<h2><SPAN name="XLVIII" id="XLVIII"></SPAN>XLVIII</h2>
<p class="caption">JANUARY DAYS</p>
<p>In these midwinter days, how muffled
is the earth in its immaculate raiment, so
disguised in whiteness that familiar places
are strange, rough hollows smoothed to
mere undulations, deceitful to the eye
and feet, and level fields so piled with
heaps and ridges that their owners
scarcely recognize them. The hovel is
as regally roofed as the palace, the rudest
fence is a hedge of pearl, finer than a
wall of marble, and the meanest wayside
weed is a white flower of fairyland.</p>
<p>The woods, which frost and November
winds stripped of their leafy thatch, are
roofed again, now with an arabesque of
alabaster more delicate than the green
canopy that summer unfolded, and all
the floor is set in noiseless pavement,
traced with a shifting pattern of blue
shadows. In these silent aisles the
echoes are smothered at their birth.<span class="pagenum">[230]</span>
There is no response of airy voices to
the faint call of the winter birds. The
sound of the axe-stroke flies no farther
than the pungent fragrance of the smoke
that drifts in a blue haze from the
chopper's fire. The report of the gun
awakes no answering report, and each
mellow note of the hound comes separate
to the ear, with no jangle of reverberations.</p>
<p>Fox and hound wallow through the
snow a crumbling furrow that obliterates
identity of either trail, yet there are
tracks that tell as plain as written words
who made them. Here have fallen,
lightly as snowflakes, the broad pads of
the hare, white as the snow he trod;
there, the parallel tracks of another winter
masker, the weasel, and those of the
squirrel, linking tree to tree. The leaps
of a tiny wood-mouse are lightly marked
upon the feathery surface to where there
is the imprint of a light, swift pinion on
either side, and the little story of his
wandering ends—one crimson blood
drop the period that marks the finis.</p>
<p>In the blue shadow at the bottom of
that winding furrow are the dainty footprints<span class="pagenum">[231]</span>
of a grouse, and you wonder why
he, so strong of wing, should choose to
wade laboriously the clogging snow even
in his briefest trip, rather than make
his easy way through the unresisting
air, and the snow-written record of his
wayward wanderings tells not why.
Suddenly, as if a mine had been sprung
where your next footstep should fall and
with almost as startling, though harmless
effect, another of his wild tribe
bursts upward through the unmarked
white floor and goes whirring and clattering
away, scattering in powdery ruin
the maze of delicate tracery the snowfall
wrought; and vanishes, leaving only
an aerial pathway of naked twigs to mark
his impetuous passage.</p>
<p>In the twilight of an evergreen thicket
sits a great horned owl like a hermit in
his cell in pious contemplation of his
own holiness and the world's wickedness.
But this recluse hates not sin,
only daylight and mankind. Out in the
fields you may find the white-robed brother
of this gray friar, a pilgrim from
the far north, brooding in the very face
of the sun, on some stack or outlying<span class="pagenum">[232]</span>
barn, but he will not suffer you to come
so near to him as will this solemn anchorite
who stares at you unmoved as a
graven image till you come within the
very shadows of his roof.</p>
<p>Marsh and channel are scarcely distinguishable
now but by the white domes
of the muskrats' winter homes and here
and there a sprawling thicket or button
bush, for the rank growth of weeds is
beaten flat, and the deep snow covers it
and the channel ice in one unbroken
sheet.</p>
<p>Champlain's sheltered bays and coves
are frozen and white with snow or frost,
and the open water, whether still or
storm-tossed, black beneath clouds or
bluer than the blue dome that arches it,
looks as cold as ice and snow. Sometimes
its steaming breath lies close
above it, sometimes mounts in swaying,
lofty columns to the sky, but always
cold and ghostly, without expression of
warmth or life.</p>
<p>So far away to hoary peaks that shine
with a glittering gleam against the blue
rim of the sky, or to the furthest bluegray
line of woodland that borders the<span class="pagenum">[233]</span>
horizon, stretches the universal whiteness,
so coldly shines the sun from the
low curve of his course, and so chilly
comes the lightest waft of wind from
wheresoever it listeth, that it tasks the
imagination to picture any land on all
the earth where spring is just awakening
fresh life, or where summer dwells amid
green leaves and bright flowers, the music
of birds and running waters, and of
warm waves on pleasant shores, or autumn
yet lingers in the gorgeousness of
many hues. How far off beyond this
world seems the possibility of such seasons,
how enduring and relentless this
which encompasses us.</p>
<p>And then, at the close of the brief
white day, the sunset paints a promise
and a prophecy in a blaze of color on the
sky. The gray clouds kindle with red
and yellow fire that burns about their
purple hearts in tints of infinite variety,
while behind them and the dark blue
rampart of the mountains flames the last
glory of the departing sun, fading in a
tint of tender green to the upper blue.
Even the cold snow at our feet flushes
with warm color, and the eastern hills<span class="pagenum">[234]</span>
blush roseate against the climbing, darkening
shadow of the earth.</p>
<p>It is as if some land of summer whose
brightness has never been told lay unveiled
before us, its delectable mountains
splendid with innumerable hues,
its lakes and streams of gold rippling to
purple shores seeming not so far before
us but that we might, by a little journey,
come to them.<span class="pagenum">[235]</span></p>
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