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<h2> CHAPTER III </h2>
<p>"All that thou see'st is Natures handiwork;<br/>
Those rocks that upward throw their mossy brawl<br/>
Like castled pinnacles of elder times;<br/>
These venerable stems, that slowly rock<br/>
Their towering branches in the wintry gale;<br/>
That field of frost, which glitters in the sun,<br/>
Mocking the whiteness of a marble breast!<br/>
Yet man can mar such works with his rude taste,<br/>
Like some sad spoiler of a virgin's fame."<br/>
—Duo.<br/></p>
<p>Some little while elapsed ere Marmaduke Temple was sufficiently recovered
from his agitation to scan the person of his new companion. He now
observed that he was a youth of some two or three and twenty years of age,
and rather above the middle height. Further observation was prevented by
the rough overcoat which was belted close to his form by a worsted sash,
much like the one worn by the old hunter. The eyes of the Judge, after
resting a moment on the figure of the stranger, were raised to a scrutiny
of his countenance. There had been a look of care visible in the features
of the youth, when he first entered the sleigh, that had not only
attracted the notice of Elizabeth, but which she had been much puzzled to
interpret. His anxiety seemed the strongest when he was en joining his old
companion to secrecy; and even when he had decided, and was rather
passively suffering himself to be conveyed to the village, the expression
of his eyes by no means indicated any great degree of self-satisfaction at
the step. But the lines of an uncommonly prepossessing countenance were
gradually becoming composed; and he now sat silent, and apparently musing.
The Judge gazed at him for some time with earnestness, and then smiling,
as if at his own forgetfulness, he said:</p>
<p>"I believe, my young friend, that terror has driven you from my
recollection; your face is very familiar, and yet, for the honor of a
score of bucks' tails in my cap, I could not tell your name."</p>
<p>"I came into the country but three weeks since," returned the youth
coldly, "and I understand you have been absent twice that time."</p>
<p>"It will be five to-morrow. Yet your face is one that I have seen; though
it would not be strange, such has been my affright, should I see thee in
thy winding-sheet walking by my bedside to-night. What say'st thou, Bess?
Am I compos mentis or not? Fit to charge a grand jury, or, what is just
now of more pressing necessity, able to do the honors of Christmas eve in
the hall of Templeton?"</p>
<p>"More able to do either, my dear father." said a playful voice from under
the ample inclosures of the hood, "than to kill deer with a smooth-bore."
A short pause followed, and the same voice, but in a different accent,
continued. "We shall have good reasons for our thanksgiving to night, on
more accounts than one."</p>
<p>The horses soon reached a point where they seemed to know by instinct that
the journey was nearly ended, and, bearing on the bits as they tossed
their heads, they rapidly drew the sleigh over the level land which lay on
the top of the mountain, and soon came to the point where the road
descended suddenly, but circuitously, into the valley.</p>
<p>The Judge was roused from his reflections, when he saw the four columns of
smoke which floated above his own chimneys. As house, village, and valley
burst on his sight, he exclaimed cheerfully to his daughter:</p>
<p>"See, Bess, there is thy resting-place for life! And thine too, young man,
if thou wilt consent to dwell with us."</p>
<p>The eyes of his auditors involuntarily met; and, if the color that
gathered over the face of Elizabeth was contradicted by the cold
expression of her eye, the ambiguous smile that again played about the
lips of the stranger seemed equally to deny the probability of his
consenting to form one of this family group. The scene was one, however,
which might easily warm a heart less given to philanthropy than that of
Marmaduke Temple.</p>
<p>The side of the mountain on which our travellers were journeying, though
not absolutely perpendicular, was so steep as to render great care
necessary in descending the rude and narrow path which, in that early day,
wound along the precipices. The negro reined in his impatient steeds, and
time was given Elizabeth to dwell on a scene which was so rapidly altering
under the hands of man, that it only resembled in its outlines the picture
she had so often studied with delight in childhood. Immediately beneath
them lay a seeming plain, glittering without in equality, and buried in
mountains. The latter were precipitous, especially on the side of the
plain, and chiefly in forest. Here and there the hills fell away in long,
low points, and broke the sameness of the outline, or setting to the long
and wide field of snow, which, without house, tree, fence, or any other
fixture, resembled so much spot less cloud settled to the earth. A few
dark and moving spots were, however, visible on the even surface, which
the eye of Elizabeth knew to be so many sleighs going their several ways
to or from the village. On the western border of the plain, the mountains,
though equally high, were less precipitous, and as they receded opened
into irregular valleys and glens, or were formed into terraces and hollows
that admitted of cultivation. Although the evergreens still held dominion
over many of the hills that rose on this side of the valley, yet the
undulating outlines of the distant mountains, covered with forests of
beech and maple, gave a relief to the eye, and the promise of a kinder
soil. Occasionally spots of white were discoverable amidst the forests of
the opposite hills, which announced, by the smoke that curled over the
tops of the trees, the habitations of man and the commencement of
agriculture. These spots were sometimes, by the aid of united labor,
enlarged into what were called settlements, but more frequently were small
and insulated; though so rapid were the changes, and so persevering the
labors of those who had cast their fortunes on the success of the
enterprise, that it was not difficult for the imagination of Elizabeth to
conceive they were enlarging under her eye while she was gazing, in mute
wonder, at the alterations that a few short years had made in the aspect
of the country. The points on the western side of this remarkable plain,
on which no plant had taken root, were both larger and more numerous than
those on its eastern, and one in particular thrust itself forward in such
a manner as to form beautifully curved bays of snow on either side. On its
extreme end an oak stretched forward, as if to overshadow with its
branches a spot which its roots were forbidden to enter. It had released
itself from the thraldom that a growth of centuries had imposed on the
branches of the surrounding forest trees, and threw its gnarled and
fantastic arms abroad, in the wildness of liberty. A dark spot of a few
acres in extent at the southern extremity of this beautiful flat, and
immediately under the feet of our travellers, alone showed by its rippling
surface, and the vapors which exhaled from it, that what at first might
seem a plain was one of the mountain lakes, locked in the frosts of
winter. A narrow current rushed impetuously from its bosom at the open
place we have mentioned, and was to be traced for miles, as it wound its
way toward the south through the real valley, by its borders of hemlock
and pine, and by the vapor which arose from its warmer surface into the
chill atmosphere of the hills. The banks of this lovely basin, at its
outlet, or southern end, were steep, but not high; and in that direction
the land continued, far as the eye could reach, a narrow but graceful
valley, along which the settlers had scattered their humble habitations,
with a profusion that bespoke the quality of the soil and the comparative
facilities of intercourse, Immediately on the bank of the lake and at its
foot, stood the village of Templeton. It consisted of some fifty
buildings, including those of every description, chiefly built of wood,
and which, in their architecture, bore no great marks of taste, but which
also, by the unfinished appearance of most of the dwellings, indicated the
hasty manner of their construction, To the eye, they presented a variety
of colors. A few were white in both front and rear, but more bore that
expensive color on their fronts only, while their economical but ambitious
owners had covered the remaining sides of the edifices with a dingy red.
One or two were slowly assuming the russet of age; while the uncovered
beams that were to be seen through the broken windows of their second
stories showed that either the taste or the vanity of their proprietors
had led them to undertake a task which they were unable to accomplish. The
whole were grouped in a manner that aped the streets of a city, and were
evidently so arranged by the directions of one who looked to the wants of
posterity rather than to the convenience of the present incumbents. Some
three or four of the better sort of buildings, in addition to the
uniformity of their color, were fitted with green blinds, which, at that
season at least, were rather strangely contrasted to the chill aspect of
the lake, the mountains, the forests, and the wide fields of snow. Before
the doors of these pretending dwellings were placed a few saplings, either
without branches or possessing only the feeble shoots of one or two
summers' growth, that looked not unlike tall grenadiers on post near the
threshold of princes. In truth, the occupants of these favored habitations
were the nobles of Templeton, as Marmaduke was its king. They were the
dwellings of two young men who were cunning in the law; an equal number of
that class who chaffered to the wants of the community under the title of
storekeepers; and a disciple of Aesculapius, who, for a novelty, brought
more subjects into the world than he sent out of it. In the midst of this
incongruous group of dwellings rose the mansion of the Judge, towering
above all its neighbors. It stood in the centre of an inclosure of several
acres, which was covered with fruit-trees. Some of the latter had been
left by the Indians, and began already to assume the moss and inclination
of age, therein forming a very marked contrast to the infant plantations
that peered over most of the picketed fences of the village. In addition
to this show of cultivation were two rows of young Lombardy poplars, a
tree but lately introduced into America, formally lining either side of a
pathway which led from a gate that opened on the principal street to the
front door of the building. The house itself had been built entirely under
the superintendence of a certain Mr. Richard Jones, whom we have already
mentioned, and who, from his cleverness in small matters, and an entire
willingness to exert his talents, added to the circumstance of their being
sisters' children, ordinarily superintended all the minor concerns of
Marmaduke Temple. Richard was fond of saying that this child of invention
consisted of nothing more nor less than what should form the groundwork of
every clergyman's discourse, viz., a firstly and a lastly. He had
commenced his labors, in the first year of their residence, by erecting a
tall, gaunt edifice of wood, with its gable toward the highway. In this
shelter for it was little more, the family resided three years. By the end
of that period, Richard had completed his design. He had availed himself,
in this heavy undertaking, of the experience of a certain wandering
eastern mechanic, who, by exhibiting a few soiled plates of English
architecture, and talking learnedly of friezes, entablatures, and
particularly of the composite order, had obtained a very undue influence
over Richard's taste in everything that pertained to that branch of the
fine arts. Not that Mr. Jones did not affect to consider Hiram Doolittle a
perfect empiric in his profession, being in the constant habit of
listening to his treatises on architecture with a kind of indulgent smile;
yet, either from an inability to oppose them by anything plausible from
his own stores of learning or from secret admiration, Richard generally
submitted to the arguments of his co-adjutor. Together, they had not only
erected a dwelling for Marmaduke, but they had given a fashion to the
architecture of the whole county. The composite order, Mr. Doolittle would
contend, was an order composed of many others, and was intended to be the
most useful of all, for it admitted into its construction such alterations
as convenience or circumstances might require. To this proposition Richard
usually assented; and when rival geniuses who monopolize not only all the
reputation but most of the money of a neighborhood, are of a mind, it is
not uncommon to see them lead the fashion, even in graver matters. In the
present instance, as we have already hinted, the castle, as Judge
Templeton's dwelling was termed in common parlance, came to be the model,
in some one or other of its numerous excellences, for every aspiring
edifice within twenty miles of it.</p>
<p>The house itself, or the "lastly," was of stone: large, square, and far
from uncomfortable. These were four requisites, on which Marmaduke had
insisted with a little more than his ordinary pertinacity. But everything
else was peaceably assigned to Richard and his associate. These worthies
found the material a little too solid for the tools of their workmen,
which, in General, were employed on a substance no harder than the white
pine of the adjacent mountains, a wood so proverbially soft that it is
commonly chosen by the hunters for pillows. But for this awkward dilemma,
it is probable that the ambitious tastes of our two architects would have
left us much more to do in the way of description. Driven from the faces
of the house by the obduracy of the material, they took refuge in the
porch and on the roof. The former, it was decided, should be severely
classical, and the latter a rare specimen of the merits of the Composite
order.</p>
<p>A roof, Richard contended, was a part of the edifice that the ancients
always endeavored to conceal, it being an excrescence in architecture that
was only to be tolerated on account of its usefulness. Besides, as he
wittily added, a chief merit in a dwelling was to present a front on
whichever side it might happen to be seen; for, as it was exposed to all
eyes in all weathers, there should be no weak flank for envy or
unneighborly criticism to assail. It was therefore decided that the roof
should be flat, and with four faces. To this arrangement, Marmaduke
objected the heavy snows that lay for months, frequently covering the
earth to a depth of three or four feet. Happily the facilities of the
composite order presented themselves to effect a compromise, and the
rafters were lengthened, so as to give a descent that should carry off the
frozen element. But, unluckily, some mistake was made in the admeasurement
of these material parts of the fabric; and, as one of the greatest
recommendations of Hiram was his ability to work by the "square rule," no
opportunity was found of discovering the effect until the massive timbers
were raised on the four walls of the building. Then, indeed, it was soon
seen that, in defiance of all rule, the roof was by far the most
conspicuous part of the whole edifice. Richard and his associate consoled
themselves with the relief that the covering would aid in concealing this
unnatural elevation; but every shingle that was laid only multiplied
objects to look at. Richard essayed to remedy the evil with paint, and
four different colors were laid on by his own hands. The first was a
sky-blue, in the vain expectation that the eye might be cheated into the
belief it was the heavens themselves that hung so imposingly over
Marmaduke's dwelling; the second was what he called a "cloud-color," being
nothing more nor less than an imitation of smoke; the third was what
Richard termed an invisible green, an experiment that did not succeed
against a background of sky. Abandoning the attempt to conceal, our
architects drew upon their invention for means to ornament the offensive
shingles.</p>
<p>After much deliberation and two or three essays by moonlight, Richard
ended the affair by boldly covering the whole beneath a color that he
christened "sunshine," a cheap way, as he assured his cousin the Judge, of
always keeping fair weather over his head. The platform, as well as the
caves of the house, were surmounted by gaudily painted railings, and the
genius of Hiram was exerted in the fabrication of divers urns and
mouldings, that were scattered profusely around this part of their labors.
Richard had originally a cunning expedient, by which the chimneys were
intended to be so low, and so situated, as to resemble ornaments on the
balustrades; but comfort required that the chimneys should rise with the
roof, in order that the smoke might be carried off, and they thus became
four extremely conspicuous objects in the view.</p>
<p>As this roof was much the most important architectural undertaking in
which Mr. Jones was ever engaged, his failure produced a correspondent
degree of mortification At first, he whispered among his acquaintances
that it proceeded from ignorance of the square rule on the part of Hiram;
but, as his eye became gradually accustomed to the object, he grew better
satisfied with his labors, and instead of apologizing for the defects, he
commenced praising the beauties of the mansion-house; he soon found
hearers, and, as wealth and comfort are at all times attractive, it was,
as has been said, made a model for imitation on a small scale. In less
than two years from its erection, he had the pleasure of standing on the
elevated platform, and of looking down on three humble imitators of its
beauty. Thus it is ever with fashion, which even renders the faults of the
great subjects of admiration.</p>
<p>Marmaduke bore this deformity in his dwelling with great good-nature, and
soon contrived, by his own improvements, to give an air of respectability
and comfort to his place of residence. Still, there was much of in
congruity, even immediately about the mansion-house. Although poplars had
been brought from Europe to ornament the grounds, and willows and other
trees were gradually springing up nigh the dwelling, yet many a pile of
snow betrayed the presence of the stump of a pine; and even, in one or two
instances, unsightly remnants of trees that had been partly destroyed by
fire were seen rearing their black, glistening columns twenty or thirty
feet above the pure white of the snow, These, which in the language of the
country are termed stubs, abounded in the open fields adjacent to the
village, and were accompanied, occasionally, by the ruin of a pine or a
hemlock that had been stripped of its bark, and which waved in melancholy
grandeur its naked limbs to the blast, a skeleton of its former glory. But
these and many other unpleasant additions to the view were unseen by the
delighted Elizabeth, who, as the horses moved down the side of the
mountain, saw only in gross the cluster of houses that lay like a map at
her feet; the fifty smokes that were curling from the valley to the
clouds; the frozen lake as it lay imbedded in mountains of evergreen, with
the long shadows of the pines on its white surface, lengthening in the
setting sun; the dark ribbon of water that gushed from the outlet and was
winding its way toward the distant Chesapeake—the altered, though
still remembered, scenes of her child hood.</p>
<p>Five years had wrought greater changes than a century would produce in
countries where time and labor have given permanency to the works of man.
To our young hunter and the Judge the scene had less novelty; though none
ever emerge from the dark forests of that mountain, and witness the
glorious scenery of that beauteous valley, as it bursts unexpectedly upon
them, without a feeling of delight. The former cast one admiring glance
from north to south, and sank his face again beneath the folds of his
coat; while the latter contemplated, with philanthropic pleasure, the
prospect of affluence and comfort that was expanding around him; the
result of his own enterprise, and much of it the fruits of his own
industry.</p>
<p>The cheerful sound of sleigh-bells, however, attracted the attention of
the whole party, as they came jingling up the sides of the mountain, at a
rate that announced a powerful team and a hard driver. The bushes which
lined the highway interrupted the view, and the two sleighs were close
upon each other before either was seen.</p>
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