14.
Former Inhabitants;
and Winter Visitors
I weathered some merry snow-storms,
and spent some cheerful winter evenings by my fireside, while the snow
whirled wildly without, and even the hooting of the owl was hushed. For
many weeks I met no one in my walks but those who came occasionally to
cut wood and sled it to the village. The elements, however, abetted me
in making a path through the deepest snow in the woods, for when I had
once gone through the wind blew the oak leaves into my tracks, where they
lodged, and by absorbing the rays of the sun melted the snow, and so not
only made a my bed for my feet, but in the night their dark line was my
guide. For human society I was obliged to conjure up the former occupants
of these woods. Within the memory of many of my townsmen the road near
which my house stands resounded with the laugh and gossip of inhabitants,
and the woods which border it were notched and dotted here and there with
their little gardens and dwellings, though it was then much more shut in
by the forest than now. In some places, within my own remembrance, the
pines would scrape both sides of a chaise at once, and women and children
who were compelled to go this way to Lincoln alone and on foot did it with
fear, and often ran a good part of the distance. Though mainly but a humble
route to neighboring villages, or for the woodman's team, it once amused
the traveller more than now by its variety, and lingered longer in his
memory. Where now firm open fields stretch from the village to the woods,
it then ran through a maple swamp on a foundation of logs, the remnants
of which, doubtless, still underlie the present dusty highway, from the
Stratton, now the Alms-House Farm, to Brister's Hill.
East of my bean-field, across the
road, lived Cato Ingraham, slave of Duncan Ingraham, Esquire, gentleman,
of Concord village, who built his slave a house, and gave him permission
to live in Walden Woods;--Cato, not Uticensis, but Concordiensis.(1)
Some say that he was a Guinea Negro. There are a few who remember his little
patch among the walnuts, which he let grow up till he should be old and
need them; but a younger and whiter speculator got them at last. He too,
however, occupies an equally narrow house at present. Cato's half-obliterated
cellar-hole still remains, though known to few, being concealed from the
traveller by a fringe of pines. It is now filled with the smooth sumach
(Rhus glabra), and one of the earliest species of goldenrod (Solidago
stricta) grows there luxuriantly.
Here, by the very corner of my field,
still nearer to town, Zilpha, a colored woman, had her little house, where
she spun linen for the townsfolk, making the Walden Woods ring with her
shrill singing, for she had a loud and notable voice. At length, in the
war of 1812,(2) her dwelling
was set on fire by English soldiers, prisoners on parole, when she was
away, and her cat and dog and hens were all burned up together. She led
a hard life, and somewhat inhumane. One old frequenter of these woods remembers,
that as he passed her house one noon he heard her muttering to herself
over her gurgling pot--"Ye are all bones, bones!" I have seen bricks amid
the oak copse there.
Down the road, on the right hand, on Brister's Hill,
lived Brister Freeman, "a handy Negro," slave of Squire Cummings once--there
where grow still the apple trees which Brister planted and tended; large
old trees now, but their fruit still wild and ciderish to my taste. Not
long since I read his epitaph in the old Lincoln burying-ground, a little
on one side, near the unmarked graves of some British grenadiers who fell
in the retreat from Concord--where he is styled "Sippio Brister"--Scipio
Africanus (3) he had some title
to be called--"a man of color," as if he were discolored. It also told
me, with staring emphasis, when he died; which was but an indirect way
of informing me that he ever lived. With him dwelt Fenda, his hospitable
wife, who told fortunes, yet pleasantly--large, round, and black, blacker
than any of the children of night, such a dusky orb as never rose on Concord
before or since.
Farther down the hill, on the left, on the old road
in the woods, are marks of some homestead of the Stratton family; whose
orchard once covered all the slope of Brister's Hill, but was long since
killed out by pitch pines, excepting a few stumps, whose old roots furnish
still the wild stocks of many a thrifty village tree.(4)
Nearer yet to town, you come to Breed's location,
on the other side of the way, just on the edge of the wood; ground famous
for the pranks of a demon not distinctly named in old mythology, who has
acted a prominent and astounding part in our New England life, and deserves,
as much as any mythological character, to have his biography written one
day; who first comes in the guise of a friend or hired man, and then robs
and murders the whole family--New-England Rum. But history must not yet
tell the tragedies enacted here; let time intervene in some measure to
assuage and lend an azure tint to them. Here the most indistinct and dubious
tradition says that once a tavern stood; the well the same, which tempered
the traveller's beverage and refreshed his steed. Here then men saluted
one another, and heard and told the news, and went their ways again.
Breed's hut was standing only a dozen years ago,
though it had long been unoccupied. It was about the size of mine. It
was set on fire by mischievous boys, one Election night, if I do not mistake.
I lived on the edge of the village then, and had just lost myself over
Davenant's (5) "Gondibert," that
winter that I labored with a lethargy--which, by the way, I never knew
whether to regard as a family complaint, having an uncle
(6) who goes to sleep shaving himself, and
is obliged to sprout potatoes in a cellar Sundays, in order to keep awake
and keep the Sabbath, or as the consequence of my attempt to read Chalmers'(7)
collection of English poetry without skipping. It fairly overcame my Nervii.
I had just sunk my head on this when the bells rung fire, and in hot haste
the engines rolled that way, led by a straggling troop of men and boys,
and I among the foremost, for I had leaped the brook. We thought it was
far south over the woods--we who had run to fires before--barn, shop, or
dwelling-house, or all together. "It's Baker's barn," cried one. "It is
the Codman place," affirmed another. And then fresh sparks went up above
the wood, as if the roof fell in, and we all shouted "Concord to the rescue!"
Wagons shot past with furious speed and crushing loads, bearing, perchance,
among the rest, the agent of the Insurance Company, who was bound to go
however far; and ever and anon the engine bell tinkled behind, more slow
and sure; and rearmost of all, as it was afterward whispered, came they
who set the fire and gave the alarm. Thus we kept on like true idealists,
rejecting the evidence of our senses, until at a turn in the road we heard
the crackling and actually felt the heat of the fire from over the wall,
and realized, alas! that we were there. The very nearness of the fire but
cooled our ardor. At first we thought to throw a frog-pond on to it; but
concluded to let it burn, it was so far gone and so worthless. So
we stood round our engine, jostled one another, expressed our sentiments
through speaking-trumpets, or in lower tone referred to the great conflagrations
which the world has witnessed, including Bascom's shop, and, between ourselves,
we thought that, were we there in season with our "tub,(8)"
and a full frog-pond by, we could turn that threatened last and universal
one into another flood. We finally retreated without doing any mischief--returned
to sleep and "Gondibert." But as for "Gondibert," I would except that passage
in the preface about wit being the soul's powder--"but most of mankind
are strangers to wit, as Indians are to powder."
It chanced that I walked that way across the fields
the following night, about the same hour, and hearing a low moaning at
this spot, I drew near in the dark, and discovered the only survivor of
the family that I know, the heir of both its virtues and its vices, who
alone was interested in this burning, lying on his stomach and looking
over the cellar wall at the still smouldering cinders beneath, muttering
to himself, as is his wont. He had been working far off in the river meadows
all day, and had improved the first moments that he could call his own
to visit the home of his fathers and his youth. He gazed into the cellar
from all sides and points of view by turns, always lying down to it, as
if there was some treasure, which he remembered, concealed between the
stones, where there was absolutely nothing but a heap of bricks and ashes. The
house being gone, he looked at what there was left. He was soothed by the
sympathy which my mere presence, implied, and showed me, as well as the
darkness permitted, where the well was covered up; which, thank Heaven,
could never be burned; and he groped long about the wall to find the well-sweep
which his father had cut and mounted, feeling for the iron hook or staple
by which a burden had been fastened to the heavy end--all that he could
now cling to--to convince me that it was no common "rider.(9)"
I felt it, and still remark it almost daily in my walks, for by it hangs
the history of a family.
Once more, on the left, where are seen the well and
lilac bushes by the wall, in the now open field, lived Nutting and Le Grosse.
But to return toward Lincoln.
Farther in the woods than any of these, where the
road approaches nearest to the pond, Wyman the potter squatted, and furnished
his townsmen with earthenware, and left descendants to succeed him. Neither
were they rich in worldly goods, holding the land by sufferance while they
lived; and there often the sheriff came in vain to collect the taxes, and
"attached a chip," for form's sake, as I have read in his accounts, there
being nothing else that he could lay his hands on. One day in midsummer,
when I was hoeing, a man who was carrying a load of pottery to market stopped
his horse against my field and inquired concerning Wyman the younger. He
had long ago bought a potter's wheel of him, and wished to know what had
become of him. I had read of the potter's clay and wheel in Scripture,
but it had never occurred to me that the pots we use were not such as had
come down unbroken from those days, or grown on trees like gourds somewhere,
and I was pleased to hear that so fictile an art was ever practiced in
my neighborhood.
The last inhabitant of these woods before me was
an Irishman, Hugh Quoil (if I have spelt his name with coil enough), who
occupied Wyman's tenement--Col. Quoil, he was called. Rumor said that he
had been a soldier at Waterloo. If he had lived I should have made him
fight his battles over again. His trade here was that of a ditcher. Napoleon
went to St. Helena; Quoil came to Walden Woods. All I know of him is tragic.
He was a man of manners, like one who had seen the world, and was capable
of more civil speech than you could well attend to. He wore a greatcoat
in midsummer, being affected with the trembling delirium, and his face
was the color of carmine. He died in the road at the foot of Brister's
Hill shortly after I came to the woods, so that I have not remembered him
as a neighbor. Before his house was pulled down, when his comrades avoided
it as "an unlucky castle," I visited it. There lay his old clothes curled
up by use, as if they were himself, upon his raised plank bed. His pipe
lay broken on the hearth, instead of a bowl broken at the fountain. The
last could never have been the symbol of his death, for he confessed to
me that, though he had heard of Brister's Spring, he had never seen it;
and soiled cards, kings of diamonds, spades, and hearts, were scattered
over the floor. One black chicken which the administrator could not catch,
black as night and as silent, not even croaking, awaiting Reynard, still
went to roost in the next apartment. In the rear there was the dim outline
of a garden, which had been planted but had never received its first hoeing,
owing to those terrible shaking fits, though it was now harvest time. It
was overrun with Roman wormwood and beggar-ticks, which last stuck to my
clothes for all fruit. The skin of a woodchuck was
freshly stretched upon the back of the house, a trophy of his last Waterloo;(10)
but no warm cap or mittens would he want more.
Now only a dent in the earth marks the site of these
dwellings, with buried cellar stones, and strawberries, raspberries, thimble-berries,
hazel-bushes, and sumachs growing in the sunny sward there; some pitch
pine or gnarled oak occupies what was the chimney nook, and a sweet-scented
black birch, perhaps, waves where the door-stone was. Sometimes the well
dent is visible, where once a spring oozed; now dry and tearless grass;
or it was covered deep--not to be discovered till some late day--with a
flat stone under the sod, when the last of the race departed. What a sorrowful
act must that be--the covering up of wells! coincident with the opening
of wells of tears. These cellar dents, like deserted
fox burrows, old holes, are all that is left where once were the stir and
bustle of human life, and "fate, free will, foreknowledge absolute,"(11)
in some form and dialect or other were by turns discussed. But all I can
learn of their conclusions amounts to just this, that "Cato and Brister
pulled wool"; which is about as edifying as the history of more famous
schools of philosophy.
Still grows the vivacious lilac a generation after
the door and lintel and the sill are gone, unfolding its sweet-scented
flowers each spring, to be plucked by the musing traveller; planted and
tended once by children's hands, in front-yard plots--now standing by wallsides
in retired pastures, and giving place to new-rising forests;--the last
of that stirp, sole survivor of that family. Little did the dusky children
think that the puny slip with its two eyes only, which they stuck in the
ground in the shadow of the house and daily watered, would root itself
so, and outlive them, and house itself in the rear that shaded it, and
grown man's garden and orchard, and tell their story faintly to the lone
wanderer a half-century after they had grown up and died--blossoming as
fair, and smelling as sweet, as in that first spring. I mark its still
tender, civil, cheerful lilac colors.
But this small village, germ of something more, why
did it fail while Concord keeps its ground? Were there no natural advantages--no
water privileges, forsooth? Ay, the deep Walden Pond and cool Brister's
Spring--privilege to drink long and healthy draughts at these, all unimproved
by these men but to dilute their glass. They were universally a thirsty
race. Might not the basket, stable-broom, mat-making, corn-parching, linen-spinning,
and pottery business have thrived here, making the wilderness to blossom
like the rose, and a numerous posterity have inherited the land of their
fathers? The sterile soil would at least have been proof against a low-land
degeneracy. Alas! how little does the memory of these human inhabitants
enhance the beauty of the landscape! Again, perhaps, Nature will try, with
me for a first settler, and my house raised last spring to be the oldest
in the hamlet.
I am not aware that any man has ever built on the
spot which I occupy. Deliver me from a city built on the site of a more
ancient city, whose materials are ruins, whose gardens cemeteries. The
soil is blanched and accursed there, and before that becomes necessary
the earth itself will be destroyed. With such reminiscences I repeopled
the woods and lulled myself asleep.
At this season I seldom had a visitor. When the snow
lay deepest no wanderer ventured near my house for a week or fortnight
at a time, but there I lived as snug as a meadow mouse, or as cattle and
poultry which are said to have survived for a long time buried in drifts,
even without food; or like that early settler's family in the town of Sutton,
in this State, whose cottage was completely covered by the great snow of
1717 when he was absent, and an Indian found it only by the hole which
the chimney's breath made in the drift, and so relieved the family. But
no friendly Indian concerned himself about me; nor needed he, for the master
of the house was at home. The Great Snow! How cheerful it is to hear of!
When the farmers could not get to the woods and swamps with their teams,
and were obliged to cut down the shade trees before their houses, and,
when the crust was harder, cut off the trees in the swamps, ten feet from
the ground, as it appeared the next spring.
In the deepest snows, the path which I used from
the highway to my house, about half a mile long, might have been represented
by a meandering dotted line, with wide intervals between the dots. For
a week of even weather I took exactly the same number of steps, and of
the same length, coming and going, stepping deliberately and with the precision
of a pair of dividers in my own deep tracks--to such routine the winter
reduces us--yet often they were filled with heaven's own blue. But no weather
interfered fatally with my walks, or rather my going abroad, for I frequently
tramped eight or ten miles through the deepest snow to keep an appointment
with a beech tree, or a yellow birch, or an old acquaintance among the
pines; when the ice and snow causing their limbs to droop, and so sharpening
their tops, had changed the pines into fir trees; wading to the tops of
the highest hills when the show was nearly two feet deep on a level, and
shaking down another snow-storm on my head at every step; or sometimes
creeping and floundering thither on my hands and knees, when the hunters
had gone into winter quarters. One afternoon I amused myself by watching
a barred owl (Strix nebulosa) sitting on one of the lower dead limbs
of a white pine, close to the trunk, in broad daylight, I standing within
a rod of him. He could hear me when I moved and cronched the snow with
my feet, but could not plainly see me. When I made most noise he would
stretch out his neck, and erect his neck feathers, and open his eyes wide;
but their lids soon fell again, and he began to nod. I too felt a slumberous
influence after watching him half an hour, as he sat thus with his eyes
half open, like a cat, winged brother of the cat. There was only a narrow
slit left between their lids, by which be preserved a pennisular relation
to me; thus, with half-shut eyes, looking out from the land of dreams,
and endeavoring to realize me, vague object or mote that interrupted his
visions. At length, on some louder noise or my nearer approach, he would
grow uneasy and sluggishly turn about on his perch, as if impatient at
having his dreams disturbed; and when he launched himself off and flapped
through the pines, spreading his wings to unexpected breadth, I could not
hear the slightest sound from them. Thus, guided amid the pine boughs rather
by a delicate sense of their neighborhood than by sight, feeling his twilight
way, as it were, with his sensitive pinions, he found a new perch, where
he might in peace await the dawning of his day.
As I walked over the long causeway made for the railroad
through the meadows, I encountered many a blustering and nipping wind,
for nowhere has it freer play; and when the frost had smitten me on one
cheek, heathen as I was, I turned to it the other also. Nor was it much
better by the carriage road from Brister's Hill. For I came to town still,
like a friendly Indian, when the contents of the broad open fields were
all piled up between the walls of the Walden road, and half an hour sufficed
to obliterate the tracks of the last traveller. And when I returned new
drifts would have formed, through which I floundered, where the busy northwest
wind had been depositing the powdery snow round a sharp angle in the road,
and not a rabbit's track, nor even the fine print, the small type, of a
meadow mouse was to be seen. Yet I rarely failed to find, even in midwinter,
some warm and springly swamp where the grass and the skunk-cabbage still
put forth with perennial verdure, and some hardier bird occasionally awaited
the return of spring.
Sometimes, notwithstanding the snow, when I returned
from my walk at evening I crossed the deep tracks of a woodchopper leading
from my door, and found his pile of whittlings on the hearth, and my house
filled with the odor of his pipe. Or on a Sunday
afternoon, if I chanced to be at home, I heard the cronching of the snow
made by the step of a long-headed farmer, who from far through the woods
sought my house, to have a social "crack"; one of the few of his vocation
who are "men on their farms";(12)
who donned a frock instead of a professor's gown, and is as ready to extract
the moral out of church or state as to haul a load of manure from his barn-yard.
We talked of rude and simple times, when men sat about large fires in cold,
bracing weather, with clear heads; and when other dessert failed, we tried
our teeth on many a nut which wise squirrels have long since abandoned,
for those which have the thickest shells are commonly empty.
The one who came from farthest to
my lodge, through deepest snows and most dismal tempests, was a poet.(13)
A farmer, a hunter, a soldier, a reporter, even a philosopher, may be daunted;
but nothing can deter a poet, for he is actuated by pure love. Who can
predict his comings and goings? His business calls him out at all hours,
even when doctors sleep. We made that small house ring with boisterous
mirth and resound with the murmur of much sober talk, making amends then
to Walden vale for the long silences. Broadway was still and deserted in
comparison. At suitable intervals there were regular salutes of laughter,
which might have been referred indifferently to the last-uttered or the
forth-coming jest. We made many a "bran new" theory of life over a thin
dish of gruel, which combined the advantages of conviviality with the clear-headedness
which philosophy requires.
I should not forget that during
my last winter at the pond there was another welcome visitor,(14)
who at one time came through the village, through snow and rain and darkness,
till he saw my lamp through the trees, and shared with me some long winter
evenings. One of the last of the philosophers--Connecticut gave him to
the world--he peddled first her wares, afterwards, as he declares, his
brains. These he peddles still, prompting God and disgracing man, bearing
for fruit his brain only, like the nut its kernel. I think that he must
be the man of the most faith of any alive. His words and attitude always
suppose a better state of things than other men are acquainted with, and
he will be the last man to be disappointed as the ages revolve. He has
no venture in the present. But though comparatively
disregarded now, when his day comes, laws unsuspected by most will take
effect, and masters of families and rulers will come to him for advice.
"How blind that cannot see serenity!"(15)
A true friend of man; almost the only friend of human progress. An
Old Mortality,(16) say rather
an Immortality, with unwearied patience and faith making plain the image
engraven in men's bodies, the God of whom they are but defaced and leaning
monuments. With his hospitable intellect he embraces children, beggars,
insane, and scholars, and entertains the thought of all, adding to it commonly
some breadth and elegance. I think that he should keep a caravansary on
the world's highway, where philosophers of all nations might put up, and
on his sign should be printed, "Entertainment for man, but not for his
beast. Enter ye that have leisure and a quiet mind, who earnestly seek
the right road." He is perhaps the sanest man and has the fewest crotchets
of any I chance to know; the same yesterday and tomorrow. Of yore we had
sauntered and talked, and effectually put the world behind us; for he was
pledged to no institution in it, freeborn, ingenuus. Whichever way we turned,
it seemed that the heavens and the earth had met together, since he enhanced
the beauty of the landscape. A blue-robed man, whose fittest roof is the
overarching sky which reflects his serenity. I do not see how he can ever
die; Nature cannot spare him.
Having each some shingles of thought well dried,
we sat and whittled them, trying our knives, and admiring the clear yellowish
grain of the pumpkin pine. We waded so gently and reverently, or we pulled
together so smoothly, that the fishes of thought were not scared from the
stream, nor feared any angler on the bank, but came and went grandly, like
the clouds which float through the western sky, and the mother-o'-pearl
flocks which sometimes form and dissolve there. There we worked, revising
mythology, rounding a fable here and there, and building castles in the
air for which earth offered no worthy foundation. Great Looker! Great Expecter!
to converse with whom was a New England Night's Entertainment. Ah! such
discourse we had, hermit and philosopher, and the old settler I have spoken
of--we three--it expanded and racked my little house; I should not dare
to say how many pounds' weight there was above the atmospheric pressure
on every circular inch; it opened its seams so that they had to be calked
with much dulness thereafter to stop the consequent leak;--but I had enough
of that kind of oakum already picked.
There was one other
(17) with whom I had "solid seasons," long
to be remembered, at his house in the village, and who looked in upon me
from time to time; but I had no more for society there.
There too, as everywhere, I sometimes expected the
Visitor who never comes. The Vishnu Purana (18)
says, "The house-holder is to remain at eventide in his courtyard as long
as it takes to milk a cow, or longer if he pleases, to await the arrival
of a guest." I often performed this duty of hospitality, waited long enough
to milk a whole herd of cows, but did not see the man approaching from
the town.
Notes
- more information
1. not the Roman Marcus Porcius
Cato (95-46 B.C.), but Cato of Concord - back
2. British prisoners were in Concord
during the War of 1812 - back
3. title given a Roman general
after the defeat of hannibal - back
4. "Surveying for Cyrus Jarvis
Dec. 23d 56-- he shows me a deed of this lot contaning 6 A. 52 rods all
on the W. of the Wayland Road--& 'consisting of plowland, orcharding
& woodland,' sold by Joseph Stratton to Samual Swan of Concord In holder
Aug. 11th 1777" - Thoreau's note -
back
5. William D'Avenant (1606-1668)
English dramatist and poet - back
6. Charles Dunbar, lived with Thoreaus,
started the Thoreau pencil business - back
7. Alexander Chalmers (1759-1834)
Scottish biographer and editor -
back
8. hand pulled fire engine - back
9. part of a wooden fence - back
10. 1815 battle in which Wellington
defeated Napoleon - back
11. John Milton (1608-1674) English
poet Paradise Lost - back
12. reference to Emerson's The
American Scholar, "The planter, who is Man sent out into the field
to gather food, is seldom cheered by any idea of the true dignity of his
ministry. He sees his bushel and his cart, and nothing beyond, and sinks
into the farmer, instead of Man on the farm." - back
13. Thoreau's friend Ellery Channing
- back
14. Amos Bronson Alcott (1799-1888),
Transcendentalist and teacher - back
15. Thomas Storer, The Life
and Death of Thomas Wolsey, Cardinal, 1599 - back
16. title and central character
on a novel by Sir Walter Scott (1771-1832) - back
17. Ralph Waldo Emerson (1803-1882),
Thoreau's good friend - back
18. Hindu religious text; there
are 18 Puranas - the number of Walden chapters - back
[ 홈 ] [ 위로 ] [ Walden - Chapter 1-A ] [ Walden - Chapter 1-B ] [ Walden - Chapter 1-C ] [ Walden - Chapter 1-D ] [ Walden - Chapter 1-E ] [ Walden - Chapter 2 ] [ Walden - Chapter 3 ] [ Walden - Chapter 4 ] [ Walden - Chapter 5 ] [ Walden - Chapter 6 ] [ Walden - Chapter 7 ] [ Walden - Chapter 8 ] [ Walden - Chapter 9-A ] [ Walden - Chapter 9-B ] [ Walden - Chapter 10 ] [ Walden - Chapter 11 ] [ Walden - Chapter 12 ] [ Walden - Chapter 13 ] [ Walden - Chapter 14 ] [ Walden - Chapter 15 ] [ Walden - Chapter 16 ] [ Walden - Chapter 17 ] [ Walden - Chapter 18 ] [ The Walden Express ]
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