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<p><br/><br/></p>
<h1> OVER PRAIRIE TRAILS </h1>
<p><br/><br/></p>
<h2> By Frederick Philip Grove </h2>
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<h2> Contents </h2>
<h3> <SPAN href="#link2H_4_0001"> Introductory </SPAN><br/> </h3>
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<SPAN href="#link2H_4_0002"> ONE. </SPAN>
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Farms and Roads
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</tr>
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<SPAN href="#link2H_4_0003"> TWO. </SPAN>
</td>
<td>
Fog
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<SPAN href="#link2H_4_0004"> THREE. </SPAN>
</td>
<td>
Dawn and Diamonds
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<tr>
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<SPAN href="#link2H_4_0005"> FOUR. </SPAN>
</td>
<td>
Snow
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<SPAN href="#link2H_4_0006"> FIVE. </SPAN>
</td>
<td>
Wind and Waves
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<td>
<SPAN href="#link2H_4_0007"> SIX. </SPAN>
</td>
<td>
A Call for Speed
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<tr>
<td>
<SPAN href="#link2H_4_0008"> SEVEN. </SPAN>
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<td>
Skies and Scares
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</table>
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<h2> Introductory </h2>
<p>A few years ago it so happened that my work—teaching school—kept
me during the week in a small country town in the centre of one of the
prairie provinces while my family—wife and little daughter—lived
in the southern fringe of the great northern timber expanse, not very far
from the western shore of a great lake. My wife—like the plucky
little woman she is—in order to round off my far-from-imperial
income had made up her mind to look after a rural school that boasted of
something like a residence. I procured a buggy and horse and went “home”
on Fridays, after school was over, to return to my town on Sunday evening—covering
thus, while the season was clement and allowed straight cross-country
driving, coming and going, a distance of sixty-eight miles. Beginning with
the second week of January this distance was raised to ninety miles
because, as my more patient readers will see, the straight cross-country
roads became impassable through snow.</p>
<p>These drives, the fastest of which was made in somewhat over four hours
and the longest of which took me nearly eleven—the rest of them
averaging pretty well up between the two extremes—soon became what
made my life worth living. I am naturally an outdoor creature—I have
lived for several years “on the tramp”—I love Nature more than Man—I
take to horses—horses take to me—so how could it have been
otherwise? Add to this that for various reasons my work just then was not
of the most pleasant kind—I disliked the town, the town disliked me,
the school board was sluggish and unprogressive, there was friction in the
staff—and who can wonder that on Fridays, at four o’clock, a real
holiday started for me: two days ahead with wife and child, and going and
coming—the drive.</p>
<p>I made thirty-six of these trips: seventy-two drives in all. I think I
could still rehearse every smallest incident of every single one of them.
With all their weirdness, with all their sometimes dangerous adventure—most
of them were made at night, and with hardly ever any regard being paid to
the weather or to the state of the roads—they stand out in the vast
array of memorable trifles that constitute the story of my life as among
the most memorable ones. Seven drives seem, as it were, lifted above the
mass of others as worthy to be described in some detail—as not too
trivial to detain for an hour or so a patient reader’s kind attention. Not
that the others lack in interest for myself; but there is little in them
of that mildly dramatic, stirring quality which might perhaps make their
recital deserving of being heard beyond my own frugal fireside. Strange to
say, only one of the seven is a return trip. I am afraid that the prospect
of going back to rather uncongenial work must have dulled my senses. Or
maybe, since I was returning over the same road after an interval of only
two days, I had exhausted on the way north whatever there was of
noticeable impressions to be garnered. Or again, since I was coming from
“home,” from the company of those for whom I lived and breathed, it might
just be that all my thoughts flew back with such an intensity that there
was no vitality left for the perception of the things immediately around
me.</p>
<p><br/></p>
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<br/>
<h2> ONE. Farms and Roads </h2>
<p>At ten minutes past four, of an evening late in September, I sat in the
buggy and swung out of the livery stable that boarded my horse. Peter, the
horse, was a chunky bay, not too large, nor too small; and I had stumbled
on to him through none of my sagacity. To tell the plain truth, I wanted
to get home, I had to have a horse that could stand the trip, no other
likely looking horse was offered, this one was—on a trial drive he
looked as if he might do, and so I bought him—no, not quite—I
arranged with the owner that I should make one complete trip with him and
pay a fee of five dollars in case I did not keep him. As the sequence
showed, I could not have found a better horse for the work in hand.</p>
<p>I turned on to the road leading north, crossed the bridge, and was between
the fields. I looked at my watch and began to time myself. The moon was
new and stood high in the western sky; the sun was sinking on the downward
stretch. It was a pleasant, warm fall day, and it promised an evening such
as I had wished for on my first drive out. Not a cloud showed anywhere. I
did not urge the horse; he made the first mile in seven, and a half
minutes, and I counted that good enough.</p>
<p>Then came the turn to the west; this new road was a correction line, and I
had to follow it for half a mile. There was no farmhouse on this short
bend. Then north for five miles. The road was as level as a table top—a
good, smooth, hard-beaten, age-mellowed prairie-grade. The land to east
and west was also level; binders were going and whirring their harvest
song. Nobody could have felt more contented than I did. There were two
clusters of buildings—substantial buildings—set far back from
the road, one east, the other one west, both clusters huddled homelike and
sheltered in bluffs of planted cottonwoods, straight rows of them, three,
four trees deep. My horse kept trotting leisurely along, the wheels kept
turning, a meadow lark called in a desultory way from a nearby fence post.
I was “on the go.” I had torn up my roots, as it were, I felt detached and
free; and if both these prosperous looking farms had been my property—I
believe, that moment a “Thank-you” would have bought them from me if
parting from them had been the price of the liberty to proceed. But, of
course, neither one of them ever could have been my property, for neither
by temperament nor by profession had I ever been given to the accumulation
of the wealth of this world.</p>
<p>A mile or so farther on there stood another group of farm buildings—this
one close to the road. An unpainted barn, a long and low, rather
ramshackle structure with sagging slidedoors that could no longer be
closed, stood in the rear of the farm yard. The dwelling in front of it
was a tall, boxlike two-story house, well painted in a rather loud green
with white door and window frames. The door in front, one window beside
it, two windows above, geometrically correct, and stiff and cold. The
house was the only green thing around, however. Not a tree, not a shrub,
not even a kitchen garden that I could see. I looked the place over
critically, while I drove by. Somehow I was convinced that a bachelor
owned it—a man who made this house—which was much too large
for him—his “bunk.” There it stood, slick and cold, unhospitable as
ever a house was. A house has its physiognomy as well as a man, for him
who can read it; and this one, notwithstanding its new and shining paint,
was sullen, morose, and nearly vicious and spiteful. I turned away. I
should not have cared to work for its owner.</p>
<p>Peter was trotting along. I do not know why on this first trip he never
showed the one of his two most prominent traits—his laziness. As I
found out later on, so long as I drove him single (he changed entirely in
this respect when he had a mate), he would have preferred to be hitched
behind, with me between the shafts pulling buggy and him. That was his
weakness, but in it there also lay his strength. As soon as I started to
dream or to be absorbed in the things around, he was sure to fall into the
slowest of walks. When then he heard the swish of the whip, he would start
with the worst of consciences, gallop away at breakneck speed, and slow
down only when he was sure the whip was safe in its socket. When we met a
team and pulled out on the side of the road, he would take it for granted
that I desired to make conversation. He stopped instantly, drew one
hindleg up, stood on three legs, and drooped his head as if he had come
from the ends of the world. Oh yes, he knew how to spare himself. But on
the other hand, when it came to a tight place, where only an extraordinary
effort would do, I had never driven a horse on which I could more
confidently rely. What any horse could do, he did.</p>
<p>About two miles beyond I came again to a cluster of buildings, close to
the corner of the crossroads, sheltered, homelike, inviting in a large
natural bluff of tall, dark-green poplars. Those first two houses had had
an aristocratic aloofness—I should not have liked to turn in there
for shelter or for help. But this was prosperous, open-handed, well-to-do
middle class; not that conspicuous “moneyedness” that we so often find in
our new west when people have made their success; but the solid, friendly,
everyday liberality that for generations has not had to pinch itself and
therefore has mellowed down to taking the necessities and a certain amount
of give and take for granted. I was glad when on closer approach I noticed
a school embedded in the shady green of the corner. I thought with
pleasure of children being so close to people with whom I should freely
have exchanged a friendly greeting and considered it a privilege. In my
mental vision I saw beeches and elms and walnut trees around a squire’s
place in the old country.</p>
<p>The road began to be lined with thickets of shrubs here: choke cherry
bushes, with some ripe, dried-up black berries left on the branches, with
iron-black bark, and with wiry stems, in the background; in front of them,
closer to the driveway, hawthorn, rich with red fruit; rosebushes with
scarlet leaves reaching down to nearly underfoot. It is one of the most
pleasing characteristics of our native thickets that they never rise
abruptly Always they shade off through cushionlike copses of smaller
growth into the level ground around.</p>
<p>The sun was sinking. I knew a mile or less further north I should have to
turn west in order to avoid rough roads straight ahead. That meant
doubling up, because some fifteen miles or so north I should have to turn
east again, my goal being east of my starting place. These fifteen or
sixteen miles of the northward road I did not know; so I was anxious to
make them while I could see. I looked at the moon—I could count on
some light from her for an hour or so after sundown. But although I knew
the last ten or twelve miles of my drive fairly well, I was also aware of
the fact that there were in it tricky spots—forkings of mere trails
in muskeg bush—where leaving the beaten log-track might mean as much
as being lost. So I looked at my watch again and shook the lines over
Peter’s back. The first six miles had taken me nearly fifty minutes. I
looked at the sun again, rather anxiously I could count on him for another
hour and a quarter—well and good then!</p>
<p>There was the turn. Just north of it, far back from both roads, another
farmyard. Behind it—to the north, stretched out, a long windbreak of
poplars, with a gap or a vista in its centre. Barn and outbuildings were
unpainted, the house white; a not unpleasing group, but something slovenly
about it. I saw with my mind’s eye numerous children, rather neglected,
uncared for, an overworked, sickly woman, a man who was bossy and harsh.</p>
<p>The road angles here. Bell’s farm consists of three quartersections; the
southwest quarter lends its diagonal for the trail. I had hardly made the
turn, however, when a car came to meet me. It stopped. The
school-inspector of the district looked out. I drew in and returned his
greeting, half annoyed at being thus delayed. But his very next word made
me sit up. He had that morning inspected my wife’s school and seen her and
my little girl; they were both as well as they could be. I felt so glad
that I got out of my buggy to hand him my pouch of tobacco, the which he
took readily enough. He praised my wife’s work, as no doubt he had reason
to do, and I should have given him a friendly slap on the shoulder, had
not just then my horse taken it into his head to walk away without me.</p>
<p>I believe I was whistling when I got back to the buggy seat. I know I
slapped the horse’s rump with my lines and sang out, “Get up, Peter, we
still have a matter of nearly thirty miles to make.”</p>
<p>The road becomes pretty much a mere trail here, a rut-track, smooth enough
in the rut, where the wheels ran, but rough for the horse’s feet in
between.</p>
<p>To the left I found the first untilled land. It stretched far away to the
west, overgrown with shrub-willow, wolf-willow and symphoricarpus—a
combination that is hard to break with the plow. I am fond of the silver
grey, leathery foliage of the wolf-willow which is so characteristic of
our native woods. Cinquefoil, too, the shrubby variety, I saw in great
numbers—another one of our native dwarf shrubs which, though decried
as a weed, should figure as a border plant in my millionaire’s park.</p>
<p>And as if to make my enjoyment of the evening’s drive supreme, I saw the
first flocks of my favourite bird, the goldfinch. All over this vast
expanse, which many would have called a waste, there were strings of them,
chasing each other in their wavy flight, twittering on the downward
stretch, darting in among the bushes, turning with incredible swiftness
and sureness of wing the shortest of curves about a branch, and undulating
away again to where they came from.</p>
<p>To the east I had, while pondering over the beautiful wilderness, passed a
fine bluff of stately poplars that stood like green gold in the evening
sun. They sheltered apparently, though at a considerable distance, another
farmhouse; for a road led along their southern edge, lined with telephone
posts. A large flock of sheep was grazing between the bluff and the trail,
the most appropriate kind of stock for this particular landscape.</p>
<p>While looking back at them, I noticed a curious trifle. The fence along my
road had good cedar posts, placed about fifteen feet apart. But at one
point there were two posts where one would have done. The wire, in fact,
was not fastened at all to the supernumerary one, and yet this useless
post was strongly braced by two stout, slanting poles. A mere nothing,
which I mention only because it was destined to be an important landmark
for me on future drives.</p>
<p>We drove on. At the next mile-corner all signs of human habitation ceased.
I had now on both sides that same virgin ground which I have described
above. Only here it was interspersed with occasional thickets of young
aspen-boles. It was somewhere in this wilderness that I saw a wolf, a
common prairie-wolf with whom I became quite familiar later on. I made it
my custom during the following weeks, on my return trips, to start at a
given point a few miles north of here eating the lunch which my wife used
to put up for me: sandwiches with crisply fried bacon for a filling. And
when I saw that wolf for the second time, I threw a little piece of bacon
overboard. He seemed interested in the performance and stood and watched
me in an averted kind of way from a distance. I have often noticed that
you can never see a wolf from the front, unless it so happens that he does
not see you. If he is aware of your presence, he will instantly swing
around, even though he may stop and watch you. If he watches, he does so
with his head turned back. That is one of the many precautions the wily
fellow has learned, very likely through generations of bitter experience.
After a while I threw out a second piece, and he started to trot
alongside, still half turned away; he kept at a distance of about two
hundred yards to the west running in a furtive, half guilty-looking way,
with his tail down and his eye on me. After that he became my regular
companion, an expected feature of my return trips, running with me every
time for a while and coming a little bit closer till about the middle of
November he disappeared, never to be seen again. This time I saw him in
the underbrush, about a hundred yards ahead and as many more to the west.
I took him by surprise, as he took me. I was sorry I had not seen him a
few seconds sooner. For, when I focused my eyes on him, he stood in a
curious attitude: as if he was righting himself after having slipped on
his hindfeet in running a sharp curve. At the same moment a rabbit shot
across that part of my field of vision to the east which I saw in a
blurred way only, from the very utmost corner of my right eye. I did not
turn but kept my eyes glued to the wolf. Nor can I tell whether I had
stirred the rabbit up, or whether the wolf had been chasing or stalking
it. I should have liked to know, for I have never seen a wolf stalking a
rabbit, though I have often seen him stalk fowl. Had he pulled up when he
saw me? As I said, I cannot tell, for now he was standing in the
characteristic wolf-way, half turned, head bent back, tail stretched out
nearly horizontally. The tail sank, the whole beast seemed to shrink, and
suddenly he slunk away with amazing agility. Poor fellow—he did not
know that many a time I had fed some of his brothers in cruel winters. But
he came to know me, as I knew him; for whenever he left me on later
drives, very close to Bell’s corner, after I had finished my lunch, he
would start right back on my trail, nose low, and I have no doubt that he
picked up the bits of bacon which I had dropped as tidbits for him.</p>
<p>I drove and drove. The sun neared the horizon now It was about six
o’clock. The poplar thickets on both sides of the road began to be larger.
In front the trail led towards a gate in a long, long line of towering
cottonwoods. What was beyond?</p>
<p>It proved to be a gate indeed. Beyond the cottonwoods there ran an
eastward grade lined on the north side by a ditch which I had to cross on
a culvert. It will henceforth be known as the “twelve-mile bridge.” Beyond
the culvert the road which I followed had likewise been worked up into a
grade. I did not like it, for it was new and rough. But less did I like
the habitation at the end of its short, one-mile career. It stood to the
right, close to the road, and was a veritable hovel. [Footnote: It might
be well to state expressly here that, whatever has been said in these
pages concerning farms and their inhabitants, has intentionally been so
arranged as not to apply to the exact localities at which they are
described. Anybody at all familiar with the district through which these
drives were made will readily identify every natural landmark. But
although I have not consciously introduced any changes in the landscape as
God made it, I have in fairness to the settlers entirely redrawn the
superimposed man-made landscape.] It was built of logs, but it looked more
like a dugout, for stable as well as dwelling were covered by way of a
roof with blower-thrown straw In the door of the hovel there stood two
brats—poor things!</p>
<p>The road was a trail again for a mile or two. It led once more through the
underbrush-wilderness interspersed with poplar bluffs. Then it became by
degrees a real “high-class” Southern Prairie grade. I wondered, but not
for long. Tall cottonwood bluffs, unmistakably planted trees, betrayed
more farms. There were three of them, and, strange to say, here on the
very fringe of civilization I found that “moneyed” type—a house, so
new and up-to-date, that it verily seemed to turn up its nose to the
traveller. I am sure it had a bathroom without a bathtub and various
similar modern inconveniences. The barn was of the Agricultural-College
type—it may be good, scientific, and all that, but it seems to crush
everything else around out of existence; and it surely is not picturesque—unless
it has wings and silos to relieve its rigid contours. Here it had not.</p>
<p>The other two farms to which I presently came—buildings set back
from the road, but not so far as to give them the air of aloofness—had
again that friendly, old-country expression that I have already mentioned:
here it was somewhat marred, though, by an over-rigidity of the lines. It
is unfortunate that our farmers, when they plant at all, will nearly
always plant in straight lines. The straight line is a flaw where we try
to blend the work of our hands with Nature. They also as a rule neglect
shrubs that would help to furnish a foreground for their trees; and, worst
of all, they are given to importing, instead of utilising our native
forest growth. Not often have I seen, for instance, our high-bush
cranberry planted, although it certainly is one of the most beautiful
shrubs to grow in copses.</p>
<p>These two farms proved to be pretty much the last sign of comfort that I
was to meet on my drives to the north. Though later I learned the names of
their owners and even made their acquaintance, for me they remained the
“halfway farms,” for, after I had passed them, at the very next corner, I
was seventeen miles from my starting point, seventeen miles from “home.”</p>
<p>Beyond, stretches of the real wilderness began, the pioneer country, where
farms, except along occasional highroads, were still three, four miles
apart, where the breaking on few homesteads had reached the thirty-acre
mark, and where a real, “honest-to-goodness” cash dollar bill was often as
scarce as a well-to-do teacher in the prairie country.</p>
<p>The sun went down, a ball of molten gold—two hours from “town,” as I
called it. It was past six o’clock. There were no rosy-fingered clouds;
just a paling of the blue into white; then a greying of the western sky;
and lastly the blue again, only this time dark. A friendly crescent still
showed trail and landmarks after even the dusk had died away. Four miles,
or a little more, and I should be in familiar land again. Four miles, that
I longed to make, before the last light failed...</p>
<p>The road angled to the northeast. I was by no means very sure of it. I
knew which general direction to hold, but trails that often became mere
cattle-paths crossed and criss-crossed repeatedly. It was too dark by this
time to see very far. I did not know the smaller landmarks. But I knew, if
I drove my horse pretty briskly, I must within little more than half an
hour strike a black wall of the densest primeval forest fringing a creek—and,
skirting this creek, I must find an old, weather-beaten lumber bridge.
When I had crossed that bridge, I should know the landmarks again.</p>
<p>Underbrush everywhere, mostly symphoricarpus, I thought. Large trunks
loomed up, charred with forest fires; here and there a round, white or
light-grey stone, ghostly in the waning light, knee-high, I should judge.
Once I passed the skeleton of a stable—the remnant of the buildings
put up by a pioneer settler who had to give in after having wasted effort
and substance and worn his knuckles to the bones. The wilderness uses
human material up...</p>
<p>A breeze from the north sprang up, and it turned strangely chilly I
started to talk to Peter, the loneliness seemed so oppressive. I told him
that he should have a walk, a real walk, as soon as we had crossed the
creek. I told him we were on the homeward half—that I had a bag of
oats in the box, and that my wife would have a pail of water ready... And
Peter trotted along.</p>
<p>Something loomed up in front. Dark and sinister it looked. Still there was
enough light to recognize even that which I did not know. A large bluff of
poplars rustled, the wind soughing through the stems with a wailing note.
The brush grew higher to the right. I suddenly noticed that I was driving
along a broken-down fence between the brush and myself. The brush became a
grove of boles which next seemed to shoot up to the full height of the
bluff. Then, unexpectedly, startlingly, a vista opened. Between the silent
grove to the south and the large; whispering, wailing bluff to the north
there stood in a little clearing a snow white log house, uncannily white
in the paling moonlight. I could still distinctly see that its upper
windows were nailed shut with boards—and yes, its lower ones, too.
And yet, the moment I passed it, I saw through one unclosed window on the
northside light. Unreasonably I shuddered.</p>
<p>This house, too, became a much-looked-for landmark to me on my future
drives. I learned that it stood on the range line and called it the “White
Range Line House.” There hangs a story by this house. Maybe I shall one
day tell it...</p>
<p>Beyond the great and awe-inspiring poplar-bluff the trail took a sharp
turn eastward. From the southwest another rut-road joined it at the bend.
I could only just make it out in the dark, for even moonlight was fading
fast now. The sudden, reverberating tramp of the horse’s feet betrayed
that I was crossing a culvert. I had been absorbed in getting my bearings,
and so it came as a surprise. It had not been mentioned in the elaborate
directions which I had received with regard to the road to follow. For a
moment, therefore, I thought I must be on the wrong trail. But just then
the dim view, which had been obstructed by copses and thickets, cleared
ahead in the last glimmer of the moon, and I made out the back cliff of
forest darkly looming in the north—that forest I knew. Behind a
narrow ribbon of bush the ground sloped down to the bed of the creek—a
creek that filled in spring and became a torrent, but now was sluggish and
slow where it ran at all. In places it consisted of nothing but a line of
muddy pools strung along the bottom of its bed. In summer these were a
favourite haunting place for mosquito-and-fly-plagued cows. There the
great beasts would lie down in the mud and placidly cool their punctured
skins. A few miles southwest the creek petered out entirely in a bed of
shaly gravel bordering on the Big Marsh which I had skirted in my drive
and a corner of which I was crossing just now.</p>
<p>The road was better here and spoke of more traffic. It was used to haul
cordwood in late winter and early spring to a town some ten or fifteen
miles to the southwest. So I felt sure again I was not lost but would
presently emerge on familiar territory. The horse seemed to know it, too,
for he raised his head and went at a better gait.</p>
<p>A few minutes passed. There was hardly a sound from my vehicle. The buggy
was rubber-tired, and the horse selected a smooth ribbon of grass to run
on. But from the black forest wall there came the soughing of the wind and
the nocturnal rustle of things unknown. And suddenly there came from close
at hand a startling sound: a clarion call that tore the veil lying over my
mental vision: the sharp, repeated whistle of the whip-poor-will. And with
my mind’s eye I saw the dusky bird: shooting slantways upward in its low
flight which ends in a nearly perpendicular slide down to within ten or
twelve feet from the ground, the bird being closely followed by a second
one pursuing. In reality I did not see the birds, but I heard the fast
whir of their wings.</p>
<p>Another bird I saw but did not hear. It was a small owl. The owl’s flight
is too silent, its wing is down-padded. You may hear its beautiful call,
but you will not hear its flight, even though it circle right around your
head in the dusk. This owl crossed my path not more than an inch or two in
front. It nearly grazed my forehead, so that I blinked. Oh, how I felt
reassured! I believe, tears welled in my eyes. When I come to the home of
frog and toad, of gartersnake and owl and whip-poor-will, a great
tenderness takes possession of me, and I should like to shield and help
them all and tell them not to be afraid of me; but I rather think they
know it anyway.</p>
<p>The road swung north, and then east again; we skirted the woods; we came
to the bridge; it turned straight north; the horse fell into a walk. I
felt that henceforth I could rely on my sense of orientation to find the
road. It was pitch dark in the bush—the thin slice of the moon had
reached the horizon and followed the sun; no light struck into the hollow
which I had to thread after turning to the southeast for a while. But as
if to reassure me once more and still further of the absolute friendliness
of all creation for myself—at this very moment I saw high overhead,
on a dead branch of poplar, a snow white owl, a large one, eighteen inches
tall, sitting there in state, lord as he is of the realm of night...</p>
<p>Peter walked—though I did not see the road, the horse could not
mistake it. It lay at the bottom of a chasm of trees and bushes. I drew my
cloak somewhat closer around and settled back. This cordwood trail took us
on for half a mile, and then we came to a grade leading east. The grade
was rough; it was the first one of a network of grades which were being
built by the province, not primarily for the roads they afforded, but for
the sake of the ditches of a bold and much needed drainage-system. To this
very day these yellow grades of the pioneer country along the lake lie
like naked scars on Nature’s body: ugly raw, as if the bowels were torn
out of a beautiful bird and left to dry and rot on its plumage. Age will
mellow them down into harmony.</p>
<p>Peter had walked for nearly half an hour. The ditch was north of the
grade. I had passed, without seeing it, a newly cut-out road to the north
which led to a lonesome schoolhouse in the bush. As always when I passed
or thought of it, I had wondered where through this wilderness-tangle of
bush and brush the children came from to fill it—walking through
winter-snows, through summer-muds, for two, three, four miles or more to
get their meagre share of the accumulated knowledge of the world. And the
teacher! Was it the money? Could it be when there were plenty of schools
in the thickly settled districts waiting for them? I knew of one who had
come to this very school in a car and turned right back when she saw that
she was expected to live as a boarder on a comfortless homestead and walk
quite a distance and teach mostly foreign-born children. It had been the
money with her! Unfortunately it is not the woman—nor the man
either, for that matter—who drives around in a car, that will buckle
down and do this nation’s work! I also knew there were others like myself
who think this backwoods bushland God’s own earth and second only to
Paradise—but few! And these young girls that quake at their
loneliness and yet go for a pittance and fill a mission! But was not my
wife of their very number?</p>
<p>I started up. Peter was walking along. But here, somewhere, there led a
trail off the grade, down through the ditch, and to the northeast into the
bush which swallows it up and closes behind it. This trail needs to be
looked for even in daytime, and I was to find it at night! But by this
time starlight began to aid. Vega stood nearly straight overhead, and
Deneb and Altair, the great autumnal triangle in our skies. The Bear, too,
stood out boldly, and Cassiopeia opposite.</p>
<p>I drew in and got out of the buggy; and walking up to the horse’s head,
got ahold of the bridle and led him, meanwhile scrutinizing the ground
over which I stepped. At that I came near missing the trail. It was just a
darkening of the ground, a suggestion of black on the brown of the grade,
at the point where poles and logs had been pulled across with the logging
chain. I sprang down into the ditch and climbed up beyond and felt with my
foot for the dent worn into the edge of the slope, to make sure that I was
where I should be. It was right, so I led the horse across. At once he
stood on three legs again, left hindleg drawn up, and rested.</p>
<p>“Well, Peter,” I said, “I suppose I have made it easy enough for you: We
have another twelve miles to make. You’ll have to get up.” But Peter this
time did not stir till I touched him a flick with my whip.</p>
<p>The trail winds around, for it is a logging trail, leading up to the best
bluffs, which are ruthlessly cut down by the fuel-hunters. Only dead and
half decayed trees are spared. But still young boles spring up in
astonishing numbers. Aspen and Balm predominate, though there is some ash
and oak left here and there, with a conifer as the rarest treat for the
lover of trees. It is a pitiful thing to see a Nation’s heritage go into
the discard. In France or in England it would be tended as something
infinitely precious. The face of our country as yet shows the youth of
infancy, but we make it prematurely old. The settler who should regard the
trees as his greatest pride, to be cut into as sparingly as is compatible
with the exigencies of his struggle for life—he regards them as a
nuisance to be burned down by setting wholesale fires to them. Already
there is a scarcity of fuel-wood in these parts.</p>
<p>Where the fires as yet have not penetrated too badly, the cutting, which
leaves only what is worthless, determines the impression the forest makes.
At night this impression is distinctly uncanny. Like gigantic brooms, with
their handles stuck into the ground, the dead wood stands up; the
underbrush crowds against it, so dense that it lies like huge black
cushions under the stars. The inner recesses form an almost impenetrable
mass of young boles of shivering aspen and scented balm. This mass slopes
down to thickets of alder, red dogwood, haw, highbush cranberry, and
honeysuckle, with wide beds of goldenrod or purple asters shading off into
the spangled meadows wherever the copses open up into grassy glades.</p>
<p>Through this bush, and skirting its meadows, I drove for an hour. There
was another fork in the trail, and again I had to get out and walk on the
side, to feel with my foot for the rut where it branched to the north. And
then, after a while, the landscape opened up, the brush receded. At last I
became conscious of a succession of posts to the right, and a few minutes
later I emerged on the second east-west grade. Another mile to the east
along this grade, and I should come to the last, homeward stretch.</p>
<p>Again I began to talk to the horse. “Only five miles now, Peter, and then
the night’s rest. A good drink, a good feed of oats and wild hay, and the
birds will waken you in the morning.”</p>
<p>The northern lights leaped into the sky just as I turned from this
east-west grade, north again, across a high bridge, to the last road that
led home. To the right I saw a friendly light, and a dog’s barking voice
rang over from the still, distant farmstead. I knew the place. An American
settler with a French sounding name had squatted down there a few years
ago.</p>
<p>The road I followed was, properly speaking, not a road at all, though used
for one. A deep master ditch had been cut from ten or twelve miles north
of here; it angled, for engineering reasons, so that I was going northwest
again. The ground removed from the ditch had been dumped along its east
side, and though it formed only a narrow, high, and steep dam, rough with
stones and overgrown with weeds, it was used by whoever had to go north or
south here. The next east-west grade which I was aiming to reach, four
miles north, was the second correction line that I had to use, twenty-four
miles distant from the first; and only a few hundred yards from its corner
I should be at home!</p>
<p>At home! All my thoughts were bent on getting home now. Five or six hours
of driving will make the strongest back tired, I am told. Mine is not of
the strongest. This road lifted me above the things that I liked to watch.
Invariably, on all these drives, I was to lose interest here unless the
stars were particularly bright and brilliant. This night I watched the
lights, it is true: how they streamed across the sky, like driving rain
that is blown into wavy streaks by impetuous wind. And they leaped and
receded, and leaped and receded again. But while I watched, I stretched my
limbs and was bent on speed. There were a few particularly bad spots in
the road, where I could not do anything but walk the horse. So, where the
going was fair, I urged him to redoubled effort. I remember how I
reflected that the horse as yet did not know we were so near home, this
being his first trip out; and I also remember, that my wife afterwards
told me that she had heard me a long while before I came—had heard
me talking to the horse, urging him on and encouraging him.</p>
<p>Now I came to a slight bend in the road. Only half a mile! And sure
enough: there was the signal put out for me. A lamp in one of the windows
of the school—placed so that after I turned in on the yard, I could
not see it—it might have blinded my eye, and the going is rough
there with stumps and stones. I could not see the cottage, it stood behind
the school. But the school I saw clearly outlined against the dark blue,
star-spangled sky, for it stands on a high gravel ridge. And in the most
friendly and welcoming way it looked with its single eye across at the
nocturnal guest.</p>
<p>I could not see the cottage, but I knew that my little girl lay sleeping
in her cosy bed, and that a young woman was sitting there in the dark, her
face glued to the windowpane, to be ready with a lantern which burned in
the kitchen whenever I might pull up between school and house. And there,
no doubt, she had been sitting for a long while already; and there she was
destined to sit during the winter that came, on Friday nights—full
often for many and many an hour—full often till midnight—and
sometimes longer...</p>
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0003" id="link2H_4_0003"></SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> TWO. Fog </h2>
<p>Peter took me north, alone, on six successive trips. We had rain, we had
snow, we had mud, and hard-frozen ground. It took us four, it took us six,
it took us on one occasion—after a heavy October snowfall—nearly
eleven hours to make the trip. That last adventure decided me. It was
unavoidable that I should buy a second horse. The roads were getting too
heavy for single driving over such a distance. This time I wanted a horse
that I could sell in the spring to a farmer for any kind of work on the
land. I looked around for a while. Then I found Dan. He was a sorrel, with
some Clyde blood in him. He looked a veritable skate of a horse. You could
lay your fingers between his ribs, and he played out on the first trip I
ever made with this newly-assembled, strange-looking team. But when I look
back at that winter, I cannot but say that again I chose well. After I had
fed him up, he did the work in a thoroughly satisfactory manner, and he
learnt to know the road far better than Peter. Several times I should have
been lost without his unerring road sense. In the spring I sold him for
exactly what I had paid; the farmer who bought him has him to this very
day [Footnote: Spring, 1919.] and says he never had a better horse.</p>
<p>I also had found that on moonless nights it was indispensable for me to
have lights along. Now maybe the reader has already noticed that I am
rather a thorough-going person. For a week I worked every day after four
at my buggy and finally had a blacksmith put on the finishing touches.
What I rigged up, was as follows: On the front springs I fastened with
clamps two upright iron supports; between them with thumbscrews the
searchlight of a wrecked steam tractor which I got for a “Thank-you” from
a junk-pile. Into the buggy box I laid a borrowed acetylene gas tank,
strapped down with two bands of galvanized tin. I made the connection by a
stout rubber tube, “guaranteed not to harden in the severest weather.” To
the side of the box I attached a short piece of bandiron, bent at an
angle, so that a bicycle lamp could be slipped over it. Against the case
that I should need a handlight, I carried besides a so-called dashboard
coal-oil lantern with me. With all lamps going, it must have been a
strange outfit to look at from a distance in the dark.</p>
<p>I travelled by this time in fur coat and cap, and I carried a robe for
myself and blankets for the horses, for I now fed them on the road soon
after crossing the creek.</p>
<p>Now on the second Friday of November there had been a smell of smoke in
the air from the early morning. The marsh up north was afire—as it
had been off and on for a matter of twenty-odd years. The fire consumes on
the surface everything that will burn; the ground cools down, a new
vegetation springs up, and nobody would suspect—as there is nothing
to indicate—that only a few feet below the heat lingers, ready to
leap up again if given the opportunity In this case I was told that a man
had started to dig a well on a newly filed claim, and that suddenly he
found himself wrapped about in smoke and flames. I cannot vouch for the
truth of this, but I can vouch for the fact that the smoke of the fire was
smelt for forty miles north and that in the afternoon a combination of
this smoke (probably furnishing “condensation nuclei”) and of the moisture
in the air, somewhere along or above the lake brought about the densest
fog I had ever seen on the prairies. How it spread, I shall discuss later
on. To give an idea of its density I will mention right here that on the
well travelled road between two important towns a man abandoned his car
during the early part of the night because he lost his nerve when his
lights could no longer penetrate the fog sufficiently to reach the road.</p>
<p>I was warned at noon. “You surely do not intend to go out to-night?”
remarked a lawyer-acquaintance to me at the dinner table in the hotel; for
by telephone from lake-points reports of the fog had already reached the
town. “I intend to leave word at the stable right now,” I replied, “to
have team and buggy in front of the school at four o’clock.” “Well,” said
the lawyer in getting up, “I would not; you’ll run into fog.”</p>
<p>And into fog I did run. At this time of the year I had at best only a
little over an hour’s start in my race against darkness. I always drove my
horses hard now while daylight lasted; I demanded from them their very
best strength at the start. Then, till we reached the last clear road over
the dam, I spared them as much as I could. I had met up with a few things
in the dark by now, and I had learned, if a difficulty arose, how much
easier it is to cope with it even in failing twilight than by the gleam of
lantern or headlight; for the latter never illumine more than a limited
spot.</p>
<p>So I had turned Bell’s corner by the time I hit the fog. I saw it in front
and to the right. It drew a slanting line across the road. There it stood
like a wall. Not a breath seemed to be stirring. The fog, from a distance,
appeared to rise like a cliff, quite smoothly, and it blotted out the
world beyond. When I approached it, I saw that its face was not so smooth
as it had appeared from half a mile back; nor was it motionless. In fact,
it was rolling south and west like a wave of great viscosity. Though my
senses failed to perceive the slightest breath of a breeze, the fog was
brewing and whirling, and huge spheres seemed to be forming in it, and to
roll forward, slowly, and sometimes to recede, as if they had encountered
an obstacle and rebounded clumsily. I had seen a tidal wave, fifty or more
feet high, sweep up the “bore” of a river at the head of the Bay of Fundy.
I was reminded of the sight; but here everything seemed to proceed in a
strangely, weirdly leisurely way. There was none of that rush, of that
hurry about this fog that characterizes water. Besides there seemed to be
no end to the wave above; it reached up as far as your eye could see—now
bulging in, now out, but always advancing. It was not so slow however, as
for the moment I judged it to be; for I was later on told that it reached
the town at about six o’clock. And here I was, at five, six and a half
miles from its limits as the crow flies.</p>
<p>I had hardly time to take in the details that I have described before I
was enveloped in the folds of the fog. I mean this quite literally, for I
am firmly convinced that an onlooker from behind would have seen the grey
masses fold in like a sheet when I drove against them. It must have looked
as if a driver were driving against a canvas moving in a slight breeze—canvas
light and loose enough to be held in place by the resistance of the air so
as to enclose him. Or maybe I should say “veiling” instead of canvas—or
something still lighter and airier. Have you ever seen milk poured
carefully down the side of a glass vessel filled with water? Well, clear
air and fog seemed to behave towards each other pretty much the same way
as milk in that case behaves towards water.</p>
<p>I am rather emphatic about this because I have made a study of just such
mists on a very much smaller scale. In that northern country where my wife
taught her school and where I was to live for nearly two years as a
convalescent, the hollows of the ground on clear cold summer nights, when
the mercury dipped down close to the freezing point, would sometimes fill
with a white mist of extraordinary density. Occasionally this mist would
go on forming in higher and higher layers by condensation; mostly however,
it seemed rather to come from below. But always, when it was really dense,
there was a definite plane of demarcation. In fact, that was the criterion
by which I recognised this peculiar mist. Mostly there is, even in the
north, a layer of lesser density over the pools, gradually shading off
into the clear air above. Nothing of what I am going to describe can be
observed in that case.</p>
<p>One summer, when I was living not over two miles from the lakeshore, I
used to go down to these pools whenever they formed in the right way; and
when I approached them slowly and carefully, I could dip my hand into the
mist as into water, and I could feel the coolness of the misty layers. It
was not because my hand got moist, for it did not. No evaporation was
going on there, nor any condensation either. Nor did noticeable bubbles
form because there was no motion in the mass which might have caused the
infinitesimal droplets to collide and to coalesce into something
perceivable to my senses.</p>
<p>Once, of a full-moon night, I spent an hour getting into a pool like that,
and when I looked down at my feet, I could not see them. But after I had
been standing in it for a while, ten minutes maybe, a clear space had
formed around my body, and I could see the ground. The heat of my body
helped the air to redissolve the mist into steam. And as I watched, I
noticed that a current was set up. The mist was continually flowing in
towards my feet and legs where the body-heat was least. And where
evaporation proceeded fastest, that is at the height of my waist, little
wisps of mist would detach themselves from the side of the funnel of clear
air in which I stood, and they would, in a slow, graceful motion,
accelerated somewhat towards the last, describe a downward and inward
curve towards the lower part of my body before they dissolved. I thought
of that elusive and yet clearly defined layer of mist that forms in the
plane of contact between the cold air flowing from Mammoth Cave in
Kentucky and the ambient air of a sultry summer day. [Footnote: See
Burroughs’ wonderful description of this phenomenon in “Riverby.”]</p>
<p>On another of the rare occasions when the mists had formed in the
necessary density I went out again, put a stone in my pocket and took a
dog along. I approached a shallow mist pool with the greatest caution. The
dog crouched low, apparently thinking that I was stalking some game. Then,
when I had arrived within about ten or fifteen yards from the edge of the
pool, I took the stone from my pocket, showed it to the dog, and threw it
across the pool as fast and as far as I could. The dog dashed in and tore
through the sheet. Where the impact of his body came, the mist bulged in,
then broke. For a while there were two sheets, separated by a more or less
clearly defined, vertical layer of transparency or maybe blackness rather.
The two sheets were in violent commotion, approaching, impinging upon each
other, swinging back again to complete separation, and so on. But the
violence of the motion consisted by no means in speed: it suggested a very
much retarded rolling off of a motion picture reel. There was at first an
element of disillusion in the impression. I felt tempted to shout and to
spur the mist into greater activity. On the surface, to both sides of the
tear, waves ran out, and at the edges of the pool they rose in that same
leisurely, stately way which struck me as one of the most characteristic
features of that November mist; and at last it seemed as if they reared
and reached up, very slowly as a dying man may stand up once more before
he falls. And only after an interval that seemed unconscionably long to me
the whole pool settled back to comparative smoothness, though without its
definite plane of demarcation now. Strange to say, the dog had actually
started something, a rabbit maybe or a jumping deer, and did not return.</p>
<p>When fogs spread, as a rule they do so in air already saturated with
moisture. What really spreads, is the cold air which by mixing with, and
thereby cooling, the warmer, moisture-laden atmosphere causes the
condensation. That is why our fall mists mostly are formed in an
exceedingly slight but still noticeable breeze. But in the case of these
northern mist pools, whenever the conditions are favourable for their
formation, the moisture of the upper air seems to be pretty well condensed
as dew It is only in the hollows of the ground that it remains suspended
in this curious way. I cannot, so far, say whether it is due to the fact
that where radiation is largely thrown back upon the walls of the hollow,
the fall in temperature at first is very much slower than in the open,
thus enabling the moisture to remain in suspension; or whether the hollows
serve as collecting reservoirs for the cold air from the surrounding
territory—the air carrying the already condensed moisture with it;
or whether, lastly, it is simply due to a greater saturation of the
atmosphere in these cavities, consequent upon the greater approach of
their bottom to the level of the ground water. I have seen a “waterfall”
of this mist overflow from a dent in the edge of ground that contained a
pool. That seems to argue for an origin similar to that of a spring; as if
strongly moisture-laden air welled up from underground, condensing its
steam as it got chilled. It is these strange phenomena that are familiar,
too, in the northern plains of Europe which must have given rise to the
belief in elves and other weird creations of the brain—“the earth
has bubbles as the water has”—not half as weird, though, as some
realities are in the land which I love.</p>
<p>Now this great, memorable fog of that November Friday shared the nature of
the mist pools of the north in as much as to a certain extent it refused
to mingle with the drier and slightly warmer air into which it travelled.
It was different from them in as much as it fairly dripped and oozed with
a very palpable wetness. Just how it displaced the air in its path, is
something which I cannot with certainty say. Was it formed as a low layer
somewhere over the lake and slowly pushed along by a gentle,
imperceptible, fan-shaped current of air? Fan-shaped, I say; for, as we
shall see, it travelled simultaneously south and north; and I must infer
that in exactly the same way it travelled west. Or was it formed
originally like a tremendous column which flattened out by and by, through
its own greater gravity slowly displacing the lighter air in the lower
strata? I do not know, but I am inclined to accept the latter explanation.
I do know that it travelled at the rate of about six miles an hour; and
its coming was observed somewhat in detail by two other observers besides
myself—two people who lived twenty-five miles apart, one to the
north, one to the south of where I hit it. Neither one was as much
interested in things meteorological as I am, but both were struck by the
unusual density of the fog, and while one saw it coming from the north,
the other one saw it approaching from the south.</p>
<p>I have no doubt that at last it began to mingle with the clearer air and
to thin out; in fact, I have good testimony to that effect. And early next
morning it was blown by a wind like an ordinary fog-cloud all over Portage
Plains.</p>
<p>I also know that further north, at my home, for instance, it had the smell
of the smoke which could not have proceeded from anywhere but the marsh;
and the marsh lay to the south of it. That seemed to prove that actually
the mist was spreading from a common centre in at least two directions.
These points, which I gathered later, strongly confirmed my own
observations, which will be set down further on. It must, then, have been
formed as a layer of a very considerable height, to be able to spread over
so many square miles.</p>
<p>As I said, I was reminded of those mist pools in the north when I
approached the cliff of the fog, especially of that “waterfall” of mist of
which I spoke. But besides the difference in composition—the fog, as
we shall see, was not homogeneous, this being the cause of its wetness—there
was another important point of distinction. For, while the mist of the
pools is of the whitest white, this fog showed from the outside and in the
mass—the single wreaths seemed white enough—rather the colour
of that “wet, unbleached linen” of which Burroughs speaks in connection
with rain-clouds.</p>
<p>Now, as soon as I was well engulfed in the fog, I had a few surprises. I
could no longer see the road ahead; I could not see the fence along which
I had been driving; I saw the horses’ rumps, but I did not see their
heads. I bent forward over the dashboard: I could not even see the ground
below It was a series of negatives. I stopped the horses. I listened—then
looked at my watch. The stillness of the grave enveloped me. It was a
little past five o’clock. The silence was oppressive—the misty
impenetrability of the atmosphere was appalling. I do not say “darkness,”
for as yet it was not really dark. I could still see the dial of my watch
clearly enough to read the time. But darkness was falling fast—“falling,”
for it seemed to come from above: mostly it rises—from out of the
shadows under the trees—advancing, fighting back the powers of light
above.</p>
<p>One of the horses, I think it was Peter, coughed. It was plain they felt
chilly. I thought of my lights and started with stiffening fingers to
fumble at the valves of my gas tank. When reaching into my trouser pockets
for matches, I was struck with the astonishing degree to which my furs had
been soaked in these few minutes. As for wetness, the fog was like a
sponge. At last, kneeling in the buggy box, I got things ready. I smelt
the gas escaping from the burner of my bicycle lantern and heard it
hissing in the headlight. The problem arose of how to light a match. I
tried various places—without success. Even the seat of my trousers
proved disappointing. I got a sizzling and sputtering flame, it is true,
but it went out before I could apply it to the gas. The water began to
drip from the backs of my hands. It was no rain because it did not fall.
It merely floated along; but the droplets, though smaller, were infinitely
more numerous than in a rain—there were more of them in a given
space. At last I lifted the seat cushion under which I had a tool box
filled with ropes, leather straps and all manner of things that I might
ever be in need of during my nights in the open. There I found a dry spot
where to strike the needed match. I got the bicycle lantern started. It
burned quite well, and I rather admired it: unreasoningly I seemed to have
expected that it would not burn in so strange an atmosphere. So I
carefully rolled a sheet of letter paper into a fairly tight roll, working
with my back to the fog and under the shelter of my big raccoon coat. I
took a flame from the bicycle light and sheltered and nursed it along till
I thought it would stand the drizzle. Then I turned and thrust the
improvised torch into the bulky reflector case of the searchlight. The
result was startling. A flame eighteen inches high leaped up with a
crackling and hissing sound.</p>
<p>The horses bolted, and the buggy jumped. I was lucky, for inertia carried
me right back on the seat, and as soon as I had the lines in my hands
again, I felt that the horses did not really mean it. I do not think we
had gone more than two or three hundred yards before the team was under
control. I stopped and adjusted the overturned valves. When I succeeded, I
found to my disappointment that the heat of that first flame had partly
spoiled the reflector. Still, my range of vision now extended to the
belly-band in the horses’ harness. The light that used to show me the road
for about fifty feet in front of the horses’ heads gave a short truncated
cone of great luminosity, which was interesting and looked reassuring; but
it failed to reach the ground, for it was so adjusted that the focus of
the converging light rays lay ahead and not below. Before, therefore, the
point of greatest luminosity was reached, the light was completely
absorbed by the fog.</p>
<p>I got out of the buggy, went to the horses’ heads and patted their noses
which were dripping with wetness. But now that I faced the headlight, I
could see it though I had failed to see the horses’ heads when seated
behind it. This, too, was quite reassuring, for it meant that the horses
probably could see the ground even though I did not.</p>
<p>But where was I? I soon found out that we had shot off the trail. And to
which side? I looked at my watch again. Already the incident had cost me
half an hour. It was really dark by now, even outside the fog, for there
was no moon. I tried out how far I could get away from the buggy without
losing sight of the light. It was only a very few steps, not more than a
dozen. I tried to visualize where I had been when I struck the fog. And
fortunately my habit of observing the smallest details, even, if only
subconsciously, helped me out. I concluded that the horses had bolted
straight ahead, thus missing an s-shaped curve to the right.</p>
<p>At this moment I heard Peter paw the ground impatiently; so I quickly
returned to the horses, for I did not relish the idea of being left alone.
There was an air of impatience and nervousness about both of them.</p>
<p>I took my bicycle lantern and reached for the lines. Then, standing clear
of the buggy, I turned the horses at right angles, to the north, as I
imagined it to be. When we started, I walked alongside the team through
dripping underbrush and held the lantern with my free hand close down to
the ground.</p>
<p>Two or three times I stopped during the next half hour, trying, since we
still did not strike the trail, to reason out a different course. I was
now wet through and through up to my knees; and I had repeatedly run into
willow-clumps, which did not tend to make me any drier either. At last I
became convinced that in bolting the horses must have swerved a little to
the south, so that in starting up again we had struck a tangent to the big
bend north, just beyond Bell’s farm. If that was the case, we should have
to make another turn to the right in order to strike the road again, for
at best we were then simply going parallel to it. The trouble was that I
had nothing to tell me the directions, not even a tree the bark or moss of
which might have vouchsafed information. Suddenly I had an inspiration.
Yes, the fog was coming from the northeast! So, by observing the drift of
the droplets I could find at least an approximate meridian line. I went to
the headlight, and an observation immediately confirmed my conjecture. I
was now convinced that I was on that wild land where two months ago I had
watched the goldfinches disporting themselves in the evening sun. But so
as not to turn back to the south, I struck out at an angle of only about
sixty degrees to my former direction. I tried not to swerve, which
involved rough going, and I had many a stumble. Thus I walked for another
half hour or thereabout.</p>
<p>Then, certainly! This was the road! The horses turned into it of their own
accord. That was the most reassuring thing of all. There was one strange
doubt left. Somehow I was not absolutely clear about it whether north
might not after all be behind. I stopped. Even a new observation of the
fog did not remove the last vestige of a doubt. I had to take a chance,
some landmark might help after a while.</p>
<p>I believe in getting ready before I start. So I took my coal-oil lantern,
lighted and suspended it under the rear springs of the buggy in such a way
that it would throw its light back on the road. Having the light away
down, I expected to be able to see at least whether I was on a road or
not. In this I was only partly successful; for on the rut-trails nothing
showed except the blades of grass and the tops of weeds; while on the
grades where indeed I could make out the ground, I did not need a light,
for, as I found out, I could more confidently rely on my ear.</p>
<p>I got back to my seat and proceeded to make myself as comfortable as I
could. I took off my shoes and socks keeping well under the robe—extracted
a pair of heavy woollens from my suitcase under the seat, rubbed my feet
dry and then wrapped up, without putting my shoes on again, as carefully
and scientifically as only a man who has had pneumonia and is a chronic
sufferer from pleuritis knows how to do.</p>
<p>At last I proceeded. After listening again with great care for any sound I
touched the horses with my whip, and they fell into a quiet trot. It was
nearly seven now, and I had probably not yet made eight miles. We swung
along. If I was right in my calculations and the horses kept to the road,
I should strike the “twelve-mile bridge” in about three-quarters of an
hour. That was the bridge leading through the cottonwood gate to the grade
past the “hovel.” I kept the watch in the mitt of my left hand.</p>
<p>Not for a moment did it occur to me to turn back. Way up north there was a
young woman preparing supper for me. The fog might not be there—she
would expect me—I could not disappoint her. And then there was the
little girl, who usually would wake up and in her “nightie” come out of
bed and sleepily smile at me and climb on to my knee and nod off again. I
thought of them, to be sure, of the hours and hours in wait for them, and
a great tenderness came over me, and gratitude for the belated home they
gave an aging man...</p>
<p>And slowly my mind reverted to the things at hand. And this is what was
the most striking feature about them: I was shut in, closed off from the
world around. Apart from that cone of visibility in front of the
headlight, and another much smaller one from the bicycle lamp, there was
not a thing I could see. If the road was the right one, I was passing now
through some square miles of wild land. Right and left there were poplar
thickets, and ahead there was that line of stately cottonwoods. But no
suggestion of a landmark—nothing except a cone of light which was
filled with fog and cut into on both sides by two steaming and
rhythmically moving horseflanks. It was like a very small room, this space
of light—the buggy itself, in darkness, forming an alcove to it, in
which my hand knew every well-appointed detail. Gradually, while I was
warming up, a sense of infinite comfort came, and with it the enjoyment of
the elvish aspect.</p>
<p>I began to watch the fog. By bending over towards the dashboard and
looking into the soon arrested glare I could make out the component parts
of the fog. It was like the mixture of two immiscible liquids—oil,
for instance, shaken up with water. A fine, impalpable, yet very dense
mist formed the ground mass. But in it there floated myriads of droplets,
like the droplets of oil in water. These droplets would sometimes sparkle
in a mild, unobtrusive way as they were nearing the light; and then they
would dash against the pane and keep it dripping, dripping down.</p>
<p>I leaned back again; and I watched the whole of the light-cone. Snow white
wisps would float and whirl through it in graceful curves, stirred into
motion by the horses’ trot. Or a wreath of it would start to dance, as if
gently pulled or plucked at from above; and it would revolve, faster
towards the end, and fade again into the shadows behind. I thought of a
summer in Norrland, in Sweden, in the stone-and-birch waste which forms
the timberline, where I had also encountered the mist pools. And a trip
down a stream in the borderland of the Finns came back with great
vividness into my mind. That trip had been made in a fog like this; only
it had been begun in the early morning, and the whole mass of the mist had
been suffused with the whitest of lights. But strange to say, what stood
out most strikingly in the fleeting memory of the voyage, was the weird
and mocking laughter of the magpies all along the banks. The Finnish woods
seemed alive with that mocking laughter, and it truly belongs to the land
of the mists. For a moment I thought that something after all was missing
here on the prairies. But then I reflected again that this silence of the
grave was still more perfect, still more uncanny and ghostly, because it
left the imagination entirely free, without limiting it by even as much as
a suggestion.</p>
<p>No wonder, I thought, that the Northerners in their land of heath and bog
were the poets of elves and goblins and of the fear of ghosts. Shrouds
were these fogs, hanging and waving and floating shrouds! Mocking spirits
were plucking at them and setting them into their gentle motions. Gleams
of light, that dance over the bog, lured you in, and once caught in these
veils after veils of mystery, madness would seize you, and you would
wildly dash here and there in a vain attempt at regaining your freedom;
and when, exhausted at last, you broke down and huddled together on the
ground, the werwolf would come, ghostly himself, and huge and airy and
weird, his body woven of mist, and in the fog’s stately and leisurely way
he would kneel down on your chest, slowly crushing you beneath his
exceeding weight; and bending and straightening, bending and stretching,
slowly—slowly down came his head to your throat; and then he would
lie and not stir until morning and suck; and after few or many days people
would find you, dead in the woods—a victim of fog and mist...</p>
<p>A rumbling sound made me sit up at last. We were crossing over the
“twelve-mile bridge.” In spite of my dreaming I was keeping my eyes on the
look-out for any sign of a landmark, but this was the only one I had known
so far, and it came through the ear, not the eye. I promptly looked back
and up, to where the cottonwoods must be; but no sign of high, weeping
trees, no rustling of fall-dry leaves, not even a deeper black in the
black betrayed their presence. Well, never before had I failed to see some
light, to hear some sound around the house of the “moneyed” type or those
of the “half way farms.” Surely, somehow I should be aware of their
presence when I got there! Some sign, some landmark would tell me how far
I had gone!... The horses were trotting along, steaming, through the
brewing fog. I had become all ear. Even though my buggy was silent and
though the road was coated with a thin film of soft clay-mud, I could
distinctly hear by the muffled thud of the horses’ hoofs on the ground
that they were running over a grade. That confirmed my bearings. I had no
longer a moment’s doubt or anxiety over my drive.</p>
<p>The grade was left behind, the rut-road started again, was passed and
outrun. So now I was close to the three-farm cluster. I listened intently
for the horses’ thump. Yes, there was that muffled hoof-beat again—I
was on the last grade that led to the angling road across the corner of
the marsh.</p>
<p>Truly, this was very much like lying down in the sleeping-car of an
overland train. You recline and act as if nothing unusual were going on;
and meanwhile a force that has something irresistible about it and is
indeed largely beyond your control, wafts you over mile after mile of
fabled distance; now and then the rumble of car on rail will stop, the
quiet awakens you, lights flash their piercing darts, a voice calls out;
it is a well known stop on your journey and then the rumbling resumes, you
doze again, to be awakened again, and so on. And when you get up in the
morning—there she lies, the goal of your dreams-the resplendent
city...</p>
<p>My goal was my “home,” and mildly startling, at least one such mid-nightly
awakening came. I had kept peering about for a landmark, a light.
Somewhere here in those farmhouses which I saw with my mind’s eye, people
were sitting around their fireside, chatting or reading. Lamps shed their
homely light; roof and wall kept the fog-spook securely out: nothing as
comfortable then as to listen to stories of being lost on the marsh, or to
tell them... But between those people and myself the curtain had fallen—no
sign of their presence, no faintest gleam of their light and warmth! They
did not know of the stranger passing outside, his whole being a-yearn with
the desire for wife and child. I listened intently—no sound of man
or beast, no soughing of wind in stems or rustling of the very last leaves
that were now fast falling... And then the startling neighing of Dan, my
horse! This was the third trip he made with me, and I might have known and
expected it, but it always came as a surprise. Whenever we passed that
second farm, he stopped and raising his head, with a sideways motion,
neighed a loud and piercing call. And now he had stopped and done it
again. He knew where we were. I lowered my whip and patted his rump. How
did he know? And why did he do it? Was there a horse on this farmstead
which he had known in former life? Or was it a man? Or did he merely feel
that it was about time to put in for the night? I enquired later on, but
failed to discover any reason for his behaviour.</p>
<p>Now came that angling road past the “White Range Line House.” I relied on
the horses entirely. This “Range Line House” was inhabited now—a
settler was putting in winter-residence so he might not lose his claim. He
had taken down the clapboards that closed the windows, and always had I so
far seen a light in the house.</p>
<p>It seemed to me that in this corner of the marsh the fog was less dense
than it had been farther south, and the horses, once started, were
swinging along though in a leisurely way, yet without hesitation. Another
half hour passed. Once, at a bend in the trail, the rays from the powerful
tractor searchlight, sweeping sideways past the horses, struck a wetly
glistening, greyish stone to the right of the road. I knew that stone.
Yes, surely the fog must be thinning, or I could not have seen it. I could
now also dimly make out the horses’ heads, as they nodded up and down...</p>
<p>And then, like a phantom, way up in the mist, I made out a blacker black
in the black—the majestic poplars north of the “Range Line House.”
Not that I could really see them or pick out the slightest detail—no!
But it seemed to my searching eyes as if there was a quiet pool in the
slow flow of the fog—as the water in a slow flowing stream will come
to rest when it strikes the stems of a willow submerged at its margin. I
was trying even at the time to decide how much of what I seemed to divine
rather than to perceive was imagination and how much reality. And I was
just about ready to contend that I also saw to the north something like
the faintest possible suggestion of an eddy, such as would form in the
flowing water below a pillar or a rock—when I was rudely shaken up
and jolted.</p>
<p>Trap, trap, I heard the horses’ feet on the culvert. Crash! And Peter went
stumbling down. Then a violent lurch of the buggy, I holding on—Peter
rallied, and then, before I had time to get a firmer grasp on the lines,
both horses bolted again. It took me some time to realize what had
happened. It was the culvert, of course; it had broken down, and lucky I
was that the ditch underneath was shallow. Only much later, when
reflecting upon the incident, did I see that this accident was really the
best verification of what I was nearly inclined to regard as the product
of my imagination. The trees must indeed have stood where I had seemed to
see that quiet reach in the fog and that eddy...</p>
<p>We tore along. I spoke to the horses and quietly and evenly pulled at the
lines. I think it must have been several minutes before I had them under
control again. And then—in this night of weird things—the
weirdest sight of them all showed ahead.</p>
<p>I was just beginning to wonder, whether after all we had not lost the road
again, when the faintest of all faint glimmers began to define itself
somewhere in front. And... was I right? Yes, a small, thin voice came out
of the fog that incessantly floated into my cone of light and was left
behind in eddies. What did it mean?...</p>
<p>The glimmer was now defining itself more clearly. Somewhere, not very far
ahead and slightly to the left, a globe of the faintest iridescent
luminosity seemed suspended in the brewing and waving mist. The horses
turned at right angles on to the bridge, the glimmer swinging round to the
other side of the buggy. Their hoofs struck wood, and both beasts snorted
and stopped.</p>
<p>In a flash a thought came. I had just broken through a culvert—the
bridge, too, must have broken down, and somebody had put a light there to
warn the chance traveller who might stray along on a night like this! I
was on the point of getting out of my wraps, when a thinner wave in the
mist permitted me to see the flames of three lanterns hung to the
side-rails of the bridge. And that very moment a thin, piping voice came
out of the darkness beyond. “Daddy, is that you?” I did not know the
child’s voice, but I sang out as cheerily as I could. “I am a daddy all
right, but I am afraid, not yours. Is the bridge broken down, sonny?
Anything wrong?” “No, Sir,” the answer came, “nothing wrong.” So I pulled
up to the lanterns, and there I saw, dimly enough, God wot, a small,
ten-year old boy standing and shivering by the signal which he had rigged
up. He was barefooted and bareheaded, in shirt and torn knee-trousers. I
pointed to the lanterns with my whip. “What’s the meaning of this, my
boy?” I asked in as friendly a voice as I could muster. “Daddy went to
town this morning,” he said rather haltingly, “and he must have got caught
in the fog. We were afraid he might not find the bridge.” “Well, cheer up,
son,” I said, “he is not the only one as you see; his horses will know the
road. Where did he go?” The boy named the town—it was to the west,
not half the distance away that I had come. “Don’t worry,” I said; “I
don’t think he has started out at all. The fog caught me about sixteen
miles south of here. It’s nine o’clock now If he had started before the
fog got there, he would be here by now.” I sat and thought for a moment.
Should I say anything about the broken culvert? “Which way would your
daddy come, along the creek or across the marsh?” “Along the creek.” All
right then, no use in saying anything further. “Well, as I said,” I sang
out and clicked my tongue to the horses, “don’t worry; better go home; he
will come to-morrow” “I guess so,” replied the boy the moment I lost sight
of him and the lanterns.</p>
<p>I made the turn to the southeast and walked my horses. Here, where the
trail wound along through the chasm of the bush, the light from my cone
would, over the horses’ backs, strike twigs and leaves now and then.
Everything seemed to drip and to weep. All nature was weeping I walked the
horses for ten minutes more. Then I stopped. It must have been just at the
point where the grade began; but I do not know for sure.</p>
<p>I fumbled a long while for my shoes; but at last I found them and put them
on over my dry woollens. When I had shaken myself out of my robes, I
jumped to the ground. There was, here, too, a film of mud on top, but
otherwise the road was firm enough. I quickly threw the blankets over the
horses’ backs, dropped the traces, took the bits out of their mouths, and
slipped the feed-bags over their heads. I looked at my watch, for it was
my custom to let them eat for just ten minutes, then to hook them up again
and walk them for another ten before trotting. I had found that that
refreshed them enough to make the remainder of the trip in excellent
shape.</p>
<p>While I was waiting, I stood between the wheels of the buggy, leaning
against the box and staring into the light. It was with something akin to
a start that I realized the direction from which the fog rolled by: it
came from the south! I had, of course, seen that already, but it had so
far not entered my consciousness as a definite observation. It was this
fact that later set me to thinking about the origin of the fog along the
lines which I have indicated above. Again I marvelled at the density of
the mist which somehow seemed greater while we were standing than while we
were driving. I had repeatedly been in the clouds, on mountainsides, but
they seemed light and thin as compared with this. Finland, Northern
Sweden, Canada—no other country which I knew had anything resembling
it. The famous London fogs are different altogether. These mists, like the
mist pools, need the swamp as their mother, I suppose, and the ice-cool
summer night for their nurse...</p>
<p>The time was up. I quickly did what had to be done, and five minutes later
we were on the road again. I watched the horses for a while, and suddenly
I thought once more of that fleeting impression of an eddy in the lee of
the poplar bluff at the “White Range Line House.” It was on the north side
of the trees, if it was there at all! The significance of the fact had
escaped me at the time. It again confirmed my observation of the flow of
the fog in both directions. It came from a common centre. And still there
was no breath of air. I had no doubt any longer; it was not the air that
pushed the fog; the floating bubbles, the infinitesimally small ones as
well as those that were quite perceptible, simply displaced the lighter
atmosphere. I wondered what kept these bubbles apart. Some repellent force
with which they were charged? Something, at any rate, must be preventing
them from coalescing into rain. Maybe it was merely the perfect evenness
of their flow, for they gathered thickly enough on the twigs and the few
dried leaves, on any obstacles in their way. And again I thought of the
fact that the mist had seemed thinner when I came out on the marsh. This
double flow explained it, of course. There were denser and less dense
waves in it: like veils hung up one behind the other. So long as I went in
a direction opposite to its flow, I had to look through sheet after sheet
of the denser waves. Later I could every now and then look along a plane
of lesser density...</p>
<p>It was Dan who found the turn off the grade into the bushy glades. I could
see distinctly how he pushed Peter over. Here, where again the road was
winding, and where the light, therefore, once more frequently struck the
twigs and boughs, as they floated into my cone of luminosity, to disappear
again behind, a new impression thrust itself upon me. I call it an
impression, not an observation. It is very hard to say, what was reality,
what fancy on a night like that. In spite of its air of unreality, of
improbability even, it has stayed with me as one of my strongest visions.
I nearly hesitate to put it in writing.</p>
<p>These boughs and twigs were like fingers held into a stream that carried
loose algae, arresting them in their gliding motion. Or again, those wisps
of mist were like gossamers as they floated along, and they would bend and
fold over on the boughs before they tore; and where they broke, they
seemed like comets to trail a thinner tail of themselves behind. There was
tenacity in them, a certain consistency which made them appear as if woven
of different things from air and mere moisture. I have often doubted my
memory here, and yet I have my very definite notes, and besides there is
the picture in my mind. In spite of my own uncertainty I can assure you,
that this is only one quarter a poem woven of impressions; the other three
quarters are reality. But, while I am trying to set down facts, I am also
trying to render moods and images begot by them...</p>
<p>We went on for an hour, and it lengthened out into two. No twigs and
boughs any longer, at last. But where I was, I knew not. Much as I
listened, I could not make out any difference in the tramp of the horses
now I looked down over the back of my buggy seat, and I seemed to see the
yellow or brownish clay of a grade. I went on rather thoughtlessly. Then,
about eleven o’clock, I noticed that the road was rough. I had long since,
as I said, given myself over to the horses. But now I grew nervous. No
doubt, unless we had entirely strayed from our road, we were by this time
riding the last dam; for no other trail over which we went was quite so
rough. But then I should have heard the rumble on the bridge, and I felt
convinced that I had not. It shows to what an extent a man may be
hypnotised into insensibility by a constant sameness of view, that I was
mistaken. If we were on the dam and missed the turn at the end of it, on
to the correction line, we should infallibly go down from the grade, on to
muskeg ground, for there was a gap in the dam. At that place I had seen a
horse disappear, and many a cow had ended there in the deadly struggle
against the downward suck of the swamp...</p>
<p>I pulled the horses back to a walk, and we went on for another half hour.
I was by this time sitting on the left hand side of the side, bicycle
lantern in my left hand, and bending over as far as I could to the left,
trying, with arm outstretched, to reach the ground with my light. The
lantern at the back of the buggy was useless for this. Here and there the
drop-laden, glistening tops of the taller grasses and weeds would float
into this auxiliary cone of light—but that was all.</p>
<p>Then no weeds appeared any longer, so I must be on the last half-mile of
the dam, the only piece of it that was bare and caution extreme was the
word. I made up my mind to go on riding for another five minutes and timed
myself, for there was hardly enough room for a team and a walking man
besides. When the time was up, I pulled in and got out. I took the lines
short, laid my right hand on Peter’s back and proceeded. The bicycle
lantern was hanging down from my left and showed plainly the clayey gravel
of the dam. And so I walked on for maybe ten minutes.</p>
<p>Suddenly I became again aware of a glimmer to the left, and the very next
moment a lantern shot out of the mist, held high by an arm wrapped in
white. A shivering woman, tall, young, with gleaming eyes, dressed in a
linen house dress, an apron flung over breast and shoulders, gasped out
two words, “You came!” “Have you been standing here and waiting?” I asked.
“No, no! I just could not bear it any longer. Something told me. He’s at
the culvert now, and if I do not run, he will go down into the swamp!”
There was something of a catch in the voice. I did not reply I swung the
horses around and crossed the culvert that bridges the master ditch.</p>
<p>And while we were walking up to the yard—had my drive been anything
brave—anything at all deserving of the slightest reward—had it
not in itself been a thing of beauty, not to be missed by selfish me—surely,
the touch of that arm, as we went, would have been more than enough to
reward even the most chivalrous deeds of yore.</p>
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0004" id="link2H_4_0004"></SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> THREE. Dawn and Diamonds </h2>
<p>Two days before Christmas the ground was still bare. I had a splendid new
cutter with a top and side curtains; a heavy outfit, but one that would
stand up, I believed, under any road conditions. I was anxious to use it,
too, for I intended to spend a two weeks’ holiday up north with my family.
I was afraid, if I used the buggy, I might find it impossible to get back
to town, seeing that the first heavy winter storms usually set in about
the turn of the year.</p>
<p>School had closed at noon. I intended to set out next morning at as early
an hour as I could. I do not know what gave me my confidence, but I firmly
expected to find snow on the ground by that time. I am rather a student of
the weather. I worked till late at night getting my cutter ready. I had to
adjust my buggy pole and to stow away a great number of parcels. The
latter contained the first real doll for my little girl, two or three
picture books, a hand sleigh, Pip—a little stuffed dog of the
silkiest fluffiness—and as many more trifles for wife and child as
my Christmas allowance permitted me to buy. It was the first time in the
five years of my married life that, thanks to my wife’s co-operation in
earning money, there was any Christmas allowance to spend; and since I am
writing this chiefly for her and the little girl’s future reading, I want
to set it down here, too, that it was thanks to this very same
co-operation that I had been able to buy the horses and the driving outfit
which I needed badly, for the poor state of my health forbade more
rigorous exercise. I have already said, I think, that I am essentially an
outdoor creature; and for several years the fact that I had been forced to
look at the out-of-doors from the window of a town house only, had been
eating away at my vitality. Those drives took decades off my age, and in
spite of incurable illness my few friends say that I look once more like a
young man.</p>
<p>Besides my Christmas parcels I had to take oats along, enough to feed the
horses for two weeks. And I was, as I said, engaged that evening in
stowing everything away, when about nine o’clock one of the physicians of
the town came into the stable. He had had a call into the country, I
believe, and came to order a team. When he saw me working in the shed, he
stepped up and said, “You’ll kill your horses.” “Meaning?” I queried. “I
see you are getting your cutter ready,” he replied. “If I were you, I
should stick to the wheels.” I laughed. “I might not be able to get back
to work.” “Oh yes,” he scoffed, “it won’t snow up before the end of next
month. We figure on keeping the cars going for a little while yet.” Again
I laughed. “I hope not,” I said, which may not have sounded very gracious.</p>
<p>At ten o’clock every bolt had been tightened, the horses’ harness and
their feed were ready against the morning, and everything looked good to
me.</p>
<p>I was going to have the first real Christmas again in twenty-five years,
with a real Christmas tree, and with wife and child, and even though it
was a poor man’s Christmas, I refused to let anything darken my Christmas
spirit or dull the keen edge of my enjoyment. Before going out, I stepped
into the office of the stable, slipped a half-dollar into the hostler’s
palm and asked him once more to be sure to have the horses fed at
half-past five in the morning.</p>
<p>Then I left. A slight haze filled the air, not heavy enough to blot out
the stars; but sufficient to promise hoarfrost at least. Somehow there was
no reason to despair as yet of Christmas weather.</p>
<p>I went home and to bed and slept about as soundly as I could wish. When
the alarm of my clock went off at five in the morning, I jumped out of bed
and hurried down to shake the fire into activity. As soon as I had started
something of a blaze, I went to the window and looked out. It was pitch
dark, of course, the moon being down by this time, but it seemed to me
that there was snow on the ground. I lighted a lamp and held it to the
window; and sure enough, its rays fell on white upon white on shrubs and
fence posts and window ledge. I laughed and instantly was in a glow of
impatience to be off.</p>
<p>At half past five, when the coffee water was in the kettle and on the
stove, I hurried over to the stable across the bridge. The snow was three
inches deep, enough to make the going easy for the horses. The slight haze
persisted, and I saw no stars. At the stable I found, of course, that the
horses had not been fed; so I gave them oats and hay and went to call the
hostler. When after much knocking at last he responded to my impatience,
he wore a guilty look on his face but assured me that he was just getting
up to feed my team. “Never mind about feeding,” I said “I’ve done that.
But have them harnessed and hitched up by a quarter past six. I’ll water
them on the road.” They never drank their fill before nine o’clock. And I
hurried home to get my breakfast...</p>
<p>“Merry Christmas!” the hostler called after me; and I shouted back over my
shoulder, “The same to you.” The horses were going under the merry jingle
of the bells which they carried for the first time this winter.</p>
<p>I rarely could hold them down to a walk or a trot now, since the cold
weather had set in; and mostly, before they even had cleared the
slide-doors, they were in a gallop. Peter had changed his nature since he
had a mate. By feeding and breeding he was so much Dan’s superior in
vitality that, into whatever mischief the two got themselves, he was the
leader. For all times the picture, seen by the light of a lantern, stands
out in my mind how he bit at Dan, wilfully, urging him playfully on, when
we swung out into the crisp, dark, hazy morning air. Dan being nothing
loth and always keen at the start, we shot across the bridge.</p>
<p>It was hard now, mostly, to hitch them up. They would leap and rear with
impatience when taken into the open before they were hooked to the
vehicle. They were being very well fed, and though once a week they had
the hardest of work, for the rest of the time they had never more than
enough to limber them up, for on schooldays I used to take them out for a
spin of three or four miles only, after four. At home, when I left, my
wife and I would get them ready in the stable; then I took them out and
lined them up in front of the buggy. My wife quickly took the lines: I
hooked the traces up, jumped in, grabbed for the lines and waved my last
farewell from the road afar off. Even at that they got away from us once
or twice and came very near upsetting and wrecking the buggy; but nothing
serious ever happened during the winter. I had to have horses like that,
for I needed their speed and their staying power, as the reader will see
if he cares to follow me very much farther.</p>
<p>We flew along—the road seemed ideal—the air was wonderfully
crisp and cold—my cutter fulfilled the highest expectations—the
horses revelled in speed. But soon I pulled them down to a trot, for I
followed the horsemen’s rules whenever I could, and Dan, as I mentioned,
was anyway rather too keen at the start for steady work later on. I
settled back. The top of my cutter was down, for not a breath stirred; and
I was always anxious to see as much of the country as I could...</p>
<p>Do you know which is the stillest hour of the night? The hour before dawn.
It is at that time, too, that in our winter nights the mercury dips down
to its lowest level. Perhaps the two things have a causal relation—whatever
there is of wild life in nature, withdraws more deeply within itself; it
curls up and dreams. On calm summer mornings you hear no sound except the
chirping and twittering of the sleeping birds. The birds are great
dreamers—like dogs; like dogs they will twitch and stir in their
sleep, as if they were running and flying and playing and chasing each
other. Just stalk a bird’s nest of which you know at half past two in the
morning, some time during the month of July; and before you see them, you
will hear them. If there are young birds in the nest, all the better; take
the mother bird off and the little ones will open their beaks, all mouth
as they are, and go to sleep again; and they will stretch their
featherless little wings; and if they are a little bit older, they will
even try to move their tiny legs, as if longing to use them. As with dogs,
it is the young ones that dream most. I suppose their impressions are so
much more vivid, the whole world is so new to them that it rushes in upon
them charged with emotion. Emotions penetrate even us to a greater depth
than mere apperceptions; so they break through that crust that seems to
envelop the seat of our memory, and once inside, they will work out again
into some form of consciousness—that of sleep or of the wakeful
dream which we call memory.</p>
<p>The stillest hour! In starlit winter nights the heavenly bodies seem to
take on an additional splendour, something next to blazing, overweening
boastfulness. “Now sleeps the world,” they seem to say, “but we are awake
and weaving destiny” And on they swing on their immutable paths.</p>
<p>The stillest hour! If you step out of a sleeping house and are alone, you
are apt to hold your breath; and if you are not, you are apt to whisper.
There is an expectancy in the air, a fatefulness—a loud word would
be blasphemy that offends the ear and the feeling of decency It is the
hour of all still things, the silent things that pass like dreams through
the night. You seem to stand hushed. Stark and bare, stripped of all
accidentals, the universe swings on its way.</p>
<p>The stillest hour! But how much stiller than still, when the earth has
drawn over its shoulders that morning mist that allows of no slightest
breath—when under the haze the very air seems to lie curled and to
have gone to sleep. And yet how portentous! The haze seems to brood. It
seems somehow to suggest that there is all of life asleep on earth. You
seem to feel rather than to hear the whole creation breathing in its sleep—as
if it was soundlessly stirring in dreams—presently to stretch, to
awake. There is also the delicacy, the tenderness of all young things
about it. Even in winter it reminds me of the very first unfolding of
young leaves on trees; of the few hours while they are still hanging down,
unable to raise themselves up as yet; they look so worldlywise sometimes,
so precocious, and before them there still lie all hopes and all
disappointments... In clear nights you forget the earth—under the
hazy cover your eye is thrown back upon it. It is the contrast of the
universe and of creation.</p>
<p>We drove along—and slowly, slowly came the dawn. You could not
define how it came. The whole world seemed to pale and to whiten, and that
was all. There was no sunrise. It merely seemed as if all of Nature—very
gradually—was soaking itself full of some light; it was dim at
first, but never grey; and then it became the whitest, the clearest, the
most undefinable light. There were no shadows. Under the brush of the wild
land which I was skirting by now there seemed to be quite as much of
luminosity as overhead. The mist was the thinnest haze, and it seemed to
derive its whiteness as much from the virgin snow on the ground as from
above. I could not cease to marvel at this light which seemed to be
without a source—like the halo around the Saviour’s face. The eye as
yet did not reach very far, and wherever I looked, I found but one word to
describe it: impalpable—and that is saying what it was not rather
than what it was. As I said, there was no sunshine, but the light was
there, omnipresent, diffused, coming mildly, softly, but from all sides,
and out of all things as well as into them.</p>
<p>Shakespeare has this word in Macbeth, and I had often pondered on it:</p>
<p>So fair and foul a day I have not seen.<br/></p>
<p>This was it, I thought. We have such days about four or five times a year—and
none but the northern countries have them. There are clouds—or
rather, there is a uniform layer of cloud, very high, and just the
slightest suggestion of curdiness in it; and the light is very white.
These days seem to waken in me every wander instinct that lay asleep.
There is nothing definite, nothing that seems to be emphasized—something
seems to beckon to me and to invite me to take to my wings and just glide
along—without beating of wings—as if I could glide without
sinking, glide and still keep my height... If you see the sun at all—as
I did not on this day of days—he stands away up, very distant and
quite aloof. He looks more like the moon than like his own self, white and
heatless and lightless, as if it were not he at all from whom all this
transparency and visibility proceeded.</p>
<p>I have lived in southern countries, and I have travelled rather far for a
single lifetime. Like an epic stretch my memories into dim and ever
receding pasts. I have drunk full and deep from the cup of creation. The
Southern Cross is no strange sight to my eyes. I have slept in the desert
close to my horse, and I have walked on Lebanon. I have cruised in the
seven seas and seen the white marvels of ancient cities reflected in the
wave of incredible blueness. But then I was young. When the years began to
pile up, I longed to stake off my horizons, to flatten out my views. I
wanted the simpler, the more elemental things, things cosmic in their
associations, nearer to the beginning or end of creation. The parrot that
flashed through “nutmeg groves” did not hold out so much allurement as the
simple gray-and-slaty junco. The things that are unobtrusive and
differentiated by shadings only—grey in grey above all—like
our northern woods, like our sparrows, our wolves—they held a more
compelling attraction than orgies of colour and screams of sound. So I
came home to the north. On days like this, however, I should like once
more to fly out and see the tireless wave and the unconquerable rock. But
I should like to see them from afar and dimly only—as Moses saw the
promised land. Or I should like to point them out to a younger soul and
remark upon the futility and innate vanity of things.</p>
<p>And because these days take me out of myself, because they change my whole
being into a very indefinite longing and dreaming, I wilfully blot from my
vision whatever enters. If I meet a tree, I see it not. If I meet a man, I
pass him by without speaking. I do not care to be disturbed. I do not care
to follow even a definite thought. There is sadness in the mood, such
sadness as enters—strange to say—into a great and very
definitely expected disappointment. It is an exceedingly delicate sadness—haughty,
aloof like the sun, and like him cool to the outer world. It does not even
want sympathy; it merely wants to be left alone.</p>
<p>It strangely chimed in with my mood on this particular and very perfect
morning that no jolt shook me up, that we glided along over virgin snow
which had come soft-footedly over night, in a motion, so smooth and silent
as to suggest that wingless flight...</p>
<p>We spurned the miles, and I saw them not. As if in a dream we turned in at
one of the “half way farms,” and the horses drank. And we went on and
wound our way across that corner of the marsh. We came to the “White Range
Line House,” and though there were many things to see, I still closed the
eye of conscious vision and saw them not. We neared the bridge, and we
crossed it; and then—when I had turned southeast—on to the
winding log-road through the bush—at last the spell that was cast
over me gave way and broke. My horses fell into their accustomed walk, and
at last I saw.</p>
<p>Now, what I saw, may not be worth the describing, I do not know. It surely
is hardly capable of being described. But if I had been led through
fairylands or enchanted gardens, I could not have been awakened to a truer
day of joy, to a greater realization of the good will towards all things
than I was here.</p>
<p>Oh, the surpassing beauty of it! There stood the trees, motionless under
that veil of mist, and not their slenderest finger but was clothed in
white. And the white it was! A translucent white, receding into itself,
with strange backgrounds of white behind it—a modest white, and yet
full of pride. An elusive white, and yet firm and substantial. The white
of a diamond lying on snow white velvet, the white of a diamond in
diffused light. None of the sparkle and colour play that the most precious
of stones assumes under a definite, limited light which proceeds from a
definite, limited source. Its colour play was suggested, it is true, but
so subdued that you hardly thought of naming or even recognising its
component parts. There was no red or yellow or blue or violet, but merely
that which might flash into red and yellow and blue and violet, should
perchance the sun break forth and monopolize the luminosity of the
atmosphere. There was, as it were, a latent opalescence.</p>
<p>And every twig and every bough, every branch and every limb, every trunk
and every crack even in the bark was furred with it. It seemed as if the
hoarfrost still continued to form. It looked heavy, and yet it was nearly
without weight. Not a twig was bent down under its load, yet with its halo
of frost it measured fully two inches across. The crystals were large,
formed like spearheads, flat, slablike, yet of infinite thinness and
delicacy, so thin and light that, when by misadventure my whip touched the
boughs, the flakes seemed to float down rather than to fall. And every one
of these flat and angular slabs was fringed with hairlike needles, or with
featherlike needles, and longer needles stood in between. There was such
an air of fragility about it all that you hated to touch it—and I,
for one, took my whip down lest it shook bare too many boughs.</p>
<p>Whoever has seen the trees like that—and who has not?—will see
with his mind’s eye what I am trying to suggest rather than to describe.
It was never the single sight nor the isolated thing that made my drives
the things of beauty which they were. There was nothing remarkable in them
either. They were commonplace enough. I really do not know why I should
feel urged to describe our western winters. Whatever I may be able to tell
you about them, is yours to see and yours to interpret. The gifts of
Nature are free to all for the asking. And yet, so it seems to me, there
is in the agglomerations of scenes and impressions, as they followed each
other in my experience, something of the quality of a great symphony; and
I consider this quality as a free and undeserved present which Chance or
Nature shook out of her cornucopia so it happened to fall at my feet. I am
trying to render this quality here for you.</p>
<p>On that short mile along the first of the east-west grades, before again I
turned into the bush, I was for the thousandth time in my life struck with
the fact how winter blots out the sins of utility. What is useful, is
often ugly because in our fight for existence we do not always have time
or effort to spare to consider the looks of things. But the slightest
cover of snow will bury the eyesores. Snow is the greatest equalizer in
Nature. No longer are there fields and wild lands, beautiful trails and
ugly grades—all are hidden away under that which comes from Nature’s
purest hands and fertile thoughts alone. Now there was no longer the raw,
offending scar on Nature’s body; just a smooth expanse of snow white
ribbon that led afar.</p>
<p>That led afar! And here is a curious fact. On this early December morning—it
was only a little after nine when I started the horses into their trot
again—I noticed for the first time that this grade which sprang here
out of the bush opened up to the east a vista into a seemingly endless
distance. Twenty-six times I had gone along this piece of it, but thirteen
times it had been at night, and thirteen times I had been facing west,
when I went back to the scene of my work. So I had never looked east very
far. This morning, however, in this strange light, which was at this very
hour undergoing a subtle change that I could not define as yet, mile after
mile of road seemed to lift itself up in the far away distance, as if you
might drive on for ever through fairyland. The very fact of its
straightness, flanked as it was by the rows of frosted trees, seemed like
a call. And a feeling that is very familiar to me—that of an
eternity in the perpetuation of whatever may be the state I happen to be
in, came over me, and a desire to go on and on, for ever, and to see what
might be beyond...</p>
<p>But then the turn into the bushy trail was reached. I did not see the
slightest sign of it on the road. But Dan seemed infallible—he made
the turn. And again I was in Winter’s enchanted palace, again the slight
whirl in the air that our motion set up made the fairy tracery of the
boughs shower down upon me like snow white petals of flowers, so delicate
that to disturb the virginity of it all seemed like profaning the temple
of the All-Highest.</p>
<p>But then I noticed that I had not been the first one to visit the woods.
All over their soft-napped carpet floor there were the restless, fleeting
tracks of the snowflake, lacing and interlacing in lines and loops, as if
they had been assembled in countless numbers, as no doubt they had. And
every track looked like nothing so much as like that kind of embroidery,
done white upon white, which ladies, I think; call the feather stitch. In
places I could clearly see how they had chased and pursued each other,
running, and there was a merriness about their spoors, a suggestion of
swiftness which made me look up and about to see whether they were not
wheeling their restless curves and circles overhead. But in this I was
disappointed for the moment, though only a little later I was to see them
in numbers galore. It was on that last stretch of my road, when I drove
along the dam of the angling ditch. There they came like a whirlwind and
wheeled and curved and circled about as if they knew no enemy, feeding
meanwhile with infallible skill from the tops of seed-bearing weeds while
skimming along. But I am anticipating just now In the bush I saw only
their trails. Yet they suggested their twittering and whistling even
there; and since on the gloomiest day their sound and their sight will
cheer you, you surely cannot help feeling glad and overflowing with joy
when you see any sign of them on a day like this!</p>
<p>Meanwhile we were winging along ourselves, so it seemed. For there was the
second east-west grade ahead. And that made me think of wife and child to
whom I was coming like Santa Claus, and so I stopped under a bush that
overhung the trail; and though I hated to destroy even a trifling part of
the beauty around, I reached high up with my whip and let go at the
branches, so that the moment before the horses bolted, the flakes showered
down upon me and my robes and the cutter and changed me into a veritable
snowman in snow white garb.</p>
<p>And then up on the grade. One mile to the east, and the bridge appeared.</p>
<p>It did not look like the work of man. Apart from its straight lines it
resembled more the architecture of a forest brook as it will build after
heavy fall rains followed by a late drought when all the waters of the
wild are receding so that the icy cover stands above them like the arches
of a bridge. It is strange how rarely the work of man will really
harmonize with Nature. The beaver builds, and his work will blend. Man
builds, and it jars—very likely because he mostly builds with silly
pretensions. But in winter Nature breathes upon his handiwork and
transforms it. Bridges may be imposing and of great artificial beauty in
cities—as for instance the ancient structure that spans the Tiber
just below the tomb of Hadrian, or among modern works the spider web
engineering feat of Brooklyn bridge—but if in the wilderness we run
across them, there is something incongruous about them, and they disturb.
Strange to say, there is the exception of high-flung trellis-viaducts
bridging the chasm of mountain canyons. Maybe it is exactly on account of
their unpretentious, plain utility; or is it that they reconcile by their
overweening boldness, by their very paradoxality—as there is beauty
even in the hawk’s bloodthirsty savagery. To-day this bridge was, like the
grades, like the trees and the meadows furred over with opalescent,
feathery frost.</p>
<p>And the dam over which I am driving now! This dam that erstwhile was a
very blasphemy, an obscenity flung on the marshy meadows with their reeds,
their cat-tails, and their wide-leaved swamp-dock clusters! It had been
used by the winds as a veritable dumping ground for obnoxious weeds which
grew and thrived on the marly clay while every other plant despised it!
Not that I mean to decry weeds—far be it from me. When the goldenrod
flings its velvet cushions along the edge of the copses, or when the
dandelion spangles the meadows, they are things of beauty as well as any
tulip or tiger-lily. But when they or their rivals, silverweed, burdock,
false ragweed, thistles, gumweed, and others usurp the landscape and seem
to choke up the very earth and the very air with ceaseless monotony and
repetition, then they become an offence to the eye and a reproach to those
who tolerate them. To-day, however, they all lent their stalks to support
the hoarfrost, to double and quadruple its total mass. They were powdered
over with countless diamonds.</p>
<p>It was here that I met with the flocks of snowflakes; and if my joyous
mood had admitted of any enhancement, they would have given it.</p>
<p>And never before had I seen the school and the cottage from quite so far!
The haze was still there, but somehow it seemed to be further overhead
now, with a stratum of winterclear air underneath. Once before, when
driving along the first east-west grade, where I discovered the vista, I
had wondered at the distance to which the eye could pierce. Here, on the
dam, of course, my vision was further aided by the fact that whatever of
trees and shrubs there was in the way—and a ridge of poplars ran at
right angles to the ditch, throwing up a leafy curtain in summer—stood
bare of its foliage. I was still nearly four miles from my “home” when I
first beheld it. And how pitiably lonesome it looked! Not another house
was to be seen in its neighbourhood. I touched the horses up with my whip.
I felt as if I should fly across the distance and bring my presence to
those in the cottage as their dearest gift. They knew I was coming. They
were at this very moment flying to meet me with their thoughts. Was I
well? Was I finding everything as I had wished to find it? And though I
often told them how I loved and enjoyed my drives, they could not view
them but with much anxiety, for they were waiting, waiting, waiting...
Waiting on Thursday for Friday to come, waiting on Wednesday and Tuesday
and Monday—waiting on Sunday even, as soon as I had left; counting
the days, and the hours, and the minutes, till I was out, fighting storm
and night to my heart’s content! And then—worry, worry, worry—what
might not happen! Whatever my drives were to me, to them they were
horrors. There never were watchers of weather and sky so anxiously eager
as they! And when, as it often, too often happened, the winter storms
came, when care rose, hope fell, then eye was clouded, thought dulled,
heart aflutter... Sometimes the soul sought comfort from nearest
neighbours, and not always was it vouchsafed. “Well,” they would say, “if
he starts out to-day, he will kill his horses!”—or, “In weather like
this I should not care to drive five miles!”—Surely, surely, I owe
it to them, staunch, faithful hearts that they were, to set down this
record so it may gladden the lonesome twilight hours that are sure to
come...</p>
<p>And at last I swung west again, up the ridge and on to the yard. And there
on the porch stood the tall, young, smiling woman, and at her knee the
fairest-haired girl in all the world. And quite unconscious of Nature’s
wonder-garb, though doubtlessly gladdened by it the little girl shrilled
out, “Oh, Daddy, Daddy, did du see Santa Claus?” And I replied lustily,
“Of course, my girl, I am coming straight from his palace.”</p>
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0005" id="link2H_4_0005"></SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> FOUR. Snow </h2>
<p>The blizzard started on Wednesday morning. It was that rather common,
truly western combination of a heavy snowstorm with a blinding northern
gale—such as piles the snow in hills and mountains and makes walking
next to impossible.</p>
<p>I cannot exactly say that I viewed it with unmingled joy. There were
special reasons for that. It was the second week in January; when I had
left “home” the Sunday before, I had been feeling rather bad; so my wife
would worry a good deal, especially if I did not come at all. I knew there
was such a thing as its becoming quite impossible to make the drive. I had
been lost in a blizzard once or twice before in my lifetime. And yet, so
long as there was the least chance that horse-power and human will-power
combined might pull me through at all, I was determined to make or anyway
to try it.</p>
<p>At noon I heard the first dismal warning. For some reason or other I had
to go down into the basement of the school. The janitor, a highly
efficient but exceedingly bad-humoured cockney, who was dissatisfied with
all things Canadian because “in the old country we do things differently”—whose
sharp tongue was feared by many, and who once remarked to a lady teacher
in the most casual way, “If you was a lidy, I’d wipe my boots on you!”—this
selfsame janitor, standing by the furnace, turned slowly around, showed
his pale and hollow-eyed face, and smiled a withering and commiserating
smile. “Ye won’t go north this week,” he remarked—not without
sympathy, for somehow he had taken a liking to me, which even prompted him
off and on to favor me with caustic expressions of what he thought of the
school board and the leading citizens of the town. I, of course, never
encouraged him in his communicativeness which seemed to be just what he
would expect, and no rebuff ever goaded him into the slightest show of
resentment. “We’ll see,” I said briefly “Well, Sir,” he repeated
apodeictically, “ye won’t.” I smiled and went out.</p>
<p>But in my classroom I looked from the window across the street. Not even
in broad daylight could you see the opposite houses or trees. And I knew
that, once a storm like that sets in, it is apt to continue for days at a
stretch. It was one of those orgies in which Titan Wind indulges ever so
often on our western prairies. I certainly needed something to encourage
me, and so, before leaving the building, I went upstairs to the third
story and looked through a window which faced north. But, though I was now
above the drifting layer, I could not see very far here either; the
snowflakes were small and like little round granules, hitting the panes of
the windows with little sounds of “ping-ping”; and they came, driven by a
relentless gale, in such numbers that they blotted out whatever was more
than two or three hundred yards away.</p>
<p>The inhabitant of the middle latitudes of this continent has no data to
picture to himself what a snowstorm in the north may be. To him snow is
something benign that comes soft-footedly over night, and on the most
silent wings like an owl, something that suggests the sleep of Nature
rather than its battles. The further south you go, the more, of course,
snow loses of its aggressive character.</p>
<p>At the dinner table in the hotel I heard a few more disheartening words.
But after four I defiantly got my tarpaulin out and carried it to the
stable. If I had to run the risk of getting lost, at least I was going to
prepare for it. I had once stayed out, snow-bound, for a day and a half,
nearly without food and altogether without shelter; and I was not going to
get thus caught again. I also carefully overhauled my cutter. Not a bolt
but I tested it with a wrench; and before the stores were closed, I bought
myself enough canned goods to feed me for a week should through any
untoward accident the need arise. I always carried a little alcohol stove,
and with my tarpaulin I could convert my cutter within three minutes into
a windproof tent. Cramped quarters, to be sure, but better than being
given over to the wind at thirty below!</p>
<p>More than any remark on the part of friends or acquaintances one fact
depressed me when I went home. There was not a team in town which had come
in from the country. The streets were deserted: the stores were empty. The
north wind and the snow had the town to themselves.</p>
<p>On Thursday the weather was unchanged. On the way to the school I had to
scale a snowdrift thrown up to a height of nearly six feet, and, though it
was beginning to harden, from its own weight and the pressure of the wind,
I still broke in at every step and found the task tiring in the extreme. I
did my work, of course, as if nothing oppressed me, but in my heart I was
beginning to face the possibility that, even if I tried, I might fail to
reach my goal. The day passed by. At noon the school-children, the
teachers, and a few people hurrying to the post-office for their mail lent
a fleeting appearance of life to the streets. It nearly cheered me; but
soon after four the whole town again took on that deserted look which
reminded me of an abandoned mining camp. The lights in the store windows
had something artificial about them, as if they were merely painted on the
canvas-wings of a stage-setting. Not a team came in all day.</p>
<p>On Friday morning the same. Burroughs would have said that the weather had
gone into a rut. Still the wind whistled and howled through the bleak,
dark, hollow dawn; the snow kept coming down and piling up, as if it could
not be any otherwise. And as if to give notice of its intentions, the
drift had completely closed up my front door. I fought my way to the
school and thought things over. My wife and I had agreed, if ever the
weather should be so bad that there was danger in going at night, I was to
wait till Saturday morning and go by daylight. Neither one of us ever
mentioned the possibility of giving the attempt up altogether. My wife
probably understood that I would not bind myself by any such promise. Now
even on this Friday I should have liked to go by night, if for no other
reason, than for the experience’s sake; but I reflected that I might get
lost and not reach home at all. The horses knew the road—so long as
there was any road; but there was none now. I felt it would not be fair to
wife and child. So, reluctantly and with much hesitation, but definitely
at last, I made up my mind that I was going to wait till morning. My
cutter was ready—I had seen to that on Wednesday. As soon as the
storm had set in, I had instinctively started to work in order to
frustrate its designs.</p>
<p>At noon I met in front of the post-office a charming lady who with her
husband and a young Anglican curate constituted about the only circle of
real friends I had in town. “Why!” I exclaimed, “what takes you out into
this storm, Mrs. ——?” “The desire,” she gasped against the
wind and yet in her inimitable way, as if she were asking a favour, “to
have you come to our house for tea, my friend. You surely are not going
this week?” “I am going to go to-morrow morning at seven,” I said. “But I
shall be delighted to have tea with you and Mr. ——.” I read
her at a glance. She knew that in not going out at night I should suffer—she
wished to help me over the evening, so I should not feel too much
thwarted, too helpless, and too lonesome. She smiled. “You really want to
go? But I must not keep you. At six, if you please.” And we went our ways
without a salute, for none was possible at this gale-swept corner.</p>
<p>After four o’clock I took word to the stable to have my horses fed and
harnessed by seven in the morning. The hostler had a tale to tell. “You
going out north?” he enquired although he knew perfectly well I was. “Of
course,” I replied. “Well,” he went on, “a man came in from ten miles out;
he was half dead; come, look at his horses! He says, in places the snow is
over the telephone posts.” “I’ll try it anyway,” I said. “Just have the
team ready I know what I can ask my horses to do. If it cannot be done, I
shall turn back, that is all.”</p>
<p>When I stepped outside again, the wind seemed bent upon shaking the
strongest faith. I went home to my house across the bridge and dressed. As
soon as I was ready, I allowed myself to be swept past stable, past hotel
and post-office till I reached the side street which led to the house
where I was to be the guest.</p>
<p>How sheltered, homelike and protected everything looked inside. The
hostess, as usual, was radiantly amiable. The host settled back after
supper to talk old country. The Channel Islands, the French Coast, Kent
and London—those were from common knowledge our most frequently
recurring topics. Both host and hostess, that was easy to see, were bent
upon beguiling the hours of their rather dark-humored guest. But the
howling gale outside was stronger than their good intentions. It was not
very long before the conversation got around—reverted, so it seemed—to
stories of storms, of being lost, of nearly freezing. The boys were
sitting with wide and eager eyes, afraid they might be sent to bed before
the feast of yarns was over. I told one or two of my most thrilling
escapes, the host contributed a few more, and even the hostess had had an
experience, driving on top of a railroad track for several miles, I
believe, with a train, snowbound, behind her. I leaned over. “Mrs. ——,”
I said, “do not try to dissuade me. I am sorry to say it, but it is
useless. I am bound to go.” “Well,” she said, “I wish you would not.”
“Thanks,” I replied and looked at my watch. It was two o’clock. “There is
only one thing wrong with coming to have tea in this home,” I continued
and smiled; “it is so hard to say good-bye.”</p>
<p>I carefully lighted my lantern and got into my wraps. The wind was howling
dismally outside. For a moment we stood in the hall, shaking hands and
paying the usual compliments; then one of the boys opened the door for me;
and in stepping out I had one of the greatest surprises. Not far from the
western edge of the world there stood the setting half-moon in a cloudless
sky; myriads of stars were dusted over the vast, dark blue expanse,
twinkling and blazing at their liveliest. And though the wind still
whistled and shrieked and rattled, no snow came down, and not much seemed
to drift. I pointed to the sky, smiled, nodded and closed the door. As far
as the drifting of the snow went, I was mistaken, as I found out when I
turned to the north, into the less sheltered street, past the post-office,
hotel and stable. In front of a store I stopped to read a thermometer
which I had found halfways reliable the year before. It read minus
thirty-two degrees...</p>
<p>It was still dark, of course, when I left the house on Saturday morning to
be on my way. Also, it was cold, bitterly cold, but there was very little
wind. In crossing the bridge which was swept nearly clean of snow I
noticed a small, but somehow ominous-looking drift at the southern end. It
had such a disturbed, lashed-up appearance. The snow was still loose, yet
packed just hard enough to have a certain degree of toughness. You could
no longer swing your foot through it: had you run into it at any great
speed, you would have fallen; but as yet it was not hard enough to carry
you. I knew that kind of a drift; it is treacherous. On a later drive one
just like it, only built on a vastly larger scale, was to lead to the
first of a series of little accidents which finally shattered my nerve.
That was the only time that my temerity failed me. I shall tell you about
that drive later on.</p>
<p>At the stable I went about my preparations in a leisurely way. I knew that
a supreme test was ahead of myself and the horses, and I meant to have
daylight for tackling it. Once more I went over the most important bolts;
once more I felt and pulled at every strap in the harness. I had a Clark
footwarmer and made sure that it functioned properly I pulled the flaps of
my military fur cap down over neck, ears and cheeks. I tucked a pillow
under the sweater over my chest and made sure that my leggings clasped my
furlined moccasins well. Then, to prevent my coat from opening even under
the stress of motion, just before I got into the cutter, I tied a rope
around my waist.</p>
<p>The hostler brought the horses into the shed. They pawed the floor and
snorted with impatience. While I rolled my robes about my legs and drew
the canvas curtain over the front part of the box, I weighed Dan with my
eyes. I had no fear for Peter, but Dan would have to show to-day that he
deserved the way I had fed and nursed him. Like a chain, the strength of
which is measured by the strength of its weakest link, my team was
measured by Dan’s pulling power and endurance. But he looked good to me as
he danced across the pole and threw his head, biting back at Peter who was
teasing him.</p>
<p>The hostler was morose and in a biting mood. Every motion of his seemed to
say, “What is the use of all this? No teamster would go out on a long
drive in this weather, till the snow has settled down; and here a
schoolmaster wants to try it.”</p>
<p>At last he pushed the slide doors aside, and we swung out. I held the
horses tight and drove them into that little drift at the bridge to slow
them down right from the start.</p>
<p>The dawn was white, but with a strictly localised angry glow where the sun
was still hidden below the horizon. In a very few minutes he would be up,
and I counted on making that first mile just before he appeared.</p>
<p>This mile is a wide, well levelled road, but ever so often, at intervals
of maybe fifty to sixty yards, steep and long promontories of snow had
been flung across—some of them five to six feet high. They started
at the edge of the field to the left where a rank growth of shrubby weeds
gave shelter for the snow to pile in. Their base, alongside the fence, was
broad, and they tapered across the road, with a perfectly flat top, and
with concave sides of a most delicate, smooth, and finished looking curve,
till at last they ran out into a sharp point, mostly beyond the road on
the field to the right.</p>
<p>The wind plays strange pranks with snow; snow is the most plastic medium
it has to mould into images and symbols of its moods. Here one of these
promontories would slope down, and the very next one would slope upward as
it advanced across the open space. In every case there had been two walls,
as it were, of furious blow, and between the two a lane of comparative
calm, caused by the shelter of a clump of brush or weeds, in which the
snow had taken refuge from the wind’s rough and savage play. Between these
capes of snow there was an occasional bare patch of clean swept ground.
Altogether there was an impression of barren, wild, bitter-cold windiness
about the aspect that did not fail to awe my mind; it looked inhospitable,
merciless, and cruelly playful.</p>
<p>As yet the horses seemed to take only delight in dashing through the
drifts, so that the powdery crystals flew aloft and dusted me all over. I
peered across the field to the left, and a curious sight struck me. There
was apparently no steady wind at all, but here and there, and every now
and then a little whirl of snow would rise and fall again. Every one of
them looked for all the world like a rabbit reconnoitring in deep grass.
It jumps up on its hindlegs, while running, peers out, and settles down
again. It was as if the snow meant to have a look at me, the interloper at
such an early morning hour. The snow was so utterly dry that it obeyed the
lightest breath; and whatever there was of motion in the air, could not
amount to more than a cat’s-paw’s sudden reach.</p>
<p>At the exact moment when the snow where it stood up highest became
suffused with a rose-red tint from the rising sun, I arrived at the turn
to the correction line. Had I been a novice at the work I was engaged in,
the sight that met my eye might well have daunted me. Such drifts as I saw
here should be broken by drivers who have short hauls to make before the
long distance traveller attempts them. From the fence on the north side of
the road a smoothly curved expanse covered the whole of the road allowance
and gently sloped down into the field at my left. Its north edge stood
like a cliff, the exact height of the fence, four feet I should say. In
the centre it rose to probably six feet and then fell very gradually,
whaleback fashion, to the south. Not one of the fence posts to the left
was visible. The slow emergence of the tops of these fence posts became
during the following week, when I drove out here daily, a measure for me
of the settling down of the drift. I believe I can say from my
observations that if no new snow falls or drifts in, and if no very
considerable evaporation takes place, a newly piled snowdrift, undisturbed
except by wind-pressure, will finally settle down to about from one third
to one half of its original height, according to the pressure of the wind
that was behind the snow when it first was thrown down. After it has, in
this contracting process, reached two thirds of its first height, it can
usually be relied upon to carry horse and man.</p>
<p>The surface of this drift, which covered a ditch besides the grade and its
grassy flanks, showed that curious appearance that we also find in the
glaciated surfaces of granite rock and which, in them, geologists call
exfoliation. In the case of rock it is the consequence of extreme changes
in temperature. The surface sheet in expanding under sudden heat detaches
itself in large, leaflike layers. In front of my wife’s cottage up north
there lay an exfoliated rock in which I watched the process for a number
of years. In snow, of course, the origin of this appearance is entirely
different; snow is laid down in layers by the waves in the wind.
“Adfoliation” would be a more nearly correct appellation of the process.
But from the analogy of the appearance I shall retain the more common word
and call it exfoliation. Layers upon layers of paperlike sheets are
superimposed upon each other, their edges often “cropping out” on sloping
surfaces; and since these edges, according to the curvatures of the
surfaces, run in wavy lines, the total aspect is very often that of
“moire” silk.</p>
<p>I knew the road as well as I had ever known a road. In summer there was a
grassy expanse some thirty feet wide to the north; then followed the
grade, flanked to the south by a ditch; and the tangle of weeds and small
brush beyond reached right up to the other fence. I had to stay on or
rather above the grade; so I stood up and selected the exact spot where to
tackle it. Later, I knew, this drift would be harmless enough; there was
sufficient local traffic here to establish a well-packed trail. At
present, however, it still seemed a formidable task for a team that was to
pull me over thirty-three miles more. Besides it was a first test for my
horses; I did not know yet how they would behave in snow.</p>
<p>But we went at it. For a moment things happened too fast for me to watch
details. The horses plunged wildly and reared on their hind feet in a
panic, straining against each other, pulling apart, going down underneath
the pole, trying to turn and retrace their steps. And meanwhile the cutter
went sharply up at first, as if on the crest of a wave, then toppled over
into a hole made by Dan, and altogether behaved like a boat tossed on a
stormy sea. Then order returned into the chaos. I had the lines short,
wrapped double and treble around my wrists; my feet stood braced in the
corner of the box, knees touching the dashboard; my robes slipped down. I
spoke to the horses in a soft, quiet, purring voice; and at last I pulled
in. Peter hated to stand. I held him. Then I looked back. This first wild
plunge had taken us a matter of two hundred yards into the drift. Peter
pulled and champed at the bit; the horses were sinking nearly out of
sight. But I knew that many and many a time in the future I should have to
go through just this and that from the beginning I must train the horses
to tackle it right. So, in spite of my aching wrists I kept them standing
till I thought that they were fully breathed. Then I relaxed my pull the
slightest bit and clicked my tongue. “Good,” I thought, “they are pulling
together!” And I managed to hold them in line. They reared and plunged
again like drowning things in their last agony, but they no longer clashed
against nor pulled away from each other. I measured the distance with my
eye. Another two hundred yards or thereabout, and I pulled them in again.
Thus we stopped altogether four times. The horses were steaming when we
got through this drift which was exactly half a mile long; my cutter was
packed level full with slabs and clods of snow; and I was pretty well
exhausted myself.</p>
<p>“If there is very much of this,” I thought for the moment, “I may not be
able to make it.” But then I knew that a north-south road will drift in
badly only under exceptional circumstances. It is the east-west grades
that are most apt to give trouble. Not that I minded my part of it, but I
did not mean to kill my horses. I had sized them up in their behaviour
towards snow. Peter, as I had expected, was excitable. It was hard to
recognize in him just now, as he walked quietly along, the uproar of
playing muscle and rearing limbs that he had been when we first struck the
snow. That was well and good for a short, supreme effort; but not even for
Peter would it do in the long, endless drifts which I had to expect. Dan
was quieter, but he did not have Peter’s staying power, in fact, he was
not really a horse for the road. Strange, in spite of his usual keenness
on the level road, he seemed to show more snow sense in the drift. This
was to be amply confirmed in the future. Whenever an accident happened, it
was Peter’s fault. As you will see if you read on, Dan once lay quiet when
Peter stood right on top of him.</p>
<p>On this road north I found the same “promontories” that had been such a
feature of the first one, flung across from the northwest to the
southeast. Since the clumps of shrubs to the left were larger here, and
more numerous, too, the drifts occasionally also were larger and higher;
but not one of them was such that the horses could not clear it with one
or two leaps. The sun was climbing, the air was winter-clear and still.
None of the farms which I passed showed the slightest sign of life. I had
wrapped up again and sat in comparative comfort and at ease, enjoying the
clear sparkle and glitter of the virgin snow. It was not till considerably
later that the real significance of the landscape dawned upon my
consciousness. Still there was even now in my thoughts a speculative
undertone. Subconsciously I wondered what might be ahead of me.</p>
<p>We made Bell’s corner in good time. The mile to the west proved easy.
There were drifts, it is true, and the going was heavy, but at no place
did the snow for any length of time reach higher than the horses’ hocks.
We turned to the north again, and here, for a while, the road was very
good indeed; the underbrush to the left, on those expanses of wild land,
had fettered, as it were, the feet of the wind. The snow was held
everywhere, and very little of it had drifted. Only one spot I remember
where a clump of Russian willow close to the trail had offered shelter
enough to allow the wind to fill in the narrow road-gap to a depth of
maybe eight or nine feet; but here it was easy to go around to the west.
Without any further incident we reached the point where the useless,
supernumerary fence post had caught my eye on my first trip out. I had
made nearly eight miles now.</p>
<p>But right here I was to get my first inkling of sights that might shatter
my nerve. You may remember that a grove of tall poplars ran to the east,
skirted along its southern edge by a road and a long line of telephone
posts. Now here, in this shelter of the poplars, the snow from the more or
less level and unsheltered spaces to the northwest had piled in indeed. It
sloped up to the east; and never shall I forget what I beheld.</p>
<p>The first of the posts stood a foot in snow; at the second one the drift
reached six or seven feet up; the next one looked only half as long as the
first one, and you might have imagined, standing as it did on a sloping
hillside, that it had intentionally been made so much shorter than the
others; but at the bottom of the visible part the wind, in sweeping around
the pole, had scooped out a funnel-shaped crater which seemed to open into
the very earth like a sinkhole. The next pole stood like a giant buried up
to his chest and looked singularly helpless and footbound; and the last
one I saw showed just its crossbar with three glassy, green insulators
above the mountain of snow. The whole surface of this gigantic drift
showed again that “exfoliated” appearance which I have described. Strange
to say, this very exfoliation gave it something of a quite peculiarly
desolate aspect. It looked so harsh, so millennial-old, so antediluvian
and pre-adamic! I still remember with particular distinctness the slight
dizziness that overcame me, the sinking feeling in my heart, the awe, and
the foreboding that I had challenged a force in Nature which might defy
all tireless effort and the most fearless heart.</p>
<p>So the hostler had not been fibbing after all!</p>
<p>But not for a moment did I think of turning back. I am fatalistic in
temperament. What is to be, is to be, that is not my outlook. If at last
we should get bound up in a drift, well and good, I should then see what
the next move would have to be. While the wind blows, snow drifts; while
my horses could walk and I was not disabled, my road led north, not south.
Like the snow I obeyed the laws of my nature. So far the road was good,
and we swung along.</p>
<p>Somewhere around here a field presented a curious view Its crop had not
been harvested; it still stood in stooks. But from my side I saw nothing
of the sheaves—it seemed to be flax, for here and there a flag of
loose heads showed at the top. The snow had been blown up from all
directions, so it looked, by the counter-currents that set up in the lee
of every obstacle. These mounds presented one and all the appearance of
cones or pyramids of butter patted into shape by upward strokes made with
a spoon. There were the sharp ridges, irregular and erratic, and there
were the hollows running up their flanks—exactly as such a cone of
butter will show them. And the whole field was dotted with them, as if
there were so many fresh graves.</p>
<p>I made the twelve-mile bridge—passing through the cottonwood gate—reached
the “hovel,” and dropped into the wilderness again. Here the bigger trees
stood strangely bare. Winter reveals the bark and the “habit” of trees.
All ornaments and unessentials have been dropped. The naked skeletons show
I remember how I was more than ever struck by that dappled appearance of
the bark of the balm: an olive-green, yellowish hue, ridged and spotted
with the black of ancient, overgrown leaf-scars; there was actually
something gay about it; these poplars are certainly beautiful winter
trees. The aspens were different. Although their stems stood white on
white in the snow, that greenish tinge in their white gave them a curious
look. From the picture that I carry about in my memory of this morning I
cannot help the impression that they looked as if their white were not
natural at all; they looked white-washed! I have often since confirmed
this impression when there was snow on the ground.</p>
<p>In the copses of saplings the zigzagging of the boles from twig to twig
showed very distinctly, more so, I believe, than to me it had ever done
before. How slender and straight they look in their summer garb—now
they were stripped, and bone and sinew appeared.</p>
<p>We came to the “half way farms,” and the marsh lay ahead. I watered the
horses, and I do not know what made me rest them for a little while, but I
did. On the yard of the farm where I had turned in there was not a soul to
be seen. Barns and stables were closed—and I noticed that the back
door of the dwelling was buried tight by the snow. No doubt everybody
preferred the neighbourhood of the fire to the cold outside. While
stopping, I faced for the first time the sun. He was high in the sky by
now—it was half-past ten—and it suddenly came home to me that
there was something relentless, inexorable, cruel, yes, something of a
sneer in the pitiless way in which he looked down on the infertile waste
around. Unaccountably two Greek words formed on my lips: Homer’s Pontos
atrygetos—the barren sea. Half an hour later I was to realize the
significance of it.</p>
<p>I turned back to the road and north again. For another half mile the
fields continued on either side; but somehow they seemed to take on a
sinister look. There was more snow on them than I had found on the level
land further south; the snow lay more smoothly, again under those
“exfoliated” surface sheets which here, too, gave it an inhuman, primeval
look; in the higher sun the vast expanse looked, I suppose, more
blindingly white; and nowhere did buildings or thickets seem to emerge.
Yet, so long as the grade continued, the going was fair enough.</p>
<p>Then I came to the corner which marked half the distance, and there I
stopped. Right in front, where the trail had been and where a ditch had
divided off the marsh, a fortress of snow lay now: a seemingly impregnable
bulwark, six or seven feet high, with rounded top, fitting descriptions
which I had read of the underground bomb-proofs around Belgian strongholds—those
forts which were hammered to pieces by the Germans in their first,
heart-breaking forward surge in 1914. There was not a wrinkle in this
inverted bowl. There it lay, smooth and slick—curled up in security,
as it were, some twenty, thirty feet across; and behind it others, and
more of them to the right and to the left. This had been a stretch,
covered with brush and bush, willow and poplar thickets; but my eye saw
nothing except a mammiferous waste, cruelly white, glittering in the
heatless, chuckling sun, and scoffing at me, the intruder. I stood up
again and peered out. To the east it seemed as if these buttes of snow
were a trifle lower; but maybe the ground underneath also sloped down. I
wished I had travelled here more often by daytime, so I might know. As it
was, there was nothing to it; I had to tackle the task. And we plunged in.</p>
<p>I had learned something from my first experience in the drift one mile
north of town, and I kept my horses well under control. Still, it was a
wild enough dash. Peter lost his footing two or three times and worked
himself into a mild panic. But Dan—I could not help admiring the way
in which, buried over his back in snow, he would slowly and deliberately
rear on his hindfeet and take his bound. For fully five minutes I never
saw anything of the horses except their heads. I inferred their motions
from the dusting snowcloud that rose above their bodies and settled on
myself. And then somehow we emerged. We reached a stretch of ground where
the snow was just high enough to cover the hocks of the horses. It was a
hollow scooped out by some freak of the wind. I pulled in, and the horses
stood panting. Peter no longer showed any desire to fret and to jump. Both
horses apparently felt the wisdom of sparing their strength. They were all
white with the frost of their sweat and the spray of the snow...</p>
<p>While I gave them their time, I looked around, and here a lesson came home
to me. In the hollow where we stood, the snow did not lie smoothly. A huge
obstacle to the northwest, probably a buried clump of brush, had made the
wind turn back upon itself, first downward, then, at the bottom of the
pit, in a direction opposite to that of the main current above, and
finally slantways upward again to the summit of the obstacle, where it
rejoined the parent blow. The floor of the hollow was cleanly scooped out
and chiselled in low ridges; and these ridges came from the southeast,
running their points to the northwest. I learned to look out for this
sign, and I verily believe that, had I not learned that lesson right now,
I should never have reached the creek which was still four or five miles
distant.</p>
<p>The huge mound in the lee of which I was stopping was a matter of two
hundred yards away; nearer to it the snow was considerably deeper; and
since it presented an appearance very characteristic of Prairie
bush-drifts, I shall describe it in some detail. Apparently the winds had
first bent over all the stems of the clump; for whenever I saw one of them
from the north, it showed a smooth, clean upward sweep. On the south side
the snow first fell in a sheer cliff; then there was a hollow which was
partly filled by a talus-shaped drift thrown in by the counter currents
from the southern pit in which we were stopping; the sides of this talus
again showed the marks that reminded of those left by the spoon when
butter is roughly stroked into the shape of a pyramid. The interesting
parts of the structure consisted in the beetling brow of the cliff and the
roof of the cavity underneath. The brow had a honeycombed appearance; the
snow had been laid down in layers of varying density (I shall discuss this
more fully in the next chapter when we are going to look in on the snow
while it is actually at work); and the counter currents that here swept
upward in a slanting direction had bitten out the softer layers, leaving a
fine network of little ridges which reminded strangely of the delicate
fretwork-tracery in wind-sculptured rock—as I had seen it in the
Black Hills in South Dakota. This piece of work of the wind is exceedingly
short-lived in snow, and it must not be confounded with the honeycombed
appearance of those faces of snow cliffs which are “rotting” by reason of
their exposure to the heat of the noonday sun. These latter are coarse,
often dirty, and nearly always have something bristling about them which
is entirely absent in the sculptures of the wind. The under side of the
roof in the cavity looked very much as a very stiff or viscid treacle
would look when spread over a meshy surface, as, for instance, over a
closely woven netting of wire. The stems and the branches of the brush
took the place of the wire, and in their meshes the snow had been pressed
through by its own weight, but held together by its curious ductility or
tensile strength of which I was to find further evidence soon enough. It
thus formed innumerable, blunted little stalactites, but without the
corresponding stalagmites which you find in limestone caves or on the
north side of buildings when the snow from the roof thaws and forms
icicles and slender cones of ice growing up to meet them from the ground
where the trickling drops fall and freeze again.</p>
<p>By the help of these various tokens I had picked my next resting place
before we started up again. It was on this second dash that I understood
why those Homeric words had come to my lips a while ago. This was indeed
like nothing so much as like being out on rough waters and in a troubled
sea, with nothing to brace the storm with but a wind-tossed nutshell of a
one-man sailing craft. I knew that experience for having outridden many a
gale in the mouth of the mighty St. Lawrence River. When the snow reached
its extreme in depth, it gave you the feeling which a drowning man may
have when fighting his desperate fight with the salty waves. But more
impressive than that was the frequent outer resemblance. The waves of the
ocean rise up and reach out and batter against the rocks and battlements
of the shore, retreating again and ever returning to the assault, covering
the obstacles thrown in the way of their progress with thin sheets of
licking tongues at least. And if such a high crest wave had suddenly been
frozen into solidity, its outline would have mimicked to perfection many a
one of the snow shapes that I saw around.</p>
<p>Once the horses had really learned to pull exactly together—and they
learned it thoroughly here—our progress was not too bad. Of course,
it was not like going on a grade, be it ever so badly drifted in. Here the
ground underneath, too, was uneven and overgrown with a veritable
entanglement of brush in which often the horses’ feet would get caught. As
for the road, there was none left, nothing that even by the boldest
stretch of imagination could have been considered even as the slightest
indication of one. And worst of all, I knew positively that there would be
no trail at any time during the winter. I was well aware of the fact that,
after it once snowed up, nobody ever crossed this waste between the “half
way farms” and the “White Range Line House.” This morning it took me two
and a half solid hours to make four miles.</p>
<p>But the ordeal had its reward. Here where the fact that there was snow on
the ground, and plenty of it, did no longer need to be sunk into my brain—as
soon as it had lost its value as a piece of news and a lesson, I began to
enjoy it just as the hunter in India will enjoy the battle of wits when he
is pitted against a yellow-black tiger. I began to catch on to the ways of
this snow; I began, as it were, to study the mentality of my enemy. Though
I never kill, I am after all something of a sportsman. And still another
thing gave me back that mental equilibrium which you need in order to see
things and to reason calmly about them. Every dash of two hundred yards or
so brought me that much nearer to my goal. Up to the “half way farms” I
had, as it were, been working uphill: there was more ahead than behind.
This was now reversed: there was more behind than ahead, and as yet I did
not worry about the return trip.</p>
<p>Now I have already said that snow is the only really plastic element in
which the wind can carve the vagaries of its mood and leave a record of at
least some permanency. The surface of the sea is a wonderful book to be
read with a lightning-quick eye; I do not know anything better to do as a
cure for ragged nerves—provided you are a good sailor. But the forms
are too fleeting, they change too quickly—so quickly, indeed, that I
have never succeeded in so fixing their record upon my memory as to be
able to develop one form from the other in descriptive notes. It is that
very fact, I believe, upon which hinges the curative value of the sight:
you are so completely absorbed by the moment, and all other things fall
away. Many and many a day have I lain in my deck chair on board a liner
and watched the play of the waves; but the pleasure, which was very great
indeed, was momentary; and sometimes, when in an unsympathetic mood, I
have since impatiently wondered in what that fascination may have
consisted. It was different here. Snow is very nearly as yielding as water
and, once it fully responds in its surface to the carving forces of the
wind, it stays—as if frozen into the glittering marble image of its
motion. I know few things that are as truly fascinating as the sculptures
of the wind in snow; for here you have time and opportunity a-plenty to
probe not only into the what, but also into the why. Maybe that one day I
shall write down a fuller account of my observations. In this report I
shall have to restrict myself to a few indications, for this is not the
record of the whims of the wind, but merely the narrative of my drives.</p>
<p>In places, for instance, the rounded, “bomb-proof” aspect of the expanses
would be changed into the distinct contour of gigantic waves with a very
fine, very sharp crest-line. The upsweep from the northwest would be ever
so slightly convex, and the downward sweep into the trough was always very
distinctly concave. This was not the ripple which we find in beach sand.
That ripple was there, too, and in places it covered the wide backs of
these huge waves all over; but never was it found on the concave side.
Occasionally, but rarely, one of these great waves would resemble a large
breaker with a curly crest. Here the onward sweep from the northwest had
built the snow out, beyond the supporting base, into a thick overhanging
ledge which here and there had sagged; but by virtue of that tensile
strength and cohesion in snow which I have mentioned already, it still
held together and now looked convoluted and ruffled in the most deceiving
way. I believe I actually listened for the muffled roar which the breaker
makes when its subaqueous part begins to sweep the upward sloping beach.
To make this illusion complete, or to break it by the very absurdity and
exaggeration of a comparison drawn out too far—I do not know which—there
would, every now and then, from the crest of one of these waves, jut out
something which closely resembled the wide back of a large fish diving
down into the concave side towards the trough. This looked very much like
porpoises or dolphins jumping in a heaving sea; only that in my memory
picture the real dolphins always jump in the opposite direction, against
the run of the waves, bridging the trough.</p>
<p>In other places a fine, exceedingly delicate crest-line would spring up
from the high point of some buried obstacle and sweep along in the most
graceful curve as far as the eye would carry I particularly remember one
of them, and I could discover no earthly reason for the curvature in it.</p>
<p>Again there would be a triangular—or should I say “tetrahedral”?—up-sweep
from the direction of the wind, ending in a sharp, perfectly plane
down-sweep on the south side; and the point of this three-sided but
oblique pyramid would hang over like the flap of a tam. There was
something of the consistency of very thick cloth about this overhanging
flap.</p>
<p>Or an up-slope from the north would end in a long, nearly perpendicular
cliff-line facing south. And the talus formation which I have mentioned
would be perfectly smooth; but it did not reach quite to the top of the
cliff, maybe to within a foot of it. The upsloping layer from the north
would hang out again, with an even brow; but between this smooth cornice
and the upper edge of the talus the snow looked as if it had been squeezed
out by tremendous pressure from above, like an exceedingly viscid liquid—cooling
glue, for instance, which is being squeezed out from between the core and
the veneer in a veneering press.</p>
<p>Once I passed close to and south of, two thickets which were completely
buried by the snow. Between them a ditch had been scooped out in a very
curious fashion. It resembled exactly a winding river bed with its water
drained off; it was two or three feet deep, and wherever it turned, its
banks were undermined on the “throw” side by the “wash” of the furious
blow. The analogy between the work of the wind and the work of flowing
water constantly obtrudes, especially where this work is one of “erosion.”</p>
<p>But as flowing water will swing up and down in the most surprising forms
where the bed of the river is rough with rocks and throws it into choppy
waves which do not seem to move, so the snow was thrown up into the most
curious forms where the frozen swamp ground underneath had bubbled, as it
were, into phantastic shapes. I remember several places where a perfect
circle was formed by a sharp crestline that bounded an hemispherical,
crater-like hollow. When steam bubbles up through thick porridge, in its
leisurely and impeded way, and the bubble bursts with a clucking sound,
then for a moment a crater is formed just like these circular holes; only
here in the snow they were on a much larger scale, of course, some of them
six to ten feet in diameter.</p>
<p>And again the snow was thrown up into a bulwark, twenty and more feet
high, with that always repeating cliff face to the south, resembling a
miniature Gibraltar, with many smaller ones of most curiously similar form
on its back: bulwarks upon bulwarks, all lowering to the south. In these
the aggressive nature of storm-flung snow was most apparent. They were
formidable structures; formidable and intimidating, more through the
suggestiveness of their shape than through mere size.</p>
<p>I came to places where the wind had had its moments of frolicksome humour,
where it had made grim fun of its own massive and cumbersome and yet so
pliable and elastic majesty. It had turned around and around, running with
breathless speed, with its tongue lolling out, as it were, and probably
yapping and snapping in mocking mimicry of a pup trying to catch its tail;
and it had scooped out a spiral trough with overhanging rim. I felt sorry
that I had not been there to watch it, because after all, what I saw, was
only the dead record of something that had been very much alive and
vociferatingly noisy. And in another place it had reared and raised its
head like a boa constrictor, ready to strike at its prey; up to the
flashing, forked tongue it was there. But one spot I remember, where it
looked exactly as if quite consciously it had attempted the outright
ludicrous: it had thrown up the snow into the semblance of some formidable
animal—more like a gorilla than anything else it looked, a gorilla
that stands on its four hands and raises every hair on its back and snarls
in order to frighten that which it is afraid of itself—a leopard
maybe.</p>
<p>And then I reached the “White Range Line House.” Curiously enough, there
it stood, sheltered by its majestic bluff to the north, as peaceful
looking as if there were no such a thing as that record, which I had
crossed, of the uproar and fury of one of the forces of Nature engaged in
an orgy. And it looked so empty, too, and so deserted, with never a wisp
of smoke curling from its flue-pipe, that for a moment I was tempted to
turn in and see whether maybe the lonely dweller was ill. But then I felt
as if I could not be burdened with any stranger’s worries that day.</p>
<p>The effective shelter of the poplar forest along the creek made itself
felt. The last mile to the northeast was peaceful driving. I felt quite
cheered, though I walked the horses over the whole of the mile since both
began to show signs of wear. The last four miles had been a test to try
any living creature’s mettle. To me it had been one of the culminating
points in that glorious winter, but the horses had lacked the mental
stimulus, and even I felt rather exhausted.</p>
<p>On the bridge I stopped, threw the blankets over the horses, and fed.
Somehow this seemed to be the best place to do it. There was no snow to
speak of, and I did not know yet what might follow. The horses were
drooping, and I gave them an additional ten minutes’ rest. Then I slowly
made ready. I did not really expect any serious trouble.</p>
<p>We turned at a walk, and the chasm of the bush road opened up. Instantly I
pulled the horses in. What I saw, baffled me for a moment so completely
that I just sat there and gasped. There was no road. The trees to both
sides were not so overly high, but the snow had piled in level with their
tops; the drift looked like a gigantic barricade. It was that fleeting
sight of the telephone posts over again, though on a slightly smaller
scale; but this time it was in front. Slowly I started to whistle and then
looked around. I remembered now. There was a newly cut-out road running
north past the school which lay embedded in the bush. It had offered a
lane to the wind; and the wind, going there, in cramped space, at a doubly
furious stride, had picked up and carried along all the loose snow from
the grassy glades in its path. The road ended abruptly just north of the
drift, where the east-west grade sprang up. When the wind had reached this
end of the lane, where the bush ran at right angles to its direction, it
had found itself in something like a blind alley, and, sweeping upward, to
clear the obstacle, it had dropped every bit of its load into the shelter
of the brush, gradually, in the course of three long days, building up a
ridge that buried underbrush and trees. I might have known it, of course.
I knew enough about snow; all the conditions for an exceptionally large
drift were provided for here. But it had not occurred to me, especially
after I had found the northern fringe of the marsh so well sheltered. Here
I felt for a moment as if all the snow of the universe had piled in. As I
said, I was so completely baffled that I could have turned the horses then
and there.</p>
<p>But after a minute or two my eyes began to cast about. I turned to the
south, right into the dense underbrush and towards the creek which here
swept south in a long, flat curve. Peter was always intolerant of anything
that moved underfoot. He started to bolt when the dry and hard-frozen
stems snapped and broke with reports resembling pistol shots. But since
Dan kept quiet, I held Peter well in hand. I went along the drift for
maybe three to four hundred yards, reconnoitring. Then the trees began to
stand too dense for me to proceed without endangering my cutter. Just
beyond I saw the big trough of the creek bed, and though I could not make
out how conditions were at its bottom, the drift continued on its southern
bank, and in any case it was impossible to cross the hollow. So I turned;
I had made up my mind to try the drift.</p>
<p>About a hundred and fifty yards from the point where I had turned off the
road there was something like a fold in the flank of the drift. At its
foot I stopped. For a moment I tried to explain that fold to myself. This
is what I arrived at. North of the drift, just about where the new cut-out
joined the east-west grade, there was a small clearing caused by a bush
fire which a few years ago had penetrated thus far into this otherwise
virgin corner of the forest. Unfortunately it stood so full of charred
stumps that it was impossible to get through there. But the main currents
of the wind would have free play in this opening, and I knew that, when
the blizzard began, it had been blowing from a more northerly quarter than
later on, when it veered to the northwest. And though the snow came
careering along the lane of the cut-out, that is, from due north, its
“throw” and therefore, the direction of the drift would be determined by
the direction of the wind that took charge of it on this clearing.
Probably, then, a first, provisional drift whose long axis lay nearly in a
north-south line, had been piled up by the first, northerly gale. Later a
second, larger drift had been superimposed upon it at an angle, with its
main axis running from the northwest to the southeast. The fold marked the
point where the first, smaller drift still emerged from the second larger
one. This reasoning was confirmed by a study of the clearing itself which
I came to make two or three weeks after.</p>
<p>Before I called on the horses to give me their very last ounce of
strength, I got out of my cutter once more and made sure that my lines
were still sound. I trusted my ability to guide the horses even in this
crucial test, but I dreaded nothing so much as that the lines might break;
and I wanted to guard against any accident. I should mention that, of
course, the top of my cutter was down, that the traces of the harness were
new, and that the cutter itself during its previous trials had shown an
exceptional stability. Once more I thus rested my horses for five minutes;
and they seemed to realize what was coming. Their heads were up, their
ears were cocked. When I got back into my cutter, I carefully brushed the
snow from moccasins and trousers, laid the robe around my feet, adjusted
my knees against the dashboard, and tied two big loops into the lines to
hold them by.</p>
<p>Then I clicked my tongue. The horses bounded upward in unison. For a
moment it looked as if they intended to work through, instead of over, the
drift. A wild shower of angular snow-slabs swept in upon me. The cutter
reared up and plunged and reared again—and then the view cleared.
The snow proved harder than I had anticipated—which bespoke the fury
of the blow that had piled it. It did not carry the horses, but neither—once
we had reached a height of five or six feet—did they sink beyond
their bellies and out of sight. I had no eye for anything except them.
What lay to right or left, seemed not to concern me. I watched them work.
They went in bounds, working beautifully together. Rhythmically they
reared, and rhythmically they plunged. I had dropped back to the seat,
holding them with a firm hand, feet braced against the dashboard; and
whenever they got ready to rear, I called to them in a low and quiet
voice, “Peter—Dan—now!” And their muscles played with the
effort of desperation. It probably did not take more than five minutes,
maybe considerably less, before we had reached the top, but to me it
seemed like hours of nearly fruitless endeavour. I did not realize at
first that we were high. I shall never forget the weird kind of
astonishment when the fact came home to me that what snapped and crackled
in the snow under the horses’ hoofs, were the tops of trees. Nor shall the
feeling of estrangement, as it were—as if I were not myself, but
looking on from the outside at the adventure of somebody who yet was I—the
feeling of other-worldliness, if you will pardon the word, ever fade from
my memory—a feeling of having been carried beyond my depth where I
could not swim—which came over me when with two quick glances to
right and left I took in the fact that there were no longer any trees to
either side, that I was above that forest world which had so often
engulfed me.</p>
<p>Then I drew my lines in. The horses fought against it, did not want to
stand. But I had to find my way, and while they were going, I could not
take my eyes from them. It took a supreme effort on my part to make them
obey. At last they stood, but I had to hold them with all my strength, and
with not a second’s respite. Now that I was on top of the drift, the
problem of how to get down loomed larger than that of getting up had
seemed before. I knew I did not have half a minute in which to decide upon
my course; for it became increasingly difficult to hold the horses back,
and they were fast sinking away.</p>
<p>During this short breathing spell I took in the situation. We had come up
in a northeast direction, slanting along the slope. Once on top, I had
instinctively turned to the north. Here the drift was about twenty feet
wide, perfectly level and with an exfoliated surface layer. To the east
the drift fell steeply, with a clean, smooth cliff-line marking off the
beginning of the descent; this line seemed particularly disconcerting, for
it betrayed the concave curvature of the down-sweep. A few yards to the
north I saw below, at the foot of the cliff, the old logging-trail, and I
noticed that the snow on it lay as it had fallen, smooth and sheer,
without a ripple of a drift. It looked like mockery. And yet that was
where I had to get down.</p>
<p>The next few minutes are rather a maze in my memory. But two pictures were
photographed with great distinctness. The one is of the moment when we
went over the edge. For a second Peter reared up, pawing the air with his
forefeet; Dan tried to back away from the empty fall. I had at this
excruciating point no purchase whatever on the lines. Then apparently
Peter sat or fell down, I do not know which, on his haunches and began to
slide. The cutter lurched to the left as if it were going to spill all it
held. Dan was knocked off his hind feet by the drawbar—and we
plunged... We came to with a terrific jolt that sent me in a heap against
the dashboard. One jump, and I stood on the ground. The cutter—and
this is the second picture which is etched clearly on the plate of my
memory—stood on its pole, leaning at an angle of forty-five degrees
against the drift. The horses were as if stunned. “Dan, Peter!” I shouted,
and they struggled to their feet. They were badly winded, but otherwise
everything seemed all right. I looked wistfully back and up at the gully
which we had torn into the flank of the drift.</p>
<p>I should gladly have breathed the horses again, but they were hot, the air
was at zero or colder, the rays of the sun had begun to slant. I walked
for a while alongside the team. They were drooping sadly. Then I got in
again, driving them slowly till we came to the crossing of the ditch. I
had no eye for the grade ahead. On the bush road the going was good—now
and then a small drift, but nothing alarming anywhere. The anti-climax had
set in. Again the speckled trunks of the balm poplars struck my eye, now
interspersed with the scarlet stems of the red osier dogwood. But they
failed to cheer me—they were mere facts, unable to stir moods...</p>
<p>I began to think. A few weeks ago I had met that American settler with the
French sounding name who lived alongside the angling dam further north. We
had talked snow, and he had said, “Oh, up here it never is bad except
along this grade,”—we were stopping on the last east-west grade, the
one I was coming to—“there you cannot get through. You’d kill your
horses. Level with the tree-tops.” Well, I had had just that a little
while ago—I could not afford any more of it. So I made up my mind to
try a new trail, across a section which was fenced. It meant getting out
of my robes twice more, to open the gates, but I preferred that to another
tree-high drift. To spare my horses was now my only consideration. I
should not have liked to take the new trail by night, for fear of missing
the gates; but that objection did not hold just now. Horses and I were
pretty well spent. So, instead of forking off the main trail to the north
we went straight ahead.</p>
<p>In due time I came to the bridge which I had to cross in order to get up
on the dam. Here I saw—in an absent-minded, half unconscious, and
uninterested way—one more structure built by architect wind. The
deep master ditch from the north emptied here, to the left of the bridge,
into the grade ditch which ran east and west. And at the corner the snow
had very nearly bridged it—so nearly that you could easily have
stepped across the remaining gap. But below it was hollow—nothing
supported the bridge—it was a mere arch, with a vault underneath
that looked temptingly sheltered and cosy to wearied eyes.</p>
<p>The dam was bare, and I had to pull off to the east, on to the swampy
plain. I gave my horses the lines, and slowly, slowly they took me home!
Even had I not always lost interest here, to-day I should have leaned back
and rested. Although the horses had done all the actual work, the strain
of it had been largely on me. It was the after-effect that set in now.</p>
<p>I thought of my wife, and of how she would have felt had she been able to
follow the scenes in some magical mirror through every single vicissitude
of my drive. And once more I saw with the eye of recent memory the horses
in that long, endless plunge through the corner of the marsh. Once more I
felt my muscles a-quiver with the strain of that last wild struggle over
that last, inhuman drift. And slowly I made up my mind that the next time,
the very next day, on my return trip, I was going to add another eleven
miles to my already long drive and to take a different road. I knew the
trail over which I had been coming so far was closed for the rest of the
winter—there was no traffic there—no trail would be kept open.
That other road of which I was thinking and which lay further west was the
main cordwood trail to the towns in the south. It was out of my way, to be
sure, but I felt convinced that I could spare my horses and even save time
by making the detour.</p>
<p>Being on the east side of the dam, I could not see school or cottage till
I turned up on the correction line. But when at last I saw it, I felt
somewhat as I had felt coming home from my first big trip overseas. It
seemed a lifetime since I had started out. I seemed to be a different man.</p>
<p>Here, in the timber land, the snow had not drifted to any extent. There
were signs of the gale, but its record was written in fallen tree trunks,
broken branches, a litter of twigs—not in drifts of snow. My wife
would not surmise what I had gone through.</p>
<p>She came out with a smile on her face when I pulled in on the yard. It was
characteristic of her that she did not ask why I came so late; she
accepted the fact as something for which there were no doubt compelling
reasons. “I was giving our girl a bath,” she said; “she cannot come.” And
then she looked wistfully at my face and at the horses. Silently I slipped
the harness off their backs. I used to let them have their freedom for a
while on reaching home. And never yet but Peter at least had had a kick
and a caper and a roll before they sought their mangers. To-day they stood
for a moment knock-kneed, without moving, then shook themselves in a weak,
half-hearted way and went with drooping heads and weary limbs straight to
the stable.</p>
<p>“You had a hard trip?” asked my wife; and I replied with as much cheer as
I could muster, “I have seen sights to-day that I did not expect to see
before my dying day.” And taking her arm, I looked at the westering sun
and turned towards the house.</p>
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0006" id="link2H_4_0006"></SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> FIVE. Wind and Waves </h2>
<p>When I awoke on the morning after the last described arrival at “home,” I
thought of the angry glow in the east at sunrise of the day before. It had
been cold again over night, so cold that in the small cottage, whatever
was capable of freezing, froze to its very core. The frost had even
penetrated the hole which in this “teacher’s residence” made shift for a
cellar, and, in spite of their being covered with layer upon layer of
empty bags, had sweetened the winter’s supply of potatoes.</p>
<p>But towards morning there had been a let-up, a sudden rise in temperature,
as we experience it so often, coincident with a change in the direction of
the wind, which now blew rather briskly from the south, foreboding a
storm.</p>
<p>I got the horses ready at an early hour, for I was going to try the
roundabout way at last, forty-five miles of it; and never before had I
gone over the whole of it in winter. Even in summer I had done so only
once, and that in a car, when I had accompanied the school-inspector on
one of his trips. I wanted to make sure that I should be ready in time to
start at ten o’clock in the morning.</p>
<p>This new road had chiefly two features which recommended it to me.
Firstly, about thirty-eight miles out of forty-five led through a fairly
well settled district where I could hope to find a chain of short-haul
trails. The widest gap in this series of settlements was one of two miles
where there was wild land. The remaining seven miles, it is true, led
across that wilderness on the east side of which lay Bell’s farm. This
piece, however, I knew so well that I felt sure of finding my way there by
night or day in any reasonable kind of weather. Nor did I expect to find
it badly drifted. And secondly, about twenty-nine miles from “home” I
should pass within one mile of a town which boasted of boarding house and
livery stable, offering thus, in case of an emergency, a convenient
stopping place.</p>
<p>I watched the sky rather anxiously, not so much on my own account as
because my wife, seeing me start, would worry a good deal should that
start be made in foul weather. At nine the sky began to get grey in spots.
Shortly after a big cloud came sailing up, and I went out to watch it. And
sure enough, it had that altogether loose appearance, with those
wind-torn, cottony appendages hanging down from its darker upper body
which are sure to bring snow. Lower away in the south—a rare thing
to come from the south in our climate—there lay a black squall-cloud
with a rounded outline, like a big windbag, resembling nothing so much as
a fat boy’s face with its cheeks blown out, when he tries to fill a
football with the pressure from his lungs. That was an infallible sign.
The first cloud, which was travelling fast, might blow over. The second,
larger one was sure to bring wind a-plenty. But still there was hope. So
long as it did not bring outright snow, my wife would not worry so much.
Here where she was, the snow would not drift—there was altogether
too much bush. She—not having been much of an observer of the skies
before—dreaded the snowstorm more than the blizzard. I knew the
latter was what portended danger.</p>
<p>When I turned back into the house, a new thought struck me. I spoke to my
wife, who was putting up a lunch for me, and proposed to take her and our
little girl over to a neighbour’s place a mile and a half west of the
school. Those people were among the very few who had been decent to her,
and the visit would beguile the weary Sunday afternoon. She agreed at
once. So we all got ready; I brought the horses out and hooked them up,
alone—no trouble from them this morning: they were quiet enough when
they drank deep at the well.</p>
<p>A few whirls of snow had come down meanwhile—not enough, however, as
yet to show as a new layer on the older snow. Again a cloud had torn loose
from that squall-bag on the horizon, and again it showed that cottony,
fringy, whitish under layer which meant snow. I raised the top of the
cutter and fastened the curtains.</p>
<p>By the time we three piled in, the thin flakes were dancing all around
again, dusting our furs with their thin, glittering crystals. I bandied
baby-talk with the little girl to make things look cheerful, but there was
anguish in the young woman’s look. I saw she would like to ask me to stay
over till Monday, but she knew that I considered it my duty to get back to
town by night.</p>
<p>The short drive to the neighbour’s place was pleasant enough. There was
plenty of snow on this part of the correction line, which farther east was
bare; and it was packed down by abundant traffic. Then came the parting. I
kissed wife and child; and slowly, accompanied by much waving of hands on
the part of the little girl and a rather depressed looking smile on that
of my wife, I turned on the yard and swung back to the road. The cliffs of
black poplar boles engulfed me at once: a sheltered grade.</p>
<p>But I had not yet gone very far—a mile perhaps, or a little over—when
the trees began to bend under the impact of that squall. Nearly at the
same moment the sun, which so far had been shining in an intermittent way,
was blotted from the sky, and it turned almost dusky. For a long while—for
more than an hour, indeed—it had seemed as if that black
squall-cloud were lying motionless at the horizon—an anchored ship,
bulging at its wharf. But then, as if its moorings had been cast off, or
its sails unfurled, it travelled up with amazing speed. The wind had an
easterly slant to it—a rare thing with us for a wind from that
quarter to bring a heavy storm. The gale had hardly been blowing for ten
or fifteen minutes, when the snow began to whirl down. It came in the
tiniest possible flakes, consisting this time of short needles that looked
like miniature spindles, strung with the smallest imaginable globules of
ice—no six-armed crystals that I could find so far. Many a snowstorm
begins that way with us. And there was even here, in the chasm of the
road, a swing and dance to the flakes that bespoke the force of the wind
above.</p>
<p>My total direction—after I should have turned off the correction
line—lay to the southeast; into the very teeth of the wind. I had to
make it by laps though, first south, then east, then south again, with the
exception of six or seven miles across the wild land west of Bell’s
corner; there, as nearly as I could hold the direction, I should have to
strike a true line southeast.</p>
<p>I timed my horses; I could not possibly urge them on to-day. They took
about nine minutes to the mile, and I knew I should have to give them many
a walk. That meant at best a drive of eight hours. It would be dark before
I reached town. I did not mind that, for I knew there would be many a
night drive ahead, and I felt sure that that half-mile on the southern
correction line, one mile from town, would have been gone over on Saturday
by quite a number of teams. The snow settles down considerably, too, in
thirty hours, especially under the pressure of wind. If a trail had been
made over the drift, I was confident my horses would find it without fail.
So I dismissed all anxiety on my own score.</p>
<p>But all the more did the thought of my wife worry me. If only I could have
made her see things with my own eyes—but I could not. She regarded
me as an invalid whose health was undermined by a wasting illness and who
needed nursing and coddling on the slightest provocation. Instead of
drawing Nature’s inference that, what cannot live, should die, she clung
to the slender thread of life that sometimes threatened to break—but
never on these drives. I often told her that, if I could make my living by
driving instead of teaching, I should feel the stronger, the healthier,
and the better for it—my main problem would have been solved. But
she, with a woman’s instinct for shelter and home, cowered down before
every one of Nature’s menaces. And yet she bore up with remarkable
courage.</p>
<p>A mile or so before I came to the turn in my road the forest withdrew on
both sides, yielding space to the fields and elbow-room for the wind to
unfold its wings. As soon as its full force struck the cutter, the
curtains began to emit that crackling sound which indicates to the sailor
that he has turned his craft as far into the wind as he can safely do
without losing speed. Little ripples ran through the bulging canvas. As
yet I sat snug and sheltered within, my left shoulder turned to the
weather, but soon I sighted dimly a curtain of trees that ran at right
angles to my road. Behind it there stood a school building, and beyond
that I should have to turn south. I gave the horses a walk. I decided to
give them a walk of five minutes for every hour they trotted along. We
reached the corner that way and I started them up again.</p>
<p>Instantly things changed. We met the wind at an angle of about thirty
degrees from the southeast. The air looked thick ahead. I moved into the
left-hand corner of the seat, and though the full force of the wind did
not strike me there, the whirling snow did not respect my shelter. It blew
in slantways under the top, then described a curve upward, and downward
again, as if it were going to settle on the right end of the back. But
just before it touched the back, it turned at a sharp angle and piled on
to my right side. A fair proportion of it reached my face which soon
became wet and then caked over with ice. There was a sting to the flakes
which made them rather disagreeable. My right eye kept closing up, and I
had to wipe it ever so often to keep it open. The wind, too, for the first
and only time on my drives, somehow found an entrance into the lower part
of the cutter box, and though my feet were resting on the heater and my
legs were wrapped, first in woollen and then in leather leggings, besides
being covered with a good fur robe, my left side soon began to feel the
cold. It may be that this comparative discomfort, which I had to endure
for the better part of the day, somewhat coloured the kind of experience
this drive became.</p>
<p>As far as the road was concerned, I had as yet little to complain of.
About three miles from the turn there stood a Lutheran church frequented
by the Russian Germans that formed a settlement for miles around. They had
made the trail for me on these three miles, and even for a matter of four
or five miles south of the church, as I found out. It is that kind of a
road which you want for long drives: where others who have short drives
and, therefore, do not need to consider their horses break the crust of
the snow and pack it down. I hoped that a goodly part of my day’s trip
would be in the nature of a chain of shorter, much frequented stretches;
and on the whole I was not to be disappointed.</p>
<p>Doubtless all my readers know how a country road that is covered with from
two to three feet of snow will look when the trail is broken. There is a
smooth expanse, mostly somewhat hardened at the surface, and there are two
deep-cut tracks in it, each about ten to twelve inches wide, sharply
defined, with the snow at the bottom packed down by the horses’ feet and
the runners of the respective conveyances. So long as you have such a
trail and horses with road sense, you do not need to worry about your
directions, no matter how badly it may blow. Horses that are used to
travelling in the snow will never leave the trail, for they dread nothing
so much as breaking in on the sides. This fact released my attention for
other things.</p>
<p>Now I thought again for a while of home, of how my wife would be worrying,
how even the little girl would be infected by her nervousness—how
she would ask, “Mamma, is Daddy in... now?” But I did not care to follow
up these thoughts too far. They made me feel too soft.</p>
<p>After that I just sat there for a while and looked ahead. But I saw only
the whirl, whirl, whirl of the snow slanting across my field of vision.
You are closed in by it as by insecure and ever receding walls when you
drive in a snowstorm. If I had met a team, I could not have seen it, and
if my safety had depended on my discerning it in time to turn out of the
road, my safety would not have been very safe indeed. But I could rely on
my horses: they would hear the bells of any encountering conveyance long
enough ahead to betray it to me by their behaviour. And should I not even
notice that, they would turn out in time of their own accord: they had a
great deal of road sense.</p>
<p>Weariness overcame me. In the open the howling and whistling of the wind
always acts on me like a soporific. Inside of a house it is just the
reverse; I know nothing that will keep my nerves as much on edge and
prevent me as certainly from sleeping as the voices at night of a gale
around the buildings. I needed something more definite to look at than
that prospect ahead. The snow was by this time piling in on the seat at my
right and in the box, so as to exclude all drafts except from below I felt
that as a distinct advantage.</p>
<p>Without any conscious intention I began to peer out below the slanting
edge of the left side-curtain and to watch the sharp crest-wave of
snow-spray thrown by the curve of the runner where it cut into the freshly
accumulating mass. It looked like the wing-wave thrown to either side by
the bow of a power boat that cuts swiftly through quiet water. From it my
eye began to slip over to the snow expanse. The road was wide, lined with
brush along the fence to the left. The fields beyond had no very large
open areas—windbreaks had everywhere been spared out when the
primeval forest had first been broken into by the early settlers. So
whatever the force of the wind might be, no high drift layer could form.
But still the snow drifted. There was enough coming down from above to
supply material even on such a narrow strip as a road allowance. It was
the manner of this drifting that held my eye and my attention at last.</p>
<p>All this is, of course, utterly trivial. I had observed it myself a
hundred times before. I observe it again to-day at this very writing, in
the first blizzard of the season. It always has a strange fascination for
me; but maybe I need to apologize for setting it down in writing.</p>
<p>The wind would send the snowflakes at a sharp angle downward to the older
surface. There was no impact, as there is with rain. The flakes, of
course, did not rebound. But they did not come to rest either, not for the
most imperceptible fraction of time. As soon as they touched the white,
underlying surface, they would start to scud along horizontally at a most
amazing speed, forming with their previous path an obtuse angle. So long
as I watched the single flake—which is quite a task, especially
while driving—it seemed to be in a tremendous hurry. It rushed along
very nearly at the speed of the wind, and that was considerable, say
between thirty-five and forty miles an hour or even more. But then, when
it hit the trail, the crack made by horses and runners, strange to say, it
did not fall down perpendicularly, as it would have done had it acted
there under the influence of gravity alone; but it started on a curved
path towards the lower edge of the opposite wall of the crack and there,
without touching the wall, it started back, first downward, thus making
the turn, and then upward again, towards the upper edge of the east wall,
and not in a straight line either, but in a wavy curve, rising very nearly
but not quite to the edge; and only then would it settle down against the
eastern wall of the track, helping to fill it in. I watched this with all
the utmost effort of attention of which I was capable. I became intensely
interested in my observations. I even made sure—as sure as anybody
can be of anything—that the whole of this curious path lay in the
same perpendicular plane which ran from the southeast to the northwest,
that is to say in the direction of the main current of the wind. I have
since confirmed these observations many times.</p>
<p>I am aware of the fact that nobody—nobody whom I know, at least—takes
the slightest interest in such things. People watch birds because some
“Nature-Study-cranks” (I am one of them) urge it in the schools. Others
will make desultory observations on “Weeds” or “Native Trees.” Our school
work in this respect seems to me to be most ridiculously and palpably
superficial. Worst of all, most of it is dry as dust, and it leads
nowhere. I sometimes fear there is something wrong with my own mentality.
But to me it seems that the Kingdom of Heaven lies all around us, and that
most of us simply prefer the moving-picture-show. I have kept weather
records for whole seasons—brief notes on the everyday observations
of mere nothings. You, for whom above all I am setting these things down,
will find them among my papers one day. They would seem meaningless to
most of my fellow men, I believe; to me they are absorbingly interesting
reading when once in a great while I pick an older record up and glance it
over. But this is digressing.</p>
<p>Now slowly, slowly another fact came home to me. This unanimous,
synchronous march of all the flakes coming down over hundreds of square
miles—and I was watching it myself over miles upon miles of road—in
spite of the fact that every single flake seemed to be in the greatest
possible hurry—was, judged as a whole, nevertheless an exceedingly
leisurely process. In one respect it reminded me of bees swarming; watch
the single bee, and it seems to fly at its utmost speed; watch the swarm,
and it seems to be merely floating along. The reason, of course, is
entirely different. The bees wheel and circle around individually, the
whole swarm revolves—if I remember right, Burroughs has well
described it (as what has he not?). [Footnote: Yes; I looked it up. See
the “Pastoral Bees” in “Locusts and Wild Honey.”] But the snow will not
change its direction while drifting in a wind that blows straight ahead.
Its direction is from first to last the resultant of the direction of the
wind and that of the pull of gravity, into which there enters besides only
the ratio of the strengths of these two forces. The single snowflake is to
the indifferent eye something infinitesimal, too small to take individual
notice of, once it reaches the ground. For most of us it hardly has any
separate existence, however it may be to more astute observers. We see the
flakes in the mass, and we judge by results. Now firstly, to talk of
results, the filling up of a hollow, unless the drifting snow is simply
picked up from the ground where it lay ready from previous falls, proceeds
itself rather slowly and in quite a leisurely way. But secondly, and this
is the more important reason, the wind blows in waves of greater and
lesser density; these waves—and I do not know whether this
observation has ever been recorded though doubtless it has been made by
better observers than I am—these waves, I say, are propagated in a
direction opposite to that of the wind. They are like sound-waves sent
into the teeth of the wind, only they travel more slowly. Anybody who has
observed a really splashing rain on smooth ground—on a cement
sidewalk, for instance—must have observed that the rebounding drops,
like those that are falling, form streaks, because they, too, are arranged
in vertical layers—or sheets—of greater and lesser density—or
maybe the term “frequency” would be more appropriate; and these streaks
travel as compared with the wind, and, as compared with its direction,
they travel against it. It is this that causes the curious criss-cross
pattern of falling and rebounding rain-streaks in heavy showers. Quite
likely there are more competent observers who might analyze these
phenomena better than I can do it; but if nobody else does, maybe I shall
one day make public a little volume containing observations on our summer
rains. But again I am digressing.</p>
<p>The snow, then, hits the surface of the older layers in waves, no matter
whether the snow is freshly falling or merely drifting; and it is these
waves that you notice most distinctly. Although they travel with the wind
when you compare their position with points on the ground—yet, when
compared with the rushing air above, it becomes clear that they travel
against it. The waves, I say, not the flakes. The single flake never stops
in its career, except as it may be retarded by friction and other
resistances. But the aggregation of the multitudes of flakes, which varies
constantly in its substance, creates the impression as if the snow
travelled very much more slowly than in reality it does. In other words,
every single flake, carried on by inertia, constantly passes from one air
wave to the next one, but the waves themselves remain relatively
stationary. They swing along in undulating, comparatively slow-moving
sheets which may simply be retarded behind the speed of the wind, but more
probably form an actual reaction, set up by a positive force counteracting
the wind, whatever its origin may be.</p>
<p>When at last I had fully satisfied my mind as to the somewhat complicated
mechanics of this thing, I settled back in my seat—against a cushion
of snow that had meanwhile piled in behind my spine. If I remember right,
I had by this time well passed the church. But for a while longer I looked
out through the triangular opening between the door of the cutter and the
curtain. I did not watch snowflakes or waves any longer, but I matured an
impression. At last it ripened into words.</p>
<p>Yes, the snow, as figured in the waves, CRAWLED over the ground. There was
in the image that engraved itself on my memory something cruel—I
could not help thinking of the “cruel, crawling foam” and the ruminating
pedant Ruskin, and I laughed. “The cruel, crawling snow!” Yes, and in
spite of Ruskin and his “Pathetic Fallacy,” there it was! Of course, the
snow is not cruel. Of course, it merely is propelled by something which,
according to Karl Pearson, I do not even with a good scientific conscience
dare to call a “force” any longer. But nevertheless, it made the
impression of cruelty, and in that lay its fascination and beauty. It even
reminded me of a cat slowly reaching out with armed claw for the
“innocent” bird. But the cat is not cruel either—we merely call it
so! Oh, for the juggling of words!...</p>
<p>Suddenly my horses brought up on a farmyard. They had followed the last of
the church-goers’ trails, had not seen any other trail ahead and
faithfully done their horse-duty by staying on what they considered to be
the road.</p>
<p>I had reached the northern limit of that two-mile stretch of wild land. In
summer there is a distinct and good road here, but for the present the
snow had engulfed it. When I had turned back to the bend of the trail, I
was for the first time up against a small fraction of what was to come. No
trail, and no possibility of telling the direction in which I was going!
Fortunately I realized the difficulty right from the start. Before setting
out, I looked back to the farm and took my bearings from the fence of the
front yard which ran north-south. Then I tried to hold to the line thus
gained as best I could. It was by no means an easy matter, for I had to
wind my weary way around old and new drifts, brush and trees. The horses
were mostly up to their knees in snow, carefully lifting their hindlegs to
place them in the cavities which their forelegs made. Occasionally, much
as I tried to avoid it, I had to make a short dash through a snow dam
thrown up over brush that seemed to encircle me completely. The going, to
be sure, was not so heavy as it had been the day before on the corner of
the marsh, but on the other hand I could not see as far beyond the horses’
heads. And had I been able to see, the less conspicuous landmarks would
not have helped me since I did not know them. It took us about an hour to
cross this untilled and unfenced strip. I came out on the next crossroad,
not more than two hundred yards east of where I should have come out. I
considered that excellent; but I soon was to understand that it was owing
only to the fact that so far I had had no flying drifts to go through. Up
to this point the snow was “crawling” only wherever the thicket opened up
a little. What blinded my vision had so far been only the new, falling
snow.</p>
<p>I am sure I looked like a snowman. Whenever I shook my big gauntlets bare,
a cloud of exceedingly fine and hard snow crystals would hit my face; and
seeing how much I still had ahead, I cannot say that I liked the
sensation. I was getting thoroughly chilled by this time. The mercury
probably stood at somewhere between minus ten and twenty. The very next
week I made one trip at forty below—a thermometer which I saw and
the accuracy of which I have reason to doubt showed minus forty-eight
degrees. Anyway, it was the coldest night of the winter, but I was not to
suffer then. I remember how about five in the morning, when I neared the
northern correction line, my lips began to stiffen; hard, frozen patches
formed on my cheeks, and I had to allow the horses to rub their noses on
fence posts or trees every now and then, to knock the big icicles off and
to prevent them from freezing up altogether—but. my feet and my
hands and my body kept warm, for there was no wind. On drives like these
your well-being depends largely on the state of your feet and hands. But
on this return trip I surely did suffer. Every now and then my fingers
would turn curd-white, and I had to remove my gauntlets and gloves, and to
thrust my hands under my wraps, next to my body. I also froze two toes
rather badly. And what I remember as particularly disagreeable, was that
somehow my scalp got chilled. Slowly, slowly the wind seemed to burrow its
way under my fur-cap and into my hair. After a while it became impossible
for me to move scalp or brows. One side of my face was now thickly caked
over with ice—which protected, but also on account of its stiffness
caused a minor discomfort. So far, however, I had managed to keep both my
eyes at work. And for a short while I needed them just now.</p>
<p>We were crossing a drift which had apparently not been broken into since
it had first been piled up the previous week. Such drifts are dangerous
because they will bear up for a while under the horses’ weight, and then
the hard pressed crust will break and reveal a softer core inside. Just
that happened here, and exactly at a moment, too, when the drifting snow
caught me with its full force and at its full height. It was a
quarter-minute of stumbling, jumping, pulling one against the other—and
then a rally, and we emerged in front of a farmyard from which a fairly
fresh trail led south. This trail was filled in, it is true, for the wind
here pitched the snow by the shovelful, but the difference in colour
between the pure white, new snow that filled it and the older surface to
both sides made it sufficiently distinct for the horses to guide them.
They plodded along.</p>
<p>Here miles upon miles of open fields lay to the southeast, and the snow
that fell over all these fields was at once picked up by the wind and
started its irresistible march to the northwest. And no longer did it
crawl. Since it was bound upon a long-distance trip, somewhere in its
career it would be caught in an upward sweep of the wind and thrown aloft,
and then it would hurtle along at the speed of the wind, blotting
everything from sight, hitting hard whatever it encountered, and piling in
wherever it found a sheltered space. The height of this drifting snow
layer varies, of course, directly and jointly (here the teacher makes fun
of his mathematics) as the amount of loose snow available and as the
carrying force of the wind. Many, many years ago I once saved the day by
climbing on to the seat of my cutter and looking around from this
vantage-point. I was lost and had no idea of where I was. There was no
snowstorm going on at the time, but a recent snowfall was being driven
along by a merciless northern gale. As soon as I stood erect on my seat,
my head reached into a less dense drift layer, and I could clearly discern
a farmhouse not more than a few hundred yards away. I had been on the
point of accepting it as a fact that I was lost. Those tactics would not
have done on this particular day, there being the snowstorm to reckon
with. For the moment, not being lost, I was in no need of them, anyway.
But even later the possible but doubtful advantage to be gained by them
seemed more than offset by the great and certain disadvantage of having to
get out of my robes and to expose myself to the chilling wind.</p>
<p>This north-south road was in the future invariably to seem endlessly long
to me. There were no very prominent landmarks—a school somewhere—and
there was hardly any change in the monotony of driving. As for landmarks,
I should mention that there was one more at least. About two miles from
the turn into that town which I have mentioned I crossed a bridge, and
beyond this bridge the trail sloped sharply up in an s-shaped curve to a
level about twenty or twenty-five feet higher than that of the road along
which I had been driving. The bridge had a rail on its west side; but the
other rail had been broken down in some accident and had never been
replaced. I mention this trifle because it became important in an incident
during the last drive which I am going to describe.</p>
<p>On we went. We passed the school of which I did not see much except the
flagpole. And then we came to the crossroads where the trail bent west
into the town. If I had known the road more thoroughly, I should have
turned there, too. It would have added another two miles to my already
overlong trip, but I invariably did it later on. Firstly, the horses will
rest up much more completely when put into a stable for feeding. And
secondly, there always radiate from a town fairly well beaten trails. It
is a mistake to cut across from one such trail to another. The straight
road, though much shorter, is apt to be entirely untravelled, and to break
trail after a heavy snowstorm is about as hard a task as any that you can
put your team up against. I had the road; there was no mistaking it; it
ran along between trees and fences which were plainly visible; but there
were ditches and brush buried under the snow which covered the grade to a
depth of maybe three feet, and every bit of these drifts was of that
treacherous character that I have described.</p>
<p>If you look at some small drift piled up, maybe, against the glass pane of
a storm window, you can plainly see how the snow, even in such a miniature
pile, preserves the stratified appearance which is the consequence of its
being laid down in layers of varying density. Now after it has been lying
for some time, it will form a crust on top which is sometimes the effect
of wind pressure and sometimes—under favourable conditions—of
superficial glaciation. A similar condensation takes place at the bottom
as the result of the work of gravity: a harder core will form. Between the
two there is layer upon layer of comparatively softer snow. In these
softer layers the differences which are due to the stratified
precipitation still remain. And frequently they will make the going
particularly uncertain; for a horse will break through in stages only. He
thinks that he has reached the carrying stratum, gets ready to take his
next step—thereby throwing his whole weight on two or at best three
feet—and just when he is off his balance, there is another caving
in. I believe it is this what makes horses so nervous when crossing
drifts. Later on in the winter there is, of course, the additional
complication of successive snowfalls. The layers from this cause are
usually clearly discernible by differences in colour.</p>
<p>I have never figured out just how far I went along this entirely unbroken
road, but I believe it must have been for two miles. I know that my horses
were pretty well spent by the time we hit upon another trail. It goes
without saying that this trail, too, though it came from town, had not
been gone over during the day and therefore consisted of nothing but a
pair of whiter ribbons on the drifts; but underneath these ribbons the
snow was packed. Hardly anybody cares to be out on a day like that, not
even for a short drive. And though in this respect I differ in my tastes
from other people, provided I can keep myself from actually getting
chilled, even I began to feel rather forlorn, and that is saying a good
deal.</p>
<p>A few hundred yards beyond the point where we had hit upon this new trail
which was only faintly visible, the horses turned eastward, on to a field.
Between two posts the wire of the fence had been taken down, and since I
could not see any trail leading along the road further south, I let my
horses have their will. I knew the farm on which we were. It was famous
all around for its splendid, pure-bred beef cattle herd. I had not counted
on crossing it, but I knew that after a mile of this field trail I should
emerge on the farmyard, and since I was particularly well acquainted with
the trail from there across the wild land to Bell’s corner, it suited me
to do as my horses suggested. As a matter of fact this trail became—with
the exception of one drive—my regular route for the rest of the
winter. Never again was I to meet with the slightest mishap on this
particular run. But to-day I was to come as near getting lost as I ever
came during the winter, on those drives to and from the north.</p>
<p>For the next ten minutes I watched the work of the wind on the open field.
As is always the case with me, I was not content with recording a mere
observation. I had watched the thing a hundred times before. “Observing”
means to me as much finding words to express what I see as it means the
seeing itself. Now, when a housewife takes a thin sheet that is lying on
the bed and shakes it up without changing its horizontal position, the
running waves of air caught under the cloth will throw it into a motion
very similar to that which the wind imparts to the snow-sheets, only that
the snow-sheets will run down instead of up. Under a good head of wind
there is a vehemence in this motion that suggests anger and a violent
disposition. The sheets of snow are “flapped” down. Then suddenly the
direction of the wind changes slightly, and the sheet is no longer flapped
down but blown up. At the line where the two motions join we have that
edge the appearance of which suggested to me the comparison with
“exfoliated” rock in a previous paper. It is for this particular stage in
the process of bringing about that appearance that I tentatively proposed
the term “adfoliation.” “Adfoliated” edges are always to be found on the
lee side of the sheet.</p>
<p>Sometimes, however, the opposite process will bring about nearly the same
result. The snow-sheet has been spread, and a downward sweep of violent
wind will hit the surface, denting it, scraping away an edge of the top
layer, and usually gripping through into lower layers; then, rebounding,
it will lift the whole sheet up again, or any part of it; and, shattering
it into its component crystals, will throw these aloft and afar to be laid
down again further on. This is true “exfoliation.” Since it takes a more
violent burst of wind to effect this true exfoliation than it does to
bring about the adfoliation, and since, further, the snow once indented,
will yield to the depth of several layers, the true exfoliation edges are
usually thicker than the others: and, of course, they are always to be
found on the wind side.</p>
<p>Both kinds of lines are wavy lines because the sheets of wind are
undulating. In this connection I might repeat once more that the straight
line seems to be quite unknown in Nature, as also is uniformity of motion.
I once watched very carefully a ferry cable strung across the bottom of a
mighty river, and, failing to discover any theoretical reason for its
vibratory motion, I was thrown back upon proving to my own satisfaction
that the motion even of that flowing water in the river was the motion of
a pulse; and I still believe that my experiments were conclusive.
Everybody, of course, is familiar with the vibrations of telephone wires
in a breeze. That humming sound which they emit would indeed be hard to
explain without the assumption of a pulsating blow. Of course, it is easy
to prove this pulsation in air. From certain further observations, which I
do not care to speak about at present, I am inclined to assume a pulsating
arrangement, or an alternation of layers of greater and lesser density in
all organised—that is, crystalline—matter; for instance, in
even such an apparently uniform block as a lump of metallic gold or copper
or iron. This arrangement, of course, may be disturbed by artificial
means; but if it is, the matter seems to be in an unstable condition, as
is proved, for instance, by the sudden, unexpected breaking of apparently
perfectly sound steel rails. There seems to be a condition of matter which
so far we have largely failed to take into account or to utilise in human
affairs...</p>
<p>I reached the yard, crossed it, and swung out through the front gate.
Nowhere was anybody to be seen. The yard itself is sheltered by a curtain
of splendid wild trees to the north, the east, and the south. So I had a
breathing spell for a few minutes. I could also clearly see the gap in
this windbreak through which I must reach the open. I think I mentioned
that on the previous drive, going north, I had found the road four or five
miles east of here very good indeed. But the reason had been that just
this windbreak, which angles over to what I have been calling the
twelve-mile bridge, prevented all serious drifting while the wind came
from the north. To-day I was to find things different, for to the south
the land was altogether open. The force of the wind alone was sufficient
to pull the horses back to a walk, before we even had quite reached the
open plain. It was a little after four when I crossed the gap, and I knew
that I should have to make the greater part of what remained in darkness.
I was about twelve miles from town, I should judge. The horses had not
been fed. So, as soon as I saw how things were, I turned back into the
shelter of the bluff to feed. I might have gone to the farm, but I was
afraid it would cost too much time. After this I always went into town and
fed in the stable. While the horses were eating and resting, I cleaned the
cutter of snow looked after my footwarmer, and, by tramping about and
kicking against the tree trunks, tried to get my benumbed circulation
started again. My own lunch on examination proved to be frozen into one
hard, solid lump. So I decided to go without it and to save it for my
supper.</p>
<p>At half past four we crossed the gap in the bluffs for the second time.</p>
<p>Words fail me to describe or even to suggest the fury of the blast and of
the drift into which we emerged. For a moment I thought the top of the
cutter would be blown off. With the twilight that had set in the wind had
increased to a baffling degree. The horses came as near as they ever came,
in any weather, to turning on me and refusing to face the gale. And what
with my blurred vision, the twisting and dodging about of the horses, and
the gathering dusk, I soon did not know any longer where I was. There was
ample opportunity to go wrong. Copses, single trees, and burnt stumps
which dotted the wilderness had a knack of looming up with startling
suddenness in front or on the side, sometimes dangerously close to the
cutter. It was impossible to look straight ahead, because the ice crystals
which mimicked snow cut right into my eyes and made my lids smart with
soreness. Underfoot the rough ground seemed like a heaving sea. The horses
would stumble, and the cutter would pitch over from one side to the other
in the most alarming way. I saw no remedy. It was useless to try to avoid
the obstacles—only once did I do so, and that time I had to back
away from a high stump against which my drawbar had brought up. The
pitching and rolling of the cutter repeatedly shook me out of my robes,
and if, when starting up again from the bluff, I had felt a trifle more
comfortable, that increment of consolation was soon lost.</p>
<p>We wallowed about—there is only this word to suggest the motion. To
all intents and purposes I was lost. But still there was one thing,
provided it had not changed, to tell me the approximate direction—the
wind. It had been coming from the south-southeast. So, by driving along
very nearly into its teeth, I could, so I thought, not help emerging on
the road to town.</p>
<p>Repeatedly I wished I had taken the old trail. That fearful drift in the
bush beyond the creek, I thought, surely had settled down somewhat in
twenty-four hours. [Footnote: As a matter of fact I was to see it once
more before the winter was over, and I found it settled down to about one
third its original height. This was partly the result of superficial
thawing. But still even then, shortly before the final thaw-up, it looked
formidable enough.] I had had as much or more of unbroken trail to-day as
on the day before. On the whole, though, I still believed that the four
miles across the corner of the marsh south of the creek had been without a
parallel in their demands on the horses’ endurance. And gradually I came
to see that after all the horses probably would have given out before
this, under the cumulative effect of two days of it, had they not found
things somewhat more endurable to-day.</p>
<p>We wallowed along... And then we stopped. I shouted to the horses—nothing
but a shout could have the slightest effect against the wind. They started
to fidget and to dance and to turn this way and that, but they would not
go. I wasted three or four minutes before I shook free of my robes and
jumped out to investigate. Well, we were in the corner formed by two
fences—caught as in a trap. I was dumbfounded. I did not know of any
fence in these parts, of none where I thought I should be. And how had we
got into it? I had not passed through any gate. There was, of course, no
use in conjecturing. If the wind had not veered around completely, one of
the fences must run north-south, the other one east-west, and we were in
the southeast corner of some farm. Where there was a fence, I was likely
to find a farmyard. It could not be to the east, so there remained three
guesses. I turned back to the west. I skirted the fence closely, so
closely that even in the failing light and in spite of the drifting snow I
did not lose sight of it. Soon the going began to be less rough; the
choppy motion of the cutter seemed to indicate that we were on
fall-ploughed land; and not much later Peter gave a snort. We were
apparently nearing a group of buildings. I heard the heavy thump of
galloping horses, and a second later I saw a light which moved.</p>
<p>I hailed the man; and he came over and answered my questions. Yes, the
wind had turned somewhat; it came nearly from the east now (so that was
what had misled me); I was only half a mile west of my old trail, but
still, for all that, nearly twelve miles from town. In this there was good
news as well as bad. I remembered the place now; just south of the
twelve-mile bridge I had often caught sight of it to the west. Instead of
crossing the wild land along its diagonal, I had, deceived by the changed
direction of the wind, skirted its northern edge, holding close to the
line of poplars. I thought of the fence: yes, the man who answered my
questions was renting from the owner of that pure-bred Angus herd; he was
hauling wood for him and had taken the fence on the west side down. I had
passed between two posts without noticing them. He showed me the south
gate and gave me the general direction. He even offered my horses water,
which they drank eagerly enough. But he did not offer bed and stable-room
for the night; nor did he open the gate for me, as I had hoped he would. I
should have declined the night’s accommodation, but I should have been
grateful for a helping hand at the gate. I had to get out of my wraps to
open it. And meanwhile I had been getting out and in so often, that I did
no longer even care to clean my feet of snow; I simply pushed the heater
aside so as to prevent it from melting.</p>
<p>I “bundled in”—that word, borrowed from an angry lady, describes my
mood perhaps better than anything else I might say. And yet, though what
followed, was not exactly pleasure, my troubles were over for the day. The
horses, of course, still had a weary, weary time of it, but as soon as we
got back to our old trail—which we presently did—they knew the
road at least. I saw that the very moment we reached it by the way they
turned on to it and stepped out more briskly.</p>
<p>From this point on we had about eleven miles to make, and every step of it
was made at a walk. I cannot, of course say much about the road. There was
nothing for me to do except as best I could to fight the wind. I got my
tarpaulin out from under the seat and spread it over myself. I verily
believe I nodded repeatedly. It did not matter. I knew that the horses
would take me home, and since it was absolutely dark, I could not have
helped it had they lost their way. A few times, thinking that I noticed an
improvement in the road, I tried to speed the horses up; but when Dan at
last, in an attempt to respond, went down on his knees, I gave it up.
Sometimes we pitched and rolled again for a space, but mostly things went
quietly enough. The wind made a curious sound, something between an
infuriated whistle and the sibilant noise a man makes when he draws his
breath in sharply between his teeth.</p>
<p>I do not know how long we may have been going that way. But I remember how
at last suddenly and gradually I realized that there was a change in our
motion. Suddenly, I say—for the realization of the change came as a
surprise; probably I had been nodding, and I started up. Gradually—for
I believe it took me quite an appreciable time before I awoke to the fact
that the horses at last were trotting. It was a weary, slow, jogging trot—but
it electrified me, for I knew at once that we were on our very last mile.
I strained my eye-sight, but I could see no light ahead. In fact, we were
crossing the bridge before I saw the first light of the town.</p>
<p>The livery stable was deserted. I had to open the doors, to drive in, to
unhitch, to unharness, and to feed the horses myself. And then I went home
to my cold and lonesome house.</p>
<p>It was a cheerless night.</p>
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0007" id="link2H_4_0007"></SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> SIX. A Call for Speed </h2>
<p>I held the horses in at the start. Somehow they realized that a new kind
of test was ahead. They caught the infection of speed from my voice, I
suppose, or from my impatience. They had not been harnessed by the hostler
either. When I came to the stable—it was in the forenoon, too, at an
hour when they had never been taken out before—the hostler had been
away hauling feed. The boys whom I had pressed into service had pulled the
cutter out into the street; it was there we hitched up. Everything, then,
had been different from the way they had been used to. So, when at last I
clicked my tongue, they bounded off as if they were out for a sprint of a
few miles only.</p>
<p>I held them in and pulled them down to a trot; for of all days to-day was
it of the utmost importance that neither one of them should play out. At
half past twelve a telephone message had reached me, after having passed
through three different channels, that my little girl was sick; and over
the wire it had a sinister, lugubrious, reticent sound, as if the worst
was held back. Details had not come through, so I was told. My wife was
sending a call for me to come home as quickly as I possibly could; nothing
else. It was Thursday. The Sunday before I had left wife and child in
perfect health. But scarlatina and diphtheria were stalking the plains.
The message had been such a shock to me that I had acted with automatic
precision. I had notified the school-board and asked the inspector to
substitute for me; and twenty minutes after word had reached me I crossed
the bridge on the road to the north.</p>
<p>The going was heavy but not too bad. Two nights ago there had been a
rather bad snowstorm and a blow, and during the last night an exceedingly
slight and quiet fall had followed it. Just now I had no eye for its
beauty, though.</p>
<p>I was bent on speed, and that meant watching the horses closely; they must
not be allowed to follow their own bent. There was no way of communicating
with my wife; so that, whatever I could do, was left entirely to my
divination. I had picked up a few things at the drug store—things
which had occurred to me on the spur of the moment as likely to be needed;
but now I started a process of analysis and elimination. Pneumonia,
diphtheria, scarlatina and measles—all these were among the more
obvious possibilities. I was enough of a doctor to trust my ability to
diagnose. I knew that my wife would in that respect rather rely on me than
on the average country-town practitioner. All the greater was my
responsibility.</p>
<p>Since the horses had not been fed for their midday-meal, I had in any case
to put in at the one-third-way town. It had a drug store; so there was my
last chance of getting what might possibly be needed. I made a list of
remedies and rehearsed it mentally till I felt sure I should not omit
anything of which I had thought.</p>
<p>Then I caught myself at driving the horses into a gallop. It was hard to
hold in. I must confess that I thought but little of the little girl’s
side of it; more of my wife’s; most of all of my own. That seems selfish.
But ever since the little girl was born, there had been only one desire
which filled my life. Where I had failed, she was to succeed. Where I had
squandered my energies and opportunities, she was to use them to some
purpose. What I might have done but had not done, she was to do. She was
to redeem me. I was her natural teacher. Teaching her became henceforth my
life-work. When I bought a book, I carefully considered whether it would
help her one day or not before I spent the money. Deprived of her, I
myself came to a definite and peremptory end. With her to continue my
life, there was still some purpose in things, some justification for
existence.</p>
<p>Most serious-minded men at my age, I believe, become profoundly impressed
with the futility of “it all.” Unless we throw ourselves into something
outside of our own personality, life is apt to impress us as a great
mockery. I am afraid that at the bottom of it there lies the recognition
of the fact that we ourselves were not worth while, that we did not amount
to what we had thought we should amount to; that we did not measure up to
the exigencies of eternities to come. Children are among the most
effective means devised by Nature to delude us into living on. Modern
civilization has, on the whole, deprived us of the ability for the
enjoyment of the moment. It raises our expectations too high—realization
is bound to fall short, no matter what we do. We live in an artificial
atmosphere. So we submerge ourselves in business, profession, or
superficial amusement. We live for something—do not merely live. The
wage-slave lives for the evening’s liberty, the business man for his
wealth, the preacher for his church. I used to live for my school. Then a
moment like the one I was living through arrives. Nature strips down our
pretences with a relentless finger, and we stand, bare of disguises, as
helpless failures. We have lost the childlike power of living without
conscious aims. Sometimes, when the aims have faded already in the
gathering dusk, we still go on by the momentum acquired. Inertia carries
us over the dead points—till a cog breaks somewhere, and our whole
machinery of life comes to with a jar. If no such awakening supervenes,
since we never live in the present, we are always looking forward to what
never comes; and so life slips by, unlived.</p>
<p>If my child was taken from me, it meant that my future was made
meaningless. I felt that I might just as well lie down and die.</p>
<p>There was injustice in this, I know I was reasoning, as it were, in a
phantom world. Actualities, outlooks, retrospections—my view of them
had been jarred and distorted by an unexpected, stunning blow. For that it
did not really matter how things actually were up north. I had never yet
faced such possibilities; they opened up like an abyss which I had skirted
in the dark, unknowingly. True, my wife was something like a child to me.
I was old enough to be her father, older even in mind than in actual
years. But she, too, by marrying an aging man, had limited her own
development, as it were, by mine. Nor was she I, after all. My child was.
The outlook without her was night. Such a life was not to be lived.</p>
<p>There was the lash of a scourge in these thoughts, so that I became
nervous, impatient, and unjust—even to the horses. Peter stumbled,
and I came near punishing him with my whip. But I caught myself just
before I yielded to the impulse. I was doing exactly what I should not do.
If Peter stumbled, it was more my own fault than his. I should have
watched the road more carefully instead of giving in to the trend of my
thoughts. A stumble every five minutes, and over a drive of forty-five
miles: that might mean a delay of half an hour—it might mean the
difference between “in time” and “too late.” I did not know what waited at
the other end of the road. It was my business to find out, not to indulge
in mere surmises and forebodings.</p>
<p>So, with an effort, I forced my attention to revert to the things around.
And Nature, with her utter lack of sentiment, is after all the only real
soother of anguished nerves. With my mind in the state it was in, the
drive would indeed have been nothing less than torture, had I not felt,
sometimes even against my will, mostly without at any rate consciously
yielding to it, the influence of that merriest of all winter sights which
surrounded me.</p>
<p>The fresh fall of snow, which had come over night, was exceedingly slight.
It had come down softly, floatingly, with all the winds of the prairies
hushed, every flake consisting of one or two large, flat crystals only,
which, on account of the nearly saturated air, had gone on growing by
condensation till they touched the ground. Such a condition of the
atmosphere never holds out in a prolonged snowfall, may it come down ever
so soft-footedly; the first half hour exhausts the moisture content of the
air. After that the crystals are the ordinary, small, six-armed “stars”
which bunch together into flakes. But if the snowfall is very slight, the
moisture content of the lower air sometimes is not exhausted before it
stops; those large crystals remain at the surface and are not buried out
of sight by the later fall. These large, coarse, slablike crystals reflect
as well as refract the light of the sun. There is not merely the sparkle
and glitter, but also the colour play. Facing north, you see only
glittering points of white light; but, facing the sun, you see every
colour of the rainbow, and you see it with that coquettish, sudden flash
which snow shares only with the most precious of stones.</p>
<p>Through such a landscape covered with the thinnest possible sheet of the
white glitter we sped. A few times, in heavier snow, the horses were
inclined to fall into a walk; but a touch of the whip sent them into line
again. I began to view the whole situation more quietly. Considering that
we had forty-five miles to go, we were doing very well indeed. We made
Bell’s corner in forty minutes, and still I was saving the horses’
strength.</p>
<p>On to the wild land we turned, where the snow underfoot was soft and free
from those hard clods that cause the horses’ feet to stumble. I beguiled
the time by watching the distance through the surrounding brush.
Everybody, of course, has noticed how the open landscape seems to turn
when you speed along. The distance seems to stand still, while the
foreground rushes past you. The whole countryside seems to become a
revolving, horizontal wheel with its hub at the horizon. It is different
when you travel fast through half open bush, so that the eye on its way to
the edge of the visible world looks past trees and shrubs. In that case
there are two points which speed along: you yourself, and with you,
engaged, as it were, in a race with you, the distance. You can go many
miles before your horizon changes. But between it and yourself the
foreground is rushed back like a ribbon. There is no impression of
wheeling; there is no depth to that ribbon which moves backward and past.
You are also more distinctly aware that it is not the objects near you
which move, but you yourself. Only a short distance from you trees and
objects seem rather to move with you, though more slowly; and faster and
faster all things seem to be moving in the same direction with you, the
farther away they are, till at last the utmost distance rushes along at an
equal speed, behind all the stems of the shrubs and the trees, and keeps
up with you.</p>
<p>So is it truly in life. My childhood seems as near to me now as it was
when I was twenty—nearer, I sometimes think; but the years of my
early manhood have rushed by like that ribbon and are half swallowed by
oblivion.</p>
<p>This line of thought threw me back into heavier moods. And yet, since now
I banished the hardest of all thoughts hard to bear, I could not help
succumbing to the influence of Nature’s merry mood. I did so even more
than I liked. I remember that, while driving through the beautiful natural
park that masks the approach to the one-third-way town from the south, I
as much as reproached myself because I allowed Nature to interfere with my
grim purpose of speed. Half intentionally I conjured up the vision of an
infinitely lonesome old age for myself, and again the sudden palpitation
in my veins nearly prompted me to send my horses into a gallop. But
instantly I checked myself. Not yet, I thought. On that long stretch
north, beyond the bridge, there I was going to drive them at their utmost
speed. I was unstrung, I told myself; this was mere sentimentalism; no
emotional impulses were of any value; careful planning only counted. So I
even pulled the horses back to a walk. I wanted to feed them shortly after
reaching the stable. They must not be hot, or I should have trouble.</p>
<p>Then we turned into the main street of the town. In front of the stable I
deliberately assumed the air of a man of leisure. The hostler came out and
greeted me. I let him water the horses and waited, watch in hand. They got
some hay, and five minutes after I had stopped, I poured their oats into
the feeding boxes.</p>
<p>Then to the drug store—it was locked. I hunted the druggist all over
town for nearly twenty minutes. Everybody had seen him a short while ago;
everybody knew exactly where he had been a minute before; but nobody could
discover him just then. I worked myself into a veritable frenzy of hurry.
The moisture began to break out all over my body. I rushed back to the
livery stable to tell the hostler to hitch up again—and there stood
the druggist, looking my horses over! I shall not repeat what I said.</p>
<p>Five minutes later I had what I wanted, and after a few minutes more I
walked my horses out of town. It had taken me an hour and fifty minutes to
make the town, and thirty-five minutes to leave it behind.</p>
<p>One piece of good news I received before leaving. While I was getting into
my robes and the hostler hooked up, he told me that no fewer than
twenty-two teams had that very morning come in with cordwood from the
northern correction line. They had made a farm halfways to town by
nightfall of the day before; the rest they had gone that very day. So
there would be an unmistakable trail all the way, and there was no need to
worry over the snow.</p>
<p>I walked the horses for a while; then, when we were swinging round the
turn to the north, on that long, twenty-mile grade, I speeded them up. The
trail was good: that just about summarizes what I remember of the road.
All details were submerged in one now, and that one was speed. The horses,
which were in prime condition, gave me their best. Sometimes we went over
long stretches that were sandy under that inch or so of new snow—with
sand blown over the older drifts from the fields—stretches where
under ordinary circumstances I should have walked my horses—at a
gallop. Once or twice we crossed bad drifts with deep holes in them, made
by horses that were being wintered outside and that had broken in before
the snow had hardened down sufficiently to carry them. There, of course, I
had to go slowly. But as soon as the trail was smooth again, the horses
would fall back into their stride without being urged. They had, as I
said, caught the infection. My yearning for speed was satisfied at last.</p>
<p>Four sights stand out.</p>
<p>The first is of just such bunches of horses that were being brought
through the winter with practically no yard feeding at all; and
consequently their healthy outdoor looks, and their velvety rumps were
very conspicuous as they scattered away from the trail on our approach.
Several times we dashed right in among them, and I had to shout in order
to clear the road. They did not like to leave the firm footing on the
trail, where they fed by pawing away the snow on both sides and baring the
weeds. Sometimes a whole bunch of them would thunder along in a stampede
ahead of us till they came to a cross-trail or to a farmyard; there we
left them behind. Sometimes only one of them would thus try to keep in
front, while the rest jumped off into the drifts; but, being separated
from his mates, he would stop at last and ponder how to get back to them
till we were right on him again. There was, then, no way to rejoin those
left behind except by doing what he hated to do, by getting off the trail
and jumping into the dreaded snow, thus giving us the right of way. And
when, at last, he did so, he felt sadly hampered and stopped close to the
trail, looking at us in a frightened and helpless sort of way while we
dashed by.</p>
<p>The next sight, too, impressed me with the degree to which snow handicaps
the animal life of our plains. Not more than ten feet from the heads of my
horses a rabbit started up. The horses were going at a gallop just then.
There it jumped up, unseen by myself until it moved, ears high, eyes
turned back, and giving a tremendous thump with its big hind feet before
setting out on its wild and desperate career. We were pretty close on its
heels and going fast. For maybe a quarter of a mile it stayed in one
track, running straight ahead and at the top of its speed so that it
pulled noticeably away. Every hundred yards or so, however, it would slow
down a little, and its jumps, as it glanced back without turning—by
merely taking a high, flying leap and throwing its head aloft—would
look strangely retarded, as if it were jumping from a sitting posture or
braking with its hind feet while bending its body backward. Then, seeing
us follow at undiminished speed, it would straighten out again and dart
away like an arrow. At the end of its first straight run it apparently
made up its mind that it was time to employ somewhat different tactics in
order to escape. So it jumped slantways across the soft, central cushion
of the trail into the other track. Again it ran straight ahead for a
matter of four or five hundred yards, slowing down three or four times to
reconnoitre in its rear. After that it ran in a zigzag line, taking four
or five jumps in one track, crossing over into the other with a gigantic
leap, at an angle of not more than thirty degrees to its former direction;
then, after another four or five bounds, crossing back again, and so on.
About every tenth jump was now a high leap for scouting purposes, I should
say. It looked breathless, frantic, and desperate. But it kept it up for
several miles. I am firmly convinced that rabbits distinguish between the
man with a gun and the one without it. This little animal probably knew
that I had no gun. But what was it to do? It was caught on the road with
us bearing down upon it. It knew that it did not stand a chance of getting
even beyond reach of a club if it ventured out into the deep, loose snow.
There might be dogs ahead, but it had to keep on and take that risk. I
pitied the poor thing, but I did not stop. I wished for a cross-trail to
appear, so it would be relieved of its panic; and at last there came one,
too, which it promptly took.</p>
<p>And as if to prove still more strikingly how helpless many of our wild
creatures are in deep snow, the third sight came. We started a prairie
chicken next. It had probably been resting in the snow to the right side
of the trail. It began to run when the horses came close. And in a sudden
panic as it was, it did the most foolish thing it possibly could do: it
struck a line parallel to the trail. Apparently the soft snow in which it
sank prevented it from taking to its wings. It had them lifted, but it did
not even use them in running as most of the members of its family will do;
it ran in little jumps or spurts, trying its level best to keep ahead. But
the horses were faster. They caught up with it, passed it. And slowly I
pulled abreast. Its efforts certainly were as frantic as those of the
rabbit had looked. I could have picked it up with my hands. Its beak was
open with the exertion—the way you see chickens walking about with
open beaks on a swooningly hot summer day I reached for the whip to lower
it in front of the bird and stop it from this unequal race. It cowered
down, and we left it behind...</p>
<p>We had by that time reached the narrow strip of wild land which separated
the English settlements to the south from those of the Russian Germans to
the north. We came to the church, and like everything else it rushed back
to the rear; the school on the correction line appeared.</p>
<p>Strangely, school was still on in that yellow building at the corner. I
noticed a cutter outside, with a man in it, who apparently was waiting for
his children. This is the fourth of the pictures that stand out in my
memory. The man looked so forlorn. His horse, a big, hulking farm beast,
wore a blanket under the harness. I looked at my watch. It was twenty-five
minutes past four. Here, in the bush country where the pioneers carve the
farms out of the wilderness, the time kept is often oddly at variance with
the time of the towns. I looked back several times, as long as I could see
the building, which was for at least another twenty minutes; but school
did not close. Still the man sat there, humped over, patiently waiting. It
is this circumstance, I believe, which fixed in my memory the exact hour
at which I reached the correction line.</p>
<p>Beyond, on the first mile of the last road east there was no possibility
of going fast. This piece was blown in badly. There was, however, always a
trail over this mile-long drift. The school, of course, had something to
do with that. But when you drive four feet above the ground, with nothing
but uncertain drifts on both sides of the trail, you want to be chary of
speeding your horses along. One wrong step, and a horse might wallow in
snow up to his belly, and you would lose more time than you could make up
for in an hour’s breathless career. A horse is afraid, too, of trotting
there, and it takes a great deal of urging to make him do it.</p>
<p>So we lost a little time here; but when a mile or so farther on we reached
the bush, we made up for it. This last run of five or six miles along the
correction line consisted of one single, soft, smooth bed of snow. The
trail was cut in sharply and never drifted. Every successive snowfall was
at once packed down by the tree-fellers, and whoever drove along, could
give his horses the lines. I did so, too, and the horses ran.</p>
<p>I relaxed. I had done what I could do. Anxiety there was hardly any now. A
drive over more than forty miles, made at the greatest obtainable speed,
blunts your emotional energies. I thought of home, to be sure, did so all
the time; but it was with expectation now, with nothing else. Within half
an hour I should know...</p>
<p>Then the bush opened up. The last mile led along between snow-buried
meadows, school and house in plain view ahead. There lay the cottage, as
peaceful in the evening sun as any house can look. Smoke curled up from
its chimney and rose in a nearly perpendicular column. I became aware of
the colder evening air, and with the chill that crept over me I was again
overwhelmed by the pitifully lonesome looks of the place.</p>
<p>Mostly I shouted when I drew near to tell of my coming. To-day I silently
swung up through the shrubby thicket in which the cottage and the stable
behind it lay embedded and turned in to the yard. As soon as the horses
stopped, I dropped the lines, jerked the door of the cutter back, and
jumped to the ground.</p>
<p>Then I stood transfixed. That very moment the door of the cottage opened.
There stood my wife, and between her knee and the door-post a curly head
pushed through, and a child’s voice shouted, “Daddy, come to the house!
Daddy, come to the house!”</p>
<p>A turn to the better had set in sometime during the morning. The fever had
dropped, and quickly, as children’s illness will come, it had gone. But
the message had sped on its way, irrevocable and, therefore, unrevoked. My
wife, when she told me the tale, thought, well had she reason to smile,
for had I not thus gained an additional holiday?</p>
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0008" id="link2H_4_0008"></SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> SEVEN. Skies and Scares </h2>
<p>We had a “soft spell” over a week end, and on Monday it had been followed
by a fearful storm—snowstorm and blizzard, both coming from the
southeast and lasting their traditional three days before they subsided.
On Thursday, a report came in that the trail across the wild land west of
Bell’s corner was closed completely—in fact, would be impassable for
the rest of the winter. This report came with the air of authority; the
man who brought it knew what he was talking about; of that I had no doubt.
For the time being, he said, no horses could possibly get through.</p>
<p>That very day I happened to meet another man who was habitually driving
back and forth between the two towns. “Why don’t you go west?” he said.
“You angle over anyway. Go west first and then straight north.” And he
described in detail the few difficulties of the road which he followed
himself. There was no doubt, he of all men should certainly know which was
the best road for the first seventeen miles. He had come in from that
one-third-way town that morning. I knew the trails which he described as
summer-roads, had gone over them a good many times, though never in
winter; so, the task of finding the trail should not offer any difficulty.
Well and good, then; I made up my mind to follow the advice.</p>
<p>On Friday afternoon everything was ready as usual. I rang off at four
o’clock and stepped into the hall. And right there the first thing went
wrong.</p>
<p>Never before had I been delayed in my start. But now there stood three men
in the hall, prominent citizens of the town. I had handed my resignation
to the school-board; these men came to ask me that I reconsider. The
board, so I had heard, was going to accept my decision and let it go at
that. According to this committee the board did not represent the majority
of the citizens in town. They argued for some time against my
stubbornness. At last, fretting under the delay, I put it bluntly. “I have
nothing to reconsider, gentlemen. The matter does no longer rest with me.
If, as I hear, the board is going to accept my resignation, that settles
the affair for me. It must of necessity suit me or I should not have
resigned. But you might see the board. Maybe they are making a mistake. In
fact, I think so. That is not my business, however.” And I went.</p>
<p>The time was short enough in any case; this cut it shorter. It was five
o’clock before I swung out on the western road. I counted on moonlight,
though, the fickle luminary being in its first quarter. But there were
clouds in the north and the weather was by no means settled. As for my
lights, they were useless for driving so long as the ground was completely
buried under its sheet of snow. On the snow there form no shadows by which
you can recognize the trail in a light that comes from between the two
tracks. So I hurried along.</p>
<p>We had not yet made the first three miles, skirting meanwhile the river,
when the first disaster came. I noticed a rather formidable drift on the
road straight ahead. I thought I saw a trail leading up over it—I
found later on that it was a snowshoe trail. I drove briskly up to its
very edge; then the horses fell into a walk. In a gingerly kind of way we
started to climb. And suddenly the world seemed to fall to pieces. The
horses disappeared in the snow, the cutter settled down, there was a sharp
snap, I fell back—the lines had broken. With lightning quickness I
reached over the dashboard down to the whiffletrees and unhooked one each
of the horses’ traces. That would release the others, too, should they
plunge. For the moment I did not know what they were doing. There was a
cloud of dust dry snow which hid them. Then Peter emerged. I saw with
horror that he stood on Dan who was lying on his side. Dan started to roll
over; Peter slipped off to the right. That brought rebellion into Dan, for
now the neck yoke was cruelly twisting his head. I saw Dan’s feet emerging
out of the snow, pawing the air: he was on his back. Everything seemed
convulsed. Then Peter plunged and reared, pulling Dan half-ways up; that
motion of his released the neck yoke from the pole. The next moment both
horses were on their feet, head by head now, but facing each other,
apparently trying to pull apart; but the martingales held. Then both
jumped clear of the cutter and the pole; and they plunged out, to the
rear, past the cutter, to solid ground.</p>
<p>I do not remember how I got out; but after a minute or so I stood at their
heads, holding them by the bridles. The knees of both horses shook, their
nostrils trembled; Peter’s eye looked as if he were going to bolt. We were
only a hundred yards or so from a farm. A man and a boy came running with
lanterns. I snapped the halter ropes into the bit rings and handed the
horses over to the boy to be led to and fro at a walk so as to prevent a
chill; and I went with the man to inspect the cutter. Apparently no damage
was done beyond the snapping of the lines. The man, who knew me, offered
to lend me another pair, which I promptly accepted. We pulled the cutter
out backwards, straightened the harness, and hitched the horses up again.
It was clear that, though they did not seem to be injured, their nerves
were on edge.</p>
<p>The farmer meanwhile enlightened me. I mentioned the name of the man who
had recommended the road. Yes, the road was good enough from town to town.
This was the only bad drift. Yes, my adviser had passed here the day
before; but he had turned off the road, going down to the river below,
which was full of holes, it is true, made by the ice-harvesters, but
otherwise safe enough. The boy would go along with his lantern to guide me
to the other side of the drift. I am afraid I thought some rather
uncharitable things about my adviser for having omitted to caution me
against this drift. What I minded most, was, of course, the delay.</p>
<p>The drift was partly hollow, it appeared; the crust had thawed and frozen
again; the huge mass of snow underneath had settled down. The crust had
formed a vault, amply strong enough to carry a man, but not to carry horse
and cutter.</p>
<p>When in the dying light and by the gleam of the lantern we went through
the dense brush, down the steep bank, and on to the river, the horses were
every second ready to bolt. Peter snorted and danced, Dan laid his ears
back on his head. But the boy gave warning at every open hole, and we made
it safely. At last we got back to the road, I kept talking and purring to
the horses for a while, and it seemed they were quieting down.</p>
<p>It was not an auspicious beginning for a long night-drive. And though for
a while all things seemed to be going about as well as I could wish, there
remained a nervousness which, slight though it seemed while unprovoked,
yet tinged every motion of the horses and even my own state of mind.
Still, while we were going west, and later, north into the one-third-way
town, the drive was one of the most marvellously beautiful ones that I had
had during that winter of marvellous sights.</p>
<p>As I have mentioned, the moon was in its first quarter and, therefore,
during the early part of the night high in the sky. It was not very cold;
the lower air was quiet, of that strange, hushed stillness which in
southern countries is the stillness of the noon hour in midsummer—when
Pan is frightened into a panic by the very quiet. It was not so, however,
in the upper reaches of the atmosphere. It was a night of skies, of
shifting, ever changing skies. Not for five minutes did an aspect last.
When I looked up, after maybe having devoted my attention for a while to a
turn in the road or to a drift, there was no trace left of the picture
which I had seen last. And you could not help it, the sky would draw your
eye. There was commotion up there—operations were proceeding on a
very vast scale, but so silently, with not a whisper of wind, that I felt
hushed myself.</p>
<p>A few of the aspects have persisted in my memory, but it seems an
impossible task to sketch them.</p>
<p>I was driving along through open fields. The trail led dimly ahead. Huge
masses of snow with sharp, immovable shadows flanked it. The horses were
very wide awake. They cocked their ears at every one of the mounds; and
sometimes they pressed rump against rump, as if to reassure each other by
their mutual touch.</p>
<p>About halfway up from the northern horizon there lay a belt of faintest
luminosity in the atmosphere—no play of northern lights—just
an impalpable paling of the dark blue sky. There were stars, too, but they
were not very brilliant. Way down in the north, at the edge of the world,
there lay a long, low-flung line of cloud, black, scarcely discernible in
the light of the moon. And from its centre, true north, there grew out a
monstrous human arm, reaching higher and higher, up to the zenith,
blotting the stars behind it. It looked at first—in texture and
rigid outline—as the stream of straw looks that flows from the
blower of a threshing machine when you stand straight in its line and
behind it. But, of course, it did not curve down. It seemed to stretch and
to rise, growing more and more like an arm with a clumsy fist at its end,
held unconceivably straight and unbending. This cloud, I have no doubt,
was forming right then by condensation. And it stretched and lengthened
till it obscured the moon.</p>
<p>Just then I reached the end of my run to the west. I was nearing a block
of dense poplar bush in which somewhere two farmsteads lay embedded. The
road turned to the north. I was now exactly south of and in line with that
long, twenty-mile trail where I had startled horses, rabbit, and partridge
on the last described drive. I believe I was just twenty-five miles from
the northern correction line. At this corner where I turned I had to
devote all my attention to the negotiating of a few bad drifts.</p>
<p>When I looked up again, I was driving along the bottom of a wide road gap
formed by tall and stately poplars on both sides—trees which stood
uncannily still. The light of the moon became less dim, and I raised my
eyes. That band of cloud—for it had turned into a band now, thus
losing its threatening aspect—had widened out and loosened up. It
was a strip of flocculent, sheepy-looking, little cloudlets that suggested
curliness and innocence. And the moon stood in between like a goodnatured
shepherd in the stories of old.</p>
<p>For a while I kept my eyes on the sky. The going was good indeed on this
closed-in road. And so I watched that insensible, silent, and yet swift
shifting of things in the heavens that seemed so orderly, pre-ordained,
and as if regulated by silent signals. The clouds lost their sheeplike
look again; they became more massive; they took on more substance and
spine, more manliness, as it were; and they arranged themselves in
distinct lines. Soldiers suggested themselves, not soldiers engaged in
war, but soldiers drilling in times of peace, to be reviewed, maybe, by
some great general. That central point from which the arm had sprung and
which had been due north had sidled over to the northwest; the low-flung
line along the horizon had taken on the shape of a long wedge pointing
east; farther west it, too, looked more massive now—more like a
rather solid wall. And all those soldier-clouds fell into a fan-shaped
formation—into lines radiating from that common central point in the
northwest. This arrangement I have for many years been calling “the tree.”
It is quite common, of course, and I read it with great confidence as
meaning “no amount of rain or snow worth mentioning.” “The tree” covered
half the heavens or more, and nowhere did I see any large reaches of clear
sky. Here and there a star would peep through, and the moon seemed to be
quickly and quietly moving through the lines. Apparently he was the
general who reviewed the army.</p>
<p>Again there came a shifting in the scenes. It looked as if some unseen
hands were spreading a sheet above these flocculent clouds—a thin
and vapoury sheet that came from the north and gradually covered the whole
roof of the sky. Stars and moon disappeared; but not, so far, the light of
the moon; it merely became diffused—the way the light from an
electric bulb becomes diffused when you enclose it in a frosted globe. And
then, as the sheet of vapour above began to thicken, the light on the snow
became dim and dimmer, till the whole of the landscape lay in gloom. The
sheet still seemed to be coming, coming from the north. But no longer did
it travel away to the south. It was as if it had brought up against an
obstacle there, as if it were being held in place. And since there was
more and more of it pressing up—it seemed rather to be pushed now—it
telescoped together and threw itself into folds, till at last the whole
sky looked like an enormous system of parallel clothes-lines over all of
which one great, soft, and loose cloth were flung, so that fold after fold
would hang down between all the neighbouring pairs of lines; and between
two folds there would be a sharply converging, upward crease. It being
night, this arrangement, common in grey daylight, would not have shown at
all, had it not been for the moon above. As it was, every one of the
infolds showed an increasingly lighter grey the higher it folded up, and
like huge, black udders the outfolds were hanging down. This sky, when it
persists, I have often found to be followed within a few days by heavy
storms. To-night, however, it did not last. Shifting skies are never
certain signs, though they normally indicate an unsettled condition of the
atmosphere. I have observed them after a blizzard, too.</p>
<p>I looked back over my shoulder, just when I emerged from the bush into the
open fields. And there I became aware of a new element again. A quiet and
yet very distinct commotion arose from the south. These cloth-clouds
lifted, and a nearly impalpable change crept over the whole of the sky. A
few minutes later it crystallised into a distinct impression. A dark grey,
faintly luminous, inverted bowl stood overhead. Not a star was to be seen
above, nor yet the moon. But all around the horizon there was a nearly
clear ring, suffused with the light of the moon. There, where the sky is
most apt to be dark and hazy, stars peeped out—singly and dimly only—I
did not recognize any constellation.</p>
<p>And then the grey bowl seemed to contract into patches. Again the change
seemed to proceed from the south. The clouds seemed to lift still higher,
and to shrink into small, light, feathery cirrus clouds, silvery on the
dark blue sky—resembling white pencil shadings. The light of the
moon asserted itself anew. And this metamorphosis also spread upward, till
the moon herself looked out again, and it went on spreading northward till
it covered the whole of the sky.</p>
<p>This last change came just before I had to turn west again for a mile or
so in order to hit a trail into town. I did not mean to go on straight
ahead and to cut across those radiating road lines of which I have spoken
in a former paper. I knew that my wife would be sitting up and waiting
till midnight or two o’clock, and I wanted to make it. So I avoided all
risks and gave my attention to the road for a while. I had to drive
through a ditch and through a fence beyond, and to cross a field in order
to strike that road which led from the south through the park into town. A
certain farmstead was my landmark. Beyond it I had to watch out sharply if
I wanted to find the exact spot where according to my informant the wire
of the fence had been taken down. I found it.</p>
<p>To cross the field proved to be the hardest task the horses had had so far
during the night. The trail had been cut in deep through knee-high drifts,
and it was filled with firmly packed, freshly blown-in snow. That makes a
particularly bad road for fast driving. I simply had to take my time and
to give all my attention to the guiding of the horses. And here I was also
to become aware once more of the fact that my horses had not yet forgotten
their panic in that river drift of two hours ago. There was a strawstack
in the centre of the field; at least the shape of the big, white mound
suggested a strawstack; and the trail led closely by it. Sharp shadows
showed, and the horses, pricking their ears, began to dance and to sidle
away from it as we passed along its southern edge.</p>
<p>But we made it. By the time we reached the park that forms the approach to
the town from the south, the skies had changed completely. There was now,
as far as my eye would reach, just one vast, dark-blue, star-spangled
expanse. And the skies twinkled and blazed down upon the earth with a
veritable fervour. There was not one of the more familiar stars that did
not stand out brightly, even the minor ones which you do not ordinarily
see oftener than, maybe, once or twice a year—as, for instance,
Vega’s smaller companions in the constellation of the Lyre, or the minor
points in the cluster of the Pleiades.</p>
<p>I sometimes think that the mere fact of your being on a narrow bush-road,
with the trees looming darkly to both sides, makes the stars seem brighter
than they appear from the open fields. I have heard that you can see a
star even in daytime from the bottom of a deep mine-pit if it happens to
pass overhead. That would seem to make my impression less improbable,
perhaps. I know that not often have the stars seemed so much alive to me
as they did that night in the park.</p>
<p>And then I came into the town. I stayed about forty-five minutes, fed the
horses, had supper myself, and hitched up again.</p>
<p>On leaving town I went for another mile east in the shelter of a fringe of
bush; and this bush kept rustling as if a breeze had sprung up. But it was
not till I turned north again, on the twenty-mile stretch, that I became
conscious of a great change in the atmosphere. There was indeed a slight
breeze, coming from the north, and it felt very moist. Somehow it felt
homely and human, this breeze. There was a promise in it, as of a time,
not too far distant, when the sap would rise again in the trees and when
tender leaflets would begin to stir in delicate buds. So far, however, its
more immediate promise probably was snow.</p>
<p>But it did not last, either. A colder breeze sprang up. Between the two
there was a distinct lull. And again there arose in the north, far away,
at the very end of my seemingly endless road, a cloud-bank. The colder
wind that sprang up was gusty; it came in fits and starts, with short
lulls in between; it still had that water-laden feeling, but it was now
what you would call “damp” rather than “moist”—the way you often
feel winter-winds along the shores of great lakes or along sea-coasts.
There was a cutting edge to it—it was “raw” And it had not been
blowing very long before low-hanging, dark, and formless cloud-masses
began to scud up from the north to the zenith. The northern lights, too,
made their appearance again about that time. They formed an arc very far
to the south, vaulting up behind my back, beyond the zenith. No streamers
in them, no filtered rays and streaks—nothing but a blurred
luminosity high above the clouds and—so it seemed—above the
atmosphere. The northern lights have moods, like the clouds—moods as
varied as theirs—though they do not display them so often nor quite
so ostentatiously.</p>
<p>We were nearing the bridge across the infant river. The road from the
south slopes down to this bridge in a rather sudden, s-shaped curve, as
perhaps the reader remembers. I still had the moonlight from time to time,
and whenever one of the clouds floated in front of the crescent, I drove
more slowly and more carefully. Now there is a peculiar thing about
moonlight on snow. With a fairly well-marked trail on bare ground, in
summertime, a very little of it will suffice to indicate the road, for
there are enough rough spots on the best of trails to cast little shadows,
and grass and weeds on both sides usually mark the beaten track off still
more clearly, even though the road lead north. But the snow forms such an
even expanse, and the trail on it is so featureless that these signs are
no longer available. The light itself also is too characterless and too
white and too nearly of the same quality as the light reflected by the
snow to allow of judging distances delicately and accurately. You seem to
see nothing but one vast whiteness all around. When you drive east or
west, the smooth edges of the tracks will cast sharply defined shadows to
the north, but when you drive north or south, even these shadows are
absent, and so you must entirely rely on your horses to stay on the trail.
I have often observed how easily my own judgment was deluded.</p>
<p>But still I felt so absolutely sure that I should know when I approached
the bridge that, perhaps through overconfidence, I was caught napping.
There was another fact which I did not take sufficiently into account at
the time. I have mentioned that we had had a “soft spell.” In fact, it had
been so warm for a day or two that the older snow had completely iced
over. Now, much as I thought I was watching out, we were suddenly and
quite unexpectedly right on the downward slope before I even realized that
we were near it.</p>
<p>As I said, on this slope the trail described a double curve, and it hit
the bridge at an angle from the west. The first turn and the behaviour of
the horses were what convinced me that I had inadvertently gone too far.
If I had stopped the horses at the point where the slope began and then
started them downward at a slow walk, we should still have reached the
bridge at too great a speed; for the slope had offered the last big wind
from the north a sheer brow, and it was swept clean of new snow, thus
exposing the smooth ice underneath; the snow that had drifted from the
south, on the other hand, had been thrown beyond the river, on to the
lower northern bank; the horses skidded, and the weight of the cutter
would have pushed them forward. As it was, they realized the danger
themselves; for when we turned the second curve, both of them stiffened
their legs and spread their feet in order to break the momentum of the
cutter; but in spite of the heavy calks under their shoes they slipped on
all fours, hardly able to make the bend on to the bridge.</p>
<p>They had to turn nearly at right angles to their last direction, and the
bridge seemed to be one smooth sheet of ice. The moon shone brightly just
then; so I saw exactly what happened. As soon as the runners hit the
iced-over planks, the cutter swung out sideways; the horses, however,
slipping and recovering, managed to make the turn. It was a worth-while
sight to see them strike their calks into the ice and brace themselves
against the shock which they clearly expected when the cutter started to
skid. The latter swung clear of the bridge—you will remember that
the railing on the east-side was broken away—out into space, and
came down with a fearful crash, but right side up, on the steep north bank
of the river—just at the very moment when the horses reached the
deep, loose snow beyond which at least gave them a secure footing. They
had gone along the diagonal of the bridge, from the southwest corner,
barely clearing the rail, to the northwest corner where the snow had piled
in to a depth of from two to five feet on the sloping bank. If the ground
where I hit the bank had been bare, the cutter would have splintered to
pieces; as it was, the shock of it seemed to jar every bone in my body.</p>
<p>It seemed rather a piece of good luck that the horses bolted; the lines
held; they pulled me free of the drift on the bank and plunged out on the
road. For a mile or two we had a pretty wild run; and this time there was
no doubt about it, either, the horses were thoroughly frightened. They ran
till they were exhausted, and there was no holding them; but since I was
on a clear road, I did not worry very much. Nevertheless, I was rather
badly shaken up myself; and if I had followed the good advice that
suggested itself, I should have put in for some time at the very next farm
which I passed. The way I see things now, it was anything rather than safe
to go on. With horses in the nervous condition in which mine were I could
not hope any longer to keep them under control should a further accident
happen. But I had never yet given in when I had made up my mind to make
the trip, and it was hard to do so for the first time.</p>
<p>As soon as I had the horses sufficiently in hand again, I lighted my
lantern, got out on the road, and carefully looked my cutter over. I found
that the hardwood lining of both runners was broken at the curve, but the
steel shoes were, though slightly bent, still sound. Fortunately the top
had been down, otherwise further damage would have been sure to result. I
saw no reason to discontinue the drive.</p>
<p>Now after a while—when the nervousness incident upon the shock which
I had received subsided—my interest in the shifting skies revived
once more, and again I began to watch the clouds. The wind was squally,
and the low, black vapour-masses overhead had coalesced into a vast array
of very similar but yet distinct groups. There was still a certain amount
of light from the moon, but only just enough to show the texture and the
grouping of the clouds. Hardly ever had I seen, or at least consciously
taken note of a sky that with its blackness and its massed multitudes of
clouds looked so threatening, so sinister, so much like a battle-array.
But way up in the northeast there were two large areas quite suffused with
light from the north. They must have been thin cloud-layers in whose upper
reaches the northern lights were playing. And these patches of light were
like a promise, like a word of peace arresting the battle. Had it not been
for these islands of light, I should have felt depressed when I looked
back to the road.</p>
<p>We were swinging along as before. I had rested the horses by a walk, and
to a casual observer they would have seemed to be none the worse for their
fling at running away. But on closer scrutiny they would again have
revealed the unmistakable signs of nervous tension. Their ears moved
jerkily on the slightest provocation. Still, the road was good and clear,
and I had no apprehensions.</p>
<p>Then came the sudden end of the trail. It was right in front of a farm
yard. Clearly, the farmer had broken the last part of the road over which
I had come. The trail widened out to a large, circus-shaped flat in the
drifts. The snow had the ruffled appearance of being thoroughly tramped
down by a herd of cattle. On both sides there were trees—wild trees—a-plenty.
Brush lined the narrow road gap ahead; but the snow had piled in level
with its tops. This had always been rather a bad spot, though the last
time I had seen it the snow had settled down to about half the height of
the shrubs. I stopped and hesitated for a moment. I knew just where the
trail had been. It was about twenty-five feet from the fence of the field
to the east. It was now covered under three to four feet of freshly
drifted-in snow. The drift seemed to be higher towards the west, where the
brush stood higher, too. So I decided to stay as nearly as I could above
the old trail. There, even though we might break through the new snow the
older drifts underneath were likely to be firm enough.</p>
<p>We went ahead. The drift held, and slowly we climbed to its summit. It is
a strange coincidence that just then I should have glanced up at the sky.
I saw a huge, black cloud-mass elbowing its way, as it were, in front of
those islands of light, the promise of peace. And so much was I by this
time imbued with the moods of the skies that the disappearance of this
mild glimmer sent a regret through my very body. And simultaneously with
this thrill of regret there came—I remember this as distinctly as if
it had been an hour ago—the certainty of impending disaster. The
very next moment chaos reigned. The horses broke in, not badly at all; but
as a consequence of their nervous condition they flew into a panic. I held
them tight as they started to plunge. But there was no guiding them; they
were bound to have things their own way altogether. It seemed as if they
had lost their road-sense, too, for instead of plunging at least straight
ahead, out on the level trail, they made, with irresistible bounds and
without paying the slightest attention to the pull of the lines, towards
the east. There the drift, not being packed by any previous traffic, went
entirely to pieces under their feet. I had meanwhile thrown off my robes,
determined at all costs to bring them to a stop, for I knew, if I allowed
them to get away with me this time, they would be spoiled for any further
drives of mine.</p>
<p>Now just the very fraction of a second when I got my feet up against the
dashboard so as to throw my whole weight into my pull, they reared up as
if for one tremendous and supreme bound, and simultaneously I saw a fence
post straight under the cutter pole. Before I quite realized it, the
horses had already cleared the fence. I expected the collision, the
breaking of the drawbar and the bolting of the horses; but just then my
desperate effort in holding them told, and dancing and fretting they
stood. Then, in a flash, I mentally saw and understood the whole
situation. The runners of the cutter, still held up by the snow of the
drift which sloped down into the field and which the horses had churned
into slabs and clods, had struck the fence wire and, lifting the whole of
the conveyance, had placed me; cutter and all, balanced for a moment to a
nicety, on top of the post. But already we began to settle back.</p>
<p>I felt that I could not delay, for a moment later the runners would slip
off the wire and the cutter fall backward; that was the certain signal for
the horses to bolt. The very paradoxicality of the situation seemed to
give me a clue. I clicked my tongue and, holding the horses back with my
last ounce of strength, made them slowly dance forward and pull me over
the fence. In a moment I realized that I had made a mistake. A quick pull
would have jerked me clear of the post. As it was, it slowly grated along
the bottom of the box; then the cutter tilted forward, and when the
runners slipped off the wire, the cutter with myself pitched back with a
frightful knock against the post. The back panel of the box still shows
the splintered tear that fence post made. The shock of it threw me
forward, for a second I lost all purchase on the lines, and again the
horses went off in a panic. It was quite dark now, for the clouds were
thickening in the sky. While I attended to the horses, I reflected that
probably something had broken back there in the cutter, but worst of all,
I realized that this incident, for the time being at least, had completely
broken my nerve. As soon as I had brought the horses to a stop, I turned
in the knee-deep snow of the field and made for the fence.</p>
<p>Half a mile ahead there gleamed a light. I had, of course, to stay on the
field, and I drove along, slowly and carefully, skirting the fence and
watching it as closely as what light there was permitted.</p>
<p>I do not know why this incident affected me the way it did; but I presume
that the cumulative effect of three mishaps, one following the other, had
something to do with it; the same as it affected the horses. But more than
that, I believe, it was the effect of the skies. I am rather subject to
the influence of atmospheric conditions. There are not many things that I
would rather watch. No matter what the aspect of the skies may be, they
fascinate me. I have heard people say, “What a dull day!”—or, “What
a sleepy day!”—and that when I was enjoying my own little paradise
in yielding to the moods of cloud and sky. To this very hour I am
convinced that the skies broke my nerve that night, that those incidents
merely furnished them with an opportunity to get their work in more
tellingly.</p>
<p>Of the remainder of the drive little needs to be said. I found a way out
of the field, back to the road, drove into the yard of the farm where I
had seen the light, knocked at the house, and asked for and obtained the
night’s accommodation for myself and for my horses.</p>
<p>At six o’clock next morning I was on the road again. Both I and the horses
had shaken off the nightmare, and through a sprinkling, dusting fall of
snow we made the correction line and finally home in the best of moods and
conditions.</p>
<p>END <br/> <br/></p>
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