Sounds
But while we are confined to books,
though the most select and classic, and read only
particular written languages, which are themselves
but dialects and provincial, we are in danger of forgetting
the language which all things and events speak without
metaphor, which alone is copious and standard.
Much is published, but little printed. The
rays which stream through the shutter will be no longer
remembered when the shutter is wholly removed.
No method nor discipline can supersede the necessity
of being forever on the alert. What is a course
of history or philosophy, or poetry, no matter how
well selected, or the best society, or the most admirable
routine of life, compared with the discipline of looking
always at what is to be seen? Will you be a reader,
a student merely, or a seer? Read your fate,
see what is before you, and walk on into futurity.
I did not read books the first
summer; I hoed beans. Nay, I
often did better than this. There were times
when I could not afford to sacrifice the bloom of
the present moment to any work, whether of the head
or hands. I love a broad margin to my life.
Sometimes, in a summer morning, having taken my accustomed
bath, I sat in my sunny doorway from sunrise till
noon, rapt in a revery, amidst the pines and hickories
and sumachs, in undisturbed solitude and stillness,
while the birds sing around or flitted noiseless through
the house, until by the sun falling in at my west window,
or the noise of some traveller’s wagon on the
distant highway, I was reminded of the lapse of time.
I grew in those seasons like corn in the night, and
they were far better than any work of the hands would
have been. They were not time subtracted from
my life, but so much over and above my usual allowance.
I realized what the Orientals mean by contemplation
and the forsaking of works. For the most part,
I minded not how the hours went. The day advanced
as if to light some work of mine; it was morning,
and lo, now it is evening, and nothing memorable is
accomplished. Instead of singing like the birds,
I silently smiled at my incessant good fortune.
As the sparrow had its trill, sitting on the hickory
before my door, so had I my chuckle or suppressed
warble which he might hear out of my nest. My
days were not days of the week, bearing the stamp of
any heathen deity, nor were they minced into hours
and fretted by the ticking of a clock; for I lived
like the Puri Indians, of whom it is said that “for
yesterday, today, and tomorrow they have only one
word, and they express the variety of meaning by pointing
backward for yesterday forward for tomorrow, and overhead
for the passing day.” This was sheer idleness
to my fellow-townsmen, no doubt; but if the birds
and flowers had tried me by their standard, I should
not have been found wanting. A man must find
his occasions in himself, it is true. The natural
day is very calm, and will hardly reprove his indolence.
I had this advantage, at least,
in my mode of life, over those
who were obliged to look abroad for amusement, to
society and the theatre, that my life itself was become
my amusement and never ceased to be novel. It
was a drama of many scenes and without an end.
If we were always, indeed, getting our living, and
regulating our lives according to the last and best
mode we had learned, we should never be troubled with
ennui. Follow your genius closely enough, and
it will not fail to show you a fresh prospect every
hour. Housework was a pleasant pastime.
When my floor was dirty, I rose early, and, setting
all my furniture out of doors on the grass, bed and
bedstead making but one budget, dashed water on the
floor, and sprinkled white sand from the pond on it,
and then with a broom scrubbed it clean and white;
and by the time the villagers had broken their fast
the morning sun had dried my house sufficiently to
allow me to move in again, and my meditations were
almost uninterupted. It was pleasant to see
my whole household effects out on the grass, making
a little pile like a gypsy’s pack, and my three-legged
table, from which I did not remove the books and pen
and ink, standing amid the pines and hickories.
They seemed glad to get out themselves, and as if
unwilling to be brought in. I was sometimes
tempted to stretch an awning over them and take my
seat there. It was worth the while to see the
sun shine on these things, and hear the free wind
blow on them; so much more interesting most familiar
objects look out of doors than in the house.
A bird sits on the next bough, life-everlasting grows
under the table, and blackberry vines run round its
legs; pine cones, chestnut burs, and strawberry leaves
are strewn about. It looked as if this was the
way these forms came to be transferred to our furniture,
to tables, chairs, and bedsteads — because
they once stood in their midst.
My house was on the side of
a hill, immediately on the edge of
the larger wood, in the midst of a young forest of
pitch pines and hickories, and half a dozen rods from
the pond, to which a narrow footpath led down the
hill. In my front yard grew the strawberry,
blackberry, and life-everlasting, johnswort and goldenrod,
shrub oaks and sand cherry, blueberry and groundnut.
Near the end of May, the sand cherry (Cerasus pumila)
adorned the sides of the path with its delicate flowers
arranged in umbels cylindrically about its short stems,
which last, in the fall, weighed down with goodsized
and handsome cherries, fell over in wreaths like rays
on every side. I tasted them out of compliment
to Nature, though they were scarcely palatable.
The sumach (Rhus glabra) grew luxuriantly about the
house, pushing up through the embankment which I had
made, and growing five or six feet the first season.
Its broad pinnate tropical leaf was pleasant though
strange to look on. The large buds, suddenly
pushing out late in the spring from dry sticks which
had seemed to be dead, developed themselves as by magic
into graceful green and tender boughs, an inch in
diameter; and sometimes, as I sat at my window, so
heedlessly did they grow and tax their weak joints,
I heard a fresh and tender bough suddenly fall like
a fan to the ground, when there was not a breath of
air stirring, broken off by its own weight.
In August, the large masses of berries, which, when
in flower, had attracted many wild bees, gradually
assumed their bright velvety crimson hue, and by their
weight again bent down and broke the tender limbs.
As I sit at my window this
summer afternoon, hawks are circling
about my clearing; the tantivy of wild pigeons, flying
by two and threes athwart my view, or perching restless
on the white pine boughs behind my house, gives a
voice to the air; a fish hawk dimples the glassy surface
of the pond and brings up a fish; a mink steals out
of the marsh before my door and seizes a frog by the
shore; the sedge is bending under the weight of the
reed-birds flitting hither and thither; and for the
last half-hour I have heard the rattle of railroad
cars, now dying away and then reviving like the beat
of a partridge, conveying travellers from Boston to
the country. For I did not live so out of the
world as that boy who, as I hear, was put out to a
farmer in the east part of the town, but ere long
ran away and came home again, quite down at the heel
and homesick. He had never seen such a dull
and out-of-the-way place; the folks were all gone
off; why, you couldn’t even hear the whistle!
I doubt if there is such a place in Massachusetts
now:—
“In truth,
our village has become a butt
For one
of those fleet railroad shafts, and o’er
Our peaceful
plain its soothing sound is — Concord.”
The Fitchburg Railroad touches
the pond about a hundred rods
south of where I dwell. I usually go to the
village along its causeway, and am, as it were, related
to society by this link. The men on the freight
trains, who go over the whole length of the road,
bow to me as to an old acquaintance, they pass me so
often, and apparently they take me for an employee;
and so I am. I too would fain be a track-repairer
somewhere in the orbit of the earth.
The whistle of the locomotive
penetrates my woods summer and
winter, sounding like the scream of a hawk sailing
over some farmer’s yard, informing me that many
restless city merchants are arriving within the circle
of the town, or adventurous country traders from the
other side. As they come under one horizon, they
shout their warning to get off the track to the other,
heard sometimes through the circles of two towns.
Here come your groceries, country; your rations,
countrymen! Nor is there any man so independent
on his farm that he can say them nay. And here’s
your pay for them! screams the countryman’s whistle;
timber like long battering-rams going twenty miles
an hour against the city’s walls, and chairs
enough to seat all the weary and heavy-laden that
dwell within them. With such huge and lumbering
civility the country hands a chair to the city.
All the Indian huckleberry hills are stripped, all
the cranberry meadows are raked into the city.
Up comes the cotton, down goes the woven cloth; up
comes the silk, down goes the woollen; up come the
books, but down goes the wit that writes them.
When I meet the engine with
its train of cars moving off with
planetary motion — or, rather, like a comet,
for the beholder knows not if with that velocity and
with that direction it will ever revisit this system,
since its orbit does not look like a returning curve
— with its steam cloud like a banner streaming
behind in golden and silver wreaths, like many a downy
cloud which I have seen, high in the heavens, unfolding
its masses to the light — as if this traveling
demigod, this cloud-compeller, would ere long take
the sunset sky for the livery of his train; when I
hear the iron horse make the hills echo with his snort
like thunder, shaking the earth with his feet, and
breathing fire and smoke from his nostrils (what kind
of winged horse or fiery dragon they will put into
the new Mythology I don’t know), it seems as
if the earth had got a race now worthy to inhabit
it. If all were as it seems, and men made the
elements their servants for noble ends! If the
cloud that hangs over the engine were the perspiration
of heroic deeds, or as beneficent as that which floats
over the farmer’s fields, then the elements
and Nature herself would cheerfully accompany men on
their errands and be their escort.
I watch the passage of the
morning cars with the same feeling
that I do the rising of the sun, which is hardly more
regular. Their train of clouds stretching far
behind and rising higher and higher, going to heaven
while the cars are going to Boston, conceals the sun
for a minute and casts my distant field into the shade,
a celestial train beside which the petty train of
cars which hugs the earth is but the barb of the spear.
The stabler of the iron horse was up early this winter
morning by the light of the stars amid the mountains,
to fodder and harness his steed. Fire, too, was
awakened thus early to put the vital heat in him and
get him off. If the enterprise were as innocent
as it is early! If the snow lies deep, they
strap on his snowshoes, and, with the giant plow, plow
a furrow from the mountains to the seaboard, in which
the cars, like a following drill-barrow, sprinkle
all the restless men and floating merchandise in the
country for seed. All day the fire-steed flies
over the country, stopping only that his master may
rest, and I am awakened by his tramp and defiant snort
at midnight, when in some remote glen in the woods
he fronts the elements incased in ice and snow; and
he will reach his stall only with the morning star,
to start once more on his travels without rest or
slumber. Or perchance, at evening, I hear him
in his stable blowing off the superfluous energy of
the day, that he may calm his nerves and cool his
liver and brain for a few hours of iron slumber.
If the enterprise were as heroic and commanding as
it is protracted and unwearied!
Far through unfrequented woods
on the confines of towns, where
once only the hunter penetrated by day, in the darkest
night dart these bright saloons without the knowledge
of their inhabitants; this moment stopping at some
brilliant station-house in town or city, where a social
crowd is gathered, the next in the Dismal Swamp, scaring
the owl and fox. The startings and arrivals of
the cars are now the epochs in the village day.
They go and come with such regularity and precision,
and their whistle can be heard so far, that the farmers
set their clocks by them, and thus one well-conducted
institution regulates a whole country. Have not
men improved somewhat in punctuality since the railroad
was invented? Do they not talk and think faster
in the depot than they did in the stage-office?
There is something electrifying in the atmosphere
of the former place. I have been astonished
at the miracles it has wrought; that some of my neighbors,
who, I should have prophesied, once for all, would
never get to Boston by so prompt a conveyance, are
on hand when the bell rings. To do things “railroad
fashion” is now the byword; and it is worth
the while to be warned so often and so sincerely by
any power to get off its track. There is no
stopping to read the riot act, no firing over the heads
of the mob, in this case. We have constructed
a fate, an Atropos, that never turns aside. (Let
that be the name of your engine.) Men are advertised
that at a certain hour and minute these bolts will
be shot toward particular points of the compass; yet
it interferes with no man’s business, and the
children go to school on the other track. We
live the steadier for it. We are all educated
thus to be sons of Tell. The air is full of
invisible bolts. Every path but your own is
the path of fate. Keep on your own track, then.
What recommends commerce to
me is its enterprise and bravery.
It does not clasp its hands and pray to Jupiter.
I see these men every day go about their business
with more or less courage and content, doing more
even than they suspect, and perchance better employed
than they could have consciously devised. I am
less affected by their heroism who stood up for half
an hour in the front line at Buena Vista, than by
the steady and cheerful valor of the men who inhabit
the snowplow for their winter quarters; who have not
merely the three-o’-clock-in-the-morning courage,
which Bonaparte thought was the rarest, but whose
courage does not go to rest so early, who go to sleep
only when the storm sleeps or the sinews of their
iron steed are frozen. On this morning of the
Great Snow, perchance, which is still raging and chilling
men’s blood, I bear the muffled tone of their
engine bell from out the fog bank of their chilled
breath, which announces that the cars are coming, without
long delay, notwithstanding the veto of a New England
northeast snow-storm, and I behold the plowmen covered
with snow and rime, their heads peering, above the
mould-board which is turning down other than daisies
and the nests of field mice, like bowlders of the
Sierra Nevada, that occupy an outside place in the
universe.
Commerce is unexpectedly confident
and serene, alert,
adventurous, and unwearied. It is very natural
in its methods withal, far more so than many fantastic
enterprises and sentimental experiments, and hence
its singular success. I am refreshed and expanded
when the freight train rattles past me, and I smell
the stores which go dispensing their odors all the
way from Long Wharf to Lake Champlain, reminding me
of foreign parts, of coral reefs, and Indian oceans,
and tropical climes, and the extent of the globe.
I feel more like a citizen of the world at the sight
of the palm-leaf which will cover so many flaxen New
England heads the next summer, the Manilla hemp and
cocoanut husks, the old junk, gunny bags, scrap iron,
and rusty nails. This carload of torn sails is
more legible and interesting now than if they should
be wrought into paper and printed books. Who
can write so graphically the history of the storms
they have weathered as these rents have done?
They are proof-sheets which need no correction.
Here goes lumber from the Maine woods, which did
not go out to sea in the last freshet, risen four
dollars on the thousand because of what did go out
or was split up; pine, spruce, cedar —
first, second, third, and fourth qualities, so lately
all of one quality, to wave over the bear, and moose,
and caribou. Next rolls Thomaston lime, a prime
lot, which will get far among the hills before it
gets slacked. These rags in bales, of all hues
and qualities, the lowest condition to which cotton
and linen descend, the final result of dress —
of patterns which are now no longer cried up, unless
it be in Milwaukee, as those splendid articles, English,
French, or American prints, ginghams, muslins, etc.,
gathered from all quarters both of fashion and poverty,
going to become paper of one color or a few shades
only, on which, forsooth, will be written tales of
real life, high and low, and founded on fact!
This closed car smells of salt fish, the strong New
England and commercial scent, reminding me of the
Grand Banks and the fisheries. Who has not seen
a salt fish, thoroughly cured for this world, so that
nothing can spoil it, and putting, the perseverance
of the saints to the blush? with which you may sweep
or pave the streets, and split your kindlings, and
the teamster shelter himself and his lading against
sun, wind, and rain behind it — and the
trader, as a Concord trader once did, hang it up by
his door for a sign when he commences business, until
at last his oldest customer cannot tell surely whether
it be animal, vegetable, or mineral, and yet it shall
be as pure as a snowflake, and if it be put into a
pot and boiled, will come out an excellent dun-fish
for a Saturday’s dinner. Next Spanish hides,
with the tails still preserving their twist and the
angle of elevation they had when the oxen that wore
them were careering over the pampas of the Spanish
Main — a type of all obstinacy, and evincing
how almost hopeless and incurable are all constitutional
vices. I confess, that practically speaking,
when I have learned a man’s real disposition,
I have no hopes of changing it for the better or worse
in this state of existence. As the Orientals
say, “A cur’s tail may be warmed, and
pressed, and bound round with ligatures, and after
a twelve years’ labor bestowed upon it, still
it will retain its natural form.” The
only effectual cure for such inveteracies as these
tails exhibit is to make glue of them, which I believe
is what is usually done with them, and then they will
stay put and stick. Here is a hogshead of molasses
or of brandy directed to John Smith, Cuttingsville,
Vermont, some trader among the Green Mountains, who
imports for the farmers near his clearing, and now
perchance stands over his bulkhead and thinks of the
last arrivals on the coast, how they may affect the
price for him, telling his customers this moment,
as he has told them twenty times before this morning,
that he expects some by the next train of prime quality.
It is advertised in the Cuttingsville Times.
While these things go up other
things come down. Warned by the
whizzing sound, I look up from my book and see some
tall pine, hewn on far northern hills, which has winged
its way over the Green Mountains and the Connecticut,
shot like an arrow through the township within ten
minutes, and scarce another eye beholds it; going
“to
be the mast
Of
some great ammiral.”
And hark! here comes the cattle-train
bearing the cattle of a thousand hills, sheepcots,
stables, and cow-yards in the air, drovers with their
sticks, and shepherd boys in the midst of their flocks,
all but the mountain pastures, whirled along like leaves
blown from the mountains by the September gales.
The air is filled with the bleating of calves and
sheep, and the hustling of oxen, as if a pastoral
valley were going by. When the old bell-wether
at the head rattles his bell, the mountains do indeed
skip like rams and the little hills like lambs.
A carload of drovers, too, in the midst, on a level
with their droves now, their vocation gone, but still
clinging to their useless sticks as their badge of
office. But their dogs, where are they?
It is a stampede to them; they are quite thrown out;
they have lost the scent. Methinks I hear them
barking behind the Peterboro’ Hills, or panting
up the western slope of the Green Mountains.
They will not be in at the death. Their vocation,
too, is gone. Their fidelity and sagacity are
below par now. They will slink back to their
kennels in disgrace, or perchance run wild and strike
a league with the wolf and the fox. So is your
pastoral life whirled past and away. But the
bell rings, and I must get off the track and let the
cars go by;—
What’s the railroad
to me?
I never go to see
Where it ends.
It fills a few hollows,
And makes banks for the swallows,
It sets the sand a-blowing,
And the blackberries a-growing,
but I cross it like a cart-path in
the woods. I will not have my eyes put out and
my ears spoiled by its smoke and steam and hissing.
Now that the cars are gone
by and all the restless world with
them, and the fishes in the pond no longer feel their
rumbling, I am more alone than ever. For the
rest of the long afternoon, perhaps, my meditations
are interrupted only by the faint rattle of a carriage
or team along the distant highway.
Sometimes, on Sundays, I heard
the bells, the Lincoln, Acton,
Bedford, or Concord bell, when the wind was favorable,
a faint, sweet, and, as it were, natural melody, worth
importing into the wilderness. At a sufficient
distance over the woods this sound acquires a certain
vibratory hum, as if the pine needles in the horizon
were the strings of a harp which it swept. All
sound heard at the greatest possible distance produces
one and the same effect, a vibration of the universal
lyre, just as the intervening atmosphere makes a distant
ridge of earth interesting to our eyes by the azure
tint it imparts to it. There came to me in this
case a melody which the air had strained, and which
had conversed with every leaf and needle of the wood,
that portion of the sound which the elements had taken
up and modulated and echoed from vale to vale.
The echo is, to some extent, an original sound, and
therein is the magic and charm of it. It is
not merely a repetition of what was worth repeating
in the bell, but partly the voice of the wood; the
same trivial words and notes sung by a wood-nymph.
At evening, the distant lowing
of some cow in the horizon beyond
the woods sounded sweet and melodious, and at first
I would mistake it for the voices of certain minstrels
by whom I was sometimes serenaded, who might be straying
over hill and dale; but soon I was not unpleasantly
disappointed when it was prolonged into the cheap
and natural music of the cow. I do not mean to
be satirical, but to express my appreciation of those
youths’ singing, when I state that I perceived
clearly that it was akin to the music of the cow, and
they were at length one articulation of Nature.
Regularly at half-past seven,
in one part of the summer, after
the evening train had gone by, the whip-poor-wills
chanted their vespers for half an hour, sitting on
a stump by my door, or upon the ridge-pole of the
house. They would begin to sing almost with as
much precision as a clock, within five minutes of a
particular time, referred to the setting of the sun,
every evening. I had a rare opportunity to become
acquainted with their habits. Sometimes I heard
four or five at once in different parts of the wood,
by accident one a bar behind another, and so near
me that I distinguished not only the cluck after each
note, but often that singular buzzing sound like a
fly in a spider’s web, only proportionally louder.
Sometimes one would circle round and round me in
the woods a few feet distant as if tethered by a string,
when probably I was near its eggs. They sang
at intervals throughout the night, and were again
as musical as ever just before and about dawn.
When other birds are still,
the screech owls take up the strain,
like mourning women their ancient u-lu-lu. Their
dismal scream is truly Ben Jonsonian. Wise midnight
hags! It is no honest and blunt tu-whit tu-who
of the poets, but, without jesting, a most solemn
graveyard ditty, the mutual consolations of suicide
lovers remembering the pangs and the delights of supernal
love in the infernal groves. Yet I love to hear
their wailing, their doleful responses, trilled along
the woodside; reminding me sometimes of music and
singing birds; as if it were the dark and tearful side
of music, the regrets and sighs that would fain be
sung. They are the spirits, the low spirits
and melancholy forebodings, of fallen souls that once
in human shape night-walked the earth and did the deeds
of darkness, now expiating their sins with their wailing
hymns or threnodies in the scenery of their transgressions.
They give me a new sense of the variety and capacity
of that nature which is our common dwelling.
Oh-o-o-o-o that I never had been bor-r-r-r-n! sighs
one on this side of the pond, and circles with the
restlessness of despair to some new perch on the gray
oaks. Then — that I never had been
bor-r-r-r-n! echoes another on the farther side with
tremulous sincerity, and — bor-r-r-r-n!
comes faintly from far in the Lincoln woods.
I was also serenaded by a
hooting owl. Near at hand you could
fancy it the most melancholy sound in Nature, as if
she meant by this to stereotype and make permanent
in her choir the dying moans of a human being —
some poor weak relic of mortality who has left hope
behind, and howls like an animal, yet with human sobs,
on entering the dark valley, made more awful by a
certain gurgling melodiousness — I find
myself beginning with the letters gl when I try to
imitate it — expressive of a mind which
has reached the gelatinous, mildewy stage in the mortification
of all healthy and courageous thought. It reminded
me of ghouls and idiots and insane howlings.
But now one answers from far woods in a strain made
really melodious by distance — Hoo hoo hoo,
hoorer hoo; and indeed for the most part it suggested
only pleasing associations, whether heard by day or
night, summer or winter.
I rejoice that there are owls.
Let them do the idiotic and
maniacal hooting for men. It is a sound admirably
suited to swamps and twilight woods which no day illustrates,
suggesting a vast and undeveloped nature which men
have not recognized. They represent the stark
twilight and unsatisfied thoughts which all have.
All day the sun has shone on the surface of some
savage swamp, where the single spruce stands hung
with usnea lichens, and small hawks circulate above,
and the chickadee lisps amid the evergreens, and the
partridge and rabbit skulk beneath; but now a more
dismal and fitting day dawns, and a different race
of creatures awakes to express the meaning of Nature
there.
Late in the evening I heard
the distant rumbling of wagons over
bridges — a sound heard farther than almost
any other at night — the baying of dogs,
and sometimes again the lowing of some disconsolate
cow in a distant barn-yard. In the mean-while
all the shore rang with the trump of bullfrogs, the
sturdy spirits of ancient wine-bibbers and wassailers,
still unrepentant, trying to sing a catch in their
Stygian lake — if the Walden nymphs will
pardon the comparison, for though there are almost
no weeds, there are frogs there — who would
fain keep up the hilarious rules of their old festal
tables, though their voices have waxed hoarse and
solemnly grave, mocking at mirth, and the wine has
lost its flavor, and become only liquor to distend
their paunches, and sweet intoxication never comes
to drown the memory of the past, but mere saturation
and waterloggedness and distention. The most
aldermanic, with his chin upon a heart-leaf, which
serves for a napkin to his drooling chaps, under this
northern shore quaffs a deep draught of the once scorned
water, and passes round the cup with the ejaculation
tr-r-r-oonk, tr-r-r—oonk, tr-r-r-oonk! and
straightway comes over the water from some distant
cove the same password repeated, where the next in
seniority and girth has gulped down to his mark; and
when this observance has made the circuit of the shores,
then ejaculates the master of ceremonies, with satisfaction,
tr-r-r-oonk! and each in his turn repeats the same
down to the least distended, leakiest, and flabbiest
paunched, that there be no mistake; and then the howl
goes round again and again, until the sun disperses
the morning mist, and only the patriarch is not under
the pond, but vainly bellowing troonk from time to
time, and pausing for a reply.
I am not sure that I ever
heard the sound of cock-crowing from
my clearing, and I thought that it might be worth
the while to keep a cockerel for his music merely,
as a singing bird. The note of this once wild
Indian pheasant is certainly the most remarkable of
any bird’s, and if they could be naturalized
without being domesticated, it would soon become the
most famous sound in our woods, surpassing the clangor
of the goose and the hooting of the owl; and then
imagine the cackling of the hens to fill the pauses
when their lords’ clarions rested! No wonder
that man added this bird to his tame stock —
to say nothing of the eggs and drumsticks. To
walk in a winter morning in a wood where these birds
abounded, their native woods, and hear the wild cockerels
crow on the trees, clear and shrill for miles over
the resounding earth, drowning the feebler notes of
other birds — think of it! It would
put nations on the alert. Who would not be early
to rise, and rise earlier and earlier every successive
day of his life, till he became unspeakably healthy,
wealthy, and wise? This foreign bird’s
note is celebrated by the poets of all countries along
with the notes of their native songsters. All
climates agree with brave Chanticleer. He is
more indigenous even than the natives. His health
is ever good, his lungs are sound, his spirits never
flag. Even the sailor on the Atlantic and Pacific
is awakened by his voice; but its shrill sound never
roused me from my slumbers. I kept neither dog,
cat, cow, pig, nor hens, so that you would have said
there was a deficiency of domestic sounds; neither
the churn, nor the spinning-wheel, nor even the singing
of the kettle, nor the hissing of the urn, nor children
crying, to comfort one. An old-fashioned man
would have lost his senses or died of ennui before
this. Not even rats in the wall, for they were
starved out, or rather were never baited in —
only squirrels on the roof and under the floor, a
whip-poor-will on the ridge-pole, a blue jay screaming
beneath the window, a hare or woodchuck under the
house, a screech owl or a cat owl behind it, a flock
of wild geese or a laughing loon on the pond, and a
fox to bark in the night. Not even a lark or
an oriole, those mild plantation birds, ever visited
my clearing. No cockerels to crow nor hens to
cackle in the yard. No yard! but unfenced nature
reaching up to your very sills. A young forest
growing up under your meadows, and wild sumachs and
blackberry vines breaking through into your cellar;
sturdy pitch pines rubbing and creaking against the
shingles for want of room, their roots reaching quite
under the house. Instead of a scuttle or a blind
blown off in the gale — a pine tree snapped
off or torn up by the roots behind your house for
fuel. Instead of no path to the front-yard gate
in the Great Snow — no gate —
no front-yard — and no path to the civilized
world.