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CHAPTER 16 The Pond in Winter
After a still winter night I awoke with the impression that some question had been put
to me, which I had been endeavoring in vain to answer in my sleep, as what--how--when--
where?
But there was dawning Nature, in whom all creatures live, looking in at my broad
windows with serene and satisfied face, and no question on her lips.
I awoke to an answered question, to Nature and daylight.
The snow lying deep on the earth dotted with young pines, and the very slope of the
hill on which my house is placed, seemed to say, Forward!
Nature puts no question and answers none which we mortals ask.
She has long ago taken her resolution.
"O Prince, our eyes contemplate with admiration and transmit to the soul the
wonderful and varied spectacle of this universe.
The night veils without doubt a part of this glorious creation; but day comes to
reveal to us this great work, which extends from earth even into the plains of the
ether."
Then to my morning work. First I take an axe and pail and go in
search of water, if that be not a dream. After a cold and snowy night it needed a
divining-rod to find it.
Every winter the liquid and trembling surface of the pond, which was so sensitive
to every breath, and reflected every light and shadow, becomes solid to the depth of a
foot or a foot and a half, so that it will
support the heaviest teams, and perchance the snow covers it to an equal depth, and
it is not to be distinguished from any level field.
Like the marmots in the surrounding hills, it closes its eyelids and becomes dormant
for three months or more.
Standing on the snow-covered plain, as if in a pasture amid the hills, I cut my way
first through a foot of snow, and then a foot of ice, and open a window under my
feet, where, kneeling to drink, I look down
into the quiet parlor of the fishes, pervaded by a softened light as through a
window of ground glass, with its bright sanded floor the same as in summer; there a
perennial waveless serenity reigns as in
the amber twilight sky, corresponding to the cool and even temperament of the
inhabitants. Heaven is under our feet is well as over
our heads.
Early in the morning, while all things are crisp with frost, men come with fishing-
reels and slender lunch, and let down their fine lines through the snowy field to take
pickerel and perch; wild men, who
instinctively follow other fashions and trust other authorities than their
townsmen, and by their goings and comings stitch towns together in parts where else
they would be ripped.
They sit and eat their luncheon in stout fear-naughts on the dry oak leaves on the
shore, as wise in natural lore as the citizen is in artificial.
They never consulted with books, and know and can tell much less than they have done.
The things which they practice are said not yet to be known.
Here is one fishing for pickerel with grown perch for bait.
You look into his pail with wonder as into a summer pond, as if he kept summer locked
up at home, or knew where she had retreated.
How, pray, did he get these in midwinter?
Oh, he got worms out of rotten logs since the ground froze, and so he caught them.
His life itself passes deeper in nature than the studies of the naturalist
penetrate; himself a subject for the naturalist.
The latter raises the moss and bark gently with his knife in search of insects; the
former lays open logs to their core with his axe, and moss and bark fly far and
wide.
He gets his living by barking trees. Such a man has some right to fish, and I
love to see nature carried out in him.
The perch swallows the grub-worm, the pickerel swallows the perch, and the
fisher-man swallows the pickerel; and so all the chinks in the scale of being are
filled.
When I strolled around the pond in misty weather I was sometimes amused by the
primitive mode which some ruder fisherman had adopted.
He would perhaps have placed alder branches over the narrow holes in the ice, which
were four or five rods apart and an equal distance from the shore, and having
fastened the end of the line to a stick to
prevent its being pulled through, have passed the slack line over a twig of the
alder, a foot or more above the ice, and tied a dry oak leaf to it, which, being
pulled down, would show when he had a bite.
These alders loomed through the mist at regular intervals as you walked half way
round the pond.
Ah, the pickerel of Walden! when I see them lying on the ice, or in the well which the
fisherman cuts in the ice, making a little hole to admit the water, I am always
surprised by their rare beauty, as if they
were fabulous fishes, they are so foreign to the streets, even to the woods, foreign
as Arabia to our Concord life.
They possess a quite dazzling and transcendent beauty which separates them by
a wide interval from the cadaverous cod and haddock whose fame is trumpeted in our
streets.
They are not green like the pines, nor gray like the stones, nor blue like the sky; but
they have, to my eyes, if possible, yet rarer colors, like flowers and precious
stones, as if they were the pearls, the
animalized nuclei or crystals of the Walden water.
They, of course, are Walden all over and all through; are themselves small Waldens
in the animal kingdom, Waldenses.
It is surprising that they are caught here- -that in this deep and capacious spring,
far beneath the rattling teams and chaises and tinkling sleighs that travel the Walden
road, this great gold and emerald fish swims.
I never chanced to see its kind in any market; it would be the cynosure of all
eyes there.
Easily, with a few convulsive quirks, they give up their watery ghosts, like a mortal
translated before his time to the thin air of heaven.
As I was desirous to recover the long lost bottom of Walden Pond, I surveyed it
carefully, before the ice broke up, early in '46, with compass and chain and sounding
line.
There have been many stories told about the bottom, or rather no bottom, of this pond,
which certainly had no foundation for themselves.
It is remarkable how long men will believe in the bottomlessness of a pond without
taking the trouble to sound it. I have visited two such Bottomless Ponds in
one walk in this neighborhood.
Many have believed that Walden reached quite through to the other side of the
globe.
Some who have lain flat on the ice for a long time, looking down through the
illusive medium, perchance with watery eyes into the bargain, and driven to hasty
conclusions by the fear of catching cold in
their ***, have seen vast holes "into which a load of hay might be driven," if
there were anybody to drive it, the undoubted source of the Styx and entrance
to the Infernal Regions from these parts.
Others have gone down from the village with a "fifty-six" and a wagon load of inch
rope, but yet have failed to find any bottom; for while the "fifty-six" was
resting by the way, they were paying out
the rope in the vain attempt to fathom their truly immeasurable capacity for
marvellousness.
But I can assure my readers that Walden has a reasonably tight bottom at a not
unreasonable, though at an unusual, depth.
I fathomed it easily with a cod-line and a stone weighing about a pound and a half,
and could tell accurately when the stone left the bottom, by having to pull so much
harder before the water got underneath to help me.
The greatest depth was exactly one hundred and two feet; to which may be added the
five feet which it has risen since, making one hundred and seven.
This is a remarkable depth for so small an area; yet not an inch of it can be spared
by the imagination. What if all ponds were shallow?
Would it not react on the minds of men?
I am thankful that this pond was made deep and pure for a symbol.
While men believe in the infinite some ponds will be thought to be bottomless.
A factory-owner, hearing what depth I had found, thought that it could not be true,
for, judging from his acquaintance with dams, sand would not lie at so steep an
angle.
But the deepest ponds are not so deep in proportion to their area as most suppose,
and, if drained, would not leave very remarkable valleys.
They are not like cups between the hills; for this one, which is so unusually deep
for its area, appears in a vertical section through its centre not deeper than a
shallow plate.
Most ponds, emptied, would leave a meadow no more hollow than we frequently see.
William Gilpin, who is so admirable in all that relates to landscapes, and usually so
correct, standing at the head of Loch Fyne, in Scotland, which he describes as "a bay
of salt water, sixty or seventy fathoms
deep, four miles in breadth," and about fifty miles long, surrounded by mountains,
observes, "If we could have seen it immediately after the diluvian crash, or
whatever convulsion of nature occasioned
it, before the waters gushed in, what a horrid chasm must it have appeared!
"So high as heaved the tumid hills, so low Down sunk a hollow bottom broad and deep,
Capacious bed of waters."
But if, using the shortest diameter of Loch Fyne, we apply these proportions to Walden,
which, as we have seen, appears already in a vertical section only like a shallow
plate, it will appear four times as shallow.
So much for the increased horrors of the chasm of Loch Fyne when emptied.
No doubt many a smiling valley with its stretching cornfields occupies exactly such
a "horrid chasm," from which the waters have receded, though it requires the
insight and the far sight of the geologist
to convince the unsuspecting inhabitants of this fact.
Often an inquisitive eye may detect the shores of a primitive lake in the low
horizon hills, and no subsequent elevation of the plain have been necessary to conceal
their history.
But it is easiest, as they who work on the highways know, to find the hollows by the
puddles after a shower.
The amount of it is, the imagination give it the least license, dives deeper and
soars higher than Nature goes.
So, probably, the depth of the ocean will be found to be very inconsiderable compared
with its breadth.
As I sounded through the ice I could determine the shape of the bottom with
greater accuracy than is possible in surveying harbors which do not freeze over,
and I was surprised at its general regularity.
In the deepest part there are several acres more level than almost any field which is
exposed to the sun, wind, and plow.
In one instance, on a line arbitrarily chosen, the depth did not vary more than
one foot in thirty rods; and generally, near the middle, I could calculate the
variation for each one hundred feet in any
direction beforehand within three or four inches.
Some are accustomed to speak of deep and dangerous holes even in quiet sandy ponds
like this, but the effect of water under these circumstances is to level all
inequalities.
The regularity of the bottom and its conformity to the shores and the range of
the neighboring hills were so perfect that a distant promontory betrayed itself in the
soundings quite across the pond, and its
direction could be determined by observing the opposite shore.
Cape becomes bar, and plain shoal, and valley and gorge deep water and channel.
When I had mapped the pond by the scale of ten rods to an inch, and put down the
soundings, more than a hundred in all, I observed this remarkable coincidence.
Having noticed that the number indicating the greatest depth was apparently in the
centre of the map, I laid a rule on the map lengthwise, and then breadthwise, and
found, to my surprise, that the line of
greatest length intersected the line of greatest breadth exactly at the point of
greatest depth, notwithstanding that the middle is so nearly level, the outline of
the pond far from regular, and the extreme
length and breadth were got by measuring into the coves; and I said to myself, Who
knows but this hint would conduct to the deepest part of the ocean as well as of a
pond or puddle?
Is not this the rule also for the height of mountains, regarded as the opposite of
valleys? We know that a hill is not highest at its
narrowest part.
Of five coves, three, or all which had been sounded, were observed to have a bar quite
across their mouths and deeper water within, so that the bay tended to be an
expansion of water within the land not only
horizontally but vertically, and to form a basin or independent pond, the direction of
the two capes showing the course of the bar.
Every harbor on the sea-coast, also, has its bar at its entrance.
In proportion as the mouth of the cove was wider compared with its length, the water
over the bar was deeper compared with that in the basin.
Given, then, the length and breadth of the cove, and the character of the surrounding
shore, and you have almost elements enough to make out a formula for all cases.
In order to see how nearly I could guess, with this experience, at the deepest point
in a pond, by observing the outlines of a surface and the character of its shores
alone, I made a plan of White Pond, which
contains about forty-one acres, and, like this, has no island in it, nor any visible
inlet or outlet; and as the line of greatest breadth fell very near the line of
least breadth, where two opposite capes
approached each other and two opposite bays receded, I ventured to mark a point a short
distance from the latter line, but still on the line of greatest length, as the
deepest.
The deepest part was found to be within one hundred feet of this, still farther in the
direction to which I had inclined, and was only one foot deeper, namely, sixty feet.
Of course, a stream running through, or an island in the pond, would make the problem
much more complicated.
If we knew all the laws of Nature, we should need only one fact, or the
description of one actual phenomenon, to infer all the particular results at that
point.
Now we know only a few laws, and our result is vitiated, not, of course, by any
confusion or irregularity in Nature, but by our ignorance of essential elements in the
calculation.
Our notions of law and harmony are commonly confined to those instances which we
detect; but the harmony which results from a far greater number of seemingly
conflicting, but really concurring, laws,
which we have not detected, is still more wonderful.
The particular laws are as our points of view, as, to the traveller, a mountain
outline varies with every step, and it has an infinite number of profiles, though
absolutely but one form.
Even when cleft or bored through it is not comprehended in its entireness.
What I have observed of the pond is no less true in ethics.
It is the law of average.
Such a rule of the two diameters not only guides us toward the sun in the system and
the heart in man, but draws lines through the length and breadth of the aggregate of
a man's particular daily behaviors and
waves of life into his coves and inlets, and where they intersect will be the height
or depth of his character.
Perhaps we need only to know how his shores trend and his adjacent country or
circumstances, to infer his depth and concealed bottom.
If he is surrounded by mountainous circumstances, an Achillean shore, whose
peaks overshadow and are reflected in his ***, they suggest a corresponding depth
in him.
But a low and smooth shore proves him shallow on that side.
In our bodies, a bold projecting brow falls off to and indicates a corresponding depth
of thought.
Also there is a bar across the entrance of our every cove, or particular inclination;
each is our harbor for a season, in which we are detained and partially land-locked.
These inclinations are not whimsical usually, but their form, size, and
direction are determined by the promontories of the shore, the ancient axes
of elevation.
When this bar is gradually increased by storms, tides, or currents, or there is a
subsidence of the waters, so that it reaches to the surface, that which was at
first but an inclination in the shore in
which a thought was harbored becomes an individual lake, cut off from the ocean,
wherein the thought secures its own conditions--changes, perhaps, from salt to
fresh, becomes a sweet sea, dead sea, or a marsh.
At the advent of each individual into this life, may we not suppose that such a bar
has risen to the surface somewhere?
It is true, we are such poor navigators that our thoughts, for the most part, stand
off and on upon a harborless coast, are conversant only with the bights of the bays
of poesy, or steer for the public ports of
entry, and go into the dry docks of science, where they merely refit for this
world, and no natural currents concur to individualize them.
As for the inlet or outlet of Walden, I have not discovered any but rain and snow
and evaporation, though perhaps, with a thermometer and a line, such places may be
found, for where the water flows into the
pond it will probably be coldest in summer and warmest in winter.
When the ice-men were at work here in '46- 7, the cakes sent to the shore were one day
rejected by those who were stacking them up there, not being thick enough to lie side
by side with the rest; and the cutters thus
discovered that the ice over a small space was two or three inches thinner than
elsewhere, which made them think that there was an inlet there.
They also showed me in another place what they thought was a "leach-hole," through
which the pond leaked out under a hill into a neighboring meadow, pushing me out on a
cake of ice to see it.
It was a small cavity under ten feet of water; but I think that I can warrant the
pond not to need soldering till they find a worse leak than that.
One has suggested, that if such a "leach- hole" should be found, its connection with
the meadow, if any existed, might be proved by conveying some colored powder or sawdust
to the mouth of the hole, and then putting
a strainer over the spring in the meadow, which would catch some of the particles
carried through by the current.
While I was surveying, the ice, which was sixteen inches thick, undulated under a
slight wind like water. It is well known that a level cannot be
used on ice.
At one rod from the shore its greatest fluctuation, when observed by means of a
level on land directed toward a graduated staff on the ice, was three quarters of an
inch, though the ice appeared firmly attached to the shore.
It was probably greater in the middle.
Who knows but if our instruments were delicate enough we might detect an
undulation in the crust of the earth?
When two legs of my level were on the shore and the third on the ice, and the sights
were directed over the latter, a rise or fall of the ice of an almost infinitesimal
amount made a difference of several feet on a tree across the pond.
When I began to cut holes for sounding there were three or four inches of water on
the ice under a deep snow which had sunk it thus far; but the water began immediately
to run into these holes, and continued to
run for two days in deep streams, which wore away the ice on every side, and
contributed essentially, if not mainly, to dry the surface of the pond; for, as the
water ran in, it raised and floated the ice.
This was somewhat like cutting a hole in the bottom of a ship to let the water out.
When such holes freeze, and a rain succeeds, and finally a new freezing forms
a fresh smooth ice over all, it is beautifully mottled internally by dark
figures, shaped somewhat like a spider's
web, what you may call ice rosettes, produced by the channels worn by the water
flowing from all sides to a centre.
Sometimes, also, when the ice was covered with shallow puddles, I saw a double shadow
of myself, one standing on the head of the other, one on the ice, the other on the
trees or hillside.
While yet it is cold January, and snow and ice are thick and solid, the prudent
landlord comes from the village to get ice to cool his summer drink; impressively,
even pathetically, wise, to foresee the
heat and thirst of July now in January-- wearing a thick coat and mittens! when so
many things are not provided for.
It may be that he lays up no treasures in this world which will cool his summer drink
in the next.
He cuts and saws the solid pond, unroofs the house of fishes, and carts off their
very element and air, held fast by chains and stakes like corded wood, through the
favoring winter air, to wintry cellars, to underlie the summer there.
It looks like solidified azure, as, far off, it is drawn through the streets.
These ice-cutters are a merry race, full of jest and sport, and when I went among them
they were wont to invite me to saw pit- fashion with them, I standing underneath.
In the winter of '46-7 there came a hundred men of Hyperborean extraction swoop down on
to our pond one morning, with many carloads of ungainly-looking farming tools--sleds,
plows, drill-barrows, turf-knives, spades,
saws, rakes, and each man was armed with a double-pointed pike-staff, such as is not
described in the New-England Farmer or the Cultivator.
I did not know whether they had come to sow a crop of winter rye, or some other kind of
grain recently introduced from Iceland.
As I saw no manure, I judged that they meant to skim the land, as I had done,
thinking the soil was deep and had lain fallow long enough.
They said that a gentleman farmer, who was behind the scenes, wanted to double his
money, which, as I understood, amounted to half a million already; but in order to
cover each one of his dollars with another,
he took off the only coat, ay, the skin itself, of Walden Pond in the midst of a
hard winter.
They went to work at once, plowing, barrowing, rolling, furrowing, in admirable
order, as if they were bent on making this a model farm; but when I was looking sharp
to see what kind of seed they dropped into
the furrow, a gang of fellows by my side suddenly began to hook up the *** mould
itself, with a peculiar jerk, clean down to the sand, or rather the water--for it was a
very springy soil--indeed all the terra
firma there was--and haul it away on sleds, and then I guessed that they must be
cutting peat in a bog.
So they came and went every day, with a peculiar shriek from the locomotive, from
and to some point of the polar regions, as it seemed to me, like a flock of arctic
snow-birds.
But sometimes Squaw Walden had her revenge, and a hired man, walking behind his team,
slipped through a crack in the ground down toward Tartarus, and he who was so brave
before suddenly became but the ninth part
of a man, almost gave up his animal heat, and was glad to take refuge in my house,
and acknowledged that there was some virtue in a stove; or sometimes the frozen soil
took a piece of steel out of a plowshare,
or a plow got set in the furrow and had to be cut out.
To speak literally, a hundred Irishmen, with Yankee overseers, came from Cambridge
every day to get out the ice.
They divided it into cakes by methods too well known to require description, and
these, being sledded to the shore, were rapidly hauled off on to an ice platform,
and raised by grappling irons and block and
tackle, worked by horses, on to a stack, as surely as so many barrels of flour, and
there placed evenly side by side, and row upon row, as if they formed the solid base
of an obelisk designed to pierce the clouds.
They told me that in a good day they could get out a thousand tons, which was the
yield of about one acre.
Deep ruts and "cradle-holes" were worn in the ice, as on terra firma, by the passage
of the sleds over the same track, and the horses invariably ate their oats out of
cakes of ice hollowed out like buckets.
They stacked up the cakes thus in the open air in a pile thirty-five feet high on one
side and six or seven rods square, putting hay between the outside layers to exclude
the air; for when the wind, though never so
cold, finds a passage through, it will wear large cavities, leaving slight supports or
studs only here and there, and finally topple it down.
At first it looked like a vast blue fort or Valhalla; but when they began to tuck the
coarse meadow hay into the crevices, and this became covered with rime and icicles,
it looked like a venerable moss-grown and
hoary ruin, built of azure-tinted marble, the abode of Winter, that old man we see in
the almanac--his shanty, as if he had a design to estivate with us.
They calculated that not twenty-five per cent of this would reach its destination,
and that two or three per cent would be wasted in the cars.
However, a still greater part of this heap had a different destiny from what was
intended; for, either because the ice was found not to keep so well as was expected,
containing more air than usual, or for some other reason, it never got to market.
This heap, made in the winter of '46-7 and estimated to contain ten thousand tons, was
finally covered with hay and boards; and though it was unroofed the following July,
and a part of it carried off, the rest
remaining exposed to the sun, it stood over that summer and the next winter, and was
not quite melted till September, 1848. Thus the pond recovered the greater part.
Like the water, the Walden ice, seen near at hand, has a green tint, but at a
distance is beautifully blue, and you can easily tell it from the white ice of the
river, or the merely greenish ice of some ponds, a quarter of a mile off.
Sometimes one of those great cakes slips from the ice-man's sled into the village
street, and lies there for a week like a great emerald, an object of interest to all
passers.
I have noticed that a portion of Walden which in the state of water was green will
often, when frozen, appear from the same point of view blue.
So the hollows about this pond will, sometimes, in the winter, be filled with a
greenish water somewhat like its own, but the next day will have frozen blue.
Perhaps the blue color of water and ice is due to the light and air they contain, and
the most transparent is the bluest. Ice is an interesting subject for
contemplation.
They told me that they had some in the ice- houses at Fresh Pond five years old which
was as good as ever.
Why is it that a bucket of water soon becomes putrid, but frozen remains sweet
forever?
It is commonly said that this is the difference between the affections and the
intellect.
Thus for sixteen days I saw from my window a hundred men at work like busy husbandmen,
with teams and horses and apparently all the implements of farming, such a picture
as we see on the first page of the almanac;
and as often as I looked out I was reminded of the fable of the lark and the reapers,
or the parable of the sower, and the like; and now they are all gone, and in thirty
days more, probably, I shall look from the
same window on the pure sea-green Walden water there, reflecting the clouds and the
trees, and sending up its evaporations in solitude, and no traces will appear that a
man has ever stood there.
Perhaps I shall hear a solitary loon laugh as he dives and plumes himself, or shall
see a lonely fisher in his boat, like a floating leaf, beholding his form reflected
in the waves, where lately a hundred men securely labored.
Thus it appears that the sweltering inhabitants of Charleston and New Orleans,
of Madras and Bombay and Calcutta, drink at my well.
In the morning I bathe my intellect in the stupendous and cosmogonal philosophy of the
Bhagvat-Geeta, since whose composition years of the gods have elapsed, and in
comparison with which our modern world and
its literature seem puny and trivial; and I doubt if that philosophy is not to be
referred to a previous state of existence, so remote is its sublimity from our
conceptions.
I lay down the book and go to my well for water, and lo! there I meet the servant of
the Bramin, priest of Brahma and Vishnu and Indra, who still sits in his temple on the
Ganges reading the Vedas, or dwells at the
root of a tree with his crust and water jug.
I meet his servant come to draw water for his master, and our buckets as it were
grate together in the same well.
The pure Walden water is mingled with the sacred water of the Ganges.
With favoring winds it is wafted past the site of the fabulous islands of Atlantis
and the Hesperides, makes the periplus of Hanno, and, floating by Ternate and Tidore
and the mouth of the Persian Gulf, melts in
the tropic gales of the Indian seas, and is landed in ports of which Alexander only
heard the names.
>
CHAPTER 17 Spring
The opening of large tracts by the ice- cutters commonly causes a pond to break up
earlier; for the water, agitated by the wind, even in cold weather, wears away the
surrounding ice.
But such was not the effect on Walden that year, for she had soon got a thick new
garment to take the place of the old.
This pond never breaks up so soon as the others in this neighborhood, on account
both of its greater depth and its having no stream passing through it to melt or wear
away the ice.
I never knew it to open in the course of a winter, not excepting that of '52-3, which
gave the ponds so severe a trial.
It commonly opens about the first of April, a week or ten days later than Flint's Pond
and Fair Haven, beginning to melt on the north side and in the shallower parts where
it began to freeze.
It indicates better than any water hereabouts the absolute progress of the
season, being least affected by transient changes of temperature.
A severe cold of a few days' duration in March may very much retard the opening of
the former ponds, while the temperature of Walden increases almost uninterruptedly.
A thermometer thrust into the middle of Walden on the 6th of March, 1847, stood at
32°, or freezing point; near the shore at 33°; in the middle of Flint's Pond, the
same day, at 32°; at a dozen rods from the
shore, in shallow water, under ice a foot thick, at 36°.
This difference of three and a half degrees between the temperature of the deep water
and the shallow in the latter pond, and the fact that a great proportion of it is
comparatively shallow, show why it should break up so much sooner than Walden.
The ice in the shallowest part was at this time several inches thinner than in the
middle.
In midwinter the middle had been the warmest and the ice thinnest there.
So, also, every one who has waded about the shores of the pond in summer must have
perceived how much warmer the water is close to the shore, where only three or
four inches deep, than a little distance
out, and on the surface where it is deep, than near the bottom.
In spring the sun not only exerts an influence through the increased temperature
of the air and earth, but its heat passes through ice a foot or more thick, and is
reflected from the bottom in shallow water,
and so also warms the water and melts the under side of the ice, at the same time
that it is melting it more directly above, making it uneven, and causing the air
bubbles which it contains to extend
themselves upward and downward until it is completely honeycombed, and at last
disappears suddenly in a single spring rain.
Ice has its grain as well as wood, and when a cake begins to rot or "comb," that is,
assume the appearance of honeycomb, whatever may be its position, the air cells
are at right angles with what was the water surface.
Where there is a rock or a log rising near to the surface the ice over it is much
thinner, and is frequently quite dissolved by this reflected heat; and I have been
told that in the experiment at Cambridge to
freeze water in a shallow wooden pond, though the cold air circulated underneath,
and so had access to both sides, the reflection of the sun from the bottom more
than counterbalanced this advantage.
When a warm rain in the middle of the winter melts off the snow-ice from Walden,
and leaves a hard dark or transparent ice on the middle, there will be a strip of
rotten though thicker white ice, a rod or
more wide, about the shores, created by this reflected heat.
Also, as I have said, the bubbles themselves within the ice operate as
burning-glasses to melt the ice beneath.
The phenomena of the year take place every day in a pond on a small scale.
Every morning, generally speaking, the shallow water is being warmed more rapidly
than the deep, though it may not be made so warm after all, and every evening it is
being cooled more rapidly until the morning.
The day is an epitome of the year.
The night is the winter, the morning and evening are the spring and fall, and the
noon is the summer. The cracking and booming of the ice
indicate a change of temperature.
One pleasant morning after a cold night, February 24th, 1850, having gone to Flint's
Pond to spend the day, I noticed with surprise, that when I struck the ice with
the head of my axe, it resounded like a
gong for many rods around, or as if I had struck on a tight drum-head.
The pond began to boom about an hour after sunrise, when it felt the influence of the
sun's rays slanted upon it from over the hills; it stretched itself and yawned like
a waking man with a gradually increasing
tumult, which was kept up three or four hours.
It took a short siesta at noon, and boomed once more toward night, as the sun was
withdrawing his influence.
In the right stage of the weather a pond fires its evening gun with great
regularity.
But in the middle of the day, being full of cracks, and the air also being less
elastic, it had completely lost its resonance, and probably fishes and muskrats
could not then have been stunned by a blow on it.
The fishermen say that the "thundering of the pond" scares the fishes and prevents
their biting.
The pond does not thunder every evening, and I cannot tell surely when to expect its
thundering; but though I may perceive no difference in the weather, it does.
Who would have suspected so large and cold and thick-skinned a thing to be so
sensitive?
Yet it has its law to which it thunders obedience when it should as surely as the
buds expand in the spring. The earth is all alive and covered with
papillae.
The largest pond is as sensitive to atmospheric changes as the globule of
mercury in its tube.
One attraction in coming to the woods to live was that I should have leisure and
opportunity to see the Spring come in.
The ice in the pond at length begins to be honeycombed, and I can set my heel in it as
I walk.
Fogs and rains and warmer suns are gradually melting the snow; the days have
grown sensibly longer; and I see how I shall get through the winter without adding
to my wood-pile, for large fires are no longer necessary.
I am on the alert for the first signs of spring, to hear the chance note of some
arriving bird, or the striped squirrel's chirp, for his stores must be now nearly
exhausted, or see the woodchuck venture out of his winter quarters.
On the 13th of March, after I had heard the bluebird, song sparrow, and red-wing, the
ice was still nearly a foot thick.
As the weather grew warmer it was not sensibly worn away by the water, nor broken
up and floated off as in rivers, but, though it was completely melted for half a
rod in width about the shore, the middle
was merely honeycombed and saturated with water, so that you could put your foot
through it when six inches thick; but by the next day evening, perhaps, after a warm
rain followed by fog, it would have wholly
disappeared, all gone off with the fog, spirited away.
One year I went across the middle only five days before it disappeared entirely.
In 1845 Walden was first completely open on the 1st of April; in '46, the 25th of
March; in '47, the 8th of April; in '51, the 28th of March; in '52, the 18th of
April; in '53, the 23d of March; in '54, about the 7th of April.
Every incident connected with the breaking up of the rivers and ponds and the settling
of the weather is particularly interesting to us who live in a climate of so great
extremes.
When the warmer days come, they who dwell near the river hear the ice crack at night
with a startling whoop as loud as artillery, as if its icy fetters were rent
from end to end, and within a few days see it rapidly going out.
So the alligator comes out of the mud with quakings of the earth.
One old man, who has been a close observer of Nature, and seems as thoroughly wise in
regard to all her operations as if she had been put upon the stocks when he was a boy,
and he had helped to lay her keel--who has
come to his growth, and can hardly acquire more of natural lore if he should live to
the age of Methuselah--told me--and I was surprised to hear him express wonder at any
of Nature's operations, for I thought that
there were no secrets between them--that one spring day he took his gun and boat,
and thought that he would have a little sport with the ducks.
There was ice still on the meadows, but it was all gone out of the river, and he
dropped down without obstruction from Sudbury, where he lived, to Fair Haven
Pond, which he found, unexpectedly, covered for the most part with a firm field of ice.
It was a warm day, and he was surprised to see so great a body of ice remaining.
Not seeing any ducks, he hid his boat on the north or back side of an island in the
pond, and then concealed himself in the bushes on the south side, to await them.
The ice was melted for three or four rods from the shore, and there was a smooth and
warm sheet of water, with a muddy bottom, such as the ducks love, within, and he
thought it likely that some would be along pretty soon.
After he had lain still there about an hour he heard a low and seemingly very distant
sound, but singularly grand and impressive, unlike anything he had ever heard,
gradually swelling and increasing as if it
would have a universal and memorable ending, a sullen rush and roar, which
seemed to him all at once like the sound of a vast body of fowl coming in to settle
there, and, seizing his gun, he started up
in haste and excited; but he found, to his surprise, that the whole body of the ice
had started while he lay there, and drifted in to the shore, and the sound he had heard
was made by its edge grating on the shore--
at first gently nibbled and crumbled off, but at length heaving up and scattering its
wrecks along the island to a considerable height before it came to a standstill.
At length the sun's rays have attained the right angle, and warm winds blow up mist
and rain and melt the snowbanks, and the sun, dispersing the mist, smiles on a
checkered landscape of russet and white
smoking with incense, through which the traveller picks his way from islet to
islet, cheered by the music of a thousand tinkling rills and rivulets whose veins are
filled with the blood of winter which they are bearing off.
Few phenomena gave me more delight than to observe the forms which thawing sand and
clay assume in flowing down the sides of a deep cut on the railroad through which I
passed on my way to the village, a
phenomenon not very common on so large a scale, though the number of freshly exposed
banks of the right material must have been greatly multiplied since railroads were
invented.
The material was sand of every degree of fineness and of various rich colors,
commonly mixed with a little clay.
When the frost comes out in the spring, and even in a thawing day in the winter, the
sand begins to flow down the slopes like lava, sometimes bursting out through the
snow and overflowing it where no sand was to be seen before.
Innumerable little streams overlap and interlace one with another, exhibiting a
sort of hybrid product, which obeys half way the law of currents, and half way that
of vegetation.
As it flows it takes the forms of sappy leaves or vines, making heaps of pulpy
sprays a foot or more in depth, and resembling, as you look down on them, the
laciniated, lobed, and imbricated thalluses
of some lichens; or you are reminded of coral, of leopard's paws or birds' feet, of
brains or lungs or bowels, and excrements of all kinds.
It is a truly grotesque vegetation, whose forms and color we see imitated in bronze,
a sort of architectural foliage more ancient and typical than acanthus,
chiccory, ivy, vine, or any vegetable
leaves; destined perhaps, under some circumstances, to become a puzzle to future
geologists.
The whole cut impressed me as if it were a cave with its stalactites laid open to the
light.
The various shades of the sand are singularly rich and agreeable, embracing
the different iron colors, brown, gray, yellowish, and reddish.
When the flowing mass reaches the drain at the foot of the bank it spreads out flatter
into strands, the separate streams losing their semi-cylindrical form and gradually
becoming more flat and broad, running
together as they are more moist, till they form an almost flat sand, still variously
and beautifully shaded, but in which you can trace the original forms of vegetation;
till at length, in the water itself, they
are converted into banks, like those formed off the mouths of rivers, and the forms of
vegetation are lost in the ripple marks on the bottom.
The whole bank, which is from twenty to forty feet high, is sometimes overlaid with
a mass of this kind of foliage, or sandy rupture, for a quarter of a mile on one or
both sides, the produce of one spring day.
What makes this sand foliage remarkable is its springing into existence thus suddenly.
When I see on the one side the inert bank-- for the sun acts on one side first--and on
the other this luxuriant foliage, the creation of an hour, I am affected as if in
a peculiar sense I stood in the laboratory
of the Artist who made the world and me-- had come to where he was still at work,
sporting on this bank, and with excess of energy strewing his fresh designs about.
I feel as if I were nearer to the vitals of the globe, for this sandy overflow is
something such a foliaceous mass as the vitals of the animal body.
You find thus in the very sands an anticipation of the vegetable leaf.
No wonder that the earth expresses itself outwardly in leaves, it so labors with the
idea inwardly.
The atoms have already learned this law, and are pregnant by it.
The overhanging leaf sees here its prototype.
Internally, whether in the globe or animal body, it is a moist thick lobe, a word
especially applicable to the liver and lungs and the leaves of fat (yeibw, labor,
lapsus, to flow or slip downward, a
lapsing; lobus, globus, lobe, globe; also lap, flap, and many other words);
externally a dry thin leaf, even as the f and v are a pressed and dried b.
The radicals of lobe are lb, the soft mass of the b (single lobed, or B, double
lobed), with the liquid l behind it pressing it forward.
In globe, glb, the guttural g adds to the meaning the capacity of the throat.
The feathers and wings of birds are still drier and thinner leaves.
Thus, also, you pass from the lumpish grub in the earth to the airy and fluttering
butterfly.
The very globe continually transcends and translates itself, and becomes winged in
its orbit.
Even ice begins with delicate crystal leaves, as if it had flowed into moulds
which the fronds of waterplants have impressed on the watery mirror.
The whole tree itself is but one leaf, and rivers are still vaster leaves whose pulp
is intervening earth, and towns and cities are the ova of insects in their axils.
When the sun withdraws the sand ceases to flow, but in the morning the streams will
start once more and branch and branch again into a myriad of others.
You here see perchance how blood-vessels are formed.
If you look closely you observe that first there pushes forward from the thawing mass
a stream of softened sand with a drop-like point, like the ball of the finger, feeling
its way slowly and blindly downward, until
at last with more heat and moisture, as the sun gets higher, the most fluid portion, in
its effort to obey the law to which the most inert also yields, separates from the
latter and forms for itself a meandering
channel or artery within that, in which is seen a little silvery stream glancing like
lightning from one stage of pulpy leaves or branches to another, and ever and anon
swallowed up in the sand.
It is wonderful how rapidly yet perfectly the sand organizes itself as it flows,
using the best material its mass affords to form the sharp edges of its channel.
Such are the sources of rivers.
In the silicious matter which the water deposits is perhaps the bony system, and in
the still finer soil and organic matter the fleshy fibre or cellular tissue.
What is man but a mass of thawing clay?
The ball of the human finger is but a drop congealed.
The fingers and toes flow to their extent from the thawing mass of the body.
Who knows what the human body would expand and flow out to under a more genial heaven?
Is not the hand a spreading palm leaf with its lobes and veins?
The ear may be regarded, fancifully, as a lichen, Umbilicaria, on the side of the
head, with its lobe or drop.
The lip--labium, from labor (?)--laps or lapses from the sides of the cavernous
mouth. The nose is a manifest congealed drop or
stalactite.
The chin is a still larger drop, the confluent dripping of the face.
The cheeks are a slide from the brows into the valley of the face, opposed and
diffused by the cheek bones.
Each rounded lobe of the vegetable leaf, too, is a thick and now loitering drop,
larger or smaller; the lobes are the fingers of the leaf; and as many lobes as
it has, in so many directions it tends to
flow, and more heat or other genial influences would have caused it to flow yet
farther.
Thus it seemed that this one hillside illustrated the principle of all the
operations of Nature. The Maker of this earth but patented a
leaf.
What Champollion will decipher this hieroglyphic for us, that we may turn over
a new leaf at last?
This phenomenon is more exhilarating to me than the luxuriance and fertility of
vineyards.
True, it is somewhat excrementitious in its character, and there is no end to the heaps
of liver, lights, and bowels, as if the globe were turned wrong side outward; but
this suggests at least that Nature has some
bowels, and there again is mother of humanity.
This is the frost coming out of the ground; this is Spring.
It precedes the green and flowery spring, as mythology precedes regular poetry.
I know of nothing more purgative of winter fumes and indigestions.
It convinces me that Earth is still in her swaddling-clothes, and stretches forth baby
fingers on every side. Fresh curls spring from the baldest brow.
There is nothing inorganic.
These foliaceous heaps lie along the bank like the slag of a furnace, showing that
Nature is "in full blast" within.
The earth is not a mere fragment of dead history, stratum upon stratum like the
leaves of a book, to be studied by geologists and antiquaries chiefly, but
living poetry like the leaves of a tree,
which precede flowers and fruit--not a fossil earth, but a living earth; compared
with whose great central life all animal and vegetable life is merely parasitic.
Its throes will heave our exuviae from their graves.
You may melt your metals and cast them into the most beautiful moulds you can; they
will never excite me like the forms which this molten earth flows out into.
And not only it, but the institutions upon it are plastic like clay in the hands of
the potter.
Ere long, not only on these banks, but on every hill and plain and in every hollow,
the frost comes out of the ground like a dormant quadruped from its burrow, and
seeks the sea with music, or migrates to other climes in clouds.
Thaw with his gentle persuasion is more powerful than Thor with his hammer.
The one melts, the other but breaks in pieces.
When the ground was partially bare of snow, and a few warm days had dried its surface
somewhat, it was pleasant to compare the first tender signs of the infant year just
peeping forth with the stately beauty of
the withered vegetation which had withstood the winter--life-everlasting, goldenrods,
pinweeds, and graceful wild grasses, more obvious and interesting frequently than in
summer even, as if their beauty was not
ripe till then; even cotton-grass, cat- tails, mulleins, johnswort, hard-hack,
meadow-sweet, and other strong-stemmed plants, those unexhausted granaries which
entertain the earliest birds--decent weeds, at least, which widowed Nature wears.
I am particularly attracted by the arching and sheaf-like top of the wool-grass; it
brings back the summer to our winter memories, and is among the forms which art
loves to copy, and which, in the vegetable
kingdom, have the same relation to types already in the mind of man that astronomy
has. It is an antique style, older than Greek or
Egyptian.
Many of the phenomena of Winter are suggestive of an inexpressible tenderness
and fragile delicacy.
We are accustomed to hear this king described as a rude and boisterous tyrant;
but with the gentleness of a lover he adorns the tresses of Summer.
At the approach of spring the red squirrels got under my house, two at a time, directly
under my feet as I sat reading or writing, and kept up the queerest chuckling and
chirruping and vocal pirouetting and
gurgling sounds that ever were heard; and when I stamped they only chirruped the
louder, as if past all fear and respect in their mad pranks, defying humanity to stop
them.
No, you don't--chickaree--chickaree. They were wholly deaf to my arguments, or
failed to perceive their force, and fell into a strain of invective that was
irresistible.
The first sparrow of spring! The year beginning with younger hope than
ever!
The faint silvery warblings heard over the partially bare and moist fields from the
bluebird, the song sparrow, and the red- wing, as if the last flakes of winter
tinkled as they fell!
What at such a time are histories, chronologies, traditions, and all written
revelations? The brooks sing carols and glees to the
spring.
The marsh hawk, sailing low over the meadow, is already seeking the first slimy
life that awakes.
The sinking sound of melting snow is heard in all dells, and the ice dissolves apace
in the ponds.
The grass flames up on the hillsides like a spring fire--"et primitus oritur herba
imbribus primoribus evocata"--as if the earth sent forth an inward heat to greet
the returning sun; not yellow but green is
the color of its flame;--the symbol of perpetual youth, the grass-blade, like a
long green ribbon, streams from the sod into the summer, checked indeed by the
frost, but anon pushing on again, lifting
its spear of last year's hay with the fresh life below.
It grows as steadily as the rill oozes out of the ground.
It is almost identical with that, for in the growing days of June, when the rills
are dry, the grass-blades are their channels, and from year to year the herds
drink at this perennial green stream, and
the mower draws from it betimes their winter supply.
So our human life but dies down to its root, and still puts forth its green blade
to eternity.
Walden is melting apace. There is a canal two rods wide along the
northerly and westerly sides, and wider still at the east end.
A great field of ice has cracked off from the main body.
I hear a song sparrow singing from the bushes on the shore,--olit, olit, olit,--
chip, chip, chip, che char,--che wiss, wiss, wiss.
He too is helping to crack it.
How handsome the great sweeping curves in the edge of the ice, answering somewhat to
those of the shore, but more regular!
It is unusually hard, owing to the recent severe but transient cold, and all watered
or waved like a palace floor.
But the wind slides eastward over its opaque surface in vain, till it reaches the
living surface beyond.
It is glorious to behold this ribbon of water sparkling in the sun, the bare face
of the pond full of glee and youth, as if it spoke the joy of the fishes within it,
and of the sands on its shore--a silvery
sheen as from the scales of a leuciscus, as it were all one active fish.
Such is the contrast between winter and spring.
Walden was dead and is alive again.
But this spring it broke up more steadily, as I have said.
The change from storm and winter to serene and mild weather, from dark and sluggish
hours to bright and elastic ones, is a memorable crisis which all things proclaim.
It is seemingly instantaneous at last.
Suddenly an influx of light filled my house, though the evening was at hand, and
the clouds of winter still overhung it, and the eaves were dripping with sleety rain.
I looked out the window, and lo! where yesterday was cold gray ice there lay the
transparent pond already calm and full of hope as in a summer evening, reflecting a
summer evening sky in its ***, though
none was visible overhead, as if it had intelligence with some remote horizon.
I heard a robin in the distance, the first I had heard for many a thousand years,
methought, whose note I shall not forget for many a thousand more--the same sweet
and powerful song as of yore.
O the evening robin, at the end of a New England summer day!
If I could ever find the twig he sits upon! I mean he; I mean the twig.
This at least is not the Turdus migratorius.
The pitch pines and shrub oaks about my house, which had so long drooped, suddenly
resumed their several characters, looked brighter, greener, and more erect and
alive, as if effectually cleansed and restored by the rain.
I knew that it would not rain any more.
You may tell by looking at any twig of the forest, ay, at your very wood-pile, whether
its winter is past or not.
As it grew darker, I was startled by the honking of geese flying low over the woods,
like weary travellers getting in late from Southern lakes, and indulging at last in
unrestrained complaint and mutual consolation.
Standing at my door, I could hear the rush of their wings; when, driving toward my
house, they suddenly spied my light, and with hushed clamor wheeled and settled in
the pond.
So I came in, and shut the door, and passed my first spring night in the woods.
In the morning I watched the geese from the door through the mist, sailing in the
middle of the pond, fifty rods off, so large and tumultuous that Walden appeared
like an artificial pond for their amusement.
But when I stood on the shore they at once rose up with a great flapping of wings at
the signal of their commander, and when they had got into rank circled about over
my head, twenty-nine of them, and then
steered straight to Canada, with a regular honk from the leader at intervals, trusting
to break their fast in muddier pools.
A "plump" of ducks rose at the same time and took the route to the north in the wake
of their noisier cousins.
For a week I heard the circling, groping clangor of some solitary goose in the foggy
mornings, seeking its companion, and still peopling the woods with the sound of a
larger life than they could sustain.
In April the pigeons were seen again flying express in small flocks, and in due time I
heard the martins twittering over my clearing, though it had not seemed that the
township contained so many that it could
afford me any, and I fancied that they were peculiarly of the ancient race that dwelt
in hollow trees ere white men came.
In almost all climes the tortoise and the frog are among the precursors and heralds
of this season, and birds fly with song and glancing plumage, and plants spring and
bloom, and winds blow, to correct this
slight oscillation of the poles and preserve the equilibrium of nature.
As every season seems best to us in its turn, so the coming in of spring is like
the creation of Cosmos out of Chaos and the realization of the Golden Age.--
"Eurus ad Auroram Nabathaeaque regna recessit, Persidaque, et radiis juga
subdita matutinis."
"The East-Wind withdrew to Aurora and the Nabathaen kingdom, And the Persian, and the
ridges placed under the morning rays. Man was born.
Whether that Artificer of things, The origin of a better world, made him from the
divine seed; Or the earth, being recent and lately sundered from the high Ether,
retained some seeds of cognate heaven."
A single gentle rain makes the grass many shades greener.
So our prospects brighten on the influx of better thoughts.
We should be blessed if we lived in the present always, and took advantage of every
accident that befell us, like the grass which confesses the influence of the
slightest dew that falls on it; and did not
spend our time in atoning for the neglect of past opportunities, which we call doing
our duty. We loiter in winter while it is already
spring.
In a pleasant spring morning all men's sins are forgiven.
Such a day is a truce to vice. While such a sun holds out to burn, the
vilest sinner may return.
Through our own recovered innocence we discern the innocence of our neighbors.
You may have known your neighbor yesterday for a thief, a drunkard, or a sensualist,
and merely pitied or despised him, and despaired of the world; but the sun shines
bright and warm this first spring morning,
recreating the world, and you meet him at some serene work, and see how it is
exhausted and debauched veins expand with still joy and bless the new day, feel the
spring influence with the innocence of infancy, and all his faults are forgotten.
There is not only an atmosphere of good will about him, but even a savor of
holiness groping for expression, blindly and ineffectually perhaps, like a new-born
instinct, and for a short hour the south hill-side echoes to no vulgar jest.
You see some innocent fair shoots preparing to burst from his gnarled rind and try
another year's life, tender and fresh as the youngest plant.
Even he has entered into the joy of his Lord.
Why the jailer does not leave open his prison doors--why the judge does not dismis
his case--why the preacher does not dismiss his congregation!
It is because they do not obey the hint which God gives them, nor accept the pardon
which he freely offers to all.
"A return to goodness produced each day in the tranquil and beneficent breath of the
morning, causes that in respect to the love of virtue and the hatred of vice, one
approaches a little the primitive nature of
man, as the sprouts of the forest which has been felled.
In like manner the evil which one does in the interval of a day prevents the germs of
virtues which began to spring up again from developing themselves and destroys them.
"After the germs of virtue have thus been prevented many times from developing
themselves, then the beneficent breath of evening does not suffice to preserve them.
As soon as the breath of evening does not suffice longer to preserve them, then the
nature of man does not differ much from that of the brute.
Men seeing the nature of this man like that of the brute, think that he has never
possessed the innate faculty of reason. Are those the true and natural sentiments
of man?"
"The Golden Age was first created, which without any avenger Spontaneously without
law cherished fidelity and rectitude.
Punishment and fear were not; nor were threatening words read On suspended brass;
nor did the suppliant crowd fear The words of their judge; but were safe without an
avenger.
Not yet the pine felled on its mountains had descended To the liquid waves that it
might see a foreign world, And mortals knew no shores but their own.
There was eternal spring, and placid zephyrs with warm Blasts soothed the
flowers born without seed."
On the 29th of April, as I was fishing from the bank of the river near the Nine-Acre-
Corner bridge, standing on the quaking grass and willow roots, where the muskrats
lurk, I heard a singular rattling sound,
somewhat like that of the sticks which boys play with their fingers, when, looking up,
I observed a very slight and graceful hawk, like a nighthawk, alternately soaring like
a ripple and tumbling a rod or two over and
over, showing the under side of its wings, which gleamed like a satin ribbon in the
sun, or like the pearly inside of a shell.
This sight reminded me of falconry and what nobleness and poetry are associated with
that sport. The Merlin it seemed to me it might be
called: but I care not for its name.
It was the most ethereal flight I had ever witnessed.
It did not simply flutter like a butterfly, nor soar like the larger hawks, but it
sported with proud reliance in the fields of air; mounting again and again with its
strange chuckle, it repeated its free and
beautiful fall, turning over and over like a kite, and then recovering from its lofty
tumbling, as if it had never set its foot on terra firma.
It appeared to have no companion in the universe--sporting there alone--and to need
none but the morning and the ether with which it played.
It was not lonely, but made all the earth lonely beneath it.
Where was the parent which hatched it, its kindred, and its father in the heavens?
The tenant of the air, it seemed related to the earth but by an egg hatched some time
in the crevice of a crag;--or was its native nest made in the angle of a cloud,
woven of the rainbow's trimmings and the
sunset sky, and lined with some soft midsummer haze caught up from earth?
Its eyry now some cliffy cloud.
Beside this I got a rare mess of golden and silver and bright cupreous fishes, which
looked like a string of jewels.
Ah! I have penetrated to those meadows on the morning of many a first spring day,
jumping from hummock to hummock, from willow root to willow root, when the wild
river valley and the woods were bathed in
so pure and bright a light as would have waked the dead, if they had been slumbering
in their graves, as some suppose. There needs no stronger proof of
immortality.
All things must live in such a light. O Death, where was thy sting?
O Grave, where was thy victory, then?
Our village life would stagnate if it were not for the unexplored forests and meadows
which surround it.
We need the tonic of wildness--to wade sometimes in marshes where the bittern and
the meadow-hen lurk, and hear the booming of the snipe; to smell the whispering sedge
where only some wilder and more solitary
fowl builds her nest, and the mink crawls with its belly close to the ground.
At the same time that we are earnest to explore and learn all things, we require
that all things be mysterious and unexplorable, that land and sea be
infinitely wild, unsurveyed and unfathomed by us because unfathomable.
We can never have enough of nature.
We must be refreshed by the sight of inexhaustible vigor, vast and titanic
features, the sea-coast with its wrecks, the wilderness with its living and its
decaying trees, the thunder-cloud, and the
rain which lasts three weeks and produces freshets.
We need to witness our own limits transgressed, and some life pasturing
freely where we never wander.
We are cheered when we observe the vulture feeding on the carrion which disgusts and
disheartens us, and deriving health and strength from the repast.
There was a dead horse in the hollow by the path to my house, which compelled me
sometimes to go out of my way, especially in the night when the air was heavy, but
the assurance it gave me of the strong
appetite and inviolable health of Nature was my compensation for this.
I love to see that Nature is so rife with life that myriads can be afforded to be
sacrificed and suffered to prey on one another; that tender organizations can be
so serenely squashed out of existence like
pulp--tadpoles which herons gobble up, and tortoises and toads run over in the road;
and that sometimes it has rained flesh and blood!
With the liability to accident, we must see how little account is to be made of it.
The impression made on a wise man is that of universal innocence.
Poison is not poisonous after all, nor are any wounds fatal.
Compassion is a very untenable ground. It must be expeditious.
Its pleadings will not bear to be stereotyped.
Early in May, the oaks, hickories, maples, and other trees, just putting out amidst
the pine woods around the pond, imparted a brightness like sunshine to the landscape,
especially in cloudy days, as if the sun
were breaking through mists and shining faintly on the hillsides here and there.
On the third or fourth of May I saw a loon in the pond, and during the first week of
the month I heard the whip-poor-will, the brown thrasher, the veery, the wood pewee,
the chewink, and other birds.
I had heard the wood thrush long before.
The phoebe had already come once more and looked in at my door and window, to see if
my house was cavern-like enough for her, sustaining herself on humming wings with
clinched talons, as if she held by the air, while she surveyed the premises.
The sulphur-like pollen of the pitch pine soon covered the pond and the stones and
rotten wood along the shore, so that you could have collected a barrelful.
This is the "sulphur showers" we hear of.
Even in Calidas' drama of Sacontala, we read of "rills dyed yellow with the golden
dust of the lotus."
And so the seasons went rolling on into summer, as one rambles into higher and
higher grass.
Thus was my first year's life in the woods completed; and the second year was similar
to it. I finally left Walden September 6th, 1847.
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CHAPTER 18 Conclusion
To the sick the doctors wisely recommend a change of air and scenery.
Thank Heaven, here is not all the world. The buckeye does not grow in New England,
and the mockingbird is rarely heard here.
The wild goose is more of a cosmopolite than we; he breaks his fast in Canada,
takes a luncheon in the Ohio, and plumes himself for the night in a southern bayou.
Even the bison, to some extent, keeps pace with the seasons cropping the pastures of
the Colorado only till a greener and sweeter grass awaits him by the
Yellowstone.
Yet we think that if rail fences are pulled down, and stone walls piled up on our
farms, bounds are henceforth set to our lives and our fates decided.
If you are chosen town clerk, forsooth, you cannot go to Tierra del Fuego this summer:
but you may go to the land of infernal fire nevertheless.
The universe is wider than our views of it.
Yet we should oftener look over the tafferel of our craft, like curious
passengers, and not make the voyage like stupid sailors picking oakum.
The other side of the globe is but the home of our correspondent.
Our voyaging is only great-circle sailing, and the doctors prescribe for diseases of
the skin merely.
One hastens to southern Africa to chase the giraffe; but surely that is not the game he
would be after. How long, pray, would a man hunt giraffes
if he could?
Snipes and woodcocks also may afford rare sport; but I trust it would be nobler game
to shoot one's self.--
"Direct your eye right inward, and you'll find A thousand regions in your mind Yet
undiscovered. Travel them, and be Expert in home-
cosmography."
What does Africa--what does the West stand for?
Is not our own interior white on the chart? black though it may prove, like the coast,
when discovered.
Is it the source of the Nile, or the Niger, or the Mississippi, or a Northwest Passage
around this continent, that we would find? Are these the problems which most concern
mankind?
Is Franklin the only man who is lost, that his wife should be so earnest to find him?
Does Mr. Grinnell know where he himself is?
Be rather the Mungo Park, the Lewis and Clark and Frobisher, of your own streams
and oceans; explore your own higher latitudes--with shiploads of preserved
meats to support you, if they be necessary;
and pile the empty cans sky-high for a sign.
Were preserved meats invented to preserve meat merely?
Nay, be a Columbus to whole new continents and worlds within you, opening new
channels, not of trade, but of thought.
Every man is the lord of a realm beside which the earthly empire of the Czar is but
a petty state, a hummock left by the ice.
Yet some can be patriotic who have no self- respect, and sacrifice the greater to the
less.
They love the soil which makes their graves, but have no sympathy with the
spirit which may still animate their clay. Patriotism is a maggot in their heads.
What was the meaning of that South-Sea Exploring Expedition, with all its parade
and expense, but an indirect recognition of the fact that there are continents and seas
in the moral world to which every man is an
isthmus or an inlet, yet unexplored by him, but that it is easier to sail many thousand
miles through cold and storm and cannibals, in a government ship, with five hundred men
and boys to assist one, than it is to
explore the private sea, the Atlantic and Pacific Ocean of one's being alone.
"Erret, et extremos alter scrutetur Iberos. Plus habet hic vitae, plus habet ille
viae."
Let them wander and scrutinize the outlandish Australians.
I have more of God, they more of the road. It is not worth the while to go round the
world to count the cats in Zanzibar.
Yet do this even till you can do better, and you may perhaps find some "Symmes'
Hole" by which to get at the inside at last.
England and France, Spain and Portugal, Gold Coast and Slave Coast, all front on
this private sea; but no bark from them has ventured out of sight of land, though it is
without doubt the direct way to India.
If you would learn to speak all tongues and conform to the customs of all nations, if
you would travel farther than all travellers, be naturalized in all climes,
and cause the Sphinx to dash her head
against a stone, even obey the precept of the old philosopher, and Explore thyself.
Herein are demanded the eye and the nerve. Only the defeated and deserters go to the
wars, cowards that run away and enlist.
Start now on that farthest western way, which does not pause at the Mississippi or
the Pacific, nor conduct toward a worn-out China or Japan, but leads on direct, a
tangent to this sphere, summer and winter,
day and night, sun down, moon down, and at last earth down too.
It is said that Mirabeau took to highway robbery "to ascertain what degree of
resolution was necessary in order to place one's self in formal opposition to the most
sacred laws of society."
He declared that "a soldier who fights in the ranks does not require half so much
courage as a footpad"--"that honor and religion have never stood in the way of a
well-considered and a firm resolve."
This was manly, as the world goes; and yet it was idle, if not desperate.
A saner man would have found himself often enough "in formal opposition" to what are
deemed "the most sacred laws of society," through obedience to yet more sacred laws,
and so have tested his resolution without going out of his way.
It is not for a man to put himself in such an attitude to society, but to maintain
himself in whatever attitude he find himself through obedience to the laws of
his being, which will never be one of
opposition to a just government, if he should chance to meet with such.
I left the woods for as good a reason as I went there.
Perhaps it seemed to me that I had several more lives to live, and could not spare any
more time for that one.
It is remarkable how easily and insensibly we fall into a particular route, and make a
beaten track for ourselves.
I had not lived there a week before my feet wore a path from my door to the pond-side;
and though it is five or six years since I trod it, it is still quite distinct.
It is true, I fear, that others may have fallen into it, and so helped to keep it
open.
The surface of the earth is soft and impressible by the feet of men; and so with
the paths which the mind travels.
How worn and dusty, then, must be the highways of the world, how deep the ruts of
tradition and conformity!
I did not wish to take a cabin passage, but rather to go before the mast and on the
deck of the world, for there I could best see the moonlight amid the mountains.
I do not wish to go below now.
I learned this, at least, by my experiment: that if one advances confidently in the
direction of his dreams, and endeavors to live the life which he has imagined, he
will meet with a success unexpected in common hours.
He will put some things behind, will pass an invisible boundary; new, universal, and
more liberal laws will begin to establish themselves around and within him; or the
old laws be expanded, and interpreted in
his favor in a more liberal sense, and he will live with the license of a higher
order of beings.
In proportion as he simplifies his life, the laws of the universe will appear less
complex, and solitude will not be solitude, nor poverty poverty, nor weakness weakness.
If you have built castles in the air, your work need not be lost; that is where they
should be. Now put the foundations under them.
It is a ridiculous demand which England and America make, that you shall speak so that
they can understand you. Neither men nor toadstools grow so.
As if that were important, and there were not enough to understand you without them.
As if Nature could support but one order of understandings, could not sustain birds as
well as quadrupeds, flying as well as creeping things, and hush and whoa, which
Bright can understand, were the best English.
As if there were safety in stupidity alone.
I fear chiefly lest my expression may not be extra-vagant enough, may not wander far
enough beyond the narrow limits of my daily experience, so as to be adequate to the
truth of which I have been convinced.
Extra vagance! it depends on how you are yarded.
The migrating buffalo, which seeks new pastures in another latitude, is not
extravagant like the cow which kicks over the pail, leaps the cowyard fence, and runs
after her calf, in milking time.
I desire to speak somewhere without bounds; like a man in a waking moment, to men in
their waking moments; for I am convinced that I cannot exaggerate enough even to lay
the foundation of a true expression.
Who that has heard a strain of music feared then lest he should speak extravagantly any
more forever?
In view of the future or possible, we should live quite laxly and undefined in
front, our outlines dim and misty on that side; as our shadows reveal an insensible
perspiration toward the sun.
The volatile truth of our words should continually betray the inadequacy of the
residual statement. Their truth is instantly translated; its
literal monument alone remains.
The words which express our faith and piety are not definite; yet they are significant
and fragrant like frankincense to superior natures.
Why level downward to our dullest perception always, and praise that as
common sense? The commonest sense is the sense of men
asleep, which they express by snoring.
Sometimes we are inclined to class those who are once-and-a-half-witted with the
half-witted, because we appreciate only a third part of their wit.
Some would find fault with the morning red, if they ever got up early enough.
"They pretend," as I hear, "that the verses of Kabir have four different senses;
illusion, spirit, intellect, and the exoteric doctrine of the Vedas"; but in
this part of the world it is considered a
ground for complaint if a man's writings admit of more than one interpretation.
While England endeavors to cure the potato- rot, will not any endeavor to cure the
brain-rot, which prevails so much more widely and fatally?
I do not suppose that I have attained to obscurity, but I should be proud if no more
fatal fault were found with my pages on this score than was found with the Walden
ice.
Southern customers objected to its blue color, which is the evidence of its purity,
as if it were muddy, and preferred the Cambridge ice, which is white, but tastes
of weeds.
The purity men love is like the mists which envelop the earth, and not like the azure
ether beyond.
Some are dinning in our ears that we Americans, and moderns generally, are
intellectual dwarfs compared with the ancients, or even the Elizabethan men.
But what is that to the purpose?
A living dog is better than a dead lion. Shall a man go and hang himself because he
belongs to the race of pygmies, and not be the biggest pygmy that he can?
Let every one mind his own business, and endeavor to be what he was made.
Why should we be in such desperate haste to succeed and in such desperate enterprises?
If a man does not keep pace with his companions, perhaps it is because he hears
a different drummer. Let him step to the music which he hears,
however measured or far away.
It is not important that he should mature as soon as an apple tree or an oak.
Shall he turn his spring into summer?
If the condition of things which we were made for is not yet, what were any reality
which we can substitute? We will not be shipwrecked on a vain
reality.
Shall we with pains erect a heaven of blue glass over ourselves, though when it is
done we shall be sure to gaze still at the true ethereal heaven far above, as if the
former were not?
There was an artist in the city of Kouroo who was disposed to strive after
perfection. One day it came into his mind to make a
staff.
Having considered that in an imperfect work time is an ingredient, but into a perfect
work time does not enter, he said to himself, It shall be perfect in all
respects, though I should do nothing else in my life.
He proceeded instantly to the forest for wood, being resolved that it should not be
made of unsuitable material; and as he searched for and rejected stick after
stick, his friends gradually deserted him,
for they grew old in their works and died, but he grew not older by a moment.
His singleness of purpose and resolution, and his elevated piety, endowed him,
without his knowledge, with perennial youth.
As he made no compromise with Time, Time kept out of his way, and only sighed at a
distance because he could not overcome him.
Before he had found a stock in all respects suitable the city of Kouroo was a hoary
ruin, and he sat on one of its mounds to peel the stick.
Before he had given it the proper shape the dynasty of the Candahars was at an end, and
with the point of the stick he wrote the name of the last of that race in the sand,
and then resumed his work.
By the time he had smoothed and polished the staff Kalpa was no longer the pole-
star; and ere he had put on the ferule and the head adorned with precious stones,
Brahma had awoke and slumbered many times.
But why do I stay to mention these things? When the finishing stroke was put to his
work, it suddenly expanded before the eyes of the astonished artist into the fairest
of all the creations of Brahma.
He had made a new system in making a staff, a world with full and fair proportions; in
which, though the old cities and dynasties had passed away, fairer and more glorious
ones had taken their places.
And now he saw by the heap of shavings still fresh at his feet, that, for him and
his work, the former lapse of time had been an illusion, and that no more time had
elapsed than is required for a single
scintillation from the brain of Brahma to fall on and inflame the tinder of a mortal
brain.
The material was pure, and his art was pure; how could the result be other than
wonderful? No face which we can give to a matter will
stead us so well at last as the truth.
This alone wears well. For the most part, we are not where we are,
but in a false position.
Through an infinity of our natures, we suppose a case, and put ourselves into it,
and hence are in two cases at the same time, and it is doubly difficult to get
out.
In sane moments we regard only the facts, the case that is.
Say what you have to say, not what you ought.
Any truth is better than make-believe.
Tom Hyde, the tinker, standing on the gallows, was asked if he had anything to
say.
"Tell the tailors," said he, "to remember to make a knot in their thread before they
take the first stitch." His companion's prayer is forgotten.
However mean your life is, meet it and live it; do not shun it and call it hard names.
It is not so bad as you are. It looks poorest when you are richest.
The fault-finder will find faults even in paradise.
Love your life, poor as it is.
You may perhaps have some pleasant, thrilling, glorious hours, even in a
poorhouse.
The setting sun is reflected from the windows of the almshouse as brightly as
from the rich man's abode; the snow melts before its door as early in the spring.
I do not see but a quiet mind may live as contentedly there, and have as cheering
thoughts, as in a palace. The town's poor seem to me often to live
the most independent lives of any.
Maybe they are simply great enough to receive without misgiving.
Most think that they are above being supported by the town; but it oftener
happens that they are not above supporting themselves by dishonest means, which should
be more disreputable.
Cultivate poverty like a garden herb, like sage.
Do not trouble yourself much to get new things, whether clothes or friends.
Turn the old; return to them.
Things do not change; we change. Sell your clothes and keep your thoughts.
God will see that you do not want society.
If I were confined to a corner of a garret all my days, like a spider, the world would
be just as large to me while I had my thoughts about me.
The philosopher said: "From an army of three divisions one can take away its
general, and put it in disorder; from the man the most abject and vulgar one cannot
take away his thought."
Do not seek so anxiously to be developed, to subject yourself to many influences to
be played on; it is all dissipation. Humility like darkness reveals the heavenly
lights.
The shadows of poverty and meanness gather around us, "and lo! creation widens to our
view."
We are often reminded that if there were bestowed on us the wealth of Croesus, our
aims must still be the same, and our means essentially the same.
Moreover, if you are restricted in your range by poverty, if you cannot buy books
and newspapers, for instance, you are but confined to the most significant and vital
experiences; you are compelled to deal with
the material which yields the most sugar and the most starch.
It is life near the bone where it is sweetest.
You are defended from being a trifler.
No man loses ever on a lower level by magnanimity on a higher.
Superfluous wealth can buy superfluities only.
Money is not required to buy one necessary of the soul.
I live in the angle of a leaden wall, into whose composition was poured a little alloy
of bell-metal.
Often, in the repose of my mid-day, there reaches my ears a confused tintinnabulum
from without. It is the noise of my contemporaries.
My neighbors tell me of their adventures with famous gentlemen and ladies, what
notabilities they met at the dinner-table; but I am no more interested in such things
than in the contents of the Daily Times.
The interest and the conversation are about costume and manners chiefly; but a goose is
a goose still, dress it as you will. They tell me of California and Texas, of
England and the Indies, of the Hon.
Mr.----of Georgia or of Massachusetts, all transient and fleeting phenomena, till I am
ready to leap from their court-yard like the Mameluke bey.
I delight to come to my bearings--not walk in procession with pomp and parade, in a
conspicuous place, but to walk even with the Builder of the universe, if I may--not
to live in this restless, nervous,
bustling, trivial Nineteenth Century, but stand or sit thoughtfully while it goes by.
What are men celebrating?
They are all on a committee of arrangements, and hourly expect a speech
from somebody. God is only the president of the day, and
Webster is his orator.
I love to weigh, to settle, to gravitate toward that which most strongly and
rightfully attracts me--not hang by the beam of the scale and try to weigh less--
not suppose a case, but take the case that
is; to travel the only path I can, and that on which no power can resist me.
It affords me no satisfaction to commerce to spring an arch before I have got a solid
foundation.
Let us not play at kittly-benders. There is a solid bottom everywhere.
We read that the traveller asked the boy if the swamp before him had a hard bottom.
The boy replied that it had.
But presently the traveller's horse sank in up to the girths, and he observed to the
boy, "I thought you said that this bog had a hard bottom."
"So it has," answered the latter, "but you have not got half way to it yet."
So it is with the bogs and quicksands of society; but he is an old boy that knows
it.
Only what is thought, said, or done at a certain rare coincidence is good.
I would not be one of those who will foolishly drive a nail into mere lath and
plastering; such a deed would keep me awake nights.
Give me a hammer, and let me feel for the furring.
Do not depend on the putty.
Drive a nail home and clinch it so faithfully that you can wake up in the
night and think of your work with satisfaction--a work at which you would not
be ashamed to invoke the Muse.
So will help you God, and so only. Every nail driven should be as another
rivet in the machine of the universe, you carrying on the work.
Rather than love, than money, than fame, give me truth.
I sat at a table where were rich food and wine in abundance, and obsequious
attendance, but sincerity and truth were not; and I went away hungry from the
inhospitable board.
The hospitality was as cold as the ices. I thought that there was no need of ice to
freeze them.
They talked to me of the age of the wine and the fame of the vintage; but I thought
of an older, a newer, and purer wine, of a more glorious vintage, which they had not
got, and could not buy.
The style, the house and grounds and "entertainment" pass for nothing with me.
I called on the king, but he made me wait in his hall, and conducted like a man
incapacitated for hospitality.
There was a man in my neighborhood who lived in a hollow tree.
His manners were truly regal. I should have done better had I called on
him.
How long shall we sit in our porticoes practising idle and musty virtues, which
any work would make impertinent?
As if one were to begin the day with long- suffering, and hire a man to hoe his
potatoes; and in the afternoon go forth to practise Christian meekness and charity
with goodness aforethought!
Consider the China pride and stagnant self- complacency of mankind.
This generation inclines a little to congratulate itself on being the last of an
illustrious line; and in Boston and London and Paris and Rome, thinking of its long
descent, it speaks of its progress in art
and science and literature with satisfaction.
There are the Records of the Philosophical Societies, and the public Eulogies of Great
Men!
It is the good Adam contemplating his own virtue.
"Yes, we have done great deeds, and sung divine songs, which shall never die"--that
is, as long as we can remember them.
The learned societies and great men of Assyria--where are they?
What youthful philosophers and experimentalists we are!
There is not one of my readers who has yet lived a whole human life.
These may be but the spring months in the life of the race.
If we have had the seven-years' itch, we have not seen the seventeen-year locust yet
in Concord. We are acquainted with a mere pellicle of
the globe on which we live.
Most have not delved six feet beneath the surface, nor leaped as many above it.
We know not where we are. Beside, we are sound asleep nearly half our
time.
Yet we esteem ourselves wise, and have an established order on the surface.
Truly, we are deep thinkers, we are ambitious spirits!
As I stand over the insect crawling amid the pine needles on the forest floor, and
endeavoring to conceal itself from my sight, and ask myself why it will cherish
those humble thoughts, and bide its head
from me who might, perhaps, be its benefactor, and impart to its race some
cheering information, I am reminded of the greater Benefactor and Intelligence that
stands over me the human insect.
There is an incessant influx of novelty into the world, and yet we tolerate
incredible dulness.
I need only suggest what kind of sermons are still listened to in the most
enlightened countries.
There are such words as joy and sorrow, but they are only the burden of a psalm, sung
with a nasal twang, while we believe in the ordinary and mean.
We think that we can change our clothes only.
It is said that the British Empire is very large and respectable, and that the United
States are a first-rate power.
We do not believe that a tide rises and falls behind every man which can float the
British Empire like a chip, if he should ever harbor it in his mind.
Who knows what sort of seventeen-year locust will next come out of the ground?
The government of the world I live in was not framed, like that of Britain, in after-
dinner conversations over the wine.
The life in us is like the water in the river.
It may rise this year higher than man has ever known it, and flood the parched
uplands; even this may be the eventful year, which will drown out all our
muskrats.
It was not always dry land where we dwell. I see far inland the banks which the stream
anciently washed, before science began to record its freshets.
Every one has heard the story which has gone the rounds of New England, of a strong
and beautiful bug which came out of the dry leaf of an old table of apple-tree wood,
which had stood in a farmer's kitchen for
sixty years, first in Connecticut, and afterward in Massachusetts--from an egg
deposited in the living tree many years earlier still, as appeared by counting the
annual layers beyond it; which was heard
gnawing out for several weeks, hatched perchance by the heat of an urn.
Who does not feel his faith in a resurrection and immortality strengthened
by hearing of this?
Who knows what beautiful and winged life, whose egg has been buried for ages under
many concentric layers of woodenness in the dead dry life of society, deposited at
first in the alburnum of the green and
living tree, which has been gradually converted into the semblance of its well-
seasoned tomb--heard perchance gnawing out now for years by the astonished family of
man, as they sat round the festive board--
may unexpectedly come forth from amidst society's most trivial and handselled
furniture, to enjoy its perfect summer life at last!
I do not say that John or Jonathan will realize all this; but such is the character
of that morrow which mere lapse of time can never make to dawn.
The light which puts out our eyes is darkness to us.
Only that day dawns to which we are awake. There is more day to dawn.
The sun is but a morning star.
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