it where the branches of
the trees brushed my shoulder and picked a twig here and there and bit
it through. “This is cherry,” I said; “this is elm, this is dogwood.”
And it was a fine adventure to know old friends in new ways, for I had
never thought before to test the trees and shrubs by their taste and
smell. After that, whenever I passed that way, I closed my eyes and
tried for further identifications by taste, and was soon able to tell
quickly half a dozen other varieties of trees, shrubs, and smaller
plants along that bit of meadow.

Presently, as one who learns to navigate still water near shore longs
for more thrilling voyages, I tried the grassy old roads in the woods,
where young trees and other growths were to be found in great variety:
and had a joy of it I cannot describe, for old and familiar places were
thus made new and wonderful to me. And when I think of those places,
now, say in winter, I grasp them more vividly and strongly than ever I
did before, for I think not only how they look, but how they taste and
smell, and I even know many of the growing things by the touch of them.
It is certain that our grasp of life is in direct proportion to the
variety and warmth of the ways in which we lay hold of it. No thought
no beauty and no joy.

On these excursions I have often reflected that if I were blind, I
should still find here unexplored joys of life, and should make it a
point to know all the friendly trees and shrubs around about by the
taste or smell or touch of them. I think seriously that this method of
widening the world of the blind, and increasing their narrower joys,
might well be developed, though it would be wise for such as do take it
to borrow first the eyes of a friend to see that no poison ivy, which
certain rascally birds plant along our fences and hedges, is lurking
about.

Save for this precaution I know of nothing that will injure the taster,
though he must be prepared, here and there, for shocks and thrills of
bitterness. A lilac leaf, for example, and to a scarcely lesser degree
the willow and the poplar are, when bitten through, of a penetrating
and intense bitterness; but do no harm, and will daunt no one who is
really adventurous. There is yet to be written a botany, or, better
yet, a book of nature, for the blind.

It is by knowing human beings that we come to understand them, and by
understanding them come to love them, and so it is with the green
people. When I was a boy in the wild north country trees were enemies
to be ruthlessly fought—to be cut down, sawed, split, burned—anything
to be rid of them. The ideal in making a home place was to push the
forest as far away from it as possible. But now, when I go to the
woods, it is like going among old and treasured friends, and with riper
acquaintance the trees come to take on, curiously, a kind of
personality, so that I am much fonder of some trees than of others, and
instinctively seek out the companionship of certain trees in certain
moods, as one will his friends.

I love the unfolding beeches in spring, and the pines in winter; the
elms I care for afar off, like great aloof men, whom I can admire; but
for friendly confidences give me an apple tree in an old green meadow.

[Illustration]

In this more complete understanding I have been much aided by getting
hold of my friends of the hedges and hills in the new ways I have
described. At times I even feel that I have become a fully accepted
member of the Fraternity of the Living Earth, for I have already
received many of the benefits which go with that association; and I
know now for a certainty that it makes no objection to its members
because they are old, or sad, or have sinned, but welcomes them all
alike.

The essential taste of the cherry and peach and all their numerous
relatives is, in variation, that of the peach pit, so that the whole
tribe may be easily recognized, though it was some time before I could
tell with certainty the peach from the cherry. The oak shoot, when
chewed a little, tastes exactly like the smell of new oak lumber; the
maple has a peculiar taste and smell of its own that I can find no
comparison for, and the poplar is one of the bitterest trees that ever
I have tasted. The trees—pines, spruces, hemlocks, balsams, cedars—are
to me about the pleasantest of all, both in taste and odour, and though
the spruces and pines taste and smell much alike at first, one soon
learns to distinguish them. The elm has a rather agreeable,
nondescript, bitterish taste, but the linden is gummy and of a mediocre
quality, like the tree itself, which I dislike. Some of the sweetest
flowering shrubs, such as the lilac, have the bitterest of leaves and
twigs or, like certain kinds of clematis, have a seed that when green
is sharper than cayenne pepper, while others, like the rose, are
pleasanter in flavour. The ash tree is not too bitter and a little
sour.

I give here only a few of the commoner examples, for I wish to make
this no tedious catalogue of the flavours of the green people. I am not
a scientist, nor would wish to be taken for one. Only last winter I had
my pretensions sadly shocked when I tasted twigs cut from various trees
and shrubs and tried to identify them by taste or by smell, and while
it was a pleasing experiment I found I could not certainly place above
half of them; partly, no doubt, because many growing things keep their
flavours well wrapped up in winter. No, I have not gone far upon this
pleasant road, but neither am I in any great hurry; for there yet
remains much time in this and my future lives to conquer the secrets of
the earth. I plan to devote at least one entire life to science, and
may find I need several!

One great reason why the sense of taste and the sense of smell have not
the same honour as the sense of sight or of hearing is that no way has
yet been found to make a true art of either. For sight, we have
painting, sculpturing, photography, architecture, and the like; and for
hearing, music; and for both, poetry and the drama. But the other
senses are more purely personal, and have not only been little studied
or thought about, but are the ones least developed, and most dimmed and
clogged by the customs of our lives.

For the sense of smell we have, indeed, the perfumer’s art, but a poor
rudimentary art it is, giving little freedom for the artist who would
draw his inspirations freshly from nature. I can, indeed, describe
poorly in words the odours of this June morning—the mingled lilacs,
late wild cherries, new-broken soil, and the fragrance of the sun on
green verdure, for there are here both lyrical and symphonic odours—but
how inadequate it is! I can tell you what I feel and smell and taste,
and give you, perhaps, a desire another spring to spend the months of
May and June in the country, but I can scarcely make you live again the
very moment of life I have lived, which is the magic quality of the
best art. The art of the perfumer which, like all crude art, thrives
upon blatancy, does not make us go to gardens, or love the rose, but
often instils in us a kind of artificiality, so that perfumes, so far
from being an inspiration to us, increasing our lives, become often the
badge of the abnormal, used by those unsatisfied with simple, clean,
natural things.

And as a people deficient in musical art delights in ragtime tunes, so
a people deficient in the true art of tasting and smelling delights in
ragtime odours and ragtime tastes.

I do not know that the three so-called lesser senses will ever be
organized to the point where they are served by well-established arts,
but this I do know—that there are three great ways of entering upon a
better understanding of this magic earth which are now neglected.

I think we have come upon hasty and heated days, and are too much
mastered by the god of hurry and the swift and greedy eye. We accept
flashing pictures of life for life itself; we rush here and rush there
and, having arrived, rush away again—to what sensible purpose? Be still
a little! Be still!

I do not mean by stillness, stagnation not yet lazy contentment, but
life more deeply thought about, more intensely realized, an activity so
concentrated that it is quiet. Be still then!

So it is that, though I am no worshipper of the old, I think the older
gardeners had in some ways a better practice of the art than we have,
for they planted not for the eye alone but for the nose and the sense
of taste and even, in growing such plants as the lamb’s tongue, to
gratify, curiously, the sense of touch. They loved the scented herbs,
and appropriately called them simples. Some of these old simples I am
greatly fond of, and like to snip a leaf as I go by to smell or taste;
but many of them, I here confess, have for me a rank and culinary
odour—as sage and thyme and the bold scarlet monarda, sometimes called
bergamot.

But if their actual fragrance is not always pleasing, and their uses
are now grown obscure, I love well the names of many of them—whether
from ancient association or because the words themselves fall
pleasantly upon the ear, as, for example, sweet marjoram and dill,
anise and summer savoury, lavender and sweet basil. Coriander! Caraway!
Cumin! And “there’s rosemary, that’s for remembrance; pray you, love,
remember,... there’s fennel for you, and columbines: there’s rue for
you: and here’s some for me—” All sweet names that one loves to roll
under his tongue.

I have not any great number of these herbs in my own garden, but, when
I go among those I do have, I like to call them by their familiar names
as I would a dignified doctor or professor, if ever I knew him well
enough.

It is in this want of balance and quietude that the age fails most. We
are all for action, not at all for reflection; we think there are easy
ways to knowledge and shortcuts to perfection; we are for laws rather
than for life.

And this reminds me inevitably of a mellow-spirited old friend who
lives not a thousand miles from here—I must not tell his name—whose
greatest word is “proportion.” At this moment, as I write, I can hear
the roll of his resonant old voice on the syllable p-o-r—prop-o-rtion.
He is the kind of man good to know and to trust.

If ever I bring him a hard problem, as, indeed, I delight to do, it is
a fine thing to see him square himself to meet it. A light comes in his
eye, he draws back his chin a little and exclaims occasionally:
“Well—well!”

He will have all the facts and circumstances fully mobilized, standing
up side by side before him like an awkward squad, and there’s nothing
more awkward than some facts that have to stand out squarely in
daylight! And he inquires into their ancestry, makes them run out their
tongues, and pokes them once or twice in the ribs, to make sure that
they are lively and robust facts capable of making a good fight for
their lives. He never likes to see any one thing too large, as a
church, a party, a reform, a new book, or a new fashion, lest he see
something else too small; but will have everything, as he says, in true
proportion. If he occasionally favours a little that which is old,
solid, well-placed, it is scarcely to be measured to him as a fault in
an age so overwhelmed with the shiny new.

He is a fine, up-standing, hearty old gentleman with white hair and
rosy cheeks, and the bright eyes of one who has lived all his life with
temperance. One incident I cannot resist telling, though it has nothing
directly to do with this story, but it will let you know what kind of a
man my old friend is, and when all is said, it would be a fine thing to
know about any man. Not long ago he was afflicted with a serious loss,
a loss that would have crushed some men, but when I met him not long
afterward, though the lines around his eyes were grown deeper, he
greeted me in his old serene, courtly manner, When I would have
comforted him with my sympathy, for I felt myself near enough to speak
of his loss, he replied calmly:

“How can we know whether a thing is evil until we reach the end of it?
It may be good!”

One of the events I esteem among the finest of the whole year is my old
friend’s birthday party. Every winter, on the twenty-sixth of February,
a party of his friends drop in to see him. Some of us go out of habit,
drawn by our affection for the old gentleman; others, I think, he
invites, for he knows to perfection the delicate shadings of
companionship which divide those who come unbidden from those, not less
loved but shyer, who must be summoned.

Now this birthday gathering has one historic ceremony which none of us
would miss, because it expresses so completely the essence of our
friend’s generous and tolerant, but just, nature. He is, as I have
said, a temperate man, and dislikes as much as any one I know the whole
alcohol business; but living in a community where the struggle for
temperance has often been waged intemperately, and where there is a
lurking belief that cudgelling laws can make men virtuous, he publishes
abroad once a year his declaration of independence.

After we have been with our friend for an hour or so, and are well
warmed and happy with the occasion, he rises solemnly and goes to the
toby-closet at the end of his generous fireplace, where the apple-log
specially cut for the occasion is burning merrily, and as we all fall
silent, knowing well what is coming, he unlocks the door and takes from
the shelf a bottle of old peach brandy which, having uncorked, he
gravely smells of and possibly lets his nearest neighbour smell of too.
Then he brings from the sideboard a server set with diminutive glasses
that have been polished until they shine for the great occasion, and,
having filled them all with the ripe liquor, he passes them around to
each of us. We have all risen and are becomingly solemn as he now
proposes the toast of the year—and it is always the same toast:

“Here’s to moderation—in all things!”

He takes a sip or two, and continues:

“Here’s to temperance—the queen of the virtues.”

So we all drink off our glasses. Our mellow old friend smacks his lips,
corks the tall bottle, and returns it to his toby-closet, where it
reposes undisturbed for another year.

“And now, gentlemen,” he says, heartily, “let us go in to dinner.”...

As I think of it, now that it is written, this story bears no very
close relationship to my original subject, and yet it seemed to follow
naturally enough as I set it down, and to belong with the simple and
well-flavoured things of the garden and fields; and recalling the
advice of Cobbett to his nephew on the art of writing, “never to alter
a thought, for that which has come of itself into your mind is likely
to pass into that of another more readily and with more effect than
anything which you can by reflection invent,” I leave it here just as I
wrote it, hoping that the kinship of my genial old friend with simple
and natural and temperate things may plainly appear.

[Illustration]




CHAPTER V.
PLACES OF RETIREMENT


“Good God, how sweet are all things here!
How beautiful the fields appear!
    How cleanly do we feed and lie!
Lord, what good hours do we keep!
How quietly we sleep!”


CHARLES COTTON (a friend of Izaak Walton)


_April 29th_.

I have been spending a Sunday of retirement in the woods. I came out
with a strange, deep sense of depression, and though I knew it was
myself and not the world that was sad, yet I could not put it away from
me. ... As I write, the wood seems full of voices, the little rustling
of leaves, the minute sounds of twigs chafing together, the cry of
frogs from the swamp so steady and monotonous that it scarcely arrests
attention. Of odours, a-plenty! Just behind me, so that by turning my
head I can see into their cool green depths, are a number of hemlock
trees, the breath of which is incalculably sweet. All the earth the
very earth itself has a good rich growing odour, pleasant to smell.

These things have been here a thousand years a million years and yet
they are not stale, but are ever fresh, ever serene, ever here to
loosen one’s crabbed spirit and make one quietly happy. It seems to me
I could not live if it were not possible often to come thus alone to
the woods.

...On later walking I discover that here and there on warm southern
slopes the dog-tooth violet is really in bloom, and worlds of hepatica,
both lavender and white, among the brown leaves. One of the notable
sights of the hillsides at this time of the year is the striped maple,
the long wands rising straight and chaste among thickets of
less-striking young birches and chestnuts, and having a bud of a
delicate pink—a marvel of minute beauty. A little trailing arbutus I
found and renewed my joy with one of the most exquisite odours of all
the spring; Solomon’s seal thrusting up vivid green cornucopias from
the lifeless earth, and often near a root or stone the red partridge
berries among their bright leaves. The laurel on the hills is sharply
visible, especially when among deciduous trees, and along the old brown
roads are patches of fresh wintergreen. In a cleft of the hills near
the top of Norwottuck, though the day is warm, I found a huge
snowbank—the last held trench of old winter, the last guerilla of the
cold, driven to the fastnesses of the hills.... I have enjoyed this day
without trying. After the first hour or so of it all the worries
dropped away, all the ambitions, all the twisted thoughts—

It is strange how much thrilling joy there is in the discovery of the
ages-old miracle of returning life in the woods: each green adventurer,
each fragrant joy, each bird-call—and the feel of the soft, warm
sunshine upon one’s back after months of winter. On any terms life is
good. The only woe, the only Great Woe, is the woe of never having been
born. Sorrow, yes; failure, yes; weakness, yes the sad loss of dear
friends—yes! But oh, the good God: I still live!

Being alone without feeling alone is one of the great experiences of
life, and he who practises it has acquired an infinitely valuable
possession. People fly to crowds for happinesss not knowing that all
the happiness they find there they must take with them. Thus they
divert and distract that within them which creates power and joy, until
by flying always away from themselves, seeking satisfaction from
without rather than from within, they become infinitely boresome to
themselves, so that they can scarcely bear a moment of their own
society.

But if once a man have a taste of true and happy retirement, though it
be but a short hour, or day, now and then, he has found, or is
beginning to find, a sure place of refuge, of blessed renewal, toward
which in the busiest hours he will find his thoughts wistfully
stealing. How stoutly will he meet the buffets of the world if he knows
he has such a place of retirement where all is well-ordered and full of
beauty, and right counsels prevail, and true things are noted.

As a man grows older, if he cultivate the art of retirement, not indeed
as an end in itself, but as a means of developing a richer and freer
life, he will find his reward growing surer and greater until in time
none of the storms or shocks of life any longer disturbs him. He might
in time even reach the height attained by Diogenes, of whom Epictetus
said, “It was not possible for any man to approach him, nor had any man
the means of laying hold upon him to enslave him. He had everything
easily loosed, everything only hanging to him. If you laid hold of his
property, he would rather have let it go and be yours than he would
have followed you for it; if you laid hold of his leg he would have let
go his leg: if all of his body, all his poor body; his intimates,
friends, country, just the same. For he knew from whence he had them,
and from whom and on what conditions.”

The best partners of solitude are books. I like to take a book with me
in my pocket, although I find the world so full of interesting
things—sights, sounds, odours—that often I never read a word in it. It
is like having a valued friend with you, though you walk for miles
without saying a word to him or he to you: but if you really know your
friend, it is a curious thing how, subconsciously, you are aware of
what he is thinking and feeling about this hillside or that distant
view. And so it is with books. It is enough to have this writer in your
pocket, for the very thought of him and what he would say to these old
fields and pleasant trees is ever freshly delightful. And he never
interrupts at inconvenient moments, nor intrudes his thoughts upon
yours unless you desire it.

I do not want long books and least of all story books in the
woods—these are for the library—but rather scraps and extracts and
condensations from which thoughts can be plucked like flowers and
carried for a while in the buttonhole. So it is that I am fond of all
kinds of anthologies. I have one entitled “Traveller’s Joy,” another,
“Songs of Nature,” and I have lately found the best one I know called
“The Spirit of Man” by Robert Bridges, the English laureate. Other
little books that fit well in the pocket on a tramp, because they are
truly companionable, are Ben Jonson’s “Timber,” one of the very best,
and William Penn’s “Fruits of Solitude.” An anthology of Elizabethan
verse, given me by a friend, is also a good companion.

It is not a discourse or a narrative we want as we walk abroad, but
conversation. Neither do we want people or facts or stories, but a
person. So I open one of these little books and read therein the
thoughtful remark of a wise companion. This I may reply to, or merely
enjoy, as I please. I am in no hurry, as I might be with a living
companion, for my book friend, being long dead, is not impatient and
gives me time to reply, and is not resentful if I make no reply at all.
Submitted to such a test as this few writers, old or new, give
continued profit or delight. To be considered in the presence of the
great and simple things of nature, or worn long in the warm places of
the spirit, a writer must have supreme qualities of sense or humour, a
great sensitiveness to beauty, or a genuine love of goodness—but above
all he must somehow give us the flavour of personality. He must be a
true companion of the spirit.

There is an exercise given to young soldiers which consists in raising
the hands slowly above the head, taking in a full breath at the same
time, and then letting them down in such a way as to square the
shoulders. This leaves the body erect, the head high, the eyes straight
ahead, the lungs full of good air. It is the attitude that every man at
arms should wish to take, After a day in the woods I feel some such
erectness of spirit, a life of the head, and a clearer and calmer
vision, for I have raised up my hands to the heavens, and drawn in the
odours and sights and sounds of the good earth.

One of the great joys of such times of retirement perhaps the greatest
of the joys is the return, freshened and sweetened, to the common life.
How good then appear the things of the garden and farm, the house and
shop, that weariness had staled; how good the faces of friends.

[Illustration]




CHAPTER VI.
NO TRESPASS


I live in a country of beautiful hills, and in the last few years,
since I have been here with Harriet, I have made familiar and pleasant
acquaintance with several of them....

One hill I know is precious to me for a peculiar reason. Upon the side
of it, along the town road, are two or three old farms with lilacs like
trees about their doorways, and ancient apple orchards with great
gnarly branches, and one has an old garden of hollyhocks, larkspurs,
zinnias, mignonette, and I know not how many other old-fashioned
flowers. Wild grapes there are along the neglected walls, and in a
corner of one of them, by a brook, a mass of sweet currant which in
blossom time makes all that bit of valley a bower of fragrance, I have
gone that way often in spring for the sheer joy of the friendly odours
I had across the ancient stone fences.

The largest and stoniest of the farms is owned by an old man named
Howieson. A strange, brown-clad, crooked, crabbed old man, I have seen
him often creeping across his fields with his horses. An ineffective
worker all his life long, he has scarcely made a living from his stony
acres. His farm is tipped up behind upon the hill and runs below to the
brook, and the buildings are old and worn, and a rocky road goes by to
the town. Once, in more prosperous days, before the factories took over
the winter work of these hill farms, the busy families finished shoes,
and wove cloth, and plaited straw hats—and one I know was famous for
wooden bowls craftily hollowed out of maple knots—and the hill people
relied upon their stony fields for little more than their food. But in
these later days, the farm industries are gone, the houses are no
longer overflowing with children, for there is nothing for children to
do, and those who remain are old or discouraged. Some homes have
entirely disappeared, so that all that remains is a clump of lilacs or
a wild tangle of rose bushes about a grass-covered or bush-grown cellar
wall. The last thing to disappear is not that which the old farmers
most set their hearts upon, their fine houses and barns or their
cultivated fields, but the one touch of beauty they left—lilac clump or
rose-tangle.

Old Howieson, with that passion for the sense of possession which
thrives best when the realities of possession are slipping away, has
posted all his fields with warnings against intrusion. You may not
enter this old field, nor walk by this brook, nor climb this hill, for
all this belongs, in fee simple, to James Howieson!

[Illustration]

For a long time I did not meet James Howieson face to face, though I
had often seen his signs, and always with a curious sense of the
futility of them. I did not need to enter his fields, nor climb his
hill, nor walk by his brook, but as the springs passed and the autumns
whitened into winter, I came into more and more complete possession of
all those fields that he so jealously posted. I looked with strange joy
upon his hill, saw April blossom in his orchard, and May colour the
wild grape leaves along his walls. June I smelled in the sweet vernal
of his hay fields, and from the October of his maples and beeches I
gathered rich crops and put up no hostile signs of ownership, paid no
taxes, worried over no mortgage, and often marvelled that he should be
so poor within his posted domain and I so rich without.

One who loves a hill, or a bit of valley, will experiment long until he
finds the best spot to take his joy of it; and this is no more than the
farmer himself does when he experiments year after year to find the
best acres for his potatoes, his corn, his oats, his hay. Intensive
cultivation is as important in these wider fields of the spirit as in
any other. If I consider the things that I hear and see and smell, and
the thoughts that go with them or grow out of them, as really valuable
possessions, contributing to the wealth of life, I cannot see why I
should not willingly give to them a tenth or a hundredth part of the
energy and thought I give to my potatoes or my blackberries or to the
writing I do.

I chose a place in a field just below Old Howieson’s farm, where there
is a thorn-apple tree to sit or lie under. From the thorn-apple tree,
by turning my head in one direction, I can look up at the crown of the
hill with its green hood of oaks and maples and chestnuts, and high
above it I can see the clouds floating in the deep sky, or, if I turn
my head the other way, for I am a kind of monarch there on the hill and
command the world to delight me, I can look off across the pleasant
valley with its spreading fields and farmsteads set about with trees,
and the town slumbering by the riverside. I come often with a little
book in one pocket to read from, and a little book in the other to
write in, but I rarely use either the one or the other, for there is
far too much to see and think about.

From this spot I make excursions round about, and have had many strange
and interesting adventures: and now find thoughts of mine, like
lichens, upon all the boulders and old walls and oak trees of that
hillside. Sometimes I climb to the top of the hill. If I am in a
leisurely mood I walk lawfully around Old Howieson’s farm by a kind of
wood lane that leads to the summit, but often I cross his walls, all
regardless of his trespass signs, and go that way to the top.

[Illustration]

It was on one of these lawless excursions in Old Howieson’s field that
I first saw that strange old fellow who is known hereabout as the
Herbman. I came upon him so suddenly that I stopped short, curiously
startled, as one is startled at finding anything human that seems less
than human. He was kneeling there among the low verdure of a shallow
valley, and looked like an old gray rock or some prehistoric animal. I
stopped to look at him, but he paid no heed, and seemed only to shrink
into himself as though, if he kept silent, he might be taken for stock
or stone. I addressed him but he made no answer. I went nearer, with a
sensation of uncanny wonder; but he did not so much as glance up at me,
though he knew I was there. His old brown basket was near him and the
cane beside it. He was gathering pennyroyal.

“Another man who is taking an unexpected crop from Old Howieson’s
acres,” I thought to myself.

I watched him for some moments, quite still, as one might watch a
turtle or a woodchuck—and left him there.

Since then I have heard something about him, and seen him once or
twice. A strange old man, a wanderer upon the face of the fragrant
earth. Spring and summer he wears always an old overcoat, and carries a
basket with double covers, very much worn and brown with usage. His
cane is of hickory with a crooked root for a handle, this also shiny
with age. He gathers bitter-bark, tansy; ginseng, calamus, smartweed,
and slippery elm, and from along old fences and barnyards, catnip and
boneset, I suppose he lives somewhere, a hole in a log, or the limb of
a tree, but no one knows where it is, or how he dries or cures his
findings. No one knows his name: perhaps he has forgotten it himself. A
name is no great matter anyway. He is called simply the Herbman. He
drifts into our valley in the spring, is seen here and there on the
hills or in the fields, like the crows or the blackbirds, and
disappears in the fall with the robins and the maple leaves. Perhaps he
is one of those favoured souls to whom life is all spring and summer.

The age has passed him by, and except for certain furtive old women,
few care now for his sovereign remedies.

I met him once in the town road, and he stopped humbly without lifting
his eyes, and opening his basket let out into the air such a fragrance
of ancient simples as I never smelled before. He said nothing at all;
but took out dry bundles of catnip, sassafras, slippery elm, to show
me. He had also pennyroyal for healing teas, and calamus and
bitter-bark for miseries. I selected a choice assortment of his wares
to take home to Harriet, but could get him to name no price. He took
what I gave without objection and without thanks, and went his way. A
true man of the hills.

As I said, I came often to the field below Old Howieson’s farm. I think
the old man saw me coming and going, for the road winds along the side
of the hill within sight of his house, skirts a bit of wood, and with
an unexpected turn comes out triumphantly to the top of the ridge
beyond.

At the turn of the road I always disappeared, for I crossed the wall
into the field below Old Howieson’s farm, and mysteriously failed to
appear to the watchful eye upon the ridge beyond. What could be more
provoking or suspicious! To go in at one end of a well-travelled road
and not to come out in the regular and expected way at the other! Or to
be suspected of not being deferential toward trespass signs, or
observant of closed ways! How disturbing to all those who dwell
tremulously within posted enclosures of whatever sort, or those who
base their sense of possession upon stumped paper, or take their God
from a book. Men have been crucified for less.

Sooner or later those who cross boundaries clash with those who defend
boundaries: and those who adventure offend those who seek security; but
it was a long time before I came face to face with Old Man Howieson.

This was the way of it: Well back of Howieson’s buildings and reaching
upward upon the face of the hill stretches a long and narrow field, a
kind of barren back pasture with boulders in it, and gnarly hawthorn
trees, and a stunted wild apple or so. A stone fence runs down one side
of the cleared land and above it rises the hill. It is like a great
trough or ravine which upon still spring evenings gathers in all the
varied odours of Old Howieson’s farm and orchard and brings them down
to me as I sit in the field below. I need no book then, nor sight of
the distant town, nor song of birds, for I have a singular and
incomparable album of the good odours of the hill. This is one reason
why I chose this particular spot in the fields for my own, and it has
given me a secret name for the place which I will not here disclose. If
ever you should come this way in May, my friend, I might take you there
of an evening, but could warrant you no joy of it that you yourself
could not take. But you need not come here, or go there, but stop where
you are at this moment, and I here assure you that if you look up, and
look in, you, also, will see something of the glory of the world.

One evening I had been upon the hill to seek again the pattern and
dimensions of my tabernacle, and to receive anew the tables of the Jaw.
I had crossed Old Howieson’s field so often that I had almost forgotten
it was not my own. It was indeed mine by the same inalienable right
that it belonged to the crows that flew across it, or to the partridges
that nested in its coverts, or the woodchucks that lived in its walls,
or the squirrels in its chestnut trees. It was mine by the final test
of all possession—that I could use it.

He came out of a thicket of hemlocks like a wraith of the past, a gray
and crabbed figure, and confronted me there in the wide field. I
suppose he thought he had caught me at last. I was not at all startled
or even surprised, for as I look back upon it now I know that I had
always been expecting him. Indeed, I felt a lift of the spirit, the
kind of jauntiness with which one meets a crucial adventure.

He stood there for a moment quite silent, a grim figure of denial, and
I facing him.

“You are on my land, sir,” he said.

I answered him instantly and in a way wholly unexpected to myself:

“You are breathing my air, sir.”

He looked at me dully, but with a curious glint of fear in his eye,
fear and anger, too.

“Did you see the sign down there? This land is posted.”

“Yes,” I said, “I have seen your signs. But let me ask you: If I were
not here would you own this land any more than you do now? Would it
yield you any better crops?”

It is never the way of those who live in posted enclosures, of whatever
sort, to reason. They assert.

“This land is posted,” said the old man doggedly.

“Are you sure you own it?” I asked. “Is it really yours?”

“My father owned this farm before me,” he said, “and my grandfather
cleared this field and built these walls. I was born in that house and
have lived there all my life.”

“Well, then, I must be going—and I will not come here again,” I said.
“I am sorry I walked on your land—”

I started to go down the hill, but stopped, and said, as though it were
an afterthought:

“I have made some wonderful discoveries upon your land, and that hill
there. You don’t seem to know how valuable this field is.... Good-bye.”

With that I took two or three steps down the hill—but felt the old
man’s hand on my arm.

“Say, mister,” he asked, “are you one of the electric company men? Is
that high-tension line comin’ across here?”

“No,” I said, “it is something more valuable than that!”

I walked onward a few steps, as though I was quite determined to get
out of his field, but he followed close behind me.

“It ain’t the new trolley line, is it?”

“No,” I said, “it isn’t the trolley line.”

“What is it, then?”

In that question, eager and shrill, spoke the dry soul of the old man,
the lifelong hope that his clinging ownership of those barren acres
would bring him from the outside some miraculous profit.

His whole bearing had changed. He had ceased to be truculent or even
fearful, but was now shrilly beseeching, A great wave of compassion
came over me, I was sorry for him, imprisoned there within the walls of
his own making, and expecting wealth from the outside when there was
wealth in plenty within and everywhere about him.

But how could I help him? You can give no valuable thing to any man who
has not the vision to take it. If I had told him what I found upon his
hill or in his fields he would have thought me—well, crazy; or he would
have suspected that under cover of such a quest I hid some evil design.
As well talk adventure to an old party man, or growth to a set
churchman.

So I left him there within his walls. So often when we think we are
barring other people out, we are only barring ourselves in. The last I
saw of him as I turned into the road was a gray and crabbed figure
standing alone, looking after me, and not far off his own sign:

[Illustration]

Sometime, I thought, this old farm will be owned by a man who is also
capable of possessing it. More than one such place I know already has
been taken by those who value the beauty of the hills and the old
walls, and the boulder-strewn fields. One I know is really possessed by
a man who long ago had a vision of sheep feeding on fields too
infertile to produce profitable crops, and many others have been taken
by men who saw forests growing where forests ought to grow. For real
possession is not a thing of inheritance or of documents, but of the
spirit; and passes by vision and imagination. Sometimes, indeed, the
trespass signs stand long—so long that we grow impatient—but nature is
in no hurry. Nature waits, and presently the trespass signs rot away,
one arm falls off, and lo! where the adventurer found only denial
before he is now invited to—“pass.” The old walls are conquered by the
wild cherries and purple ivy and blackberry bushes, and the old
Howiesons sleep in calm forgetfulness of their rights upon the hills
they thought they possessed, and all that is left is a touch of
beauty—lilac clump and wild-rose tangle.

[Illustration]




CHAPTER VII.
LOOK AT THE WORLD!


“Give me to struggle with weather and wind;
    Give me to stride through the snow;
Give me the feel of the chill on my cheeks,
    And the glow and the glory within!”


_March 17th._

The joy of winter: the downright joy of winter! I tramped to-day
through miles of open, snow-clad country. I slipped in the ruts of the
roads or ploughed through the drifts in the fields with such a sense of
adventure as I cannot describe.

Day before yesterday we had a heavy north wind with stinging gusts of
snow. Yesterday fell bright and cold with snow lying fine and crumbly
like sugar. To the east of the house where I shovelled a path the heaps
are nearly as high as my shoulder....

This perfect morning a faint purplish haze is upon all the hills, with
bright sunshine and still, cold air through which the chimney smoke
rises straight upward. Hungry crows flap across the fields, or with
unaccustomed daring settle close in upon the manure heaps around the
barns. All the hillsides glisten and sparkle like cloth of gold, each
glass knob on the telephone poles is like a resplendent jewel, and the
long morning shadows of the trees lie blue upon the snow. Horses’ feet
crunch upon the road as the early farmers go by with milk for the
creamery—the frosty breath of each driver fluttering aside like a white
scarf. Through the still air ordinary voices cut sharply and clearly,
and a laugh bounds out across the open country with a kind of
superabundance of joy. I see two men beating their arms as they follow
their wood sled. They are bantering one another noisily. I see a man
shovelling snow from his barn doors; as each shovelful rises and
scatters, the sun catches it for an instant and it falls, a silvery
shower. ... I tramped to-day through miles of it: and whether in broken
roads or spotless fields, had great joy of it. It was good to stride
through opposing drifts and to catch the tingling air upon one’s face.
The spring is beautiful indeed, and one is happy at autumn, but of all
the year no other mornings set the blood to racing like these; none
gives a greater sense of youth, strength, or of the general goodness of
the earth.

Give me the winter: give me the winter! Not all winter, but just winter
enough, just what nature sends.

...Dry air in the throat so cold at first as to make one cough; and
dry, sharp, tingling air in the nostrils; frost on beard and eyebrows;
cheeks red and crusty, so that to wrinkle them hurts: but all the body
within aglow with warmth and health. Twice the ordinary ozone in the
air, so that one wishes to whistle or sing, and if the fingers grow
chill, what are shoulders for but to beat them around!

It is a strange and yet familiar experience how all things present
their opposites. Do you enjoy the winter? Your neighbour loathes or
fears it. Do you enjoy life? To your friend it is a sorrow and a
heaviness. Even to you it is not always alike. Though the world itself
is the same to-day as it was yesterday and will be to-morrow—the same
snowy fields and polar hills, the same wintry stars, the same
infinitely alluring variety of people—yet to-day you, that were a god,
have become a grieving child.

Even at moments when we are well pleased with the earth we often have a
wistful feeling that we should conceal it lest it hurt those borne down
by circumstances too great or too sad for them. What is there to offer
one who cannot respond gladly to the beauty of the fields, or opens his
heart widely to the beckoning of friends? And we ask ourselves: Have I
been tried as this man has? Would I be happy then? Have I been wrung
with sorrow, worn down by ill-health, buffeted with injustice as this
man has? Would I be happy then?

I saw on my walk to-day an old woman with a crossed shawl upon her
breast creeping out painfully to feed her hens. She lives on a small,
ill-kept farm I have known for years. She is old and poor and
asthmatic, and the cold bites through her with the sharpness of knives.
The path to the hen-house is a kind of via dolorosa, a terror of
slipperiness and cold. She might avoid it: her son, worthless as he is,
might do it for her, but she clings to it as she clings to her life. It
is the last reason for staying here! But the white fields and drifted
roads are never joyfully met, never desired. She spends half the summer
dreading the return of winter from the severities of which she cannot
escape.

Nor is it all mere poverty, though she is poor, for there are those who
would help to send her away, but she will not go. She is wrapped about
with Old Terrors, Ancient Tyrannies—that Terror of the Unknown which is
more painful even than the Terror of the Known: those Tyrannies of
Habit and of Place which so often and so ruthlessly rule the lives of
the old. She clings desperately to the few people she knows (“’tis hard
to die among strangers!”) and the customs she has followed all her
life. Against the stark power of her tragic helplessness neither the
good nor the great of the earth may prevail. This reality too....

I had a curious experience not long ago: One of those experiences which
light up as in a flash some of the fundamental things of life. I met a
man in the town road whom I have come to know rather more than
slightly. He is a man of education and has been “well-off” in the
country sense, is still, so far as I know, but he has a sardonic
outlook upon life. He is discouraged about human nature. Thinks that
politics are rotten, and that the prices of potatoes and bread are
disgraceful. The state of the nation, and of the world, is quite beyond
temperate expression. Few rays of joy seem to illuminate his pathway.

As we approached in the town road I called out to him:

“Good morning.”

He paused and, to my surprise, responded:

“Are you happy?”

It had not occurred to me for some time whether I was happy or not, so
I replied:

“I don’t know; why do you ask?”

He looked at me in a questioning, and I thought rather indignant, way.

“Why shouldn’t a man be happy?” I pressed him.

“Why _should_ he be? Answer me that!” he responded, “Why should he be?
Look at the world!”

With that he passed onward with a kind of crushing dignity.

I have laughed since when I have recalled the tone of his voice as he
said, “Look at the world!” Gloomy and black it was. It evidently made
him indignant to be here.

But at the moment his bitter query, the essential attitude of spirit
which lay behind it, struck into me with a poignancy that stopped me
where I stood. Was I, then, all wrong about the world? I actually had a
kind of fear lest when I should look up again I should find the earth
grown wan and bleak and unfriendly, so that I should no longer desire
it.

“Look at the world!” I said aloud.

And with that I suddenly looked all around me and it is a strange, deep
thing, as I have thought of it since, how the world came back upon me
with a kind of infinite, calm assurance, as beautiful as ever it was.
There were the hills and the fields and the great still trees—and the
open sky above. And even as I looked down the road and saw my sardonic
old friend plodding through the snow—his very back frowning—I had a
sense that he belonged in the picture, too—and couldn’t help himself.
That he even had a kind of grace, and gave a human touch to that wintry
scene! He had probably said a great deal more than he meant!

_Look at the world_!

Well, look at it.

[Illustration]




CHAPTER VIII.
A GOOD APPLE


“I am made immortal by apprehending my possession of incorruptible
goods.”

I have just had one of the pleasant experiences of life. From time to
time, these brisk winter days, I like to walk across the fields to
Horace’s farm. I take a new way each time and make nothing of the snow
in the fields or the drifts along the fences....

“Why,” asks Harriet, “do you insist on struggling through the snow when
there’s a good beaten road around?”

“Harriet,” I said, “why should any one take a beaten road when there
are new and adventurous ways to travel?”

When I cross the fields I never know at what moment I may come upon
some strange or surprising experience, what new sights I may see, what
new sounds I may hear, and I have the further great advantage of
appearing unexpectedly at Horace’s farm. Sometimes I enter by the cow
lane, sometimes by way of the old road through the wood-lot, or I
appear casually, like a gust of wind, around the corner of the barn, or
I let Horace discover me leaning with folded arms upon his cattle
fence. I have come to love doing this, for unexpectedness in visitors,
as in religion and politics, is disturbing to Horace and, as sand-grits
in oysters produce pearls, my unexpected appearances have more than
once astonished new thoughts in Horace, or yielded pearly bits of
native humour.

Ever since I have known him, Horace has been rather high-and-mighty
with me; but I know he enjoys my visits, for I give him always, I
think, a pleasantly renewed sense of his own superiority. When he sees
me his eye lights up with the comfortable knowledge that he can plough
so much better than I can, that his corn grows taller than mine, and
his hens lay more eggs. He is a wonderfully practical man, is Horace;
hard-headed, they call it here. And he never feels so superior, I
think, as when he finds me sometimes of a Sunday or an evening walking
across the fields where my land joins his, or sitting on a stone fence,
or lying on my back in the pasture under a certain friendly thorn-apple
tree. This he finds it difficult to understand, and thinks it highly
undisciplined, impractical, no doubt reprehensible.

One incident of the sort I shall never forget. It was on a June day
only a year or so after I came here, and before Horace knew me as well
as he does now. I had climbed the hill to look off across his own
high-field pasture, where the white daisies, the purple fleabane, and
the buttercups made a wild tangle of beauty among the tall herd’s
grass. Light airs moved billowing across the field, bobolinks and
meadow larks were singing, and all about were the old fences, each with
its wild hedgerow of choke cherry, young elms, and black raspberry
bushes, and beyond, across miles and miles of sunny green countryside,
the mysterious blue of the ever-changing hills. It was a spot I loved
then, and have loved more deeply every year since.

Horace found me sitting on the stone fence which there divides our
possessions; I think he had been observing me with amusement for some
time before I saw him, for when I looked around his face wore a
comfortably superior, half-disdainful smile.

“David,” said he, “what ye doin’ here?”

“Harvesting my crops,” I said.

He looked at me sharply to see if I was joking, but I was perfectly
sober.

“Harvestin’ yer crops?”

“Yes,” I said, the fancy growing suddenly upon me, “and just now I’ve
been taking a crop from the field you think you own.”

I waved my hand to indicate his high-field pasture.

“Don’t I own it?”

“No, Horace, I’m sorry to say, not all of it. To be frank with you,
since I came here, I’ve quietly acquired an undivided interest in that
land. I may as well tell you first as last. I’m like you, Horace, I’m
reaching out in all directions.”

I spoke in as serious a voice as I could command: the tone I use when I
sell potatoes. Horace’s smile wholly disappeared. A city feller like me
was capable of anything!

“How’s that?” he exclaimed sharply. “What do you mean? That field came
down to me from my grandfather Jamieson.”

I continued to look at Horace with great calmness and gravity.

“Judging from what I now know of your title, Horace,” said I, “neither
your grandfather Jamieson nor your father ever owned all of that field.
And I’ve now acquired that part of it, in fee simple, that neither they
nor you ever really had.”

At this Horace began to look seriously worried. The idea that any one
could get away from him anything that he possessed, especially without
his knowledge, was terrible to him.

“What do you mean, Mr. Grayson?”

He had been calling me “David,” but he now returned sharply to
“Mister.” In our country when we “Mister” a friend something serious is
about to happen. It’s the signal for general mobilization.

I continued to look Horace rather coldly and severely in the eye.

“Yes,” said I, “I’ve acquired a share in that field which I shall not
soon surrender.”

An unmistakable dogged look came into Horace’s face, the look inherited
from generations of land-owning, home-defending, fighting ancestors.
Horace is New England of New England.

“Yes,” I said, “I have already had two or three crops from that field.”

“Huh!” said Horace. “I’ve cut the grass and I’ve cut the rowen every
year since you bin here. What’s more, I’ve got the money fer it in the
bank.”

He tapped his fingers on the top of the wall.

“Nevertheless, Horace,” said I, “I’ve got my crops, also, from that
field, and a steady income, too.”

“What crops?”

“Well, Eve just now been gathering in one of them. What do you think of
the value of the fleabane, and the daisies, and the yellow five-finger
in that field?”

“Huh!” said Horace.

“Well, I’ve just been cropping them. And have you observed the wind in
the grass—and those shadows along the southern wall? Aren’t they
valuable?”

“Huh!” said Horace.

“I’ve rarely seen anything more beautiful,” I said, “than this field
and the view across it—I’m taking that crop now, and later I shall
gather in the rowen of goldenrod and aster, and the red and yellow of
the maple trees—and store it all away in _my_ bank—to live on next
winter.”

It was some time before either of us spoke again, but I could see from
the corner of my eye that mighty things were going on inside of Horace;
and suddenly he broke out into a big laugh and clapped his knee with
his hand in a way he has.

“Is that all!” said Horace.

I think it only confirmed him in the light esteem in which he held me.
Though I showed him unmeasured wealth in his own fields, ungathered
crops of new enjoyment, he was unwilling to take them, but was content
with hay. It is a strange thing to me, and a sad one, how many of our
farmers (and be it said in a whisper, other people, too) own their
lands without ever really possessing them: and let the most precious
crops of the good earth go to waste.

After that, for a long time, Horace loved to joke me about my crops and
his. A joke with Horace is a durable possession.

“S’pose you think that’s your field,” he’d say.

“The best part of it,” I’d return, “but you can have all I’ve taken,
and there’ll still be enough for both of us.”

“You’re a queer one!” he’d say, and then add sometimes, dryly, “but
there’s one crop ye don’t git, David,” and he’d tap his pocket where he
carries his fat, worn, leather pocket-book. “And as fer feelin’s, it
can’t be beat.”

So many people have the curious idea that the only thing the world
desires enough to pay its hard money for is that which can be seen or
eaten or worn. But there never was a greater mistake. While men will
haggle to the penny over the price of hay, or fight for a cent more to
the bushel of oats, they will turn out their very pockets for strange,
intangible joys, hopes, thoughts, or for a moment of peace in a
feverish world the unknown great possessions.

So it was that one day, some months afterward, when we had been thus
bantering each other with great good humour, I said to him:

“Horace, how much did you get for your hay this year?”

“Off that one little piece,” he replied, “I figger fifty-two dollars.”

“Well, Horace,” said I, “I have beaten you. I got more out of it this
year than you did.”

“Oh, I know what you mean——”

“No, Horace, you don’t. This time I mean just what you do: money, cash,
dollars.”

“How’s that, now?”

“Well, I wrote a little piece about your field, and the wind in the
grass, and the hedges along the fences, and the weeds among the
timothy, and the fragrance of it all in June and sold it last week——” I
leaned over toward Horace and whispered behind my hand—in just the way
he tells me the price he gets for his pigs.

“What!” he exclaimed.

Horace had long known that I was “a kind of literary feller,” but his
face was now a study in astonishment.

“_What?_”

Horace scratched his head, as he is accustomed to do when puzzled, with
one finger just under the rim of his hat.

“Well, I vum!” said he.

Here I have been wandering all around Horace’s barn—in the snow—getting
at the story I really started to tell, which probably supports Horace’s
conviction that I am an impractical and unsubstantial person. If I had
the true business spirit I should have gone by the beaten road from my
house to Horace’s, borrowed the singletree I went for, and hurried
straight home. Life is so short when one is after dollars! I should not
have wallowed through the snow, nor stopped at the top of the hill to
look for a moment across the beautiful wintry earth—gray sky and bare
wild trees and frosted farmsteads with homely smoke rising from the
chimneys—I should merely have brought home a singletree—and missed the
glory of life! As I reflect upon it now, I believe it took me no longer
to go by the fields than by the road; and I’ve got the singletree as
securely with me as though I had not looked upon the beauty of the
eternal hills, nor reflected, as I tramped, upon the strange ways of
man.

Oh, my friend, is it the settled rule of life that we are to accept
nothing not expensive? It is not so settled for me; that which is
freest, cheapest, seems somehow more valuable than anything I pay for;
that which is given better than that which is bought; that which passes
between you and me in the glance of an eye, a touch of the hand, is
better than minted money!

I found Horace upon the March day I speak of just coming out of his new
fruit cellar. Horace is a progressive and energetic man, a leader in
this community, and the first to have a modern fruit cellar. By this
means he ministers profitably to that appetite of men which craves most
sharply that which is hardest to obtain: he supplies the world with
apples in March.

It being a mild and sunny day, the door of the fruit cellar was open,
and as I came around the corner I had such of whiff of fragrance as I
cannot describe. It seemed as though the vials of the earth’s most
precious odours had been broken there in Horace’s yard! The smell of
ripe apples!

In the dusky depths of the cellar, down three steps, I could see
Horace’s ruddy face.

“How are ye, David,” said he. “Will ye have a Good Apple?”

So he gave me a good apple. It was a yellow Bellflower without a
blemish, and very large and smooth. The body of it was waxy yellow, but
on the side where the sun had touched it, it blushed a delicious deep
red. Since October it had been in the dark, cool storage-room, and
Horace, like some old monkish connoisseur of wines who knows just when
to bring up the bottles of a certain vintage, had chosen the exact
moment in all the year when the vintage of the Bellflower was at its
best. As he passed it to me I caught, a scent as of old crushed apple
blossoms, or fancied I did or it may have been the still finer aroma of
friendship which passed at the touching of our fingers.

It was a hand-filling apple and likewise good for tired eyes, an
antidote for winter, a remedy for sick souls.

“A wonderful apple!” I said to Horace, holding it off at arm’s length.

“No better grown anywhere,” said he, with scarcely restrained pride.

I took my delight of it more nearly; and the odour was like new-cut
clover in an old orchard, or strawberry leaves freshly trod upon, or
the smell of peach wood at the summer pruning—how shall one describe
it? at least a compound or essence of all the good odours of summer.

“Shall I eat it?” I asked myself, for I thought such a perfection of
nature should be preserved for the blessing of mankind. As I hesitated,
Horace remarked:

“It was grown to be eaten.”

So I bit into it, a big liberal mouthful, which came away with a
rending sound such as one hears sometimes in a winter’s ice-pond. The
flesh within, all dewy with moisture, was like new cream, except a rim
near the surface where the skin had been broken; here it was of a
clear, deep yellow.

New odours came forth and I knew for the first time how perfect in
deliciousness such an apple could be. A mild, serene, ripe, rich
bouquet, compounded essence of the sunshine from these old
Massachusetts hills, of moisture drawn from our grudging soil, of all
the peculiar virtues of a land where the summers make up in the passion
of growth for the long violence of winter; the compensatory aroma of a
life triumphant, though hedged about by severity, was in the bouquet of
this perfect Bellflower.

Like some of the finest of wines and the warmest of friends it was of
two flavours, and was not to be eaten for mere nourishment, but was to
be tasted and enjoyed. The first of the flavours came readily in a
sweetness, richness, a slight acidity, that it might not cloy; but the
deeper, more delicate flavour came later—if one were not crudely
impatient—and was, indeed, the very soul of the fruit. One does not
quickly arrive at souls either in apples or in friends. And I said to
Horace with solemnity, for this was an occasion not to be lightly
treated:

“I have never in my life tasted a fine apple.”

“There is no finer apple,” said Horace with conviction.

With that we fell to discussing the kinds and qualities of all the
apples grown this side China, and gave our more or less slighting
opinions of Ben Davises and Greenings and Russets, and especially of
trivial summer apples of all sorts, and came to the conclusion at last
that it must have been just after God created this particular “tree
yielding fruit” that he desisted from his day’s work and remarked that
what he saw was good. The record is silent upon the point, and Moses is
not given to adjectives, but I have often wondered what He would have
said if He had not only seen the product of His creation, but _tasted_
it.

I forgot to say that when I would have slurred the excellence of the
Baldwin in comparison with the Bellflower, Horace began at once to
interpose objections, and defended the excellence and perfection of
that variety.

...He has fifty barrels of Baldwins in his cellar.

While we talked with much enjoyment of the lore of apples and
apple-growing, I finished the Bellflower to the very core, and said to
Horace as I reluctantly tossed aside the stem and three seeds:

“Surely this has been one of the rare moments of life.”

[Illustration]




CHAPTER IX.
I GO TO THE CITY


“Surely man is a wonderfull divers and varying subject: It is very hard
to ground and directly constant and uniforme judgement upon him.”

Though I live most of the time in the country, as I love best to do,
sometimes I go to the city and find there much that is strange and
amusing. I like to watch the inward flow of the human tide in the
morning, and the ebb at evening, and sometimes in the slack tide of
noon I drift in one of the eddies where the restless life of the city
pauses a moment to refresh itself. One of the eddies I like best of all
is near the corner of Madison Square, where the flood of Twenty-third
Street swirls around the bulkhead of the Metropolitan tower to meet the
transverse currents of Madison Avenue. Here, of a bright morning when
Down-at-Heels is generously warming himself on the park benches, and
Old Defeat watches Young Hurry striding by, one has a royal choice of
refreshment: a “red-hot” enfolded in a bun from the dingy sausage wagon
at the curb, or a plum for a penny from the Italian with the trundle
cart, or news of the world in lurid gulps from the noon edition of the
paper—or else a curious idea or so flung out stridently over the heads
of the crowd by a man on a soap box.

I love this corner of the great city; I love the sense of the warm
human tide flowing all about me. I love to look into the strange, dark,
eager, sensitive, blunt faces.

The other noon, drifting there in that human eddy, I stopped to listen
to a small, shabby man who stood in transitory eminence upon his soap
box, half his body reaching above the knobby black soil of human heads
around him—black, knobby soil that he was seeking, there in the spring
sunshine, to plough with strange ideas. He had ruddy cheeks and a tuft
of curly hair set like an upholstery button on each side of his bald
head. The front teeth in his upper jaw were missing, and as he opened
his mouth one could see the ample lining of red flannel.

He raised his voice penetratingly to overcome the noise of the world,
straining until the dark-corded veins of his throat stood out sharply
and perspiration gleamed on his bald forehead. As though his life
depended upon the delivery of his great message he was explaining to
that close-packed crowd that there was no God.

From time to time he offered for sale pamphlets by R.G. Ingersoll and
Frederic Harrison, with grimy back numbers of a journal called the
“Truth-Seeker.”

By the slant and timbre of his speech he was an Englishman; he had a
gift of vigorous statement, and met questioners like an intellectual
pugilist with skilful blows between the eyes: and his grammar was bad.

I stood for some time listening to him while he proved with excellent
logic, basing his reasoning on many learned authorities, that there was
no God. His audience cheered with glee his clever hits, and held up
their hands for the books he had for sale.

“Who is this speaker?” I asked the elbowing helper who came through the
crowd to deliver the speaker’s wares and collect the silver for them.
“Who is this speaker who says there is no God?”

“Henry Moore,” he responded.

“And who,” I asked, “is Henry Moore?”

“He is an Englishman and was brought up a Presbyterian—but he seen the
light.”

“And no longer thinks there is any God?”

“Nope.”

“And these books prove the same thing?”

“Yep.”

So I bought one of them, thinking it wonderful that proof of so
momentous a conclusion could be had for so small a sum.

This Henry Moore could fling arguments like thunderbolts; he could
marshall his authorities like an army; he could talk against the roar
of the city and keep his restless audience about him; and if he did not
believe in God he had complete faith in Haeckel and Jacques Loeb, and
took at face value the lightest utterances of John Stuart Mill.

I enjoyed listening to Henry Moore. I enjoyed looking into the faces
all around me—mostly keen foreign or half-foreign faces, and young
faces, and idle faces, and curious faces, and faces that drank in, and
faces that disdainfully rejected.

After a time, however, I grew unaccountably weary of the vehemence of
Henry Moore and of the adroit helper who hawked his books. And suddenly
I looked up into the clear noon blue of the ancient sky. A pigeon was
flying across the wide open spaces of the square, the sunlight glinting
on its wings. I saw the quiet green tops of the trees in the park, and
the statue of Roscoe Conkling, turning a nonchalant shoulder toward the
heated speaker who said there was no God. How many strange ideas,
contradictory arguments, curious logic, have fallen, this last quarter
century, upon the stony ears of Roscoe Conkling! Far above me the
Metropolitan tower, that wonder work of men, lifted itself grandly to
the heavens, and all about I suddenly heard and felt the roar and surge
of the mighty city, the mighty, careless, busy city, thousands of
people stirring about me, souls full of hot hopes and mad desires,
unsatisfied longings, unrealized ideals. And I stepped out of the group
who were gathered around the man who said there was no God....

But I still drifted in the eddy, thinking how wonderful and strange all
these things were, and came thus to another group, close gathered at
the curb. It was much smaller than the other, and at the centre stood a
patriarchal man with a white beard, and with him two women. He was
leaning against the iron railing of the park, and several of the
free-thinker’s audience, freshly stuffed with arguments, had engaged
him hotly. Just as I approached he drew from his pocket a worn,
leather-covered Bible, and said, tapping it with one finger:

“For forty years I have carried this book with me. It contains more
wisdom than any other book in the world. Your friend there can talk
until he is hoarse—it will do no harm—but the world will continue to
follow the wisdom of this book.”

A kind of exaltation gleamed in his eye, and he spoke with an
earnestness equal to that of Henry Moore. He, too, was a street
speaker, waiting with his box at his side to begin. He would soon be
standing up there to prove, also with logic and authority, that there
was a God. He, also, would plough that knobby black soil of human heads
with the share of his vehement faith. The two women were with him to
sing their belief, and one had a basket to take up a collection, and
the other, singling me out as I listened with eagerness, gave me a
printed tract, a kind of advertisement of God.

I looked at the title of it. It was called: “God in His World.”

“Does this prove that God is really in the world?” I asked.

“Yes,” she said. “Will you read it?”

“Yes,” I said, “I am glad to get it. It is wonderful that so great a
truth can be established in so small a pamphlet, and all for nothing.”

She looked at me curiously, I thought, and I put the tract by the side
of the pamphlet I had bought from the freethinker, and drifted again in
the eddy.

The largest crowd of all was close packed about a swarthy young chap
whose bushy hair waved in response to the violence of his oratory. He,
too, was perspiring with his ideas. He had a marvellous staccato method
of question and answer. He would shoot a question like a rifle bullet
at the heads of his audience, and then stiffen back like a wary boxer,
both clenched hands poised in a tremulous gesticulation, and before any
one could answer his bullet-like question, he was answering it himself.
As I edged my way nearer to him I discovered that he, also, had a
little pile of books at his feet which a keen-eyed assistant was busily
selling. How well-established the technic of this art of the city
eddies! How well-studied the psychology!

I thought this example the most perfect of them all, and watched with
eagerness the play of the argument as it was mirrored in the intent
faces all about me. And gradually I grew interested in what the man was
saying, and thought of many good answers I could give to his
questionings if he were not so cunning with answers of his own.
Finally, in the midst of one of his loftiest flights, he demanded,
hotly:

“Are you not, every one of you, a slave of the capitalist class?”

It was perfectly still for a second after he spoke, and before I knew
what I was doing, I responded:

“Why, no, I’m not.”

It seemed to astonish the group around me: white faces turned my way.

But it would have been difficult to dash that swarthy young man. He was
as full of questions as a porcupine is full of quills.

“Well, sir,” said he, “if I can prove to you that you are a slave, will
you believe it?”

“No,” I said, “unless you make me feel like a slave, too! No man is a
slave who does not feel slavish.”

But I was no match for that astonishing young orator; and he had the
advantage over me of a soap box! Moreover, at that moment, the
keen-eyed assistant, never missing an opportunity, offered me one of
his little red books.

“If you can read this without feeling a slave,” he remarked, “you’re
John D. himself in disguise.”

I bought his little red book and put it with the pamphlet of the
freethinker, and the tract of the God-fearing man, and stepped out of
that group, feeling no more servile than when I went in. And I said to
myself:

“This, surely, is a curious place to be in.”

For I was now strangely interested in these men of the eddy.

“There are more gods preached here,” I said, “than ever were known on
the Acropolis.”

Up the square a few paces I saw a covered wagon with a dense crowd
around it. And in front of it upon a little platform which raised the
speaker high above the heads of the audience stood a woman, speaking
with shrill ardour. Most of the hearers were men; and she was telling
them with logic and authority that the progress of civilization waited
upon the votes of women. The army of the world stood still until the
rear rank of its women could be brought into line! Morals languished,
religion faded, industries were brutalized, home life destroyed! If
only women had their rights the world would at once become a beautiful
and charming place! Oh, she was a powerful and earnest speaker; she
made me desire above everything, at the first opportunity, to use my
share of the power in this Government to provide each woman with a
vote. And just as I had reached this compliant stage there came a girl
smiling and passing her little basket. The sheer art of it! So I
dropped in my coin and took the little leaflet she gave me and put it
side by side with the other literature of my accumulating library.

And so I came away from those hot little groups with their perspiring
orators, and felt again the charm of the tall buildings and the wide
sunny square, and the park with Down-at-Heels warming his ragged
shanks, and the great city clanging heedlessly by. How serious they all
were there in their eddies! Is there no God? Will woman suffrage or
socialism cure all the evils of this mad world which, ill as it is, we
would not be without? Is a belief for forty years in the complete
wisdom of the Book the final solution? Why do not all of the seeking
and suffering thousands flowing by in Twenty-third Street stop here in
the eddies to seek the solution of their woes, the response to their
hot desires?

So I came home to the country, thinking of what I had seen and heard,
asking myself, “What is the truth, after all? What _is_ real?”

And I was unaccountably glad to be at home again. As I came down the
hill through the town road the valley had a quiet welcome for me, and
the trees I know best, and the pleasant fields of corn and tobacco, and
the meadows ripe with hay. I know of nothing more comforting to the
questioning spirit than the sight of distant hills....

I found that Bill had begun the hay cutting. I saw him in the lower
field as I came by in the road. There he was, stationed high on the
load, and John, the Pole, was pitching on. When he saw me he lifted one
arm high in the air and waved his hand—and I in return gave him the
sign of the Free Fields.

“Harriet,” I said, “it seems to me I was never so glad before to get
home.”

“It’s what you always say,” she remarked placidly.

“This time it’s true!” And I put the pamphlets I had accumulated in the
city eddies upon the pile of documents which I fully intend to read but
rarely get to.

The heavenly comfort of an old shirt! The joy of an old hat!

As I walked down quickly into the field with my pitchfork on my
shoulder to help Bill with the hay, I was startled to see, hanging upon
a peach tree at the corner of the orchard, a complete suit of black
clothes. Near it, with the arms waving gently in the breeze, was a
white shirt and a black tie, and at the foot of the tree a respectable
black hat. It was as though the peach tree had suddenly, on that bright
day, gone into mourning.

I laughed to myself.

“Bill,” I said, “what does this mean?”

Bill is a stout jolly chap with cheeks that look, after half a day’s
haying, like raw beef-steaks. He paused on his load, smiling broadly,
his straw hat set like a halo on the back of his head.

“Expected a funeral,” he said cheerfully.

Bill is the undertaker’s assistant, and is always on call in cases of
emergency.

“What happened, Bill?”

“They thought they’d bury ’im this afternoon, but they took an’ kep’
’im over till to-morrow.”

“But you came prepared.”

“Yas, no time to go home in hayin’. The pump fer me, and the black
togs.”

Bill calls the first rakings of the hay “tumbles,” and the scattered
re-rakings, which he despises, he calls “scratchings.” I took one side
of the load and John, the Pole, the other and we put on great forkfuls
from the tumbles which Bill placed skilfully at the corners and sides
of the load, using the scratchings for the centre.

John, the Pole, watched the load from below. “Tank he too big here,” he
would say, or, “Tank you put more there”; but Bill told mostly by the
feel of the load under his feet or by the “squareness of his eye.”
John, the Pole, is a big, powerful fellow, and after smoothing down the
load with his fork he does not bother to rake up the combings, but
gathering a bunch of loose hay with his fork, he pushes it by main
strength, and very quickly, around the load, and running his fork
through the heap, throws it upon the mountain-high load in a
twinkling—an admirable, deft performance.

Hay-making is a really beautiful process: the clicking mower cutting
its clean, wide swath, a man stepping after, where the hay is very
heavy, to throw the windrow back a little. Then, after lying to wilt
and dry in the burning sun—all full of good odours—the horse-rake draws
it neatly into wide billows, and after that, John, the Pole, and I roll
the billows into tumbles. Or, if the hay is slow in drying, as it was
not this year, the kicking tedder goes over it, spreading it widely.
Then the team and rack on the smooth-cut meadow and Bill on the load,
and John and I pitching on; and the talk and badinage that goes on, the
excitement over disturbed field mice, the discussion of the best
methods of killing woodchucks, tales of marvellous exploits of loaders
and stackers, thrilling incidents of the wet year of ’98 when two men
and one team saved four acres of hay by working all night—“with
lanterns, I jing”—much talk of how she goes on, “she” being the hay,
and no end of observations upon the character, accomplishments, faults,
and excesses of the sedate old horses waiting comfortably out in front,
half hidden by the mountain of hay above them and nibbling at the
tumbles as they go by.

Then the proud moment when Bill the driver, with legs apart, almost
pushing on the reins, drives his horses up the hill.

“Go it, Dick. Let ’er out, Daisy. Stiddy, ol’ boy. Whoa, there. Ease
down now. Hey, there, John, block the wheel—block the wheel I tell ye.
Ah-h now, jes’ breathe a bit. I jing, it’s hot.”

And then the barn, the cavernous dark doors, the hoofs of the horses
thundering on the floor, the smell of cattle from below, the pigeons in
the loft whirring startled from their perches. Then the hot, scented,
dusty “pitching off” and “mowing in”—a fine process, an _honest_
process: men sweating for what they get.

As I came in from the field that night the sun was low in the hills,
and a faint breeze had begun to blow, sweetly cool after the burning
heat of the day. And I felt again that curious deep sense I have so
often here in the country, of the soundness and reality of the plain
things of life.

[Illustration]




CHAPTER X.
THE OLD STONE MASON


Of well-flavoured men, I know none better than those who live close to
the soil or work in common things. Men are like roses and lilacs,
which, too carefully cultivated to please the eye, lose something of
their native fragrance. One of the best-flavoured men I know is my
friend, the old stone mason.

To-day I rode over with the old stone mason to select some wide stones
for steps in my new building. The old man loves stones. All his life
long—he is now beyond seventy years old—he has lived among stones,
lifted stones, fitted stones. He knows all the various kinds, shapes,
sizes, and where they will go best in a wall. He can tell at a glance
where to strike a stone to make it fit a particular place, and out of a
great pile he can select with a shrewd eye the stone for the exact
opening he has to fill. He will run his stubby rough hand over a stone
and remark:

“Fine face that. Ye don’t see many such stones these days,” as though
he were speaking of the countenance of a friend.

I veritably believe there are stones that smile at him, stones that
frown at him, stones that appear good or ill-humoured to him as he
bends his stocky strong body to lift or lay them. He is a slow man, a
slow, steady, geologic man, as befits one who works with the elemental
stuff of nature. His arms are short and his hands powerful. He has been
a servant of stones in this neighbourhood alone for upward of fifty
years.

He loves stones and can no more resist a good stone than I a good book.
When going about the country, if he sees comely stones in a wayside
pile, or in a fine-featured old fence he will have them, whether or no,
and dickers for them with all the eagerness, sly pride, and
half-concealed cunning with which a lover of old prints chaffers for a
Seymour Haden in a second-hand book shop. And when he has bought them
he takes the first idle day he has, and with his team of old horses
goes into the hills, or wherever it may be, and brings them down. He
has them piled about his barn and even in his yard, as another man
might have flower beds. And he can tell you, as he told me to-day, just
where a stone of such a size and such a face can be found, though it be
at the bottom of a pile. No book lover with a feeling sense for the
place in his cases where each of his books may be found has a sharper
instinct than he. In his pocket he carries a lump of red chalk, and
when we had made our selections he marked each stone with a broad red
cross.

I think it good fortune that I secured the old stone mason to do my
work, and take to myself some credit for skill in enticing him. He is
past seventy years old, though of a ruddy fresh countenance and a clear
bright eye, and takes no more contracts, and is even reluctantly
persuaded to do the ordinary stone work of the neighbourhood. He is
“well enough off,” as the saying goes, to rest during the remainder of
his years, for he has lived a temperate and frugal life, owns his own
home with the little garden behind it, and has money in the bank. But
he can be prevailed upon, like an old artist who has reached the time
of life when it seems as important to enjoy as to create, he can
sometimes be prevailed upon to lay a wall for the joy of doing it.

So I had the stone hauled onto the ground, the best old field stone I
could find, and I had a clean, straight foundation dug, and when all
was ready I brought the old man over to look at it. I said I wanted his
advice. No sooner did his glance light upon the stone, no sooner did he
see the open and ready earth than a new light came in his eye. His step
quickened and as he went about he began to hum an old tune under his
breath. I knew then that I had him! He had taken fire. I could see that
his eye was already selecting the stones that should “go down,” the
fine square stones to make the corners or cap the wall, and measuring
with a true eye the number of little stones for the fillers. In no time
at all he had agreed to do my work; indeed, would have felt aggrieved
if I had not employed him.

I enjoyed the building of the wall, I think, as much as he did, and
helped him what I could by rolling the larger stones close down to the
edge of the wall. As the old man works he talks, if any one cares to
listen, or if one does not care to listen he is well content to remain
silent among his stones. But I enjoyed listening, for nothing in this
world is so fascinating to me as the story of how a man has come to be
what he is. When we think of it there are no abstract adventures in
this world, but only your adventure and my adventure, and it is only as
we come to know a man that we can see how wonderful his life has been.

He told me all about the great walls and the little walls—miles and
miles of them—he has built in the course of fifty years. He told of
crude boyhood walls when he was a worker for wages only, he told of
proud manhood walls when he took contracts for foundations, retaining
walls, and even for whole buildings, such as churches, where the work
was mostly of stone; he told me of thrilling gains and profits, and of
depressing losses; and he told me of his calm later work, again on
wages, for which he is chosen as a master of his craft. A whole long
lifetime of it—and the last years the best of all!

As we drove up yesterday to select the steps from his piles of old
field stone, riding behind his great, slow, hairy-hoofed horse, in the
battered and ancient wagon, he pointed with his stubby whip to this or
that foundation, the work of his hands.

“Fine job, that,” said he, and I looked for the first time in my life
at the beautiful stonework beneath the familiar home of a friend. I had
seen the house a thousand times, and knew well the people in it, but my
unobservant eye had never before rested consciously upon that bit of
basement wall. How we go through life, losing most of the beauties of
it from sheer inability to see! But the old man, as he drives about,
rarely sees houses at all, especially wooden houses, and for all modern
stucco and cement work he entertains a kind of lofty contempt. Sham
work of a hasty and unskilled age! He never, I think, put in a
shovelful of cement except in the place where it belongs, as a mortar
for good walls, and never will do so as long as he lives. So long as he
lives the standards of high art will never be debased!

He built that foundation, and this chimney, he worked on the tower of
the Baptist church in the town, “and never yet has there been a crack
in her, winter or summer”; and more than forty years ago he laid the
cornerstone of the old schoolhouse, the foundation walls of which stand
to-day as sound and strong as they were when they were put down.

In dry walls I think the old stone mason takes the greatest pride of
all: for it is in the dry wall—I mean by that a wall laid without
mortar—that the sheer art of the mason comes most into play. Any one
can throw a wall together if he has mortar to make it stick, but a dry
wall must stand out for what it is, built solid from the bottom up,
each stone resting securely upon those below it, and braced and nested
in by the sheer skill of the mason. The art of the dry wall is the
ancient heritage of New England and speaks not only of the sincerity
and the conscientiousness of the old Puritan spirit but strikes the
higher note of beauty. Many of the older walls I know are worth going
far to see, for they exhibit a rare sense of form and proportion, and
are sometimes set in the landscape with a skill that only the
Master-Artist himself could exceed. Those old, hard-wrought stone
fences of the Burnham Hills and Crewsbury, the best of them, were
honestly built, and built to last a thousand years. A beautiful art—and
one that is passing away! It is the dry wall that stands of itself that
the old stone mason loves best of all.

As we drove along the road the old man pointed out to me with his
stubby whip so many examples of his work that it seemed finally as if
he had borne a hand in nearly everything done in this neighbourhood in
the last half-century. He has literally built himself into the country
and into the town, and at seventy years of age he can look back upon it
all with honest pride. It stands. No jerry-work anywhere. No cracks. It
stands.

I never realized before how completely the neighbourhood rests upon the
work of this simple old man. He _founded_ most of the homes here, and
upon his secure walls rest many of the stores, the churches, and the
schools of the countryside. I see again how important each man is to
the complete fabric of civilization and know that we are to leave no
one out, despise no one, look down upon no one.

He told me stories of this ancient settler and of that.

He was a powerful queer man—he wanted the moss left on his stones when
I put ’em in; never a hammer touched the facings of _his_ wall...

“That is properly a woman’s wall. She was the boss, you might call it,
and wanted stone, but _he_ wanted brick. So you see the front, where
people can see it, is of stone, but the sides is all brick.”

Thus like the true artist that he is, he has not only built himself his
own honesty, truth, skill, into the town, but he has built in the
inexhaustible peculiarities, the radiant charm, the hates and the
loves, of the people of this place. He has mirrored his own little age
in stone. He knows the town, indeed, better than most of us, having a
kind of stone-age knowledge of it—the fundamental things men build in
when they set about building permanently.

“And that is what you might call a spite-wall,” said he, showing me a
long wall leading between two shady homes, making one of them a prison
on the south, and the other a prison on the north. He told me the story
of an ancient and bitter quarrel between two old friends, a story which
sounded to-day among spring blossoms like the account of some ancient
baronial feud.

But if the old stone mason has built walls to keep enemies apart how
many more walls has he built to keep friends together? How many times
has he been consulted by shy lovers seeking a foundation for a new
home, a new family, how many times by Darby and Joan planning a resting
place for the sunny closing years of their lives! He could point,
indeed, to one wall that symbolized hatred; all the others meant homes,
roof-trees, families, or they were the foundations for the working
places of men, or else, like the tower of the church, they pointed
heavenward and were built to the glory of God.

The old stone mason has not the slightest idea that he has done
anything unusual or wonderful. He is as simple and honest a man as ever
I knew; and if he has pride, simple and honest also in that. He was
anxious not to charge me too much for the stone I bought—in an age like
this! I have never talked with him about God, or about religion: I had
no need to.

[Illustration]

He has done his duty in other ways by his time and his place. He has
brought up a large family of children; and has known sorrow and loss,
as well as happiness and contentment. Two of his children were taken in
one day with pneumonia. He told me about it with a quaver in his old
voice.

“How long ago was it?” I asked.

“Twenty-seven years.”

He has sons and daughters left, and two of the sons he has well trained
as stone masons after him. They are good as young men go in a
degenerate age. They insist on working in cement! He has grandchildren
in school, and spoils them.

He is also a man of public interests and upon town-meeting day puts on
his good clothes and sits modestly toward the back of the hall. Though
he rarely says anything he always has a strong opinion, an opinion as
sound and hard as stones and as simple, upon most of the questions that
come up. And he votes as he thinks, though the only man in meeting who
votes that way. For when a man works in the open, laying walls true to
lines and measurements, being honest with natural things, he comes
clear, sane, strong, upon many things. I would sooner trust his
judgment upon matters that are really important as between man and man,
and man and God, than I would trust the town lawyer. And if he has
grown a little testy with some of the innovations of modern life, and
thinks they did everything better forty years ago—and says so—he
speaks, at least, his honest conviction.

If I can lay my walls as true as he does, if I can build myself a third
part as firmly into any neighbourhood as he has into this, if at
seventy years of age—if ever I live to lay walls with joy at that time
of life—if I can look back upon _my_ foundations, _my_ heaven-pointing
towers, and find no cracks or strains in them, I shall feel that I have
made a great success of my life....

I went out just now: the old man was stooping to lift a heavy stone.
His hat was off and the full spring sunshine struck down warmly upon
the ruddy bald spot on the top of his head, the white hair around about
it looking silvery in that light. As he placed the stone in the wall,
he straightened up and rubbed his stubby hand along it.

“A fine stone that!” said he.

[Illustration]




CHAPTER XI.
AN AUCTION OF ANTIQUES


“I would not paint a face
    Or rocks or streams or trees
Mere semblances of things—
    But something more than these.”

“I would not play a tune
    Upon the sheng or lute
Which did not also sing
    Meanings that else were mute.”

John Templeton died on the last day of August, but it was not until
some weeks later that his daughter Julida, that hard-favoured woman,
set a time for the auction. It fell happily upon a mellow autumn day,
and as I drove out I saw the apples ripening in all the orchards along
the road, and the corn was beginning to look brown, and the meadows by
the brook were green with rowen. It was an ideal day for an auction,
and farmers and townsmen came trooping from all parts of the country,
for the Templeton antiques were to be sold.

John Templeton lived in one house for seventy-eight years; he was born
there, and you will find the like of that in few places in America. It
was a fine house for its time, for any time, and not new when John
Templeton was born. A great, solid, square structure, such as they
built when the Puritan spirit was virile in New England, with an almost
Greek beauty of measured lines. It has a fanlight over the front door,
windows exquisitely proportion, and in the center a vast brick chimney.
Even now, though weathered and unpainted, it stands four-square upon
the earth with a kind of natural dignity. A majestic chestnut tree
grows near it, and a large old barn and generous sheds, now somewhat
dilapidated, ramble away to the rear.

Enclosing the fields around about are stone fences representing the
infinite labour of John Templeton’s forebears. More toil has gone into
the stone fences of New England, free labour of a free people, than
ever went into the slave-driven building of the Pyramids of Egypt.

I knew John Templeton in his old age—a stiff, weather-beaten old man
driving to town in a one-horse buggy.

“How are you, Mr. Templeton?”

“Comin’ on, comin’ on.” This was his invariable reply.

He had the old New England pronunciation, now disappearing. He said
“rud” for road, “daown” for down, and gave an indescribable twist to
the word garden, best spelled “gardin.” He had also the old New England
ways. He was forehanded with his winter woodpile, immaculately neat
with his dooryard, determined in his Sunday observance, and if he put
the small apples in the middle of the barrel he refused to raise
tobacco, lest it become a cause of stumbling to his neighbour. He paid
his debts, disciplined his children, and in an age which has come to
look chummily upon God, he dreaded His wrath.

He grew a peculiar, very fine variety of sweet apple which I have never
seen anywhere else. He called it the Pumpkin Sweet, for it was of a
rich yellow. I can see him yet, driving into town with a shallow wagon
box half full of this gold of the orchard; can see him turn stiffly to
get one of the apples for me; can hear him say in the squeaky voice of
age:

“Ye won’t find no sweeter apples hereabout, I can tell ye that.”

He was a dyed-in-the-wool abolition Republican and took the Boston
_Transcript_ for forty-six years. He left two cords of them piled up in
a back storeroom. He loved to talk about Napoleon Bonaparte and the
Battle of Waterloo, and how, if there had not been that delay of half
an hour, the history of the world might have been different. I can see
him saying, with the words puffing out his loose cheeks:

“And then Blooker kem up—”

To the very last, even when his eyes were too dim to read and his voice
was cracked, he would start up, like some old machine set a-whirring
when you touched the rusty lever, and talk about the Battle of
Waterloo.

No one, so far as I know, ever heard him complain, or bemoan his age,
or regret the change in the times; and when his day came, he lay down
upon his bed and died.

“Positively nothing will be reserved,” were the familiar words of the
poster, and they have a larger meaning in an old country neighbourhood
than the mere sale of the last pan and jug and pig and highboy. Though
we live with our neighbours for fifty years we still secretly wonder
about them. We still suspect that something remains covered, something
kept in and hidden away, some bits of beauty unappreciated—as they are,
indeed, with ourselves. But death snatches away the last friendly
garment of concealment; and after the funeral the auction. We may enter
now. The doors stand at last flung widely open; all the attics have
been ransacked; all the chests have been turned out; a thousand
privacies stand glaringly revealed in the sunny open spaces of the
yard. Positively nothing will be reserved; everything will be knocked
down to the highest bidder. What wonder that the neighbourhood gathers,
what wonder that it nods its head, leaves sentences half uttered,
smiles enigmatically.

Nearly all the contents of the house had been removed to the yard,
under the great chesnut tree. A crowd of people, mostly women, were
moving about among the old furniture, the old furniture that had been
in John Templeton’s family for no one knows how long—old highboys and
lowboys, a beautifully simple old table or so, and beds with carved
posts, and hand-wrought brasses, and an odd tall clock that struck with
sonorous dignity. These things, which had been temptingly advertised as
“antiques,” a word John Templeton never knew, were only the common
serviceable things of uncounted years of family life.

Nothing about the place was of any great value except the antiques, and
it was these that drew the well-dressed women in automobiles from as
far away as Hempfield and Nortontown; and yet there were men in plenty
to poke the pigs, look sarcastically at the teeth of the two old
horses, and examine with calculating and rather jeering eyes John
Templeton’s ancient buggy, and the harness and the worn plough and
cultivator and mowing machine. Everything seems so cheap, so poor, so
unprotected, when the spirit has departed.

Under the chestnut tree the swarthy auctioneer with his amiable
countenance and ironical smile acquired through years of dispassionate
observation of the follies of human emotion, the mutability of human
affairs, the brevity of human endeavour, that brought everything at
last under his hammer—there by the chestnut tree the auctioneer had
taken his stand in temporary eminence upon an old chest, with an
ancient kitchen cupboard near him which served at once as a pulpit for
exhortation, and a block for execution. Already the well-worn smile had
come pat to his countenance, and the well-worn witticisms were ready to
his tongue.

“Now, gentlemen, if you’ll give me such attention as you can spare from
the ladies, we have here to-day——”

But I could not, somehow, listen to him: the whole scene, the whole
deep event, had taken hold upon me strangely. It was so full of human
meaning, human emotion, human pathos. I drifted away from the crowd and
stepped in at the open door of the old house, and walked through the
empty, resounding rooms with their curious old wallpaper and low
ceilings and dusty windows. And there were the old fireplaces where the
heavy brick had been eaten away by the pokings and scrapings of a
century; and the thresholds worn by the passage of many feet, the
romping feet of children, the happy feet of youth the bride passed here
on her wedding night with her arm linked in the arm of the groom; the
sturdy, determined feet of maturity; the stumbling feet of old age
creeping in; the slow, pushing feet of the bearers with the last
burden, crowding out—

The air of the house had a musty, shut-in odour, ironically cut
through, as all old things are, by the stinging odour of the new: the
boiling of the auction coffee in the half-dismantled kitchen, the
epochal moment in the life of Julia Templeton. I could hear,
occasionally, her high, strident worried voice ordering a helper about.
Such a hard-favoured woman!

It is the studied and profitable psychology of the auction that the
rubbish must be sold first—pots and bottles and jugs at five-cent bids,
and hoes at ten—and after that, the friction of the contest having
warmed in the bidders an amiable desire to purchase goods they do not
want and cannot use, the auctioneer gradually puts forth the treasures
of the day.

As I came out of the old house I could see that the mystic web had been
spun, that the great moment of the sale was arriving. The auctioneer
was leaning forward now upon the tall cupboard with an air of command,
and surveying the assembled crowd with a lordly eye.

“Now, Jake, careful there—pass it along—steady.... We come now to the
cheff dooves of the day, the creem delly creems of this sale. Gentleman
_and_ ladies, it is a great moment in the life of an auctioneer when he
can offer, for sale, free and without reservation, such treasures as
these....”

I could feel the warming interest of the crowd gathering in more
closely about Mr. Harpworth, the furtive silences of shrewd bargainers,
eagerness masked as indifference, and covetousness cloaking itself with
smiling irony. It is in the auction that trade glorifies itself finally
as an Art.

“Here, gentlemen _and_ ladies, is a genuine antique, hand-wrought and
solid all the way through. Just enough worn to give the flavour and
distinction of age. Well built in the first place, plain, simple lines,
but, ladies, _beautiful_.”

It was the tall four-post bed he was selling and he now put his hand
upon this object—a hardy service with a cunningly simulated air of
deference. It was to be profaned by no irreverent handling!

“What am I offered for this heirloom of the Templeton family? Ten? Ten!
Fifteen over there, thank you, Mr. Cody. Why, gentlemen, that bed
cannot be duplicated in America! A real product of Colonial art! Look
at the colour of it! Where will you find such depth of colour in any
modern piece? Age varnished it, gentlemen, age and use—the use of a
hundred years.... Twenty over there, twenty I hear, twenty, twenty,
make it thirty.... Speak up now, Ike, we know you’ve come here to-day
to make your fortune—do I hear thirty?”

No sooner had the great bed been sold (“it’s yours, Mrs. Craigie, a
treasure and dirt cheap”) there came an ancient pair of hand-wrought
andirons, and a spider-legged table, and a brass warming-pan, and a
banjo clock....

I scarcely know how to explain it, but the sale of these inanimate
antiques, so charged with the restrained grace, the reticent beauty,
the serviceable strength, of a passing age, took hold upon me with
strange intensity. In times of high emotion the veil between sight and
insight slips aside and that which lies about us suddenly achieves a
higher reality. We are conscious of

“Something beside the form
Something beyond the sound.”

It came to me with a thrill that this was no mere sale of antique wood
and brass and iron, but a veritable auction, here symbolized, of the
decaying fragments of a sternly beautiful civilization.

I looked off across the stony fields, now softly green in the sunlight,
from which three generations of the Templeton family had wrung an
heroic living; I looked up at the majestic old house where they had
lived and married and died....

As my eye came back to the busy scene beneath the chestnut tree it
seemed to me, how vividly I cannot describe—that beside or behind the
energetic and perspiring Mr. Harpworth there stood Another Auctioneer.
And I thought he had flowing locks and a patriarchal beard, and a
scythe for a sign of the uncertainty of life, and a glass to mark the
swiftness of its passage. He was that Great Auctioneer who brings all
things at last under his inexorable hammer.

After that, though Mr. Harpworth did his best, he claimed my attention
only intermittently from that Greater Sale which was going on at his
side, from that Greater Auctioneer who was conducting it with such
consummate skill—for _he_ knew that nothing is for sale but life. The
mahogany highboy, so much packed and garnered life cut into inanimate
wood; the andirons, so much life; the bookshelves upon which John
Templeton kept his “Life of Napoleon Bonaparte,” so much life. Life for
sale, gentlemen! What am I offered to-day for this bit of life—and
this—and this—

Mr. Harpworth had paused, for even an auctioneer, in the high moment of
his art, remains human; and in the silence following the cessation of
the metallic click of his voice, “Thirty, thirty, thirt, thirt—make it
thirty-five—thank you—forty,” one could hear the hens gossiping in the
distant yard.

“There were craftsmen in those days, gentlemen,” he was resuming; “look
at this example of their art—there is quality here and durability——”

At this point the Great Auctioneer broke in upon my attention and
caught up Mr. Harpworth’s words:

“Yes, quality and durability—quality and durability. I also have here
to-day, and will offer you, gentlemen, a surpassing antique, not built
of wood nor fashioned in brass or iron, but a thing long attached to
these acres and this house. I present for your consideration the
married life of John Templeton and Hannah his wife. They lived together
forty years, and the record scarcely shows a dent. In all that time
hardly a word of love passed between them; but never a word of hatred,
either. They had a kind of hard and fast understanding, like the laws
of Moses. He did the work of the fields and she did the work of the
house, from sunrise to sunset. On Sunday they went to church together.
He got out at five o’clock to milk and harness up; and it made double
work for her, what with getting the children cleaned, and the milk
taken care of, and the Sunday dinner made ready. But neither he nor she
every doubted or complained. It was the Lord’s way. She bore him eight
children. She told him before the last one came that she was not equal
to it.... After that she was an invalid for seventeen years until she
died. And there was loss of children to bear between them, and
sickness, and creeping age, but this bit of furniture held firm to the
last. Gentlemen, it was mad solid, no veneer, a good job all the way
through.”

As he spoke I thought that his roving eye (perhaps it was only my own!)
fell upon Johnny Holcomb, whose married life has been full of
vicissitudes.

“John, take this home with you; _you_ can use it.”

“Nope, no such married life for me,” I thought I could hear him
responding, rather pleased than not to be the butt of the auctioneer.

“Do I hear any bids?” the Great Auctioneer was saying, almost in the
words of Mr. Harpworth. “_What!_ No one wants n married life like this?
Well, put it aside, Jake. It isn’t wanted. Too old-fashioned.”

It was Julia Templeton herself who now appeared with certain of the
intimate and precious “bedroom things”—a wonderful old linen bedspread,
wrought upon with woollen figures, and exaling an ancient and exquisite
odour of lavender, and a rag rug or so, and a little old rocking chair
with chintz coverings in which more than one Templeton mother had
rocked her baby to sleep. Julia herself——

I saw Julia, that hard-favoured woman, for the first time at that
moment, really saw her. How fiercely she threw down the spread and the
rugs! How bold and unweeping her eyes! How hard and straight the lines
of her mouth!

“Here they are, Mr. Harpworth!”

How shrill her voice; and how quickly she turned back to the noisy
kitchen! I could see the angular form, the streakings of gray in her
hair. ...

“What am I offered now for this precious antique? This hand-made
spread? Everything sold without reserve! Come, now, don’t let this
opportunity slip by.” He leaned forward confidentially and
persuasively: “Fellah citizens, styles change and fashions pass away,
but things made like these, good lines, strong material, honest work,
they never grow old....”

Here the Shadowy Auctioneer broke in again and lifted me out of that
limited moment.

“A true word!” he was saying. “Styles change and fashions pass away,
and only those things that are well made, and made for service the
beautiful things remain. I am offering to-day, without reservation,
another precious antique. What will you give for such a religious faith
as that of John Templeton? Worn for a lifetime and sound to the end. He
read the Bible every Sunday morning of his life, went to church, and
did his religious duty by his children. Do you remember young Joe
Templeton? Wouldn’t learn his chapter one Sunday, and the old gentleman
prayed about it and then beat him with a hitching strap. Joe ran away
from home and made his fortune in Minnesota. Nearly broke the mother’s
heart, and old John’s, too; but he thought it right, and never repented
it. Gentlemen, an honest man who feared God and lived righteously all
his days! What am I offered for this durable antique, this
characteristic product of New England? Do I hear a bid?”

At this I felt coming over me that strange urge of the auction, to bid
and to buy. A rare possession indeed, not without a high, stern kind of
beauty! It would be wonderful to possess such a faith; but what had I
to offer that Shadowy Auctioneer? What coin that would redeem past
times and departed beliefs?

It was curious how the words of Mr. Harpworth fitted into the fabric of
my imaginings. When he next attracted my attention he was throwing up
his hands in a fine semblance of despair. We were such obtuse
purchasers!

“I think,” said Mr. Harpworth, “that this crowd came here to-day only
to eat Julia Templeton’s auction luncheon. What’s the matter with this
here generation? You don’t want things that are well made and durable,
but only things that are cheap and flashy. Put ’er aside, Jake. We’ll
sell ’er yet to some historical museum devoted to the habits and
customs of the early Americans.”

He was plainly disgusted with us, and we felt it keenly, and were glad
and pleased when, a moment later, he gave evidence of being willing to
go on with us, paltry as we were.

“Jake, pass up that next treasure.”

His spirits were returning; his eyes gleamed approvingly upon the newly
presented antique. He looked at us with fresh confidence; he was still
hopeful that we would rise to his former good opinion of us.

“And now before I sell the hail clock by Willard, date of 1822, I am
going to offer what is possibly the best single piece in this sale....”

Here again the Old Auctioneer, having caught his * broke in. When he
spoke, who could listen to Mr. Harpworth:

“... the best single piece in this sale, gentlemen! I offer you now the
Templeton family pride! A choice product of old New England. A little
battered, but still good and sound. The Templetons! They never did
anything notable except to work, work early and late, summer and
winter, for three generations. They were proud of any one who bore the
Templeton name; they were proud even of Jim, simple Jim, who got a job
driving the delivery wagon at the hill store, and drove it for
twenty-two years and was drowned in Mill River. I’ll tell you what
family pride meant to old John Templeton....”

I thought he leaned forward to take us into his confidence, motioning
at the same time toward the house.

“You know Julia Templeton——”

Know her? Of course we knew her! Knew her as only the country knows its
own.

“When Julia ran away with that sewing-machine agent—it was her only
chance!—old John Templeton drove his best cow into town and sold her,
he mortgaged his team of horses, and went after the girl and brought
her home with him. They were firm and strong and as righteous as God
with her; and they paid off, without whining, the mortgages on the
horses, and never spoke of the loss of the cow—but never forgot it.
They held up their heads to the end. Gentlemen, what am I offered for
this interesting antique, this rare work of art?”

The auction was considered, upon the whole, a great success. Mr.
Harpworth himself said so. Ike, the Jewish dealer, bought the family
clock and the spring-tooth harrow, and even bid on the family crayon
portraits (the frames could be sold for something or other); a Swede
bought the pigs and the old buggy; an Irish teamster bid in John
Templeton’s horses, and a Pole, a good man, I know him well, bought the
land, and will no doubt keep his geese in the summer kitchen, and get
rich from the cultivation of the ancient fields. While old John
Templeton bowed himself humbly before a wrathful God he would never go
down on his knees, as the Poles do, to the fertile earth. And—I
forgot—an Italian from Nortontown bought for a song the apple and
chestnut crops, and busy third generation Americans loaded in the
antiques and drove off with them to the city.

The last I saw of Julia Templeton, that hard-favoured woman, she was
standing, an angular figure, in the midst of the wreck of the luncheon
dishes, one arm wrapped in her apron, the other hand shading her eyes
while she watched the company, in wagons and automobiles, trailing away
to the westward, and the towns....

The sale was over; but the most valuable antiques of all found no
purchasers: they were left behind with Julia Templeton: only she could
use them.

[Illustration]




CHAPTER XII.
A WOMAN OF FORTY-FIVE


We have an Astonishing Woman in this community. She acts in a way that
no one expects, and while we are intensely interested in everything she
does, and desire to know about it to the uttermost detail, we are
inclined to speak of her in bated breath.

Some Woman to Talk About in a country neighbourhood is a kind of public
necessity. She fills one of the stated functions like the town
assessor, or the president of the Dorcas Society; and if ever the
office falls vacant we have immediate resort to one of those silent
elections at which we choose our town celebrities. There are usually
several candidates, and the campaign is accompanied by much heated
argument and exemplification. We have our staunch party men and our
irresponsible independents on whom you can never put your finger; and
if we are sometimes a little vague in our discussion of principles and
issues we share with our national political leaders an intense interest
in personalities. Prominent citizens “come out” for this candidate or
that, we “spring surprises,” and launch new booms, and often, at the
last moment, we are taken off our feet by the circulation of comebacks.
I take a pardonable pride, however, in saying, to the credit of our
democratic institutions that most of the candidates elected are chosen
strictly upon merit.

I shall never forget the afternoon, now more than a year ago, that
Harriet came up the road bearing the news which, beyond a doubt, placed
the present incumbent in office; and has served to keep her there,
despite the efforts in certain quarters, which shall be nameless, to
use that pernicious instrument of radicalism, the recall.

I can always tell when Harriet brings important news. She has a
slightly quicker step, carries her head a little more firmly, and when
she speaks impresses her message upon me with a lowered voice. When
Harriet looks at me severely and drops down an octave I prepare for the
worst.

“David,” she said, “Mary Starkweather has gone to live in the barn!”

“In the _barn_!”

“In the barn.”

I don’t know quite why it is, but I dislike being surprised, and do my
best to cover it up, and, besides, I have always liked Mary
Starkweather. So I remarked, as casually as I could:

“Why not? It’s a perfectly good barn.”

“David Grayson!”

“Well, it is. It’s a better building to-day than many of the people of
this town live in. Why shouldn’t Mary Starkweather live in the barn if
she wants to? It’s her barn.”

“But, _David_—there are her children—and her husband!”

“There always are, when anybody wants to live in a barn.”

“I shall not talk with you any more,” said Harriet, “until you can be
serious.”

I had my punishment, as I richly deserved to have, in the gnawing of
unsatisfied curiosity, which is almost as distressing as a troubled
conscience.

Within the next few days, I remember, I heard the great news buzzing
everywhere I went. We had conjectured that the barn was being refitted
for the family of a caretaker, and it was Mary Starkweather herself,
our sole dependable representative of the Rich, who was moving in! Mary
Starkweather, who had her house in town, and her home in the country,
and her automobiles, and her servants, and her pictures, and her books,
to say nothing of her husband and her children and her children’s maid
going to live in her barn! I leave it to you if there was not a valid
reason for our commotion.

It must have been two weeks later that I went to town by the upper hill
road in order to pass the Starkweather place. It is a fine old estate,
the buildings, except the barn, set well back from the road with a
spacious garden near them, and pleasant fields stretching away on every
hand. As I skirted the shoulder of the hill I looked eagerly for the
first glimpse of the barn. I confess that I had woven a thousand
stories to explain the mystery, and had reached the point where I could
no longer resist seeing if I could solve it.

Well, the barn was transformed. Two or three new windows, a door with a
little porch, a lattice or so for vines, a gable upon the roof lifting
an inquiring eyebrow—and what was once a barn had become a charming
cottage. It seemed curiously to have come alive, to have acquired a
personality of its own. A corner of the great garden had been cut off
and included in the miniature grounds of the cottage; and a simple
arbour had been built against a background of wonderful beech trees.
You felt at once a kind of fondness for it.

I saw Mary Starkweather in her garden, in a large straw hat, with a
trowel in her hand.

“How are you, David Grayson?” she called out when I stopped.

“I have been planning for several days,” I said, “to happen casually by
your new house.”

“Have you?”

“You don’t know how you have stirred our curiosity. We haven’t had a
good night’s rest since you moved in.”

“I’ve no doubt of it,” she laughed. “Won’t you come in? I’d like to
tell you all about it.”

“I also prepared to make excuses for not stopping,” I said, “and
thought up various kinds of urgent business, such as buying a new snow
shovel to use next winter, but after making these excuses I intended to
stop—if I were sufficiently urged.”

“You are more than urged: you are commanded.”

As I followed her up the walk she said earnestly:

“Will you do me a favour? When you come in will you tell me the first
impression my living-room gives you? No second thoughts. Tell me
instantly.”

“I’ll do it.” I said, my mind leaping eagerly to all manner of
mysterious surprises.

At the centre of the room she turned toward me and with a sweeping
backward motion of the arms, made me a bow—a strong figure instinct
with confident grace: a touch of gray in the hair, a fleeting look of
old sadness about the eyes.

“Now, David Grayson,” she said, “quick!”

It was not that the room itself was so remarkable as that it struck me
as being confusingly different from the heavily comfortable rooms of
the old Starkweather house with their crowded furnishings, their
overloaded mantels, their plethoric bookcases.

“I cannot think of you yet,” I stumbled, “as being here.”

“Isn’t it _like_ me?”

“It is a beautiful room—” I groped lamely.

“I was afraid you would say that.”

“But it is. It really is.”

“Then I’ve failed, after all.”

She said it lightly enough, but there was an undertone of real
disappointment in her voice.

“I’m in rather the predicament,” I said, “of old Abner Coates. You
probably don’t know Abner. He sells nursery stock, and each spring when
he comes around and I tell him that the peach trees or the raspberry
bushes I bought of him the year before have not done well, he says,
with the greatest astonishment, ‘Wal, now, ye ain’t said what I hoped
ye would.’ I see that I haven’t said what you hoped I would.”

It was too serious a matter, however, for Mary Starkweather to joke
about.

“But, David Grayson,” she said, “isn’t it _simple_?”

I glanced around me with swift new comprehension.

“Why, yes, it _is_ simple.”

I saw that my friend was undergoing some deep inner change of which
this room, this renovated barn, were mere symbols.

“Tell me,” I said, “how you came to such a right-about-face.”

“It’s just that!” she returned earnestly, “It _is_ a right-about-face.
I think I am really in earnest for the first time in my life.”

I had a moment of flashing wonder if her marriage had not been in
earnest, a flashing picture of Richard Starkweather with his rather
tired, good-humoured face, and I wondered if her children were not
earnest realities to her, if her busy social life had meant nothing.
Then I reflected that we all have such moments, when the richest
experiences of the past seem as nothing in comparison with the fervour
of this glowing moment.

“Everything in my life in the past,” she was saying, “seems to have
happened to me. Life has done things _for_ me; I have had so few
chances of doing anything for myself.”

“And now you are expressing yourself.”

“Almost for the first time in my life!”

She paused. “All my life, it seems to me, I have been smothered with
things. Just things! Too much of everything. All my time has been taken
up in caring for things and none in enjoying them.”

“I understand!” I said with a warm sense of corroboration and sympathy.

“I had so many pictures on my walls that I never saw, really saw, any
of them. I saw the dust on them, I saw the cracks in the frames, that
needed repairing, I even saw better ways of arranging them, but I very
rarely saw, with the inner eye, what the artists were trying to tell
me. And how much time I have wasted on mere food and clothing—it is
appalling! I had become nothing short of a slave to my house and my
things.”

“I see now,” I said, “why you have just one rose on your table.”

“Yes”—she returned eagerly—“isn’t it a beauty! I spent half an hour
this morning looking for the best and most perfect rose in the garden,
and there it is!”

She was now all alight with her idea, and I saw her, as we sometimes
see our oldest friends, as though I had not seen her before. She was
that phenomenon of the modern world—the free woman of forty-five.

When a woman reaches the old age of youth, the years between forty and
forty-five, she either surrenders or revolts. In the older days in
America it was nearly always surrender. Those women of a past
generation bore many children: how many graves there are in our hill
cemeteries of women of forty to fifty who died leading families of five
or eight or ten children! How many second and third wives there were,
often with second and third families. Or if they did not die, how
terribly they toiled, keeping the house, clothing the children, cooking
the food. Or if they bore no children, yet they were bound down by a
thousand chains of convention and formality.

But in these days we have a woman of forty-five who has not
surrendered. She is a vigorous, experienced, active-minded human being,
just beginning to look restlessly around her and take a new interest in
the world. Such a woman was Mary Starkweather; and this was her first
revolt.

“You cannot imagine,” she was saying, “what a joy it has been to
unaccumulate! To get rid of things! To select.”

“To become an artist in life!”

“Yes! At last! What a lot of perfectly worthless trash accumulates
around us. Not beautiful, not even useful! And it is not only the lives
of the well-to-do that are choked and cluttered with things. I wish you
could see the house of our Polish farmer. He’s been saving money, and
filling up his house with perfectly worthless ornaments—ornate clocks,
gorgeous plush furniture, impossible rugs—and yet he is only doing what
we are all doing on a more elaborate scale.”

I laughed.

“That reminds me of a family of squirrels that lives in an oak tree on
my hill,” I said. “I am never tired of watching them. In the fall they
work desperately, stealing all the hickory nuts and chestnuts on my
neighbour Horace’s back pastures, five times as many as they need, and
then they forget, half the time, where they’ve hidden them. We’re all
more or less in the squirrel stage of civilization.”

“Yes,” she responded. “There are my books! I gathered up books for
years, just squirrel fashion, until I forgot what I had or where I put
them. You cannot know what joy I’m going to have in selecting just the
essential books, the ones I want by me for daily companions. All the
others, I see now, are temporary rubbish.”

“And you’ve made your selections?”

“No, but I’m making them. You’ll laugh when you come next time and I
show them to you. Oh, I am going to be stern with myself. I’m not going
to put a single book in that case for show, nor a single one to give
the impression that I’m profoundly interested in Egypt or Maeterlinck
or woman suffrage, when I’m positively not.”

“It’s terribly risky,” I said.

“And I’m terribly reckless,” she responded.

As I went onward toward the town I looked back from the hilltop beyond
the big house for a last glimpse of the reconstructed barn, and with a
curious warm sense of having been admitted to a new adventure. Here was
life changing under my eyes! Here was a human being struggling with one
of the deep common problems that come to all of us. The revolt from
things! The struggle with superfluities!

And yet as I walked along the cool aisles of the woods with the quiet
fields opening here and there to the low hill ridges, and saw the
cattle feeding, and heard a thrush singing in a thicket, I found myself
letting go—how can I explain it?—relaxing! I had been keyed up to a
high pitch there in that extraordinary room, Yes, it _was_
beautiful—and yet as I thought of the sharp little green gate, the new
gable, the hard, clean mantel with the cloisonne vase, it wanted
something....

As I was gathering the rowen crop of after-enjoyment which rewards us
when we reflect freshly upon our adventures, whom should I meet but
Richard Starkweather himself in his battered machine. The two boys, one
of whom was driving, and the little girl, were with him.

“How are you, David?” he called out. “Whoa, there! Draw up, Jamie.”

We looked at each other for a moment with that quizzical, half-humorous
look that so often conveys, better than any spoken words, the
sympathetic greeting of friends. I like Richard Starkweather.

He had come up from the city looking rather worn, for the weather had
been trying. He has blue, honest, direct-gazing eyes with small humour
wrinkles at the corners. I never knew a man with fewer theories, or
with a simpler devotion to the thing at hand, whatever it may be. At
everything else he smiles, not cynically, for he is too modest in his
regard for his own knowledge; he smiles at everything else because it
doesn’t seem quite real to him.

“Been up to see Mary’s new house?” he asked.

“Yes,” And for the life of me I couldn’t help smiling in response.

“It’s a wonder isn’t it?”

He thought his wife a very extraordinary woman. I remember his saying
to me once, “David, she’s got the soul of a poet and the brain of a
general.”

“It _is_ a wonder,” I responded.

“I can’t decide yet what chair to sit in, nor just what she wants the
kids to do.”

I still smiled.

“I expect she hasn’t determined yet,” he went drawling on, “in what
chair I will look most decorative.”

He ruminated.

“You know, she’s got the idea that there’s too much of everything. I
guess there is, too—and that she ought to select only those things that
an essential. I’ve been wondering, if she had more than one husband
whether or not she’d select me——”

The restless young Jamie was now starting the machine, and Richard
Starkweather leaned out and said to me in parting:

“isn’t she a wonder! Did all the planning herself—wouldn’t have an
architect—wouldn’t have a decorator—all I could do—”

As he turned around I saw him throw one arm carelessly about the
shoulders of the sturdy younger boy who sat next him.

When I got home I told Harriet all about what I had seen and heard. I
think I must feel when I am retailing such fascinating neighbourhood
events to Harriet—how she _does_ enjoy them!—I must feel very much as
she does when she is urging me to have just a little more of the new
gingerbread.

In the next few months I watched with indescribable interest the
unfolding of the drama of Mary Starkweather. I saw her from time to
time that summer and she seemed, and I think she was, happier than ever
she had been before in her whole life. Making over her garden,
selecting the “essential books,” choosing the best pictures for her
rooms, even reforming the clothing of the boys, all with an emphasis
upon perfect simplicity—her mind was completely absorbed. Occasionally
Richard appeared upon the stage, a kind of absurd Greek chorus of one,
who remarked what a wonderful woman this was and poked fun at himself
and at the new house, and asserted that Mary could be as simple as ever
she liked, he insisted on thick soup for dinner and would not sacrifice
his beloved old smoking jacket upon the altar of any new idea.

“She’s a wonder, David,” he’d wind up: “but this simple life is getting
more complicated every day.”

It was in December, about the middle of the month, as I remember, that
I had a note one day from Mary Starkweather.

“The next time you go to town,” it ran, “stop in and see me. I’ve made
a discovery.”

With such a note as that us my hand it appeared imperative that I go to
town at once. I discovered, to Harriet’s astonishment, that we were
running out of all sorts of necessaries.

“Now, David,” she said, “you know perfectly well that you’re just
making up to call on Mary Starkweather.”

“That,” I said, “relieves my conscience of a great burden.”

As I went out of the door I heard her saying: “Why Mary Starkweather
should _care_ to live in her barn....”

It was a sparkling cold day, sun on the snow and the track crunching
under one’s feet, and I walked swiftly and with a warm sense of coming
adventure.

To my surprise there was no smoke in the cottage chimney, and when I
reached the door I found a card pinned upon it:

PLEASE CALL AT THE HOUSE

Mary Starkweather herself opened the door—she had seen me coming—and
took me into the big comfortable old living-room, the big, cluttered,
overfurnished living-room, with the two worn upholstered chairs at the
fireplace, in which a bright log fire was now burning. There was a
pleasant litter of books and magazines, and a work basket on the table,
and in the bay window an ugly but cheerful green rubber plant in a tub.

“Well!” I exclaimed.

“Don’t smile—not yet.”

As I looked at her I felt not at all like smiling.

“I know,” she was saying, “it does have a humorous side. I can see
that. Dick has seen it all along. Do you know, although Dick pretends
to pooh-pooh everything intellectual, he has a really penetrating
mind.”

I had a sudden vision of Dick in his old smoking jacket, standing in
the midst of the immaculate cottage that was once a barn, holding his
pipe with one finger crooked around the stem just in front of his nose
in the way he had, and smiling across at me.

“Have you deserted the cottage entirely?”

“Oh, we may possibly go back in the spring———” She paused and looked
into the fire, her fine, strong face a little sad in composure, full of
thought.

“I am trying to be honest with myself David. Honest above everything
else. That’s fundamental. It seems to me I have wanted most of all to
learn how to live my life more freely and finely.... I thought I was
getting myself free of things when, as a matter of fact, I was devoting
more time to them than ever before-and, besides that, making life more
or less uncomfortable for Dick and the children. So I’ve taken my
courage squarely in my hands and come back here into this blessed old
home, this blessed, ugly, stuffy old home—I’ve learned _that_ lesson.”

At this, she glanced up at me with that rare smile which sometimes
shines out of her very nature: the smile that is herself.

“I found,” she said, “that when I had finished the work of becoming
simple—there was nothing else left to do.”

I laughed outright, for I couldn’t help it, and she joined me. How we
do like people who can laugh at themselves.

“But,” I said, “there was sound sense in a great deal that you were
trying to do.”

“The fireplace smoked; and the kitchen sink froze up; and the cook left
because we couldn’t keep her room warm.”

“But you were right,” I interrupted, “and I am not going to be put off
by smoking fireplaces or chilly cooks; you were right. We do have too
much, we are smothered in things, we don’t enjoy what we do have—”

I paused.

“And you were making a beautiful thing, a beautiful house.”

“The trouble with making a beautiful thing,” she replied, “is that when
you have got it done you must straightway make another. Now I don’t
want to keep on building houses or furnishing rooms. I am not after
beauty—I mean primarily—what I want is to _live_, live simply, live
greatly.”

She was desperately in earnest.

“Perhaps,” I said, feeling as though I were treading on dangerous
ground, “you were trying to be simple for the sake of being simple. I
wonder if true simplicity is ever any thing but a by-product. If we aim
directly for it, it eludes us: but if we are on fire with some great
interest that absorbs on lives to the uttermost, we forget ourselves
into simplicity, Everything falls into simple lines around us, like a
worn garment.”

I had the rather uncomfortable feeling on the way home that I had been
preachy; and the moment you became preachy begin to build up barriers
between yourself and your friends: but that’s a defect of character
I’ve never been able, quite, to overcome. I keep thinking I’ve got the
better of it, but along will come a beautiful temptation and down I
go—and come out as remorseful as I was that afternoon on the way home
from Mary Starkweather’s.

A week or two later I happened to meet Richard Starkweather on the
street in Hempfield. He was on his way home.

“Yes,” he said, “we’re in the old house again until spring, anyway. I
haven’t been so comfortable in a year. And, say,” here he looked at me
quizzically, “Mary has joined the new cemetery association; you know
they’re trying to improve the resting places of the forefathers, and,
by George, if they didn’t elect her chairman at the first meeting.
She’s a wonder!”

[Illustration]




CHAPTER XIII.
HIS MAJESTY—BILL RICHARDS


Well, I have just been having an amusing and delightful adventure and
have come to know a Great Common Person. His name is Bill Richards, and
he is one of the hereditary monarchs of America. He belongs to our
ruling dynasty.

I first saw Bill about two weeks ago, and while I was strongly
interested in him I had no idea, at the time, that I should ever come
to know him well. It was a fine June day, and I was riding on the new
trolley line that crosses the hills to Hewlett—a charming trip through
a charming country—and there in the open car just in front of me sat
Bill himself. One huge bare forearm rested on the back of the seat, the
rich red blood showing through the weathered brown of the skin. His
clean brown neck rose strongly from the loose collar of his shirt,
which covered but could not hide the powerful lines of his shoulders.
He wore blue denim and khaki, and a small round felt hat tipped up
jauntily at the back. He had crisp, coarse light hair rather thin—not
by age, but by nature—so that the ruddy scalp could be seen through it,
and strong jaws and large firm features, and if the beard was two days
old, his face was so brown, so full of youthful health, that it gave no
ill impression.

He could not sit still for the very life that was in him. He seemed to
have some grand secret with the conductor and frequently looked around
at him, his eyes full of careless laughter, and once or twice he called
out—some jocose remark. He helped the conductor, in pantomime, to pull
the cord and stop or start the car, and he watched with the liveliest
interest each passenger getting on or getting off. A rather mincing
young girl with a flaring red ribbon at her throat was to him the
finest comedy in the world, so that he had to wink a telegram to the
conductor about her. An old woman with a basket of vegetables who
delayed the car was exquisitely funny.

I set him down as being about twenty-two years old and some kind of
outdoor workman, not a farmer.

When he got off, which was before the car stopped, so that he had to
jump and run with it, he gave a wild flourish with both arms, grimaced
at the conductor, and went off down the road whistling for all he was
worth. How I enjoyed the sight of him! He was so charged with youthful
energy, so overflowing with the joy of life, that he could scarcely
contain himself. What a fine place the world was to him! And what
comical and interesting people it contained! I was sorry when he got
off.

Two or three days later I was on my way up the town road north of my
farm when I was astonished and delighted to see Bill for the second
time. He was coming down the road pulling a wire over the crosspiece of
a tall telephone pole (the company is rebuilding and enlarging its
system through our town). He was holding the wire close drawn over his
right shoulder, his strong hands gripped and pressed upon his breast.
The veins stood out in his brown neck where the burlap shoulder pad he
wore was drawn aside by the wire. He leaned forward, stepping first on
his toe, which he dug into the earth and then, heavily letting down his
heel, he drew the other foot forward somewhat stiffly. The muscles
stood out in his powerful shoulders and thighs. His legs were
double-strapped with climbing spurs. He was a master lineman.

As I came alongside he turned a good-humoured sweaty face toward me.

“It’s dang hot,” said he.

“It is,” said I.

There is something indescribably fascinating about the sight of a
strong workman in the full swing of his work, something—yes, beautiful!
A hard pull of a job, with a strong man doing it joyfully, what could
be finer to see? And he gave such a jaunty sense of youth and easy
strength!

I watched him for some time, curiously interested, and thought I should
like well to know him, but could not see just how to go about it.

The man astride the cross-arm who was heaving the wire forward from the
spool on the distant truck suddenly cried out:

“Ease up there, Bill, she’s caught.”

So Bill eased up and drew his arm across his dripping face.

“How many wires are you putting up?” I asked, fencing for some opening.

“Three,” said Bill.

Before I could get in another stroke the man on the pole shouted:

“Let ’er go, Bill.” And Bill let ’er go, and buckled down again to his
job.

“Gee, but it’s hot,” said he.

In the country there are not so many people passing our way that we
cannot be interested in all of them. That evening I could not help
thinking about Bill, the lineman, wondering where he came from, how he
happened to be what he was, who and what sort were the friends he made,
and the nature of his ambitions, if he had any. Talk about going to the
North Pole! It is not to be compared, for downright fascination, with
the exploration of an undiscovered human being.

With that I began to think how I might get at Bill, the lineman, and
not merely weather talk, or wages talk, or work talk, but at Bill
himself. He was a character quite unusual in our daily lives here in
the country. I wondered what his interests could be, surely not mine
nor Horace’s nor the Starkweathers’. As soon as I began trying to
visualize what his life might be, I warmed up to a grand scheme of
capturing him, if by chance he was to be found the next day upon the
town road.

All this may seem rather absurd in the telling, but I found it a
downright good adventure for a quiet evening, and fully believe I felt
for the moment like General Joffre planning to meet the Germans on the
Marne.

“I have it!” I said aloud.

“You have what?” asked Harriet, somewhat startled.

“The grandest piece of strategy ever devised in this town,” said I.

With that I went delving in a volume of universal information I keep
near me, one of those knowing books that tells you how tall the great
Pryamid is and why a hen cackles after laying an egg, and having found
what I wanted I asked Harriet if she could find a tape measure around
the place. She is a wonderful person and knows where everything is.
When she handed me the tape measure she asked me what in the world I
was so mysterious about.

“Harriet,” I said, “I’m going on a great adventure. I’ll tell you all
about it to-morrow.”

“Nonsense,” said Harriet.

It is this way with the fancies of the evening—they often look flat and
flabby and gray the next morning. Quite impossible! But if I’d acted on
half the good and grand schemes I’ve had o’ nights I might now be quite
a remarkable person.

I went about my work the next morning just as usual. I even avoided
looking at the little roll of tape on the corner of the mantel as I
went out. It seemed a kind of badge of my absurdity. But about the
middle of the fore-noon, while I was in my garden, I heard a tremendous
racket up the road. Rattle—bang, zip, toot! As I looked up I saw the
boss lineman and his crew careering up the road in their truck, and the
bold driver was driving like Jehu, the son of Nimshi. And there were
ladders and poles clattering out behind, and rolls of wire on upright
spools rattling and flashing in the sunshine, and the men of the crew
were sitting along the sides of the truck with hats off and hair flying
as they came bumping and bounding up the road. It was a brave thing to
see going by on a spring morning!

As they passed, whom should I see but Bill himself, at the top of the
load, with a broad smile on his face. When his eye fell on me he threw
up one arm, and gave me the railroad salute.

“Hey, there!” he shouted.

“Hey there, yourself,” I shouted in return—and could not help it.

I had a curious warm feeling of being taken along with that jolly crowd
of workmen, with Bill on the top of the load.

It was this that finished me. I hurried through an early dinner, and
taking the tape measure off the mantel I put it in my pocket as though
it were a revolver or a bomb, and went off up the road feeling as
adventurous as ever I felt in my life. I never said a word to Harriet
but disappeared quietly around the lilac bushes. I was going to waylay
that crew, and especially Bill. I hoped to catch them at their nooning.

Well, I was lucky. About a quarter of a mile up the road, in a little
valley near the far corner of Horace’s farm, I found the truck, and
Bill just getting out his dinner pail. It seems they had flipped
pennies and Bill hod been left behind with the truck and the tools
while the others went down to the mill pond in the valley below.

“How are you?” said I.

“How are _you_?” said he.

I could see that he was rather cross over having been left behind.

“Fine day,” said I.

“You bet,” said he.

He got out his pail, which was a big one, and seated himself on the
roadside, a grassy, comfortable spot near the brook which runs below
into the pond. There were white birches and hemlocks on the hill, and
somewhere in the thicket I heard a wood thrush singing.

“Did you ever see John L. Sullivan?” I asked.

He glanced up at me quickly, but with new interest.

“No, did you?”

“Or Bob Fitzsimmons?”

“Nope—but I was mighty near it once. I’ve seen ’em both in the movies.”

“Well, sir,” said I, “that’s interesting. I should like to see them
myself. Do you know what made me speak of them?”

He had spread down a newspaper and was taking the luncheon out of his
“bucket,” as he called it, including a large bottle of coffee; but he
paused and looked at me with keen interest.

“Well,” said I, “when I saw you dragging that wire yesterday I took you
to be a pretty husky citizen yourself.”

He grinned and took a big mouthful from one of his sandwiches. I could
see that my shot had gone home.

“So when I got back last night,” I said, “I looked up the arm
measurements of Sullivan and Fitzsimmons in a book I have and got to
wondering how they compared with mine and yours. They were considerably
larger than mine—”

Bill thought this a fine joke and laughed out in great good humour.

“But I imagine you’d not be far behind either of them.”

He looked at me a little suspiciously, as if doubtful what I was
driving at or whether or not I was joking him. But I was as serious as
the face of nature; and proceeded at once to get out my tape measure.

“I get very much interested in such things,” I said, “and I had enough
curiosity to want to see how big your arm really was.”

He smiled broadly.

“You’re a queer one,” said he.

But he took another bite of sandwich, and clenching his great fist drew
up his forearm until the biceps muscles looked like a roll of Vienna
bread—except that they had the velvety gleam of life. So I measured
first one arm, then the other.

“By George!” said I, “you’re ahead of Fitzsimmons, but not quite up to
Sullivan.”

“Fitz wasn’t a heavy man,” said Bill, “but a dead game fighter.”

I saw then that I had him! So I sat down on the grass near by and we
had great talk about the comparative merits of Fitzsimmons and Sullivan
and Corbett and Jack Johnson, a department of knowledge in which he
out-distanced me. He even told me of an exploit or two of his own,
which showed that he was able to take care of himself.

While we talked he ate his luncheon, and a downright gargantuan
luncheon it was, backed by an appetite which if it were offered to the
highest bidder on the New York Stock Exchange would, I am convinced,
bring at least ten thousand dollars in cash. It even made me envious.

There were three huge corned-beef sandwiches, three hard-boiled eggs, a
pickle six inches long and fat to boot, four doughnuts so big that they
resembled pitching quoits, a bottle of coffee and milk, a quarter of a
pie, and, to cap the climax, an immense raw onion. It was worth a long
journey to see Bill eat that onion. He took out his clasp knife, and
after stripping off the papery outer shell, cut the onion into thick
dewy slices. Then he opened one of the sandwiches and placed several of
them on the beef, afterward sprinkling them with salt from a small
paper parcel. Having restored the top slice of bread he took a
moon-shaped bite out of one end of this glorified sandwich.

“I like onions,” said he.

When we first sat down he had offered to share his luncheon with me but
I told him I had just been to dinner, and I observed that he had no
difficulty in taking care of every crumb in his “bucket.” It was
wonderful to see.

Having finished his luncheon he went down to the brook and got a drink,
and then sat down comfortably with his back among the ferns of the
roadside, crossed his legs, and lit his pipe. There was a healthy and
wholesome flush in his face, and as he blew off the first cloud of
smoke he drew a sigh of complete comfort and looked around at me with a
lordly air such as few monarchs, no matter how well fed, could have
bettered. He had worked and sweat for what he got, and was now taking
his ease in his roadside inn. I wonder sometimes if anybody in the
world experiences keener joys than unwatched common people.

How we talked! From pugilists we proceeded to telephones, and from that
to wages, hours, and strikes, and from that we leaped easily to Alaska
and gold-mining, and touched in passing upon Theodore Roosevelt.

“I was just thinking,” I said, “that you and I can enjoy some things
that were beyond the reach of the greatest kings of the world.”

“How’s that?” said he.

“Why, Napoleon never saw a telephone nor talked through one.”

“That’s so!” he laughed.

“And Caesar couldn’t have dreamed that such a thing as you are doing
now was a possibility—nor George Washington, either.”

“Say, that’s so. I never thought o’ that.”

“Why,” I said, “the world is only half as big as it was before you
fellows came along stringing your wires! I can get to town now from my
farm in two minutes, when it used to take me an hour.”

I really believe I gave him more of his own business than ever he had
before, for he listened so intently that his pipe went out.

I found that Bill was from Ohio, and that he had been as far south as
Atlanta and as far west as Denver. He got his three dollars and a half
a day, rain or shine, and thought it wonderful pay; and besides, he was
seein’ the country “free, gratis, fer nothing.”

He got his coat out of the truck and took from the pocket a
many-coloured folder.

“Say, Mister, have you ever been to the Northwest?”

“No,” said I.

“Well, it’s a great country, and I’m goin’ up there.”

He spread out the glittering folder and placed his big forefinger on a
spot about the size of Rhode Island somewhere this side of the Rockies.

“How’ll you do it?” I asked.

“Oh, a lineman can go anywhere,” said he with a flourish, “A lineman
don’t have to beg a job. Besides, I got eighty dollars sewed up.”

Talk about freedom! Never have I got a clearer impression of it than
Bill gave me that day. No millionaire, no potentate, could touch him.

The crew came back all too soon for me. Bill knocked the ashes out of
his pipe on his boot heel, and put his “bucket” back in the truck. Five
minutes later he was climbing a tall pole with legs bowed out, striking
in his spikes at each step. From the cross-arm, up among the hemlock
tops, he called out to me:

“Good-bye, pard.”

“Stop in, Bill, and see me when you come by my place,” said I.

“You bet,” said he.

And he did, the next day, and I showed him off to Harriet, who brought
him a plate of her best doughnuts and asked him about his mother.

Yesterday I saw him again careering by in the truck. The job was
finished. He waved his hand at me.

“I’m off,” said he.

“Where?” I shouted.

“Canada.”

[Illustration]




CHAPTER XIV.
ON LIVING IN THE COUNTRY


“Why risk with men your hard won gold?
Buy grain and sow—your Brother Dust
Will pay you back a hundred fold—
The earth commits no breach of trust.”


_Hindu Proverb, Translated by Arthur Guiterman_.

It is astonishing how many people there are in cities and towns who
have a secret longing to get back into quiet country places, to own a
bit of the soil of the earth, and to cultivate it. To some it appears
as a troublesome malady only in spring and will be relieved by a whirl
or two in country roads, by a glimpse of the hills, or a day by the
sea; but to others the homesickness is deeper seated and will be
quieted by no hasty visits. These must actually go home.

I have had, in recent years, many letters from friends asking about
life in the country, but the longer I remain here, the more I know
about it, the less able I am to answer them—at least briefly. It is as
though one should come and ask: “Is love worth trying?” or, “How about
religion?” For country life is to each human being a fresh, strange,
original adventure. We enjoy it, or we do not enjoy it, or more
probably, we do both. It is packed and crowded with the zest of
adventure, or it is dull and miserable. We may, if we are skilled
enough, make our whole living from the land, or only a part of it, or
we may find in a few cherished acres the inspiration and power for
other work, whatever it may be. There is many a man whose strength is
renewed like that of the wrestler of Irassa, every time his feet touch
the earth.

Of all places in the world where life can be lived to its fullest and
freest, where it can be met in its greatest variety and beauty, I am
convinced that there is none to equal the open country, or the country
town. For all country people in these days may have the city—some city
or town not too far away: but there are millions of men and women in
America who have no country and no sense of the country. What do they
not lose out of life!

I know well the disadvantages charged against country life at its
worst. At its worst there are long hours and much lonely labour and an
income pitifully small. Drudgery, yes, especially for the women, and
loneliness. But where is there not drudgery when men are poor—where
life is at its worst? I have never seen drudgery in the country
comparable for a moment to the dreary and lonely drudgery of city
tenements, city mills, factories, and sweat shops. And in recent years
both the drudgery and loneliness of country life have been disappearing
before the motor and trolley car, the telephone, the rural post, the
gasoline engine. I have seen a machine plant as many potatoes in one
day as a man, at hand work, could have planted in a week. While there
is, indeed, real drudgery in the country, much that is looked upon as
drudgery by people who long for easy ways and a soft life, is only
good, honest, wholesome hard work—the kind of work that makes for fiber
in a man or in a nation, the kind that most city life in no wise
provides.

There are a thousand nuisances and annoyances that men must meet who
come face to face with nature itself. You have set out your upper acres
to peach trees: and the deer come down from the hills at night and
strip the young foliage; or the field mice in winter, working under the
snow, girdle and kill them. The season brings too much rain and the
potatoes rot in the ground, the crows steal the corn, the bees swarm
when no out is watching, the cow smothers her calf, the hens’ eggs
prove infertile, and a storm in a day ravages a crop that has been
growing all summer. A constant warfare with insects and blights and
fungi—a real, bitter warfare, which can cease neither summer nor
winter!

It is something to meet, year after year, the quiet implacability of
the land. While it is patient, it never waits long for you. There is a
chosen time for planting, a time for cultivating, a time for
harvesting. You accept the gauge thrown down—well and good, you shall
have a chance to fight! You do not accept it? There is no complaint.
The land cheerfully springs up to wild yellow mustard and dandelion and
pig-weed—and will be productive and beautiful in spite of you.

Nor can you enter upon the full satisfaction of cultivating even a
small piece of land at second hand. To be accepted as One Who Belongs,
there must be sweat and weariness.

The other day I was digging with Dick in a ditch that is to run down
through the orchard and connect finally with the land drain we put in
four years ago. We laid the tile just in the gravel below the silt,
about two feet deep, covering the openings with tar paper and then
throwing in gravel. It was a bright, cool afternoon. In the field below
a ploughman was at work: I could see the furrows of the dark earth
glisten as he turned it over. The grass in the meadow was a full rich
green, the new chickens were active in their yards, running to the
cluck of the hens, already the leaves of the orchard trees showed
green. And as I worked there with Dick I had the curious deep feeling
of coming somehow into a new and more intimate possession of my own
land. For titles do not really pass with signatures and red seals, nor
with money changing from one hand to another, but for true possession
one must work and serve according to the most ancient law. There is no
mitigation and no haggling of price. Those who think they can win the
greatest joys of country life on any easier terms are mistaken.

But if one has drained his land, and ploughed it, and fertilized it,
and planted it and harvested it—even though it be only a few acres— how
he comes to know and to love every rod of it. He knows the wet spots,
and the stony spots, and the warmest and most fertile spots —until his
acres have all the qualities of a personality, whose every
characteristic he knows. It is so also that he comes to know his horses
and cattle and pigs and hens. It is a fine thing, on a warm day in
early spring, to bring out the bee-hives and let the bees have their
first flight in the sunshine. What cleanly folk they are! And later to
see them coming in yellow all over with pollen from the willows! It is
a fine thing to watch the cherries and plum trees come into blossom,
with us about the first of May, while all the remainder of the orchard
seems still sleeping. It is a fine thing to see the cattle turned for
the first time in spring into the green meadows. It is a fine thing—one
of the finest of all—to see and smell the rain in a corn-field after
weeks of drought. How it comes softly out of gray skies, the first
drops throwing up spatters of dust and losing themselves in the dry
soil. Then the clouds sweep forward up the valley, darkening the
meadows and blotting out the hills, and then there is the whispering of
the rain as it first sweeps across the corn-field. At once what a stir
of life! What rustling of the long green leaves. What joyful shaking
and swaying of the tassels! And have you watched how eagerly the
grooved leaves catch the early drops, and, lest there be too little
rain after all, conduct them jealously down the stalks where they will
soonest reach the thirsty roots? What a fine thing is this to see!

One who thus takes part in the whole process of the year comes soon to
have an indescribable affection for his land, his garden, his animals.
There are thoughts of his in every tree: memories in every fence
corner. Just now, the fourth of June, I walked down past my blackberry
patch, now come gorgeously into full white bloom—and heavy with
fragrance. I set out these plants with my own hands, I have fed them,
cultivated them, mulched them, pruned them, trellised them, and helped
every year to pick the berries. How could they be otherwise than full
of associations! They bear a fruit more beautiful than can be found in
any catalogue: and stranger and wilder than in any learned botany book!

Why, one who comes thus to love a bit of countryside may enjoy it all
the year round. When he awakens in the middle of a long winter night he
may send his mind out to the snowy fields—I’ve done it a thousand
times!—and visit each part in turn, stroll through the orchard and pay
his respects to each tree—in a small orchard one comes to know
familiarly every tree as he knows his friends—stop at the strawberry
bed, consider the grape trellises, feel himself opening the door of the
warm, dark stable and listening to the welcoming whicker of his horses,
or visiting his cows, his pigs, his sheep, his hens, or so many of them
as he may have.

So much of the best in the world seems to have come fragrant out of
fields, gardens, and hillsides. So many truths spoken by the Master
Poet come to us exhaling the odours of the open country. His stories
were so often of sowers, husbandmen, herdsmen: his similes and
illustrations so often dealt with the common and familiar beauty of the
fields. “Consider the lilies how they grow.” It was on a hillside that
he preached his greatest Sermon, and when in the last agony he sought a
place to meet his God, where did he go but to a garden? A carpenter you
say? Yes, but of this one may be sure: there were gardens and fields
all about: he knew gardens, and cattle, and the simple processes of the
land: he must have worked in a garden and loved it well.

A country life rather spoils one for the so-called luxuries. A farmer
or gardener may indeed have a small cash income, but at least he eats
at the first table. He may have the sweetest of the milk, there are
thousands, perhaps millions, of men and women in America who have never
in their lives tasted really sweet milk and the freshest of eggs, and
the ripest of fruit. One does not know how good strawberries or
raspberries are when picked before breakfast and eaten with the dew
still on them. And while he must work and sweat for what he gets, he
may have all these things in almost unmeasured abundance, and without a
thought of what they cost. A man from the country is often made
uncomfortable, upon visiting the city, to find two cans of sweet corn
served for twenty or thirty cents, or a dish of raspberries at
twenty-five or forty—and neither, even at their best, equal in quality
to those he may have fresh from the garden every day. One need say this
in no boastful spirit, but as a simple statement of the fact: for
fruits sent to the city are nearly always picked before they are fully
ripe—and lose that last perfection of flavour which the sun and the
open air impart: and both fruits and vegetables, as well as milk and
eggs, suffer more than most people think from handling and shipment.
These things can be set down as one of the make-weights against the
familiar presentation of the farmer’s life as a hard one.

One of the greatest curses of mill or factory work and with much city
work of all kinds, is its interminable monotony: the same process
repeated hour after hour and day after day. In the country there is
indeed monotonous work but rarely monotony. No task continues very
long: everything changes infinitely with the seasons. Processes are not
repetitive but creative. Nature hates monotony, is ever changing and
restless, brings up a storm to drive the haymakers from their hurried
work in the fields, sends rain to stop the ploughing, or a frost to
hurry the apple harvest. Everything is full of adventure and
vicissitude! A man who has been a farmer for two hours at the mowing
must suddenly turn blacksmith when his machine breaks down and tinker
with wrench and hammer; and later in the day he becomes dairyman,
farrier, harness-maker, merchant. No kind of wheat but is grist to his
mill, no knowledge that he cannot use! And who is freer to be a citizen
than he: freer to take his part in town meeting and serve his state in
some one of the innumerable small offices which form the solid blocks
of organization beneath our commonwealth.

I thought last fall that corn-husking came as near being monotonous
work, as any I had ever done in the country. I presume in the great
corn-fields of the West, where the husking goes on for weeks at a time,
it probably does grow really monotonous. But I soon found that there
was a curious counter-reward attending even a process as repetitive as
this.

I remember one afternoon in particular. It was brisk and cool with
ragged clouds like flung pennants in a poverty-stricken sky, and the
hills were a hazy brown, rather sad to see, and in one of the apple
trees at the edge of the meadow the crows were holding their mournful
autumn parliament.

At such work as this one’s mind often drops asleep, or at least goes
dreaming, except for the narrow margin of awareness required for the
simple processes of the hands. Its orders have indeed been given: you
must kneel here, pull aside the stalks one by one, rip down the husks,
and twist off the ear—and there is the pile for the stripped stalks,
and here the basket for the gathered corn, and these processes
infinitely repeated.

While all this is going on, the mind itself wanders off to its own far
sweet pastures, upon its own dear adventures—or rests, or plays. It is
in these times that most of the airy flying things of this beautiful
world come home to us—things that heavy-footed reason never quite
overtakes, nor stodgy knowledge ever knows. I think sometimes (as
Sterne says) we thus intercept thoughts never intended for us at all,
or uncover strange primitive memories of older times than these—racial
memories.

At any rate, the hours pass and suddenly the mind comes home again, it
comes home from its wanderings refreshed, stimulated, happy. And
nowhere, whether in cities, or travelling in trains, or sailing upon
the sea, have I so often felt this curious enrichment as I have upon
this hillside, working alone in field, or garden, or orchard, It seems
to come up out of the soil, or respond to the touch of growing things.

What makes any work interesting is the fact that one can make
experiments, try new things, develop specialties and _grow_. And where
can he do this with such success as on the land and in direct contact
with nature. The possibilities are here infinite new machinery,
spraying, seed testing, fertilizers, experimentation with new
varieties. A thousand and one methods, all creative, which may be tried
out in that great essential struggle of the farmer or gardener to
command all the forces of nature.

Because there are farmers, and many of them, who do not experiment and
do not grow, but make their occupation a veritable black drudgery, this
is no reason for painting a sombre-hued picture of country life. Any
calling, the law, the ministry, the medical profession, can be blasted
by fixing one’s eyes only upon its ugliest aspects. And farming, at its
best, has become a highly scientific, extraordinarily absorbing, and
when all is said, a profitable, profession. Neighbours of mine have
developed systems of overhead irrigation to make rain when there is no
rain, and have covered whole fields with cloth canopies to increase the
warmth and to protect the crops from wind and hail, and by the analysis
of the soil and exact methods of feeding it with fertilizers, have come
as near a complete command of nature as any farmers in the world. What
independent, resourceful men they are! And many of them have also grown
rich in money. It is not what nature does with a man that matters but
what he does with nature.

Nor is it necessary in these days for the farmer or the country dweller
to be uncultivated or uninterested in what are often called, with no
very clear definition, the “finer things of life.” Many educated men
are now on the farms and have their books and magazines, and their
music and lectures and dramas not too far off in the towns. A great
change in this respect has come over American country life in twenty
years. The real hardships of pioneering have passed away, and with good
roads and machinery, and telephones, and newspapers every day by rural
post, the farmer may maintain as close a touch with the best things the
world has to offer as any man. And if he really have such broader
interests the winter furnishes him time and leisure that no other class
of people can command.

I do not know, truly, what we are here for upon this wonderful and
beautiful earth, this incalculably interesting earth, unless it is to
crowd into a few short years—when all is said, terribly short
years!—every possible fine experience and adventure: unless it is to
live our lives to the uttermost: unless it is to seize upon every fresh
impression, develop every latent capacity: to grow as much as ever we
have it in our power to grow. What else can there be? If there is no
life beyond this one, we have lived _here_ to the uttermost. We’ve had
what we’ve had! But if there is more life, and still more life, beyond
this one, and above and under this one, and around and through this
one, we shall be well prepared for that, whatever it may be.

The real advantages of country life have come to be a strong lure to
many people in towns and cities: but no one should attempt to “go back
to the land” with the idea that it is an easy way to escape the real
problems and difficulties of life. The fact is, there is no escape. The
problems and the difficulties must be boldly met whether in city or
country. Farming in these days is not “easy living,” but a highly
skilled profession, requiring much knowledge, and actual manual labour
and plenty of it. So many come to the country too light-heartedly, buy
too much land, attempt unfamiliar crops, expect to hire the work
done—and soon find themselves facing discouragement and failure. Any
city man who would venture on this new way of life should try it first
for a year or so before he commits himself—try himself out against the
actual problems. Or, by moving to the country, still within reach of
his accustomed work, he can have a garden or even a small farm to
experiment with. The shorter work-day has made this possible for a
multitude of wage-workers, and I know many instances in which life
because of this opportunity to get to the soil has become a very
different and much finer thing for them.

It is easy also for many men who are engaged in professional work to
live where they can get their hands into the soil for part of the time
at least: and this may be made as real an experience as far as it goes
as though they owned wider acres and devoted their whole time to the
work.

A man who thus faces the problem squarely will soon see whether country
life is the thing for him; if he finds it truly so, he can be as nearly
assured of “living happily ever after” as any one outside of a
story-book can ever be. Out of it all is likely to come some of the
greatest rewards that men can know, a robust body, a healthy appetite,
a serene and cheerful spirit!

And finally there is one advantage not so easy to express. Long ago I
read a story of Tolstoi’s called “The Candle”—how a peasant Russian
forced to plough on Easter Day lighted a candle to his Lord and kept it
burning on his plough as he worked through the sacred day. When I see a
man ploughing in his fields I often think of Tolstoi’s peasant, and
wonder if this is not as true a way as any of worshipping God. I wonder
if any one truly worships God who sets about it with deliberation, or
knows quite why he does it.

“My doctrine shall drop as the rain, my speech shall distil as the dew,
as the small rain upon the tender herb, and as showers upon the grass.”

THE END