We spent the following day in drifting
quietly around the lake, floating lazily in the little
bays, under the shadow of the tall trees, and lounging
upon small islands, gathering the low-bush whortleberries
which grew in abundance upon them. We filled our
tin pails with this delicious fruit for a dessert
for our evening meal. On one of these islands
we found indications of its being inhabited by wood
rabbits, and we sent Cullen to the shanty for the dogs
to course them, not however with any intention of
capturing them, but to enjoy the music of the chase,
and hear the voices of the hounds echoing over the
water. We landed them upon the island, and began
beating for the game. The hounds understanding
that their business was the pursuit of deer, and having
hunted the island over thoroughly, came back to us,
and sat quietly down upon their haunches, as much as
to say there was nothing there worth looking after.
But we had seen one of the little animals that had
been roused from its bed by the dogs, and we called
their special attention to the fact by leading them
to the spot, and bidding them to “hunt him up.”
They understood our meaning, and started on the trail,
with a loud and cheerful cry. For half an hour,
they coursed him round and round the island, making
the lake vocal with their merry music. We might
have shot the game they were pursuing fifty times,
but we had no design against its life. The little
fellow did not seem to be greatly alarmed, for we
noted him often, when by doubling he had temporarily
thrown off the dogs, squat himself down, and throw
his long ears back in the direction of the sound that
had been pursuing him; and when the dogs straightened
upon his trail, and approached where he sat, he would
bound nimbly away among the thick bushes to double
on them again.
We called off the dogs and passed
on to float along under the shadow of the forest trees
and the hills, and take an occasional trout by way
of experiment among the broken rocks along the shore.
We had dispatched Cullen to the shanty to prepare
dinner for us by six o’clock, at which hour
we were to be at home. Cullen had promised, to
use his own expression, “to spread himself”
in the preparation of this meal, and he kept his promise.
On our return, we found a sirloin of moose roasted
to a turn, a stake of bear-meat broiled on the coals,
a stew of jerked venison, and as pleasant a dish of
fried trout and pork as an epicure could desire.
Our appetites were keen, and we did ample justice
to his cookery. This was one of the most delightful
evenings that I have ever spent in the northern woods.
There was such a calm resting upon all things, such
an impress of repose upon forest and lake, such a
cheerful quiet and serenity all around us, that one
could scarcely refrain from rejoicing aloud in the
beauty and the glory of the hour. As the sun
sank to his rest behind the western hills, and the
twilight began to gather in the forest and over the
lake, the moon rose over the eastern high lands, walking
with a queenly step up into the sky, casting a long
line of brilliant light across the waters, showing
the shadows of the mountains in bold outline in the
depths below, and paling the stars by her brightness
above. We all felt that we were recruiting in
strength so rapidly in these mountain regions, where
the air was so bracing and pure, under the influence
of exercise, simple diet, natural sleep, and the absence
of the labors and cares of business, that we were
contented, notwithstanding the monotony that began
to mark our everyday proceedings.
“I have been listening,”
said Spalding, as we sat upon the rude benches in
front of our camp-fire, indulging in our usual season
of smoking after our meals, “to the song of
the crickets in those rude jams, and they call up
sad, yet pleasant memories from the long past; of
the old log house, the quiet fire-place, the crane
in the jam, the great logs blazing upon the hearth
of a cold winter evening, the house dog sleeping quietly
in the corner, and the cat nestled confidingly between
his feet. Oh! the days of old! the days of old!
These crickets call back with these memories the circle
that gathered around the hearth of my home, when I
was young. Father, mother, brothers, sisters,
playmates, and friends. How quietly some of them
grew old and ripe, and then dropped into the grave.
How quietly others stole away in their youth to the
home of the dead, and how the rest have drifted away
on the currents of life and are lost to me in the mists
and shadows of time. Even the home and the hearth
are gone; they
‘Battled with time and slow decay,’
until at last they were wiped out
from the things that are. The song of the peepers
is a pleasant memory, and comes welling up with a
thousand cherished recollections of our vanished youth;
but the song of the cricket that made its home in
the jams of the great stone fire-place is pleasanter,
and the memories that come floating back with his
remembered lay are pleasanter still. He was always
there. He was not silent, like the out-door insect,
through the spring month and the cold of winter, piping
only in sadness when the still autumnal evenings close
in their brightness and beauty over the earth; but
he sang always, and his chirrup was heard at all seasons.
In the winter the fire on the hearth warmed him; in
the summer he had a cool resting place, and he was
cheerful and merry through all the long year.
And this reminds me of an anecdote of a venerable
minister, who passed years ago to his rest. He
was a Scotchman, and when preaching to his own congregation
at Salem, in Washington comity, he indulged in broad
Scotch, which to those who were accustomed to it was
exceedingly pleasant. I was a boy then, and was
returning with my father from a visit to Vermont.
We stopped over the Sabbath at Salem, and attended
worship in the neat little church of that pleasant
village. There were no railroads in those days.
The iron horse had not yet made his advent, and the
scream of the steam whistle had never startled the
echoes that dwell among the gorges of the Green Mountain
State. Oh! Progress! Progress!
I have travelled that same route often since, more
than once within the year, and I flew over in an hour
what was the work of all that cold winter day that
brought us at night to that neat little village of
Salem. I thought, as I dashed with a rush over
the road I once travelled so leisurely, how change
was written upon everything; how time and progress
had obliterated all the old landmarks, leaving scarcely
anything around which memory could cling. Well!
well! it is so everywhere. All over the world,
change, improvement, progress are the words.
The venerable minister, for his locks were grey, and
time had ploughed deep furrows down his cheeks, and
draws palpable lines across his brow, was, as my memory
paints him, the personification of earnestness, sincerity
and truth. The text and the drift of the sermon
I have forgotten, save the little fragment that fixed
itself in my memory by the singularity of the figure
by which he illustrated his meaning. He was speaking
of the operation of the Holy Spirit upon the human
heart, and how gently it won men from their sinful
ways. He said, ’It was not boisterous, like
the rush of the tempest; it was not fierce, like the
lightning; it was not loud, like the thunder; but
it was a still sma’ voice, like a wee cricket
in the wa’s.’ I regard the cricket
that chirruped in the wall as an institution.
One of the past to be sure, swept away by the current
of progress, whose course is onward always; over everything,
obliterating everything, hurling the things of today
into history, or burying them in eternal oblivion.
In this country there is nothing fixed, nothing stationary,
and never has been since the first white man swung
his axe against the outside forest tree; since the
first green field was opened up to the sunlight from
the deep shadows of the old forests that had stood
there, grand, solemn, and boundless since this world
was first thrown from the hand of God. There will
be nothing fixed for centuries to come. The tide
of progress will sweep onward in the future as it
has done in the past. Onward is the great watchword
of America, and American institutions; onward and onward,
over the ancient forests; onward, over the log-houses
that stood in the van of civilization; over the great
fire-places; over the cricket in the wall; over the
old house dog that slept in the corner; over the loved
faces that clustered around the blazing hearth in the
days of our childhood; over everything primitive,
everything, my friends, that you and I loved, when
we were little children, and that comes drifting along
down on the current of memory bright visions
of the returnless past. Ah, well! it is best
that it should be so. It is best that the world
should move on; that there should be no pause, no halting
in the onward march. What are we that the earth
should stand still at our bidding, or pause to contemplate
our tears? Dust to dust is the great law, but
so long as a phoenix rises from the ashes of decay,
what right have we to murmur? Time may desolate
and destroy, but man can build up and beautify.
True, his works perish as he perishes, but new works
and new men are rising forever to fill, and more than
fill, the vacancies and desolations of the past.
Go ahead then, world! Sweep along, Progress!
Mow away, Time! Tear down temple and stronghold;
sweep away the marble palace and log-house! sweep away
infancy and youth, manhood and old age; wipe out old
memories, and pass the sponge over cherished recollections.
The energy and the ingenuity of man are an over-match
even for time. From the ruins of the past, from
the desolations of decay, new structures will rise,
and a new harvest, more abundant than the old, will
spring up from the stubble over which Time’s
sickle has passed. Recuperation is a law stronger
than decay, and it is written all over the face of
the earth.”