<h2><SPAN name="link2H_4_0013" id="link2H_4_0013"></SPAN> XIII<br/> A Golden Picnic</h2>
<p>Anne, on her way to Orchard Slope, met Diana, bound for Green Gables, just
where the mossy old log bridge spanned the brook below the Haunted Wood, and
they sat down by the margin of the Dryad’s Bubble, where tiny ferns were
unrolling like curly-headed green pixy folk wakening up from a nap.</p>
<p>“I was just on my way over to invite you to help me celebrate my birthday
on Saturday,” said Anne.</p>
<p>“Your birthday? But your birthday was in March!”</p>
<p>“That wasn’t my fault,” laughed Anne. “If my parents
had consulted me it would never have happened then. I should have chosen to be
born in spring, of course. It must be delightful to come into the world with
the mayflowers and violets. You would always feel that you were their foster
sister. But since I didn’t, the next best thing is to celebrate my
birthday in the spring. Priscilla is coming over Saturday and Jane will be
home. We’ll all four start off to the woods and spend a golden day making
the acquaintance of the spring. We none of us really know her yet, but
we’ll meet her back there as we never can anywhere else. I want to
explore all those fields and lonely places anyhow. I have a conviction that
there are scores of beautiful nooks there that have never really been
<i>seen</i> although they may have been <i>looked</i> at. We’ll make
friends with wind and sky and sun, and bring home the spring in our
hearts.”</p>
<p>“It <i>sounds</i> awfully nice,” said Diana, with some inward
distrust of Anne’s magic of words. “But won’t it be very damp
in some places yet?”</p>
<p>“Oh, we’ll wear rubbers,” was Anne’s concession to
practicalities. “And I want you to come over early Saturday morning and
help me prepare lunch. I’m going to have the daintiest things possible .
. . things that will match the spring, you understand . . . little jelly tarts
and lady fingers, and drop cookies frosted with pink and yellow icing, and
buttercup cake. And we must have sandwiches too, though they’re
<i>not</i> very poetical.”</p>
<p>Saturday proved an ideal day for a picnic . . . a day of breeze and blue, warm,
sunny, with a little rollicking wind blowing across meadow and orchard. Over
every sunlit upland and field was a delicate, flower-starred green.</p>
<p>Mr. Harrison, harrowing at the back of his farm and feeling some of the spring
witch-work even in his sober, middle-aged blood, saw four girls, basket laden,
tripping across the end of his field where it joined a fringing woodland of
birch and fir. Their blithe voices and laughter echoed down to him.</p>
<p>“It’s so easy to be happy on a day like this, isn’t
it?” Anne was saying, with true Anneish philosophy. “Let’s
try to make this a really golden day, girls, a day to which we can always look
back with delight. We’re to seek for beauty and refuse to see anything
else. ‘Begone, dull care!’ Jane, you are thinking of something that
went wrong in school yesterday.”</p>
<p>“How do you know?” gasped Jane, amazed.</p>
<p>“Oh, I know the expression . . . I’ve felt it often enough on my
own face. But put it out of your mind, there’s a dear. It will keep till
Monday . . . or if it doesn’t so much the better. Oh, girls, girls, see
that patch of violets! There’s something for memory’s picture
gallery. When I’m eighty years old . . . if I ever am . . . I shall shut
my eyes and see those violets just as I see them now. That’s the first
good gift our day has given us.”</p>
<p>“If a kiss could be seen I think it would look like a violet,” said
Priscilla.</p>
<p>Anne glowed.</p>
<p>“I’m so glad you <i>spoke</i> that thought, Priscilla, instead of
just thinking it and keeping it to yourself. This world would be a much more
interesting place . . . although it <i>is</i> very interesting anyhow . . . if
people spoke out their real thoughts.”</p>
<p>“It would be too hot to hold some folks,” quoted Jane sagely.</p>
<p>“I suppose it might be, but that would be their own faults for thinking
nasty things. Anyhow, we can tell all our thoughts today because we are going
to have nothing but beautiful thoughts. Everybody can say just what comes into
her head. <i>That</i> is conversation. Here’s a little path I never saw
before. Let’s explore it.”</p>
<p>The path was a winding one, so narrow that the girls walked in single file and
even then the fir boughs brushed their faces. Under the firs were velvety
cushions of moss, and further on, where the trees were smaller and fewer, the
ground was rich in a variety of green growing things.</p>
<p>“What a lot of elephant’s ears,” exclaimed Diana.
“I’m going to pick a big bunch, they’re so pretty.”</p>
<p>“How did such graceful feathery things ever come to have such a dreadful
name?” asked Priscilla.</p>
<p>“Because the person who first named them either had no imagination at all
or else far too much,” said Anne, “Oh, girls, look at that!”</p>
<p>“That” was a shallow woodland pool in the center of a little open
glade where the path ended. Later on in the season it would be dried up and its
place filled with a rank growth of ferns; but now it was a glimmering placid
sheet, round as a saucer and clear as crystal. A ring of slender young birches
encircled it and little ferns fringed its margin.</p>
<p>“<i>How</i> sweet!” said Jane.</p>
<p>“Let us dance around it like wood-nymphs,” cried Anne, dropping her
basket and extending her hands.</p>
<p>But the dance was not a success for the ground was boggy and Jane’s
rubbers came off.</p>
<p>“You can’t be a wood-nymph if you have to wear rubbers,” was
her decision.</p>
<p>“Well, we must name this place before we leave it,” said Anne,
yielding to the indisputable logic of facts. “Everybody suggest a name
and we’ll draw lots. Diana?”</p>
<p>“Birch Pool,” suggested Diana promptly.</p>
<p>“Crystal Lake,” said Jane.</p>
<p>Anne, standing behind them, implored Priscilla with her eyes not to perpetrate
another such name and Priscilla rose to the occasion with
“Glimmer-glass.” Anne’s selection was “The
Fairies’ Mirror.”</p>
<p>The names were written on strips of birch bark with a pencil Schoolma’am
Jane produced from her pocket, and placed in Anne’s hat. Then Priscilla
shut her eyes and drew one. “Crystal Lake,” read Jane triumphantly.
Crystal Lake it was, and if Anne thought that chance had played the pool a
shabby trick she did not say so.</p>
<p>Pushing through the undergrowth beyond, the girls came out to the young green
seclusion of Mr. Silas Sloane’s back pasture. Across it they found the
entrance to a lane striking up through the woods and voted to explore it also.
It rewarded their quest with a succession of pretty surprises. First, skirting
Mr. Sloane’s pasture, came an archway of wild cherry trees all in bloom.
The girls swung their hats on their arms and wreathed their hair with the
creamy, fluffy blossoms. Then the lane turned at right angles and plunged into
a spruce wood so thick and dark that they walked in a gloom as of twilight,
with not a glimpse of sky or sunlight to be seen.</p>
<p>“This is where the bad wood elves dwell,” whispered Anne.
“They are impish and malicious but they can’t harm us, because they
are not allowed to do evil in the spring. There was one peeping at us around
that old twisted fir; and didn’t you see a group of them on that big
freckly toadstool we just passed? The good fairies always dwell in the sunshiny
places.”</p>
<p>“I wish there really were fairies,” said Jane.
“Wouldn’t it be nice to have three wishes granted you . . . or even
only one? What would you wish for, girls, if you could have a wish granted?
I’d wish to be rich and beautiful and clever.”</p>
<p>“I’d wish to be tall and slender,” said Diana.</p>
<p>“I would wish to be famous,” said Priscilla. Anne thought of her
hair and then dismissed the thought as unworthy.</p>
<p>“I’d wish it might be spring all the time and in everybody’s
heart and all our lives,” she said.</p>
<p>“But that,” said Priscilla, “would be just wishing this world
were like heaven.”</p>
<p>“Only like a part of heaven. In the other parts there would be summer and
autumn . . . yes, and a bit of winter, too. I think I want glittering snowy
fields and white frosts in heaven sometimes. Don’t you, Jane?”</p>
<p>“I . . . I don’t know,” said Jane uncomfortably. Jane was a
good girl, a member of the church, who tried conscientiously to live up to her
profession and believed everything she had been taught. But she never thought
about heaven any more than she could help, for all that.</p>
<p>“Minnie May asked me the other day if we would wear our best dresses
every day in heaven,” laughed Diana.</p>
<p>“And didn’t you tell her we would?” asked Anne.</p>
<p>“Mercy, no! I told her we wouldn’t be thinking of dresses at all
there.”</p>
<p>“Oh, I think we will . . . a <i>little</i>,” said Anne earnestly.
“There’ll be plenty of time in all eternity for it without
neglecting more important things. I believe we’ll all wear beautiful
dresses . . . or I suppose <i>raiment</i> would be a more suitable way of
speaking. I shall want to wear pink for a few centuries at first . . . it would
take me that long to get tired of it, I feel sure. I do love pink so and I can
never wear it in <i>this</i> world.”</p>
<p>Past the spruces the lane dipped down into a sunny little open where a log
bridge spanned a brook; and then came the glory of a sunlit beechwood where the
air was like transparent golden wine, and the leaves fresh and green, and the
wood floor a mosaic of tremulous sunshine. Then more wild cherries, and a
little valley of lissome firs, and then a hill so steep that the girls lost
their breath climbing it; but when they reached the top and came out into the
open the prettiest surprise of all awaited them.</p>
<p>Beyond were the “back fields” of the farms that ran out to the
upper Carmody road. Just before them, hemmed in by beeches and firs but open to
the south, was a little corner and in it a garden . . . or what had once been a
garden. A tumbledown stone dyke, overgrown with mosses and grass, surrounded
it. Along the eastern side ran a row of garden cherry trees, white as a
snowdrift. There were traces of old paths still and a double line of rosebushes
through the middle; but all the rest of the space was a sheet of yellow and
white narcissi, in their airiest, most lavish, wind-swayed bloom above the lush
green grasses.</p>
<p>“Oh, how perfectly lovely!” three of the girls cried. Anne only
gazed in eloquent silence.</p>
<p>“How in the world does it happen that there ever was a garden back
here?” said Priscilla in amazement.</p>
<p>“It must be Hester Gray’s garden,” said Diana.
“I’ve heard mother speak of it but I never saw it before, and I
wouldn’t have supposed that it could be in existence still. You’ve
heard the story, Anne?”</p>
<p>“No, but the name seems familiar to me.”</p>
<p>“Oh, you’ve seen it in the graveyard. She is buried down there in
the poplar corner. You know the little brown stone with the opening gates
carved on it and ‘Sacred to the memory of Hester Gray, aged
twenty-two.’ Jordan Gray is buried right beside her but there’s no
stone to him. It’s a wonder Marilla never told you about it, Anne. To be
sure, it happened thirty years ago and everybody has forgotten.”</p>
<p>“Well, if there’s a story we must have it,” said Anne.
“Let’s sit right down here among the narcissi and Diana will tell
it. Why, girls, there are hundreds of them . . . they’ve spread over
everything. It looks as if the garden were carpeted with moonshine and sunshine
combined. This is a discovery worth making. To think that I’ve lived
within a mile of this place for six years and have never seen it before! Now,
Diana.”</p>
<p>“Long ago,” began Diana, “this farm belonged to old Mr. David
Gray. He didn’t live on it . . . he lived where Silas Sloane lives now.
He had one son, Jordan, and he went up to Boston one winter to work and while
he was there he fell in love with a girl named Hester Murray. She was working
in a store and she hated it. She’d been brought up in the country and she
always wanted to get back. When Jordan asked her to marry him she said she
would if he’d take her away to some quiet spot where she’d see
nothing but fields and trees. So he brought her to Avonlea. Mrs. Lynde said he
was taking a fearful risk in marrying a Yankee, and it’s certain that
Hester was very delicate and a very poor housekeeper; but mother says she was
very pretty and sweet and Jordan just worshipped the ground she walked on.
Well, Mr. Gray gave Jordan this farm and he built a little house back here and
Jordan and Hester lived in it for four years. She never went out much and
hardly anybody went to see her except mother and Mrs. Lynde. Jordan made her
this garden and she was crazy about it and spent most of her time in it. She
wasn’t much of a housekeeper but she had a knack with flowers. And then
she got sick. Mother says she thinks she was in consumption before she ever
came here. She never really laid up but just grew weaker and weaker all the
time. Jordan wouldn’t have anybody to wait on her. He did it all himself
and mother says he was as tender and gentle as a woman. Every day he’d
wrap her in a shawl and carry her out to the garden and she’d lie there
on a bench quite happy. They say she used to make Jordan kneel down by her
every night and morning and pray with her that she might die out in the garden
when the time came. And her prayer was answered. One day Jordan carried her out
to the bench and then he picked all the roses that were out and heaped them
over her; and she just smiled up at him . . . and closed her eyes . . . and
that,” concluded Diana softly, “was the end.”</p>
<p>“Oh, what a dear story,” sighed Anne, wiping away her tears.</p>
<p>“What became of Jordan?” asked Priscilla.</p>
<p>“He sold the farm after Hester died and went back to Boston. Mr. Jabez
Sloane bought the farm and hauled the little house out to the road. Jordan died
about ten years after and he was brought home and buried beside Hester.”</p>
<p>“I can’t understand how she could have wanted to live back here,
away from everything,” said Jane.</p>
<p>“Oh, I can easily understand <i>that</i>,” said Anne thoughtfully.
“I wouldn’t want it myself for a steady thing, because, although I
love the fields and woods, I love people too. But I can understand it in
Hester. She was tired to death of the noise of the big city and the crowds of
people always coming and going and caring nothing for her. She just wanted to
escape from it all to some still, green, friendly place where she could rest.
And she got just what she wanted, which is something very few people do, I
believe. She had four beautiful years before she died. . . four years of
perfect happiness, so I think she was to be envied more than pitied. And then
to shut your eyes and fall asleep among roses, with the one you loved best on
earth smiling down at you . . . oh, I think it was beautiful!”</p>
<p>“She set out those cherry trees over there,” said Diana. “She
told mother she’d never live to eat their fruit, but she wanted to think
that something she had planted would go on living and helping to make the world
beautiful after she was dead.”</p>
<p>“I’m so glad we came this way,” said Anne, the shining-eyed.
“This is my adopted birthday, you know, and this garden and its story is
the birthday gift it has given me. Did your mother ever tell you what Hester
Gray looked like, Diana?”</p>
<p>“No . . . only just that she was pretty.”</p>
<p>“I’m rather glad of that, because I can imagine what she looked
like, without being hampered by facts. I think she was very slight and small,
with softly curling dark hair and big, sweet, timid brown eyes, and a little
wistful, pale face.”</p>
<p>The girls left their baskets in Hester’s garden and spent the rest of the
afternoon rambling in the woods and fields surrounding it, discovering many
pretty nooks and lanes. When they got hungry they had lunch in the prettiest
spot of all . . . on the steep bank of a gurgling brook where white birches
shot up out of long feathery grasses. The girls sat down by the roots and did
full justice to Anne’s dainties, even the unpoetical sandwiches being
greatly appreciated by hearty, unspoiled appetites sharpened by all the fresh
air and exercise they had enjoyed. Anne had brought glasses and lemonade for
her guests, but for her own part drank cold brook water from a cup fashioned
out of birch bark. The cup leaked, and the water tasted of earth, as brook
water is apt to do in spring; but Anne thought it more appropriate to the
occasion than lemonade.</p>
<p>“Look do you see that poem?” she said suddenly, pointing.</p>
<p>“Where?” Jane and Diana stared, as if expecting to see Runic rhymes
on the birch trees.</p>
<p>“There . . . down in the brook . . . that old green, mossy log with the
water flowing over it in those smooth ripples that look as if they’d been
combed, and that single shaft of sunshine falling right athwart it, far down
into the pool. Oh, it’s the most beautiful poem I ever saw.”</p>
<p>“I should rather call it a picture,” said Jane. “A poem is
lines and verses.”</p>
<p>“Oh dear me, no.” Anne shook her head with its fluffy wild cherry
coronal positively. “The lines and verses are only the outward garments
of the poem and are no more really it than your ruffles and flounces are
<i>you</i>, Jane. The real poem is the soul within them . . . and that
beautiful bit is the soul of an unwritten poem. It is not every day one sees a
soul . . . even of a poem.”</p>
<p>“I wonder what a soul . . . a person’s soul . . . would look
like,” said Priscilla dreamily.</p>
<p>“Like that, I should think,” answered Anne, pointing to a radiance
of sifted sunlight streaming through a birch tree. “Only with shape and
features of course. I like to fancy souls as being made of light. And some are
all shot through with rosy stains and quivers . . . and some have a soft
glitter like moonlight on the sea . . . and some are pale and transparent like
mist at dawn.”</p>
<p>“I read somewhere once that souls were like flowers,” said
Priscilla.</p>
<p>“Then your soul is a golden narcissus,” said Anne, “and
Diana’s is like a red, red rose. Jane’s is an apple blossom, pink
and wholesome and sweet.”</p>
<p>“And your own is a white violet, with purple streaks in its heart,”
finished Priscilla.</p>
<p>Jane whispered to Diana that she really could not understand what they were
talking about. Could she?</p>
<p>The girls went home by the light of a calm golden sunset, their baskets filled
with narcissus blossoms from Hester’s garden, some of which Anne carried
to the cemetery next day and laid upon Hester’s grave. Minstrel robins
were whistling in the firs and the frogs were singing in the marshes. All the
basins among the hills were brimmed with topaz and emerald light.</p>
<p>“Well, we have had a lovely time after all,” said Diana, as if she
had hardly expected to have it when she set out.</p>
<p>“It has been a truly golden day,” said Priscilla.</p>
<p>“I’m really awfully fond of the woods myself,” said Jane.</p>
<p>Anne said nothing. She was looking afar into the western sky and thinking of
little Hester Gray.</p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />