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VII
A BED OF BOUGHS WHEN Aaron came again to
camp and tramp with me, or, as he wrote, "to eat locusts and wild honey
with me in the wilderness," It was past the middle of August, and the
festival of the season neared its close. We were belated guests, but
perhaps
all the more eager on that account, especially as the country was
suffering
from a terrible drought, and the only promise of anything fresh or
tonic or
cool was in primitive woods and mountain passes. "Now, my friend,"
said I, "we can go to Canada, or to the Maine woods, or to the
Adirondacks,
and thus have a whole loaf and a big loaf of this bread which you know
as well
as I will have heavy streaks in it, and will not be uniformly sweet; or
we can
seek nearer woods, and content ourselves with one week instead of four,
with
the prospect of a keen relish to the last. Four sylvan weeks sound
well, but
the poetry is mainly confined to the first one. We can take another
slice or
two of the Catskills, can we not, without being sated with kills and
dividing
ridges?" "Anywhere,"
replied Aaron, "so that we have a good tramp and plenty of primitive
woods. No doubt we should find good browsing on Peakamoose, and trout
enough in
the streams at its base." So without further ado we
made ready, and in due time found ourselves, with our packs on our
backs,
entering upon a pass in the mountains that led to the valley of the
Rondout. The scenery was wild and
desolate in the extreme, the mountains on either hand looking as if
they had
been swept by a tornado of stone. Stone avalanches hung suspended on
their
sides, or had shot down into the chasm below. It was a kind of Alpine
scenery,
where crushed and broken boulders covered the earth instead of snow. In the depressions in the
mountains the rocky fragments seemed to have accumulated, and to have
formed
what might be called stone glaciers that were creeping slowly down. Two hours' march brought us
into heavy timber where the stone cataclysm had not reached, and before
long
the soft voice of the Rondout was heard in the gulf below us. We paused
at a spring
run, and I followed it a few yards down its mountain stairway, carpeted
with
black moss, and had my first glimpse of the unknown stream. I stood
upon rocks
and looked many feet down into a still, sunlit pool and saw the trout
disporting themselves in the transparent water, and I was ready to
encamp at
once; but my companion, who had not been tempted by the view, insisted
upon
holding to our original purpose, which was to go farther up the stream.
We
passed a clearing with three or four houses and a saw-mill. The dam of
the
latter was filled with such clear water that it seemed very shallow,
and not
ten or twelve feet deep, as it really was. The fish were as conspicuous
as if
they had been in a pail. Two miles farther up we
suited ourselves and went into camp. If there ever was a stream
cradled in the rocks, detained lovingly by them, held and fondled in a
rocky
lap or tossed in rocky arms, that stream is the Rondout. Its course for
several
miles from its head is over the stratified rock, and into this it has
worn a
channel that presents most striking and peculiar features. Now it comes
silently along on the top of the rock, spread out and flowing over that
thick,
dark green moss that is found only in the coldest streams; then drawn
into a
narrow canal only four or five feet wide, through which it shoots,
black and
rigid, to be presently caught in a deep basin with shelving,
overhanging rocks,
beneath which the phœbe-bird builds in security, and upon
which the fisherman
stands and casts his twenty or thirty feet of line without fear of
being
thwarted by the brush; then into a black, well-like pool, ten or
fifteen feet
deep, with a smooth, circular wall of rock on one side worn by the
water
through long ages; or else into a deep, oblong pocket, into which and
out of
which the water glides without a ripple. The surface rock is a coarse
sandstone superincumbent upon a lighter-colored conglomerate that looks
like
Shawangunk grits, and when this latter is reached by the water it seems
to be
rapidly disintegrated by it, thus forming the deep excavations alluded
to. My eyes had never before
beheld such beauty in a mountain stream. The water was almost as
transparent as
the air, — was, indeed, like liquid air; and as it lay in
these wells and pits
enveloped in shadow, or lit up by a chance ray of the vertical sun, it
was a
perpetual feast to the eye, — so cool, so deep, so pure;
every reach and pool
like a vast spring. You lay down and drank or dipped the water up in
your cup,
and found it just the right degree of refreshing coldness. One is never
prepared for the clearness of the water in these streams. It is always
a
surprise. See them every year for a dozen years, and yet, when you
first come
upon one, you will utter an exclamation. I saw nothing like it in the
Adirondacks,
nor in Canada. Absolutely without stain or hint of impurity, it seems
to
magnify like a lens, so that the bed of the stream and the fish in it
appear
deceptively near. It is rare to find even a trout stream that is not a
little
"off color," as they say of diamonds, but the waters in the section
of which I am writing have the genuine ray; it is the undimmed and
untarnished
diamond. If I were a trout, I should
ascend every stream till I found the Rondout. It is the ideal brook.
What homes
these fish have, what retreats under the rocks, what paved or flagged
courts
and areas, what crystal depths where no net or snare can reach them!
— no mud,
no sediment, but here and there in the clefts and seams of the rock
patches of
white gravel, — spawning-beds ready-made. The finishing touch is given
by the moss with which the rock is everywhere carpeted. Even in the
narrow
grooves or channels where the water runs the swiftest, the green lining
is
unbroken. It sweeps down under the stream and up again on the other
side, like
some firmly woven texture. It softens every outline and cushions every
stone.
At a certain depth in the great basins and wells it of course ceases,
and only
the smooth-swept flagging of the place-rock is visible. The trees are kept well back
from the margin of the stream by the want of soil, and the large ones
unite
their branches far above it, thus forming a high winding gallery, along
which
the fisherman passes and makes his long casts with scarcely an
interruption
from branch or twig. In a few places he makes no cast, but sees from
his rocky
perch the water twenty feet below him, and drops his hook into it as
into a
well. We made camp at a bend in
the creek where there was a large surface of mossy rock uncovered by
the
shrunken stream, — a clean, free space left for us in the
wilderness that was
faultless as a kitchen and dining-room, and a marvel of beauty as a
lounging-room, or an open court, or what you will. An obsolete wood or
bark
road conducted us to it, and disappeared up the hill in the woods
beyond. A
loose boulder lay in the middle, and on the edge next the stream were
three or
four large natural wash-basins scooped out of the rock, and ever filled
ready
for use. Our lair we carved out of the thick brush under a large birch
on the
bank. Here we planted our flag of smoke and feathered our nest with
balsam and
hemlock boughs and ferns, and laughed at your four walls and pillows of
down. Wherever one encamps in the
woods, there is home, and every object and feature about the place take
on a
new interest and assume a near and friendly relation to one. We were at
the
head of the best fishing. There was an old bark-clearing not far off
which
afforded us a daily dessert of most delicious blackberries, —
an important item
in the woods, — and then all the features of the place
— a sort of cave above
ground — were of the right kind. There was not a mosquito, or
gnat, or other pest in the woods, the cool nights having already cut
them off.
The trout were sufficiently abundant, and afforded us a few hours'
sport daily
to supply our wants. The only drawback was, that they were out of
season, and
only palatable to a woodman's keen appetite. What is this about trout
spawning
in October and November, and in some cases not till March? These trout
had all
spawned in August, every one of them. The coldness and purity of the
water
evidently made them that much earlier. The game laws of the State
protect the
fish after September 1, proceeding upon the theory that its spawning
season is
later than that, — as it is in many cases, but not in all, as
we found out. The fish are small in these
streams, seldom weighing over a few ounces. Occasionally a large one is
seen of
a pound or pound and a half weight. I remember one such, as black as
night,
that ran under a black rock. But I remember much more distinctly a
still larger
one that I caught and lost one eventful day. I had him on my hook ten
minutes, and actually got my thumb in his mouth, and yet he escaped. It was only the
over-eagerness of the sportsman. I imagined I could hold him by the
teeth. The place where I struck him
was a deep well-hole, and I was perched upon a log that spanned it ten
or
twelve feet above the water. The situation was all the more interesting
because
I saw no possible way to land my fish. I could not lead him ashore, and
my
frail tackle could not be trusted to lift him sheer from that pit to my
precarious perch. What should I do? call for help? but no help was
near. I had
a revolver in my pocket and might have shot him through and through,
but that
novel proceeding did not occur to me until it was too late. I would
have taken
a Sam Patch leap into the water, and have wrestled with my antagonist
in his
own element, but I knew the slack, thus sure to occur, would probably
free him;
so I peered down upon the beautiful creature and enjoyed my triumph as
far as
it went. He was caught very lightly through his upper jaw, and I
expected every
struggle and somersault would break the hold. Presently I saw a place
in the
rocks where I thought it possible, with such an incentive, to get down
within
reach of the water: by careful manœuvring I slipped my pole
behind me and got
hold of the line, which I cut and wound around my finger; then I made
my way
toward the end of the log and the place in the rocks, leading my fish
along
much exhausted on the top of the water. By an effort worthy the
occasion I got
down within reach of the fish, and, as I have already confessed, thrust
my
thumb into his mouth and pinched his cheek; he made a spring and was
free from
my hand and the hook at the same time; for a moment he lay panting on
the top
of the water, then, recovering himself slowly, made his way down
through the
clear, cruel element beyond all hope of recapture. My blind impulse to
follow
and try to seize him was very strong, but I kept my hold and peered and
peered
long after the fish was lost to view, then looked my mortification in
the face
and laughed a bitter laugh. "But, hang it! I had
all the fun of catching the fish, and only miss the pleasure of eating
him,
which at this time would not be great." "The fun, I take
it," said my soldier, "is in triumphing, and not in being beaten at
the last." "Well, have it so; but
I would not exchange those ten or fifteen minutes with that trout for
the tame two
hours you have spent in catching that string of thirty. To see a big
fish after
days of small fry is an event; to have a jump from one is a glimpse of
the
sportsman's paradise; and to hook one, and actually have him under your
control
for ten minutes, — why, that is paradise itself as long as it
lasts." One day I went down to the
house of a settler a mill below, and engaged the good dame to make us a
couple
of loaves of bread, and in the evening we went down after them. How
elastic and
exhilarating the walk was through the cool, transparent shadows! The
sun was
gilding the mountains, and its yellow light seemed to be reflected
through all
the woods. At one point we looked through and along a valley of deep
shadow
upon a broad sweep of mountain quite near and densely clothed with
woods,
flooded from base to summit by the setting sun. It was a wild,
memorable scene.
What power and effectiveness in Nature, I thought, and how rarely an
artist
catches her touch! Looking down upon or squarely into a mountain
covered with a
heavy growth of birch and maple, and shone upon by the sun, is a sight
peculiarly agreeable to me. How closely the swelling umbrageous heads
of the
trees fit together, and how the eye revels in the flowing and easy
uniformity,
while the mind feels the ruggedness and terrible power beneath! As we came back, the light
yet lingered on the top of Slide Mountain. "'The last that parleys
with the setting sun,'" said
I, quoting
Wordsworth.
"That line is almost Shakespearean," said my companion. "It suggests that great hand at least, though it has not the grit and virility of the more primitive bard. What triumph and fresh morning power in Shakespeare's lines that will occur to us at sunrise to-morrow!
Or
in this:
—
There is
savage, perennial
beauty there, the quality that Wordsworth
and nearly all
the modern
poets
lack."
"But Wordsworth is the
poet of the mountains," said I, "and of lonely peaks. True, he does
not express the power and aboriginal grace there is in them, nor toy
with them
and pluck them up by the hair of their heads, as Shakespeare does.
There is
something in Peakamoose yonder, as we see it from this point, cutting
the blue
vault with its dark, serrated edge, not in the bard of Grasmere; but he
expresses the feeling of loneliness and insignificance that the
cultivated man
has in the presence of mountains, and the burden of solemn emotion they
give
rise to. Then there is something much more wild and merciless, much
more remote
from human interests and ends, in our long, high, wooded ranges than is
expressed by the peaks and scarred groups of the lake country of
Britain. These
mountains we behold and cross are not picturesque, — they are
wild and inhuman
as the sea. In them you are in a maze, in a weltering world of woods;
you can
see neither the earth nor the sky, but a confusion of the growth and
decay of
centuries, and must traverse them by your compass or your science of
woodcraft,
— a rift through the trees giving one a glimpse of the
opposite range or of the
valley beneath, and he is more at sea than ever; one does not know his
own farm
or settlement when framed in these mountain treetops; all look alike
unfamiliar." Not the least of the charm
of camping out is your camp-fire at night. What an artist! What
pictures are
boldly thrown or faintly outlined upon the canvas of the night! Every
object,
every attitude of your companion is striking and memorable. You see
effects and
groups every moment that you would give money to be able to carry away
with you
in enduring form. How the shadows leap, and skulk, and hover about!
Light and
darkness are in perpetual tilt and warfare, with first the one
unhorsed, then
the other. The friendly and cheering fire, what acquaintance we make
with it!
We had almost forgotten there was such an element, we had so long known
only
its dark offspring, heat. Now we see the wild beauty uncaged and note
its manner
and temper. How surely it creates its own draught and sets the currents
going,
as force and enthusiasm always will! It carves itself a chimney out of
the
fluid and houseless air. A friend, a ministering angel, in subjection;
a fiend,
a fury, a monster, ready to devour the world, if ungoverned. By day it
burrows
in the ashes and sleeps; at night it comes forth and sits upon its
throne of
rude logs, and rules the camp, a sovereign queen. Near camp stood a tall,
ragged yellow birch, its partially cast-off bark hanging in crisp
sheets or
dense rolls. "That tree needs the
barber," we said, "and shall have a call from him to-night." So after dark I touched a match into it, and we saw the flames creep up and wax in fury until the whole tree and its main branches stood wrapped in a sheet of roaring flame. It was a wild and striking spectacle, and must have advertised our camp to every nocturnal creature in the forest. What does the camper think
about when lounging around the fire at night? Not much, — of
the sport of the
day, of the big fish he lost and might have saved, of the distant
settlement,
of to-morrow's plans. An owl hoots off in the mountain and he thinks of
him; if
a wolf were to howl or a panther to scream, he would think of him the
rest of
the night. As it is, things flicker and hover through his mind, and he
hardly
knows whether it is the past or the present that possesses him. Certain
it is,
he feels the hush and solitude of the great forest, and, whether he
will or
not, all his musings are in some way cast upon that huge background of
the
night. Unless he is an old camper-out, there will be an undercurrent of
dread
or half fear. My companion said he could not help but feel all the time
that
there ought to be a sentinel out there pacing up and down. One seems to
require
less sleep in the woods, as if the ground and the untempered air rested
and
refreshed him sooner. The balsam and the hemlock heal his aches very
quickly.
If one is awakened often during the night, as he invariably is, he does
not feel
that sediment of sleep in his mind next day that he does when the same
interruption occurs at home; the boughs have drawn it all out of him. And it is wonderful how
rarely any of the housed and tender white man's colds or influenzas
come
through these open doors and windows of the woods. It is our partial
isolation
from Nature that is dangerous; throw yourself unreservedly upon her and
she
rarely betrays you. If one takes anything to the
woods to read, he seldom reads it; it does not taste good with such
primitive
air. There are very few camp
poems that I know of, poems that would be at home with one on such an
expedition; there is plenty that is weird and spectral, as in Poe, but
little
that is woody and wild as this scene is. I recall a Canadian poem by
the late
C. D. Shanly — the only one, I believe, the author ever wrote
— that fits well
the distended pupil of the mind's eye about the camp-fire at night. It
was
printed many years ago in the "Atlantic Monthly," and is called
"The Walker of the Snow;" it begins thus: —
"That has a Canadian sound," said Aaron; "give us more of it."
And so on. The intent seems to be to personify the fearful cold that overtakes and benumbs the traveler in the great Canadian forests in winter. This stanza brings out the silence or desolation of the scene very effectively, — a scene without sound or motion: —
"The rest of the poem
runs thus: —
"Ah!" exclaimed my
companion. "Let us pile on more of those dry birch-logs; I feel both
the
'fear-chill' and the 'cold-chill' creeping over me. How far is it to
the valley
of the Neversink?" "About three or four
hours' march, the man said." "I hope we have no
haunted valleys to cross?" "None," said I,
"but we pass an old log cabin about which there hangs a ghostly
superstition. At a certain hour in the night, during the time the bark
is loose
on the hemlock, a female form is said to steal from it and grope its
way into the
wilderness. The tradition runs that her lover, who was a bark-peeler
and
wielded the spud, was killed by his rival, who felled a tree upon him
while
they were at work. The girl, who helped her mother cook for the
'hands,' was
crazed by the shock, and that night stole forth into the woods and was
never
seen or heard of more. There are old hunters who aver that her cry may
still be
heard at night at the head of the valley whenever a tree falls in the
stillness
of the forest." "Well, I heard a tree
fall not ten minutes ago," said Aaron; "a distant, rushing sound with
a subdued crash at the end of it, and the only answering cry I heard
was the
shrill voice of the screech owl off yonder against the mountain. But
maybe it
was not an owl," said he after a moment; "let us help the legend
along by believing it was the voice of the lost maiden." "By the way,"
continued he, "do you remember the pretty creature we saw seven years
ago
in the shanty on the West Branch, who was really helping her mother
cook for
the hands, a slip of a girl twelve or thirteen years old, with eyes as
beautiful and bewitching as the waters that flowed by her cabin? I was
wrapped
in admiration till she spoke; then how the spell was broken! Such a
voice! It
was like the sound of pots and pans when you expected to hear a lute." The next day we bade
farewell to the Rondout, and set out to cross the mountain to the east
branch
of the Neversink. "We shall find tame
waters compared with these, I fear, — a shriveled stream
brawling along over
loose stones, with few pools or deep places." Our course was along the
trail of the bark-men who had pursued the doomed hemlock to the last
tree at
the head of the valley. As we passed along, a red steer stepped out of
the
bushes into the road ahead of us, where the sunshine fell full upon
him, and,
with a half-scared, beautiful look, begged alms of salt. We passed the
Haunted
Shanty; but both it and the legend about it looked very tame at ten
o'clock in
the morning. After the road had faded out, we took to the bed of the
stream to
avoid the gauntlet of the underbrush, skipping up the mountain from
boulder to
boulder. Up and up we went, with frequent pauses and copious quaffing
of the
cold water. My soldier declared a "haunted valley" would be a
godsend; anything but endless dragging of one's self up such an Alpine
stairway. The winter wren, common all through the woods, peeped and
scolded at
us as we sat blowing near the summit, and the oven-bird, not quite sure
as to
what manner of creatures we were, hopped down a limb to within a few
feet of us
and had a good look, then darted off into the woods to tell the news. I
also
noted the Canada warbler, the chestnut-sided warbler, and the
black-throated
blue-back, — the latter most abundant of all. Up these
mountain brooks, too, goes
the belted kingfisher, swooping around through the woods when he spies
the
fisherman, then wheeling into the open space of the stream and
literally making
a "blue streak" down under the branches. At last the stream which had
been our guide was lost under the rocks, and before long the top was
gained.
These mountains are horse-shaped. There is always a broad, smooth back,
more or
less depressed, which the hunter aims to bestride; rising rapidly from
this is
pretty sure to be a rough, curving ridge that carries the forest up to
some
highest peak. We were lucky in hitting the saddle, but we could see a
little to
the south the sharp, steep neck of the steed sweeping up toward the sky
with an
erect mane of balsam fir. These mountains are
steed-like in other respects: any timid and vacillating course with
them is
sure to get you into trouble. One must strike out boldly, and not be
disturbed
by the curveting and shying; the valley you want lies squarely behind
them, but
farther off than you think, and if you do not go for it resolutely, you
will
get bewildered and the mountain will play you a trick. I may say that Aaron and I
kept a tight rein and a good pace till we struck a water-course on the
other
side, and that we clattered down it with no want of decision till it
emptied
into a larger stream which we knew must be the East Branch. An
abandoned
fish-pole lay on the stones, marking the farthest point reached by some
fisherman. According to our reckoning, we were five or six miles above
the
settlement, with a good depth of primitive woods all about us. We kept on down the stream,
now and then pausing at a likely place to take some trout for dinner,
and with
an eye out for a good camping-ground. Many of the trout were full of
ripe
spawn, and a few had spawned, the season with them being a little later
than on
the stream we had left, perhaps because the water was less cold.
Neither had
the creek here any such eventful and startling career. It led, indeed,
quite a
humdrum sort of life under the roots and fallen treetops and among the
loose
stones. At rare intervals it beamed upon us from some still reach or
dark
cover, and won from us our best attention in return. The day was quite spent
before we had pitched our air-woven tent and prepared our dinner, and
we gathered
boughs for our bed in the gloaming. Breakfast had to be caught in the
morning
and was not served early, so that it was nine o'clock before we were in
motion.
A little bird, the red-eyed vireo, warbled most cheerily in the trees
above our
camp, and, as Aaron said, "gave us a good send-off." We kept down the
stream, following the inevitable bark road. My companion had refused to
look at another "dividing ridge" that had neither path nor way, and
henceforth I must keep to the open road or travel alone. Two hours'
tramp
brought us to an old clearing with some rude, tumble-down log buildings
that
many years before had been occupied by the bark and lumber men. The
prospect
for trout was so good in the stream hereabouts, and the scene so
peaceful and
inviting, shone upon by the dreamy August sun, that we concluded to
tarry here
until the next day. It was a page of pioneer history opened to quite
unexpectedly. A dim footpath led us a few yards to a superb spring, in
which a
trout from the near creek had taken up his abode. We took possession of
what
had been a shingle-shop, attracted by its huge fireplace. We floored it
with
balsam boughs, hung its walls with our "traps," and sent the smoke
curling again from its disused chimney. The most musical and
startling sound we heard in the woods greeted our ears that evening
about
sundown as we sat on a log in front of our quarters, — the
sound of slow,
measured pounding in the valley below us. We did not know how near we
were to
human habitations, and the report of the lumberman's mallet, like the
hammering
of a great woodpecker, was music to the ear and news to the mind. The
air was
still and dense, and the silence such as alone broods over these little
openings in the primitive woods. My soldier started as if he had heard
a
signal-gun. The sound, coming so far through the forest, sweeping over
those
great wind-harps of trees, became wild and legendary, though probably
made by a
lumberman driving a wedge or working about his mill. We expected a friendly visit
from porcupines that night, as we saw where they had freshly gnawed all
about
us; hence, when a red squirrel came and looked in upon us very early in
the
morning and awoke us by his snickering and giggling, my comrade cried
out,
"There is your porcupig." How the frisking red rogue seemed to enjoy
what he had found! He looked in at the door and snickered, then in at
the
window, then peeked down from between the rafters and cachinnated till
his
sides must have ached; then struck an attitude upon the chimney, and
fairly
squealed with mirth and ridicule. In fact, he grew so obstreperous, and
so
disturbed our repose, that we had to "shoo" him away with one of our
boots. He declared most plainly that he had never before seen so
preposterous a
figure as we cut lying there in the corner of that old shanty. The morning boded rain, the
week to which we had limited ourselves drew near its close, and we
concluded to
finish our holiday worthily by a good square tramp to the railroad
station,
twenty-three miles distant, as it proved. Two miles brought us to
stumpy
fields, and to the house of the upper inhabitant. They told us there
was a
short cut across the mountain, but my soldier shook his head. "Better twenty miles of
Europe," said he, getting Tennyson a little mixed, "than one of
Cathay, or Slide Mountain either." Drops of the much-needed
rain began to come down, and I hesitated in front of the woodshed. "Sprinkling weather
always comes to some bad end," said Aaron, with a reminiscence of an
old
couplet in his mind, and so it proved, for it did not get beyond a
sprinkle,
and the sun shone out before noon. In the next woods I picked
up from the middle of the road the tail and one hind leg of one of our
native
rats, the first I had ever seen except in a museum. An owl or fox had
doubtless
left it the night before. It was evident the fragments had once formed
part of
a very elegant and slender creature. The fur that remained (for it was
not
hair) was tipped with red. My reader doubtless knows that the common
rat is an
importation, and that there is a native American rat, usually found
much
farther south than the locality of which I am writing, that lives in
the woods,
— a sylvan rat, very wild and nocturnal in his habits, and
seldom seen even by
hunters or woodmen. Its eyes are large and fine, and its form slender.
It looks
like only a far-off undegenerate cousin of the filthy creature that has
come to
us from the long-peopled Old World. Some creature ran between my feet
and the
fire toward morning, the last night we slept in the woods, and I have
little
doubt it was one of these wood-rats. The people in these back
settlements are almost as shy and furtive as the animals. Even the men
look a
little scared when you stop them by your questions. The children dart
behind
their parents when you look at them. As we sat on a bridge resting,
— for our
packs still weighed fifteen or twenty pounds each, — two
women passed us with
pails on their arms, going for blackberries. They filed by with their
eyes down
like two abashed nuns. In due time we found an old
road, to which we had been directed, that led over the mountain to the
West
Branch. It was a hard pull, sweetened by blackberries and a fine
prospect. The
snowbird was common along the way, and a solitary wild pigeon shot
through the
woods in front of us, recalling the nests we had seen on the East
Branch, —
little scaffoldings of twigs scattered all through the trees. It was nearly noon when we
struck the West Branch, and the sun was scalding hot. We knew that two
and
three pound trout had been taken there, and yet we wet not a line in
its
waters. The scene was primitive, and carried one back to the days of
his
grandfather, stumpy fields, log fences, log houses and barns. A boy
twelve or
thirteen years old came out of a house ahead of us eating a piece of
bread and
butter. We soon overtook him and held converse with him. He knew the
land well,
and what there was in the woods and the waters. He had walked out to
the
railroad station, fourteen miles distant, to see the cars, and back the
same
day. I asked him about the flies and mosquitoes, etc. He said they were
all
gone except the "blunder-heads;" there were some of them left yet. "What are
blunder-heads?" I inquired, sniffing new game. "The pesky little fly
that gets into your eye when you are a-fishing." Ah, yes! I knew him well. We
had got acquainted some days before, and I thanked the boy for the
name. It is
an insect that hovers before your eye as you thread the streams, and
you are
forever vaguely brushing at it under the delusion that it is a little
spider
suspended from your hat-brim; and just as you want to see clearest,
into your
eye it goes, head and ears, and is caught between the lids. You miss
your cast,
but you catch a "blunder-head." We paused under a bridge at
the mouth of Biscuit Brook and ate our lunch, and I can recommend it to
be as
good a wayside inn as the pedestrian need look for. Better bread and
milk than
we had there I never expect to find. The milk was indeed so good that
Aaron
went down to the little log house under the hill a mile farther on and
asked
for more; and being told they had no cow, he lingered five minutes on
the
doorstone with his sooty pail in his hand, putting idle questions about
the way
and distance to the mother while he refreshed himself with the sight of
a
well-dressed and comely-looking young girl, her daughter. "I got no milk,"
said he, hurrying on after me, "but I got something better, only I
cannot
divide it." "I know what it
is," replied I; "I heard her voice." "Yes, and it was a good
one, too. The sweetest sound I ever heard," he went on, "was a girl's
voice after I had been four years in the army, and, by Jove! if I did
n't
experience something of the same pleasure in hearing this young girl
speak
after a week in the woods. She had evidently been out in the world and
was home
on a visit. It was a different look she gave me from that of the
natives. This
is better than fishing for trout," said he. "You drop in at the next
house." But the next house looked
too unpromising. "There is no milk
there," said I, "unless they keep a goat." "But could we
not," said my facetious companion, "go it on that?" A couple of miles beyond I
stopped at a house that enjoyed the distinction of being clapboarded,
and had
the good fortune to find both the milk and the young lady. A mother and
her
daughter were again the only occupants save a babe in the cradle, which
the
young woman quickly took occasion to disclaim. "It has not opened its
dear eyes before since its mother left. Come to aunty," and she put out
her hands. The daughter filled my pail
and the mother replenished our stock of bread. They asked me to sit and
cool
myself, and seemed glad of a stranger to talk with. They had come from
an
adjoining county five years before, and had carved their little
clearing out of
the solid woods. "The men folks,"
the mother said, "came on ahead and built the house right among the big
trees," pointing to the stumps near the door. One no sooner sets out with
his pack upon his back to tramp through the land than all objects and
persons
by the way have a new and curious interest to him. The tone of his
entire being
is not a little elevated, and all his perceptions and susceptibilities
quickened. I feel that some such statement is necessary to justify the
interest
that I felt in this backwoods maiden. A slightly pale face it was,
strong and
well arched, with a tender, wistful expression not easy to forget. I had surely seen that face
many times before in towns and cities, and in other lands, but I hardly
expected to meet it here amid the stumps. What were the agencies that
had given
it its fine lines and its gracious intelligence amid these simple,
primitive
scenes? What did my heroine read, or think? or what were her
unfulfilled
destinies? She wore a sprig of prince's pine in her hair, which gave a
touch
peculiarly welcome. "Pretty lonely,"
she said, in answer to my inquiry; "only an occasional fisherman in
summer, and in winter — nobody
at
all." And the little new
schoolhouse in the woods farther on, with its half-dozen scholars and
the
girlish face of the teacher seen through the open door, —
nothing less than the
exhilaration of a journey on foot could have made it seem the
interesting
object it was. Two of the little girls had been to the spring after a
pail of
water, and came struggling out of the woods into the road with it as we
passed.
They set down their pail and regarded us with a half-curious,
half-alarmed
look. "What is your teacher's
name?" asked one of us. "Miss Lucinde
Josephine
—" began the
red-haired
one, then hesitated, bewildered, when the bright, dark-eyed one cut her
short
with "Miss Simms," and taking hold of the pail said, "Come
on." "Are there any scholars
from above here?" I inquired. "Yes, Bobbie and
Matie," and they hastened toward the door. We once more stopped under a bridge for refreshments, and took our time, knowing the train would not go on without us. By four o'clock we were across the mountain, having passed from the watershed of the Delaware into that of the Hudson. The next eight miles we had a down grade but a rough road, and during the last half of it we had blisters on the bottoms of our feet. It is one of the rewards of the pedestrian that, however tired he may be, he is always more or less refreshed by his journey. His physical tenement has taken an airing. His respiration has been deepened, his circulation quickened. A good draught has carried off the fumes and the vapors. One's quality is intensified; the color strikes in. At noon that day I was much fatigued; at night I was leg-weary and footsore, but a fresh, hardy feeling had taken possession of me that lasted for weeks. |