1999-2005
(Return
to Web Text-ures)
|
Click
here to return to
Content
Page
|
(HOME)
|
FRESH
FIELDS
I NATURE IN ENGLAND I THE first whiff we got of
transatlantic nature was the peaty breath of the peasant chimneys of
Ireland
while we were yet many miles at sea. What a homelike, fireside smell it
was! it
seemed to make something long forgotten stir within one. One recognizes
it as a
characteristic Old World odor, it savors so of the soil and of a ripe
and
mellow antiquity. I know no other fuel that yields so agreeable a
perfume as
peat. Unless the Irishman in one has dwindled to a very small fraction,
he will
be pretty sure to dilate his nostrils and feel some dim awakening of
memory on
catching the scent of this ancestral fuel. The fat, unctuous peat,
— the pith
and marrow of ages of vegetable growth, — how typical it is
of much that lies
there before us in the elder world; of the slow ripenings and
accumulations, of
extinct life and forms, decayed civilizations, of ten thousand growths
and
achievements of the hand and soul of man, now reduced to their last
modicum of
fertilizing mould! With the breath of the
chimney there came presently the chimney swallow, and dropped much
fatigued
upon the deck of the steamer. It was a still more welcome and
suggestive token,
— the bird of Virgil and of Theocritus, acquainted with every
cottage roof and
chimney in Europe, and with the ruined abbeys and castle walls. Except
its
lighter-colored breast, it seemed identical with our barn swallow; its
little
black cap appeared pulled down over its eyes in the same manner, and
its glossy
steel-blue coat, its forked tail, its infantile feet, and its cheerful
twitter
were the same. But its habits are different; for in Europe this swallow
builds
in chimneys, and the bird that answers to our chimney swallow, or
swift, builds
in crevices in barns and houses. We did not suspect we had
taken aboard our pilot in the little swallow, yet so it proved: this
light
navigator always hails from the port of bright, warm skies; and the
next
morning we found ourselves sailing between shores basking in full
summer
sunshine. Those who, after ten days of sorrowing and fasting in the
desert of
the ocean, have sailed up the Frith of Clyde, and thence up the Clyde
to
Glasgow, on the morning of a perfect mid-May day, the sky all sunshine,
the
earth all verdure, know what this experience is; and only those can
know it. It
takes a good many foul days in Scotland to breed one fair one; but when
the
fair day does come, it is worth the price paid for it. The soul and
sentiment
of all fair weather is in it; it is the flowering of the meteorological
influences, the rose on this thorn of rain and mist. These fair days, I
was
told, may be quite confidently looked for in May; we were so fortunate
as to
experience a series of them, and the day we entered port was such a one
as you
would select from a hundred. The traveler is in a mood to
be pleased after clearing the Atlantic gulf; the eye in its exuberance
is
full of caresses and flattery, and the deck of a steamer is a rare
vantage-ground on any occasion of sight-seeing; it affords just the
isolation
and elevation needed. Yet fully discounting these favorable conditions,
the
fact remains that Scotch sunshine is bewitching, and that the scenery
of the
Clyde is unequaled by any other approach to Europe. It is Europe,
abridged and
assorted and passed before you in the space of a few hours, —
the highlands and
lochs and castle-crowned crags on the one hand; and the lowlands, with
their
parks and farms, their manor halls and matchless verdure, on the other.
The eye
is conservative, and loves a look of permanence and order, of peace and
contentment; and these Scotch shores, with their stone houses, compact
masonry,
clean fields, grazing herds ivied walls, massive foliage, perfect
roads,
verdant mountains, fill all the conditions. We pause an hour in front
of
Greenock, and then, on the crest of the tide, make our way slowly
upward. The
landscape closes around us. We can almost hear the cattle ripping off
the lush
grass in the fields. One feels as if he could eat grass himself. It is
pastoral
paradise. We can see the daisies and buttercups; and from above a
meadow on the
right a part of the song of a skylark reaches my ear. Indeed, not a
little of
the charm and novelty of this part of the voyage was the impression it
made as
of going afield in an ocean steamer. We had suddenly passed from a
wilderness
of waters into a verdurous, sunlit landscape, where scarcely any water
was
visible. The Clyde, soon after you leave Greenock, becomes little more
than a
large, deep canal, inclosed between meadow banks, and from the deck of
the
great steamer only the most charming rural sights and sounds greet you.
You are
at sea amid verdant parks and fields of clover and grain. You behold
farm
occupations — sowing, planting, plowing — as from
the middle of the Atlantic.
Playful heifers and skipping lambs take the place of the leaping
dolphins and
the basking swordfish. The ship steers her way amid turnip-fields and
broad
acres of newly planted potatoes. You are not surprised that she needs
piloting.
A little tug with a rope at her bow pulls her first this way and then
that,
while one at her stern nudges her right flank and then her left.
Presently we
come to the shipbuilding yards of the Clyde, where rural, pastoral
scenes are
strangely mingled with those of quite another sort. "First a cow and
then
an iron ship," as one of the voyagers observed. Here a pasture
or a
meadow, or a field of wheat or oats, and close beside it,
without an inch
of waste or neutral ground between, rise the skeletons of innumerable
ships,
like a forest of slender growths of iron, with the workmen hammering
amid it
like so many noisy woodpeckers. It is doubtful if such a scene can be
witnessed
anywhere else in the world, — an enormous mechanical,
commercial, and
architectural interest, alternating with the quiet and simplicity of
inland
farms and home occupations. You could leap from the deck of a
half-finished
ocean steamer into a field of waving wheat or Winchester beans. The
vast
shipyards appear to be set down here upon the banks of the Clyde
without any
interference with the natural surroundings of the place. Of the factories and
foundries that put this iron in shape you get no hint; here the ships
rise as
if they sprouted from the soil, without waste or litter, but with an
incessant
din. They stand as thickly as a row of cattle in stanchions, almost
touching
each other, and in all stages of development. Now and then a stall will
be
vacant, the ship having just been launched, and others will be standing
with
flags flying and timbers greased or soaped, ready to take to the water
at the
word. Two such, both large ocean steamers, waited for us to pass. We
looked
back, saw the last block or wedge knocked away from one of them, and
the
monster ship sauntered down to the water and glided out into the
current in the
most gentle, nonchalant way imaginable. I wondered at her slow pace,
and at the
grace and composure with which she took to the water; the problem
nicely
studied and solved, — just power enough, and not an ounce to
spare. The vessels
are launched diagonally up or down stream, on account of the narrowness
of the
channel. But to see such a brood of ships, the largest in the world,
hatched
upon the banks of such a placid little river, amid such quiet country
scenes,
is a novel experience. But this is Britain, — a little
island, with little
lakes, little rivers, quiet, bosky fields, but mighty interests and
power that
reach round the world. I was conscious that the same scene at home
would have
been less pleasing. It would not have been so compact and tidy. There
would not
have been a garden of ships and a garden of turnips side by side;
haymakers and
shipbuilders in adjoining fields; milch-cows and iron steamers seeking
the
water within sight of each other. We leave wide margins and ragged
edges in
this country, and both man and nature sprawl about at greater lengths
than in
the Old World. For the rest I was perhaps
least prepared for the utter tranquillity, and shall I say domesticity
of the
mountains. At a distance they appear to be covered with a tender green
mould
that one could brush away with his hand. On nearer approach it is seen
to be
grass. They look nearly as rural and pastoral as the fields. Goat Fell
is steep
and stony, but even it does not have a wild and barren look. At home,
one
thinks of a mountain as either a vast pile of barren, frowning rocks
and
precipices, or else a steep acclivity covered with a tangle of
primitive forest
timber. But here, the mountains are high, grassy sheep-walks, smooth,
treeless,
rounded, and as green as if dipped in a fountain of perpetual spring. I
did not
wish my Catskills any different; but I wondered what would need to be
done to
them to make them look like these Scotch highlands. Cut away their
forests, rub
down all inequalities in their surfaces, pulverizing their loose
boulders; turf
them over, leaving the rock to show through here and there, —
then, with a few
large black patches to represent the heather, and the softening and
ameliorating effect of a mild, humid climate, they might in time come
to bear
some resemblance to these shepherd mountains. Then over all the
landscape is
that new look, — that mellow, legendary, half-human
expression which nature
wears in these ancestral lands, an expression familiar in pictures and
in
literature, but which a native of our side of the Atlantic has never
before
seen in gross, material objects and open-air spaces, — the
added charm of the
sentiment of time and human history, the ripening and ameliorating
influence of
long ages of close and loving occupation of the soil, —
naturally a deep,
fertile soil under a mild, very humid climate. There is an unexpected, an
unexplained lure and attraction in the landscape, — a
pensive, reminiscent
feeling in the air itself. Nature has grown mellow under these humid
skies, as
in our fiercer climate she grows harsh and severe. One sees at once why
this
fragrant Old World has so dominated the affections and the imaginations
of our
artists and poets: it is saturated with human qualities; it is unctuous
with
the ripeness of ages, the very marrow fat of time. II
I had come to Great Britain
less to see the noted sights and places than to observe the general
face of
nature. I wanted to steep myself long and well in that mellow, benign
landscape, and put to further tests the impressions I had got of it
during a
hasty visit one autumn, eleven years before. Hence I was mainly intent
on roaming
about the country, it mattered little where. Like an attic stored with
relics
and heirlooms, there is no place in England where you cannot instantly
turn
from nature to scenes and places of deep historical or legendary or
artistic
interest. My journal of travel is a
brief one, and keeps to a few of the main lines. After spending a
couple of
days in Glasgow, we went down to Alloway, in Burns's country, and had
our first
taste of the beauty and sweetness of rural Britain, and of the privacy
and
comfort of a little Scotch inn. The weather was exceptionally fair, and
the
mellow Ayrshire landscape, threaded by the Doon, a perpetual delight.
Thence we
went north on a short tour through the Highlands, — up Loch
Lomond, down Loch
Katrine, and through the Trosachs to Callander, and thence to Stirling
and
Edinburgh. After a few days in the Scotch capital we set out for
Carlyle's
country, where we passed five delightful days. The next week found us
in
Wordsworth's land, and the 10th of June in London. After a week here I
went
down into Surrey and Hants, in quest of the nightingale, for four or
five days.
Till the middle of July I hovered about London, making frequent
excursions into
the country, — east, south, north, west, and once across the
channel into
France, where I had a long walk over the hills about Boulogne. July 15
we began
our return journey northward, stopping a few days at Stratford, where I
found
the Red Horse Inn sadly degenerated from excess of travel. Thence again
into
the Lake region for a longer stay. From Grasmere we went into north
Wales, and
did the usual touring and sightseeing around and over the mountains.
The last
week of July we were again in Glasgow, from which port we sailed on our
homeward voyage July 29. With a suitable companion, I
should probably have made many long pedestrian tours. As it was, I took
many
short but delightful walks both in England and Scotland, with a half
day's walk
in the north of Ireland about Moville. 'T is an admirable country to
walk in, —
the roads are so dry and smooth and of such easy grade, the footpaths
so
numerous and so bold, and the climate so cool and tonic. One night,
with a
friend, I walked from Rochester to Maidstone, part of the way in a slow
rain
and part of the way in the darkness. We had proposed to put up at some
one of
the little inns on the road, and get a view of the weald of Kent in the
morning; but the inns refused us entertainment, and we were compelled
to do the
eight miles at night, stepping off very lively the last four in order
to reach
Maidstone before the hotels were shut up, which takes place at eleven
o'clock.
I learned this night how fragrant the English elder is while in bloom,
and that
distance lends enchantment to the smell. When I plucked the flowers,
which
seemed precisely like our own, the odor was rank and disagreeable; but
at the
distance of a few yards it floated upon the moist air, a spicy and
pleasing
perfume. The elder here grows to be a veritable tree; I saw specimens
seven or
eight inches in diameter and twenty feet high. In the morning we walked
back by
a different route, taking in Boxley Church, where the pilgrims used to
pause on
their way to Canterbury, and getting many good views of Kent
grain-fields and
hop-yards. Sometimes the road wound through the landscape like a
footpath, with
nothing between it and the rank-growing crops. An occasional newly
plowed field
presented a curious appearance. The soil is upon the chalk formation,
and is
full of large fragments of flint. These work out upon the surface, and,
being
white and full of articulations and processes, give to the ground the
appearance of being thickly strewn with bones, — with thigh
bones greatly
foreshortened. Yet these old bones in skillful hands make a most
effective
building material. They appear in all the old churches and ancient
buildings in
the south of England. Broken squarely off, the flint shows a fine
semi-transparent surface that, in combination with coarser material,
has a
remarkable crystalline effect. One of the most delicious bits of
architectural decoration
I saw in England was produced, in the front wall of one of the old
buildings
attached to the cathedral at Canterbury, by little squares of these
flints in
brick panel-work. The cool, pellucid, illuminating effect of the flint
was just
the proper foil to the warm, glowing, livid brick. From Rochester we walked to
Gravesend, over Gad's Hill; the day soft and warm, half sunshine, half
shadow;
the air full of the songs of skylarks; a rich, fertile landscape all
about us;
the waving wheat just in bloom, dashed with scarlet poppies; and
presently, on
the right, the Thames in view dotted with vessels. Seldom any cattle or
grazing
herds in Kent; the ground is too valuable; it is all given up to wheat,
oats,
barley, hops, fruit, and various garden produce. A few days later we walked
from Feversham to Canterbury, and from the top of Harbledown hill saw
the
magnificent cathedral suddenly break upon us as it did upon the
footsore and
worshipful pilgrims centuries ago. At this point, it is said, they
knelt down,
which seems quite probable, the view is so imposing. The cathedral
stands out
from and above the city, as if the latter were the foundation upon
which it
rested. On this walk we passed several of the famous cherry orchards of
Kent,
the thriftiest trees and the finest fruit I ever saw. We invaded one of
the
orchards, and proposed to purchase some of the fruit of the men engaged
in
gathering it. But they refused to sell it; had no right to do so, they
said;
but one of them followed us across the orchard, and said in a
confidential way
that he would see that we had some cherries. He filled my companion's
hat, and
accepted our shilling with alacrity. In getting back into the highway,
over the
wire fence, I got my clothes well tarred before I was aware of it. The
fence
proved to be well besmeared with a mixture of tar and grease,
— an ingenious
device for marking trespassers. We sat in the shade of a tree and ate
our fruit
and scraped our clothes, while a troop of bicyclists filed
by. About the
best glimpses I had of Canterbury cathedral — after the first
view from
Harbledown hill — were obtained while lying upon my back on
the grass, under
the shadow of its walls, and gazing up at the jackdaws flying about the
central
tower and going out and in weather-worn openings three hundred feet
above
me. There seemed to be some wild, pinnacled mountain peak or
rocky ledge
up there toward the sky, where the fowls of the air had made their
nests,
secure from molestation. The way the birds make themselves at home
about these
vast architectural piles is
very pleasing. Doves,
starlings, jackdaws, swallows, sparrows, take to them as to a wood or
to a
cliff. If there were only something to give a corresponding
touch of
nature or a throb of life inside! But their interiors are only
impressive
sepulchres, tombs within a tomb. Your own footfalls seem like
the echo of
past ages. These cathedrals belong to the pleistocene period of man's
religious
history, the period of gigantic forms. How vast, how monstrous, how
terrible in
beauty and power! but in our day as empty and dead as the shells upon
the
shore. The cold, thin ecclesiasticism that now masquerades in them
hardly
disturbs the dust in their central aisles. I saw five worshipers at the
choral
service in Canterbury, and about the same number of curious spectators.
For my
part, I could not take my eyes off the remnants of some of the old
stained
windows up aloft. If I worshiped at all, it was my devout admiration of
those
superb relics. There could be no doubt about the faith that inspired
those.
Below them were some gorgeous modern memorial windows: stained glass,
indeed!
loud, garish, thin, painty; while these were like a combination of
precious
stones and gems, full of depth and richness of tone, land, above all,
serious, not
courting your attention. My eye was not much taken with them at first,
and not
till after it had recoiled from the hard, thin glare in my immediate
front. From Canterbury I went to
Dover, and spent part of a day walking along the cliffs to Folkestone.
There is
a good footpath that skirts the edge of the cliffs, and it is much
frequented.
It is characteristic of the compactness and neatness of this little
island,
that there is not an inch of waste land along this sea margin; the
fertile
rolling landscape, waving with wheat and barley, and with grass just
ready for
the scythe, is cut squarely off by the sea; the plow and the reaper
come to the
very brink of the chalky cliffs. As you sit down on Shakespeare's
Cliff, with
your feet dangling in the air at a height of three hundred and fifty
feet, you
can reach back and pluck the grain heads and the scarlet poppies. Never
have I
seen such quiet pastoral beauty take such a sudden leap into space. Yet
the
scene is tame in one sense: there is no hint of the wild and the
savage; the
rock is soft and friable, a kind of chalky bread, which the sea devours
readily; the hills are like freshly cut loaves; slice after slice has
been
eaten away by the hungry elements. Sitting here, I saw no "crows and
choughs" winging "the midway air," but a species of hawk,
"haggards of the rocks," were disturbed in the niches beneath me, and
flew along from point to point. "The murmuring surge, I had wondered why
Shakespeare
had made his seashores pebbly instead of sandy, and now I saw why: they
are
pebbly, with not a grain of sand to be found. This chalk formation, as
I have
already said, is full of flint nodules; and as the shore is eaten away
by the
sea, these rounded masses remain. They soon become worn into smooth
pebbles,
which beneath the pounding of the surf give out a strange clinking,
rattling
sound. Across the Channel, on the French side, there is more sand, but
it is of
the hue of mud and not pleasing to look upon. Of other walks I had in
England, I recall with pleasure a Sunday up the Thames toward Windsor;
the day
perfect, the river alive with rowboats, the shore swarming with
pedestrians and
picnickers; young athletic London, male and female, rushing forth as
hungry for
the open air and the water as young mountain herds for salt. I never
saw or
imagined anything like it. One shore of the Thames, sometimes the
right,
sometimes the left, it seems, belongs to the public. No private
grounds,
however lordly, are allowed to monopolize both sides. Another walk was about
Winchester and Salisbury, with more cathedral-viewing. One of the most
human
things to be seen in the great cathedrals is the carven image of some
old
knight or warrior prince resting above his tomb, with his feet upon his
faithful dog. I was touched by this remembrance of the dog. In all
cases he
looked alert and watchful, as if guarding his master while he slept. I
noticed
that Cromwell's soldiers were less apt to batter off the nose and ears
of the
dog than they were those of the knight. At Stratford I did more walking. After a row on the river, we strolled through the low, grassy field in front of the church, redolent of cattle and clover, and sat for an hour on the margin of the stream and enjoyed the pastoral beauty and the sunshine. In the afternoon (it was Sunday) I walked across the fields to Shottery, and then followed the road as it wound amid the quaint little thatched cottages till it ended at a stile from which a footpath led across broad, sunny fields to a stately highway. To give a more minute account of English country scenes and sounds in midsummer, I will here copy some jottings in my note-book, made then and there: — "July
16. In
the fields beyond Shottery. Bright and breezy, with appearance of
slight
showers in the distance. Thermometer probably about seventy; a good
working
temperature. Clover — white, red, and yellow (white
predominating) — in the
fields all about me. The red very ruddy; the white large. The only
noticeable
bird voice that of the yellow-hammer, two or three being within
ear-shot. The
song is much like certain sparrow songs, only inferior: Sip,
sip, sip,
see-e-e-e; or, If,
if, if you ple-e-ease.
Honey-bees on the white
clover. Turf very thick and springy, supporting two or three kinds of
grass
resembling redtop and bearded rye-grass. Narrow-leaved plantain, a few
buttercups, a small yellow flower unknown to me (probably ladies'
fingers),
also species of dandelion and prunella. The land thrown into marked
swells twenty
feet broad. Two Sunday-school girls lying on the grass in the other end
of the
field. A number of young men playing some game, perhaps cards, seated
on the
ground in an adjoining field. Scarcely any signs of midsummer to me; no
ripeness or maturity in nature yet. The grass very tender and
succulent, the
streams full and roily. Yarrow and cinquefoil also in the grass where I
sit. The plantain in bloom and fragrant. Along the
Avon, the
meadow-sweet in full bloom, with a fine cinnamon odor. A wild
rose here
and there in the hedgerows. The wild clematis nearly ready to bloom, in
appearance almost identical with our own. The wheat and oats
full-grown, but
not yet turning. The clouds soft and fleecy. Prunella dark purple. A
few paces
farther on I enter a highway, one of the broadest I have seen, the
roadbed hard
and smooth as usual, about sixteen feet wide, with grassy margins
twelve feet
wide, redolent with white and red clover. A rich farming landscape
spreads
around me, with blue hills in the far west. Cool and fresh like
June.
Bumblebees here and there, more hairy than at home. A plow in
a field by
the roadside is so heavy I can barely move it, — at least
three times as heavy
as an American plow; beam very long, tails four inches square, the
mould-board
a thick plank. The soil like putty; where it dries, crumbling
into small,
hard lumps, but sticky and tough when damp, — Shakespeare's
soil, — the finest
and most versatile wit of the world, the product of a sticky, stubborn
clay-bank! Here is a field where every alternate swell is
small. The
large swells heave up in a very molten-like way — real turfy
billows, crested
with white clover-blossoms." "July
17. On the road to Warwick, two miles from Stratford. Morning
bright,
with sky full of white, soft, high-piled thunderheads. Plenty of pink
blackberry blossoms along the road; herb Robert in bloom, and a kind of
Solomon's-seal as at home, and what appears to be a species of
golden-rod with
a midsummery smell. The note of the yellow-hammer and the wren here and
there.
Beech-trees loaded with mast and humming with bumblebees, probably
gathering
honey-dew, which seems to be more abundant here than with us. The
landscape
like a well-kept park dotted with great trees, which make islands of
shade in a
sea of grass. Droves of sheep grazing, and herds of cattle reposing in
the
succulent fields. Now the just felt breeze brings me the rattle of a
mowing-machine, a rare sound here, as most of the grass is cut by hand.
The
great motionless arms of a windmill rising here and there above the
horizon. A
gentleman's turnout goes by with glittering wheels and spanking team;
the
footman in livery behind, the gentleman driving. I hear his brake
scrape as he
puts it on down the gentle descent. Now a lark goes off. Then the
mellow horn
of a cow or heifer is heard. Then the bleat of sheep. The crows caw
hoarsely.
Few houses by the roadside, but here and there behind the trees in the
distance. I hear the greenfinch, stronger and sharper than our
goldfinch, but
less pleasing. The matured look of some fields of grass alone suggests
midsummer. Several species of mint by the roadside, also certain white
umbelliferous plants. Everywhere that royal weed of Britain,
the
nettle. Shapely piles of road material and pounded stone at
regular distances,
every fragment of which will go through a two-inch
ring. The roads
are mended only in winter, and are kept as smooth and hard as a
rock. No
swells or 'thank-y'-ma'ams' in them to turn the water; they shed the
water like
a rounded pavement. On the hill, three miles from Stratford,
where a
finger-post points you to Hampton Lucy, I turn and see the spire of
Shakespeare's church between the trees. It lies in a broad,
gentle
valley, and rises above much foliage. 'I hope and praise God it will
keep
foine,' said the old woman at whose little cottage I stopped for
ginger-beer,
attracted by a sign in the window. 'One penny, sir, if you
please. I made
it myself, sir. I do not leave the front door unfastened'
(undoing it to
let me out) 'when I am down in the garden.' A weasel runs
across the road
in front of me, and is scolded by a little bird. The body of
a dead
hedgehog festering beside the hedge. A species of St.
John's-wort in
bloom, teasels, and a small convolvulus. Also a species of
plantain with
a head large as my finger, purple tinged with white. Road
margins wide,
grassy, and fragrant with clover. Privet in bloom in the
hedges, panicles
of small white flowers faintly sweet-scented. 'As clean and
white as
privet when it flowers,' says Tennyson in 'Walking to the Mail.' The
road and
avenue between noble trees, beech, ash, elm, and oak. All the fields
are
bounded by lines of stately trees; the distance is black with them. A
large
thistle by the roadside, with homeless bumblebees on the heads as at
home, some
of them white-faced and stingless. Thistles rare in this country. Weeds
of all
kinds rare except the nettle. The place to see the Scotch thistle is
not in
Scotland or England, but in America." III
England is like the margin
of a spring-run near its source, — always green, always cool,
always moist,
comparatively free from frost in winter and from drought in summer. The
spring-run to which it owes this character is the Gulf Stream, which
brings out
of the pit of the southern ocean what the fountain brings out of the
bowels of
the earth — a uniform temperature, low but constant; a fog in
winter, a cloud
in summer. The spirit of gentle, fertilizing summer rain perhaps never
took
such tangible and topographical shape before. Cloud-evolved,
cloud-enveloped,
cloud-protected, it fills the eye of the American traveler with a
vision of
greenness such as he has never before dreamed of; a greenness born of
perpetual
May, tender, untarnished, ever renewed, and as uniform and
all-pervading as the
rain-drops that fall, covering mountain, cliff, and vale
alike. The
softened, rounded, flowing outlines given to our landscapes by a deep
fall of
snow are given to the English by this depth of vegetable mould and this
all-prevailing verdure which it supports. Indeed, it is
caught upon the
shelves and projections of the rocks as if it fell from the clouds,
— a kind of
green snow, — and it clings to their rough or slanting sides
like moist
flakes. In the little valleys and chasms it appears to lie
deepest.
Only the peaks and broken rocky crests of the highest Scotch and
Cumberland
mountains are bare. Adown their treeless sides the moist, fresh
greenness
fairly drips. Grass, grass, grass, and evermore
grass. Is
there another country under the sun. so becushioned,
becarpeted, and
becurtained with grass? Even the woods are full of grass, and
I have seen
them mowing in a forest. Grass grows upon the rocks, upon the walls, on
the
tops of the old castles, on the roofs of the houses, and in winter the
hay-seed
sometimes sprouts upon the backs of the sheep. Turf used as
capping to a
stone fence thrives and blooms as if upon the ground. There
seems to be a
deposit from the atmosphere, — a slow but steady accumulation
of a black, peaty
mould upon all exposed surfaces, — that by and by supports
some of the lower or
cryptogamous forms of vegetation These decay and add to the
soil, till
thus in time grass and other plants will grow. The walls of the old
castles and
cathedrals support a variety of plant life. On Rochester Castle I saw
two or
three species of large wild flowers growing one hundred feet from the
ground
and tempting the tourist to perilous reachings and climbings to get
them. The
very stones seem to sprout. My companion made a sketch of a striking
group of
red and white flowers blooming far up on one of the buttresses of
Rochester
Cathedral. The soil will climb to any height. Indeed, there seems to be
a kind
of finer soil floating in the air. How else can one account for the
general
smut of the human face and hands in this country, and the impossibility
of
keeping his own clean? The unwashed hand here quickly leaves its mark
on
whatever it touches. A prolonged neglect of soap and water, and I think
one
would be presently covered with a fine green mould, like that upon the
boles of
the trees in the woods. If the rains were not occasionally heavy enough
to
clean them off, I have no doubt that the roofs of all buildings in
England
would in a few years be covered with turf, and that daisies and
buttercups
would bloom upon them. How quickly all new buildings take on the
prevailing
look of age and mellowness! One needs to have seen the great
architectural
piles and monuments of Britain to appreciate Shakespeare's line,
— "That
unswept stone,
besmeared with sluttish Time." He must also have seen those
Scotch or Cumberland mountains to appreciate the descriptive force of
this
other line, — "The turfy
mountains
where live the nibbling sheep." The turfy mountains are the
unswept stones that have held and utilized their ever-increasing
capital of
dirt. These vast rocky eminences are stuffed and padded with peat; it
is the
sooty soil of the housetops and of the grimy human hand, deepened and
accumulated till it nourishes the finest, sweetest grass. It was this turfy and grassy
character of these mountains — I am tempted to say their
cushiony character —
that no reading or picture viewing of mine had prepared me for. In the
cut or
on canvas they appeared like hard and frowning rocks; and here I beheld
them as
green and succulent as any meadow-bank in April or May, —
vast, elevated
sheep-walks and rabbit-warrens, treeless, shrubless, generally without
loose
boulders, shelving rocks, or sheer precipices; often rounded, feminine,
dimpled, or impressing one as if the rock had been thrust up beneath an
immense
stretch of the finest lawn, and had carried the turf with it
heavenward,
rending it here and there, but preserving acres of it intact. In Scotland I ascended Ben
Venue, not one of the highest or ruggedest of the Scotch mountains, but
a fair
sample of them, and my foot was seldom off the grass or bog, often
sinking into
them as into a saturated sponge. Where I expected a dry course, I found
a wet
one. The thick, springy turf wax oozing with water. Instead of being
balked by
precipices, I was hindered by swamps. Where a tangle of brush or a
chaos of
boulders should have detained me, I was picking my way as through a wet
meadow-bottom tilted up at an angle of forty-five degrees. My feet
became
soaked when my shins should have been bruised. Occasionally, a large
deposit of
peat in some favored place had given way beneath the strain of much
water, and
left a black chasm a few yards wide and a yard or more deep. Cold
spring-runs
were abundant, wild flowers few, grass universal. A loping hare started
up
before me; a pair of ringed ousels took a hasty glance at me from
behind a
rock; sheep and lambs, the latter white and conspicuous beside their
dingy and
all but invisible dams, were scattered here and there; the wheat-ear
uncovered
its white rump as it flitted from rock to rock, and the mountain pipit
displayed its lark-like tail. No sound of wind in the trees; there were
no
trees, no seared branches and trunks that so enhance and set off the
wildness
of our mountain-tops. On the summit the wind whistled around the
outcropping
rocks and hummed among the heather, but the great mountain did not purr
or roar
like one covered with forests. I lingered for an hour or
more, and gazed upon the stretch of mountain and vale about
me. The
summit of Ben Lomond, eight or ten miles to the west, rose a few
hundred feet
above me. On four peaks I could see snow or miniature
glaciers.
Only four or five houses, mostly humble shepherd dwellings, were
visible in
that wide circuit. The sun shone out at intervals;
the driving
clouds floated low, their keels scraping the rocks of some of the
higher
summits. The atmosphere was filled with a curious white film,
like water
tinged with milk, an effect only produced at home by a fine mist. "A
certain tameness in the view, after all," I recorded in my
note-book
on the spot, "perhaps because of the trim and grassy character of the
mountain; not solemn and impressive; no sense of age or
power. The
rock crops out everywhere, but it can hardly look you in the face; it
is
crumbling and insignificant; shows no frowning walls, no tremendous
cleavage;
nothing overhanging and precipitous; no wrath and revel of the elder
gods." Even in rugged Scotland nature is scarcely wilder than a
mountain
sheep, certainly a good way short of the ferity of the moose and
caribou.
There is everywhere marked repose and moderation in the scenery, a kind
of
aboriginal Scotch canniness and propriety that gives one a new
sensation.
On and about Ben Nevis there is barrenness, cragginess, and
desolation;
but the characteristic feature of wild Scotch scenery is the moor,
lifted up
into mountains, covering low, broad hills, or stretching away in
undulating
plains, black, silent, melancholy, it may be, but never savage or
especially
wild. "The vast and yet not savage solitude," Carlyle says, referring
to these moorlands. The soil is black and peaty, often boggy; the
heather short
and uniform as prairie grass; a shepherd's cottage or a sportsman's
"box" stuck here and there amid the hills. The highland cattle are
shaggy and picturesque, but the moors and mountains are close cropped
and
uniform. The solitude is not that of a forest full of still forms and
dim
vistas, but of wide, open, sombre spaces. Nature did not look alien or
unfriendly to me; there must be barrenness or some savage threatening
feature
in the landscape to produce this impression; but the heather and whin
are like
a permanent shadow, and one longs to see the trees stand up and wave
their
branches. The torrents leaping down off the mountains are very welcome
to both
eye and ear. And the lakes — nothing can be prettier than
Loch Lomond and Loch
Katrine, though one wishes for some of the superfluous rocks of the New
World
to give their beauty a granite setting. IV It is characteristic of
nature
in England that most of the stone with which the old bridges, churches,
and
cathedrals are built is so soft that people carve their initials in it
with
their jack-knives, as we do in the bark of a tree or in a piece of pine
timber.
At Stratford a card has been posted upon the outside of the old church,
imploring visitors to refrain from this barbarous practice. One sees
names and
dates there more than a century old. Often, in leaning over the
parapets of the
bridges along the highways, I would find them covered with letters and
figures. Tourists have made such havoc chipping off fragments
from the
old Brig o' Doon in Burns's country, that the parapet has had to be
repaired.
One could cut out the key of the arch with his pocket-knife.
And yet
these old structures outlast empires. A few miles from
Glasgow I saw the
remains of an old Roman bridge, the arch apparently as perfect as when
the
first Roman chariot passed over it, probably fifteen centuries
ago. No
wheels but those of time pass over it in these later centuries, and
these seem
to be driven slowly and gently in this land, with but little wear and
tear to
the ancient highways. England is not a country of
granite and marble, but of chalk, marl, and clay. The old Plutonic gods
do not
assert themselves; they are buried and turned to dust, and the more
modern
humanistic divinities bear sway. The land is a green cemetery of
extinct rude
forces. Where the highway or the railway gashed the hills deeply, I
could
seldom tell where the soil ended and the rock began, as they gradually
assimilated, blended, and became one. And this is the key to
nature in England: 't is granite grown ripe and mellow and issuing in
grass and
verdure; 't is aboriginal force and fecundity become docile and equable
and
mounting toward higher forms, — the harsh, bitter rind of the
earth grown sweet
and edible. There is such body and substance in the color and presence
of
things that one thinks the very roots of the grass must go deeper than
usual.
The crude, the raw, the discordant, where are they? It seems a
comparatively
short and easy step from nature to the canvas or to the poem in this
cozy land.
Nothing need be added; the idealization has already taken place. The
Old World
is deeply covered with a kind of human leaf-mould, while the New is for
the
most part yet raw, undigested hard-pan. This is why these scenes haunt
one like
a memory. One seems to have youthful associations with every field and
hilltop
he looks upon. The complete humanization of nature has taken place. The
soil has
been mixed with human thought and substance. These fields have been
alternately
Celt, Roman, British, Norman, Saxon; they have moved and walked and
talked and
loved and suffered; hence one feels kindred to them and at home among
them. The
mother-land, indeed! Every foot of its soil has given birth to a human
being
and grown tender and conscious with time. England is like a seat by
the chimney-corner, and is as redolent of human occupancy and
domesticity. It
has the island coziness and unity, and the island simplicity as opposed
to the
continental diversity of forms. It is all one neighborhood; a friendly
and
familiar air is over all. It satisfies to the full one's utmost craving
for the
home-like and for the fruits of affectionate occupation of the soil. It
does
not satisfy one's craving for the wild, the savage, the aboriginal,
what our
poet describes as his "Hungering,
hungering,
hungering for primal energies and Nature's dauntlessness." But probably in the matter
of natural scenes we hunger most for that which we most do feed upon.
At any
rate, I can conceive that one might be easily contented with what the
English
landscape affords him. The whole physiognomy of the
land bespeaks the action of slow, uniform, conservative agencies. There
is an
elemental composure and moderation in things that leave their mark
everywhere,
— a sort of elemental sweetness and docility that are a
surprise and a charm.
One does not forget that the evolution of man probably occurred in this
hemisphere, and time would seem to have proved that there is something
here
more favorable to his perpetuity and longevity. The dominant impression of
the English landscape is repose. Never was such a restful land to the
eye,
especially to the American eye, sated as it is very apt to be with the
mingled
squalor and splendor of its own landscape, its violent contrasts, and
general
spirit of unrest. But the completeness and composure of this outdoor
nature is
like a dream. It is like the poise of the tide at its full: every hurt
of the
world is healed, every shore covered, every unsightly spot is hidden.
The
circle of the horizon is brimming with the green equable flood. (I did
not see
the fens of Lincolnshire nor the wolds of York.) This look of repose is
partly
the result of the maturity and ripeness brought about by time and ages
of
patient and thorough husbandry, and partly the result of the gentle,
continent
spirit of Nature herself. She is contented, she is happily wedded, she
is well
clothed and fed. Her offspring swarm about her, her paths have fallen
in
pleasant places. The foliage of the trees, how dense and massive! The
turf of
the fields, how thick and uniform! The streams and rivers, how placid
and full,
showing no devastated margins, no widespread sandy wastes and unsightly
heaps of
drift boulders! To the returned traveler the foliage of the trees and
groves of
New England and New York looks thin and disheveled when compared with
the
foliage he has just left. This effect is probably owing to our cruder
soil and
sharper climate. The aspect of our trees in midsummer is as if the hair
of
their heads stood on end; the woods have a wild, frightened look, or as
if they
were just recovering from a debauch. In our intense light and
heat, the
leaves, instead of spreading themselves full to the sun and crowding
out upon
the ends of the branches as they do in England, retreat, as it were,
hide
behind each other, stand edgewise, perpendicular, or at any angle, to
avoid the
direct rays. In Britain, from the slow, dripping rains and the
excessive moisture,
the leaves of the trees droop more, and the branches are more pendent.
The rays
of light are fewer and feebler, and the foliage disposes itself so as
to catch
them all, and thus presents a fuller and broader surface to the eye of
the
beholder. The leaves are massed upon the outer ends of the branches,
while the
interior of the tree is comparatively leafless. The European plane-tree
is like
a tent. The foliage is all on the outside. The bird voices in it
reverberate as
in a chamber. "The
pillar'd dusk of
sounding sycamores," says Tennyson. At a little
distance, it has the mass and solidity of a rock. The same is true of
the
European maple, and when this tree is grown on our side of the Atlantic
it
keeps up its Old World habits. I have for several years taken note of a
few of
them growing in a park near my home. They have less grace and delicacy
of
outline than our native maple, but present a darker and more solid mass
of
foliage. The leaves are larger and less feathery, and are crowded to
the
periphery of the tree. Nearly every summer one of the trees, which is
most
exposed, gets the leaves on one side badly scorched. When the foliage
begins to
turn in the fall, the trees appear as if they had been lightly and
hastily
brushed with gold. The outer edges of the branches become a light
yellow,
while, a little deeper, the body of the foliage is still green. It is
this
solid and sculpturesque character of the English foliage that so fills
the eye
of the artist. The feathery, formless, indefinite, not to say thin,
aspect of
our leafage is much less easy to paint, and much less pleasing when
painted.
The same is true of the turf
in the fields and upon the hills. The sward with us, even in the oldest
meadows, will wear more or less a ragged, uneven aspect. The frost
heaves it,
the sun parches it; it is thin here and thick there, crabbed in one
spot and
fine and soft in another. Only by the frequent use of a heavy roller,
copious
waterings, and top-dressings, can we produce sod that approaches in
beauty even
that of the elevated sheep ranges in England and Scotland. The greater activity and
abundance of the earthworm, as disclosed by Darwin, probably has much
to do
with the smoothness and fatness of those fields when contrasted with
our own.
This little yet mighty engine is much less instrumental in leavening
and
leveling the soil in New England than in Old. The greater humidity of
the
mother country, the deep clayey soil, its fattening for ages by human
occupancy, the abundance of food, the milder climate, etc., are all
favorable
to the life and activity of the earthworm. Indeed, according
to Darwin,
the gardener that has made England a garden is none other than this
little
obscure creature. It plows, drains, airs, pulverizes,
fertilizes, and
levels. It cannot transport rocks and stone, but it can bury them; it
cannot
remove the ancient walls and pavements, but it can undermine them and
desposit
its rich castings above them. On each acre of land, he says,
"in
many parts of England, a weight of more than ten tons of dry earth
annually
passes through their bodies and is brought to the surface." "When we
behold a wide, turf-covered expanse," he further observes, "we should
remember that its smoothness, on which so much of its beauty depends,
is mainly
due to all the inequalities having been slowly leveled by worms." The small part which worms
play in this direction in our landscape is, I am convinced, more than
neutralized by our violent or disrupting climate; but England looks
like the
product of some such gentle, tireless, and beneficent agent. I have
referred to
that effect in the face of the landscape as if the soil had snowed
down; it
seems the snow came from the other direction, namely, from below, but
was
deposited with equal gentleness and uniformity. The repose and equipoise of
nature of which I have spoken appears in the fields of grain no less
than in
the turf and foliage. One may see vast stretches of wheat, oats,
barley, beans,
etc., as uniform as the surface of a lake, every stalk of grain or bean
the
size and height of every other stalk. This, of course, means good
husbandry; it
means a mild, even-tempered nature back of it, also. Then the repose of
the
English landscape is enhanced, rather than marred, by the part man has
played
in it. How those old arched bridges rest above the placid streams; how
easily
they conduct the trim, perfect highways over them! Where the foot finds
an easy
way, the eye finds the same; where the body finds harmony, the mind
finds
harmony. Those ivy-covered walls and ruins, those finished fields,
those
rounded hedge-rows, those embowered cottages, and that gray, massive
architecture, all contribute to the harmony and to the repose of the
landscape.
Perhaps in no other country are the grazing herds so much at ease.
One's first
impression, on seeing British fields in spring or summer, is that the
cattle
and sheep have all broken into the meadow and have not yet been
discovered by
the farmer; they have taken their fill, and are now reposing upon the
grass or
dreaming under the trees. But you presently perceive that it is all
meadow or
meadow-like; that there are no wild, weedy, or barren pastures about
which the
herds toil; but that they are in grass up to their eyes everywhere.
Hence their
contentment; hence another element of repose in the landscape. The softness and humidity of the English climate act in two ways in promoting that marvelous greenness of the land, namely, by growth and by decay. As the grass springs quickly, so its matured stalk or dry leaf decays quickly. No field growths are desiccated and preserved as with us; there are no dried stubble and seared leaves remaining over the winter to mar and obscure the verdancy of spring. Every dead thing is quickly converted back to vegetable mould. In the woods, in May, it is difficult to find any of the dry leaves of the previous autumn; in the fields and copses and along the highways, no stalk of weed or grass remains; while our wild, uplying pastures and mountain-tops always present a more or less brown and seared appearance from the dried and bleached stalks of the growth of the previous year, through which the fresh springing grass is scarcely visible. Where rain falls on nearly three hundred days in the year, as in the British islands, the conversion of the mould into grass, and vice versa, takes place very rapidly. |