 Preface of THE LONG AGO by Jacob William Wright. And said he unto me, Go thy way, weigh me the weight of the fire, or measure me the blast of the wind, or call me again, the day that is past. 2. Estra. 4. Section 5. The day is done, and yet we linger here at the window of the private office alone in the early evening. Street sounds come surging up to us, the hoarse voice of the city. A confused blur of noise, clanging trolley-cars, rumbling wagons, and familiar cries, all the varied commotion of the home-going hour when the city's buildings are pouring forth their human tide of laborers into the clogged arteries. We lean against the window frame, looking across and beyond the myriad roofs and listening. The world-weariness has touched our temples with gray, and the heaviness of the day's concerns and tumult presses in, presses in, presses in. Yet as we look into the gentle twilight, the throbbing street below slowly changes to a winding country road. The tall buildings fade in the sunset glow until they become only huge elm trees overtopping a dusty lane. The trolley-bells are softened so that they are but the distant tinkle of the homeward herd on the hills, and you and I in matchless freedom are once more trudging the old, dear road side by side, answering the call of the wondrous voice of boyhood sounding through the years. End of Preface. CHAPTER I What the garden stood for. Started to express, left a mysterious but certain impress. Grandmother's touch hallowed it, and made it a thing apart, and the rare soul of her seemed to be reflected in the lilies of the valley that bloomed sweetly year by year in the shady plot under her favorite window in the sitting-room. Because the garden was her special province, it expressed her own sturdy, kindly nature. Still wonder, then, that we cherished it, that I loved to roam idly there, feeling the enfoldment of that same protection and loving kindness which drew me to the shelter of her gingham-aproned lap, when the griefs of boyhood pressed too hard upon me, and that we walked in it so contentedly in the cool of the evening, after the four o'clock had folded their purple petals for the night. Mother's garden, like all real gardens, wasn't just flowers and fragrance. There was a brick-walk leading from the front gate to the sitting-room entrance, red brick, all moss-brown, and with the tiny weeds and grasses pushing up between the bricks. In the garden proper the paths were of earth, bordered and well-defined by inch-wide boards that provided jolly, tight-rope practice, until grandmother came anxiously out with her off repeated, Willie, don't walk on those boards, you'll break them down. And just after the warm spring showers these earth-walks always held tiny mud-puddles where the rain-bleached worms congregated until the robins came that way. There's something distinctive and individual about the paths in a garden. They either belong or they do not. In cement-walks in grandmother's garden its walks are as much to a garden as its flowers or its birds or its beetles, and express that dear, indescribable intimacy that makes the flocks a friend and the Johnny jump-up a play-fellow. The best place for angle-worms was underneath the white syringa bush, the tallest bloomer in the garden except the great red rose that climbed over the entire wall of the house, tacked to it by strips of red flannel and whose blossoms were annually counted and reported to the weekly newspaper. Another good place was under the snowball-bush where the ground was covered with white petals dropped from the countless blossom-balls that made passers-by stop in admiration. Still another good digging-ground was in the lilac corner where the purple and white bushes exhaled their incomparable perfume. Grandmother forbade digging in the flower-beds. It was all right to go into the vegetable garden, but the tender flower-roots must not be exposed to the sun by ruthless boy-hands intent only on the quest of bait. Into the lapel of my dress-coat she fastened a delicate orchid last night. It must have cost a pretty penny at this season. If no doubt, to buy the seeds that would reproduce a half-dozen of my grandmother's gardens. And as we moved away in the limousine she asked me why I was so silent. She could not know that when she slipped its rare stem into place upon my coat the long years dropped away, and I stood again where the yellow rose, all thorn-covered, lifted its sunny top above the picket fence, plucked its choicest blossom, put it almost apologetically and ashamed into the buttonhole of my jacket, stuffed my hands into my pockets, and went whistling down the street with the yellow rose-tent and the sunlight and the curls on my child-head all shining in harmony. The first boutonnaire of my life, from the bush that became my confidant through all those wondrous years before they packed my trunk and sent me off to college. To be sure I loved the bright-faced pansies which smiled cheerily up at me from their round bed and the dear old pinks of a strange fragrance all their own, and the sweet William and even the gruesome bleeding heart that droops so sad and forlorn in its allotted corner. Yet it is significant that last night's orchid took me straight back over memory's pathway to that simple yellow rose-bush by the fence. With a forgotten orchid in my lapel, and all the weight of the great struggle lying heavy against my heart, I stand where the night fog veils the scraggly eucalyptus, and the dense silence blots out all the noises that have intervened between the then and the now. And I can see again the gorgeous peonies, pink and white, where they toss their shaggy heads and gather as of old the flaming cockscomb by the little path. I hear the honey-bees droning in the crab-apple tree by the back gate, and watch the robins crowding the branches of the mountain ash, where the bright red berries cluster. I see the terrible bumblebee bear down the poppy on its slender stem, and go buzzing threateningly away, all pollen-covered. And shining clear and true through the mist, I see her who was the spirit of the garden. There she stands, on the broad step beside the bed where the lilies of the valley grew, leaning firmly upon her one crutch, looking out across her garden to each loved group of her flower-friends, smiling out upon them as she did each day through fifty years, turning at last into the house and taking with her in her heart the glory of the holly-hocks against the brick wall, the perfume of the Narcissus and the border, the wingsong of the hummingbird among the honeysuckle, and the warmth of the glad-June sunshine. CHAPTER II OF THE LONG AGO CHAPTER II THE RIVER The river wasn't a big river as I look back at it now, yet it was wide and wandering and deep, and flowed quietly along through a wonderful middle-west valley, dividing the little old town geographically and socially. It sure furnished such a boy playground as never was known anywhere else in all the world, for it was a gentle river, a kindly play-fellow, an understanding friend, and it seemed fairly to thrill and responsively when I plunged, naked, and untamed, beneath the eddying waters of the swimming-hole under the overhanging wild plum-tree. Its banks, curving in a semi-circle around the village, marked the borders of the whole wide world. There were other rivers, other villages, other lands somewhere, all with strange queer names existing only in the geographies to worry little children. The real world, and all the really, truly folks and things, were along the far-stretching banks of this our river. Along by the flats were the tiny creek widened to a miniature swamp, and emptied its placid waters into the mainstream. The red-winged blackbirds sounded their strange cry among the cap-tails and the bull-rushes. The frogs croaked in ceaseless and reverberant chorus. The catfish were ever hungry after dark, and the night was broken by the glare of torches along the little bridge, or in a group of boats, where fisher-lads kept close watch upon their corks. Far below the dam, where the changeful current had left a wide sand-bar, and a great tree-trunk stretched its fallen length across from the shore to the water's edge. The mud-turtles basked in the sunshine, and at the approach of boyhood glided or splashed to the safety of the water. The banks of the river were a deep and silent jungle, wherein all manner of wild beasts and birds were hunted. Its bosom was the vasty deep out upon which our cherished argoses were sent, and how often their prowls were unexpectedly turned by some new current into mid-stream, sometimes saved by an assortment of missiles, breathlessly thrown to the far side to bring them wavewashed back to us. Sometimes alas, swept mercilessly, out to depths where only the eye and childish grief could follow them over the big dam to certain wreckage in the whirlpools below. But even then not abandoned until the shore had been patrolled for salvage as far as courage held out. Let's go back to the banks of our beloved river, you and I, and get up early in the morning and run to the riffles near the old Cooper Shop, and catch a bucket of shiners and chubs, and then hurry on to Boomer's Dam, or way upstream above the island where we used to have the Sunday School picnics, or maybe just stay at the in-town dam near the flower mills and the saw mills where old shoemaker Schmidt used to catch so many big ones, fat yellow pike and broad black bass. We will climb high up on the mist-soaked timbers of the mill-race and settle ourselves contentedly with the spray moistening our faces, and the warm sun browning our hands, and the heavy pounding of falling waters sounding in our ears so melodiously and so sweetly. Lazily, drowsily, we'll hold a bamboo pole and guide our shiners through the foam crowned eddies of the whirlpool, awaiting the flash of a golden side or a lusty tug at the line, and dreamily watch a long narrow stream of shavings and sawdust loosed from the opposite planing mill float away on the current, and here in the dear dream days the cockering of the world will be a simple matter, for through the mist-prisons that rise from the foaming waters below the dam only rainbows can be seen, and there is youth and the springtime and the newborn flowers and mating birds and the river, and when the sun is low we'll wind our poles at the end of a rare and great day, one that cannot die with the sunset, but that will live so long as memory is. Tonight we need not trudge over the fields toward home in happy wariness to her who waited and watched for us at the window, peering through the gathering dusk until the anxious heart was still by the sight of tired little legs dragging down the street past the post office. We'll stay here in the twilight and watch the fireflies light their fitful lamps and the first stars blinking through the afterglow, and when the night drops down see the black bats careening weirdly across the moon, and we'll stretch out again on the wild grass soothed by the fragrance of the may-apple and the violets and the touch of the night wind how still it is, and the river doesn't seem to sound so loud when your heads on the ground and your eyes are closed and you're listening to the far, far, far-off lullaby of tumbling waters, and you're a bit tired, perhaps a bit tired, the winter stream. Somehow the river never terrified me. It did, mother, however. Perhaps it brought no fear to me because it flowed so gently and so helpfully through such a wonderful valley of peace and plenty. Even in its austere winter aspect, with its tree-banks bare of leaves and its snow and ice-bound setting, it rejoiced me. Teams of big horses and wagons and scores of men worked busily upon its frozen surface, sawing and cutting and packing ice in the big wooden houses along the banks. Always there was enough wind for an ice-boat or a skatesale, or to send a fellow swiftly along when mother-made promises were forgotten, and an unbuttoned coat was held outstretched to catch the breeze. At night the torches and bonfires flickered and glowed where the skaters sent the merry noises of their revelry afloat through the crisp air as they dodged, still-footed, in and out among the huts of the winter fishermen. Perhaps I loved the winter river because I knew that beneath its forbidding surface there was the life of my loved lilies, and because I knew that all in good time the real river, our river, would be restored to us again, alive and joyous and unchanged. One day when first the tiny rivulets started to run from the bottom of the snow-drifts, the river suddenly unloosed its artillery and the crisp air re-echoed with a booming that proclaimed the breaking up of the ice. Great crowds of people thronged the banks, wondering if the bridge would go out or would stand the strain of pounding ice-cakes. The unmistakable note of a robin sounded from somewhere. Great dark spots began to show in the white ice-ribbon that wound through the valley. The air at sundown had lost its sting. So day by day the breaking up continued until at last the blessed stream was clear. The bass jumped, hungry, to the fly. The daffodils and violets sprang from beneath their wet-leaf blankets, and all the world joined the birds in one grand song of emancipation and joy. The Big Bend. Above the town, just beyond the red iron bridge, the river made a great bend and widened into a lake where the banks were willow-grown and reeds and rushes and grasses and lelly-pads pushed far out into mid-stream, leaving only a narrow channel of clear water. To the Big Bend our canoe glided often, paddling lazily along and going far upstream to drift back with the current. Arms bared to the shoulder we reached deep beneath the surface to bring up the long-stemmed water-lellies, the great white blossoms and the queer little yellow and black ones. Like a blight-eyed sprite the tiny marsh wren flitted among the rushes and the musk-rat built strange reed castles at the water's edge. The lace-winged dragonfly following our boat darted from side to side or poised in the air or alighted on the dripping blade of our paddle when it rested for a moment across our knees. Along the grasses the wind-harps played weird melodies which only boyhood could interpret. In this place the river sang its love songs and sent forth an answering note to the vast harmonious blending of blue sky and golden day and instance-heavy air and the glad songs of birds. And here at this tranquil bend the river seemed to be the self-same river of the old loved hymn we sang so often in the little church with the white steeple. That river which flows by the throne of God fulfilling the promise of the ancient prophet of prophets and bringing peace like a river and glory like a flowing stream. Everything is in the public domain, reading by Bologna Times. CHAPTER III Christmas. We always used grandmother's stalking because it was the biggest one in the family, much larger than mother's, and somehow it seemed able to stretch more than hers. There was so much room in the foot, too, a chance for all sorts of packages. There was a carpet-covered couch against the flowered wall and one corner of the parlor. Between the foot of it and the chimney was the door into our bedroom. I always hung my stalking at the side of the door, nearest the couch, on the theory, well-defined in my mind with each recurring Christmas, that if by any chance Santa Claus brought me more than he could get into the stalking he could pile the overflow on the couch. And he always did. It may seem strange that a lad who seldom heard even the third getting up call in the morning should have awakened without any calling once a year, or that his red-night-gown figure should have leapt from the depths of his feather bed, or that he should have crept breathless and fearful to the door where the stalking hung. Notwithstanding the ripe experience of years past, when each Christmas found the generous stalking stuffed with good things, there was always the chance that Santa Claus might have forgotten this year, or that he might have miscalculated his supply and not have enough to go round, or that he had not been correctly informed as to just what you wanted, or that some accident might have befallen his reindeer and sleigh to detain him until the gray dawn of Christmas morning stopped his work and sent him scurrying back to his toy kingdom to await another yuletide. And so in the fearful silence and darkness of that early hour, with still breath and heart beating so loudly you thought it would awaken everyone in the house, you softly opened the door, poked your arm through, felt around where the stalking ought to be, but with a great sinking in your heart when you didn't find it the first time, and finally your chubby fist clutched the misshapen, lumpy, bulging fabric that proclaimed a generous Santa Claus. Yes, it was there. That was enough for the moment. A hurried climb back into the warm bed, and then interminable years of waiting until your attuned ear cut the first sounds of grandmother's dressing in her nearby bedroom, and the first gleam of winter daylight permitted you to see the wondrous stalking and the array of packages on the sofa. It was beyond human strength to refrain from just one look. But alas, the sight of a dapple gray rocking-horse with silk and mane and flowing tail was too much. In the next moment you were in the room with your arms around his arched neck, while peals of unrestrained joy brought the whole family to the scene. Then it was that mother gathered you into her lap and wrapped her skirt about your bare legs, and held your trembling form tight in her arms until you promised to get dressed if they would open just one package. The big one on the end of the sofa. After that there was always just one more please, and by that time the base burner was warming up, and you were on the floor in the middle of the discarded wrapping paper uncovering each wondrous package down to the very last, the very very last, in the very toe of the stalking. The big round one that you were sure was a real league ball, but proved to be nothing but an orange. Know Santa Claus? Huh. If there isn't any Santa Claus, what does he put all the sample toys in the stores for every Christmas so boys and girls can see what they want? If he doesn't fill the stockings, who does, I'd like to know. Some folks say that father and mother do it, but suppose and they do. It's only to help Santa Claus sometimes when he's late or overworked, or something like that. The spirit of Christmas is Santa Claus. Else how could he get around to everybody in the whole world at exactly the same time of the night? There is a new high-power motor in my garage. It came to me yesterday. Christmas. It is very beautiful, and it cost a great deal of money. A very great deal. If we were in the little old town, it would take us all out to Aunt M's farm in ten minutes. It always took her an hour to drive in with the old spotted white mirror. I am quite happy to have this wonderful new horse of today, and there is some warmth inside of me as I walk around it in the garage while Henry, its keeper, flicks with his chamois every last vestige of dust from its shiny sides. And yet, how gladly would I give it up if only I could have been in my feather-bed last night, if I could have awakened at daybreak and crept softly, red flanneled, and barefooted to the parlor door, if I could have groped for grandmother's stalking, and felt its lumpy shape respond to my eager touch? And if I could have known the thrill of that dapple-gray rocking-horse when I flung my arms around its neck and buried my face in its soaken mane. CHAPTER IV. OF THE LONG AGO. by Jacob William Wright. This LibriVox recording is in the public domain, reading by Bologna Times. CHAPTER IV. BUTTER, EGGS, DUCKS, GEES. It seems muddily convenient to telephone your grocer to send up a pound of butter and have it come all squeezed tight into a nice square-cornered cardboard box whose bright and multicolored label assures you that the butter has been properly deodorized, fumigated, washed, sterilized, antisepticized, and conforms in every other respect to the Food and Drugs Act, Serial 1762973-A. You read the label again and feel reasonably safe at meals. Huh! Precious little grandmother knew about that kind of butter. Hers came in a basket, a great big, worn-brown and shiny, round-bottom, willow basket, hand-wove. It didn't come in any white and gold delivery-wagon, either. It was delivered by a round-faced, rosy-cheeked, gingham-gowned picture of health whose apron-strings barely met around the middle. For Fra Hummel brought it herself. After having first milked the cows with her own hands and wielded the churning stick with her own stout German arms, she had the butter all covered up with fresh, sweet, white linen cloths, and hand molded into big rolls. Each roll wrapped in its own immaculate cloth, and when that cloth was slowly pulled away so that grandmother could stick the point of a knife in the butter and test it on her tongue, you could see the white salt all over the roll, and even the imprint of the cloth threads. Good! Why, you could eat it without bread. What else have you got today, Mrs. Hummel? Grandmother could never say frau, and as if she didn't know what else was in the basket. Well, Mrs. Van, there is mepe some eggs, and edok, and also there is left von fine stuffed geese. So the cloth covering was rolled farther back, and the three dozen eggs were gently taken out and put in the old tin egg bucket. And just then grandfather came in and lifted tenderly out of the basket one of those wonderful geese stuffed with good food in a dark cellar until fat enough for market. Ever had a toothful of that kind of goose breast or second joint? No, your life is yet incomplete. You have something to live for. Goodness me, I can't describe it. How can a fellow tell about such things? It's like, well, it's like Frauhemmel's stuffed goose, that's all. And then it was weighed on the old balances. Steels. No, I don't mean scales. Steelyards, you know. A long armed affair with a pear shape of iron at one end, and a hook at the other, and a handle somewhere in between at the center of gravity, or some such place. Anyway, they gave an honest pound, which is perhaps another respect in which they were different. Then the ducks, too, were unwrapped from their white cloths and weighed, usually a pair of them. And the old willow basket had nothing left but its bundle of cloths when Frauhemmel started out again on her ten-mile walk to the farm. Whenever I see a glassy eyed, feather-headed, cold-storage chicken half plucked and discolored, hanging in a present-day butcher shop, accumulating dust, or a scrawny duck almost popping through its skin, I think of Frauhemmel and her willow basket. But Frauhemmel isn't here now, and they don't build ducks and geese like hers anymore, and her old willow basket is probably in some collection while we use the machine-made things that fall to pieces when you accidentally stub your toe against them in the cellar. We are hurrying along so fast that we don't see anything until it's cooked and served. We just use the phone and let them send us any old thing that they can charge on a bill. But in those days, grandfather and grandmother inspected everything, and it just had to be good. And there weren't any trusts or eggs of various grades from just eggs to strictly fresh eggs and on down to eggs guaranteed to boil without crowing. Every Frauhemmel in the country wanted the Van Alstein trade, and Frauhemmel knew it, and she never brought anything to that back-kitchen door unless it was perfect of its kind. No wonder grandfather lived to be ninety-two and grandmother eighty-six in good health and spirits to the last. Do you remember the three barrels of sugar in the dark place under the stairs, or were they in the big pantry just off the kitchen? Well, anyway, there were three, you recollect, two of white and one of brown, always the brown sugar, and each autumn the same colloquy. Mr. Van, don't you think we can get along without the brown sugar this year? Now, Mrs. Van, you've got to have a little brown sugar in the house, and it comes cheaper by the barrel. Yes, so it does, Mr. Van. We can use it, I suppose, in something, and we always have had it, and, well, do as you think best. White sugar was good when you had something to go with it. But brown sugar stood alone, sticky, heavy, crumbly lumps that held together until a fellow could tip back his head and drop one of the chunks in his mouth. And after school, grandmother could be persuaded to cut a full-sized slice of bread thick, and spread it with butter thick, and you'd start away with it quick, just nibbling at one edge, not really biting, and you'd sneak into the dark place under the stairs, or into the pantry, and reach deep down into the white sugar barrel, and grab a handful, and sprinkle it over the bread and butter, and shake back into the barrel all that didn't stick to the butter, and then do it all over again, and pat it down hard, and then sprinkle just a little bit more on hurriedly, because grandfather's cane could be heard tapping down the hall, and then you emerge with dignity, but with no unnecessary commotion, and just faded away into the outer world so softly, so gently, so contentedly. Have you tried any bread and butter and sugar recently? Did it taste the same as it used to? No. Perhaps you broke it into pieces instead of beginning at one side and eating straight through? Or maybe you got hold of the cooking butter? Or did you try it with baker's bread? No. Well, why didn't it taste the same? CHAPTER VI The sun had gone down behind the willows on the riverbank. The night-clouds still carried the crimson and purple of the late twilight, and the deep, still waters of the channel gave back the colors and the gleam of the first stars that heralded the night. The Martins chattered under the eaves, scolding some belated member of the clan who pushed noisily for a lodging-place for the night. The black bat and the darting night-hawk were a wing, grim specters of the dusk. The whipper-will was crying along the river, and far upstream the loon called weirdly across the water. A small boy was sitting on his grandfather's front steps, his elbows on his knees, his chin and his palms, seeing familiar objects disappear in the gathering dusk and watching the stars come out. He was safe, very safe, for grandfather had not gone to the dining-room yet, and his arms could be reached for shelter in two or three bounds, if need be. So it was very pleasant to sit on the steps and see the little old town fold up its affairs and settle down for the night, and more particularly to watch for Jimmy, the lamp-lighter. Far up the street and the almost dark place, about where Schmidt's shoe-store ought to be. A point of light flashed suddenly, flickered, and then burned steadily, and in a moment another across the street. Then a space of black and two more points appeared. Down the street they came in pairs, closely following the retreating day, and the little boy in the steps knew that it was Jimmy, the lamp-lighter, working his way swiftly and silently. If only the supper bell would delay a while, the boy would see old Jimmy light the lamp on grandfather's corner, as he had seen him countless times before. Then, just as the red glow faded in the west and night settled down, he came swinging sturdily across the street, his ladder hung on his right shoulder, his waxed taper in his left hand. Quickly, unerringly, he placed the ladder against the iron post that sent its metallic ring into the clear night air as the ladder struck, and was three rounds up almost before it settled into position. Then a quick opening of the glass, a struggle with the matches in the wind, a hurried closing of the door, one quick look upward, an arm through the ladder and a swing to the shoulder, and Jimmy, the lamp-lighter, was busily off to his next corner. Once, in the later years, he came with his new-lighter, a splendid brass affair with smooth wood handle holding a waxed taper that flickered fitfully down the street and marked old Jimmy's pathway through the dusk. Although he could reach up and turn on the gas with the key slot at the end of the scepter and lighted with the taper, all at one time, he ever carried the ladder, for none could tell when or where a burner might need fixing, or there would be other need to climb the post as in the days of the lamp and sulfur match. Short of stature, firm of build, was old Jimmy. The night storms of innumerable years had bronzed his skin and furrowed his face. Innumerable years, yes, for so faithful a servant as old Jimmy the lamp-lighter was, not to be cast away by every caprice of the public mind which changed the political aspect of the town council. So, Jimmy stayed on through the years and changing administrations in the sultry heat of the summer nights or breasting his way through winters, huge snowdrifts. Fronting the wind-driven sleet or dripping through the springtime rain, his taper hugged tight beneath his thick rubber coat, his matches safe in the depths of an inside pocket. And tonight, as the boy still watches, in memory, old Jimmy on his rounds, they are a bit odd, these queer old street lamps that just seem to belong to the night after the garish blaze of electric signs and the great arc lights in the shop windows. Yet it shines through the years, the simple lamp of the long ago, as it shone through the night of old, a friendly beacon only, the modest servant of a humble race. Jimmy's boy, Ted, who carries his father's ladder and taper, when the good old man laid them down, now nods in his chimney corner at nights. But his boy, old Jimmy's grandson, is still a lamp-lighter, still illuminating the streets of his town, still turning on its lamps when the loon calls weirdly across the river and the gathering dusk. He bears no ladder, nor fitful taper. He dreads no sultry summer heat. He breasts no snowdrifts. He battles against no wind-driven sleet and rain. There he sits, inside yonder great brick building, his chair tipped back against the wall, reading the evening paper while the giant wheels of the dynamo purse softly and steadily. He lowers his paper, looks at the clock, then out into the early twilight, then slowly turns to the wall, pushes a bit of button, takes up his paper again, and goes on with his reading, while a thousand lights burn, white, through the city. Ah, Jimmy! Jimmy! The world is all awry, man. Your sun-sun lights his thousand lamps, and a flash that's no more than the puff of wind that used to blow your match out when you stood on your ladder, and lighted one. CHAPTER VII. FLYES Come to think of it, the old folks never made such a fuss about flies as we make nowadays. You cannot pick up a magazine without running plump into an article on the deadly housefly, with pictures of him magnified until he looks like the old, million-toed, barrel-eyed, spiked-tailed dragon of your boyhood, Mence Pie Dreams. The first two pages convince you that the human race is doomed to extermination within eighteen months by the housefly root. Grandmother never resorted to very drastic measures. The most violent thing she ever did was to get little Annie, Bridget the housewoman's Annie, to help her chase them out. They went from room to room periodically, when flies became too numerous, each armed with an old sawed-off broom-handle on which were tacked long-cloth streamers, a sort of cat on nine-tails effect, only with about a score or more of tails. After herding the blue bottles and all their kith and kin into a fairly compact bunch at the door, little Annie opened the screen and Grandmother drove them out, and that's all there was to it. Another favorite device, particularly in the dining room and kitchen, was the fly gallery, a wonderful array of multicolored tissue paper festooned artistically from the ceiling or around the gas pipes to lure or induce the fly into moments of inactivity. There was no extermination in this device. It was purely preventive in its function. The idea being that since there must be fly specs, better to mask them as much as possible on places where they would show the least and could be removed the easiest when sufficiently accumulated. But the greatest ounce of prevention was this green hemisphere. Gee, I haven't thought of that thing for years, have you? Of course you remember it. Absolutely flyproof. One clapped over the butter, another over the cracker bowl, another over the sugar. And say, I almost forgot. Yes, I know you were just going to speak of it. That conical screen fly trap, where the flies see something good inside, crawl up to the top and then over and in, and then can't get out. But just buzz and buzz and buzz and make a lot of fuss about it. Blue bottles and all. No respecter of persons. And when it gets full of the quick and dead in flydom, Bridget takes it out in the backyard and dumps it. Very simple, clean, peaceful, effective. My, my, but it's a far cry back to those days, isn't it? And wouldn't you like, right this minute, to sneak into the cool curtain down, ever so quiet dining-room again, and nose around to see if anything edible, bad, been overlooked? And see one of those dear, old, round flyscreens guarding the sugar? END OF CHAPTER VII CHAPTER VIII OF THE LONG AGO by Jacob William Bright This LibriVox recording is in the public domain. BELONA TIMES CHAPTER VIII THE AUTOM LEAVES There were three recognized uses for leaves in the autumn. First, to be banked by the wind along fences or sidewalk edges, and provide kicking-ground for exuberant youngsters returning home from school. Second, to be packed around the foundations of the house as a measure for interior comfort in winter. And third, to be pressed between the pages of the big Bible and kept for ornamental purposes until they crumbled and had to be thrown away. The last named use was always questioned by every red-blooded boy and more tolerated than accepted, a concession to the women of earth, from little sister with her bright-hewed wreath to mother and grandmother with their book of pressed leaves. Even for purposes of comfort their use was more or less secondary, granted because the banking-up process was a man's job and an outdoor enterprise. Then, too, it was a lot of fun to rake the big yard and get the fallen leaves into one or two huge piles, and wheel-barrow them to the edge of the house where old Spencer had driven the wooden pegs that held the boards ready to receive the leaves. Load after load was dumped into the trough-like arrangement, and stamped down tight and hard by old Tom's huge feet and little Willys, eager but ineffective ones. And then the top board was fastened down, and never a cold winter wind could find its way under the floors with such a protective bulwark around the house. And in the spring the boards had to be taken down, and countless bleached bugs fairly oozed out into the spring sunlight, and the snow-wet soggy leaves were raked out and burned, and the smoke was so thick and heavy that it hardly got out of the yard. But the real use of leaves, their only legitimate function in the autumn, according to all accepted boy-law, was for kicking purposes. Plunging through banks of dried leaves along the edge of the sidewalk knee-deep sometimes, scattering them in all directions, even about our heads, there was such a racket that we could scarcely hear each other's shouts of glee, and we'd run through them only to dive exhausted into some huge pile of them, rolling and kicking and hollering until some kid came along and chucked an armful dirt and all plum into our face. This was the signal for a battle of leaves, and perhaps there would have been fewer torting-marks, teacher, if there had been fewer autumn leaves along the route. Perhaps. There were influences that tempered the joys of leaf-kicking. Some meanie was always ready to hide a big rock or other disagreeable foreign substance under a particularly inviting bunch of leaves, then watch and giggle at your discomforture when you came innocently plowing along. What a riot of wonderful color they made just after the first frosts had turned their green to red and gold and brown. As a boy I disdained so weak a thing as noticing the coloring on Big Hill. But now, in the long after years, I realize that its vivid autumn garment was indestructibly fixed in my memory and has lived, saved for me, until I could look back through time's long glass and understand and love that glorious picture. Not even the brush of a Barbizon master could tell the story of Big Hill, three miles up the river from Main Street Bridge, gleaming in the hues that Jack Frost mixed beneath the blue-gold dome of a cloudless sky, for it could not paint the chatter of the squirrel, or the glint of the bursting bittersweet berry, or the call of the crow, or the crisp of the air, or the joy of life that only boyhood knows. CHAPTER IX. GETTING IN THE WOOD. An autumnal event of importance, second only to the filling of the meat-house, was the purchase and sawing of the wood. Three sizes, remember? The four-foot lengths for the long, low stove in the big room, twelve-inch chunks for the oval sheet-iron stove in the parlor, and the fine-split, eighteen-inch lengths for the kitchen. Yes, they burned wood in the kitchen. Not only wood, but oak and maple and hickory, the kind you buy by the carrot nowadays. And what a fire it made! Two sticks of the long wood in the stove in the big room and the damper open, and you'd have to raise the windows inside of fifteen minutes, no matter how low the thermometer registered outside. In the kitchen, grandmother did all her cooking with a wood-fire, using the ashes for the lybaral. And the feasts that came steaming from her famous oven have never been equaled on any gas-range ever made. Gas-range, how grandmother would have sniffed in scorn at such a suggestion. Even coal was only fit for the base-burner in the family's sitting-room. And that must be anthracite, or hard coal, the kind that comes in sacks nowadays at about the same price as butter and eggs. And even the wood had to be split just so and be clear and right, or grandmother would scold grandfather for not wearing his near-seeing specs when he bought it. Guess they fooled you on that load, Mr. Van, she'd say. It isn't like the last we had. Don't you remember how you were hanging around the kitchen one Saturday morning, kind of waiting for something to come within reach? And grandfather's cane came tapping down the long hall, and he pushed open the kitchen door and stood there, just inside the door, until the kettle started boiling over and making such a noise. And then he announced that he thought he better go out and see if there was any wood in the market. As if there weren't fifty farmers lined up there almost before daylight. It was about nine o'clock, and the sun had had a chance to warm things up a bit. So grandmother wrapped him up in his knitted muffler and away he went beneath his shiny soak hat. And because you stood around and looked wistfully up at him, he finally turned back just before he reached the big front door and said, Want to go along, Billy? Of course you went, because there were all kinds of shops on the way uptown to the wood market, and grandfather always had an extra nickel for such occasions. Can't you just see that wood market now, as it used to be in the long ago, with its big platform scales and its wagons of accurately piled cord wood marked on the end of some stick with the white chalk mark of the official inspector and measurer, and the farmers all bundled up and tied around with various cold dispelling devices and big mitts and fur caps? So far as you could tell, then. Or now, either, I'll wager. Every load was exactly like every other load, but not so to grandfather, for he would scrutinize them all, sound them with his stick, barter and dicker, and look out for knots, and then make the rounds again and do it all over before finally making his selection. And I distinctly remember feeling that the wood left in market after grandfather had made his selection wasn't worth hauling away. Load after load was driven up to the high backyard fence, and its sticks heaved into the yard and piled in perfect order, and it made a goodly and formidable showing when old Pete, the wood sawyer, finally arrived on the scene. The time of wood buying was determined partly by Pete's engagements. He went first to the Perkinses and next to the Williamses, and so on in rotation as he had done for years, his entire winter being engaged far ahead. It did not seem possible to boyish mind that one man could ever get all that wood sawed and split, even if he was a great giant Norseman with a finest buxaw in the country. But each year old Pete's prowess seemed to increase, and day after day the ceaseless music of his saw sounded across the crisp air, and the measured strokes of his axe struck a clarion note, until finally the yard showed only chips and sawdust where that vast wood pile had been, and the big barn was piled full to the rafters. The kitchen wood and chunks on one side, the big wood on the other. Then Pete would come in and announce that the job was done, and grandfather would bundle up and go out for final inspection. Pete removed the pad from his leg. You remember the carpet he wore on his left knee, the one that held the stick in place in the buck when he was sawing, and together they went into the barn, and talked it all over. And Pete said it was harder wood than last year's, and more knots in it and ought to be worth two shillings more than contract price. And grandfather finally allowed the excess, and old Pete came in and got his money in gold and silver and a bowl of coffee and some bread, and went his way to the Joneses or some other folks. And you, young man, you surely hated to see that great viking go, for he had told you many a wonderful tale at the noon hour as he munched his thick sandwiches, and no one could look at his massive head and huge shoulders and great beard and hair and doubt that his forebears had done all that he credited to them. Somehow old Pete seemed more real than most men you knew, except grandfather, of course. There was something unexplainable in the man, and his work that rang true, something that was so wholesome and sound. He wasn't like old Hawkins, the grocer. He'd as leaf give you a rotten apple as not if he could smuggle it into the bag without you seeing him. And Klein, the candy man, sometimes sold you old hard stuff mixed with the fresh. But old Pete here. He just worked honest and steady, out in the open, at a fixed wage, and he did an honest job and was proud of it, even if it was only sawing wood. He worked faithfully until it was done, and then he got a good word and a bowl of coffee and his wages in gold and silver, and went his way rejoicing, leaving behind him the glory of labour well performed, blending with the refreshing fragrance of new-cut logs that sifted through the cracks of the old barn. CHAPTER 10 The Rain It is early and Saturday morning, very, very early. Listen, an unmistakable drip, drip, drip, and the room is dark. A bound out of bed, a quick step to the window, an anxious peering through the wet panes, and the conformation is complete. It is raining, and on a Saturday, the familiar leaden skies and steady drip that spell permanency and send the robin to the shelter of some thick bush, and leave only an occasional undaunted swallow cleaving the air on swift wing. In all the world there is no sadness like that which, in boyhood, sends you back to bed on Saturday morning with a mournful drip, drip, drip of a steady rain doling in your ears. Out in the woodshed there is a can of the largest, fattest angle worms ever dug from a rich garden plot, all so happily, so feverishly, so exultantly captured last night when anticipation strengthened the little muscles that wielded the heavy spade. All safe in their black soil they wait, coiled round and round each other into a solid worm ball in the bottom of the can. A mile down the river the dam is calling, the tumbled waters are swirling and eddying and foaming over the deep places where the black bass wait, and old shoemaker Schmidt, patriarch of the river, is there this very minute, unwinding his pole, for while he knows that if one cares to brave the weather he will catch the largest and finest and most bass when the rain is falling on the river. But small boys who have anxious mothers do not go fishing on rainy days, so there is no need of haste, and one might as well go back to bed and sleep unconcernedly just as late as possible. If only a fellow could get up between showers, or before the rain actually starts so that he could truthfully say, but mother, really and truly it wasn't raining when we started, it would be all right, and the escape was warrantable, justified, and safe. But with the rain actually falling there was nothing to do but go to sleep again and turn the worms back into the garden if the rain didn't let up by noon. It is one of the miracles of life that boyhood can turn grief into joy and become almost instantly reconciled to the inevitable like a true philosopher, and change a sorrow into a blessing. The companion miracle is that manhood with its years of wisdom forgets how to do this, and so when the rainy day becomes hopelessly rainy, and Shoemaker Schmidt is left alone at the dam, the rain that sounded so dismal at dawn proves to be a benefactor after all. There will be no wood splitting to-day, no outdoor chores, for if it's too wet to go fishing, as mother insists, of course it's too wet to carry wood, or weed gardens, or pick cucumbers for pickles. The logic is so obvious and conclusive that even mother does not press the point when you are a reminder of it, and you are free for a whole day in the attic. The blessing is manifest. The sadness of that daybreak drip, drip, drip is healed. The whole character of the day is changed, and the rain melody becomes not a funeral march, but a dance. The attic is the place of all places you would most love to be on this particular calendar day. How stupid to spoil a perfectly good Saturday by sitting on a hard beam, with wet spray blowing in your face all the time, and getting all tired out holding a heavy fish-pole, when here in the attic, waiting for you with its mysterious dark corners, its scurrying mice that suddenly develop into lions for your bow and arrow hunting, and its maneuvers on the broad field of its floor with yourself as the drum-core, and your companions as the army equipped with wooden swords and paper helmets. The day has been rich in adventure and exploration, and the doing of great deeds, and it has been all too short, for the attic is growing dim, and mother is again calling us, telling us to send our little playmates home and come and get our bread and milk. A last arrow is shot into the farthest corner where some undiscovered jungle beast may be prowling. A last roll is given to the drum and the army dispans. A sudden fear seizes upon us as we realize that night has come and we are in the attic alone. And with no need of further urging, we scamper unceremoniously down the stairs, slam the attic door, hurry into the kitchen where Maggie has our table waiting. Eight o'clock, and we're all tucked away among the feathers again. Aren't we glad we didn't go down to the river? It would have been a cold, dismal day, and perhaps they weren't biting to-day anyway, and we should have gotten very wet. It is still raining, raining hard, pattering unceasingly on the roof, and the ten eave troughs are singing their gentle lullaby of running water trickling from the shingles. A lullaby so soothing that we do not hear mother softly open the door, and come to our crib, and place the little bear arms under the covers, and leave a kiss on the yellow curls, and a benediction in the room. She lost her glasses. My such a commotion! Everybody turned in to hunt for them. Mother tramped from one end of the house to the other. We all searched, upstairs and down, with no success. They weren't in the big Bible. We turned the leaves carefully many times. It was the most likely place. They weren't in either of her sewing baskets, nor in the cookbook, in the kitchen. Grandfather said she could use one pair of his gold-bowed ones, but shucks. She couldn't see with anything except those old steel-bowed specks. And then, when she finally sat down and said for the fiftieth time, I wonder where those specks are, and put the corner of her apron to her eyes. I happened to look up, and there they were, on the top of her head, been there all the time, and she enjoyed the joke as much as we did, a joke that went around the little town and followed her through all the years within my memory of her. Sometimes, as often as expedient, you asked her for a penny. Nevermore. And then, now, Willie, what do you want with a penny? I haven't got it. Run along now. Ah, Grandma, don't make a fellow tell what he's going to buy. I know you got one. Look and see. Please, Grandma. Slowly the wrinkled hand would fumble for that skirt pocket, which was always so hard to locate. And from its depths there would come the old worn leather wallet with a strap around it. And slowly, gee, how slowly, after much fumbling, during which you were never sure whether you were going to get it or not, the penny would come forth and be placed with seeming reluctance in the grimy, dirty boy hand. And usually, just as you reached the door on your hurried way to the nearest candy shop, she would scare you almost stiff by calling you back and say, Wait a minute, Willie. I found another one that I didn't know was in here. And then you kissed her wrinkled, soft cheek and ran away thinking, after all, Grandmother was pretty good. Good. And a woman stick to a man through sixty odd years and keep his linen and his broadcloth and bear him children, and make them into fine wives and husbands, and take them back to her bosom when their mates turn against them, and raise a bunch of riotous grandchildren, and manage such a household as ours with never a complaint, get up at five o'clock every morning and set up till half after nine o'clock every night, busy all the time, and nurse her own and other folks' ailments without a murmur, and submerge self completely in her constant doing for others. Can a frail woman so live for eighty-six years and be anything less than good? And then at the end of the long journey she was still trudging patiently and gladly along, side by side with Grandfather, making less fuss over the years, old pain in her knees than we make now over a splitter and a finger, going daily and uncomplaningly about her manifold duties. And at night, about an hour before bedtime, she would sit down in the black upholstered rocker, almost behind the big base burner, her first quiet moment in all the long day, head resting against the chairs high back, and doze and listen to the fitful conversation in the room, or to someone reading, giving everything, demanding nothing, as had been her want all the long years. And Christmas Eve, I'll have to go a bit slow now. On Christmas Eve, you remember, when out of doors the big snowflakes were slowly and softly fluttering down, Grandmother would get the huge Bible and her treasure box and bring them up to the little round table covered with its red cloth, and you'd get a chair and come up close, because you knew what was happening. Then she would read you a wonderful story out of the Bible about the love of God so great that he sent his only begotten son to be a light unto the world. And then she'd go down into that little cardboard treasure box and find some Christmas carols, printed in beautiful colors on lace-edged cards, folded up just like a fan. Then she would look down at you over the top of her specs, and tell you how the street menstruals in England used to stand out in the snow and sing, and be brought into the house and given a warm mug and a bite to eat, going from house to house all through the early night. And then she would close her eyes and begin to sing the dear old carols with a tremble in her voice and tapping on the table with her finger ends in rhythm, and memories tears dropping on the wrinkled cheeks, and the tremulous voice still soft and sweet, chanting. God rest ye merry gentlemen, let nothing you dismay, for Jesus Christ our Saviour was born on Christmas Day. I and Amen, dear soul, God rest ye, and he does. CHAPTER 12 OF THE LONG AGO by Jacob William Wright This LibriVox recording is in the public domain, reading by Bologna Times. CHAPTER 12 ONE DAY IS DONE If the page blurs, as it may do, if you were ever a child, and if you have been tempered in the cruel furnace of the years, maybe the mists that fill the eyes will bathe the soul of you in their hallowed flood until the world ache is soothed, and you can start up the big road again with some of the same wonderful exultation that sped you onward and forward in the long ago. One touch of that, and the burden of today, grown great in the years of struggle, slips from your shoulders as lightly as the wild rose petals drops upon the bosom of the stream and floats away to the music of the riffles. Only a strong man can go back over the old road to the beginning point, facing the memories that throng the path, meeting the surging emotions that sweep away all our carefully laid defenses, braving the grim specter that puts the white seal of age upon our heads. Once more, in the cool of the late twilight, we'll sit with Chen in hand on grandfather's front steps and watch the stars come out, and hear the loon calling weirdly across the water, and catch the perfume of the lilacs and narcissus from the garden, and gather at grandmother's knee to feel her soft fingers in our curls, and hear her bedtime story. Half asleep, but ever reluctant, we will trudge stumblingly to the little room with its deep feather bed, and get into our red flannel nighty. Down on your knees, with our face and the soft edges of the mattress, and tiny hands uplifted, we will say our prayers and end them in the same old way. God bless father and mother and grandfather and grandmother and every body else in the world, amen. And feel those strong mother arms lifting our sleepy form into the downy depths. Never until now have we known the reality of the boy days or paused to receive their hallowed touch. Grandfather and grandmother and the garden and the river and the song of the robin and the apple tree, and all the myriad experiences of the boy time, are glorified now as never before. In the Halcyon, then, they were but incidents of the day. In the Melod, now, we learn the truth of them and catch their wondrous meaning. The flower blossoms are gleaming as colorful and fragrant today as they did in the long ago. The birdsongs are as tuneful now as they were then. The sun is shining just as golden and as genial this moment as it did when we sat on the beams of the mill-race and felt on our faces the spray of tumbling waters sun-warmed in the air. We need only open our hearts and let the sun shine in. And youth and age, blended and rejoicing, will go hand in hand along the path of life to its far goal bestowing upon us all the freshness of the dew-damped morning, all the vigor of the strenuous noon, and all the peace and calm assurance of the starlit night.