bask in mild etherialness all winter long? I
am disgusted this morning, with the mercury at 30 degrees
below zero, and still going down, at the whole batch
of them, and with Vennor and Hazen, and all professionally
weatherwise men and things. I have heard of little
real suffering in my neighborhood from the cold, among
either humans or brutes. Doubtless, when the weather
moderates and people get out to tell each other all
about the cold spell, there will be many true tales
of intense suffering and more than the usual romancing
about the terrible week. And then the Oldest Inhabitant
will thaw out, and with all the self-satisfaction
that superior age and experience crown him with, will
tell how much colder it was in such and such a year,
until we wish this little spell had sealed his memory
and mouth, for we do all take a great pride in living
in a time that excels all other times, albeit, if
it be only in a storm or a freeze. But in these
things the early times of the Old Settler can never
be excelled, no matter in what century he flourishes.
He is always master of the situation. His experiences
are like those of no other settler that ever lived
and died. With him, imagination has gradually
usurped the place of experience and its isothermal
dips and dodges carry him through hotter and through
colder seasons than are marked down in any Standard
Time PRAIRIE FARMER, or any other map or chart in
existence. But for this weather business I should
like to live next door to the Old Settler, for he
is generally truthful, good, kind, full of practical
knowledge and common sense.
LETTER FROM CHAMPAIGN.
We are having some very sharp winter weather, and
sleighing as uninterruptedly good since the 20th of
December as I ever remember. This morning, January
5th, the mercury reported 28 degrees below zero at
5:30 A.M., and 20 degrees below at 10 o’clock.
This is the coldest since January 29th, 1873, when
36 degrees below was recorded at the Industrial University
here, and 42 degrees below by the spirit thermometer
at one of the Jacksonville institutions. But
the wind was west at that date, and it is so to-day,
showing our coldest weather comes from that direction
rather than from the northwest or north. The explanation
I suppose to be, those great fountains of cold storage,
the Colorado mountains, lie west and southwest of
us, and are several hundred miles nearer than the
lower peaks and ranges northwest.
* * * *
*
It is an interesting and important truth to know at
this time that an unexpected source for seed corn
has been discovered here at home. It has been
ascertained by experiment and investigation that the
early frosted corn, which has been allowed to stand
in the field, has a sound germ, and though shrunken,
will make fairly good seed, whereas corn which was
not frosted till late in October, and ripened in most
respects, save drying out, is wholly unfit for seed,