It is one of those places God must
have meant for a field from all time, lying very level
at the foot of the slope that crowds up against Kearsarge,
falling slightly toward the town. North and south
it is fenced by low old glacial ridges, boulder strewn
and untenable. Eastward it butts on orchard closes
and the village gardens, brimming over into them by
wild brier and creeping grass. The village street,
with its double row of unlike houses, breaks off abruptly
at the edge of the field in a footpath that goes up
the streamside, beyond it, to the source of waters.
The field is not greatly esteemed
of the town, not being put to the plough nor affording
firewood, but breeding all manner of wild seeds that
go down in the irrigating ditches to come up as weeds
in the gardens and grass plots. But when I had
no more than seen it in the charm of its spring smiling,
I knew I should have no peace until I had bought ground
and built me a house beside it, with a little wicket
to go in and out at all hours, as afterward came about.
Edswick, Roeder, Connor, and Ruffin
owned the field before it fell to my neighbor.
But before that the Paiutes, mesne lords of the soil,
made a campoodie by the rill of Pine Creek; and after,
contesting the soil with them, cattle-men, who found
its foodful pastures greatly to their advantage; and
bands of blethering flocks shepherded by wild, hairy
men of little speech, who attested their rights to
the feeding ground with their long staves upon each
other’s skulls. Edswick homesteaded the
field about the time the wild tide of mining life was
roaring and rioting up Kearsarge, and where the village
now stands built a stone hut, with loopholes to make
good his claim against cattle-men or Indians.
But Edswick died and Roeder became master of the field.
Roeder owned cattle on a thousand hills, and made
it a recruiting ground for his bellowing herds before
beginning the long drive to market across a shifty
desert. He kept the field fifteen years, and afterward
falling into difficulties, put it out as security
against certain sums. Connor, who held the securities,
was cleverer than Roeder and not so busy. The
money fell due the winter of the Big Snow, when all
the trails were forty feet under drifts, and Roeder
was away in San Francisco selling his cattle.
At the set time Connor took the law by the forelock
and was adjudged possession of the field. Eighteen
days later Roeder arrived on snowshoes, both feet
frozen, and the money in his pack. In the long
suit at law ensuing, the field fell to Ruffin, that
clever one-armed lawyer with the tongue to wile a
bird out of the bush, Connor’s counsel, and
was sold by him to my neighbor, whom from envying his
possession I call Naboth.
Curiously, all this human occupancy
of greed and mischief left no mark on the field, but
the Indians did, and the unthinking sheep. Round
its corners children pick up chipped arrow points
of obsidian, scattered through it are kitchen middens
and pits of old sweat-houses. By the south corner,
where the campoodie stood, is a single shrub of “hoopee”
(Lycium Andersonii), maintaining itself hardly
among alien shrubs, and near by, three low rakish
trees of hackberry, so far from home that no prying
of mine has been able to find another in any cañon
east or west. But the berries of both were food
for the Paiutes, eagerly sought and traded for as
far south as Shoshone Land. By the fork of the
creek where the shepherds camp is a single clump of
mesquite of the variety called “screw bean.”
The seed must have shaken there from some sheep’s
coat, for this is not the habitat of mesquite, and
except for other single shrubs at sheep camps, none
grows freely for a hundred and fifty miles south or
east.
Naboth has put a fence about the best
of the field, but neither the Indians nor the shepherds
can quite forego it. They make camp and build
their wattled huts about the borders of it, and no
doubt they have some sense of home in its familiar
aspect.
As I have said, it is a low-lying
field, between the mesa and the town, with no hillocks
in it, but a gentle swale where the waste water of
the creek goes down to certain farms, and the hackberry-trees,
of which the tallest might be three times the height
of a man, are the tallest things in it. A mile
up from the water gate that turns the creek into supply
pipes for the town, begins a row of long-leaved pines,
threading the watercourse to the foot of Kearsarge.
These are the pines that puzzle the local botanist,
not easily determined, and unrelated to other conifers
of the Sierra slope; the same pines of which the Indians
relate a legend mixed of brotherliness and the retribution
of God. Once the pines possessed the field, as
the worn stumps of them along the streamside show,
and it would seem their secret purpose to regain their
old footing. Now and then some seedling escapes
the devastating sheep a rod or two down-stream.
Since I came to live by the field one of these has
tiptoed above the gully of the creek, beckoning the
procession from the hills, as if in fact they would
make back toward that skyward-pointing finger of granite
on the opposite range, from which, according to the
legend, when they were bad Indians and it a great
chief, they ran away. This year the summer floods
brought the round, brown, fruitful cones to my very
door, and I look, if I live long enough, to see them
come up greenly in my neighbor’s field.
It is interesting to watch this retaking
of old ground by the wild plants, banished by human
use. Since Naboth drew his fence about the field
and restricted it to a few wild-eyed steers, halting
between the hills and the shambles, many old habitués
of the field have come back to their haunts.
The willow and brown birch, long ago cut off by the
Indians for wattles, have come back to the streamside,
slender and virginal in their spring greenness, and
leaving long stretches of the brown water open to
the sky. In stony places where no grass grows,
wild olives sprawl; close-twigged, blue-gray patches
in winter, more translucent greenish gold in spring
than any aureole. Along with willow and birch
and brier, the clematis, that shyest plant of water
borders, slips down season by season to within a hundred
yards of the village street. Convinced after
three years that it would come no nearer, we spent
time fruitlessly pulling up roots to plant in the garden.
All this while, when no coaxing or care prevailed
upon any transplanted slip to grow, one was coming
up silently outside the fence near the wicket, coiling
so secretly in the rabbit-brush that its presence was
never suspected until it flowered delicately along
its twining length. The horehound comes through
the fence and under it, shouldering the pickets off
the railings; the brier rose mines under the horehound;
and no care, though I own I am not a close weeder,
keeps the small pale moons of the primrose from rising
to the night moth under my apple-trees. The first
summer in the new place, a clump of cypripediums came
up by the irrigating ditch at the bottom of the lawn.
But the clematis will not come inside, nor the wild
almond.
I have forgotten to find out, though
I meant to, whether the wild almond grew in that country
where Moses kept the flocks of his father-in-law,
but if so one can account for the burning bush.
It comes upon one with a flame-burst as of revelation;
little hard red buds on leafless twigs, swelling unnoticeably,
then one, two, or three strong suns, and from tip
to tip one soft fiery glow, whispering with bees as
a singing flame. A twig of finger size will be
furred to the thickness of one’s wrist by pink
five-petaled bloom, so close that only the blunt-faced
wild bees find their way in it. In this latitude
late frosts cut off the hope of fruit too often for
the wild almond to multiply greatly, but the spiny,
tap-rooted shrubs are resistant to most plant evils.
It is not easy always to be attentive
to the maturing of wild fruit. Plants are so
unobtrusive in their material processes, and always
at the significant moment some other bloom has reached
its perfect hour. One can never fix the precise
moment when the rosy tint the field has from the wild
almond passes into the inspiring blue of lupines.
One notices here and there a spike of bloom, and a
day later the whole field royal and ruffling lightly
to the wind. Part of the charm of the lupine is
the continual stir of its plumes to airs not suspected
otherwhere. Go and stand by any crown of bloom
and the tall stalks do but rock a little as for drowsiness,
but look off across the field, and on the stillest
days there is always a trepidation in the purple patches.
From midsummer until frost the prevailing
note of the field is clear gold, passing into the
rusty tone of bigelovia going into a decline, a succession
of color schemes more admirably managed than the transformation
scene at the theatre. Under my window a colony
of cleome made a soft web of bloom that drew me every
morning for a long still time; and one day I discovered
that I was looking into a rare fretwork of fawn and
straw colored twigs from which both bloom and leaf
had gone, and I could not say if it had been for a
matter of weeks or days. The time to plant cucumbers
and set out cabbages may be set down in the almanac,
but never seed-time nor blossom in Naboth’s field.
Certain winged and mailed denizens
of the field seem to reach their heyday along with
the plants they most affect. In June the leaning
towers of the white milkweed are jeweled over with
red and gold beetles, climbing dizzily. This
is that milkweed from whose stems the Indians flayed
fibre to make snares for small game, but what use the
beetles put it to except for a displaying ground for
their gay coats, I could never discover. The
white butterfly crop comes on with the bigelovia bloom,
and on warm mornings makes an airy twinkling all across
the field. In September young linnets grow out
of the rabbit-brush in the night. All the nests
discoverable in the neighboring orchards will not account
for the numbers of them. Somewhere, by the same
secret process by which the field matures a million
more seeds than it needs, it is maturing red-hooded
linnets for their devouring. All the purlieus
of bigelovia and artemisia are noisy with them for
a month. Suddenly as they come as suddenly go
the fly-by-nights, that pitch and toss on dusky barred
wings above the field of summer twilights. Never
one of these nighthawks will you see after linnet
time, though the hurtle of their wings makes a pleasant
sound across the dusk in their season.
For two summers a great red-tailed
hawk has visited the field every afternoon between
three and four o’clock, swooping and soaring
with the airs of a gentleman adventurer. What
he finds there is chiefly conjectured, so secretive
are the little people of Naboth’s field.
Only when leaves fall and the light is low and slant,
one sees the long clean flanks of the jackrabbits,
leaping like small deer, and of late afternoons little
cotton-tails scamper in the runways. But the most
one sees of the burrowers, gophers, and mice is the
fresh earthwork of their newly opened doors, or the
pitiful small shreds the butcher-bird hangs on spiny
shrubs.
It is a still field, this of my neighbor’s,
though so busy, and admirably compounded for variety
and pleasantness,—a little sand, a little
loam, a grassy plot, a stony rise or two, a full brown
stream, a little touch of humanness, a footpath trodden
out by moccasins. Naboth expects to make town
lots of it and his fortune in one and the same day;
but when I take the trail to talk with old Seyavi at
the campoodie, it occurs to me that though the field
may serve a good turn in those days it will hardly
be happier. No, certainly not happier.