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<h2> XVIII. COUNTRY SCENES </h2>
<p>It is impossible to say at what age a New England country-boy becomes
conscious that his trousers-legs are too short, and is anxious about the
part of his hair and the fit of his woman-made roundabout. These harrowing
thoughts come to him later than to the city lad. At least, a generation
ago he served a long apprenticeship with nature only for a master,
absolutely unconscious of the artificialities of life.</p>
<p>But I do not think his early education was neglected. And yet it is easy
to underestimate the influences that, unconsciously to him, were expanding
his mind and nursing in him heroic purposes. There was the lovely but
narrow valley, with its rapid mountain stream; there were the great hills
which he climbed, only to see other hills stretching away to a broken and
tempting horizon; there were the rocky pastures, and the wide sweeps of
forest through which the winter tempests howled, upon which hung the haze
of summer heat, over which the great shadows of summer clouds traveled;
there were the clouds themselves, shouldering up above the peaks, hurrying
across the narrow sky,—the clouds out of which the wind came, and
the lightning and the sudden dashes of rain; and there were days when the
sky was ineffably blue and distant, a fathomless vault of heaven where the
hen-hawk and the eagle poised on outstretched wings and watched for their
prey. Can you say how these things fed the imagination of the boy, who had
few books and no contact with the great world? Do you think any city lad
could have written "Thanatopsis" at eighteen?</p>
<p>If you had seen John, in his short and roomy trousers and ill-used straw
hat, picking his barefooted way over the rocks along the river-bank of a
cool morning to see if an eel had "got on," you would not have fancied
that he lived in an ideal world. Nor did he consciously. So far as he
knew, he had no more sentiment than a jack-knife. Although he loved
Cynthia Rudd devotedly, and blushed scarlet one day when his cousin found
a lock of Cynthia's flaming hair in the box where John kept his fishhooks,
spruce gum, flag-root, tickets of standing at the head, gimlet,
billets-doux in blue ink, a vile liquid in a bottle to make fish bite, and
other precious possessions, yet Cynthia's society had no attractions for
him comparable to a day's trout-fishing. She was, after all, only a single
and a very undefined item in his general ideal world, and there was no
harm in letting his imagination play about her illumined head. Since
Cynthia had "got religion" and John had got nothing, his love was tempered
with a little awe and a feeling of distance. He was not fickle, and yet I
cannot say that he was not ready to construct a new romance, in which
Cynthia should be eliminated. Nothing was easier. Perhaps it was a
luxurious traveling carriage, drawn by two splendid horses in plated
harness, driven along the sandy road. There were a gentleman and a young
lad on the front seat, and on the back seat a handsome pale lady with a
little girl beside her. Behind, on the rack with the trunk, was a colored
boy, an imp out of a story-book. John was told that the black boy was a
slave, and that the carriage was from Baltimore. Here was a chance for a
romance. Slavery, beauty, wealth, haughtiness, especially on the part of
the slender boy on the front seat,—here was an opening into a vast
realm. The high-stepping horses and the shining harness were enough to
excite John's admiration, but these were nothing to the little girl. His
eyes had never before fallen upon that kind of girl; he had hardly
imagined that such a lovely creature could exist. Was it the soft and
dainty toilet, was it the brown curls, or the large laughing eyes, or the
delicate, finely cut features, or the charming little figure of this
fairy-like person? Was this expression on her mobile face merely that of
amusement at seeing a country-boy? Then John hated her. On the contrary,
did she see in him what John felt himself to be? Then he would go the
world over to serve her. In a moment he was self-conscious. His trousers
seemed to creep higher up his legs, and he could feel his very ankles
blush. He hoped that she had not seen the other side of him, for, in fact,
the patches were not of the exact shade of the rest of the cloth. The
vision flashed by him in a moment, but it left him with a resentful
feeling. Perhaps that proud little girl would be sorry some day, when he
had become a general, or written a book, or kept a store, to see him go
away and marry another. He almost made up his cruel mind on the instant
that he would never marry her, however bad she might feel. And yet he
could n't get her out of his mind for days and days, and when her image
was present, even Cynthia in the singers' seat on Sunday looked a little
cheap and common. Poor Cynthia! Long before John became a general or had
his revenge on the Baltimore girl, she married a farmer and was the mother
of children, red-headed; and when John saw her years after, she looked
tired and discouraged, as one who has carried into womanhood none of the
romance of her youth.</p>
<p>Fishing and dreaming, I think, were the best amusements John had. The
middle pier of the long covered bridge over the river stood upon a great
rock, and this rock (which was known as the swimming-rock, whence the boys
on summer evenings dove into the deep pool by its side) was a favorite
spot with John when he could get an hour or two from the everlasting
"chores." Making his way out to it over the rocks at low water with his
fish-pole, there he was content to sit and observe the world; and there he
saw a great deal of life. He always expected to catch the legendary trout
which weighed two pounds and was believed to inhabit that pool. He always
did catch horned dace and shiners, which he despised, and sometimes he
snared a monstrous sucker a foot and a half long. But in the summer the
sucker is a flabby fish, and John was not thanked for bringing him home.
He liked, however, to lie with his face close to the water and watch the
long fishes panting in the clear depths, and occasionally he would drop a
pebble near one to see how gracefully he would scud away with one wave of
the tail into deeper water. Nothing fears the little brown boy. The
yellow-bird slants his wings, almost touches the deep water before him,
and then escapes away under the bridge to the east with a glint of
sunshine on his back; the fish-hawk comes down with a swoop, dips one
wing, and, his prey having darted under a stone, is away again over the
still hill, high soaring on even-poised pinions, keeping an eye perhaps
upon the great eagle which is sweeping the sky in widening circles.</p>
<p>But there is other life. A wagon rumbles over the bridge, and the farmer
and his wife, jogging along, do not know that they have startled a lazy
boy into a momentary fancy that a thunder-shower is coming up. John can
see as he lies there on a still summer day, with the fishes and the birds
for company, the road that comes down the left bank of the river,—a
hot, sandy, well-traveled road, hidden from view here and there by trees
and bushes. The chief point of interest, however, is an enormous
sycamore-tree by the roadside and in front of John's house. The house is
more than a century old, and its timbers were hewed and squared by Captain
Moses Rice (who lies in his grave on the hillside above it), in the
presence of the Red Man who killed him with arrow and tomahawk some time
after his house was set in order. The gigantic tree, struck with a sort of
leprosy, like all its species, appears much older, and of course has its
tradition. They say that it grew from a green stake which the first
land-surveyor planted there for one of his points of sight. John was
reminded of it years after when he sat under the shade of the decrepit
lime-tree in Freiburg and was told that it was originally a twig which the
breathless and bloody messenger carried in his hand when he dropped
exhausted in the square with the word "Victory!" on his lips, announcing
thus the result of the glorious battle of Morat, where the Swiss in 1476
defeated Charles the Bold. Under the broad but scanty shade of the great
button-ball tree (as it was called) stood an old watering-trough, with its
half-decayed penstock and well-worn spout pouring forever cold, sparkling
water into the overflowing trough. It is fed by a spring near by, and the
water is sweeter and colder than any in the known world, unless it be the
well Zem-zem, as generations of people and horses which have drunk of it
would testify, if they could come back. And if they could file along this
road again, what a procession there would be riding down the valley!—antiquated
vehicles, rusty wagons adorned with the invariable buffalo-robe even in
the hottest days, lean and long-favored horses, frisky colts, drawing,
generation after generation, the sober and pious saints, that passed this
way to meeting and to mill.</p>
<p>What a refreshment is that water-spout! All day long there are pilgrims to
it, and John likes nothing better than to watch them. Here comes a gray
horse drawing a buggy with two men,—cattle buyers, probably. Out
jumps a man, down goes the check-rein. What a good draught the nag takes!
Here comes a long-stepping trotter in a sulky; man in a brown linen coat
and wide-awake hat,—dissolute, horsey-looking man. They turn up, of
course. Ah, there is an establishment he knows well: a sorrel horse and an
old chaise. The sorrel horse scents the water afar off, and begins to turn
up long before he reaches the trough, thrusting out his nose in
anticipation of the coot sensation. No check to let down; he plunges his
nose in nearly to his eyes in his haste to get at it. Two maiden ladies—unmistakably
such, though they appear neither "anxious nor aimless"—within the
scoop-top smile benevolently on the sorrel back. It is the deacon's horse,
a meeting-going nag, with a sedate, leisurely jog as he goes; and these
are two of the "salt of the earth,"—the brevet rank of the women who
stand and wait,—going down to the village store to dicker. There
come two men in a hurry, horse driven up smartly and pulled up short; but
as it is rising ground, and the horse does not easily reach the water with
the wagon pulling back, the nervous man in the buggy hitches forward on
his seat, as if that would carry the wagon a little ahead! Next,
lumber-wagon with load of boards; horse wants to turn up, and driver
switches him and cries "G'lang," and the horse reluctantly goes by,
turning his head wistfully towards the flowing spout. Ah, here comes an
equipage strange to these parts, and John stands up to look; an elegant
carriage and two horses; trunks strapped on behind; gentleman and boy on
front seat and two ladies on back seat,—city people. The gentleman
descends, unchecks the horses, wipes his brow, takes a drink at the spout
and looks around, evidently remarking upon the lovely view, as he swings
his handkerchief in an explanatory manner. Judicious travelers. John would
like to know who they are. Perhaps they are from Boston, whence come all
the wonderfully painted peddlers' wagons drawn by six stalwart horses,
which the driver, using no rein, controls with his long whip and cheery
voice. If so, great is the condescension of Boston; and John follows them
with an undefined longing as they drive away toward the mountains of Zoar.
Here is a footman, dusty and tired, who comes with lagging steps. He
stops, removes his hat, as he should to such a tree, puts his mouth to the
spout, and takes a long pull at the lively water. And then he goes on,
perhaps to Zoar, perhaps to a worse place.</p>
<p>So they come and go all the summer afternoon; but the great event of the
day is the passing down the valley of the majestic stage-coach,—the
vast yellow-bodied, rattling vehicle. John can hear a mile off the shaking
of chains, traces, and whiffle-trees, and the creaking of its leathern
braces, as the great bulk swings along piled high with trunks. It
represents to John, somehow, authority, government, the right of way; the
driver is an autocrat, everybody must make way for the stage-coach. It
almost satisfies the imagination, this royal vehicle; one can go in it to
the confines of the world,—to Boston and to Albany.</p>
<p>There were other influences that I daresay contributed to the boy's
education. I think his imagination was stimulated by a band of gypsies who
used to come every summer and pitch a tent on a little roadside patch of
green turf by the river-bank not far from his house. It was shaded by elms
and butternut-trees, and a long spit of sand and pebbles ran out from it
into the brawling stream. Probably they were not a very good kind of
gypsy, although the story was that the men drank and beat the women. John
didn't know much about drinking; his experience of it was confined to
sweet cider; yet he had already set himself up as a reformer, and joined
the Cold Water Band. The object of this Band was to walk in a procession
under a banner that declared,</p>
<p>"So here we pledge perpetual hate<br/>
To all that can intoxicate;"<br/></p>
<p>and wear a badge with this legend, and above it the device of a well-curb
with a long sweep. It kept John and all the little boys and girls from
being drunkards till they were ten or eleven years of age; though perhaps
a few of them died meantime from eating loaf-cake and pie and drinking
ice-cold water at the celebrations of the Band.</p>
<p>The gypsy camp had a strange fascination for John, mingled of curiosity
and fear. Nothing more alien could come into the New England life than
this tatterdemalion band. It was hardly credible that here were actually
people who lived out-doors, who slept in their covered wagon or under
their tent, and cooked in the open air; it was a visible romance
transferred from foreign lands and the remote times of the story-books;
and John took these city thieves, who were on their annual foray into the
country, trading and stealing horses and robbing hen-roosts and
cornfields, for the mysterious race who for thousands of years have done
these same things in all lands, by right of their pure blood and ancient
lineage. John was afraid to approach the camp when any of the scowling and
villainous men were lounging about, pipes in mouth; but he took more
courage when only women and children were visible. The swarthy,
black-haired women in dirty calico frocks were anything but attractive,
but they spoke softly to the boy, and told his fortune, and wheedled him
into bringing them any amount of cucumbers and green corn in the course of
the season. In front of the tent were planted in the ground three poles
that met together at the top, whence depended a kettle. This was the
kitchen, and it was sufficient. The fuel for the fire was the driftwood of
the stream. John noted that it did not require to be sawed into
stove-lengths; and, in short, that the "chores" about this establishment
were reduced to the minimum. And an older person than John might envy the
free life of these wanderers, who paid neither rent nor taxes, and yet
enjoyed all the delights of nature. It seemed to the boy that affairs
would go more smoothly in the world if everybody would live in this simple
manner. Nor did he then know, or ever after find out, why it is that the
world permits only wicked people to be Bohemians.</p>
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