I
WHEREVER Nature has commissioned one
creature to prey upon another, she has preserved the
balance by forewarning that other creature of what
she has done. Nature says to the cat, “Catch
the mouse,” and she equips her for that purpose;
but on the selfsame day she says to the mouse, “Be
wary, the cat is watching for you.”
Nature takes care that none of her creatures have
smooth sailing, the whole voyage at least. Why
has she not made the mosquito noiseless and its bite
itchless? Simply because in that case the odds
would be too greatly in its favor. She has taken
especial pains to enable the owl to fly softly and
silently, because the creatures it preys upon are
small and wary, and never venture far from their holes.
She has not shown the same caution in the case of the
crow, because the crow feeds on dead flesh, or on
grubs and beetles, or fruit and grain, that do not
need to be approached stealthily. The big fish
love to cat up the little fish, and the little fish
know it, and, on the very day they are hatched, seek
shallow water, and put little sandbars between themselves
and their too loving parents.
How easily a bird’s tail, or
that of any fowl, or in fact any part of the plumage,
comes out when the hold of its would-be capturer is
upon this alone; and how hard it yields in the dead
bird! No doubt there is relaxation in the former
case. Nature says to the pursuer, “Hold
on,” and to the pursued, “Let your tail
go.” What is the tortuous, zigzag course
of those slow-flying moths for but to make it difficult
for the birds to snap them up? The skunk is a
slow, witless creature, and the fox and lynx love
its meat; yet it carries a bloodless weapon that neither
likes to face.
I recently heard of an ingenious method
a certain other simple and slow-going creature has
of baffling its enemy. A friend of mine was walking
in the fields when he saw a commotion in the grass
a few yards off. Approaching the spot, he found
a snake the common garter snake trying
to swallow a lizard. And how do you suppose the
lizard was defeating the benevolent designs of the
snake? By simply taking hold of its own tail
and making itself into a hoop. The snake went
round and round, and could find neither beginning
nor end. Who was the old giant that found himself
wrestling with Time? This little snake had a tougher
customer the other day in the bit of eternity it was
trying to swallow.
The snake itself has not the same
wit, because I lately saw a black snake in the woods
trying to swallow the garter snake, and he had made
some headway, though the little snake was fighting
every inch of the ground, hooking his tail about sticks
and bushes, and pulling back with all his might, apparently
not liking the look of things down there at all.
I thought it well to let him have a good taste of his
own doctrines, when I put my foot down against further
proceedings.
This arming of one creature against
another is often cited as an evidence of the wisdom
of Nature, but it is rather an evidence of her impartiality.
She does not care a fig more for one creature than
for another, and is equally on the side of both, or
perhaps it would be better to say she does not care
a fig for either. Every creature must take its
chances, and man is no exception. We can ride
if we know how and are going her way, or we can be
run over if we fall or make a mistake. Nature
does not care whether the hunter slay the beast or
the beast the hunter; she will make good compost of
them both, and her ends are prospered whichever succeeds.
“If the red slayer think
he slays,
Or if the slain think he is slain,
They know not well the subtle ways
I keep, and pass, and turn again.”
What is the end of Nature? Where
is the end of a sphere? The sphere balances at
any and every point. So everything in Nature is
at the top, and yet no one thing is at the
top.
She works with reference to no measure
of time, no limit of space, and with an abundance
of material, not expressed by exhaustless. Did
you think Niagara a great exhibition of power?
What is that, then, that withdraws noiseless and invisible
in the ground about, and of which Niagara is but the
lifting of the finger?
Nature is thoroughly selfish, and
looks only to her own ends. One thing she is
bent upon, and that is keeping up the supply, multiplying
endlessly and scattering as she multiplies. Did
Nature have in view our delectation when she made
the apple, the peach, the plum, the cherry? Undoubtedly;
but only as a means to her own private ends. What
a bribe or a wage is the pulp of these delicacies
to all creatures to come and sow their seed!
And Nature has taken care to make the seed indigestible,
so that, though the fruit be eaten, the germ is not,
but only planted.
God made the crab, but man made the
pippin; but the pippin cannot propagate itself, and
exists only by violence and usurpation. Bacon
says, “It is easier to deceive Nature than to
force her,” but it seems to me the nurserymen
really force her. They cut off the head of a savage
and clap on the head of a fine gentleman, and the crab
becomes a Swaar or a Baldwin. Or is it a kind
of deception practiced upon Nature, which succeeds
only by being carefully concealed? If we could
play the same tricks upon her in the human species,
how the great geniuses could be preserved and propagated,
and the world stocked with them! But what a frightful
condition of things that would be! No new men,
but a tiresome and endless repetition of the old ones, a
world perpetually stocked with Newtons and Shakespeares!
We say Nature knows best, and has
adapted this or that to our wants or to our constitution, sound
to the ear, light and color to the eye; but she has
not done any such thing, but has adapted man to these
things. The physical cosmos is the mould, and
man is the molten metal that is poured into it.
The light fashioned the eye, the laws of sound made
the ear; in fact, man is the outcome of Nature and
not the reverse. Creatures that live forever
in the dark have no eyes; and would not any one of
our senses perish and be shed, as it were, in a world
where it could not be used?
II
It is well to let down our metropolitan
pride a little. Man thinks himself at the top,
and that the immense display and prodigality of Nature
are for him. But they are no more for him than
they are for the birds and beasts, and he is no more
at the top than they are. He appeared upon the
stage when the play had advanced to a certain point,
and he will disappear from the stage when the play
has reached another point, and the great drama will
go on without him. The geological ages, the convulsions
and parturition throes of the globe, were to bring
him forth no more than the beetles. Is not all
this wealth of the seasons, these solar and sidereal
influences, this depth and vitality and internal fire,
these seas, and rivers, and oceans, and atmospheric
currents, as necessary to the life of the ants and
worms we tread under foot as to our own? And
does the sun shine for me any more than for yon butterfly?
What I mean to say is, we cannot put our finger upon
this or that and say, Here is the end of Nature.
The Infinite cannot be measured. The plan of
Nature is so immense, but she has no plan,
no scheme, but to go on and on forever. What is
size, what is time, distance, to the Infinite?
Nothing. The Infinite knows no time, no space,
no great, no small, no beginning, no end.
I sometimes think that the earth and
the worlds are a kind of nervous ganglia in an organization
of which we can form no conception, or less even than
that. If one of the globules of blood that
circulate in our veins were magnified enough million
times, we might see a globe teeming with life and
power. Such is this earth of ours, coursing in
the veins of the Infinite. Size is only relative,
and the imagination finds no end to the series either
way.
III
Looking out of the car window one
day, I saw the pretty and unusual sight of an eagle
sitting upon the ice in the river, surrounded by half
a dozen or more crows. The crows appeared as if
looking up to the noble bird and attending his movements.
“Are those its young?” asked a gentleman
by my side. How much did that man know not
about eagles, but about Nature? If he had been
familiar with geese or hens, or with donkeys, he would
not have asked that question. The ancients had
an axiom that he who knew one truth knew all truths;
so much else becomes knowable when one vital fact
is thoroughly known. You have a key, a standard,
and cannot be deceived. Chemistry, geology, astronomy,
natural history, all admit one to the same measureless
interiors.
I heard a great man say that he could
see how much of the theology of the day would fall
before the standard of him who had got even the insects.
And let any one set about studying these creatures
carefully, and he will see the force of the remark.
We learn the tremendous doctrine of metamorphosis
from the insect world; and have not the bee and the
ant taught man wisdom from the first? I was highly
edified the past summer by observing the ways and
doings of a colony of black hornets that established
themselves under one of the projecting gables of my
house. This hornet has the reputation of being
a very ugly customer, but I found it no trouble to
live on the most friendly terms with her. She
was as little disposed to quarrel as I was. She
is indeed the eagle among hornets, and very noble
and dignified in her bearing. She used to come
freely into the house and prey upon the flies.
You would hear that deep, mellow hum, and see the
black falcon poising on wing, or striking here and
there at the flies, that scattered on her approach
like chickens before a hawk. When she had caught
one, she would alight upon some object and proceed
to dress and draw her game. The wings were sheared
off, the legs cut away, the bristles trimmed, then
the body thoroughly bruised and broken. When the
work was completed, the fly was rolled up into a small
pellet, and with it under her arm the hornet flew
to her nest, where no doubt in due time it was properly
served up on the royal board. Every dinner inside
these paper walls is a state dinner, for the queen
is always present.
I used to mount the ladder to within
two or three feet of the nest and observe the proceedings.
I at first thought the workshop must be inside, a
place where the pulp was mixed, and perhaps treated
with chemicals; for each hornet, when she came with
her burden of materials, passed into the nest, and
then, after a few moments, emerged again and crawled
to the place of building. But I one day stopped
up the entrance with some cotton, when no one happened
to be on guard, and then observed that, when the loaded
hornet could not get inside, she, after some deliberation,
proceeded to the unfinished part and went forward with
her work. Hence I inferred that maybe the hornet
went inside to report and to receive orders, or possibly
to surrender her material into fresh hands. Her
career when away from the nest is beset with dangers;
the colony is never large, and the safe return of
every hornet is no doubt a matter of solicitude to
the royal mother.
The hornet was the first paper-maker,
and holds the original patent. The paper it makes
is about like that of the newspaper; nearly as firm,
and made of essentially the same material, woody
fibres scraped from old rails and boards. And
there is news on it, too, if one could make out the
characters.
When I stopped the entrance with cotton,
there was no commotion or excitement, as there would
have been in the case of yellow-jackets. Those
outside went to pulling, and those inside went to pushing
and chewing. Only once did one of the outsiders
come down and look me suspiciously in the face, and
inquire very plainly what my business might be up
there. I bowed my head, being at the top of a
twenty-foot ladder, and had nothing to say.
The cotton was chewed and moistened
about the edges till every fibre was loosened, when
the mass dropped. But instantly the entrance was
made smaller, and changed so as to make the feat of
stopping it more difficult.
IV
There are those who look at Nature
from the standpoint of conventional and artificial
life, from parlor windows and through gilt-edged
poems, the sentimentalists. At the
other extreme are those who do not look at Nature
at all, but are a grown part of her, and look away
from her toward the other class, the backwoodsmen
and pioneers, and all rude and simple persons.
Then there are those in whom the two are united or
merged, the great poets and artists.
In them the sentimentalist is corrected and cured,
and the hairy and taciturn frontiersman has had experience
to some purpose. The true poet knows more about
Nature than the naturalist because he carries her open
secrets in his heart. Eckermann could instruct
Goethe in ornithology, but could not Goethe instruct
Eckermann in the meaning and mystery of the bird?
It is my privilege to number among my friends a man
who has passed his life in cities amid the throngs
of men, who never goes to the woods or to the country,
or hunts or fishes, and yet he is the true naturalist.
I think he studies the orbs. I think day and night
and the stars, and the faces of men and women, have
taught him all there is worth knowing.
We run to Nature because we are afraid
of man. Our artists paint the landscape because
they cannot paint the human face. If we could
look into the eyes of a man as coolly as we can into
the eyes of an animal, the products of our pens and
brushes would be quite different from what they are.
V
But I suspect, after all, it makes
but little difference to which school you go, whether
to the woods or to the city. A sincere man learns
pretty much the same things in both places. The
differences are superficial, the resemblances deep
and many. The hermit is a hermit, and the poet
a poet, whether he grow up in the town or the country.
I was forcibly reminded of this fact recently on opening
the works of Charles Lamb after I had been reading
those of our Henry Thoreau. Lamb cared nothing
for nature, Thoreau for little else. One was as
attached to the city and the life of the street and
tavern as the other to the country and the life of
animals and plants. Yet they are close akin.
They give out the same tone and are pitched in about
the same key. Their methods are the same; so
are their quaintness and scorn of rhetoric. Thoreau
has the drier humor, as might be expected, and is
less stomachic. There is more juice and unction
in Lamb, but this he owes to his nationality.
Both are essayists who in a less reflective age would
have been poets pure and simple. Both were spare,
high-nosed men, and I fancy a resemblance even in
their portraits. Thoreau is the Lamb of New England
fields and woods, and Lamb is the Thoreau of London
streets and clubs. There was a willfulness and
perversity about Thoreau, behind which he concealed
his shyness and his thin skin, and there was a similar
foil in Lamb, though less marked, on account of his
good-nature; that was a part of his armor, too.
VI
Speaking of Thoreau’s dry humor
reminds me how surely the old English unctuous and
sympathetic humor is dying out or has died out of our
literature. Our first notable crop of authors
had it, Paulding, Cooper, Irving, and in
a measure Hawthorne, but our later humorists
have it not at all, but in its stead an intellectual
quickness and perception of the ludicrous that is
not unmixed with scorn.
One of the marks of the great humorist,
like Cervantes, or Sterne, or Scott, is that he approaches
his subject, not through his head merely, but through
his heart, his love, his humanity. His humor is
full of compassion, full of the milk of human kindness,
and does not separate him from his subject, but unites
him to it by vital ties. How Sterne loved Uncle
Toby and sympathized with him, and Cervantes his luckless
knight! I fear our humorists would have made fun
of them, would have shown them up and stood aloof
superior, and “laughed a laugh of merry scorn.”
Whatever else the great humorist or poet, or any artist,
may be or do, there is no contempt in his laughter.
And this point cannot be too strongly insisted on
in view of the fact that nearly all our humorous writers
seem impressed with the conviction that their own
dignity and self-respect require them to look down
upon what they portray. But it is only little
men who look down upon anything or speak down to anybody.
One sees every day how clear it is that specially fine,
delicate, intellectual persons cannot portray satisfactorily
coarse, common, uncultured characters. Their
attitude is at once scornful and supercilious.
The great man, like Socrates, or Dr. Johnson, or Abraham
Lincoln, is just as surely coarse as he is fine, but
the complaint I make with our humorists is that they
are fine and not coarse in any healthful and manly
sense. A great part of the best literature and
the best art is of the vital fluids, the bowels, the
chest, the appetites, and is to be read and judged
only through love and compassion. Let us pray
for unction, which is the marrowfat of humor, and for
humility, which is the badge of manhood.
As the voice of the American has retreated
from his chest to his throat and nasal passages, so
there is danger that his contribution to literature
will soon cease to imply any blood or viscera, or healthful
carnality, or depth of human and manly affection, and
will be the fruit entirely of our toploftical brilliancy
and cleverness.
What I complain of is just as true
of the essayists and the critics as of the novelists.
The prevailing tone here also is born of a feeling
of immense superiority. How our lofty young men,
for instance, look down upon Carlyle, and administer
their masterly rebukes to him! But see how Carlyle
treats Burns, or Scott, or Johnson, or Novalis, or
any of his heroes. Ay, there’s the rub;
he makes heroes of them, which is not a trick of small
natures. He can say of Johnson that he was “moonstruck,”
but it is from no lofty height of fancied superiority,
but he uses the word as a naturalist uses a term to
describe an object he loves.
What we want, and perhaps have got
more of than I am ready to admit, is a race of writers
who affiliate with their subjects, and enter into them
through their blood, their sexuality and manliness,
instead of standing apart and criticising them and
writing about them through mere intellectual cleverness
and “smartness.”
VII
There is a feeling in heroic poetry,
or in a burst of eloquence, that I sometimes catch
in quite different fields. I caught it this morning,
for instance, when I saw the belated trains go by,
and knew how they had been battling with storm, darkness,
and distance, and had triumphed. They were due
at my place in the night, but did not pass till after
eight o’clock in the morning. Two trains
coupled together, the fast mail and the
express, making an immense line of coaches
hauled by two engines. They had come from the
West, and were all covered with snow and ice, like
soldiers with the dust of battle upon them. They
had massed their forces, and were now moving with
augmented speed, and with a resolution that was epic
and grand. Talk about the railroad dispelling
the romance from the landscape; if it does, it brings
the heroic element in. The moving train is a
proud spectacle, especially on stormy and tempestuous
nights. When I look out and see its light, steady
and unflickering as the planets, and hear the roar
of its advancing tread, or its sound diminishing in
the distance, I am comforted and made stout of heart.
O night, where is thy stay! O space, where is
thy victory! Or to see the fast mail pass in
the morning is as good as a page of Homer. It
quickens one’s pulse for all day. It is
the Ajax of trains. I hear its defiant, warning
whistle, hear it thunder over the bridges, and its
sharp, rushing ring among the rocks, and in the winter
mornings see its glancing, meteoric lights, or in
summer its white form bursting through the silence
and the shadows, its plume of smoke lying flat upon
its roofs and stretching far behind, a
sight better than a battle. It is something of
the same feeling one has in witnessing any wild, free
careering in storms, and in floods in nature; or in
beholding the charge of an army; or in listening to
an eloquent man, or to a hundred instruments of music
in full blast, it is triumph, victory.
What is eloquence but mass in motion, a
flood, a cataract, an express train, a cavalry charge?
We are literally carried away, swept from our feet,
and recover our senses again as best we can.
I experienced the same emotion when
I saw them go by with the sunken steamer. The
procession moved slowly and solemnly. It was like
a funeral cortege, a long line of grim
floats and barges and boxes, with their bowed and
solemn derricks, the pall-bearers; and underneath in
her watery grave, where she had been for six months,
the sunken steamer, partially lifted and borne along.
Next day the procession went back again, and the spectacle
was still more eloquent. The steamer had been
taken to the flats above and raised till her walking-beam
was out of water; her bell also was exposed and cleaned
and rung, and the wreckers’ Herculean labor
seemed nearly over. But that night the winds and
the storms held high carnival. It looked like
preconcerted action on the part of tide, tempest,
and rain to defeat these wreckers, for the elements
all pulled together and pulled till cables and hawser
snapped like threads. Back the procession started,
anchors were dragged or lost, immense new cables were
quickly taken ashore and fastened to trees; but no
use: trees were upturned, the cables stretched
till they grew small and sang like harp-strings, then
parted; back, back against the desperate efforts of
the men, till within a few feet of her old grave,
when there was a great commotion among the craft, floats
were overturned, enormous chains parted, colossal
timbers were snapped like pipestems, and, with a sound
that filled all the air, the steamer plunged to the
bottom again in seventy feet of water.
VIII
I am glad to observe that all the
poetry of the midsummer harvesting has not gone out
with the scythe and the whetstone. The line of
mowers was a pretty sight, if one did not sympathize
too deeply with the human backs turned up there to
the sun, and the sound of the whetstone, coming up
from the meadows in the dewy morning, was pleasant
music. But I find the sound of the mowing-machine
and the patent reaper is even more in tune with the
voices of Nature at this season. The characteristic
sounds of midsummer are the sharp, whirring crescendo
of the cicada or harvest fly, and the rasping, stridulous
notes of the nocturnal insects. The mowing-machine
repeats and imitates these sounds. ’T is
like the hum of a locust or the shuffling of a mighty
grasshopper. More than that, the grass and the
grain at this season have become hard. The timothy
stalk is like a file; the rye straw is glazed with
flint; the grasshoppers snap sharply as they fly up
in front of you; the bird-songs have ceased; the ground
crackles under foot; the eye of day is brassy and merciless;
and in harmony with all these things is the rattle
of the mower and the hay-tedder.
IX
’T is an evidence of how directly
we are related to Nature, that we more or less sympathize
with the weather, and take on the color of the day.
Goethe said he worked easiest on a high barometer.
One is like a chimney that draws well some days and
won’t draw at all on others, and the secret
is mainly in the condition of the atmosphere.
Anything positive and decided with the weather is
a good omen. A pouring rain may be more auspicious
than a sleeping sunshine. When the stove draws
well, the fogs and fumes will leave your mind.
I find there is great virtue in the bare ground, and
have been much put out at times by those white angelic
days we have in winter, such as Whittier has so well
described in these lines:
“Around the glistening
wonder bent
The blue walls of the firmament;
No cloud above, no earth below,
A universe of sky and snow.”
On such days my spirit gets snow-blind;
all things take on the same color, or no color; my
thought loses its perspective; the inner world is
a blank like the outer, and all my great ideals are
wrapped in the same monotonous and expressionless
commonplace. The blackest of black days are better.
Why does snow so kill the landscape
and blot out our interest in it? Not merely because
it is cold, and the symbol of death, for
I imagine as many inches of apple blossoms would have
about the same effect, but because it expresses
nothing. White is a negative; a perfect blank.
The eye was made for color, and for the earthy tints,
and, when these are denied it, the mind is very apt
to sympathize and to suffer also.
Then when the sap begins to mount
in the trees, and the spring languor comes, does not
one grow restless indoors? The sun puts out the
fire, the people say, and the spring sun certainly
makes one’s intellectual light grow dim.
Why should not a man sympathize with the seasons and
the moods and phases of Nature? He is an apple
upon this tree, or rather he is a babe at this breast,
and what his great mother feels affects him also.
X
I have frequently been surprised,
in late fall and early winter, to see how unequal
or irregular was the encroachment of the frost upon
the earth. If there is suddenly a great fall
in the mercury, the frost lays siege to the soil and
effects a lodgment here and there, and extends its
conquests gradually. At one place in the field
you can easily run your staff through into the soft
ground, when a few rods farther on it will be as hard
as a rock. A little covering of dry grass or leaves
is a great protection. The moist places hold
out long, and the spring runs never freeze. You
find the frost has gone several inches into the plowed
ground, but on going to the woods, and poking away
the leaves and debris under the hemlocks and cedars,
you find there is no frost at all. The Earth
freezes her ears and toes and naked places first, and
her body last.
If heat were visible, or if we should
represent it say by smoke, then the December landscape
would present a curious spectacle. We should see
the smoke lying low over the meadows, thickest in the
hollows and moist places, and where the turf is oldest
and densest. It would cling to the fences and
ravines. Under every evergreen tree we should
see the vapor rising and filling the branches, while
the woods of pine and hemlock would be blue with it
long after it had disappeared from the open country.
It would rise from the tops of the trees, and be carried
this way and that with the wind. The valleys
of the great rivers, like the Hudson, would overflow
with it. Large bodies of water become regular
magazines in which heat is stored during the summer,
and they give it out again during the fall and early
winter. The early frosts keep well back from
the Hudson, skulking behind the ridges, and hardly
come over in sight at any point. But they grow
bold as the season advances, till the river’s
fires, too, I are put out and Winter covers it with
his snows.
XI
One of the strong and original strokes
of Nature was when she made the loon. It is always
refreshing to contemplate a creature so positive and
characteristic. He is the great diver and flyer
under water. The loon is the genius loci of the
wild northern lakes, as solitary as they are.
Some birds represent the majesty of nature, like the
eagles; others its ferocity, like the hawks; others
its cunning, like the crow; others its sweetness and
melody, like the song-birds. The loon represents
its wildness and solitariness. It is cousin to
the beaver. It has the feathers of a bird and
the fur of an animal, and the heart of both. It
is as quick and cunning as it is bold and resolute.
It dives with such marvelous quickness that the shot
of the gunner get there just in time “to cut
across a circle of descending tail feathers and a couple
of little jets of water flung upward by the web feet
of the loon.” When disabled so that it
can neither dive nor fly, it is said to face its foe,
look him in the face with its clear, piercing eye,
and fight resolutely till death. The gunners
say there is something in its wailing, piteous cry,
when dying, almost human in its agony. The loon
is, in the strictest sense, an aquatic fowl. It
can barely walk upon the land, and one species at
least cannot take flight from the shore. But in
the water its feet are more than feet, and its wings
more than wings. It plunges into this denser
air and flies with incredible speed. Its head
and beak form a sharp point to its tapering neck.
Its wings are far in front and its legs equally far
in the rear, and its course through the crystal depths
is like the speed of an arrow. In the northern
lakes it has been taken forty feet under water upon
hooks baited for the great lake trout. I had
never seen one till last fall, when one appeared on
the river in front of my house. I knew instantly
it was the loon. Who could not tell a loon a
half mile or more away, though he had never seen one
before? The river was like glass, and every movement
of the bird as it sported about broke the surface
into ripples, that revealed it far and wide.
Presently a boat shot out from shore, and went ripping
up the surface toward the loon. The creature
at once seemed to divine the intentions of the boatman,
and sidled off obliquely, keeping a sharp lookout
as if to make sure it was pursued. A steamer came
down and passed between them, and when the way was
again clear, the loon was still swimming on the surface.
Presently it disappeared under the water, and the
boatman pulled sharp and hard. In a few moments
the bird reappeared some rods farther on, as if to
make an observation. Seeing it was being pursued,
and no mistake, it dived quickly, and, when it came
up again, had gone many times as far as the boat had
in the same space of time. Then it dived again,
and distanced its pursuer so easily that he gave over
the chase and rested upon his oars. But the bird
made a final plunge, and, when it emerged upon the
surface again, it was over a mile away. Its course
must have been, and doubtless was, an actual flight
under water, and half as fast as the crow flies in
the air.
The loon would have delighted the
old poets. Its wild, demoniac laughter awakens
the echoes on the solitary lakes, and its ferity and
hardiness are kindred to those robust spirits.
XII
One notable difference between man
and the four-footed animals which has often occurred
to me is in the eye, and the greater perfection, or
rather supremacy, of the sense of sight in the human
species. All the animals the dog,
the fox, the wolf, the deer, the cow, the horse depend
mainly upon the senses of hearing and smell. Almost
their entire powers of discrimination are confined
to these two senses. The dog picks his master
out of the crowd by smell, and the cow her calf out
of the herd. Sight is only partial recognition.
The question can only be settled beyond all doubt
by the aid of the nose. The fox, alert and cunning
as he is, will pass within a few yards of the hunter
and not know him from a stump. A squirrel will
run across your lap, and a marmot between your feet,
if you are motionless. When a herd of cattle see
a strange object, they are not satisfied till each
one has sniffed it; and the horse is cured of his
fright at the robe, or the meal-bag, or other object,
as soon as he can be induced to smell it. There
is a great deal of speculation in the eye of an animal,
but very little science. Then you cannot catch
an animal’s eye; he looks at you, but not into
your eye. The dog directs his gaze toward your
face, but, for aught you can tell, it centres upon
your mouth or nose. The same with your horse or
cow. Their eye is vague and indefinite.
Not so with the birds. The bird
has the human eye in its clearness, its power, and
its supremacy over the other senses. How acute
their sense of smell may be is uncertain; their hearing
is sharp enough, but their vision is the most remarkable.
A crow or a hawk, or any of the larger birds, will
not mistake you for a stump or a rock, stand you never
so still amid the bushes. But they cannot separate
you from your horse or team. A hawk reads a man
on horseback as one animal, and reads it as a horse.
None of the sharp-scented animals could be thus deceived.
The bird has man’s brain also
in its size. The brain of a song-bird is even
much larger in proportion than that of the greatest
human monarch, and its life is correspondingly intense
and high-strung. But the bird’s eye is
superficial. It is on the outside of his head.
It is round, that it may take in a full circle at
a glance.
All the quadrupeds emphasize their
direct forward gaze by a corresponding movement of
the ears, as if to supplement and aid one sense with
another. But man’s eye seldom needs the
confirmation of his ear, while it is so set, and his
head so poised, that his look is forcible and pointed
without being thus seconded.
XIII
I once saw a cow that had lost her
cud. How forlorn and desolate and sick at heart
that cow looked! No more rumination, no more of
that second and finer mastication, no more of that
sweet and juicy reverie under the spreading trees,
or in the stall. Then the farmer took an elder
and scraped the bark and put something with it, and
made the cow a cud, and, after due waiting, the experiment
took, a response came back, and the mysterious machinery
was once more in motion, and the cow was herself again.
Have you, O poet, or essayist, or
story-writer, never lost your cud, and wandered about
days and weeks without being able to start a single
thought or an image that tasted good, your
literary appetite dull or all gone, and the conviction
daily growing that it was all over with you in that
direction? A little elder-bark, something fresh
and bitter from the woods, is about the best thing
you can take.
XIV
Notwithstanding what I have elsewhere
said about the desolation of snow, when one looks
closely it is little more than a thin veil after all,
and takes and repeats the form of whatever it covers.
Every path through the fields is just as plain as
before. On every hand the ground sends tokens,
and the curves and slopes are not of the snow, but
of the earth beneath. In like manner the rankest
vegetation hides the ground less than we think.
Looking across a wide valley in the month of July,
I have noted that the fields, except the meadows,
had a ruddy tinge, and that corn, which near at hand
seemed to completely envelop the soil, at that distance
gave only a slight shade of green. The color of
the ground everywhere predominated, and I doubt not
that, if we could see the earth from a point sufficiently
removed, as from the moon, its ruddy hue, like that
of Mars, would alone be visible.
What is a man but a miniature earth,
with many disguises in the way of manners, possessions,
dissemblances? Yet through all through
all the work of his hands and all the thoughts of
his mind how surely the ground quality
of him, the fundamental hue, whether it be this or
that, makes itself felt and is alone important!
XV
Men follow their noses, it is said.
I have wondered why the Greek did not follow his nose
in architecture, did not copy those arches
that spring from it as from a pier, and support his
brow, but always and everywhere used the
post and the lintel. There was something in that
face that has never reappeared in the human countenance.
I am thinking especially of that straight, strong
profile. Is it really godlike, or is this impression
the result of association? But any suggestion
or reminiscence of it in the modern face at once gives
one the idea of strength. It is a face strong
in the loins, or it suggests a high, elastic instep.
It is the face of order and proportion. Those
arches are the symbols of law and self-control.
The point of greatest interest is the union of the
nose with the brow, that strong, high embankment;
it makes the bridge from the ideal to the real sure
and easy. All the Greek’s ideas passed
readily into form. In the modern face the arches
are more or less crushed, and the nose is severed from
the brow, hence the abstract and the analytic;
hence the preponderance of the speculative intellect
over creative power.
XVI
I have thought that the boy is the
only true lover of Nature, and that we, who make such
a dead set at studying and admiring her, come very
wide of the mark. “The nonchalance of a
boy who is sure of his dinner,” says our Emerson,
“is the healthy attitude of humanity.”
The boy is a part of Nature; he is as indifferent,
as careless, as vagrant as she. He browses, he
digs, he hunts, he climbs, he halloes, he feeds on
roots and greens and mast. He uses things roughly
and without sentiment. The coolness with which
boys will drown dogs or cats, or hang them to trees,
or murder young birds, or torture frogs or squirrels,
is like Nature’s own mercilessness.
Certain it is that we often get some
of the best touches of nature from children.
Childhood is a world by itself, and we listen to children
when they frankly speak out of it with a strange interest.
There is such a freedom from responsibility and from
worldly wisdom, it is heavenly wisdom.
There is no sentiment in children, because there is
no ruin; nothing has gone to decay about them yet, not
a leaf or a twig. Until he is well into his teens,
and sometimes later, a boy is like a bean-pod before
the fruit has developed, indefinite, succulent,
rich in possibilities which are only vaguely outlined.
He is a pericarp merely. How rudimental are all
his ideas! I knew a boy who began his school
composition on swallows by saying there were two kinds
of swallows, chimney swallows and swallows.
Girls come to themselves sooner; are
indeed, from the first, more definite and “translatable.”
XVII
Who will write the natural history
of the boy? One of the first points to be taken
account of is his clannishness. The boys of one
neighborhood are always pitted against those of an
adjoining neighborhood, or of one end of the town
against those of the other end. A bridge, a river,
a railroad track, are always boundaries of hostile
or semi-hostile tribes. The boys that go up the
road from the country school hoot derisively at those
that go down the road, and not infrequently add the
insult of stones; and the down-roaders return the
hooting and the missiles with interest.
Often there is open war, and the boys
meet and have regular battles. A few years since,
the boys of two rival towns on opposite sides of the
Ohio River became so belligerent that the authorities
had to interfere. Whenever an Ohio boy was caught
on the West Virginia side of the river, he was unmercifully
beaten; and when a West Virginia boy was discovered
on the Ohio side, he was pounced upon in the same manner.
One day a vast number of boys, about one hundred and
fifty on a side, met by appointment upon the ice and
engaged in a pitched battle. Every conceivable
missile was used, including pistols. The battle,
says the local paper, raged with fury for about two
hours. One boy received a wound behind the ear,
from the effects of which he died the next morning.
More recently the boys of a large manufacturing town
of New Jersey were divided into two hostile clans
that came into frequent collision. One Saturday
both sides mustered their forces, and a regular fight
ensued, one boy here also losing his life from the
encounter.
Every village and settlement is at
times the scene of these youthful collisions When
a new boy appears in the village, or at the country
school, how the other boys crowd around him and take
his measure, or pick at him and insult him to try
his mettle!
I knew a boy, twelve or thirteen years
old, who was sent to help a drover with some cattle
as far as a certain village ten miles from his home.
After the place was reached, and while the boy was
eating his cracker and candies, he strolled about
the village, and fell in with some other boys playing
upon a bridge. In a short time a large number
of children of all sizes had collected upon the bridge.
The new-comer was presently challenged by the boys
of his own age to jump with them. This he readily
did, and cleared their farthest mark. Then he
gave them a sample of his stone-throwing, and at this
pastime he also far surpassed his competitors.
Before long, the feeling of the crowd began to set
against him, showing itself first in the smaller fry,
who began half playfully to throw pebbles and lumps
of dry earth at him. Then they would run up slyly
and strike him with sticks. Presently the large
ones began to tease him in like manner, till the contagion
of hostility spread, and the whole pack was arrayed
against the strange boy. He kept them at bay
for a few moments with his stick, till, the feeling
mounting higher and higher, he broke through their
ranks, and fled precipitately toward home, with the
throng of little and big at his heels. Gradually
the girls and smaller boys dropped behind, till at
the end of the first fifty rods only two boys of about
his own size, with wrath and determination in their
faces, kept up the pursuit. But to these he added
the final insult of beating them at running also, and
reached, much blown, a point beyond which they refused
to follow.
The world the boy lives in is separate
and distinct from the world the man lives in.
It is a world inhabited only by boys. No events
are important or of any moment save those affecting
boys. How they ignore the presence of their elders
on the street, shouting out their invitations, their
appointments, their pass-words from our midst, as
from the veriest solitude! They have peculiar
calls, whistles, signals, by which they communicate
with each other at long distances, like birds or wild
creatures. And there is as genuine a wildness
about these notes and calls as about those of a fox
or a coon.
The boy is a savage, a barbarian,
in his taste, devouring roots, leaves,
bark, unripe fruit; and in the kind of music or discord
he delights in, of harmony he has no perception.
He has his fashions that spread from city to city.
In one of our large cities the rage at one time was
an old tin can with a string attached, out of which
they tortured the most savage and ear-splitting discords.
The police were obliged to interfere and suppress
the nuisance. On another occasion, at Christmas,
they all came forth with tin horns, and nearly drove
the town distracted with the hideous uproar.
Another savage trait of the boy is
his untruthfulness. Corner him, and the chances
are ten to one he will lie his way out. Conscience
is a plant of slow growth in the boy. If caught
in one lie, he invents another. I know a boy
who was in the habit of eating apples in school.
His teacher finally caught him in the act, and, without
removing his eye from him, called him to the middle
of the floor.
“I saw you this time,” said the teacher.
“Saw me what?” said the boy innocently.
“Bite that apple,” replied the teacher.
“No, sir,” said the rascal.
“Open your mouth;” and
from its depths the teacher, with his thumb and finger,
took out the piece of apple.
“Did n’t know it was there,” said
the boy, unabashed.
Nearly all the moral sentiment and
graces are late in maturing in the boy. He has
no proper self-respect till past his majority.
Of course there are exceptions, but they are mostly
windfalls. The good boys die young. We lament
the wickedness and thoughtlessness of the young vagabonds
at the same time that we know it is mainly the acridity
and bitterness of the unripe fruit that we are lamenting.