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CHAPTER XI WHEN WE WALKED THE TOWN
LINES IT was
some time the following week,
I think, that the old Squire looked across to us at the breakfast table
and
said, "Boys, don't you want to walk the town lines for me? I think I
shall
let you do it this time — and have the fee," he added, smiling. The old
gentleman was one of the
selectmen of the town that year; and an old law, or municipal
regulation,
required that one or more of the selectmen should walk the town lines —
follow
round the town boundaries on foot — once a year, to see that the people
of
adjoining towns, or others, were not trespassing. The practice of
walking the
town lines is now almost or quite obsolete, but it was a needed
precaution when
inhabitants were few and when the thirty-six square miles of a township
consisted mostly of forest. At this time the southern half of our town
was
already taken up in farms, but the northern part was still in forest
lots. The
selectmen usually walked the north lines only. When the
state domain, almost all
dense forest, was first surveyed, the land was laid off in ranges,
so-called,
and tiers of lots. The various grants of land to persons for public
services
were also surveyed in a similar manner and the corners and lines
established by
means of stakes and stones, and of blazed trees. If a large rock
happened to
lie at the corner of a range or lot, the surveyor sometimes marked it
with a
drill. Such rocks made the best corners. Usually
the four corners of the town
were established by means of low, square granite posts, set in the
earth and
with the initial letter of the township cut in it with a drill. As if it
were yesterday I remember
that sharp, cold morning. Hard-frozen snow a foot deep still covered
the
cleared land, and in the woods it was much deeper. The first heavy
rainstorm of
spring had come two days before, but it had cleared off cold and windy
the
preceding evening, with snow squalls and zero weather again.
Nevertheless,
Addison and I were delighted at the old Squire's proposal, especially
since the
old gentleman had hinted that we could have the fee, which was usually
four
dollars when two of the selectmen walked the lines and were out all
day. "Go to the
northeast corner of
the town first," the old Squire said. "The corner post is three miles
and a half from here; you will find it in the cleared land a hundred
rods
northeast of the barn on the Jotham Silver place. Start from there and
go due
west till you reach the wood-lot on the Silver farm. There the blazed
trees
begin, and you will have to go from one to another. It is forest nearly
all the
way after that for six miles, till you come to the northwest town
corner. "You can
take my compass if you
like," the old Squire added. "But it will not be of much use to you,
for it will be easier to follow the blazed trees or corner stakes. Take
our
lightest axe with you and renew the old blazes on the trees." He
apparently felt some misgivings that we might get lost, for he added,
"If
you want to ask Thomas to go with you, you may." Tom was
more accustomed to being in
the woods than either of us; but Addison hesitated about inviting him,
for of
course if he went we should have to divide the fee with him. However,
the old
Squire seemed to wish to have him go with us, and at last, while
Theodora was
putting up a substantial luncheon for us, Ellen ran over to carry the
invitation to Tom. He was willing enough to go and came back with her,
carrying
his shotgun. "It will
be a long jaunt,"
the old gentleman said as we started off. "But if you move on briskly
and
don't stop by the way, you can get back before dark." The snow
crust was so hard and the
walking so good that we struck directly across the fields and pastures
to the
northeast and within an hour reached the town corner on the Silver
farm. At
that point our tramp along the north line of the town began, and we
went from
one blazed tree to another and freshened the blazes. We went on
rapidly, crossed Hedgehog
Ridge and descended to Stoss Pond, which the town line crossed
obliquely. We
had expected to cross the pond on the ice; but the recent great
rainstorm and
thaw had flooded the ice to a depth of six or eight inches. New ice was
already
forming, but it would not quite bear our weight, and we had to make a
detour of
a mile through swamps round the south end of the pond and pick up the
line
again on the opposite shore. Stoss Pond
Mountain then confronted
us, and it was almost noon when we neared Wild Brook; we heard it
roaring as we
approached and feared that we should find it very high. "We may
have to fell a tree
over it to get across," Addison said. So it
seemed, for upon emerging on
the bank we saw a yellow torrent twenty feet or more wide and four or
five feet
deep rushing tumultuously down the rocky channel. Tom,
however, who had come out on
the bank a little way below, shouted to us, above the roar, to come
that way,
and we rejoined him at a bend where the opposite bank was high. He was
in the
act of crossing cautiously on a snow bridge. During the winter a great
snowdrift, seven or eight feet deep, had lodged in the brook; and the
recent
freshet had merely cut a channel beneath it, leaving a frozen arch that
spanned
the torrent. "Don't do
it!" Addison
shouted to him. "It will fall with you!" But,
extending one foot slowly ahead
of the other, Tom safely crossed to the other side. "Come on!"
he shouted.
"It will hold." Addison, however, held back. The bridge looked dangerous; if it broke down, whoever was on it would be thrown into the water and carried downstream in the icy torrent. WHEN WE WALKED THE TOWN LINES "Oh, it's
strong enough!"
Tom exclaimed. "That will hold all right." And to show how firm it
was, he came part way back across the frozen arch and stood still. It was an
unlucky action. The whole
bridge suddenly collapsed under him, and down went Tom with it into the
rushing
water, which whirled him along toward a jam of ice and drift stuff
twenty or
thirty yards below. By flinging his arms across one of those great
cakes of
hard-frozen snow he managed to keep his head up; and he shouted lustily
for us
to help him. He bumped against the jam and hung there, fighting with
both arms
to keep from being carried under it. Addison,
who had the axe, ran down
the bank and with a few strokes cut a moosewood sapling, which we
thrust out to
Tom. He caught hold of it, and then, by pulling hard, we hauled him to
the bank
and helped him out. Oh, but
wasn't he a wet boy, and
didn't his teeth chatter! In fact, all three of us were wet, for, in
our
excitement, Addison and I had gone in knee-deep, and the water had
splashed.
over us. In that bitter cold wind we felt it keenly. Tom was nearly
torpid; he
seemed unable to speak, and we could hardly make him take a step. His
face and
hands were blue. "What
shall we do with
him?" Addison whispered to me in alarm. "It's five miles home. I'm
afraid he'll freeze." We then
thought of the old Squire's
logging camp on Papoose Pond, the outlet of which entered Wild Brook
about half
a mile above where we had tried to cross it. We knew that there was a
cooking
stove in the camp and decided that our best plan was to take Tom there
and dry
his clothes. Getting him between us, we tried to make him run, but he
seemed
unable to move his feet. "Run, run,
Tom!" we
shouted to him. "Run, or you'll freeze!" He seemed
not to hear or care. In
our desperation we slapped him and dragged him along between us.
Finally his
legs moved a little, and he began to step. "Run, run
with us!"
Addison kept urging. At last we
got him going, although
he shook so hard that he shook us with him. The exertion did him good.
We
hustled him along and, following the brook, came presently to a disused
lumber
road that led to the logging camp in the woods a few hundred yards from
the
shore of the pond. All three of us were panting hard when we reached
it, but
our wet clothes were frozen stiff. We rushed
Tom into the camp and,
finding matches on a shelf behind the stovepipe, kindled a fire of such
dry
stuff as we found at hand. Then, as the place warmed up, we pulled off
Tom's
frozen outer coat and waistcoat, got the water out of his boots, and
set him
behind the stove. Still he
shook and could speak only
with difficulty. We kept a hot fire and finally boiled water in a
kettle and,
gathering wintergreen leaves from a knoll outside the camp, made a hot
tea for
him. At last we
put him into the bunk and
covered him as best we could with our own coats, which we did not miss,
since
the camp was now as hot as an oven. For more than an hour longer,
however, his
tremors continued in spite of the heat. Addison and I took turns
rushing
outside to cut wood from dry spruces to keep the stove hot. A little
later, as
I came in with an armful, I found Addison watching Tom. "Sh!" he
said. "He's
asleep." The
afternoon was waning; a cold,
windy night was coming on. "What
shall we do?"
Addison whispered in perplexity. "I don't believe we ought to take him
out; his clothes aren't dry yet. We shall have to stay here all night
with
him." "But what
will the folks at
home think?" I exclaimed. "Of course
they will worry
about us," Addison replied gloomily. "But I'm afraid Tom will get his
death o' cold if we take him out. We ought to keep him warm." Our own
wet clothes had dried by
that time, and, feeling hungry, we ate a part of our luncheon. Night
came on
with snow squalls; the wind roared in the forest. It was so bleak that
we gave
up all idea of going home; and, after bringing in ten or a dozen
armfuls of
wood, we settled down to spend the night there. Still Tom slept, but he
breathed easier and had ceased to shiver. Suddenly he sat up and cried,
"Help!" "Don't you
know where you
are?" Addison asked. "Still dreaming?" He stared
round in the feeble light.
"Oh, yes!" he said and laughed. "It's the old camp. I tumbled
into the brook. But what makes it so dark?" "It's
night. You have been
asleep two or three hours. We shall have to stay here till morning." "With
nothing to eat?" Tom
exclaimed. "I'm hungry!" In his
haste to set off from home
with Ellen he had neglected to take any luncheon. We divided with him
what we
had left; and he ate hungrily. While he
was eating, we heard a
sound of squalling, indistinct above the roar of the wind in the woods.
"Bobcat!"
Tom exclaimed.
Then he added, "But it sounds more like an old gander." "May be a
flock of wild geese
passing over," Addison said. "They sometimes fly by night." "Not on
such a cold night in
such a wind," Tom replied. Soon we
heard the same sounds again. "That's an
old gander,
sure," Tom admitted. "Seems to
come from the same
place," Addison remarked. "Out on Papoose Pond, I guess." "Yes,
siree!" Tom
exclaimed. "A flock of geese has come down on that pond. If I had my
gun,
I could get a goose. But my gun is in Wild Brook," he added
regretfully.
"I let go of it when I fell in." The
squalling continued at
intervals. The night was so boisterous, however, that we did not leave
the camp
and after a time fell asleep in the old bunk. The cold
waked me soon after
daybreak. Tom and Addison were still asleep, with their coats pulled
snugly
about their shoulders and their feet drawn up. I rekindled the fire and
clattered round the stove. Still they snoozed on; and soon afterwards,
hearing
the same squalling sounds again, I stole forth in the bleak dawn to see
what I
could discover. When I had
pushed through the swamp
of thick cedar that lay between the camp and the pond, I beheld a goose
flapping its wings and squalling scarcely more than a stone's throw
away. A
second glance, in the increasing light, showed me the forms of other
geese,
great numbers of them on the newly formed ice. On this pond, as on the
other,
water had gathered over the winter ice and then frozen again. With the
exception of this one
gander, the flock was sitting there very still and quiet. The gander
waddled
among the others, plucking at them with his pink beak, as if to stir
them up.
Now and then he straightened up, flapped his wings and squalled
dolorously.
None of the others I noticed flapped, stirred or made any movement
whatever.
They looked as if they were asleep, and many of them had their heads
under
their wings. At last I
went out toward them on
the new ice, which had now frozen solid enough to bear me. The gander
rose in
the air and circled overhead, squalling fearfully. On going nearer, I
saw that
all those geese were frozen, in, and that they were dead; the entire
flock,
except that one powerful old gander, had perished there. They were
frozen in
the ice so firmly that I could not pull them out; in fact, I could
scarcely
bend the necks of those that had tucked them under their wings. I
counted
forty-one of them besides the gander. While I
was looking them over, Tom
and Addison appeared on the shore. They had waked and missed me, but,
hearing
the gander, had guessed that I had gone to the pond. Both were
astonished and
could hardly believe their eyes till they came out where I stood and
tried to
lift the geese. "We shall
have to chop them out
with the axe!" Tom exclaimed. "By jingo, boys, here's goose feathers
enough to make two feather beds and pillows to boot." The
gander, still squalling, circled
over us again. "The old
fellow feels
bad," Addison remarked. "He has lost his whole big family." We decided
that the geese on their
way north had been out in the rainstorm, and that when the weather
cleared and
turned cold so suddenly, with snow squalls, they had become bewildered,
perhaps,
and had descended on the pond. The cold wave was so sharp that, being
quite
without food, they had frozen into the ice and perished there. "Well, old
boy," Tom said,
addressing the gander that now stood flapping his wings at us a few
hundred
feet away, "you've lost your women-folks. We may as well have them as
the
bobcats." He fetched
the axe, and we cut away
the ice round the geese and then carried six loads of them down to
camp. If we had
had any proper means of
preparing a goose we should certainly have put one to bake in the stove
oven;
for all three of us were hungry. As it was, Addison said we had better
make a
scoot, load the geese on it, and take the nearest way home. We had only
the axe
and our jackknives to work with, and it was nine o'clock before we had
built a
rude sled and loaded the geese on it. As we were
about to start we heard a
familiar voice cry, "Well, well; there they are!" And who should come
through the cedars but the old Squire! A little behind him was Tom's
father. On account
of the severity of the
weather both families had been much alarmed when we failed to come home
the
night before. Making an early start that morning, Mr. Edwards and the
old
Squire had driven to the Silver farm and, leaving their team there, had
followed
the town line in search of us. On reaching Wild Brook they had seen
that the
snow bridge had fallen, and at first they had been badly frightened. On
looking
round, however, they had found the marks of our boot heels on the
frozen snow,
heading upstream, and had immediately guessed that we had gone to the
old camp.
So we had their company on the way home; and much astonished both of
them were
at the sight of so many geese. The two
households shared the goose
feathers. The meat was in excellent condition for cooking, and our two
families
had many a good meal of roast goose. We sent six of the birds to the
town farm,
and we heard afterwards that the seventeen paupers there partook of a
grand
goose dinner, garnished with apple sauce. But I have often thought of
that old
gander flying north to the breeding grounds alone. The
following week we walked the
remaining part of the town line and received the fee. |