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+metadata, and any other content or labor, has been confirmed to be
+in the PUBLIC DOMAIN IN THE UNITED STATES.
+
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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #62303 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/62303)
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-The Project Gutenberg eBook, A Winter of Content, by Laura Lee Davidson
-
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most
-other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of
-the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at
-www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you'll have
-to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook.
-
-
-
-
-Title: A Winter of Content
-
-
-Author: Laura Lee Davidson
-
-
-
-Release Date: June 2, 2020 [eBook #62303]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-
-***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK A WINTER OF CONTENT***
-
-
-This text was transcribed by Les Bowler
-
- [Picture: Book cover]
-
- [Picture: “Through patches of snow”]
-
-
-
-
-
- A Winter of Content
-
-
- By
- LAURA LEE DAVIDSON
-
- * * * * *
-
- “Now there is a rocky isle in the mid
- sea, midway between Ithaca
- and rocky Samos, Asteris, a little isle.”
-
- The Odyssey of Homer. Translated by
- S. S. Butcher and Andrew Lang
-
- * * * * *
-
- [Picture: Decorate graphic]
-
- * * * * *
-
- THE ABINGDON PRESS
- NEW YORK CINCINNATI
-
- * * * * *
-
- Copyright, 1922, by
- LAURA LEE DAVIDSON
-
- * * * * *
-
- Printed in the United States of America
-
- * * * * *
-
- To
- LOUISE
- THE LADY OF THE ISLAND
-
- * * * * *
-
-
-
-
-ILLUSTRATIONS
-
-“THROUGH PATCHES OF SNOW” Frontispiece
-“PETER, THE RABBIT, IS TURNING WHITE VERY RAPIDLY” 53
-THE HOUSE 82
-A POINT OF ONE OF THE ISLANDS 97
-“THE HEAVY WOODSLEDS STILL TRAVEL DOWN THE LAKES” 131
-“THE DRAPEAUS LIVE ON A LONG PENINSULA TO THE WEST 155
-OF THIS ISLAND”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER I
-
-
-A SMALL, rocky island in a lake, a canoe paddling away across the blue
-water, a woman standing on a narrow strip of beach, looking after it. I
-was the woman left on the shore, the canoe held my companions of the past
-summer, the island was to be my home until another summer should bring
-them back again.
-
-There is no denying that I was frightened as I turned back along the
-trail toward the little house among the birches. It was hard work to
-keep from jumping into a boat and putting out after the canoe that was
-rounding the point and leaving me alone.
-
-Little chilly fears laid icy fingers on the back of my neck. A shadow
-slipped between the trees; a sigh whispered among the leaves. I wanted
-to see all round me; I wanted to put my back against a wall. A little,
-grinning goblin of a misgiving stuck out an impudent tongue as it quoted
-some of the jeers of unsympathetic friends and relatives, who had derided
-my plan for borrowing the camp, when summer was gone, and staying on
-alone at the Lake of Many Islands.
-
-“Good-by,” had smiled my sister. “You say you mean to stay a year, but
-you’ll tire of solitude long before the winter. We’ll see you back at
-Thanksgiving.”
-
-It was only mid-September, but I wanted to see her then at that very
-instant.
-
-There had been a farewell dinner, the family assembled, to prophesy
-disaster.
-
-“You’ll freeze your nose and ears off,” mourned a reassuring aunt.
-
-In vain I reminded her that no inhabitant seen in five summers’ sojourn
-at the lake had been without a nose or ears; all had had the requisite
-number of features, although some of those same features had withstood
-the cold of well-nigh a hundred winters. But she was not consoled, and
-continued to regard me so tearfully that I felt sure that she was bidding
-farewell to my nose.
-
-“You’ll break a leg and lie for days before anyone knows you are hurt,”
-said Cousin John.
-
-“You’ll be snowed in and no one will find you until spring,” said Brother
-Henry.
-
-“You are a city woman and not strong. What do you know of a pioneer’s
-life? It is the most foolish plan we ever heard of,” chorused all.
-
-Descending from prophecy to argument, they continued:
-
-“Of course you will have a telephone.”
-
-“That I will not,” I answered. “I have been jerked at the end of a
-telephone wire for years. I want rest.”
-
-“At least you will have a good dog. That will be some protection.”
-
-“A dog would drive away all the wild things. I want to study them,” I
-objected.
-
-“Then, for mercy’s sake, find some other woman to stay there with you.
-Surely there is another lunatic willing to freeze to death on the
-precious island. You should have a companion, if only to send for help.”
-
-“I don’t want a companion,” I protested, tearfully. “I won’t be
-responsible for another person’s comfort or safety. I will do this thing
-alone or not at all.”
-
-“I am tired to death,” I stormed. “I need rest for at least one year. I
-want to watch the procession of the seasons in some place that is not all
-paved streets, city smells and noise. Instead of the clang of car bells
-and the honk of automobile horns, I want to hear the winds sing across
-the ice fields, instead of the smell of asphalt and hot gasoline, I want
-the odor of wet earth in boggy places. I have loved the woods all my
-life, I long to see the year go round there just once before I die.”
-
-At which outburst they shrugged exasperated shoulders and were silent,
-but each one drew me aside, at parting, and pressed a gift into my hand.
-
-“Be sure to let us know if anything goes wrong. Write to us if you need
-the least thing. Don’t be ashamed to come back, if the experiment proves
-a failure”—and so on and so on, God bless them!
-
-Of all this the bogy reminded me as he danced ahead up the winding trail.
-
-The house looked lonely, even in the brightness of the late afternoon. I
-hurried supper, to be indoors before the twilight fell. Big Canadian
-hares hopped along the paths and sat at the kitchen door, their great
-eyes peering, long, furry ears alert, quivering noses pressed against the
-wire screen. Grouse pecked on the hill side, as tame as barnyard fowl.
-From the water came the evening call of the loons.
-
-The scant meal finished, I ran across the platform from the kitchen to
-the main house and locked up. Somehow, I did not want any open doors
-behind me that evening. Then I loaded the pistol and laid it on a shelf
-at the head of the bed, along with the Bible and the Prayer Book. If any
-marauder could know how dreadfully afraid I am of that pistol, he would
-do his marauding with a quiet mind. I never expect to touch that weapon.
-It shall be cleaned and oiled when any of the men come over from the
-mainland, but handle it—never! I would not fire it for a kingdom.
-
-While it was still light I climbed into bed, and lay down rigid, with
-tight-shut eyes, trying to pretend I did not hear all the rustling,
-creaking, snapping noises in the woods. Heavy animals pushed through the
-fallen leaves. Something that sounded as large as a moose went crashing
-through the dry bushes.
-
-“A rabbit,” I whispered to myself.
-
-Creatures surely as large as bears rushed through the underbrush.
-
-“Grouse,” I tried to believe.
-
-From the lake came stealthy sounds.
-
-“Driftwood pounding against the rocks, not really oars,” I murmured to my
-thumping heart.
-
-Then light, pattering footsteps on the porch.
-
-In desperation I raised my head and looked out. It was a little red fox,
-trotting busily along, snuffling softly as he went. I lay down and
-closed my eyes firmly, determined not to open them again no matter what
-might happen, then must have dozed, for, suddenly I was aware of a light
-that flooded all the room.
-
-There through the northeast window, large and round and beautiful, shone
-the moon, the great Moon of the Falling Leaves. It was like the sudden
-meeting with a friend, reassuring, comforting. A broad band of light lay
-across my breast like a kind arm thrown over me. The path of the
-moonbeams on the water seemed the road to some safe haven. With the
-moon’s calm face looking in and the soft lapping of the waves as lullaby,
-I fell asleep—and lo! it was day.
-
-This house, the living room of the camp, that is to be my home for the
-coming winter, stands on a bluff overhanging the lake. It is a one-room
-shack, 16×20 feet, surrounded by an eight-foot porch. It is one-storied,
-shingled, the porch roof upheld by birch log pillars, beautiful still
-clothed in their silvery bark. There are eight windows, two in each
-corner, and through some of them the sun is always shining.
-
-Adjoining this main shack and connected with it by an uncovered platform
-are the kitchen and storeroom, but these will not be used in winter. The
-stores and I will have to stay in the big house if we are not to freeze.
-
-From these buildings little trails run off through the woods to the dock,
-the pump, the summer sleeping shacks, and a path goes all round the
-island close to the shore. Away from these beaten tracks are all sorts
-of hidden nooks and lovely, dim seclusions.
-
-This little rocky island, one of scores that dot the face of the lake, is
-all a tangle of ferns and vines and wildflowers. It is thickly wooded
-with white birch, poplar and wild cherry. There are also oaks, maples,
-pines, and great clumps of basswood, and innumerable little cedars are
-pushing up everywhere.
-
-Making a way through the overgrown paths in the early morning, I break
-through myriads of spiderwebs, stretched across from bushes heavy with
-dew. They feel like the tiniest of fairy fingers brushing my cheek, and
-laid on my eyelids, light as the memory of a caress. Butterflies dressed
-in black velvet, with white satin frills and sapphire jewels, flutter on
-ahead, and the stems of the birches are seen through a gold-green glow,
-like sunlight shining through clear water. When I sit on the sandy
-bottom, with the whole lake for my washpot, small fishes, wearing coral
-buttons and jade green ruffles on fins and tails, bump their blunt noses
-against my knees.
-
-Sounds from the mainland come across the lake, blurred and indistinct.
-On the island I hear only the wind in the trees, the water beating
-against the stones, and the hum of many insect wings.
-
-There is something queer about the island. I am convinced that it stands
-on some magnetic pole or other, that puts every clock and watch out of
-order as soon as it is landed here. Cheap or fine, every timepiece
-breaks a mainspring, and then we fall back on the sundial to tell us
-what’s o’clock. We can always know when it is noon, provided the weather
-be sunny. When it is cloudy we guess at the time and wait for the next
-fine day.
-
-This sundial stands in a clearing beside the house, and bears for its
-motto, not the high-sounding Latin quotation that seems to belong to
-sundials, but the trite assertion, “Time is valuable.” A statement
-wholly untrue, so far as this present life of mine is concerned. A fine
-bass, now, or a tin of beans perhaps is valuable, but surely not time, in
-a place where there is nothing to do but eat, sleep, and think.
-
-Yet when I stood to-day, on this lonely bit of land, in the midst of an
-empty lake, waiting for the shadow to travel to the mark, I seemed to
-catch, for one fleeting instant, some idea of the terrible, inexorable
-passing of the hours.
-
-“Set thy house in order, set thy house in order,” something seemed to
-say, “for never, for thee, shall the shadow turn back upon the dial.” In
-that moment I stood alone in space, on this old clock the earth, swinging
-with the whirling of the spheres.
-
-The lake too has its mystery, a strange light that shines from the point
-of one of the islands. No one lives on that land; there is no farmhouse
-near it on the shore, nor is it in line with any dwelling whose light
-could seem to glimmer from its point. The flare is too high and too
-steady for fox-fire, the glow that comes from rotting wood, and though
-men say they have explored the place repeatedly, there has never been any
-sign of a campfire there. But every now and again that light shines by
-night, like a beacon, and no one has ever explained it.
-
-Perhaps it is the phantom of the council fire, round which the red
-warriors sat in the days when this land was theirs. For there were
-Indians hereabout, and not so very long ago; and people on the mainland
-tell of a great fight that raged here when a band of the Mississagua
-Nation, led by the chief White Eagle, fought with an invading war party
-and of a day of battle from dawn until the going down of the sun when the
-lake was red with blood. On the sheer face of the cliff of the opposite
-island are red veinings in the rock. If one pretends very hard, they are
-pictures of two war canoes left there by some artist of the tribe. The
-people here believe in them devoutly.
-
-“They were painted in blood,” they say.
-
-A very indelible blood it must have been, for those tracings have
-withstood the wash of high water for many a year.
-
-Whether the picture writing is genuine or no, there is plenty of evidence
-that Indians lived along the shores of Many Islands, and there is a
-pretty story told of the wedding of a girl, White Eagle’s daughter, to a
-young brave of her tribe. The Indians came down the lakes and through
-the portages to Queensport, in their fine canoes, and the lovers were
-married there by the priest at the mission. Afterward they were all
-entertained at dinner by the big-hearted wife of the principal merchant
-of the town. That lady’s daughter tells me that for many seasons
-thereafter the chief’s daughter would bring or send beautiful birch
-baskets, filled with berries or maple sugar for the children of her
-hostess.
-
-The bride is described as slim and young, with big, dark eyes. The
-wedding dress was dark blue cloth, trimmed with new-minted five- and
-ten-cent pieces, pierced and sewed on in a pattern—this worn over a vest
-of buckskin, beautifully embroidered.
-
-What became of you, little Indian Bride, girl of the grateful heart?
-Were you happy here at Many Islands, or was it life-blood of your brave
-that helped to redden all the waters? Did you move back and back with
-your wandering people, or are you lying under the cedars on some green
-slope of the shore? I shall never know, but I shall think of you and
-wonder.
-
-There are no Indians here now, except one old squaw, who lives far back
-on the road to Maskinonge and tans buckskins in the fine old Indian way,
-but the plow turns up the arrowheads, and once in a while a bowl or pipe,
-proofs that the red men lived and fought here.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER II
-
-
-THE Lake of the Many Islands, long, irregular, spring-fed, lies in a cup
-of the rolling Ontario farmlands. At the south its waters, passing
-through a narrow strait, widen into beautiful Blue Bay. At the north
-they empty, in a series of cascades, into the little river Eau Claire.
-The town of Les Rapides, its sawmill idle, the ten or twelve log houses
-closed, stands at the outlet, a deserted village. The eagles soar to and
-fro over the blue lake; the black bass jump; the doré swim. There are
-hundreds of little coves and narrow channels—waters forgotten of the
-foot, where only the hum of insect wings and the rattle of the kingfisher
-are heard, and where the heron stands sentinel in the marshes and the
-loons have their mud nests on the shores.
-
-“Crazy as a loon,” that is, of all phrases, the most libelous. For the
-loon is the most sensible of fowl and possessed of the most distinct
-personality. No other water bird has so direct and so level a flight.
-He lays his strong body down along the wind, and goes, like a bullet,
-straight to his goal, purposeful, unswerving. He has three cries, one a
-high, maniac laugh, which is, of course, the reason his wits are
-slandered; then a loud, squealing cry, very like the sound of a pig in
-distress; and last a long, yearning call, the summons to his mate,
-perhaps, that he sends out far across the water—a cry that seems the very
-voice of the wilderness. At twilight, and often in the night, I hear
-that lonely cry, echoing down the lakes, and the faint, far cry that
-answers it.
-
-“There will be wind to-night,” the weather-wise say. “Hear the loons
-making a noise.”
-
-The birds come to the bay back of the island, and swim about there as
-friendly as puddle ducks. If I go too close, closer than Mr. Gavia Immer
-thinks safe or respectful, down he goes and stays for some minutes under
-the water, to emerge far away, and in quite a different quarter from the
-one in which I expected to see him. No one on earth could ever predict
-where a loon will come up when he dives. He looks at me austerely,
-twisting his black head back on his shoulder, until I would swear he had
-turned it completely round on his white-ringed neck. Then he gives his
-crazy laugh and disappears again.
-
-The loon is protected in Canada. No one may shoot him or molest him.
-But once in a while one comes across a boat cushion made of a bird skin,
-its gray and white feathers very soft and thick and attached to the skin
-so fast that it is well-nigh impossible to pluck them. That is the
-breast of the loon, the great wild bird of the northern lakes, that the
-game law has failed to save. When I see one of these skins I hate the
-vandal who has killed the bird.
-
-The Blakes are my nearest neighbors—not nearest geographically, for the
-Drapeau farm lies closer to the island; but near by reason of their many
-friendly acts and kind suggestions. If I am ill or in trouble, it is to
-Henry and Mary Blake that I shall go for help.
-
-Henry Blake of the keen, ice-blue eye, the caustic tongue and the good
-heart. There was never anything more scathing than his condemnation of
-the shiftlessness and, what he considers the general imbecility of his
-neighbors, and never anything kinder than his willingness to help one of
-them in a crisis. He will sit for an hour, pencil in hand, laboring to
-explain to some unsuccessful farmer that wood hauled at next to nothing a
-cord can only land the hauler in a ditch of debt, and when the hapless
-one has departed, fully determined to go his own way, to hear Henry spit
-out the one word, “Fat-head,” as he turns back to his book, is a lesson
-in the nice choice of epithet.
-
-When it comes to judgment on the manners, the morals, and the methods of
-their neighbors Henry and Mary Blake sit in the seats of the scornful;
-but, after all, they are somewhat justified, for they came over from “The
-States.” Henry, an invalid, bought a rundown island farm, and they have
-brought it to a good state of cultivation and paid off their mortgage,
-all in ten years.
-
-But while they are free in their criticisms of the natives, who live from
-hand to mouth, one notices that the Blakes are always willing to do a
-good turn, and are usually being asked to do one. Is a house to be
-built? Henry is called on to plan it. Does a churn spring a leak, or a
-cow fall ill? Mary goes to the rescue. Does a temperamental seed-drill
-choke in one of its sixty odd pipes? Henry is sent for to find the seat
-of the disorder and to apply the remedy.
-
-I also went to him, when deliberating the relative cost of a log house
-and one of board. Mr. Blake discussed the matter with me in the kindest
-way, summing up his advice in a sentence, that reached my muddled brain
-in some such statement as the following:
-
-“It all comes to this. You can get one cedar log, 6×14 for twenty cents.
-Three goes into twenty-one seven times, so board or log, it would come to
-the same thing.”
-
-It wasn’t what he said, of course, but I hastened to agree, lest I should
-be a fat-head too.
-
-Everything on the Blake farm is a pet, from the handsome young Jersey
-bull, to the tiniest chick, hatched untimely from a nest-egg. They all
-run toward Mary as soon as she steps from the kitchen door, and as she
-hurries from house to barn there is always a rabble of small ducks,
-chickens, calves, and kittens hurrying after her. The other day, when
-she, Henry, and Jimmy Dodd, their adopted boy, set off for a tour of the
-lake, a calf swam after them, and tried so earnestly to climb aboard
-that, perforce, they turned back to shore and tied the foolish creature,
-lest he should drown himself and them.
-
-Like almost every family in the countryside, the Blakes have adopted a
-small boy, giving him a home and training and enough to eat, which he
-never had before in all his forlorn life. They are kindness itself to
-Jimmie, but Henry regards him with the same foreboding he feels for all
-other native-born Canadians. He trains him, but in the spirit of “What’s
-the use?”
-
-“Jimmie here,” he philosophizes, “he can’t seem to learn the first thing;
-and if he learns it, he can’t retain it. I have taught him to read, but
-he can’t remember a word; and to write, but he forgets it the next day.
-Mary even put him through the catechism, and a week later he didn’t know
-one thing about it. So what are you going to do? I figure out,” he goes
-on meditatively, “that the people who learn easy are the ones who have
-been here before. They knew it all in another life, maybe in another
-language, and all they have to do is just to recall it. But Jimmie
-here—well, I guess this is his first trip.”
-
-All the while Jimmie of the towhead and the thin, wiry legs and arms is
-grinning at his critic with a wide, snaggle-toothed smile of great
-affection.
-
-The Blakes’ house stands on the site of an old log hut, of two rooms and
-a lean-to shed. In digging the cellar they came upon a walled-in
-grave—the boards almost rotted away—and in it lay a skeleton. Whose? No
-one knows, for that grave was dug before the time of anyone now living at
-Many Islands. Was it some Indian warrior laid there to sleep? Was it a
-settler of the old pioneer days? No one can tell and no one cares. The
-Blakes built their comfortable eight-room house over his bones and
-thought no more about them.
-
-Yesterday Mary and I drove to Queensport, the county seat, fifteen miles
-away, that I might show myself at the bank and the stores where I am to
-trade this winter. The start was to be early, and I rose at dawn to have
-breakfast over, the cabin cleaned, and I myself rowed over to the farm.
-The woods lay wrapped in a heavy mist. Not a wet leaf stirred. The
-water looked like mouse-colored crêpe, and the sun hung like a big, pink
-balloon in a sky of gray velvet. But before our start the mists had
-burned away and the day was glorious.
-
-The road lies through a rolling country, all hills, woods, lakes, and
-glades. Queensport stands at the head of a chain of lakes. It boasts
-two banks, a high school, churches of all denominations, and a dozen or
-so shops and houses set in gardens. We dined at the hotel, the Wardrobe
-House; we transacted our business at the bank, and turned then to our
-shopping. We went to the harness shop for bread, to the grocer’s for a
-spool of thread, to the tailor’s to enquire the cost of a telephone.
-Then I bethought me of my need for some rag carpet. I did not really
-want that carpet that day, indeed, I had not the money to pay for it. I
-only thought of inquiring for it while I was in the town.
-
-We were directed to the hardware shop as the most likely place for
-carpets, and I had no sooner mentioned my errand when a voice came out
-from behind a stove saying eagerly:
-
-“I know where you can find just what you’re looking for. My old mother
-has forty yards of as fine a rag carpet as you could wish to see. Say
-the word and I’ll drive you right out to the farm and show it to you.”
-
-Whereupon a tall, wiry, keen-faced man rose up and dashed out of the
-shop, returning in an instant with a buggy and a wild-looking black
-horse. Despite my protests we were bundled into the vehicle and driven
-at a gallop, through the main street of Queensport, and the driving was
-as the driving of Jehu the son of Nimshi. Past farms and fields we flew,
-stopping with a mighty jerk at the door of the mother’s house. There the
-carpet was rolled forth before me, and there Mary Blake and our energetic
-friend measured me off twenty yards of it, by a nick in the edge of the
-kitchen table.
-
-In vain I pleaded and explained my poverty. Our abductor waved me a
-careless hand.
-
-“Money,” he assured us, “is the last thing that ever worried me. You may
-pay for the carpet when and where you choose.”
-
-On the way back to town my new friend was properly presented. His name
-was William Whitfield. Later I heard varied tales of his peculiarities.
-There was talk of a horse trade, to which Bill Whitfield was a party.
-The other man came out of the transaction the richer by one more
-experience, but the poorer as regarded property. It was told me that men
-said freely that Bill Whitfield drunk could get the better of any two
-sober men in the Dominion when it came to a bargain, and, as I
-contemplated my roll of carpet, leaning against the dashboard, I
-understood why I had been as wax in his hands, and I could only be
-thankful that it had not occurred to Mr. Whitfield to sell me the whole
-forty yards.
-
-Back we jogged, Mary and I, along the quiet roads, discussing our
-bargains and the news of the town. We passed the schoolhouse just as
-“Teacher” was locking the door for the night. The dusty road was printed
-all over with the marks of little bare feet, all turning away from the
-school gate and pointing toward home. The sun was sinking in a flaming
-sky as we came to the shore of our own lake, where the rowboat lay on the
-sand awaiting us, a pair of tired travelers, glad to be nearing home.
-
-I would not be a bigot. To each man should belong the right to vaunt the
-glories of his own beloved camping ground. There may be other places as
-beautiful as this Lake of the Many Islands, although I cannot believe it.
-But Many Islands at sunset, its quiet waters all rose and saffron and
-lavender, under a crescent moon; when the swallows skim the surface and
-dip their breasts in the ripple, and the blue heron flaps away to his
-nest in the reeds—Well! I shall see no other spot that so moves my heart
-with its beauty, until my eyes look out beyond the sunset and behold the
-land that is very far off.
-
-I drift on past the islands, where the cedars troop down to the water’s
-edge, and the white birches lean far out over the rocks. The colors
-fade, the far line of the forests becomes a purple blur, and stars come
-out and hang in a dove-gray sky. I land at the little dock, safe hidden
-in the cove; I scramble along the dark trail to the house, while the
-loons are laughing and calling as they rock on the waves.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER III
-
-
-THE days are still warm, but autumn is surely here. The wasps are dying
-everywhere and lie in heaps on all the window-sills; the great water
-spiders have disappeared, and all day long the yellow leaves drift down
-silently, steadily, in the forests. Wreaths of vapor hang over the
-trees, and every wind brings the pungent fall odor of distant forest
-fires. The hillsides are a blaze of color, with basswoods a beautiful
-butter-yellow, oaks, russet and maroon and sugar maples, a flame of
-scarlet against the dark-green velvet of the cedars and hemlocks. Each
-birch stands forth, a slender Danæ, white feet in a drift of gold. The
-woods here on the island are thinning rapidly. All sorts of hidden dells
-and boulders are coming to light. Soon the whole island will lie open to
-the sight, and then there will no longer be anything mysterious about it.
-
-Dried heads of goldenrod, life everlasting, and a few closed gentians are
-all that are left of the flowers; but the red and orange garlands of the
-bittersweet wave from every bush, the juniper berries are purple, and the
-sumacs are a wonder of great garnet velvet cones.
-
-From a walk round the trails I bring in an assortment of seeds: beggar’s
-ticks, stick-seeds, Spanish needles, pitchforks—“the tramps of the
-vegetable world,” Burroughs calls them. They cover my skirt, they cling
-to my woolen leggings, they perch on the brim of my hat. Little
-pocket-shaped cases, pods with hooks, seeds shaped like tiny twin
-turtles, and furry balls like miniature chestnut burrs. As I pick and
-brush and tear them off I wish I knew what plants had fathered every one
-of them.
-
-At the approach of cold weather the small animals and the few birds that
-are left draw nearer to the house. Grouse are in all the paths, flying
-up everywhere. They rise with a thrashing, pounding noise and soar away
-over the bushes, to settle again only a little further on. Last evening,
-at twilight, two of them came on the porch, the little cock ruffling it
-bravely, wings dragging, fantail spread, ruff standing valiantly erect.
-A hen followed sedately at his heels. They are very pretty, about the
-size of bantam chickens. How I hope that I shall be here to see their
-young in the spring!
-
-This afternoon a red squirrel came round the corner of the house and sat
-down, absentmindedly, beside me on a bench. When he looked up and saw
-what he had done he gave a shriek and a bound and fled chattering off
-toward the sundial. But he will come back and will probably be darting
-into the house when he thinks my back is turned, for there is nothing
-half so impudent or so mischievous as the red squirrel. I am told that
-they do not “den in” as the chipmunks do.
-
-The rabbits do their best to help me get rid of my stores. There are
-hundreds of them about. They sit under the bushes, peering out; they
-appear and disappear between the dry stalks of the brakes. At evening
-they come close to the house, and catch bits of bread and potatoes thrown
-to them, then sit in the paths munching contentedly. They are not
-rabbits, correctly speaking, but Canadian hares, with long brown fur,
-bulging black eyes, furry ears, fringed with black, and very long hind
-legs. One of them comes so close and seems so fearless that it should
-not be difficult to tame him. I have named him Peter. These hares turn
-snow-white in winter, I am told. Even now their coats are showing white
-where the winter coat is growing.
-
-In the dusk the porcupines come pushing through the fallen leaves,
-snuffling and grunting. Away in the woods the bobcats scream and snarl.
-The natives accuse the bobcat of a pretty trick of lying flattened out on
-a limb, waiting for his prey to pass underneath, then he drops on its
-back to tear with tooth and talon. They warn me not to walk in the woods
-after dark, for fear of this Canada lynx.
-
-But my natural histories say that, while the lynx sometimes follows the
-hunter for long distances, he does it only because he is curious, and
-that there is no authentic record of the bobcat’s ever having attacked a
-man. So I shall continue to take my walks abroad, without fear that a
-fierce tree cat will drop on me. But late in the night, when I am waked
-by that eerie sound, that begins with a low meow, like the cry of the
-house cat, and goes on louder and louder, to end in a horrid screech,
-full of a malevolent violence, I cover my head and am glad that I am safe
-indoors. I know that the lynx has come forth from his lair in a hollow
-tree and is hunting my poor rabbits.
-
-There is no telephone line to the island; sometimes I am stormbound for a
-week, but in some underground way, the news of the neighborhood reaches
-me sooner or later. Therefore, when I came out of doors the other
-morning, I was instantly aware of a sense of impending disaster, that
-hung over all the landscape. There was no cheerful popping of guns in
-the fields, no hoarse voice bawled to the cattle. At Blake’s the cause
-of the silence was explained. All the men round Many Islands had been
-summoned to the County Court at Frontenac, to be tried for the illegal
-netting and export of fish out of season. A knot of angry men had
-gathered on the shore, discussing the summons; anxious women hovered in
-the background; speculation was rife as to the identity of the informer.
-
-It could have been none of our men, for the obvious reason that all were
-in the same boat. Black Jack Beaulac, Yankee Jim, Little Jack, Long Joe,
-William Foret, all had received the same summons. It must have been an
-inspector from Glen Avon.
-
-“Did we not all remember a strange, white boat in the lake? That was,
-without doubt, the fish warden come to spy out for nets.”
-
-I know very little about the legality of nets versus hooks, or the open
-and closed seasons for fishing, but even to my ignorance there seemed
-grave doubts about the line of defense to be offered, and I was conscious
-that, being an alien and a “sport” (vernacular for sportsman, that is,
-summer visitor), the matter was not being freely discussed in my
-presence.
-
-Next morning, while it was yet dark, Foret’s motor boat was heard,
-chugging solemnly round the shore, gathering up the victims to take them
-to court. All day the women went softly, each wondering what was
-happening to her man, and devising means for scraping up the money for
-fines, if fines it had to be. Henry Blake went off to town to the trial,
-and the day passed gray and lowering.
-
-At red sunset the boat turned in at the narrows, but before she hove in
-sight the very beat of her engine signaled victory. She came swinging
-down the lake, her crew upright, alert, the flag of Canada flew in the
-wind, her propeller kicked the water joyously. As she made the round of
-the lake, to Blake’s, to Beaulac’s, to Drapeau’s, to the Mines, it needed
-none to tell us that all was well.
-
-Foret touched at the island last to give news of the fight. The case had
-been dismissed for lack of evidence. There had been no conviction, no
-fines.
-
-“How did it happen that there were no witnesses?” I asked.
-
-Foret took out his pouch and stuffed his pipe carefully before he
-answered.
-
-“There was eight or nine fellers there from Blue Bay,” he said. “They
-looked like they’d come to testify, but, after we had talked to them a
-bit, it seemed like they hadn’t nothing at all to say.”
-
-“What had you told them?” I persisted.
-
-“Well, we told them that if any man felt like he’d any information to
-give, concerning netting fer fish, he’d best make his plans to leave the
-lake afore twelve o’clock to-night. We meant it too; they knowed that.
-Black Jack give them some very plain talk, Black Jack did. I guess,”
-with a grin, “I guess that I was about the politest man there.”
-
-“I was fined once,” William went on, reminiscently, “twenty-five dollars
-it was too, an’ it just about cleaned me out. They put me on oath, you
-see, an’ of course, when a man’s on his oath he can’t lie. But the next
-time I went to town I seen a lawyer, an’ he told me they hadn’t no right
-to ask me that question. A man ain’t called on to testify against
-himself. So now, when the judge asks me: ‘Did you, or did you not, net
-fer fish?’ I says, ‘That’s fer you to prove. Bring on your witnesses.’
-Howsoever,” he went on, “as long as all this has come up, I guess we’d as
-well eat mudcats fer a spell.”
-
-So mudcats it was, until the herring began to run.
-
-Foret has kept me supplied with fish this fall, explaining carefully that
-he will sell me pickerel, herring, and catfish but not bass. Bass, being
-a game fish, may not be caught for the market. I have paid for the
-pickerel by the pound and the bass have been gifts, for, as William
-justly remarks: “What are a few bass, now and then, in a friendly way?”
-
-Foret is long, lean, powerful, with thin, keen face, steady, dark eyes,
-and the long, silent tread of the woodsman. Sometimes he works in the
-Mica Mines; sometimes he farms a bit, or fells trees. More often he
-hunts and fishes, but always he is a delightful companion, because of his
-unconquerable optimism and fervent interest in all that concerns a matter
-in hand. He never admits a difficulty, no obstacle ever daunts him, and
-no one has ever heard him say an unkind thing about any living creature.
-
-When William goes off to a dance, Jean Foret is wild with anxiety. When
-he drinks a bit too much and the other men throw him into a hayfield or a
-barn, to sleep it off, she ranges the county in a despairing search.
-When he sobers and comes home, subdued and bearing gifts, who is so
-contrite as he?
-
-“Never again will I go to a dance. There’s nothing to it at all,” he
-assures you. “A man’s better off to home.”
-
-But once in so often William takes his fling—only he is never ugly or
-quarrelsome when he drinks. Even when his mind has lost control, he is
-quiet and peaceable, they say.
-
-The Forets live on the mainland, three miles off, along the shore.
-William is building their house by degrees. This season he went as far
-as the inner wall, frame, studding, windows, chimney, and floor. There
-is also an outer casing of builder’s paper tacked on with small disks of
-tin. The whole edifice stands on stilts, about five feet off the ground,
-giving fine harbor for the hounds, and a pig or two beneath. The first
-time I called to see them William made a great show of driving these
-animals forth.
-
-“The boards is so thin,” he apologized, “that it seems like I can smell
-them dogs up through the floor.”
-
-When I remember that one thickness of board and a few sheets of paper are
-all that stand between the Forets and the winter blasts, I shudder. Not
-so the Forets. They are apparently quite undismayed and look forward to
-the approach of winter without misgiving.
-
-The house is divided into two rooms, each about ten feet square. There
-are lace curtains at the tiny windows, bright pictures, mostly colored
-calendars, a gay rag carpet, and over all the comfort of an exquisite
-neatness, for Mrs. Foret is the cleanest housekeeper imaginable—Jennie
-Foret, with her snapping, black eyes, her dark hair upreared in a
-militant pompadour, her trim, alert figure, and quick, light movements.
-Where did she acquire her love of order and her dainty, cleanly ways, I
-wonder?
-
-It is a friendly place. Chickens, ducks, geese, cats, dogs, horses and
-cows roll, run, squawk, and squeal all over the hillside. In the cove
-before the house live-boxes are moored, motor boat and skiffs lie at
-anchor. There are nets and skins drying on the fences. Two bunches of
-ribbon-grass do duty for a formal garden, standing sentinel on either
-side of the path that winds to the door. The house looks away across the
-“drowned lands” where the wicked roots and snags of the submerged forest
-stand in the water, threatening navigation. The channel to the landing
-is winding and treacherous. But, once at the door, no guest is ever
-turned away. Wandering miner, tramp, bewildered emigrant, each is sure
-of a meal, a bed, and something to set him on his way.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IV
-
-
-WILD geese flying over, cold mornings, colder nights, warn me that it is
-time to lay in supplies of firewood, oil and food against the coming of
-winter. Last evening a laden rowboat passed the island, going eastward
-under the Moon of Travelers. In the stern were a stove, a chair, a
-coffeepot, a frying pan, a great pile of bedding, and, surmounting all, a
-fiddle. The man at the oars threw me a surly “Good night,” and turning,
-looked back at me with a scowl. It was Old Bill Shelly, the hermit of
-the countryside—trapper, frogger, netter of fish, and general
-ne’er-do-well. He has built log shacks all round the shores—little,
-one-room affairs, filled with a miscellaneous assortment of nets, guns,
-dogs, all forlorn and filthy past description. When one becomes
-uninhabitable, he leaves it and moves on to the next, but at the approach
-of cold weather he always goes into winter quarters at Blue Bay, and his
-flitting, like the flitting of the other wild things, means that all
-nature is getting ready for “_le grand frête_.”
-
-Poor Shelly! his is the only hostile glance that I have encountered in my
-wanderings. Even Old Kate, the witch at Les Rapides, has smiled at me.
-
-“Mind Old Kate,” the neighbors caution me. “If she ever crosses her
-fingers at you, it’s all day with you then.”
-
-But when I met her in the road she spoke in quite a friendly way.
-
-“Cold weather coming,” she said. “Get in your wood.”
-
-Doubtless she thinks me another as crazy as herself.
-
-So I must set about getting enough wood to last until the January sawing,
-and must pack eggs and butter against the time when hens stop laying and
-cows go dry, for there is no shop nearer than Sark, six miles away, and
-even if one could reach it, through the winds on the lake, or the drifts
-in the roads, there would be no butter or eggs to buy.
-
-Tom Jackson, at the far end of the lake, has consented to sell me eight
-cords of hard wood; but to bring it to the island we must hire the big
-scow that ferries mica from the mines, and must have Foret’s motor boat
-to tug it.
-
-This life is a great education as regards the relative values of things.
-Wood and water, oil and food, are seen here in their true perspective.
-Already I have learned to rate the wealth of a family by the size of the
-woodpile, that stands, like a rampart in the dooryard, for I know what a
-big stock of logs means in thrift, foresight, and hard labor. I know
-what it cost to get my own wood to my hand.
-
-City folk can pass a loaded woodcart without special emotion, indeed,
-half the time they do not see it, so concerned are they with the price of
-theater tickets, or the cut of the season’s gowns. But I shall never
-look at one without seeing again a great scow moving slowly on the blue
-bosom of a lake, and I shall smell the delicious odor of fresh-cut maple,
-beech, and cedar, far sweeter than the breath of any summer garden.
-
-Ah me! How prosaic will seem the city’s conveniences of pipes and
-furnaces as compared with the daily adventure of carrying in the logs,
-and battling down a windswept trail to dip the pails into a pit of
-crystal ice water! Never again shall I turn on the spigot in a bathroom
-without a swift vision of that drift-filled path through the woods that
-leads out on the lake, to where the upright stake marks the water hole,
-hidden under last night’s fall of snow.
-
-To one who has only to push a button or strike a match to have a room
-flooded with light, the problem of illumination is not perplexing. Here,
-the five-gallon oil tank must be ferried across the lake to Blake’s farm;
-whence it must be again sent by boat to Jackson’s shore, and there loaded
-on a wagon for Sark. Back it must come to the shore, to Blake’s, and to
-the island storehouse—all this taking from ten days to two weeks,
-according to when Henry Blake is sending in to the store.
-
-The city postman is no very heroic figure, but little Jimmie Dodd is, as
-he beats his way across the lake, and through the high drifts on the
-island, his slender body bowed under a great bag of mail, his small face
-blue with the cold. Letters mean something to us here. They leave the
-train at Glen Avon, they come by stage to Sark, then they follow the oil
-tank route over water and wood trails to me, and it takes as long to get
-a letter from “The States” as to hear from England, “The Old Country.”
-
-To-day a shrill, childish yell sounded from the water. There was Jimmie,
-in a boat, with a great basket of eggs. He was fending carefully off
-from shore, as the high wind threatened to dash his fragile cargo against
-the rocks. Before those eggs were loaded into the skiff a woman had
-walked five miles with them on her back. I spent a long, happy
-afternoon, standing them upright on their small ends in boxes of salt.
-When they were all packed, twenty-four dozens of eggs seemed a great
-number for one woman to eat, even if she expected to have a long winter
-in which to eat them.
-
-The wood is all stacked on the porch, but it was hard work to get it
-there. The scow docked on a beach at the far side of the island, there
-the logs were gayly thrown ashore, and there Tom Jackson washed his hands
-of all further responsibility concerning them. The duck-shooting had
-commenced; no man could be found to draw that wood through the island to
-the house, so there it stayed.
-
-At length William Foret came to my aid and promised to haul it, and I was
-jubilant. I did not then know that Foret will promise any one anything.
-No man can promise more delightfully than he. He is always perfectly
-willing, apparently, to help anyone out of any dilemma, he recognizes no
-difficulty in the way, and to hear him make light of one’s most pressing
-problem is to come to the conclusion that there is no problem there. So
-when William promised to get the wood to the house I believed him and was
-content.
-
-Meanwhile the days went on, each colder than the last. Each morning I
-toiled to and fro from the beach, carrying enough wood, two sticks at a
-time, to last the day. Each evening I made a pilgrimage along the shore
-to Foret’s to ask why tarried the wheels of his chariot. Sometimes he
-was at home and greeted me with a charming cordiality, more often he was
-away, fishing or hunting or cutting down a bee-tree. Always he was
-coming to the island the very next day. The Forets were cut to the heart
-to learn that I was carrying my own wood. But for this reason or that,
-William would have been there long ago. I was not to worry at all. That
-fuel would be stacked before the snow fell.
-
-I always started to Foret’s with wrath in my heart, I always left there
-soothed and comforted, and by the time I had eaten supper in the boat,
-had watched the sunset over the islands, and had listened to the bell on
-Blake’s old red cow, I would go to bed really believing that William was
-coming the next day.
-
-Sure enough, he did appear one afternoon and attacked the woodpile with a
-very fury of energy, trundling load after load up the trail for perhaps
-an hour. Suddenly he sat down his barrow and gazed fixedly out across
-the lake.
-
-“There, I heard my gun,” he observed. “It’s two fellers from Glen Avon,
-come to have me cut them down a bee-tree. I told the woman”—meaning Mrs.
-Foret—“to take the little rifle and shoot three times if they come, an’
-that’s her. I got to go.”
-
-“Oh, Mr. Foret!” I expostulated, almost with tears, “have you the heart
-to leave this wood? Here, you take my pistol and shoot for them to come
-over and lend a hand with this work.”
-
-But William was already climbing into his boat.
-
-“It’s the little rifle,” he said, sentimentally, “I’ve got to go,” and
-away he chugged, leaving me raging on the shore.
-
-After all he did come back, and the very next day, Mrs. Foret and little
-Emmie, their adopted child, with him. We all carried wood, Jean and I in
-baskets, little Emmie, one stick at a time in her small arms. By evening
-it was all stacked and we were exhausted. There it stands, eight feet
-high, all round the house and the place looks like a stockade.
-
-After supper William cleaned and oiled the famous pistol; we women washed
-the dishes and little Emmie skirmished about, getting in every one’s way,
-while Jean Foret shrieked dire threats of the laying on of a “gad” that
-one knew would never be applied. The crows flew home across the sky.
-The child crept close to William’s side and fell asleep. He moved the
-heavy little head very gently, until it rested more comfortably against
-his great shoulder.
-
-“Our little girl would have been just the age of this one, if she had
-lived,” he said.
-
-There was a sudden hush, while I remembered the Foret baby that had died
-at birth, when Jennie had almost died too, and when Dr. Le Baron had said
-that she could never have another.
-
-Presently we gathered barrow, baskets and sleeping child, and I watched
-their boat go off, threading its way between the islands and points, a
-little moving speck on the amber water.
-
-Across, on the shore, Joey Drapeau was plowing for the fall rye. His
-voice, bawling threatening and slaughter to the steaming horses, came
-across to me, softened by the distance. It was Saturday night. Soon the
-work would be done for another week. Then the men would go out on the
-lake, jerking along in their cranky little flat-bottomed punts. They
-would sing under the stars, girls’ voices mingling with their harsher
-tones.
-
-Little fiery clouds broke off from the sides of the crater, into which
-the sun had dropped, and were drifting across the quiet sky. A long
-finger of light crossed over the island and ran like a torch along the
-eastern horizon, turning the treetops to flame color and burnished
-copper, and the upland meadows to gold.
-
-On the island the woods were dark, and somewhere in their depths a
-screech owl’s cry shuddered away into silence.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER V
-
-
-NOVEMBER is the month of mosses. Every fallen tree, every rotting stump,
-every rock, the trodden paths, and even the hard face of the cliff, are
-padded deep with velvet. The color ranges from clear emerald, out
-through the tints to silvery, sage green, and back through the shades to
-an olive brown, almost as dark as the earth itself. Round the shores the
-driftwood is piled high on the beach. It looks like bleached bones of
-monsters long dead, huge vertebrae, leg bones, skulls and branching
-antlers. The trees are bare, the brakes dry and crumbling, but the north
-point of the island, its one naked ugly spot of the summer, is now
-covered with a blood-red carpet. A close-growing, grassy weed has turned
-brilliant crimson and clothed it with beauty. Far away on the lake I am
-guided home by that flare of color on the point.
-
-The birds are gone, all but the crows, that perch on the tallest trees
-and lift their hoarse voices in a mournful chorus. But now is the time
-to go bird’s-nesting, to find the homes of all the vireos, warblers,
-creepers, and sparrows that made the island their breeding ground. The
-nests of the vireos, woven of birch bark, bits of hornet’s nests, grass
-and scraps of paper, are easy to find, for the pretty, hanging baskets
-are fastened in the crotches of the bushes and low saplings. The others
-are not so readily discovered, and it was by merest accident that I came
-across the home of the brown thrasher, who made the summer vocal with his
-beautiful song. It was on the ground and so near the house that I wonder
-that we did not walk into it. It is a mere bunch of twigs, so loosely
-twisted together that it fell apart when it was moved.
-
-Every afternoon I go faggotting, bringing in armloads of dry sumac and
-fallen branches. They are not especially good for kindling, but now that
-the deer season is on, no man will work; so until after November
-fifteenth, the reign of the Hunter’s Moon, the brush pile must serve. It
-takes constant gathering to collect enough to start the hardwood fires,
-and a wet day sets me back sadly. I pile up as much as I can in the
-empty sleeping shacks, to keep it dry, and I can only hope that the snow
-will not come before someone has been induced to lay aside his gun and
-cut a cord or two of driftwood kindling.
-
-Butterflies are always coming in on the twigs. With their wings folded
-flat together, showing only their dry undersides, they look so like old
-withered leaves that it is only when the warmth of the room wakes them,
-and they flutter off to the windows, that they can be recognized as
-butterflies at all. One flew to the south window yesterday and crawled
-there, beating his delicate wings against the glass all morning. He was
-brown, tan and yellow on the upper side but underneath so like a dry,
-woolly old leaf as to be an amazing bit of nature’s mimicry. As I looked
-at his poor, torn wings and feebly waving antennæ he seemed suddenly the
-very oldest thing, the lone survivor of a forgotten summer, a piteous
-little Tithonus, to whom had been granted the terrible gift of
-immortality, without the boon of an immortal youth.
-
-At first I thought that he was being given a respite from the common fate
-of butterflies, for I did not then know that the angle wings can last
-over the winter, lying dormant in protected places, and that the last
-brood of a summer can live until another spring. I even planned to
-outwit nature by feeding this one and keeping him alive in the artificial
-summer of the warm house. I made a sirup of sugar and water and offered
-it but the butterfly would none of it, only crawling and beating his
-wings in a vain effort to escape through the glass into the bleak
-November sunshine. At length I carried him to the door, and he fluttered
-off to a bush and clung there. After turning away for a moment I went
-back to find him; he was gone; he had become a dead leaf again.
-
- [Picture: “Peter the rabbit, is turning white very rapidly”]
-
-Peter, the rabbit, spends most of his time at the door, waiting for a
-chance crust. He fsits on his haunches, rocking gently back and forth,
-making a soft, little knocking noise on the porch floor. If I am late in
-coming out at mealtimes, he looks at me with so dignified an air of
-patient reproof that I feel quite apologetic for having kept him waiting.
-His meal finished, he washes his face and paws carefully, like a cat,
-then sits in the sun, eyes closed, forepaws tucked away under his breast
-and ears laid back along his shoulders. He is turning white very
-rapidly. At first, only his tail, feet, breast and the ends of his ears
-were lightly powdered, but now he looks as if he had hopped into a pan of
-flour by mistake.
-
-Other hares, now lean and wild, come out of the woods at dusk and try to
-share Peter’s bread. But he turns on them fiercely, driving them back
-over the hill, with an angry noise, something between a squeal and a
-grunt. If anyone thinks a rabbit a meek, poor-spirited creature, he
-should see Peter, when threatened with the loss of his dinner.
-Evidently, he believes that he has pre-empted this territory and all that
-goes here in the way of food, and he means to defend his claim.
-
-Rufus, the red squirrel, torments Peter unmercifully, dashing across the
-ground under his nose and snatching the bread from between the rabbit’s
-very teeth. He is there and away before the rabbit knows what has
-happened. Poor, slow little Peter stood these attacks in bewildered
-patience for a time, but now he has worked out a plan for getting even
-with the squirrel that serves him fairly well. He sits on his crust,
-drawing it out inch by inch from under him as he nibbles, but even at
-that Rufus gets about half. I am training the rabbit to take his food
-from my hand, for nothing thrown on the ground is safe for an instant
-from the little red-brown robber. It took some very patient sitting to
-overcome Peter’s timidity, but after the first bit was taken the rest was
-easy. Now he comes fearlessly to me as soon as I appear.
-
-The squirrel is growing very tame too, but he will never be as tranquil a
-companion as the rabbit. He lacks Bunny’s repose of manner. He is
-sitting on the windowsill now, eating a bit of cold potato. He turns it
-round and round, nibbling at it daintily. Now and again he stops to lay
-a tiny paw on his heart—or is it his stomach? The area of his organs is
-very minute and it may be either.
-
-There is something very flattering in the confidence of these little
-creatures of the island. How do they know that they may safely trust my
-kindness? How can they be sure that I will not betray them suddenly with
-trap or gun?
-
-The rabbit came into the house yesterday, padding about noiselessly on
-his cushioned toes. He stopped at each chair and stood on his hind feet,
-resting his forepaws on the seat. He examined everything, ears
-wriggling, nose quivering, tail thumping on the carpet. Suddenly he
-discovered that the door had blown shut and then he went quite wild with
-fear. He was in a trap, he thought, and tore round and round the room,
-jumping against the window panes, dashing his head against the walls
-until I feared that he would injure himself before I could reach the door
-to open it. Poor little Peter, he is not valiant after all. He comes in
-still, but always keeps close to the door, and the way of escape must
-always be open.
-
-The men on the mainland hunt over the islands, putting on the dogs to
-drive off the game. When the ice holds, the hounds will come over of
-their own accord to course the rabbits. I should like to feel that for
-the term of my stay this one island could be a place of safety for the
-animals that take refuge here, and so I have paid visits of ceremony to
-the neighboring farms to explain that I shall spend the winter and to ask
-that the dogs be kept off my preserve, as far as possible for the sake of
-my pets. I may say that my wish has been respected in the kindest way,
-and my neighbors have done their best to make the island a sanctuary for
-the birds and beasts. The first assurance of each visitor has been, “I
-tied up my dogs afore I started over.” It was the opening remark of an
-early caller who strode into the room this morning as I was eating a late
-breakfast. A reassuring salutation, for without it I might have feared
-that the speaker had dropped in to do me a mischief, his appearance was
-so very intimidating. He was tall and very lean, a sort of cross between
-an Indian and a crane. His greasy, black hair hung in rattails on the
-turned-up collar of a dingy red sweater. He wore a ragged squirrel-skin
-cap, tail hanging down behind—which headgear he did not remove, and he
-carried a murderous looking ax. Following came a boy of about sixteen,
-whose smile was so friendly and ingratiating that I felt comforted when I
-saw it. The two drew up to the stove, lit pipes, conversed, and in the
-round-about course of their remarks I gathered that they had heard of my
-need of kindling wood and had come to cut me a cord. Presently they
-retired to a secluded spot on the shore and chopped away, emerging every
-half hour or so to bring a load up to the house.
-
-In this country men eat where they work, so toward noon I bestirred
-myself to prepare what I considered a particularly good dinner for my
-“hands.” I had a theory that my chances of getting future kindling cut
-depended on the good impression made on these first workmen. I had
-corned beef, potatoes, peas, and tinned beans. I made hot biscuit, cake,
-stewed apples, and prepared the inevitable pot of strong tea. The man
-drew his chair to the table with perfect self-possession, speared a
-potato from the pot with his knife and remarked: “You ain’t much of a
-cook, are you?”—adding, kindly, “I think I’ll just try yer tea.”
-
-He assured me subsequently that he had no particular fault to find with
-my dinner. He only meant to put me at my ease and to make conversation.
-
-When he departed in the evening, after having cut and stacked an
-incredible amount of wood, he assured me that he would be ready to work
-for me at any time. I had only to “holler” and he would drop a day’s
-hunting to come to my aid. So the dinner could not have been so
-unsatisfactory after all.
-
-News of the Great War has come to Many Islands. William Foret returned
-from Glen Avon the other day with great tales of armed men guarding the
-railroad bridges against the Germans. He also brought the information
-that I am a German spy. He heard that at the station.
-
-“That woman on the island is there for no good,” the loafers were saying.
-“She’s a spy. She’s got a writing machine there an’ she’s sending off
-letters every day.”
-
-One inventive soul was even asserting that I am not a woman at all, but a
-man in woman’s clothes and that there is a wireless station here.
-
-But William stood up for me bravely.
-
-“Spy, nawthin,” he scoffed. “What could she be a spyin’ on there on that
-island? There’s nawthin’ there but rabbits. No, as I understand it,
-she’s some sort of a book-writer off fer health. She’s got no wireless,
-that I know, fer I’ve been over the ground there time and again.”
-
-But the crowd was not convinced.
-
-“She’d ought to be investigated,” they declared.
-
-Then William rose to the occasion nobly. “She’s no German spy,” he said.
-“She’s an all-right woman, and ef any man feels like makin’ any trouble
-fer her, me an’ Black Jack and Yankee Jim stands ready to make it very
-onhealthy fer him.”
-
-“I told them,” added William, with a delighted grin, “that you’d a little
-gun here an’ you’d use it on the first man that come on the island
-without you knowed him fer a friend. But I didn’t say that you only
-stood five feet five in yer boots and didn’t weigh over a hundred
-pounds.”
-
-Under the shield of William’s favor and the wholly undeserved reputation
-of being a good shot, I continue to sleep o’ nights, but I have no fancy
-for being investigated.
-
-Last night a boat stopped at the shore, long after dark, and I was
-startled for a moment until I heard a chant that rose at the dock and
-continued up the trail to the house. Uncle Dan Cassidy had brought over
-the mail and a Thanksgiving box from home, but he was taking no chances.
-
-“Friends, friends, don’t shoot, don’t shoot,” he sang until he stepped on
-the porch.
-
-But while war and its rumors excite us, all topics pale in interest
-before the fact that the herring have begun to run. Whether battles are
-lost or won we still have to eat, a pig or a sheep does not last very
-long and the fish are a great part of the winter food.
-
-“They save the meat,” says Harry Spriggins.
-
-So when the first silver herring came up in the net there was great
-rejoicing. Then the little skiffs and punts started out, dancing and
-curtseying on the waves. The nets were stretched across the narrows
-between the islands, and, during the herring run, no other work was done.
-The season is short; there is no time to waste. The run began this year
-on the twelfth, the greatest catch was on the eighteenth, the fishing was
-over on the twenty-eighth. The fish do not come up except at a
-temperature of about thirty-four.
-
-These are the bright, frosty days—days when the blood runs quick and the
-air tastes like wine; when the water is deep-blue, the waves run high and
-the whitecaps race in to the shores.
-
-The little boats bob up and down, the long nets come up spangled with the
-gleaming fish, and the tubs and boxes are piled high with the silver
-catch. As the fishermen pass they stop at the island and throw me off a
-herring or two. Every house on the mainland reeks; barrels and kegs
-stand in every dooryard, and everywhere the women and children are busy
-cleaning the fish.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VI
-
-
-THE time of great winds has come, the heavy November gales that roar down
-the lakes, lashing the water into white-capped waves, dashing the
-driftwood against the rocks and decking the beaches with long wreaths of
-yellow foam. The swell is so strong and the waves so high that even the
-men do not care to venture out. When I must get over to Blake’s farm I
-hug the shore of the island to the point, then dash across the channel
-between this land and his, and the wind turns my light skiff round and
-round before I can catch the lee again.
-
-All night the house rocks and shivers and the trees creak, groan and
-crash down in the woods. I am afraid to walk the trails because of
-falling branches, for if I were struck down I should lie in the path for
-days and no one would know that I had been hurt.
-
-These winds give the strangest effect of distant music. I am always
-thinking that I can almost hear the sound of trumpets, blowing far away.
-
-Inside the house is warm and comfortable, with its creamy yellow walls of
-unpainted wood, its many windows, its pictures, its books; but I am
-lonely; I cannot settle to any occupation. The constant roaring of the
-wind unnerves me, the gray, scudding clouds depress me. A hound on the
-shore bays and howls day and night. I have heard no human voice for more
-than a week.
-
-The storm died away in a smothering fog that settled down on the very
-surface of the lake, blotting out everything. I could not see one inch
-beyond the shore. The mainland was hidden, the opposite island was
-invisible—everything was gone except the land on which I stood. I could
-hear voices at the farms, the sound of oars, and people talking in the
-boats as they passed. Men were hunting on the mainland, almost a mile
-away. I could hear their shots and the cries of the hounds, but I might
-as well have been stricken blind, for all that I could distinguish. All
-sorts of fears assailed me. Suppose men should land on the island in the
-fog, how could I see to escape them? Suppose the fog should last and
-last, how would I dare to go out in a boat for any provisions? Suppose I
-should be ill, or hurt, how could I signal to the farm for help?
-
-By evening the fog had thoroughly frightened me; it was time to pull
-myself together. So I cooked a particularly good dinner, read a new book
-for awhile, then went to bed praying that the sun would be shining in the
-morning.
-
-After being asleep for what seemed hours, I was aware of a loud shouting,
-followed by heavy steps on the porch and a voice calling as someone
-knocked and pounded on the door. I stumbled out of bed, half asleep, and
-groped my way to the lamp, fortunately forgetting all about the pistol
-laid by my side for just such an emergency. When the door was finally
-opened, the shapeless bulk of a woman confronted me—the very largest
-woman I have ever seen. She loomed like a giant against a solid bank of
-fog that rolled in behind her.
-
-“I don’t know where I am,” she announced. “I’m all turned round. I’ve
-been rowing hours and hours in the fog, and I’ve a boy, a pail of eggs, a
-mess of catfish and a little wee baby in the boat.”
-
-“For mercy’s sake,” I ejaculated, “what are you doing out in a boat with
-a baby on a night like this? Who are you anyway?”
-
-“I’m from Spriggins’ farm,” she answered, “the place where you gits yer
-chickens at. I’ve been over at Drapeau’s spending the evening and I
-started to row home two hours ago. But the fog got me all turned round,
-and when I struck this shore I says: ‘This must be the island where the
-woman’s at. Ef she’s to the house I’ll wake her and git me a light.’”
-
-I gave her a lantern and she went off to the shore, while I threw fresh
-logs on the smoldering fire and tried to wake myself.
-
-Presently a dismal procession returned: a boy, laden with shawls and
-wraps, the woman carrying a baby. When that infant was unwrapped, it
-needed not its proud mother’s introduction to tell me whose child it was.
-Harry Spriggins is a small, wiry man, with sharp, black eyes and a face
-like a weasel. The baby was exactly like him. They were a forlorn trio,
-and, oh, so dirty! My heart sank as I surveyed them, realizing that they
-were on my hands for the night. Then I felt properly ashamed of myself,
-for if the poor soul had not found the island she might have been on the
-lake in an open boat until daylight; and by this time a rain was falling,
-quite heavily enough to have swamped so unseaworthy a craft as her small,
-flat-bottomed punt.
-
-For some time we sat gazing at one another, while I tried to determine
-what should be done with my guests. Finally I sent the boy to the
-storehouse for extra mattresses, and prepared them beds on the floor.
-Clean sheets were spread over everything. Probably the woman had never
-slept on clean sheets before, but I reasoned that sheets could be washed
-more easily than blankets, and just then washing seemed to me very
-essential.
-
-About one o’clock we all settled down for the night, but not to sleep—oh,
-no! The woman was far too excited for that. Thanks to the fire that I
-had made, in my stupidity, and to the air in the cabin, I could not sleep
-either, so I heard a great deal of the inside history of the
-neighborhood, before morning.
-
-I learned that minks are a menace to the poultry industry here about. In
-Spriggins’ own barnyard, a flock of thirty-six young turkeys were found
-all lying dead in a row, with their necks chewed off—a plain case of
-mink, and a dire blow to the finances of the family.
-
-At three o’clock I had the life history of a Plymouth Rock rooster, of
-superlative intelligence, that always crowed at that precise hour. At
-four I was roused from an uneasy doze by the query: “Do you know anything
-about Dr. So-and-So’s cure for ‘obsidy’?”
-
-After puzzling over the word for some minutes I gathered that “obesity”
-was what was meant, for my guest went on, pathetically enough, to tell me
-how hard her work was and how she suffered in doing it, burdened with
-that mountain of flesh.
-
-“There’s another cure,” she went on. “It’s Mrs. So-and-So’s, but it
-calls for a Turkish bath, and where could I get that? Beside, I could
-never do all that rolling and kicking.”
-
-Peering through the gloom at what looked like the outline of an elephant
-on the floor, I did not see how she could, but I felt that if there were
-any known way of getting that woman into a Turkish bath I would
-cheerfully bear the expense.
-
-At six I gave up the struggle and rose for the day, stumbling about from
-cabin to kitchen to cook breakfast in the semi-darkness, for the fog was
-still thick. At nine, the day being a little lighter, I made the mistake
-of suggesting that the boy row over to Blake’s for some bread and the
-mail. He departed, and stayed for hours. Soon his mother began to
-fidget and finally set off for the shore to search for him, leaving that
-changeling of a baby in my care.
-
-There it lay on my bed, staring at me with its black beads of eyes, and
-looking as old as the Pharaoh of the Exodus and as crafty. The mother
-stayed and stayed away. I had visions of being left with that child on
-my hands all winter. I saw myself walking it up and down the cabin
-through the long nights. I saw myself sharing with it my last spoonful
-of condensed milk, but, as I surveyed it, I knew what I would do first.
-I would give it the best bath it had ever had in its short life and I
-would burn its filthy little clothes.
-
-But while I was harboring these designs against that innocent child its
-mother came back, her hands full of green leaves. She had not found the
-boy, but she had gathered what she called “Princess Fern.”
-
-“This is awful good fer the blood,” she announced. “Ef yer blood is bad,
-this will make it as pure as spring water; if it’s pure, this will keep
-it so. It’s good fer you either way.”
-
-The mention of blood led naturally to the recital of the various
-accidents she had seen, and I learned that there are several blood
-healers in the neighborhood—persons who can stop the flow by the
-recitation of a certain verse of Scripture. A man can perform this
-miracle for a woman and a woman for a man, but a man cannot cure another
-man, nor a woman another woman. This charm must never be revealed. It
-can only be transmitted at death. It is a sure cure for blood flow and
-quite authentic, according to Mrs. Spriggins, who has seen the blood
-stopped.
-
-While we were discussing this mystery the boy came back, smilingly, from
-quite a different direction from the one in which he had been sent. He
-had never found the farm, but had been all this time wandering in the
-fog. It was all too like a nightmare. I did not tempt fate by offering
-any more suggestions. Instead, I bundled the party into their various
-wrappings, led them to their boat, and turned their faces firmly in the
-direction of home. Then I sat on the porch, tracing their progress down
-the lake by the wailing of that wretched baby. When the sounds had
-finally died away, I went in and scrubbed the cabin from end to end with
-strong, yellow soap.
-
-And the sequel to all this? She was not Spriggins’ wife at all, but
-“Spriggins’ woman,” and she was not lost.
-
-When I mentioned her visit the neighbors shook their heads.
-
-“You couldn’t lose old Jane on Many Islands,” they scoffed. “She wanted
-to see you, that was all; and she knowed you wouldn’t let her land if she
-come by day.”
-
-But two men were lost on the lake that night, and I believe that Jane was
-lost too.
-
-With the rural love of scandal and the usual disregard of all laws of
-probability, the people accuse this woman of all sorts of outrageous
-crimes. It is said that she murdered her daughter for the girl’s bit of
-life insurance, that she has strangled her own babies, that she bound her
-aged aunt face downward on a board, and pushed her out on the lake to
-drown. And here was I, all ignorant of the character of my guest,
-gravely discussing with this alleged criminal the proper feeding of
-infants and the rival merits of toilet soaps.
-
-I stopped at her house the other day to inquire my way. She greeted me
-with much cordiality.
-
-“You was certainly fine to me that night,” she said. “I donno what we
-would a-done, ef you hadn’t took us in. The baby would a-been drownded,
-I guess.”
-
-Now I am glad that I was “fine” to her, for poor Jane is gone, and she
-died as she had lived—without help and without hope.
-
-Her children’s father was away at a dance in Sark when she fell in their
-desolate house. Seeing that she did not rise, one frightened child crept
-out of bed and covered her nakedness with an old quilt. In the morning
-two little boys, crying and shivering, made their way along the shore to
-the place where the man was sleeping off his debauch.
-
-“Come home, Pop,” they cried. “Mom’s dead.”
-
-But he would not heed them.
-
-“It’s only one of them spells she gits,” he grunted. “She’ll be all
-right.”
-
-“No, it ain’t no spell, Pop,” they cried. “She’s dead, I tell you.
-She’s cold.”
-
-Then the neighbors, who had never gone to that house when Jane was alive,
-went now and comforted the children. They followed the poor body along
-the ice to its grave, and Mrs. Spellman, who has six little ones of her
-own, went over and took the baby home.
-
-There are a great many of these irregular unions here, for Canada is no
-land of easy divorce. If you are a poor man, and have any predilection
-for being legally married, you must stay with the wife with whom you
-started. Divorce and remarriage are not for you.
-
-In a little book of instructions for immigrants and settlers, published
-by one of the newspapers, the matter is made very plain:
-
-“In Manitoba, Ontario, Alberta, and Saskatchewan there is no divorce
-court. Application must be made to the Dominion Parliament, by means of
-a private bill, praying for relief by reason of adultery, or adultery and
-cruelty, if it is the wife who is seeking a divorce from her husband.
-The charges made are investigated by a special committee of the Senate,
-and, if a favorable report is presented to the House, the bill usually
-passes.” But the little book goes on to state, very simply, that “The
-expense of obtaining the bill is very great, exceeding in any event five
-hundred dollars.”
-
-So for men like Harry Spriggins, whose wife deserted him, or for Black
-Jack’s woman, whose husband beat her, there is no way out. They simply
-take another mate, and stand by the arrangement as faithfully as may be.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VII
-
-
-WINTER has thrown a veil of lace over the islands, a wet, clinging snow
-that covers every tree-trunk, rock, and stump, and turns the cedars to
-mounds of fluffy whiteness. The paths lie under archways of bending,
-snow-laden branches, and all the underbrush is hidden. The island wears
-many jewels, for every ice-incrusted twig flashes a cluster of diamonds,
-the orange berries of the bittersweet, each encased in clear ice, are
-like topaz, and the small frozen pools between the stones reflect the sky
-and shine like sapphires.
-
-There have been snows since the first week in November, but this is the
-first that has remained, and how it shows the midnight activities of all
-the wild folk! The porch floor is a white page on which they have left
-their signatures. Here, by the storeroom door, are innumerable little
-stitch-like strokes. They were made by the deer mouse’s wee paws. There
-are the prints of the squirrel’s little hands and a long swathe, where
-his brush swept the snow. The chickadees and nuthatches came very early.
-Their three-fingered prints are all over the woodpile, and on the paths
-are the blurred, ragged tracks left by the grouse’s snowshoes. Over the
-hill runs a row of deep, round holes, showing that a fox has passed that
-way, and the rabbit’s tracks are everywhere.
-
-Every day the water freezes farther and farther out from the shores, and
-it is increasingly difficult to force a channel through it to the open
-lake. The bay in front of the Blake’s house is frozen straight across,
-and I land far away on the point and scramble through the bushes to the
-house when I must go over for the mail. Frozen cascades hang down over
-the rocks, pale-blue, jade and softest cream color. The rocks themselves
-are capped with frozen spray and the driftwood wears long beards of ice.
-
-Walking along the beach to-day I heard a great chirping and twittering,
-like the sound made by innumerable very small birds. Could a late flock
-of migrants be stopping in the treetops? I wondered. But when I
-searched for the birds there were none. The chirping noises came from
-the thin shore ice, whose crystals, rubbed together by the gently moving
-water, were making the birdlike sounds. Now and then would come a sudden
-“ping” like the stroke on the wire string of a banjo, and sometimes a
-clear, sustained tone, like the note of a violin.
-
-As the ice grew thicker these sounds all stopped and over all the land
-broods a profound silence. The winds are still, no bird voices come out
-of the woods; even the waves seem hardly to rise and fall against the
-shores. It is as though all nature were holding her breath to wait the
-coming of the ice.
-
-“When the lake freezes over, when the ice holds,” we have a habit of
-saying, and, looking across the uncertainties of the shut-in time, when I
-shall not be able to use the boat and when no one can cross over to me, I
-too am longing for the ice.
-
-The boat can no longer be left in the water. Any cold morning would find
-it frozen in until spring. It must also be turned every evening, lest it
-fill with snow in the night, so I haul that heavy skiff out on the sand;
-and, sure enough, the accident, so confidently predicted by my friends,
-came to pass, for in the turning the boat slipped, and down it came, full
-weight across my foot.
-
-I am somewhat a judge of pain. I know quite a good deal about suffering
-of one kind and another, but this hurt was something special in the way
-of an agony. It turned me sick and dizzy, and for several minutes I
-could only stand and gasp, while the trees turned round and round against
-the sky. When their whirling had slowed down a bit, and I had caught my
-breath, I hobbled down to the edge of the lake, kicked a hole in the thin
-ice with my good foot, and thrust the hurt one into the icy water. Then
-I spoke aloud! I did not in the least mean to say the words that came to
-my lips, no one could have been more surprised than I when I heard them,
-but with my horrified face turned up to the evening sky, and the
-consciousness that there was no way in the world of getting help if I
-were badly hurt, I said, “Great God Almighty!”
-
-Thinking it over, I am inclined to believe that the ejaculation was,
-after all, a prayer.
-
-Knowing that I should probably not be able to walk for days, I then
-hobbled to and fro from the house to the lake, filling every pail and
-tub. Then I carried in as much wood as I could, and at last took off my
-shoe.
-
-It was a wicked-looking injury, a foot swollen, bruised, and crushed. I
-blessed my little medicine chest, with its bichloride and morphia
-tablets, its cotton and gauze, that made the long hours of that night
-endurable. For more than a week I did my housework with a knee on the
-seat of a chair that I pushed along before me round the cabin and the
-porch. No one came to the island, nor could I get far enough from the
-house to call a passing boat.
-
-One afternoon there was a great sound of chopping in the narrows between
-this island and Blake’s Point. I called, but no one answered. Later I
-learned that Henry Blake had left a herring net there and that it had
-frozen in. But at that time I felt only the faintest interest in
-whatever was going forward. They might have chopped a way through to
-China and I would not have cared.
-
-The long days dragged on, while my hurt foot slowly healed. I may say
-here that it was never fully healed until the following spring. I had
-always to keep it bandaged even after it had ceased to pain and it was
-not until May that I could forget that it had been injured.
-
-On the eighth the calm weather broke in a day of wild winds and flying
-clouds, when the waves rolled in on the shores, and the driftwood pounded
-on the beaches. At evening, when the storm had lulled, the lake looked
-like a wide expanse of crinkled lead foil.
-
-Next morning I waked to a bright blue day and dazzling sunshine. At
-first I feared that I had been suddenly deafened, the stillness so
-stopped my ears. Then I realized what had happened. There was no sound
-of the moving water. The ice had come!
-
-The lake was a silver mirror that reflected every tree, every bowlder,
-every floating cloud. The islands hung between two skies, were lighted
-by two suns. An eagle, soaring over the lake, saw his double far below,
-even to his white back, that flashed in the sunlight when he wheeled.
-
-In the glancing beauty of that morning my heart flung open all her doors,
-my breath came quickly, and my spirit sang. For the first time in my
-life I understood how frost and cold, how ice and snow, can praise and
-magnify the Lord.
-
-That evening the snow came, turning the lake into a vast white plain
-“white as no fuller on earth could white it,” that lay without spot or
-wrinkle under the Indian’s Moon of the Snowshoes.
-
-This was the ninth of the month. Then followed long, silent days, when I
-read and sewed and dreamed, and forgot what day of the week it was, or
-what time of the day, and wondered how long it would be before someone
-could come over from the mainland to tell me that the ice was safe to
-walk on.
-
-Each afternoon I hobbled to the beach and paraded there, according to
-agreement with Mary Blake, to let her see that I was still alive. The
-rabbit came in and sat by the fire—a queer, silent little companion. The
-red squirrel scampered all over the outside of the house, peeping at me
-through the windows, and whisking in at the open door to steal a potato
-or a nut, when he thought my back was turned. Funny little Rufus! He
-spent a long, hard-working day, stealing the contents of a basket of
-frozen potatoes put out for his amusement. For months afterward I found
-those potatoes, hard as bullets, stuck in the crotches of the cedars all
-over the island.
-
-From the ninth to the nineteenth I saw no one and heard no voice. Then I
-descried two men walking across the lake. They carried long poles, with
-which they struck the ice ahead to test its thickness. Each stroke ran
-along the ice to the shore, with the sound of iron ringing against stone.
-I saw the stick fall some seconds before I heard the noise.
-
-I had never seen men walking across a lake before. I had never realized
-that this lake would become a solid floor on which men could walk. I
-shall never forget the excitement with which I watched them do it.
-
- [Picture: The House]
-
-Half an hour later Jimmie Dodd burst in, with red cheeks and shining
-eyes, to tell me that the ice would hold.
-
-The way to the farm being once more open, I made my Christmas cake,
-mixing it here in the cabin and carrying it three quarters of a mile
-across to the Blakes’ big oven. The finished loaf came back over the
-ice, an excellent cake, as all my Christmas visitors testified.
-
-For let no one assume that because the inhabitants of this island are few
-there has been no Christmas here. On the contrary, the feast began on
-Christmas Eve and lasted for a week. The tree, a young white pine, was
-cut on the island, the trimmings came from Toronto, and great was the
-anxiety lest the ice should not be strong enough to bear the wagon that
-brought them over from Loon Lake Station. But the final freeze came just
-in time, and we, the rabbit and I, spent happy days tying on all the
-glittering trifles that go to the making of that prettiest thing in the
-world—a Christmas tree. There was a big gold star on the topmost twig.
-There were oranges and boxes of candy for all invited and uninvited
-children round the lake, and when all was finished, our first visitor was
-a storm-driven chickadee, that wandered in and stayed with us, perched on
-a glittering branch.
-
-On Christmas Eve the Blakes came and had cake and coffee and viewed the
-tree. On Christmas day, came the little Beaulacs, from Loon Bay, some
-walking, some in arms, some dragged in a big wooden box over the ice, and
-were refreshed with tea and bread and butter and cake, after which they
-sat round the tree, regarding it with great eyes of wonder. Next day the
-Forets came to help me eat the Christmas duck and tinned plum pudding,
-and after them the Big John Beaulacs, from far back of Sark.
-
-So it went, with a party every day, while the brave little tree stood
-glowing and twinkling at us all. It was interesting to note how many
-errands the men found to bring them to the island while the Christmas
-tree was standing, and how their heavy faces lightened at sight of it.
-Surely it fulfilled its purpose, sending out messages of good will and
-friendliness and the love of God from the feather tip of each tiniest
-twig.
-
-At midnight on Christmas Eve I went out on the porch and walked to and
-fro there in the biting cold. The rabbit, that had been sleeping, a
-bunch of snow-white fur, on the woodpile, hopped down and followed at my
-heels. The lake was a shield of frosted silver. The moon shone bright
-as day. One great star blazed over the shoulder of the opposite
-island—it might have been the very star of Bethlehem. So diamond clear
-was the air, so near leaned the sky, that I might almost have reached and
-touched that star. The night was so white, so still that I fancied I
-could almost hear the angels’ song, and in the rainbow glory of the
-moonlight could catch swift glimpses of the flashing of their wings.
-
-We walked there, the rabbit and I, until the cold drove me in, to sleep
-beside the tree and dream of a procession of little Beaulacs, creeping
-over the ice, each one with a star in his hand.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VIII
-
-
-THE Beaulacs belong to a tribe of French Canadians that has peopled half
-the countryside. They have various nicknames—Black Jack, Little Joe,
-Yankee Jim, Big John, Rose Marie, Marie John, and so on. The Little Jack
-Beaulacs live at Loon Bay, round the point and three miles away. The
-road to Loon Lake Station starts at their landing. They live in a barn,
-a sixteen-by-twenty-foot log structure, banked with earth to keep out the
-cold. In its one room, along with a double bed, a cooking stove, table,
-sideboard, sewing machine, rocking chair, boxes, pots and pans, and a
-clutter of harness and old junk of all kinds, live John and Rose and the
-six young Beaulacs, beginning with sixteen-year-old Louis and ending with
-the baby. There is one door and a small window, that, so far as I know,
-has never been opened. In summer, when the door is left ajar, the room
-is apt to be further inhabited by hens, ducks, cats, and even a lamb or
-two.
-
-The house stands in a clearing on a perfectly bare hill, but in summer,
-the whole slope is golden with sheets of tansy, and the small dug-out
-milk house is shaded by a giant lilac bush, sole remnant of some
-long-forgotten garden. At the foot of the hill, rotting, flat-bottomed
-boats wallow in the mud, and there the little Beaulacs spend happy days
-fishing for mudcats, wading for frogs, screaming, wrangling, and throwing
-stones into the water.
-
-They have not always lived in a barn. They have had two other houses,
-each burned to the ground, with all the pitiful furnishings it
-contained—crushing blows to people as poor as the Beaulacs. After the
-last fire they moved into the barn, the only shelter left standing,
-intending to build again in the spring. But log-hauling is work,
-building materials cost money, and time went on. Now they have settled
-down contentedly in the barn, and will stay there, I doubt not, until
-this roof falls down about their heads. They have no fear of another
-fire. That would be impossible, for, as one of the children tells me,
-the last one happened on the full of the moon—sure sign that they can
-never be burned out again.
-
-Like other men of the settlement, John Beaulac works at the mica mine,
-hunts, fishes, and farms a bit. Rose walks barefoot over the fields,
-after the plow, digs the small garden, raises chickens, picks wild
-berries, and sells frogs to the summer campers, contriving thus to supply
-the few clothes and groceries needed. For the rest, they live a happy,
-carefree life in the open, and the young Beaulacs scramble up somehow.
-
-Rose handles the boxes of supplies that come from Toronto for the island,
-driving them in from Loon Lake and bringing them across the lake by wagon
-or boat, as the time of the year permits. Last time she refused, very
-firmly, to allow me to pay for that hauling.
-
-“We ain’t agoin’ to tax you nothin’,” she declared.
-
-When I expostulated, she only shook her frowsy head more violently.
-
-“No,” she said, “we do it fer you fer nothin’. It ain’t like you had a
-man here to do fer you,” she reasoned.
-
-Then she looked at her own man with pride and at me with a vast pity,
-because I had no man to work myself to death for.
-
-In a pioneer neighborhood, where every woman must have some man, however
-worthless, to hew the wood and care for the stock, and where every man
-must have some woman, to cook and to keep the house, however lazy a
-slattern she may be, I, who live alone, pay for my wood and draw the
-water, must be a creature not to be understood.
-
-Yesterday the Beaulacs invited me to go with them to the races in
-Henderson’s Bay—a trying out of the neighborhood horses before the yearly
-races to be held at Queensport next week. Scrambling and falling down
-the slippery trail, in answer to their halloo, I found a straw-filled
-wagon body set on runners and drawn by Beaulac’s old mare. She, not
-having been “sharp shod,” slipped and slid, threatening to break a leg at
-every step, while the wagon slewed from side to side over the ice. It
-was the first time that I had driven over a lake. My heart was in my
-mouth all the way.
-
-Henderson’s Bay, a long arm of Many Islands, stretches for a mile into
-the land. It is a beautiful horseshoe, with the farm house at the toe.
-The course was laid out on the dull green ice, little cedar bushes set up
-to mark the quarter miles. An old reaper, frozen in near the shore,
-served as the judges’ stand.
-
-We drew up at the side of the track, in the lee of a high rock that
-somewhat sheltered us from the piercing wind. It was a friendly scene.
-The encircling arms of the shore stretched round and seemed to gather us
-close. The smoke from the house chimneys curled up to the low-leaning
-gray sky, and Henderson’s herd, led by a dignified old bull, strolled
-down over the hill as though to see the race. Far away on the ice, black
-spots appeared, later discerned to be fast-moving buggies, sleighs, and
-wagons coming to the meet. When they were all assembled there must have
-been as many as seven vehicles. There were four horses to be tried.
-They were harnessed in turn to a little two-wheeled affair called a bike.
-There is only one “bike” here, so no two horses could run at a time, and
-there had to be a great unhitching and harnessing again after every trial
-of speed. Joe Boggs, the neighborhood jockey, drove with arms and legs
-all spraddled out, like a spider, and urged on his poor steeds with wild
-cries of: “Hi-hi-hi-hi”—enough to frighten a sensible horse to death.
-
-I have never beheld a more professional looking horseman than Mr. Boggs.
-His disreputable old squirrel-skin cap, that hung off the back of his
-head, his high boots, the bow of his legs, the squint of his eye, even
-the way he chewed a straw between races, bespoke the true jockey. One
-felt that if Joe Boggs could not put a horse over the track, no one
-could.
-
-Rose Beaulac too was a keen judge of a horse. She criticized the entries
-unsparingly—Rose, with her long, dry-looking coon skin coat, and her
-dirty red “tuque” cocked over one eye.
-
-“That old mare,” she would say, cuttingly, “I knowed her in her best
-days, and then she wasn’t much.”
-
-That settled the mare for us. Our money was not on her.
-
-There was, however, one horse that she did consider worth praise. She
-told me with awe that his owner had refused four hundred dollars for
-him—a staggering sum. So valued was this animal that he was not to be
-allowed to run any more until the Queensport races, but when it was
-learned that I wished to admire him, his owner consented to put him once
-round the course, for my pleasure.
-
-After the contestants had each done his best—or worst—the meet broke up,
-with many “Good-days” and “Come-overs,” and we drove back over the ice,
-the old mare plunging and sliding along seemingly quite accustomed to
-being driven, at a gallop, over a sheet of glass.
-
-The eye swept the outline of the shore on which stand the seven
-homesteads of this arm of the lake. Each roof shelters a family of a
-different race and creed. Many Islands is a type of the whole of this
-strong, young country, that takes in men of all lands and minds, gives
-them her fertile prairies almost for the asking, and makes them over into
-good Canadians.
-
-There are the Blakes, from “The States,” and aggressively American; the
-Jacksons, Canadian born and Methodist; the Hendersons, English and Church
-of England; the McDougals, Scotch and Presbyterian; the Cassidys, Irish
-and Catholic; Harry Sprig-gins, a sharp-faced little London cockney; and
-the Beaulacs, true French Canadian. Once in a while a Swede wanders in
-and hires out for the wood-cutting, or an Indian comes along through the
-lakes in his canoe, and camps for awhile on one of the islands. Amid all
-the differences of belief and the clash of temperament, the people manage
-to be friendly and neighborly; the children play together; the young folk
-marry, and the next generation is all Canadian.
-
-They all speak English, but when one stops to listen, literal
-translations of idioms and queer turns of phrase stand out. Foret always
-speaks of a “little, small” bird or tree or what not, and for him things
-are always “perfectly all right.”
-
-“Do yer moind thot pig, I sold Black Jack?” asks Uncle Dan Cassidy.
-
-“’Ow har you to-d’y?” inquires Harry Spriggins.
-
-“Oh, not too bad,” answers John Beaulac. “_Pas trop mal_,” he is saying,
-of course.
-
-When John has finished a job he stands off, hands in pockets, and
-observes: “That iss now ahl bunkum sah.” After a moment’s pondering one
-knows that “_Bon comme ça_” is what he means.
-
-They speak of coming home through the “Brooly.” That is the scrub wood
-through which a forest fire once swept. It is the land “brulé”—burned
-over. While they live in Canada their talk is of far away lands, and it
-is to the “Old Country” that they mean to return some day.
-
-And from the house on the island I see the life go by—the stern, bare
-life of the country—with its never-ending toil, its uncounted sacrifices,
-its feuds, its ready charities and the piteous, unnecessary sufferings of
-the sick. Blessed be the rural telephone, lately come to Many Islands,
-that has made it possible for Dr. LeBaron to reach a patient the day he
-is called. Thrice blessed the tinkle of those little bells that bring
-the voices of the world to the farms, shut in behind the snowdrifts. To
-the women, dulled with labor and shaken with loneliness, they are the
-little bells of courage.
-
-I stopped at a farm the other day—a very lonely place. Scarce were the
-first greetings over when the young mistress of the house said, proudly:
-“We have the telephone here. Would you care to talk to any of your
-friends?”
-
-Something in her tone, the eager shining of her eyes, brought a rush of
-tears to my own. It was the supreme effort of hospitality. She was
-offering me the thing that had meant life itself to her, the dear
-privilege of speaking with a friend.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IX
-
-
-WE are at the very heart of winter now. It is “_le grand frête_,” that I
-have been secretly dreading, and all my ideas of it are changing as the
-quiet days go on. Winter in the woods has always seemed to me the dead
-time—the season of darkness and loneliness and loss. I find it only the
-pause before the birth of a new year. If I break off a twig, it is green
-at the heart, when I brush away the snow, the moss springs green beneath
-it. Close against the breast of the meadow lie the steadfast, evergreen
-rosettes of the plantain, sorrel, moth mullen, and evening primrose,
-waiting in patience for the melting of the snow. I never dip a pail into
-the hole in the ice without bringing up a long trailer of green
-waterweed, or a darting, flitting little whirligig beetle—the
-gyrinus—somewhat less lively than in summer, to be sure, but still active
-and alert. There is a big, fresh-water clam lying at the bottom of the
-waterhole. He breathes and palpitates, lolling out a soft pink body from
-the lips of a half-open shell.
-
-Yes, winter here is only a slumber, and everything is stirring in its
-sleep. They all proclaim again the old, old covenant, made with the
-perpetual generations, that promise of the sure return of seedtime and
-harvest, cold and heat, summer and winter, and day and night, that shall
-not cease while the earth remains.
-
-The colors of winter are slate-blue and gray, laid on a background of
-black and white. The chickadees and nuthatches wear them—black velvet
-caps, gray coats, white waistcoats. In the mornings long, slate-blue
-shadows stretch away from the points of all the islands, and every
-smallest standing weed casts its tiny blue shadow across the snow. The
-ice is darkly iridescent, like the blue pigeon’s neck and head.
-
-The dawns come late, the sunsets early, and in the twilight the mice
-steal out from the woods and climb up and down on the window screens,
-little misty, gray blurs moving swiftly against the soft, gray dusk.
-
-Through the long evenings, when supper is over, the curtains drawn and
-the long sides of the big box stove glowing red, I read and think and
-dream. All the while the timbers of the house crack and snap with the
-cold, the trees twist and creak in the wind, and the ice groans and
-mutters. Now and again it gives a long sigh, as though some heavy animal
-were imprisoned under it and were struggling to escape. I imagine him
-heaving at it with a great shoulder, grunting as he pushes, and sinking
-back to rest before pushing again. Late in the night comes a long roar,
-as though the beast had broken forth and were calling to his mate.
-
- [Picture: A point of one of the Islands]
-
-Most people undress to go to bed. Here I undress and dress again,
-putting on heaviest woolen underwear, long knit stockings, flannel gown
-and sweater over all. I creep into bed and lie between flannel sheets
-and under piled blankets, and throw a fur coat across the foot, in
-preparation for that first hurried dash across the room at dawn.
-
-There is only one anguished moment in the twenty-four hours. It is when
-the fire has burned out, and the cold wakes me. My movements then are
-reduced to the least possible number. Almost with one motion I spring
-out of bed, fling the window shut, tear back the whole top of the stove,
-throw in fresh logs, put on the coffeepot, then skurry back to bed to
-doze until the cabin is warm.
-
-There is not the least trouble about keeping my stores cool. The problem
-is to prevent their freezing. The potatoes and eggs freeze in the very
-room with me, a pot of soup, set in the outer vestibule, is a hard block
-from which I crack a piece with the ax when I wish a hot supper. The
-condensed milk is hard frozen, the canned plum puddings rattle about in
-their tins like so many paving stones, and it takes all day to heat them.
-Early in December, I laid a jagged bit of ice on the corner of the porch,
-and there it lies, its shape quite unchanged through weeks of bitter
-weather.
-
-There is an inch or two of ice over the waterhole every morning. When I
-go to fill the pails, I take the little ax along to chop my cistern open,
-but gradually the walls of ice close in and about once a week someone
-must cut me a fresh waterhole in another spot on the lake.
-
-The drying of the weekly wash is a most perplexing thing. Clothes hung
-outside the house freeze immediately of course. If they are hung inside,
-the room is filled with their steam. My only plan is to heat the cabin
-red-hot, hang them indoors, bank the fire for safety and take to the lake
-or go a-visiting, for a certain number of clean clothes one must have, if
-only to keep up one’s self-respect.
-
-This morning I woke so stiff with cold that I was almost afraid to move
-in bed, lest a frozen finger or toe should drop off. There was no more
-sleep, so, cowering over the stove, I watched the sunrise, more augustly
-beautiful than I have ever seen it. The bright crescent of last month’s
-moon hung, point downward, on a sky of mouse-gray velvet. Over it stood
-the morning star. Along the eastern horizon lay a line of soft
-brightness, that glowed through a veil of gray gauze. Very slowly this
-bright line widened while the snow field grew slate-blue, then purple,
-and the jagged tree line of the forest stood out in silhouette, black
-pines, cedars, and hemlocks against a yellow sky. Trees and bushes near
-at hand stole out from the shadows, patterns of black lace against the
-white ground, and sharply visible. The horizon line was now tinged with
-red, the sky was changing to a tender yellow-gray, shading to pale green
-as it neared the zenith. The paling moon hung now against a background
-of rose and saffron. The star still blazed above it like a lamp, until,
-suddenly, a fiery streak appeared on the horizon, and star and moon faded
-away before the red disk of the sun.
-
-Toward noon the cold was less intense, and I ventured out to get some
-long-delayed mail at the farm. Not a bird was abroad, not a rabbit track
-lay on the paths. In fur coat, fur hood, and high rubber boots I plowed
-a way across the lake, where the level snow, knee-high, drifted in over
-the tops of the boots and formed an icy crust around my stockinged feet.
-At the farm I learned that the thermometer at Loon Lake Station had
-registered thirty-five degrees below zero at seven o’clock that morning.
-Even then, in the sun, on the Blakes’ south porch it stood at twenty
-below.
-
-At home in the afternoon all my little pensioners were out to greet me.
-The white-breasted nuthatch was clinging, head down, on a birch pillar,
-his head, twisted back at a neck-dislocating angle, showed his black cap
-perched over one eye, and gave him an indescribably rakish, disreputable
-appearance.
-
-“Yank, yank,” he observed, irritably, as though to chide me for keeping
-him waiting so long for food. The air was full of the plaintive winter
-notes of the chickadees. Peter, the rabbit, was sitting hunched against
-the kitchen door, a forlorn little figure.
-
-The feeding of my live stock has become quite a large part of the duty of
-each day. The rabbit waits at the door for his slice of bread, and, if
-that door is left ajar, he is quite apt to hop inside and help himself to
-anything he finds standing on the hearth. The squirrel has his toast and
-cold potato on the woodpile, the birds their crumbs. The bushes present
-a very odd appearance, hung with bits of bacon rind for the chickadees.
-
-The other night there came another little boarder, in the person of a
-very small deer mouse, that slipped into the cabin and fell down between
-the wire screen and the lower casement of the north window. Between the
-netting and the window frame there is space enough to make a very
-satisfactory runway for a very tiny mouse, and there he cowered, peering
-at me, with terrified, bright eyes. The window panes open in on hinges,
-like a French casement, so my first impulse was to shut the upper half
-and keep him prisoner, knowing that if he once ran at large in the house
-I could never catch him, and that he would make havoc among the stores.
-He looked so hungry, trembling there, with his tiny, pink hands clasped
-on his breast, that I dropped him down a bit of bacon. Then he shivered
-so piteously that I dropped also a fluff of absorbent cotton, which he
-seized and instantly made into a little Esquimeau hut. This he placed in
-the corner best sheltered from the wind, turned its door in toward the
-glass, and retired, closing that opening with a bit of cotton, and I saw
-him no more by day.
-
-A deer mouse is the prettiest little beast imaginable, somewhat smaller
-than the house mouse, and with very large eyes. His fur is dark brown,
-very soft and thick and with a darker streak along the spine. His breast
-is white, his legs white too, ending in tiny pink paws with wee
-fingernails, the exact size of the eye of a number five needle. His ears
-are long and fringed with black, his head very much like the head of a
-doe. He is nocturnal in habit, staying up in the morning until after his
-breakfast and mine, then retiring for the day, to come out at twilight
-and run up and down the window screen for exercise. So long as I keep
-this window closed he can’t get out, and I can study him through the
-glass at my leisure.
-
-Who ever sees a deer mouse at home? Walking through the stubble field
-one sometimes starts one, and away he goes like a flash. Here I have
-this little wild thing living in my house, apparently quite content. He
-shall stay as long as he seems well and happy. When I think he is pining
-he shall go free, but he is quite as well off in his little hut as he
-would be in the cast-off vireo’s nest that is, in all probability, his
-winter home. Snow drifts in and covers it, to be sure, but he seems snug
-and warm and is growing sleek and fat on a diet of bacon and apple.
-
-Since the coming of the ice I find that I must keep more cooked stores on
-hand, not only for myself and for the birds and beasts, but for the
-frequent visitors that come driving up the lake to the door. They race
-along the ice in sleighs and buggies and stop at the island. When they
-come they stay to the next meal, so there must be materials for a party
-always ready. It is only fair to state that the rule works quite as well
-the other way round, for I am always welcome to drop in at any house near
-which I happen to be at meal time. Any passing guest may draw his chair
-to the table and partake of what is set thereon. No apologies are
-offered for the food. It may be only a pot of tea and a biscuit, but
-whatever it is you are welcome, and that, by your leave, is hospitality.
-
-Oh, Many Islands, place of the good neighbors! I close my eyes to see
-picture after picture passing across the screen of memory. There is
-Henry Blake giving his time and labor that my house may be warm and
-weather proof; there is Mary Blake with daily gifts of good things to eat
-and counsel for my inexperience. I see the little fishing boats bobbing
-against the rocks as the men stop at the island to throw me off a bass
-and some silver herring as they pass with the day’s catch. There are
-John Beaulac’s two little girls scrambling through the bushes to bring me
-some venison when father has killed a deer, and I see Anna Jackson
-putting a big jug of maple syrup in the sleigh that brings me home on a
-Sunday.
-
-I see too Granny Drapeau’s earnest old face, as I hear her say:
-
-“Eh, but I was feared for you last night, when the wind blowed so strong.
-I couldn’t sleep fer thinkin’ of you, all alone on that island. Come
-daylight I says to Andy, ‘Look over an’ tell if you kin see her smoke.’
-For if ever that smoke is not a’risin’ I’ll send one of the men over to
-see what’s wrong.”
-
-Daily kindnesses, daily acts of friendliness for the stranger woman, who
-came from nowhere, to stay awhile and will go away, they know not where.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER X
-
-
-JANUARY the twenty-second was a great day in the county. It was the date
-of the “Tea Meeting,” given under the auspices of the English Church, for
-the benefit of the destitute Belgians. It was also a great day for me,
-being the first and the last time that I shall appear in Many Islands’
-society, when society meets at night. To drive seven miles in the bitter
-cold, to return to a stone cold house in the middle of the night,
-requires a love of foregathering with one’s fellows that I do not
-possess. So not until I have trained the rabbit to keep up the fire
-shall I venture out at night again. I had been invited to the festivity
-by Mrs. Jackson weeks before. Having very little notion of the proper
-dress for such an occasion, I ventured to ask counsel of a young visitor
-who dropped in opportunely.
-
-“What do the women wear to the Tea Meetings here?” I inquired.
-
-She surveyed me with an appraising eye. “Well now,” she said, kindly,
-“haven’t you a nice, dark waist here with you? A lady of your age would
-naturally wear something dark and plain.”
-
-At once I cast away all idea of a serviceably plain attire and determined
-to array myself in all the finery I had with me here; chiffon gown, long
-gloves and velvet hat with plumes. “Lady of my age, indeed!”
-
-And when I arrived at the entertainment every soul was in her best, and
-my attire entirely appropriate. I waited with some pleasant anticipation
-for the moment when my little friend should spy me and was not
-disappointed in the expression that swept across her pretty face. As a
-plain dresser I was evidently not a success.
-
-The start was to be an early one. In the middle of the afternoon I raked
-out the fire, fed the animals, hid the key under the woodpile and started
-down the lake to the Jackson farm, following a fresh-cut sleigh track
-that glittered like a silver ribbon flung down on the blue ice. Now and
-again the solid floor under me would give a groan and a heave and I would
-spring aside, my heart in my throat despite my knowledge of the two feet
-of solid ice beneath me. Then I would assure my quaking spirit that
-where the woodsleds could drive I could surely walk, and would travel on.
-
-At Jackson’s there was a pot of bean soup on the stove, and, as a
-comforting repast on a cold day, I know of nothing that approaches hot
-bean soup—it stays by one. We drove off in the big farm sleigh, seven
-miles to the town of Fallen Timber, passing through Sark with its five
-houses and the Cheese Factory, and by farms each of which contributed its
-heavily laden sleigh to the long line of vehicles bound for the meeting.
-
-The town hall of Fallen Timber stands on a bleak hillside. It is a room,
-about thirty by forty feet in size, with a six-foot wide stage at the end
-and a box stove in the middle. The stovepipe goes straight to the
-ceiling, across, and out by a hole in the wall at the back of the stage.
-The walls are of a dirty, leprous-looking plaster, with here and there a
-small bunch of ground pine tacked on by way of decoration. At the back
-of the stage a strip of once white muslin bore the inscription: “Welcome
-To All” in letters a foot high.
-
-The seats are planks laid on the stumps of trees, the stage curtain is of
-red and green calico.
-
-Now and again this curtain was pushed aside, disclosing the preparations
-for supper, and such piles of cookies, cakes, and sandwiches I never
-expect to see again. In the phrase of this neighborhood there were
-certainly “plenty of cookings.”
-
-The great folk of the evening were late—the rector and his wife, the
-member of Parliament, who was to preside for us, and the orator, who was
-to address us. But we did not mind the delay. We had come to meet each
-other, and the time passed pleasantly enough. I was seated almost
-exactly on the stove, ventilation there was none, and the hall was
-packed, but what of that? It was good to feel thoroughly warm, at no
-expense to oneself, and there’s too much fuss made about fresh air
-anyway—at least in the opinion of many of my neighbors.
-
-The orator was the typical political speaker—portly, bland, slightly
-humorous and very approachable. He made an excellent speech, outlining
-the causes that led to the Great War, and telling of Germany’s policy and
-her hopes. He explained the part that Belgium had played, in holding
-back the tide of invasion until France had had time to mobilize, and it
-was all very clear and convincing. He laid stress on the spontaneous
-outpouring of loyalty in the colonies, and quoted one of the first
-messages received from India—the telegram from a Rajah that read: “My
-Emperor, what work has he for ME and for my-people?”
-
-As he went on to enumerate them—Canada, India, Australia, New Zealand and
-all the islands of the seas—I forgot the little hall, the crowd, the
-heat, and caught something of Isaiah’s vision of the Great House of God,
-that shall be exalted high above the hills, and of the time when all
-nations shall flow unto it.
-
-After the speech came supper, huge plates of sandwiches and many kinds of
-cake, with pitchers of steaming tea. The men ate three and four of these
-platefuls with as careless an air as who should say: “What are five
-pounds or so of food washed down with quarts of strong, boiled tea? A
-mere nothing.”
-
-What was worse, the children ate quite as much as their elders, but I
-have long since ceased to forebode anything for the youth of this favored
-land. Apparently, they cannot be harmed.
-
-After supper, at about eleven-thirty, came the real object of the
-meeting—the entertainment by “local talent.” It began with the chorus:
-“Tramp, tramp, tramp, the boys are marching.” Followed then a
-recitation, “My Aunt Somebody’s Custard Pie.”
-
-This was delivered in a coquettish, not to say soubrettish manner by a
-little miss in a short white frock, and with a coral ribbon wound round
-her curly, dark hair. Her assured manner struck me and not pleasantly.
-Later I understood it. She was “Teacher” in charge of Number Six, better
-known as the Woodchuck School. I am told that the Boards of Education
-cannot keep these rural schools supplied, the girls marry off so fast;
-and I can well believe it, judging by this one. She was evidently the
-belle of the neighborhood. In the comments that the boys were making all
-round me the other girls were all very well, but “Teacher” was easily the
-favorite.
-
-“She’s a good teacher,” I heard one declare, hoarsely fervent. “She’s
-did well by Number Six. I could make out every word them children
-spoke”—a fact that really seemed to give him cause for satisfaction.
-
-The night wore on with drill after drill, song after song, recitation
-after recitation. Despite my fatigue, I was interested. As I watched
-the audience something took me by the throat. It was somehow so
-pathetic. Those heavy men, those work-worn women were not interested
-because their children were being shown off. No indeed. They liked the
-performance because it was just at their level, and that fact threw a
-searchlight on the bare monotony of their lives. We finished at about
-two o’clock with “Tipperary,” and “God Save the King,” and, as every
-national anthem is an assault on the feelings and makes me cry, I sang
-and wiped my eyes with the rest.
-
-The night skies here are seldom black, like the skies of the south, they
-are more often a soft, misty gray. The stars, instead of being sharp
-little points of light, are big and indistinct and furry. It is always
-light enough to see the road, even at the dark of the moon. We drove
-along through the bitter cold, Big John Beaulac’s hired boy, Reginald,
-standing in the back of the sleigh, by way of getting a lift home. He
-was regretting, all the way, that some people had not eaten all their
-“cookings” and that so much good food had been wasted on the floor. I
-fancied that Reginald Bean would fain have eaten even more than he did.
-
-At the shore we dropped Mrs. Jackson and the three little sleeping
-Jacksons, and drove on down the lake. At the narrows I, being almost
-frozen to the seat of the sleigh, insisted on being set down to walk, and
-took my way along the side of the island, treading in the footprints that
-I had left in the snow when I had set out—was it the day or the week
-before?
-
-I groped my way among the trees and along the trail to the house, lighted
-a fire and looked at the clock. I had been walking through the woods at
-four o’clock in the morning, and with as little concern as though it had
-been that hour of a summer afternoon.
-
-Then, as though to rebuke my temerity, I was frightened on the lake the
-very next day.
-
-I was walking briskly along on the ice, singing at the top of my lungs,
-because just to be alive on a day when the air was so cold and clean, the
-sky so blue and the snow crystals so brilliant, was happiness, when I
-came full on a figure that robbed the morning of its joy.
-
-It was Ishmael Beaulac, the imbecile, shambling heavily along. He spoke,
-then turned and followed me some distance, his air half menacing, half
-cringing, and I was frightened, for I realized that for miles around
-there was no one to come to my aid, if Ishmael should take it into his
-poor, crazed brain to do me harm. But he wandered off again, and, as I
-watched his bent figure shuffling away in the snow, I was shaken with a
-great compassion. I have never seen a face so marked with evil. Lined,
-swollen, and inflamed with some loathsome eruption, the low, receding
-forehead, with coarse, black hair growing almost to the line of the
-eyebrows, a wide, loose-lipped mouth, and cunning shifty eyes—it is a
-face that has haunted my dreams.
-
-I asked Rose Beaulac about him.
-
-“John and I was a sayin’ that we’d ought to tell you about Ish,” she
-said. “Now that the ice is come, likely he’ll walk over to the island.
-But don’t you be afeared of him. Just make out like you’re goin’ to
-throw hot water on him an’ he’ll run.”
-
-“Oh, poor creature!” I cried. “I couldn’t hurt him.”
-
-“It ain’t needful to scald him,” said Rose, with an air of great cunning.
-“I always holds my finger in the water to see if it’s cool enough afore I
-throws it. He’s awful ’fraid of water, Ish is,” she observed, and
-remembering Ishmael’s appearance I could well believe it.
-
-“But don’t you ever make over him,” Rose went on, “and don’t you ever
-feed him or you’ll have him there all the time. Don’t leave any knives
-or old boots around where he can git them. Ish don’t know nothin’ about
-money; he’ll walk right past your purse to steal a pair of old boots.
-But he won’t hurt you—at least we don’t think he will.”
-
-“I have heard that his father, Old John, was cruel to him,” I ventured,
-with some diffidence, for Old John or Devil Beaulac was Little John’s own
-Uncle.
-
-A look of distress flitted across Rose’s face.
-
-“Old John was a very severe man, very severe,” she said. “He treated
-Ishmael awful bad. He must have hurted him very hard, for now when the
-men is teasin’ him if one of them lifts an ax or a spade, and makes to
-run at him, Ish goes perfectly wild. They say Old John used to hit him
-on the head. That would make him so crazy-like, wouldn’t it? Yes, poor
-Ish has had it awful hard, there’s none but will tell you that,” she
-sighed.
-
-The neighbors are less reticent about old John. By their account he was
-a man outside all law, a giant in strength and of a fiendish cruelty.
-Finally his tyrannies grew intolerable, and his sons set on him, beating
-him until he died. Then they threw his body into an old mica pit, filled
-the pit with stones and went their way. No one interfered. The old man
-was thought to have earned his doom and the sons were never brought to
-trial. But even now, when poor Ishmael’s fits of madness come upon him
-they say he goes to that pit and throws great rocks into it, cursing the
-memory of his father.
-
-Much of this may be untrue, but the story haunts me. In the figure of
-this poor maniac, hurling his stones and shouting impotent curses to the
-unheeding sky, I see a time when the earth was young, when men dragged
-the offender out from the great congregation and stoned him to death
-before the face of an angry God. I marvel that in this place so near to
-civilization such stories can still be told.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XI
-
-
-WE are no longer tenderfeet, the rabbit and I. We have come through a
-blizzard. For the better part of a week we have been “denned in” along
-with the squirrels, chipmunks, coons, bobcats, and bears. We have melted
-snow for drinking water, because the drifts cut us off from the lake and
-buried the waterhole. We have dug our firewood out from under a pile of
-wet whiteness. The mouse came through safely too, although the snow
-sifted in through the window screen, and covered him, house and all.
-
-The storm began on the second of February, in the evening. All night
-long the wind howled with a violence that threatened to lift the house
-bodily and deposit it out on the lake. It searched out every crack and
-crevice, chilling me to the bone. It wrenched and tore at the heavy
-wooden shutters, it tossed and twisted the trees, every now and again
-throwing one to the ground with a grinding crash. It whistled, it
-moaned; and, with it came the snow, in blinding, whirling gray clouds
-that blotted out everything. The lake was obscured, the outlines of the
-neighboring islands were lost. I could see only a smother of drifting,
-dancing flakes.
-
-The day passed fairly well, for the mere necessity of keeping up the fire
-was an occupation in itself.
-
-“This,” said I to Peter, “is the beginning of the true Canadian winter.
-I hope it does not stay too long.”
-
-Peter, having been born last summer, has had no experience of any other
-winter. No memories of former blizzards troubled him. He hoped that the
-bread would hold out.
-
-At about three o’clock in the afternoon Satan inspired me to go out on
-the porch, to survey the prospect. Immediately I smelled smoke.
-
-Now, there is but one thing of which I have been afraid, and that is
-fire. A blaze started here would inevitably sweep the island and no one
-could stop it. I smelled tar paper burning.
-
-“What a pleasant thing it would be to borrow the cherished summer camp of
-a friend and burn it down for her! What a safe thing for oneself it
-would be to go to sleep in a smoldering house and have it break into
-flames in the night.”
-
-I sniffed and sniffed despairingly. I scrambled out into the snow to
-examine the chimneys; I burrowed under the porch floor to look at the
-foundations; I climbed the ladder to make sure of the roof, and still
-that smell of burning tar persisted. I had a horrible misgiving that
-there was fire smoldering between the outer and the inner walls.
-
-There was nothing for it but to get to the Blakes and tell them of my
-fears. If Henry could assure me that there was no way of a fire’s
-starting, I would believe him and go to bed content. If I had not that
-assurance, I should be forced to sit up all night waiting to escape into
-the snow. Whatever the weather I had to get to the farm; that was all I
-could think of.
-
-I dressed as warmly as I could and set forth, through the drifts, to the
-edge of the island. I made fair progress until I stepped off the land on
-to the lake. Then I began to have some idea of what I, in my ignorance,
-had undertaken.
-
-The lake was like the ocean done in snow. The wind had piled great
-breakers of snow one behind another, their crests curled over at the top,
-exactly like the waves on a beach. Only these breakers were curled over
-the opposite way. They turned over toward the wind, not away from it.
-One long ridge followed another with a deep, scooped out furrow to
-windward. Looking down on the lake from the level of the porch, these
-waves did not look very high. When I stepped off into them they came up
-to my armpits.
-
-Even then I had not sense to turn back; even then I had no idea of any
-real danger. The wind was at my back. I could feel it behind me like a
-wall, as I climbed through each succeeding hillock of snow and out across
-the intervening three or four yards of level ice. Wave followed wave,
-each higher, deeper, more suffocating than the last. Sometimes I could
-walk for a few feet on the top of a drift before sinking into its depths.
-I scrambled, fell, rolled, crawled, climbed, and thought that I should
-never reach the shore. Counting helped me, as I pulled each foot up out
-of the clinging mass and set it down a few inches nearer the land.
-
-“One, two, three, four,” I said aloud, timing my steps to the pounding of
-my laboring heart. My breath was coming in gasps, a pulse beat in my
-temples, my head swam, there was a ringing in my ears as I plodded on,
-now with eyes shut.
-
-A thin, washed out moon came out and looked through wisps of ragged
-clouds. Its light served only to make the scene more desolate, the
-distance from the shore more terrifying. The only idea that remained in
-my stupified brain was that I must somehow find strength to go on lifting
-heavy feet one after the other; that I must struggle up from each fall,
-must breathe deep and keep a quiet mind.
-
-At last I reached the deeper drifts that fringed the shore, skirted the
-hidden waterhole, found traces of the cattle tracks, dragged myself along
-the path and finally stepped, with the very last remnant of strength, up
-on the porch and into the warm bright kitchen. When Mary Blake caught
-sight of me, she sat down suddenly and said: “My God!”
-
-They had not attempted to get to the water hole that day, but had given
-the cattle melted snow. They had gone only as far as the barn and
-henhouses. Even the house dog had stayed indoors.
-
-I gasped out my fears and Henry Blake laughed at them. There was no way,
-he said, for a fire to have started and if one had caught, the house
-would have been flat to the ground long before I had crossed the lake.
-
-I heard him with disgust. If that was the way my panic looked, it was
-high time for me to return to my home on the island. I rose with much
-dignity and walked off to the shore, before the Blakes had adjusted their
-minds to the move.
-
-This time the wind was in my face, making the going ten times harder than
-before. About forty yards out from shore I stopped and turned my back to
-the blast to catch my breath, and there was Henry, dressed in his great
-fur coat, striding out after me and looking for all the world like a bear
-on its hind legs.
-
-When I saw his thickset figure struggling against the gale it seemed
-suddenly a hatefully inconsiderate thing to have brought him away from
-his warm fire and out into the storm and I called:
-
-“Go back, Mr. Blake. There is no fire. Don’t attempt to come after me.”
-
-But Henry only stumped on.
-
-“I know there’s nothing burning,” he retorted. “We’re a long way more
-worried about you than we are about the camp. You might get confused and
-lose your life in this storm.”
-
-On he went ahead of me and I was thankful to follow humbly in his
-footsteps.
-
-We reached the house, and, as we stood in the warm room fighting for
-breath, I said:
-
-“Mr. Blake, there is some Scotch here. Will you drink some?” And Henry
-said he would.
-
-After that I was content to stay indoors until he came with the horses
-and broke the tracks through the island.
-
-Such heaps of snow lay piled on the lake and in the woods that it should
-have taken months for it to disappear; but in three days there came a
-thaw and melted it all away.
-
-The thaw came not a day too soon, for the sixteenth was the time set for
-the long anticipated sawing bee at the farm. During January Henry Blake
-and Jimmie had been felling trees and dragging them to the house in
-preparation for the arrival of the perambulating sawmill, that goes from
-farm to farm as soon as the ice will hold. There was a pile of logs, ten
-feet high by thirty feet long piled butt end to in the dooryard. When a
-farmer announces a bee his neighbors gather from far and near, leaving
-their own work to help him put through the particular job in hand. He is
-expected to attend their bees in return. The farmer’s wife, who earns a
-high seat in heaven if ever woman did, works for days beforehand, cooking
-for the ten or a dozen hungry men who will come down on her for dinner,
-supper and, perhaps, breakfast, with a night’s lodging thrown in.
-
-Mary Blake had made bread of the lightest and finest, had killed
-chickens, taken fish out of brine, and pork from the barrel; had made
-cakes and pies; had brought out pickles and preserves, and when I arrived
-she was creaming carrots and onions and boiling the inevitable potatoes.
-
-It was a cold, gray day, with the surface of the lake awash. As I
-splashed my way through the water, ankle-deep on the ice, I heard the
-saw, clear and high, like the note of a violin. There were ten men
-working at the bee. The little gasoline engine was drawn up on a bobsled
-at the kitchen door, and even as early as ten o’clock it had eaten out a
-big hole in the side of the stack of logs. William Foret and Jock
-McDougal were at the machine shoveling snow into the boiler, William in a
-bright blue jersey and with a squirrel skin cap set at an angle over his
-dark, eager face. Henry Blake was at the wheel, to take the sawed-off
-chunks from the feeders and throw them to the pile. The rhythm of his
-movements was exact. A reach toward the wheel, a heave, a toss over his
-shoulder to the ever-increasing pile of chunks and a return to the
-wheel—all this at the rate of a chunk every three seconds. This
-position, being the hardest work, is always taken by the host at a bee.
-
-Little John Beaulac, Tom Jackson and Uncle Dan Cassidy lifted the logs
-and carried them to the saw, where Black Jack held them against the
-blade. There were two or three extra men standing ready to take up the
-work when one or more should be exhausted.
-
-In the midst of the fray a sleigh was sighted, far out on the ice. It
-was bringing Jim McNally from far back of the mica mine. He had heard of
-the bee and had come, at a venture, for fear that Henry might be
-“shorthanded.” He brought a pail of fresh eggs for Mary Blake and a
-great sack of turnips. There was a mighty skurry and mystery about
-slipping a bag of salt fish under the seat of the sleigh, for him to find
-when he reached home.
-
-At half past eleven the men trooped in to dinner, with many facetious
-remarks about the strength of their appetites and the advisability of
-letting the dirtiest man wash first.
-
-After a very short smoke time they were at work again and I sat at the
-kitchen window, watching the saw bite through the big logs. The men’s
-rhythmic movements, the swift interplay of the bright colors of their
-jerseys, the long scream of the toothed blade, all lulled me to vacuity
-of mind. Long after dark, when I was back at home, I could hear the
-sound of the wheel coming across the lake. That song of the saw tells me
-just where the mill is working for the day. Going out on the porch I can
-tell whether the bee is at Blake’s, Drapeau’s, Foret’s or the mines.
-
-The Blakes are very up to date in their use of the gasoline engine. Many
-of the farmers still use the old treadmill, where four teams of horses
-walk round and round all day, turning the wheel. Invited to a bee at the
-Jacksons’, the other day, I took a camera along, for a picture of the old
-tread will soon be a treasured possession. The men had paused in their
-work in the kindest way to allow themselves to be “took.” I was walking,
-with great dignity, down the slippery hillside, when a treacherous bit of
-ice was my undoing. I fell and my demoralization was complete.
-
-Camera flew one way, walking staff another, arms and legs spread out to
-the four points of the compass, as I went shooting down that hill. When
-I had gathered my scattered members and my wits together, and was
-scrambling up with the foolish grin of the newly fallen, I looked
-appealingly at the sawing gang, expecting to hear the inevitable laugh.
-Not a face did I see. Every man’s back was turned. The picture was
-taken amid a sounding silence.
-
-Commenting on that display of good manners to Uncle Dan, I said
-fervently: “Never in my life did I see such perfect breeding. It is
-almost impossible to help laughing when anyone falls, but not one of
-those men smiled. I never expected such politeness.”
-
-Uncle Dan’s Irish eyes twinkled.
-
-“You’d ought to have heard what the b’ys said when you left,” he
-observed.
-
-Pondering that cryptic remark, I am inclined to think that it is just as
-well that I do not know all that is being said of me in the work gangs
-and around the kitchen fires of Many Islands.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XII
-
-
-HOW do we know when the turn of the year has come? The calendar gives
-March twenty-first as the official birthday of spring, but that has
-nothing to do with it. One February day will be all winter, hard frozen
-and dreary, and on the next, quite suddenly, through some spirit line of
-sense, a message will reach us that spring, her very self, is on the way.
-After that, no matter how many days of sleet and snow may follow, we know
-that for us the winter is past.
-
-So it was yesterday, here on the island. With a mind adjusted to the
-thought of weeks of snow and ice to come, I stepped out of doors and into
-the spring. The air was balmy as May, the sky a turquoise and the lake a
-pearl. The furry gray buds of the poplars had puffed out in the night.
-The three little fingers of the birches were swelling and lengthening.
-Suddenly my eyes were dazzled by a flash of bright blue light, and a
-magnificent jay darted through the air and perched on the bare branch of
-a basswood. After the small, drab-hued chickadees and nuthatches, that
-jay looked as large as an eagle. Then I looked at little Peter, and lo!
-he was turning brown. The white hairs of his winter coat were falling
-off, his spring jacket was showing through.
-
-The ground under the trees is dusted over with myriads of brown scales,
-chief among them the bird-shaped pods of the birches, that carry two wee
-seeds under their pinions. In the open the snow is gray with patches of
-briskly hopping snow fleas that move along over the meadows at a lively
-rate. The nature books tell me that these are insects that live in the
-mosses and lichens, and that they come out on warm days for exercise.
-They are exercising for dear life to-day.
-
-Here and there on the white carpet are the fairy writings left by the
-wind last night. It bent down the dry tips of the sedges, and traced
-circles, bows, triangles, mystic runes that look as though they meant
-great news, if one could only read them.
-
-But the snow still covers the ground. Rufus still tunnels under it,
-shaking the crust violently when he goes in for some hidden store of
-food. The rabbit roads, pressed hard by hundreds of small, skurrying
-feet, still run crisscross under the cedars, and the heavy woodsleds
-still travel down the middle of the lake, like giant caterpillars,
-crawling along.
-
- [Picture: The heavy woodsleds still travel down the lakes]
-
-Behind the opposite island the men are cutting ice. Uncle Dan stands at
-the side of a dark pool of open water, and works away with a saw as tall
-as himself. The rectangular blocks, two feet thick, slide up the
-inclined boards to the sleds and are driven off to the icehouses in
-preparation for the summer’s shipment of fish to the towns. They are
-beautiful, those blocks of ice, so clear and clean and blue.
-
-With the fine weather has come the news that the Rector of the English
-Church and Mrs. Rector are coming to the island for a visit. The island
-is in much excitement. Salt bacon and potatoes do not seem just the
-right fare to offer guests so important and who are coming from afar. My
-mind is set on chicken, and the word has gone forth round the lake that
-“the English minister is coming and the woman on the island wants a
-fowl.”
-
-Now, all our turkeys, ducks, and chickens are fattened for the fowl fair,
-held at Queensport in December, when the poultry dealers from Toronto and
-Montreal, and even from “The States,” go through the country buying up
-the stock. The greater part of the yearly income of some of us depends
-on the prices paid for the fowl. My only chance of having chickens
-through the winter was to engage a neighbor to save me a dozen young
-cockerels and to pay him for their feed, having them killed as needed. I
-had long ago eaten all these chickens and the prospect of getting any
-more was slight. Even Rose Beaulac, fertile in resource, could give me
-no hope.
-
-I never found the chicken, but I had a visit from Rose the day before the
-party. She told me that she had given John his gun and had sent him up
-Loon Bay to shoot me some grouse. Then the conversation languished.
-Rose is a very shy little woman; it took her nearly an hour to come to
-the real point of her call. She would not lay aside her coonskin coat,
-she would not remove her dingy tuque; there she sat, struggling with her
-errand.
-
-At last it came out:
-
-“Might she bring the baby to be christened when the Rector came?”
-
-Then for another half hour she rambled on about people who never had
-their babies christened and what a sin that was, and of those who never
-registered their children’s births, and how those children could never
-inherit property. Once in a while she said something about things “not
-being legal,” until I was quite bewildered and do not know to this day
-whether, in her opinion, the unbaptized or the unregistered infant is not
-legal. But the upshot of it all was that the youngest Beaulac was to be
-christened next day.
-
-The hour set for service was two o’clock, but such was Mrs. Beaulac’s
-determination not to be late that she and the baby’s eldest sister
-arrived at eleven. There was no sign of the father, John Beaulac. There
-I had made my mistake. I had let him know that a sponsor would be needed
-and that he was expected to stand. So when the godfather was demanded
-none could be found.
-
-“Where was John?”
-
-“Gone to Queensport with a load of wood.”
-
-“Andy Drapeau, the baby’s uncle?”
-
-“Gone to Glen Avon.”
-
-The other uncles were off hunting at Loon Lake; Louis, the eldest
-brother, had disappeared entirely. So when the time came for sponsors,
-the Rector’s wife and I had to stand, and for this poor baby, whose
-father owns not one rod of ground, and who is sheltered in a hovel built
-for the cattle, we gravely renounced “the vain pomp and glory of the
-world.” And because, in my hurry, I had forgotten to temper the water in
-the improvised font, the new little soldier and servant of Christ yelled
-valiantly when the ice water touched him.
-
-It was a scene I shall not forget: the cabin, with its bunk in one
-corner, its big stove at one end, the pots and pans on the wall behind
-it; the tools; the fishing tackle and the stores. The Rector, wearing
-white surplice and embroidered stole, stood in the center of the room
-beside the white-covered table that held the bowl of water and the Prayer
-Book.
-
-Old Mrs. Drapeau, the baby’s grandmother, had crept across the ice to
-witness the baptism, the first she had seen, she said, in twenty years.
-
-The meeting closed with tea and cake; then the christening party
-withdrew, the little new Christian sleeping peacefully in the wooden box
-in which his mother dragged him away over the ice.
-
-We three who were left settled to dinner and a long afternoon’s talk. At
-teatime the Rector observed that the Woodchuck School was a mere seven
-miles away, and that he might as well have a service there while he was
-so near. So we dashed away across the lake, used telephones freely to
-collect a congregation, opened the school house, and, by the light of two
-guttering candles, said our prayers, sang our hymns, and listened to a
-simple, direct, and practical sermon. Back across the ice I drove in the
-flare of the northern lights, that made the night almost as bright as
-day.
-
-The Rector is a young man and an energetic one—and he has need to be—for
-his parish covers much ground. It extends from the church at Queensport,
-out to Godfrey’s Mills, fifteen miles away to the south, and back to
-Fallen Timber, twelve miles to the north. Besides these three churches
-he has four or five irregular stations in the schoolhouses dotted about
-within the radius of his activities. On Sunday mornings he teaches the
-Sunday school at Queensport and holds service there; in the afternoon he
-drives to the Mills, and has Sunday school and Evening Prayer, at night
-there is service at Fallen Timber. Up and down the roads he drives, day
-after day, visiting the sick, baptizing the children, burying the dead.
-He consoles, admonishes, encourages; he reproves our negligences, bears
-with our foolishnesses, and somehow contrives to have patience with our
-ignorance.
-
-Being a churchman to whom the decency and orthodoxy of services are dear,
-it is hard for him to excuse our lax ways. It gives him genuine distress
-when we know no better than to drape our flags over the cross, and his
-face is set against the to us very pleasing decoration furnished by house
-plants growing in tin cans and set upon the altar. When he marches up
-the aisle and removes these attempts at ornament, replaces the vases and
-the cross where they belong, we say nothing. It is evident that we have
-made a mistake in our zeal. We don’t try that again, but something else
-that proves just as reprehensible. But we are learning—the Rector sees
-to that. If only the Bishop will let him stay, we shall be good
-churchmen after awhile. But we say proudly and sorrowfully: “He’s too
-good for a small parish like this. He’ll be moved to the city soon.”
-
-The only way the Rector spares himself is in the matter of writing
-sermons. He confessed to me that he did not write three new ones a week,
-but preached the same one at all three churches, thereby reserving, I
-suppose, a few hours for sleep.
-
-And with all this unceasing effort—and the clergy of all denominations
-work just as hard—there are families living here round Many Islands that
-have never entered a church. They are as veritable heathen as any on the
-far frontier. There was a death at a farm on the road to Loon Lake
-station last week. The body was put into a rough box, thrust into a
-shallow grave, and the work of the farm went straight on. And the
-English rector, the Roman Catholic priest, the Methodist preacher and the
-Presbyterian minister all live within a radius of twenty miles.
-
-Strange country, so civilized and so primitive, so close to cities and so
-inaccessible. Strange people, at once so old and so young, so instructed
-in vice and sorrow, and so ignorant of the simplest teachings of life.
-Grown men and women in body but children in mind, with children’s virtues
-and with adults’ sins.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIII
-
-
-SINCE the first of December we have not seen the ground—only a great
-field of white so dazzling that one understands the Indian’s name for the
-March moon. Verily, my own eyes tell me why it is the Moon of
-Snowblindness.
-
-The ice is still thick and clear, but the sun on its surface and the
-moving water beneath are both wearing it away, slowly, surely. There are
-clear pools on the lake at noon, and then the crows come down and drink,
-marching to and fro, like files of small, black-clad soldiers. They
-meet, and bow politely, speak to each other singly or in groups, then
-line up and off they go with hoarse caws. They look so important that
-they might be plotting all sorts of villainies.
-
-“Look out fer yerself,” laughs Uncle Dan. “I’ll put the curse of the
-crows on yer.”
-
-A dire threat! What use to break one’s back planting the corn if one’s
-evilly disposed neighbor can call winged battalions of those black
-thieves to undo all a man’s work and bring him to penury?
-
-The snow is still thick in the woods, but on the hilltops and in the
-open, bare patches of earth are beginning to show. Peter’s coat matches
-the ground exactly, being a sharply mottled brown and white. Indeed, he
-never did turn entirely white, like the wild hares in the woods. Even
-when his fur was its snowiest there was always a brown, diamond-shaped
-patch on his forehead, and, so far as I know, he was the only hare so
-decorated. No matter how far from home he strayed, I could always
-recognize him by his brown brand.
-
-This simple life has its inconveniences. I was eating a belated
-breakfast the other morning, when bells on the lake and later a sleigh at
-the door announced a visitor. It was a perfectly unknown man who
-informed me that he had been sent by Mrs. Swanson to bring me to her
-house to spend the day. He had to wait outside, in the piercing wind,
-until a hasty glance round the combined sleeping, cooking, and reception
-room reassured me as to its condition for the entrance of a stranger.
-Then he sat beside the stove, pipe in hand, and inspected me gravely
-while I prepared for the long drive down the lake.
-
-The day was bright and blue and snapping cold. A point of light flashed
-from every facet of the roughened ice. The horse was fresh, the wind at
-our backs, and we fairly flew past Jackson’s, over the bare roads and out
-again on beautiful Blue Bay, lying like a sapphire in its setting of
-silvered shores.
-
-The pony was a broncho, my companion told me, calling my attention to a
-brand to prove it. He was all that, and a tree-climbing broncho to boot,
-for soon we came to a perpendicular bank as high as the side of a barn,
-and I was given to understand that the pony was going to clamber straight
-up, with the sleigh dangling at his heels. I left the vehicle and
-scrambled up on my own feet, but the animal went up the side of that hill
-like a cat at a wall, and without one second’s hesitation.
-
-Arrived at the house I inquired of my hostess if my escort was her son.
-
-“Oh, no,” she answered. “It was only Clarence Nutting, the hired man.”
-
-Evidently, “hired man” means something very different here from what it
-has hitherto meant to me. It means friend, protector, helper, and member
-of the family. Mrs. Swanson, Susie Dove, the hired girl, Clarence
-Nutting, and I all dined together; after dinner we played dominoes. When
-Clarence brought in the fresh eggs from the barn he suggested: “Better
-give Miss X some to take home with her.” Later he invited me to come
-back, and soon, to spend several days.
-
-Through the long, sunny afternoon, we sat round the stove in the pleasant
-best room, with its well-starched lace curtains, each with a bunch of
-artificial roses sewed on its folds, its oak sideboard decorated with
-rose-bordered crêpe paper napkins, its crayon portraits and wonderful,
-hand-made hooked rugs. We women had our crocheting, but little Susie sat
-very upright, her small, work-roughened hands clasped on her
-plaid-covered knees, her toes, in their shiny best shoes, just reaching
-the floor, while Clarence played for us on his new graphophone.
-
-Clarence, in his high boots, patched trousers, and flannel shirt, handled
-his music box with the tenderness of a lover. He dusted each record
-after using it, as carefully as a mother powders a baby. As he played
-tune after tune, I saw in that instrument, God knows what of pleasures
-foregone, and temptations put aside while he saved out of his meager
-wages the price of that graphophone. He had discovered a way to use the
-thorns from a hawthorn tree instead of wooden needles. They gave a very
-soft and lovely tone. His records were the usual collection sold with
-the machine—a few dances, a few Negro dialects and songs, some good
-marches and some hymns. After nearly a year of hearing no tunes at all,
-I enjoyed them, every one. When the concert was over, Clarence played:
-“God be with you till we meet again.”
-
-After tea came the sleigh and we drove home to the island, this time in a
-blinding snowstorm. Conversation was not so lively as in the morning. I
-was thinking of all the evidences I see here of man’s unquenchable thirst
-for beauty and music and the pleasant things of life, that not the most
-incessant toil nor hardest privation can ever wholly destroy. I was
-remembering how I had gone over to the Blakes’ to use the telephone one
-afternoon and had had to wait for an hour because Clarence Nutting’s new
-instrument had come, and all the receivers on the line were down while he
-played it for the neighborhood. I thought of poor Harry Spriggins’s
-delight in a magazine, of Mary Blake’s habit of keeping a glass of fresh
-flowers in the center of her table, of the time when Mrs. Drapeau, having
-no white tablecloth, had spread a clean sheet over her table for company,
-and of the Beaulacs’ joy in the blossoming of their lilac bush.
-
-Then I began dreaming of a big, comfortable shack somewhere on the shore,
-to which the people could come, as to a common meeting ground, social
-differences and local feuds forgotten. I saw it furnished with a
-cupboard full of cups and plates, a piano or victrola. There should be a
-circulating library there and games, I decided, and I saw the boys and
-girls dancing, singing, cooking popcorn, candy and fudge, in the
-evenings. I imagined a group of women drinking tea and sewing while
-“teacher” played.
-
-A few days later I went with the Rector and Mrs. Rector to drink tea with
-the wife of the owner of a big lumber mill, and there I saw what one
-woman has done amid just such conditions as are here at Many Islands.
-
-There were the pretty little church, the parish house, the Sunday school
-room, all built by Mrs. Baring, and I heard of the reading circles, the
-concerts, the cooking classes that she has organized for the people among
-whom she has had to live.
-
-There too I saw the Canadian mother in war times and marveled at her.
-Mrs. Baring has sent the light of her eyes, the pride of her heart, the
-son who was winning honors at his university and had a great future
-before him, overseas to the trenches. I saw picture after picture of
-him—Harold as a baby, as a child, as a boy, as a man. He was shown in
-his little knickers, his first long trousers, his khaki.
-
-“Yes, he is in France now, but of course we do not know where,” the
-mother said. “I send him two pairs of socks, some handkerchiefs and
-shirts every week. The boys like that better than one large box
-occasionally—they lose their clothes so. We hope that things reach him,
-but we do not know. We have not heard from him for two months now.”
-
-All this without a tremor of the firm lips, with not the shadow of a
-cloud over the serene blue eyes.
-
-The Rector told me afterward that not once has that mother alluded to the
-possibility of her son’s return. She gave her supreme gift without hope
-of any reward. Withal her interest in affairs is as keen, her charities
-as wide, her hospitality as gracious, as though she had never a care in
-the world and her boy were safe at her side.
-
-After supper we climbed over the slippery hillside to the church for
-Evensong. Our hostess sat at the organ at the side of the chancel and in
-full view of the congregation. During the service I watched her calm,
-clear profile. She went through the intolerably pathetic petitions of
-the Litany without wavering, as we prayed for those who are fighting by
-land and sea and air; for the prisoners, the wounded and the dying, and
-her sweet, steady voice led our responses. Only once did I see her
-falter. It was during the singing of the hymn. Her pretty ringed
-fingers went on pressing the keys; she played, but she could not sing.
-
- “The Son of God goes forth to war,
- A kingly crown to gain,
- His blood-red banner streams afar,
- Who follows in his train?”
-
-Her eyes looked past us, straight across the world. Her lips were parted
-in a smile sadder than tears. She was shedding her heart’s blood, drop
-by drop, for the safety of the empire.
-
-We do not talk much about the Great War here at Many Islands. Indeed, it
-is only when I go to the towns that I realize that Canada is at war.
-Once in a while one of our boys speaks of going to the front, and only
-the other day Andy Drapeau was saying, “Ef it comes to drafting, I’ll
-volunteer. I’ll fight of me own free will. No man shall make me go.”
-
-But at that, Andy was merely talking. He had no idea of enlisting.
-
-No, as always, it is the men of the cities who will go first, and the
-reason is not far to seek. It lies in the fact that the bucolic mind is
-almost totally devoid of imagination—it cannot picture what it has never
-seen. It can form no vision of an empire. It can think of this county
-as part of the Province and the Province as part of the Dominion, but of
-Canada as part of a great federation it cannot conceive—the thought is
-too big. Our vision is bounded by the limits of our own experience. We
-know that Britain, France, and Russia are fighting Germany and Austria,
-but the fields of Europe lie very far away, while our own fields are very
-near.
-
-We all know Germans. We have worked beside them in the hayfields and the
-mines. They seem good fellows enough, not companionable because they
-speak an outlandish sort of lingo that we doubt their being able to
-understand themselves. But why should we fight them? Of the Hun we can
-form no idea, thank God. He is outside our experience.
-
-We have a patriotism, but it is local, parochial. If this war were a
-baseball game between the rival teams of Sark and Fallen Timber, we could
-understand it fast enough. We would “root” for our side and, if need be,
-fight for it. But the far-off struggle of nation with nation leaves us
-cold. We cannot picture it.
-
-But when the first wounded came back from the trenches, and when the
-stories of Saint Julien and Festhubert were told at the firesides, then
-went the men of rural Canada forward gladly to fill the places of those
-heroes whose deaths are Canada’s undying glory.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIV
-
-
-APPROPRIATELY enough, on this first day of the calendar spring, I am
-warned that the ice is unsafe and that I must stay on the island until
-the lake is open water. The natives still venture out, but they know the
-look of the thin spots and even they are very cautious. Two men started
-over from mainland this morning, axes on shoulder, hounds at heel, but
-they turned back at the shore, and the dogs, after stepping daintily on
-the dark, spongy crust, turned back also. The middle of the lake is
-still hard, but there are ditches of water round the edges of the land.
-The ice has heaved up into long fissures stretching away from the points,
-the clear green water showing between their open sides, and from this
-island to the Blakes’ point there is a great crevasse.
-
-Mary declares that she has known Henry to start off in a sleigh over the
-lake when the ice was only three inches thick; when he had to drive fast
-to keep from breaking in and when the water spurted up from the holes
-made by the horse’s hoofs. But Henry was going for the mail, and when he
-has been deprived of news for two or three weeks, the papers become
-things to risk one’s life for—which is proof that Henry will never be a
-true Many Islander. The rest of us are quite willing to wait until
-spring, if need be.
-
-So I am “denned in” once more, and before I am free all sorts of things
-will have happened. There will be hundreds of little new calves and
-lambs lying beside their mothers in the meadows, and scores of
-thin-legged colts running beside the mares in the pastures. I shall also
-be shut in when the sap buckets hang in the “sugar bush” and the great
-black kettles steam over the fires in the dooryards, and I can only hope
-that some of my friends will remember to put my name in the pot, and to
-save me some syrup and some maple sugar.
-
-Forced to take my exercise on the island, I find new things everywhere,
-as I tramp round and round the trails. The snow under the evergreens is
-covered with last year’s dry needles; the hemlocks, pines and cedars are
-putting on their new, bright green fringes. Under the rotting leaves,
-innumerable little new plants are pushing up, princess fern, wild
-strawberry, Canada mayflower, and countless other small weeds and herbs,
-whose names I do not know. When the leaves and needles are raked away
-each stalk is seen standing in a tiny pool of clear ice.
-
-The spring peepers are whistling in the lowlands, the hylodes blows his
-little bagpipe, away in the wood the grouse is “beating his throbbing
-drum”—no other description fits that thrilling sound—and the first
-honeybees are buzzing out from a clump of birches and winging away over
-the lake. Underneath all the other spring sounds is the measured
-“tonk-tonk” of the air escaping through the holes in the ice, and the
-thin, silver sound of trickling streams.
-
-The red-headed woodpecker is here, his crown a spot of splendid crimson
-against the snow. “Ker-r-ruck, ker-r-ruck,” he cries as he darts from
-tree to tree, his white tail coverts flashing in the sunlight.
-
-There has been a deer on the island. Through my dreams one night I heard
-sounds of a great commotion, the cries of dogs, the crashing of animals
-through the underbrush. In the morning, not ten paces from the kitchen
-door, the snow was all trampled, soiled and covered with bunches of long
-brown hair. Evidently, the place was the scene of the poor animal’s
-agony, for those hairs were soaked with blood.
-
-I grieved, for I have liked to think that the island was a place of
-refuge for all hunted things—at least for this one year. But if the dogs
-had dragged down the deer and killed him, what had become of the carcass?
-I wondered. They could not have eaten it so clean that no trace of skin
-or bones remained. I pondered this as I followed the deer’s small,
-shapely hoof-prints from the shore and up over the hill and through the
-bushes all hung with bunches of tell-tale brown hair. I traced the dogs’
-tracks also, as they crossed and recrossed the trail, and following them
-came to an old mica pit, hidden far back among the cedars a gash in the
-hillside, ten or twelve feet deep and four or five yards long, ringed
-round with bushes and with a young birch growing in its depths. Indeed,
-I fell headlong into that hidden pitfall, and had time to hope, as I went
-down, scrambling over the edge and clutching at branches, that I was not
-going to land full on a wounded deer.
-
-All tracks stopped at this pit, and the mystery remained a mystery until
-late in the spring, when it leaked out that Andy and George Drapeau had
-heard the cries of the hounds, had watched their chance, had come over,
-dragged off the dogs, and skinned and carried away the deer.
-
-Now the season for hunting deer lasts from November first to November
-fifteenth. Only one deer may be shot by each hunter. No hounds may be
-allowed to run at large during the closed season and any dog found
-running a deer may be shot on sight, and the person shooting this dog may
-not be prosecuted. Thus the month of March is not the time for fresh
-venison. Venison out of season is “mountain goat,” to be eaten privately
-and without boastfulness. Nor is it safe to display a deer’s spring
-coat. But if the Drapeaus had left me that hide, would I have informed
-on their dogs? I wonder.
-
-My own stupidity robbed me of the only other deerskin rug that I might
-have had. Little John Beaulac offered me a beautiful—and seasonable—one
-which I bought and sent to the squaw at Maskinonge for tanning. Some
-weeks later I mentioned my good fortune to William Foret.
-
-“Are you having the hair left on?” he asked.
-
-“Hair left on!” I echoed. “Of course. I never heard of having the hair
-taken off. I want the skin for a rug.”
-
-“Well, you’d ought to have said so,” said William. “Mostly they tans
-them for leather round here. They makes fine moccasins and mittens.”
-
-Sure enough, that Indian woman had patiently scraped off all the hair and
-I received a superfine piece of buckskin, which was presented to Little
-John, I having no use in the world for moccasins or mittens when I should
-return to the city.
-
-The Drapeaus live on a long peninsula to the west of this island and half
-a mile away. From this dock I see their barns in silhouette against the
-sunsets. Their land rises in fold on fold of meadow, with here and there
-a clump of cedars or maples, then a soft slope and slanting cornfield.
-Their house is the typical Canadian log shack, a building about sixteen
-by twenty feet, divided by a board partition into a kitchen and a tiny
-bedroom. A trap door opens into the cellar; a ladder leads up to the
-loft where the boys sleep. There is a shed, built at right angles to the
-south wall, and here Mrs. Drapeau keeps her washtub, churn, and milk
-separator. The place is always crowded with lounging men; the dogs are
-everywhere under foot, and the air is thick with the smoke from many old
-pipes.
-
- [Picture: “The Drapeaus live on a long peninsula to the west of this
- Island”]
-
-Herring nets hang from the rafters, harness on the walls; drying skins
-are stretched across the uprights. In the muskrat season dozens of
-furry, brown rats are nailed, by their tails, to the outside walls, and
-inside the house great pails of bloody water, piles of raw skins, and
-heaps of rats fill the small room.
-
-The Drapeaus believe in the division of labor, and the work of the family
-seems portioned out in a thoroughly satisfactory way. Andy, the eldest
-son, is the farmer, Lewis the hunter and George the fisherman.
-
-Mrs. Drapeau, though not an old woman, goes back to the early days of the
-settlement and knows all the hardships of pioneer life.
-
-“I mind the time,” she says, “when this land was all wilderness and when
-the bears and the wildcats come up to the very door. Once I seen four
-bear start over across the lake from Blake’s point to your island. They
-swum across the narrows, the old he-bear in the lead, the biggest of the
-young next, then the little cub and the mother behind. Me an’ the boys
-was in the boat—we had been a berryin’—and when the boys seen them bear
-they went wild. They rowed up along the island after them, but they
-couldn’t go fast enough with me in the boat, so they landed me and rowed
-along to head off the bear, an’ blest if they didn’t turn ’em right back
-along the shore to where I was a sittin’. I was right in their tracks.
-
-“‘You come back here an’ git me,’ I yelled, ‘an’ don’t you do another
-trick like that agin, the longest day you live.’
-
-“There was I a-hollerin’ an’ the boys a-laughin’ an’ the bear a comin’.
-Why, I might ’a’ been kilt.”
-
-“What became of them?” I asked.
-
-“The bears? Oh! they got away. What with me a-screechin’ an’ the boys a
-shootin’ they was so scared that they climbed off the far side of the
-island, an’ the last we saw of them they was over to Henderson’s Bay,
-their heads just out of water.”
-
-Mrs. Drapeau tells of the day when she and her husband came over to their
-farm in a little flat-bottomed punt, a calf, the beginning of their herd,
-tied foot to foot and bellowing in the stern. It was a hard fight to
-clear the land and bring it to some sort of cultivation, and in a few
-years Drapeau was killed in a lumber camp, leaving her with four young
-children to feed. She describes the long winter nights when she spun,
-carded, and wove the cloth that kept their shivering little bodies
-covered against the bitter cold, of the backbreaking days in the fields
-when she hoed the potatoes and planted the corn, that there might be food
-for the hungry mouths, and of the long months when she worked at the
-miners’ boarding house, cooking and washing for a score of men.
-
-“I never could have done it if it hadn’t been for my neighbors,” she
-said. “They was awful good to me. The men cut my wood every winter as
-come an’ ketched me my fish until the boys was big enough to work. Eh!
-but I did have the hardest time the year my man died. Scarce was he laid
-in the ground when the two biggest boys come back from the school at Loon
-Lake with the smallpox. George and Andy had it and they had it fearful
-bad. I thought sure the other two would have it too. The health doctor
-come up all the way from Queensport an’ nailed a notice on my door,
-tellin’ the neighbors to keep away, and he forbid me to cross the lake,
-on fifty dollars fine. So there I was, the ice just breakin’ and me shut
-in with my children that was a dyin’, as you might say. I didn’t want to
-go to no one’s house, nor to have them come to mine, but I had little or
-nothin’ to eat on the place, and I feared lest my children should starve.
-
-“But I done the best I could, and one day, when the ice was all broke, I
-heard Bill Shelly, the frogger, passin’ in a boat. I hollered to him the
-fix I was in and told him to fetch me some goods from the store an’ to
-tell my father how we was shut in. Bill brung me the goods and we got
-along some way, and when all was over an’ the boys was well, here comes
-Robinson, the health doctor, to ask how we was all gettin’ along. He
-stood off, twenty paces from the door with his white handkerchief to his
-face. I was minded to set the dogs on him.
-
-“‘Why don’t you come in?’ I says, ‘All’s safe now. You needn’t to be
-afraid. You shut me in here, with my dyin’ children, and not you ner no
-one else come anear me, not even to the shore, to ask did I have so much
-as a hundred of flour to keep us alive. How did you know we wasn’t all
-starved together? Get you off this land,’ I says, ‘fer you haven’t got
-the grace of God in yer heart.’ He got off and I ain’t seen him since,
-but I ain’t never fergot him.”
-
-All this she tells me, sitting before the fire, her gray woolen petticoat
-turned back over her knees, a black three-cornered shawl laid over her
-head and pinned firmly under her pointed chin, She was a beauty once.
-She is a pretty old woman still, with her flashing black eyes and silver
-hair. Even now, at sixty odd, she milks seven cows, makes all the butter
-and cheese, cares for the hens, the turkeys and the pigs, works a small
-garden, cooks for the boys, nurses them when they fall ill, and finds
-time to make wonderful patchwork quilts. Mrs. Drapeau can tell the names
-of all the quilt patterns known to Canada.
-
-I love these patchwork quilts. They speak of thrift and industry and
-patience, and of the leisure of a life in which small bits of cloth are
-of more value than the time it takes to stitch them together. Who in the
-cities has time nowadays to sit and make a patchwork quilt? They bring
-up pictures of bedfuls of little children, sleeping snug and warm under
-mother’s handiwork, and of contented women sewing in the firelight.
-
-Their names are poetry—woman’s poetry. The Log Cabin stands for home,
-the Churn Dasher is food, the Maple Leaf means Canada. The Road to
-Dublin, and the Irish Chain speak of the homesick Irish heart, but I like
-to imagine that the Prairie Rose was named by some happy woman who loved
-the wide and blossoming fields of this new land.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XV
-
-
-GOOD FRIDAY, a heavy fall of snow and winter come again. The ground is
-white, the sky dull gray, the lake a dark, bluish green flecked with
-windrows of snow. It is more than a week since I have walked on the ice.
-It bids fair to be two weeks before I can cross in a boat. At this rate
-the ice will never break—I had to chop out the water hole again this
-morning. This waiting for the ice to go out is like waiting for a child
-to be born, and it seems almost as solemn. It induces a calm,
-philosophic, not to say fatalistic, viewpoint. You can’t hurry it, you
-can’t stop it, you can’t do anything at all about it. You can only wait.
-
-Again, as in the fall when the ice was forming, there is that strange
-blanket of silence over the island. There’s not a rustle in the dry
-leaves, not a bird’s voice, not even the scraping of a hanging bough.
-The ice field is growing darker, wetter, and cracking into long lines
-that form geometric figures—squares, triangles, trapezoids—until the
-lake’s surface looks like a gigantic spider’s web. For movement there is
-only the water along the shores, creeping up over the stones.
-
-The evening was cold and gray, with a rising wind that whistled up the
-rain. In the night came both the former and the latter rains and all
-other rains between; then Easter Day, warm and blue and beautiful. As
-the Easter lesson sank into my heart, along with the still beauty of sky
-and sun and waking life, the first butterfly, emblem of the resurrection,
-came forth from his winter sleeping place and fluttered to and fro among
-the yellow tassels of the birches.
-
-The years remaining may be many or few for me, but to life’s end I shall
-hope to keep some measure of the joy of that one Easter day. I pray that
-I may always remember the tender blue of the arching sky, the white of
-the wisps of floating cloud, the gray purple of the spring haze lying
-over the forests; its silence and its peace. Looking out over the
-breaking ice, I remembered the story of two boys who lost their lives in
-the lake only last summer. They were forlorn little fellows, held in
-bondage by a stupid, tyrannical father. They had never seen anything
-that boys love—neither a circus, nor a picture, nor had ever heard a
-band. They had never been allowed to go even to Frontenac, the county
-seat, ten miles away. All they knew about was work and heavy sleep and
-now and then a beating. But they were boys after all, and one bright day
-they slipped away from the harvest field and went to the lake to go
-afishing. Hearing footsteps and fearing their father’s anger, they tried
-to escape it. The younger boy jumped into a rotting punt at the shore
-and pushed off on the water. The elder hid behind a rock.
-
-Out on the lake the old punt filled and began to sink. The little
-fellow, seeing that he was going down and knowing that he could not swim,
-called out:
-
-“Good-by, Charley; Good-by, good-by,” his piping child’s voice sang over
-the water.
-
-The elder boy heard him and plunged in to his aid. Both went down, and
-when, at last, the grappling hooks brought up the bodies, the brothers
-were locked in one another’s arms.
-
-A commonplace story, isn’t it? Such accidents happen almost every
-day—somewhere. There’s nothing at all in it but childish joy in freedom,
-dread of punishment, terror, then love and sacrifice, and, crowning all,
-heroic death. I think of them not as “saints in glory” but as happy
-youngsters, trudging, hand in hand the streets of the Eternal City;
-seeing, hearing, tasting all the joys that life denied them here.
-
-Resigned to the thought of days and weeks of solitude, I was surprised by
-the sound of a long halloo coming from the direction of Blake’s Point.
-
-It was Henry, standing on the extreme end of his land and calling over to
-me. His was the first voice I had heard for days.
-
-“Come down to your point,” he yelled.
-
-Scrambling through the underbrush, sliding from rock to rock, plowing
-through bogs, wading through patches of snow, I reached the shore, to see
-Jimmie Dodd, trotting cautiously across the ice dragging his little
-hand-sled, while Henry directed his way from the point. The sled held
-loaves of bread, a pat of fresh butter—a great bag of mail and a box of
-candy and fruit—the Easter greeting from home. The water was flowing all
-round the shore; Jimmie could not come within many feet of the island,
-but I waded out on the shelving sand and Jimmie crept as near the edge of
-the ice as he dared and tossed the bags to me across the open water.
-Then he trotted back again to the farm and I returned to the house to
-enjoy my feast alone.
-
-Day followed day, slipping by swiftly, silently. The first phœbe has
-come back and is twitching his tail and screaming his “Phœbe, phœbe,
-phœbe,” all day long.
-
-Across the sky, in V-shaped wedges, the geese are flying over. From ever
-so far I can hear their “honk-honk,” telling me why the April moon is the
-Goose moon.
-
-The woodchuck, that lives in a hole by the sundial, comes out and waddles
-slowly down to the lake’s edge to dip his black muzzle in the water. He
-turns his rat’s face up to the sky, glancing hurriedly from side to side,
-his little pig eyes rolling, the white ring of hairs surrounding his
-snout standing like a ruff. He is so fat that his short legs hardly lift
-his red-brown breast off the ground, and his bushy tail drags as he goes.
-He walks with a rolling waddle, like a bear. His gray-brown coat is dry
-and dusty.
-
-There are hundreds of wide-open clam shells lying on the sand under the
-water, pearl side up. They are the shape and almost the size of the
-soles of a pair of baby’s shoes. When I turned over the skiff, that has
-lain on the shore all winter, there was a muskrat’s nest under it. The
-animal had scooped out a hole in the beach, and a pile of clam shells
-showed that he had feasted well.
-
-But though all these other small animals are coming out, I am forlorn,
-for Peter, the rabbit, has disappeared! Up and down the island I have
-gone, calling him, but he does not come hopping to my feet. No one will
-acknowledge having shot him; indeed, it would be a hard-hearted hunter
-that would kill so gentle and so trusting a creature. So either the
-hounds got him or he felt the call of the spring and wandered away to the
-woods full of fresh green. I prefer to think he did that, but I miss him
-cruelly.
-
-Here, as in Kipling’s Jungle, spring is the time of new smells. All
-winter there were some good smells—the odor of far-off forest fires; the
-fragrance of fresh-cut logs; the not unpleasing, pungent scent of Blake’s
-cow stable, that came over the ice to me on the crisp, frosty air, but
-now there is a very riot of perfume. The rotting leaves, the barks of
-trees, the swamps and even the rocks themselves, give forth an incense.
-The poplars and the birches shake out sweetness from their waving
-tassels, the new green fringes of the evergreens are fragrant, soon will
-come the odors from wild cherry, basswood, and wild grape in flower, and
-the scents of the new ferns, and then I shall go quite wild with delight
-and shall long to shout my joy to heaven, as Rufus, the red squirrel, is
-doing now. Far out on a birch limb, in the sun, he is clucking and
-chirping away, his plumy tail waving, his whole little tense,
-rust-colored body jerking as he gives tongue to his spring ecstasy.
-
-Rufus is not always so harmlessly employed. He and the phœbes wage
-perpetual war over a nestful of eggs under the eaves. One or other of
-the small householders must stand ever on guard against the red robber
-that goes like a flash along the beam. What fluttering of wings, what
-scampering of tiny feet, what chattering there is! But the birds will
-win, they put the squirrel to flight every time.
-
-Once again I heard a call from Blake’s point. This time it was Mary, out
-looking for new-born lambs. Her voice, borne on the wet wind, came clear
-over the water between us:
-
-“How are you getting along?”
-
-“Oh, not too bad,” I shouted in the vernacular.
-
-“We think the ice will go out this week.”
-
-“Never,” I screamed. “At this rate it will last until June.”
-
-“Well, I don’t think it. We tried to get over to Jackson’s yesterday,
-and the middle of the lake was opening so fast we could not make it.”
-
-“I’ll go to the shore every day at noon, and let you see that I am
-alive,” I promised.
-
-“All right,” she answered. “Hang out a white cloth if there’s anything
-really wrong, and we’ll try to get over to you somehow.”
-
-And away went Mary, a lamb in her arms, the ewe bleating at her heels.
-
-Then came a day of warm rain, followed by a high wind from the south,
-that drove the breaking ice before it and piled great masses of
-glistening white fragments on all the beaches. And, sure enough, on the
-next Sunday, the eleventh, Henry Blake and Jimmie Dodd came across in a
-boat, the first I had seen in the water for four months.
-
-That morning, when I looked out, instead of the solid floor of ice that I
-had seen so long, there was a great stretch of dark and tumbling water,
-over which two white gulls wheeled and dipped. For an instant I was
-startled. I felt as though the island had somehow slipped its moorings
-and was being washed away. Then I realized that the ice was gone and, so
-far as I am concerned, gone forever, and that the winter, with its bitter
-nights, its long quiet days, its flash of sunlight on silver surfaces,
-became as the memory of a dream.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XVI
-
-
-WHAT is the first wild flower of the spring? Each of us has his own
-first flower. It varies with the locality and the special season. Here
-it was the hepatica, that lifted its little faintly blushing face from
-the edge of a patch of melting snow. I plucked it, remembering the words
-of Old Kate, at Les Rapides: “Ef you pluck yer first flower and kill yer
-first snake, you’ll prevail over yer enemies for the comin’ year.”
-
-I did not trouble her poor mind by inquiring: “What if your enemy is also
-plucking his first flower and killing his first snake. Who, then, would
-prevail?”
-
-I know of no enemy, but I gathered the hepatica. Whether I shall kill
-the snake remains a matter of doubt. If it is old Josephine, who will
-soon be sunning herself on a flat rock at the bathing beach, I will not.
-That snake has been a friend of mine too long.
-
-After the hepatica came the dicentra cucularia, or Dutchman’s breeches—a
-wide patch of them, nodding from a shaded ledge of rock, and then the
-trillium, lifting its white chalices by thousands through the woods. If
-Saint Patrick had known the trillium, I cannot think that he would ever
-have chosen the shamrock as his emblem of the Trinity. The
-golden-throated flower rises three-petaled from a cup of three green
-sepals. Below this is an inch or so of thick, green stem and below that
-the leaves, three in a whorl. So three and three and three says the
-plant with every part of its being.
-
-The air is full of the spring songs of birds and the dry whir of
-innumerable wings. A colony of gold finches moved in last night, and
-they are singing like hundreds of canaries in the cedars. “Konker-ree,”
-call the redwings over in the meadow. “Purity-purity,” sings the
-bluebird, and “Quick-quick-quick,” snaps the flicker. Busy brown
-sparrows slip through the dry leaves. On an oak tree the woodpecker is
-playing his xylophone, sounding a different note on each branch that he
-strikes with his little red hammer.
-
-From the drowned lands come the boom of the frogs and the rattling signal
-of the kingfisher, and to-day—the seventeenth of April—I heard the first
-call of the returning loons. The water is very still, with schools of
-pin-long striped fishes swimming in the sunny shallows.
-
-The leaves came out in a night. One evening there was only a purple haze
-over the bare twigs, and the next day the swollen buds had burst out into
-a very vehemence of leafage, and all the woods were green. The fields on
-the mainland also turned green that day, and on the island the wild
-cherry blossoms opened in drifts of white, that loaded all the branches.
-
-With all this newness out of doors, the thought of fresh foods possessed
-me and I started forth on a foraging expedition, to find out whether the
-hens had waked to their duty, and whether the cows were ready to give
-milk again. Verily I was aweary of tinned milk, stored eggs, and packed
-foods of all varieties. So I took the skiff and started for the
-Jacksons’.
-
-The Jackson farmhouse stands on a high hill, commanding the lake. From
-her kitchen door Anna Jackson can see every boat that passes. Therefore,
-long before one comes to shore, she is ready, wearing a frilled tea apron
-and a welcoming smile, when the panting visitor comes toiling up the
-steep slope from the landing. To-day the winds were contrary and I took
-her unaware, by creeping along the shore in the lee, and Anna, in her
-work dress, was digging stones out of the garden.
-
-Grandma Jackson was knitting beside the stove in the sunny kitchen. A
-peddler, a low voiced, dark-eyed young Jew, sat in the corner. At my
-entrance he began unpacking his big oilcloth-covered case, drawing out
-aprons, handkerchiefs, shirtwaists, stockings, until the floor was strewn
-with its contents. Every article that one could name seemed stowed away
-in that great pack—enough to have stocked a small department store. When
-all had been displayed he began putting them away again.
-
-“That’s all what I got,” he said with a patient smile. Presently he
-shouldered his load and walked away, bending under its weight. We heard
-him coughing as he passed through the gate.
-
-These peddlers begin their travels with the spring, being heralded by the
-telephones all along the line. It seems impossible that they should make
-a living, but I suppose they do, for, after being shut in for a long
-winter, few women can resist buying a ribbon or some lace when it is
-brought to the very door.
-
-“That feller won’t sleep at Joshua White’s to-night,” quoth Grandma
-Jackson, watching the stooping figure out of sight. “All tramps and
-peddlers and such like always put up at Joshua’s. He’d give them all a
-supper and a bed.”
-
-But Joshua White died yesterday, and his house was the “wake house” now,
-for they still have wakes in this country—when the neighbors gather to
-condole with the bereaved, extol the virtues of the deceased, and partake
-of supper at midnight, when the whisky and the clay pipes are passed
-around. In this case there would be no difficulty about praising the
-dead man. Joshua White was a man of good standing, and wide charity, a
-good neighbor and a kind friend. The community mourned his loss.
-
-“Joshua was an awful proud man too,” said Grandma. “Do you think that he
-would ever carry a handkerchief with a colored border? Well, I guess
-not.”
-
-At that moment the telephone bell rang.
-
-“Gran,” said Anna, after a moment’s conversation, “Mary wants to know the
-age of Alec’s eldest boy. Can you tell her?”
-
-“I dunno,” answered Mrs. Jackson. “Let me see. No, I can’t remember.
-Ask Mary haven’t they got some old horse or cow that they can reckon by?
-There’s always some old critter on every farm that they counts the young
-ones’ ages by. Alec’s Charley was born the spring they bought old Nance.
-They must know how old she is.”
-
-Just then the three Jackson children came in from school, with their bags
-of books and little tin dinner pails. There was no running or shouting;
-they sat down quietly at table. Six-year-old Beryl’s small face was pale
-and grave. She had started that morning at seven o’clock, had walked
-four miles to school, had sat all day on a hard bench with her little
-feet dangling. At noon she had eaten her dinner of cold potatoes, “bread
-and jell,” cake and pie, and at four o’clock she had started home again,
-trudging those four long, muddy miles to a put-away supper. No wonder
-she looked subdued. She was tired in mind and in her frail, small body,
-but she is getting an education. Beryl is at the head of her class. She
-tells you this with a little grown-up air.
-
-It seems a topsy-turvey thing, this way of keeping schools open during
-the winter, when only the children living close to the schoolhouses can
-reach them through the snowdrifts and the mud, and closing them in summer
-when the roads are good. I should turn things the other way round, and
-give the long holiday in winter; but I am told that my plan would never
-do. The farmers need the children. So in the rural districts the weeks
-spent at lessons are few. It is only in the spring and fall that the
-children can go to school and there is no such thing as “regular
-attendance,” that bugbear of public instruction.
-
-After all, I fancy that the youngsters learn as much while they toss the
-hay in the clean, hot meadows, or when they drive the cattle along the
-shady roads to the lakes, as they would if penned in the little one-room
-houses, where some eighteen-year-old girl, just from high school,
-struggles with the work of all the grades at once.
-
-This thing of getting an education is a mighty matter in Canada. The
-roads are dotted with schoolhouses, the papers have long columns of
-advertisements for teachers, and it is always specified as to whether
-Catholic or Protestant is needed. It seems the dear ambition of each
-family to produce at least one teacher, and the Normal School at
-Queensport turns them out by the score. On Monday mornings and Friday
-afternoons vehicles of every description travel to and from town, taking
-the girls home for Sundays and back for the week’s work.
-
-Students hire a room in Queensport for two dollars a month, and with it
-goes the privilege of cooking on the family stove and sitting in a warm
-room to study. Those who live near enough to town bring their food from
-home, so food costs them nothing. Thus they work their difficult way
-through to the little country schools.
-
-My neighbor, Mrs. Spellman, is doubly proud, for her two daughters are
-teaching, one in Alberta, the other in far-away British Columbia.
-
-“It was hard work to give them their training,” she says. “Their father
-had no patience with the notion of sending them to high school, so he
-wouldn’t help. But I made up my mind that they should have their chance.
-They’d not be tied down to a farm all their days, as I’ve been. Mary, my
-eldest, was always such a home girl too. She wouldn’t hear of leaving me
-until I promised that she should come home every week. There wasn’t
-anyone to drive her to town and back but me, but I seen to it that she
-got home. Every Friday noon I’d harness up and go for her, coming back
-long after dark. Every Monday morning I’d be up before day, to feed the
-horse and cook breakfast in time to take her back to school again, and
-she never was late. I always had her there by nine o’clock. Sometimes
-the roads were so dark that I’d drive all the way with the reins in my
-two hands. I was afraid to hold them in the one hand lest I should get
-them crossed in the darkness and pull the horse out of the road and into
-the drifts. I’d feel sometimes as though my hands was frozen. But I
-never missed a week all those two long years. When Nellie, my second
-girl, went, it wasn’t so hard for me. The two stayed in Queensport
-together, and they didn’t get so homesick. Yes, it was a hard pull, but
-I’d do it all over again, for my children did well. They stood at the
-head of their class. I’m proud of them when they come home, summers.”
-
-I have often wondered at these little schoolma’ams, with their youth,
-their high spirits, and their wholly innocent love of pretty clothes and
-beaux and good times. They have to board at one house and another,
-accustoming themselves to all sorts of food, all kinds of families. They
-must toil through rough weather to their work. They must learn to please
-all parents, to conciliate school boards and supervisors. They must have
-sense to steer a difficult way through neighborhood prejudice and to
-avoid giving rise to gossip. A task for a strong woman, it has always
-seemed to me, but I wonder no longer that so many succeed in it, since I
-know something of the strength of the mothers who stand behind them.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XVII
-
-
-THE mudcat season has come. After the winter’s diet of salt herring, and
-before the open season for bass and pickerel, comes the mudcat, alias
-bullhead, to give us the taste of fresh fish again. From April fifteenth
-until the fifteenth of May is the closed season for pickerel, and from
-April fifteenth to June fifteenth it is forbidden to fish for bass, so
-now the humble mudcat comes to his own.
-
-Over on the Drapeaus’ shore the men are all skinning bullheads for
-market. They have rigged up a machine that twists off the heads and
-strips off the skins at one turn of a handle. Andy Drapeau dips the fish
-out of the live box, Black Jack skins and beheads them, George Drapeau
-rakes away the offal, Harry Spriggins and Lewis Drapeau pack the fish in
-barrels. The whole shore reeks of them, the beach is red with their
-gore, for your bullhead is a very bloody fish. He is an ugly
-creature—great head, thorny spines, wicked-looking mouth, but he tastes
-very good indeed, if one has not seen Black Jack skin him.
-
-I have come in for the usual present, and have to restrain my friends, or
-they would give me at least a half barrel.
-
-“Kin you git their inside out, ef I take the hide offen them?” asks Black
-Jack. And I assure him that for the sake of fresh fish I can do
-anything.
-
-John Beaulac was not there. The Beaulac baby—my godson—was “awful sick.”
-
-Later in the day came young Louis to the island to ask for the loan of
-some alcohol. The doctor had seen the child, by chance, as he was
-passing through the farm on his way to the lake, and had prescribed a
-warm bath and an alcohol rub. Young Louis’ eyes were big with horror.
-To wash a sick child was evidently the same thing as killing it outright.
-I supplied the alcohol and, gathering up clean sheets, soft towels, a new
-washcloth and talcum powder, took shipping for Loon Lake.
-
-Rose Beaulac sat in the center of a red-hot room, the window shut, the
-door shut, every chair, box and square foot of floor space occupied by a
-child or a dog, and held the gasping, moaning baby, despair in her face.
-One look at its crimson cheeks and glazed blue eyes told me that it was
-an ill child indeed. My thermometer showed a temperature of a hundred
-and four when it came out from the burning little armpit.
-
-John stood beside the woodpile and called me as I left the house.
-
-“Was the baby very ill? Ought he to send for the doctor?”
-
-It was “Yes” to both questions.
-
-Then John did some figuring in his mind. His beady black eyes stopped
-twinkling, his face grew stern and set. This has been a hard winter for
-Jack. The war stopped the export of mica and the mines have been shut
-down. Last year was a wet season when the hay floated in the meadows and
-the grain sprouted in the stooks. It has been almost impossible to make
-ends meet, but if the child needed the doctor—well, he must be called and
-he’d be paid somehow. John left the decision to me. I must call the
-doctor if I thought best.
-
-So away up the lake, three miles to the telephone, I rowed, and the
-doctor promised to come the next day.
-
-“Tell John to have a boat at Henderson’s landing for me, at seven-thirty.
-I can’t make the fifteen miles there and back over these roads to-night.
-Meanwhile keep up the bathing and the alcohol rubs, and tell Rose to keep
-that door open. Don’t forget that. Tell her that child must have plenty
-of air”—an injunction that Dr. LeBaron did not in the least expect to
-have obeyed when he gave it; it was merely a part of his general course
-of education.
-
-How did those eight people manage to breathe in that stifling room; how
-could that ill child survive in that foul atmosphere? I wondered, as I
-laid my weary body down on my clean, cool bed. And if I were worn out,
-what must Rose be, who had sat for three nights with that tossing,
-suffering baby in her arms?
-
-Whether the lake is more beautiful in the early morning or at sunset, I
-have never been able to determine. At six o’clock, as I pushed off from
-the dock on the blue water, the thrasher’s liquid song followed the
-rhythm of the oars. Out on the open bay the swallows wheeled and dipped
-all round the boat, so near that I could have touched their burnished
-blue-green backs. On the beaches the sandpipers ran tipping up and down,
-their plaintive piping mingling with the robin’s song. A gentle breeze
-roughened the water and every little ripple that hurried to the shore was
-tipped with a winking star.
-
-At Beaulac’s all was in readiness for the doctor. Rose’s eyes were
-glazed with sleeplessness, her face lined with fatigue; but she had found
-strength to comb and braid her dark hair, the children’s faces had been
-washed, and the baby had been dressed in a little new pink cotton frock.
-There was a dishpan full of newly hatched turkeys behind the stove, for
-even if one’s child is dying one must try to save the fowl, and there was
-a basket of young kittens under the bed. But Richard, the pet lamb, had
-been banished to the meadow and the hounds were tied to the fence. John
-had gone for the doctor. Mary was alone with the ill child. She had
-done all she could, she could only wait.
-
-“I’m glad you got me his picture,” she said with a piteous little smile
-and looking over at a kodak print of the baby that we had taken some
-weeks before. “He’s never been nowheres to have his picture took. I
-guess I’ll be glad of that one.”
-
-Far out on the shining bay we saw the boat returning. There was only one
-figure in it. John was coming back alone. The doctor had been stopped
-by an accident case; he could not come until evening. Rose’s lips
-trembled, but she made no complaint. What was the life of one baby when
-there were so many, so many that needed the doctor?
-
-Back to the island for my midday meal, back to Loon Bay to meet the
-doctor. This time there were two figures black against the evening sky.
-John was rowing with quick jerks of the short, straight oars. In the
-stern sat a bulky shape digging away with a paddle. Under its weight the
-upward pointing bow waved from side to side. Over the gunwale amidship
-came a steady stream of water. Mrs. LeBaron, the doctor’s wife, crouched
-on the bottom, was bailing away for life.
-
-“By gol!” said John, in an aside to me, as the party climbed the hill.
-“By gol! but the doctor iss a heavy man. I thought she was over two,
-three times.”
-
-Oh, the method of these country doctors! There’s no talk of “Call me in
-the night if the change should come.” No promise: “I’ll see you the
-first thing in the morning.” No, Dr. LeBaron only gave his verdict. The
-baby had pneumonia. The right lung was suffused. He was a very ill
-child, but he might pull through—no one could tell. And all the time the
-doctor’s deft hands were making up powders, counting tablets, measuring
-drops. On every package he wrote the day and the hour the dose was to be
-given. He set down the times for baths and nourishment, he told us what
-symptoms we might expect. He gave his directions over and over again,
-slowly, clearly, waiting for a repetition of his words. There was no
-haste, no irritation at our ignorance, only infinite care, infinite
-patience. Then he ordered out the children, the young turkeys and the
-cats, shook hands with the mother, stepped into the boat and was rowed
-away. If the child lived, we would not need him again; if it died, we
-were to notify him at once, and twice a day he wished me to telephone him
-the baby’s temperature, respiration, pulse, and a general account of the
-progress of the disease. And then when excitement was at its height,
-someone broke my thermometer, the only one in miles; there was no more
-taking of temperatures—and the child got well!
-
-The last time that Dr. LeBaron came to Many Islands it was to treat Harry
-Spriggins’ boy, who had cleft his kneecap straight through with an ax.
-There was no fire in the house. The Doctor had to build one and boil a
-pan clean before he could sterilize his instruments. There was no one
-willing to help him give an anæsthetic, so he had to sew up that wound
-while the boy sat and watched him do it.
-
-“How in the world did the child stand it, Doctor?” I asked.
-
-“Well, it was pretty hard on him,” answered the doctor. “I told him that
-I’d thrash him within an inch of his life if he moved—it was the only
-way—and the poor kid gritted his teeth and swore like a trooper all the
-time. But the wound healed perfectly, almost without a scar, and the
-joint did not stiffen.”
-
-“You would be quite surprised to know how little charity work I do,”
-continued the Doctor, giving me a very direct look from his keen, gray
-eyes. “There are not many bad debts on my books. The country people pay
-remarkably well, all things considered.”
-
-A quick little smile flits over Mrs. LeBaron’s face at his words. I
-imagine she could tell quite another tale. Doubtless she knows how much
-of time and strength and pity is given for which no money can ever pay.
-
-“What do you call charity, Doctor?”
-
-It is not, of course, charity to charge Johnny Bagneau ten dollars for
-driving twenty miles through the blinding snow; to sit, through the long
-night and half the day, beside the bed where little John makes his
-delayed entrance into life; to eat a breakfast of eggs in the shells and
-a dinner of potatoes in their jackets, and to stand outdoors in the
-bitter cold to eat them, because even the doctor, inured to filth and
-foul air, cannot eat in that poor room.
-
-“No, the Doctor does not work for charity,” the people tell me. “He gits
-paid for what he does.”
-
-Younger men come from the hospitals of Toronto and Montreal and hang out
-their signs in Queensport for awhile. They get a percentage of the town
-cases. They do not “go in” for the country practice.
-
-“They young chaps is all very good when there’s nawthin’ much the
-matter,” says old Mrs. Drapeau. “But when it’s anything bad we wants the
-old Doctor.”
-
-Yes, that is it. When danger threatens we want the man we know. He has
-brought us into the world, he has stood by us through life’s trouble. It
-is he who must sit beside us, steadfast amid the gathering shadows, as
-the soul starts forth through the darkness of the long trail, to the land
-where there shall be no more night.
-
-These country doctors! Up and down the roads they go, by night and day,
-through storm and fair weather, treating everything, operating for
-anything, nursing, instructing, overcoming prejudice, performing miracles
-of healing despite incredible difficulties. To meet them is to come face
-to face with the eternal realities. To hear them talk is to listen to a
-tale that cuts down deep into the beating heart of life.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XVIII
-
-
-THE May woods are full of color; the crimson of the young maple sprays,
-the bronze and yellows of the new birch and basswood leaves reflecting
-the tints of autumn.
-
-The brakes are unclenching their little, woolly brown fists, the new
-ferns are uncurling their furry, pale-green spirals. The dwarf ginseng’s
-leaves carpet the damp hollows, from their clusters rise innumerable
-feathery balls of bloom. The little wild ginseng holds its treasure
-safe—the small, edible tuber hidden far underground. There is no
-long-nailed Caliban to dig for it here on the island.
-
-The trillium flowers are turning pink. After about two weeks of snowy
-whiteness they have changed to a beautiful rose color, and oh, the
-perfume that comes blown across those far-stretching beds of trillium!
-No garden of summer roses was ever half so sweet.
-
-On the mainland trail, that winds along the shore from Drapeau’s to
-Foret’s, the ground is blue with violets and yellow with adder’s tongue,
-straw-colored bell wort and the downy yellow violet. Wild columbine
-beckons from the rocky crannies, Bishop’s cap and Solomon’s seal wave in
-the thickets, the wet fence corners are gay with the wine-red flowers of
-the wake robin and the tiny white stars of the wild strawberry dot the
-meadows.
-
-This is insect time. The air hums with the whirring wings of the May
-flies, eel flies, woolly heads, and the great mosquitoes. They cling in
-clouds on all the window screens, they come into the house by hundreds,
-hanging on my clothes and tangled in the meshes of my hair. The wild
-cherry trees are festooned with the webs of the tent caterpillars and the
-worms are spinning down on long threads from thousands of teeming
-cocoons. When I walk through the woods I am decorated with a pair of
-little, live epaulets.
-
-The treetops are noisy with a convention of bronzed grackles discussing
-all sorts of burning questions in their harsh, raucous voices.
-
-“Cheerily, cheerily, cheer-up,” begs a robin in a white pine.
-
-“I see you, I see you,” warns the meadow lark.
-
-“We know it, we know it,” answer the vireos.
-
-The sapsucker is back, beating a tattoo on the house roof. An empty
-wooden box at the door rings like a war drum under the blows of his hard
-bill. On the first morning he waked me I felt a sentimental pleasure in
-the sound; it seemed spring’s reveille. On three successive mornings I
-heard him with an ever-decreasing joy. On the fourth I sprang out of
-bed, dazed with sleep, and, seizing a stick from the woodpile, I let fly
-at that diligent fowl, and he dashed away with a squawk. So low may
-one’s love of nature ebb at four o’clock in the morning.
-
-To-day, as I was dreaming on the porch, I heard a fat-sounding “plop,”
-and saw a yard-long snake hanging in a crotch of a poplar, twisting his
-wicked head and lashing his tail. Immediately a brilliant redstart flew
-down and began darting at the reptile’s eyes, screaming and fluttering at
-a great rate. The snake had probably gone up the tree for eggs, only to
-be driven down by the small, furious householder. In a moment more he
-slid down the trunk and disappeared under the house.
-
-The snakes on the island are harmless, I am assured. Therefore I do not
-object to this one’s living under the porch, but I hope that he will stay
-under it, and that I shall not step into the middle of his coils some day
-when he is out sunning himself. The feel of a live snake under my foot
-would throw me back some millions of years and I should become, at once,
-the prehistoric female, fleeing in terror from the ancient enemy.
-
-The young rabbits are out, hopping softly down all the paths. They look
-so exactly like the small brown plaster bunnies sold in the shops at
-Easter that, when something frightens them and they “freeze” motionless
-under a bush or fern, I can scarcely believe that they are not toys,
-after all. Comical little creatures! They eye me with such solemnity.
-I often wonder what makes babies and other young things look so very
-wise. They seem to know such weighty secrets, that all the rest of the
-world has long forgotten.
-
-The old hares also are coming round the house again. One ventures so
-near and drives the others away so fiercely that I half believe he is
-little Peter returned to me.
-
-Over at the farms the spring sowing is done—the wheat, the barley, and
-the oats; and in the long twilights, and under the Planter’s Moon, the
-farmers are putting in the last seed potatoes. Seed planted at the full
-of the May moon gives the heaviest crops, they say.
-
-In the furrows, the big dew worms are working up out of the wet ground,
-to be bait for the fish hooks. Here, our object in fishing being to
-catch the fish, we use worms, frogs, anything that fish will bite,
-leaving flies, spoons, and sportsman devices to the campers who fish
-according to science and rule.
-
-Walking along the shore trail yesterday, I came upon Black Jack Beaulac,
-sitting on a rock, fishing tackle beside him. He seemed deep in thought
-and I wondered what new deviltry he was hatching there, for Black Jack is
-the tease and torment of the countryside. It is he who starts the good
-stories that go the rounds of the stores and firesides, and the slower
-wits fly before his tongue like chaff before the fan.
-
-If Black Jack’s tales on the other men are good, theirs of his
-performances are quite as well worth hearing. There is one of the time
-when he stole a hogshead of good liquor, and carried it off single-handed
-before the wondering eyes of the “Sports” encamped at Les Rapides. It
-was Black Jack who plunged into the icy waters of the lake to the rescue
-of the half breed drowning there, and it was he who came to the aid of
-poor, terrified Rebecca North, whose husband had gone suddenly deranged
-and was running amuck. The poor crazy giant has never forgotten the
-treatment he received at those great hands. Long after his madness was
-past he spoke with awe of Black Jack’s powerful grasp.
-
-Again there is the story of the race on the ice of Henderson’s Bay that
-will never lose its flavor. I heard it from Uncle Dan Cassidy one wet
-Sunday afternoon, as we sat round the Blakes’ kitchen fire popping corn
-and capping stories. Uncle Dan has a brogue as thick as cream and a
-voice as smooth as butter. No writer of dialects could ever reproduce
-his speech. Translated, the tale runs thus:
-
-There was to be a great race to which anyone having a horse was welcome.
-Yankee Jim Branch, a cousin of Black Jack’s, had an old nag, fit for
-little, which he entered by way of a joke. Black Jack, being temporarily
-out of horses, in consequence of some dealing with the local storekeeper
-and a chattel mortgage, was not included in the company. There had long
-been a feud between Black Jack and Yankee, so it was considered a good
-thing that they were not both to be represented in the contest.
-
-It was a great occasion. The course was staked out on the ice with
-ceremony, little cedar bushes were stuck up to mark the quarter miles,
-and there was a flag at the judge’s stand. William Foret held Joe Bogg’s
-big silver stop watch to mark the time, Andy Drapeau had a stump of
-pencil and an old envelope on which to record it and the stakes were as
-much as two dollars.
-
-The start was made, all horses had run, and the race, oddly enough, lay
-between Bogg’s gray and Yankee’s old hack, when—
-
-“Ping!”
-
-A shot sang out from somewhere, far back on the point, and Yankee’s horse
-dropped like a stone. His driver was leaning far out over the wretched
-creature’s back, belaboring him with a great gad. The halt was so sudden
-that away he went, straight on over the horse’s head, landing hard on the
-ice. Up he jumped raging, and ran back to the stupified group at the
-stand.
-
-“Is any man in the crowd got his gun?” he demanded.
-
-Every man was abundantly able to prove that his gun rested behind the
-door of his own cabin.
-
-“Is Black Jack in the crowd?” inquired Yankee.
-
-He was not, and Yankee was immediately convinced that his cousin, Black
-Jack, had fired that shot.
-
-Then in the midst of the excitement Black Jack himself appeared, striding
-unconcernedly down the hill. He had been hidden among the bushes, far
-back on the point, and, unable to endure the thought of Yankee’s bragging
-if his horse should win, had raised his gun and shot the wretched animal,
-at the very instant of victory, and when, in Yankee’s mind, the two
-dollars was as good as spent.
-
-History does not tell what Yankee did to get even. Probably nothing, for
-no one in the countryside cares to interfere with Black Jack. He is
-known as a man of his hands and a good person to let alone.
-
-All this and more I remembered when I saw Jack sitting on the shore. But
-he was not wearing his usual devil-may-care swagger and cheerful grin.
-Instead, his square, dark face was grim, his great shoulders were bent,
-his long arms hung relaxed and his black eyes gazed moodily over the
-water. He looked tired and gaunt and gray. Presently he rose heavily
-and, without seeing me, strode off to his boat, stepped in and rowed away
-and the next I heard of him, he had enlisted and was off to Valcartier to
-learn to be a soldier.
-
-Following his example went Little John Beaulac and his son Louis, to the
-despair of poor Rose, and later, Charley McDougal and George Drapeau.
-
-“It’s the meal ticket with those fellows,” commented Henry Blake. “What
-do they know about this war? They don’t even know what they’ll be
-fighting for. No, it’s the money they’re after. The mines are not
-working, there’s little or no wood-cutting to be done, and they’re up
-against it for food. Jack thinks that he’ll get a pension for his woman
-and a bounty for each one of the kids. The recruiting sergeants get so
-much a head for every man they bring in and so, of course, they promise
-these poor fellows anything. But they find out different after they’ve
-enlisted. Black Jack’ll never stick at it. He’ll desert, and if he does
-they’ll never catch him. He’s here to-day and fifty miles away across
-the hills to-morrow. He travels like a mink, Black Jack does.”
-
-Poor Jack! He will find the restraint of barracks and drill intolerable,
-he who has never known any law but his own will. Will he stand the life?
-I wonder.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIX
-
-
-NOVEMBER’S moon is said to be the Indian’s Moon of Magic, but here the
-June moon is the wonder moon and “the moon of my delight.” It sails
-resplendent in a luminous sky, pouring its brightness down on a lake that
-gleams like a silver shield. Its beams rain down through the leaves in a
-drenching flood of light, to lie in shining pools on the mossy ground.
-It illuminates the hidden nooks of the forest, it makes the stems of the
-birches look like slender columns of white marble, and the woods are so
-bright that half the flowers forget to shut their eyes, and stay wide
-open through the night. Slender, tall irises stand like ghost flowers in
-the swamps; the thousand little bells of the false lily of the valley—the
-Canada May Flower—swing in the breezes that run along the ground, and on
-the low, south point of the island the rushes rattle stiffly and bow
-their heads as the wind passes over them. They are the Equisetum, the
-Horsetail rush, known to the Pilgrim housewives as scouring rushes, with
-which they used to clean their pots and pans.
-
-Mary Blake tells me that she has used them and that the flinty, hollow
-stems are excellent kettle cleaners. They do not suggest anything so
-prosaic here in the white moonlight—rather they make me think of small
-silver spears held upright in the hands of a fairy troop, the small,
-green yeomen of the forest, on guard through the white night.
-
-There is great rushing and scurrying in the underbrush, for the deer
-mice, the rabbits, and other small folk of the forest are awake and
-active. The birds too are wakeful and chirp answers chirp from one nest
-to another all through the night.
-
-This is going to be a good bird year judging from the number of broken
-egg shells—blue, cream, speckled—that are cast from the nests to the
-ground. There is a continuous sound of faint, wheezing cries, the voices
-of nestlings, begging for food.
-
-A pair of robins have plastered their mud nest on a beam of the porch
-roof, a red-eyed vireo has hung her birch bark cradle in a low bush under
-the kitchen window, some phœbes have built on the lintel of the house
-door. It seems impossible that so small a nest can hold so many
-squirming little bodies as must belong to all those upstretched, gaping
-yellow bills. The parent phœbes do not hesitate about telling me in good
-round terms just what they think of me when I go too near their home, but
-the robins do not scold me, they only go off to a bush and mourn. The
-vireo cares not at all for anybody, but sits tranquil on her eggs and
-eyes me fearlessly.
-
-I have seen a whippoorwill’s nest, a thing, I am told, that few people
-ever find. It lies on the ground under the shelter of cedar poles that
-serves John Beaulac for a wagon shed, and is so directly in the path of
-the horses’ hoofs that I wonder it has not been trampled into the mold.
-John’s small daughter, Sallie May, led me to it, and, as we approached, a
-dark, slenderly trailing bird slid away through the underbrush, leaving
-her two furry balls of nestlings rolling helplessly on the dry leaves of
-their bed. They were about half the size of young chickens and were
-covered with thick down of a red clay color that had so fiery and vital a
-glow that it made me think of live coals showing through the ashes. We
-took one look and hurried away lest the whippoorwill mother should become
-frightened and forsake her nest, and two sweet and plaintive bird voices
-be lost from the evening chorus.
-
-At Beaulac’s, where I stopped on the homeward way, a lively discussion
-was going forward. The Bishop of Ontario was coming to Sark, for the
-first time in many years, to hold service and to confirm, and there was
-much speculation about who would join the English Church.
-
-“I’m a goin’ to be a Catholic,” announced poor Ishmael, the half-wit,
-peering out from a dim nook behind the stove.
-
-“They tells me the priest kin cure the fits,” he went on, hopefully, “but
-he won’t do it fer you lessen you bees a Catholic, so I’m a goin’ to jine
-his church.”
-
-“I favors the Baptists, ef I favors any,” observed Bill Shelly, the
-frogger.
-
-Whereupon John Beaulac retorted cruelly, that “We’d ought to send fer the
-preacher quick and have Bill dipped right off the dock, clothes and all,”
-further explaining that the suggestion was made in view of Bill’s general
-appearance and his boast that he had not touched water since early in the
-previous summer, and then only because he had “fell in.”
-
-Bill, so far from being offended, took this witticism in excellent part,
-joining uproariously in the laugh that followed it.
-
-For the rest of that week, telephones were busy calling a congregation.
-I was invited to drive to church in Mrs. Swanson’s spring wagon, and
-reached her farm by a devious route on the great day. I rowed across the
-half mile that lies between the island and the nearest point of mainland
-and walked the wood trail from Drapeau’s to Foret’s. There William’s
-motor boat was waiting to ferry me across the lake and up Blue Bay to the
-Swan-sons’ landing.
-
-Here also there was a flutter of excitement, for Susie Dove was going to
-be confirmed.
-
-Clarence Nutting too had wished to be of the class, but at the last
-moment it had been remembered that he had never been baptized. As
-baptism must precede confirmation the Rector, amid the hurry and work of
-entertaining the Bishop and conveying him to and from the several
-churches where there were to be services, had been diligently striving to
-come up with Clarence to baptize him.
-
-But each time he searched for him Clarence was away, either in a distant
-field or over in the next township, and so the Rector never caught him,
-and when the service commenced poor Clarence sat humbly at the side of
-the church with the men, and could not come forward.
-
-There was no trouble about little Susie. Her case was entirely clear.
-Her new dress and white veil were spread forth on the spare room bed for
-display and admiration; her hair was plaited in innumerable tight
-pigtails as a prelude to subsequent frizzes.
-
-Susie looked quiet and subdued. There was a frightened expression in her
-china-blue eyes. She could eat no dinner, she could not even taste her
-pie, and soon she and Mrs. Swanson retired to dress. On the way to
-church Susie sat silent, clutching her new Prayer Book in a moist and
-trembling hand. On the homeward drive she confided to me that she had
-been very afraid of the Bishop.
-
-“I knew my Commandments,” she assured me, “but I was not so certain about
-the creed, and I was afeared lest the Bishop should ask me some hard
-questions.”
-
-Her face then was radiant. The Bishop had been kind and had asked no one
-any hard questions, and so this little one had not been put to confusion.
-
-The church at Sark is old and falling to pieces but it looked lovely that
-day. Each window sill held a plant in bloom, its tin can covered with
-gay, flowered wall paper—geraniums, fuchsias, patience plants—the
-ornaments of many a parlor. Each window framed a picture of soft,
-rolling meadows, fruit trees in bloom, homesteads nestled in the hollows,
-and, over all, stretches of blue sky, flecked with wisps of floating
-vapor. In the center of the church sat the group of ten or a dozen
-candidates for confirmation. Through the misty veils their young faces
-looked out, awed and grave and very sweet. There had been a great
-disappointment for little Mary Spellman, for her veil had not come from
-town with the rest. She looked like a gentle little nun, with a square
-of plain white muslin laid over her flaxen head. Most of these girls
-will not wear bridal dress at their weddings, so confirmation is the one
-great occasion in their lives when they can put on the dignity and the
-mystery of the veil.
-
-“Defend, O Lord, this thy child with thy heavenly grace”—The words seemed
-to reach me from a great way off, repeated each time the Bishop laid his
-hands on a bowed head. The Bishop’s voice was kind, his tone gentle
-when, his sermon finished, he turned from the congregation to deliver his
-charge to the class. I do not remember much of what he said, but I have
-not forgotten his manner. It seemed to me, listening, that he must feel
-a peculiar tenderness for these little cut-off country parishes.
-
-After service I was led forward to be presented to his Lordship. He said
-that he had heard of “the lady from the Southern States who was living
-alone at Many Islands.” I could not help feeling that the Episcopal eye
-regarded me with a certain suspicion, as one not quite right in her
-mind—which supposition was, I fear, confirmed by my own behavior, for
-when Mrs. Rector said: “My Lord, I wish to present Miss X. to you,” the
-unaccustomed sound of the title, and my own total ignorance of the proper
-mode of addressing one called “My Lord,” gave me a foolish, flustered
-manner that must have betrayed me.
-
-We locked the silent church, stripped of its flowers and white-robed
-girls, and drove along the tree-shaded roads to the shore, where the
-motor boat was waiting. The water was so still and so clear that we
-could see every rock and pebble lying a dozen feet below. We passed over
-schools of big fish, bass and pickerel, hanging suspended in a crystal
-medium. Between the sheer walls of the Loon Lake Portage the sun was
-going down in a lake of gold and the rocks were purple and red in its
-glow.
-
-I walked the home trail slowly, lingering in the falling dusk. The odors
-of the cedars, hemlocks, and basswoods came to me mingled with the wet
-smell from the bogs and the perfume of the tiny twin trumpets of the
-partridge vine, twining the damp moss. I came out of the dimness of the
-woods to the path worn along the grass of meadows starred all over with
-myriads of misty little globes, the seed heads of the dandelions. I
-pushed the row boat off on the quiet water, and drifted while “the moth
-hour went from the fields.” The sky was bright with the rising moon as I
-climbed the island path. There was great scurrying of rabbits in the
-underbrush and away in the misty thickets the whippoorwills were calling.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XX
-
-
-IT is wild strawberry time in lower Canada. The fields are carpeted with
-them and the fern-covered rocks hold each a little garden where the red
-berries hang over the water like rubies in a setting of clustered leaves.
-The birds are feasting royally and I walk along the edges of the meadows,
-gathering handfuls of the ripe fruit. No one is at home any more. When
-I stop at a house the women have all gone a-berrying. Thousands of
-quarts go off to the markets, or are cooked here into jellies and jam,
-for the delicacy of the winter is wild strawberry preserve. I had it
-every time I went out to tea. Now they give me strawberry shortcake and,
-O how good it is! No garden fruit can compare, in sweetness or perfume,
-with the little wild berry of the fields.
-
-Not all my friends go berrying every day, however. Yesterday I was
-kneeling on the dock busy washing my clothes, when a heavily laden motor
-boat, with a row boat in tow, rounded the point and headed for the
-island. In it were Mary Blake, Mrs. Swanson, Anna Jackson, and Jean
-Foret. Rose Beaulac and Granny Drapeau sat in the little boat behind and
-all space not filled by women of ample build, was piled high with pails
-and baskets.
-
-“We’ve come to spend the day,” they hailed me. “Don’t get scared, we’ve
-brought our dinners along.”
-
-“Dinner or no dinner, I am glad to see you,” I called back, waving an
-apron in welcome.
-
-“We knew this would be our last chance to have a visit with you before
-the campers come, so we’ve come to have a picnic.”
-
-Ah! What a happy, friendly day! These women—busy heads of households,
-women of affairs—laid aside their cares, forgot their responsibilities
-and enjoyed their party with the simplicity of children. And how good
-was the chicken, brought already cooked in a shining pail, and the cakes
-and pies in the baskets! Mrs. Swanson had journeyed in to Sark to buy
-candy, and all that the store there boasted was the dear old candy of our
-childhood, little chocolate boys and girls and rabbits, sugar hearts with
-mottoes, jaw-breakers and pep’mint sticks.
-
-We sat long at the big table on the porch. We talked and talked, or,
-rather, they talked; I listened, marking the shrewdness of their
-deductions, the keenness of their comment, the kindliness of their
-judgments. I heard all about the fine new store at Frontenac and the
-bargains one and another had found. They described the magnificence of
-the yearly celebration there when the Orangemen walk in procession. They
-told me that this year Joey Trueman, the storekeeper, had not scrupled to
-set off a whole twenty-three dollars’ worth of fireworks by way of
-advertisement.
-
-We explored the scant five acres of the island, peeping in at the doors
-of the little summer sleeping shacks, all swept and furnished for the
-campers, and then, in the pleasant languor of the afternoon, I brought
-out my stack of photographs and told all about my homefolk.
-
-For I too have formed the photo-displaying habit of this neighborhood, a
-friendly, kindly custom that makes one free at once of the home and all
-the family. I have never gone visiting here without being at once
-presented with the album. Many a time has my hostess hurried in from the
-kitchen to ask: “Has Miss X. seen the pictures yet?”
-
-Big, unmercifully true-to-life crayon likenesses of grandparents stare
-down from all the parlor walls—ancestral portraits. There are
-photographs of all the brides and grooms and babies, snapshots of sons
-fighting “somewhere in France,” of daughters gone out to make homes of
-their own on the far-off frontier, and there are the faces of those lying
-safe under the cedars in the little graveyards close at home. I have
-heard the life stories of all, and so it seems quite natural for me to
-hand out my pictures too.
-
-As evening drew on and milking time approached, my guests gathered
-together pails and baskets and, as we walked single file along the trail
-to the dock, I tried to say something of what lies in my heart about all
-the kindness they had shown me in the year gone by, but the lump that
-rose in my throat choked back the words. They climbed into their boats,
-that sank to the gunwales under their weight, and I watched them away
-across the purple water.
-
-My holiday is over. In a very few weeks I must go back to the city and
-take up my work—the same, yet never again to be the same. Here in the
-quiet of the woods I am trying to take stock of all that this year has
-done for me.
-
-It has given me health. I have forgotten all about jerking nerves and
-aching muscles. I sleep all night like a stone; I eat plain food with
-relish; I walk and row mile after mile; I work rejoicing in my strength
-and glad to be alive.
-
-There has been also the renewing of my mind, for my standards of values
-are changed. Things that once were of supreme importance seem now the
-veriest trifles. Things that once I took for granted, believing them the
-common due of mankind—like air and sunshine, warm fires and the kind
-faces of friends—are now the most valuable things in the world. What I
-have learned here of the life of birds and beasts, of insects and trees
-are the veriest primer facts of science to the naturalist—to me they are
-inestimably precious, the possessions of my mind, for, like Chicken
-Little, “I saw them with my eyes, and heard them with my ears.” And I
-shall carry away a gallery of mind-pictures to be a solace and
-refreshment through all the years to come.
-
-The camp is ready for its owner. I have spent many hours in cleaning,
-arranging, replacing, that she may find all as she left it ten months
-ago. The island lies neat and fair in the sunshine, reminding me of a
-good child that has been washed and dressed and seated on the doorstep to
-wait for company. Never have the woods looked so fair to me, or the wide
-lake, where the dragonflies are hawking to and fro over the water, so
-beautiful.
-
-This is dragonfly season. Millions of them are darting through the
-air—great green and brown ones with a wing-spread of three to four
-inches; wee blue ones, like lances of sapphire light; little inch-long
-yellow ones, and beautiful, rusty red.
-
-To-day I spent three hours on the dock watching one make that wonderful
-transition from the life amphibious to the life of the air. Noon came
-and went, food was forgotten while that miracle unfolded there before my
-very eyes.
-
-I was tying the boat, when I saw what looked like a very large spider,
-crawling up from the water and out on a board. It moved with such effort
-and seemed so weak that I was tempted to put it out of its pain. But if
-I have learned nothing else in all these months in the woods, I have
-thoroughly learned to keep hands off the processes of nature. Too often
-have I seen my well-meant attempts to help things along end in disaster.
-So I gave the creature another glance and prepared to go about my
-business, when I noticed a slit in its humped back, and a head with
-great, dull beads of eyes pushing out through the opening. Then I sat
-down to watch, for I realized that this was birth and not death.
-
-Very slowly the head emerged and the eyes began to glow like lamps of
-emerald light. A shapeless, pulpy body came working out and two feeble
-legs pushed forth and began groping for a firm hold. They fastened on
-the board and then, little by little and ever so slowly, the whole insect
-struggled out, and lay weak, almost inanimate, beside the empty case that
-had held it prisoner so long.
-
-Two crumpled lumps on either side began to unfurl and show as wings. The
-long abdomen, curled round and under, like a snail-shell, began to uncurl
-and change to brilliant green, while drops of clear moisture gathered on
-its enameled sides and dripped from its tip. The transparent membrane of
-the wings, now held stiffly erect, began to show rainbow colors, as they
-fanned slowly in the warm air, and, at last, nearly three hours after the
-creature had crept out of the water, the great dragon-fly stood free,
-beside its cast-off body lying on the dock. And
-
- “Because the membraned wings,
- So wonderful, so wide,
- So sun-suffused, were things
- Like soul and nought beside.”
-
-Certain stupendous phrases rose in my mind and kept sounding through my
-thoughts.
-
-“Behold, I show you a mystery. We shall not all sleep, but we shall all
-be changed.”
-
-There it stood, that living jewel, growing every moment more strong, more
-exquisite, waiting perhaps for some trumpet call of its life. Suddenly
-it stiffened, the great wings shot out horizontally, and with one joyous,
-upward bound, away it flashed, an embodied triumph, out across the
-shining water, straight up into the glory of the sun.
-
-When I came to myself I was standing a tiptoe gazing up after it, my
-breath was coming in gasps and I heard my own voice saying: “It is sown
-in weakness, it is raised in power. . . . Thanks be to God, which giveth
-us the victory.”
-
-Then, standing there under those trees, clothed in their new green and
-upspringing to the sky, and beside the lake, where the young ferns troop
-down to the water’s edge, valiant little armies with banners, there came
-to me one of those strange flashes of understanding, that pierce for an
-instant the thick dullness of our minds, and give us a glimpse of the
-meaning of this life we live in blindness here.
-
-I had seen those woods, all bare and dead, rise triumphant in a glorious
-spring. I had seen that lake grow dark and still and lie icebound
-through the strange sleep of winter. Its water now lay rippling in the
-sun.
-
-Since my coming to Many Islands, one year ago, the Great War has broken
-forth, civilization has seemed to die, and the hearts of half the world
-have gone down into a grave.
-
-But even to me has come the echo of the Great Voice that spoke to John,
-as he stood gazing on a new heaven and new earth:
-
-“I am the beginning and the end,” it said. “Behold I make all things
-new.”
-
-
-
-
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-<title>A Winter of Content, by Laura Lee Davidson</title>
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-
-The Project Gutenberg eBook, A Winter of Content, by Laura Lee Davidson
-
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most
-other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of
-the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at
-www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you'll have
-to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook.
-
-
-
-
-Title: A Winter of Content
-
-
-Author: Laura Lee Davidson
-
-
-
-Release Date: June 2, 2020 [eBook #62303]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: ISO-646-US (US-ASCII)
-
-
-***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK A WINTER OF CONTENT***
-</pre>
-<p>This text was transcribed by Les Bowler</p>
-<p style="text-align: center">
-<a href="images/cover.jpg">
-<img alt=
-"Book cover"
-title=
-"Book cover"
- src="images/cover.jpg" />
-</a></p>
-<p style="text-align: center">
-<a href="images/fp.jpg">
-<img alt=
-"&ldquo;Through patches of snow&rdquo;"
-title=
-"&ldquo;Through patches of snow&rdquo;"
- src="images/fp.jpg" />
-</a></p>
-<h1>A Winter of Content</h1>
-<p style="text-align: center">By<br />
-LAURA LEE DAVIDSON</p>
-
-<div class="gapspace">&nbsp;</div>
-<blockquote><p>&ldquo;Now there is a rocky isle in the mid<br />
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; sea, midway
-between Ithaca<br />
-and rocky Samos, Asteris, a little isle.&rdquo;</p>
-<p style="text-align: right">The Odyssey of Homer.&nbsp;
-Translated by<br />
-S. S. Butcher and Andrew Lang</p>
-</blockquote>
-
-<div class="gapspace">&nbsp;</div>
-<p style="text-align: center">
-<a href="images/tpb.jpg">
-<img alt=
-"Decorate graphic"
-title=
-"Decorate graphic"
- src="images/tps.jpg" />
-</a></p>
-
-<div class="gapspace">&nbsp;</div>
-<p style="text-align: center">THE ABINGDON PRESS<br />
-NEW
-YORK&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
-CINCINNATI</p>
-
-<div class="gapspace">&nbsp;</div>
-<p style="text-align: center"><a name="page2"></a><span
-class="pagenum">p. 2</span><span class="GutSmall">Copyright,
-1922, by</span><br />
-<span class="GutSmall">LAURA LEE DAVIDSON</span></p>
-
-<div class="gapspace">&nbsp;</div>
-<p style="text-align: center"><span class="GutSmall">Printed in
-the United States of America</span></p>
-
-<div class="gapspace">&nbsp;</div>
-<p style="text-align: center"><a name="page3"></a><span
-class="pagenum">p. 3</span>To<br />
-LOUISE<br />
-<span class="smcap">The Lady of the Island</span></p>
-
-<div class="gapspace">&nbsp;</div>
-<h2><a name="page5"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
-5</span>ILLUSTRATIONS</h2>
-<table>
-<tr>
-<td><p>&ldquo;<span class="smcap">Through patches of
-Snow</span>&rdquo;</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">Frontispiece</p>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td><p>&ldquo;<span class="smcap">Peter</span>, <span
-class="smcap">the Rabbit</span>, <span class="smcap">is Turning
-White Very Rapidly</span>&rdquo;</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right"><span class="indexpageno"><a
-href="#page53">53</a></span></p>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td><p><span class="smcap">The House</span></p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right"><span class="indexpageno"><a
-href="#page82">82</a></span></p>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td><p><span class="smcap">A Point of One of the
-Islands</span></p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right"><span class="indexpageno"><a
-href="#page97">97</a></span></p>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td><p>&ldquo;<span class="smcap">The Heavy Woodsleds Still
-Travel Down the Lakes</span>&rdquo;</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right"><span class="indexpageno"><a
-href="#page131">131</a></span></p>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td><p>&ldquo;<span class="smcap">The Drapeaus Live on a Long
-Peninsula to the West of This Island</span>&rdquo;</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right"><span class="indexpageno"><a
-href="#page155">155</a></span></p>
-</td>
-</tr>
-</table>
-<h2><a name="page7"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 7</span>CHAPTER
-I</h2>
-<p>A <span class="smcap">small</span>, rocky island in a lake, a
-canoe paddling away across the blue water, a woman standing on a
-narrow strip of beach, looking after it.&nbsp; I was the woman
-left on the shore, the canoe held my companions of the past
-summer, the island was to be my home until another summer should
-bring them back again.</p>
-<p>There is no denying that I was frightened as I turned back
-along the trail toward the little house among the birches.&nbsp;
-It was hard work to keep from jumping into a boat and putting out
-after the canoe that was rounding the point and leaving me
-alone.</p>
-<p>Little chilly fears laid icy fingers on the back of my
-neck.&nbsp; A shadow slipped between the trees; a sigh whispered
-among the leaves.&nbsp; I wanted to see all round me; I wanted to
-put my back against a wall.&nbsp; A little, grinning goblin of a
-misgiving stuck out an impudent tongue as it quoted some of the
-jeers of unsympathetic friends and relatives, who had derided my
-plan for borrowing the camp, <a name="page8"></a><span
-class="pagenum">p. 8</span>when summer was gone, and staying on
-alone at the Lake of Many Islands.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Good-by,&rdquo; had smiled my sister.&nbsp; &ldquo;You
-say you mean to stay a year, but you&rsquo;ll tire of solitude
-long before the winter.&nbsp; We&rsquo;ll see you back at
-Thanksgiving.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>It was only mid-September, but I wanted to see her then at
-that very instant.</p>
-<p>There had been a farewell dinner, the family assembled, to
-prophesy disaster.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;You&rsquo;ll freeze your nose and ears off,&rdquo;
-mourned a reassuring aunt.</p>
-<p>In vain I reminded her that no inhabitant seen in five
-summers&rsquo; sojourn at the lake had been without a nose or
-ears; all had had the requisite number of features, although some
-of those same features had withstood the cold of well-nigh a
-hundred winters.&nbsp; But she was not consoled, and continued to
-regard me so tearfully that I felt sure that she was bidding
-farewell to my nose.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;You&rsquo;ll break a leg and lie for days before anyone
-knows you are hurt,&rdquo; said Cousin John.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;You&rsquo;ll be snowed in and no one will find you
-until spring,&rdquo; said Brother Henry.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;You are a city woman and not strong.&nbsp; <a
-name="page9"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 9</span>What do you
-know of a pioneer&rsquo;s life?&nbsp; It is the most foolish plan
-we ever heard of,&rdquo; chorused all.</p>
-<p>Descending from prophecy to argument, they continued:</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Of course you will have a telephone.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;That I will not,&rdquo; I answered.&nbsp; &ldquo;I have
-been jerked at the end of a telephone wire for years.&nbsp; I
-want rest.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;At least you will have a good dog.&nbsp; That will be
-some protection.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;A dog would drive away all the wild things.&nbsp; I
-want to study them,&rdquo; I objected.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Then, for mercy&rsquo;s sake, find some other woman to
-stay there with you.&nbsp; Surely there is another lunatic
-willing to freeze to death on the precious island.&nbsp; You
-should have a companion, if only to send for help.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I don&rsquo;t want a companion,&rdquo; I protested,
-tearfully.&nbsp; &ldquo;I won&rsquo;t be responsible for another
-person&rsquo;s comfort or safety.&nbsp; I will do this thing
-alone or not at all.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I am tired to death,&rdquo; I stormed.&nbsp; &ldquo;I
-need rest for at least one year.&nbsp; I want to watch the
-procession of the seasons in some place that is not all paved
-streets, city smells and noise.&nbsp; Instead of the clang of car
-bells and <a name="page10"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
-10</span>the honk of automobile horns, I want to hear the winds
-sing across the ice fields, instead of the smell of asphalt and
-hot gasoline, I want the odor of wet earth in boggy places.&nbsp;
-I have loved the woods all my life, I long to see the year go
-round there just once before I die.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>At which outburst they shrugged exasperated shoulders and were
-silent, but each one drew me aside, at parting, and pressed a
-gift into my hand.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Be sure to let us know if anything goes wrong.&nbsp;
-Write to us if you need the least thing.&nbsp; Don&rsquo;t be
-ashamed to come back, if the experiment proves a
-failure&rdquo;&mdash;and so on and so on, God bless them!</p>
-<p>Of all this the bogy reminded me as he danced ahead up the
-winding trail.</p>
-<p>The house looked lonely, even in the brightness of the late
-afternoon.&nbsp; I hurried supper, to be indoors before the
-twilight fell.&nbsp; Big Canadian hares hopped along the paths
-and sat at the kitchen door, their great eyes peering, long,
-furry ears alert, quivering noses pressed against the wire
-screen.&nbsp; Grouse pecked on the hill side, as tame as barnyard
-fowl.&nbsp; From the water came the evening call of the
-loons.</p>
-<p><a name="page11"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 11</span>The
-scant meal finished, I ran across the platform from the kitchen
-to the main house and locked up.&nbsp; Somehow, I did not want
-any open doors behind me that evening.&nbsp; Then I loaded the
-pistol and laid it on a shelf at the head of the bed, along with
-the Bible and the Prayer Book.&nbsp; If any marauder could know
-how dreadfully afraid I am of that pistol, he would do his
-marauding with a quiet mind.&nbsp; I never expect to touch that
-weapon.&nbsp; It shall be cleaned and oiled when any of the men
-come over from the mainland, but handle it&mdash;never!&nbsp; I
-would not fire it for a kingdom.</p>
-<p>While it was still light I climbed into bed, and lay down
-rigid, with tight-shut eyes, trying to pretend I did not hear all
-the rustling, creaking, snapping noises in the woods.&nbsp; Heavy
-animals pushed through the fallen leaves.&nbsp; Something that
-sounded as large as a moose went crashing through the dry
-bushes.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;A rabbit,&rdquo; I whispered to myself.</p>
-<p>Creatures surely as large as bears rushed through the
-underbrush.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Grouse,&rdquo; I tried to believe.</p>
-<p>From the lake came stealthy sounds.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Driftwood pounding against the rocks, not <a
-name="page12"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 12</span>really
-oars,&rdquo; I murmured to my thumping heart.</p>
-<p>Then light, pattering footsteps on the porch.</p>
-<p>In desperation I raised my head and looked out.&nbsp; It was a
-little red fox, trotting busily along, snuffling softly as he
-went.&nbsp; I lay down and closed my eyes firmly, determined not
-to open them again no matter what might happen, then must have
-dozed, for, suddenly I was aware of a light that flooded all the
-room.</p>
-<p>There through the northeast window, large and round and
-beautiful, shone the moon, the great Moon of the Falling
-Leaves.&nbsp; It was like the sudden meeting with a friend,
-reassuring, comforting.&nbsp; A broad band of light lay across my
-breast like a kind arm thrown over me.&nbsp; The path of the
-moonbeams on the water seemed the road to some safe haven.&nbsp;
-With the moon&rsquo;s calm face looking in and the soft lapping
-of the waves as lullaby, I fell asleep&mdash;and lo! it was
-day.</p>
-<p>This house, the living room of the camp, that is to be my home
-for the coming winter, stands on a bluff overhanging the
-lake.&nbsp; It is a one-room shack, 16&times;20 feet, surrounded
-by an eight-foot porch.&nbsp; It is one-storied, <a
-name="page13"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 13</span>shingled, the
-porch roof upheld by birch log pillars, beautiful still clothed
-in their silvery bark.&nbsp; There are eight windows, two in each
-corner, and through some of them the sun is always shining.</p>
-<p>Adjoining this main shack and connected with it by an
-uncovered platform are the kitchen and storeroom, but these will
-not be used in winter.&nbsp; The stores and I will have to stay
-in the big house if we are not to freeze.</p>
-<p>From these buildings little trails run off through the woods
-to the dock, the pump, the summer sleeping shacks, and a path
-goes all round the island close to the shore.&nbsp; Away from
-these beaten tracks are all sorts of hidden nooks and lovely, dim
-seclusions.</p>
-<p>This little rocky island, one of scores that dot the face of
-the lake, is all a tangle of ferns and vines and
-wildflowers.&nbsp; It is thickly wooded with white birch, poplar
-and wild cherry.&nbsp; There are also oaks, maples, pines, and
-great clumps of basswood, and innumerable little cedars are
-pushing up everywhere.</p>
-<p>Making a way through the overgrown paths in the early morning,
-I break through myriads of spiderwebs, stretched across from
-bushes heavy with dew.&nbsp; They feel like the <a
-name="page14"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 14</span>tiniest of
-fairy fingers brushing my cheek, and laid on my eyelids, light as
-the memory of a caress.&nbsp; Butterflies dressed in black
-velvet, with white satin frills and sapphire jewels, flutter on
-ahead, and the stems of the birches are seen through a gold-green
-glow, like sunlight shining through clear water.&nbsp; When I sit
-on the sandy bottom, with the whole lake for my washpot, small
-fishes, wearing coral buttons and jade green ruffles on fins and
-tails, bump their blunt noses against my knees.</p>
-<p>Sounds from the mainland come across the lake, blurred and
-indistinct.&nbsp; On the island I hear only the wind in the
-trees, the water beating against the stones, and the hum of many
-insect wings.</p>
-<p>There is something queer about the island.&nbsp; I am
-convinced that it stands on some magnetic pole or other, that
-puts every clock and watch out of order as soon as it is landed
-here.&nbsp; Cheap or fine, every timepiece breaks a mainspring,
-and then we fall back on the sundial to tell us what&rsquo;s
-o&rsquo;clock.&nbsp; We can always know when it is noon, provided
-the weather be sunny.&nbsp; When it is cloudy we guess at the
-time and wait for the next fine day.</p>
-<p><a name="page15"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 15</span>This
-sundial stands in a clearing beside the house, and bears for its
-motto, not the high-sounding Latin quotation that seems to belong
-to sundials, but the trite assertion, &ldquo;Time is
-valuable.&rdquo;&nbsp; A statement wholly untrue, so far as this
-present life of mine is concerned.&nbsp; A fine bass, now, or a
-tin of beans perhaps is valuable, but surely not time, in a place
-where there is nothing to do but eat, sleep, and think.</p>
-<p>Yet when I stood to-day, on this lonely bit of land, in the
-midst of an empty lake, waiting for the shadow to travel to the
-mark, I seemed to catch, for one fleeting instant, some idea of
-the terrible, inexorable passing of the hours.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Set thy house in order, set thy house in order,&rdquo;
-something seemed to say, &ldquo;for never, for thee, shall the
-shadow turn back upon the dial.&rdquo;&nbsp; In that moment I
-stood alone in space, on this old clock the earth, swinging with
-the whirling of the spheres.</p>
-<p>The lake too has its mystery, a strange light that shines from
-the point of one of the islands.&nbsp; No one lives on that land;
-there is no farmhouse near it on the shore, nor is it in line
-with any dwelling whose light could seem to glimmer from its
-point.&nbsp; The flare is too <a name="page16"></a><span
-class="pagenum">p. 16</span>high and too steady for fox-fire, the
-glow that comes from rotting wood, and though men say they have
-explored the place repeatedly, there has never been any sign of a
-campfire there.&nbsp; But every now and again that light shines
-by night, like a beacon, and no one has ever explained it.</p>
-<p>Perhaps it is the phantom of the council fire, round which the
-red warriors sat in the days when this land was theirs.&nbsp; For
-there were Indians hereabout, and not so very long ago; and
-people on the mainland tell of a great fight that raged here when
-a band of the Mississagua Nation, led by the chief White Eagle,
-fought with an invading war party and of a day of battle from
-dawn until the going down of the sun when the lake was red with
-blood.&nbsp; On the sheer face of the cliff of the opposite
-island are red veinings in the rock.&nbsp; If one pretends very
-hard, they are pictures of two war canoes left there by some
-artist of the tribe.&nbsp; The people here believe in them
-devoutly.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;They were painted in blood,&rdquo; they say.</p>
-<p>A very indelible blood it must have been, for those tracings
-have withstood the wash of high water for many a year.</p>
-<p><a name="page17"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 17</span>Whether
-the picture writing is genuine or no, there is plenty of evidence
-that Indians lived along the shores of Many Islands, and there is
-a pretty story told of the wedding of a girl, White Eagle&rsquo;s
-daughter, to a young brave of her tribe.&nbsp; The Indians came
-down the lakes and through the portages to Queensport, in their
-fine canoes, and the lovers were married there by the priest at
-the mission.&nbsp; Afterward they were all entertained at dinner
-by the big-hearted wife of the principal merchant of the
-town.&nbsp; That lady&rsquo;s daughter tells me that for many
-seasons thereafter the chief&rsquo;s daughter would bring or send
-beautiful birch baskets, filled with berries or maple sugar for
-the children of her hostess.</p>
-<p>The bride is described as slim and young, with big, dark
-eyes.&nbsp; The wedding dress was dark blue cloth, trimmed with
-new-minted five- and ten-cent pieces, pierced and sewed on in a
-pattern&mdash;this worn over a vest of buckskin, beautifully
-embroidered.</p>
-<p>What became of you, little Indian Bride, girl of the grateful
-heart?&nbsp; Were you happy here at Many Islands, or was it
-life-blood of your brave that helped to redden all the
-waters?&nbsp; Did you move back and back with <a
-name="page18"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 18</span>your
-wandering people, or are you lying under the cedars on some green
-slope of the shore?&nbsp; I shall never know, but I shall think
-of you and wonder.</p>
-<p>There are no Indians here now, except one old squaw, who lives
-far back on the road to Maskinonge and tans buckskins in the fine
-old Indian way, but the plow turns up the arrowheads, and once in
-a while a bowl or pipe, proofs that the red men lived and fought
-here.</p>
-<h2><a name="page19"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
-19</span>CHAPTER II</h2>
-<p><span class="smcap">The</span> Lake of the Many Islands, long,
-irregular, spring-fed, lies in a cup of the rolling Ontario
-farmlands.&nbsp; At the south its waters, passing through a
-narrow strait, widen into beautiful Blue Bay.&nbsp; At the north
-they empty, in a series of cascades, into the little river Eau
-Claire.&nbsp; The town of Les Rapides, its sawmill idle, the ten
-or twelve log houses closed, stands at the outlet, a deserted
-village.&nbsp; The eagles soar to and fro over the blue lake; the
-black bass jump; the dor&eacute; swim.&nbsp; There are hundreds
-of little coves and narrow channels&mdash;waters forgotten of the
-foot, where only the hum of insect wings and the rattle of the
-kingfisher are heard, and where the heron stands sentinel in the
-marshes and the loons have their mud nests on the shores.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Crazy as a loon,&rdquo; that is, of all phrases, the
-most libelous.&nbsp; For the loon is the most sensible of fowl
-and possessed of the most distinct personality.&nbsp; No other
-water bird has so direct and so level a flight.&nbsp; He lays his
-strong body down along the wind, and goes, like a bullet,
-straight to his goal, purposeful, <a name="page20"></a><span
-class="pagenum">p. 20</span>unswerving.&nbsp; He has three cries,
-one a high, maniac laugh, which is, of course, the reason his
-wits are slandered; then a loud, squealing cry, very like the
-sound of a pig in distress; and last a long, yearning call, the
-summons to his mate, perhaps, that he sends out far across the
-water&mdash;a cry that seems the very voice of the
-wilderness.&nbsp; At twilight, and often in the night, I hear
-that lonely cry, echoing down the lakes, and the faint, far cry
-that answers it.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;There will be wind to-night,&rdquo; the weather-wise
-say.&nbsp; &ldquo;Hear the loons making a noise.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>The birds come to the bay back of the island, and swim about
-there as friendly as puddle ducks.&nbsp; If I go too close,
-closer than Mr. Gavia Immer thinks safe or respectful, down he
-goes and stays for some minutes under the water, to emerge far
-away, and in quite a different quarter from the one in which I
-expected to see him.&nbsp; No one on earth could ever predict
-where a loon will come up when he dives.&nbsp; He looks at me
-austerely, twisting his black head back on his shoulder, until I
-would swear he had turned it completely round on his white-ringed
-neck.&nbsp; Then he gives his crazy laugh and disappears
-again.</p>
-<p><a name="page21"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 21</span>The
-loon is protected in Canada.&nbsp; No one may shoot him or molest
-him.&nbsp; But once in a while one comes across a boat cushion
-made of a bird skin, its gray and white feathers very soft and
-thick and attached to the skin so fast that it is well-nigh
-impossible to pluck them.&nbsp; That is the breast of the loon,
-the great wild bird of the northern lakes, that the game law has
-failed to save.&nbsp; When I see one of these skins I hate the
-vandal who has killed the bird.</p>
-<p>The Blakes are my nearest neighbors&mdash;not nearest
-geographically, for the Drapeau farm lies closer to the island;
-but near by reason of their many friendly acts and kind
-suggestions.&nbsp; If I am ill or in trouble, it is to Henry and
-Mary Blake that I shall go for help.</p>
-<p>Henry Blake of the keen, ice-blue eye, the caustic tongue and
-the good heart.&nbsp; There was never anything more scathing than
-his condemnation of the shiftlessness and, what he considers the
-general imbecility of his neighbors, and never anything kinder
-than his willingness to help one of them in a crisis.&nbsp; He
-will sit for an hour, pencil in hand, laboring to explain to some
-unsuccessful farmer that wood hauled at next to nothing a cord
-can <a name="page22"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 22</span>only
-land the hauler in a ditch of debt, and when the hapless one has
-departed, fully determined to go his own way, to hear Henry spit
-out the one word, &ldquo;Fat-head,&rdquo; as he turns back to his
-book, is a lesson in the nice choice of epithet.</p>
-<p>When it comes to judgment on the manners, the morals, and the
-methods of their neighbors Henry and Mary Blake sit in the seats
-of the scornful; but, after all, they are somewhat justified, for
-they came over from &ldquo;The States.&rdquo;&nbsp; Henry, an
-invalid, bought a rundown island farm, and they have brought it
-to a good state of cultivation and paid off their mortgage, all
-in ten years.</p>
-<p>But while they are free in their criticisms of the natives,
-who live from hand to mouth, one notices that the Blakes are
-always willing to do a good turn, and are usually being asked to
-do one.&nbsp; Is a house to be built?&nbsp; Henry is called on to
-plan it.&nbsp; Does a churn spring a leak, or a cow fall
-ill?&nbsp; Mary goes to the rescue.&nbsp; Does a temperamental
-seed-drill choke in one of its sixty odd pipes?&nbsp; Henry is
-sent for to find the seat of the disorder and to apply the
-remedy.</p>
-<p>I also went to him, when deliberating the <a
-name="page23"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 23</span>relative cost
-of a log house and one of board.&nbsp; Mr. Blake discussed the
-matter with me in the kindest way, summing up his advice in a
-sentence, that reached my muddled brain in some such statement as
-the following:</p>
-<p>&ldquo;It all comes to this.&nbsp; You can get one cedar log,
-6&times;14 for twenty cents.&nbsp; Three goes into twenty-one
-seven times, so board or log, it would come to the same
-thing.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>It wasn&rsquo;t what he said, of course, but I hastened to
-agree, lest I should be a fat-head too.</p>
-<p>Everything on the Blake farm is a pet, from the handsome young
-Jersey bull, to the tiniest chick, hatched untimely from a
-nest-egg.&nbsp; They all run toward Mary as soon as she steps
-from the kitchen door, and as she hurries from house to barn
-there is always a rabble of small ducks, chickens, calves, and
-kittens hurrying after her.&nbsp; The other day, when she, Henry,
-and Jimmy Dodd, their adopted boy, set off for a tour of the
-lake, a calf swam after them, and tried so earnestly to climb
-aboard that, perforce, they turned back to shore and tied the
-foolish creature, lest he should drown himself and them.</p>
-<p>Like almost every family in the <a name="page24"></a><span
-class="pagenum">p. 24</span>countryside, the Blakes have adopted
-a small boy, giving him a home and training and enough to eat,
-which he never had before in all his forlorn life.&nbsp; They are
-kindness itself to Jimmie, but Henry regards him with the same
-foreboding he feels for all other native-born Canadians.&nbsp; He
-trains him, but in the spirit of &ldquo;What&rsquo;s the
-use?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Jimmie here,&rdquo; he philosophizes, &ldquo;he
-can&rsquo;t seem to learn the first thing; and if he learns it,
-he can&rsquo;t retain it.&nbsp; I have taught him to read, but he
-can&rsquo;t remember a word; and to write, but he forgets it the
-next day.&nbsp; Mary even put him through the catechism, and a
-week later he didn&rsquo;t know one thing about it.&nbsp; So what
-are you going to do?&nbsp; I figure out,&rdquo; he goes on
-meditatively, &ldquo;that the people who learn easy are the ones
-who have been here before.&nbsp; They knew it all in another
-life, maybe in another language, and all they have to do is just
-to recall it.&nbsp; But Jimmie here&mdash;well, I guess this is
-his first trip.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>All the while Jimmie of the towhead and the thin, wiry legs
-and arms is grinning at his critic with a wide, snaggle-toothed
-smile of great affection.</p>
-<p>The Blakes&rsquo; house stands on the site of an <a
-name="page25"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 25</span>old log hut,
-of two rooms and a lean-to shed.&nbsp; In digging the cellar they
-came upon a walled-in grave&mdash;the boards almost rotted
-away&mdash;and in it lay a skeleton.&nbsp; Whose?&nbsp; No one
-knows, for that grave was dug before the time of anyone now
-living at Many Islands.&nbsp; Was it some Indian warrior laid
-there to sleep?&nbsp; Was it a settler of the old pioneer
-days?&nbsp; No one can tell and no one cares.&nbsp; The Blakes
-built their comfortable eight-room house over his bones and
-thought no more about them.</p>
-<p>Yesterday Mary and I drove to Queensport, the county seat,
-fifteen miles away, that I might show myself at the bank and the
-stores where I am to trade this winter.&nbsp; The start was to be
-early, and I rose at dawn to have breakfast over, the cabin
-cleaned, and I myself rowed over to the farm.&nbsp; The woods lay
-wrapped in a heavy mist.&nbsp; Not a wet leaf stirred.&nbsp; The
-water looked like mouse-colored cr&ecirc;pe, and the sun hung
-like a big, pink balloon in a sky of gray velvet.&nbsp; But
-before our start the mists had burned away and the day was
-glorious.</p>
-<p>The road lies through a rolling country, all hills, woods,
-lakes, and glades.&nbsp; Queensport <a name="page26"></a><span
-class="pagenum">p. 26</span>stands at the head of a chain of
-lakes.&nbsp; It boasts two banks, a high school, churches of all
-denominations, and a dozen or so shops and houses set in
-gardens.&nbsp; We dined at the hotel, the Wardrobe House; we
-transacted our business at the bank, and turned then to our
-shopping.&nbsp; We went to the harness shop for bread, to the
-grocer&rsquo;s for a spool of thread, to the tailor&rsquo;s to
-enquire the cost of a telephone.&nbsp; Then I bethought me of my
-need for some rag carpet.&nbsp; I did not really want that carpet
-that day, indeed, I had not the money to pay for it.&nbsp; I only
-thought of inquiring for it while I was in the town.</p>
-<p>We were directed to the hardware shop as the most likely place
-for carpets, and I had no sooner mentioned my errand when a voice
-came out from behind a stove saying eagerly:</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I know where you can find just what you&rsquo;re
-looking for.&nbsp; My old mother has forty yards of as fine a rag
-carpet as you could wish to see.&nbsp; Say the word and
-I&rsquo;ll drive you right out to the farm and show it to
-you.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Whereupon a tall, wiry, keen-faced man rose up and dashed out
-of the shop, returning in an instant with a buggy and a
-wild-looking black horse.&nbsp; Despite my protests we were <a
-name="page27"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 27</span>bundled into
-the vehicle and driven at a gallop, through the main street of
-Queensport, and the driving was as the driving of Jehu the son of
-Nimshi.&nbsp; Past farms and fields we flew, stopping with a
-mighty jerk at the door of the mother&rsquo;s house.&nbsp; There
-the carpet was rolled forth before me, and there Mary Blake and
-our energetic friend measured me off twenty yards of it, by a
-nick in the edge of the kitchen table.</p>
-<p>In vain I pleaded and explained my poverty.&nbsp; Our abductor
-waved me a careless hand.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Money,&rdquo; he assured us, &ldquo;is the last thing
-that ever worried me.&nbsp; You may pay for the carpet when and
-where you choose.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>On the way back to town my new friend was properly
-presented.&nbsp; His name was William Whitfield.&nbsp; Later I
-heard varied tales of his peculiarities.&nbsp; There was talk of
-a horse trade, to which Bill Whitfield was a party.&nbsp; The
-other man came out of the transaction the richer by one more
-experience, but the poorer as regarded property.&nbsp; It was
-told me that men said freely that Bill Whitfield drunk could get
-the better of any two sober men in the Dominion when it came to a
-<a name="page28"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 28</span>bargain,
-and, as I contemplated my roll of carpet, leaning against the
-dashboard, I understood why I had been as wax in his hands, and I
-could only be thankful that it had not occurred to Mr. Whitfield
-to sell me the whole forty yards.</p>
-<p>Back we jogged, Mary and I, along the quiet roads, discussing
-our bargains and the news of the town.&nbsp; We passed the
-schoolhouse just as &ldquo;Teacher&rdquo; was locking the door
-for the night.&nbsp; The dusty road was printed all over with the
-marks of little bare feet, all turning away from the school gate
-and pointing toward home.&nbsp; The sun was sinking in a flaming
-sky as we came to the shore of our own lake, where the rowboat
-lay on the sand awaiting us, a pair of tired travelers, glad to
-be nearing home.</p>
-<p>I would not be a bigot.&nbsp; To each man should belong the
-right to vaunt the glories of his own beloved camping
-ground.&nbsp; There may be other places as beautiful as this Lake
-of the Many Islands, although I cannot believe it.&nbsp; But Many
-Islands at sunset, its quiet waters all rose and saffron and
-lavender, under a crescent moon; when the swallows skim the
-surface and dip their breasts in the ripple, <a
-name="page29"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 29</span>and the blue
-heron flaps away to his nest in the reeds&mdash;Well!&nbsp; I
-shall see no other spot that so moves my heart with its beauty,
-until my eyes look out beyond the sunset and behold the land that
-is very far off.</p>
-<p>I drift on past the islands, where the cedars troop down to
-the water&rsquo;s edge, and the white birches lean far out over
-the rocks.&nbsp; The colors fade, the far line of the forests
-becomes a purple blur, and stars come out and hang in a dove-gray
-sky.&nbsp; I land at the little dock, safe hidden in the cove; I
-scramble along the dark trail to the house, while the loons are
-laughing and calling as they rock on the waves.</p>
-<h2><a name="page30"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
-30</span>CHAPTER III</h2>
-<p><span class="smcap">The</span> days are still warm, but autumn
-is surely here.&nbsp; The wasps are dying everywhere and lie in
-heaps on all the window-sills; the great water spiders have
-disappeared, and all day long the yellow leaves drift down
-silently, steadily, in the forests.&nbsp; Wreaths of vapor hang
-over the trees, and every wind brings the pungent fall odor of
-distant forest fires.&nbsp; The hillsides are a blaze of color,
-with basswoods a beautiful butter-yellow, oaks, russet and maroon
-and sugar maples, a flame of scarlet against the dark-green
-velvet of the cedars and hemlocks.&nbsp; Each birch stands forth,
-a slender Dan&aelig;, white feet in a drift of gold.&nbsp; The
-woods here on the island are thinning rapidly.&nbsp; All sorts of
-hidden dells and boulders are coming to light.&nbsp; Soon the
-whole island will lie open to the sight, and then there will no
-longer be anything mysterious about it.</p>
-<p>Dried heads of goldenrod, life everlasting, and a few closed
-gentians are all that are left of the flowers; but the red and
-orange <a name="page31"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
-31</span>garlands of the bittersweet wave from every bush, the
-juniper berries are purple, and the sumacs are a wonder of great
-garnet velvet cones.</p>
-<p>From a walk round the trails I bring in an assortment of
-seeds: beggar&rsquo;s ticks, stick-seeds, Spanish needles,
-pitchforks&mdash;&ldquo;the tramps of the vegetable world,&rdquo;
-Burroughs calls them.&nbsp; They cover my skirt, they cling to my
-woolen leggings, they perch on the brim of my hat.&nbsp; Little
-pocket-shaped cases, pods with hooks, seeds shaped like tiny twin
-turtles, and furry balls like miniature chestnut burrs.&nbsp; As
-I pick and brush and tear them off I wish I knew what plants had
-fathered every one of them.</p>
-<p>At the approach of cold weather the small animals and the few
-birds that are left draw nearer to the house.&nbsp; Grouse are in
-all the paths, flying up everywhere.&nbsp; They rise with a
-thrashing, pounding noise and soar away over the bushes, to
-settle again only a little further on.&nbsp; Last evening, at
-twilight, two of them came on the porch, the little cock ruffling
-it bravely, wings dragging, fantail spread, ruff standing
-valiantly erect.&nbsp; A hen followed sedately at his
-heels.&nbsp; They are very pretty, about the size of bantam
-chickens.&nbsp; <a name="page32"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
-32</span>How I hope that I shall be here to see their young in
-the spring!</p>
-<p>This afternoon a red squirrel came round the corner of the
-house and sat down, absentmindedly, beside me on a bench.&nbsp;
-When he looked up and saw what he had done he gave a shriek and a
-bound and fled chattering off toward the sundial.&nbsp; But he
-will come back and will probably be darting into the house when
-he thinks my back is turned, for there is nothing half so
-impudent or so mischievous as the red squirrel.&nbsp; I am told
-that they do not &ldquo;den in&rdquo; as the chipmunks do.</p>
-<p>The rabbits do their best to help me get rid of my
-stores.&nbsp; There are hundreds of them about.&nbsp; They sit
-under the bushes, peering out; they appear and disappear between
-the dry stalks of the brakes.&nbsp; At evening they come close to
-the house, and catch bits of bread and potatoes thrown to them,
-then sit in the paths munching contentedly.&nbsp; They are not
-rabbits, correctly speaking, but Canadian hares, with long brown
-fur, bulging black eyes, furry ears, fringed with black, and very
-long hind legs.&nbsp; One of them comes so close and seems so
-fearless that it should not be difficult to tame him.&nbsp; I
-have named him <a name="page33"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
-33</span>Peter.&nbsp; These hares turn snow-white in winter, I am
-told.&nbsp; Even now their coats are showing white where the
-winter coat is growing.</p>
-<p>In the dusk the porcupines come pushing through the fallen
-leaves, snuffling and grunting.&nbsp; Away in the woods the
-bobcats scream and snarl.&nbsp; The natives accuse the bobcat of
-a pretty trick of lying flattened out on a limb, waiting for his
-prey to pass underneath, then he drops on its back to tear with
-tooth and talon.&nbsp; They warn me not to walk in the woods
-after dark, for fear of this Canada lynx.</p>
-<p>But my natural histories say that, while the lynx sometimes
-follows the hunter for long distances, he does it only because he
-is curious, and that there is no authentic record of the
-bobcat&rsquo;s ever having attacked a man.&nbsp; So I shall
-continue to take my walks abroad, without fear that a fierce tree
-cat will drop on me.&nbsp; But late in the night, when I am waked
-by that eerie sound, that begins with a low meow, like the cry of
-the house cat, and goes on louder and louder, to end in a horrid
-screech, full of a malevolent violence, I cover my head and am
-glad that I am safe indoors.&nbsp; <a name="page34"></a><span
-class="pagenum">p. 34</span>I know that the lynx has come forth
-from his lair in a hollow tree and is hunting my poor
-rabbits.</p>
-<p>There is no telephone line to the island; sometimes I am
-stormbound for a week, but in some underground way, the news of
-the neighborhood reaches me sooner or later.&nbsp; Therefore,
-when I came out of doors the other morning, I was instantly aware
-of a sense of impending disaster, that hung over all the
-landscape.&nbsp; There was no cheerful popping of guns in the
-fields, no hoarse voice bawled to the cattle.&nbsp; At
-Blake&rsquo;s the cause of the silence was explained.&nbsp; All
-the men round Many Islands had been summoned to the County Court
-at Frontenac, to be tried for the illegal netting and export of
-fish out of season.&nbsp; A knot of angry men had gathered on the
-shore, discussing the summons; anxious women hovered in the
-background; speculation was rife as to the identity of the
-informer.</p>
-<p>It could have been none of our men, for the obvious reason
-that all were in the same boat.&nbsp; Black Jack Beaulac, Yankee
-Jim, Little Jack, Long Joe, William Foret, all had received the
-same summons.&nbsp; It must have been an inspector from Glen
-Avon.</p>
-<p><a name="page35"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
-35</span>&ldquo;Did we not all remember a strange, white boat in
-the lake?&nbsp; That was, without doubt, the fish warden come to
-spy out for nets.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>I know very little about the legality of nets versus hooks, or
-the open and closed seasons for fishing, but even to my ignorance
-there seemed grave doubts about the line of defense to be
-offered, and I was conscious that, being an alien and a
-&ldquo;sport&rdquo; (vernacular for sportsman, that is, summer
-visitor), the matter was not being freely discussed in my
-presence.</p>
-<p>Next morning, while it was yet dark, Foret&rsquo;s motor boat
-was heard, chugging solemnly round the shore, gathering up the
-victims to take them to court.&nbsp; All day the women went
-softly, each wondering what was happening to her man, and
-devising means for scraping up the money for fines, if fines it
-had to be.&nbsp; Henry Blake went off to town to the trial, and
-the day passed gray and lowering.</p>
-<p>At red sunset the boat turned in at the narrows, but before
-she hove in sight the very beat of her engine signaled
-victory.&nbsp; She came swinging down the lake, her crew upright,
-alert, the flag of Canada flew in the wind, her propeller kicked
-the water joyously.&nbsp; As she made the round of the lake, to
-Blake&rsquo;s, to <a name="page36"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
-36</span>Beaulac&rsquo;s, to Drapeau&rsquo;s, to the Mines, it
-needed none to tell us that all was well.</p>
-<p>Foret touched at the island last to give news of the
-fight.&nbsp; The case had been dismissed for lack of
-evidence.&nbsp; There had been no conviction, no fines.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;How did it happen that there were no witnesses?&rdquo;
-I asked.</p>
-<p>Foret took out his pouch and stuffed his pipe carefully before
-he answered.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;There was eight or nine fellers there from Blue
-Bay,&rdquo; he said.&nbsp; &ldquo;They looked like they&rsquo;d
-come to testify, but, after we had talked to them a bit, it
-seemed like they hadn&rsquo;t nothing at all to say.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;What had you told them?&rdquo; I persisted.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Well, we told them that if any man felt like he&rsquo;d
-any information to give, concerning netting fer fish, he&rsquo;d
-best make his plans to leave the lake afore twelve o&rsquo;clock
-to-night.&nbsp; We meant it too; they knowed that.&nbsp; Black
-Jack give them some very plain talk, Black Jack did.&nbsp; I
-guess,&rdquo; with a grin, &ldquo;I guess that I was about the
-politest man there.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I was fined once,&rdquo; William went on,
-reminiscently, &ldquo;twenty-five dollars it was too, an&rsquo;
-it just about cleaned me out.&nbsp; They put <a
-name="page37"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 37</span>me on oath,
-you see, an&rsquo; of course, when a man&rsquo;s on his oath he
-can&rsquo;t lie.&nbsp; But the next time I went to town I seen a
-lawyer, an&rsquo; he told me they hadn&rsquo;t no right to ask me
-that question.&nbsp; A man ain&rsquo;t called on to testify
-against himself.&nbsp; So now, when the judge asks me: &lsquo;Did
-you, or did you not, net fer fish?&rsquo;&nbsp; I says,
-&lsquo;That&rsquo;s fer you to prove.&nbsp; Bring on your
-witnesses.&rsquo;&nbsp; Howsoever,&rdquo; he went on, &ldquo;as
-long as all this has come up, I guess we&rsquo;d as well eat
-mudcats fer a spell.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>So mudcats it was, until the herring began to run.</p>
-<p>Foret has kept me supplied with fish this fall, explaining
-carefully that he will sell me pickerel, herring, and catfish but
-not bass.&nbsp; Bass, being a game fish, may not be caught for
-the market.&nbsp; I have paid for the pickerel by the pound and
-the bass have been gifts, for, as William justly remarks:
-&ldquo;What are a few bass, now and then, in a friendly
-way?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Foret is long, lean, powerful, with thin, keen face, steady,
-dark eyes, and the long, silent tread of the woodsman.&nbsp;
-Sometimes he works in the Mica Mines; sometimes he farms a bit,
-or fells trees.&nbsp; More often he hunts and fishes, but always
-he is a delightful <a name="page38"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
-38</span>companion, because of his unconquerable optimism and
-fervent interest in all that concerns a matter in hand.&nbsp; He
-never admits a difficulty, no obstacle ever daunts him, and no
-one has ever heard him say an unkind thing about any living
-creature.</p>
-<p>When William goes off to a dance, Jean Foret is wild with
-anxiety.&nbsp; When he drinks a bit too much and the other men
-throw him into a hayfield or a barn, to sleep it off, she ranges
-the county in a despairing search.&nbsp; When he sobers and comes
-home, subdued and bearing gifts, who is so contrite as he?</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Never again will I go to a dance.&nbsp; There&rsquo;s
-nothing to it at all,&rdquo; he assures you.&nbsp; &ldquo;A
-man&rsquo;s better off to home.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>But once in so often William takes his fling&mdash;only he is
-never ugly or quarrelsome when he drinks.&nbsp; Even when his
-mind has lost control, he is quiet and peaceable, they say.</p>
-<p>The Forets live on the mainland, three miles off, along the
-shore.&nbsp; William is building their house by degrees.&nbsp;
-This season he went as far as the inner wall, frame, studding,
-windows, chimney, and floor.&nbsp; There is also an outer casing
-of builder&rsquo;s paper tacked on with small disks of tin.&nbsp;
-The whole edifice <a name="page39"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
-39</span>stands on stilts, about five feet off the ground, giving
-fine harbor for the hounds, and a pig or two beneath.&nbsp; The
-first time I called to see them William made a great show of
-driving these animals forth.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;The boards is so thin,&rdquo; he apologized,
-&ldquo;that it seems like I can smell them dogs up through the
-floor.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>When I remember that one thickness of board and a few sheets
-of paper are all that stand between the Forets and the winter
-blasts, I shudder.&nbsp; Not so the Forets.&nbsp; They are
-apparently quite undismayed and look forward to the approach of
-winter without misgiving.</p>
-<p>The house is divided into two rooms, each about ten feet
-square.&nbsp; There are lace curtains at the tiny windows, bright
-pictures, mostly colored calendars, a gay rag carpet, and over
-all the comfort of an exquisite neatness, for Mrs. Foret is the
-cleanest housekeeper imaginable&mdash;Jennie Foret, with her
-snapping, black eyes, her dark hair upreared in a militant
-pompadour, her trim, alert figure, and quick, light
-movements.&nbsp; Where did she acquire her love of order and her
-dainty, cleanly ways, I wonder?</p>
-<p><a name="page40"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 40</span>It is a
-friendly place.&nbsp; Chickens, ducks, geese, cats, dogs, horses
-and cows roll, run, squawk, and squeal all over the
-hillside.&nbsp; In the cove before the house live-boxes are
-moored, motor boat and skiffs lie at anchor.&nbsp; There are nets
-and skins drying on the fences.&nbsp; Two bunches of ribbon-grass
-do duty for a formal garden, standing sentinel on either side of
-the path that winds to the door.&nbsp; The house looks away
-across the &ldquo;drowned lands&rdquo; where the wicked roots and
-snags of the submerged forest stand in the water, threatening
-navigation.&nbsp; The channel to the landing is winding and
-treacherous.&nbsp; But, once at the door, no guest is ever turned
-away.&nbsp; Wandering miner, tramp, bewildered emigrant, each is
-sure of a meal, a bed, and something to set him on his way.</p>
-<h2><a name="page41"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
-41</span>CHAPTER IV</h2>
-<p><span class="smcap">Wild</span> geese flying over, cold
-mornings, colder nights, warn me that it is time to lay in
-supplies of firewood, oil and food against the coming of
-winter.&nbsp; Last evening a laden rowboat passed the island,
-going eastward under the Moon of Travelers.&nbsp; In the stern
-were a stove, a chair, a coffeepot, a frying pan, a great pile of
-bedding, and, surmounting all, a fiddle.&nbsp; The man at the
-oars threw me a surly &ldquo;Good night,&rdquo; and turning,
-looked back at me with a scowl.&nbsp; It was Old Bill Shelly, the
-hermit of the countryside&mdash;trapper, frogger, netter of fish,
-and general ne&rsquo;er-do-well.&nbsp; He has built log shacks
-all round the shores&mdash;little, one-room affairs, filled with
-a miscellaneous assortment of nets, guns, dogs, all forlorn and
-filthy past description.&nbsp; When one becomes uninhabitable, he
-leaves it and moves on to the next, but at the approach of cold
-weather he always goes into winter quarters at Blue Bay, and his
-flitting, like the flitting of the other wild things, means that
-all nature is getting ready for &ldquo;<i>le grand
-fr&ecirc;te</i>.&rdquo;</p>
-<p><a name="page42"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 42</span>Poor
-Shelly! his is the only hostile glance that I have encountered in
-my wanderings.&nbsp; Even Old Kate, the witch at Les Rapides, has
-smiled at me.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Mind Old Kate,&rdquo; the neighbors caution me.&nbsp;
-&ldquo;If she ever crosses her fingers at you, it&rsquo;s all day
-with you then.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>But when I met her in the road she spoke in quite a friendly
-way.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Cold weather coming,&rdquo; she said.&nbsp; &ldquo;Get
-in your wood.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Doubtless she thinks me another as crazy as herself.</p>
-<p>So I must set about getting enough wood to last until the
-January sawing, and must pack eggs and butter against the time
-when hens stop laying and cows go dry, for there is no shop
-nearer than Sark, six miles away, and even if one could reach it,
-through the winds on the lake, or the drifts in the roads, there
-would be no butter or eggs to buy.</p>
-<p>Tom Jackson, at the far end of the lake, has consented to sell
-me eight cords of hard wood; but to bring it to the island we
-must hire the big scow that ferries mica from the mines, and must
-have Foret&rsquo;s motor boat to tug it.</p>
-<p><a name="page43"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 43</span>This
-life is a great education as regards the relative values of
-things.&nbsp; Wood and water, oil and food, are seen here in
-their true perspective.&nbsp; Already I have learned to rate the
-wealth of a family by the size of the woodpile, that stands, like
-a rampart in the dooryard, for I know what a big stock of logs
-means in thrift, foresight, and hard labor.&nbsp; I know what it
-cost to get my own wood to my hand.</p>
-<p>City folk can pass a loaded woodcart without special emotion,
-indeed, half the time they do not see it, so concerned are they
-with the price of theater tickets, or the cut of the
-season&rsquo;s gowns.&nbsp; But I shall never look at one without
-seeing again a great scow moving slowly on the blue bosom of a
-lake, and I shall smell the delicious odor of fresh-cut maple,
-beech, and cedar, far sweeter than the breath of any summer
-garden.</p>
-<p>Ah me!&nbsp; How prosaic will seem the city&rsquo;s
-conveniences of pipes and furnaces as compared with the daily
-adventure of carrying in the logs, and battling down a windswept
-trail to dip the pails into a pit of crystal ice water!&nbsp;
-Never again shall I turn on the spigot in a bathroom without a
-swift vision of that drift-filled path through the woods that <a
-name="page44"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 44</span>leads out on
-the lake, to where the upright stake marks the water hole, hidden
-under last night&rsquo;s fall of snow.</p>
-<p>To one who has only to push a button or strike a match to have
-a room flooded with light, the problem of illumination is not
-perplexing.&nbsp; Here, the five-gallon oil tank must be ferried
-across the lake to Blake&rsquo;s farm; whence it must be again
-sent by boat to Jackson&rsquo;s shore, and there loaded on a
-wagon for Sark.&nbsp; Back it must come to the shore, to
-Blake&rsquo;s, and to the island storehouse&mdash;all this taking
-from ten days to two weeks, according to when Henry Blake is
-sending in to the store.</p>
-<p>The city postman is no very heroic figure, but little Jimmie
-Dodd is, as he beats his way across the lake, and through the
-high drifts on the island, his slender body bowed under a great
-bag of mail, his small face blue with the cold.&nbsp; Letters
-mean something to us here.&nbsp; They leave the train at Glen
-Avon, they come by stage to Sark, then they follow the oil tank
-route over water and wood trails to me, and it takes as long to
-get a letter from &ldquo;The States&rdquo; as to hear from
-England, &ldquo;The Old Country.&rdquo;</p>
-<p><a name="page45"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 45</span>To-day
-a shrill, childish yell sounded from the water.&nbsp; There was
-Jimmie, in a boat, with a great basket of eggs.&nbsp; He was
-fending carefully off from shore, as the high wind threatened to
-dash his fragile cargo against the rocks.&nbsp; Before those eggs
-were loaded into the skiff a woman had walked five miles with
-them on her back.&nbsp; I spent a long, happy afternoon, standing
-them upright on their small ends in boxes of salt.&nbsp; When
-they were all packed, twenty-four dozens of eggs seemed a great
-number for one woman to eat, even if she expected to have a long
-winter in which to eat them.</p>
-<p>The wood is all stacked on the porch, but it was hard work to
-get it there.&nbsp; The scow docked on a beach at the far side of
-the island, there the logs were gayly thrown ashore, and there
-Tom Jackson washed his hands of all further responsibility
-concerning them.&nbsp; The duck-shooting had commenced; no man
-could be found to draw that wood through the island to the house,
-so there it stayed.</p>
-<p>At length William Foret came to my aid and promised to haul
-it, and I was jubilant.&nbsp; I did not then know that Foret will
-promise any one anything.&nbsp; No man can promise more <a
-name="page46"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 46</span>delightfully
-than he.&nbsp; He is always perfectly willing, apparently, to
-help anyone out of any dilemma, he recognizes no difficulty in
-the way, and to hear him make light of one&rsquo;s most pressing
-problem is to come to the conclusion that there is no problem
-there.&nbsp; So when William promised to get the wood to the
-house I believed him and was content.</p>
-<p>Meanwhile the days went on, each colder than the last.&nbsp;
-Each morning I toiled to and fro from the beach, carrying enough
-wood, two sticks at a time, to last the day.&nbsp; Each evening I
-made a pilgrimage along the shore to Foret&rsquo;s to ask why
-tarried the wheels of his chariot.&nbsp; Sometimes he was at home
-and greeted me with a charming cordiality, more often he was
-away, fishing or hunting or cutting down a bee-tree.&nbsp; Always
-he was coming to the island the very next day.&nbsp; The Forets
-were cut to the heart to learn that I was carrying my own
-wood.&nbsp; But for this reason or that, William would have been
-there long ago.&nbsp; I was not to worry at all.&nbsp; That fuel
-would be stacked before the snow fell.</p>
-<p>I always started to Foret&rsquo;s with wrath in my heart, I
-always left there soothed and comforted, and by the time I had
-eaten supper in <a name="page47"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
-47</span>the boat, had watched the sunset over the islands, and
-had listened to the bell on Blake&rsquo;s old red cow, I would go
-to bed really believing that William was coming the next day.</p>
-<p>Sure enough, he did appear one afternoon and attacked the
-woodpile with a very fury of energy, trundling load after load up
-the trail for perhaps an hour.&nbsp; Suddenly he sat down his
-barrow and gazed fixedly out across the lake.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;There, I heard my gun,&rdquo; he observed.&nbsp;
-&ldquo;It&rsquo;s two fellers from Glen Avon, come to have me cut
-them down a bee-tree.&nbsp; I told the woman&rdquo;&mdash;meaning
-Mrs. Foret&mdash;&ldquo;to take the little rifle and shoot three
-times if they come, an&rsquo; that&rsquo;s her.&nbsp; I got to
-go.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Oh, Mr. Foret!&rdquo; I expostulated, almost with
-tears, &ldquo;have you the heart to leave this wood?&nbsp; Here,
-you take my pistol and shoot for them to come over and lend a
-hand with this work.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>But William was already climbing into his boat.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;It&rsquo;s the little rifle,&rdquo; he said,
-sentimentally, &ldquo;I&rsquo;ve got to go,&rdquo; and away he
-chugged, leaving me raging on the shore.</p>
-<p>After all he did come back, and the very <a
-name="page48"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 48</span>next day,
-Mrs. Foret and little Emmie, their adopted child, with him.&nbsp;
-We all carried wood, Jean and I in baskets, little Emmie, one
-stick at a time in her small arms.&nbsp; By evening it was all
-stacked and we were exhausted.&nbsp; There it stands, eight feet
-high, all round the house and the place looks like a
-stockade.</p>
-<p>After supper William cleaned and oiled the famous pistol; we
-women washed the dishes and little Emmie skirmished about,
-getting in every one&rsquo;s way, while Jean Foret shrieked dire
-threats of the laying on of a &ldquo;gad&rdquo; that one knew
-would never be applied.&nbsp; The crows flew home across the
-sky.&nbsp; The child crept close to William&rsquo;s side and fell
-asleep.&nbsp; He moved the heavy little head very gently, until
-it rested more comfortably against his great shoulder.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Our little girl would have been just the age of this
-one, if she had lived,&rdquo; he said.</p>
-<p>There was a sudden hush, while I remembered the Foret baby
-that had died at birth, when Jennie had almost died too, and when
-Dr. Le Baron had said that she could never have another.</p>
-<p>Presently we gathered barrow, baskets and sleeping child, and
-I watched their boat go <a name="page49"></a><span
-class="pagenum">p. 49</span>off, threading its way between the
-islands and points, a little moving speck on the amber water.</p>
-<p>Across, on the shore, Joey Drapeau was plowing for the fall
-rye.&nbsp; His voice, bawling threatening and slaughter to the
-steaming horses, came across to me, softened by the
-distance.&nbsp; It was Saturday night.&nbsp; Soon the work would
-be done for another week.&nbsp; Then the men would go out on the
-lake, jerking along in their cranky little flat-bottomed
-punts.&nbsp; They would sing under the stars, girls&rsquo; voices
-mingling with their harsher tones.</p>
-<p>Little fiery clouds broke off from the sides of the crater,
-into which the sun had dropped, and were drifting across the
-quiet sky.&nbsp; A long finger of light crossed over the island
-and ran like a torch along the eastern horizon, turning the
-treetops to flame color and burnished copper, and the upland
-meadows to gold.</p>
-<p>On the island the woods were dark, and somewhere in their
-depths a screech owl&rsquo;s cry shuddered away into silence.</p>
-<h2><a name="page50"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
-50</span>CHAPTER V</h2>
-<p><span class="smcap">November</span> is the month of
-mosses.&nbsp; Every fallen tree, every rotting stump, every rock,
-the trodden paths, and even the hard face of the cliff, are
-padded deep with velvet.&nbsp; The color ranges from clear
-emerald, out through the tints to silvery, sage green, and back
-through the shades to an olive brown, almost as dark as the earth
-itself.&nbsp; Round the shores the driftwood is piled high on the
-beach.&nbsp; It looks like bleached bones of monsters long dead,
-huge vertebrae, leg bones, skulls and branching antlers.&nbsp;
-The trees are bare, the brakes dry and crumbling, but the north
-point of the island, its one naked ugly spot of the summer, is
-now covered with a blood-red carpet.&nbsp; A close-growing,
-grassy weed has turned brilliant crimson and clothed it with
-beauty.&nbsp; Far away on the lake I am guided home by that flare
-of color on the point.</p>
-<p>The birds are gone, all but the crows, that perch on the
-tallest trees and lift their hoarse voices in a mournful
-chorus.&nbsp; But now is the time to go bird&rsquo;s-nesting, to
-find the homes of <a name="page51"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
-51</span>all the vireos, warblers, creepers, and sparrows that
-made the island their breeding ground.&nbsp; The nests of the
-vireos, woven of birch bark, bits of hornet&rsquo;s nests, grass
-and scraps of paper, are easy to find, for the pretty, hanging
-baskets are fastened in the crotches of the bushes and low
-saplings.&nbsp; The others are not so readily discovered, and it
-was by merest accident that I came across the home of the brown
-thrasher, who made the summer vocal with his beautiful
-song.&nbsp; It was on the ground and so near the house that I
-wonder that we did not walk into it.&nbsp; It is a mere bunch of
-twigs, so loosely twisted together that it fell apart when it was
-moved.</p>
-<p>Every afternoon I go faggotting, bringing in armloads of dry
-sumac and fallen branches.&nbsp; They are not especially good for
-kindling, but now that the deer season is on, no man will work;
-so until after November fifteenth, the reign of the
-Hunter&rsquo;s Moon, the brush pile must serve.&nbsp; It takes
-constant gathering to collect enough to start the hardwood fires,
-and a wet day sets me back sadly.&nbsp; I pile up as much as I
-can in the empty sleeping shacks, to keep it dry, and I can only
-hope that the snow will not come before someone has been <a
-name="page52"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 52</span>induced to
-lay aside his gun and cut a cord or two of driftwood
-kindling.</p>
-<p>Butterflies are always coming in on the twigs.&nbsp; With
-their wings folded flat together, showing only their dry
-undersides, they look so like old withered leaves that it is only
-when the warmth of the room wakes them, and they flutter off to
-the windows, that they can be recognized as butterflies at
-all.&nbsp; One flew to the south window yesterday and crawled
-there, beating his delicate wings against the glass all
-morning.&nbsp; He was brown, tan and yellow on the upper side but
-underneath so like a dry, woolly old leaf as to be an amazing bit
-of nature&rsquo;s mimicry.&nbsp; As I looked at his poor, torn
-wings and feebly waving antenn&aelig; he seemed suddenly the very
-oldest thing, the lone survivor of a forgotten summer, a piteous
-little Tithonus, to whom had been granted the terrible gift of
-immortality, without the boon of an immortal youth.</p>
-<p>At first I thought that he was being given a respite from the
-common fate of butterflies, for I did not then know that the
-angle wings can last over the winter, lying dormant in protected
-places, and that the last brood of a summer can live until
-another spring.&nbsp; I even <a name="page53"></a><span
-class="pagenum">p. 53</span>planned to outwit nature by feeding
-this one and keeping him alive in the artificial summer of the
-warm house.&nbsp; I made a sirup of sugar and water and offered
-it but the butterfly would none of it, only crawling and beating
-his wings in a vain effort to escape through the glass into the
-bleak November sunshine.&nbsp; At length I carried him to the
-door, and he fluttered off to a bush and clung there.&nbsp; After
-turning away for a moment I went back to find him; he was gone;
-he had become a dead leaf again.</p>
-<p>
-<a href="images/p53b.jpg">
-<img class='floatright' alt=
-"&ldquo;Peter the rabbit, is turning white very rapidly&rdquo;"
-title=
-"&ldquo;Peter the rabbit, is turning white very rapidly&rdquo;"
- src="images/p53s.jpg" />
-</a>Peter, the rabbit, spends most of his time at the door,
-waiting for a chance crust.&nbsp; He fsits on his haunches,
-rocking gently back and forth, making a soft, little <a
-name="page54"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 54</span>knocking
-noise on the porch floor.&nbsp; If I am late in coming out at
-mealtimes, he looks at me with so dignified an air of patient
-reproof that I feel quite apologetic for having kept him
-waiting.&nbsp; His meal finished, he washes his face and paws
-carefully, like a cat, then sits in the sun, eyes closed,
-forepaws tucked away under his breast and ears laid back along
-his shoulders.&nbsp; He is turning white very rapidly.&nbsp; At
-first, only his tail, feet, breast and the ends of his ears were
-lightly powdered, but now he looks as if he had hopped into a pan
-of flour by mistake.</p>
-<p>Other hares, now lean and wild, come out of the woods at dusk
-and try to share Peter&rsquo;s bread.&nbsp; But he turns on them
-fiercely, driving them back over the hill, with an angry noise,
-something between a squeal and a grunt.&nbsp; If anyone thinks a
-rabbit a meek, poor-spirited creature, he should see Peter, when
-threatened with the loss of his dinner.&nbsp; Evidently, he
-believes that he has pre-empted this territory and all that goes
-here in the way of food, and he means to defend his claim.</p>
-<p>Rufus, the red squirrel, torments Peter unmercifully, dashing
-across the ground under his nose and snatching the bread from <a
-name="page55"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 55</span>between the
-rabbit&rsquo;s very teeth.&nbsp; He is there and away before the
-rabbit knows what has happened.&nbsp; Poor, slow little Peter
-stood these attacks in bewildered patience for a time, but now he
-has worked out a plan for getting even with the squirrel that
-serves him fairly well.&nbsp; He sits on his crust, drawing it
-out inch by inch from under him as he nibbles, but even at that
-Rufus gets about half.&nbsp; I am training the rabbit to take his
-food from my hand, for nothing thrown on the ground is safe for
-an instant from the little red-brown robber.&nbsp; It took some
-very patient sitting to overcome Peter&rsquo;s timidity, but
-after the first bit was taken the rest was easy.&nbsp; Now he
-comes fearlessly to me as soon as I appear.</p>
-<p>The squirrel is growing very tame too, but he will never be as
-tranquil a companion as the rabbit.&nbsp; He lacks Bunny&rsquo;s
-repose of manner.&nbsp; He is sitting on the windowsill now,
-eating a bit of cold potato.&nbsp; He turns it round and round,
-nibbling at it daintily.&nbsp; Now and again he stops to lay a
-tiny paw on his heart&mdash;or is it his stomach?&nbsp; The area
-of his organs is very minute and it may be either.</p>
-<p>There is something very flattering in the confidence of these
-little creatures of the <a name="page56"></a><span
-class="pagenum">p. 56</span>island.&nbsp; How do they know that
-they may safely trust my kindness?&nbsp; How can they be sure
-that I will not betray them suddenly with trap or gun?</p>
-<p>The rabbit came into the house yesterday, padding about
-noiselessly on his cushioned toes.&nbsp; He stopped at each chair
-and stood on his hind feet, resting his forepaws on the
-seat.&nbsp; He examined everything, ears wriggling, nose
-quivering, tail thumping on the carpet.&nbsp; Suddenly he
-discovered that the door had blown shut and then he went quite
-wild with fear.&nbsp; He was in a trap, he thought, and tore
-round and round the room, jumping against the window panes,
-dashing his head against the walls until I feared that he would
-injure himself before I could reach the door to open it.&nbsp;
-Poor little Peter, he is not valiant after all.&nbsp; He comes in
-still, but always keeps close to the door, and the way of escape
-must always be open.</p>
-<p>The men on the mainland hunt over the islands, putting on the
-dogs to drive off the game.&nbsp; When the ice holds, the hounds
-will come over of their own accord to course the rabbits.&nbsp; I
-should like to feel that for the term of my stay this one island
-could be a <a name="page57"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
-57</span>place of safety for the animals that take refuge here,
-and so I have paid visits of ceremony to the neighboring farms to
-explain that I shall spend the winter and to ask that the dogs be
-kept off my preserve, as far as possible for the sake of my
-pets.&nbsp; I may say that my wish has been respected in the
-kindest way, and my neighbors have done their best to make the
-island a sanctuary for the birds and beasts.&nbsp; The first
-assurance of each visitor has been, &ldquo;I tied up my dogs
-afore I started over.&rdquo;&nbsp; It was the opening remark of
-an early caller who strode into the room this morning as I was
-eating a late breakfast.&nbsp; A reassuring salutation, for
-without it I might have feared that the speaker had dropped in to
-do me a mischief, his appearance was so very intimidating.&nbsp;
-He was tall and very lean, a sort of cross between an Indian and
-a crane.&nbsp; His greasy, black hair hung in rattails on the
-turned-up collar of a dingy red sweater.&nbsp; He wore a ragged
-squirrel-skin cap, tail hanging down behind&mdash;which headgear
-he did not remove, and he carried a murderous looking ax.&nbsp;
-Following came a boy of about sixteen, whose smile was so
-friendly and ingratiating that I felt comforted when I saw
-it.&nbsp; The two drew <a name="page58"></a><span
-class="pagenum">p. 58</span>up to the stove, lit pipes,
-conversed, and in the round-about course of their remarks I
-gathered that they had heard of my need of kindling wood and had
-come to cut me a cord.&nbsp; Presently they retired to a secluded
-spot on the shore and chopped away, emerging every half hour or
-so to bring a load up to the house.</p>
-<p>In this country men eat where they work, so toward noon I
-bestirred myself to prepare what I considered a particularly good
-dinner for my &ldquo;hands.&rdquo;&nbsp; I had a theory that my
-chances of getting future kindling cut depended on the good
-impression made on these first workmen.&nbsp; I had corned beef,
-potatoes, peas, and tinned beans.&nbsp; I made hot biscuit, cake,
-stewed apples, and prepared the inevitable pot of strong
-tea.&nbsp; The man drew his chair to the table with perfect
-self-possession, speared a potato from the pot with his knife and
-remarked: &ldquo;You ain&rsquo;t much of a cook, are
-you?&rdquo;&mdash;adding, kindly, &ldquo;I think I&rsquo;ll just
-try yer tea.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>He assured me subsequently that he had no particular fault to
-find with my dinner.&nbsp; He only meant to put me at my ease and
-to make conversation.</p>
-<p>When he departed in the evening, after <a
-name="page59"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 59</span>having cut
-and stacked an incredible amount of wood, he assured me that he
-would be ready to work for me at any time.&nbsp; I had only to
-&ldquo;holler&rdquo; and he would drop a day&rsquo;s hunting to
-come to my aid.&nbsp; So the dinner could not have been so
-unsatisfactory after all.</p>
-<p>News of the Great War has come to Many Islands.&nbsp; William
-Foret returned from Glen Avon the other day with great tales of
-armed men guarding the railroad bridges against the
-Germans.&nbsp; He also brought the information that I am a German
-spy.&nbsp; He heard that at the station.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;That woman on the island is there for no good,&rdquo;
-the loafers were saying.&nbsp; &ldquo;She&rsquo;s a spy.&nbsp;
-She&rsquo;s got a writing machine there an&rsquo; she&rsquo;s
-sending off letters every day.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>One inventive soul was even asserting that I am not a woman at
-all, but a man in woman&rsquo;s clothes and that there is a
-wireless station here.</p>
-<p>But William stood up for me bravely.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Spy, nawthin,&rdquo; he scoffed.&nbsp; &ldquo;What
-could she be a spyin&rsquo; on there on that island?&nbsp;
-There&rsquo;s nawthin&rsquo; there but rabbits.&nbsp; No, as I
-understand it, she&rsquo;s some sort of a book-writer off fer
-health.&nbsp; She&rsquo;s got no wireless, <a
-name="page60"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 60</span>that I know,
-fer I&rsquo;ve been over the ground there time and
-again.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>But the crowd was not convinced.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;She&rsquo;d ought to be investigated,&rdquo; they
-declared.</p>
-<p>Then William rose to the occasion nobly.&nbsp;
-&ldquo;She&rsquo;s no German spy,&rdquo; he said.&nbsp;
-&ldquo;She&rsquo;s an all-right woman, and ef any man feels like
-makin&rsquo; any trouble fer her, me an&rsquo; Black Jack and
-Yankee Jim stands ready to make it very onhealthy fer
-him.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I told them,&rdquo; added William, with a delighted
-grin, &ldquo;that you&rsquo;d a little gun here an&rsquo;
-you&rsquo;d use it on the first man that come on the island
-without you knowed him fer a friend.&nbsp; But I didn&rsquo;t say
-that you only stood five feet five in yer boots and didn&rsquo;t
-weigh over a hundred pounds.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Under the shield of William&rsquo;s favor and the wholly
-undeserved reputation of being a good shot, I continue to sleep
-o&rsquo; nights, but I have no fancy for being investigated.</p>
-<p>Last night a boat stopped at the shore, long after dark, and I
-was startled for a moment until I heard a chant that rose at the
-dock and continued up the trail to the house.&nbsp; Uncle Dan
-Cassidy had brought over the mail and <a name="page61"></a><span
-class="pagenum">p. 61</span>a Thanksgiving box from home, but he
-was taking no chances.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Friends, friends, don&rsquo;t shoot, don&rsquo;t
-shoot,&rdquo; he sang until he stepped on the porch.</p>
-<p>But while war and its rumors excite us, all topics pale in
-interest before the fact that the herring have begun to
-run.&nbsp; Whether battles are lost or won we still have to eat,
-a pig or a sheep does not last very long and the fish are a great
-part of the winter food.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;They save the meat,&rdquo; says Harry Spriggins.</p>
-<p>So when the first silver herring came up in the net there was
-great rejoicing.&nbsp; Then the little skiffs and punts started
-out, dancing and curtseying on the waves.&nbsp; The nets were
-stretched across the narrows between the islands, and, during the
-herring run, no other work was done.&nbsp; The season is short;
-there is no time to waste.&nbsp; The run began this year on the
-twelfth, the greatest catch was on the eighteenth, the fishing
-was over on the twenty-eighth.&nbsp; The fish do not come up
-except at a temperature of about thirty-four.</p>
-<p>These are the bright, frosty days&mdash;days when the blood
-runs quick and the air tastes like wine; when the water is
-deep-blue, the <a name="page62"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
-62</span>waves run high and the whitecaps race in to the
-shores.</p>
-<p>The little boats bob up and down, the long nets come up
-spangled with the gleaming fish, and the tubs and boxes are piled
-high with the silver catch.&nbsp; As the fishermen pass they stop
-at the island and throw me off a herring or two.&nbsp; Every
-house on the mainland reeks; barrels and kegs stand in every
-dooryard, and everywhere the women and children are busy cleaning
-the fish.</p>
-<h2><a name="page63"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
-63</span>CHAPTER VI</h2>
-<p><span class="smcap">The</span> time of great winds has come,
-the heavy November gales that roar down the lakes, lashing the
-water into white-capped waves, dashing the driftwood against the
-rocks and decking the beaches with long wreaths of yellow
-foam.&nbsp; The swell is so strong and the waves so high that
-even the men do not care to venture out.&nbsp; When I must get
-over to Blake&rsquo;s farm I hug the shore of the island to the
-point, then dash across the channel between this land and his,
-and the wind turns my light skiff round and round before I can
-catch the lee again.</p>
-<p>All night the house rocks and shivers and the trees creak,
-groan and crash down in the woods.&nbsp; I am afraid to walk the
-trails because of falling branches, for if I were struck down I
-should lie in the path for days and no one would know that I had
-been hurt.</p>
-<p>These winds give the strangest effect of distant music.&nbsp;
-I am always thinking that I can almost hear the sound of
-trumpets, blowing far away.</p>
-<p><a name="page64"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 64</span>Inside
-the house is warm and comfortable, with its creamy yellow walls
-of unpainted wood, its many windows, its pictures, its books; but
-I am lonely; I cannot settle to any occupation.&nbsp; The
-constant roaring of the wind unnerves me, the gray, scudding
-clouds depress me.&nbsp; A hound on the shore bays and howls day
-and night.&nbsp; I have heard no human voice for more than a
-week.</p>
-<p>The storm died away in a smothering fog that settled down on
-the very surface of the lake, blotting out everything.&nbsp; I
-could not see one inch beyond the shore.&nbsp; The mainland was
-hidden, the opposite island was invisible&mdash;everything was
-gone except the land on which I stood.&nbsp; I could hear voices
-at the farms, the sound of oars, and people talking in the boats
-as they passed.&nbsp; Men were hunting on the mainland, almost a
-mile away.&nbsp; I could hear their shots and the cries of the
-hounds, but I might as well have been stricken blind, for all
-that I could distinguish.&nbsp; All sorts of fears assailed
-me.&nbsp; Suppose men should land on the island in the fog, how
-could I see to escape them?&nbsp; Suppose the fog should last and
-last, how would I dare to go out in a boat for any
-provisions?&nbsp; Suppose I <a name="page65"></a><span
-class="pagenum">p. 65</span>should be ill, or hurt, how could I
-signal to the farm for help?</p>
-<p>By evening the fog had thoroughly frightened me; it was time
-to pull myself together.&nbsp; So I cooked a particularly good
-dinner, read a new book for awhile, then went to bed praying that
-the sun would be shining in the morning.</p>
-<p>After being asleep for what seemed hours, I was aware of a
-loud shouting, followed by heavy steps on the porch and a voice
-calling as someone knocked and pounded on the door.&nbsp; I
-stumbled out of bed, half asleep, and groped my way to the lamp,
-fortunately forgetting all about the pistol laid by my side for
-just such an emergency.&nbsp; When the door was finally opened,
-the shapeless bulk of a woman confronted me&mdash;the very
-largest woman I have ever seen.&nbsp; She loomed like a giant
-against a solid bank of fog that rolled in behind her.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I don&rsquo;t know where I am,&rdquo; she
-announced.&nbsp; &ldquo;I&rsquo;m all turned round.&nbsp;
-I&rsquo;ve been rowing hours and hours in the fog, and I&rsquo;ve
-a boy, a pail of eggs, a mess of catfish and a little wee baby in
-the boat.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;For mercy&rsquo;s sake,&rdquo; I ejaculated,
-&ldquo;what are <a name="page66"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
-66</span>you doing out in a boat with a baby on a night like
-this?&nbsp; Who are you anyway?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;m from Spriggins&rsquo; farm,&rdquo; she
-answered, &ldquo;the place where you gits yer chickens at.&nbsp;
-I&rsquo;ve been over at Drapeau&rsquo;s spending the evening and
-I started to row home two hours ago.&nbsp; But the fog got me all
-turned round, and when I struck this shore I says: &lsquo;This
-must be the island where the woman&rsquo;s at.&nbsp; Ef
-she&rsquo;s to the house I&rsquo;ll wake her and git me a
-light.&rsquo;&rdquo;</p>
-<p>I gave her a lantern and she went off to the shore, while I
-threw fresh logs on the smoldering fire and tried to wake
-myself.</p>
-<p>Presently a dismal procession returned: a boy, laden with
-shawls and wraps, the woman carrying a baby.&nbsp; When that
-infant was unwrapped, it needed not its proud mother&rsquo;s
-introduction to tell me whose child it was.&nbsp; Harry Spriggins
-is a small, wiry man, with sharp, black eyes and a face like a
-weasel.&nbsp; The baby was exactly like him.&nbsp; They were a
-forlorn trio, and, oh, so dirty!&nbsp; My heart sank as I
-surveyed them, realizing that they were on my hands for the
-night.&nbsp; Then I felt properly ashamed of myself, for if the
-poor soul had not found the island she might have <a
-name="page67"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 67</span>been on the
-lake in an open boat until daylight; and by this time a rain was
-falling, quite heavily enough to have swamped so unseaworthy a
-craft as her small, flat-bottomed punt.</p>
-<p>For some time we sat gazing at one another, while I tried to
-determine what should be done with my guests.&nbsp; Finally I
-sent the boy to the storehouse for extra mattresses, and prepared
-them beds on the floor.&nbsp; Clean sheets were spread over
-everything.&nbsp; Probably the woman had never slept on clean
-sheets before, but I reasoned that sheets could be washed more
-easily than blankets, and just then washing seemed to me very
-essential.</p>
-<p>About one o&rsquo;clock we all settled down for the night, but
-not to sleep&mdash;oh, no!&nbsp; The woman was far too excited
-for that.&nbsp; Thanks to the fire that I had made, in my
-stupidity, and to the air in the cabin, I could not sleep either,
-so I heard a great deal of the inside history of the
-neighborhood, before morning.</p>
-<p>I learned that minks are a menace to the poultry industry here
-about.&nbsp; In Spriggins&rsquo; own barnyard, a flock of
-thirty-six young turkeys were found all lying dead in a row, with
-their necks chewed off&mdash;a plain case of <a
-name="page68"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 68</span>mink, and a
-dire blow to the finances of the family.</p>
-<p>At three o&rsquo;clock I had the life history of a Plymouth
-Rock rooster, of superlative intelligence, that always crowed at
-that precise hour.&nbsp; At four I was roused from an uneasy doze
-by the query: &ldquo;Do you know anything about Dr.
-So-and-So&rsquo;s cure for &lsquo;obsidy&rsquo;?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>After puzzling over the word for some minutes I gathered that
-&ldquo;obesity&rdquo; was what was meant, for my guest went on,
-pathetically enough, to tell me how hard her work was and how she
-suffered in doing it, burdened with that mountain of flesh.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;There&rsquo;s another cure,&rdquo; she went on.&nbsp;
-&ldquo;It&rsquo;s Mrs. So-and-So&rsquo;s, but it calls for a
-Turkish bath, and where could I get that?&nbsp; Beside, I could
-never do all that rolling and kicking.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Peering through the gloom at what looked like the outline of
-an elephant on the floor, I did not see how she could, but I felt
-that if there were any known way of getting that woman into a
-Turkish bath I would cheerfully bear the expense.</p>
-<p>At six I gave up the struggle and rose for the day, stumbling
-about from cabin to kitchen <a name="page69"></a><span
-class="pagenum">p. 69</span>to cook breakfast in the
-semi-darkness, for the fog was still thick.&nbsp; At nine, the
-day being a little lighter, I made the mistake of suggesting that
-the boy row over to Blake&rsquo;s for some bread and the
-mail.&nbsp; He departed, and stayed for hours.&nbsp; Soon his
-mother began to fidget and finally set off for the shore to
-search for him, leaving that changeling of a baby in my care.</p>
-<p>There it lay on my bed, staring at me with its black beads of
-eyes, and looking as old as the Pharaoh of the Exodus and as
-crafty.&nbsp; The mother stayed and stayed away.&nbsp; I had
-visions of being left with that child on my hands all
-winter.&nbsp; I saw myself walking it up and down the cabin
-through the long nights.&nbsp; I saw myself sharing with it my
-last spoonful of condensed milk, but, as I surveyed it, I knew
-what I would do first.&nbsp; I would give it the best bath it had
-ever had in its short life and I would burn its filthy little
-clothes.</p>
-<p>But while I was harboring these designs against that innocent
-child its mother came back, her hands full of green leaves.&nbsp;
-She had not found the boy, but she had gathered what she called
-&ldquo;Princess Fern.&rdquo;</p>
-<p><a name="page70"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
-70</span>&ldquo;This is awful good fer the blood,&rdquo; she
-announced.&nbsp; &ldquo;Ef yer blood is bad, this will make it as
-pure as spring water; if it&rsquo;s pure, this will keep it
-so.&nbsp; It&rsquo;s good fer you either way.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>The mention of blood led naturally to the recital of the
-various accidents she had seen, and I learned that there are
-several blood healers in the neighborhood&mdash;persons who can
-stop the flow by the recitation of a certain verse of
-Scripture.&nbsp; A man can perform this miracle for a woman and a
-woman for a man, but a man cannot cure another man, nor a woman
-another woman.&nbsp; This charm must never be revealed.&nbsp; It
-can only be transmitted at death.&nbsp; It is a sure cure for
-blood flow and quite authentic, according to Mrs. Spriggins, who
-has seen the blood stopped.</p>
-<p>While we were discussing this mystery the boy came back,
-smilingly, from quite a different direction from the one in which
-he had been sent.&nbsp; He had never found the farm, but had been
-all this time wandering in the fog.&nbsp; It was all too like a
-nightmare.&nbsp; I did not tempt fate by offering any more
-suggestions.&nbsp; Instead, I bundled the party into their
-various wrappings, led them to their boat, and <a
-name="page71"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 71</span>turned their
-faces firmly in the direction of home.&nbsp; Then I sat on the
-porch, tracing their progress down the lake by the wailing of
-that wretched baby.&nbsp; When the sounds had finally died away,
-I went in and scrubbed the cabin from end to end with strong,
-yellow soap.</p>
-<p>And the sequel to all this?&nbsp; She was not Spriggins&rsquo;
-wife at all, but &ldquo;Spriggins&rsquo; woman,&rdquo; and she
-was not lost.</p>
-<p>When I mentioned her visit the neighbors shook their
-heads.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;You couldn&rsquo;t lose old Jane on Many
-Islands,&rdquo; they scoffed.&nbsp; &ldquo;She wanted to see you,
-that was all; and she knowed you wouldn&rsquo;t let her land if
-she come by day.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>But two men were lost on the lake that night, and I believe
-that Jane was lost too.</p>
-<p>With the rural love of scandal and the usual disregard of all
-laws of probability, the people accuse this woman of all sorts of
-outrageous crimes.&nbsp; It is said that she murdered her
-daughter for the girl&rsquo;s bit of life insurance, that she has
-strangled her own babies, that she bound her aged aunt face
-downward on a board, and pushed her out on the lake to
-drown.&nbsp; And here was I, all ignorant of the character of my
-guest, gravely discussing with <a name="page72"></a><span
-class="pagenum">p. 72</span>this alleged criminal the proper
-feeding of infants and the rival merits of toilet soaps.</p>
-<p>I stopped at her house the other day to inquire my way.&nbsp;
-She greeted me with much cordiality.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;You was certainly fine to me that night,&rdquo; she
-said.&nbsp; &ldquo;I donno what we would a-done, ef you
-hadn&rsquo;t took us in.&nbsp; The baby would a-been drownded, I
-guess.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Now I am glad that I was &ldquo;fine&rdquo; to her, for poor
-Jane is gone, and she died as she had lived&mdash;without help
-and without hope.</p>
-<p>Her children&rsquo;s father was away at a dance in Sark when
-she fell in their desolate house.&nbsp; Seeing that she did not
-rise, one frightened child crept out of bed and covered her
-nakedness with an old quilt.&nbsp; In the morning two little
-boys, crying and shivering, made their way along the shore to the
-place where the man was sleeping off his debauch.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Come home, Pop,&rdquo; they cried.&nbsp;
-&ldquo;Mom&rsquo;s dead.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>But he would not heed them.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;It&rsquo;s only one of them spells she gits,&rdquo; he
-grunted.&nbsp; &ldquo;She&rsquo;ll be all right.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;No, it ain&rsquo;t no spell, Pop,&rdquo; they
-cried.&nbsp; &ldquo;She&rsquo;s dead, I tell you.&nbsp;
-She&rsquo;s cold.&rdquo;</p>
-<p><a name="page73"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 73</span>Then
-the neighbors, who had never gone to that house when Jane was
-alive, went now and comforted the children.&nbsp; They followed
-the poor body along the ice to its grave, and Mrs. Spellman, who
-has six little ones of her own, went over and took the baby
-home.</p>
-<p>There are a great many of these irregular unions here, for
-Canada is no land of easy divorce.&nbsp; If you are a poor man,
-and have any predilection for being legally married, you must
-stay with the wife with whom you started.&nbsp; Divorce and
-remarriage are not for you.</p>
-<p>In a little book of instructions for immigrants and settlers,
-published by one of the newspapers, the matter is made very
-plain:</p>
-<p>&ldquo;In Manitoba, Ontario, Alberta, and Saskatchewan there
-is no divorce court.&nbsp; Application must be made to the
-Dominion Parliament, by means of a private bill, praying for
-relief by reason of adultery, or adultery and cruelty, if it is
-the wife who is seeking a divorce from her husband.&nbsp; The
-charges made are investigated by a special committee of the
-Senate, and, if a favorable report is presented to the House, the
-bill usually passes.&rdquo;&nbsp; But the little book goes on to
-state, very simply, <a name="page74"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
-74</span>that &ldquo;The expense of obtaining the bill is very
-great, exceeding in any event five hundred dollars.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>So for men like Harry Spriggins, whose wife deserted him, or
-for Black Jack&rsquo;s woman, whose husband beat her, there is no
-way out.&nbsp; They simply take another mate, and stand by the
-arrangement as faithfully as may be.</p>
-<h2><a name="page75"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
-75</span>CHAPTER VII</h2>
-<p><span class="smcap">Winter</span> has thrown a veil of lace
-over the islands, a wet, clinging snow that covers every
-tree-trunk, rock, and stump, and turns the cedars to mounds of
-fluffy whiteness.&nbsp; The paths lie under archways of bending,
-snow-laden branches, and all the underbrush is hidden.&nbsp; The
-island wears many jewels, for every ice-incrusted twig flashes a
-cluster of diamonds, the orange berries of the bittersweet, each
-encased in clear ice, are like topaz, and the small frozen pools
-between the stones reflect the sky and shine like sapphires.</p>
-<p>There have been snows since the first week in November, but
-this is the first that has remained, and how it shows the
-midnight activities of all the wild folk!&nbsp; The porch floor
-is a white page on which they have left their signatures.&nbsp;
-Here, by the storeroom door, are innumerable little stitch-like
-strokes.&nbsp; They were made by the deer mouse&rsquo;s wee
-paws.&nbsp; There are the prints of the squirrel&rsquo;s little
-hands and a long swathe, where his brush swept the snow.&nbsp;
-The chickadees and nuthatches <a name="page76"></a><span
-class="pagenum">p. 76</span>came very early.&nbsp; Their
-three-fingered prints are all over the woodpile, and on the paths
-are the blurred, ragged tracks left by the grouse&rsquo;s
-snowshoes.&nbsp; Over the hill runs a row of deep, round holes,
-showing that a fox has passed that way, and the rabbit&rsquo;s
-tracks are everywhere.</p>
-<p>Every day the water freezes farther and farther out from the
-shores, and it is increasingly difficult to force a channel
-through it to the open lake.&nbsp; The bay in front of the
-Blake&rsquo;s house is frozen straight across, and I land far
-away on the point and scramble through the bushes to the house
-when I must go over for the mail.&nbsp; Frozen cascades hang down
-over the rocks, pale-blue, jade and softest cream color.&nbsp;
-The rocks themselves are capped with frozen spray and the
-driftwood wears long beards of ice.</p>
-<p>Walking along the beach to-day I heard a great chirping and
-twittering, like the sound made by innumerable very small
-birds.&nbsp; Could a late flock of migrants be stopping in the
-treetops?&nbsp; I wondered.&nbsp; But when I searched for the
-birds there were none.&nbsp; The chirping noises came from the
-thin shore ice, whose crystals, rubbed together by the gently
-moving <a name="page77"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
-77</span>water, were making the birdlike sounds.&nbsp; Now and
-then would come a sudden &ldquo;ping&rdquo; like the stroke on
-the wire string of a banjo, and sometimes a clear, sustained
-tone, like the note of a violin.</p>
-<p>As the ice grew thicker these sounds all stopped and over all
-the land broods a profound silence.&nbsp; The winds are still, no
-bird voices come out of the woods; even the waves seem hardly to
-rise and fall against the shores.&nbsp; It is as though all
-nature were holding her breath to wait the coming of the ice.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;When the lake freezes over, when the ice holds,&rdquo;
-we have a habit of saying, and, looking across the uncertainties
-of the shut-in time, when I shall not be able to use the boat and
-when no one can cross over to me, I too am longing for the
-ice.</p>
-<p>The boat can no longer be left in the water.&nbsp; Any cold
-morning would find it frozen in until spring.&nbsp; It must also
-be turned every evening, lest it fill with snow in the night, so
-I haul that heavy skiff out on the sand; and, sure enough, the
-accident, so confidently predicted by my friends, came to pass,
-for in the turning the boat slipped, and down it came, full
-weight across my foot.</p>
-<p><a name="page78"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 78</span>I am
-somewhat a judge of pain.&nbsp; I know quite a good deal about
-suffering of one kind and another, but this hurt was something
-special in the way of an agony.&nbsp; It turned me sick and
-dizzy, and for several minutes I could only stand and gasp, while
-the trees turned round and round against the sky.&nbsp; When
-their whirling had slowed down a bit, and I had caught my breath,
-I hobbled down to the edge of the lake, kicked a hole in the thin
-ice with my good foot, and thrust the hurt one into the icy
-water.&nbsp; Then I spoke aloud!&nbsp; I did not in the least
-mean to say the words that came to my lips, no one could have
-been more surprised than I when I heard them, but with my
-horrified face turned up to the evening sky, and the
-consciousness that there was no way in the world of getting help
-if I were badly hurt, I said, &ldquo;Great God
-Almighty!&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Thinking it over, I am inclined to believe that the
-ejaculation was, after all, a prayer.</p>
-<p>Knowing that I should probably not be able to walk for days, I
-then hobbled to and fro from the house to the lake, filling every
-pail and tub.&nbsp; Then I carried in as much wood as I could,
-and at last took off my shoe.</p>
-<p><a name="page79"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 79</span>It was
-a wicked-looking injury, a foot swollen, bruised, and
-crushed.&nbsp; I blessed my little medicine chest, with its
-bichloride and morphia tablets, its cotton and gauze, that made
-the long hours of that night endurable.&nbsp; For more than a
-week I did my housework with a knee on the seat of a chair that I
-pushed along before me round the cabin and the porch.&nbsp; No
-one came to the island, nor could I get far enough from the house
-to call a passing boat.</p>
-<p>One afternoon there was a great sound of chopping in the
-narrows between this island and Blake&rsquo;s Point.&nbsp; I
-called, but no one answered.&nbsp; Later I learned that Henry
-Blake had left a herring net there and that it had frozen
-in.&nbsp; But at that time I felt only the faintest interest in
-whatever was going forward.&nbsp; They might have chopped a way
-through to China and I would not have cared.</p>
-<p>The long days dragged on, while my hurt foot slowly
-healed.&nbsp; I may say here that it was never fully healed until
-the following spring.&nbsp; I had always to keep it bandaged even
-after it had ceased to pain and it was not until May that I could
-forget that it had been injured.</p>
-<p><a name="page80"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 80</span>On the
-eighth the calm weather broke in a day of wild winds and flying
-clouds, when the waves rolled in on the shores, and the driftwood
-pounded on the beaches.&nbsp; At evening, when the storm had
-lulled, the lake looked like a wide expanse of crinkled lead
-foil.</p>
-<p>Next morning I waked to a bright blue day and dazzling
-sunshine.&nbsp; At first I feared that I had been suddenly
-deafened, the stillness so stopped my ears.&nbsp; Then I realized
-what had happened.&nbsp; There was no sound of the moving
-water.&nbsp; The ice had come!</p>
-<p>The lake was a silver mirror that reflected every tree, every
-bowlder, every floating cloud.&nbsp; The islands hung between two
-skies, were lighted by two suns.&nbsp; An eagle, soaring over the
-lake, saw his double far below, even to his white back, that
-flashed in the sunlight when he wheeled.</p>
-<p>In the glancing beauty of that morning my heart flung open all
-her doors, my breath came quickly, and my spirit sang.&nbsp; For
-the first time in my life I understood how frost and cold, how
-ice and snow, can praise and magnify the Lord.</p>
-<p>That evening the snow came, turning the <a
-name="page81"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 81</span>lake into a
-vast white plain &ldquo;white as no fuller on earth could white
-it,&rdquo; that lay without spot or wrinkle under the
-Indian&rsquo;s Moon of the Snowshoes.</p>
-<p>This was the ninth of the month.&nbsp; Then followed long,
-silent days, when I read and sewed and dreamed, and forgot what
-day of the week it was, or what time of the day, and wondered how
-long it would be before someone could come over from the mainland
-to tell me that the ice was safe to walk on.</p>
-<p>Each afternoon I hobbled to the beach and paraded there,
-according to agreement with Mary Blake, to let her see that I was
-still alive.&nbsp; The rabbit came in and sat by the fire&mdash;a
-queer, silent little companion.&nbsp; The red squirrel scampered
-all over the outside of the house, peeping at me through the
-windows, and whisking in at the open door to steal a potato or a
-nut, when he thought my back was turned.&nbsp; Funny little
-Rufus!&nbsp; He spent a long, hard-working day, stealing the
-contents of a basket of frozen potatoes put out for his
-amusement.&nbsp; For months afterward I found those potatoes,
-hard as bullets, stuck in the crotches of the cedars all over the
-island.</p>
-<p>From the ninth to the nineteenth I saw no <a
-name="page82"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 82</span>one and heard
-no voice.&nbsp; Then I descried two men walking across the
-lake.&nbsp; They carried long poles, with which they struck the
-ice ahead to test its thickness.&nbsp; Each stroke ran along the
-ice to the shore, with the sound of iron ringing against
-stone.&nbsp; I saw the stick fall some seconds before I heard the
-noise.</p>
-<p>I had never seen men walking across a lake before.&nbsp; I had
-never realized that this lake would become a solid floor on which
-men could walk.&nbsp; I shall never forget the excitement with
-which I watched them do it.</p>
-<p style="text-align: center">
-<a href="images/p82.jpg">
-<img alt=
-"The House"
-title=
-"The House"
- src="images/p82.jpg" />
-</a></p>
-<p><a name="page83"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 83</span>Half an
-hour later Jimmie Dodd burst in, with red cheeks and shining
-eyes, to tell me that the ice would hold.</p>
-<p>The way to the farm being once more open, I made my Christmas
-cake, mixing it here in the cabin and carrying it three quarters
-of a mile across to the Blakes&rsquo; big oven.&nbsp; The
-finished loaf came back over the ice, an excellent cake, as all
-my Christmas visitors testified.</p>
-<p>For let no one assume that because the inhabitants of this
-island are few there has been no Christmas here.&nbsp; On the
-contrary, the feast began on Christmas Eve and lasted for a
-week.&nbsp; The tree, a young white pine, was cut on the island,
-the trimmings came from Toronto, and great was the anxiety lest
-the ice should not be strong enough to bear the wagon that
-brought them over from Loon Lake Station.&nbsp; But the final
-freeze came just in time, and we, the rabbit and I, spent happy
-days tying on all the glittering trifles that go to the making of
-that prettiest thing in the world&mdash;a Christmas tree.&nbsp;
-There was a big gold star on the topmost twig.&nbsp; There were
-oranges and boxes of candy for all invited and uninvited children
-round the lake, and when all was finished, our <a
-name="page84"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 84</span>first visitor
-was a storm-driven chickadee, that wandered in and stayed with
-us, perched on a glittering branch.</p>
-<p>On Christmas Eve the Blakes came and had cake and coffee and
-viewed the tree.&nbsp; On Christmas day, came the little
-Beaulacs, from Loon Bay, some walking, some in arms, some dragged
-in a big wooden box over the ice, and were refreshed with tea and
-bread and butter and cake, after which they sat round the tree,
-regarding it with great eyes of wonder.&nbsp; Next day the Forets
-came to help me eat the Christmas duck and tinned plum pudding,
-and after them the Big John Beaulacs, from far back of Sark.</p>
-<p>So it went, with a party every day, while the brave little
-tree stood glowing and twinkling at us all.&nbsp; It was
-interesting to note how many errands the men found to bring them
-to the island while the Christmas tree was standing, and how
-their heavy faces lightened at sight of it.&nbsp; Surely it
-fulfilled its purpose, sending out messages of good will and
-friendliness and the love of God from the feather tip of each
-tiniest twig.</p>
-<p>At midnight on Christmas Eve I went out on the porch and
-walked to and fro there in <a name="page85"></a><span
-class="pagenum">p. 85</span>the biting cold.&nbsp; The rabbit,
-that had been sleeping, a bunch of snow-white fur, on the
-woodpile, hopped down and followed at my heels.&nbsp; The lake
-was a shield of frosted silver.&nbsp; The moon shone bright as
-day.&nbsp; One great star blazed over the shoulder of the
-opposite island&mdash;it might have been the very star of
-Bethlehem.&nbsp; So diamond clear was the air, so near leaned the
-sky, that I might almost have reached and touched that
-star.&nbsp; The night was so white, so still that I fancied I
-could almost hear the angels&rsquo; song, and in the rainbow
-glory of the moonlight could catch swift glimpses of the flashing
-of their wings.</p>
-<p>We walked there, the rabbit and I, until the cold drove me in,
-to sleep beside the tree and dream of a procession of little
-Beaulacs, creeping over the ice, each one with a star in his
-hand.</p>
-<h2><a name="page86"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
-86</span>CHAPTER VIII</h2>
-<p><span class="smcap">The</span> Beaulacs belong to a tribe of
-French Canadians that has peopled half the countryside.&nbsp;
-They have various nicknames&mdash;Black Jack, Little Joe, Yankee
-Jim, Big John, Rose Marie, Marie John, and so on.&nbsp; The
-Little Jack Beaulacs live at Loon Bay, round the point and three
-miles away.&nbsp; The road to Loon Lake Station starts at their
-landing.&nbsp; They live in a barn, a sixteen-by-twenty-foot log
-structure, banked with earth to keep out the cold.&nbsp; In its
-one room, along with a double bed, a cooking stove, table,
-sideboard, sewing machine, rocking chair, boxes, pots and pans,
-and a clutter of harness and old junk of all kinds, live John and
-Rose and the six young Beaulacs, beginning with sixteen-year-old
-Louis and ending with the baby.&nbsp; There is one door and a
-small window, that, so far as I know, has never been
-opened.&nbsp; In summer, when the door is left ajar, the room is
-apt to be further inhabited by hens, ducks, cats, and even a lamb
-or two.</p>
-<p>The house stands in a clearing on a <a name="page87"></a><span
-class="pagenum">p. 87</span>perfectly bare hill, but in summer,
-the whole slope is golden with sheets of tansy, and the small
-dug-out milk house is shaded by a giant lilac bush, sole remnant
-of some long-forgotten garden.&nbsp; At the foot of the hill,
-rotting, flat-bottomed boats wallow in the mud, and there the
-little Beaulacs spend happy days fishing for mudcats, wading for
-frogs, screaming, wrangling, and throwing stones into the
-water.</p>
-<p>They have not always lived in a barn.&nbsp; They have had two
-other houses, each burned to the ground, with all the pitiful
-furnishings it contained&mdash;crushing blows to people as poor
-as the Beaulacs.&nbsp; After the last fire they moved into the
-barn, the only shelter left standing, intending to build again in
-the spring.&nbsp; But log-hauling is work, building materials
-cost money, and time went on.&nbsp; Now they have settled down
-contentedly in the barn, and will stay there, I doubt not, until
-this roof falls down about their heads.&nbsp; They have no fear
-of another fire.&nbsp; That would be impossible, for, as one of
-the children tells me, the last one happened on the full of the
-moon&mdash;sure sign that they can never be burned out again.</p>
-<p><a name="page88"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 88</span>Like
-other men of the settlement, John Beaulac works at the mica mine,
-hunts, fishes, and farms a bit.&nbsp; Rose walks barefoot over
-the fields, after the plow, digs the small garden, raises
-chickens, picks wild berries, and sells frogs to the summer
-campers, contriving thus to supply the few clothes and groceries
-needed.&nbsp; For the rest, they live a happy, carefree life in
-the open, and the young Beaulacs scramble up somehow.</p>
-<p>Rose handles the boxes of supplies that come from Toronto for
-the island, driving them in from Loon Lake and bringing them
-across the lake by wagon or boat, as the time of the year
-permits.&nbsp; Last time she refused, very firmly, to allow me to
-pay for that hauling.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;We ain&rsquo;t agoin&rsquo; to tax you
-nothin&rsquo;,&rdquo; she declared.</p>
-<p>When I expostulated, she only shook her frowsy head more
-violently.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;No,&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;we do it fer you fer
-nothin&rsquo;.&nbsp; It ain&rsquo;t like you had a man here to do
-fer you,&rdquo; she reasoned.</p>
-<p>Then she looked at her own man with pride and at me with a
-vast pity, because I had no man to work myself to death for.</p>
-<p><a name="page89"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 89</span>In a
-pioneer neighborhood, where every woman must have some man,
-however worthless, to hew the wood and care for the stock, and
-where every man must have some woman, to cook and to keep the
-house, however lazy a slattern she may be, I, who live alone, pay
-for my wood and draw the water, must be a creature not to be
-understood.</p>
-<p>Yesterday the Beaulacs invited me to go with them to the races
-in Henderson&rsquo;s Bay&mdash;a trying out of the neighborhood
-horses before the yearly races to be held at Queensport next
-week.&nbsp; Scrambling and falling down the slippery trail, in
-answer to their halloo, I found a straw-filled wagon body set on
-runners and drawn by Beaulac&rsquo;s old mare.&nbsp; She, not
-having been &ldquo;sharp shod,&rdquo; slipped and slid,
-threatening to break a leg at every step, while the wagon slewed
-from side to side over the ice.&nbsp; It was the first time that
-I had driven over a lake.&nbsp; My heart was in my mouth all the
-way.</p>
-<p>Henderson&rsquo;s Bay, a long arm of Many Islands, stretches
-for a mile into the land.&nbsp; It is a beautiful horseshoe, with
-the farm house at the toe.&nbsp; The course was laid out on the
-dull green ice, little cedar bushes set up to mark <a
-name="page90"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 90</span>the quarter
-miles.&nbsp; An old reaper, frozen in near the shore, served as
-the judges&rsquo; stand.</p>
-<p>We drew up at the side of the track, in the lee of a high rock
-that somewhat sheltered us from the piercing wind.&nbsp; It was a
-friendly scene.&nbsp; The encircling arms of the shore stretched
-round and seemed to gather us close.&nbsp; The smoke from the
-house chimneys curled up to the low-leaning gray sky, and
-Henderson&rsquo;s herd, led by a dignified old bull, strolled
-down over the hill as though to see the race.&nbsp; Far away on
-the ice, black spots appeared, later discerned to be fast-moving
-buggies, sleighs, and wagons coming to the meet.&nbsp; When they
-were all assembled there must have been as many as seven
-vehicles.&nbsp; There were four horses to be tried.&nbsp; They
-were harnessed in turn to a little two-wheeled affair called a
-bike.&nbsp; There is only one &ldquo;bike&rdquo; here, so no two
-horses could run at a time, and there had to be a great
-unhitching and harnessing again after every trial of speed.&nbsp;
-Joe Boggs, the neighborhood jockey, drove with arms and legs all
-spraddled out, like a spider, and urged on his poor steeds with
-wild cries of: &ldquo;Hi-hi-hi-hi&rdquo;&mdash;enough to frighten
-a sensible horse to death.</p>
-<p><a name="page91"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 91</span>I have
-never beheld a more professional looking horseman than Mr.
-Boggs.&nbsp; His disreputable old squirrel-skin cap, that hung
-off the back of his head, his high boots, the bow of his legs,
-the squint of his eye, even the way he chewed a straw between
-races, bespoke the true jockey.&nbsp; One felt that if Joe Boggs
-could not put a horse over the track, no one could.</p>
-<p>Rose Beaulac too was a keen judge of a horse.&nbsp; She
-criticized the entries unsparingly&mdash;Rose, with her long,
-dry-looking coon skin coat, and her dirty red &ldquo;tuque&rdquo;
-cocked over one eye.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;That old mare,&rdquo; she would say, cuttingly,
-&ldquo;I knowed her in her best days, and then she wasn&rsquo;t
-much.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>That settled the mare for us.&nbsp; Our money was not on
-her.</p>
-<p>There was, however, one horse that she did consider worth
-praise.&nbsp; She told me with awe that his owner had refused
-four hundred dollars for him&mdash;a staggering sum.&nbsp; So
-valued was this animal that he was not to be allowed to run any
-more until the Queensport races, but when it was learned that I
-wished to admire him, his owner consented to put him once round
-the course, for my pleasure.</p>
-<p><a name="page92"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 92</span>After
-the contestants had each done his best&mdash;or worst&mdash;the
-meet broke up, with many &ldquo;Good-days&rdquo; and
-&ldquo;Come-overs,&rdquo; and we drove back over the ice, the old
-mare plunging and sliding along seemingly quite accustomed to
-being driven, at a gallop, over a sheet of glass.</p>
-<p>The eye swept the outline of the shore on which stand the
-seven homesteads of this arm of the lake.&nbsp; Each roof
-shelters a family of a different race and creed.&nbsp; Many
-Islands is a type of the whole of this strong, young country,
-that takes in men of all lands and minds, gives them her fertile
-prairies almost for the asking, and makes them over into good
-Canadians.</p>
-<p>There are the Blakes, from &ldquo;The States,&rdquo; and
-aggressively American; the Jacksons, Canadian born and Methodist;
-the Hendersons, English and Church of England; the McDougals,
-Scotch and Presbyterian; the Cassidys, Irish and Catholic; Harry
-Sprig-gins, a sharp-faced little London cockney; and the
-Beaulacs, true French Canadian.&nbsp; Once in a while a Swede
-wanders in and hires out for the wood-cutting, or an Indian comes
-along through the lakes in his canoe, and camps for awhile on one
-of the islands.&nbsp; Amid <a name="page93"></a><span
-class="pagenum">p. 93</span>all the differences of belief and the
-clash of temperament, the people manage to be friendly and
-neighborly; the children play together; the young folk marry, and
-the next generation is all Canadian.</p>
-<p>They all speak English, but when one stops to listen, literal
-translations of idioms and queer turns of phrase stand out.&nbsp;
-Foret always speaks of a &ldquo;little, small&rdquo; bird or tree
-or what not, and for him things are always &ldquo;perfectly all
-right.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Do yer moind thot pig, I sold Black Jack?&rdquo; asks
-Uncle Dan Cassidy.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;&rsquo;Ow har you to-d&rsquo;y?&rdquo; inquires Harry
-Spriggins.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Oh, not too bad,&rdquo; answers John Beaulac.&nbsp;
-&ldquo;<i>Pas trop mal</i>,&rdquo; he is saying, of course.</p>
-<p>When John has finished a job he stands off, hands in pockets,
-and observes: &ldquo;That iss now ahl bunkum sah.&rdquo;&nbsp;
-After a moment&rsquo;s pondering one knows that &ldquo;<i>Bon
-comme &ccedil;a</i>&rdquo; is what he means.</p>
-<p>They speak of coming home through the
-&ldquo;Brooly.&rdquo;&nbsp; That is the scrub wood through which
-a forest fire once swept.&nbsp; It is the land
-&ldquo;brul&eacute;&rdquo;&mdash;burned over.&nbsp; While they
-live in Canada their talk is of far away lands, and it <a
-name="page94"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 94</span>is to the
-&ldquo;Old Country&rdquo; that they mean to return some day.</p>
-<p>And from the house on the island I see the life go
-by&mdash;the stern, bare life of the country&mdash;with its
-never-ending toil, its uncounted sacrifices, its feuds, its ready
-charities and the piteous, unnecessary sufferings of the
-sick.&nbsp; Blessed be the rural telephone, lately come to Many
-Islands, that has made it possible for Dr. LeBaron to reach a
-patient the day he is called.&nbsp; Thrice blessed the tinkle of
-those little bells that bring the voices of the world to the
-farms, shut in behind the snowdrifts.&nbsp; To the women, dulled
-with labor and shaken with loneliness, they are the little bells
-of courage.</p>
-<p>I stopped at a farm the other day&mdash;a very lonely
-place.&nbsp; Scarce were the first greetings over when the young
-mistress of the house said, proudly: &ldquo;We have the telephone
-here.&nbsp; Would you care to talk to any of your
-friends?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Something in her tone, the eager shining of her eyes, brought
-a rush of tears to my own.&nbsp; It was the supreme effort of
-hospitality.&nbsp; She was offering me the thing that had meant
-life itself to her, the dear privilege of speaking with a
-friend.</p>
-<h2><a name="page95"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
-95</span>CHAPTER IX</h2>
-<p><span class="smcap">We</span> are at the very heart of winter
-now.&nbsp; It is &ldquo;<i>le grand fr&ecirc;te</i>,&rdquo; that
-I have been secretly dreading, and all my ideas of it are
-changing as the quiet days go on.&nbsp; Winter in the woods has
-always seemed to me the dead time&mdash;the season of darkness
-and loneliness and loss.&nbsp; I find it only the pause before
-the birth of a new year.&nbsp; If I break off a twig, it is green
-at the heart, when I brush away the snow, the moss springs green
-beneath it.&nbsp; Close against the breast of the meadow lie the
-steadfast, evergreen rosettes of the plantain, sorrel, moth
-mullen, and evening primrose, waiting in patience for the melting
-of the snow.&nbsp; I never dip a pail into the hole in the ice
-without bringing up a long trailer of green waterweed, or a
-darting, flitting little whirligig beetle&mdash;the
-gyrinus&mdash;somewhat less lively than in summer, to be sure,
-but still active and alert.&nbsp; There is a big, fresh-water
-clam lying at the bottom of the waterhole.&nbsp; He breathes and
-palpitates, lolling out a soft pink body from the lips of a
-half-open shell.</p>
-<p><a name="page96"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 96</span>Yes,
-winter here is only a slumber, and everything is stirring in its
-sleep.&nbsp; They all proclaim again the old, old covenant, made
-with the perpetual generations, that promise of the sure return
-of seedtime and harvest, cold and heat, summer and winter, and
-day and night, that shall not cease while the earth remains.</p>
-<p>The colors of winter are slate-blue and gray, laid on a
-background of black and white.&nbsp; The chickadees and
-nuthatches wear them&mdash;black velvet caps, gray coats, white
-waistcoats.&nbsp; In the mornings long, slate-blue shadows
-stretch away from the points of all the islands, and every
-smallest standing weed casts its tiny blue shadow across the
-snow.&nbsp; The ice is darkly iridescent, like the blue
-pigeon&rsquo;s neck and head.</p>
-<p>The dawns come late, the sunsets early, and in the twilight
-the mice steal out from the woods and climb up and down on the
-window screens, little misty, gray blurs moving swiftly against
-the soft, gray dusk.</p>
-<p>Through the long evenings, when supper is over, the curtains
-drawn and the long sides of the big box stove glowing red, I read
-and think and dream.&nbsp; All the while the timbers of the <a
-name="page97"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 97</span>house crack
-and snap with the cold, the trees twist and creak in the wind,
-and the ice groans and mutters.&nbsp; Now and again it gives a
-long sigh, as though some heavy animal were imprisoned under it
-and were struggling to escape.&nbsp; I imagine him heaving at it
-with a great shoulder, grunting as he pushes, and sinking back to
-rest before pushing again.&nbsp; Late in the night comes a long
-roar, as though the beast had broken forth and were calling to
-his mate.</p>
-<p>
-<a href="images/p97.jpg">
-<img class='floatright' alt=
-"A point of one of the Islands"
-title=
-"A point of one of the Islands"
- src="images/p97.jpg" />
-</a>Most people undress to go to bed.&nbsp; Here I undress and
-dress again, putting on heaviest woolen underwear, long knit
-stockings, flannel gown and sweater over all.&nbsp; I creep into
-<a name="page98"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 98</span>bed and
-lie between flannel sheets and under piled blankets, and throw a
-fur coat across the foot, in preparation for that first hurried
-dash across the room at dawn.</p>
-<p>There is only one anguished moment in the twenty-four
-hours.&nbsp; It is when the fire has burned out, and the cold
-wakes me.&nbsp; My movements then are reduced to the least
-possible number.&nbsp; Almost with one motion I spring out of
-bed, fling the window shut, tear back the whole top of the stove,
-throw in fresh logs, put on the coffeepot, then skurry back to
-bed to doze until the cabin is warm.</p>
-<p>There is not the least trouble about keeping my stores
-cool.&nbsp; The problem is to prevent their freezing.&nbsp; The
-potatoes and eggs freeze in the very room with me, a pot of soup,
-set in the outer vestibule, is a hard block from which I crack a
-piece with the ax when I wish a hot supper.&nbsp; The condensed
-milk is hard frozen, the canned plum puddings rattle about in
-their tins like so many paving stones, and it takes all day to
-heat them.&nbsp; Early in December, I laid a jagged bit of ice on
-the corner of the porch, and there it lies, its shape quite
-unchanged through weeks of bitter weather.</p>
-<p><a name="page99"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 99</span>There
-is an inch or two of ice over the waterhole every morning.&nbsp;
-When I go to fill the pails, I take the little ax along to chop
-my cistern open, but gradually the walls of ice close in and
-about once a week someone must cut me a fresh waterhole in
-another spot on the lake.</p>
-<p>The drying of the weekly wash is a most perplexing
-thing.&nbsp; Clothes hung outside the house freeze immediately of
-course.&nbsp; If they are hung inside, the room is filled with
-their steam.&nbsp; My only plan is to heat the cabin red-hot,
-hang them indoors, bank the fire for safety and take to the lake
-or go a-visiting, for a certain number of clean clothes one must
-have, if only to keep up one&rsquo;s self-respect.</p>
-<p>This morning I woke so stiff with cold that I was almost
-afraid to move in bed, lest a frozen finger or toe should drop
-off.&nbsp; There was no more sleep, so, cowering over the stove,
-I watched the sunrise, more augustly beautiful than I have ever
-seen it.&nbsp; The bright crescent of last month&rsquo;s moon
-hung, point downward, on a sky of mouse-gray velvet.&nbsp; Over
-it stood the morning star.&nbsp; Along the eastern horizon lay a
-line of soft brightness, that glowed through a veil of gray
-gauze.&nbsp; <a name="page100"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
-100</span>Very slowly this bright line widened while the snow
-field grew slate-blue, then purple, and the jagged tree line of
-the forest stood out in silhouette, black pines, cedars, and
-hemlocks against a yellow sky.&nbsp; Trees and bushes near at
-hand stole out from the shadows, patterns of black lace against
-the white ground, and sharply visible.&nbsp; The horizon line was
-now tinged with red, the sky was changing to a tender
-yellow-gray, shading to pale green as it neared the zenith.&nbsp;
-The paling moon hung now against a background of rose and
-saffron.&nbsp; The star still blazed above it like a lamp, until,
-suddenly, a fiery streak appeared on the horizon, and star and
-moon faded away before the red disk of the sun.</p>
-<p>Toward noon the cold was less intense, and I ventured out to
-get some long-delayed mail at the farm.&nbsp; Not a bird was
-abroad, not a rabbit track lay on the paths.&nbsp; In fur coat,
-fur hood, and high rubber boots I plowed a way across the lake,
-where the level snow, knee-high, drifted in over the tops of the
-boots and formed an icy crust around my stockinged feet.&nbsp; At
-the farm I learned that the thermometer at Loon Lake Station had
-registered thirty-five degrees below zero at seven o&rsquo;clock
-<a name="page101"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 101</span>that
-morning.&nbsp; Even then, in the sun, on the Blakes&rsquo; south
-porch it stood at twenty below.</p>
-<p>At home in the afternoon all my little pensioners were out to
-greet me.&nbsp; The white-breasted nuthatch was clinging, head
-down, on a birch pillar, his head, twisted back at a
-neck-dislocating angle, showed his black cap perched over one
-eye, and gave him an indescribably rakish, disreputable
-appearance.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Yank, yank,&rdquo; he observed, irritably, as though to
-chide me for keeping him waiting so long for food.&nbsp; The air
-was full of the plaintive winter notes of the chickadees.&nbsp;
-Peter, the rabbit, was sitting hunched against the kitchen door,
-a forlorn little figure.</p>
-<p>The feeding of my live stock has become quite a large part of
-the duty of each day.&nbsp; The rabbit waits at the door for his
-slice of bread, and, if that door is left ajar, he is quite apt
-to hop inside and help himself to anything he finds standing on
-the hearth.&nbsp; The squirrel has his toast and cold potato on
-the woodpile, the birds their crumbs.&nbsp; The bushes present a
-very odd appearance, hung with bits of bacon rind for the
-chickadees.</p>
-<p>The other night there came another little boarder, in the
-person of a very small deer <a name="page102"></a><span
-class="pagenum">p. 102</span>mouse, that slipped into the cabin
-and fell down between the wire screen and the lower casement of
-the north window.&nbsp; Between the netting and the window frame
-there is space enough to make a very satisfactory runway for a
-very tiny mouse, and there he cowered, peering at me, with
-terrified, bright eyes.&nbsp; The window panes open in on hinges,
-like a French casement, so my first impulse was to shut the upper
-half and keep him prisoner, knowing that if he once ran at large
-in the house I could never catch him, and that he would make
-havoc among the stores.&nbsp; He looked so hungry, trembling
-there, with his tiny, pink hands clasped on his breast, that I
-dropped him down a bit of bacon.&nbsp; Then he shivered so
-piteously that I dropped also a fluff of absorbent cotton, which
-he seized and instantly made into a little Esquimeau hut.&nbsp;
-This he placed in the corner best sheltered from the wind, turned
-its door in toward the glass, and retired, closing that opening
-with a bit of cotton, and I saw him no more by day.</p>
-<p>A deer mouse is the prettiest little beast imaginable,
-somewhat smaller than the house mouse, and with very large
-eyes.&nbsp; His fur is dark brown, very soft and thick and with a
-<a name="page103"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 103</span>darker
-streak along the spine.&nbsp; His breast is white, his legs white
-too, ending in tiny pink paws with wee fingernails, the exact
-size of the eye of a number five needle.&nbsp; His ears are long
-and fringed with black, his head very much like the head of a
-doe.&nbsp; He is nocturnal in habit, staying up in the morning
-until after his breakfast and mine, then retiring for the day, to
-come out at twilight and run up and down the window screen for
-exercise.&nbsp; So long as I keep this window closed he
-can&rsquo;t get out, and I can study him through the glass at my
-leisure.</p>
-<p>Who ever sees a deer mouse at home?&nbsp; Walking through the
-stubble field one sometimes starts one, and away he goes like a
-flash.&nbsp; Here I have this little wild thing living in my
-house, apparently quite content.&nbsp; He shall stay as long as
-he seems well and happy.&nbsp; When I think he is pining he shall
-go free, but he is quite as well off in his little hut as he
-would be in the cast-off vireo&rsquo;s nest that is, in all
-probability, his winter home.&nbsp; Snow drifts in and covers it,
-to be sure, but he seems snug and warm and is growing sleek and
-fat on a diet of bacon and apple.</p>
-<p>Since the coming of the ice I find that I <a
-name="page104"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 104</span>must keep
-more cooked stores on hand, not only for myself and for the birds
-and beasts, but for the frequent visitors that come driving up
-the lake to the door.&nbsp; They race along the ice in sleighs
-and buggies and stop at the island.&nbsp; When they come they
-stay to the next meal, so there must be materials for a party
-always ready.&nbsp; It is only fair to state that the rule works
-quite as well the other way round, for I am always welcome to
-drop in at any house near which I happen to be at meal
-time.&nbsp; Any passing guest may draw his chair to the table and
-partake of what is set thereon.&nbsp; No apologies are offered
-for the food.&nbsp; It may be only a pot of tea and a biscuit,
-but whatever it is you are welcome, and that, by your leave, is
-hospitality.</p>
-<p>Oh, Many Islands, place of the good neighbors!&nbsp; I close
-my eyes to see picture after picture passing across the screen of
-memory.&nbsp; There is Henry Blake giving his time and labor that
-my house may be warm and weather proof; there is Mary Blake with
-daily gifts of good things to eat and counsel for my
-inexperience.&nbsp; I see the little fishing boats bobbing
-against the rocks as the men stop at the island to throw me off a
-bass and some silver herring <a name="page105"></a><span
-class="pagenum">p. 105</span>as they pass with the day&rsquo;s
-catch.&nbsp; There are John Beaulac&rsquo;s two little girls
-scrambling through the bushes to bring me some venison when
-father has killed a deer, and I see Anna Jackson putting a big
-jug of maple syrup in the sleigh that brings me home on a
-Sunday.</p>
-<p>I see too Granny Drapeau&rsquo;s earnest old face, as I hear
-her say:</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Eh, but I was feared for you last night, when the wind
-blowed so strong.&nbsp; I couldn&rsquo;t sleep fer thinkin&rsquo;
-of you, all alone on that island.&nbsp; Come daylight I says to
-Andy, &lsquo;Look over an&rsquo; tell if you kin see her
-smoke.&rsquo;&nbsp; For if ever that smoke is not
-a&rsquo;risin&rsquo; I&rsquo;ll send one of the men over to see
-what&rsquo;s wrong.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Daily kindnesses, daily acts of friendliness for the stranger
-woman, who came from nowhere, to stay awhile and will go away,
-they know not where.</p>
-<h2><a name="page106"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
-106</span>CHAPTER X</h2>
-<p><span class="smcap">January</span> the twenty-second was a
-great day in the county.&nbsp; It was the date of the &ldquo;Tea
-Meeting,&rdquo; given under the auspices of the English Church,
-for the benefit of the destitute Belgians.&nbsp; It was also a
-great day for me, being the first and the last time that I shall
-appear in Many Islands&rsquo; society, when society meets at
-night.&nbsp; To drive seven miles in the bitter cold, to return
-to a stone cold house in the middle of the night, requires a love
-of foregathering with one&rsquo;s fellows that I do not
-possess.&nbsp; So not until I have trained the rabbit to keep up
-the fire shall I venture out at night again.&nbsp; I had been
-invited to the festivity by Mrs. Jackson weeks before.&nbsp;
-Having very little notion of the proper dress for such an
-occasion, I ventured to ask counsel of a young visitor who
-dropped in opportunely.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;What do the women wear to the Tea Meetings here?&rdquo;
-I inquired.</p>
-<p>She surveyed me with an appraising eye.&nbsp; &ldquo;Well
-now,&rdquo; she said, kindly, &ldquo;haven&rsquo;t you a nice,
-dark waist here with you?&nbsp; A lady of <a
-name="page107"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 107</span>your age
-would naturally wear something dark and plain.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>At once I cast away all idea of a serviceably plain attire and
-determined to array myself in all the finery I had with me here;
-chiffon gown, long gloves and velvet hat with plumes.&nbsp;
-&ldquo;Lady of my age, indeed!&rdquo;</p>
-<p>And when I arrived at the entertainment every soul was in her
-best, and my attire entirely appropriate.&nbsp; I waited with
-some pleasant anticipation for the moment when my little friend
-should spy me and was not disappointed in the expression that
-swept across her pretty face.&nbsp; As a plain dresser I was
-evidently not a success.</p>
-<p>The start was to be an early one.&nbsp; In the middle of the
-afternoon I raked out the fire, fed the animals, hid the key
-under the woodpile and started down the lake to the Jackson farm,
-following a fresh-cut sleigh track that glittered like a silver
-ribbon flung down on the blue ice.&nbsp; Now and again the solid
-floor under me would give a groan and a heave and I would spring
-aside, my heart in my throat despite my knowledge of the two feet
-of solid ice beneath me.&nbsp; Then I would assure my quaking
-spirit that where the woodsleds could <a name="page108"></a><span
-class="pagenum">p. 108</span>drive I could surely walk, and would
-travel on.</p>
-<p>At Jackson&rsquo;s there was a pot of bean soup on the stove,
-and, as a comforting repast on a cold day, I know of nothing that
-approaches hot bean soup&mdash;it stays by one.&nbsp; We drove
-off in the big farm sleigh, seven miles to the town of Fallen
-Timber, passing through Sark with its five houses and the Cheese
-Factory, and by farms each of which contributed its heavily laden
-sleigh to the long line of vehicles bound for the meeting.</p>
-<p>The town hall of Fallen Timber stands on a bleak
-hillside.&nbsp; It is a room, about thirty by forty feet in size,
-with a six-foot wide stage at the end and a box stove in the
-middle.&nbsp; The stovepipe goes straight to the ceiling, across,
-and out by a hole in the wall at the back of the stage.&nbsp; The
-walls are of a dirty, leprous-looking plaster, with here and
-there a small bunch of ground pine tacked on by way of
-decoration.&nbsp; At the back of the stage a strip of once white
-muslin bore the inscription: &ldquo;Welcome To All&rdquo; in
-letters a foot high.</p>
-<p>The seats are planks laid on the stumps of trees, the stage
-curtain is of red and green calico.</p>
-<p><a name="page109"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 109</span>Now
-and again this curtain was pushed aside, disclosing the
-preparations for supper, and such piles of cookies, cakes, and
-sandwiches I never expect to see again.&nbsp; In the phrase of
-this neighborhood there were certainly &ldquo;plenty of
-cookings.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>The great folk of the evening were late&mdash;the rector and
-his wife, the member of Parliament, who was to preside for us,
-and the orator, who was to address us.&nbsp; But we did not mind
-the delay.&nbsp; We had come to meet each other, and the time
-passed pleasantly enough.&nbsp; I was seated almost exactly on
-the stove, ventilation there was none, and the hall was packed,
-but what of that?&nbsp; It was good to feel thoroughly warm, at
-no expense to oneself, and there&rsquo;s too much fuss made about
-fresh air anyway&mdash;at least in the opinion of many of my
-neighbors.</p>
-<p>The orator was the typical political speaker&mdash;portly,
-bland, slightly humorous and very approachable.&nbsp; He made an
-excellent speech, outlining the causes that led to the Great War,
-and telling of Germany&rsquo;s policy and her hopes.&nbsp; He
-explained the part that Belgium had played, in holding back the
-tide of invasion until France had had time to mobilize, <a
-name="page110"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 110</span>and it was
-all very clear and convincing.&nbsp; He laid stress on the
-spontaneous outpouring of loyalty in the colonies, and quoted one
-of the first messages received from India&mdash;the telegram from
-a Rajah that read: &ldquo;My Emperor, what work has he for <span
-class="GutSmall">ME</span> and for my-people?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>As he went on to enumerate them&mdash;Canada, India,
-Australia, New Zealand and all the islands of the seas&mdash;I
-forgot the little hall, the crowd, the heat, and caught something
-of Isaiah&rsquo;s vision of the Great House of God, that shall be
-exalted high above the hills, and of the time when all nations
-shall flow unto it.</p>
-<p>After the speech came supper, huge plates of sandwiches and
-many kinds of cake, with pitchers of steaming tea.&nbsp; The men
-ate three and four of these platefuls with as careless an air as
-who should say: &ldquo;What are five pounds or so of food washed
-down with quarts of strong, boiled tea?&nbsp; A mere
-nothing.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>What was worse, the children ate quite as much as their
-elders, but I have long since ceased to forebode anything for the
-youth of this favored land.&nbsp; Apparently, they cannot be
-harmed.</p>
-<p>After supper, at about eleven-thirty, came <a
-name="page111"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 111</span>the real
-object of the meeting&mdash;the entertainment by &ldquo;local
-talent.&rdquo;&nbsp; It began with the chorus: &ldquo;Tramp,
-tramp, tramp, the boys are marching.&rdquo;&nbsp; Followed then a
-recitation, &ldquo;My Aunt Somebody&rsquo;s Custard
-Pie.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>This was delivered in a coquettish, not to say soubrettish
-manner by a little miss in a short white frock, and with a coral
-ribbon wound round her curly, dark hair.&nbsp; Her assured manner
-struck me and not pleasantly.&nbsp; Later I understood it.&nbsp;
-She was &ldquo;Teacher&rdquo; in charge of Number Six, better
-known as the Woodchuck School.&nbsp; I am told that the Boards of
-Education cannot keep these rural schools supplied, the girls
-marry off so fast; and I can well believe it, judging by this
-one.&nbsp; She was evidently the belle of the neighborhood.&nbsp;
-In the comments that the boys were making all round me the other
-girls were all very well, but &ldquo;Teacher&rdquo; was easily
-the favorite.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;She&rsquo;s a good teacher,&rdquo; I heard one declare,
-hoarsely fervent.&nbsp; &ldquo;She&rsquo;s did well by Number
-Six.&nbsp; I could make out every word them children
-spoke&rdquo;&mdash;a fact that really seemed to give him cause
-for satisfaction.</p>
-<p>The night wore on with drill after drill, song after song,
-recitation after recitation.&nbsp; <a name="page112"></a><span
-class="pagenum">p. 112</span>Despite my fatigue, I was
-interested.&nbsp; As I watched the audience something took me by
-the throat.&nbsp; It was somehow so pathetic.&nbsp; Those heavy
-men, those work-worn women were not interested because their
-children were being shown off.&nbsp; No indeed.&nbsp; They liked
-the performance because it was just at their level, and that fact
-threw a searchlight on the bare monotony of their lives.&nbsp; We
-finished at about two o&rsquo;clock with &ldquo;Tipperary,&rdquo;
-and &ldquo;God Save the King,&rdquo; and, as every national
-anthem is an assault on the feelings and makes me cry, I sang and
-wiped my eyes with the rest.</p>
-<p>The night skies here are seldom black, like the skies of the
-south, they are more often a soft, misty gray.&nbsp; The stars,
-instead of being sharp little points of light, are big and
-indistinct and furry.&nbsp; It is always light enough to see the
-road, even at the dark of the moon.&nbsp; We drove along through
-the bitter cold, Big John Beaulac&rsquo;s hired boy, Reginald,
-standing in the back of the sleigh, by way of getting a lift
-home.&nbsp; He was regretting, all the way, that some people had
-not eaten all their &ldquo;cookings&rdquo; and that so much good
-food had been wasted on the floor.&nbsp; I fancied that Reginald
-<a name="page113"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 113</span>Bean
-would fain have eaten even more than he did.</p>
-<p>At the shore we dropped Mrs. Jackson and the three little
-sleeping Jacksons, and drove on down the lake.&nbsp; At the
-narrows I, being almost frozen to the seat of the sleigh,
-insisted on being set down to walk, and took my way along the
-side of the island, treading in the footprints that I had left in
-the snow when I had set out&mdash;was it the day or the week
-before?</p>
-<p>I groped my way among the trees and along the trail to the
-house, lighted a fire and looked at the clock.&nbsp; I had been
-walking through the woods at four o&rsquo;clock in the morning,
-and with as little concern as though it had been that hour of a
-summer afternoon.</p>
-<p>Then, as though to rebuke my temerity, I was frightened on the
-lake the very next day.</p>
-<p>I was walking briskly along on the ice, singing at the top of
-my lungs, because just to be alive on a day when the air was so
-cold and clean, the sky so blue and the snow crystals so
-brilliant, was happiness, when I came full on a figure that
-robbed the morning of its joy.</p>
-<p>It was Ishmael Beaulac, the imbecile, shambling heavily
-along.&nbsp; He spoke, then <a name="page114"></a><span
-class="pagenum">p. 114</span>turned and followed me some
-distance, his air half menacing, half cringing, and I was
-frightened, for I realized that for miles around there was no one
-to come to my aid, if Ishmael should take it into his poor,
-crazed brain to do me harm.&nbsp; But he wandered off again, and,
-as I watched his bent figure shuffling away in the snow, I was
-shaken with a great compassion.&nbsp; I have never seen a face so
-marked with evil.&nbsp; Lined, swollen, and inflamed with some
-loathsome eruption, the low, receding forehead, with coarse,
-black hair growing almost to the line of the eyebrows, a wide,
-loose-lipped mouth, and cunning shifty eyes&mdash;it is a face
-that has haunted my dreams.</p>
-<p>I asked Rose Beaulac about him.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;John and I was a sayin&rsquo; that we&rsquo;d ought to
-tell you about Ish,&rdquo; she said.&nbsp; &ldquo;Now that the
-ice is come, likely he&rsquo;ll walk over to the island.&nbsp;
-But don&rsquo;t you be afeared of him.&nbsp; Just make out like
-you&rsquo;re goin&rsquo; to throw hot water on him an&rsquo;
-he&rsquo;ll run.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Oh, poor creature!&rdquo; I cried.&nbsp; &ldquo;I
-couldn&rsquo;t hurt him.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;It ain&rsquo;t needful to scald him,&rdquo; said Rose,
-with an air of great cunning.&nbsp; &ldquo;I always holds <a
-name="page115"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 115</span>my finger
-in the water to see if it&rsquo;s cool enough afore I throws
-it.&nbsp; He&rsquo;s awful &rsquo;fraid of water, Ish is,&rdquo;
-she observed, and remembering Ishmael&rsquo;s appearance I could
-well believe it.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;But don&rsquo;t you ever make over him,&rdquo; Rose
-went on, &ldquo;and don&rsquo;t you ever feed him or you&rsquo;ll
-have him there all the time.&nbsp; Don&rsquo;t leave any knives
-or old boots around where he can git them.&nbsp; Ish don&rsquo;t
-know nothin&rsquo; about money; he&rsquo;ll walk right past your
-purse to steal a pair of old boots.&nbsp; But he won&rsquo;t hurt
-you&mdash;at least we don&rsquo;t think he will.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I have heard that his father, Old John, was cruel to
-him,&rdquo; I ventured, with some diffidence, for Old John or
-Devil Beaulac was Little John&rsquo;s own Uncle.</p>
-<p>A look of distress flitted across Rose&rsquo;s face.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Old John was a very severe man, very severe,&rdquo; she
-said.&nbsp; &ldquo;He treated Ishmael awful bad.&nbsp; He must
-have hurted him very hard, for now when the men is teasin&rsquo;
-him if one of them lifts an ax or a spade, and makes to run at
-him, Ish goes perfectly wild.&nbsp; They say Old John used to hit
-him on the head.&nbsp; That would make him so crazy-like,
-wouldn&rsquo;t it?&nbsp; Yes, poor Ish has had it awful hard,
-there&rsquo;s none but will tell you that,&rdquo; she sighed.</p>
-<p><a name="page116"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 116</span>The
-neighbors are less reticent about old John.&nbsp; By their
-account he was a man outside all law, a giant in strength and of
-a fiendish cruelty.&nbsp; Finally his tyrannies grew intolerable,
-and his sons set on him, beating him until he died.&nbsp; Then
-they threw his body into an old mica pit, filled the pit with
-stones and went their way.&nbsp; No one interfered.&nbsp; The old
-man was thought to have earned his doom and the sons were never
-brought to trial.&nbsp; But even now, when poor Ishmael&rsquo;s
-fits of madness come upon him they say he goes to that pit and
-throws great rocks into it, cursing the memory of his father.</p>
-<p>Much of this may be untrue, but the story haunts me.&nbsp; In
-the figure of this poor maniac, hurling his stones and shouting
-impotent curses to the unheeding sky, I see a time when the earth
-was young, when men dragged the offender out from the great
-congregation and stoned him to death before the face of an angry
-God.&nbsp; I marvel that in this place so near to civilization
-such stories can still be told.</p>
-<h2><a name="page117"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
-117</span>CHAPTER XI</h2>
-<p><span class="smcap">We</span> are no longer tenderfeet, the
-rabbit and I.&nbsp; We have come through a blizzard.&nbsp; For
-the better part of a week we have been &ldquo;denned in&rdquo;
-along with the squirrels, chipmunks, coons, bobcats, and
-bears.&nbsp; We have melted snow for drinking water, because the
-drifts cut us off from the lake and buried the waterhole.&nbsp;
-We have dug our firewood out from under a pile of wet
-whiteness.&nbsp; The mouse came through safely too, although the
-snow sifted in through the window screen, and covered him, house
-and all.</p>
-<p>The storm began on the second of February, in the
-evening.&nbsp; All night long the wind howled with a violence
-that threatened to lift the house bodily and deposit it out on
-the lake.&nbsp; It searched out every crack and crevice, chilling
-me to the bone.&nbsp; It wrenched and tore at the heavy wooden
-shutters, it tossed and twisted the trees, every now and again
-throwing one to the ground with a grinding crash.&nbsp; It
-whistled, it moaned; and, with it came the snow, in blinding,
-whirling gray clouds that <a name="page118"></a><span
-class="pagenum">p. 118</span>blotted out everything.&nbsp; The
-lake was obscured, the outlines of the neighboring islands were
-lost.&nbsp; I could see only a smother of drifting, dancing
-flakes.</p>
-<p>The day passed fairly well, for the mere necessity of keeping
-up the fire was an occupation in itself.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;This,&rdquo; said I to Peter, &ldquo;is the beginning
-of the true Canadian winter.&nbsp; I hope it does not stay too
-long.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Peter, having been born last summer, has had no experience of
-any other winter.&nbsp; No memories of former blizzards troubled
-him.&nbsp; He hoped that the bread would hold out.</p>
-<p>At about three o&rsquo;clock in the afternoon Satan inspired
-me to go out on the porch, to survey the prospect.&nbsp;
-Immediately I smelled smoke.</p>
-<p>Now, there is but one thing of which I have been afraid, and
-that is fire.&nbsp; A blaze started here would inevitably sweep
-the island and no one could stop it.&nbsp; I smelled tar paper
-burning.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;What a pleasant thing it would be to borrow the
-cherished summer camp of a friend and burn it down for her!&nbsp;
-What a safe thing for oneself it would be to go to sleep in a <a
-name="page119"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 119</span>smoldering
-house and have it break into flames in the night.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>I sniffed and sniffed despairingly.&nbsp; I scrambled out into
-the snow to examine the chimneys; I burrowed under the porch
-floor to look at the foundations; I climbed the ladder to make
-sure of the roof, and still that smell of burning tar
-persisted.&nbsp; I had a horrible misgiving that there was fire
-smoldering between the outer and the inner walls.</p>
-<p>There was nothing for it but to get to the Blakes and tell
-them of my fears.&nbsp; If Henry could assure me that there was
-no way of a fire&rsquo;s starting, I would believe him and go to
-bed content.&nbsp; If I had not that assurance, I should be
-forced to sit up all night waiting to escape into the snow.&nbsp;
-Whatever the weather I had to get to the farm; that was all I
-could think of.</p>
-<p>I dressed as warmly as I could and set forth, through the
-drifts, to the edge of the island.&nbsp; I made fair progress
-until I stepped off the land on to the lake.&nbsp; Then I began
-to have some idea of what I, in my ignorance, had undertaken.</p>
-<p>The lake was like the ocean done in snow.&nbsp; The wind had
-piled great breakers of snow <a name="page120"></a><span
-class="pagenum">p. 120</span>one behind another, their crests
-curled over at the top, exactly like the waves on a beach.&nbsp;
-Only these breakers were curled over the opposite way.&nbsp; They
-turned over toward the wind, not away from it.&nbsp; One long
-ridge followed another with a deep, scooped out furrow to
-windward.&nbsp; Looking down on the lake from the level of the
-porch, these waves did not look very high.&nbsp; When I stepped
-off into them they came up to my armpits.</p>
-<p>Even then I had not sense to turn back; even then I had no
-idea of any real danger.&nbsp; The wind was at my back.&nbsp; I
-could feel it behind me like a wall, as I climbed through each
-succeeding hillock of snow and out across the intervening three
-or four yards of level ice.&nbsp; Wave followed wave, each
-higher, deeper, more suffocating than the last.&nbsp; Sometimes I
-could walk for a few feet on the top of a drift before sinking
-into its depths.&nbsp; I scrambled, fell, rolled, crawled,
-climbed, and thought that I should never reach the shore.&nbsp;
-Counting helped me, as I pulled each foot up out of the clinging
-mass and set it down a few inches nearer the land.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;One, two, three, four,&rdquo; I said aloud, timing my
-steps to the pounding of my laboring <a name="page121"></a><span
-class="pagenum">p. 121</span>heart.&nbsp; My breath was coming in
-gasps, a pulse beat in my temples, my head swam, there was a
-ringing in my ears as I plodded on, now with eyes shut.</p>
-<p>A thin, washed out moon came out and looked through wisps of
-ragged clouds.&nbsp; Its light served only to make the scene more
-desolate, the distance from the shore more terrifying.&nbsp; The
-only idea that remained in my stupified brain was that I must
-somehow find strength to go on lifting heavy feet one after the
-other; that I must struggle up from each fall, must breathe deep
-and keep a quiet mind.</p>
-<p>At last I reached the deeper drifts that fringed the shore,
-skirted the hidden waterhole, found traces of the cattle tracks,
-dragged myself along the path and finally stepped, with the very
-last remnant of strength, up on the porch and into the warm
-bright kitchen.&nbsp; When Mary Blake caught sight of me, she sat
-down suddenly and said: &ldquo;My God!&rdquo;</p>
-<p>They had not attempted to get to the water hole that day, but
-had given the cattle melted snow.&nbsp; They had gone only as far
-as the barn and henhouses.&nbsp; Even the house dog had stayed
-indoors.</p>
-<p>I gasped out my fears and Henry Blake <a
-name="page122"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 122</span>laughed at
-them.&nbsp; There was no way, he said, for a fire to have started
-and if one had caught, the house would have been flat to the
-ground long before I had crossed the lake.</p>
-<p>I heard him with disgust.&nbsp; If that was the way my panic
-looked, it was high time for me to return to my home on the
-island.&nbsp; I rose with much dignity and walked off to the
-shore, before the Blakes had adjusted their minds to the
-move.</p>
-<p>This time the wind was in my face, making the going ten times
-harder than before.&nbsp; About forty yards out from shore I
-stopped and turned my back to the blast to catch my breath, and
-there was Henry, dressed in his great fur coat, striding out
-after me and looking for all the world like a bear on its hind
-legs.</p>
-<p>When I saw his thickset figure struggling against the gale it
-seemed suddenly a hatefully inconsiderate thing to have brought
-him away from his warm fire and out into the storm and I
-called:</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Go back, Mr. Blake.&nbsp; There is no fire.&nbsp;
-Don&rsquo;t attempt to come after me.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>But Henry only stumped on.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I know there&rsquo;s nothing burning,&rdquo; he <a
-name="page123"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
-123</span>retorted.&nbsp; &ldquo;We&rsquo;re a long way more
-worried about you than we are about the camp.&nbsp; You might get
-confused and lose your life in this storm.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>On he went ahead of me and I was thankful to follow humbly in
-his footsteps.</p>
-<p>We reached the house, and, as we stood in the warm room
-fighting for breath, I said:</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Mr. Blake, there is some Scotch here.&nbsp; Will you
-drink some?&rdquo; And Henry said he would.</p>
-<p>After that I was content to stay indoors until he came with
-the horses and broke the tracks through the island.</p>
-<p>Such heaps of snow lay piled on the lake and in the woods that
-it should have taken months for it to disappear; but in three
-days there came a thaw and melted it all away.</p>
-<p>The thaw came not a day too soon, for the sixteenth was the
-time set for the long anticipated sawing bee at the farm.&nbsp;
-During January Henry Blake and Jimmie had been felling trees and
-dragging them to the house in preparation for the arrival of the
-perambulating sawmill, that goes from farm to farm as soon as the
-ice will hold.&nbsp; There was a pile of logs, ten feet high by
-thirty feet long piled butt end <a name="page124"></a><span
-class="pagenum">p. 124</span>to in the dooryard.&nbsp; When a
-farmer announces a bee his neighbors gather from far and near,
-leaving their own work to help him put through the particular job
-in hand.&nbsp; He is expected to attend their bees in
-return.&nbsp; The farmer&rsquo;s wife, who earns a high seat in
-heaven if ever woman did, works for days beforehand, cooking for
-the ten or a dozen hungry men who will come down on her for
-dinner, supper and, perhaps, breakfast, with a night&rsquo;s
-lodging thrown in.</p>
-<p>Mary Blake had made bread of the lightest and finest, had
-killed chickens, taken fish out of brine, and pork from the
-barrel; had made cakes and pies; had brought out pickles and
-preserves, and when I arrived she was creaming carrots and onions
-and boiling the inevitable potatoes.</p>
-<p>It was a cold, gray day, with the surface of the lake
-awash.&nbsp; As I splashed my way through the water, ankle-deep
-on the ice, I heard the saw, clear and high, like the note of a
-violin.&nbsp; There were ten men working at the bee.&nbsp; The
-little gasoline engine was drawn up on a bobsled at the kitchen
-door, and even as early as ten o&rsquo;clock it had eaten out a
-big hole in the side of the stack of logs.&nbsp; William <a
-name="page125"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 125</span>Foret and
-Jock McDougal were at the machine shoveling snow into the boiler,
-William in a bright blue jersey and with a squirrel skin cap set
-at an angle over his dark, eager face.&nbsp; Henry Blake was at
-the wheel, to take the sawed-off chunks from the feeders and
-throw them to the pile.&nbsp; The rhythm of his movements was
-exact.&nbsp; A reach toward the wheel, a heave, a toss over his
-shoulder to the ever-increasing pile of chunks and a return to
-the wheel&mdash;all this at the rate of a chunk every three
-seconds.&nbsp; This position, being the hardest work, is always
-taken by the host at a bee.</p>
-<p>Little John Beaulac, Tom Jackson and Uncle Dan Cassidy lifted
-the logs and carried them to the saw, where Black Jack held them
-against the blade.&nbsp; There were two or three extra men
-standing ready to take up the work when one or more should be
-exhausted.</p>
-<p>In the midst of the fray a sleigh was sighted, far out on the
-ice.&nbsp; It was bringing Jim McNally from far back of the mica
-mine.&nbsp; He had heard of the bee and had come, at a venture,
-for fear that Henry might be &ldquo;shorthanded.&rdquo;&nbsp; He
-brought a pail of fresh eggs for Mary Blake and a great sack of
-turnips.&nbsp; <a name="page126"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
-126</span>There was a mighty skurry and mystery about slipping a
-bag of salt fish under the seat of the sleigh, for him to find
-when he reached home.</p>
-<p>At half past eleven the men trooped in to dinner, with many
-facetious remarks about the strength of their appetites and the
-advisability of letting the dirtiest man wash first.</p>
-<p>After a very short smoke time they were at work again and I
-sat at the kitchen window, watching the saw bite through the big
-logs.&nbsp; The men&rsquo;s rhythmic movements, the swift
-interplay of the bright colors of their jerseys, the long scream
-of the toothed blade, all lulled me to vacuity of mind.&nbsp;
-Long after dark, when I was back at home, I could hear the sound
-of the wheel coming across the lake.&nbsp; That song of the saw
-tells me just where the mill is working for the day.&nbsp; Going
-out on the porch I can tell whether the bee is at Blake&rsquo;s,
-Drapeau&rsquo;s, Foret&rsquo;s or the mines.</p>
-<p>The Blakes are very up to date in their use of the gasoline
-engine.&nbsp; Many of the farmers still use the old treadmill,
-where four teams of horses walk round and round all day, turning
-the wheel.&nbsp; Invited to a bee at the Jacksons&rsquo;, the
-other day, I took a camera along, <a name="page127"></a><span
-class="pagenum">p. 127</span>for a picture of the old tread will
-soon be a treasured possession.&nbsp; The men had paused in their
-work in the kindest way to allow themselves to be
-&ldquo;took.&rdquo;&nbsp; I was walking, with great dignity, down
-the slippery hillside, when a treacherous bit of ice was my
-undoing.&nbsp; I fell and my demoralization was complete.</p>
-<p>Camera flew one way, walking staff another, arms and legs
-spread out to the four points of the compass, as I went shooting
-down that hill.&nbsp; When I had gathered my scattered members
-and my wits together, and was scrambling up with the foolish grin
-of the newly fallen, I looked appealingly at the sawing gang,
-expecting to hear the inevitable laugh.&nbsp; Not a face did I
-see.&nbsp; Every man&rsquo;s back was turned.&nbsp; The picture
-was taken amid a sounding silence.</p>
-<p>Commenting on that display of good manners to Uncle Dan, I
-said fervently: &ldquo;Never in my life did I see such perfect
-breeding.&nbsp; It is almost impossible to help laughing when
-anyone falls, but not one of those men smiled.&nbsp; I never
-expected such politeness.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Uncle Dan&rsquo;s Irish eyes twinkled.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;You&rsquo;d ought to have heard what the b&rsquo;ys
-said when you left,&rdquo; he observed.</p>
-<p><a name="page128"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
-128</span>Pondering that cryptic remark, I am inclined to think
-that it is just as well that I do not know all that is being said
-of me in the work gangs and around the kitchen fires of Many
-Islands.</p>
-<h2><a name="page129"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
-129</span>CHAPTER XII</h2>
-<p><span class="smcap">How</span> do we know when the turn of the
-year has come?&nbsp; The calendar gives March twenty-first as the
-official birthday of spring, but that has nothing to do with
-it.&nbsp; One February day will be all winter, hard frozen and
-dreary, and on the next, quite suddenly, through some spirit line
-of sense, a message will reach us that spring, her very self, is
-on the way.&nbsp; After that, no matter how many days of sleet
-and snow may follow, we know that for us the winter is past.</p>
-<p>So it was yesterday, here on the island.&nbsp; With a mind
-adjusted to the thought of weeks of snow and ice to come, I
-stepped out of doors and into the spring.&nbsp; The air was balmy
-as May, the sky a turquoise and the lake a pearl.&nbsp; The furry
-gray buds of the poplars had puffed out in the night.&nbsp; The
-three little fingers of the birches were swelling and
-lengthening.&nbsp; Suddenly my eyes were dazzled by a flash of
-bright blue light, and a magnificent jay darted through the air
-and perched on the bare branch of a basswood.&nbsp; After the <a
-name="page130"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 130</span>small,
-drab-hued chickadees and nuthatches, that jay looked as large as
-an eagle.&nbsp; Then I looked at little Peter, and lo! he was
-turning brown.&nbsp; The white hairs of his winter coat were
-falling off, his spring jacket was showing through.</p>
-<p>The ground under the trees is dusted over with myriads of
-brown scales, chief among them the bird-shaped pods of the
-birches, that carry two wee seeds under their pinions.&nbsp; In
-the open the snow is gray with patches of briskly hopping snow
-fleas that move along over the meadows at a lively rate.&nbsp;
-The nature books tell me that these are insects that live in the
-mosses and lichens, and that they come out on warm days for
-exercise.&nbsp; They are exercising for dear life to-day.</p>
-<p>Here and there on the white carpet are the fairy writings left
-by the wind last night.&nbsp; It bent down the dry tips of the
-sedges, and traced circles, bows, triangles, mystic runes that
-look as though they meant great news, if one could only read
-them.</p>
-<p>But the snow still covers the ground.&nbsp; Rufus still
-tunnels under it, shaking the crust violently when he goes in for
-some hidden store of food.&nbsp; The rabbit roads, pressed hard
-<a name="page131"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 131</span>by
-hundreds of small, skurrying feet, still run crisscross under the
-cedars, and the heavy woodsleds still travel down the middle of
-the lake, like giant caterpillars, crawling along.</p>
-<p style="text-align: center">
-<a href="images/p131.jpg">
-<img alt=
-"The heavy woodsleds still travel down the lakes"
-title=
-"The heavy woodsleds still travel down the lakes"
- src="images/p131.jpg" />
-</a></p>
-<p>Behind the opposite island the men are cutting ice.&nbsp;
-Uncle Dan stands at the side of a dark pool of open water, and
-works away with a saw as tall as himself.&nbsp; The rectangular
-blocks, two feet thick, slide up the inclined boards to the sleds
-and are driven <a name="page132"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
-132</span>off to the icehouses in preparation for the
-summer&rsquo;s shipment of fish to the towns.&nbsp; They are
-beautiful, those blocks of ice, so clear and clean and blue.</p>
-<p>With the fine weather has come the news that the Rector of the
-English Church and Mrs. Rector are coming to the island for a
-visit.&nbsp; The island is in much excitement.&nbsp; Salt bacon
-and potatoes do not seem just the right fare to offer guests so
-important and who are coming from afar.&nbsp; My mind is set on
-chicken, and the word has gone forth round the lake that
-&ldquo;the English minister is coming and the woman on the island
-wants a fowl.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Now, all our turkeys, ducks, and chickens are fattened for the
-fowl fair, held at Queensport in December, when the poultry
-dealers from Toronto and Montreal, and even from &ldquo;The
-States,&rdquo; go through the country buying up the stock.&nbsp;
-The greater part of the yearly income of some of us depends on
-the prices paid for the fowl.&nbsp; My only chance of having
-chickens through the winter was to engage a neighbor to save me a
-dozen young cockerels and to pay him for their feed, having them
-killed as needed.&nbsp; I had long ago eaten all these chickens
-and the prospect of getting any <a name="page133"></a><span
-class="pagenum">p. 133</span>more was slight.&nbsp; Even Rose
-Beaulac, fertile in resource, could give me no hope.</p>
-<p>I never found the chicken, but I had a visit from Rose the day
-before the party.&nbsp; She told me that she had given John his
-gun and had sent him up Loon Bay to shoot me some grouse.&nbsp;
-Then the conversation languished.&nbsp; Rose is a very shy little
-woman; it took her nearly an hour to come to the real point of
-her call.&nbsp; She would not lay aside her coonskin coat, she
-would not remove her dingy tuque; there she sat, struggling with
-her errand.</p>
-<p>At last it came out:</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Might she bring the baby to be christened when the
-Rector came?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Then for another half hour she rambled on about people who
-never had their babies christened and what a sin that was, and of
-those who never registered their children&rsquo;s births, and how
-those children could never inherit property.&nbsp; Once in a
-while she said something about things &ldquo;not being
-legal,&rdquo; until I was quite bewildered and do not know to
-this day whether, in her opinion, the unbaptized or the
-unregistered infant is not legal.&nbsp; But the upshot of it all
-was that the youngest Beaulac was to be christened next day.</p>
-<p><a name="page134"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 134</span>The
-hour set for service was two o&rsquo;clock, but such was Mrs.
-Beaulac&rsquo;s determination not to be late that she and the
-baby&rsquo;s eldest sister arrived at eleven.&nbsp; There was no
-sign of the father, John Beaulac.&nbsp; There I had made my
-mistake.&nbsp; I had let him know that a sponsor would be needed
-and that he was expected to stand.&nbsp; So when the godfather
-was demanded none could be found.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Where was John?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Gone to Queensport with a load of wood.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Andy Drapeau, the baby&rsquo;s uncle?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Gone to Glen Avon.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>The other uncles were off hunting at Loon Lake; Louis, the
-eldest brother, had disappeared entirely.&nbsp; So when the time
-came for sponsors, the Rector&rsquo;s wife and I had to stand,
-and for this poor baby, whose father owns not one rod of ground,
-and who is sheltered in a hovel built for the cattle, we gravely
-renounced &ldquo;the vain pomp and glory of the
-world.&rdquo;&nbsp; And because, in my hurry, I had forgotten to
-temper the water in the improvised font, the new little soldier
-and servant of Christ yelled valiantly when the ice water touched
-him.</p>
-<p>It was a scene I shall not forget: the cabin, <a
-name="page135"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 135</span>with its
-bunk in one corner, its big stove at one end, the pots and pans
-on the wall behind it; the tools; the fishing tackle and the
-stores.&nbsp; The Rector, wearing white surplice and embroidered
-stole, stood in the center of the room beside the white-covered
-table that held the bowl of water and the Prayer Book.</p>
-<p>Old Mrs. Drapeau, the baby&rsquo;s grandmother, had crept
-across the ice to witness the baptism, the first she had seen,
-she said, in twenty years.</p>
-<p>The meeting closed with tea and cake; then the christening
-party withdrew, the little new Christian sleeping peacefully in
-the wooden box in which his mother dragged him away over the
-ice.</p>
-<p>We three who were left settled to dinner and a long
-afternoon&rsquo;s talk.&nbsp; At teatime the Rector observed that
-the Woodchuck School was a mere seven miles away, and that he
-might as well have a service there while he was so near.&nbsp; So
-we dashed away across the lake, used telephones freely to collect
-a congregation, opened the school house, and, by the light of two
-guttering candles, said our prayers, sang our hymns, and listened
-to a simple, direct, and practical sermon.&nbsp; Back <a
-name="page136"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 136</span>across the
-ice I drove in the flare of the northern lights, that made the
-night almost as bright as day.</p>
-<p>The Rector is a young man and an energetic one&mdash;and he
-has need to be&mdash;for his parish covers much ground.&nbsp; It
-extends from the church at Queensport, out to Godfrey&rsquo;s
-Mills, fifteen miles away to the south, and back to Fallen
-Timber, twelve miles to the north.&nbsp; Besides these three
-churches he has four or five irregular stations in the
-schoolhouses dotted about within the radius of his
-activities.&nbsp; On Sunday mornings he teaches the Sunday school
-at Queensport and holds service there; in the afternoon he drives
-to the Mills, and has Sunday school and Evening Prayer, at night
-there is service at Fallen Timber.&nbsp; Up and down the roads he
-drives, day after day, visiting the sick, baptizing the children,
-burying the dead.&nbsp; He consoles, admonishes, encourages; he
-reproves our negligences, bears with our foolishnesses, and
-somehow contrives to have patience with our ignorance.</p>
-<p>Being a churchman to whom the decency and orthodoxy of
-services are dear, it is hard for him to excuse our lax
-ways.&nbsp; It gives him <a name="page137"></a><span
-class="pagenum">p. 137</span>genuine distress when we know no
-better than to drape our flags over the cross, and his face is
-set against the to us very pleasing decoration furnished by house
-plants growing in tin cans and set upon the altar.&nbsp; When he
-marches up the aisle and removes these attempts at ornament,
-replaces the vases and the cross where they belong, we say
-nothing.&nbsp; It is evident that we have made a mistake in our
-zeal.&nbsp; We don&rsquo;t try that again, but something else
-that proves just as reprehensible.&nbsp; But we are
-learning&mdash;the Rector sees to that.&nbsp; If only the Bishop
-will let him stay, we shall be good churchmen after awhile.&nbsp;
-But we say proudly and sorrowfully: &ldquo;He&rsquo;s too good
-for a small parish like this.&nbsp; He&rsquo;ll be moved to the
-city soon.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>The only way the Rector spares himself is in the matter of
-writing sermons.&nbsp; He confessed to me that he did not write
-three new ones a week, but preached the same one at all three
-churches, thereby reserving, I suppose, a few hours for
-sleep.</p>
-<p>And with all this unceasing effort&mdash;and the clergy of all
-denominations work just as hard&mdash;there are families living
-here round Many Islands that have never entered a church.&nbsp;
-<a name="page138"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 138</span>They are
-as veritable heathen as any on the far frontier.&nbsp; There was
-a death at a farm on the road to Loon Lake station last
-week.&nbsp; The body was put into a rough box, thrust into a
-shallow grave, and the work of the farm went straight on.&nbsp;
-And the English rector, the Roman Catholic priest, the Methodist
-preacher and the Presbyterian minister all live within a radius
-of twenty miles.</p>
-<p>Strange country, so civilized and so primitive, so close to
-cities and so inaccessible.&nbsp; Strange people, at once so old
-and so young, so instructed in vice and sorrow, and so ignorant
-of the simplest teachings of life.&nbsp; Grown men and women in
-body but children in mind, with children&rsquo;s virtues and with
-adults&rsquo; sins.</p>
-<h2><a name="page139"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
-139</span>CHAPTER XIII</h2>
-<p><span class="smcap">Since</span> the first of December we have
-not seen the ground&mdash;only a great field of white so dazzling
-that one understands the Indian&rsquo;s name for the March
-moon.&nbsp; Verily, my own eyes tell me why it is the Moon of
-Snowblindness.</p>
-<p>The ice is still thick and clear, but the sun on its surface
-and the moving water beneath are both wearing it away, slowly,
-surely.&nbsp; There are clear pools on the lake at noon, and then
-the crows come down and drink, marching to and fro, like files of
-small, black-clad soldiers.&nbsp; They meet, and bow politely,
-speak to each other singly or in groups, then line up and off
-they go with hoarse caws.&nbsp; They look so important that they
-might be plotting all sorts of villainies.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Look out fer yerself,&rdquo; laughs Uncle Dan.&nbsp;
-&ldquo;I&rsquo;ll put the curse of the crows on yer.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>A dire threat!&nbsp; What use to break one&rsquo;s back
-planting the corn if one&rsquo;s evilly disposed neighbor can
-call winged battalions of those black thieves to undo all a
-man&rsquo;s work and bring him to penury?</p>
-<p><a name="page140"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 140</span>The
-snow is still thick in the woods, but on the hilltops and in the
-open, bare patches of earth are beginning to show.&nbsp;
-Peter&rsquo;s coat matches the ground exactly, being a sharply
-mottled brown and white.&nbsp; Indeed, he never did turn entirely
-white, like the wild hares in the woods.&nbsp; Even when his fur
-was its snowiest there was always a brown, diamond-shaped patch
-on his forehead, and, so far as I know, he was the only hare so
-decorated.&nbsp; No matter how far from home he strayed, I could
-always recognize him by his brown brand.</p>
-<p>This simple life has its inconveniences.&nbsp; I was eating a
-belated breakfast the other morning, when bells on the lake and
-later a sleigh at the door announced a visitor.&nbsp; It was a
-perfectly unknown man who informed me that he had been sent by
-Mrs. Swanson to bring me to her house to spend the day.&nbsp; He
-had to wait outside, in the piercing wind, until a hasty glance
-round the combined sleeping, cooking, and reception room
-reassured me as to its condition for the entrance of a
-stranger.&nbsp; Then he sat beside the stove, pipe in hand, and
-inspected me gravely while I prepared for the long drive down the
-lake.</p>
-<p><a name="page141"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 141</span>The
-day was bright and blue and snapping cold.&nbsp; A point of light
-flashed from every facet of the roughened ice.&nbsp; The horse
-was fresh, the wind at our backs, and we fairly flew past
-Jackson&rsquo;s, over the bare roads and out again on beautiful
-Blue Bay, lying like a sapphire in its setting of silvered
-shores.</p>
-<p>The pony was a broncho, my companion told me, calling my
-attention to a brand to prove it.&nbsp; He was all that, and a
-tree-climbing broncho to boot, for soon we came to a
-perpendicular bank as high as the side of a barn, and I was given
-to understand that the pony was going to clamber straight up,
-with the sleigh dangling at his heels.&nbsp; I left the vehicle
-and scrambled up on my own feet, but the animal went up the side
-of that hill like a cat at a wall, and without one second&rsquo;s
-hesitation.</p>
-<p>Arrived at the house I inquired of my hostess if my escort was
-her son.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Oh, no,&rdquo; she answered.&nbsp; &ldquo;It was only
-Clarence Nutting, the hired man.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Evidently, &ldquo;hired man&rdquo; means something very
-different here from what it has hitherto meant to me.&nbsp; It
-means friend, protector, <a name="page142"></a><span
-class="pagenum">p. 142</span>helper, and member of the
-family.&nbsp; Mrs. Swanson, Susie Dove, the hired girl, Clarence
-Nutting, and I all dined together; after dinner we played
-dominoes.&nbsp; When Clarence brought in the fresh eggs from the
-barn he suggested: &ldquo;Better give Miss X some to take home
-with her.&rdquo;&nbsp; Later he invited me to come back, and
-soon, to spend several days.</p>
-<p>Through the long, sunny afternoon, we sat round the stove in
-the pleasant best room, with its well-starched lace curtains,
-each with a bunch of artificial roses sewed on its folds, its oak
-sideboard decorated with rose-bordered cr&ecirc;pe paper napkins,
-its crayon portraits and wonderful, hand-made hooked rugs.&nbsp;
-We women had our crocheting, but little Susie sat very upright,
-her small, work-roughened hands clasped on her plaid-covered
-knees, her toes, in their shiny best shoes, just reaching the
-floor, while Clarence played for us on his new graphophone.</p>
-<p>Clarence, in his high boots, patched trousers, and flannel
-shirt, handled his music box with the tenderness of a
-lover.&nbsp; He dusted each record after using it, as carefully
-as a mother powders a baby.&nbsp; As he played tune after tune, I
-saw in that instrument, God <a name="page143"></a><span
-class="pagenum">p. 143</span>knows what of pleasures foregone,
-and temptations put aside while he saved out of his meager wages
-the price of that graphophone.&nbsp; He had discovered a way to
-use the thorns from a hawthorn tree instead of wooden
-needles.&nbsp; They gave a very soft and lovely tone.&nbsp; His
-records were the usual collection sold with the machine&mdash;a
-few dances, a few Negro dialects and songs, some good marches and
-some hymns.&nbsp; After nearly a year of hearing no tunes at all,
-I enjoyed them, every one.&nbsp; When the concert was over,
-Clarence played: &ldquo;God be with you till we meet
-again.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>After tea came the sleigh and we drove home to the island,
-this time in a blinding snowstorm.&nbsp; Conversation was not so
-lively as in the morning.&nbsp; I was thinking of all the
-evidences I see here of man&rsquo;s unquenchable thirst for
-beauty and music and the pleasant things of life, that not the
-most incessant toil nor hardest privation can ever wholly
-destroy.&nbsp; I was remembering how I had gone over to the
-Blakes&rsquo; to use the telephone one afternoon and had had to
-wait for an hour because Clarence Nutting&rsquo;s new instrument
-had come, and all the receivers on the line <a
-name="page144"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 144</span>were down
-while he played it for the neighborhood.&nbsp; I thought of poor
-Harry Spriggins&rsquo;s delight in a magazine, of Mary
-Blake&rsquo;s habit of keeping a glass of fresh flowers in the
-center of her table, of the time when Mrs. Drapeau, having no
-white tablecloth, had spread a clean sheet over her table for
-company, and of the Beaulacs&rsquo; joy in the blossoming of
-their lilac bush.</p>
-<p>Then I began dreaming of a big, comfortable shack somewhere on
-the shore, to which the people could come, as to a common meeting
-ground, social differences and local feuds forgotten.&nbsp; I saw
-it furnished with a cupboard full of cups and plates, a piano or
-victrola.&nbsp; There should be a circulating library there and
-games, I decided, and I saw the boys and girls dancing, singing,
-cooking popcorn, candy and fudge, in the evenings.&nbsp; I
-imagined a group of women drinking tea and sewing while
-&ldquo;teacher&rdquo; played.</p>
-<p>A few days later I went with the Rector and Mrs. Rector to
-drink tea with the wife of the owner of a big lumber mill, and
-there I saw what one woman has done amid just such conditions as
-are here at Many Islands.</p>
-<p>There were the pretty little church, the <a
-name="page145"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 145</span>parish
-house, the Sunday school room, all built by Mrs. Baring, and I
-heard of the reading circles, the concerts, the cooking classes
-that she has organized for the people among whom she has had to
-live.</p>
-<p>There too I saw the Canadian mother in war times and marveled
-at her.&nbsp; Mrs. Baring has sent the light of her eyes, the
-pride of her heart, the son who was winning honors at his
-university and had a great future before him, overseas to the
-trenches.&nbsp; I saw picture after picture of him&mdash;Harold
-as a baby, as a child, as a boy, as a man.&nbsp; He was shown in
-his little knickers, his first long trousers, his khaki.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Yes, he is in France now, but of course we do not know
-where,&rdquo; the mother said.&nbsp; &ldquo;I send him two pairs
-of socks, some handkerchiefs and shirts every week.&nbsp; The
-boys like that better than one large box occasionally&mdash;they
-lose their clothes so.&nbsp; We hope that things reach him, but
-we do not know.&nbsp; We have not heard from him for two months
-now.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>All this without a tremor of the firm lips, with not the
-shadow of a cloud over the serene blue eyes.</p>
-<p><a name="page146"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 146</span>The
-Rector told me afterward that not once has that mother alluded to
-the possibility of her son&rsquo;s return.&nbsp; She gave her
-supreme gift without hope of any reward.&nbsp; Withal her
-interest in affairs is as keen, her charities as wide, her
-hospitality as gracious, as though she had never a care in the
-world and her boy were safe at her side.</p>
-<p>After supper we climbed over the slippery hillside to the
-church for Evensong.&nbsp; Our hostess sat at the organ at the
-side of the chancel and in full view of the congregation.&nbsp;
-During the service I watched her calm, clear profile.&nbsp; She
-went through the intolerably pathetic petitions of the Litany
-without wavering, as we prayed for those who are fighting by land
-and sea and air; for the prisoners, the wounded and the dying,
-and her sweet, steady voice led our responses.&nbsp; Only once
-did I see her falter.&nbsp; It was during the singing of the
-hymn.&nbsp; Her pretty ringed fingers went on pressing the keys;
-she played, but she could not sing.</p>
-<p class="poetry">&ldquo;The Son of God goes forth to war,<br />
-&nbsp;&nbsp; A kingly crown to gain,<br />
-His blood-red banner streams afar,<br />
-&nbsp;&nbsp; Who follows in his train?&rdquo;</p>
-<p><a name="page147"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 147</span>Her
-eyes looked past us, straight across the world.&nbsp; Her lips
-were parted in a smile sadder than tears.&nbsp; She was shedding
-her heart&rsquo;s blood, drop by drop, for the safety of the
-empire.</p>
-<p>We do not talk much about the Great War here at Many
-Islands.&nbsp; Indeed, it is only when I go to the towns that I
-realize that Canada is at war.&nbsp; Once in a while one of our
-boys speaks of going to the front, and only the other day Andy
-Drapeau was saying, &ldquo;Ef it comes to drafting, I&rsquo;ll
-volunteer.&nbsp; I&rsquo;ll fight of me own free will.&nbsp; No
-man shall make me go.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>But at that, Andy was merely talking.&nbsp; He had no idea of
-enlisting.</p>
-<p>No, as always, it is the men of the cities who will go first,
-and the reason is not far to seek.&nbsp; It lies in the fact that
-the bucolic mind is almost totally devoid of imagination&mdash;it
-cannot picture what it has never seen.&nbsp; It can form no
-vision of an empire.&nbsp; It can think of this county as part of
-the Province and the Province as part of the Dominion, but of
-Canada as part of a great federation it cannot conceive&mdash;the
-thought is too big.&nbsp; Our vision is bounded by the limits of
-our own <a name="page148"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
-148</span>experience.&nbsp; We know that Britain, France, and
-Russia are fighting Germany and Austria, but the fields of Europe
-lie very far away, while our own fields are very near.</p>
-<p>We all know Germans.&nbsp; We have worked beside them in the
-hayfields and the mines.&nbsp; They seem good fellows enough, not
-companionable because they speak an outlandish sort of lingo that
-we doubt their being able to understand themselves.&nbsp; But why
-should we fight them?&nbsp; Of the Hun we can form no idea, thank
-God.&nbsp; He is outside our experience.</p>
-<p>We have a patriotism, but it is local, parochial.&nbsp; If
-this war were a baseball game between the rival teams of Sark and
-Fallen Timber, we could understand it fast enough.&nbsp; We would
-&ldquo;root&rdquo; for our side and, if need be, fight for
-it.&nbsp; But the far-off struggle of nation with nation leaves
-us cold.&nbsp; We cannot picture it.</p>
-<p>But when the first wounded came back from the trenches, and
-when the stories of Saint Julien and Festhubert were told at the
-firesides, then went the men of rural Canada forward gladly to
-fill the places of those heroes whose deaths are Canada&rsquo;s
-undying glory.</p>
-<h2><a name="page149"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
-149</span>CHAPTER XIV</h2>
-<p><span class="smcap">Appropriately</span> enough, on this first
-day of the calendar spring, I am warned that the ice is unsafe
-and that I must stay on the island until the lake is open
-water.&nbsp; The natives still venture out, but they know the
-look of the thin spots and even they are very cautious.&nbsp; Two
-men started over from mainland this morning, axes on shoulder,
-hounds at heel, but they turned back at the shore, and the dogs,
-after stepping daintily on the dark, spongy crust, turned back
-also.&nbsp; The middle of the lake is still hard, but there are
-ditches of water round the edges of the land.&nbsp; The ice has
-heaved up into long fissures stretching away from the points, the
-clear green water showing between their open sides, and from this
-island to the Blakes&rsquo; point there is a great crevasse.</p>
-<p>Mary declares that she has known Henry to start off in a
-sleigh over the lake when the ice was only three inches thick;
-when he had to drive fast to keep from breaking in and when the
-water spurted up from the holes <a name="page150"></a><span
-class="pagenum">p. 150</span>made by the horse&rsquo;s
-hoofs.&nbsp; But Henry was going for the mail, and when he has
-been deprived of news for two or three weeks, the papers become
-things to risk one&rsquo;s life for&mdash;which is proof that
-Henry will never be a true Many Islander.&nbsp; The rest of us
-are quite willing to wait until spring, if need be.</p>
-<p>So I am &ldquo;denned in&rdquo; once more, and before I am
-free all sorts of things will have happened.&nbsp; There will be
-hundreds of little new calves and lambs lying beside their
-mothers in the meadows, and scores of thin-legged colts running
-beside the mares in the pastures.&nbsp; I shall also be shut in
-when the sap buckets hang in the &ldquo;sugar bush&rdquo; and the
-great black kettles steam over the fires in the dooryards, and I
-can only hope that some of my friends will remember to put my
-name in the pot, and to save me some syrup and some maple
-sugar.</p>
-<p>Forced to take my exercise on the island, I find new things
-everywhere, as I tramp round and round the trails.&nbsp; The snow
-under the evergreens is covered with last year&rsquo;s dry
-needles; the hemlocks, pines and cedars are putting on their new,
-bright green fringes.&nbsp; Under the rotting leaves, innumerable
-little new plants are pushing up, princess fern, wild <a
-name="page151"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 151</span>strawberry,
-Canada mayflower, and countless other small weeds and herbs,
-whose names I do not know.&nbsp; When the leaves and needles are
-raked away each stalk is seen standing in a tiny pool of clear
-ice.</p>
-<p>The spring peepers are whistling in the lowlands, the hylodes
-blows his little bagpipe, away in the wood the grouse is
-&ldquo;beating his throbbing drum&rdquo;&mdash;no other
-description fits that thrilling sound&mdash;and the first
-honeybees are buzzing out from a clump of birches and winging
-away over the lake.&nbsp; Underneath all the other spring sounds
-is the measured &ldquo;tonk-tonk&rdquo; of the air escaping
-through the holes in the ice, and the thin, silver sound of
-trickling streams.</p>
-<p>The red-headed woodpecker is here, his crown a spot of
-splendid crimson against the snow.&nbsp; &ldquo;Ker-r-ruck,
-ker-r-ruck,&rdquo; he cries as he darts from tree to tree, his
-white tail coverts flashing in the sunlight.</p>
-<p>There has been a deer on the island.&nbsp; Through my dreams
-one night I heard sounds of a great commotion, the cries of dogs,
-the crashing of animals through the underbrush.&nbsp; In the
-morning, not ten paces from the kitchen door, the snow was all
-trampled, soiled and <a name="page152"></a><span
-class="pagenum">p. 152</span>covered with bunches of long brown
-hair.&nbsp; Evidently, the place was the scene of the poor
-animal&rsquo;s agony, for those hairs were soaked with blood.</p>
-<p>I grieved, for I have liked to think that the island was a
-place of refuge for all hunted things&mdash;at least for this one
-year.&nbsp; But if the dogs had dragged down the deer and killed
-him, what had become of the carcass?&nbsp; I wondered.&nbsp; They
-could not have eaten it so clean that no trace of skin or bones
-remained.&nbsp; I pondered this as I followed the deer&rsquo;s
-small, shapely hoof-prints from the shore and up over the hill
-and through the bushes all hung with bunches of tell-tale brown
-hair.&nbsp; I traced the dogs&rsquo; tracks also, as they crossed
-and recrossed the trail, and following them came to an old mica
-pit, hidden far back among the cedars a gash in the hillside, ten
-or twelve feet deep and four or five yards long, ringed round
-with bushes and with a young birch growing in its depths.&nbsp;
-Indeed, I fell headlong into that hidden pitfall, and had time to
-hope, as I went down, scrambling over the edge and clutching at
-branches, that I was not going to land full on a wounded
-deer.</p>
-<p>All tracks stopped at this pit, and the <a
-name="page153"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 153</span>mystery
-remained a mystery until late in the spring, when it leaked out
-that Andy and George Drapeau had heard the cries of the hounds,
-had watched their chance, had come over, dragged off the dogs,
-and skinned and carried away the deer.</p>
-<p>Now the season for hunting deer lasts from November first to
-November fifteenth.&nbsp; Only one deer may be shot by each
-hunter.&nbsp; No hounds may be allowed to run at large during the
-closed season and any dog found running a deer may be shot on
-sight, and the person shooting this dog may not be
-prosecuted.&nbsp; Thus the month of March is not the time for
-fresh venison.&nbsp; Venison out of season is &ldquo;mountain
-goat,&rdquo; to be eaten privately and without
-boastfulness.&nbsp; Nor is it safe to display a deer&rsquo;s
-spring coat.&nbsp; But if the Drapeaus had left me that hide,
-would I have informed on their dogs?&nbsp; I wonder.</p>
-<p>My own stupidity robbed me of the only other deerskin rug that
-I might have had.&nbsp; Little John Beaulac offered me a
-beautiful&mdash;and seasonable&mdash;one which I bought and sent
-to the squaw at Maskinonge for tanning.&nbsp; Some weeks later I
-mentioned my good fortune to William Foret.</p>
-<p><a name="page154"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
-154</span>&ldquo;Are you having the hair left on?&rdquo; he
-asked.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Hair left on!&rdquo; I echoed.&nbsp; &ldquo;Of
-course.&nbsp; I never heard of having the hair taken off.&nbsp; I
-want the skin for a rug.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Well, you&rsquo;d ought to have said so,&rdquo; said
-William.&nbsp; &ldquo;Mostly they tans them for leather round
-here.&nbsp; They makes fine moccasins and mittens.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Sure enough, that Indian woman had patiently scraped off all
-the hair and I received a superfine piece of buckskin, which was
-presented to Little John, I having no use in the world for
-moccasins or mittens when I should return to the city.</p>
-<p>The Drapeaus live on a long peninsula to the west of this
-island and half a mile away.&nbsp; From this dock I see their
-barns in silhouette against the sunsets.&nbsp; Their land rises
-in fold on fold of meadow, with here and there a clump of cedars
-or maples, then a soft slope and slanting cornfield.&nbsp; Their
-house is the typical Canadian log shack, a building about sixteen
-by twenty feet, divided by a board partition into a kitchen and a
-tiny bedroom.&nbsp; A trap door opens into the cellar; a ladder
-leads up to the loft where the boys sleep.&nbsp; There <a
-name="page155"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 155</span>is a shed,
-built at right angles to the south wall, and here Mrs. Drapeau
-keeps her washtub, churn, and milk separator.&nbsp; The place is
-always crowded with lounging men; the dogs are everywhere under
-foot, and the air is thick with the smoke from many old
-pipes.</p>
-<p style="text-align: center">
-<a href="images/p155.jpg">
-<img alt=
-"&ldquo;The Drapeaus live on a long peninsula to the west of this
-Island&rdquo;"
-title=
-"&ldquo;The Drapeaus live on a long peninsula to the west of this
-Island&rdquo;"
- src="images/p155.jpg" />
-</a></p>
-<p>Herring nets hang from the rafters, harness on the walls;
-drying skins are stretched across the uprights.&nbsp; In the
-muskrat season dozens of furry, brown rats are nailed, by their
-tails, to the outside walls, and inside the house <a
-name="page156"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 156</span>great pails
-of bloody water, piles of raw skins, and heaps of rats fill the
-small room.</p>
-<p>The Drapeaus believe in the division of labor, and the work of
-the family seems portioned out in a thoroughly satisfactory
-way.&nbsp; Andy, the eldest son, is the farmer, Lewis the hunter
-and George the fisherman.</p>
-<p>Mrs. Drapeau, though not an old woman, goes back to the early
-days of the settlement and knows all the hardships of pioneer
-life.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I mind the time,&rdquo; she says, &ldquo;when this land
-was all wilderness and when the bears and the wildcats come up to
-the very door.&nbsp; Once I seen four bear start over across the
-lake from Blake&rsquo;s point to your island.&nbsp; They swum
-across the narrows, the old he-bear in the lead, the biggest of
-the young next, then the little cub and the mother behind.&nbsp;
-Me an&rsquo; the boys was in the boat&mdash;we had been a
-berryin&rsquo;&mdash;and when the boys seen them bear they went
-wild.&nbsp; They rowed up along the island after them, but they
-couldn&rsquo;t go fast enough with me in the boat, so they landed
-me and rowed along to head off the bear, an&rsquo; blest if they
-didn&rsquo;t turn &rsquo;em right back along the shore to where I
-was a sittin&rsquo;.&nbsp; I was right in their tracks.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;&lsquo;You come back here an&rsquo; git me,&rsquo; I
-yelled, <a name="page157"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
-157</span>&lsquo;an&rsquo; don&rsquo;t you do another trick like
-that agin, the longest day you live.&rsquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;There was I a-hollerin&rsquo; an&rsquo; the boys
-a-laughin&rsquo; an&rsquo; the bear a comin&rsquo;.&nbsp; Why, I
-might &rsquo;a&rsquo; been kilt.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;What became of them?&rdquo; I asked.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;The bears?&nbsp; Oh! they got away.&nbsp; What with me
-a-screechin&rsquo; an&rsquo; the boys a shootin&rsquo; they was
-so scared that they climbed off the far side of the island,
-an&rsquo; the last we saw of them they was over to
-Henderson&rsquo;s Bay, their heads just out of water.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Mrs. Drapeau tells of the day when she and her husband came
-over to their farm in a little flat-bottomed punt, a calf, the
-beginning of their herd, tied foot to foot and bellowing in the
-stern.&nbsp; It was a hard fight to clear the land and bring it
-to some sort of cultivation, and in a few years Drapeau was
-killed in a lumber camp, leaving her with four young children to
-feed.&nbsp; She describes the long winter nights when she spun,
-carded, and wove the cloth that kept their shivering little
-bodies covered against the bitter cold, of the backbreaking days
-in the fields when she hoed the potatoes and planted the corn,
-that there might be food for the hungry mouths, and of <a
-name="page158"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 158</span>the long
-months when she worked at the miners&rsquo; boarding house,
-cooking and washing for a score of men.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I never could have done it if it hadn&rsquo;t been for
-my neighbors,&rdquo; she said.&nbsp; &ldquo;They was awful good
-to me.&nbsp; The men cut my wood every winter as come an&rsquo;
-ketched me my fish until the boys was big enough to work.&nbsp;
-Eh! but I did have the hardest time the year my man died.&nbsp;
-Scarce was he laid in the ground when the two biggest boys come
-back from the school at Loon Lake with the smallpox.&nbsp; George
-and Andy had it and they had it fearful bad.&nbsp; I thought sure
-the other two would have it too.&nbsp; The health doctor come up
-all the way from Queensport an&rsquo; nailed a notice on my door,
-tellin&rsquo; the neighbors to keep away, and he forbid me to
-cross the lake, on fifty dollars fine.&nbsp; So there I was, the
-ice just breakin&rsquo; and me shut in with my children that was
-a dyin&rsquo;, as you might say.&nbsp; I didn&rsquo;t want to go
-to no one&rsquo;s house, nor to have them come to mine, but I had
-little or nothin&rsquo; to eat on the place, and I feared lest my
-children should starve.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;But I done the best I could, and one day, when the ice
-was all broke, I heard Bill <a name="page159"></a><span
-class="pagenum">p. 159</span>Shelly, the frogger, passin&rsquo;
-in a boat.&nbsp; I hollered to him the fix I was in and told him
-to fetch me some goods from the store an&rsquo; to tell my father
-how we was shut in.&nbsp; Bill brung me the goods and we got
-along some way, and when all was over an&rsquo; the boys was
-well, here comes Robinson, the health doctor, to ask how we was
-all gettin&rsquo; along.&nbsp; He stood off, twenty paces from
-the door with his white handkerchief to his face.&nbsp; I was
-minded to set the dogs on him.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;&lsquo;Why don&rsquo;t you come in?&rsquo;&nbsp; I
-says, &lsquo;All&rsquo;s safe now.&nbsp; You needn&rsquo;t to be
-afraid.&nbsp; You shut me in here, with my dyin&rsquo; children,
-and not you ner no one else come anear me, not even to the shore,
-to ask did I have so much as a hundred of flour to keep us
-alive.&nbsp; How did you know we wasn&rsquo;t all starved
-together?&nbsp; Get you off this land,&rsquo; I says, &lsquo;fer
-you haven&rsquo;t got the grace of God in yer heart.&rsquo;&nbsp;
-He got off and I ain&rsquo;t seen him since, but I ain&rsquo;t
-never fergot him.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>All this she tells me, sitting before the fire, her gray
-woolen petticoat turned back over her knees, a black
-three-cornered shawl laid over her head and pinned firmly under
-her pointed chin, She was a beauty once.&nbsp; She is <a
-name="page160"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 160</span>a pretty
-old woman still, with her flashing black eyes and silver
-hair.&nbsp; Even now, at sixty odd, she milks seven cows, makes
-all the butter and cheese, cares for the hens, the turkeys and
-the pigs, works a small garden, cooks for the boys, nurses them
-when they fall ill, and finds time to make wonderful patchwork
-quilts.&nbsp; Mrs. Drapeau can tell the names of all the quilt
-patterns known to Canada.</p>
-<p>I love these patchwork quilts.&nbsp; They speak of thrift and
-industry and patience, and of the leisure of a life in which
-small bits of cloth are of more value than the time it takes to
-stitch them together.&nbsp; Who in the cities has time nowadays
-to sit and make a patchwork quilt?&nbsp; They bring up pictures
-of bedfuls of little children, sleeping snug and warm under
-mother&rsquo;s handiwork, and of contented women sewing in the
-firelight.</p>
-<p>Their names are poetry&mdash;woman&rsquo;s poetry.&nbsp; The
-Log Cabin stands for home, the Churn Dasher is food, the Maple
-Leaf means Canada.&nbsp; The Road to Dublin, and the Irish Chain
-speak of the homesick Irish heart, but I like to imagine that the
-Prairie Rose was named by some happy woman who loved the wide and
-blossoming fields of this new land.</p>
-<h2><a name="page161"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
-161</span>CHAPTER XV</h2>
-<p><span class="smcap">Good Friday</span>, a heavy fall of snow
-and winter come again.&nbsp; The ground is white, the sky dull
-gray, the lake a dark, bluish green flecked with windrows of
-snow.&nbsp; It is more than a week since I have walked on the
-ice.&nbsp; It bids fair to be two weeks before I can cross in a
-boat.&nbsp; At this rate the ice will never break&mdash;I had to
-chop out the water hole again this morning.&nbsp; This waiting
-for the ice to go out is like waiting for a child to be born, and
-it seems almost as solemn.&nbsp; It induces a calm, philosophic,
-not to say fatalistic, viewpoint.&nbsp; You can&rsquo;t hurry it,
-you can&rsquo;t stop it, you can&rsquo;t do anything at all about
-it.&nbsp; You can only wait.</p>
-<p>Again, as in the fall when the ice was forming, there is that
-strange blanket of silence over the island.&nbsp; There&rsquo;s
-not a rustle in the dry leaves, not a bird&rsquo;s voice, not
-even the scraping of a hanging bough.&nbsp; The ice field is
-growing darker, wetter, and cracking into long lines that form
-geometric figures&mdash;squares, triangles,
-trapezoids&mdash;until the lake&rsquo;s surface looks like a
-gigantic spider&rsquo;s web.&nbsp; For <a
-name="page162"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 162</span>movement
-there is only the water along the shores, creeping up over the
-stones.</p>
-<p>The evening was cold and gray, with a rising wind that
-whistled up the rain.&nbsp; In the night came both the former and
-the latter rains and all other rains between; then Easter Day,
-warm and blue and beautiful.&nbsp; As the Easter lesson sank into
-my heart, along with the still beauty of sky and sun and waking
-life, the first butterfly, emblem of the resurrection, came forth
-from his winter sleeping place and fluttered to and fro among the
-yellow tassels of the birches.</p>
-<p>The years remaining may be many or few for me, but to
-life&rsquo;s end I shall hope to keep some measure of the joy of
-that one Easter day.&nbsp; I pray that I may always remember the
-tender blue of the arching sky, the white of the wisps of
-floating cloud, the gray purple of the spring haze lying over the
-forests; its silence and its peace.&nbsp; Looking out over the
-breaking ice, I remembered the story of two boys who lost their
-lives in the lake only last summer.&nbsp; They were forlorn
-little fellows, held in bondage by a stupid, tyrannical
-father.&nbsp; They had never seen anything that boys
-love&mdash;neither a circus, nor a picture, nor had ever heard a
-band.&nbsp; <a name="page163"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
-163</span>They had never been allowed to go even to Frontenac,
-the county seat, ten miles away.&nbsp; All they knew about was
-work and heavy sleep and now and then a beating.&nbsp; But they
-were boys after all, and one bright day they slipped away from
-the harvest field and went to the lake to go afishing.&nbsp;
-Hearing footsteps and fearing their father&rsquo;s anger, they
-tried to escape it.&nbsp; The younger boy jumped into a rotting
-punt at the shore and pushed off on the water.&nbsp; The elder
-hid behind a rock.</p>
-<p>Out on the lake the old punt filled and began to sink.&nbsp;
-The little fellow, seeing that he was going down and knowing that
-he could not swim, called out:</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Good-by, Charley; Good-by, good-by,&rdquo; his piping
-child&rsquo;s voice sang over the water.</p>
-<p>The elder boy heard him and plunged in to his aid.&nbsp; Both
-went down, and when, at last, the grappling hooks brought up the
-bodies, the brothers were locked in one another&rsquo;s arms.</p>
-<p>A commonplace story, isn&rsquo;t it?&nbsp; Such accidents
-happen almost every day&mdash;somewhere.&nbsp; There&rsquo;s
-nothing at all in it but childish joy in freedom, dread of
-punishment, terror, then love and sacrifice, and, crowning all,
-<a name="page164"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 164</span>heroic
-death.&nbsp; I think of them not as &ldquo;saints in glory&rdquo;
-but as happy youngsters, trudging, hand in hand the streets of
-the Eternal City; seeing, hearing, tasting all the joys that life
-denied them here.</p>
-<p>Resigned to the thought of days and weeks of solitude, I was
-surprised by the sound of a long halloo coming from the direction
-of Blake&rsquo;s Point.</p>
-<p>It was Henry, standing on the extreme end of his land and
-calling over to me.&nbsp; His was the first voice I had heard for
-days.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Come down to your point,&rdquo; he yelled.</p>
-<p>Scrambling through the underbrush, sliding from rock to rock,
-plowing through bogs, wading through patches of snow, I reached
-the shore, to see Jimmie Dodd, trotting cautiously across the ice
-dragging his little hand-sled, while Henry directed his way from
-the point.&nbsp; The sled held loaves of bread, a pat of fresh
-butter&mdash;a great bag of mail and a box of candy and
-fruit&mdash;the Easter greeting from home.&nbsp; The water was
-flowing all round the shore; Jimmie could not come within many
-feet of the island, but I waded out on the shelving sand and
-Jimmie crept as near the edge of the ice as he dared and tossed
-the <a name="page165"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 165</span>bags
-to me across the open water.&nbsp; Then he trotted back again to
-the farm and I returned to the house to enjoy my feast alone.</p>
-<p>Day followed day, slipping by swiftly, silently.&nbsp; The
-first ph&oelig;be has come back and is twitching his tail and
-screaming his &ldquo;Ph&oelig;be, ph&oelig;be,
-ph&oelig;be,&rdquo; all day long.</p>
-<p>Across the sky, in V-shaped wedges, the geese are flying
-over.&nbsp; From ever so far I can hear their
-&ldquo;honk-honk,&rdquo; telling me why the April moon is the
-Goose moon.</p>
-<p>The woodchuck, that lives in a hole by the sundial, comes out
-and waddles slowly down to the lake&rsquo;s edge to dip his black
-muzzle in the water.&nbsp; He turns his rat&rsquo;s face up to
-the sky, glancing hurriedly from side to side, his little pig
-eyes rolling, the white ring of hairs surrounding his snout
-standing like a ruff.&nbsp; He is so fat that his short legs
-hardly lift his red-brown breast off the ground, and his bushy
-tail drags as he goes.&nbsp; He walks with a rolling waddle, like
-a bear.&nbsp; His gray-brown coat is dry and dusty.</p>
-<p>There are hundreds of wide-open clam shells lying on the sand
-under the water, pearl side up.&nbsp; They are the shape and
-almost the size of the soles of a pair of baby&rsquo;s
-shoes.&nbsp; <a name="page166"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
-166</span>When I turned over the skiff, that has lain on the
-shore all winter, there was a muskrat&rsquo;s nest under
-it.&nbsp; The animal had scooped out a hole in the beach, and a
-pile of clam shells showed that he had feasted well.</p>
-<p>But though all these other small animals are coming out, I am
-forlorn, for Peter, the rabbit, has disappeared!&nbsp; Up and
-down the island I have gone, calling him, but he does not come
-hopping to my feet.&nbsp; No one will acknowledge having shot
-him; indeed, it would be a hard-hearted hunter that would kill so
-gentle and so trusting a creature.&nbsp; So either the hounds got
-him or he felt the call of the spring and wandered away to the
-woods full of fresh green.&nbsp; I prefer to think he did that,
-but I miss him cruelly.</p>
-<p>Here, as in Kipling&rsquo;s Jungle, spring is the time of new
-smells.&nbsp; All winter there were some good smells&mdash;the
-odor of far-off forest fires; the fragrance of fresh-cut logs;
-the not unpleasing, pungent scent of Blake&rsquo;s cow stable,
-that came over the ice to me on the crisp, frosty air, but now
-there is a very riot of perfume.&nbsp; The rotting leaves, the
-barks of trees, the swamps and even the rocks themselves, give
-forth an incense.&nbsp; The poplars <a name="page167"></a><span
-class="pagenum">p. 167</span>and the birches shake out sweetness
-from their waving tassels, the new green fringes of the
-evergreens are fragrant, soon will come the odors from wild
-cherry, basswood, and wild grape in flower, and the scents of the
-new ferns, and then I shall go quite wild with delight and shall
-long to shout my joy to heaven, as Rufus, the red squirrel, is
-doing now.&nbsp; Far out on a birch limb, in the sun, he is
-clucking and chirping away, his plumy tail waving, his whole
-little tense, rust-colored body jerking as he gives tongue to his
-spring ecstasy.</p>
-<p>Rufus is not always so harmlessly employed.&nbsp; He and the
-ph&oelig;bes wage perpetual war over a nestful of eggs under the
-eaves.&nbsp; One or other of the small householders must stand
-ever on guard against the red robber that goes like a flash along
-the beam.&nbsp; What fluttering of wings, what scampering of tiny
-feet, what chattering there is!&nbsp; But the birds will win,
-they put the squirrel to flight every time.</p>
-<p>Once again I heard a call from Blake&rsquo;s point.&nbsp; This
-time it was Mary, out looking for new-born lambs.&nbsp; Her
-voice, borne on the wet wind, came clear over the water between
-us:</p>
-<p>&ldquo;How are you getting along?&rdquo;</p>
-<p><a name="page168"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
-168</span>&ldquo;Oh, not too bad,&rdquo; I shouted in the
-vernacular.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;We think the ice will go out this week.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Never,&rdquo; I screamed.&nbsp; &ldquo;At this rate it
-will last until June.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Well, I don&rsquo;t think it.&nbsp; We tried to get
-over to Jackson&rsquo;s yesterday, and the middle of the lake was
-opening so fast we could not make it.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;ll go to the shore every day at noon, and let
-you see that I am alive,&rdquo; I promised.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;All right,&rdquo; she answered.&nbsp; &ldquo;Hang out a
-white cloth if there&rsquo;s anything really wrong, and
-we&rsquo;ll try to get over to you somehow.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>And away went Mary, a lamb in her arms, the ewe bleating at
-her heels.</p>
-<p>Then came a day of warm rain, followed by a high wind from the
-south, that drove the breaking ice before it and piled great
-masses of glistening white fragments on all the beaches.&nbsp;
-And, sure enough, on the next Sunday, the eleventh, Henry Blake
-and Jimmie Dodd came across in a boat, the first I had seen in
-the water for four months.</p>
-<p>That morning, when I looked out, instead of the solid floor of
-ice that I had seen so long, there was a great stretch of dark
-and tumbling <a name="page169"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
-169</span>water, over which two white gulls wheeled and
-dipped.&nbsp; For an instant I was startled.&nbsp; I felt as
-though the island had somehow slipped its moorings and was being
-washed away.&nbsp; Then I realized that the ice was gone and, so
-far as I am concerned, gone forever, and that the winter, with
-its bitter nights, its long quiet days, its flash of sunlight on
-silver surfaces, became as the memory of a dream.</p>
-<h2><a name="page170"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
-170</span>CHAPTER XVI</h2>
-<p><span class="smcap">What</span> is the first wild flower of
-the spring?&nbsp; Each of us has his own first flower.&nbsp; It
-varies with the locality and the special season.&nbsp; Here it
-was the hepatica, that lifted its little faintly blushing face
-from the edge of a patch of melting snow.&nbsp; I plucked it,
-remembering the words of Old Kate, at Les Rapides: &ldquo;Ef you
-pluck yer first flower and kill yer first snake, you&rsquo;ll
-prevail over yer enemies for the comin&rsquo; year.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>I did not trouble her poor mind by inquiring: &ldquo;What if
-your enemy is also plucking his first flower and killing his
-first snake.&nbsp; Who, then, would prevail?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>I know of no enemy, but I gathered the hepatica.&nbsp; Whether
-I shall kill the snake remains a matter of doubt.&nbsp; If it is
-old Josephine, who will soon be sunning herself on a flat rock at
-the bathing beach, I will not.&nbsp; That snake has been a friend
-of mine too long.</p>
-<p>After the hepatica came the dicentra cucularia, or
-Dutchman&rsquo;s breeches&mdash;a wide patch of them, nodding
-from a shaded ledge of rock, and then the trillium, lifting its
-white <a name="page171"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
-171</span>chalices by thousands through the woods.&nbsp; If Saint
-Patrick had known the trillium, I cannot think that he would ever
-have chosen the shamrock as his emblem of the Trinity.&nbsp; The
-golden-throated flower rises three-petaled from a cup of three
-green sepals.&nbsp; Below this is an inch or so of thick, green
-stem and below that the leaves, three in a whorl.&nbsp; So three
-and three and three says the plant with every part of its
-being.</p>
-<p>The air is full of the spring songs of birds and the dry whir
-of innumerable wings.&nbsp; A colony of gold finches moved in
-last night, and they are singing like hundreds of canaries in the
-cedars.&nbsp; &ldquo;Konker-ree,&rdquo; call the redwings over in
-the meadow.&nbsp; &ldquo;Purity-purity,&rdquo; sings the
-bluebird, and &ldquo;Quick-quick-quick,&rdquo; snaps the
-flicker.&nbsp; Busy brown sparrows slip through the dry
-leaves.&nbsp; On an oak tree the woodpecker is playing his
-xylophone, sounding a different note on each branch that he
-strikes with his little red hammer.</p>
-<p>From the drowned lands come the boom of the frogs and the
-rattling signal of the kingfisher, and to-day&mdash;the
-seventeenth of April&mdash;I heard the first call of the
-returning loons.&nbsp; The water is very still, with schools of
-<a name="page172"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 172</span>pin-long
-striped fishes swimming in the sunny shallows.</p>
-<p>The leaves came out in a night.&nbsp; One evening there was
-only a purple haze over the bare twigs, and the next day the
-swollen buds had burst out into a very vehemence of leafage, and
-all the woods were green.&nbsp; The fields on the mainland also
-turned green that day, and on the island the wild cherry blossoms
-opened in drifts of white, that loaded all the branches.</p>
-<p>With all this newness out of doors, the thought of fresh foods
-possessed me and I started forth on a foraging expedition, to
-find out whether the hens had waked to their duty, and whether
-the cows were ready to give milk again.&nbsp; Verily I was aweary
-of tinned milk, stored eggs, and packed foods of all
-varieties.&nbsp; So I took the skiff and started for the
-Jacksons&rsquo;.</p>
-<p>The Jackson farmhouse stands on a high hill, commanding the
-lake.&nbsp; From her kitchen door Anna Jackson can see every boat
-that passes.&nbsp; Therefore, long before one comes to shore, she
-is ready, wearing a frilled tea apron and a welcoming smile, when
-the panting visitor comes toiling up the steep slope from the
-landing.&nbsp; To-day the winds were contrary <a
-name="page173"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 173</span>and I took
-her unaware, by creeping along the shore in the lee, and Anna, in
-her work dress, was digging stones out of the garden.</p>
-<p>Grandma Jackson was knitting beside the stove in the sunny
-kitchen.&nbsp; A peddler, a low voiced, dark-eyed young Jew, sat
-in the corner.&nbsp; At my entrance he began unpacking his big
-oilcloth-covered case, drawing out aprons, handkerchiefs,
-shirtwaists, stockings, until the floor was strewn with its
-contents.&nbsp; Every article that one could name seemed stowed
-away in that great pack&mdash;enough to have stocked a small
-department store.&nbsp; When all had been displayed he began
-putting them away again.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;That&rsquo;s all what I got,&rdquo; he said with a
-patient smile.&nbsp; Presently he shouldered his load and walked
-away, bending under its weight.&nbsp; We heard him coughing as he
-passed through the gate.</p>
-<p>These peddlers begin their travels with the spring, being
-heralded by the telephones all along the line.&nbsp; It seems
-impossible that they should make a living, but I suppose they do,
-for, after being shut in for a long winter, few women can resist
-buying a ribbon or some lace when it is brought to the very
-door.</p>
-<p><a name="page174"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
-174</span>&ldquo;That feller won&rsquo;t sleep at Joshua
-White&rsquo;s to-night,&rdquo; quoth Grandma Jackson, watching
-the stooping figure out of sight.&nbsp; &ldquo;All tramps and
-peddlers and such like always put up at Joshua&rsquo;s.&nbsp;
-He&rsquo;d give them all a supper and a bed.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>But Joshua White died yesterday, and his house was the
-&ldquo;wake house&rdquo; now, for they still have wakes in this
-country&mdash;when the neighbors gather to condole with the
-bereaved, extol the virtues of the deceased, and partake of
-supper at midnight, when the whisky and the clay pipes are passed
-around.&nbsp; In this case there would be no difficulty about
-praising the dead man.&nbsp; Joshua White was a man of good
-standing, and wide charity, a good neighbor and a kind
-friend.&nbsp; The community mourned his loss.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Joshua was an awful proud man too,&rdquo; said
-Grandma.&nbsp; &ldquo;Do you think that he would ever carry a
-handkerchief with a colored border?&nbsp; Well, I guess
-not.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>At that moment the telephone bell rang.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Gran,&rdquo; said Anna, after a moment&rsquo;s
-conversation, &ldquo;Mary wants to know the age of Alec&rsquo;s
-eldest boy.&nbsp; Can you tell her?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I dunno,&rdquo; answered Mrs. Jackson.&nbsp; &ldquo;Let
-<a name="page175"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 175</span>me
-see.&nbsp; No, I can&rsquo;t remember.&nbsp; Ask Mary
-haven&rsquo;t they got some old horse or cow that they can reckon
-by?&nbsp; There&rsquo;s always some old critter on every farm
-that they counts the young ones&rsquo; ages by.&nbsp;
-Alec&rsquo;s Charley was born the spring they bought old
-Nance.&nbsp; They must know how old she is.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Just then the three Jackson children came in from school, with
-their bags of books and little tin dinner pails.&nbsp; There was
-no running or shouting; they sat down quietly at table.&nbsp;
-Six-year-old Beryl&rsquo;s small face was pale and grave.&nbsp;
-She had started that morning at seven o&rsquo;clock, had walked
-four miles to school, had sat all day on a hard bench with her
-little feet dangling.&nbsp; At noon she had eaten her dinner of
-cold potatoes, &ldquo;bread and jell,&rdquo; cake and pie, and at
-four o&rsquo;clock she had started home again, trudging those
-four long, muddy miles to a put-away supper.&nbsp; No wonder she
-looked subdued.&nbsp; She was tired in mind and in her frail,
-small body, but she is getting an education.&nbsp; Beryl is at
-the head of her class.&nbsp; She tells you this with a little
-grown-up air.</p>
-<p>It seems a topsy-turvey thing, this way of keeping schools
-open during the winter, when only the children living close to
-the schoolhouses <a name="page176"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
-176</span>can reach them through the snowdrifts and the mud, and
-closing them in summer when the roads are good.&nbsp; I should
-turn things the other way round, and give the long holiday in
-winter; but I am told that my plan would never do.&nbsp; The
-farmers need the children.&nbsp; So in the rural districts the
-weeks spent at lessons are few.&nbsp; It is only in the spring
-and fall that the children can go to school and there is no such
-thing as &ldquo;regular attendance,&rdquo; that bugbear of public
-instruction.</p>
-<p>After all, I fancy that the youngsters learn as much while
-they toss the hay in the clean, hot meadows, or when they drive
-the cattle along the shady roads to the lakes, as they would if
-penned in the little one-room houses, where some
-eighteen-year-old girl, just from high school, struggles with the
-work of all the grades at once.</p>
-<p>This thing of getting an education is a mighty matter in
-Canada.&nbsp; The roads are dotted with schoolhouses, the papers
-have long columns of advertisements for teachers, and it is
-always specified as to whether Catholic or Protestant is
-needed.&nbsp; It seems the dear ambition of each family to
-produce at least one teacher, and the Normal School at <a
-name="page177"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 177</span>Queensport
-turns them out by the score.&nbsp; On Monday mornings and Friday
-afternoons vehicles of every description travel to and from town,
-taking the girls home for Sundays and back for the week&rsquo;s
-work.</p>
-<p>Students hire a room in Queensport for two dollars a month,
-and with it goes the privilege of cooking on the family stove and
-sitting in a warm room to study.&nbsp; Those who live near enough
-to town bring their food from home, so food costs them
-nothing.&nbsp; Thus they work their difficult way through to the
-little country schools.</p>
-<p>My neighbor, Mrs. Spellman, is doubly proud, for her two
-daughters are teaching, one in Alberta, the other in far-away
-British Columbia.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;It was hard work to give them their training,&rdquo;
-she says.&nbsp; &ldquo;Their father had no patience with the
-notion of sending them to high school, so he wouldn&rsquo;t
-help.&nbsp; But I made up my mind that they should have their
-chance.&nbsp; They&rsquo;d not be tied down to a farm all their
-days, as I&rsquo;ve been.&nbsp; Mary, my eldest, was always such
-a home girl too.&nbsp; She wouldn&rsquo;t hear of leaving me
-until I promised that she should come home every week.&nbsp;
-There wasn&rsquo;t <a name="page178"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
-178</span>anyone to drive her to town and back but me, but I seen
-to it that she got home.&nbsp; Every Friday noon I&rsquo;d
-harness up and go for her, coming back long after dark.&nbsp;
-Every Monday morning I&rsquo;d be up before day, to feed the
-horse and cook breakfast in time to take her back to school
-again, and she never was late.&nbsp; I always had her there by
-nine o&rsquo;clock.&nbsp; Sometimes the roads were so dark that
-I&rsquo;d drive all the way with the reins in my two hands.&nbsp;
-I was afraid to hold them in the one hand lest I should get them
-crossed in the darkness and pull the horse out of the road and
-into the drifts.&nbsp; I&rsquo;d feel sometimes as though my
-hands was frozen.&nbsp; But I never missed a week all those two
-long years.&nbsp; When Nellie, my second girl, went, it
-wasn&rsquo;t so hard for me.&nbsp; The two stayed in Queensport
-together, and they didn&rsquo;t get so homesick.&nbsp; Yes, it
-was a hard pull, but I&rsquo;d do it all over again, for my
-children did well.&nbsp; They stood at the head of their
-class.&nbsp; I&rsquo;m proud of them when they come home,
-summers.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>I have often wondered at these little schoolma&rsquo;ams, with
-their youth, their high spirits, and their wholly innocent love
-of pretty clothes and beaux and good times.&nbsp; They have <a
-name="page179"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 179</span>to board at
-one house and another, accustoming themselves to all sorts of
-food, all kinds of families.&nbsp; They must toil through rough
-weather to their work.&nbsp; They must learn to please all
-parents, to conciliate school boards and supervisors.&nbsp; They
-must have sense to steer a difficult way through neighborhood
-prejudice and to avoid giving rise to gossip.&nbsp; A task for a
-strong woman, it has always seemed to me, but I wonder no longer
-that so many succeed in it, since I know something of the
-strength of the mothers who stand behind them.</p>
-<h2><a name="page180"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
-180</span>CHAPTER XVII</h2>
-<p><span class="smcap">The</span> mudcat season has come.&nbsp;
-After the winter&rsquo;s diet of salt herring, and before the
-open season for bass and pickerel, comes the mudcat, alias
-bullhead, to give us the taste of fresh fish again.&nbsp; From
-April fifteenth until the fifteenth of May is the closed season
-for pickerel, and from April fifteenth to June fifteenth it is
-forbidden to fish for bass, so now the humble mudcat comes to his
-own.</p>
-<p>Over on the Drapeaus&rsquo; shore the men are all skinning
-bullheads for market.&nbsp; They have rigged up a machine that
-twists off the heads and strips off the skins at one turn of a
-handle.&nbsp; Andy Drapeau dips the fish out of the live box,
-Black Jack skins and beheads them, George Drapeau rakes away the
-offal, Harry Spriggins and Lewis Drapeau pack the fish in
-barrels.&nbsp; The whole shore reeks of them, the beach is red
-with their gore, for your bullhead is a very bloody fish.&nbsp;
-He is an ugly creature&mdash;great head, thorny spines,
-wicked-looking mouth, but he tastes very good indeed, if one has
-not seen Black Jack skin him.</p>
-<p><a name="page181"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 181</span>I
-have come in for the usual present, and have to restrain my
-friends, or they would give me at least a half barrel.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Kin you git their inside out, ef I take the hide offen
-them?&rdquo; asks Black Jack.&nbsp; And I assure him that for the
-sake of fresh fish I can do anything.</p>
-<p>John Beaulac was not there.&nbsp; The Beaulac baby&mdash;my
-godson&mdash;was &ldquo;awful sick.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Later in the day came young Louis to the island to ask for the
-loan of some alcohol.&nbsp; The doctor had seen the child, by
-chance, as he was passing through the farm on his way to the
-lake, and had prescribed a warm bath and an alcohol rub.&nbsp;
-Young Louis&rsquo; eyes were big with horror.&nbsp; To wash a
-sick child was evidently the same thing as killing it
-outright.&nbsp; I supplied the alcohol and, gathering up clean
-sheets, soft towels, a new washcloth and talcum powder, took
-shipping for Loon Lake.</p>
-<p>Rose Beaulac sat in the center of a red-hot room, the window
-shut, the door shut, every chair, box and square foot of floor
-space occupied by a child or a dog, and held the gasping, moaning
-baby, despair in her face.&nbsp; One look at its crimson cheeks
-and glazed blue <a name="page182"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
-182</span>eyes told me that it was an ill child indeed.&nbsp; My
-thermometer showed a temperature of a hundred and four when it
-came out from the burning little armpit.</p>
-<p>John stood beside the woodpile and called me as I left the
-house.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Was the baby very ill?&nbsp; Ought he to send for the
-doctor?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>It was &ldquo;Yes&rdquo; to both questions.</p>
-<p>Then John did some figuring in his mind.&nbsp; His beady black
-eyes stopped twinkling, his face grew stern and set.&nbsp; This
-has been a hard winter for Jack.&nbsp; The war stopped the export
-of mica and the mines have been shut down.&nbsp; Last year was a
-wet season when the hay floated in the meadows and the grain
-sprouted in the stooks.&nbsp; It has been almost impossible to
-make ends meet, but if the child needed the doctor&mdash;well, he
-must be called and he&rsquo;d be paid somehow.&nbsp; John left
-the decision to me.&nbsp; I must call the doctor if I thought
-best.</p>
-<p>So away up the lake, three miles to the telephone, I rowed,
-and the doctor promised to come the next day.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Tell John to have a boat at Henderson&rsquo;s landing
-for me, at seven-thirty.&nbsp; I can&rsquo;t make the fifteen
-miles there and back over these <a name="page183"></a><span
-class="pagenum">p. 183</span>roads to-night.&nbsp; Meanwhile keep
-up the bathing and the alcohol rubs, and tell Rose to keep that
-door open.&nbsp; Don&rsquo;t forget that.&nbsp; Tell her that
-child must have plenty of air&rdquo;&mdash;an injunction that Dr.
-LeBaron did not in the least expect to have obeyed when he gave
-it; it was merely a part of his general course of education.</p>
-<p>How did those eight people manage to breathe in that stifling
-room; how could that ill child survive in that foul
-atmosphere?&nbsp; I wondered, as I laid my weary body down on my
-clean, cool bed.&nbsp; And if I were worn out, what must Rose be,
-who had sat for three nights with that tossing, suffering baby in
-her arms?</p>
-<p>Whether the lake is more beautiful in the early morning or at
-sunset, I have never been able to determine.&nbsp; At six
-o&rsquo;clock, as I pushed off from the dock on the blue water,
-the thrasher&rsquo;s liquid song followed the rhythm of the
-oars.&nbsp; Out on the open bay the swallows wheeled and dipped
-all round the boat, so near that I could have touched their
-burnished blue-green backs.&nbsp; On the beaches the sandpipers
-ran tipping up and down, their plaintive piping mingling with the
-robin&rsquo;s <a name="page184"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
-184</span>song.&nbsp; A gentle breeze roughened the water and
-every little ripple that hurried to the shore was tipped with a
-winking star.</p>
-<p>At Beaulac&rsquo;s all was in readiness for the doctor.&nbsp;
-Rose&rsquo;s eyes were glazed with sleeplessness, her face lined
-with fatigue; but she had found strength to comb and braid her
-dark hair, the children&rsquo;s faces had been washed, and the
-baby had been dressed in a little new pink cotton frock.&nbsp;
-There was a dishpan full of newly hatched turkeys behind the
-stove, for even if one&rsquo;s child is dying one must try to
-save the fowl, and there was a basket of young kittens under the
-bed.&nbsp; But Richard, the pet lamb, had been banished to the
-meadow and the hounds were tied to the fence.&nbsp; John had gone
-for the doctor.&nbsp; Mary was alone with the ill child.&nbsp;
-She had done all she could, she could only wait.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;m glad you got me his picture,&rdquo; she said
-with a piteous little smile and looking over at a kodak print of
-the baby that we had taken some weeks before.&nbsp;
-&ldquo;He&rsquo;s never been nowheres to have his picture
-took.&nbsp; I guess I&rsquo;ll be glad of that one.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Far out on the shining bay we saw the boat returning.&nbsp;
-There was only one figure in it.&nbsp; <a
-name="page185"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 185</span>John was
-coming back alone.&nbsp; The doctor had been stopped by an
-accident case; he could not come until evening.&nbsp;
-Rose&rsquo;s lips trembled, but she made no complaint.&nbsp; What
-was the life of one baby when there were so many, so many that
-needed the doctor?</p>
-<p>Back to the island for my midday meal, back to Loon Bay to
-meet the doctor.&nbsp; This time there were two figures black
-against the evening sky.&nbsp; John was rowing with quick jerks
-of the short, straight oars.&nbsp; In the stern sat a bulky shape
-digging away with a paddle.&nbsp; Under its weight the upward
-pointing bow waved from side to side.&nbsp; Over the gunwale
-amidship came a steady stream of water.&nbsp; Mrs. LeBaron, the
-doctor&rsquo;s wife, crouched on the bottom, was bailing away for
-life.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;By gol!&rdquo; said John, in an aside to me, as the
-party climbed the hill.&nbsp; &ldquo;By gol! but the doctor iss a
-heavy man.&nbsp; I thought she was over two, three
-times.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Oh, the method of these country doctors!&nbsp; There&rsquo;s
-no talk of &ldquo;Call me in the night if the change should
-come.&rdquo;&nbsp; No promise: &ldquo;I&rsquo;ll see you the
-first thing in the morning.&rdquo;&nbsp; No, Dr. LeBaron only
-gave his verdict.&nbsp; The baby had pneumonia.&nbsp; The right
-lung was suffused.&nbsp; He <a name="page186"></a><span
-class="pagenum">p. 186</span>was a very ill child, but he might
-pull through&mdash;no one could tell.&nbsp; And all the time the
-doctor&rsquo;s deft hands were making up powders, counting
-tablets, measuring drops.&nbsp; On every package he wrote the day
-and the hour the dose was to be given.&nbsp; He set down the
-times for baths and nourishment, he told us what symptoms we
-might expect.&nbsp; He gave his directions over and over again,
-slowly, clearly, waiting for a repetition of his words.&nbsp;
-There was no haste, no irritation at our ignorance, only infinite
-care, infinite patience.&nbsp; Then he ordered out the children,
-the young turkeys and the cats, shook hands with the mother,
-stepped into the boat and was rowed away.&nbsp; If the child
-lived, we would not need him again; if it died, we were to notify
-him at once, and twice a day he wished me to telephone him the
-baby&rsquo;s temperature, respiration, pulse, and a general
-account of the progress of the disease.&nbsp; And then when
-excitement was at its height, someone broke my thermometer, the
-only one in miles; there was no more taking of
-temperatures&mdash;and the child got well!</p>
-<p>The last time that Dr. LeBaron came to Many Islands it was to
-treat Harry <a name="page187"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
-187</span>Spriggins&rsquo; boy, who had cleft his kneecap
-straight through with an ax.&nbsp; There was no fire in the
-house.&nbsp; The Doctor had to build one and boil a pan clean
-before he could sterilize his instruments.&nbsp; There was no one
-willing to help him give an an&aelig;sthetic, so he had to sew up
-that wound while the boy sat and watched him do it.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;How in the world did the child stand it, Doctor?&rdquo;
-I asked.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Well, it was pretty hard on him,&rdquo; answered the
-doctor.&nbsp; &ldquo;I told him that I&rsquo;d thrash him within
-an inch of his life if he moved&mdash;it was the only
-way&mdash;and the poor kid gritted his teeth and swore like a
-trooper all the time.&nbsp; But the wound healed perfectly,
-almost without a scar, and the joint did not stiffen.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;You would be quite surprised to know how little charity
-work I do,&rdquo; continued the Doctor, giving me a very direct
-look from his keen, gray eyes.&nbsp; &ldquo;There are not many
-bad debts on my books.&nbsp; The country people pay remarkably
-well, all things considered.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>A quick little smile flits over Mrs. LeBaron&rsquo;s face at
-his words.&nbsp; I imagine she could tell quite another
-tale.&nbsp; Doubtless she knows <a name="page188"></a><span
-class="pagenum">p. 188</span>how much of time and strength and
-pity is given for which no money can ever pay.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;What do you call charity, Doctor?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>It is not, of course, charity to charge Johnny Bagneau ten
-dollars for driving twenty miles through the blinding snow; to
-sit, through the long night and half the day, beside the bed
-where little John makes his delayed entrance into life; to eat a
-breakfast of eggs in the shells and a dinner of potatoes in their
-jackets, and to stand outdoors in the bitter cold to eat them,
-because even the doctor, inured to filth and foul air, cannot eat
-in that poor room.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;No, the Doctor does not work for charity,&rdquo; the
-people tell me.&nbsp; &ldquo;He gits paid for what he
-does.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Younger men come from the hospitals of Toronto and Montreal
-and hang out their signs in Queensport for awhile.&nbsp; They get
-a percentage of the town cases.&nbsp; They do not &ldquo;go
-in&rdquo; for the country practice.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;They young chaps is all very good when there&rsquo;s
-nawthin&rsquo; much the matter,&rdquo; says old Mrs.
-Drapeau.&nbsp; &ldquo;But when it&rsquo;s anything bad we wants
-the old Doctor.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Yes, that is it.&nbsp; When danger threatens we <a
-name="page189"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 189</span>want the
-man we know.&nbsp; He has brought us into the world, he has stood
-by us through life&rsquo;s trouble.&nbsp; It is he who must sit
-beside us, steadfast amid the gathering shadows, as the soul
-starts forth through the darkness of the long trail, to the land
-where there shall be no more night.</p>
-<p>These country doctors!&nbsp; Up and down the roads they go, by
-night and day, through storm and fair weather, treating
-everything, operating for anything, nursing, instructing,
-overcoming prejudice, performing miracles of healing despite
-incredible difficulties.&nbsp; To meet them is to come face to
-face with the eternal realities.&nbsp; To hear them talk is to
-listen to a tale that cuts down deep into the beating heart of
-life.</p>
-<h2><a name="page190"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
-190</span>CHAPTER XVIII</h2>
-<p><span class="smcap">The</span> May woods are full of color;
-the crimson of the young maple sprays, the bronze and yellows of
-the new birch and basswood leaves reflecting the tints of
-autumn.</p>
-<p>The brakes are unclenching their little, woolly brown fists,
-the new ferns are uncurling their furry, pale-green
-spirals.&nbsp; The dwarf ginseng&rsquo;s leaves carpet the damp
-hollows, from their clusters rise innumerable feathery balls of
-bloom.&nbsp; The little wild ginseng holds its treasure
-safe&mdash;the small, edible tuber hidden far underground.&nbsp;
-There is no long-nailed Caliban to dig for it here on the
-island.</p>
-<p>The trillium flowers are turning pink.&nbsp; After about two
-weeks of snowy whiteness they have changed to a beautiful rose
-color, and oh, the perfume that comes blown across those
-far-stretching beds of trillium!&nbsp; No garden of summer roses
-was ever half so sweet.</p>
-<p>On the mainland trail, that winds along the shore from
-Drapeau&rsquo;s to Foret&rsquo;s, the ground is blue with violets
-and yellow with adder&rsquo;s <a name="page191"></a><span
-class="pagenum">p. 191</span>tongue, straw-colored bell wort and
-the downy yellow violet.&nbsp; Wild columbine beckons from the
-rocky crannies, Bishop&rsquo;s cap and Solomon&rsquo;s seal wave
-in the thickets, the wet fence corners are gay with the wine-red
-flowers of the wake robin and the tiny white stars of the wild
-strawberry dot the meadows.</p>
-<p>This is insect time.&nbsp; The air hums with the whirring
-wings of the May flies, eel flies, woolly heads, and the great
-mosquitoes.&nbsp; They cling in clouds on all the window screens,
-they come into the house by hundreds, hanging on my clothes and
-tangled in the meshes of my hair.&nbsp; The wild cherry trees are
-festooned with the webs of the tent caterpillars and the worms
-are spinning down on long threads from thousands of teeming
-cocoons.&nbsp; When I walk through the woods I am decorated with
-a pair of little, live epaulets.</p>
-<p>The treetops are noisy with a convention of bronzed grackles
-discussing all sorts of burning questions in their harsh, raucous
-voices.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Cheerily, cheerily, cheer-up,&rdquo; begs a robin in a
-white pine.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I see you, I see you,&rdquo; warns the meadow lark.</p>
-<p><a name="page192"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
-192</span>&ldquo;We know it, we know it,&rdquo; answer the
-vireos.</p>
-<p>The sapsucker is back, beating a tattoo on the house
-roof.&nbsp; An empty wooden box at the door rings like a war drum
-under the blows of his hard bill.&nbsp; On the first morning he
-waked me I felt a sentimental pleasure in the sound; it seemed
-spring&rsquo;s reveille.&nbsp; On three successive mornings I
-heard him with an ever-decreasing joy.&nbsp; On the fourth I
-sprang out of bed, dazed with sleep, and, seizing a stick from
-the woodpile, I let fly at that diligent fowl, and he dashed away
-with a squawk.&nbsp; So low may one&rsquo;s love of nature ebb at
-four o&rsquo;clock in the morning.</p>
-<p>To-day, as I was dreaming on the porch, I heard a fat-sounding
-&ldquo;plop,&rdquo; and saw a yard-long snake hanging in a crotch
-of a poplar, twisting his wicked head and lashing his tail.&nbsp;
-Immediately a brilliant redstart flew down and began darting at
-the reptile&rsquo;s eyes, screaming and fluttering at a great
-rate.&nbsp; The snake had probably gone up the tree for eggs,
-only to be driven down by the small, furious householder.&nbsp;
-In a moment more he slid down the trunk and disappeared under the
-house.</p>
-<p>The snakes on the island are harmless, I am <a
-name="page193"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
-193</span>assured.&nbsp; Therefore I do not object to this
-one&rsquo;s living under the porch, but I hope that he will stay
-under it, and that I shall not step into the middle of his coils
-some day when he is out sunning himself.&nbsp; The feel of a live
-snake under my foot would throw me back some millions of years
-and I should become, at once, the prehistoric female, fleeing in
-terror from the ancient enemy.</p>
-<p>The young rabbits are out, hopping softly down all the
-paths.&nbsp; They look so exactly like the small brown plaster
-bunnies sold in the shops at Easter that, when something
-frightens them and they &ldquo;freeze&rdquo; motionless under a
-bush or fern, I can scarcely believe that they are not toys,
-after all.&nbsp; Comical little creatures!&nbsp; They eye me with
-such solemnity.&nbsp; I often wonder what makes babies and other
-young things look so very wise.&nbsp; They seem to know such
-weighty secrets, that all the rest of the world has long
-forgotten.</p>
-<p>The old hares also are coming round the house again.&nbsp; One
-ventures so near and drives the others away so fiercely that I
-half believe he is little Peter returned to me.</p>
-<p>Over at the farms the spring sowing is done&mdash;the wheat,
-the barley, and the oats; and <a name="page194"></a><span
-class="pagenum">p. 194</span>in the long twilights, and under the
-Planter&rsquo;s Moon, the farmers are putting in the last seed
-potatoes.&nbsp; Seed planted at the full of the May moon gives
-the heaviest crops, they say.</p>
-<p>In the furrows, the big dew worms are working up out of the
-wet ground, to be bait for the fish hooks.&nbsp; Here, our object
-in fishing being to catch the fish, we use worms, frogs, anything
-that fish will bite, leaving flies, spoons, and sportsman devices
-to the campers who fish according to science and rule.</p>
-<p>Walking along the shore trail yesterday, I came upon Black
-Jack Beaulac, sitting on a rock, fishing tackle beside him.&nbsp;
-He seemed deep in thought and I wondered what new deviltry he was
-hatching there, for Black Jack is the tease and torment of the
-countryside.&nbsp; It is he who starts the good stories that go
-the rounds of the stores and firesides, and the slower wits fly
-before his tongue like chaff before the fan.</p>
-<p>If Black Jack&rsquo;s tales on the other men are good, theirs
-of his performances are quite as well worth hearing.&nbsp; There
-is one of the time when he stole a hogshead of good liquor, and
-carried it off single-handed before the <a
-name="page195"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 195</span>wondering
-eyes of the &ldquo;Sports&rdquo; encamped at Les Rapides.&nbsp;
-It was Black Jack who plunged into the icy waters of the lake to
-the rescue of the half breed drowning there, and it was he who
-came to the aid of poor, terrified Rebecca North, whose husband
-had gone suddenly deranged and was running amuck.&nbsp; The poor
-crazy giant has never forgotten the treatment he received at
-those great hands.&nbsp; Long after his madness was past he spoke
-with awe of Black Jack&rsquo;s powerful grasp.</p>
-<p>Again there is the story of the race on the ice of
-Henderson&rsquo;s Bay that will never lose its flavor.&nbsp; I
-heard it from Uncle Dan Cassidy one wet Sunday afternoon, as we
-sat round the Blakes&rsquo; kitchen fire popping corn and capping
-stories.&nbsp; Uncle Dan has a brogue as thick as cream and a
-voice as smooth as butter.&nbsp; No writer of dialects could ever
-reproduce his speech.&nbsp; Translated, the tale runs thus:</p>
-<p>There was to be a great race to which anyone having a horse
-was welcome.&nbsp; Yankee Jim Branch, a cousin of Black
-Jack&rsquo;s, had an old nag, fit for little, which he entered by
-way of a joke.&nbsp; Black Jack, being temporarily out of horses,
-in consequence of some dealing with the local storekeeper and a
-chattel mortgage, <a name="page196"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
-196</span>was not included in the company.&nbsp; There had long
-been a feud between Black Jack and Yankee, so it was considered a
-good thing that they were not both to be represented in the
-contest.</p>
-<p>It was a great occasion.&nbsp; The course was staked out on
-the ice with ceremony, little cedar bushes were stuck up to mark
-the quarter miles, and there was a flag at the judge&rsquo;s
-stand.&nbsp; William Foret held Joe Bogg&rsquo;s big silver stop
-watch to mark the time, Andy Drapeau had a stump of pencil and an
-old envelope on which to record it and the stakes were as much as
-two dollars.</p>
-<p>The start was made, all horses had run, and the race, oddly
-enough, lay between Bogg&rsquo;s gray and Yankee&rsquo;s old
-hack, when&mdash;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Ping!&rdquo;</p>
-<p>A shot sang out from somewhere, far back on the point, and
-Yankee&rsquo;s horse dropped like a stone.&nbsp; His driver was
-leaning far out over the wretched creature&rsquo;s back,
-belaboring him with a great gad.&nbsp; The halt was so sudden
-that away he went, straight on over the horse&rsquo;s head,
-landing hard on the ice.&nbsp; Up he jumped raging, and ran back
-to the stupified group at the stand.</p>
-<p><a name="page197"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
-197</span>&ldquo;Is any man in the crowd got his gun?&rdquo; he
-demanded.</p>
-<p>Every man was abundantly able to prove that his gun rested
-behind the door of his own cabin.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Is Black Jack in the crowd?&rdquo; inquired Yankee.</p>
-<p>He was not, and Yankee was immediately convinced that his
-cousin, Black Jack, had fired that shot.</p>
-<p>Then in the midst of the excitement Black Jack himself
-appeared, striding unconcernedly down the hill.&nbsp; He had been
-hidden among the bushes, far back on the point, and, unable to
-endure the thought of Yankee&rsquo;s bragging if his horse should
-win, had raised his gun and shot the wretched animal, at the very
-instant of victory, and when, in Yankee&rsquo;s mind, the two
-dollars was as good as spent.</p>
-<p>History does not tell what Yankee did to get even.&nbsp;
-Probably nothing, for no one in the countryside cares to
-interfere with Black Jack.&nbsp; He is known as a man of his
-hands and a good person to let alone.</p>
-<p>All this and more I remembered when I saw Jack sitting on the
-shore.&nbsp; But he was not wearing his usual devil-may-care
-swagger <a name="page198"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
-198</span>and cheerful grin.&nbsp; Instead, his square, dark face
-was grim, his great shoulders were bent, his long arms hung
-relaxed and his black eyes gazed moodily over the water.&nbsp; He
-looked tired and gaunt and gray.&nbsp; Presently he rose heavily
-and, without seeing me, strode off to his boat, stepped in and
-rowed away and the next I heard of him, he had enlisted and was
-off to Valcartier to learn to be a soldier.</p>
-<p>Following his example went Little John Beaulac and his son
-Louis, to the despair of poor Rose, and later, Charley McDougal
-and George Drapeau.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;It&rsquo;s the meal ticket with those fellows,&rdquo;
-commented Henry Blake.&nbsp; &ldquo;What do they know about this
-war?&nbsp; They don&rsquo;t even know what they&rsquo;ll be
-fighting for.&nbsp; No, it&rsquo;s the money they&rsquo;re
-after.&nbsp; The mines are not working, there&rsquo;s little or
-no wood-cutting to be done, and they&rsquo;re up against it for
-food.&nbsp; Jack thinks that he&rsquo;ll get a pension for his
-woman and a bounty for each one of the kids.&nbsp; The recruiting
-sergeants get so much a head for every man they bring in and so,
-of course, they promise these poor fellows anything.&nbsp; But
-they find out different after they&rsquo;ve enlisted.&nbsp; Black
-Jack&rsquo;ll never stick at it.&nbsp; He&rsquo;ll desert, <a
-name="page199"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 199</span>and if he
-does they&rsquo;ll never catch him.&nbsp; He&rsquo;s here to-day
-and fifty miles away across the hills to-morrow.&nbsp; He travels
-like a mink, Black Jack does.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Poor Jack!&nbsp; He will find the restraint of barracks and
-drill intolerable, he who has never known any law but his own
-will.&nbsp; Will he stand the life?&nbsp; I wonder.</p>
-<h2><a name="page200"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
-200</span>CHAPTER XIX</h2>
-<p><span class="smcap">November&rsquo;s</span> moon is said to be
-the Indian&rsquo;s Moon of Magic, but here the June moon is the
-wonder moon and &ldquo;the moon of my delight.&rdquo;&nbsp; It
-sails resplendent in a luminous sky, pouring its brightness down
-on a lake that gleams like a silver shield.&nbsp; Its beams rain
-down through the leaves in a drenching flood of light, to lie in
-shining pools on the mossy ground.&nbsp; It illuminates the
-hidden nooks of the forest, it makes the stems of the birches
-look like slender columns of white marble, and the woods are so
-bright that half the flowers forget to shut their eyes, and stay
-wide open through the night.&nbsp; Slender, tall irises stand
-like ghost flowers in the swamps; the thousand little bells of
-the false lily of the valley&mdash;the Canada May
-Flower&mdash;swing in the breezes that run along the ground, and
-on the low, south point of the island the rushes rattle stiffly
-and bow their heads as the wind passes over them.&nbsp; They are
-the Equisetum, the Horsetail rush, known to the Pilgrim
-housewives as scouring rushes, with which they used to clean
-their pots and pans.</p>
-<p><a name="page201"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 201</span>Mary
-Blake tells me that she has used them and that the flinty, hollow
-stems are excellent kettle cleaners.&nbsp; They do not suggest
-anything so prosaic here in the white moonlight&mdash;rather they
-make me think of small silver spears held upright in the hands of
-a fairy troop, the small, green yeomen of the forest, on guard
-through the white night.</p>
-<p>There is great rushing and scurrying in the underbrush, for
-the deer mice, the rabbits, and other small folk of the forest
-are awake and active.&nbsp; The birds too are wakeful and chirp
-answers chirp from one nest to another all through the night.</p>
-<p>This is going to be a good bird year judging from the number
-of broken egg shells&mdash;blue, cream, speckled&mdash;that are
-cast from the nests to the ground.&nbsp; There is a continuous
-sound of faint, wheezing cries, the voices of nestlings, begging
-for food.</p>
-<p>A pair of robins have plastered their mud nest on a beam of
-the porch roof, a red-eyed vireo has hung her birch bark cradle
-in a low bush under the kitchen window, some ph&oelig;bes have
-built on the lintel of the house door.&nbsp; It seems impossible
-that so small a nest can hold so many squirming little bodies as
-must belong <a name="page202"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
-202</span>to all those upstretched, gaping yellow bills.&nbsp;
-The parent ph&oelig;bes do not hesitate about telling me in good
-round terms just what they think of me when I go too near their
-home, but the robins do not scold me, they only go off to a bush
-and mourn.&nbsp; The vireo cares not at all for anybody, but sits
-tranquil on her eggs and eyes me fearlessly.</p>
-<p>I have seen a whippoorwill&rsquo;s nest, a thing, I am told,
-that few people ever find.&nbsp; It lies on the ground under the
-shelter of cedar poles that serves John Beaulac for a wagon shed,
-and is so directly in the path of the horses&rsquo; hoofs that I
-wonder it has not been trampled into the mold.&nbsp; John&rsquo;s
-small daughter, Sallie May, led me to it, and, as we approached,
-a dark, slenderly trailing bird slid away through the underbrush,
-leaving her two furry balls of nestlings rolling helplessly on
-the dry leaves of their bed.&nbsp; They were about half the size
-of young chickens and were covered with thick down of a red clay
-color that had so fiery and vital a glow that it made me think of
-live coals showing through the ashes.&nbsp; We took one look and
-hurried away lest the whippoorwill mother should become
-frightened and forsake her nest, and two sweet and <a
-name="page203"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 203</span>plaintive
-bird voices be lost from the evening chorus.</p>
-<p>At Beaulac&rsquo;s, where I stopped on the homeward way, a
-lively discussion was going forward.&nbsp; The Bishop of Ontario
-was coming to Sark, for the first time in many years, to hold
-service and to confirm, and there was much speculation about who
-would join the English Church.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;m a goin&rsquo; to be a Catholic,&rdquo;
-announced poor Ishmael, the half-wit, peering out from a dim nook
-behind the stove.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;They tells me the priest kin cure the fits,&rdquo; he
-went on, hopefully, &ldquo;but he won&rsquo;t do it fer you
-lessen you bees a Catholic, so I&rsquo;m a goin&rsquo; to jine
-his church.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I favors the Baptists, ef I favors any,&rdquo; observed
-Bill Shelly, the frogger.</p>
-<p>Whereupon John Beaulac retorted cruelly, that
-&ldquo;We&rsquo;d ought to send fer the preacher quick and have
-Bill dipped right off the dock, clothes and all,&rdquo; further
-explaining that the suggestion was made in view of Bill&rsquo;s
-general appearance and his boast that he had not touched water
-since early in the previous summer, and then only because he had
-&ldquo;fell in.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Bill, so far from being offended, took this <a
-name="page204"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 204</span>witticism
-in excellent part, joining uproariously in the laugh that
-followed it.</p>
-<p>For the rest of that week, telephones were busy calling a
-congregation.&nbsp; I was invited to drive to church in Mrs.
-Swanson&rsquo;s spring wagon, and reached her farm by a devious
-route on the great day.&nbsp; I rowed across the half mile that
-lies between the island and the nearest point of mainland and
-walked the wood trail from Drapeau&rsquo;s to
-Foret&rsquo;s.&nbsp; There William&rsquo;s motor boat was waiting
-to ferry me across the lake and up Blue Bay to the
-Swan-sons&rsquo; landing.</p>
-<p>Here also there was a flutter of excitement, for Susie Dove
-was going to be confirmed.</p>
-<p>Clarence Nutting too had wished to be of the class, but at the
-last moment it had been remembered that he had never been
-baptized.&nbsp; As baptism must precede confirmation the Rector,
-amid the hurry and work of entertaining the Bishop and conveying
-him to and from the several churches where there were to be
-services, had been diligently striving to come up with Clarence
-to baptize him.</p>
-<p>But each time he searched for him Clarence was away, either in
-a distant field or over in the next township, and so the Rector
-never <a name="page205"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
-205</span>caught him, and when the service commenced poor
-Clarence sat humbly at the side of the church with the men, and
-could not come forward.</p>
-<p>There was no trouble about little Susie.&nbsp; Her case was
-entirely clear.&nbsp; Her new dress and white veil were spread
-forth on the spare room bed for display and admiration; her hair
-was plaited in innumerable tight pigtails as a prelude to
-subsequent frizzes.</p>
-<p>Susie looked quiet and subdued.&nbsp; There was a frightened
-expression in her china-blue eyes.&nbsp; She could eat no dinner,
-she could not even taste her pie, and soon she and Mrs. Swanson
-retired to dress.&nbsp; On the way to church Susie sat silent,
-clutching her new Prayer Book in a moist and trembling
-hand.&nbsp; On the homeward drive she confided to me that she had
-been very afraid of the Bishop.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I knew my Commandments,&rdquo; she assured me,
-&ldquo;but I was not so certain about the creed, and I was
-afeared lest the Bishop should ask me some hard
-questions.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Her face then was radiant.&nbsp; The Bishop had been kind and
-had asked no one any hard questions, and so this little one had
-not been put to confusion.</p>
-<p><a name="page206"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 206</span>The
-church at Sark is old and falling to pieces but it looked lovely
-that day.&nbsp; Each window sill held a plant in bloom, its tin
-can covered with gay, flowered wall paper&mdash;geraniums,
-fuchsias, patience plants&mdash;the ornaments of many a
-parlor.&nbsp; Each window framed a picture of soft, rolling
-meadows, fruit trees in bloom, homesteads nestled in the hollows,
-and, over all, stretches of blue sky, flecked with wisps of
-floating vapor.&nbsp; In the center of the church sat the group
-of ten or a dozen candidates for confirmation.&nbsp; Through the
-misty veils their young faces looked out, awed and grave and very
-sweet.&nbsp; There had been a great disappointment for little
-Mary Spellman, for her veil had not come from town with the
-rest.&nbsp; She looked like a gentle little nun, with a square of
-plain white muslin laid over her flaxen head.&nbsp; Most of these
-girls will not wear bridal dress at their weddings, so
-confirmation is the one great occasion in their lives when they
-can put on the dignity and the mystery of the veil.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Defend, O Lord, this thy child with thy heavenly
-grace&rdquo;&mdash;The words seemed to reach me from a great way
-off, repeated each time the Bishop laid his hands on a bowed
-head.&nbsp; <a name="page207"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
-207</span>The Bishop&rsquo;s voice was kind, his tone gentle
-when, his sermon finished, he turned from the congregation to
-deliver his charge to the class.&nbsp; I do not remember much of
-what he said, but I have not forgotten his manner.&nbsp; It
-seemed to me, listening, that he must feel a peculiar tenderness
-for these little cut-off country parishes.</p>
-<p>After service I was led forward to be presented to his
-Lordship.&nbsp; He said that he had heard of &ldquo;the lady from
-the Southern States who was living alone at Many
-Islands.&rdquo;&nbsp; I could not help feeling that the Episcopal
-eye regarded me with a certain suspicion, as one not quite right
-in her mind&mdash;which supposition was, I fear, confirmed by my
-own behavior, for when Mrs. Rector said: &ldquo;My Lord, I wish
-to present Miss X. to you,&rdquo; the unaccustomed sound of the
-title, and my own total ignorance of the proper mode of
-addressing one called &ldquo;My Lord,&rdquo; gave me a foolish,
-flustered manner that must have betrayed me.</p>
-<p>We locked the silent church, stripped of its flowers and
-white-robed girls, and drove along the tree-shaded roads to the
-shore, where the motor boat was waiting.&nbsp; The <a
-name="page208"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 208</span>water was
-so still and so clear that we could see every rock and pebble
-lying a dozen feet below.&nbsp; We passed over schools of big
-fish, bass and pickerel, hanging suspended in a crystal
-medium.&nbsp; Between the sheer walls of the Loon Lake Portage
-the sun was going down in a lake of gold and the rocks were
-purple and red in its glow.</p>
-<p>I walked the home trail slowly, lingering in the falling
-dusk.&nbsp; The odors of the cedars, hemlocks, and basswoods came
-to me mingled with the wet smell from the bogs and the perfume of
-the tiny twin trumpets of the partridge vine, twining the damp
-moss.&nbsp; I came out of the dimness of the woods to the path
-worn along the grass of meadows starred all over with myriads of
-misty little globes, the seed heads of the dandelions.&nbsp; I
-pushed the row boat off on the quiet water, and drifted while
-&ldquo;the moth hour went from the fields.&rdquo;&nbsp; The sky
-was bright with the rising moon as I climbed the island
-path.&nbsp; There was great scurrying of rabbits in the
-underbrush and away in the misty thickets the whippoorwills were
-calling.</p>
-<h2><a name="page209"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
-209</span>CHAPTER XX</h2>
-<p><span class="smcap">It</span> is wild strawberry time in lower
-Canada.&nbsp; The fields are carpeted with them and the
-fern-covered rocks hold each a little garden where the red
-berries hang over the water like rubies in a setting of clustered
-leaves.&nbsp; The birds are feasting royally and I walk along the
-edges of the meadows, gathering handfuls of the ripe fruit.&nbsp;
-No one is at home any more.&nbsp; When I stop at a house the
-women have all gone a-berrying.&nbsp; Thousands of quarts go off
-to the markets, or are cooked here into jellies and jam, for the
-delicacy of the winter is wild strawberry preserve.&nbsp; I had
-it every time I went out to tea.&nbsp; Now they give me
-strawberry shortcake and, O how good it is!&nbsp; No garden fruit
-can compare, in sweetness or perfume, with the little wild berry
-of the fields.</p>
-<p>Not all my friends go berrying every day, however.&nbsp;
-Yesterday I was kneeling on the dock busy washing my clothes,
-when a heavily laden motor boat, with a row boat in tow, rounded
-the point and headed for the island.&nbsp; In it were Mary Blake,
-Mrs. Swanson, Anna Jackson, and Jean Foret.&nbsp; Rose Beaulac
-and <a name="page210"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
-210</span>Granny Drapeau sat in the little boat behind and all
-space not filled by women of ample build, was piled high with
-pails and baskets.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;We&rsquo;ve come to spend the day,&rdquo; they hailed
-me.&nbsp; &ldquo;Don&rsquo;t get scared, we&rsquo;ve brought our
-dinners along.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Dinner or no dinner, I am glad to see you,&rdquo; I
-called back, waving an apron in welcome.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;We knew this would be our last chance to have a visit
-with you before the campers come, so we&rsquo;ve come to have a
-picnic.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Ah!&nbsp; What a happy, friendly day!&nbsp; These
-women&mdash;busy heads of households, women of affairs&mdash;laid
-aside their cares, forgot their responsibilities and enjoyed
-their party with the simplicity of children.&nbsp; And how good
-was the chicken, brought already cooked in a shining pail, and
-the cakes and pies in the baskets!&nbsp; Mrs. Swanson had
-journeyed in to Sark to buy candy, and all that the store there
-boasted was the dear old candy of our childhood, little chocolate
-boys and girls and rabbits, sugar hearts with mottoes,
-jaw-breakers and pep&rsquo;mint sticks.</p>
-<p>We sat long at the big table on the porch.&nbsp; We talked and
-talked, or, rather, they talked; I listened, marking the
-shrewdness of their <a name="page211"></a><span
-class="pagenum">p. 211</span>deductions, the keenness of their
-comment, the kindliness of their judgments.&nbsp; I heard all
-about the fine new store at Frontenac and the bargains one and
-another had found.&nbsp; They described the magnificence of the
-yearly celebration there when the Orangemen walk in
-procession.&nbsp; They told me that this year Joey Trueman, the
-storekeeper, had not scrupled to set off a whole twenty-three
-dollars&rsquo; worth of fireworks by way of advertisement.</p>
-<p>We explored the scant five acres of the island, peeping in at
-the doors of the little summer sleeping shacks, all swept and
-furnished for the campers, and then, in the pleasant languor of
-the afternoon, I brought out my stack of photographs and told all
-about my homefolk.</p>
-<p>For I too have formed the photo-displaying habit of this
-neighborhood, a friendly, kindly custom that makes one free at
-once of the home and all the family.&nbsp; I have never gone
-visiting here without being at once presented with the
-album.&nbsp; Many a time has my hostess hurried in from the
-kitchen to ask: &ldquo;Has Miss X. seen the pictures
-yet?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Big, unmercifully true-to-life crayon likenesses of
-grandparents stare down from all <a name="page212"></a><span
-class="pagenum">p. 212</span>the parlor walls&mdash;ancestral
-portraits.&nbsp; There are photographs of all the brides and
-grooms and babies, snapshots of sons fighting &ldquo;somewhere in
-France,&rdquo; of daughters gone out to make homes of their own
-on the far-off frontier, and there are the faces of those lying
-safe under the cedars in the little graveyards close at
-home.&nbsp; I have heard the life stories of all, and so it seems
-quite natural for me to hand out my pictures too.</p>
-<p>As evening drew on and milking time approached, my guests
-gathered together pails and baskets and, as we walked single file
-along the trail to the dock, I tried to say something of what
-lies in my heart about all the kindness they had shown me in the
-year gone by, but the lump that rose in my throat choked back the
-words.&nbsp; They climbed into their boats, that sank to the
-gunwales under their weight, and I watched them away across the
-purple water.</p>
-<p>My holiday is over.&nbsp; In a very few weeks I must go back
-to the city and take up my work&mdash;the same, yet never again
-to be the same.&nbsp; Here in the quiet of the woods I am trying
-to take stock of all that this year has done for me.</p>
-<p><a name="page213"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 213</span>It
-has given me health.&nbsp; I have forgotten all about jerking
-nerves and aching muscles.&nbsp; I sleep all night like a stone;
-I eat plain food with relish; I walk and row mile after mile; I
-work rejoicing in my strength and glad to be alive.</p>
-<p>There has been also the renewing of my mind, for my standards
-of values are changed.&nbsp; Things that once were of supreme
-importance seem now the veriest trifles.&nbsp; Things that once I
-took for granted, believing them the common due of
-mankind&mdash;like air and sunshine, warm fires and the kind
-faces of friends&mdash;are now the most valuable things in the
-world.&nbsp; What I have learned here of the life of birds and
-beasts, of insects and trees are the veriest primer facts of
-science to the naturalist&mdash;to me they are inestimably
-precious, the possessions of my mind, for, like Chicken Little,
-&ldquo;I saw them with my eyes, and heard them with my
-ears.&rdquo;&nbsp; And I shall carry away a gallery of
-mind-pictures to be a solace and refreshment through all the
-years to come.</p>
-<p>The camp is ready for its owner.&nbsp; I have spent many hours
-in cleaning, arranging, replacing, that she may find all as she
-left it ten months ago.&nbsp; The island lies neat and fair in <a
-name="page214"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 214</span>the
-sunshine, reminding me of a good child that has been washed and
-dressed and seated on the doorstep to wait for company.&nbsp;
-Never have the woods looked so fair to me, or the wide lake,
-where the dragonflies are hawking to and fro over the water, so
-beautiful.</p>
-<p>This is dragonfly season.&nbsp; Millions of them are darting
-through the air&mdash;great green and brown ones with a
-wing-spread of three to four inches; wee blue ones, like lances
-of sapphire light; little inch-long yellow ones, and beautiful,
-rusty red.</p>
-<p>To-day I spent three hours on the dock watching one make that
-wonderful transition from the life amphibious to the life of the
-air.&nbsp; Noon came and went, food was forgotten while that
-miracle unfolded there before my very eyes.</p>
-<p>I was tying the boat, when I saw what looked like a very large
-spider, crawling up from the water and out on a board.&nbsp; It
-moved with such effort and seemed so weak that I was tempted to
-put it out of its pain.&nbsp; But if I have learned nothing else
-in all these months in the woods, I have thoroughly learned to
-keep hands off the processes of nature.&nbsp; Too often have I
-seen my well-meant attempts to <a name="page215"></a><span
-class="pagenum">p. 215</span>help things along end in
-disaster.&nbsp; So I gave the creature another glance and
-prepared to go about my business, when I noticed a slit in its
-humped back, and a head with great, dull beads of eyes pushing
-out through the opening.&nbsp; Then I sat down to watch, for I
-realized that this was birth and not death.</p>
-<p>Very slowly the head emerged and the eyes began to glow like
-lamps of emerald light.&nbsp; A shapeless, pulpy body came
-working out and two feeble legs pushed forth and began groping
-for a firm hold.&nbsp; They fastened on the board and then,
-little by little and ever so slowly, the whole insect struggled
-out, and lay weak, almost inanimate, beside the empty case that
-had held it prisoner so long.</p>
-<p>Two crumpled lumps on either side began to unfurl and show as
-wings.&nbsp; The long abdomen, curled round and under, like a
-snail-shell, began to uncurl and change to brilliant green, while
-drops of clear moisture gathered on its enameled sides and
-dripped from its tip.&nbsp; The transparent membrane of the
-wings, now held stiffly erect, began to show rainbow colors, as
-they fanned slowly in the warm air, and, at last, nearly three
-hours after the creature had crept out of the water, the great <a
-name="page216"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 216</span>dragon-fly
-stood free, beside its cast-off body lying on the dock.&nbsp;
-And</p>
-<p class="poetry">&ldquo;Because the membraned wings,<br />
-&nbsp;&nbsp; So wonderful, so wide,<br />
-So sun-suffused, were things<br />
-&nbsp;&nbsp; Like soul and nought beside.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Certain stupendous phrases rose in my mind and kept sounding
-through my thoughts.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Behold, I show you a mystery.&nbsp; We shall not all
-sleep, but we shall all be changed.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>There it stood, that living jewel, growing every moment more
-strong, more exquisite, waiting perhaps for some trumpet call of
-its life.&nbsp; Suddenly it stiffened, the great wings shot out
-horizontally, and with one joyous, upward bound, away it flashed,
-an embodied triumph, out across the shining water, straight up
-into the glory of the sun.</p>
-<p>When I came to myself I was standing a tiptoe gazing up after
-it, my breath was coming in gasps and I heard my own voice
-saying: &ldquo;It is sown in weakness, it is raised in power. . .
-.&nbsp; Thanks be to God, which giveth us the victory.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Then, standing there under those trees, clothed in their new
-green and upspringing <a name="page217"></a><span
-class="pagenum">p. 217</span>to the sky, and beside the lake,
-where the young ferns troop down to the water&rsquo;s edge,
-valiant little armies with banners, there came to me one of those
-strange flashes of understanding, that pierce for an instant the
-thick dullness of our minds, and give us a glimpse of the meaning
-of this life we live in blindness here.</p>
-<p>I had seen those woods, all bare and dead, rise triumphant in
-a glorious spring.&nbsp; I had seen that lake grow dark and still
-and lie icebound through the strange sleep of winter.&nbsp; Its
-water now lay rippling in the sun.</p>
-<p>Since my coming to Many Islands, one year ago, the Great War
-has broken forth, civilization has seemed to die, and the hearts
-of half the world have gone down into a grave.</p>
-<p>But even to me has come the echo of the Great Voice that spoke
-to John, as he stood gazing on a new heaven and new earth:</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I am the beginning and the end,&rdquo; it said.&nbsp;
-&ldquo;Behold I make all things new.&rdquo;</p>
-<pre>
-
-
-
-
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