“Such is the story of the Boblink;
once spiritual, musical, admired, the joy of
the meadows, and the favourite bird of spring;
finally a gross little sensualist who expiates his
sensuality in the larder. His story contains
a moral, worthy the attention of all little birds
and little boys; warning them to keep to those
refined and intellectual pursuits which raised
him to so high a pitch of popularity during the early
part of his career; but to eschew all tendency to that
gross and dissipated indulgence, which brought
this mistaken little bird to an untimely end.”
- WashingtonIrving: Wolfert’s Roost.
The Swiftwater brook was laughing
softly to itself as it ran through a strip of hemlock
forest on the edge of the Woodlings’ farm.
Among the evergreen branches overhead the gayly-dressed
warblers, - little friends of the forest, - were
flitting to and fro, lisping their June songs of contented
love: milder, slower, lazier notes than those
in which they voiced the amourous raptures of May.
Prince’s Pine and golden loose-strife and pink
laurel and blue hare-bells and purple-fringed orchids,
and a score of lovely flowers were all abloom.
The late spring had hindered some; the sudden heats
of early summer had hastened others; and now they
seemed to come out all together, as if Nature had suddenly
tilted up her cornucopia and poured forth her treasures
in spendthrift joy.
I lay on a mossy bank at the foot
of a tree, filling my pipe after a frugal lunch, and
thinking how hard it would be to find in any quarter
of the globe a place more fair and fragrant than this
hidden vale among the Alleghany Mountains. The
perfume of the flowers of the forest is more sweet
and subtle than the heavy scent of tropical blossoms.
No lily-field in Bermuda could give a fragrance half
so magical as the fairy-like odour of these woodland
slopes, soft carpeted with the green of glossy vines
above whose tiny leaves, in delicate profusion,
“The slight Linnaea
hangs its twin-born heads.”
Nor are there any birds in Africa,
or among the Indian Isles, more exquisite in colour
than these miniature warblers, showing their gold
and green, their orange and black, their blue and white,
against the dark background of the rhododendron thicket.
But how seldom we put a cup of pleasure
to our lips without a dash of bitters, a touch of
faultfinding. My drop of discontent, that day,
was the thought that the northern woodland, at least
in June, yielded no fruit to match its beauty and
its fragrance.
There is good browsing among the leaves
of the wood and the grasses of the meadow, as every
well-instructed angler knows. The bright emerald
tips that break from the hemlock and the balsam like
verdant flames have a pleasant savour to the tongue.
The leaves of the sassafras are full of spice, and
the bark of the black-birch twigs holds a fine cordial.
Crinkle-root is spicy, but you must partake of it delicately,
or it will bite your tongue. Spearmint and peppermint
never lose their charm for the palate that still remembers
the delights of youth. Wild sorrel has an agreeable,
sour, shivery flavour. Even the tender stalk of
a young blade of grass is a thing that can be chewed
by a person of childlike mind with much contentment.
But, after all, these are only relishes.
They whet the appetite more than they appease it.
There should be something to eat, in the June woods,
as perfect in its kind, as satisfying to the sense
of taste, as the birds and the flowers are to the
senses of sight and hearing and smell. Blueberries
are good, but they are far away in July. Blackberries
are luscious when they are fully ripe, but that will
not be until August. Then the fishing will be
over, and the angler’s hour of need will be
past. The one thing that is lacking now beside
this mountain stream is some fruit more luscious and
dainty than grows in the tropics, to melt upon the
lips and fill the mouth with pleasure.
But that is what these cold northern
woods will not offer. They are too reserved,
too lofty, too puritanical to make provision for the
grosser wants of humanity. They are not friendly
to luxury.
Just then, as I shifted my head to
find a softer pillow of moss after this philosophic
and immoral reflection, Nature gave me her silent
answer. Three wild strawberries, nodding on their
long stems, hung over my face. It was an invitation
to taste and see that they were good.
The berries were not the round and
rosy ones of the meadow, but the long, slender, dark
crimson ones of the forest. One, two, three; no
more on that vine; but each one as it touched my lips
was a drop of nectar and a crumb of ambrosia, a concentrated
essence of all the pungent sweetness of the wildwood,
sapid, penetrating, and delicious. I tasted the
odour of a hundred blossoms and the green shimmering
of innumerable leaves and the sparkle of sifted sunbeams
and the breath of highland breezes and the song of
many birds and the murmur of flowing streams, - all
in a wild strawberry.
Do you remember, in the compleat
angler, a remark which Isaak Walton quotes from
a certain “Doctor Boteler” about strawberries?
“Doubtless,” said that wise old man, “God
could have made a better berry, but doubtless God
never did.”
Well, the wild strawberry is the one that God made.
I think it would have been pleasant
to know a man who could sum up his reflections upon
the important question of berries in such a pithy
saying as that which Walton repeats. His tongue
must have been in close communication with his heart.
He must have had a fair sense of that sprightly humour
without which piety itself is often insipid.
I have often tried to find out more
about him, and some day I hope I shall. But up
to the present, all that the books have told me of
this obscure sage is that his name was William Butler,
and that he was an eminent physician, sometimes called
“the Aesculapius of his age.” He was
born at Ipswich, in 1535, and educated at Clare Hall,
Cambridge; in the neighbourhood of which town he appears
to have spent the most of his life, in high repute
as a practitioner of physic. He had the honour
of doctoring King James the First after an accident
on the hunting field, and must have proved himself
a pleasant old fellow, for the king looked him up
at Cambridge the next year, and spent an hour in his
lodgings. This wise physician also invented a
medicinal beverage called “Doctor Butler’s
Ale.” I do not quite like the sound of it,
but perhaps it was better than its name. This
much is sure, at all events: either it was really
a harmless drink, or else the doctor must have confined
its use entirely to his patients; for he lived to
the ripe age of eighty-three years.
Between the time when William Butler
first needed the services of a physician, in 1535,
and the time when he last prescribed for a patient,
in 1618, there was plenty of trouble in England.
Bloody Queen Mary sat on the throne; and there were
all kinds of quarrels about religion and politics;
and Catholics and Protestants were killing one another
in the name of God. After that the red-haired
Elizabeth, called the Virgin Queen, wore the crown,
and waged triumphant war and tempestuous love.
Then fat James of Scotland was made king of Great Britain;
and Guy Fawkes tried to blow him up with gunpowder,
and failed; and the king tried to blow out all the
pipes in England with his counterblast against
tobacco; but he failed too. Somewhere about
that time, early in the seventeenth century, a very
small event happened. A new berry was brought
over from Virginia, - FRAGRARIA VIRGINIANA, - and
then, amid wars and rumours of wars, Doctor Butler’s
happiness was secure. That new berry was so much
richer and sweeter and more generous than the familiar
FRAGRARIA vesca of Europe, that it attracted the
sincere interest of all persons of good taste.
It inaugurated a new era in the history of the strawberry.
The long lost masterpiece of Paradise was restored
to its true place in the affections of man.
Is there not a touch of merry contempt
for all the vain controversies and conflicts of humanity
in the grateful ejaculation with which the old doctor
greeted that peaceful, comforting gift of Providence?
“From this time forward,”
he seems to say, “the fates cannot beggar me,
for I have eaten strawberries. With every Maytime
that visits this distracted island, the white blossoms
with hearts of gold will arrive. In every June
the red drops of pleasant savour will hang among the
scalloped leaves. The children of this world may
wrangle and give one another wounds that even my good
ale cannot cure. Nevertheless, the earth as God
created it is a fair dwelling and full of comfort for
all who have a quiet mind and a thankful heart.
Doubtless God might have made a better world, but
doubtless this is the world He made for us; and in
it He planted the strawberry.”
Fine old doctor! Brave philosopher
of cheerfulness! The Virginian berry should have
been brought to England sooner, or you should have
lived longer, at least to a hundred years, so that
you might have welcomed a score of strawberry-seasons
with gratitude and an epigram.
Since that time a great change has
passed over the fruit which Doctor Butler praised
so well. That product of creative art which Divine
wisdom did not choose to surpass, human industry has
laboured to improve. It has grown immensely in
size and substance. The traveller from America
who steams into Queenstown harbour in early summer
is presented (for a consideration) with a cabbage-leaf
full of pale-hued berries, sweet and juicy, any one
of which would outbulk a dozen of those that used to
grow in Virginia when Pocahontas was smitten with
the charms of Captain John Smith. They are superb,
those light-tinted Irish strawberries. And there
are wonderful new varieties developed in the gardens
of New Jersey and Rhode Island, which compare with
the ancient berries of the woods and meadows as Leviathan
with a minnow. The huge crimson cushions hang
among the plants so thick that they seem like bunches
of fruit with a few leaves attached for ornament.
You can satisfy your hunger in such a berry-patch
in ten minutes, while out in the field you must pick
for half an hour, and in the forest thrice as long,
before you can fill a small tin cup.
Yet, after all, it is questionable
whether men have really bettered God’s chef
d’oeuvre in the berry line. They have
enlarged it and made it more plentiful and more certain
in its harvest. But sweeter, more fragrant, more
poignant in its flavour? No. The wild berry
still stands first in its subtle gusto.
Size is not the measure of excellence.
Perfection lies in quality, not in quantity.
Concentration enhances pleasure, gives it a point so
that it goes deeper.
Is not a ten-inch trout better than
a ten-foot sturgeon? I would rather read a tiny
essay by Charles Lamb than a five-hundred page libel
on life by a modern British novelist who shall be
nameless. Flavour is the priceless quality.
Style is the thing that counts and is remembered, in
literature, in art, and in berries.
No jocunda, nor triumph,
nor Victoria, nor any other high-titled fruit
that ever took the first prize at an agricultural fair,
is half so delicate and satisfying as the wild strawberry
that dropped into my mouth, under the hemlock tree,
beside the Swiftwater.
A touch of surprise is essential to perfect sweetness.
To get what you have been wishing
for is pleasant; but to get what you have not been
sure of, makes the pleasure tingle. A new door
of happiness is opened when you go out to hunt for
something and discover it with your own eyes.
But there is an experience even better than that.
When you have stupidly forgotten (or despondently forgone)
to look about you for the unclaimed treasures and
unearned blessings which are scattered along the by-ways
of life, then, sometimes by a special mercy, a small
sample of them is quietly laid before you so that you
cannot help seeing it, and it brings you back to a
sense of the joyful possibilities of living.
How full of enjoyment is the search
after wild things, - wild birds, wild flowers,
wild honey, wild berries! There was a country
club on Storm King Mountain, above the Hudson River,
where they used to celebrate a festival of flowers
every spring. Men and women who had conservatories
of their own, full of rare plants and costly orchids,
came together to admire the gathered blossoms of the
woodlands and meadows. But the people who had
the best of the entertainment were the boys and girls
who wandered through the thickets and down the brooks,
pushed their way into the tangled copses and crept
venturesomely across the swamps, to look for the flowers.
Some of the seekers may have had a few gray hairs;
but for that day at least they were all boys and girls.
Nature was as young as ever, and they were all her
children. Hand touched hand without a glove.
The hidden blossoms of friendship unfolded. Laughter
and merry shouts and snatches of half-forgotten song
rose to the lips. Gay adventure sparkled in the
air. School was out and nobody listened for the
bell. It was just a day to live, and be natural,
and take no thought for the morrow.
There is great luck in this affair
of looking for flowers. I do not see how any
one who is prejudiced against games of chance can consistently
undertake it.
For my own part, I approve of garden
flowers because they are so orderly and so certain;
but wild flowers I love, just because there is so much
chance about them. Nature is all in favour of
certainty in great laws and of uncertainty in small
events. You cannot appoint the day and the place
for her flower-shows. If you happen to drop in
at the right moment she will give you a free admission.
But even then it seems as if the table of beauty had
been spread for the joy of a higher visitor, and in
obedience to secret orders which you have not heard.
Have you ever found the fringed gentian?
“Just
before the snows,
There came a purple
creature
That lavished
all the hill:
And summer hid her forehead,
And mockery was
still.
The frosts were her
condition:
The Tyrian would
not come
Until the North evoked her, -
‘Creator,
shall I bloom?’”
There are strange freaks of fortune
in the finding of wild flowers, and curious coincidences
which make us feel as if some one were playing friendly
tricks on us. I remember reading, one evening
in May, a passage in a good book called the procession
of the flowers, in which Colonel Higginson
describes the singular luck that a friend of his enjoyed,
year after year, in finding the rare blossoms of the
double rueanemone. It seems that this man needed
only to take a walk in the suburbs of any town, and
he would come upon a bed of these flowers, without
effort or design. I envied him his good fortune,
for I had never discovered even one of them.
But the next morning, as I strolled out to fish the
Swiftwater, down below Billy Lerns’s spring-house
I found a green bank in the shadow of the wood all
bespangled with tiny, trembling, twofold stars, - double
rueanemones, for luck! It was a favourable omen,
and that day I came home with a creel full of trout.
The theory that Adam lived out in
the woods for some time before he was put into the
garden of Eden “to dress it and to keep it”
has an air of probability. How else shall we
account for the arboreal instincts that cling to his
posterity?
There is a wilding strain in our blood
that all the civilization in the world will not eradicate.
I never knew a real boy - or, for that matter,
a girl worth knowing - who would not rather
climb a tree, any day, than walk up a golden stairway.
It is a touch of this instinct, I
suppose, that makes it more delightful to fish in
the most insignificant of free streams than in a carefully
stocked and preserved pond, where the fish are brought
up by hand and fed on minced liver. Such elaborate
precautions to ensure good luck extract all the spice
from the sport of angling. Casting the fly in
such a pond, if you hooked a fish, you might expect
to hear the keeper say, “Ah, that is Charles,
we will play him and put him back, if you please,
sir; for the master is very fond of him,” - or,
“Now you have got hold of Edward; let us land
him and keep him; he is three years old this month,
and just ready to be eaten.” It would seem
like taking trout out of cold storage.
Who could find any pleasure in angling
for the tame carp in the fish-pool of Fontainebleau?
They gather at the marble steps, those venerable,
courtly fish, to receive their rations; and there are
veterans among them, in ancient livery, with fringes
of green moss on their shoulders, who could tell you
pretty tales of being fed by the white hands of maids
of honour, or even of nibbling their crumbs of bread
from the jewelled fingers of a princess.
There is no sport in bringing pets
to the table. It may be necessary sometimes;
but the true sportsman would always prefer to leave
the unpleasant task of execution to menial hands,
while he goes out into the wild country to capture
his game by his own skill, - if he has good
luck. I would rather run some risk in this enterprise
(even as the young Tobias did, when the voracious
pike sprang at him from the waters of the Tigris,
and would have devoured him but for the friendly instruction
of the piscatory Angel, who taught Tobias how to land
the monster), - I would far rather take any
number of chances in my sport than have it domesticated
to the point of dulness.
The trim plantations of trees which
are called “forests” in certain parts
of Europe - scientifically pruned and tended,
counted every year by uniformed foresters, and defended
against all possible depredations - are admirable
and useful in their way; but they lack the mystic enchantment
of the fragments of native woodland which linger among
the Adirondacks and the White Mountains, or the vast,
shaggy, sylvan wildernesses which hide the lakes and
rivers of Canada. These Laurentian Hills lie in
No Man’s Land. Here you do not need to
keep to the path, for there is none. You may
make your own trail, whithersoever fancy leads you;
and at night you may pitch your tent under any tree
that looks friendly and firm.
Here, if anywhere, you shall find
Dryads, and Naiads, and Oreads. And if you chance
to see one, by moonlight, combing her long hair beside
the glimmering waterfall, or slipping silently, with
gleaming shoulders, through the grove of silver birches,
you may call her by the name that pleases you best.
She is all your own discovery. There is no social
directory in the wilderness.
One side of our nature, no doubt,
finds its satisfaction in the regular, the proper,
the conventional. But there is another side of
our nature, underneath, that takes delight in the
strange, the free, the spontaneous. We like to
discover what we call a law of Nature, and make our
calculations about it, and harness the force which
lies behind it for our own purposes. But we taste
a different kind of joy when an event occurs which
nobody has foreseen or counted upon. It seems
like an evidence that there is something in the world
which is alive and mysterious and untrammelled.
The weather-prophet tells us of an
approaching storm. It comes according to the
programme. We admire the accuracy of the prediction,
and congratulate ourselves that we have such a good
meteorological service. But when, perchance,
a bright, crystalline piece of weather arrives instead
of the foretold tempest, do we not feel a secret sense
of pleasure which goes beyond our mere comfort in
the sunshine? The whole affair is not as easy
as a sum in simple addition, after all, - at
least not with our present knowledge. It is a
good joke on the Weather Bureau. “Aha,
Old Probabilities!” we say, “you don’t
know it all yet; there are still some chances to be
taken!”
Some day, I suppose, all things in
the heavens above, and in the earth beneath, and in
the hearts of the men and women who dwell between,
will be investigated and explained. We shall
live a perfectly ordered life, with no accidents,
happy or unhappy. Everybody will act according
to rule, and there will be no dotted lines on the
map of human existence, no regions marked “unexplored.”
Perhaps that golden age of the machine will come,
but you and I will hardly live to see it. And
if that seems to you a matter for tears, you must
do your own weeping, for I cannot find it in my heart
to add a single drop of regret.
The results of education and social
discipline in humanity are fine. It is a good
thing that we can count upon them. But at the
same time let us rejoice in the play of native traits
and individual vagaries. Cultivated manners are
admirable, yet there is a sudden touch of inborn grace
and courtesy that goes beyond them all. No array
of accomplishments can rival the charm of an unsuspected
gift of nature, brought suddenly to light. I
once heard a peasant girl singing down the Traunthal,
and the echo of her song outlives, in the hearing
of my heart, all memories of the grand opera.
The harvest of the gardens and the
orchards, the result of prudent planting and patient
cultivation, is full of satisfaction. We anticipate
it in due season, and when it comes we fill our mouths
and are grateful. But pray, kind Providence,
let me slip over the fence out of the garden now and
then, to shake a nut-tree that grows untended in the
wood. Give me liberty to put off my black coat
for a day, and go a-fishing on a free stream, and
find by chance a wild strawberry.