“The best rose-bush,
after all, is not that which has the
fewest thorns, but that
which bears the finest roses.”
- SolomonSINGLEWITZ: The Life of Adam.
I
It was not all unadulterated sweetness,
of course. There were enough difficulties in
the way to make it seem desirable; and a few stings
of annoyance, now and then, lent piquancy to the adventure.
But a good memory, in dealing with the past, has the
art of straining out all the beeswax of discomfort,
and storing up little jars of pure hydromel. As
we look back at our six weeks in Norway, we agree that
no period of our partnership in experimental honeymooning
has yielded more honey to the same amount of comb.
Several considerations led us to the
resolve of taking our honeymoon experimentally rather
than chronologically. We started from the self-evident
proposition that it ought to be the happiest time in
married life.
“It is perfectly ridiculous,”
said my lady Graygown, “to suppose that a thing
like that can be fixed by the calendar. It may
possibly fall in the first month after the wedding,
but it is not likely. Just think how slightly
two people know each other when they get married.
They are in love, of course, but that is not at all
the same as being well acquainted. Sometimes
the more love, the less acquaintance! And sometimes
the more acquaintance, the less love! Besides,
at first there are always the notes of thanks for
the wedding-presents to be written, and the letters
of congratulation to be answered, and it is awfully
hard to make each one sound a little different from
the others and perfectly natural. Then, you know,
everybody seems to suspect you of the folly of being
newly married. You run across your friends everywhere,
and they grin when they see you. You can’t
help feeling as if a lot of people were watching you
through opera-glasses, or taking snap-shots at you
with a kodak. It is absurd to imagine that the
first month must be the real honeymoon. And just
suppose it were, - what bad luck that would
be! What would there be to look forward to?”
Every word that fell from her lips
seemed to me like the wisdom of Diotima.
“You are right,” I cried;
“Portia could not hold a candle to you for clear
argument. Besides, suppose two people are imprudent
enough to get married in the first week of December,
as we did! - what becomes of the chronological
honeymoon then? There is no fishing in December,
and all the rivers of Paradise, at least in our latitude,
are frozen up. No, my lady, we will discover
our month of honey by the empirical method. Each
year we will set out together to seek it in a solitude
for two; and we will compare notes on moons, and strike
the final balance when we are sure that our happiest
experiment has been completed.”
We are not sure of that, even yet.
We are still engaged, as a committee of two, in our
philosophical investigation, and we decline to make
anything but a report of progress. We know more
now than we did when we first went honeymooning in
the city of Washington. For one thing, we are
certain that not even the far-famed rosemary-fields
of Narbonne, or the fragrant hillsides of the Corbieres,
yield a sweeter harvest to the busy-ness of the bees
than the Norwegian meadows and mountain-slopes yielded
to our idleness in the summer of 1888.
II
The rural landscape of Norway, on
the long easterly slope that leads up to the watershed
among the mountains of the western coast, is not unlike
that of Vermont or New Hampshire. The railway
from Christiania to the Randsfjord carried us through
a hilly country of scattered farms and villages.
Wood played a prominent part in the scenery. There
were dark stretches of forest on the hilltops and
in the valleys; rivers filled with floating logs;
sawmills beside the waterfalls; wooden farmhouses
painted white; and rail-fences around the fields.
The people seemed sturdy, prosperous, independent.
They had the familiar habit of coming down to the
station to see the train arrive and depart. We
might have fancied ourselves on a journey through
the Connecticut valley, if it had not been for the
soft sing-song of the Norwegian speech and the uniform
politeness of the railway officials.
What a room that was in the inn at
Randsfjord where we spent our first night out!
Vast, bare, primitive, with eight windows to admit
the persistent nocturnal twilight; a sea-like floor
of blue-painted boards, unbroken by a single island
of carpet; and a castellated stove in one corner:
an apartment for giants, with two little beds for dwarfs
on opposite shores of the ocean. There was no
telephone; so we arranged a system of communication
with a fishing-line, to make sure that the sleepy
partner should be awake in time for the early boat
in the morning.
The journey up the lake took seven
hours, and reminded us of a voyage on Lake George;
placid, picturesque, and pervaded by summer boarders.
Somewhere on the way we had lunch, and were well fortified
to take the road when the steamboat landed us at Odnaes,
at the head of the lake, about two o’clock in
the afternoon.
There are several methods in which
you may drive through Norway. The government
maintains posting-stations at the farms along the main
travelled highways, where you can hire horses and carriages
of various kinds. There are also English tourist
agencies which make a business of providing travellers
with complete transportation. You may try either
of these methods alone, or you may make a judicious
mixture.
Thus, by an application of the theory
of permutations and combinations, you have your choice
among four ways of accomplishing a driving-tour.
First, you may engage a carriage and pair, with a driver,
from one of the tourist agencies, and roll through
your journey in sedentary case, provided your horses
do not go lame or give out. Second, you may rely
altogether upon the posting-stations to send you on
your journey; and this is a very pleasant, lively
way, provided there is not a crowd of travellers on
the road before you, who take up all the comfortable
conveyances and leave you nothing but a jolting cart
or a ramshackle KARIOL of the time of St. Olaf.
Third, you may rent an easy-riding vehicle (by choice
a well-hung gig) for the entire trip, and change ponies
at the stations as you drive along; this is the safest
way. The fourth method is to hire your horseflesh
at the beginning for the whole journey, and pick up
your vehicles from place to place. This method
is theoretically possible, but I do not know any one
who has tried it.
Our gig was waiting for us at Odnaes.
There was a brisk little mouse-coloured pony in the
shafts; and it took but a moment to strap our leather
portmanteau on the board at the back, perch the postboy
on top of it, and set out for our first experience
of a Norwegian driving-tour.
The road at first was level and easy;
and we bowled along smoothly through the valley of
the Etnaelv, among drooping birch-trees and green
fields where the larks were singing. At Tomlevolden,
ten miles farther on, we reached the first station,
a comfortable old farmhouse, with a great array of
wooden outbuildings. Here we had a chance to try
our luck with the Norwegian language in demanding
“en hest, saa straxt som muligt.”
This was what the guide-book told us to say when we
wanted a horse.
There is great fun in making a random
cast on the surface of a strange language. You
cannot tell what will come up. It is like an experiment
in witchcraft. We should not have been at all
surprised, I must confess, if our preliminary incantation
had brought forth a cow or a basket of eggs.
But the good people seemed to divine
our intentions; and while we were waiting for one
of the stable-boys to catch and harness the new horse,
a yellow-haired maiden inquired, in very fair English,
if we would not be pleased to have a cup of tea and
some butter-bread; which we did with great comfort.
The SKYDSGUT, or so-called postboy,
for the next stage of the journey, was a full-grown
man of considerable weight. As he climbed to his
perch on our portmanteau, my lady Graygown congratulated
me on the prudence which had provided that one side
of that receptacle should be of an inflexible stiffness,
quite incapable of being crushed; otherwise, asked
she, what would have become of her Sunday frock under
the pressure of this stern necessity of a postboy?
But I think we should not have cared
very much if all our luggage had been smashed on this
journey, for the road now began to ascend, and the
views over the Etnadal, with its winding river, were
of a breadth and sweetness most consoling. Up
and up we went, curving in and out through the forest,
crossing wild ravines and shadowy dells, looking back
at every turn on the wide landscape bathed in golden
light. At the station of Sveen, where we changed
horse and postboy again, it was already evening.
The sun was down, but the mystical radiance of the
northern twilight illumined the sky. The dark
fir-woods spread around us, and their odourous breath
was diffused through the cool, still air. We were
crossing the level summit of the plateau, twenty-three
hundred feet above the sea. Two tiny woodland
lakes gleamed out among the trees. Then the road
began to slope gently towards the west, and emerged
suddenly on the edge of the forest, looking out over
the long, lovely vale of Valders, with snow-touched
mountains on the horizon, and the river Baegna shimmering
along its bed, a thousand feet below us.
What a heart-enlarging outlook!
What a keen joy of motion, as the wheels rolled down
the long incline, and the sure-footed pony swung between
the shafts and rattled his hoofs merrily on the hard
road! What long, deep breaths of silent pleasure
in the crisp night air! What wondrous mingling
of lights in the afterglow of sunset, and the primrose
bloom of the first stars, and faint foregleamings
of the rising moon creeping over the hill behind us!
What perfection of companionship without words, as
we rode together through a strange land, along the
edge of the dark!
When we finished the thirty-fifth
mile, and drew up in the courtyard of the station
at Frydenlund, Graygown sprang out, with a little sigh
of regret.
“Is it last night,” she
cried, “or to-morrow morning? I have n’t
the least idea what time it is; it seems as if we
had been travelling in eternity.”
“It is just ten o’clock,”
I answered, “and the landlord says there will
be a hot supper of trout ready for us in five minutes.”
It would be vain to attempt to give
a daily record of the whole journey in which we made
this fair beginning. It was a most idle and unsystematic
pilgrimage. We wandered up and down, and turned
aside when fancy beckoned. Sometimes we hurried
on as fast as the horses would carry us, driving sixty
or seventy miles a day; sometimes we loitered and
dawdled, as if we did not care whether we got anywhere
or not. If a place pleased us, we stayed and
tried the fishing. If we were tired of driving,
we took to the water, and travelled by steamer along
a fjord, or hired a rowboat to cross from point to
point. One day we would be in a good little hotel,
with polyglot guests, and serving-maids in stagey
Norse costumes, - like the famous inn at Stalheim,
which commands the amazing panorama of the Naerodal.
Another day we would lodge in a plain farmhouse like
the station at Nedre Vasenden, where eggs and fish
were the staples of diet, and the farmer’s daughter
wore the picturesque peasants’ dress, with its
tall cap, without any dramatic airs. Lakes and
rivers, precipices and gorges, waterfalls and glaciers
and snowy mountains were our daily repast. We
drove over five hundred miles in various kinds of
open wagons, KARIOLS for one, and STOLKJAERRES for
two, after we had left our comfortable gig behind us.
We saw the ancient dragon-gabled church of Burgund;
and the delightful, showery town of Bergen; and the
gloomy cliffs of the Geiranger-Fjord laced with filmy
cataracts; and the bewitched crags of the Romsdal;
and the wide, desolate landscape of Jerkin; and a
hundred other unforgotten scenes. Somehow or
other we went, (around and about, and up and down,
now on wheels, and now on foot, and now in a boat,)
all the way from Christiania to Throndhjem. My
lady Graygown could give you the exact itinerary,
for she has been well brought up, and always keeps
a diary. All I know is, that we set out from
one city and arrived at the other, and we gathered
by the way a collection of instantaneous photographs.
I am going to turn them over now, and pick out a few
of the clearest pictures.
III
Here is the bridge over the Naeselv
at Fagernaes. Just below it is a good pool for
trout, but the river is broad and deep and swift.
It is difficult wading to get out within reach of
the fish. I have taken half a dozen small ones
and come to the end of my cast. There is a big
one lying out in the middle of the river, I am sure.
But the water already rises to my hips; another step
will bring it over the top of my waders, and send
me downstream feet uppermost.
“Take care!” cries Graygown
from the grassy bank, where she sits placidly crocheting
some mysterious fabric of white yarn.
She does not see the large rock lying
at the bottom of the river just beyond me. If
I can step on that, and stand there without being swept
away, I can reach the mid-current with my flies.
It is a long stride and a slippery foothold, but by
good luck “the last step which costs” is
accomplished. The tiny black and orange hackle
goes curling out over the stream, lights softly, and
swings around with the current, folding and expanding
its feathers as if it were alive. The big trout
takes it promptly the instant it passes over him;
and I play him and net him without moving from my
perilous perch.
Graygown waves her crochet-work like
a flag, “Bravo!” she cries. “That’s
a beauty, nearly two pounds! But do be careful
about coming back; you are not good enough to take
any risks yet.”
The station at Skogstad is a solitary
farmhouse lying far up on the bare hillside, with
its barns and out-buildings grouped around a central
courtyard, like a rude fortress. The river travels
along the valley below, now wrestling its way through
a narrow passage among the rocks, now spreading out
at leisure in a green meadow. As we cross the
bridge, the crystal water is changed to opal by the
sunset glow, and a gentle breeze ruffles the long
pools, and the trout are rising freely. It is
the perfect hour for fishing. Would Graygown dare
to drive on alone to the gate of the fortress, and
blow upon the long horn which doubtless hangs beside
it, and demand admittance and a lodging, “in
the name of the great Jéhovah and the Continental
Congress,” - while I angle down the
river a mile or so?
Certainly she would. What door
is there in Europe at which the American girl is afraid
to knock? “But wait a moment. How do
you ask for fried chicken and pancakes in Norwegian?
KYLLING OG PANDEKAGE? How fierce it sounds!
All right now. Run along and fish.”
The river welcomes me like an old
friend. The tune that it sings is the same that
the flowing water repeats all around the world.
Not otherwise do the lively rapids carry the familiar
air, and the larger falls drone out a burly bass,
along the west branch of the Penobscot, or down the
valley of the Bouquet. But here there are no forests
to conceal the course of the stream. It lies
as free to the view as a child’s thought.
As I follow on from pool to pool, picking out a good
trout here and there, now from a rocky corner edged
with foam, now from a swift gravelly run, now from
a snug hiding-place that the current has hollowed
out beneath the bank, all the way I can see the fortress
far above me on the hillside.
I am as sure that it has already surrendered
to Graygown as if I could discern her white banner
of crochet-work floating from the battlements.
Just before dark, I climb the hill
with a heavy basket of fish. The castle gate
is open. The scent of chicken and pancakes salutes
the weary pilgrim. In a cosy little parlour,
adorned with fluffy mats and pictures framed in pine-cones,
lit by a hanging lamp with glass pendants, sits the
mistress of the occasion, calmly triumphant and plying
her crochet-needle.
There is something mysterious about
a woman’s fancy-work. It seems to have
all the soothing charm of the tobacco-plant, without
its inconveniences. Just to see her tranquillity,
while she relaxes her mind and busies her fingers
with a bit of tatting or embroidery or crochet, gives
me a sense of being domesticated, a “homey”
feeling, anywhere in the wide world.
If you ever go to Norway, you must
be sure to see the Loenvand. You can set out
from the comfortable hotel at Faleide, go up the Indvik
Fjord in a rowboat, cross over a two-mile hill on
foot or by carriage, spend a happy day on the lake,
and return to your inn in time for a late supper.
The lake is perhaps the most beautiful in Norway.
Long and narrow, it lies like a priceless emerald
of palest green, hidden and guarded by jealous mountains.
It is fed by huge glaciers, which hang over the shoulders
of the hills like ragged cloaks of ice.
As we row along the shore, trolling
in vain for the trout that live in the ice-cold water,
fragments of the tattered cloth-of-silver far above
us, on the opposite side, are loosened by the touch
of the summer sun, and fall from the precipice.
They drift downward, at first, as noiselessly as thistledowns;
then they strike the rocks and come crashing towards
the lake with the hollow roar of an avalanche.
At the head of the lake we find ourselves
in an enormous amphitheatre of mountains. Glaciers
are peering down upon us. Snow-fields glare at
us with glistening eyes. Black crags seem to
bend above us with an eternal frown. Streamers
of foam float from the forehead of the hills and the
lips of the dark ravines. But there is a little
river of cold, pure water flowing from one of the
rivers of ice, and a pleasant shelter of young trees
and bushes growing among the debris of shattered rocks;
and there we build our camp-fire and eat our lunch.
Hunger is a most impudent appetite.
It makes a man forget all the proprieties. What
place is there so lofty, so awful, that he will not
dare to sit down in it and partake of food? Even
on the side of Mount Sinai, the elders of Israel spread
their out-of-door table, “and did eat and drink.”
I see the Tarn of the Elk at this
moment, just as it looked in the clear sunlight of
that August afternoon, ten years ago. Far down
in a hollow of the desolate hills it nestles, four
thousand feet above the sea. The moorland trail
hangs high above it, and, though it is a mile away,
every curve of the treeless shore, every shoal and
reef in the light green water is clearly visible.
With a powerful field-glass one can almost see the
large trout for which the pond is famous.
The shelter-hut on the bank is built
of rough gray stones, and the roof is leaky to the
light as well as to the weather. But there are
two beds in it, one for my guide and one for me; and
a practicable fireplace, which is soon filled with
a blaze of comfort. There is also a random library
of novels, which former fishermen have thoughtfully
left behind them. I like strong reading in the
wilderness. Give me a story with plenty of danger
and wholesome fighting in it, - “The
Three Musketeers,” or “Treasure Island,”
or “The Afghan’s Knife.” Intricate
studies of social dilemmas and tales of mild philandering
seem bloodless and insipid.
The trout in the Tarn of the Elk are
large, undoubtedly, but they are also few in number
and shy in disposition. Either some of the peasants
have been fishing over them with the deadly “otter,”
or else they belong to that variety of the trout family
known as TRUTTA damnosa, - the species
which you can see but cannot take. We watched
these aggravating fish playing on the surface at sunset;
we saw them dart beneath our boat in the early morning;
but not until a driving snowstorm set in, about noon
of the second day, did we succeed in persuading any
of them to take the fly. Then they rose, for
a couple of hours, with amiable perversity. I
caught five, weighing between two and four pounds each,
and stopped because my hands were so numb that I could
cast no longer.
Now for a long tramp over the hills
and home. Yes, home; for yonder in the white
house at Drivstuen, with fuchsias and geraniums
blooming in the windows, and a pretty, friendly Norse
girl to keep her company, my lady is waiting for me.
See, she comes running out to the door, in the gathering
dusk, with a red flower in her hair, and hails me with
the fisherman’s greeting. What luck?
Well, this luck, at all events!
I can show you a few good fish, and sit down with
you to a supper of reindeer-venison and a quiet evening
of music and talk.
Shall I forget thee, hospitable Stuefloten,
dearest to our memory of all the rustic stations in
Norway? There are no stars beside thy name in
the pages of Baedeker. But in the book of our
hearts a whole constellation is thine.
The long, low, white farmhouse stands
on a green hill at the head of the Romsdal. A
flourishing crop of grass and flowers grows on the
stable-roof, and there is a little belfry with a big
bell to call the labourers home from the fields.
In the corner of the living-room of the old house
there is a broad fireplace built across the angle.
Curious cupboards are tucked away everywhere.
The long table in the dining-room groans thrice a
day with generous fare. There are as many kinds
of hot bread as in a Virginia country-house; the cream
is thick enough to make a spoon stand up in amazement;
once, at dinner, we sat embarrassed before six different
varieties of pudding.
In the evening, when the saffron light
is beginning to fade, we go out and walk in the road
before the house, looking down the long mystical vale
of the Rauma, or up to the purple western hills from
which the clear streams of the Ulvaa flow to meet
us.
Above Stuefloten the Rauma lingers
and meanders through a smoother and more open valley,
with broad beds of gravel and flowery meadows.
Here the trout and grayling grow fat and lusty, and
here we angle for them, day after day, in water so
crystalline that when one steps into the stream one
hardly knows whether to expect a depth of six inches
or six feet.
Tiny English flies and leaders of
gossamer are the tackle for such water in midsummer.
With this delicate outfit, and with a light hand and
a long line, one may easily outfish the native angler,
and fill a twelve-pound basket every fair day.
I remember an old Norwegian, an inveterate fisherman,
whose footmarks we saw ahead of us on the stream all
through an afternoon. Footmarks I call them; and
so they were, literally, for there were only the prints
of a single foot to be seen on the banks of sand,
and between them, a series of small, round, deep holes.
“What kind of a bird made those
marks, Frederik?” I asked my faithful guide.
“That is old Pedersen,”
he said, “with his wooden leg. He makes
a dot after every step. We shall catch him in
a little while.”
Sure enough, about six o’clock
we saw him standing on a grassy point, hurling his
line, with a fat worm on the end of it, far across
the stream, and letting it drift down with the current.
But the water was too fine for that style of fishing,
and the poor old fellow had but a half dozen little
fish. My creel was already overflowing, so I emptied
out all of the grayling into his bag, and went on up
the river to complete my tale of trout before dark.
And when the fishing is over, there
is Graygown with the wagon, waiting at the appointed
place under the trees, beside the road. The sturdy
white pony trots gayly homeward. The pale yellow
stars blossom out above the hills again, as they did
on that first night when we were driving down into
the Valders. Frederik leans over the back of the
seat, telling us marvellous tales, in his broken English,
of the fishing in a certain lake among the mountains,
and of the reindeer-shooting on the fjeld beyond
it.
“It is sad that you go to-morrow,”
says he “but you come back another year, I think,
to fish in that lake, and to shoot those reindeer.”
Yes, Frederik, we are coming back
to Norway some day, perhaps, - who can tell?
It is one of the hundred places that we are vaguely
planning to revisit. For, though we did not see
the midnight sun there, we saw the honeymoon most
distinctly. And it was bright enough to take pictures
by its light.