<h2><SPAN name="XXXVI" id="XXXVI"></SPAN>XXXVI</h2>
<p class="caption">A COMMON EXPERIENCE</p>
<p>The keenest of the sportsman's disappointments
is not a blank day, nor a
series of misses, unaccountable or too
well accountable to a blundering hand or
unsteady nerves, nor adverse weather,
nor gun or tackle broken in the midst of
sport, nor perversity of dogs, nor uncongeniality
of comradeship, nor yet even
the sudden cold or the spell of rheumatism
that prevents his taking the field
on the allotted morning.</p>
<p>All these may be but for a day. To-morrow
may bring game again to haunts
now untenanted, restore cunning to the
awkward hand, steady the nerves, mend
the broken implement, make the dogs
obedient and bring pleasanter comrades
or the comfortable lonesomeness of one's
own companionship, and to-morrow or
next day or next week the cold and<span class="pagenum">[173]</span>
rheumatic twinges may have passed into
the realm of bygone ills.</p>
<p>For a year, perhaps for many years,
he has yearned for a sight of some beloved
haunt, endeared to him by old
and cherished associations. He fancies
that once more among the scenes of
his youthful exploits there will return to
him something of the boyish ardor, exuberance
of spirit and perfect freedom
from care that made the enjoyment of
those happy hours so complete. He
imagines that a draught from the old
spring that bubbles up in the shadow of
the beeches or from the moss-brimmed
basin of the trout brook will rejuvenate
him, at least for the moment while its
coolness lingers on his palate, as if he
quaffed Ponce de Leon's undiscovered
fountain. He doubts not that in the
breath of the old woods he shall once
more catch that faint, indescribable, but
unforgotten aroma, that subtle savor of
wildness, that has so long eluded him,
sometimes tantalizing his nostrils with a
touch, but never quite inhaled since its
pungent elixir made the young blood
tingle in his veins.<span class="pagenum">[174]</span></p>
<p>He has almost come to his own again,
his long-lost possession in the sunny
realm of youth. It lies just beyond the
hill before him, from whose crest he
shall see the nut-tree where he shot his
first squirrel, the southing slope where
the beeches hide the spring, where he
astonished himself with the glory of
killing his first grouse, and he shall see
the glint of the brook flashing down the
evergreen dell and creeping among the
alder copses.</p>
<p>He does not expect to find so many
squirrels or grouse or trout now as thirty
years ago, when a double gun was a wonder,
and its possession the unrealized
dream of himself and his comrades, and
none of them had ever seen jointed rod
or artificial fly, and dynamite was uninvented.
Yet all the game and fish
cannot have been driven from nor exterminated
in haunts so congenial and
fostering as these, by the modern horde
of gunners and anglers and by the latter-day
devices of destruction, and he
doubts not that he shall find enough to
satisfy the tempered ardor of the graybeard.<span class="pagenum">[175]</span></p>
<p>Indeed, it is for something better than
mere shooting or fishing that he has
come so far. One squirrel, flicking the
leaves with his downfall, one grouse
plunging to earth midway in his thunderous
flight, one trout caught as he can
catch him, now, will appease his moderate
craving for sport, and best and most
desired of all, make him, for the nonce, a
boy again. He anticipates with quicker
heartbeat the thrill of surprised delight
that choked him with its fullness when
he achieved his first triumph.</p>
<p>At last the hilltop is gained, but what
unfamiliar scene is this which has taken
the place of that so cherished in his
memory and so longed for? Can that
naked hillside slanting toward him from
the further rim of the valley, forlorn in
the desolation of recent clearing, be the
wooded slope of the other day? Can
the poor, unpicturesque thread of water
that crawls in feeble attenuation between
its shorn, unsightly banks be the wild,
free brook whose voice was a continual
song, every rod of whose amber and silver
course was a picture? Even its fringes of
willow and alders, useful for their shade<span class="pagenum">[176]</span>
and cover when alive, but cut down
worthless even for fuel, have been swept
from its margin by the ruthless besom of
destruction, as if everything that could
beautify the landscape must be blotted
out to fulfill the mission of the spoiler.</p>
<p>Near it, and sucking in frequent
draughts from the faint stream, is a
thirsty and hungry little sawmill, the
most obtrusive and most ignoble feature
of the landscape, whose beauty its
remorseless fangs have gnawed away.
Every foot of the brook below it is foul
with its castings, and the fragments of
its continual greedy feasting are thickly
strewn far and near. Yet it calls to the
impoverished hills for more victims; its
shriek arouses discordant echoes where
once resounded the music of the brook,
the song of birds, the grouse's drum call,
and the mellow note of the hound.</p>
<p>Though sick at heart with the doleful
scene, the returned exile descends to his
harried domain hoping that he may yet
find some vestige of its former wealth,
but only more disappointments reward
his quest. Not a trout flashes through
the shrunken pools. The once limpid<span class="pagenum">[177]</span>
spring is a quagmire among rotting
stumps. The rough nakedness of the
hillside is clad only with thistles and
fireweed, with here and there a patch of
blanched dead leaves, dross of the old gold
of the beech's ancient autumnal glory.</p>
<p>Of all he hoped for nothing is realized,
and he finds only woful change, irreparable
loss. His heart heavy with sorrow
and bursting with impotent wrath
against the ruthless spoiler, he turns his
back forever on the desolated scene of
his boyhood's sports.</p>
<p>Alas! That one should ever attempt
to retouch the time-faded but beautiful
pictures that the memory holds.<span class="pagenum">[178]</span></p>
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