among all the blessings of the earth. It was
spring time, too; and all were coming forth in clusters
crowded for very love; there was room enough for all,
but they crushed their leaves into all manner of strange
shapes only to be nearer each other. There was
the wood anemone, star after star, closing every now
and then into nebulae; and there was the oxalis, troop
by troop, like virginal processions of the Mois de
Marie,[162] the dark vertical clefts in the limestone
choked up with them as with heavy snow, and touched
with ivy on the edges—ivy as light and lovely
as the vine; and, ever and anon, a blue gush of violets,
and cowslip bells in sunny places; and in the more
open ground, the vetch, and comfrey, and mezereon,
and the small sapphire buds of the Polygala Alpina,
and the wild strawberry, just a blossom or two all
showered amidst the golden softness of deep, warm,
amber-coloured moss. I came out presently on
the edge of the ravine: the solemn murmur of its
waters rose suddenly from beneath, mixed with the
singing of the thrushes among the pine boughs; and,
on the opposite side of the valley, walled all along
as it was by grey cliffs of limestone, there was a
hawk sailing slowly off their brow, touching them
nearly with his wings, and with the shadows of the
pines flickering upon his plumage from above; but with
the fall of a hundred fathoms under his breast, and
the curling pools of the green river gliding and glittering
dizzily beneath him, their foam globes moving with
him as he flew. It would be difficult to conceive
a scene less dependent upon any other interest than
that of its own secluded and serious beauty; but the
writer well remembers the sudden blankness and chill
which were cast upon it when he endeavoured, in order
more strictly to arrive at the sources of its impressiveness,
to imagine it, for a moment, a scene in some aboriginal
forest of the New Continent. The flowers in an
instant lost their light, the river its music; the
hills became oppressively desolate; a heaviness in
the boughs of the darkened forest showed how much
of their former power had been dependent upon a life
which was not theirs, how much of the glory of the
imperishable, or continually renewed, creation is reflected
from things more precious in their memories than it,
in its renewing. Those ever springing flowers
and ever flowing streams had been dyed by the deep
colours of human endurance, valour, and virtue; and
the crests of the sable hills that rose against the
evening sky received a deeper worship, because their
far shadows fell eastward over the iron wall of Joux,
and the four-square keep of Granson.