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THE PLEASURES OF
MELANCHOLY THIS
wintry
November forenoon I was on a sea beach; the sky clouded, the wind high
and
cold, cutting to the marrow; a bleak and comfortless place. A boy,
dragging a
child's cart, was gathering chips of driftwood along the upper edge of
the
sand, — one human figure, such as painters use to make a lonesome scene
more
lonesome. A loon, well offshore, sat rocking upon the water, now lifted
into
sight for an instant, now lost behind a wave. Distant sails and a
steamship were
barely visible through the fog. So much for the world on its seaward
side.
There was little to cheer a man's soul in that quarter. On the
landward
side were thickets of leafless rosebushes covered with scarlet hips;
groves of
tall, tree-like, smooth-barked alders; swampy tracts, wherein were ilex
bushes
bright with red Christmas berries, and blueberry bushes scarcely less
bright
with red leaves. Sometimes it was necessary to put up an opera-glass
before I
could tell one from the other. Here was a marshy spot; dry, shivering
sedges
standing above the ice, and among them four or five mud-built domes of
muskrat
houses. Shrewd muskrats! They knew better than to be stirring abroad on
a day
like this. “If you haven’t a house, why don't you build one?” they
might have
said to the man hurrying past, with his neck drawn down into his coat
collar.
Here I skirted a purple cranberry bog, having tufts of dwarfed, stubby
bayberry bushes scattered over it, each with its winter crop of
pale-blue,
densely packed, tightly held berry clusters. Not a
flower; not a
bird. Not so much as a crow or a robin in one of the stunted savin
trees. I
remembered winter days here, a dozen years ago, when the alder clumps
were
lively with tree sparrows, myrtle warblers, and goldfinches. Now the
whole
peninsula was a place forsaken. I had better have stayed away myself.
Here, as
so often elsewhere, memory was the better sight. By a
summer cottage
upon the rocks was a ledge matted over with the Japanese trailing
white rose.
There were no blossoms, of course, but what with the leaves, still of a
glossy
green, and the bunches of handsome, high-colored hips, the vine could
hardly
have been more beautiful, I was ready to say, even when the roses were
thickest
upon it. Beside another house a pink poppy still looked fresh. Frail,
belated
child of summer! I could hardly believe my eyes. All its human admirers
were
gone long since. Every cottage stood vacant. Nobody would live here in
this
icy wind, if he could find another place to flee to. I remembered
Florida
beaches, summery abodes, where every breath from the sea brought a
welcome
coolness. Why should
I not
take the next train southward? Shall a man be less sensible than a
bird? That was
five or
six hours ago. Now I am a dozen miles inland. The air is so still that
the
sifting snowflakes fall straight downward. Even the finest twigs of
the gray
birches, so sensitive to the faintest breath, can hardly be seen to
stir. A
narrow footpath under. the window is a line of white running through
the green
grass. Beyond that is the brown hillside, brightened with a few
pitch-pines;
and then a veil shuts down upon the world, with a spray of bare
treetops
breaking through. It is the gray month in its grayest mood. Be it so.
I will
sit at my window and enjoy the world as it is. This sombre day has a
beauty and
charm of its own — the charm of melancholy. The wise course is to tune
our
thought to nature's mood of soberness, rather than to force a
different note,
profaning the hour, and cheating ourselves with shallow talk and
laughter.
There is a time for everything under the sun — L' Allegro and Il
Penseroso,
each in its turn. Now is a
time to
think of what has been and of what will be. Only the other day the year
was
young; grass was greening, violets were budding, birds were mating and
singing.
Now the birds are gone, the flowers are dead, the year is ending as all
the
years have ended before it. And as the
year is,
so are we. A few days ago we were children, just venturing to run
alone. We
knew nothing, had seen nothing, looked forward to nothing. Life for us
was only
a day in a house and a door-yard, a span of playtime between two
sleeps. A few days
ago, I
say. Yet what a weary distance we have traveled since then, and what an
infinity of things we have seen and dealt with. How many thoughts we
have had,
coming we know not whence, how many hopes, one making way for the
other, how
many dreams. We have made friends; friends that were to be friends
forever; and
long, long ago, with no fault on either side, the currents of the world
carrying us, they and we have drifted apart. It is all we can do now to
recall
their names and their manner of being. Some of them we should pass for
strangers if we met them face to face. What a
long
procession of things and events have gone by us and been forgotten.
Almost we
have forgotten our own childish names, it is so many years since any
one called
us by them. Should we know ourselves, even, if we met in the street the
boy or
girl of thirty or forty or fifty years ago? Was it indeed we who lived
then?
who believed such things, enjoyed such things, concerned ourselves with
such
things, trembled with such fears, were lifted up by such hopes, felt
ourselves
enriched by such havings? How shadowy and unreal they look now; and
once they
were as substantial as life and death. Nay, it is some one else whose
past we
are remembering. The boy and the man cannot be the same. Shall we
rejoice or
be sad that we have outgrown ourselves thus completely? Something of
both,
perhaps. It matters not. The year is ending, the night is falling. The
past is
as if it had never been; the future is nothing; and the present is less
than
either of them. Life is a vapor; nothing, and less than nothing, and
vanity. So we say
to
ourselves, not sadly, but with a kind of satisfaction to have it so.
Yet we
love to live over the past, and, with less assurance, to dream of the
future. Yes, we
have heard
that, and we will not dispute; this is not an hour for disputing; but
the
flowers that bloomed forty years ago — the iris and the four-o'clocks
in a
child's garden — we can still see in recollection's magic glass. And
they are
brighter than any rose that opened this morning. We have forgotten
things without
number; but other things — we shall never forget them. A friend or two
that
died when they and we were young; “the loveliest and the best;” we can
see them
more plainly than most of those whose empty, conventionalized faces,
each like
the other, each wearing its mask, we meet day by day in the common
round of
business and pleasure. Death, which seemed to destroy them, has but set
them
beyond the risk of alteration and forgetfulness. After all,
the past
is our one sure possession. There is our miser's chest. With that,
while
memory holds for us the key, we shall still be rich. There we will
spend our
gray hours, with friends that have kept their youth; one of the best of
them
our own true self, not as we were, nor as we are, but as we meant to be. “These
pleasures, Melancholy, give;
And I with thee will choose to live.” |