while John and his comrades went to the brook and began
to dig a canal, to turn the water into the residence
of the woodchuck. This was often a difficult
feat of engineering, and a long job. Often it
took more than half a day of hard labor with shovel
and hoe to dig the canal. But when the canal
was finished and the water began to pour into the
hole, the excitement began. How long would it
take to fill the hole and drown out the woodchuck?
Sometimes it seemed as if the hole was a bottomless
pit. But sooner or later the water would rise
in it, and then there was sure to be seen the nose
of the woodchuck, keeping itself on a level with the
rising flood. It was piteous to see the anxious
look of the hunted, half-drowned creature as—it
came to the surface and caught sight of the dog.
There the dog stood, at the mouth of the hole, quivering
with excitement from his nose to the tip of his tail,
and behind him were the cruel boys dancing with joy
and setting the dog on. The poor creature would
disappear in the water in terror; but he must breathe,
and out would come his nose again, nearer the dog each
time. At last the water ran out of the hole as
well as in, and the soaked beast came with it, and
made a desperate rush. But in a trice the dog
had him, and the boys stood off in a circle, with
stones in their hands, to see what they called “fair
play.” They maintained perfect “neutrality”
so long as the dog was getting the best of the woodchuck;
but if the latter was likely to escape, they “interfered”
in the interest of peace and the “balance of
power,” and killed the woodchuck. This
is a boy’s notion of justice; of course, he’d
no business to be a woodchuck,—an—unspeakable
woodchuck.
I used the word “aromatic” in relation
to the New England soil. John knew very well
all its sweet, aromatic, pungent, and medicinal products,
and liked to search for the scented herbs and the wild
fruits and exquisite flowers; but he did not then know,
and few do know, that there is no part of the globe
where the subtle chemistry of the earth produces more
that is agreeable to the senses than a New England
hill-pasture and the green meadow at its foot.
The poets have succeeded in turning our attention
from it to the comparatively barren Orient as the
land of sweet-smelling spices and odorous gums.
And it is indeed a constant surprise that this poor
and stony soil elaborates and grows so many delicate
and aromatic products.
John, it is true, did not care much for anything that
did not appeal to his taste and smell and delight
in brilliant color; and he trod down the exquisite
ferns and the wonderful mosses—without
compunction. But he gathered from the crevices
of the rocks the columbine and the eglantine and the
blue harebell; he picked the high-flavored alpine
strawberry, the blueberry, the boxberry, wild currants
and gooseberries, and fox-grapes; he brought home armfuls
of the pink-and-white laurel and the wild honeysuckle;
he dug the roots of the fragrant sassafras and of