<h2><SPAN name="page161"></SPAN><span class="pagenum"></span>CHAPTER XV</h2>
<p><span class="smcap">Good Friday</span>, a heavy fall of snow
and winter come again. The ground is white, the sky dull
gray, the lake a dark, bluish green flecked with windrows of
snow. It is more than a week since I have walked on the
ice. It bids fair to be two weeks before I can cross in a
boat. At this rate the ice will never break—I had to
chop out the water hole again this morning. This waiting
for the ice to go out is like waiting for a child to be born, and
it seems almost as solemn. It induces a calm, philosophic,
not to say fatalistic, viewpoint. You can’t hurry it,
you can’t stop it, you can’t do anything at all about
it. You can only wait.</p>
<p>Again, as in the fall when the ice was forming, there is that
strange blanket of silence over the island. There’s
not a rustle in the dry leaves, not a bird’s voice, not
even the scraping of a hanging bough. The ice field is
growing darker, wetter, and cracking into long lines that form
geometric figures—squares, triangles,
trapezoids—until the lake’s surface looks like a
gigantic spider’s web. For <SPAN name="page162"></SPAN><span class="pagenum"></span>movement
there is only the water along the shores, creeping up over the
stones.</p>
<p>The evening was cold and gray, with a rising wind that
whistled up the rain. In the night came both the former and
the latter rains and all other rains between; then Easter Day,
warm and blue and beautiful. As the Easter lesson sank into
my heart, along with the still beauty of sky and sun and waking
life, the first butterfly, emblem of the resurrection, came forth
from his winter sleeping place and fluttered to and fro among the
yellow tassels of the birches.</p>
<p>The years remaining may be many or few for me, but to
life’s end I shall hope to keep some measure of the joy of
that one Easter day. I pray that I may always remember the
tender blue of the arching sky, the white of the wisps of
floating cloud, the gray purple of the spring haze lying over the
forests; its silence and its peace. Looking out over the
breaking ice, I remembered the story of two boys who lost their
lives in the lake only last summer. They were forlorn
little fellows, held in bondage by a stupid, tyrannical
father. They had never seen anything that boys
love—neither a circus, nor a picture, nor had ever heard a
band. <SPAN name="page163"></SPAN><span class="pagenum">p.
163</span>They had never been allowed to go even to Frontenac,
the county seat, ten miles away. All they knew about was
work and heavy sleep and now and then a beating. But they
were boys after all, and one bright day they slipped away from
the harvest field and went to the lake to go afishing.
Hearing footsteps and fearing their father’s anger, they
tried to escape it. The younger boy jumped into a rotting
punt at the shore and pushed off on the water. The elder
hid behind a rock.</p>
<p>Out on the lake the old punt filled and began to sink.
The little fellow, seeing that he was going down and knowing that
he could not swim, called out:</p>
<p>“Good-by, Charley; Good-by, good-by,” his piping
child’s voice sang over the water.</p>
<p>The elder boy heard him and plunged in to his aid. Both
went down, and when, at last, the grappling hooks brought up the
bodies, the brothers were locked in one another’s arms.</p>
<p>A commonplace story, isn’t it? Such accidents
happen almost every day—somewhere. There’s
nothing at all in it but childish joy in freedom, dread of
punishment, terror, then love and sacrifice, and, crowning all,
<SPAN name="page164"></SPAN><span class="pagenum"></span>heroic
death. I think of them not as “saints in glory”
but as happy youngsters, trudging, hand in hand the streets of
the Eternal City; seeing, hearing, tasting all the joys that life
denied them here.</p>
<p>Resigned to the thought of days and weeks of solitude, I was
surprised by the sound of a long halloo coming from the direction
of Blake’s Point.</p>
<p>It was Henry, standing on the extreme end of his land and
calling over to me. His was the first voice I had heard for
days.</p>
<p>“Come down to your point,” he yelled.</p>
<p>Scrambling through the underbrush, sliding from rock to rock,
plowing through bogs, wading through patches of snow, I reached
the shore, to see Jimmie Dodd, trotting cautiously across the ice
dragging his little hand-sled, while Henry directed his way from
the point. The sled held loaves of bread, a pat of fresh
butter—a great bag of mail and a box of candy and
fruit—the Easter greeting from home. The water was
flowing all round the shore; Jimmie could not come within many
feet of the island, but I waded out on the shelving sand and
Jimmie crept as near the edge of the ice as he dared and tossed
the <SPAN name="page165"></SPAN><span class="pagenum"></span>bags
to me across the open water. Then he trotted back again to
the farm and I returned to the house to enjoy my feast alone.</p>
<p>Day followed day, slipping by swiftly, silently. The
first phœbe has come back and is twitching his tail and
screaming his “Phœbe, phœbe,
phœbe,” all day long.</p>
<p>Across the sky, in V-shaped wedges, the geese are flying
over. From ever so far I can hear their
“honk-honk,” telling me why the April moon is the
Goose moon.</p>
<p>The woodchuck, that lives in a hole by the sundial, comes out
and waddles slowly down to the lake’s edge to dip his black
muzzle in the water. He turns his rat’s face up to
the sky, glancing hurriedly from side to side, his little pig
eyes rolling, the white ring of hairs surrounding his snout
standing like a ruff. He is so fat that his short legs
hardly lift his red-brown breast off the ground, and his bushy
tail drags as he goes. He walks with a rolling waddle, like
a bear. His gray-brown coat is dry and dusty.</p>
<p>There are hundreds of wide-open clam shells lying on the sand
under the water, pearl side up. They are the shape and
almost the size of the soles of a pair of baby’s
shoes. <SPAN name="page166"></SPAN><span class="pagenum">p.
166</span>When I turned over the skiff, that has lain on the
shore all winter, there was a muskrat’s nest under
it. The animal had scooped out a hole in the beach, and a
pile of clam shells showed that he had feasted well.</p>
<p>But though all these other small animals are coming out, I am
forlorn, for Peter, the rabbit, has disappeared! Up and
down the island I have gone, calling him, but he does not come
hopping to my feet. No one will acknowledge having shot
him; indeed, it would be a hard-hearted hunter that would kill so
gentle and so trusting a creature. So either the hounds got
him or he felt the call of the spring and wandered away to the
woods full of fresh green. I prefer to think he did that,
but I miss him cruelly.</p>
<p>Here, as in Kipling’s Jungle, spring is the time of new
smells. All winter there were some good smells—the
odor of far-off forest fires; the fragrance of fresh-cut logs;
the not unpleasing, pungent scent of Blake’s cow stable,
that came over the ice to me on the crisp, frosty air, but now
there is a very riot of perfume. The rotting leaves, the
barks of trees, the swamps and even the rocks themselves, give
forth an incense. The poplars <SPAN name="page167"></SPAN><span class="pagenum"></span>and the birches shake out sweetness
from their waving tassels, the new green fringes of the
evergreens are fragrant, soon will come the odors from wild
cherry, basswood, and wild grape in flower, and the scents of the
new ferns, and then I shall go quite wild with delight and shall
long to shout my joy to heaven, as Rufus, the red squirrel, is
doing now. Far out on a birch limb, in the sun, he is
clucking and chirping away, his plumy tail waving, his whole
little tense, rust-colored body jerking as he gives tongue to his
spring ecstasy.</p>
<p>Rufus is not always so harmlessly employed. He and the
phœbes wage perpetual war over a nestful of eggs under the
eaves. One or other of the small householders must stand
ever on guard against the red robber that goes like a flash along
the beam. What fluttering of wings, what scampering of tiny
feet, what chattering there is! But the birds will win,
they put the squirrel to flight every time.</p>
<p>Once again I heard a call from Blake’s point. This
time it was Mary, out looking for new-born lambs. Her
voice, borne on the wet wind, came clear over the water between
us:</p>
<p>“How are you getting along?”</p>
<p><SPAN name="page168"></SPAN><span class="pagenum">p.
168</span>“Oh, not too bad,” I shouted in the
vernacular.</p>
<p>“We think the ice will go out this week.”</p>
<p>“Never,” I screamed. “At this rate it
will last until June.”</p>
<p>“Well, I don’t think it. We tried to get
over to Jackson’s yesterday, and the middle of the lake was
opening so fast we could not make it.”</p>
<p>“I’ll go to the shore every day at noon, and let
you see that I am alive,” I promised.</p>
<p>“All right,” she answered. “Hang out a
white cloth if there’s anything really wrong, and
we’ll try to get over to you somehow.”</p>
<p>And away went Mary, a lamb in her arms, the ewe bleating at
her heels.</p>
<p>Then came a day of warm rain, followed by a high wind from the
south, that drove the breaking ice before it and piled great
masses of glistening white fragments on all the beaches.
And, sure enough, on the next Sunday, the eleventh, Henry Blake
and Jimmie Dodd came across in a boat, the first I had seen in
the water for four months.</p>
<p>That morning, when I looked out, instead of the solid floor of
ice that I had seen so long, there was a great stretch of dark
and tumbling <SPAN name="page169"></SPAN><span class="pagenum">p.
169</span>water, over which two white gulls wheeled and
dipped. For an instant I was startled. I felt as
though the island had somehow slipped its moorings and was being
washed away. Then I realized that the ice was gone and, so
far as I am concerned, gone forever, and that the winter, with
its bitter nights, its long quiet days, its flash of sunlight on
silver surfaces, became as the memory of a dream.</p>
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