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The
King of the Mamozekel
WHEN
the king of the Mamozekel barrens was born, he was one
of the most ungainly of all calves, — a moose-calf.
In the heart of a tamarack swamp,
some leagues south from Nictau Mountain, was a dry little
knoll of hardwood and pine undiscovered by the hunters,
out of track of the hunting beasts. Neither lynx, bear,
nor panther had tradition of it. There was little succulent
undergrowth to tempt the moose and the caribou. But there
the wild plum each summer fruited abundantly, and there
a sturdy brotherhood of beeches each autumn lavished their
treasure of three-cornered nuts; and therefore the knoll
was populous with squirrels and grouse. Nature, in one
of those whims of hers by which she delights to confound
the studious naturalist, had chosen to keep this spot
exempt from the law of blood and fear which ruled the
rest of her domains. To be sure, the squirrels would now
and then play havoc with a nest of grouse eggs, or, in
the absence [Page 287] of their chisel-beaked
parents, do murder on a nest of young golden-wings; but,
barring the outbreaks of these bright-eyed incorrigible
marauders, — bad to their very toes, and attractive
to their plumy tail-tips, — the knoll in the tamarack
swamp was a haven of peace amid the fierce but furtive
warfare of the wilderness.
On this knoll, when the arbutus
breath of the northern spring was scenting the winds of
all the Tobique country, the king was born, — a
moose-calf more ungainly and of mightier girth and limb
than any other moose-calf of the Momozekel. Never had
his mother seen such a one, — and she a mother of
lordly bulls. He was uncouth, to be sure, in any eyes
but those of his kind, — with his high humped fore-shoulders,
his long, lugubrious, overhanging snout, his big ears
set low on his big head, his little eyes crowded back
toward his ears, his long, big-knuckled legs, and the
spindling, lank diminutiveness of his hindquarters. A
grotesque figure, indeed, and lacking altogether in that
pathetic, infantile winsomeness which makes even little
pigs attractive. But any one who knew about moose would
have said, watching the huge baby struggle to his feet
and stand with sturdy legs well braced, “There,
if bears and bullets miss him till [Page 288]
his antlers get full spread, is the king of the Mamozekel.”
Now, when his mother had licked him dry, his coat showed
a dark, very sombre, cloudy, secretive brown, of a hue
to be quite lost in the shadows of the fir and hemlock
thickets, and to blend consummately with the colour of
the tangled alder trunks along the clogged banks of the
Mamozekel.
The young king’s mother
was perhaps the biggest and most morose cow on all the
moose ranges of northern New Brunswick. She assuredly
had no peer on the barrens of the upper Tobique country.
She was also the craftiest. That was the reason why, though
she was dimly known and had been blindly hunted all the
way from Nictau Lake, over Mamozekel, and down to Blue
Mountain on the main Tobique, she had never felt a bullet
wound, and had come to be regarded by the backwoods hunters
with something of a superstitious awe. It was of her craft,
too, that she had found this knoll in the heart of the
tamarack swamp, and had guarded the secret of it from
the herds. Hither, at calving time, she would come by
cunningly twisted trails. Here she would pass the perilous
hours in safety, unharassed by the need of watching against
her stealthy foes. And when once she had led her calf
away from the retreat, she never returned to it, save
alone, and in another year. [Page 289]
For three days the great owl stayed
upon the knoll, feeding upon the overhanging branch tips
of mountain-ash and poplar. This was good fodder, for
buds and twigs were swollen with sap, and succulent. In
those three days her sturdy young calf made such gains
in strength and stature that he would have passed in the
herd for a calf of two weeks’ growth. In mid-afternoon
of the third day she led the way down from the knoll and
out across the quaking glooms of the tamarack swamp. And
the squirrels in the budding branches chattered shrill
derision about their going.
The way led through the deepest
and most perilous part of the swamp; but the mother knew
the safe trail in all its windings. She knew where the
yielding surface of moss with black pools on either side
on was not afloat on fathomless ooze, but supported by
solid earth or a framework of ancient tree roots. She
shambled onward at a very rapid walk, which forced the
gaunt calf at her heels to break now and then into the
long-striding, tireless trot which is the heritage of
his race.
For perhaps an hour they travelled.
Then, in a little, partly open glade where the good sound
earth rose up sweet from the morass, and the mountain-ash,
the viburnum, and the moose-wood grew [Page 290]
thinly, and the ground was starred with spring blooms,
— painted trillium and wake-robin, claytonia and
yellow dog-tooth and wind-flower, — they stopped.
The calf, tired from his first journeying, nursed fiercely,
twitching his absurd stub of a tail, butting at his mother’s
udder with such discomforting eagerness that she had to
rebuke him by stepping aside and interrupting his meal.
After several experiences of this kind he took the hint,
and put curb upon his too robust impatience. The masterful
spirit of a king is liable to inconvenience its owner
if exercised prematurely.
By this time the pink light of
sunset was beginning to stain the western curves of branch
and stem and bud, changing the spring coolness of the
place into a delicate riot of fairy colour and light,
intervolving form. Some shadows deepened, while others
disappeared. Certain leaves and blossoms and pale limbs
stood out with a clearness almost startling, suddenly
emphasised by the level rays, while others faded from
view. Though there was no wind, the changed light gave
an effect of noiseless movement in the glade. And in the
midst of this gathering enchantment the mother moose set
herself to forage for her own meal.
Selecting a slim young birch-tree,
whose top was [Page 291] thick with twigs
and greening buds, she pushed against it with her massive
chest till it bent nearly to the ground. Then straddling
herself along it, she held it down securely between her
legs, moved forward till the succulent top was within
easy reach, and began to browse with leisurely jaws and
selective reachings out of her long, discriminating upper
lip. The calf
stood close by, watching with interest, his legs sympathetically
spread apart, his head swung low from his big shoulders,
his great ears swaying slowly backward and forward, not
together, but one at a time. When the mother had finished
feeding, there were no buds, twigs or small branches left
on the birch sapling; and the sunset colours had faded
out of the glade. With dusk a chilly air breathed softly
through the trees, and the mother led the way into a clump
of thick balsam firs near the edge of the good ground.
In the heart of the thicket she lay down for the night,
facing away from the wind; and the calf, quick in perception
as in growth, lay down close beside her in the same position.
He did not know at the time the significance of the position,
but he had a vague sense of its importance. He was afterward
to learn that enemies were liable to approach his lair
in the night, and that as long as he slept with his back
to the [Page 292] wind, he could not
be taken unawares. The wind might be trusted to bring
to his marvellous nostrils timely notice of danger from
the rear; while he could depend upon his eyes and his
spacious, sensitive, unsleeping ears to warn him of anything
ascending against the wind to attack him in front.
At the very first suggestion of
morning the two light sleepers arose. In the dusk of the
fir thicket the hungry calf made his meal. Then they came
forth into the grayness of the spectral spring dawn, and
the great cow proceeded as before to breast down a birch
sapling for fodder. Before the sun was fairly up, they
left the glade and resumed their journey across the swamp.
It was mid-morning of a sweet-aired,
radiant day when they emerged from the swamp. Now, through
a diversified country of thick forests and open levels,
the mother moose swung forward on an undeviating trail,
perceptible only to herself. Presently the land began
to dip. Then a little river appeared, winding through
innumerable alders, with here and there a pond-like expansion
full of young lily-leaves; and the future king of the
Mamozekel looked upon his kingdom. But he did not recognise
it. He cared nothing for the little river of alders. He
was tired, and very hungry, and the moment his mother
halted he ran up and nursed vehemently. [Page
295]
II.
Delicately
filming with the first green, and spicy-fragrant, were
the young birch-trees on the slopes about the Mamozekel
water. From tree-top to tree-top, across the open spaces,
the rain-birds called to each other with long falls
of melody and sweetly insistent iteration. In their
intervals of stillness, which came from time to time
as if by some secret and preconcerted signal, the hush
was beaded, as it were, with the tender and leisurely
staccatos of the chickadees. The wild kindreds of the
Tobique country were all happily busy with affairs of
spring.
While the great cow was pasturing
on birch-twigs, the calf rested, with long legs tucked
under him, on the dry, softy carpeted earth beneath
the branches of a hemlock. At this pleasant pasturage
the mother moose was presently joined by her calf of
the previous season, a sturdy bull-yearling, which ran
up to her with a pathetic little bleat of delight, as
if he had been very desolate and bewildered during the
days of her strange absence. The mother received him
with good-natured indifference, and went on pulling
birch-tips. Then the yearling came over and eyed with
curiosity the resting calf, — the first moose-calf
he had ever seen. The king, [Page 296]
unperturbed and not troubling himself to rise, thrust
forward his spacious ears, and reached out a long inquiring
nose to investigate the newcomer. But the yearling was
in doubt. He drew back, planted his fore hoofs firmly,
and lowered and shook his head, challenging the stranger
to a butting bout. The old moose, which had kept wary
eye upon the meeting, now came up and stood over her
young, touching him once or twice lightly with her upper
lip. Then, swinging her great head to one side, she
glanced at the yearling, and made a soft sound in her
throat. Whether this were warning or mere pertinent
information, the yearling understood that his smaller
kinsmen was to be let alone, and not troubled with challenges.
With easy philosophy, he accepted the situation, doubtless
not concerned to understand it, and turned his thoughts
to the ever fresh theme of forage.
Through the spring and summer
the little family of three fed never far from the Mamozekel
stream; and the king grew with astonishing speed. Of
other moose families they saw little, for the mother,
jealous and overbearing in her strength, would tolerate
no other cows on her favourite range. Sometimes they
saw a tall bull, with naked forehead, come down to drink
or to pull lily-stems in the [Page 297]
still pools at sunset. But the bull, feeling himself
discrowned and unlordly in the absence of his antlers,
paid no attention to either cows or calves. While waiting
for autumn to restore to his forehead its superb palmated
adornments, he was haughty and seclusive.
By the time summer was well
established in the land, the moose-calf had begun to
occupy himself diligently with the primer-lessons of
life. Keeping much at his mother’s head, he soon
learned to pluck the tops of tall seeding grasses; though
such low-growing tender herbage as cattle and horses
love, he never learned to crop. His mother, like all
his tribe, was too long in the legs and short in the
neck to pasture close to the ground. He was early taught,
however, what succulent pasturage of root and stem and
leaf the pools of Mamozekel could supply; and early
his sensitive upper lip acquired the wisdom to discriminate
between the wholesome water-plants and such acrid, unfriendly
growths as the water-parsnip and the spotted cowbane.
Most pleasant the little family found it, in the hot,
drowsy afternoons, to wade out into the leafy shallows
and feed at leisure belly-deep in the cool, with no
sound save their own comfortable splashings, or the
shrill clatter of a kingfisher winging past up-stream.
[Page 298] Their usual feeding hours
were just before sunrise, a little before noon, and
again in the late afternoon, till dark. The rest of
the time they would lie hidden in the deepest thickets,
safe, but ever watchful, their great ears taking in
and interpreting all the myriad fluctuating noises of
the wilderness.
The hours of foraging were also
— for the young king, in particular, whose food
was mostly provided by his mother — the hours
of lesson and the hours of play. In the pride of his
growing strength he quickly developed a tendency to
butt at everything and test his prowess. His yearling
brother was always ready to meet his desires in this
fashion, and the two would push against each other with
much grunting, till at last the elder, growing impatient,
would thrust the king hard back upon his haunches, and
turn aside indifferently to his browsing. Little by
little it became more difficult for the yearling to
close the bout in this easy way; but he never guessed
that in no distant day the contests would end in a very
different manner. He did not know that, for a calf that
same spring, his lightly tolerated playfellow was big
and strong and audacious all wont of the wide-antlered
kindred.
The young king was always athrill
with curiosity, [Page 299] full of
interest in all the wilderness folk that chanced to
come in his view. The shyest of the furtive creatures
were careless about letting him see them, both his childishness
and his race being a guarantee of good will. Very soon,
therefore, he became acquainted, in a distant, uncomprehending
fashion, with the hare and the mink, the woodmouse and
the muskrat; while the
mother mallard would float amid her brood within
a yard or two of the spot where he was pulling at the
water-lilies.
One day, however, he came suddenly
upon a porcupine which was crossing a bit of open ground,
— came upon it so suddenly that the surly little
beast was startled and rolled himself up into a round,
bristling ball. This was a strange phenomenon indeed!
He blew upon the ball, two or three hard noisy breaths
from wide nostrils. Then he was so rash as to thrust
at it, tentatively rather than roughly, with his inquisitive
nose, — for he was most anxious to know what it
meant. There was a quiver in the ball; and he jumped
back, shaking his head, with two of the sharp spines
sticking in his sensitive upper lip.
In pain and fright, yet with
growing anger, he ran to his mother where she was placidly
cropping a willow-top. But she was not helpful. She
knew [Page 300] nothing of the properties
of porcupine quills. Seeing what was the matter, she
set the example of rubbing her nose smartly against
a stump. The king did likewise. Now, for burrs, this
would have been all very well; but porcupine quills
— the malignant little intruders throve under
such treatment, and worked their way more deeply into
the tender tissues. Smarting and furious, the young
monarch rushed back with the purpose of stamping that
treacherous ball of spines to fragments under his sharp
hoofs. But the porcupine, meanwhile, had discreetly
climbed a tree, whence it looked down with scornful
red eyes, bristling its barbed armory, and daring the
angry calf to come up and fight. For days thereafter
the young king suffered from a nose so hot and swollen
that it was hard for him to browse, and almost impossible
for him to nurse. Then came relief, as the quills worked
their way through, one dropping out, and the other getting
chewed up with a lily-root. But the young moose never
forgot his grudge against the porcupine family; and
catching one, years after, in a poplar sapling, he bore
the sapling down and trod his enemy to bits. In his
wrath, however, he did not forget the powers and properties
of the quills. He took good care that none should pierce
the tender places of his feet. [Page 303]
Some weeks after his
meeting with the porcupine, when his nose and his spirits
together had quite recovered, he made a new acquaintance.
The moose family had by this time worked much farther
up the Mamozekel, into a region of broken ground, and
steep up-thrusts of rock. One day, while investigating
the world at a little distance from his mother and brother,
he saw a large, curious-looking animal at the top of
a rocky slope. It was a light brown-gray in colour,
with a big, round face, high-tufted ears, round, light,
cold eyes, long whiskers brushed back from under its
chin, very long, sharp teeth displayed in its snarlingly
open jaws, and big round pads of feet. The lynx glared
at the young king, scornfully unacquainted with his
kingship. And the young king stared at the lynx with
lively, unhostile interest. Then the lynx cast a wary
glance all about, saw no sign of the mother moose (who
was feeding on the other side of the rock), concluded
that this was such an opportunity as he had long been
looking for, and began creeping swiftly, stealthily,
noiselessly, down the slope of rocks.
Any other moose-calf,
though of thrice the young king’s months, would
have run away. But not so he. The stranger seemed unfriendly.
He would try a bout of butting with him. He stamped
his [Page 304] feet, shook his lowered
head, snorted, and advanced a stride or two. At the
same time, he uttered a harsh, very abrupt, bleating
cry of defiance, the infantile precursor of what his
mighty, forest-daunting bellow was to be in later years.
The lynx, though he well knew that this ungainly youngster
could not withstand his onslaught for a moment, was
nevertheless astonished by such a display of spirit;
and he paused for a moment to consider it. Was it possible
that unguessed resources lay behind this daring? He
would see.
It was a critical moment.
A very few words more would have sufficed for the conclusion
of this chronicle, but for the fact that the young king’s
bleat of challenge had reached other ears than those
of the great lynx. The old moose, at her pasturing behind
the rock, heard it too. Startled and anxious, she came
with a rush to find out what it meant; and the yearling,
full of curiosity, came at her heels. When she saw the
lynx, the long hair on her neck stood up with fury,
and with a roar she launched her huge, dark bulk against
him. But for such an encounter the big cat had no stomach.
He knew that he would be pounded into paste in half
a minute. With a snarl, he sprang backward, as if his
muscles had been steel springs suddenly loosed; and
before [Page 305] his assailant was
half-way up the slope, he was glaring down upon her
from the safe height of a hemlock limb.
This, to the young
king, seemed a personal victory. This mother’s
efforts to make him understand that lynxes were dangerous
had small effect upon him; and the experience advanced
him not at all in his hitherto unlearned lesson of fear.
Even he, however, for
all his kingly heart, was destined to learn that lesson,
— was destined to have it so seared into his spirit
that the remembrance should, from time to time, unnerve,
humiliate, defeat him, through half the years of his
sovereignty.
It came about in this way, one
blazing August afternoon.
The old moose and the yearling
were at rest, comfortably chewing the cud in a spruce
covert close to the water. But the king was in one of
those restless fits which, all through his calfhood,
kept driving him forward in quest of experience. The
wind was almost still; but such as there was blew up
stream. Up against it he wandered for a little way,
and saw nothing but a woodchuck, which was a familiar
sight to him. Then he turned and drifted carelessly
down the wind. Having [Page 306] passed
the spruce thicket, his nostrils received messages from
his mother and brother in their quiet concealment. The
scent was companion to him, and he wandered on. Presently
it faded away from the faintly pulsing air. Still he
went on.
Presently, he passed a huge,
half-decayed windfall, thickly draped in shrubbery and
vines. No sooner had he passed than the wind brought
him from this dense hiding-place a pungent, unfamiliar
scent. There was something ominous in the smell, something
at which his heart beat faster; but he was not afraid.
He stopped at once, and moved back slowly toward the
windfall, sniffing with curiosity, his ears alert, his
eyes striving to pierce the mysteries of the thicket.
He moved close by the decaying
trunk without solving the enigma. Then, as the wind
puffed a thought more strongly, he passed by and lost
the scent. At once he swung about to pursue the investigation;
and at the same instant an intuitive apprehension of
peril made him shudder, and shrink away from the windfall.
He turned not an instant too
soon. What he saw was a huge, black, furry head and
shoulders leaning over the windfall, a huge black paw,
with knife-like claws, lifting for a blow that would
break [Page 307] his back like a bulrush.
He was already moving, already turning, and with his
muscles gathered. That saved him. Quick as a flash of
light he sprang, wildly. Just as quickly, indeed, came
down the stroke of those terrific claws. But they
fell short of their intended mark. As the young
moose sprang into the air, the claws caught him slantingly
on the haunch. They went deep, ripping hide and flesh
almost to the bone, — a long, hideous wound. Before
the blow could be repeated, the calf was far out of
reach, bleating with pain and terror. The bear, much
disappointed, peered after him with little red, malicious
eyes, and greedily licked the sweet blood from his claws.
The next instant the mother
moose burst from her thicket, the long hair of her neck
and shoulders stiffly erect with rage. She had understood
well enough that agonised cry of the young king. She
paused but a second, to give him a hasty lick of reassurance,
then charged down upon the covert around the windfall.
She knew that only a bear could have done that injury;
and she knew, without any help from ears, eyes, or nose,
that the windfall was just the place for a bear’s
lying-in wait. With an intrepidity beyond the boldest
dreams of any other moose-cow on the Mamozekel, she
launched herself crashing into the covert. [Page
308]
But her avenging fury found
no bear to meet it. The bear knew well this mighty moose-cow,
having watched her from many hiding-place, and shrewdly
estimated her prowess. He had effaced himself, melting
away through the underwood as noiselessly and swiftly
as a weasel. Plenty of the strong bear scent the old
moose found in the covert, and it stung her to frenzy.
She stamped and tore down the vines, and sent the rotten
wood of the windfall flying in fragments. Then she emerged,
powdered with débris, and roared and glared about
for the enemy. But the wily bear was already far away,
well burdened with discretion.
III.
In
a few weeks the king’s healthy flesh, assiduously
licked by his mother, healed perfectly, leaving long,
hairless scars upon his hide, which turned, in course
of time, from livid to a leaden whitish hue. But while
his flesh healed perfectly, his spirit was in a different
case. Thenceforward, one great fear lurked in his heart,
ready to leap forth at any instant — the fear
of the bear. It was the only fear he knew, but it was
a terrible one; and when, two months later, he again
caught that pungent scent in passing a thicket, he ran
madly for an hour [Page 311] before
he recovered his wits and stole back, humiliated and
exhausted, to his mother’s pasture-grounds.
In the main, however, he was
soon his old, bold, investigating self, his bulk and
his sagacity growing vastly together. Ere the first
frosts had crimsoned the maples and touched the birches
to a shimmer of pale gold, he could almost hold his
own by sheer strength against his yearling brother’s
weight, and sometimes, for a minute or two, worst him
by feint and strategy. When he came, by chance, in the
crisp, free-roving weather of the fall, upon other moose-calves
of that year’s birth, they seemed pygmies beside
him, and gave way to him respectfully as to a yearling.
About this time he experienced
certain qualms of loneliness, which bewildered him and
took much of the interest out of life. His mother began
to betray an unexpected indifference, and his childish
heart missed her caresses. He was not driven away, but
he was left to himself; while she would stride up and
down the open, gravelly meadows by the water, sniffing
the air, and at times uttering a short, harsh roar which
made him eye her uneasily. One crisp night, when the
round October moon wrought magic in the wilderness,
he heard his mother’s call answered by a terrific,
roaring bellow, [Page 312] which made
his heart leap. Then there was a crashing through the
underbrush; and a tall bull strode forth into the light,
his antlers spreading like oak branches from either
side of his forehead. Prudence, or deference, or a mixture
of the two, led the young king to lay aside his wonted
inquisitiveness and withdraw into the thickets without
attracting the notice of this splendid and formidable
visitor. During the next few days he saw the big bull
very frequently, and found himself calmly ignored. Prudence
and deference continued their good offices, however,
and he was careful not to trespass on the big stranger’s
tolerance during those wild, mad, magical autumn days.
One night, about the middle
of October, the king saw from his thicket a scene which
filled him with excitement and awe, swelled his veins
almost to bursting, and made his brows ache, as if the
antlers were already pushing to birth beneath the skin.
It all came about in this fashion. His mother, standing
out in the moonlight by the water, had twice with outstretched
muzzle uttered her call, when it was answered not only
by her mate, the tall bull, approaching along the shore,
but by another great voice from up the hillside. Instantly
the tall bull was in a rage. He rushed up to the cow,
touched [Page 313] her with his nose,
and then, after a succession of roars which were answered
promptly from the hillside, he moved over to the edge
of the open and began thrashing the bushes with his
antlers. A great crashing of underbrush arose some distance
away, and drew near swiftly; and in a few minutes another
bull burst forth violently into the open. He was young
and impetuous, or he would have halted a moment before
leaving cover, and stealthily surveyed the situation.
But not yet had years and overthrows taught him the
ripe moose wisdom; and with a reckless heart he committed
himself to the combat.
The newcomer had barely the
chance to see where he was, before the tall bull was
upon him. He wheeled in time, however, and got his guard
down; but was borne back back upon his haunches by the
terrific shock of the charge. In a moment or two he
recovered the lost ground, for youth had given him strength,
if not wisdom; and the tall bull, his eyes flame-red
with wrath, found himself fairly matched by this shorter,
stockier antagonist.
The night forthwith became tempestuous
with gruntings, bellowings, the hard clashing of antlers,
the stamping of swift and heavy feet. The thin turf
was torn up. The earthy gravel was sent flying [Page
314] from the furious hoofs. From his covert
the young king strained eager eyes upon the flight,
his sympathies all with the tall bull whom he had regarded
reverently from the first moment he saw him. But as
for the cow, she moved up from the waterside and looked
on with a fine impartiality. What concerned he was chiefly
that none but the bravest and strongest should be her
mate, — a question which only fighting could determine.
Her favour would go with victory.
As it appeared, the rivals were
fairly matched in vigour and valour. But among moose,
as among men, brains count in the end. When the tall
bull saw that, in a matter of sheer brawn, the sturdy
stranger might hold him, he grew disgusted at the idea
of settling such a vital question by mere butting and
shoving. The red rage faded in his eyes, and a colder
light took its place. On a sudden, when his foe had
given a mighty thrust, he yielded, slipped his horns
from the lock, and jumped nimbly aside. The stranger
lunged forward, almost stumbling to his knees.
This was the tall bull’s
opportunity. In a whirlwind of fury he thrust upon the
enemy’s flank, goring him, and bearing him down.
The latter, being short and quick-moving, recovered
his feet [Page 315] in a second, and
wheeled to present his guard. But the tall bull was
quick to maintain the advantage. He, too, had shifted
ground; and now he caught his antagonist in the rear.
There was no resisting such an attack. With hind legs
weakly doubling under him, with the weight of doom descending
upon his defenceless rump, the rash stranger was thrust
forward, bellowing madly, and striving in vain to brace
himself. His humiliation was complete. With staring
eyes and distended nostrils he was hustled across the
meadow and over the edge of the bank. With a huge splash,
and carrying with him a shower of turf and gravel, he
fell into the stream. Once in the water, and his courage
well cooled, he did not wait for a glance at his snorting
and stamping conqueror on the bank above, but waded
desperately across, dripping, bleeding, crushed in spirit,
— and vanished into the woods. In the thicket,
the king’s heart swelled as if the victory had
been his own.
By and by, when the last of
the leaves had fluttered down with crisp whisperings
from the birch and ash, maple and poplar, and the first
enduring snows were beginning to change the face of
the world, the tall bull seemed to lay aside his haughtiness.
He grew carelessly good-natured toward the [Page
316] young king and the yearling, and frankly
took command of the little herd. As the snow deepened,
he led the way northward toward the Nictau Lake and
chose winter quarters on the wooded southward slopes
of Bald Mountain, where there were hemlock groves for
shelter and an abundance of young hardwood growth for
browsing.
This leisurely migration was
in the main uneventful, and left but one sharp impression
on the young king’s memory. On a wintry morning,
when the sunrise was reaching long pink-saffron fingers
across the thin snow, a puff of wind brought with it
from a tangle of stumps and rocks a breath of that pungent
scent so hateful to a moose’s nostrils. The whole
herd stopped; and the young king, his knees quaking
under him and his eyes staring with panic, crowded close
against his mother’s flank. The tall bull stamped
and bellowed his defiance to the enemy, — but
the enemy, being discreet, made no reply whatever. It
is probable, indeed, that he was preparing his winter
quarters, and getting too drowsy to hear or heed the
angry challenge; but if he did hear it no doubt he noiselessly
withdrew himself till the dangerous travellers had gone
by. In a few minutes the herd resumed its march, —
the king keeping close to his mother’s side, instead
of in his proper place in the line. [Page 317]
The big-antlered bull now chose
his site for the “yard,” with “verge
and room enough” for all contingencies. The “yard”
was an ample acreage of innumerable winding paths, trodden
ever deeper as the snows accumulated. These paths led
to every spot of browse, every nook of shelter, at the
same time twisting and crossing in a maze of intricacies.
Thick piled the
snows about the little herd, and the northern gales
roared over the hemlocks, and the frost sealed the white
world down into silence. But it was such a winter as
the moose kin loved. No wolves or hunters came to trouble
them, and the months passed pleasantly. When the days
were lengthening and the hearts of all the wild folk
beginning to dream of the yet unsignalled spring, the
young king was astonished to see the great antlers of
his leader fall off. Seeing that their owner left them
lying unregarded on the snow, he went up and sniffed
at them wonderingly, and pondered the incident long
and vainly in his heart.
When the snows shrank away,
departing with a sound of many waters, and spring returned
to the Tobique country, the herd broke up. First the
dis-antlered bull drifted off on his own affairs. Then
the two-year-old went, with no word of reason or excuse.
Though a well-grown young bull, he [Page 318]
was now little larger or heavier than the king; and
the king was now a yearling, with the stature and presence
of a two-year-old. In a playful butting contest, excited
by the joy of life which April put into their veins,
he worsted his elder brother; and this, perhaps, though
taken in good part, hastened the latter’s going.
A few days later the old cow
grew restless. She and the king turned their steps backward
toward the Mamozekel, feeding as they went. Soon they
found themselves in their old haunts, which the king
remembered very well. Then one day, while the king slept
without suspicion of evil, the old cow slipped away
stealthily, and sought her secret refuge in the heart
of the cedar swamp. When the king awoke, he found himself
alone in the thicket.
All that day he was most unhappy.
For some hours he could not eat, but strayed hither
and thither, questing and wondering. Then, when hunger
drove him to browse on the tender birch-twigs, he would
stop every minute or two to call in his big, gruff,
pathetic bleat, and look around eagerly for an answer.
No answer came from the deserting mother, by this time
far away in the swamp. [Page 321]
But there were ears in the wilderness
that heard and heeded the call of the desolate yearling.
A pair of hunting lynxes paused at the sound, licked
their chops, and crept forward with a green light in
their wide, round eyes.
Their approach was noiseless
as thought, — but the king, on a sudden, felt
a monition of their coming. Whirling sharply about,
he saw them lurking in the underbrush. He recognised
the breed. This was the same kind of creature which
he had been ready to challenge in his first calfhood.
No doubt, it would have been more prudent for him to
withdraw; but he was in no mood for concession. His
sore heart made him ill-tempered. His lonely bleat became
a bellow of wrath. He stamped the earth, shook his head
as if thrashing the underbrush with imaginary antlers,
and then charged madly upon the astonished cats. This
was no ordinary moose-calf, they promptly decided; and
in a second they were speeding away with great bounds,
gray shadows down the gray vistas of the wood. The king
glared after them for a moment, and then went back to
his feeding, greatly comforted.
It was four days before his
mother came back, bringing a lank calf at her heels.
He was glad to [Page 322] see her,
and contentedly renewed the companionship; but in those
four days he had learned full self-reliance, and his
attitude was no longer that of the yearling calf. It
had become that of the equal. As for the lank little
newcomer, he viewed it with careless complaisance, and
no more dreamed of playing with it than if it had been
a frog or a chipmunk.
The summer passed with little
more event for the king than his swift increase in stature.
One lesson then learned, however, though but vaguely
comprehended at the time, was to prove of incalculable
value in after years. He learned to shun man, —
not with fear, indeed, for he never learned to fear
anything except bears, — but with aversion, and
a certain half-disdainful prudence. It was as if he
came to recognise in man the presence of powers which
he was not anxious to put to trial, lest he should be
forced to doubt his own supremacy.
It was but a slight incident
that gave him the beginning of this valuable wisdom.
As he lay ruminating one day beside his mother and the
gaunt calf, in a spruce covert near the water, a strange
scent was wafted in to his nostrils. It carried with
it a subtle warning. His mother touched him with her
nose, conveying a silent yet eloquent monition, [Page
323] and got upon her feet with no more sound
than if she had been compact of thistle-down. From their
thicket shelter the three stared forth, moveless and
unwinking, ears forward, nostrils wide. Then a canoe
with two men came into view, paddling lazily, and turning
to land. To the king, they looked not dangerous; but
every detail of them — their shape, motion, colour,
and, above all, their ominous scent — stamped
itself in his memory. Then, to his great surprise, his
mother silently signalled the gravest and most instant
menace, and forthwith faded back through the thicket
with inconceivably stealthy motion. The king and the
calf followed with like care, — the king, though
perplexed, having faith in his mother’s wise woodcraft.
Not until they had put good miles between themselves
and strange-smelling newcomers did the old moose call
a halt; and from all this precaution the king realised
that the mysterious strangers were something to be avoided
by moose.
That summer the king saw nothing
more of the man-creatures, — and he crossed the
scent of no more bears. His great heart, therefore,
found no check to its growing arrogance and courage.
When the month of the falling leaves and the whirring
partridge-coveys again came round, he felt a new [Page
324] pugnacity swelling in his veins, and found
himself uttering challenges, he knew not why, with his
yet half infantile bellow. When, at length, his mother
began to pace the open meadow by the Mamozekel, and
startle the moonlit silences with her mating call, he
was filled with strange anger. But this was nothing
to his rage when the calls were answered by a wide-antlered
bull. This time the king refused to sink obsequiously
to cover. He waited in the open; and he eyed the new
wooer in a fashion so truculent that at length he attracted
notice.
For his dignity, if not for
his experience, this was most unfortunate. The antlered
stranger noted his size, his attitude of insolence,
and promptly charged upon him. He met the charge, in
his insane audacity, but was instantly borne down. As
he staggered to his feet he realised his folly, and
turned to withdraw, — not in terror, but in acknowledgement
of superior strength. Such a dignified retreat, however,
was not to be allowed him. The big bull fell upon him
again, prodding him cruelly. He was hustled ignominiously
across the meadow, and into the bushes. Thence he fled,
bleating with impotent wrath and shame.
In his humiliation he fled far
down along the river, [Page 325] through
alder swamps which he had never traversed, by pools
in which he had never pulled the lilies. Onward he pressed,
intent on placing irrevocably behind him the scene of
his chagrin.
At length he came out upon the
fair river basin where the Mamozekel, the Serpentine,
and the Nictau, tameless streams, unite to form the
main Tobique. Here he heard the call of a young cow,
— a voice thinner and higher than his mother’s
deep-chested notes. With an impulse which he did not
understand, he pushed forward to answer the summons,
no longer furtive, but noisily trampling the brush.
Just then, however, a pungent smell stung his nostrils.
There, not ten paces distant, was a massive black shape
standing out in the moonlight. Panic laid grip upon
his heart, chilling every vein. He wheeled, splashed
across the shallow waters of the Nictau, and fled away
northward on tireless feet.
That winter the king yarded
alone, like a morose old bull, far from his domain of
the Mamozekel. In the spring he came back, but restricted
his range to the neighbourhood of the Forks. And he
saw his mother no more.
That summer he grew his first
antlers. As antlers, indeed, they were no great thing;
but they started out bravely, a massive cylindrical
bar [Page 326] thrusting forth laterally,
unlike the pointing horns of deer and caribou, from
either side of his forehead. For all his sturdy start,
their spiking and palmation did not amount to much;
but he was inordinately proud of them, rubbing off the
velvet with care when it began to itch, and polishing
assiduously at the hardened horn. By the time the October
moon had come round again to the Tobique country, he
counted these first antlers a weapon for any encounter;
and, indeed, with his bulk and craft behind them, they
were formidable.
It was not long before they
were put to the test. One night, as he stood roaring
and thrashing the bushes on the bluff overlooking the
Forks, he heard the call of a young cow a little way
down the shore. Gladly he answered. Gladly he sped to
the tryst. Strange ecstasies, the madness of the night
spell, and the white light’s sorcery made his
heart beat and his veins run sweet fire. But suddenly
all this changed; for another roar, a taunting challenge,
answered him; and another bull broke from covert on
the other side of the sandy level where stood the young
cow coquettishly eyeing both wooers.
The new arrival was much older
than the king, and nobly antlered; but in matter of
inches the young king was already his peer. In craft,
arrogance, [Page 327] and self-confident
courage the king had an advantage that outweighed the
deficiency in antlers. The fury of his charge spelled
victory from the first; and though the battle was prolonged,
the issue was decided at the outset, as the interested
young cow soon perceived. In about a half-hour it was
all over. The wise white moon of the wilderness looked
down understandingly upon the furrowed sandspit, the
pleased young cow, and the king making diffident progress
with his first wooing. Some distance down the river-bank,
she caught glimpses of the other bull, whose antlers
had not saved him, fleeing in shame, with bleeding flanks
and neck, through the light-patched shadows of the forest.
IV.
During
the next four years the king learned to grow such antlers
as had never before been seen in all the Tobique country.
So tall, impetuous, and masterful he grew, that the
boldest bulls, recognising the vast reverberations of
his challenge, would smother their wrath and slip noiselessly
away from his neighbourhood. Rumours of his size and
his great antlers in some way got abroad among the settlements;
but so crafty was he in shunning men, — whom he
[Page 328] did not really fear, and
whom he was wont to study intently from safe coverts,
— that there was never a hunter who could boast
of having got a shot at him.
Once, and once only, did he
come into actual, face to face conflict with the strange
man-creature. It was one autumn evening, at the first
of the season. By the edge of a little lake, he heard
the call of a cow. Having already found a mate, he was
somewhat inattentive, and did not answer; but something
strange in the call made him suspicious, and he stole
forward, under cover, to make an observation. The call
was repeated, seeming to come from a little, rushy island,
a stone’s throw from shore. This time there came
an answer, — not from the king, but from an eager
bull rushing up from the outlet of the lake. The king
listened, with some lazy interest, to the crashing and
slashing of the impetuous approach, thinking that if
the visitor were big enough to be worth while he would
presently go out and thrash him. When the visitor did
appear, however, bursting from the underbrush and striding
boldly down to the water’s edge, a strange thing
happened. From the rushy island came a spurt of flame,
a sharp detonating report. The bull jumped and wheeled
in his tracks. Another [Page 329] report,
and he dropped without a kick. As he lay in the pale
light, close to the water, a canoe shot out from the
rushy island and landed some distance from the body.
Two men sprang out. They pulled up the canoe, leaving
their rifles in it, and ran up to skin the prize.
The king in his hiding-place
understood. This was what men could do, — make
a strange, menacing sound, and kill moose with it. He
boiled with rage at this exhibition of their power,
and suddenly took up the quarrel of the slain bull.
But by no means did he lay aside his craft. Noiselessly
he moved, a vast and furtive shadow, down through the
thickets to a point where the underbrush nearly touched
the water. This brought him within a few yards of the
canoe, wherein the hunters had left their rifles. Here
he paused for a few minutes, pondering. But as he pondered,
redder and redder grew his eyes; and suddenly, with
a mad roar, he burst from cover and charged.
Had the two men not been expert
woodsmen, one or the other would have been caught and
smashed to pulp. But their senses were on the watch.
Cut off as they were from the canoe and from their weapons,
their only hope was a tree. Before the king was fairly
out into view, they had [Page 330]
understood the whole situation, sprung to their feet,
and sped off like hares. Just within the nearest fringe
of bushes grew a low-hanging beech-tree; and into this
they swung themselves, just as the king came raging
beneath. As it was, one of them was nearly caught when
he imagined himself quite safe. The king reared his
mighty bulk against the trunk and with his keen-spiked
antlers reached upward fiercely after the fugitives,
the nearest of whom was saved only by a friendly branch
which intervened.
For nearly an hour the king
stamped and stormed beneath the branches, while the
trapped hunters alternately cursed his temper and wondered
at his stature. Then, with a swift change of purpose,
he wheeled and charged on the canoe. In two minutes
the graceful craft was reduced to raw material, —
while the hunters in the tree-top, sputtering furiously,
vowed vengeance. All the kit, the tins, the blankets,
the boxes, were battered shapeless, and the rifles thumped
well down into the wet sand. In the midst of the cataclysm,
one of the rifles somehow went off. The noise and the
flash astonished the king, but only added to his rage
and made him more thorough in his work of destruction.
When there was nothing left that seemed worth trampling
upon, [Page 331] he returned to the
tree, — on which he had kept eye all the time,
— and there nursed his wrath all night. At the
first of dawn, however, he came to the conclusion that
the shivering things in the tree were not worth waiting
for. He swung off, and sought his favourite pasturage,
a mile or two away; and the men, after making sure of
his departure, climbed down. They nervously cut some
steaks from the bull which they had killed, and hurried
away, crestfallen, on the long tramp back to the settlements.
This incident, however, did
not have the effect which it might have been expected
to have. It did not make the king despise men. On the
contrary, he now knew them to be dangerous, and he also
knew that their chief power lay in the long dark tubes
which spit fire and made fierce sounds. It was enough
for him that he had once worsted them. Ever afterward
he gave them wide berth. And the tradition of him would
have come at last to be doubted in the settlements,
but for the vast, shed antlers occasionally found lying
on the diminished snows of March.
But all the time, while the
king waxed huge and wise, and overthrew his enemies,
and begot great offspring that, for many years after
he was dead, were to make the Mamozekel famous, there
was one [Page 332] grave incompleteness
in his sovereignty. His old panic fear of bears still
shamed and harassed him. The whiff of a harmless half-grown
cub, engrossed in stuffing its greedy red mouth with
blueberries, was enough to turn his blood to water and
send him off to other feeding-grounds. He chose his
ranges, indeed, first of all for their freedom from
the dreaded taint, and only second for the excellence
of their pasturage. This one unreasoning fear was the
drop of gall which went far toward embittering all the
days of his singularly favoured life. It was as if the
wood-gods, after endowing him so far beyond his fellows,
had repented of their lavishness, and capriciously poisoned
their gifts.
One autumn night, just at the
beginning of the calling season, this weakness of his
betrayed the king to the deepest humiliation which had
ever befallen him. He was then nearly seven years old;
and because his voice was known to every bull in the
Tobique country, there was never answer made when his
great challenge went stridently resounding over the
moonlit wastes. But on this particular night, when he
had roared perhaps for his own amusement, or for the
edification of his mate who browsed near by, rather
than with any expectation of response, to his astonishment
there came an answering [Page 333]
defiance from the other side of the open. A big, wandering
bull, who strayed up from the Grand River region, had
never heard of the king, and was more than ready to
put his valour to test. The king rushed to meet him.
Now it chanced that between the approaching giants was
an old ash-tree growing out of a thicket. In this thicket
a bear had been grubbing for roots. When he heard the
king’s first roar, he started to steal away from
the perilous proximity; but the second bull’s
answer, from the direction in which he had hoped to
retreat, stopped him. In much perturbation he climbed
the ash-tree to a safe distance, and curled himself
into a black, furry ball, in a fork of the branches.
The night was still, and no
scents wafting to sensitive nostrils. With short roars,
and much thrashing of the underbrush, the two bulls
drew near. When the king was just about abreast of the
bear’s hiding-place, his arrogance broke into
fury, and he charged upon the audacious stranger. Just
as he did so, and just as his foe sprang to meet him,
a wilful night-wind puffed lightly through the branches.
It was a very small, irresponsible wind; but it carried
sharply to the king’s nostrils the strong, fresh
taint of bear. [Page 334]
The smell was so strong,
it seemed to the king as if the bear must be fairly
on his haunches. It was like an icy cataract flung upon
him. He shrank, trembled, — and the old wounds
twinged and cringed. The next moment, to the triumphant
amazement of his antagonist, he had wheeled aside to
avoid the charge, and was off
through the underbrush in ignominious flight. The
newcomer, who, for all his stout-heartedness, had viewed
with concern the giant bulk of his foe, stopped short
in his tracks and stared in bewilderment. So easy a
victory as this was beyond his dreams, — even
beyond his desires. However, a bull moose can be a philosopher
on occasion, and this one was not going to quarrel with
good luck. In high elation he strode on up the meadow,
and set himself, not unsuccessfully, to wooing the deserted
and disgusted cow.
His triumph, however,
was short-lived. About moon-rise of the following night
the king came back. He was no longer thinking of bears,
and his heart was full of wrath. His vast challenge
came down from the near-by hills, making the night resound
with its short, explosive thunders. His approach was
accompanied by the thrashing of giant antlers on the
trees, and by a crashing as if the undergrowths were
being trodden by a locomotive. There [Page 337]
was grim omen in the sounds; and the cow, waving her
great ears back and forward thoughtfully, eyed the Grand
River bull with shrewd interest. The stranger showed
himself game, no whit daunted by threatenings and thunder.
He answered with brave roarings, and manifested every
resolution to maintain his conquest. But sturdy and
valorous though he was, all his prowess went for little
when the king fell upon him, thrice terrible from the
memory of his humiliation. There was no such thing as
withstanding that awful charge. Before it the usurper
was borne back, borne down, overwhelmed, as if he had
been no more than a yearling calf. He had no chance
to recover. He was trampled and ripped and thrust onward,
a helpless sprawl of unstrung legs and outstretched,
piteous neck. It was luck alone, — or some unwonted
kindness of the wood-spirits, — that saved his
life from being trodden and beaten out in that hour
of terror. It was close to the river-bank that he had
made his stand; and presently, to his great good fortune,
he was thrust over the brink. He fell into the water
with a huge splash. When he struggled to his feet, and
moved off, staggering, down the shallow edges of the
stream, the king looked over and disdained to follow
up the vengeance. [Page 338]
Fully as he had vindicated
himself, the king was never secure against such a humiliation
so long as he rested thrall to his one fear. The threat
of the bear hung over him, a mystery of terror which
he could not bring himself to face. But at last, and
in the season of his weakness, when he had shed his
antlers, there came a day when he was forced to face
it. Then his kingliness was put to the supreme trial.
He was now at the age
of nine years, in the splendour of his prime. He stood
over seven feet high at the shoulders, and weighed perhaps
thirteen hundred pounds. His last antlers, those which
he had shed two months before, had shown a gigantic
spread of nearly six feet.
It was late April.
Much honeycombed snow and ice still lingered in the
deeper hollows. After a high fashion of his own, seldom
followed among the moose of the Tobique region, the
king had rejoined his mate when she emerged from her
spring retreat with a calf at her flank. He was too
lordly in spirit to feel cast down or discrowned when
his head was shorn of its great ornament; and he never
felt the spring moroseness which drives most bull moose
into seclusion. He always liked to keep his little herd
together, was tolerant to the yearlings, [Page
339] and even refrained from driving off the
two-year-olds until their own aggressiveness made it
necessary.
On this particular
April day, the king was bestriding a tall poplar sapling,
which he had borne down that he might browse upon its
tender, sap-swollen tips. By the water’s edge
the cow and the yearling were foraging on the young
willow shoots. The calf, a big-framed, enterprising
youngster two weeks old, almost as fine a specimen of
young moosehood as the king had been at his age, was
poking about curiously to gather knowledge of the wilderness
world. He approached a big gray-white boulder, whose
base was shrouded in spruce scrub, and sniffed apprehensively
at a curious, pungent taint that came stealing out upon
the air.
He knew by intuition
that there was peril in that strange scent; but his
interest overweighed his caution, and he drew close
to the spruce scrub. Close, and yet closer; and his
movement was so unusual that it attracted the attention
of the king, who stopped browsing to watch him intently.
A vague, only half-realised memory of that far-off day
when he himself, a lank calf of the season, went sniffing
curiously at a thicket, stirred in his brain; and the
stiff hair along his neck and shoulder [Page
340] began to bristle. He released the poplar
sapling, and turned all his attention to the behaviour
of the calf.
The calf was very close to the
green edges of the spruce scrub, when he caught sight
of a great dark form within, which had revealed itself
by a faint movement. More curious than ever, but now
distinctly alarmed, he shrank back, turning at the same
time, as if to investigate from another and more open
side of the scrub.
The next instant a black bulk
lunged forth with incredible swiftness from the green,
and a great paw swung itself with a circular, sweeping
motion, upon the retreating calf. In the wilderness
world, as in the word of men, history has a trick of
repeating itself; and this time, as on that day nine
years before, the bear was just too late. The blow did
not reach its object till most of its force was spent.
It drew blood, and knocked the calf sprawling, but did
no serious damage. With a bleat of pain and terror,
the little animal jumped to its feet and ran away.
The bear would have easily caught
him before he could recover himself; but another and
very different voice had answered the bleat of the calf.
At the king’s roar of fury the bear changed his
plans [Page 341] and slunk back into
hiding. In a moment the king came thundering up to the
edge of the spruces. There, planting his fore-feet suddenly
till they ploughed the ground, he stopped himself with
a mighty effort. The smell of the bear had smitten him
in the face.
The moment was a crucial one.
The pause was full of fate. Turning his head in indecision,
he caught a cry of pain from the calf as it ran to its
mother; and he saw the blood streaming down its flank.
Then the kingliness of his heart arose victorious. With
a roar, he breasted trampling into the spruce scrub,
heedless at last of the dreaded scent.
The bear, meanwhile, had been
seeking escape. He had just emerged on the other side
of the spruces, and was slipping off to find a secure
tree. As the king thundered down upon him, he wheeled
with a savage growl, half squatted back, and struck
out sturdily with that redoubtable paw. But at the same
instant the king’s edged hoofs came down upon
him with the impact of a battering ram. They smashed
in his ribs. They tore open his side. They hurled him
over so that his belly was exposed. He was at a hopeless
disadvantage. He had not an instant for recovery. Those
avenging hoofs, with [Page 342] the
power of a pile-driver behind them, smote like lightning.
The bear struck savagely, twice, thrice; and his claws
tore their way through hide and muscle till the king’s
blood gushed scarlet over his prostrate foe’s
dark fur. Then, the growls and the claw-strokes ceased;
and the furry shape lay still, outstretched, unresisting.
For a moment or two the king
drew off, and eyed the carcass. Then the remembrance
of all his past terror and shame surged hotly through
him. He pounced again upon the body, and pounded it,
and trampled it, and ground it down, till the hideous
mass bore no longer a resemblance to any thing that
ever carried the breath of life. It was not his enemy
only, not only the assailant of the helpless calf, that
he was thus completely blotting from existence, but
it was fear itself
that he was wiping out.
At last, grown suddenly tired
of rage, and somewhat faint from the red draining of
his veins, the king turned away and sought his frightened
herd. They gathered about him, trembling with excitement,
— the light-coated cow, the dark yearling, the
lank, terrified calf. They stretched thin noses toward
him, questioning, wondering, troubled at his hot, streaming
wounds. But the king held his [Page 345]
head high, heeding neither the wounds nor the herd.
He cast one long, proud look up the valley of the Mamozekel,
his immediate, peculiar domain. Then he looked southward
over the lonely Serpentine, northward across the dark-wooded
Nictau, and westward down the flood of the full, united
stream. He felt himself supreme now beyond challenge
over all the wild lands of Tobique.
For a long time the group stood
so, breathing at last quietly, still with that stillness
which the furtive kindreds know. There was no sound
save the soft, ear-filling roar of the three rivers,
swollen with freshet, rushing gladly to their confluence.
The sound was as a background to the cool, damp silence
of the April wilderness. Some belated snow in a shaded
hollow close at hand shrank and settled, with a hushed,
evasive whisper. Then the earliest white-throat, from
the top of a fir-tree, fluted across the pregnant spring
solitudes the six clear notes of his musical and melancholy
call. [Page 346]
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