One September night a family had gathered
round their hearth and piled it high with the driftwood
of mountain-streams, the dry cones of the pine, and
the splintered ruins of great trees that had come crashing
down the precipice. Up the chimney roared the
fire, and brightened the room with its broad blaze.
The faces of the father and mother had a sober gladness;
the children laughed. The eldest daughter was
the image of Happiness at seventeen, and the aged
grandmother, who sat knitting in the warmest place,
was the image of Happiness grown old. They had
found the “herb heart’s-ease” in
the bleakest spot of all New England. This family
were situated in the Notch of the White Hills, where
the wind was sharp throughout the year and pitilessly
cold in the winter, giving their cottage all its fresh
inclemency before it descended on the valley of the
Saco. They dwelt in a cold spot and a dangerous
one, for a mountain towered above their heads so steep
that the stones would often rumble down its sides
and startle them at midnight.
The daughter had just uttered some
simple jest that filled them all with mirth, when
the wind came through the Notch and seemed to pause
before their cottage, rattling the door with a sound
of wailing and lamentation before it passed into the
valley. For a moment it saddened them, though
there was nothing unusual in the tones. But the
family were glad again when they perceived that the
latch was lifted by some traveller whose footsteps
had been unheard amid the dreary blast which heralded
his approach and wailed as he was entering and went
moaning away from the door.
Though they dwelt in such a solitude,
these people held daily converse with the world.
The romantic pass of the Notch is a great artery through
which the life-blood of internal commerce is continually
throbbing between Maine on one side and the Green Mountains
and the shores of the St. Lawrence on the other.
The stage-coach always drew up before the door of
the cottage. The wayfarer with no companion but
his staff paused here to exchange a word, that the
sense of loneliness might not utterly overcome him
ere he could pass through the cleft of the mountain
or reach the first house in the valley. And here
the teamster on his way to Portland market would put
up for the night, and, if a bachelor, might sit an
hour beyond the usual bedtime and steal a kiss from
the mountain-maid at parting. It was one of those
primitive taverns where the traveller pays only for
food and lodging, but meets with a homely kindness
beyond all price. When the footsteps were heard,
therefore, between the outer door and the inner one,
the whole family rose up, grandmother, children and
all, as if about to welcome some one who belonged
to them, and whose fate was linked with theirs.
The door was opened by a young man.
His face at first wore the melancholy expression,
almost despondency, of one who travels a wild and
bleak road at nightfall and alone, but soon brightened
up when he saw the kindly warmth of his reception.
He felt his heart spring forward to meet them all,
from the old woman who wiped a chair with her apron
to the little child that held out its arms to him.
One glance and smile placed the stranger on a footing
of innocent familiarity with the eldest daughter.
“Ah! this fire is the right
thing,” cried he, “especially when there
is such a pleasant circle round it. I am quite
benumbed, for the Notch is just like the pipe of a
great pair of bellows; it has blown a terrible blast
in my face all the way from Bartlett.”
“Then you are going toward Vermont?”
said the master of the house as he helped to take
a light knapsack off the young man’s shoulders.
“Yes, to Burlington, and far
enough beyond,” replied he. “I meant
to have been at Ethan Crawford’s to-night, but
a pedestrian lingers along such a road as this.
It is no matter; for when I saw this good fire and
all your cheerful faces, I felt as if you had kindled
it on purpose for me and were waiting my arrival.
So I shall sit down among you and make myself at home.”
The frank-hearted stranger had just
drawn his chair to the fire when something like a
heavy footstep was heard without, rushing down the
steep side of the mountain as with long and rapid strides,
and taking such a leap in passing the cottage as to
strike the opposite precipice. The family held
their breath, because they knew the sound, and their
guest held his by instinct.
“The old mountain has thrown
a stone at us for fear we should forget him,”
said the landlord, recovering himself. “He
sometimes nods his head and threatens to come down,
but we are old neighbors, and agree together pretty
well, upon the whole. Besides, we have a sure
place of refuge hard by if he should be coming in
good earnest.”
Let us now suppose the stranger to
have finished his supper of bear’s meat, and
by his natural felicity of manner to have placed himself
on a footing of kindness with the whole family; so
that they talked as freely together as if he belonged
to their mountain-brood. He was of a proud yet
gentle spirit, haughty and reserved among the rich
and great, but ever ready to stoop his head to the
lowly cottage door and be like a brother or a son
at the poor man’s fireside. In the household
of the Notch he found warmth and simplicity of feeling,
the pervading intelligence of New England, and a poetry
of native growth which they had gathered when they
little thought of it from the mountain-peaks and chasms,
and at the very threshold of their romantic and dangerous
abode. He had travelled far and alone; his whole
life, indeed, had been a solitary path, for, with
the lofty caution of his nature, he had kept himself
apart from those who might otherwise have been his
companions. The family, too, though so kind and
hospitable, had that consciousness of unity among
themselves and separation from the world at large
which in every domestic circle should still keep a
holy place where no stranger may intrude. But
this evening a prophetic sympathy impelled the refined
and educated youth to pour out his heart before the
simple mountaineers, and constrained them to answer
him with the same free confidence. And thus it
should have been. Is not the kindred of a common
fate a closer tie than that of birth?
The secret of the young man’s
character was a high and abstracted ambition.
He could have borne to live an undistinguished life,
but not to be forgotten in the grave. Yearning
desire had been transformed to hope, and hope, long
cherished, had become like certainty that, obscurely
as he journeyed now, a glory was to beam on all his
pathway, though not, perhaps, while he was treading
it. But when posterity should gaze back into
the gloom of what was now the present, they would
trace the brightness of his footsteps, brightening
as meaner glories faded, and confess that a gifted
one had passed from his cradle to his tomb with none
to recognize him.
“As yet,” cried the stranger,
his cheek glowing and his eye flashing with enthusiasm “as
yet I have done nothing. Were I to vanish from
the earth to-morrow, none would know so much of me
as you that a nameless youth came up at
nightfall from the valley of the Saco, and opened
his heart to you in the evening, and passed through
the Notch by sunrise, and was seen no more. Not
a soul would ask, ’Who was he? Whither
did the wanderer go?’ But I cannot die till I
have achieved my destiny. Then let Death come:
I shall have built my monument.”
There was a continual flow of natural
emotion gushing forth amid abstracted reverie which
enabled the family to understand this young man’s
sentiments, though so foreign from their own.
With quick sensibility of the ludicrous, he blushed
at the ardor into which he had been betrayed.
“You laugh at me,” said
he, taking the eldest daughter’s hand and laughing
himself. “You think my ambition as nonsensical
as if I were to freeze myself to death on the top
of Mount Washington only that people might spy at
me from the country roundabout. And truly that
would be a noble pedestal for a man’s statue.”
“It is better to sit here by
this fire,” answered the girl, blushing, “and
be comfortable and contented, though nobody thinks
about us.”
“I suppose,” said her
father, after a fit of musing, “there is something
natural in what the young man says; and if my mind
had been turned that way, I might have felt just the
same. It is strange, wife, how his talk
has set my head running on things that are pretty
certain never to come to pass.”
“Perhaps they may,” observed
the wife. “Is the man thinking what he
will do when he is a widower?”
“No, no!” cried he, repelling
the idea with reproachful kindness. “When
I think of your death, Esther, I think of mine too.
But I was wishing we had a good farm in Bartlett or
Bethlehem or Littleton, or some other township round
the White Mountains, but not where they could tumble
on our heads. I should want to stand well with
my neighbors and be called squire and sent to General
Court for a term or two; for a plain, honest man may
do as much good there as a lawyer. And when I
should be grown quite an old man, and you an old woman,
so as not to be long apart, I might die happy enough
in my bed, and leave you all crying around me.
A slate gravestone would suit me as well as a marble
one, with just my name and age, and a verse of a hymn,
and something to let people know that I lived an honest
man and died a Christian.”
“There, now!” exclaimed
the stranger; “it is our nature to desire a
monument, be it slate or marble, or a pillar of granite,
or a glorious memory in the universal heart of man.”
“We’re in a strange way
to-night,” said the wife, with tears in her
eyes. “They say it’s a sign of something
when folks’ minds go a-wandering so. Hark
to the children!”
They listened accordingly. The
younger children had been put to bed in another room,
but with an open door between; so that they could be
heard talking busily among themselves. One and
all seemed to have caught the infection from the fireside
circle, and were outvying each other in wild wishes
and childish projects of what they would do when they
came to be men and women. At length a little boy,
instead of addressing his brothers and sisters, called
out to his mother.
“I’ll tell you what I
wish, mother,” cried he: “I want you
and father and grandma’m, and all of us, and
the stranger too, to start right away and go and take
a drink out of the basin of the Flume.”
Nobody could help laughing at the
child’s notion of leaving a warm bed and dragging
them from a cheerful fire to visit the basin of the
Flume a brook which tumbles over the precipice
deep within the Notch.
The boy had hardly spoken, when a
wagon rattled along the road and stopped a moment
before the door. It appeared to contain two or
three men who were cheering their hearts with the
rough chorus of a song which resounded in broken notes
between the cliffs, while the singers hesitated whether
to continue their journey or put up here for the night.
“Father,” said the girl,
“they are calling you by name.”
But the good man doubted whether they
had really called him, and was unwilling to show himself
too solicitous of gain by inviting people to patronize
his house. He therefore did not hurry to the door,
and, the lash being soon applied, the travellers plunged
into the Notch, still singing and laughing, though
their music and mirth came back drearily from the
heart of the mountain.
“There, mother!” cried
the boy, again; “they’d have given us a
ride to the Flume.”
Again they laughed at the child’s
pertinacious fancy for a night-ramble. But it
happened that a light cloud passed over the daughter’s
spirit; she looked gravely into the fire and drew a
breath that was almost a sigh. It forced its
way, in spite of a little struggle to repress it.
Then, starting and blushing, she looked quickly around
the circle, as if they had caught a glimpse into her
bosom. The stranger asked what she had been thinking
of.
“Nothing,” answered she,
with a downcast smile; “only I felt lonesome
just then.”
“Oh, I have always had a gift
of feeling what is in other people’s hearts,”
said he, half seriously. “Shall I tell the
secrets of yours? For I know what to think when
a young girl shivers by a warm hearth and complains
of lonesomeness at her mother’s side. Shall
I put these feelings into words?”
“They would not be a girl’s
feelings any longer if they could be put into words,”
replied the mountain-nymph, laughing, but avoiding
his eye.
All this was said apart. Perhaps
a germ of love was springing in their hearts so pure
that it might blossom in Paradise, since it could not
be matured on earth; for women worship such gentle
dignity as his, and the proud, contemplative, yet
kindly, soul is oftenest captivated by simplicity
like hers. But while they spoke softly, and he
was watching the happy sadness, the lightsome shadows,
the shy yearnings, of a maiden’s nature, the
wind through the Notch took a deeper and drearier
sound. It seemed, as the fanciful stranger said,
like the choral strain of the spirits of the blast
who in old Indian times had their dwelling among these
mountains and made their heights and recesses a sacred
region. There was a wail along the road as if
a funeral were passing. To chase away the gloom,
the family threw pine-branches on their fire till
the dry leaves crackled and the flame arose, discovering
once again a scene of peace and humble happiness.
The light hovered about them fondly and caressed them
all. There were the little faces of the children
peeping from their bed apart, and here the father’s
frame of strength, the mother’s subdued and careful
mien, the high-browed youth, the budding girl and
the good old grandam, still knitting in the warmest
place.
The aged woman looked up from her
task, and with fingers ever busy was the next to speak.
“Old folks have their notions,”
said she, “as well as young ones. You’ve
been wishing and planning and letting your heads run
on one thing and another till you’ve set my
mind a-wandering too. Now, what should an old
woman wish for, when she can go but a step or two before
she comes to her grave? Children, it will haunt
me night and day till I tell you.”
“What is it, mother?”
cried the husband and wife at once.
Then the old woman, with an air of
mystery which drew the circle closer round the fire,
informed them that she had provided her grave-clothes
some years before a nice linen shroud, a
cap with a muslin ruff, and everything of a finer
sort than she had worn since her wedding-day.
But this evening an old superstition had strangely
recurred to her. It used to be said in her younger
days that if anything were amiss with a corpse if
only the ruff were not smooth or the cap did not set
right the corpse, in the coffin and beneath
the clods, would strive to put up its cold hands and
arrange it. The bare thought made her nervous.
“Don’t talk so, grandmother,”
said the girl, shuddering.
“Now,” continued the old
woman, with singular earnestness, yet smiling strangely
at her own folly, “I want one of you, my children,
when your mother is dressed and in the coffin, I
want one of you to hold a looking-glass over my face.
Who knows but I may take a glimpse at myself and see
whether all’s right?”
“Old and young, we dream of
graves and monuments,” murmured the stranger-youth.
“I wonder how mariners feel when the ship is
sinking and they, unknown and undistinguished, are
to be buried together in the ocean, that wide and
nameless sepulchre?”
For a moment the old woman’s
ghastly conception so engrossed the minds of her hearers
that a sound abroad in the night, rising like the roar
of a blast, had grown broad, deep and terrible before
the fated group were conscious of it. The house
and all within it trembled; the foundations of the
earth seemed to be shaken, as if this awful sound
were the peal of the last trump. Young and old
exchanged one wild glance and remained an instant
pale, affrighted, without utterance or power to move.
Then the same shriek burst simultaneously from all
their lips:
“The slide! The slide!”
The simplest words must intimate,
but not portray, the unutterable horror of the catastrophe.
The victims rushed from their cottage and sought refuge
in what they deemed a safer spot, where, in contemplation
of such an emergency, a sort of barrier had been reared.
Alas! they had quitted their security and fled right
into the pathway of destruction. Down came the
whole side of the mountain in a cataract of ruin.
Just before it reached the house the stream broke into
two branches, shivered not a window there, but overwhelmed
the whole vicinity, blocked up the road and annihilated
everything in its dreadful course. Long ere the
thunder of that great slide had ceased to roar among
the mountains the mortal agony had been endured and
the victims were at peace. Their bodies were
never found.
The next morning the light smoke was
seen stealing from the cottage chimney up the mountain-side.
Within, the fire was yet smouldering on the hearth,
and the chairs in a circle round it, as if the inhabitants
had but gone forth to view the devastation of the slide
and would shortly return to thank Heaven for their
miraculous escape. All had left separate tokens
by which those who had known the family were made
to shed a tear for each. Who has not heard their
name? The story has been told far and wide, and
will for ever be a legend of these mountains.
Poets have sung their fate.
There were circumstances which led
some to suppose that a stranger had been received
into the cottage on this awful night, and had shared
the catastrophe of all its inmates; others denied
that there were sufficient grounds for such a conjecture.
Woe for the high-souled youth with his dream of earthly
immortality! His name and person utterly unknown,
his history, his way of life, his plans, a mystery
never to be solved, his death and his existence equally
a doubt, whose was the agony of that death-moment?