<h2><SPAN name="XXVI" id="XXVI"></SPAN>XXVI</h2>
<p class="caption">A VOYAGE IN THE DARK</p>
<p>A few days ago, a friend who is kind
and patient enough to encumber himself
with the care of a blind man and a boy
took me and my twelve-year-old a-fishing.
It was with a fresh realization of my deprivation
that I passed along the watery
way once as familiar as the dooryard path,
but now shrouded for me in a gloom
more impenetrable than the blackness of
the darkest night. I could only guess at
the bends and reaches as the south wind
blew on one cheek or the other, or on my
back, only knowing where the channel
draws near the shore upon which the Indians
encamped in the old days by the
flutter of leaves overbearing the rustle of
rushes. By the chuckle of ripples under
the bow, I guessed when we were in mid-channel;
by the entangled splash of an
oar, when we approached the reedy border
where the water-lilies rode at anchor,<span class="pagenum">[119]</span>
and discharged their subtle freight
of perfume as they tossed in our wake.
I knew by his clatter, drawing nearer
only with our progress, that a kingfisher
was perched on a channel-side fishing-stake,
used in turn by him and bigger
but not more skillful fishers. I heard
his headlong plunge, but whether successful
or not the ensuing clatter did not tell
me, for he has but one voice for all expressions.
Yet as his rattling cry was
kept up till the rough edge of its harshness
was worn away in receding flight,
I fancied he was proclaiming an unusually
successful achievement. For the
sake of his reputation, he would never
make such a fuss over a failure, unless
he was telling, as we do, of the big fish
he just missed catching. At any rate, I
wished him good luck, for who would begrudge
a poor kingfisher such little fish
as he must catch! They would need
years of growth to make them worth our
catching or bragging over the loss of, and
by that time we may be done with fishing.</p>
<p>Suddenly there was a roar of multitudinous
wings as a host of redwings upburst<span class="pagenum">[120]</span>
from springing and swaying wild
rice stalks, all of which I saw through
the blackness illumined for an instant
by memory,—the dusky cloud uprising
like the smoke of an explosion, the bent
rice springing up beneath its lifted burden,
the dull-witted or greedy laggards
dribbling upward to join the majority.
My companions exclaimed in one voice at
the rare sight of a white bird in the flock,
and by the same light of memory I also
saw it as I saw one in an autumn forty
years ago, when, with my comrade of
those days, I came "daown the crik"
duck-shooting, or trolling as to-day.
Again and again we saw this phenomenal
bird like a white star twinkling through
a murky cloud. The fitful gleam was
seen day after day, till the north wind
blew him and his cloud away southward.</p>
<p>The pother of the blackbirds overhead
disturbed the meditations of a bittern,
who, with an alarmed croak, jerked his
ungainly form aloft in a flurry of awkward
wing-beats, and went sagging
across the marshes in search of safer
seclusion. I wished that he might find
it, and escape the ruthless gunners that<span class="pagenum">[121]</span>
will presently come to desolate these
marshes. Very different from his uprising
was that of a pair of wood ducks,
revealing their unsuspected presence
with startling suddenness, as they sprang
from water to air with a splash and
whistle of rapid wings and their squeaking
alarm cry, and then flew swiftly
away, the sibilant wing-beats pulsing out
in the distance. These, too, I wished
might safely run the gauntlet of all the
guns that will be arrayed against them
when the summer truce is broken. If
I had not been mustered out, or if my
boy were mustered in, no doubt I should
feel differently toward the inhabitants
of these marshes. Compulsory abstinence
makes one exceedingly virtuous,
and because I am virtuous there shall be
no cakes and ale for any one.</p>
<p>The absence of the rail's cackle was
noticeable, a clamor that used to be
provoked at this season by every sudden
noise. We never got sight of the
"ma'sh chickens" as they skulked
among the sedges; and when the birds
were pressed to flight, rarely caught
more than a fleeting glimpse as they<span class="pagenum">[122]</span>
topped the rushes for an instant, and
dropped again into the mazes of the
marsh. But they were always announcing
a numerous if invisible presence
where now not one answered to our
voices or the noise of our oars.</p>
<p>All this while our trolling gear was in
tow: the boy's a "phantom minnow"
bristling with barbs, a veritable porcupine
fish; mine a fluted spoon. The
larger fish seemed attracted by the better
imitation, or perhaps age and experience
had given them discernment to
shun the other more glaring sham, and
the best of them went to the boy's score;
but the unwise majority of smaller fish
were evidently anxious to secure souvenir
spoons of Little Otter, and in consequence
of that desire I was "high
hook" as to numbers. They were only
pickerel at best, though some of them,
bearing their spots on a green ground,
are honored with the name of "maskalonge"
by our fishermen. A scratch of
the finger-nail across the scaly gill-cover
gives proof enough to convince even a
blind man of the worthlessness of this
claim to distinction.<span class="pagenum">[123]</span></p>
<p>Once I enjoyed an exaltation of spirit
only to suffer humiliation. There was
a tug at the hooks, so heavy that my
first thought was of a snag, and I was
on the point of calling out to my friend
to stop rowing. Then there was a
slight yielding, and the tremor that tells
unmistakably of a fish. "Now," said I,
with my heart but a little way back of
my teeth, "I am fast to something like
a fish, but I shall never be able to boat
him. He is too big to lift out with
the hooks, and I can't see to get him by
the gills, and so I shall lose him." As
he came in slowly, stubbornly fighting
against every shortening inch of line, I
almost wished he had not been hooked
at all only to be lost at last. When,
after a time, my fish was hauled near
the boat and in sight of my companions,
my catch proved to be no monster, but
a pickerel of very ordinary size hooked
by the belly, and so my hopes and fears
vanished together.</p>
<p>I think distances are magnified to the
blind, for it seemed twice as far as it did
of old from the East Slang to the South<span class="pagenum">[124]</span>
Slang, as we passed these oddly named
tributaries of Little Otter.</p>
<p>At last I sniffed the fragrance of
cedars and heard the wash of waves on
the southward-slanted shore of Garden
Island, and these informed me we were
at the lake. In confirmation thereof
was the testimony of my companions,
given out of their light to my darkness,
of an eagle's royal progress through his
ethereal realm, making inspection of his
disputed earthly possession. I was glad
to know that his majesty had escaped
the republican regicides who haunt the
summer shores.</p>
<p>We made a difficult landing on the
mainland, on the oozy shore of mixed
sawdust and mud, and followed the old
trail to the old camping ground under
the rocks, a place full of pleasant memories
for the elder two of our trio, and offering
to the boy the charms of freshness
and discovery. For him the cliff towered
skyward but little below the eagle's
flight; its tiny caves were unexplored
mysteries, their coral-beaded curtains of
Canada yew and delicate netting of
mountain-fringe strange foreign growths.<span class="pagenum">[125]</span>
Through his undimmed eyes I had
glimpses of those happy shores whereon
the sun always shines and no cloud
arises beyond. What a little way behind
they seem in the voyage that has
grown wearisome, and yet we can never
revisit them for a day nor for an hour,
and it is like a dream that we ever dwelt
there.</p>
<p>Bearing with us from this port something
not marketable nor even visible,
yet worth carrying home, we reëmbarked,
and the wind, blowing in my
face, informed me we were homeward
bound. One after another, we passed
five boats of fishing parties tied up at as
many stakes, the crews pursuing their
pastime with steadfast patience, as their
intent silence proclaimed. To me they
were as ships passed in the night. I
had no other knowledge of them than
this, except that my friend told me there
was a fat woman in each boat, and that
one of them boasted to us, with motherly
pride, of a big pickerel caught by her
little girl.</p>
<p>A blended hum of bumblebees droned
in among us, and my companions remarked<span class="pagenum">[126]</span>
that one of the aerial voyagers
had boarded our craft, while I maintained
there were two, which proved to
be the fact; whereupon I argued that
my ears were better than their eyes, but
failed to convince them or even myself.
I welcomed the bees as old acquaintances,
who, in the duck-shooting of past
years, always used to come aboard and
bear us company for awhile, rarely alighting,
but tacking from stem to stern on a
cruise of inspection, till at last, satisfied
or disappointed, they went booming out
of sight and hearing over marshfuls of
blue spikes of pickerel weed and white
trinities of arrowhead. I cannot imagine
why bees should be attracted to the barrenness
of a boat, unless by a curiosity
to explore such strange floating islands,
though their dry wood promises neither
leaf nor bloom.</p>
<p>I hear of people every year who forsake
leafage and bloom to search the
frozen desolation of the polar north for
the Lord knows what, and I cease to
wonder at the bees, when men so waste
the summers that are given them to enjoy
if they will but bide in them.<span class="pagenum">[127]</span></p>
<p>We passed many new houses of the
muskrats, who are building close to the
channel this year in prophecy of continued
low water. But muskrats are
not infallible prophets, and sometimes
suffer therefor in starvation or drowning.
The labor of the night-workers was suspended
in the glare of the August afternoon,
and their houses were as silent as
if deserted, though we doubted not there
were happy households inside them, untroubled
by dreams of famine or deluge,
or possibly of the unmercifulness of
man, though that seems an abiding terror
with our lesser brethren. Winter
before last the marshes were frozen to
the bottom, blockading the muskrats in
their houses, where entire families perished
miserably after being starved to
cannibalism. Some dug out through
the house roofs, and wandered far across
the desolate wintry fields in search of
food. Yet nature, indifferent to all
fates, has so fostered them since that
direful season that the marshy shores
are populous again with sedge-thatched
houses.</p>
<p>As we neared our home port we met<span class="pagenum">[128]</span>
two trollers, one of whom lifted up
for envious inspection a lusty pickerel.
"He's as big as your leg," my friend
replied to my inquiry concerning its
dimensions, and in aid of my further inquisitiveness
asked the lucky captor how
much the fish would weigh. "Wal, I
guess he ought to weigh abaout seven
pounds," was answered, after careful
consideration. We learned afterwards
that its actual weight was nine pounds,
and I set that man down as a very honest
angler.</p>
<p>Presently our boat ran her nose into
the familiar mire of well-named Mud
Landing, and we exchanged oars for
legs, which we plied with right good
will, for a thunderstorm was beginning
to bellow behind us.<span class="pagenum">[129]</span></p>
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