Thursday
"He trode the unplanted forest floor, whereon
The all-seeing sun for ages hath not shone,
Where feeds the moose, and walks the surly bear,
And up the tall mast runs the woodpecker.
* * * * *
Where darkness found him he lay glad at night;
There the red morning touched him with its light.
* * *
* *
Go where he will, the wise man is at home,
His hearth the earth,his hall the azure dome;
Where his clear spirit leads him, theres his road,
By Gods own light illumined and foreshowed."
Emerson.
[1] WHEN we awoke this
morning, we heard the faint, deliberate, and ominous sound of rain-drops on our cotton
roof. The rain had pattered all night, and now the whole country wept, the drops falling
in the river, and on the alders, and in the pastures, and instead of any bow in the
heavens, there was the trill of the hair-bird all the morning. The cheery faith of this
little bird atoned for the silence of the whole woodland choir beside. When we first
stepped abroad, a flock of sheep, led by their rams, came rushing down a ravine in our
rear, with heedless haste and unreserved frisking, as if unobserved by man, from some
higher pasture where they had spent the night, to taste the herbage by the river-side; but
when their leaders caught sight of our white tent through the mist, struck with sudden
astonishment, with their fore-feet braced, they sustained the rushing torrent in their
rear, and the whole flock stood stock-still, endeavoring to solve the mystery in their
sheepish brains. At length, concluding that it boded no mischief to them, they spread
themselves out quietly over the field. We learned afterward that we had pitched our tent
on the very spot which a few summers before had been occupied by a party of Penobscots. We
could see rising before us through the mist a dark conical eminence called Hooksett
Pinnacle, a landmark to boatmen, and also Uncannunuc Mountain, broad off on the west side
of the river.
[2] This was the limit of our
voyage, for a few hours more in the rain would have taken us to the last of the locks, and
our boat was too heavy to be dragged around the long and numerous rapids which would
occur. On foot, however, we continued up along the bank, feeling our way with a stick
through the showery and foggy day, and climbing over the slippery logs in our path with as
much pleasure and buoyancy as in brightest sunshine; scenting the fragrance of the pines
and the wet clay under our feet, and cheered by the tones of invisible waterfalls; with
visions of toadstools, and wandering frogs, and festoons of moss hanging from the
spruce-trees, and thrushes flitting silent under the leaves; our road still holding
together through that wettest of weather, like faith, while we confidently followed its
lead. We managed to keep our thoughts dry, however, and only our clothes were wet. It was
altogether a cloudy and drizzling day, with occasional brightenings in the mist, when the
trill of the tree-sparrow seemed to be ushering in sunny hours.
[3] "Nothing that
naturally happens to man can hurt him, earthquakes and thunder-storms not
excepted," said a man of genius, who at this time lived a few miles farther on our
road. When compelled by a shower to take shelter under a tree, we may improve that
opportunity for a more minute inspection of some of Natures works. I have stood
under a tree in the woods half a day at a time, during a heavy rain in the summer, and yet
employed myself happily and profitably there prying with microscopic eye into the crevices
of the bark or the leaves or the fungi at my feet. "Riches are the attendants of the
miser; and the heavens rain plenteously upon the mountains." I can fancy that it
would be a luxury to stand up to ones chin in some retired swamp a whole summer day,
scenting the wild honeysuckle and bilberry blows, and lulled by the minstrelsy of gnats
and mosquitoes! A day passed in the society of those Greek sages, such as described in the
Banquet of Xenophon, would not be comparable with the dry wit of decayed cranberry vines,
and the fresh Attic salt of the moss-beds. Say twelve hours of genial and familiar
converse with the leopard frog; the sun to rise behind alder and dogwood, and climb
buoyantly to his meridian of two hands breadth, and finally sink to rest behind some
bold western hummock. To hear the evening chant of the mosquito from a thousand green
chapels, and the bittern begin to boom from some concealed fort like a sunset
gun!Surely one may as profitably be soaked in the juices of a swamp for one day as
pick his way dry-shod over sand. Cold and damp,are they not as rich experience as
warmth and dryness?
[4] At present, the drops
come trickling down the stubble while we lie drenched on a bed of withered wild oats, by
the side of a bushy hill, and the gathering in of the clouds, with the last rush and dying
breath of the wind, and then the regular dripping of twigs and leaves the country over,
enhance the sense of inward comfort and sociableness. The birds draw closer and are more
familiar under the thick foliage, seemingly composing new strains upon their roosts
against the sunshine. What were the amusements of the drawing-room and the library in
comparison, if we had them here? We should still sing as of old,
My books Id fain cast off, I cannot read,
Twixt every page my thoughts go stray at large
Down in the meadow, where is richer feed,
And will not mind to hit their proper targe.
Plutarch was good, and so was Homer too,
Our Shakespeares life were rich to live again,
What Plutarch read, that was not good nor true,
Nor Shakespeares books, unless his books were men.
Here while I lie beneath this walnut bough,
What care I for the Greeks or for Troy town,
If juster battles are enacted now
Between the ants upon this hummocks crown?
Bid Homer wait till I the issue learn,
If red or black the gods will favor most,
Or yonder Ajax will the phalanx turn,
Struggling to heave some rock against the host.
Tell Shakespeare to attend some leisure hour,
For now Ive business with this drop of dew,
And see you not, the clouds prepare a shower,
Ill meet him shortly when the sky is blue.
This bed of herds-grass and wild oats was spread
Last year with nicer skill than monarchs use,
A clover tuft is pillow for my head,
And violets quite overtop my shoes.
And now the cordial clouds have shut all in,
And gently swells the wind to say alls well,
The scattered drops are falling fast and thin,
Some in the pool, some in the flower-bell.
I am well drenched upon my bed of oats;
But see that globe come rolling down its stem,
Now like a lonely planet there it floats,
And now it sinks into my garments hem.
Drip drip the trees for all the country round,
And richness rare distils from every bough,
The wind alone it is makes every sound,
Shaking down crystals on the leaves below.
For shame the sun will never show himself,
Who could not with his beams eer melt me so,
My dripping locks,they would become an elf,
Who in a beaded coat does gayly go.
[5] The Pinnacle is a
small wooded hill which rises very abruptly to the height of about two hundred feet, near
the shore at Hooksett Falls. As Uncannunuc Mountain is perhaps the best point from which
to view the valley of the Merrimack, so this hill affords the best view of the river
itself. I have sat upon its summit, a precipitous rock only a few rods long, in fairer
weather, when the sun was setting and filling the river valley with a flood of light. You
can see up and down the Merrimack several miles each way. The broad and straight river,
full of light and life, with its sparkling and foaming falls, the islet which divides the
stream, the village of Hooksett on the shore almost directly under your feet, so near that
you can converse with its inhabitants or throw a stone into its yards, the woodland lake
at its western base, and the mountains in the north and northeast, make a scene of rare
beauty and completeness, which the traveller should take pains to behold.
[6] We were hospitably
entertained in Concord, New Hampshire, which we persisted in calling New Concord,
as we had been wont, to distinguish it from our native town, from which we had been told
that it was named and in part originally settled. This would have been the proper place to
conclude our voyage, uniting Concord with Concord by these meandering rivers, but our boat
was moored some miles below its port.
[7] The richness of the
intervals at Penacook, now Concord, New Hampshire, had been observed by explorers, and,
according to the historian of Haverhill, in the
"year 1726, considerable progress was
made in the settlement, and a road was cut through the wilderness from Haverhill to
Penacook. In the fall of 1727, the first family, that of Captain Ebenezer Eastman, moved
into the place. His team was driven by Jacob Shute, who was by birth a Frenchman, and he
is said to have been the first person who drove a team through the wilderness. Soon after,
says tradition, one Ayer, a lad of 18, drove a team consisting of ten yoke of oxen to
Penacook, swam the river, and ploughed a portion of the interval. He is supposed to have
been the first person who ploughed land in that place. After he had completed his work, he
started on his return at sunrise, drowned a yoke of oxen while recrossing the river, and
arrived at Haverhill about midnight. The crank of the first saw-mill was manufactured in
Haverhill, and carried to Penacook on a horse."
[8] But we found that the
frontiers were not this way any longer. This generation has come into the world fatally
late for some enterprises. Go where we will on the surface of things, men have been
there before us. We cannot now have the pleasure of erecting the last house; that
was long ago set up in the suburbs of Astoria City, and our boundaries have literally been
run to the South Sea, according to the old patents. But the lives of men, though more
extended laterally in their range, are still as shallow as ever. Undoubtedly, as a Western
orator said, "Men generally live over about the same surface; some live long and
narrow, and others live broad and short"; but it is all superficial living. A worm is
as good a traveller as a grasshopper or a cricket, and a much wiser settler. With all
their activity these do not hop away from drought nor forward to summer. We do not avoid
evil by fleeing before it, but by rising above or diving below its plane; as the worm
escapes drought and frost by boring a few inches deeper. The frontiers are not east or
west, north or south, but wherever a man fronts a fact, though that fact be his
neighbor, there is an unsettled wilderness between him and Canada, between him and the
setting sun, or, farther still, between him and it. Let him build himself a
log-house with the bark on where he is, fronting IT, and wage there an Old French
war for seven or seventy years, with Indians and Rangers, or whatever else may come
between him and the reality, and save his scalp if he can.
[9] We now no longer
sailed or floated on the river, but trod the unyielding land like pilgrims. Sadi tells who
may travel; among others, "A common mechanic, who can earn a subsistence by the
industry of his hand, and shall not have to stake his reputation for every morsel of
bread, as philosophers have said." He may travel who can subsist on the wild fruits
and game of the most cultivated country. A man may travel fast enough and earn his living
on the road. I have at times been applied to to do work when on a journey; to do tinkering
and repair clocks, when I had a knapsack on my back. A man once applied to me to go into a
factory, stating conditions and wages, observing that I succeeded in shutting the window
of a railroad car in which we were travelling, when the other passengers had failed.
"Hast thou not heard of a Sufi, who was hammering some nails into the sole of his
sandal; an officer of cavalry took him by the sleeve, saying, Come along and shoe my
horse." Farmers have asked me to assist them in haying, when I was passing their
fields. A man once applied to me to mend his umbrella, taking me for an umbrella-mender,
because, being on a journey, I carried an umbrella in my hand while the sun shone. Another
wished to buy a tin cup of me, observing that I had one strapped to my belt, and a
sauce-pan on my back. The cheapest way to travel, and the way to travel the farthest in
the shortest distance, is to go afoot, carrying a dipper, a spoon, and a fish-line, some
Indian meal, some salt, and some sugar. When you come to a brook or pond, you can catch
fish and cook them; or you can boil a hasty-pudding; or you can buy a loaf of bread at a
farmers house for fourpence, moisten it in the next brook that crosses the road, and
dip into it your sugar,this alone will last you a whole day;or, if you are
accustomed to heartier living, you can buy a quart of milk for two cents, crumb your bread
or cold pudding into it, and eat it with your own spoon out of your own dish. Any one of
these things I mean, not all together. I have travelled thus some hundreds of miles
without taking any meal in a house, sleeping on the ground when convenient, and found it
cheaper, and in many respects more profitable, than staying at home. So that some have
inquired why it would not be best to travel always. But I never thought of travelling
simply as a means of getting a livelihood. A simple woman down in Tyngsborough, at whose
house I once stopped to get a draught of water, when I said, recognizing the bucket, that
I had stopped there nine years before for the same purpose, asked if I was not a
traveller, supposing that I had been travelling ever since, and had now come round again;
that travelling was one of the professions, more or less productive, which her husband did
not follow. But continued travelling is far from productive. It begins with wearing away
the soles of the shoes, and making the feet sore, and erelong it will wear a man clean up,
after making his heart sore into the bargain. I have observed that the after-life of those
who have travelled much is very pathetic. True and sincere travelling is no pastime, but
it is as serious as the grave, or any part of the human journey, and it requires a long
probation to be broken into it. I do not speak of those that travel sitting, the sedentary
travellers whose legs hang dangling the while, mere idle symbols of the fact, any more
than when we speak of sitting hens we mean those that sit standing, but I mean those to
whom travelling is life for the legs, and death too, at last. The traveller must be born
again on the road, and earn a passport from the elements, the principal powers that be for
him. He shall experience at last that old threat of his mother fulfilled, that he shall be
skinned alive. His sores shall gradually deepen themselves that they may heal inwardly,
while he gives no rest to the sole of his foot, and at night weariness must be his pillow,
that so he may acquire experience against his rainy days.So was it with us.
[10] Sometimes we lodged at
an inn in the woods, where trout-fishers from distant cities had arrived before us, and
where, to our astonishment, the settlers dropped in at nightfall to have a chat and hear
the news, though there was but one road, and no other house was visible,as if they
had come out of the earth. There we sometimes read old newspapers, who never before read
new ones, and in the rustle of their leaves heard the dashing of the surf along the
Atlantic shore, instead of the sough of the wind among the pines. But then walking had
given us an appetite even for the least palatable and nutritious food.
[11] Some hard and dry book
in a dead language, which you have found it impossible to read at home, but for which you
have still a lingering regard, is the best to carry with you on a journey. At a country
inn, in the barren society of ostlers and travellers, I could undertake the writers of the
silver or the brazen age with confidence. Almost the last regular service which I
performed in the cause of literature was to read the works of
AULUS PERSIUS FLACCUS.
[12] If you have imagined
what a divine work is spread out for the poet, and approach this author too, in the hope
of finding the field at length fairly entered on, you will hardly dissent from the words
of the prologue,
"Ipse semipaganus
Ad sacra Vatum carmen affero nostrum.
"I half pagan
Bring my verses to the shrine of the poets.
[13] Here is none of the
interior dignity of Virgil, nor the elegance and vivacity of Horace, nor will any sibyl be
needed to remind you, that from those older Greek poets there is a sad descent to Persius.
You can scarcely distinguish one harmonious sound amid this unmusical bickering with the
follies of men.
[14] One sees that music has
its place in thought, but hardly as yet in language. When the Muse arrives, we wait for
her to remould language, and impart to it her own rhythm. Hitherto the verse groans and
labors with its load, and goes not forward blithely, singing by the way. The best ode may
be parodied, indeed is itself a parody, and has a poor and trivial sound, like a man
stepping on the rounds of a ladder. Homer and Shakespeare and Milton and Marvell and
Wordsworth are but the rustling of leaves and crackling of twigs in the forest, and there
is not yet the sound of any bird. The Muse has never lifted up her voice to sing. Most of
all, satire will not be sung. A Juvenal or Persius do not marry music to their verse, but
are measured fault-finders at best; stand but just outside the faults they condemn, and so
are concerned rather about the monster which they have escaped, than the fair prospect
before them. Let them live on an age, and they will have travelled out of his shadow and
reach, and found other objects to ponder.
[15] As long as there is
satire, the poet is, as it were, particeps criminis. One sees not but he had best
let bad take care of itself, and have to do only with what is beyond suspicion. If you
light on the least vestige of truth, and it is the weight of the whole body still which
stamps the faintest trace, an eternity will not suffice to extol it, while no evil is so
huge, but you grudge to bestow on it a moment of hate. Truth never turns to rebuke
falsehood; her own straightforwardness is the severest correction. Horace would not have
written satire so well if he had not been inspired by it, as by a passion, and fondly
cherished his vein. In his odes, the love always exceeds the hate, so that the severest
satire still sings itself, and the poet is satisfied, though the folly be not corrected.
[16] A sort of necessary
order in the development of Genius is, first, Complaint; second, Plaint; third, Love.
Complaint, which is the condition of Persius, lies not in the province of poetry. Erelong
the enjoyment of a superior good would have changed his disgust into regret. We can never
have much sympathy with the complainer; for after searching nature through, we conclude
that he must be both plaintiff and defendant too, and so had best come to a settlement
without a hearing. He who receives an injury is to some extent an accomplice of the
wrong-doer.
[17] Perhaps it would be
truer to say, that the highest strain of the muse is essentially plaintive. The
saints are still tears of joy. Who has ever heard the Innocent sing?
[18] But the divinest poem,
or the life of a great man, is the severest satire; as impersonal as Nature herself, and
like the sighs of her winds in the woods, which convey ever a slight reproof to the
hearer. The greater the genius, the keener the edge of the satire.
[19] Hence we have to do
only with the rare and fragmentary traits, which least belong to Persius, or shall we say,
are the properest utterances of his muse; since that which he says best at any time is
what he can best say at all times. The Spectators and Ramblers have not failed to cull
some quotable sentences from this garden too, so pleasant is it to meet even the most
familiar truth in a new dress, when, if our neighbor had said it, we should have passed it
by as hackneyed. Out of these six satires, you may perhaps select some twenty lines, which
fit so well as many thoughts, that they will recur to the scholar almost as readily as a
natural image; though when translated into familiar language, they lose that insular
emphasis, which fitted them for quotation. Such lines as the following, translation cannot
render commonplace. Contrasting the man of true religion with those who, with jealous
privacy, would fain carry on a secret commerce with the gods, he says:
"Haud cuivis promptum est, murmurque humilesque susurros
Tollere de templis; et aperto vivere voto."
It is not easy for every one to take murmurs and low
Whispers out of the temples, and live with open vow.
[20] To the virtuous man,
the universe is the only sanctum sanctorum, and the penetralia of the temple are
the broad noon of his existence. Why should he betake himself to a subterranean crypt, as
if it were the only holy ground in all the world which he had left unprofaned? The
obedient soul would only the more discover and familiarize things, and escape more and
more into light and air, as having henceforth done with secrecy, so that the universe
shall not seem open enough for it. At length, it is neglectful even of that silence which
is consistent with true modesty, but by its independence of all confidence in its
disclosures, makes that which it imparts so private to the hearer, that it becomes the
care of the whole world that modesty be not infringed.
[21] To the man who
cherishes a secret in his breast, there is a still greater secret unexplored. Our most
indifferent acts may be matter for secrecy, but whatever we do with the utmost
truthfulness and integrity, by virtue of its pureness, must be transparent as light.
[22] In the third satire, he
asks:
"Est aliquid quo tendis, et in quod dirigis arcum?
An passim sequeris corvos, testâve, lutove,
Securus quò pes ferat, atque ex tempore vivis?"
Is there anything to which thou tendest, and against which
thou directest thy bow?
Or dost thou pursue crows, at random, with pottery or clay,
Careless whither thy feet bear thee, and live ex tempore?
[23] The bad sense is
always a secondary one. Language does not appear to have justice done it, but is obviously
cramped and narrowed in its significance, when any meanness is described. The truest
construction is not put upon it. What may readily be fashioned into a rule of wisdom, is
here thrown in the teeth of the sluggard, and constitutes the front of his offence.
Universally, the innocent man will come forth from the sharpest inquisition and lecturing,
the combined din of reproof and commendation, with a faint sound of eulogy in his ears.
Our vices always lie in the direction of our virtues, and in their best estate are but
plausible imitations of the latter. Falsehood never attains to the dignity of entire
falseness, but is only an inferior sort of truth; if it were more thoroughly false, it
would incur danger of becoming true.
"Securus quo pes ferat, atque ex tempore vivit,"
is then the motto of a wise man. For first, as the subtle discernment of the language
would have taught us, with all his negligence he is still secure; but the sluggard,
notwithstanding his heedlessness, is insecure.
[24] The life of a wise
man is most of all extemporaneous, for he lives out of an eternity which includes all
time. The cunning mind travels further back than Zoroaster each instant, and comes quite
down to the present with its revelation. The utmost thrift and industry of thinking give
no man any stock in life; his credit with the inner world is no better, his capital no
larger. He must try his fortune again to-day as yesterday. All questions rely on the
present for their solution. Time measures nothing but itself. The word that is written may
be postponed, but not that on the lip. If this is what the occasion says, let the occasion
say it. All the world is forward to prompt him who gets up to live without his creed in
his pocket.
[25] In the fifth satire,
which is the best, I find,
"Stat contrà ratio, et secretam garrit in aurem,
Ne liceat facere id, quod quis vitiabit agendo."
Reason opposes, and whispers in the secret ear,
That it is not lawful to do that which one will spoil by doing.
Only they who do not see how anything might be better done are forward to try their
hand on it. Even the master workman must be encouraged by the reflection, that his
awkwardness will be incompetent to do that thing harm, to which his skill may fail to do
justice. Here is no apology for neglecting to do many things from a sense of our
incapacity,for what deed does not fall maimed and imperfect from our hands?but
only a warning to bungle less.
[26] The satires of Persius
are the furthest possible from inspired; evidently a chosen, not imposed subject. Perhaps
I have given him credit for more earnestness than is apparent; but it is certain, that
that which alone we can call Persius, which is forever independent and consistent, was
in earnest, and so sanctions the sober consideration of all. The artist and his work are
not to be separated. The most wilfully foolish man cannot stand aloof from his folly, but
the deed and the doer together make ever one sober fact. There is but one stage for the
peasant and the actor. The buffoon cannot bribe you to laugh always at his grimaces; they
shall sculpture themselves in Egyptian granite, to stand heavy as the pyramids on the
ground of his character.
[27] Suns rose and set
and found us still on the dank forest path which meanders up the Pemigewasset, now more
like an otters or a martens trail, or where a beaver had dragged his trap,
than where the wheels of travel raise a dust; where towns begin to serve as gores, only to
hold the earth together. The wild pigeon sat secure above our heads, high on the dead
limbs of naval pines, reduced to a robins size. The very yards of our hostelries
inclined upon the skirts of mountains, and, as we passed, we looked up at a steep angle at
the stems of maples waving in the clouds.
[28] Far up in the
country,for we would be faithful to our experience,in Thornton, perhaps, we
met a soldier lad in the woods, going to muster in full regimentals, and holding the
middle of the road; deep in the forest, with shouldered musket and military step, and
thoughts of war and glory all to himself. It was a sore trial to the youth, tougher than
many a battle, to get by us creditably and with soldierlike bearing. Poor man! He actually
shivered like a reed in his thin military pants, and by the time we had got up with him,
all the sternness that becomes the soldier had forsaken his face, and he skulked past as
if he were driving his fathers sheep under a sword-proof helmet. It was too much for
him to carry any extra armor then, who could not easily dispose of his natural arms. And
for his legs, they were like heavy artillery in boggy places; better to cut the traces and
forsake them. His greaves chafed and wrestled one with another for want of other foes. But
he did get by and get off with all his munitions, and lived to fight another day; and I do
not record this as casting any suspicion on his honor and real bravery in the field.
[29] Wandering on through
notches which the streams had made, by the side and over the brows of hoar hills and
mountains, across the stumpy, rocky, forested, and bepastured country, we at length
crossed on prostrate trees over the Amonoosuck, and breathed the free air of
Unappropriated Land. Thus, in fair days as well as foul, we had traced up the river to
which our native stream is a tributary, until from Merrimack it became the Pemigewasset
that leaped by our side, and when we had passed its fountain-head, the Wild Amonoosuck,
whose puny channel was crossed at a stride, guiding us toward its distant source among the
mountains, and at length, without its guidance, we were enabled to reach the summit of
AGIOCOCHOOK.
"Sweet days, so cool, so calm, so bright,
The bridal of the earth and sky,
Sweet dews shall weep thy fall to-night,
For thou must die." HERBERT.
[30] When we returned to
Hooksett, a week afterward, the melon man, in whose corn-barn we had hung our tent and
buffaloes and other things to dry, was already picking his hops, with many women and
children to help him. We bought one watermelon, the largest in his patch, to carry with us
for ballast. It was Nathans, which he might sell if he wished, having been conveyed
to him in the green state, and owned daily by his eyes. After due consultation with
"Father," the bargain was concluded,we to buy it at a venture on the vine,
green or ripe, our risk, and pay "what the gentlemen pleased." It proved to be
ripe; for we had had honest experience in selecting this fruit.
[31] Finding our boat safe
in its harbor, under Uncannunuc Mountain, with a fair wind and the current in our favor,
we commenced our return voyage at noon, sitting at our ease and conversing, or in silence
watching for the last trace of each reach in the river as a bend concealed it from our
view. As the season was further advanced, the wind now blew steadily from the north, and
with our sail set we could occasionally lie on our oars without loss of time. The
lumbermen throwing down wood from the top of the high bank, thirty or forty feet above the
water, that it might be sent down stream, paused in their work to watch our retreating
sail. By this time, indeed, we were well known to the boatmen, and were hailed as the
Revenue Cutter of the stream. As we sailed rapidly down the river, shut in between two
mounds of earth, the sounds of this timber rolled down the bank enhanced the silence and
vastness of the noon, and we fancied that only the primeval echoes were awakened. The
vision of a distant scow just heaving in sight round a headland also increased by contrast
the solitude.
[32] Through the din and
desultoriness of noon, even in the most Oriental city, is seen the fresh and primitive and
savage nature, in which Scythians and Ethiopians and Indians dwell. What is echo, what are
light and shade, day and night, ocean and stars, earthquake and eclipse, there? The works
of man are everywhere swallowed up in the immensity of Nature. The Ægean Sea is but Lake
Huron still to the Indian. Also there is all the refinement of civilized life in the woods
under a sylvan garb. The wildest scenes have an air of domesticity and homeliness even to
the citizen, and when the flickers cackle is heard in the clearing, he is reminded
that civilization has wrought but little change there. Science is welcome to the deepest
recesses of the forest, for there too nature obeys the same old civil laws. The little red
bug on the stump of a pine,for it the wind shifts and the sun breaks through the
clouds. In the wildest nature, there is not only the material of the most cultivated life,
and a sort of anticipation of the last result, but a greater refinement already than is
ever attained by man. There is papyrus by the river-side, and rushes for light, and the
goose only flies overhead, ages before the studious are born or letters invented, and that
literature which the former suggest, and even from the first have rudely served, it may be
man does not yet use them to express. Nature is prepared to welcome into her scenery the
finest work of human art, for she is herself an art so cunning that the artist never
appears in his work.
[33] Art is not tame, and
Nature is not wild, in the ordinary sense. A perfect work of mans art would also be
wild or natural in a good sense. Man tames Nature only that he may at last make her more
free even than he found her, though he may never yet have succeeded.
[34] With this propitious
breeze, and the help of our oars, we soon reached the Falls of Amoskeag, and the mouth of
the Piscataquoag, and recognized, as we swept rapidly by, many a fair bank and islet on
which our eyes had rested in the upward passage. Our boat was like that which Chaucer
describes in his Dream, in which the knight took his departure from the island,
"To journey for his marriage,
And return with such an host,
That wedded might be least and most. . . . .
Which barge was as a mans thought,
After his pleasure to him brought,
The queene herself accustomed aye
In the same barge to play,
It needed neither mast ne rother,
I have not heard of such another,
No master for the governance,
Hie sayled by thought and pleasaunce,
Without labor east and west,
All was one, calme or tempest."
So we sailed this afternoon, thinking of the saying of Pythagoras, though we had no
peculiar right to remember it, "It is beautiful when prosperity is present with
intellect, and when sailing as it were with a prosperous wind, actions are performed
looking to virtue; just as a pilot looks to the motions of the stars." All the world
reposes in beauty to him who preserves equipoise in his life, and moves serenely on his
path without secret violence; as he who sails down a stream, he has only to steer, keeping
his bark in the middle, and carry it round the falls. The ripples curled away in our wake,
like ringlets from the head of a child, while we steadily held on our course, and under
the bows we watched
"The swaying soft,
Made by the delicate wave parted in front,
As through the gentle element we move
Like shadows gliding through untroubled dreams."
The forms of beauty fall naturally around the path of him who is in the performance of
his proper work; as the curled shavings drop from the plane, and borings cluster round the
auger. Undulation is the gentlest and most ideal of motions, produced by one fluid falling
on another. Rippling is a more graceful flight. From a hill-top you may detect in it the
wings of birds endlessly repeated. The two waving lines which represent the flight
of birds appear to have been copied from the ripple.
[35] The trees made an
admirable fence to the landscape, skirting the horizon on every side. The single trees and
the groves left standing on the interval appeared naturally disposed, though the farmer
had consulted only his convenience, for he too falls into the scheme of Nature. Art can
never match the luxury and superfluity of Nature. In the former all is seen; it cannot
afford concealed wealth, and is niggardly in comparison; but Nature, even when she is
scant and thin outwardly, satisfies us still by the assurance of a certain generosity at
the roots. In swamps, where there is only here and there an ever-green tree amid the
quaking moss and cranberry beds, the bareness does not suggest poverty. The single-spruce,
which I had hardly noticed in gardens, attracts me in such places, and now first I
understand why men try to make them grow about their houses. But though there may be very
perfect specimens in front-yard plots, their beauty is for the most part ineffectual
there, for there is no such assurance of kindred wealth beneath and around them, to make
them show to advantage. As we have said, Nature is a greater and more perfect art, the art
of God; though, referred to herself, she is genius; and there is a similarity between her
operations and mans art even in the details and trifles. When the overhanging pine
drops into the water, by the sun and water, and the wind rubbing it against the shore, its
boughs are worn into fantastic shapes, and white and smooth, as if turned in a lathe.
Mans art has wisely imitated those forms into which all matter is most inclined to
run, as foliage and fruit. A hammock swung in a grove assumes the exact form of a canoe,
broader or narrower, and higher or lower at the ends, as more or fewer persons are in it,
and it rolls in the air with the motion of the body, like a canoe in the water. Our art
leaves its shavings and its dust about; her art exhibits itself even in the shavings and
the dust which we make. She has perfected herself by an eternity of practice. The world is
well kept; no rubbish accumulates; the morning air is clear even at this day, and no dust
has settled on the grass. Behold how the evening now steals over the fields, the shadows
of the trees creeping farther and farther into the meadow, and erelong the stars will come
to bathe in these retired waters. Her undertakings are secure and never fail. If I were
awakened from a deep sleep, I should know which side of the meridian the sun might be by
the aspect of nature, and by the chirp of the crickets, and yet no painter can paint this
difference. The landscape contains a thousand dials which indicate the natural division of
time, the shadows of a thousand styles point to the hour.
"Not only oer the dials face,
This silent phantom day by day,
With slow, unseen, unceasing pace
Steals moments, months, and years away;
From hoary rock and aged tree,
From proud Palmyras mouldering walls,
From Teneriffe, towering oer the sea,
From every blade of grass it falls."
It is almost the only game which the trees play at, this tit-for-tat, now this side in
the sun, now that, the drama of the day. In deep ravines under the eastern sides of
cliffs, Night forwardly plants her foot even at noonday, and as Day retreats she steps
into his trenches, skulking from tree to tree, from fence to fence, until at last she sits
in his citadel and draws out her forces into the plain. It may be that the forenoon is
brighter than the afternoon, not only because of the greater transparency of its
atmosphere, but because we naturally look most into the west, as forward into the day, and
so in the forenoon see the sunny side of things, but in the afternoon the shadow of every
tree.
[36] The afternoon is now
far advanced, and a fresh and leisurely wind is blowing over the river, making long
reaches of bright ripples. The river has done its stint, and appears not to flow, but lie
at its length reflecting the light, and the haze over the woods is like the inaudible
panting, or rather the gentle perspiration of resting nature, rising from a myriad of
pores into the attenuated atmosphere.
[37] On the thirty-first
day of March, one hundred and forty-two years before this, probably about this time in the
afternoon, there were hurriedly paddling down this part of the river, between the pine
woods which then fringed these banks, two white women and a boy, who had left an island at
the mouth of the Contoocook before daybreak. They were slightly clad for the season, in
the English fashion, and handled their paddles unskilfully, but with nervous energy and
determination, and at the bottom of their canoe lay the still bleeding scalps of ten of
the aborigines. They were Hannah Dustan, and her nurse, Mary Neff, both of Haverhill,
eighteen miles from the mouth of this river, and an English boy, named Samuel Lennardson,
escaping from captivity among the Indians. On the 15th of March previous, Hannah Dustan
had been compelled to rise from childbed, and half dressed, with one foot bare,
accompanied by her nurse, commence an uncertain march, in still inclement weather, through
the snow and the wilderness. She had seen her seven elder children flee with their father,
but knew not of their fate. She had seen her infants brains dashed out against an
apple-tree, and had left her own and her neighbors dwellings in ashes. When she
reached the wigwam of her captor, situated on an island in the Merrimack, more than twenty
miles above where we now are, she had been told that she and her nurse were soon to be
taken to a distant Indian settlement, and there made to run the gauntlet naked. The family
of this Indian consisted of two men, three women, and seven children, beside an English
boy, whom she found a prisoner among them. Having determined to attempt her escape, she
instructed the boy to inquire of one of the men, how he should despatch an enemy in the
quickest manner, and take his scalp. "Strike em there," said he, placing
his finger on his temple, and he also showed him how to take off the scalp. On the morning
of the 31st she arose before daybreak, and awoke her nurse and the boy, and taking the
Indians tomahawks, they killed them all in their sleep, excepting one favorite boy,
and one squaw who fled wounded with him to the woods. The English boy struck the Indian
who had given him the information, on the temple, as he had been directed. They then
collected all the provision they could find, and took their masters tomahawk and
gun, and scuttling all the canoes but one, commenced their flight to Haverhill, distant
about sixty miles by the river. But after having proceeded a short distance, fearing that
her story would not be believed if she should escape to tell it, they returned to the
silent wigwam, and taking off the scalps of the dead, put them into a bag as proofs of
what they had done, and then retracing their steps to the shore in the twilight,
recommenced their voyage.
[38] Early this morning this
deed was performed, and now, perchance, these tired women and this boy, their clothes
stained with blood, and their minds racked with alternate resolution and fear, are making
a hasty meal of parched corn and moose-meat, while their canoe glides under these pine
roots whose stumps are still standing on the bank. They are thinking of the dead whom they
have left behind on that solitary isle far up the stream, and of the relentless living
warriors who are in pursuit. Every withered leaf which the winter has left seems to know
their story, and in its rustling to repeat it and betray them. An Indian lurks behind
every rock and pine, and their nerves cannot bear the tapping of a woodpecker. Or they
forget their own dangers and their deeds in conjecturing the fate of their kindred, and
whether, if they escape the Indians, they shall find the former still alive. They do not
stop to cook their meals upon the bank, nor land, except to carry their canoe about the
falls. The stolen birch forgets its master and does them good service, and the swollen
current bears them swiftly along with little need of the paddle, except to steer and keep
them warm by exercise. For ice is floating in the river; the spring is opening; the
muskrat and the beaver are driven out of their holes by the flood; deer gaze at them from
the bank; a few faint-singing forest birds, perchance, fly across the river to the
northernmost shore; the fish-hawk sails and screams overhead, and geese fly over with a
startling clangor; but they do not observe these things, or they speedily forget them.
They do not smile or chat all day. Sometimes they pass an Indian grave surrounded by its
paling on the bank, or the frame of a wigwam, with a few coals left behind, or the
withered stalks still rustling in the Indians solitary cornfield on the interval.
The birch stripped of its bark, or the charred stump where a tree has been burned down to
be made into a canoe, these are the only traces of man,a fabulous wild man to us. On
either side, the primeval forest stretches away uninterrupted to Canada, or to the
"South Sea"; to the white man a drear and howling wilderness, but to the Indian
a home, adapted to his nature, and cheerful as the smile of the Great Spirit.
[39] While we loiter here
this autumn evening, looking for a spot retired enough, where we shall quietly rest
to-night, they thus, in that chilly March evening, one hundred and forty-two years before
us, with wind and current favoring, have already glided out of sight, not to camp, as we
shall, at night, but while two sleep one will manage the canoe, and the swift stream bear
them onward to the settlements, it may be, even to old John Lovewells house on
Salmon Brook to-night.
[40] According to the
historian, they escaped as by a miracle all roving bands of Indians, and reached their
homes in safety, with their trophies, for which the General Court paid them fifty pounds.
The family of Hannah Dustan all assembled alive once more, except the infant whose brains
were dashed out against the apple-tree, and there have been many who in later times have
lived to say that they had eaten of the fruit of that apple-tree.
[41] This seems a long
while ago, and yet it happened since Milton wrote his Paradise Lost. But its antiquity is
not the less great for that, for we do not regulate our historical time by the English
standard, nor did the English by the Roman, nor the Roman by the Greek. "We must look
a long way back," says Raleigh, "to find the Romans giving laws to nations, and
their consuls bringing kings and princes bound in chains to Rome in triumph; to see men go
to Greece for wisdom, or Ophir for gold; when now nothing remains but a poor paper
remembrance of their former condition." And yet, in one sense, not so far back as to
find the Penacooks and Pawtuckets using bows and arrows and hatchets of stone, on the
banks of the Merrimack. From this September afternoon, and from between these now
cultivated shores, those times seemed more remote than the dark ages. On beholding an old
picture of Concord, as it appeared but seventy-five years ago, with a fair open prospect
and a light on trees and river, as if it were broad noon, I find that I had not thought
the sun shone in those days, or that men lived in broad daylight then. Still less do we
imagine the sun shining on hill and valley during Philips war, on the war-path of
Church or Philip, or later of Lovewell or Paugus, with serene summer weather, but they
must have lived and fought in a dim twilight or night.
[42] The age of the world is
great enough for our imaginations, even according to the Mosaic account, without borrowing
any years from the geologist. From Adam and Eve at one leap sheer down to the deluge, and
then through the ancient monarchies, through Babylon and Thebes, Brahma and Abraham, to
Greece and the Argonauts; whence we might start again with Orpheus and the Trojan war, the
Pyramids and the Olympic games, and Homer and Athens, for our stages; and after a
breathing space at the building of Rome, continue our journey down through Odin and Christ
toAmerica. It is a wearisome while. And yet the lives of but sixty old women, such
as live under the hill, say of a century each, strung together, are sufficient to reach
over the whole ground. Taking hold of hands they would span the interval from Eve to my
own mother. A respectable tea-party merely,whose gossip would be Universal History.
The fourth old woman from myself suckled Columbus,the ninth was nurse to the Norman
Conqueror,the nineteenth was the Virgin Mary,the twenty-fourth the Cumæan
Sibyl,the thirtieth was at the Trojan war and Helen her name,the thirty-eighth
was Queen Semiramis,the sixtieth was Eve the mother of mankind. So much for the
"Old woman that lives under the hill,
And if shes not gone she lives there still."
It will not take a very great-granddaughter of hers to be in at the death of Time.
[43] We can never safely
exceed the actual facts in our narratives. Of pure invention, such as some suppose, there
is no instance. To write a true work of fiction even, is only to take leisure and liberty
to describe some things more exactly as they are. A true account of the actual is the
rarest poetry, for common sense always takes a hasty and superficial view. Though I am not
much acquainted with the works of Goethe, I should say that it was one of his chief
excellences as a writer, that he was satisfied with giving an exact description of things
as they appeared to him, and their effect upon him. Most travellers have not self-respect
enough to do this simply, and make objects and events stand around them as the centre, but
still imagine more favorable positions and relations than the actual ones, and so we get
no valuable report from them at all. In his Italian Travels Goethe jogs along at a
snails pace, but always mindful that the earth is beneath and the heavens are above
him. His Italy is not merely the fatherland of lazzaroni and virtuosi, and scene of
splendid ruins, but a solid turf-clad soil, daily shined on by the sun, and nightly by the
moon. Even the few showers are faithfully recorded. He speaks as an unconcerned spectator,
whose object is faithfully to describe what he sees, and that, for the most part, in the
order in which he sees it. Even his reflections do not interfere with his descriptions. In
one place he speaks of himself as giving so glowing and truthful a description of an old
tower to the peasants who had gathered around him, that they who had been born and brought
up in the neighborhood must needs look over their shoulders, "that," to use his
own words, "they might behold with their eyes, what I had praised to their
ears,""and I added nothing, not even the ivy which for centuries had
decorated the walls." It would thus be possible for inferior minds to produce
invaluable books, if this very moderation were not the evidence of superiority; for the
wise are not so much wiser than others as respecters of their own wisdom. Some, poor in
spirit, record plaintively only what has happened to them; but others how they have
happened to the universe, and the judgment which they have awarded to circumstances. Above
all, he possessed a hearty good-will to all men, and never wrote a cross or even careless
word. On one occasion the post-boy snivelling, "Signor perdonate, quésta è la mia
patria," he confesses that "to me poor northerner came something tear-like into
the eyes."
[44] Goethes whole
education and life were those of the artist. He lacks the unconsciousness of the poet. In
his autobiography he describes accurately the life of the author of Wilhelm Meister. For
as there is in that book, mingled with a rare and serene wisdom, a certain pettiness or
exaggeration of trifles, wisdom applied to produce a constrained and partial and merely
well-bred man,a magnifying of the theatre till life itself is turned into a stage,
for which it is our duty to study our parts well, and conduct with propriety and
precision,so in the autobiography, the fault of his education is, so to speak, its
merely artistic completeness. Nature is hindered, though she prevails at last in making an
unusually catholic impression on the boy. It is the life of a city boy, whose toys are
pictures and works of art, whose wonders are the theatre and kingly processions and
crownings. As the youth studied minutely the order and the degrees in the imperial
procession, and suffered none of its effect to be lost on him, so the man aimed to secure
a rank in society which would satisfy his notion of fitness and respectability. He was
defrauded of much which the savage boy enjoys. Indeed, he himself has occasion to say in
this very autobiography, when at last he escapes into the woods without the gates:
"Thus much is certain, that only the undefinable, wide-expanding feelings of youth
and of uncultivated nations are adapted to the sublime, which, whenever it may be excited
in us through external objects, since it is either formless, or else moulded into forms
which are incomprehensible, must surround us with a grandeur which we find above our
reach." He further says of himself: "I had lived among painters from my
childhood, and had accustomed myself to look at objects, as they did, with reference to
art." And this was his practice to the last. He was even too well-bred to be
thoroughly bred. He says that he had had no intercourse with the lowest class of his
towns-boys. The child should have the advantage of ignorance as well as of knowledge, and
is fortunate if he gets his share of neglect and exposure.
"The laws of Nature break the rules of Art."
[45] The Man of Genius
may at the same time be, indeed is commonly, an Artist, but the two are not to be
confounded. The Man of Genius, referred to mankind, is an originator, an inspired or
demonic man, who produces a perfect work in obedience to laws yet unexplored. The Artist
is he who detects and applies the law from observation of the works of Genius, whether of
man or nature. The Artisan is he who merely applies the rules which others have detected.
There has been no man of pure Genius; as there has been none wholly destitute of Genius.
[46] Poetry is the mysticism
of mankind.
[47] The expressions of the
poet cannot be analyzed; his sentence is one word, whose syllables are words. There are
indeed no words quite worthy to be set to his music. But what matter if we do not
hear the words always, if we hear the music?
[48] Much verse fails of
being poetry because it was not written exactly at the right crisis, though it may have
been inconceivably near to it. It is only by a miracle that poetry is written at all. It
is not recoverable thought, but a hue caught from a vaster receding thought.
[49] A poem is one undivided
unimpeded expression fallen ripe into literature, and it is undividedly and unimpededly
received by those for whom it was matured.
[50] If you can speak what
you will never hear, if you can write what you will never read, you have done rare things.
The work we choose should be our own,
God lets alone.
[51] The unconsciousness
of man is the consciousness of God.
[52] Deep are the
foundations of sincerity. Even stone walls have their foundation below the frost.
[53] What is produced by a
free stroke charms us, like the forms of lichens and leaves. There is a certain perfection
in accident which we never consciously attain. Draw a blunt quill filled with ink over a
sheet of paper, and fold the paper before the ink is dry, transversely to this line, and a
delicately shaded and regular figure will be produced, in some respects more pleasing than
an elaborate drawing.
[54] The talent of
composition is very dangerous,the striking out the heart of life at a blow, as the
Indian takes off a scalp. I feel as if my life had grown more outward when I can express
it.
[55] On his journey from
Brenner to Verona, Goethe writes, "The Tees flows now more gently, and makes in many
places broad sands. On the land, near to the water, upon the hillsides, everything is so
closely planted one to another, that you think they must choke one
another,vineyards, maize, mulberry-trees, apples, pears, quinces, and nuts. The
dwarf elder throws itself vigorously over the walls. Ivy grows with strong stems up the
rocks, and spreads itself wide over them, the lizard glides through the intervals, and
everything that wanders to and fro reminds one of the loveliest pictures of art. The
womens tufts of hair bound up, the mens bare breasts and light jackets, the
excellent oxen which they drive home from market, the little asses with their
loads,everything forms a living, animated Heinrich Roos. And now that it is evening,
in the mild air a few clouds rest upon the mountains, in the heavens more stand still than
move, and immediately after sunset the chirping of crickets begins to grow more loud; then
one feels for once at home in the world, and not as concealed or in exile. I am contented
as though I had been born and brought up here, and were now returning from a Greenland or
whaling voyage. Even the dust of my Fatherland, which is often whirled about the wagon,
and which for so long a time I had not seen, is greeted. The clock-and-bell jingling of
the crickets is altogether lovely, penetrating, and agreeable. It sounds bravely when
roguish boys whistle in emulation of a field of such songstresses. One fancies that they
really enhance one another. Also the evening is perfectly mild as the day."
"If one who dwelt in the south, and came
hither from the south, should hear of my rapture hereupon, he would deem me very childish.
Alas! what I here express I have long known while I suffered under an unpropitious heaven,
and now may I joyful feel this joy as an exception, which we should enjoy everforth as an
eternal necessity of our nature."
[56] Thus we "sayled
by thought and pleasaunce," as Chaucer says, and all things seemed with us to flow;
the shore itself, and the distant cliffs, were dissolved by the undiluted air. The hardest
material seemed to obey the same law with the most fluid, and so indeed in the long run it
does. Trees were but rivers of sap and woody fibre, flowing from the atmosphere, and
emptying into the earth by their trunks, as their roots flowed upward to the surface. And
in the heavens there were rivers of stars, and milky-ways, already beginning to gleam and
ripple over our heads. There were rivers of rock on the surface of the earth, and rivers
of ore in its bowels, and our thoughts flowed and circulated, and this portion of time was
but the current hour. Let us wander where we will, the universe is built round about us,
and we are central still. If we look into the heavens they are concave, and if we were to
look into a gulf as bottomless, it would be concave also. The sky is curved downward to
the earth in the horizon, because we stand on the plain. I draw down its skirts. The stars
so low there seem loath to depart, but by a circuitous path to be remembering me, and
returning on their steps.
[57] We had already passed
by broad daylight the scene of our encampment at Coos Falls, and at length we pitched our
camp on the west bank, in the northern part of Merrimack, nearly opposite to the large
island on which we had spent the noon in our way up the river.
[58] There we went to bed
that summer evening, on a sloping shelf in the bank, a couple of rods from our boat, which
was drawn up on the sand, and just behind a thin fringe of oaks which bordered the river;
without having disturbed any inhabitants but the spiders in the grass, which came out by
the light of our lamp, and crawled over our buffaloes. When we looked out from under the
tent, the trees were seen dimly through the mist, and a cool dew hung upon the grass,
which seemed to rejoice in the night, and with the damp air we inhaled a solid fragrance.
Having eaten our supper of hot cocoa and bread and watermelon, we soon grew weary of
conversing, and writing in our journals, and, putting out the lantern which hung from the
tent-pole, fell asleep.
[59] Unfortunately, many
things have been omitted which should have been recorded in our journal; for though we
made it a rule to set down all our experiences therein, yet such a resolution is very hard
to keep, for the important experience rarely allows us to remember such obligations, and
so indifferent things get recorded, while that is frequently neglected. It is not easy to
write in a journal what interests us at any time, because to write it is not what
interests us.
[60] Whenever we awoke in
the night, still eking out our dreams with half-awakened thoughts, it was not till after
an interval, when the wind breathed harder than usual, flapping the curtains of the tent,
and causing its cords to vibrate, that we remembered that we lay on the bank of the
Merrimack, and not in our chamber at home. With our heads so low in the grass, we heard
the river whirling and sucking, and lapsing downward, kissing the shore as it went,
sometimes rippling louder than usual, and again its mighty current making only a slight
limpid, trickling sound, as if our water-pail had sprung a leak, and the water were
flowing into the grass by our side. The wind, rustling the oaks and hazels, impressed us
like a wakeful and inconsiderate person up at midnight, moving about, and putting things
to rights, occasionally stirring up whole drawers full of leaves at a puff. There seemed
to be a great haste and preparation throughout Nature, as for a distinguished visitor; all
her aisles had to be swept in the night, by a thousand hand-maidens, and a thousand pots
to be boiled for the next days feasting;such a whispering bustle, as if ten
thousand fairies made their fingers fly, silently sewing at the new carpet with which the
earth was to be clothed, and the new drapery which was to adorn the trees. And then the
wind would lull and die away, and we like it fell asleep again.
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