Why wilt thou take a castle
on thy back
When God gave but a pack?
With gown of honest wear,
why wilt thou tease
For braid and fripperies?
Learn thou with flowers to
dress, with birds to feed,
And pinch thy large want to
thy little need.
Frederick LANGBRIDGE.
The next morning dawned clear and
warm, and Adam, coming in with his milk-pails, held
out his hand to Robin. There were three ripe
strawberries.
“See,” he said, “they
are the harbingers of spring, or a California climate,
and either way makes our gain. California without
fogs and fleas is heavenly enough for most people.”
Nevertheless, they completed the shelling
of the corn, and made a bin for it at the end of the
tunnel, removing the cat family to the house, where
Lassie viewed their advent with jealous eyes.
One day when they had been hulling corn for nearly
a week, Adam sat down and began laughing. “Do
you know how much corn it takes to plant an acre?”
he asked.
“No,” said Robin, blankly.
“I know something about the number of kernels
to the hill, ’one for the cutworm,
and one for the crow, and one for something-or-other
else, I forget what, and one to grow.’
Why?”
“It takes eight quarts to plant
an acre. We have raised about thirty bushels
to the acre, which is very well for sod. That
will make over fifteen thousand pounds of meal and
hominy, and will feed us for seven years, even if
we eat six pounds daily. Unless there is a winter
season, when we must do something for the animals,
there is not the slightest use in planting more than
an acre. As to the wheat, even with a light yield,
there would be fifteen hundred pounds to the acre.
We have fresh vegetables all the time, and there will
be any quantity of potatoes and cabbage and beans.”
“And yet people starved everywhere,
and it seemed to me that the farmers were the worst
off of all.”
“They farmed to make money,
not to live, and they had no control over the markets.
They had to sell or build barns. It is only Dives
who can afford to tear down the old ones and build
greater. It was easier for them to sell cheap
to a man who took their wheat and held it until it
could be sold back to them as dear flour. They
were eaten up with mortgages and pests and interest.
Have you noticed that there are almost no insects
here, not even flies and mosquitoes? They were
never so bad in the mountains, and apparently they
have been wiped out with the rest.”
“Truly, Adam,” she said,
“speaking just of the physical part of it, would
you regret this year?”
He stood up and stretched out his
arms, a splendid type of manhood, smooth-shaven, with
clear-cut features, bronzed, square-shouldered, and
powerful.
“Oh, you are magnificent!”
she cried involuntarily. “It has done you
good, great good. You are twice the man you were
in strength and health and resource; and if only we
had been cast away on an island, knowing we were sure
to be rescued some day soon, I should not be sorry
at all.”
He colored and answered frankly:
“Without the mental strain, I should not regret
this year. Sometimes, when I am sure it is a dream,
and that presently we shall waken, I can’t help
wondering whether we shall not wish we had fretted
less and enjoyed it more. When I come to think
of it, I believe it is the first time since I was a
child that ways and means have not troubled me.
It was a good thing to work as we have, to keep our
minds employed, but now that we are sure that starvation
is five or six years away, we might as well drop the
old, headlong rush to get more than we need.
That has been the trouble ever since men began to
make history. It was the same thing, power,
conquest, riches, everything; too much to eat, too
much to drink, too much to wear
“Well, you can’t say that
of us,” said Robin ruefully, looking down at
her made-over gown.
“Well, perhaps not, and I don’t
mean that there ever was a time when there was a general
surfeit, but I mean that was the tendency. There
would have been plenty for all, if part had not taken
more than their share; as for the other part who had
not enough, they only longed for the opportunity to
simulate their unwise betters. When they could,
they took too much, too, if it was only to drink and
forget their misery. We could have lived so well
and so easily, if we had lived more simply, coming
more directly in contact with nature, as we have this
year.”
She shook her head doubtfully.
“This has not been real life at all. We
have only kept alive. We haven’t read anything
or done anything or helped any one
“Except each other and the animals
dependent on us. On the whole, I don’t
know but that we have accomplished about as much as
when we were devoting most of our attention to paying
board and rent bills. We have helped each other
more than we can measure. We should have died
had we been left alone with our thoughts. All
of life is not in cities, nor even in books.”
She did not answer for some moments,
and then said slowly, “If it were a dream, and
we were going back to the old life, what would you
regret most?”
“If we were going back to the
world we know, I should regret a good many things;
first, I suppose, that I did not realize sooner that
we must be going back, instead of letting myself be
utterly overwhelmed. Then I think I should be
sorry that I didn’t practise, a la Demosthenes,
when I had a whole coast to myself, and most of all
I should regret that we have not kept a record of
our lives from day to day. There is other writing
I should want to do, but there is no paper,
and I don’t know how to make any.”
“There is plenty of time to
do all that yet,” she said. “What
else would you wish you had done?”
He looked at her, for there was something
in her voice he did not understand, but her eyes were
turned from him. “I should regret that
we had not talked more. Do you know, we have been
very silent? And we used to have so many things
to talk over in the old days. I should have twinges
of remorse that I did not make more of your companionship
when I had it, instead of raising more corn than we
can eat in half a dozen years, and letting you tear
your hands shelling it.” He stooped and
kissed one of her slender hands. She withdrew
it quickly; there had never been even a touch of the
sentimental between them.
“What would you regret?” he asked suddenly.
She shrank a little, and her eyes
looked far away, past the gateway. “Some
of the things you mention; very much that I had not
encouraged you more to go on with your work, but mainly
“Well, mainly?”
She jumped down from the rock where
she had been sitting, and answered evasively, “I
don’t think there is any mainly, unless it is
that when I had such a good chance to be a hermit,
I couldn’t remember all those wonderful Mahatma
practices that make one so good and so wise. The
only formulas I have really tried hard to recall are
for cooking without sugar, or spice, or fruit.”