<SPAN name="startofbook"></SPAN>
<div class="titlepage">
<div class="figcenter"> <ANTIMG src="images/illo_025.jpg" width-obs="341" height-obs="202" alt="Cover Illustration" title="Cover Illustration" /></div>
<p class="booktitle">Minstrel Weather</p>
<p class="writtenby"><i>by</i></p>
<p class="author">Marian Storm</p>
</div>
<div class="figcenter"><SPAN name="The_Milky_Way" id="The_Milky_Way"></SPAN> <ANTIMG src="images/illo_frontispiece.jpg" width-obs="369" height-obs="609" alt="The Milky Way Revealed to Lonely Herdsmen" title="The Milky Way Revealed to Lonely Herdsmen" /></div>
<p class="booktitle">Minstrel Weather</p>
<p class="writtenby">BY</p>
<p class="author">MARIAN STORM</p>
<p class="illustrator">With Illustrations and Decorations<br/>
By Clinton Balmer</p>
<div class="figcenter"> <ANTIMG src="images/logo.jpg" width-obs="119" height-obs="125" alt="Publisher Logo" title="Publisher Logo" /></div>
<div class="quote">
<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
<span class="i0">Knowledge, we are not foes.<br/></span>
<span class="i1">Long hast thou toiled with me;<br/></span>
<span class="i0">But the world with a great wind blows,<br/></span>
<span class="i1">Crying, and not of thee!<br/></span></div>
</div>
<p class="signature">EURIPIDES</p>
</div>
<p class="publisher">HARPER & BROTHERS PUBLISHERS</p>
<p class="publishedin">NEW YORK AND LONDON</p>
<p class="copyright"><span class="smcap">Minstrel Weather</span><br/>
<br/>Copyright, 1920, by Harper & Brothers<br/>
Printed in the United States of America<br/>
Published November, 1920
<!-- <br/> -->
<!-- <small>K–U</small> --></p>
<p class="dedication"><i>For</i></p>
<p class="dedication">AMY LOVEMAN</p>
<p class="dedication"><i>The Minstrel Made His Tune<br/>
of Hours and Seasons</i></p>
<div class="minstrelpoem">
<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
<span class="i0">Dewfall, moonrise, high sweet clover,<br/></span>
<span class="i1">Chimney swifts at their twilight play;<br/></span>
<span class="i0">Quail call, owl hoot, moth a-hover,<br/></span>
<span class="i1">Midnight pale at the step of day.<br/></span></div>
<div class="stanza">
<span class="i0">Star wane, cobweb, brown-plumed bracken;<br/></span>
<span class="i1">Morning laughs, with the frost in flower;<br/></span>
<span class="i0">Duck flight, hound cry; wild grapes blacken.<br/></span>
<span class="i1">Day leaps up at the amber hour.<br/></span></div>
<div class="stanza">
<span class="i0">Sun dark, snowcloud, eaves ice cumbered,<br/></span>
<span class="i1">Gray sand piled on a carmine West;<br/></span>
<span class="i0">Faint wing, flake dance; winds unnumbered<br/></span>
<span class="i1">Swing the cradles where leaf-buds rest.<br/></span></div>
<div class="stanza">
<span class="i0">Wide light, bough flush, gold-fringed meadows,<br/></span>
<span class="i1">Berries red in the rippled grass;<br/></span>
<span class="i0">Stream song, nest note, dream deep shadows<br/></span>
<span class="i1">Drawn back slowly for noon to pass.<br/></span></div>
</div></div>
<h2 class="contents"><SPAN name="CONTENTS" id="CONTENTS"></SPAN>CONTENTS</h2>
<div class="center">
<table summary="Contents">
<tr><th class="chaphdr">CHAP.</th><th></th><th class="pagehdr">PAGE</th></tr>
<tr><td class="chapno"><SPAN href="#CHAPTER_I">I.</SPAN></td><td class="chaptitle"><SPAN href="#CHAPTER_I">Faces of Janus</SPAN></td><td class="onpage"><SPAN href="#Page_1">1</SPAN></td></tr>
<tr><td class="chapno"><SPAN href="#CHAPTER_II">II.</SPAN></td><td class="chaptitle"><SPAN href="#CHAPTER_II">A Woodland Valentine</SPAN></td><td class="onpage"><SPAN href="#Page_7">7</SPAN></td></tr>
<tr><td class="chapno"><SPAN href="#CHAPTER_III">III.</SPAN></td><td class="chaptitle"><SPAN href="#CHAPTER_III">Ways of the March Hare</SPAN></td><td class="onpage"><SPAN href="#Page_13">13</SPAN></td></tr>
<tr><td class="chapno"><SPAN href="#CHAPTER_IV">IV.</SPAN></td><td class="chaptitle"><SPAN href="#CHAPTER_IV">The April Moment</SPAN></td><td class="onpage"><SPAN href="#Page_19">19</SPAN></td></tr>
<tr><td class="chapno"><SPAN href="#CHAPTER_V">V.</SPAN></td><td class="chaptitle"><SPAN href="#CHAPTER_V">The Crest of Spring</SPAN></td><td class="onpage"><SPAN href="#Page_25">25</SPAN></td></tr>
<tr><td class="chapno"><SPAN href="#CHAPTER_VI">VI.</SPAN></td><td class="chaptitle"><SPAN href="#CHAPTER_VI">Hay Harvest Time</SPAN></td><td class="onpage"><SPAN href="#Page_31">31</SPAN></td></tr>
<tr><td class="chapno"><SPAN href="#CHAPTER_VII">VII.</SPAN></td><td class="chaptitle"><SPAN href="#CHAPTER_VII">The Month of Yellow Flowers</SPAN></td><td class="onpage"><SPAN href="#Page_37">37</SPAN></td></tr>
<tr><td class="chapno"><SPAN href="#CHAPTER_VIII">VIII.</SPAN></td><td class="chaptitle"><SPAN href="#CHAPTER_VIII">The Mood of August</SPAN></td><td class="onpage"><SPAN href="#Page_43">43</SPAN></td></tr>
<tr><td class="chapno"><SPAN href="#CHAPTER_IX">IX.</SPAN></td><td class="chaptitle"><SPAN href="#CHAPTER_IX">Summer Pauses</SPAN></td><td class="onpage"><SPAN href="#Page_48">48</SPAN></td></tr>
<tr><td class="chapno"><SPAN href="#CHAPTER_X">X.</SPAN></td><td class="chaptitle"><SPAN href="#CHAPTER_X">When the Oaks Wear Damson</SPAN></td><td class="onpage"><SPAN href="#Page_54">54</SPAN></td></tr>
<tr><td class="chapno"><SPAN href="#CHAPTER_XI">XI.</SPAN></td><td class="chaptitle"><SPAN href="#CHAPTER_XI">November Traits</SPAN></td><td class="onpage"><SPAN href="#Page_60">60</SPAN></td></tr>
<tr><td class="chapno"><SPAN href="#CHAPTER_XII">XII.</SPAN></td><td class="chaptitle"><SPAN href="#CHAPTER_XII">The Christmas Woods</SPAN></td><td class="onpage"><SPAN href="#Page_66">66</SPAN></td></tr>
<tr><td class="chapno"><SPAN href="#CHAPTER_XIII">XIII.</SPAN></td><td class="chaptitle"><SPAN href="#CHAPTER_XIII">Landscapes Seen in Dreams</SPAN></td><td class="onpage"><SPAN href="#Page_72">72</SPAN></td></tr>
<tr><td class="chapno"><SPAN href="#CHAPTER_XIV">XIV.</SPAN></td><td class="chaptitle"><SPAN href="#CHAPTER_XIV">Hiding Places</SPAN></td><td class="onpage"><SPAN href="#Page_78">78</SPAN></td></tr>
<tr><td class="chapno"><SPAN href="#CHAPTER_XV">XV.</SPAN></td><td class="chaptitle"><SPAN href="#CHAPTER_XV">The Play of Leaves</SPAN></td><td class="onpage"><SPAN href="#Page_84">84</SPAN></td></tr>
<tr><td class="chapno"><SPAN href="#CHAPTER_XVI">XVI.</SPAN></td><td class="chaptitle"><SPAN href="#CHAPTER_XVI">The Brown Frontier</SPAN></td><td class="onpage"><SPAN href="#Page_90">90</SPAN></td></tr>
<tr><td class="chapno"><SPAN href="#CHAPTER_XVII">XVII.</SPAN></td><td class="chaptitle"><SPAN href="#CHAPTER_XVII">Far Altars</SPAN></td><td class="onpage"><SPAN href="#Page_96">96</SPAN></td></tr>
</table></div>
<h2 class="contents"><SPAN name="ILLUSTRATIONS" id="ILLUSTRATIONS"></SPAN>ILLUSTRATIONS</h2>
<div class="center">
<table class="illustrations" summary="Illustrations">
<tr><td class="illotitle"><SPAN href="#The_Milky_Way">The Milky Way Revealed to Lonely Herdsmen</SPAN></td><td colspan="2" style="text-align: center"><small><i>Frontispiece</i></small></td></tr>
<tr><td class="illotitle"><SPAN href="#Firelight_at_Play">The Comforting Symbolism of Firelight at Play upon Clean Hearths</SPAN></td><td class="facing"><small><i>Facing p.</i></small></td><td class="onpage">4</td></tr>
<tr><td class="illotitle"><SPAN href="#The_Powers_of_Light">The Powers of Light</SPAN></td><td class="facing">"</td><td class="onpage">10</td></tr>
<tr><td class="illotitle"><SPAN href="#The_Fairies_Sleep">On the Topmost Boughs the Fairies Sleep</SPAN></td><td class="facing">"</td><td class="onpage">26</td></tr>
<tr><td class="illotitle"><SPAN href="#Coming_Summer">The Rejoicing Shout of Coming Summer</SPAN></td><td class="facing">"</td><td class="onpage">28</td></tr>
<tr><td class="illotitle"><SPAN href="#The_Swooping_Bat">The Swooping Bat Darts Noiselessly</SPAN></td><td class="facing">"</td><td class="onpage">34</td></tr>
<tr><td class="illotitle"><SPAN href="#The_Mountaineers_Girl">Now the Mountaineer’s Girl Hurries Indoors at Nightfall from the Hallooing Specter of the Wild Huntsman in the Clouds</SPAN></td><td class="facing">"</td><td class="onpage">54</td></tr>
<tr><td class="illotitle"><SPAN href="#Baldwins_Mellow_by_Twelfth-night">Baldwins Mellow by Twelfth-night</SPAN></td><td class="facing">"</td><td class="onpage">58</td></tr>
<tr><td class="illotitle"><SPAN href="#December_Acknowledges_an_Unpitying_Fate">December Acknowledges an Unpitying Fate—Anything May Happen</SPAN></td><td class="facing">"</td><td class="onpage">68</td></tr>
</table></div>
<h1>MINSTREL WEATHER</h1>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_1" id="Page_1">[1]</SPAN></span></p>
<div class="figcenter"> <ANTIMG src="images/illo_001.jpg" width-obs="343" height-obs="252" alt="Chapter I" title="Chapter I" /></div>
<h2><SPAN name="CHAPTER_I" id="CHAPTER_I"></SPAN>CHAPTER I.<br/> FACES OF JANUS</h2>
<div class="initial" style="width: 96px;">
<ANTIMG src="images/initial_t.jpg" width-obs="96" height-obs="110" alt="T" title="T" /></div>
<p class="dropcapsection"><span class="firstwords">
<span style="display: none;">T</span>hough</span> January has days
that dress in saffron for their
going, and noons of yellow
light, foretelling crocuses, the
month is yet not altogether
friendly. The year is moving now toward
its most unpitying season. Nights
that came on kindly may turn the meadows
to iron, tear off the last faithful leaves
from oaks, drive thick clouds across the
moon, to end in a violent dawn. January
holds gentle weather in one hand and blizzards
in the other, and what a blizzard can
be only dwellers on prairies or among the
mountains know. Snow gone mad, its
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_2" id="Page_2">[2]</SPAN></span>legions rushing across the land with daggers
drawn, furious, bearing no malice, but
certainly no compassion, and overwhelming
all creatures abroad: bewildered flocks,
birds half frozen on their twigs, cattle
unwisely left on shelterless ranges, and
people who lose the way long before
animals give up. Snow hardly seems made
of fairy stars and flowers when its full
terror sweeps Northern valleys or the interminable
solitudes of the plains. The
gale so armed for attack owns something
of the wicked intention which Conrad says
that sailors often perceive in a storm at
sea. The rider pursued by a blizzard may
feel, like the tossed mariner, that “these
elemental forces are coming at him with
a purpose, with an unbridled cruelty which
means to sweep the whole precious world
away by the simple and appalling act of
taking his life.” We do not smile at the
pathetic fallacy when we are alone with
cold. The overtaken mountaineer understands—it
means to get him. These things
happen in places where weather is not
obedient to wraps and furnaces, but where
it must be fought hand to hand and where
the pretty snow tangles its victim’s feet
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_3" id="Page_3">[3]</SPAN></span>and slowly puts him to sleep in a delicious
dream of warmth. Tropical lightning has
not the calm omnipotence of cold when
it walks lonely ways.</p>
<p>January knows days on which the haze
of spring and the dim tenderness of the
sunshine tempt the rabbit to try another
nap <i>al fresco</i>, indiscreet though he knows
it to be. Even the woodchuck must turn
over and sniff in his sleep as the thaw
creeps downward; and the muskrat takes
his safe way by water once more, while the
steel trap waits on the bank, to be sprung
humanely by a falling cone. The lithe red
fox glides across the upper pastures and
weaves among the hardhack unchallenged,
for this is not hunting weather. A fleeting
respite comes to the tormented mink.
Toward the last of the month, innocent
of the February and March to come, pussy
willows, ingenuously deceived by the
brief mildness, come out inquisitively and
stand in expectation beside the brook,
convinced that this ice is only left over—what
can have delayed the garnet-veined
skunk’s cabbage, always on hand the
first of all? So many willows are needed
by the florists that perhaps they do not
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_4" id="Page_4">[4]</SPAN></span>pay heavily for their premature debut.
But they are all gray now. In March
they show a cloudy crimson and yellow
not alone of the final blossom, but of their
fur. There are plenty of scarlet rose hips
in uplifted clusters, for the birds somehow
neglect them while they pursue other
delicacies of the same color and contour.
Nature has probably told the winter chippies
that rose hips are no good—spring decorations
must not be pilfered by the snow
sprites. Puffballs have broken off from old
logs, and in walking through low woods
you may step on one here and there,
awakening the fancy that the world is
burning, under its sad cloak of sepia leaves,
and sending up small puffs of smoke to
warn those who have trodden it in love
and comprehension.</p>
<p>When the winsome skies turn stony,
and melancholy winter rain ends in chill
mist, January has days to breathe whose
air is like breathing under water, down in
spring-cold lake, where the incredible,
pleasureless fishes move through their gray
element, finding pallid amusement perhaps
in nudging frogs and turtles, well tucked
up under a blanket of mud. They are
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_5" id="Page_5">[5]</SPAN></span>cold-blooded, of course, and not supposed
to mind the oppressiveness of the liquid
atmosphere. But after ourselves moving
in such an environment it is marvelous to
ponder that any creatures prefer it, and
good to foreknow that our own world will
swim out into a splendid frosty weather.</p>
<div class="figcenter"><SPAN name="Firelight_at_Play" id="Firelight_at_Play"></SPAN> <ANTIMG src="images/illo_004.jpg" width-obs="365" height-obs="564" alt="The Comforting Symbolism of Firelight" title="The Comforting Symbolism of Firelight" /></div>
<p>For its days of quiet sparkle we would
remember January, not for lashing tempests,
April delusions, or brooding fog.
Unbroken snow with blazing spangles
shifting as the sun moves, and above it
twittering sparrows clinging by one claw
to stalks of yarrow or mustard while they
shake the seeds loose with the other; old
stone walls suddenly demonstrating that
they have color, when the foreground is
white, and showing bluish, brown, earthen
red, and gray alight with mica; streams
covered with pearly ice that floods into
brilliant orange at sunset; spruce and hemlock
imperiously outlined on even far-off
hills; skating-time without and kindled
logs within—that is the midwinter we remember
when the sterner messengers sped
from the Pole have gone again. Were it
not for the blizzard we might fail to know
so well the comforting symbolism of firelight
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_6" id="Page_6">[6]</SPAN></span>at play upon clean hearths. Many
go all their lives, aware only of the coziness
or inconvenience of winter, never facing
the daggered gale alone, nor struck by the
terror of a hostile Nature or the awe of
cold that may not soon relent. What one
perceives in the volcano, tidal wave, or
blizzard, another is spared; the lesson,
perhaps, being postponed until he is ready
for it. Spring comes sweetly to the milliners’
this month. To the wilderness
with rapid and menacing step comes full
winter.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_7" id="Page_7">[7]</SPAN></span></p>
<div class="figcenter"> <ANTIMG src="images/illo_007.jpg" width-obs="340" height-obs="244" alt="Chapter II" title="Chapter II" /></div>
<h2><SPAN name="CHAPTER_II" id="CHAPTER_II"></SPAN>CHAPTER II.<br/> A WOODLAND VALENTINE</h2>
<div class="initial" style="width: 101px;">
<ANTIMG src="images/initial_f.jpg" width-obs="101" height-obs="110" alt="F" title="F" /></div>
<p class="dropcapsection"><span class="firstwords">
<span style="display: none;">F</span>orces</span> astir in the deepest
roots grow restless beneath
the lock of frost. Bulbs try
the door. February’s stillness
is charged with a faint
anxiety, as if the powers of light, pressing
up from the earth’s center and streaming
down from the stronger sun, had troubled
the buried seeds, who strive to answer
their liberator, so that the guarding mother
must whisper over and over, “Not yet,
not yet!” Better to stay behind the
frozen gate than to come too early up into
realms where the wolves of cold are still
aprowl. Wisely the snow places a white
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_8" id="Page_8">[8]</SPAN></span>hand over eager—life unseen, but perceived
in February’s woods as a swimmer feels
the changing moods of water in a lake fed
by springs. Only the thick stars, closer
and more companionable than in months
of foliage, burn alert and serene. In February
the Milky Way is revealed divinely
lucent to lonely peoples—herdsmen, mountaineers,
fishermen, trappers—who are
abroad in the starlight hours of this grave
and silent time of year. It is in the long,
frozen nights that the sky has most red
flowers.</p>
<p>February knows the beat of twilight
wings. Drifting north again come birds
who only pretended to forsake us—adventurers,
not so fond of safety but that they
dare risk finding how snow bunting and
pine finch have plundered the cones of the
evergreens, while chickadees, sparrows, and
crows are supervising from established
stations all the more domestic supplies
available; a sparrow often making it possible
to annoy even a duck out of her
share of cracked corn. Ranged along a
brown-draped oak branch in the waxing
light, crows show a lordly glistening of
feathers. (Sun on a sweeping wing in
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_9" id="Page_9">[9]</SPAN></span>flight has the quality of sun on a ripple.)
Where hemlocks gather, deep in somber
woods, the great horned owl has thus soon,
perhaps working amid snows at her task,
built a nest wherein March will find sturdy
balls of fluff. The thunderous love song
of her mate sounds through the timber.
By the time the wren has nested these
winter babies will be solemn with the
wisdom of their famous race.</p>
<p>There is no season like the end of February
for cleaning out brooks. Hastening
yellow waters toss a dreary wreckage of
torn or ashen leaves, twigs, acorn cups,
stranded rafts of bark, and buttonballs
from the sycamore, never to come to seed.
Standing on one bank or both, according
to the sundering flood’s ambition, the
knight with staff and bold forefinger sets
the water princess free. She goes then
curtsying and dimpling over the shining
gravel, sliding from beneath the ice that
roofs her on the uplands down to the softer
valleys, where her quickened step will be
heard by the frogs in their mansions of
mud, and the fish, recluses in rayless pools,
will rise to the light she brings.</p>
<p>Down from the frozen mountains, in
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_10" id="Page_10">[10]</SPAN></span>summer, birds and winds must bear the
seed of alpine flowers—lilies that lean
against unmelting snows, poppies, bright-colored
herbs, and the palely gleaming,
fringed beauties that change names with
countries. How just and reasonable it
would seem to be that flowers which edge
the ice in July should consent to bloom
in lowlands no colder in February! The
pageant of blue, magenta, and scarlet on
the austere upper slopes of the Rockies,
where nights are bitter to the summer
wanderer—why should it not flourish to
leeward of a valley barn in months when
icicles hang from the eaves in this tamer
setting? But no. Mountain tempests are
endurable to the silken-petaled. The
treacherous lowland winter, with its coaxing
suns followed by roaring desolation,
is for blooms bred in a different tradition.</p>
<div class="figcenter"><SPAN name="The_Powers_of_Light" id="The_Powers_of_Light"></SPAN> <ANTIMG src="images/illo_010.jpg" width-obs="366" height-obs="488" alt="The Powers of Light" title="The Powers of Light" /></div>
<p>The light is clear but hesitant, a delicate
wine, by no means the mighty vintage of
April. February has no intoxication; the
vague eagerness that gives the air a pulse
where fields lie voiceless comes from the
secret stirring of imprisoned life. Spring
and sunrise are forever miracles, but the
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_11" id="Page_11">[11]</SPAN></span>early hour of the wonder hardly hints the
exuberance of its fulfillment. Even the
forest dwellers move gravely, thankful for
any promise of kindness from the lord of
day as he hangs above a sea-gray landscape,
but knowing well that their long
duress is not yet to end. Deer pathetically
haunt the outskirts of farms, gazing
upon cattle feeding in winter pasture from
the stack, and often, after dark, clearing
the fences and robbing the same disheveled
storehouse. Not a chipmunk
winks from the top rail. The woodchuck,
after his single expeditionary effort on
Candlemas, which he is obliged to make
for mankind’s enlightenment, has retired
without being seen, in sunshine or shadow,
and has not the slightest intention of disturbing
himself just yet. Though snowdrops
may feel uneasy, he knows too much
about the Ides of March! Quietest of all
Northern woods creatures, the otter slides
from one ice-hung waterfall to the next.
The solitary scamperer left is the cottontail,
appealing because he is the most
pursued and politest of the furry; faithfully
trying to give no offense, except when
starvation points to winter cabbage, he is
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_12" id="Page_12">[12]</SPAN></span>none the less fey. So is the mink, though
he moves like a phantom.</p>
<p>Mosses, whereon March in coming treads
first, show one hue brighter in the swamps.
Pussy willows have made a gray dawn in
viny caverns where the day’s own dawn
looks in but faintly, and the flushing of
the red willow betrays reveries of a not
impossible cowslip upon the bank beneath.
The blue jay has mentioned it in the course
of his voluble recollections. He is unwilling
to prophesy arbutus, but he will just
hint that when the leaves in the wood lot
show through snow as early as this ...
Once he found a hepatica bud the last day
of February ... Speaking with his old
friend, the muskrat, last week ... And
when you can see red pebbles in the creek
at five o’clock in the afternoon ... But
it is no use to expect yellow orchids on the
west knoll this spring, for some people
found them there last year, and after that
you might as well ... Of course cowslips
beside red willows are remarkably pretty,
just as blue jays in a cedar with blue berries....
He is interminable, but then he has seen
a great deal of life. And February needs her
blue jays’ unwearied and conquering faith.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_13" id="Page_13">[13]</SPAN></span></p>
<div class="figcenter"> <ANTIMG src="images/illo_013.jpg" width-obs="344" height-obs="205" alt="Chapter III" title="Chapter III" /></div>
<h2><SPAN name="CHAPTER_III" id="CHAPTER_III"></SPAN>CHAPTER III.<br/> WAYS OF THE MARCH HARE</h2>
<div class="initial" style="width: 101px;">
<ANTIMG src="images/initial_f.jpg" width-obs="101" height-obs="110" alt="F" title="F" /></div>
<p class="dropcapsection"><span class="firstwords">
<span style="display: none;">F</span>ollow</span> him to the woods
and you know his fascination,
but never give the
March hare a reference for
sobriety. His reputation cannot
be rehabilitated, yet his intimates love
him in spite of it. He is such an accomplished
tease! He wakens, playful and ingratiating,
with the sun; he skips cajolingly
among the crocuses; and before an hour
passes he is rushing about the fields in a
fury, scattering the worn-out, brown grasses,
scaring the first robins, and bouncing
over the garden fence to break the necks of
any tulips deceived by his morning mood.
Impossible animal, he is an eccentric born,
glorying in his queerness; and none the
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_14" id="Page_14">[14]</SPAN></span>less, there are some who think he knows
the zest of life better than April’s infatuated
starling or the woodchuck drowsing
in May clover. He loves to kick the
chilly brooks into foam and fluster them
until they run over their unthawed banks
and tear downhill and through the swamp
to alarm the rivers, so that they, too, come
out on land and the whole world looks as
though it had gone back to the watery
beginning. He chases north the snowy
owl, ornament of our winter woods, and
fraternizes with the sinful sparrow. Shrike
and grosbeak leave, saying that really it
is growing quite warm, and, glancing behind
them, they behold the March hare
turning somersaults in snowdrifts. He
freezes the mud that the shore lark was
enjoying. No one depends upon him.
Yet, to see swift and enchanting changes
of sky, lake, and woodland, go forth with
the March hare and find with him, better
than quiet, the earth astir.</p>
<p>Trees lose the archaic outline as leaf
buds swell. Reddened maples and black
ash twigs, yellow flowers on the willow,
begin the coloring of a landscape that will
not fade to gray and dun again until
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_15" id="Page_15">[15]</SPAN></span>December comes. The lilacs are growing
impatient, for already the sophisticated
city lilac bush is wearing costly bloom,
careless that a debut made so early early
ends. The crocuses, spring’s opening ballet,
dressed in pastel tints, take their places
on the lawn, standing delicately erect,
waiting for bird music. Unknown to
March’s gales, the still swamp pools are
fringed with shooting green, full of hints
of cowslips; and arbutus—few know on
what hillsides—is lifting the warm leaf
blanket, trusting that vandal admirers are
far away. The March violet is sung more
than seen, visiting Northern slopes and
woods hollows only by caprice, but all the
legends lingering over it, and the magic
beauty it gives to maidens who gather it
at dawn, make the violet still, for lyrical
needs, the flower of March. Cuddled close
to sun-warmed stones, cloaked by quaint
leaves lined with sapphire and maroon,
sometimes now the hepatica has come; and
bloodroot nested under bowlders, and in
fence corners where the sun is faithful, lifts
praying, exquisite petals that open swiftly
from the slim bud and are scattered by a
touch. The dark blue grape hyacinth
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_16" id="Page_16">[16]</SPAN></span>stands calm in winds and bitter weather;
waist-deep in snow, it proudly holds its
ground. Sap is visibly climbing to the
highest limbs. It seems even to be
mounting in the ancient wild-grape vines
that swing from the roof of the wood,
bearing no buds and looking dead a hundred
years, though there is life beneath
the somber and shaggy bark. Sap called
back through the ducts of the winter-warped
thorn, solitary in the clearing
where the cruel nor’easter raced, will
cover the sad branches, once the soft
days are here, with shining blossoms. The
year turns when the sap runs. Little boys
who have their sugar maples picked out
and under guard, being more forehanded
about some things than others, are whittling
intensely.</p>
<p>Loneliest of all sounds, the “peepers”
take up their forsaken song in flooded
meadows, silenced in ghostly fashion by a
footstep that comes near. Heartbroken
chant, it is more elegy than spring song,
hard to hear at dusk, yet it is certain that
those peepers are delighted that March
is here—as content with their fate, while
they utter the poignant notes, as the emphatic
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_17" id="Page_17">[17]</SPAN></span>old frogs by the deeper water.
Wander-birds, almost unresting, are posting
north again through the twilights.
Bold wild geese are awing for Canada.
Quiet returning hawks cross the valleys,
and the pine grosbeak hastens past.
Spring dowers the devoted but undesired
starling with a pleasant voice which will
change by summer into an exasperating
croak, and so many of our birds suffer this
unfair loss that a feathered critic would
have good reason to declare that poets
ought to be slain in youth. The terrifying
little screech owl wails from shadowy
woods, and from the venerable timber
sounds the horned owl’s obscure threat.
The chickadee repeats with natural pride
his charming repertoire of two notes—“Spring
soon!” Nothing is refused this
fortunate one, born with a sweet disposition
and a winsome song, while sparrows,
angrily conducting their courtships, remain
on earth solely by dint of original
cleverness.</p>
<p>Meadow mole and turtle, woodchuck
and chipmunk, are recovering from a three
months’ nap, waiting patiently in the sunshine
for the season to begin. Snakes
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_18" id="Page_18">[18]</SPAN></span>come out with the rest of the yawning
company. Fish glitter again in the hurrying
streams, building their nests and houses
like the others—often obeying a spring
impulse to rush from lake to outlet or
from quiet water to streamhead, ending
their journey suddenly and forever amid
wire meshes. The brooks are icy on the
mildest days with melted snow from the
mountains, where hemlocks green as arctic
waters, shutting out the sun, keep a white
floor long after the valley wears grasses.</p>
<p>Whoever has a touch of madness to
lend him sympathy with the March hare
likes the bewildering days through which
he scampers to vanish at the edge of April.
Rebellious, whitening ponds and wind-bent
trees; defiant buds and all the kindled
life of marsh, hill, and woodland, set free
once more from cold, but not from dread—hear
at the coming of the mighty month
their promise of release. But only to
comrades who will run with him through
muddy lanes and tangled brush does he
show his treasures: forest creatures sped
like the couriers, petals lifted like the
banners, of life resurgent.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_19" id="Page_19">[19]</SPAN></span></p>
<div class="figcenter"> <ANTIMG src="images/illo_019.jpg" width-obs="342" height-obs="251" alt="Chapter IV" title="Chapter IV" /></div>
<h2><SPAN name="CHAPTER_IV" id="CHAPTER_IV"></SPAN>CHAPTER IV.<br/> THE APRIL MOMENT</h2>
<div class="initial" style="width: 101px;">
<ANTIMG src="images/initial_s.jpg" width-obs="101" height-obs="110" alt="S" title="S" /></div>
<p class="dropcapsection"><span class="firstwords">
<span style="display: none;">S</span>urvivor</span> of so much that
her fear is gone, triumphant
April answers the dark
powers as if they could never
speak again. Spring after
spring she stands among flying petals and
smiles at the last bitter winds. She will
not grant that the green earth was ever
vanquished, fiercely alive as now it is.
Scornfully the new silver bloom on the
clover sheds the relentless rain. Undaunted,
reaffirming, she summons all
beauty of color, music, and fragrance beneath
her banners, with a vitality so profound
and impregnable that more than
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_20" id="Page_20">[20]</SPAN></span>other months she is careless of man’s
sympathy. April, preoccupied, hastens
from crumbling furrow to meadows that
shout the coming of the green. Intense
and too eager for tenderness, she craves
no admiration. Quite without excuse, the
song sparrow sits on a wine-colored willow
twig and sings frantically. Anyone has
as good a reason for ecstasy as he—merely
that the dumb struggle is ended and the
long suns have returned in splendor.</p>
<p>Contemplative between their dark exotic
leaves, dogtooth violets fill the light-flecked
hollows. Spring beauties open
warily at daybreak to show stamens of
deep rose. Where imperious amber waters
go foaming through the swamp, spendthrift
gold of cowslips is swept down to
the rivers, and budded branches that
leaned too close above the ripple are shut
out from the sun world for a while. Mauve
and canary slippers are waiting for the
fairy queen where our wild orchid of the
North dangles them on remote knolls, but
they are usually found and borne off by
some one for whom they are in no way
suitable. Translucent young leaves glitter
beside the stream’s path. Dandelion rosettes
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_21" id="Page_21">[21]</SPAN></span>appear with serene impartiality on
guarded lawn and mountain pasture, where
steal also the polite but persistent “pussy
tiptoes,” asserting the right to display
white leaves in spring, if so a plant should
choose. The snail has deserted his shell
and gone forth to take the air at the risk
of being plowed under. None of April’s
children remember or foresee. The vivid
present is enough.</p>
<p>The apple boughs are inlaid with coral.
The peach is a cloud of dawn, and petals
of the forward cherry and pear are floating
reluctantly down. Wild-fruit trees, mysteriously
planted, are misty white above
the woodland thicket—scented crabapple
and twisted branch of plum. This is the
month of blossoms, as May is the month
of shimmering leaves and June of the
fruitless flower.</p>
<p>The blackbird swings at the foamy crest
of the haw, disturbed by a thousand delights,
and notes too few to tell them.
The crow hoarsely mentions his rapture
as he flaps above the moving harrow, and
the new lambs look on in a tremulous,
wounded manner while the famished woodchuck
makes away with the cloverheads
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_22" id="Page_22">[22]</SPAN></span>they were just about to endeavor to bite
off. Uncertainly the wondering calves
proceed about the pasture, not yet at the
stage in life where they will skip with
touching curiosity after every object that
stirs. At dusk and glistening morning
there are bird songs such as only April
hears—the outburst of welcome to the
light, and the sleepy fluting of the robins
when the sky turns to a soft prism in the
west. Fainter, more melancholy even
than in March, is the twilight lament of
the peepers. They are alien to the aria
of April.</p>
<p>New England’s forget-me-nots are fleet
turquoise in the grasses; New England’s
arbutus flowers lie flushed pearls among
the ancient leaves; but everywhere are the
violets of three colors—yellow for the pool’s
edge, white among the bog lands, and blue
as pervasive as the sunlight on hill slope,
road bank, and forest floor. And there
are violets of an unfathomable blue,
sprinkled with white like wisps of cloud
against far mountains. Some grow close
to earth, taught by past dismay; others,
long-stemmed and sweet, will live and
suffer and mend their ways next year.
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_23" id="Page_23">[23]</SPAN></span>The windflower meets the breeze, a slim
princess, incredibly fragile, yet broken less
easily than the strong tulip, vaguely
touched with rose or white as bloodroot.
Tulips dwell not only on the ground; they
have parted great, opaque petals at the
tops of trees, startling to see in the leafless
wood. Watercress glitters in the cold
streams where trout, winter-weary, are on
patrol for those flies now magnificent in
their jeweled dress of spring. The first oak
leaves are delicately crimson at the end
of the bough. Disregard, amid this pageantry
of <i>la vita nuova</i>, the outrageous
satire of brown skeleton “fingers” that
point stiffly up through the shining blades
of grass. If they seem to be a chilling
cynicism of Nature, who has not found an
April dandelion telling a braver story
through winter snow?</p>
<p>Cedar and balsam twig are golden-tipped.
Nothing is unchanged. Immortal
wings that beat through February
gales to reach this land of their tradition
are fluttering now about the building of
the nest. The smooth chimney swift
flashes above the barn and is gone. With
drooping wings he hangs poised against
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_24" id="Page_24">[24]</SPAN></span>the daffodil sky in his evening play.
Peaceably among the lilacs the contented
bluebird sits, though through bulb, root,
and chrysalis has passed the irresistible
current that will let no sharer of the earth
be still—not stone nor seed nor man. Into
this forced march April steps with gladness,
hailing the order, predestined to
change. Joining her unresisting, take for
your own the moment of escape which the
singer in the blossoms freely claims. Life’s
fullness is measured by these salvaged
April moments when suddenly joy becomes
a simple and close-dwelling thing,
when for a merciful, lighted instant the
impersonal and endless beauty of the
world seems enough.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_25" id="Page_25">[25]</SPAN></span></p>
<div class="figcenter"> <ANTIMG src="images/illo_025.jpg" width-obs="341" height-obs="202" alt="Chapter V" title="Chapter V" /></div>
<h2><SPAN name="CHAPTER_V" id="CHAPTER_V"></SPAN>CHAPTER V.<br/> THE CREST OF SPRING</h2>
<div class="initial" style="width: 101px;">
<ANTIMG src="images/initial_f.jpg" width-obs="101" height-obs="110" alt="F" title="F" /></div>
<p class="dropcapsection"><span class="firstwords">
<span style="display: none;">F</span>lickering</span> soft leaves
spangled with sunlit rain
give May a robe diamond-sown,
as lighted spray may
weave for the sea. Skimming
wings catch sunrise colors. The
grass blade is borne down by the exquisite
burden of one translucent pearl. This is
the luminous youth of the year, and its
splendor lies deeper than the glitter of
dew-and-rain jewels, for it is visible in the
forbidding strongholds of hemlock and
pine, where a sunless world still shines with
May. In one month only Nature lights
her unquenchable lamp. Look down upon
the orchard from a hill: the young leaves
are lanterns of sheer green silk, not the
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_26" id="Page_26">[26]</SPAN></span>richly draped and shadowy foliage of full
summer. Lustrous is the new red of
poison ivy and woodbine, of swamp
maple and slowly budding oak. Where
in July the hard light will play as upon
metal, lake and stream are faintly shimmering
gray. Rain cannot dim the radiant
freshness, for trees thus queenly
clothed in blossoms never bend submissive
to the pelting skies. Let that fragment
of creation which bears umbrellas prostrate
its spirit before the “blossom storm,”
seven times renewed—the answer of the
flowered thorn is always exultant. Amid
departing petals which have played their
role and gone, voyaging on raindrops, “the
May month flaps its glad green leaves like
wings.”</p>
<div class="figcenter"><SPAN name="The_Fairies_Sleep" id="The_Fairies_Sleep"></SPAN> <ANTIMG src="images/illo_026.jpg" width-obs="367" height-obs="515" alt="On the Topmost Boughs the Fairies Sleep" title="On the Topmost Boughs the Fairies Sleep" /></div>
<p>Wild shrubs upon the mountain slopes
are in thronging bloom. Delicately pink
and nectar-laden, the prodigal azalea calls
to the honeybees, always bitterly industrious
and severely intent upon duty amid
a general festival. It is a great satisfaction
sometimes to find a bee overtaken by intoxication
and night within a water lily
or hollyhock, his obtrusive good example
smothered sweetly. For once he was not
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_27" id="Page_27">[27]</SPAN></span>at the hive in time to murmur of his
heavy day of posting from garden to
meadow! Dowered with a white simplicity
beyond the pensive moonflower’s,
the bracts of the dogwood seem afloat
among gray branches—misty, seen far off;
clear cut to nearer view; eloquent of spring;
without fragrance as without pretense.
The mountain laurel holds above gleaming
leaves its marvelously carven cups,
faint pink or white, amber-flecked. All
winter it has kept the green, when ground
pine lay snowbound and spruces sagged
with sleet. The victor may find his wreath
at any time of year, for our laurel has it
ready. High toward the stars in regal
manner the tulip trees lift their broader
chalices. It is probably in these, on the
topmost boughs, that the fairies sleep
where mortals never climb up to look in.
Bilberry, shadbush, and brier stand in
May marriage robes of white, quiet and
beautiful, scented at dusk when the sun
warmth begins to leave the blossoms.
The red haw wears a little fine golden lace.
Farther south the rhododendron is gorgeously
displayed—magenta verging on
damson.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_28" id="Page_28">[28]</SPAN></span>The air is precious with the plentiful
sweetness of lilac and magnolia, of the
memorial lavender lilac that summons
homesickness to city parks on evenings of
May. The carmine glow of the flowering
quince is here, brought from its tropic
wilderness. The long flushed curve of the
almond spray bends meekly toward the
sod. Opulent is every bush, though its
blossoming may be secret. In colors beloved
of kings, the velvet, minutely perfect
iris commands the garden path. Beside
it in despair the old-time bleeding-heart
laments, and the bells of the valley lily
hang, chiming fragrance. Impatient climb
the red-stalked peonies. The currant is
in green but pleadingly sweet blossom.</p>
<p>High, thick grass and clover in May
fields are only the setting for the dazzling
buttercup, who shakes the dews from her
closed petals before daybreak and folds
them prayerfully at about the time the
birds turn home. First white daisies,
supremely fresh and lucid as all May’s
glories are, show a few misleading foam
flecks of the flood with which they intend
to overwhelm the crop of hay. Feathery
yellow of the wild mustard nods beside
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_29" id="Page_29">[29]</SPAN></span>the road as if it were not anchored to immovable
roots. Already the sapphire star
grass is hiding in the meadows. Gone
are the blossoms of the wild strawberry.
The canary-colored five-finger vine would
lace itself over the world, given but half
an opportunity. So would the bramble
of the fair white blossom and maroon-bordered
leaf.</p>
<div class="figcenter"><SPAN name="Coming_Summer" id="Coming_Summer"></SPAN> <ANTIMG src="images/illo_028.jpg" width-obs="366" height-obs="578" alt="The Rejoicing Shout of Coming Summer" title="The Rejoicing Shout of Coming Summer" /></div>
<p>Still are restless wings now upon the
guarded nest. Some flash along the turned
furrow, circle near the eaves, dip sharply
to the ripple. Willow fronds are startled
by the glinting blue of the kingfisher,
scarlet of the tanager. Once more the
chimneys of old houses know the flickering
swallow. The oriole has come to the
orchard again, the wren to the grape
arbor. Tiny rabbits, beholding for the
first time what white clover can be, twitch
their noses in content. Tired children,
returning from rifled woodlands with too
many posies, drop them in the path, like
flower girls intrusted to strew the way of
summer. It is more comfortable not to
grant flowers the capacity for pain, but we
demand, nevertheless, that they enjoy giving
pleasure to us, so doubtless they are
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_30" id="Page_30">[30]</SPAN></span>glad to be of service even in this thwarted
fashion. Yet May’s store is manifold; her
waiting buds can replace the scattered ones.</p>
<p>The face of Nature wears in the shining
month a beauty something less than
mature, but more than the mischief and
troubling intensity of April. The wonder
of the hour—the adieu of spring and the rejoicing
shout of coming summer—dwells
there, a subdued, impassioned note. The
crest of the year’s youth merges like all
crests into the wave beyond, renewed forever
like the waves. To man alone has
been given the difficult task of keeping on
without a spring. That singular adversity
is ours in common with inanimate things:
May rose and lilac come back each year
to the forsaken house, but to the house
May brings no change. About it a world
of snow becomes a world of blossoms, as
for us, and the sun creates. But the house
needs aid of human hands, man of earth’s
quickened beauty in luminous May.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_31" id="Page_31">[31]</SPAN></span></p>
<div class="figcenter"> <ANTIMG src="images/illo_031.jpg" width-obs="343" height-obs="251" alt="Chapter VI" title="Chapter VI" /></div>
<h2><SPAN name="CHAPTER_VI" id="CHAPTER_VI"></SPAN>CHAPTER VI.<br/> HAY HARVEST TIME</h2>
<div class="initial" style="width: 98px;">
<ANTIMG src="images/initial_b.jpg" width-obs="98" height-obs="110" alt="B" title="B" /></div>
<p class="dropcapsection"><span class="firstwords">
<span style="display: none;">B</span>y</span> the manifold hayfields only,
were her wild-rose token banished,
a traveler returning
from another land to our
June, not knowing the time
of year, might name the month. In days
just before hay harvest the glistening
dance of meadow grasses is most splendid,
their soft obedience to the winds is
readiest. Deep rose plumes of sorrel, the
wine-colored red-top, smoky heads of timothy,
are forever aripple, and, though
overstrewn with flowers, they reveal when
bent beneath the step of the southwest
breeze a thousand lowlier flowers near the
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_32" id="Page_32">[32]</SPAN></span>roots. Here the “wild morning-glory,”
the tiny fields convolvulus, hides perilously
in the mowing; white clover and yellow
five-finger are spread; the grassflower holds
up its single jewel. The swaying stems
are trellises to many a wandering vine;
there are fairy arbors where a tired elf
might sleep guarded from the sun as well
as in a jungle. Here, too, the wild strawberries
are ripening, not breathing yet the
bouquet of July; but the white wild strawberry,
lover of the shades, has already
reached its pallid ripeness. Far beneath
the moving surface of the grass ocean lies
a dim and mysterious world, lined with
track and countertrack of the beetle,
caverns of the mole, and the unremaining
castle of the ant. Here the sleek woodchuck
passes imperceptibly, the ingenuous
cottontail finds his brief paradise; small
moths fold their wings and sleep.</p>
<p>Above are light, motion, and the clearest,
strongest colors of the year, untarnished
by hot suns, unmixed with the later
browns. The dark-eyed yellow daisy, sun
worshiper, rises amid the fresh brilliance
of that other starry-petaled weed which
only sheep will eat. Celestial-blue chicory
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_33" id="Page_33">[33]</SPAN></span>wanders in from the roadside and will not
thereafter be denied. Yarrow with its
balsam fragrance and fernlike leaf, the
first delicate wild carrot asway, goldfinch
yellow of the moth mullein, cloverheads of
the Tyrian dye, sunny spray of mustard, lie
scattered on the crests of hayfield waves.</p>
<p>In the lowgrounds, on bowldered hillsides,
far in the woods, wherever the mowing
machine will grant it a summer,
spreads the exquisite wild rose, dowered
like other flowers of June—the water
lily, the wild-grape blossom, the syringa—with
a perfume as wistfully sweet as the
form and hue of its chalice. That fragrance,
unearthly, never fails to bring a
catch of the breath, a start of memory,
when in whatever place it is encountered
again. You seldom find a wild rose withered;
they cast their petals down without
a struggle, and a throng of ardent pink
buds are waiting on the bush. So it is
with the water lily—when the hour strikes
she draws her green cloak once more about
her and retires from the sun.</p>
<p>The meadow rue has shaken out veil
upon floating veil in the woodlands. The
shaded knolls are sprinkled lavender with
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_34" id="Page_34">[34]</SPAN></span>wild geraniums, willing to be background
for the May windflower or the buttercups
of June. Among the rocks, twinkling red
and yellow in the sandy, sunny places,
the columbine swings her cups of honey
impartially for glittering humming bird
and blunt-nosed, serious bee. Columbines
are delicious—could anyone regard them
sensibly, and not as something animate
and almost winged. The claret-colored
milkweed (a natural paradox) holds flowing
nectar, too, but there is a paler milkweed,
so softly tinted of pink, yellow, and
white as to be no color at all, whereto the
little yellow butterflies drift to sip at dusk.
The blossomed elder rests like white fog
in the hollows, scenting all the country
ways and promising elder-blossom wine,
the dryad’s draught. In moist and dark
retreats—under hemlocks and at the doors
of caves—the ghost lamp is lighted. In
the brightest spot it can find the small
blackberry lily paints against the ledge
its speckled orange star.</p>
<p>It is the time of perfect ferns, uncurled
quickly from the brown balls, and making
our Northern woods tropical with the
sumptuous brake and temperate imitations
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_35" id="Page_35">[35]</SPAN></span>of the tree fern. They fill the glades
and scale the cliffs. They mingle enchantingly
along creeks and at the edge of the
pond with the regal hosts of the blue
flag—the lavishly sown iris of the meadows.
They are matted close in the swamps,
plumy on the hilltops. From mosses on
old logs spring ferns almost as faery as the
fronds of the moss itself.</p>
<div class="figcenter"><SPAN name="The_Swooping_Bat" id="The_Swooping_Bat"></SPAN> <ANTIMG src="images/illo_034.jpg" width-obs="372" height-obs="610" alt="The Swooping Bat Darts Noiselessly" title="The Swooping Bat Darts Noiselessly" /></div>
<p>Into the whispering twilight of June come
many creatures to play strange games and
sing such songs as even the many-stringed
orchestra of the sunlit hayfield does not
know. The swooping bat darts from thick-hung
woodbine and noiselessly crosses
the garden, brushes the hollyhocks, and
speeds toward the moon. Moths, white
and pallid green, wander like spirits
among the peonies. Sometimes the humming
bird shakes the trumpet vine in the
dark, queerly restless, though he is Apollo’s
acolyte. The fireflies are lambently
awing. The cricket’s pleading, interrupted
song is half silenced by the steady, hot
throb of the locust’s. The tree toad’s
eerie note comes faint and sweet, but from
what cranny of the bark he only knows.
The mother bird, guardian even in sleep,
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_36" id="Page_36">[36]</SPAN></span>speaks drowsily to her children. From
the brooding timber the owl sends his call
of despair across acres of friendly fields
placid in the dew. June nights are wakeful.
Then enchantment deepens, for there
comes no pause in darkness for the joy
of earth.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_37" id="Page_37">[37]</SPAN></span></p>
<div class="figcenter"> <ANTIMG src="images/illo_037.jpg" width-obs="344" height-obs="251" alt="Chapter VII" title="Chapter VII" /></div>
<h2><SPAN name="CHAPTER_VII" id="CHAPTER_VII"></SPAN>CHAPTER VII.<br/> THE MONTH OF YELLOW FLOWERS</h2>
<div class="initial" style="width: 101px;">
<ANTIMG src="images/initial_f.jpg" width-obs="101" height-obs="110" alt="F" title="F" /></div>
<p class="dropcapsection"><span class="firstwords">
<span style="display: none;">F</span>rom</span> valley after valley dies
away the drowsy croon of
the mowing machine, leaving
to the grasshoppers the fragrant
drying hay. Now
comes July in many hues of yellow, spreading
her gold beside dark,
backwaters and along the sun-warmed
stubble, whose various, singing life is
loudest through these shimmering afternoons.
Tawny beauties are abroad in
woodways and sea marshes. Where the
hot air shines and quivers over shallow
pools yellow water lilies float sleepily beneath
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_38" id="Page_38">[38]</SPAN></span>curved canopies, while the lucent
pallors of the white water lily one by one
are dimmed. Moving serenely toward its
climax, the season drinks the sun and takes
the color of its slanting light.</p>
<p>The flame lily lifts a burnt-orange cup
straight toward the sky. The yellow
meadow lily bends down over the damp
mold it seeks. But both love deep woods,
and, blazing suddenly above a fern bed,
the rich flowers startle, like a butterfly
of the Andes adrift in Canadian forests.
They are princesses of the tropics, incongruously
banished to Northern swamps,
but scornfully at ease. The false Solomon’s-seal
in proud assemblies wears
with an oddly holiday air its freckled
coral beads, always a lure to the errant
cow; and jack-in-the-pulpit, having been
invested with some churchly rank which
demands the red robe, is ready to cast
off his cassock of lustrous striped green
for one of scarlet. The pendent-flowered
jewelweed, plant with temperament and
therefore called, too, touch-me-not, droops
its dew-lined leaves along the traveled
lanes, for it is making ready small surprise
packages of seed that snap ferociously open
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_39" id="Page_39">[39]</SPAN></span>at a touch; and thus intriguing every
passer-by into sowing its crop, it earns
the name unfairly borne by the innocent
yellow toadflax—snapdragon, which snaps
only at bumblebees.</p>
<p>Gayly in possession of the fields, black-eyed
Susan, known to the farmer as “that
confounded yellow bull’s-eye,” is holding
her own, prepared to resist to the utmost
the onslaught of the goldenrod, which
presumes to unfurl in summer the banners
of fall. The clear yellow evening primrose,
scion of one of our very best old
English families, associates democratically
with a peasant mullein stalk, canary-flecked,
since they both fancy sun and
sand. Magnificent sometimes upon the
sand banks rises a clump of that copper-in-the-sunshine
flower, the butterfly weed,
soon to become as fugitive as our fair, lost
trailing arbutus, the cardinal, and the
fringed gentian, if its lovers do not woo
it less selfishly. All beauty refuses captivity.
In upland meadows the orange
hawkweed is afoot, waving its delirious-colored
“paint brush” wantonly amid the
pasture grass in the light hours, but folding
it at sunset, no sipper of the dews. Brook
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_40" id="Page_40">[40]</SPAN></span>sunflowers have come to the edge of the
stream, but not to look into the waters;
their sunward-gazing petals are delicately
scented, surpassing their sisters of the
fenced garden. The half-tamed tiger lily,
haunter of deserted dooryards and faithful
even to abandoned mountain farms long
since given over to the wildcat and the
owl, wanderer by dusty roadsides, offers
each morning new buds, and by twilight
they have bloomed and withered. Like
the May rose, this is an elegiac flower,
clinging to lost gardens when all the rest
have vanished, though patches of tansy,
herb of witchlore, will show pungent
golden buttons for long years untended,
let the forgotten gardener but plant it
once. How many a little cabin, built in
eagerness and hope, is remembered at last
only by the tiger lily, May rose, and chimney
swift! Yellow sweet clover, catching
a roothold anywhere, declaring the gravel
bed a garden, makes it happiness to breathe
the entranced air. The yellow butterflies,
like leaves of autumn, tremble and flurry
where the sun-steeped field meets the
sweet dark wood. Among the rocks gleam
ebony seeds of the blackberry lily, whose
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_41" id="Page_41">[41]</SPAN></span>star of orange and umber is about to
set.</p>
<p>Who knows, besides the birds, that embroidered
on the moss new scarlet partridge
berries are ripe, hung from the
vagrant vine of pale-veined leaf that does
not fear the snow? Only a month ago in
this fairy greenery lay the furry white
partridge blossom, almost invisible, but
with a fragrance like that of just-opened
water lilies, and now the green fruit colors
to the Christmas hue. There are no
flowers like these. The wood fairies wear
them with their gowns of spangled cobweb
trimmed with moonlight.</p>
<p>Bough apples, with a sweetness like that
of flowers distilled by the intense sun,
show the first brown seeds. From the
high-piled loads of hay journeying slowly
to the mow fall the dried buttercups and
daisies that danced in the mowing grass.
Ceaseless are locusts; heavy is the air above
the garden, where phlox and strawberry
shrub tinge it Persian-sweet. Clustered
blueberries are drooped upon the mountains,
and in the swamps, sometimes over
quicksands, shows the darkling sheen of
the high-bush huckleberry. The odor of
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_42" id="Page_42">[42]</SPAN></span>the balsam fir is drawn out and spread far
by the heat. Now the pursued brambles
become the blackberry patch. The waste
lands shine yellow with the blooms of the
marching hardhack. It is the triumph of
the sun, and his priest, the white day lily
of the cloistral leaf, worships in fragrance.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_43" id="Page_43">[43]</SPAN></span></p>
<div class="figcenter"> <ANTIMG src="images/illo_043.jpg" width-obs="347" height-obs="239" alt="Chapter VIII" title="Chapter VIII" /></div>
<h2><SPAN name="CHAPTER_VIII" id="CHAPTER_VIII"></SPAN>CHAPTER VIII.<br/> THE MOOD OF AUGUST</h2>
<div class="initial" style="width: 96px;">
<ANTIMG src="images/initial_t.jpg" width-obs="96" height-obs="110" alt="T" title="T" /></div>
<p class="dropcapsection"><span class="firstwords">
<span style="display: none;">T</span>he</span> wild cherries are no longer
garnet; they have darkened
to their harvest and hang in
somber ripeness from the
twig. Drowsy lie the grain
fields and slowly purpling vineyards. The
robin in the apple orchard is hardly to be
seen among the red-fruited boughs from
which the first Astrakhans are dropping.
Days of uncertain suns and exultant growing
are over. A languorous pause has come
to the year. Even the crows, flapping away
across the windy blue, caw in a sleepy
fashion, not yet hoarse with anxiety because
the huskers are hurrying the corn
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_44" id="Page_44">[44]</SPAN></span>to cover with that penurious vigilance
which a crow finds so objectionable. The
rabbits, scampering and wary in the new
clover time, sit out in the hot sun a good
deal now, like convalescent patients; they
will keep this up until the faint noons of
November, storing the warmth that lets
them sleep, come winter, through many a
hunting party overhead. The woodpecker
knocks with less ferocity. Stately on his
favorite dead branch at the lake’s edge the
blue-armored kingfisher sits to watch the
ripple. Only the grasshopper persists with
tragical intensity in his futile rehearsal for
the role of humming bird. A satirical
Italian compares man to the grasshopper,
but no man is capable of such devotion
to baffled aspirations. Practice in grace
makes him more and more imperfect.
Young wood duck, with portentous dignity,
follow their mother down the topaz creek
in single file, an attentive field class, observing
the demented lucky bugs, the red-lined
lily pads of the coves, the turtles sound
asleep on the warm stones. For the wood’s
feathered children this is no month of play
and slumber; it will soon be autumn, and
they must attempt the long flight.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_45" id="Page_45">[45]</SPAN></span>The aspect of the buckwheat fields is
August’s signet. From their goldenrod
borders reaches a world of happy whiteness,
against sky the color of the pickerelweed
flower, waving softly, shadowed only
by the plumy clouds. The corn is out in
topgallant, and if you look from a mountain
path into the planted valley, the écru
tassels have hidden the lustrous ribbon
leaves. Cornfields are never silent. Always
there is a low swish, like that of
little summer waves on a lake shore.</p>
<p>Lavender and purple thistles, brimmed
with nectar, are besought by imperious
bees and the great blue-black butterfly,
but already their pale-lit ships drift, unreturning,
under sealed orders, to some far
harbor in the port of spring. More silvery
still, the milkweed is adrift. Fleets of
white butterflies rise and fall with the sunset
breeze, and slow, twilight moths come
from under the brakes at the hour of dew.
White-flowered, the clematis and wild cucumber,
the creamy honeysuckle of the
amorous fragrance, cover fence rail and
stone wall, give petals to the barren underbrush,
twine fearlessly around barbed wire,
and festoon deserted barns. Healing herbs
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_46" id="Page_46">[46]</SPAN></span>of long ago that once were hung every fall
from attic rafters—the “wild isep,” or
mountain mint, and the gray-blooming
boneset—stand profuse but unregarded in
the lowgrounds. We buy our magic potions
now. Once they were brewed above
the back log, as occasion came. In ferny
shadows glimmers the ivory Indian pipe.
The wild carrot, with delicate insistence,
takes the field.</p>
<p>Ironweed of royal purple, maroon-shot,
mingles in illogical harmony with the blue
vervain and magenta trumpet-weeds. The
note makers name over for us a score of
flowers that Shakespeare meant by “long
purples”; but surely he foresaw our
Northern swamps in August, on fire with
those exuberant, torchlike weeds that rise
tall above the bogs and earn, by their
arresting splendor against a crimson sky,
the need of immortality in song. They
bloom before the katydids begin and survive
the first frost. A few violets—a seed
crop, not intended for men’s gaze, and
hidden cautiously beneath the leaves, are
timidly aflower. They will not go unwed,
but would crave to die obscure.</p>
<p>The last of the new-tasting bough apples
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_47" id="Page_47">[47]</SPAN></span>lie in the orchard grass. The later apple
trees, like the sunning rabbit and the
thought-worn crow, wait for the harvest
moon. Already the unresting twigs are
preparing their winter mail of cork and
gum, which will not be unfastened by the
fiercest assaults of the sleet. Short-stemmed
flowers have arisen to clothe the
sharp wheat stubble. Along the mountain
road grow vagabond peach trees, to whose
fruit cling eager blue wasps, whose aromatic
gum traps many a climbing robber.
Other wanderers from the tended orchard—cruelly
sour plums and rouge-cheeked
pears—growing among the cornel bushes,
drop down for the field mouse and woodchuck
their harvest of the wilderness.
Some of them, companioned by the faithful
phlox and sunflower, once grew in dooryards
now desolate. The surpassing rose
mallow like sunrise lights the marshes.</p>
<p>It is not a month of growth. Fruit and
grain are only expanding—weeks ago the
marvel of formation was complete. It is
the time of warm, untroubled slumber that
ends with the reveille of frost.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_48" id="Page_48">[48]</SPAN></span></p>
<div class="figcenter"> <ANTIMG src="images/illo_048.jpg" width-obs="342" height-obs="244" alt="Chapter IX" title="Chapter IX" /></div>
<h2><SPAN name="CHAPTER_IX" id="CHAPTER_IX"></SPAN>CHAPTER IX.<br/> SUMMER PAUSES</h2>
<div class="initial" style="width: 108px;">
<ANTIMG src="images/initial_w.jpg" width-obs="108" height-obs="110" alt="W" title="W" /></div>
<p class="dropcapsection"><span class="firstwords">
<span style="display: none;">W</span>here</span> the slow creek is putting
out to sea, freighted
with seed and wan leaf,
cardinal-flowers watch the
waters reddened by their
image. Old gold and ocher, the ferns beneath
move listlessly up and down with
the ripple. As spring walks first along
the stream, autumn, too, comes early to
the waterside, to kindle swamp maples
and give the alder colors of onyx. The
lustrous indigo of the silky cornel hangs
there in profusion. Scented white balls
of the river bush have lost their golden
haloes, and even the red-grounded purple
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_49" id="Page_49">[49]</SPAN></span>of the ironweed is turning umber. The
fruited sweetbrier shows rust. Fall’s ancient
tapestry, the browns of decay worked
over with carmine, olive, maroon, and
buff, is being hung, but where the blue
lobelia is clustered in the lowground summer
pauses. A parting sun catches the
clear yellow of curtsying, transfigured
birch leaves, and looks back, waiting, to
give September’s landscape a hesitant farewell.
It seems early to go. Pickerelweed
is azure still. Among the green bogs
the fragrant lady’s-tresses wear the white
timidity of April, and the three petals of
the enameled arrowhead flower are dusty
with gold. But seeds wrapped up in
brown are scattering. Remembrance
yields to prophecy.</p>
<p>The harvesters of grain and grass have
gone, and the tinted stubble is full of
crickets and monotonous cicadas. Now
the crumbling furrow is folded back behind
the plow and corn knives are swinging
close to the solemn pumpkins, for in cornfield,
vineyard, and orchard and in the
squirrel’s domain the last harvests of all
are hastening to ripeness as the sunset
chill gives warning of a disaster foretold
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_50" id="Page_50">[50]</SPAN></span>since August by the katydid. The honey-colored
pippins, cracked and mellow in the
brooding heat, encounter the windfalls of
October’s trees—deepening red, soft yellow,
and polished green. Great, sheltering
leaves are dropping from the burdened
vine. Every breath tells of fruits, drying
herbs, and the late flowers that in deserted
gardens are most pungent in September—marigolds,
tansy, and the cinnamon
pink. Pennyroyal and mint are
betrayed. Thorn apples, not near ripened,
are knocked from the twig by south-bound
birds.</p>
<p>Still, among wine-colored and vermilion
foliage, the acorn is green, though flushed
wintergreen berry and red-gemmed partridge
vine proclaim autumn along the
forest floor. The auburn splendors are
upon the sumac and the burning-bush of
old-fashioned dooryards, where, too, the
smoke tree holds its haze of seeds. Sometimes
a gentian stands erect among dead
grasses—a slim señora with a fringed mantilla
swirled close about her shoulders in
the chilly dusk. The closed gentian keeps
its darkly impenetrable blue beside the
pink-tipped companion stalks of the
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_51" id="Page_51">[51]</SPAN></span>snake’s-head. Fair are the sheathed berries
of the prickly ash—but daggers to the
taste. Often they grow among wild cherries,
which, juiceless now, are sweet as
dried fruits from Persia. And there are
the black nannyberries with their watermelon
flavor, and the first spicy wild
grapes.</p>
<p>Immortelles are bleached paper white
on sandy hills. The nightshade holds
berries of three colors, passing from brilliant
green to clouded amber and deep
crimson lake, and still upon it hangs the
mysterious blue blossom, shunned. Dogwood
boughs are gorgeous as a sunset,
and the thick scarlet clusters droop from
the mountain ash. The last humming
birds haunt tanned honeysuckles. Languid,
but clinging yet to the sun world,
the yellow lily dies on weedy streams. If
the all-conquering goldenrod hangs the
way for summer’s passing with the color
of regret, it has made every meadow El
Dorado with its plumes, sprays, clumps,
and spears. Spray upon delicate spray,
the fairy lavender aster has taken possession
of the roadsides and fields, and before
it, far into the shade, goes the white wood
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_52" id="Page_52">[52]</SPAN></span>aster, mingling with the flamboyant leaves
of dwarf oaks and the glistening red seeds
of the wild turnip. To make September’s
pageant the scented, pale petals of spring,
the drowsy contentedness of summer’s
fulfillment and the Tyrian dyes of fall are
joined.</p>
<p>The pallid clematis, in flower along rail
fences, still hides the blacksnake, chipmunk,
and red squirrel—sometimes even
the unsylphlike woodchuck—but the
marshes and the branches of the lakeside
pines have felt for days past the brief
touch of many a strange bird’s feet as the
vanguard migrants seek regions of longer
days. Finely dressed visitors have come
to the blue-berried juniper and the monstrous
pokeweed of the terra-cotta stem.
The heron breaks his profound meditation
to engulf a meadow frog, for he will not
leave until the wild geese “with mingled
sound of horn and bells” press south above
the watercourses. Starling and blue jay
stay awhile to oblige with their clatter to
the dawn. The fur has thickened on the
woods creatures.</p>
<p>The blind might hear September in the
uproarious arguments of the crow, the
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_53" id="Page_53">[53]</SPAN></span>despondent cries of katydid, tree toad, and
hoot owl. In the air is reluctance, pause.
Flaming festoons of woodbine and poison
ivy begarland the stone wall. Summer
cannot wait. Elegiac purples of the aster
beckon, and the butterfly sleeps long upon
the thistle, but she would not go now, in
the month of the first bittersweet and the
last sweet pea.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_54" id="Page_54">[54]</SPAN></span></p>
<div class="figcenter"> <ANTIMG src="images/illo_054.jpg" width-obs="342" height-obs="267" alt="Chapter X" title="Chapter X" /></div>
<h2><SPAN name="CHAPTER_X" id="CHAPTER_X"></SPAN>CHAPTER X.<br/> WHEN THE OAKS WEAR DAMSON</h2>
<div class="initial" style="width: 96px;">
<ANTIMG src="images/initial_t.jpg" width-obs="96" height-obs="110" alt="T" title="T" /></div>
<p class="dropcapsection"><span class="firstwords">
<span style="display: none;">T</span>he</span> wild ducks are streaming
south upon their journey of
uncounted days. Resting a
little after sunset upon the
cedar-bordered pond, they
are startled into flight again by some hound
hunting in the night, and with beating
wing and eerie cry go on. The later flying
geese rise clamorous from among the cat-tails,
and in silent haste the blue heron
and the pair of sad old cranes that had
roosted in a dead elm alongshore take the
chill, invisible trail. When day comes in
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_55" id="Page_55">[55]</SPAN></span>spreading fire the crows will humorously
watch these wander-birds from the forest
edges. They feel no southward impulse.
Circling the clearing, they comment in
uproar upon the most advisable oak for
their afternoon symposium, expand their
polished feathers, and, seated in a derisive
row, caw a farewell to the wader’s long,
departing legs. Now the mountaineer’s
girl, remembering Old World peasant tales
that never have been told her, hurries indoors
at nightfall from the hallooing specter
of the Wild Huntsman in the clouds, who
is but the anxious leader of the flying
wedge.</p>
<div class="figcenter"><SPAN name="The_Mountaineers_Girl" id="The_Mountaineers_Girl"></SPAN> <ANTIMG src="images/illo_055.jpg" width-obs="365" height-obs="557" alt="Now the Mountaineer’s Girl Hurries Indoors" title="Now the Mountaineer’s Girl Hurries Indoors" /></div>
<p>Buckwheat stubble in October is such
a crimson as no Fiesolan rose garden ever
unfurled. Gray hill slopes of the North
are festal with its color, insistent even
through rains, glowing from rose madder
to maroon. Lower stretches out the pale
yellow of oats stubble, which breaks into
flashing splinters under the noon sun.
The wheat fields show ocher, and darker—burnt
sienna at the roots—lie the reaped
fields of barley. Small rash flowers, fancying
that the ground between the grain
stalks has been cultivated especially for
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_56" id="Page_56">[56]</SPAN></span>them, now that they see the sun freely
again, put on the petals of spring amid
this fair desolation. Strawberry blossoms,
visibly fey, appear; long-stemmed and
scanty-flowered fall dandelions; an ill-timed
display of April’s buttercups. The
blackberry vines go richly dyed—superb
red-velvet settings for the jewels of frost.</p>
<p>Down in the valley, through the wood-smoke
haze, move the slow apple wagons
through the lanes. This is appleland.
Northern Spy and Lemon Pippin are ripe
to cracking; Baldwins will be mellow by
Twelfth-night, the russet at Easter. Gorgeous
and ephemeral hangs the Maiden’s
Blush. The strawberry apples are like
embers on the little trees, rubies of the
orchard. Lady Sweets and Dominies are
respectfully being urged into the cellar,
and for those who will pay to learn the
falseness of this world’s shows the freight
cars are receiving Ben Davises. Sheep-noses,
left often on the boughs, will hold
cold nectar after the black frosts have
killed the last marigold. They lie, dull
red, by the orchard fence in the early
snow, their blunt expression revealing no
secrets. You have to know about them.
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_57" id="Page_57">[57]</SPAN></span>Nothing is more inscrutable than a
sheep-nose.</p>
<p>Fast above the indigo crests stir the
light clouds, harried by the west wind
whereon the hawk floats across the valley.
In the afternoon October’s lover takes the
hill path, mica-gemmed, that leads between
birches of the translucent yellow
leaf and maples still green but wearing
scarlet woodbine like a gypsy’s sash. For
here the sunset lingers till the stars, though
from the valley’s goblet evening has sipped
the waning sunlight like a clear amber
wine. But take at morning the path
through brown lowgrounds, or close along
the wood where frost sleeps late, for here
that flower of desire, the fringed gentian,
grows. Its blue is less mysterious and
deep than the closed gentian’s, and yet
how many name it the cup of autumn
delight!</p>
<p>In the woods where leafless boughs give
them blue sky at last are revealed in
quaint perfection the ferneries of the moss:
palm trees towering higher than a snail’s
house, gallant green plumes with cornelians
at the tip, vast tropical forests spreading
for long inches, gray trailing rivers
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_58" id="Page_58">[58]</SPAN></span>and orange cliffs of lichen, leagues of
delicate jungle lost under a fallen leaf.
A beetle clad in shining mail presses
through the wilderness. A cobalt dragonfly
lights on a shaken palm. Pursuing a
rolling hickory nut, the chipmunk brings
a hurricane—but these are elastic trees.</p>
<p>That same mischief maker, incurably
curious, chases every stranger, shooting
along the stone wall and pausing to peer
out from the crevices with unregenerate
eyes. The handsome but vain woodpecker
pounds at the grub-dowered tree he has
chosen to persecute. Enormously ingenuous,
the wayside cow lumbers reproachfully
out of the path, knocking the grains
of excellent make-believe coffee from the
withered dock. The drumming of a partridge
in his solitary transport sounds
where reddened dogwood glorifies a clump
of firs. Sometimes the kittle pheasant,
hardly at home in our woods, ducks her
head and vanishes in the briers.</p>
<div class="figcenter"><SPAN name="Baldwins_Mellow_by_Twelfth-night" id="Baldwins_Mellow_by_Twelfth-night"></SPAN> <ANTIMG src="images/illo_058.jpg" width-obs="366" height-obs="588" alt="Baldwins Mellow by Twelfth-night" title="Baldwins Mellow by Twelfth-night" /></div>
<p>Now the harvest moon, yellower than
the hunter’s moon of ending autumn or
the strawberry moon that looks upon
June’s roses, rises for husking time. It
is the last harvest; when the corn is in,
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_59" id="Page_59">[59]</SPAN></span>winter comes. Piled, tumbling ears, their
grain set in many a curious pattern, go
by to the sorting floor and crib, with
pumpkins, the satraps of New England,
perched in rickety fashion on the gleaming
load. The mountain ash hangs flamboyant
clusters along the road from the
field. Obedient to the frost, the acorns
are dropping, and the first chestnuts lie,
polished mahogany, in the whitened grass
at sunrise. The shagbark has scattered
its largess, the butternut its dainties in
their staining coats. Against the slopes
the tinted fern patches show bronze, russet,
and pansy brown. Speaking October
and our own purple East, the tall asters,
darkening from lavender to the ultimate
shadowy violet, join the goldenrod. Sumacs
are thronging, with their proudly
blazoned crests; the haw is hung with
Chinese scarlet lanterns; sweetbrier, stem
and leaf, is scented of menthol and spices
of the Orient. The oaks stand regal in
umber and damson. Who that has known
October could ever forget? How quiet the
nights are after frost!</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_60" id="Page_60">[60]</SPAN></span></p>
<div class="figcenter"> <ANTIMG src="images/illo_060.jpg" width-obs="338" height-obs="171" alt="Chapter XI" title="Chapter XI" /></div>
<h2><SPAN name="CHAPTER_XI" id="CHAPTER_XI"></SPAN>CHAPTER XI.<br/> NOVEMBER TRAITS</h2>
<div class="initial" style="width: 98px;">
<ANTIMG src="images/initial_b.jpg" width-obs="98" height-obs="110" alt="B" title="B" /></div>
<p class="dropcapsection"><span class="firstwords">
<span style="display: none;">B</span>y</span> the time November comes
the year is used to the
caprices of the sun and no
longer frantically brings out
flowers for his gaze or hides
them in hurt surprise from his indifference.
Now the year is resigned, untroubled of
hope, far off from impatient April with
her craving and effort. Experienced
month, November waits ready to face the
snows. She wraps up the buds too
warmly for sleet to pierce their overcoats,
comforts the roots in the woods with mats
of wrecked leaves, spreads a little jewelry
of frost as a warning before the black
frosts come, and for all else lives in the
moment. November has been through
this before. But sometimes, in a reverie,
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_61" id="Page_61">[61]</SPAN></span>she delights the blue jays and persistent
wild asters by a day of Indian summer.</p>
<p>There has been a great deal of ill feeling
about Indian summer, and the kinder way
is not to persecute those who have since
youth believed and will maintain forever
that it comes in October. Victims of this
perverted fancy, they will go through life
calling the first hot spell after Labor Day
Indian summer. Every fall one explains
to them that this brief season of perfection
may come as late as Thanksgiving, but
the very next year they will be heard to
murmur, under frostless skies, “Well, we
are having our Indian summer.” Let
them go their indoors way, or follow the
deserting robins down to Paraguay! Indian
summer could just as well come when
the oaks have turned forlorn if it wanted
to. In truth, it comes and goes, by no
means exhausted in a solitary burst of
flaring sumacs, fringed gentians lighted by
frost along the rims, damson-colored alder
leaves and old yellow pumpkins, perilously
exposed among forgotten furrows, now that
the corn is being drawn in. It goes, and
comes again, which is its charm—the one
time of year that cannot be calendared.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_62" id="Page_62">[62]</SPAN></span>There is in all the world a small, choice
coterie of people who like November and
March best of the months, and it must be
admitted that these are often a bit arrogant
about their refined perceptions. They
manage to look down upon the many of
us who prefer the daisy fields to the time
“when hills take on the noble lines of
death.” But whims of the worshiper
steal no splendor from the god. June has
nothing to place beside a moonlit November
night, whose shadow dance of multiform
boughs is never seen through leaves,
while shadows on the snow are hard of
outline, unlike the illusive phantoms running
over autumn’s brown grass. June
has no flowers so quaint, pathetic, and
austere as the trembling weeds of November.
What does the goldenrod, white
with age, care for frost? All winter it will
shake out seeds unthriftily upon the snow,
standing with a calm brotherhood who
have gone beyond dependence on the day.
June’s forests do not take a thousand
colors under a low sun. June’s gray dews
have no magnificence of frost. June’s
incorrigible sparrows are not the brave,
flitting “snowbirds” whose sins we forgive,
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_63" id="Page_63">[63]</SPAN></span>once we hear them chirping in a
blizzard. June is a lyric, November a
hymn.</p>
<p>The squirrels have put away enough nuts
to last through the holidays, and after
that they come out and get something else—no
one ever knows what. They have
gone off with most of the acorns, leaving
the fairies their usual autumn supply of
cupless saucers. No birds worth fighting
with are left, for the crows will not notice
them, so they go for the chipmunks.
Sometimes at the wood’s edge a bird that
came only with the blossoms and that
should long since have gone sits lost, half
grotesque, on a stark twig—spent and
beautiful singer, belated by perversity or
by untimely faintness of wing! The muskrat’s
winter house is ready, but no happy
quiet such as his good citizenship deserves
is in store for him, because soon the trappers
will begin their patrol of the forest,
and his skin, called wild Patagonian ox,
the exquisite new fur, will bring a good
price. Emotional wild geese still pass
overhead in the dawns and sunsets—the
crows can scarcely conceal their amusement:
“What nonsense, to be always
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_64" id="Page_64">[64]</SPAN></span>coming or going!” The crow does not remain
in the pale North simply out of devotion
to us. He is above mortal vicissitudes;
behind his demoniac eye dwells a critique
of humanity which he would not be
bothered to utter if he could. The soul
of the satirist once abode in a crow.</p>
<p>Forsaken nests and rattling reeds along
the stream, pools in the hollows edged
with thin ice, ragged leaves clutched at by
the winds, desperate buds of hepatica and
cowslip where a sloping bank catches
warmth at noon, fences stripped of vines
and ghostly with dead clematis, a few
frozen apples swinging on the top boughs,
trampled fields and pelting rain—and with
it all a grandeur more serene than melancholy.
November’s lovers are not perverse,
declaring this. They see half-indicated
colors and hear low sounds.
They love the mellow light better than
the blaze of rich July, and they are loyal
to November because she speaks in quiet
tones not heard through the eagerness or
snow silence of other months. It is the
sentimentalist who sees only gloom and
the weariness of departure now. November
is ruddier than many a day of spring
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_65" id="Page_65">[65]</SPAN></span>and the sharp air forbids languor. Indian
summer, her gift and our most fleeting
season, is like the autumn ecstasy of the
partridge, passionate and irresistible, but
not ending in despondency because he
knows it will return, and it is like joy in
that it cannot be foreseen nor detained.
The bacchanal may have dreaded November,
not the dryad.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_66" id="Page_66">[66]</SPAN></span></p>
<div class="figcenter"> <ANTIMG src="images/illo_066.jpg" width-obs="340" height-obs="243" alt="Chapter XII" title="Chapter XII" /></div>
<h2><SPAN name="CHAPTER_XII" id="CHAPTER_XII"></SPAN>CHAPTER XII.<br/> THE CHRISTMAS WOODS</h2>
<div class="initial" style="width: 96px;">
<ANTIMG src="images/initial_t.jpg" width-obs="96" height-obs="110" alt="T" title="T" /></div>
<p class="dropcapsection"><span class="firstwords">
<span style="display: none;">T</span>he</span> Southern woods hang
their Christmas trimmings
high. Laurel and rhododendron,
mistletoe and holly,
reach up against the walls of
tinted bark. Our Northern forests trail
greens along the floor, and roped ground
pine, pricking through the prone leaves
or a gentle snow, appears as a procession
of tiny palm trees, come North for the
holiday, surprised and lost, but determined
to keep together. Under the haw bushes
and over spruce roots, wherever shade was
thick last summer, partridge vines twine
red-berried wreaths and the little plants
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_67" id="Page_67">[67]</SPAN></span>of wintergreen flavor and of that wandering
name hold their rubies low on the
mountain side. After the enduring snows
have come, these glimmering fruits will be
requisitioned—dug out by the furry owners
of such plantations on days when even
covered roots seem barren of sap, and nuts
should really be saved awhile longer.
Clumps of sword fern, beaten down by
November rains, are round green mats;
other ferns long ago were brown. But
seldom save in its sunsets and woodlands
has December color. Ponds, fanged
with ice, lie sullen or stir resentfully into
whitecaps. The sky is stony and often
vanishes in brooding fog. Uncloaked, but
courageous in their gray armor, the trees
wait tensely for the intolerable onslaught
of the cold: the blizzard with knives of
sleet.</p>
<p>Over the marshes at the hour of dusk
when the bronze and topaz are quenched
passes the breath of foreboding. December
acknowledges an unpitying fate—anything
may happen. It is not the fireside
month, softly white outdoors and candlelit
within. Time of miracles, it stands expectant,
and the thronging stars of the
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_68" id="Page_68">[68]</SPAN></span>Christmas midnight wear a restless look.
Rutted paths answer harshly to the step.
Delayed snow is a menace in the air, but
lands beyond the cities would be grateful
should it hasten, bringing safety to the
soil and winter peace. Yet snow is a betrayer,
a sheet of paper upon which the
feet of rabbit, mink, and fox write a guide
to their dwellings and to the whole plan
of their days.</p>
<p>Snow for Christmas there must be—on
the lighted trees indoors, on our far-scattered,
similar cards. But save as a
convenience to the reindeer and a compliment
to their driver, who cannot create
his stocking stock unless he is snowbound,
and who must feel sadly languid as he
tears through Florida heavens, city people
would quite willingly manage with alum.
Early in school life, however, comes the
dangerous knowledge that nothing is so
easy to draw as Christmas Eve: a white
hillside, a path of one unchanging curve,
a steeple or a chimney with smoke, a fir
tree or a star. Thus snow eases art for
the credulous who think it white. Glittering
under starlight, shadowed with purple,
lemon, or deep blue as sunset turns to
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_69" id="Page_69">[69]</SPAN></span>evening, taking on daffodil hues at noon,
snow is harder to paint. Fretted with
windy tracery and drawn out into streaming
lines where the gale races along by a
fence, snow is not, on Christmas greetings,
permitted to be seen.</p>
<div class="figcenter"><SPAN name="December_Acknowledges_an_Unpitying_Fate" id="December_Acknowledges_an_Unpitying_Fate"></SPAN>December Acknowledges an Unpitying Fate <ANTIMG src="images/illo_068.jpg" width-obs="361" height-obs="583" alt="December Acknowledges an Unpitying Fate" title="December Acknowledges an Unpitying Fate" /></div>
<p>The first snowstorm of the year should
be sent from Labrador on Christmas Eve
and sprinkled impartially and ornamentally
over all the land. Then, the Yule
atmosphere once provided, the distribution
should be confined to the rural clientele
until the next December, for on streets
the hoar frost is indeed like ashes. But
why, in somber justice, should the far
South pretend to holiday snow at all?
Why not Christmas cards pranked with
live oaks, alligators, lagoons, and other
beauties of an Everglade scene—an inspiring
escape from tradition and sentiment?
For the antlered steeds must
prance above hibiscus flowers as well as
round the Pole. Yet it must seem dull to
hang stockings by a fireplace that needs
fire merely as a decoration and never to
have loved a sleigh!</p>
<p>Abandoned, but still no downcast company,
slanting corn shocks not honored
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_70" id="Page_70">[70]</SPAN></span>with winter shelter stand patient sentinels
in the field. Abandoned they may seem,
yet could you suddenly tip one over there
would be a startled scurrying, for these
are the choice snow-time residences of
field mice, cottontails, weasels, and meadow
moles—not, of course, together in harmony,
but in their separate establishments.
Let the blizzard come; it only
makes warmer a house of cornstalks properly
built, which bears, nevertheless, some
of the dangers of a gingerbread home—passing
cows may feel tempted.</p>
<p>Vermilion heraldry of the wild rose is
waved undimmed. Witch-hazel with her
yellow blossoms, last flowers of the year,
gazes upon the vanquished shrubs about
her with a smile. Why, she will not even
sow her seed until February! There is
plenty of time for hardy petals.</p>
<p>Massed against the stern horizon, the
forest stands an unresponsive gray; entered,
the twigs are seen sleek brown, dark
red, and a fawn soft as the tan orchid.
In towns December shows the iron mood.
But in the open places, where pools of
light and shadow lie, it is a water-color
month, made fine with no gorgeous velvets
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_71" id="Page_71">[71]</SPAN></span>of autumn, but hung with blending veils
of dawn mist and of new snow, so that the
subdued day rises in flushed, drifting
vapors, like April’s awakening, and when
the sun comes, pale, we wonder that there
is no summons in his light.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_72" id="Page_72">[72]</SPAN></span></p>
<div class="figcenter"> <ANTIMG src="images/illo_072.jpg" width-obs="341" height-obs="246" alt="Chapter XIII" title="Chapter XIII" /></div>
<h2><SPAN name="CHAPTER_XIII" id="CHAPTER_XIII"></SPAN>CHAPTER XIII.<br/> LANDSCAPES SEEN IN DREAMS</h2>
<div class="initial" style="width: 96px;">
<ANTIMG src="images/initial_t.jpg" width-obs="96" height-obs="110" alt="T" title="T" /></div>
<p class="dropcapsection"><span class="firstwords">
<span style="display: none;">T</span>he</span> painter of landscapes seen
in dreams must be a memory
that knows fantastic woods
and faery seas all strange to
the waking memory. Or else
the artist is only a weariness with the day
just past that gives us in sleep sight of the
country which, so Mr. Maugham and
other story-tellers say, is the real home
that men may go their whole lives long
without finding, because we are not always
born at home, nor even brought up there,
and we might for years be homesick for a
land unseen. Once beheld, the recognition
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_73" id="Page_73">[73]</SPAN></span>is instant, and in the foreign place begins
a <i>vita nuova</i>—relief and an intensity of
living never known before the new and
familiar harbor came down to meet us at
the shore. So sometimes it is in dreams.
Recurrent and vivid, a scene of sheerest
unreality will take on an earthly air, or
landscapes flamboyantly exotic will hold
the peace denied by every country it has
been our daily fortune to know.</p>
<p>Dream landscapes come back again and
again, as if they waited there forever, substantial,
and we were the transient comers.
Some, in ether dreams, shrink always from
the same green waves, the same black,
open mine, and two have now and then
been found who saw on sleep journeys
places that words repictured curiously
alike. The fantasies may be patchwork
of poems, plays, and paintings long forgotten,
but when they rise in their compelling
fusion they owe no debt to the
lumber attic of the subconscious. The
world they fashion is their own, and they
do offer by their ethereal pathway a compensation
for the insufficiencies of life.</p>
<p>There is a long, uncurving sea strand
whose gray immensity of sands lies smooth
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_74" id="Page_74">[74]</SPAN></span>for miles along the upper beach, but is
feathered near the water by the stroking
of little afterwaves, and draped unendingly
with umber bands of kelp. Here as in
no place seen the seaweed laces are
edged with colors ground in unlighted
depths, as if the tide cast carvings of
lapis lazuli and feldspar up with the argent
pebbles, and all the drifting algæ are incrusted
with yellow shells. Shoreward the
palms climb up until they make a green
horizon, and their unnatural fronds sink
down again like green chiffon that veils
the entrance to the pensive forest. Vines
with scented flowers as intangible as fog
creep over root and trunk, and among them
now and then with soundless foot and
molten eye a leopard winds. Perpetual
sunset wanes and glows behind the palms.
There is never any wind. The violence of
the ocean, the beasts, the tempest, is held
in languorous leash while the treader of the
sands goes on with unfelt steps toward
rocks where the waters break importunate
and sink moaning back. They hang black
above a cave, and waves come in to prowl
and snakes with scales like gems twine
back and forth, glittering in the half light,
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_75" id="Page_75">[75]</SPAN></span>with narcotic and effortless motion, until
they with the rocks and all the scene fade.</p>
<p>A tiny stream, a pixy’s river, slips from
beneath a bowlder in a wood long known,
and leads through thicket, glade, and clearing
to a terrifying land, desolated by ancient
fires and strewn with blackened
stones and charred boughs. The place
itself is athirst, and the dreamer kneels to
drink. The tiny stream is dark, like a deep
water, and bitter cold as if it flowed
through ice. A staff thrust down cannot
sound its depths. A finger’s span across
and bottomless! Nothing could dam its
flow. Old embers at its borders are suddenly
scattered when a gleaming hand
parts the current and waves back toward
the way just traced, but the flame-blasted
firs have closed behind into a forbidding
wall. Other pallid fingers rise from the
portal of the abyss in warning gesture, but
the narrow gulf opens underfoot.</p>
<p>There is a town where gay people in
white dress promenade in a plaza shaded
by orange trees, and they are always humming
tunes. Little white streets lead to
shuttered houses. A glory of buginvillæa
overflows trellis and bower in splendid war
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_76" id="Page_76">[76]</SPAN></span>with the hibiscus hedges and the dropping
yellow fruit. Down the hill and over
cobblestones, pursued by music and laughter,
ministered to by odors of the lemon
blossom, he whom sleep leads here may
go toward a lake of fluent amethyst. The
way is past the market place where brown
women crouch by baskets of brilliant wares
and venders of glistening lizards sit drowsily
bent, and then at a step the forest
dense and brooding is above him and its
low boughs sweep the ripple of the lake.
Immense leaves hang like curtains, and
among them men with unquiet eyes move
and hold monotoned speech while they
hew sparkling rock into monstrous shapes.
They are circling round a pit. They cast
in ornaments of opal and dark gold and
garlands of venomous forest growths, gray
and blood-red, tied with withered vines.
Cries come from the pit, but the chant
never stops.</p>
<p>Marching from a stronghold far up on
a mountain of cedars, men in mail come
at dusk with standards flickering crimson,
fringed with gold, down to a valley full
of blossomed iris where there is a wide
pool with torches at its rim. Their flare
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_77" id="Page_77">[77]</SPAN></span>streams out toward the circling cliffs.
Each marcher dips his silken flag into the
quiet waters, and lights rise upon the
battlements above as one by one all the
black plumes are lost in the meadow’s darkness
and the torches burn low and fall
into the pool.</p>
<p>A garden planted only with dark-red
nasturtiums that lift for the dreamer’s
touch a flower’s velvet cheek lies filmed
with dew and fragrant as a noon breath
from Ceylon spice groves. The miracle of
color is spread along a hillside up to a
high wall of great gray stones, and inside
the gate is a house grown all over with
grapevines, some borne down by blue
clusters with shadowy bloom, some by
clusters of topaz and ripe green. There
is a pond among the grasses, where broad,
wan lilies float, and purple pansies border
all the walks. Very slowly the paneled
door opens and the sun floods the central
hall. It is hung with silver draperies, and
an old woman stands there with a candle,
mumbling and peering in a cataract of
light.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_78" id="Page_78">[78]</SPAN></span></p>
<div class="figcenter"> <ANTIMG src="images/illo_078.jpg" width-obs="342" height-obs="233" alt="Chapter XIV" title="Chapter XIV" /></div>
<h2><SPAN name="CHAPTER_XIV" id="CHAPTER_XIV"></SPAN>CHAPTER XIV.<br/> HIDING PLACES</h2>
<div class="initial" style="width: 95px;">
<ANTIMG src="images/initial_c.jpg" width-obs="95" height-obs="110" alt="C" title="C" /></div>
<p class="dropcapsection"><span class="firstwords">
<span style="display: none;">C</span>hildhood</span> remembers a
secret place—refuge, confessional,
and couch of dreams—where
through the years
that bring the first bewildering
hints of creation’s loneliness he goes
to hide and to rebuild the joyous world
that every now and then is laid in flowery
ruins beneath the trampling necessities of
growing up. These little nooks where we
confronted so many puzzles, wondered over
incomprehension, and looked into the hard
eyes of derision, abide caressingly for
memory, who flies to them still from cities
of dreadful light. The need for those
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_79" id="Page_79">[79]</SPAN></span>small havens is lifelong. They are rarely
at hand in later days, but no locked door
and no walled chamber of the mind can
take their place.</p>
<p>The suns of midsummer, tempered by
spruce boughs, flicker and play upon a
broad-backed rock where fairy pools made
by the late rain in its crannies are frequented
by waxwing and woodpecker, even
though an intruder sleeps upon that
dryad’s couch. Brakes and sweet fern
crowd around it. Tasseled alders are its
curtains. Here one might be forever at
rest. It is to such a place that rebel
wishes turn when the early grass and clover
thicken in the pastures or when the summer
birds begin their slow recessional.
The longing to lie upon a sun-warmed rock
in the woods comes back desperately in
April and October to them who once have
known that place of healing and stillness.</p>
<p>Yellow bells from the wands of circling
forsythia bushes drop into a deep hollow
lined with velvet grass. Pale butterflies
of new-come May flutter among the dandelions
that bejewel this emerald cup of Gæa,
and sometimes drowsy wings are folded
sleepily upon a gold rosette. Light beams
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_80" id="Page_80">[80]</SPAN></span>pass and repass in jubilance over the grass
blades. The sun is enchanted in the clear
yellow of the flowers. Glints, movement,
gayety, and withal peace and silence were
in that place of exultant color and radiant
life. It was a rare spot, and unvisited
save by birds in quest of screening branches
for their nests and perhaps by some one
who hid there and always had to laugh
before he left.</p>
<p>A round space of soft sward is guarded
by strawberry shrub and by the bridal-wreath
spiræa that droops white branches
lowly to the ground. Here you could lie
on a moonlit summer night, with arms
outstretched and face pressed into the soft
grass, and beneath your fingers you could
feel the world turn on and on, immensely,
soothingly, and everlastingly, the only
sound the bats’ wings above, or a baby
robin protesting musically at the slowness
of the night’s divine pace. Here the smell
of the sod is keen and sweet. Here dew
would cool a throbbing brow. Here the
undertones of earth vibrate through the
body, and all its nerves, strung to intense
perception, yet would be wrapped in persuasive
peace.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_81" id="Page_81">[81]</SPAN></span>An old balm-o’-Gilead tree, growing on
a hillside, kindly lets down one mighty
limb as pathway to a leafy hiding place
incomparably remote and dimly lighted
even at noon. The branches make an
armchair far back against the trunk, and
that glossy foliage, always cool, swishes
like waves at low tide. The tree has much
to tell, but never an intrusive word. You
may sit there with a book or in the distracting
company of secret happiness or
tears, and it will ignore you courteously,
going on about its daylong task of gathering
greenness from the sun, and only from
time to time touching your hand with an
inquiring leaf. Sometimes a red squirrel
looks in and departs in shocked fashion
through the air. Sometimes the sheep
pass far below on their way home. But
the refuge is secure, and the balm-o’-Gilead’s
cradling arms wait peacefully to
hold an asking child.</p>
<p>A foamy brown brook that flashes and
dallies, is captured and breaks free again,
down along the mountain has been coaxed
by some wood nymph to furnish sparkling
water for her round rock bath. Dutifully
it pours in every moment its curveting
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_82" id="Page_82">[82]</SPAN></span>freshness, bringing now and then the tribute
of a laurel leaf or a petal from some
flower that bent too close. This bath is
gemmed with glittering quartz and floored
with red and white pebbles. Gray mosses
broider it where the sun lies, and dark
green where the water drips. The nymph
has been at some pains to train the five-finger
ivy and nightshade heavily all about,
and the great brakes carpet the path her
gleaming feet must tread at sunrise.
Now at noon you may come there, troubling
no living drapery, and dangle your
feet over the moss into the dimpling coolness
of that mountain pool. A trout
might dart in, a red lizard appear upon a
ledge, but nothing else. The wild-cherry
clusters hang within reach.</p>
<p>In the corner of a meadow where dispassionate
cows graze and snort scornfully
at the collie who comes to get them
in the late afternoon stands a great red
oak that has somehow inspired the grass
underneath it to grow to tropic heights.
But between two of its wandering ancient
roots is short grass, woven with canary-flowered
cinquefoil vines, and into this
nook you may creep, screened by wind-ruffled
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_83" id="Page_83">[83]</SPAN></span>blades beyond, and taste of the
white wild strawberries that reach their
eerie ripeness in the shade. A woodchuck
may sit up and gaze at you across the
barrier, or a bright-eyed chipmunk scuttle
out on a limb for a better view. They
leave you alone soon, and at twilight even
the cow bell is quiet.</p>
<p>A balsam fir that grows on a bowlder
leaning out halfway down a ravine hospitably
spreads its aromatic boughs flat upon
the rock, after the inviting manner of this
slumber-giving Northern tree. The very
breath of the hills is shed here. It is
almost dark by day, and at night the stars
show yellow above the upper firs. The
wind goes murmuring between gray walls,
and the sound of the stream, far down,
comes vaguely save in the freshet month.
This is the farthest hiding place of all.
Only the daring would find the perilous
way to its solitude.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_84" id="Page_84">[84]</SPAN></span></p>
<div class="figcenter"> <ANTIMG src="images/illo_084.jpg" width-obs="344" height-obs="253" alt="Chapter XV" title="Chapter XV" /></div>
<h2><SPAN name="CHAPTER_XV" id="CHAPTER_XV"></SPAN>CHAPTER XV.<br/> THE PLAY OF LEAVES</h2>
<div class="initial" style="width: 101px;">
<ANTIMG src="images/initial_f.jpg" width-obs="101" height-obs="110" alt="F" title="F" /></div>
<p class="dropcapsection"><span class="firstwords">
<span style="display: none;">F</span>or</span> fox and partridge, fawn
and squirrel—all the wood
dwellers that run or fly—youth,
like the rest of life, is
a time of stress and effort.
They have a short babyhood and little
childhood. Once they begin to move they
must take up for themselves the burden
of those that prey and are preyed upon.
They step from nest or den into a world
in arms against them, and while they
sensibly fail to worry over this, undoubtedly
it complicates their fun. Baby foxes
playing are winsome innocents, but they
have become sly and wary while lambs,
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_85" id="Page_85">[85]</SPAN></span>colts, and calves are still making themselves
admirably ridiculous in fenced meadows.
And neither hunter, hawk, nor
wildcat makes allowances for the youth
and inexperience of debutante game.</p>
<p>It is different with little leaves. They
are as playful as kittens, with their dances,
poses, flutters, their delicate bursts of glee.
Unless involved with flowers, or with timber
or real estate, they are safe, not alone
in winter babyhood, but through spring
and summer, that minister to them with
baths of dew and rain and with the somnolent
wine of the sun. Only when old
age has brought weariness with winds and
heat, and even with the drawing of sap,
are they confronted by their enemy, frost.
You will say, caterpillars, forest fires, but
they are the fault of man and an unanticipated
flaw in nature’s plan for letting
the leaves off easily. We brought foreign
trees that had their own mysterious protection
at home into lands where that
immunity vanished, and so the chestnut
has left us, and apple and rose are threatened
by foes whom their mother had not
foreseen. Were it not for man’s mistakes
the leaves would have had an outrageously
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_86" id="Page_86">[86]</SPAN></span>gay time by comparison with the darkling
lives of the creatures that move among
them and beneath them.</p>
<p>All winter long in its leaf bud the baby
tulip leaf drowses, curled up tight. It is
completely ready to spring full formed
into the light as soon as the frost line has
been driven back by the triumphant lances
of the sun, and there it dips and laughs
and nods, and sometimes goes quite wild
when a running breeze comes by at the
hour wherein morning makes opals of
July’s heavy dew. The poplars, the
maidenhair trees, shake out spangles then.
The maples show their silver sides. Always
the forest lives and breathes,
but when the new leaves come it draws
long, shuddering breaths of delight.
Whoever has dwelt with trees knows how
differently the small leaves of May talk
from the draped and weighted boughs of
August.</p>
<p>Stepping along the rustling wood road,
you can hear the reveries of the leaves
around you. They whisper and sigh in
youth; they reach out to touch the friendly
stranger’s cheek. In summer they hang
their patterned curtains tenderly about
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_87" id="Page_87">[87]</SPAN></span>him, in a silence made vocal only by a
teasing gale. In autumn they are loud
beneath his tread. Snow alone can hush
them. When they are voiceless they are
dead at last, but already their successors,
snugly cradled and blanketed with cotton,
are being rocked to sleep upon the twigs.</p>
<p>The rippling, shimmering birch upon a
wind-stroked hill talks with falling cadence,
like a chant. The naiad willow, arching
lowland brooks, speaks as water, very
secretly. The oak could not be silent,
with his story of many days to tell, and
keeping his leaves throughout the snow
time, his speech is perpetual. Only the
pines and kindred evergreens are now and
then melancholy, as if the new needles and
leaves looked down upon the carpet below,
forever thickened, of those whose hold
grew faint. Leaves of cherry and apple,
born into a world of tinted blossoms, are
gay to the last. The sprays of locust
leaves that keep their yellow-green until
the sober tree flowers into clustered fragrance
of white, arboreal sweet peas whisper
by night and day of the bats and tree
toads that dwell in their channeled and
vine-loved bark. The sycamore’s voice is
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_88" id="Page_88">[88]</SPAN></span>cool-toned and light, but the mountain ash
murmurs low, and low the beech.</p>
<p>Watching leaves adrift on November
winds, there comes the memory of Stevenson’s
song of another ended life—of days
they “lived the better part. April came
to bloom and never dim December
breathed its killing chill.” But the tree
that wore them, standing in stripped
starkness that month—if stark means
strong—shall enter dazzling splendors
when the days of ice storms come. That
miracle of lucent grayness, an elm in the
morning sun, when every branch and every
smallest twig is cased in ice outdoes its
green enchantments of June. It is more
beautiful than a tree of coral. It is the
color of pussy willows made to shine. It
is as gray as sunrise cobwebs on the grass,
as starlight on dew. Its branches, tossed
by January, clash sword on delicate sword,
or, left quiet, the elm stands like a pensive
dancer and swings against one another
long strands of crystal beads. And in the
city little ice-sheathed maples along an
avenue, glistening under white arc lights,
surpass the changing lusters of gray
enamel. Trees robed in ice are the very
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_89" id="Page_89">[89]</SPAN></span>home of light, of fire frozen fast in water
and turned pale.</p>
<p>Between the going and coming of the
leaves the sky is background for the cunning
lacework of twigs. Were it always
May, we should never see how finely
wrought is the loom upon which those
leafy embroideries are woven. In autumn
the design is more austere, the colors show
more somber, but when the March branches
flush with sap, and the buds, waking,
put forth hesitant green fingers, that infinitely
complex tracery of the twigs is a
spring charm as moving as the perfume
of the thorn. Outlined against a sunset,
it foretells in beauty the months when the
leaf chorus will sound with the birds’.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_90" id="Page_90">[90]</SPAN></span></p>
<div class="figcenter"> <ANTIMG src="images/illo_090.jpg" width-obs="342" height-obs="251" alt="Chapter XVI" title="Chapter XVI" /></div>
<h2><SPAN name="CHAPTER_XVI" id="CHAPTER_XVI"></SPAN>CHAPTER XVI.<br/> THE BROWN FRONTIER</h2>
<div class="initial" style="width: 116px;">
<ANTIMG src="images/initial_o.jpg" width-obs="116" height-obs="110" alt="O" title="O" /></div>
<p class="dropcapsection"><span class="firstwords">
<span style="display: none;">O</span>ne</span> warm March noon a
hushing wing is lifted from
the piping nest of earth.
Voices of forest floor, tree
trunk, and lowground break
forth, never to be silent again until Thanksgiving
weather finds a muted world.
Croon and murmur from the swaying
grasses, brief lyrics from the top of the
thorn, a sunrise chant from the bee tree,
rise and fall through all the hours of dew
and light, intense in the sun-rusted fields,
climbing to an ecstatic swan song when
frosts hover close. Whoever walks through
middle realms of the woods, never lying
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_91" id="Page_91">[91]</SPAN></span>on the mosses nor winning to skyward
branches of the trees, has not shared the
earth’s most ardent life—the pensive songs
a bird sings merely for himself; his impulsive,
goalless flights; and rarer still the
industry and traffic at the roots of growth:
the epic of the ground.</p>
<p>Cricket follows pickering frog and
cicada cricket. That earliest invisible
singer asks only a little warmth in the
waters of the pond to melt the springs of
frozen song. He comes with lady’s-tresses,
pussy willows, and unfurling lily
pads. The cricket, sleepy-voiced in the
August afternoon, grows gay at twilight,
and does his best when the firefly and bat
are abroad, darting out from the creeper-veiled
bark and setting sail upon the
placid air. Locusts play persistently a
G string out of tune until, when the first
goldenrod peers above the yarrow, the
overwhelming night chorus of the katydids
is heard, lifted bravely again and
again within the domains of autumn, not
quenched before the bittersweet berry and
the chestnut fling open portals and surrender
to the cold.</p>
<p>Little they know of trees who have not
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_92" id="Page_92">[92]</SPAN></span>seen spruce and larches against the deep
October sky, looking straight up from a
yielding club-moss pillow. The outlines
and colors of the quiet branches are shown
most memorably upon the vault of that
arching lapis-lazuli roof, draped with floating
chiffon of the clouds. Climb up among
the boughs, and the carven quality is gone.
They are dim and soft. You must go
close to earth to behold tree-top forms.
The supine view is magical.</p>
<p>Revealed in uncanny splendor by the
death of verdure, brilliant and evil fungi
come from the dark mold in fall, orange
and copper, vermilion and cinnabar, dwelling
as vampires upon trees brought low.
Some wear the terra-cotta of the alert
little lizards that, inquisitive as squirrels,
will lift their heads from bark or stone
and give back gaze for gaze. As leaves
that came from the sap of roots go back
to the roots in ashes, so ants take care
that fallen oaks shall be transformed into
the soil from which young oaks will spring,
and brown dust, when they have ended,
is all that abides of the tallest tree. Among
them pass the bobbing, glistening beetles.
This immortal and thronging activity of
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_93" id="Page_93">[93]</SPAN></span>the loam can be heard, if you bend low
enough and listen long.</p>
<p>When the air is frost-clear fairy landscapes,
hidden since spring came with
mists and masking leaves, rise with an
effect of unbeheld creation. Small pools
appear, and avenues among the bracken
that still wave banners of chestnut and
old gold. The lonely homes of ground-nesting
birds grow visible. Trinkets are
scattered as the forest makes ready for
night—tiny cones, abandoned snail shells,
and feathers which the woodpecker and
oriole dropped when they took leave.
The sun dapples with yellow the partridge
haunts where once drooped films of maidenhair
fern.</p>
<p>The home that the squirrel built for his
summer idyl is shattered by the winds
aloft and falls to earth with other finished
things. The feathery wrack of cat-tails
sails the waters and is hung upon the
grasses of the marsh. Fallow fields spread
a tangle of livid stems, but jewels lie in
the wood road, for berries, the last harvest,
are shaken down by bird gleaners
from vine and shrub, where they hang in
festal plenty, so that all hardy creatures
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_94" id="Page_94">[94]</SPAN></span>that do not fly from winter to the South
or to an underground Nirvana may here
find reward. Dark blue beads drop from
the woodbine. The rose keeps her carmine
caskets, full of other roses; but the
bayberry is generous with dove-gray pebble
seeds. Witch-hazel, reversing seasons like
the eccentric trout—who, after all, probably
enjoys the solitude at the stream-heads
after the other fish have gone—sends
wide her mysterious fusillade, and
that, too, finds its aim in the floor of the
forest.</p>
<p>Life more remote than that of snowfield
or jungle, beneath our tread, guarded from
our glances and our hearing unless we
seek it out, the subtle cycles of the soil
go on everlastingly, alien even to those
who know in intimacy the meadows and
the woods. Vigorously though it toils,
there is a peace in the vision of continuity
delicately given. Most of the singers in
the mowing grass live for a day, yet next
morning the song ascends unbroken. Here
on the frontier between the world of the
air and that within the earth passports
are granted back and forth—the red lily
is summoned from the depths; the topmost
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_95" id="Page_95">[95]</SPAN></span>acorn, lifting its cup toward the sky,
obediently falls and passes through the
dark barrier, to return when the life-call
bids. Steadily go on arrival and departure.
The gorgeous lichen is hung upon
the rotting log. White rue rises and white
snows sink. Fire demons split the rocks,
and after them in a thousand years comes
bloodroot. Floods rush down, and windflowers
and cities follow; and leisurely,
another spring, the gates that received
them part, and a legion of new cowslips
marches out.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_96" id="Page_96">[96]</SPAN></span></p>
<div class="figcenter"> <ANTIMG src="images/illo_096.jpg" width-obs="341" height-obs="352" alt="Chapter XVII" title="Chapter XVII" /></div>
<h2><SPAN name="CHAPTER_XVII" id="CHAPTER_XVII"></SPAN>CHAPTER XVII.<br/> FAR ALTARS</h2>
<div class="initial" style="width: 101px;">
<ANTIMG src="images/initial_g.jpg" width-obs="101" height-obs="110" alt="G" title="G" /></div>
<p class="dropcapsection"><span class="firstwords">
<span style="display: none;">G</span>uarded</span> by treacherous
green marshes whose murmuring
rushes will close without
a change of cadence over
the despair of the unwarned,
in August there lives a scene of tender and
appealing beauty. The languid creek,
turned the color of iron rust with
its plunder—spoil of the wild and impractical
fertility of the roots of bog and
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_97" id="Page_97">[97]</SPAN></span>bracken—pauses in a pool that shows now
brown, now sorrel, now satiny green as the
clouds wait or hasten above and the
supple rushes lean back and forth. This
is the tourney field of gorgeous dragonflies.
Emerald, gold, and amethyst, they
hold resplendent play, sparkling above the
water like magnets of light, causing the
placid depths to shimmer, and drawing
the minnows from their sunlit rest. Even
the bird-dog does not know this pool. No
messenger more personal than a prowling
shot comes there from man.</p>
<p>It is a sturdy conceit that wonders why
Nature should spend her freshest art on
treasure scenes she decrees invisible, as if
the mother of mountains, tempests, deserts,
toiled anxiously for the approval of a
particular generation, keeping one eye on
Mr. Gray and the other on Mr. Emerson
in the hope that they will justify her flower
blushing unseen and her excusable rhodora.
Nature is far too unmoral to bother about
rendering economists an account for her
spendthrift loveliness. She willfully deserts
the imitation Sicilian garden, though
she would be well paid to stay, and rollicks
in the jungle, clothing magnificently the
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_98" id="Page_98">[98]</SPAN></span>useless snake and leopard, dressing their
breakfast in paradise plumes, puzzling
Victorian poets, and badly scaring the
urban manicurist, who returns after her
first country vacation with decided views
concerning the cheerful humanity of streets
compared with lodges in the wilderness.</p>
<p>Were Nature careworn and personal,
where should we turn for consolation or
rest? Hers is the tonic gift of a strength
that, underlying all life, does not pity or
praise. As in the Cave of the Winds the
most restless spirit surely might find peace,
so in the eternal changefulness of the
forest under the touch of forces fierce or
serene we find the soul of quiet because
the powers at work are beyond our control,
control us utterly, hold us in an immense
and soothing grasp where thought
and energy are fused and contend no more.
So those who live upon the ocean come
to possess that which they will not barter
for ease, and so the timber cruiser shortens
his visit to town. They would not tell
what they gain who relinquish readily the
things for which others pour out their
years upon the ground that commerce may
grow. It is because words are not fashioned
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_99" id="Page_99">[99]</SPAN></span>to speak what shapes the wind takes,
the motion whereby mists climb after the
sun out of ravines, or how the tropic
orchids lift at daybreak among their fragrant
shadows wings of ivory and fawn
that drooped against ferny trunks.</p>
<p>Many days must bloom and fade between
you and the sound of human voices
before, in the wilderness, there can be
surrender to the giant arms that forever
hold the body, and to the spirit, supreme
and unemotional, that has sped beyond
the utmost outposts the mind ever reached.
But after the homecoming—when the confused
echoes of a swarming, blind humanity
are lost in the exalted quiet of wide
spaces—the vast impersonality of woods
and plains, swamps, hills, and sea, takes
on a tenderness more deep than lies in
human gift and a glorious hostility that
calls to combat without grudge or motive,
ennobling because it gives no mercy;
challenges alike the craft of man and the
strength of the hills.</p>
<p>The exuberant fancy of a less earnest
day made air and fire the dwellings of
creatures formed like ourselves, and,
though immortal, shod with lightning,
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_100" id="Page_100">[100]</SPAN></span>guarded from common sight, they were
afflicted with our own vexations, our loves
and hates. Nymph and naiad, faun and
satyr, were always plotting and gossiping,
and little better were the subsequent
gnomes and fairies—more personal and
cantankerous than persons; resorting upon
occasion to divorce; tangling skeins, and
teasing kind old horses. These were not
the earth deities.</p>
<p>Earth deities wear no human shape.
No one has looked upon the sky fire’s face,
the pinions of the gale. Enormously they
have wrought, without regard for man and
sharing no passion, yet yielding sometimes
their limitless force to the mind
that soared with them. In the age of
winged serpents, in the days when Assyria
was mistress, they were the same, holding
an equal welcome for the boy and sage,
unchanging and unresting, free from mortal
attributes of good and evil, mighty and
healing as no half-human god could be.
Therefore that lavish scattering of beauty
without regard to man. Therefore the
wonder given to all who dare call to them
when far from other men.</p>
<p>The disrepute of the pathetic fallacy has
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_101" id="Page_101">[101]</SPAN></span>come from making the forest sentimental.
Sentient beyond all doubt its lovers
know it is. Even as water visibly rebels,
warring with headlands and leaping after
the wind, and as it slumbers dimpling and
caresses the swimmer, so the woodlands
are solemn and aloof, or breathe to give
the open-hearted their vast serenity. The
nymph or fairy rises at the bidding of
imagination, but the everlasting deities of
the elements, past our reckoning elder
than they, need no fiction. They are
presences, and accord communion. They
can be gentle as the twilight call of quail.
They can be indifferent and gigantic as the
prairie fire and typhoon. But they brood
to-day as yesterday over cities that they
will not enter, but which sometimes they
destroy. They march above mountain
ridges and loiter among flowered laurel,
impartial as nothing else is, and in their
dispassionate companionship supremely
consoling, offering for playthings the ripple
and the gleam.</p>
<p class="theend">THE END</p>
<SPAN name="endofbook"></SPAN>
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