While Marco Paul was in Vermont, he
and Forester had a remarkable adventure in the woods.
They got lost in fact, and for a time it seemed quite
doubtful how they were ever to find their way home.
It happened thus.
One morning in the fall of the year,
Marco, walking along toward the barn with James, asked
James what he was going to do that day.
“I expect that I am going to
gather apples,” said James.
“Well,” said Marco. “Are you
going in the cart?”
“Yes,” said James.
“And may I go with you?” asked Marco.
“Yes,” said James.
“And help gather the apples? said Marco.
“Yes,” said James.
“And drive the oxen a little way?” asked
Marco.
“Yes,” said James.
“Well.” said Marco. “I will
run and get my goad-stick.”
Marco went toward the house intending
to go in and get his goad-stick. On his way he
met his uncle. His uncle asked him whether James
was out in the barn. Marco said that he was,
and his uncle then asked him to go and request James
to come to him. Marco did so, and he and James
then came along toward the house together.
Marco’s uncle stood upon the step of the door.
“James,” said he, “I
was thinking that we ought to send for the horses; and
the apples ought to be gathered too. Which is
it best to do?”
“I hardly know, sir,”
said James. “It is high time that the apples
were gathered, and yet we promised to send for the
horses to-day.”
“I can go and get the horses,”
said Marco, “just as well as not.
Where is it?”
“Oh no,” said his uncle.
“It is ten or fifteen miles from here. Isn’t
it, James?”
“Yes,” said James, “by
the road. I suppose it is about four miles
through the woods. I was intending to walk there,
through the woods, and then to come home round by
the road. It is rather a rough road for horses
through the woods.”
“Let cousin Forester and me
go,” said Marco. “I will go and ask
him.”
So Marco went and found Forester.
When Forester heard of the plan he was quite inclined
to accede to it. He had been much engaged in
studying for some time, and had had very little exercise
and recreation, so that he was easily persuaded to
undertake an expedition. The plan was all soon
agreed upon. The horses had been put out to pasture
at a farmer’s up the river about twelve miles.
In going that twelve miles the river took a great
turn, so that in fact the farm where the horses were
pastured was not, in a straight line, more than four
miles from Mr. Forester’s house. But the
intermediate country was a desolate and almost impassable
region of forests and mountains. There was, indeed,
a sort of footpath by which it was possible for men
to get through, but this path was dangerous, and in
fact almost impracticable for horses. So James
had formed the plan of walking through the woods by
the path, and then of coming home by the road, riding
one of the horses and leading the other.
Forester and Marco concluded to adopt
the same plan; except that in coming home there would
be just a horse a-piece for them to ride. They
put up some provisions to eat on the way, packing them
in Marco’s knapsack. The knapsack, when
it was ready, was strapped upon Marco’s back,
for he insisted on carrying it. Forester consented
to this arrangement, secretly intending, however,
not to allow Marco to carry the load very far.
Forester asked James if there would
be any difficulty about the way. James said that
there would not be. The path, though it was not
an easy one to travel, was very easy to find.
“You go on,” said he,
“along the back road about three quarters of
a mile, and then you will come to a small school-house
on the left hand side of the road, on a sort of hill.
It is in the Jones district.”
“What sort of a school-house is it?” asked
Forester.
“It is a small school-house,
with a little cupola upon the top of it,” said
James, “for a bell. It stands upon a knoll
by the side of the road. Just beyond it the main
road turns to the right, and there is a narrower road
leading off to the left through a gate. You must
go through that gate and then follow the path into
the woods.”
“We can find it, I think,” said Forester.
“Yes,” said Marco, “I know the place
very well.”
Forester said he thought that they
should find the way without any difficulty, and so
bidding his uncle and aunt good-bye, he and Marco
set out.
They went through the garden, and
from the garden they passed out through a small gate
into the orchard. Marco wished to go this way
in order to get some apples. He chose two from
off his favorite tree and put them into the knapsack,
and took another in his hand to eat by the way.
Forester did the same, only he put the two that he
carried with him, into his pockets.
From the orchard the travelers walked
across a field and down into the glen, and after crossing
a brook upon some stepping-stones, they ascended upon
the other side, and presently climbing over a fence,
they came out into what James had called the back road.
They walked along upon this road, for about three
quarters of a mile, until at last they came in sight
of the school-house. Marco spied it first.
“There,” said Marco, “that is the
school-house.”
“How do you know that that is the one?”
asked Forester.
“Oh, I know the Jones district very well,”
said Marco.
In New England the tract of country
included within the jurisdiction of a town, is divided
into districts for the establishment and support of
schools. These districts are called school-districts,
and each one is generally named from some of the principal
families that happen to live in it. It happened
that there were several families of the name of Jones
that lived in this part of the town, and so their district
was called the Jones district.
“How do you happen to know it?” said Forester.
“Oh, I came out here two or
three times with Thomas Jones to set my squirrel trap,”
said Marco. “There goes Thomas Jones now.”
“Where?” asked Forester.
“There,” said Marco, pointing along the
road a little way.
Forester looked forward, and saw in
the road before them a boy walking toward the school-house,
with his slate under his arm. Beyond the boy,
upon the knoll on the left side of the road, was the
school-house itself.
The school-house was not far from
the road, and there was a little grove of trees behind
it. Beyond the school-house, and almost directly
before them, Marco and Forester saw the road turning
a little to the left toward the gate.
“There is the gate,” said Marco, “that
we are to go through.”
“Yes,” said Forester, “that must
be the one.”
Forester and Marco walked on until
they came to the school-house. Thomas got to
the school-house before them, and went in. Forester
and Marco passed on and went through the gate.
They then went on beyond the gate a little way till
they came to a pair of bars. Marco took down
all but the topmost bar, and Forester, stooping down,
passed under. Marco attempted to do the same;
but forgetting that he had a knapsack upon his back,
he did not stoop low enough, and gave his knapsack
such a knock as almost threw him down. Fortunately
there was nothing frangible inside, and so no damage
was done. One of his apples was mellowed a little;
that was all.
The path led the travelers first across
a rough and rocky pasture, and then it suddenly entered
a wood where every thing wore an expression of wild
and solemn grandeur. The trees were very lofty,
and consisted of tall stems, rising to a vast height
and surmounted above with a tuft of branches, which
together formed a broad canopy over the heads of the
travelers, and produced a sort of somber twilight below.
Birds sang in plaintive notes on the tops of distant
trees, and now and then a squirrel was seen running
along the ground, or climbing up the trunk of some
vast hemlock or pine.
“I hope that we shall not lose
our way in these woods,” said Forester.
“Oh, there is no danger of that,”
rejoined Marco. “The path is very plain.”
“It seems plain here,”
said Forester, “and I presume that there can
not be any danger, or James would have recommended
to us to go the other way.”
“We shall come home the other
way,” said Marco. “I wonder if there
are any saddles. Twelve miles would be too far
to ride bareback.”
“Yes,” said Forester,
“there are saddles. I asked James about
that.”
The path which Forester and Marco
were pursuing soon began to ascend. It ascended
at first gradually, and afterward more and more precipitously,
and at length began to wind about among rocks and
precipices in such a manner, that Marco said he did
not wonder at all that James said it would be a rough
road for horses.
“I think it is a very rough
road for boys,” said Forester.
“Boys?” repeated Marco. “Do
you call yourself boys.”
“For men then,” said Forester.
“But I am not a man,” said Marco.
“Then I don’t see how I can express my
idea,” said Forester.
Marco’s attention was here diverted
from the rhetorical difficulty in which Forester had
become involved, by a very deep chasm upon one side
of the path. He went to the brink of it and could
hear the roaring of a torrent far below.
“I mean to throw a stone down,”
said Marco. He accordingly, after looking around
for a moment, found a stone about as large as his head.
This stone he contrived to bring to the edge of the
precipice and then to throw it over. It went
thundering down among the rocks and trees below, while
Marco stood upon the brink and listened to the sound
of the echoes and reverberations. He then got
another stone larger than the first, and threw that
down; after which he and Forester resumed their journey.
The path, though it was a very rough
and tortuous one, was pretty plain; and it is probable
that the travelers would have found no difficulty
in following it to the end of their route, had it not
been for an occurrence which they had not at all anticipated,
but which was one, nevertheless, that has often taken
place to confuse the steps of mountain travelers and
make them lose their way. This occurrence was
a fall of snow.
It was not late enough in the year
for snow upon the lowlands, but snow falls very early
in the autumn upon the summits of mountains.
Marco and Forester had not anticipated stormy weather
of any kind, when they left home; for the wind was
west and the sky was clear. When, however, they
had accomplished about one half of their journey,
large masses of fleecy clouds began to drive over the
mountains, and presently, all at once, it began to
snow. Marco was extremely delighted to see the
snow falling. Forester was not so much pleased.
On the other hand, he looked somewhat concerned.
He did not at first think how the snow could do them
any serious injury, but he seemed to have an undefined
sense of danger from it, and appeared uneasy.
They both, however, walked on.
The region through which the path
led at the time when the snow came on, was a tract
of flat land on the summit of the mountainous range,
with small and scattered trees here and there upon
it. The best thing, probably, for the travelers
to have done in the emergency would have been to have
turned round the moment it began to snow, and go back
as fast as possible by the way that they came, as
long as they were sure of the path, and then to wait
until the fallen snow had melted. If they found
then that the snow did not melt, so that they could
see the path again, it would be better to return altogether,
as their chance of being able to follow the path back
toward their home would be much greater than that
of pursuing it forward; for they might expect to find
some guidance, in going back, by their recognition
of the place which they had passed in ascending.
Forester, however, did not happen
to think of this; and so when it began to snow, his
only immediate desire was to go forward as fast as
possible, so as to get into the woods again where he
and Marco would be in some measure under shelter.
Marco finding that Forester appeared
somewhat anxious, began to feel some sentiment of
fear himself.
“Who would have thought,”
said he, “that we should have got caught out
in this snow-storm?”
“Oh, it is not a snow-storm,”
replied Forester. “It is only a little
snow flurry. It will be over in a few minutes.”
“How do you know that it is
not going to be a snow-storm?” asked Marco.
“Because storms never come out
of the west,” replied Forester.
It snowed, however, faster and faster,
and the ground soon began to be entirely whitened.
Forester pressed on, but he soon found himself at
a loss for his way. The air was so filled with
the descending flakes, that he could see only a very
short distance before him. The view of the forests
and mountains was cut off on every side, and nothing
presented itself to the eye but the dim forms of the
rocks and trees which were near. These, too,
were indistinct and shapeless. The ground was
soon entirely covered, and all hope of finding the
path entirely disappeared. Forester went back
then a short distance, endeavoring to retrace his
steps. He followed the foot-prints a little way,
but all traces of them were soon obliterated.
When he found that the steps could no longer be seen,
he went toward a tree which he saw rising dimly at
a little distance before him. The tree proved
to be a large hemlock, with wide-spreading branches.
There was a place under this tree where the ground
was bare, having been sheltered from the snow by the
branches of the tree. There were some rocks too
lying under this tree. Forester walked up to
them and sat down. Marco followed his example.
“Well, Marco,” said Forester, “we
are really lost.”
“And what are we going to do?”
asked Marco, with a countenance of great concern.
“The first thing is,”
said Forester, “to open the knapsack, and see
what there is inside that is good to eat.”
So Forester took the knapsack off
from his shoulders, for he had taken it
from Marco some time before, and laying it upon a large
flat stone by his side, he began to open it, and to
take out the provisions.
Forester was afraid that he and Marco
had got themselves into somewhat serious difficulty,
but he wished to teach Marco that in emergencies of
such a nature, it would do no good to give way to a
panic, or to unnecessary anxiety. So he assumed
an unconcerned and contented air, and made arrangements
for the luncheon, just as if they had stopped there
to eat it of their own accord, and without being in
any difficulty whatever about the prosecution of the
journey.
Marco, however, seemed to be quite uneasy.
“What are we going to do?”
said he. “If we get lost in this snow-storm,
we shall have to stay in the woods perhaps all night.”
“Yes,” said Forester,
“that we can do. We have done that before.”
Forester here alluded to an occasion
on which he and Marco had spent the night in a hut
in the woods, when traveling in Maine.
“But we had an axe then,” said Marco,
“to make a camp.”
“Yes,” replied Forester,
“that is true. I don’t think, however,
that we shall have to stay in the woods all night
now. We have three chances for avoiding
it.”
“What are the three?” said Marco.
“Why, in the first place,”
replied Forester, “we can stay where we are
until it stops snowing, in fact it has almost
stopped now. Then I presume that the sun will
come out, and in half an hour melt away all the snow.
Then we can find our path again, and go on.”
“But I don’t think it
is certain that we can find our path again,”
said Marco.
“Nor do I,” said Forester,
“but there’s a chance of it. I did
not say that we had three certainties, but three chances.”
“Well,” said Marco; “go on; what
are the other two?”
“If we can not find the path,”
said Forester, “either because the snow does
not melt, or for any other reason, then we can remain
where we are until night, and the people, finding
that we do not come home, will send up for us.”
“And how can they find us?” asked Marco.
“Why, they will come up the
path, of course, and we can not be very far from the
path, for we only lost it a few minutes before we came
here. Of course they will come up very near to
this place; and they will come shouting
out, every few minutes, as loud as they can, and so
we shall hear them.”
“Yes,” said Marco, “I
see; that is a pretty good chance.”
“The third chance for us,”
said Forester, “is to go down into the first
glen or valley that we can find, and then we shall
probably come to a stream. Then we can follow
the stream down to the river.”
“How do you know that it goes
to the river?” asked Marco.
“All mountain streams do, of
course,” said Forester. “They go down
wherever they can find a valley or a hollow, joining
together and taking in branches as they proceed, until
they get down into the level country, and then they
flow to the nearest river, and so to the sea.
Now I know that the river takes a bend around this
mountainous tract, and almost surrounds it, and all
the streams from it must flow into the river without
going very far. We could follow one down, though
we should probably find the way very rough and difficult.”
“Let us try it,” said Marco.
This plan was decided upon, and so,
when the snow squall was entirely over and the sun
had come out Marco and Forester, taking their departure
from the great tree and guiding their course by the
sun, the travelers set out, proceeding as nearly in
a straight line as possible, intending to go on in
that manner until they should come to some stream,
and then to follow the stream down to the river.
The plan succeeded perfectly well. They soon
descended into a valley, where they found a little
brook flowing over a bed of moss-covered stones.
They followed this brook down for about a mile, when
they came to a junction between the brook that they
were following and another one. After this junction
of course the stream was larger, and in many places
they found it difficult to get along. The way
was encumbered with bushes, rocks, and fallen trees,
and in one place the stream flowed in a foaming torrent
through the bottom of a deep chasm, with sides rising
directly out of the water. Here the travelers
were obliged to find a way at a distance from the
brook guiding themselves, however, by the
sound of its roaring. After passing the chasm,
they got back to the stream again.
They came out into the open country
about one o’clock, and found to their great
joy that they were very near the place where the horses
were pastured. The horses were all ready for
them, and Forester and Marco mounted them immediately,
and set out on their return home.
It was very pleasant riding along
at their ease on horseback, after all the dangers
and fatigues that they had encountered. A part
of the way the road which they took lay along the
shore of the river. Marco enjoyed this part of
the ride very much indeed.
They reached home about sunset, with
an excellent appetite for supper. Marco was very
enthusiastic in his manner of giving his aunt Forester
an account of his adventures, and he said, in conclusion,
that he would just as lief get lost in the woods as
not. It was good fun.