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III
STRAWBERRIES WAS it old Dr. Parr who said
or sighed in his last illness, "Oh, if I can only live till
strawberries
come!" The old scholar imagined that, if he could weather it till then,
the berries would carry him through. No doubt he had turned from the
drugs and
the nostrums, or from the hateful food, to the memory of the pungent,
penetrating, and unspeakably fresh quality of the strawberry with the
deepest
longing. The very thought of these crimson lobes, embodying as it were
the
first glow and ardor of the young summer, and with their power to
unsheathe the
taste and spur the nagging appetite, made life seem possible and
desirable to
him. The strawberry is always the
hope of the invalid, and sometimes, no doubt, his salvation. It is the
first
and finest relish among fruits, and well merits Dr. Boteler's memorable
saying,
that "doubtless God could have made a better berry, but doubtless God
never did." On the threshold of summer,
Nature proffers us this her virgin fruit; more rich and sumptuous are
to
follow, but the wild delicacy and fillip of the strawberry are never
repeated,
— that keen feathered edge greets the tongue in nothing else. Let me not be afraid of
overpraising it, but probe and probe for words to hint its surprising
virtues.
We may well celebrate it with festivals and music. It has that
indescribable
quality of all first things, — that shy, uncloying, provoking
barbed sweetness.
It is eager and sanguine as youth. It is born of the copious dews, the
fragrant
nights, the tender skies, the plentiful rains of the early season. The
singing
of birds is in it, and the health and frolic of lusty Nature. It is the
product
of liquid May touched by the June sun. It has the tartness, the
briskness, the
unruliness of spring, and the aroma and intensity of summer. Oh, the strawberry days! how
vividly they come back to one! The smell of clover in the fields, of
blooming
rye on the hills, of the wild grape beside the woods, and of the sweet
honeysuckle and the spirœa about the house. The first hot, moist
days. The
daisies and the buttercups; the songs of the birds, their first
reckless
jollity and love-making over; the full tender foliage of the trees; the
bees
swarming, and the air strung with resonant musical chords. The time of
the
sweetest and most, succulent grass, when the cows come home with aching
udders.
Indeed, the strawberry belongs to the juiciest time of the year. What a challenge it is to
the taste! how it bites back again! and is there any other sound like
the snap
and crackle with which it salutes the ear on being plucked from the
stems? It
is a threat to one sense that the other is soon to verify. It snaps to
the ear
as it smacks to the tongue. All other berries are tame beside it. The plant is almost an
evergreen; it loves the coverlid of the snow, and will keep fresh
through the
severest winters with a slight protection. The frost leaves its virtues
in it.
The berry is a kind of vegetable snow. How cool, how tonic, how
melting, and
how perishable! It is almost as easy to keep frost. Heat kills it, and
sugar quickly
breaks up its cells. Is there anything like the
odor of strawberries? The next best thing to tasting them is to smell
them; one
may put his nose to the dish while the fruit is yet too rare and choice
for his
fingers. Touch not and taste not, but take a good smell and go mad!
Last fall I
potted some of the Downer, and in the winter grew them in the house. In
March
the berries were ripe, only four or five on a plant, just enough, all
told, to
make one consider whether it were not worth while to kill off the rest
of the
household, so that the berries need not be divided. But if every tongue
could
not have a feast, every nose banqueted daily upon them. They filled the
house
with perfume. The Downer is remarkable in this respect. Grown in the
open
field, it surpasses in its odor any strawberry of my acquaintance. And
it is
scarcely less agreeable to the taste. It is a very beautiful berry to
look
upon, round, light pink, with a delicate, fine-grained expression. Some
berries
shine, the Downer glows as if there were a red bloom upon it. Its core
is firm
and white, its skin thick and easily bruised, which makes it a poor
market
berry, but, with its high flavor and productiveness, an admirable one
for home
use. It seems to be as easily grown as the Wilson, while it is much
more
palatable. The great trouble with the Wilson, as everybody knows, is
its rank
acidity. When it first comes, it is difficult to eat it without making
faces.
It is crabbed and acrimonious. Like some persons, the Wilson will not
ripen and
sweeten till its old age. Its largest and finest crop, if allowed to
remain on
the vines, will soften and fail unregenerated, or with all its sins
upon it.
But wait till toward the end of the season, after the plant gets over
its hurry
and takes time to ripen its fruit. The berry will then face the sun for
days,
and, if the weather is not too wet, instead of softening will turn dark
and
grow rich. Out of its crabbedness and spitefulness come the finest,
choicest
flavors. It is an astonishing berry. It lays hold of the taste in a way
that
the aristocratic berries, like the Jocunda or the Triumph, cannot
approximate
to. Its quality is as penetrating as that of ants and wasps, but sweet.
It is,
indeed, a wild bee turned into a berry, with the sting mollified and
the honey
disguised. A quart of these rare-ripes I venture to say contains more
of the
peculiar virtue and excellence of the strawberry kind than can be had
in twice
the same quantity of any other cultivated variety. Take these berries
in a bowl
of rich milk with some bread, — ah, what a dish! — too good
to set before a
king! I suspect this was the food of Adam in Paradise, only Adam did
not have
the Wilson strawberry; he had the wild strawberry that Eve plucked in
their
hill-meadow and "hulled" with her own hands, and that, take it all in
all, even surpasses the late-ripened Wilson. Adam is still extant in the
taste and the appetite of most country boys; lives there a country boy
who does
not like wild strawberries and milk, — yea, prefer it to any
other known dish?
I am not thinking of a dessert of strawberries and cream; this the city
boy may
have, too, after a sort; but bread-and-milk, with the addition of wild
strawberries, is peculiarly a country dish, and is to the taste what a
wild
bird's song is to the ear. When I was a lad, and went afield with my
hoe or
with the cows, during the strawberry season, I was sure to return at
meal-time
with a lining of berries in the top of my straw hat. They were my daily
food,
and I could taste the liquid and gurgling notes of the bobolink in
every
spoonful of them; and to this day, to make a dinner or supper off a
bowl of
milk with bread and strawberries, — plenty of strawberries,
— well, is as near
to being a boy again as I ever expect to come. The golden age draws
sensibly
near. Appetite becomes a kind of delicious thirst, — a gentle and
subtle
craving of all parts of the mouth and throat, — and those nerves
of taste that
occupy, as it were, a back seat, and take little cognizance of grosser
foods,
come forth, and are played upon and set vibrating. Indeed, I think, if
there is
ever rejoicing throughout one's alimentary household, — if ever
that
much-abused servant, the stomach, says Amen, or those faithful
handmaidens, the
liver and spleen, nudge each other delightedly, it must be when one on
a torrid
summer day passes by the solid and carnal dinner for this simple
Arcadian dish.
The wild strawberry, like
the wild apple, is spicy and high-flavored, but, unlike the apple, it
is also
mild and delicious. It has the true rustic sweetness and piquancy. What
it
lacks in size, when compared with the garden berry, it makes up in
intensity.
It is never dropsical or overgrown, but firm-fleshed and hardy. Its
great
enemies are the plow, gypsum, and the horse-rake. It dislikes a
limestone soil,
but seems to prefer the detritus of the stratified rock. Where the
sugar maple
abounds, I have always found plenty of wild strawberries. We have two
kinds, —
the wood berry and the field berry. The former is as wild as a
partridge. It is
found in open places in the woods and along the borders, growing beside
stumps
and rocks, never in abundance, but very sparsely. It is small,
cone-shaped,
dark red, shiny, and pimply. It looks woody, and tastes so. It has
never
reached the table, nor made the acquaintance of cream. A quart of them,
at a
fair price for human labor, would be worth their weight in silver at
least.
(Yet a careful observer writes me that in certain sections in the
western part
of New York they are very plentiful.) Ovid mentions the wood
strawberry, which would lead one to infer that they were more abundant
in his
time and country than in ours. This is, perhaps, the same
as the alpine strawberry, which is said to grow in the mountains of
Greece, and
thence northward. This was probably the first variety cultivated,
though our
native species would seem as unpromising a subject for the garden as
club-moss
or wintergreens. Of the field strawberry
there are a great many varieties, — some growing in meadows, some
in pastures,
and some upon mountain-tops. Some are round, and stick close to the
calyx or
hull; some are long and pointed, with long, tapering necks. These
usually grow
upon tall stems. They are, indeed, of the slim, linear kind. Your
corpulent
berry keeps close to the ground; its stem and foot-stalk are short, and
neck it
has none. Its color is deeper than that of its tall brother, and of
course it
has more juice. You are more apt to find the tall varieties upon knolls
in low,
wet meadows, and again upon mountain-tops, growing in tussocks of wild
grass
about the open summits. These latter ripen in July, and give one his
last taste
of strawberries for the season. But the favorite haunt of
the wild strawberry is an uplying meadow that has been exempt from the
plow for
five or six years, and that has little timothy and much daisy. When you
go
a-berrying, turn your steps toward the milk-white meadows. The slightly
bitter
odor of the daisies is very agreeable to the smell, and affords a good
background for the perfume of the fruit. The strawberry cannot cope
with the
rank and deep-rooted clover, and seldom appears in a field till the
clover has
had its day. But the daisy with its slender stalk does not crowd or
obstruct
the plant, while its broad white flower is like a light parasol that
tempers
and softens the too strong sunlight. Indeed, daisies and strawberries
are
generally associated. Nature fills her dish with the berries, then
covers them
with the white and yellow of milk and cream, thus suggesting a
combination we
are quick to follow. Milk alone, after it loses its animal heat, is a
clod, and
begets torpidity of the brain; the berries lighten it, give wings to
it, and
one is fed as by the air he breathes or the water he drinks. Then the delight of
"picking" the wild berries! It is one of the fragrant memories of
boyhood. Indeed, for boy or man to go a-berrying in a certain pastoral
country
I know of, where a passer-by along the highway is often regaled by a
breeze
loaded with a perfume of the o'er-ripe fruit, is to get nearer to June
than by
almost any course I know of. Your errand is so private and
confidential! You
stoop low. You part away the grass and the daisies, and would lay bare
the
inmost secrets of the meadow. Everything is yet tender and succulent;
the very
air is bright and new; the warm breath of the meadow comes up in your
face; to
your knees you are in a sea of daisies and clover; from your knees up,
you are
in a sea of solar light and warmth. Now you are prostrate like a
swimmer, or
like a surf-bather reaching for pebbles or shells, the white and green
spray
breaks above you; then, like a devotee before a shrine or naming his
beads,
your rosary strung with luscious berries; anon you are a grazing
Nebuchadnezzar, or an artist taking an inverted view of the landscape. The birds are alarmed by
your close scrutiny of their domain. They hardly know whether to sing
or to
cry, and do a little of both. The bobolink follows you and circles
above and in
advance of you, and is ready to give you a triumphal exit from the
field, if
you will only depart.
"Ye boys that gather
flowers and strawberries,
Lo, hid within the grass, an adder lies," Warton makes Virgil sing;
and Montaigne, in his "Journey to Italy," says: "The children
very often are afraid, on account of the snakes, to go and pick the
strawberries that grow in quantities on the mountains and among
bushes."
But there is no serpent here, — at worst, only a bumblebee's or
yellow-jacket's
nest. You soon find out the spring in the corner of the field under the
beechen
tree. While you wipe your brow and thank the Lord for spring water, you
glance
at the initials in the bark, some of them so old that they seem runic
and
legendary. You find out, also, how gregarious the strawberry is,
— that the
different varieties exist in little colonies about the field. When you
strike
the outskirts of one of these plantations, how quickly you work toward
the
centre of it, and then from the centre out, then circumnavigate it, and
follow
up all its branchings and windings! Then the delight in the
abstract and in the concrete of strolling and lounging about the June
meadows;
of lying in pickle for half a day or more in this pastoral sea, laved
by the
great tide, shone upon by the virile sun, drenched to the very marrow
of your
being with the warm and wooing influences of the young summer! I was a famous berry-picker
when a boy. It was near enough to hunting and fishing to enlist me.
Mother
would always send me in preference to any of the rest of the boys. I
got the
biggest berries and the most of them. There was something of the
excitement of
the chase in the occupation, and something of the charm and
preciousness of
game about the trophies. The pursuit had its surprises, its
expectancies, its
sudden disclosures, — in fact, its uncertainties. I went forth
adventurously. I
could wander free as the wind. Then there were moments of inspiration,
for it
always seemed a felicitous stroke to light upon a particularly fine
spot, as it
does when one takes an old and wary trout. You discovered the game
where it was
hidden. Your genius prompted you. Another had passed that way and had
missed
the prize. Indeed, the successful berry-picker, like Walton's angler,
is born,
not made. It is only another kind of angling. In the same field one boy
gets
big berries and plenty of them; another wanders up and down, and finds
only a
few little ones. He cannot see them; he does not know how to divine
them where
they lurk under the leaves and vines. The berry-grower knows that in
the
cultivated patch his pickers are very unequal, the baskets of one boy
or girl
having so inferior a look that it does not seem possible they could
have been
filled from the same vines with certain others. But neither blunt
fingers nor
blunt eyes are hard to find; and as there are those who can see nothing
clearly, so there are those who can touch nothing deftly or gently. The cultivation of the
strawberry is thought to be comparatively modern. The ancients appear
to have
been a carnivorous race: they gorged themselves with meat; while the
modern man
makes larger and larger use of fruits and vegetables, until this
generation is
doubtless better fed than any that has preceded it. The strawberry and
the
apple, and such vegetables as celery, ought to lengthen human life,
— at least
to correct its biliousness and make it more sweet and sanguine. The first impetus to
strawberry culture seems to have been given by the introduction of our
field
berry (Fragaria Virginiana) into England in the seventeenth
century,
though not much progress was made till the eighteenth. This variety is
much
more fragrant and aromatic than the native berry of Europe, though less
so in
that climate than when grown here. Many new seedlings sprang from it,
and it
was the prevailing berry in English and French gardens, says Fuller,
until the
South American species, grandiflora, was introduced and
supplanted it.
This berry is naturally much larger and sweeter, and better adapted to
the
English climate, than our Virginiana. Hence the English
strawberries of
to-day surpass ours in these respects, but are wanting in that aromatic
pungency that characterizes most of our berries. The Jocunda, Triumph,
Victoria, are foreign varieties of the Grandiflora species; while the
Hovey,
the Boston Pine, the Downer, are natives of this country. The strawberry, in the main, repeats the form of the human heart, and perhaps, of all the small fruits known to man, none other is so deeply and fondly cherished, or hailed with such universal delight, as this lowly but youth-renewing berry. |