Winter had gradually melted away before
the genial sun and warm rains of spring, till the
snow had entirely disappeared, and the fields began
to wear a tinge of green, with many other indications
that summer was about to revisit the earth. There
is something very cheering in the return of spring
after enduring for a lengthened period the rigors of
winter. The waters are loosed from their icy
fetters, and sparkle with seemingly renewed brightness
in the glad beams of the sun, and all nature seems
to partake of the buoyant spirit called forth by this
happy season. The song of birds fill the air,
and they seem in their own way to offer their tributes
of praise to the kind and benevolent Father, by whose
direction the seasons succeed each other in their appointed
order. All were busy at the farm. Uncle
Nathan was beginning to look up his “help”
for the labors of the summer, and my aunt was equally
busy within doors. Grandma is still there, always
contented and always happy, for the old-fashioned
leather-covered Bible, which lies in its accustomed
place by her side, has been her guide through the
period of youth and middle-age, and now, in extreme
old age, its promises prove, “as an anchor to
her soul, both sure and steadfast.” The
Widow Green is at present an inmate of the dwelling,
as she often is in busy seasons. A letter has
lately been received from Cousin Silas, saying he hoped
it would afford them no serious disappointment if
he postponed the proposed journey to Canada for a
time, and added, by way of explanation, that his wife
was anxious to revisit the scenes of her childhood
in the State of Maine, before removing to Canada,
and, as he considered it the duty of every man to
make the happiness of his wife his first consideration,
he was for this reason obliged to defer the proposed
removal for the present. Had he seen the look
of relief which passed over my aunt’s countenance
as she read the letter, he certainly would have felt
no fears of her suffering from disappointment by their
failing to arrive at the time expected. “I
only hope,” said she, “that his wife may
find the ties which bind her to the scenes of her childhood
strong enough to keep her there, and I am certain
I shall not seek to sever them.” “I
am afraid Lucinda,” said her mother, “that
your heart is not quite right.” “Perhaps
not mother,” she replied, “I try to do
right, but I can’t help dreading the arrival
of that lazy Silas Stinson and his family; he was
always too idle to work and when they are once here
we cannot see them suffer, so I see nothing for us
but to support them.” “Let us hope
for the best” said the old lady, “he may
do better than you think, and it’s no use to
meet troubles half way.”
The preceding winter had been one
of unusual severity, and, as is often the case in
the climate of Canada where one extreme follows another,
an early spring had given place to an intensely hot
summer. The school had closed, but I was to remain
with Uncle Nathan till autumn, when I was to return
to my home at Elmwood for a short time before seeking
a situation. It was the tenth of August, a day
which will be long remembered by the dwellers in and
around Fulton. For many weeks not a drop of rain
had fallen upon the dry and parched ground, and the
heat from the scorching rays of the sun was most oppressive.
Day and night succeeded each other with the same constant
enervating heat. Sometimes the sun was partially
obscured by a sort of murky haze, which seemed to
render the air still more oppressive and stifling,
and all nature seemed to partake of the universal
languor; not a breath of air stirred the foliage of
the trees, and the waters of the river assumed a dull
motionless look, in keeping with the other elements.
“This day does beat all,” said the Widow
Green as she came in, flushed and heated from the
dairy room. “I thought,” replied my
aunt, “I could bear either heat or cold as well
as most people, but this day is too much for me.
I cannot work, and I would advise you to give over
too.” “I remember a summer like this
thirty years ago,” said Grandma, “the same
heat continued for nine weeks, and then we had a most
terrible storm, and after that we had no more to say
very warm weather the rest of the season; and I am
pretty sure there is a tempest brooding in the air
to-day, by the dull heavy feeling about my head, which
I always experience before a thunder-storm.”
The heat had become so intense by
noon that Uncle Nathan and his hired men did not attempt
to go back to the fields after dinner, but sat listlessly
in the coolest part of the house; they made some attempt
to interest each other in conversation, but even talking
was an exertion, and they finally relapsed into silence,
and, leaning back in his chair, Uncle Nathan’s
loud breathing soon indicated that in his case the
heat as well as all other troubles were for the present
forgotten in sleep. A change came over the heavens
with the approach of evening, a breeze sprung up,
scattering the misty haze which had filled the air
during the day, and disclosing a pile of dark clouds
in the western sky, which seemed to gather blackness
as they rose. “It’s my opinion,”
said Grandma, who had carefully observed the weather
during the day, “that the storm will burst about
sunset,” and true enough it did burst with a
violence before unknown in that vicinity. I had
gone to the far-off pasture to drive home the cows
at the usual time for milking. The huge pile
of clouds, which for hours had lain motionless in the
west, now rose rapidly toward the zenith, and hung
like a funeral pall directly over our heads.
The tempest burst in all its fury before I reached
home, clouds of dust filled the air, which almost
blinded me, and almost each moment was to be heard
the crash of falling trees in the distant forest.
The thunder, which at first murmured faintly, increased
as the clouds advanced upward, till by the time I
reached home it was indeed terrific. They were
all truly glad when I burst suddenly into the house
drenched with rain, and completely exhausted.
The cows remained unmilked for that night, a thing
which Aunt Lucinda said had never happened before since
her recollection. Flash after flash of vivid lightning
filled the otherwise darkened air, succeeded by the
deep heavy roll of the thunder. It was noticed
by those who witnessed this storm, that the lightning
had that peculiar bluish light which is sometimes,
but not often, observed during a violent summer tempest.
The inmates of our dwelling became terrified.
The Widow Green crept to the darkest corner of the
room and remained with her face bowed upon her hands.
“I am no safer,” said she, “in this
corner than in any other place, but I do not like to
sit near a window while the lightning is so bright
and close at hand.” Even my aunt, self-possessed
as she usually was, showed visible signs of alarm,
and truly the scene would have inspired almost any
one with a feeling of terror, mixed with awe, at the
sublime but awful war of the elements. The wind
blew a perfect hurricane, and the rain fell in torrents,
and, quickly succeeding the flashes of forked lightning,
peal after peal of thunder shook the house to its
foundation. Grandma Adams was the only one who
seemed to feel no fear; but there was deep reverence
in her voice as she said, “Be not afraid my
children; for the same Voice which calmed the boisterous
waves on the Sea of Galilee governs this tempest,
and protected by Him we need not fear.”
The storm lasted for hours and increased in violence
till Grandma said, “the storm of thirty years
ago was far less severe than this.” The
rushing of the wind and rain, the deep darkness, except
when lighted by the glare of the vivid lightning,
with the awful roll of the thunder, altogether formed
a scene which tended to inspire a feelings of deep
awe mingled with terror. There had been a momentary
lull in the tempest, when the air was filled with a
sudden blaze of blinding light, succeeded by a crash
of thunder which shook the very ground beneath our
feet. “That lightning surely struck close
at hand,” said Uncle Nathan, as he opened the
door and looked out into the darkness, and a few moments
after the cry of “fire” added to the terrors
of the storm. A barn belonging to a neighbor who
lived a mile distant from us, had been struck by that
flash, and was soon wrapped in flames. It was
a large building, with timbers and boards like tinder,
and was filled with hay, and it was well-nigh consumed
before assistance could reach the spot, and it was
with much difficulty that the flames could be kept
from the other buildings on the premises, indeed several
of the neighbours were obliged to remain on the spot
most of the night. The storm continued with unabated
fury till after midnight and then gradually died away,
and from many a home a prayer of thanksgiving ascended
to Heaven, for protection amid the perils of that
long-to-be-remembered storm.