/ /, Zbc Camelot Series Edited by Ernest Ehys. SPECIMEN DAYS IN AMERICA. SPECIMEN DAYS IN America By WALT WHITMAN NEWLY REVISED BY THE AUTHOR, WITH FRESH PREFACE AND ADDITIONAL NOTE LONDON WALTER SCOTT, 24 WARWICK LANE PATERNOSTER ROW 1887 Digitized by the Internet Archive in 2007 with funding from IVIicrosoft Corporation http://www.archive.org/details/daysspecimeninamOOwhitrich CONTENTS. Preface : To the Reader in the British Islands A Happy Hour's Command Answer to an Insisting Friend . Genealogy — Van Velsor and Whitman The Old Whitman and Van Velsor Cemeteries ..... The Maternal Homestead Two Old Family Interiors Paumanok, and My Life on it as Child and Young Man My First Reading — Lafayette ..... Printing Office— Old Brooklyn .... Growth— Health — Work My Passion for Ferries Broadway Sights ...... Omnibus Jaunts and Drivers ..... Plays and Operas too . Through Eight Years Sources of Character — Results — 1860 Opening of the Secession War National Uprising and Volunteering Contemptuous Feeling — Battle of Bull Run, July, 1861 The Stupor Passes— Something Else Begins Down at the Front After First Fredericksburg Back to Washington .... Fifty Hours Left Wounded on the Field Hospital Scenes and Persons Patent-Office Hospital .... The White House by Moonlight An Army Hospital Ward A Connecticut Case Two Brooklyn Boys . A Secesh Brave The Wounded from Chancellorsville PAGE 11 13 15 16 19 21 25 26 27 29 29 31 33 40 41 43 45 46 48 49 51 62 VI CONTENTS. A Night Battle over a Week Since , , . . Unnamed Remains the Bravest Soldier Some Specimen Cases My Preparations for Visits Ambulance Processions Bad Wounds— the Young The Most Inspiriting of all War's Shows Battle of Gettysburg A Cavalry Camp . A New York Soldier ..... Home-Made Music , Abraham Lincoln - . . . . Heated Term Soldiers and Talks Death of a Wisconsin Officer .... Hospitals Ensemble ..... A Silent Night Ramble . , . . Spiritual Characters among the Soldiers Cattle Droves about Washington . - . . Hospital Perplexity .... Down at the Front ^ - . ^ Paying the Bounties Rumors, Changes, &c Virginia Summer of 1864 .... A New Army Organization fit for America Death of a Hero Hospital Scenes — Incidents . . - • , A Yankee Soldier Union Prisoners South Deserters A Glimpse of War's Hell-Scenes Gifts— Money— Discrimination Items from my Note Books A Case from Second Bull Run Army Surgeons — Aid Deficiencies The Blue Everywhere A Model Hospital Boys in the Army Burial of a Lady Nurse Female Nurses for Soldiers Southern Escapees The Capitol by Gas-Light The Inauguration Attitude of Foreign Governments During the War The Weather — Does it Sympathize with These Times ? Inauguration Ball Scene at the Capitol . A Yankee Antique ..... Wounds and Diseases Death of President Lincoln Sherman's Army's Jubilation its Sudden Stoppage No Good Portrait of Lincoln Releas'd Union Prisoners from South PAGE 54 CONTENTS, vii PAGE Death of a Pennsylvania Soldier ..... 110 The Armies Returning ....... 113 The Grand Review Western Soldiers . . . .114 A Soldier on Lincoln Two Brothers, one South, one North . 115 Some Sad Cases yet ...... 117 Calhoun's Real Monument Hospitals Closing . . .118 Typical Soldiers .120 ** Convulsiveness " Three Years Summ'd Up , , . 121 The Million Dead, too, Summ'd up . . . . . 123 The Real War will never get in the Books .... 125 An Interregnum Paragraph ...... 127 New Themes Enter'd Upon . . . , .127 Entering a Long Farm-Lane... To the Spring and Brook... An Early Summer Reveille ...... Birds Migrating at Midnight Bumble-Bees Cedar-Apples .... Summer Sights and Indolences Sundown Perfume— Quail- Notes the Hermit Thrush ..... A July Afternoon by the Pond . , . . . Locusts and Katy-Dids The Lesson of a Tree Autumn Side-Bits ..--.. The Sky — Days and Nights— Happiness Colors— A Contrast November 8, '76 Crows and Crows A Winter-Day on the Sea-Beach Sea-Shore Fancies -..-.- In Memory of Thomas Paine - . . . - A Two Hours' Ice-Sail ------ Spring Overtures— Recreations One of the Human Kinks An Afternoon Scene The Gates Op ening The Common Earth, the Soil Birds and Birds and Birds FuU-Starr'd Nights Mulleins and Mulleins Distant Sounds - A Sun-Bath— Nakedness . - - . . The Oaks and I A Quintette -..-... The First Frost— Mems Three Young Men's Deaths viii CONTENTS, PAGE February Days • - - - - - - 168 A Meadow Lark Sundown Lights - • - - 170 Thoughts Under an Oak— A Dream Clover and Hay Perfume An Unknown - • - - - - - 171 Bird Whistling Horse-Mint Three of Us - - - 173 Death of William CuUen Bryant - - - - - 175 Jaunt up the Hudson Happiness and Raspberries - - 177 A Specimen Tramp Family - - ' - . - . 178 Manhattan from the Bay .--..- 180 Human and Heroic New York ------ 181 Hours for the Soul - - - * - - - - 182 Straw-Color'd and other Psyches ..... 18^^ A Night Remembrance Wild Flowers - - - - 189 A Civility Too Long Neglected . , . . . . 191 Delaware River — Days and Nights... Scenes on Fejry and River — Last Winter's Nights . . . . . . .191 The First Spring Day on Chestnut Street . . . .198 Up the Hudson to Ulster County . . . . .200 Days at J. B.'s— Turf Fires— Spring Songs . . . .201 Meeting a Hermit An Ulster County Waterfall Walter Dumont and his Medal . . . . . . .203 Hudson River Sights . ..... 204 Two City Areas Certain Hours ..... 206 Central Parks Walks and Talks . . -207 A Fine Afternoon, 4 to 6 . . . . .209 Departing of the Big Steamers Two Hours on the Minnesota . 210 Mature Summer Days and Nights ..... 213 Exposition Building— New City Hall — River- Trip . . . 213 Swallows on the River Began a Long Jaunt West In the Sleeper ........ 215 Missouri State . . . . . . . .217 Lawrence andTopeka, Kansas The Prairies— (and an Undeliver'd Speech) 218 On to Denver— A Frontier Incident An Hour on Kenosha Summit ........ 219 An Egotistical ' * Find " New Scenes— New Joy s . .221 CONTENTS, PAGE Steam-Power, Telegraphs, &c America's Back-Bone , . 222 The Parks Art Features 224 Denver Impressions ....... 226 I Turn South— and then East Again ..... 228 Unfulfiird Wants— the Arkansas River A Silent Little Follower — the Coreopsis . ..... 228 The Prairies and Great Plains in Poetry The Spanish Peaks —Evening on the Plains ...... 230 America's Characteristic Landscape Earth's Most Important Stream 232 Prairie Analogies— the Tree Question Mississippi Valley Literature ........ 234 An Interviewer's Item . . . . . . 236 The Women of the West The Silent General . . .237 President Hayes's Speeches . . . . - . . 239 St . Louis Memoranda Nights on the Mississippi . . . 240 Upon our Own Land Edgar Poe's Significance . , . 241 Beethoven's Septette ....... 245 A Hint of Wild- Nature Loafing in th e Woods . , . 245 A Contralto Voice Seeing Niagara to Advantage . . 247 Jaunting to Canada Sunday with the Insane . . . 249 Reminiscence of Eliza Hicks Grand Native Growth . . 251 A ZoUverein between the U. S. and Canada The St. Lawrence Line ......... 252 The Savage Saguenay. Cape Eternity and Trinity . . 253 Chicoutimi, and Ha-ha Bay The Inhabitants — Good Living , 255 Cedar-Plums Like — Names . . . . . . 256 Death of Thomas Carlyle . . . . . .259 Carlyle from American Points of View . . . . . 264 A Couple of Old Friends— A Coleridge Bit . . . . 275 A Week's Visit to Boston . . . . , .276 The Boston of To-Day My Tribute to Four Poets . . 278 Millet's Picture — Last Items ...... 280 Birds, and a Caution ....... 282 Samples of my Common-Place Book ..... 283 My Native Sand and Salt Once More ..... 284 Hot Weather New York . . . , . . 287 X CONTENTS. PAGE " Custer's Last Rally " 288 Some Old A cquaintances —Memories A Discovery of Old Age . 290 A Visit at the Last to R. W. Emerson . . . . .292 Other Concord Notations ....... 294 Boston Common — More of Emerson ..... 295 An Ossianic Night — Dearest Friends ..... 296 Only a New Ferry Boat Death of Longfellow . . . 298 Starting Newspapers ....... 300 The Great Unrest of which We are a Part . . . .303 By Emerson's Grave . . . . . . . 304 At Present Writing — Personal After drying a Certain Book . 305 Final Confessions — Literary Tests , , . . . . 307 Nature and Democracy — Morality ..... 309 Additional Note . . .... 310 Specimen Days IN America. PREFACE. TO THE READER IN THE BRITISH ISLANDS. If you will only take the following pages, as you do some long and gossippy letter written for you by a relative or friend traveling through distant scenes and incidents, and jotting them down lazily and informally, but ever veraciously (with occasional diversions of critical thought about somebody or something), it might remove all formal or literary impediments at once, and bring you and me close together in the spirit in which the jottings were col- lated to be read. You have had, and have, plenty of public events and facts and general statistics of America ; — in the following book is a common indi- vidual New World private life, its birth and growth, its struggles for a living, its goings and comings and observations (or representative portions of them) amid the United States of America the last thirty PREFACE. or forty years, with their varied war and peace, their local coloring, the unavoidable egotism, and the lights and shades and sights and joys and pains and sympathies common to humanity. Further intro- ductory light may be found in the paragraph, "A Happy Hour's Command," and the bottom note belonging to it, at the beginning of the book. I have said in the text that if I were required to give good reason-for-being of "Specimen Days" I should be unable to do so. Let me fondly hope that it has at least the reason and excuse of such off-hand gossippy letter as just alluded to, portraying American life-sights and incidents as they actually occurred — their presentation making additions as far as it goes, to the simple experience and association of your soul, from a comrade soul ; — and that also, in the volume, as below any page of mine, anywhere, ever remains, for seen or unseen basis-phrase, GOOD-WILL BETWEEN THE COMMON PEOPLE OF ALL NATIONS. WALT WHITMAN. SPECIMEN DAYS IN AMERICA. A HAPPY HOUR'S COMMAND. Down in the WoodSy July 2d, 1882, — If I do it at all I must delay no longer. Incongruous and full of skips and jumps as is that huddle of diary-jottings, war- memoranda of 1862-'65, Nature-notes of 1877-^81, with Western and Canadian observations afterwards, all bundled up and tied by a big string, the resolution and indeed mandate comes to me this day, this hour, — (and what a day ! what an hour just passing ! the luxury of riant grass and blowing breeze, with all the shows of sun and sky and perfect temperature, never before so filling me body and soul) — to go home, untie the bundle, reel out diary- scraps and memoranda, just as they are, large or small, one after another, into print-pages,^ and let the melange's * The earlier pages are nearly verbatim an off-hand letter of mine in January, 1882, to an insisting friend. Following, I give some gloomy experiences. The war of attempted secession has, of course, been the distinguishing event of my time. I commenced at the close of 1862, and continued steadily through '63, '64, and '65, to visit the sick and wounded of the army, both on the field and in the hospitals in and around Washington city. From the first I kept little note- books for impromptu jottings in pencil to refresh my memory of names and circumstances, and what was specially wanted, &c. In these I brief 'd cases, persons, sights, occurrences in camp, by the 14 SPECIMEN DAYS lackings and wants of connection take care of themselves. It will illustrate one phase of humanity anyhow ; how few of life's days and hours (and they not by relative value or bedside, and not seldom by the corpses of the dead. Some were scratch'd down from narratives I heard and itemized while watching, or waiting, or tending somebody amid those scenes. I have dozens of such little note-books left, forming a special history of those years, for myself alone, full of associations never to be possibly said or sung. I wish I could convey to the reader the associations that attach to these soil'd and creas'd livraisons, each composed of a sheet or two of paper, folded small to carry in the pocket, and fasten'd with a pin. I leave them just as I threw them by after the war, blotch'd here and there with more than one blood-stain, hurriedly written, sometimes at the clinique, not seldom amid the excitement of uncertainty, or defeat, or of action, or getting ready for it, or a march. Most of the pages are verbatim copies of those lurid and blood-smutch'd little note-books. Very different are most of the memoranda that follow. Some time after the war ended I had a paralytic stroke, which prostrated me for several years. In 1876 I began to get over the worst of it. From this date, portions of several seasons, especially summers, I spent at a secluded haunt down in Camden county, New Jersey — Timber creek, quite a little river (it enters from the great Delaware, twelve miles away) — with primitive solitudes, winding stream, recluse and woody banks, sweet-feeding springs, and all the charms that birds, grass, wild-flowers, rabbits and squirrels, old oaks, walnut trees, &;c., can bring. Through these times, and on these spots, the diary from page 127 onward was mostly written. The Collect afterward gathers up the odds and ends of whatever pieces I can now lay hands on, written at various times past, and swoops all together like fish in a net. I suppose I publish and leave the whole gathering, first, from that eternal tendency to perpetuate and preserve which is behind all Nature, authors included ; second, to symbolize two or three specimen interiors, personal and other, out of the myriads of my time, the middle range of the Nineteenth century in the New World; a strange, unloosen'd, wondrous time. But the book is probably without any definite purpose that can be told in a statement. IN AMERICA, 15 proportion, but by chance) are ever noted. Probably another point too, how we give long preparations for some object, planning and delving and fashioning, and then, when the actual hour for doing arrives, find ourselves still quite unprepared, and tumble the thing together, letting hurry and crudeness tell the story better than fine work. At any rate I obey my happy hour's command, which seems curiously imperative. May-be, if I don't do anything else, I shall send out the most wayward, spontaneous, fragmentary book ever printed. ANSWER TO AN INSISTING FRIEND, You ask for items, details of my early life — of genealogy and parentage, particularly of the women of my ancestry, and of its far back Netherlands stock on the maternal side — of the region where I was born and raised, and my father and mother before me, and theirs before them — with a word about Brooklyn and New York cities, the times I lived there as lad and young man. You say you want to get at these details mainly as the go-befores and embryons of "Leaves of Grass." Very good ; you shall have at least some specimens of them all. I have often thought of the meaning of such things — that one can only encompass and complete matters of that kind by exploring behind, perhaps very far behind, themselves directly, and so into their genesis, antecedents, and cumulative stages. Then as luck would have it, I lately whiled away the tedium of a week's half-sickness and confinement, by collating these very items for another (yet unfulfiU'd, probably abandon'd,) purpose ; and if you will be satisfied with them, authentic in date-occurrence and fact simply, and told my own way, garrulous-like, here they are. I shall not hesitate to make i6 SPECIMEN DA YS extracts, for I catch at any thing to save labor ; but those will be the best versions of what I want to convey. GENEALOGY— VAN VELSOR AND WHITMAN. The later years of the last century found the Van Velsor family, my mother's side, living on their own farm at Cold Spring, Long Island, New York State, near the eastern edge of Queens county, about a mile from the harbor."^ My father's side — probably the fifth generation from the first English arrivals in New England— were at the same time farmers on their own land — (and a fine domain it was, 500 acres, all good soil, gently sloping east and south, about one-tenth woods, plenty of grand old trees,) two or . three miles off, at West Hills, Suffolk county. The Whit- man name in the Eastern States, and so branching West and South, starts undoubtedly from one John Whitman, born 1602, in Old England, where he grew up, married, and his eldest son was born in 1629. He came over in the " True Love" in 1640 to America, and lived in Weymouth, Mass., which place became the mother-hive of the New- Englanders of the name: he died in 1692. His brother. Rev. Zechariah Whitman, also came over in the "True Love," either at that time or soon after, and lived at Milford, Conn. A son of this Zechariah, named Joseph, migrated to Huntington, Long Island, and permanently settled there. Savage's " Genealogical Dictionary " (vol. iv, p. 524) gets the Whitman family establish'd at Huntington, per this Joseph, before 1664. It is quite certain that from that * Long Island was settled first on the west end by the Dutch, from Holland, tlien on the east end by the English — the dividing line of the two nationalities being a little west of Huntington, where my father's folks lived, and where I was born. IN AMERICA, 17 beginning, and from Joseph, the West Hill Whitmans, and all others in Suffolk county, have since radiated, myself among the number. John and Zechariah both went to Eng- land and back again divers times ; they had large families, and several of their children were born in the old country. We hear of the father of John and Zechariah, Abijah Whitman, who goes over into the 1500's, but we know little about him, except that he also was for some time in America. These old pedigree reminiscences come up to me vividly from a visit I made not long since (in my 63d year) to West Hills, and to the burial grounds of my ancestry, both sides. I extract from notes of that visit, written there and then : THE OLD WHITMAN AND VAN VELSOR CEMETERIES. July 29, 1881. — After more than forty years' absence, (except a brief visit, to take my father there once more, two years before he died,) went down Long Island on a week's jaunt to the place where I was born, thirty miles from New York city. Rode around the old familiar spots, viewing and pondering and dwelling long upon them, everything coming back to me. Went to the old Whitman homestead on the upland and took a view eastward, in- clining south, over the broad and beautiful farm lands of my grandfather (1780,) and my father. There was the new house (1810,) the big oak a hundred and fifty or two hun- dred years old ; there the well, the sloping kitchen-garden, and a little way off even the well-kept remains of the dwelling of my great-grandfather (1750-'60) still standing, with its mighty timbers and low ceilings. Near by, a stately grove of tall, vigorous black walnuts, beautiful, Apollo-like, the sons or grandsons, no doubt, of black-walnuts 273 1 8 SPECIMEN DAYS during or before 1776. On the other side of the road spread the famous apple orchard, over twenty acres, the trees planted by hands long mouldering in the grave (my uncle Jesse's,) but quite many of them evidently capable of throwing out their annual blossoms and fruit yet. I now write these lines seated on an old grave (doubtless of a century since at least) on the burial hill of the Whit- mans of many generations. Fifty and more graves are quite plainly traceable, and as many more decay'd out of all form — depress'd mounds, crumHed and broken stones, cover'd with moss — the gray and sterile hill, the clumps of chestnuts outside, the silence, just varied by the soughing wind. There is always the deepest eloquence of sermon or poem in any of these ancient graveyards of which Long Island has so many ; so what must this one have been to me % My whole family history, with its succession of links, from the first settlement down to date, told here — three centuries concentrate on this sterile acre. The next day, July 30, I devoted to the maternal locality, and if possible was still more penetrated and impressed. I write this paragraph on the burial hill of the Van Velsors, near Cold Spring, the most significant de- pository of the dead that could be imagined, without the slightest help from art, but far ahead of it, soil sterile, a mostly bare plateau-flat of half an acre, the top of a hill, brush and well grown trees and dense woods bordering all around, very primitive, secluded, no visitors, no road (you cannot drive here, you have to bring the dead on foot, and follow on foot.) Two or three-score graves quite plain ; as many more almost rubb'd out. My grandfather Cornelius and my grandmother Amy (Naomi) and numerous rela- tives nearer or remoter, on my mother's side, lie buried here. The scene as I stood or sat, the delicate and wild IN AMERICA, 19 odor of the woods, a slightly drizzling rain, the emotional atmosphere of the place, and the inferr'd reminiscences, were fitting accompaniments. THE MATERNAL HOMESTEAD. I went down from this ancient grave place eighty or ninety rods to the site of the Van Yelsor homestead, where my mother was born (1795,) and where every spot had been familiar to me as a child and youth (1 825-^40. ) Then stood there a long, rambling, dark -gray, shingle-sided house, with sheds, pens, a great barn, and much open road-space. Now of all those not a vestige left ; all had been pull'd down, erased, and the plough and harrow passed over foundations, road-spaces, and everything, for many summers ; fenced in at present, and grain and clover growing like any other fine fields. Only a big hole from the cellar, with some little heaps of broken stone, green with grass and weeds, identified the place. Even the copious old brook and spring seem'd to have mostly dwindled away. The whole scene, with what it arous'd, memories of my young days there half a century ago, the vast kitchen and ample fire- place and the sitting-room adjoining, the plain furniture, the meals, the house full of merry people, my grandmother Amy's sweet old face in its Quaker cap, my grandfather "the Major," jovial, red, stout, with sonorous voice and characteristic physiognomy, with the actual sights them- selves, made the most pronounced half-day's experience of my whole jaunt. For there with all those wooded, hilly, healthy surround- ings, my dearest mother, Louisa Van Velsor, grew up— (her mother. Amy Williams, of the Friends' or Quakers' denomination — the Williams family, seven sisters and one 20 SPECIMEN DA YS brother — ^the father and brother sailors, both of whom met their deaths at sea.) The Yan Velsor people were noted for fine horses, which the men bred and train'd from blooded stock. My mother, as a young woman, was a daily and daring rider. As to the head of the family himself, the old race of the Netherlands, so deeply grafted on Manhattan island and in Kings and Queens counties, never yielded a more mark'd and full Americanized specimen than Major Cornelius Yan Yelsor. TWO OLD FAMILY INTERIORS. Of the domestic and inside life of the middle of Long Island, at and just before that time, here are two samples : *' The Whitmans, at the beginning of the present century, lived in a long story-and-a-half farm-house, hugely timber'd, which is still stand- ing. A great smoke-canopied kitchen, with vast hearth and chimney, form'd one end of the house. The existence of slavery in New York at that time, and the possession by the family of some twelve or fifteen slaves, house and field servants, gave things quite a patriarchal look. The very young darkies could be seen, a swarm of them, toward sun- down, in this kitchen, squatted in a circle on the floor, eating their supper of Indian pudding and milk. In the house, and in food and furniture, all was rude, but substantial. No carpets or stoves were known, and no coffee, and tea or sugar only for the women. Rousing wood fires gave both warmth and light on winter nights. Pork, poultry, beef, and all the ordinary vegetables and grains were plentiful. Cider was the men's common drink, and used at meals. The clothes were mainly homespun. Journeys were made by both men and women on horseback. Both sexes labor'd with their own hands — the men on the farm — the women in the house and around it. Books were scarce, The annual copy of the almanac was a treat, and was pored over through the long winter evenings. I must not forget to mention that both these families were near enough to the sea to behold it from the high places, and to hear in still hours the roar of the surf; the latter, after a storm, giving a peculiar sound at night. Then all hands, male and female, went down frequently on beach and bathing parties, and IN AMERICA, 21 the men on practical expeditions for cutting salt hay, and for clamming and fishing. "—y Black birds (plenty,) Meadow-larks (plenty,) Ring doves. Cat-birds (plenty,) Owls, Cuckoos, Woodpeckers, Pond snipes (plenty,) King-birds, Cheewinks, Crows (plenty,) Qiiawks, Wrens, Ground robins, Kingfishers, Ravens, IS6 SPECIMEN DA YS Quails, Gray snipes. Turkey-buzzards, Eagles, Hen-hawks, High-holes, Yellow birds, Herons, Thrushes, Tits, Reed birds, Woodpigeons. rly came the Blue birds, Meadow lark. Killdeer, White-bellied swallow, Plover, Sandpiper, Robin, Wilson's thrush. Woodcock, Flicker. FULL-STARR'D NIGHTS. May 21. — Back in Camden. Again commencing one of those unusually transparent, full-starr'd, blue-black nights, as if to show that however lush and pompous the day may be, there is something left in the not-day that can outvie it. The rarest, finest sample of long-drawn-out clear-obscure, from sundown to 9 o'clock. I went down to the Delaware, and cross'd and cross' d. Yenus like blazing silver well up in the west. The large pale thin crescent of the new moon, half an hour high, sinking languidly under a bar-sinister of cloud, and then emerging. Arcturus right overhead. A faint fragrant sea-odor wafted up from the south. The gloaming, the temper'd coolness, with evf ry feature of the scene, indescribably soothing and tonic — one of those hours that give hints to the soul, impossible to put in a statement. (Ah, where would be any food for spirituality without night and the stars ?) The vacant spaciousness of the air, and the veil'd blue of the heavens, seem'd miracles enough. As the night advanc'd it changed its spirit and garments to ampler stateliness. J was almost consciQus of a definite IN AMERICA. 157 presence, Nature silently near. The great constellation of the Water-Serpent stretch'd its coils over more than half the heavens. The Swan with outspread wings was flying down the Milky Way. The northern Crown, the Eagle, Lyra, all up there in their places. From the whole dome shot down points of light, rapport with me, through the clear blue-black. All the usual sense of motion, all animal life, seem'd discarded, seem'd a fiction ; a curious power, like the placid rest of Egyptian gods, took possession, none the less potent for being impalpable. Earlier I had seen many bats, balancing in the luminous twilight, darting their black forms hither and yon over the river ; but now they altogether disappeared. The evening star and the moon had gone. Alertness and peace lay calmly couching together through the fluid universal shadows. Aug. 26. — Bright has the day been, and my spirits an equal forzando. Then comes the night, different, inexpres- sibly pensive, with its own tender and tempered splendor. Venus lingers in the west with a voluptuous dazzle unshown hitherto this summer. Mars rises early, and the red sulky moon, two days past her full ; Jupiter at night's meridian, and the long curling-slanted Scorpion stretching full view in the south, Antares-neck'd. Mars walks the heavens lord-paramount now ; all through this month I go out after supper and watch for him ; sometimes getting up at midnight to take another look at his unparalleled lustre. (I see lately an astronomer has made out through the new Washington telescope that Mars has certainly one moon, perhaps two.) Pale and distant, but near in the heavens, Saturn precedes him. 158 SPECIMEN DA YS MULLEINS AND MULLEINS. Large, placid mulleins, as summer advances, velvety in texture, of a light greenish-drab color, growing everywhere in the fields — at first earth's big rosettes in their broad- leav'd low cluster-plants, eight, ten, twenty leaves to a plant — plentiful on the fallow twenty-acre lot, at the end of the lane, and especially by the ridge-sides of the fences — then close to the ground, but soon springing up — leaves as broad as my hand, and the lower ones twice as long — so fresh and dewy in the morning — stalks now four or five, even seven or eight feet high. The farmers, I find, think the mullein a mean unworthy weed, but I have grown to a fondness for it. Every object has its lesson, enclosing the suggestion of everything else — and lately I sometimes think all is concentrated for me in these hardy, yellow- flower'd weeds. As I come down the lane early in the morning, I pause before their soft wool-like fleece and stem and broad leaves, glittering with countless diamonds. Annually for three summers now, they and I have silently return'd together; at such long intervals I stand or sit among them, musing — and woven with the rest, of so many hours and moods of partial rehabilitation — of my sane or sick spirit, here as near at peace as it can be. DISTANT SOUNDS. The axe of the wood-cutter, the measured thud of a single threshing-flail, the crowing of chanticleer in the barn- yard, (with invariable responses from other barn-yards,) and the lowing of cattle — but most of all, or far or near, the wind — through the high tree-tops, or through low bushes, laving one's face and hands so gently, this balmy- bright noon, the coolest for a long time, (Sept. 2) — I will IN AMERICA. 159 not call it sighing, for to me it is always a firm, sane, cheery expression, though a monotone, giving many varieties, or swift or slow, or dense or delicate. The wind in the patch of pine woods off there — how sibilant. Or at sea, I can imagine it this moment, tossing the waves, with spirts of foam flying far, and the free whistle, and the scent of the salt — and that vast paradox somehow with all its action and restlessness conveying a sense of eternal rest. Other adjuncts. — But the sun and moon here and these times. As never more wonderful by day, the gorgeous orb imperial, so vast, so ardently, lovingly hot — so never a more glorious moon of nights, especially the last three or four. The great planets too — Mars never before so flaming bright, so flashing-large, with slight yellow tinge, (the astronomers say — is it true ? — nearer to us than any time the past century) — and well up, lord Jupiter, (a little while since close by the moon) — and in the west, after the sun sinks, voluptuous Yenus, now languid and shorn of her beams, as if from some divine excess. A SUN-BATH— NAKEDNESS. Sunday, Aug. 27. — Another day quite free from mark'd prostration and pain. It seems indeed as if peace and nu- triment from heaven subtly filter into me as I slowly hobble down these country lanes and across fields, in the good air — as I sit here in solitude with Nature — open, voiceless, mystic, far removed, yet palpable, eloquent Nature. I merge myself in the scene, in the perfect day. Hovering over the clear brook-water, I am sooth'd by its soft gurgle in one place, and the hoarser murmurs of its three-foot fall in another. Come, ye disconsolate, in whom any latent i6o SPECIMEN DA YS eligibility is left — come get the sure virtues of creek-shore, and wood and field. Two months (July and August, 77,) have I absorb'd them, and they begin to make a new man of me. Every day, seclusion — every day at least two or three hours of freedom, bathing, no talk, no bonds, no dress, no books, no manners. Shall I tell you, reader, to what I attribute my already much-restored health ? That I have been almost two years, off and on, without drugs and medicines, and daily in the open air. Last summer I found a particularly secluded little dell off one side by my creek, originally a large dug- out marl-pit, now abandon'd, fill'd with bushes, trees, grass, a group of willows, a straggling bank, and a spring of delicious water running right through the middle of it, with two or three little cascades. Here I retreated every hot day, and follow it up this summer. Here I realize the meaning of that old fellow who said he was seldom less alone than when alone. Never before did I get so close to Nature ; never before did she come so close to me. By old habit, I pencill'd down from time to time, almost automatically, moods, sights, hours, tints and outlines, on the spot. Let me specially record the satisfaction of this current forenoon, so serene and primitive, so conventionally exceptional, natural. An hour or so after breakfast I wended my way down to the recesses of the aforesaid dell, which I and certain thrushes, cat-birds, &c., had all to ourselves. A light south-west wind was blowing through the tree-tops. It was just the place and time for my Adamic air-bath and flesh- brushing from head to foot. So hanging clothes on a rail near by, keeping old broadbrim straw on head and easy shoes on feet, havn't I had a good time the last two hours 1 First with the stiff-elastic bristles rasping arms, breast, IN AMERICA. i6i sides, till they turn'd scarlet — then partially bathing in the clear waters of the running brook — taking everything very leisurely, with many rests and pauses — stepping about barefooted every few minutes now and then in some neigh- boring black ooze, for unctuous mud-bath to my feet — a brief second and third rinsing in the crystal running waters — rubbing with the fragrant towel — slow negligent promenades on the turf up and down in the sun, varied with occasional rests, and further frictions of the bristle- brush — sometimes carrying my portable chair with me from place to place, as my range is quite extensive here, nearly a hundred rods, feeling quite secure from intrusion, (and that indeed I am not at all nervous about, if it accidentally happens.) As I walk'd slowly over the grass, the sun shone out enough to show the shadow moving with me. Somehow I seemed to get identity with each and every thing around me, in its condition. Nature was naked, and I was also. It was too lazy, soothing, and joyous-equable to speculate about. Yet I might have thought somehow in this vein : Perhaps the inner never lost rapport we hold with earth, light, air, trees, &c., is not to be realized through eyes and mind only, but through the whole corporeal body, which I will not have blinded or bandaged any more than the eyes. •Sweet, sane, still Nakedness in Nature ! — ah if poor, sick, prurient humanity in cities might really know you once more ! Is not nakedness then indecent % No, not inher- ently. It is your thought, your sophistication, your fear, your respectability, that is indecent. There come moods when these clothes of ours are not only too irksome to wear, but are themselves indecent. Perhaps indeed he or she to whom the free exhilarating extasy of nakedness in Nature has never been eligible (and how many thousands 282 1 62 SPECIMEN DA KS. there are !) has not really known what purity is — nor what faith or art or health really is. (Probably the whole curriculum of first-class philosophy, beauty, heroism, form, illustrated by the old Hellenic race — the highest height and deepest depth known to civilization in those depart- ments — came from their natural and religious idea of Nakedness.) Many such hours, from time to time, the last two sum- mers — I attribute my partial rehabilitation largely to them. Some good people may think it a feeble or half-crack*d way of spending one's time and thinking. May-be it is. THE OAKS AND I. 8eiot. 5, '77. — I write this, 11 A. M., sheltered under a dense oak by the bank, where I have taken refuge from a sudden rain. I came down here, (we had sulky drizzles all the morning, but an hour ago a lull,) for the before- mention'd daily and simple exercise I am fond of — to pull on that young hickory sapling out there — to sway and yield to its tough-limber upright stem — haply to get into my old sinews some of its elastic fibre and clear sap. I stand on the turf and take these health-pulls moderately and at intervals for nearly an hour, inhaling great draughts of fresh air. Wandering by the creek, I have three or four naturally favorable spots where I rest — besides a chair I lug with me and use for more deliberate occasions. At other spots convenient I have selected, besides the hickory just named, strong and limber boughs of beech or holly, in easy-reaching distance, for my natural gymnasia, for arms, chest, trunk-muscles. I can soon feel the sap and sinew rising through me, like mercury to heat. I hold on boughs IN AMERICA, 163 or slender trees caressingly there in the sun and shade, wrestle with their innocent stalwartness — and know the virtue thereof passes from them into me. (Or may-be we interchange — may-be the trees are more aware of it all than I ever thought.) But now pleasantly imprisoned here under the big oak — the rain dripping, and the sky covered with leaden clouds — nothing but the pond on one side, and the other a spread of grass, spotted with the milky blossoms of the wild carrot — the sound of an axe wielded at some distant wood-pile — yet in this dull scene, (as most folks would call it,) why am I so (almost) happy here and alone? Why would any intrusion, even from people I like, spoil the charm % But am I alone % Doubtless there comes a time — perhaps it has come to me — when one feels through his whole being, and pronouncedly the emotional part, that identity between himself subjectively and Nature objectively which Schelling and Fichte are so fond of pressing. How it is I know not, but I often realize a presence here — in clear moods I am certain of it, and neither chemistry nor reasoning nor esthetics will give the least explanation. All the past two summers it has been strengthening and nourishing my sick body and soul, as never before. Thanks, invisible physician, for thy silent delicious medicine, thy day and night, thy waters and thy airs, the banks, the grass, the trees, and e'en the weeds ! A QUINTETTE. While I have been kept by the rain under the shelter of my great oak, (perfectly dry and comfortable, to the rattle of the drops all around,) I have pencill'd off the mood of the hour in a little quintette, which I will give you : i64 . SPECIMEN DAYS At vacancy with Nature, Acceptive and at ease, Distilling the present hour, Whatever, wherever it is, And over the past, oblivion. Can you get hold of it, reader dear % and how do you like it anyhow ? THE FIRST FROST— MEMS. Where I was stopping I saw the first palpable frost, on my sunrise walk, October 6 ; all over the yet-green spread a light blue-gray veil, giving a new show to the entire landscape. I had but little time to notice it, for the sun rose cloudless and mellow-warm, and as I returned along the lane it had turned to glittering patches of wet. As I walk I notice the bursting pods of wild-cotton, (Indian hemp they call it here,) with flossy-silky contents, and dark red-brown seeds — a startled rabbit — I pull a handful of the balsamic life-everlasting and stuff it down in my trowsers- pocket for scent. THREE YOUNG MEN'S DEATHS. December 20. — Somehow I got thinking to-day of young men's deaths — not at all sadly or sentimentally, but gravely, realistically, perhaps a little artistically. Let me give the following three cases from budgets of personal memoranda, which I have been turning over, alone in my room, and resuming and dwelling on, this rainy afternoon. Who is there to whom the theme does not come home ? Then I don't know how it may be to others, but to me not only is there nothing gloomy or depressing in such cases — on the contrary, as reminiscences, I find them soothing, bracing, tonic. IN AMERICA. 165 Erastus Haskell. — [I just transcribe verbatim from a letter written by myself in one of the army hospitals, 16 years age, during the secession war.] Washington^ July 28, 1863. — Dear M., — I am writing this in the hospital, sitting by the side of a soldier, I do not expect to last many hours. His fate has been a hard one — he seems to be only 19 or 20 — Erastus Haskell, company K, 141st N. Y. — has been out about a year, and sick or half-sick more than half that time — has been down on the peninsula — was detail'd to go in the band as fifer-boy. While sick, the surgeon told him to keep up with the rest — (probably work'd and march'd too long.) He is a shy, and seems to me a very sensible boy — has fine manners — never complains — was sick down on the peninsula in an old storehouse — typhoid fever. The first week this July was brought up here — journey very bad, no accommodations, no nourishment, nothing but hard jolting, and exposure enough to make a well man sick ; (these fearful journeys do the job for many) — arrived here July 11th — a silent dark-skinn'd Spanish-looking youth, with large very dark blue eyes, peculiar looking. Doctor F. here made light of his sickness — said he would recover soon, &c. ; but I thought very different, and told F. so repeatedly ; (I came near quarreling with him about it from the first) — but he laugh'd, and would not listen to me. About four days ago, I told Doctor he would in my opinion lose the boy without doubt — but F. again laughed at me. The next day he changed his opinion — I brought the head surgeon of the post — he said the boy would probably die, but they would make a hard fight for him. The last two days he has been lying panting for breath — a pitiful sight. I have been with him some every day or night since he arrived. He suffers a great deal with the heat — says little or nothing — is flighty the last three days, i66 SPECIMEN DA YS at times — knows me always, however — calls me "Walter" — (sometimes calls the name over and over and over again, musingly, abstractedly, to himself.) His father lives at Breesport, Chemung county, N. Y., is a mechanic with large family — is a steady, religious man ; his mother too is living. I have written to them, and shall write again to-day — Erastus has not receiv'd a word from home for months. As I sit here writing to you, M., I wish you could see the whole scene. This young man lies within reach of me, flat on his back, his hands clasp'd across his breast, his thick black hair cut close ; he is dozing, breathing hard, every breath a spasm — it looks so cruel. He is a noble youngster, — I consider him past all hope. Often there is no one with him for a long while. I am here as much as possible. William Alcott, fireman. Camden^ Fov., 1874. — Last Monday afternoon his widow, mother, relatives, mates of the fire department, and his other friends, (I was one, only lately it is true, but our love grew fast and close, the days and nights of those eight weeks by the chair of rapid decline, and the bed of death,) gathered to the funeral of this young man, who had grown up, and was well-known here. With nothing special, perhaps, to record, I would give a word or two to his memory. He seem'd to me not an inappropriate specimen in character and elements, of that bulk of the average good American race that ebbs and flows perennially beneath this scum of eructations on the surface. Always very quiet in manner, neat in person and dress, good temper'd — punctual and industrious at his work, till he could work no longer — he just lived his steady, square, unobtrusive life, in its own humble sphere, doubt- less unconscious of itself. (Though I think there were currents of emotion and intellect undevelop'd beneath, far IN AMERICA, 167 deeper than his acquaintances ever suspected — or than he himself ever did.) He was no talker. His troubles, when he had any, he kept to himself. As there was nothing querulous about him in life, he made no complaints during his last sickness. He was one of those persons that while his associates never thought of attributing any particular talent or grace to him, yet all insensibly, really, liked Billy Alcott. I, too, loved him. At last, after being with him quite a good deal — after hours and days of panting for breath, much of the time unconscious, (for though the consumption that had been lurking in his system, once thoroughly started, made rapid progress, there was still great vitality in him, and indeed for four or five days he lay dying, before the close,) late on Wednesday night, Nov. 4th, where we surrounded his bed in silence, there came a lull — a longer drawn breath, a pause, a faint sigh — another — a weaker breath, another sigh — a pause again and just a tremble — and the face of the poor wasted young man (he was just 26,) fell gently over, in death, on my hand, on the pillow. Charles Caswell. — [I extract the following, verbatim, from a letter to me dated September 29, from my friend John Burroughs, at Esopus-on-Hudson, New York State.] " S. was away when your picture came, attending his sick brother, Charles — who has since died — an event that has sadden'd me much. Charlie was younger than S., and a most attractive young fellow. He worked at my father's, and had done so for two years. He was about the best specimen of a young country farm-hand I ever knew. You would have loved him. He was like one of your poems. With his great strength, his blond hair, his cheer- fulness and contentment, his universal good will, and his i68 SPECIMEN DA YS silent manly ways, he was a youth hard to match. He was murder'd by an old doctor. He had typhoid fever, and the old fool bled him twice. He lived to wear out the fever, but had not strength to rally. He was out of his head nearly all the time. In the morning, as he died in the afternoon, S. was standing over him, when Charlie put up his arms around S.'s neck, and pulPd his face down and kiss'd him. S. said he knew then the end was near. (S. stuck to him day and night to the last.) When 1 was home in August, Charlie was cradling on the hill, and it was a picture to see him walk through the grain. All work seem'd play to him. He had no vices, any more than Nature has, and was belov'd by all who knew him. I have written thus to you about him, for such young men belong to you ; he was of your kind. I wish you could have known him. He had the sweetness of a child, and the strength and courage and readiness of a young Yiking. His mother and father are poor ; they have a rough, hard farm. His mother works in the field with her husband when the work presses. She has had twelve children." FEBRUARY DAYS. February 7, 1878. — Glistening sun to-day, with slight haze, warm enough, and yet tart, as I sit here in the open air, down in my country retreat, under an old cedar. For two hours I have been idly wandering around the woods and pond, lugging my chair, picking out choice spots to sit awhile — then up and slowly on again. All is peace here. Of course, none of the summer noises or vitality ; to-day hardly even the winter ones. I amuse myself by exer- cising my voice in recitations, and in ringing the changes on all the vocal and alphabetical sounds. Not even an IN AMERICA. 169 echo ; only the cawing of a solitary crow, flying at some distance. The pond is one bright, flat spread, without a ripple — a vast Claude Lorraine glass, in which I study the sky, the light, the leafless trees, and an occasional crow, with flapping wings, flying overhead. The brown fields have a few white patches of snow left. Feb, 9. — After an hour's ramble, now retreating, resting, sitting close by the pond, in a warm nook, writing this, shelter'd from the breeze, just before noon. The emotional aspects and influences of Nature ! I, too, like the rest, feel these modern tendencies (from all the prevailing intellec- tions, literature and poems,) to turn everything to pathos, ennui, morbidity, dissatisfaction, death. Yet how clear it is to me that those are not the born results, influences of Nature at all, but of one's own distorted, sick or silly soul. Here, amid this wild, free scene, how healthy, how joyous, how clean and vigorous and sweet ! Mid-afternoon — One of my nooks is south of the barn, and here I am sitting now, on a log, still basking in the sun, shielded from the wind. Near me are the cattle, feeding on corn-stalks. Occasionally a cow or the young bull (how handsome and bold he is !) scratches and munches the far end of the log on which I sit. The fresh milky odor is quite perceptible, also the perfume of hay from the barn. The perpetual rustle of dry corn-stalks, the low sough of the wind round the barn gables, the grunting of pigs, the distant whistle of a locomotive, and occasional crowing of chanticleers, are the sounds. Feb, 19.^ — Gold and sharp last night — clear and not much wind — the full moon shining, and a fine spread of constella- tions and little and big stars — Sirius very bright, rising early, preceded by many-orb'd Orion, glittering, vast, sworded, and chasing with his dog. The earth hard frozen, 1 70 SPECIMEN DA YS and a stiff glare of ice over the pond. Attracted by the calm splendor of the night, I attempted a short walk, but was driven back by the cold. Too severe for me also at 9 o'clock, when I came out this morning, so I turn'd back again. But now, near noon, I have walk'd down the lane, basking all the way in the sun (this farm has a pleasant southerly exposure,) and here I am, seated under the lee of a bank, close by the water. There are blue-birds already flying about, and I hear much chirping and twittering and two or three real songs, sustain'd quite awhile, in the mid- day brilliance and warmth. (There ! that is a true carol, coming out boldly and repeatedly, as if the singer meant it.) Then as the noon strengthens, the reedy trill of the robin — to my ear the most cheering of bird-notes. At intervals, like bars and breaks (out of the low murmur that in any scene, however quiet, is never entirely absent to a delicate ear,) the occasional crunch and cracking of the ice-glare congeal'd over the creek, as it gives way to the sunbeams — sometimes with low sigh — sometimes with indignant, obstinate tug and snort. (Robert Burns says in one of his letters : ** There is scarcely any earthly object gives me more — I do not know if I should call it pleasure — but something which exalts me — something which enraptures me — than to walk in the shelter'd side of a wood in a cloudy winter day, and hear the stormy wind howling among the trees, and raving over the plain. It is my best season of devotion." Some of his most characteristic poems were composed in such scenes and seasons.) A MEADOW LARK. March 16. — Fine, clear, dazzling morning, the sun an hour high, the air just tart enough. What a stamp in IN AMERICA, 171 advance my whole day receives from the song of that meadow lark perch'd on a fence-stake twenty rods distant ! Two or three liquid-simple notes, repeated at intervals, full of careless happiness and hope. With its peculiar shimmer- ing-slow progress and rapid-noiseless action of the wings, it flies on a ways, lights on another stake, and so on to another, shimmering and singing many minutes. SUNDOWN LIGHTS. May 6, 5 P. Jf. — This is the hour for strange effects in light and shade — enough to make a colorist go delirious — long spokes of molten silver sent horizontally through the trees (now in their brightest tenderest green,) each leaf and branch of endless foliage a lit-up miracle, then lying all prone on the youthful-ripe, interminable grass, and giving the blades not only aggregate but individual splendor, in ways unknown to any other hour. I have particular spots where I get these effects in their perfection. One broad splash lies on the water, with many a rippling twinkle, offset by the rapidly deepening black -green murky - transparent shadows behind, and at intervals all along the banks. These, with great shafts of horizontal fire thrown among the trees and along the grass as the sun lowers, give effects more and more peculiar, more and more superb, unearthly, rich and dazzling. THOUGHTS UNDER AN OAK— A DREAM. June 2. — This is the fourth day of a dark northeast storm, wind and rain. Day before yesterday was my birthday. I have now enter'd on my 60th year. Every day of the storm, protected by overshoes and a waterproof blanket, I regularly come down to the pond, and ensconce 172 SPECIMEN DAYS myself under the lee of the great oak ; I am here now writing these lines. The dark smoke-col or'd clouds roll in furious silence athwart the sky ; the soft green leaves dangle all round me ; the wind steadily keeps up its hoarse, soothing music over my head — Nature's mighty whisper. Seated here in solitude I have been musing over my life — connecting events, dates, as links of a chain, neither sadly nor cheerily, but somehow, to-day here under the oak, in the rain, in an unusually matter-of-fact spirit. But my great oak — sturdy, vital, green — five feet thick at the butt. I sit a great deal near or under him. Then the tulip tree near by — the Apollo of the woods — tall and graceful, yet robust and sinewy, inimitable in hang of foliage and throwing-out of limb ; as if the beauteous, vital, leafy creature could walk, if it only would. (I had a sort of dream-trance the other day, in which I saw my favorite trees step out and promenade up, down and around, very curiously — with a whisper from one, leaning down as he pass'd me, We do all this on the present occasion, exceptionally , just for you.) CLOVER AND HAY PERFUME. July 3d, ith, bth. — Clear, hot, favorable weather — has been a good summer — the growth of clover and grass now generally mow'd. The familiar delicious perfume fills the barns and lanes. As you go along you see the fields of grayish white slightly tinged with yellow, the loosely stack'd grain, the slow-moving wagons passing, and farmers in the fields with stout boys pitching and loading the sheaves. The corn is about beginning to tassel. All over the middle and southern states the spear-shaped battalia, multitudinous, curving, flaunting — long, glossy, dark-green IN AMERICA. 173 plumes for the great horseman, earth. I hear the cheery notes of my old acquaintance Tommy quail ; but too late for the whip-poor-will, (though I heard one solitary lingerer night before last.) I watch the broad majestic flight of a turkey-buzzard, sometimes high up, sometimes low enough to see the lines of his form, even his spread quills, in relief against the sky. Once or twice lately I have seen an eagle here at early candle-light, flying low. AN UNKNOWN. June 15. — To-day I noticed a new large bird, size of a nearly grown hen — a haughty, white-bodied dark-wing'd hawk — I suppose a hawk from his bill and general look — only he had a clear, loud, quite musical, sort of bell-like call, which he repeated again and again, at intervals, from a lofty dead tree-top, overhanging the water. Sat there a long time, and I on the opposite bank watching him. Then he darted down, skimming pretty close to the stream — rose slowly, a magnificent sight, and saiFd with steady wide- spread wings, no flapping at all, up and down the pond two or three times, near me, in circles in clear sight, as if for my delectation. Once he came quite close over my head ; I saw plainly his hook'd bill and hard restless eyes. BIRD-WHISTLING. How much music (wild, simple, savage, doubtless, but so tart-sweet,) there is in mere whistling. It is four-fifths of the utterance of birds. There are all sorts and styles. For the last half-hour, now, while I have been sitting here, some feather'd fellow away off in the bushes has been repeating over and over again what I may call a kind of throbbing whistle. And now a bird about the robin size 174 SPECIMEN DA YS has just appeared, all mulberry red, flitting among the bushes — head, wings, body, deep red, not very bright — no song, as I have heard. 4 o'clock : There is a real concert going on around me — a dozen different birds pitching in with a will. There have been occasional rains, and the growths all show its vivifying influences. As I finish this, seated on a log close by the pond-edge, much chirping and trilling in the distance, and a feather'd recluse in the woods near by is singing deliciously — not many notes, but full of music of almost human sympathy — continuing for a long, long while. HORSE-MINT. Aug. 22. — Not a human being, and hardly the evidence of one, in sight. After my brief semi-daily bath, I sit here for a bit, the brook musically brawling, to the chromatic tones of a fretful cat-bird somewhere off in the bushes. On my walk hither two hours since, through fields and the old lane, I stopt to view, now the sky, now the mile-off woods on the hill, and now the apple orchards. What a contrast from New York's or Philadelphia's streets ! Everywhere great patches of dingy-blossom'd horse-mint wafting a spicy odor through the air, (especially evenings.) Every- where the flowering boneset, and the rose-bloom of the wild bean. THREE OF US. July 14. — My two kingfishers still haunt the pond. In the bright sun and breeze and perfect temperature of to-day, noon, I am sitting here by one of the gurgling brooks, dipping a French water-pen in the limpid crystal, and using it to write these lines, again watching the feather'd twain, as they fly and sport athwart the water, so close, almost touching into its surface. Indeed there seem to be IN AMERICA. 175 three of us. For nearly an hour I indolently look and join them while they dart and turn and take their airy gambols, sometimes far up the creek disappearing for a few moments, and then surely returning again, and perform- ing most of their flight within sight of me, as if they knew I appreciated and absorb'd their vitality, spirituality, faith- fulness, and the rapid, vanishing, delicate lines of moving yet quiet electricity they draw for me across the spread of the grass, the trees, and the blue sky. While the brook babbles, babbles, and the shadows of the boughs dabble in the sunshine around me, and the cool west by-nor'-west wind faintly soughs in the thick bushes and tree tops. Among the objects of beauty and interest now beginning to appear quite plentifully in this secluded spot, I notice the humming-bird, the dragon-fly with its wings of slate- color'd gauze, and many varieties of beautiful and plain butterfles, idly flapping among the plants and wild posies. The mullein has shot up out of its nest of broad leaves, to a tall stalk towering sometimes ^yoi or six feet high, now studded with knobs of golden blossoms. The milk-weed, (I see a great gorgeous creature of gamboge and black lighting on one as I write,) is in flower, with its delicate red fringe ; and there are profuse clusters of a feathery blossom waving in the wind on taper stems. I see lots of these and much else in every direction, as I saunter or sit. For the last half hour a bird has persistently kept up a simple, sweet, melodious song, from the bushes. (I have a positive con- viction that some of these birds sing, and others fly and flirt about here, for my especial benefit.) DEATH OF WILLIAM CULLEN BRYANT. N&uo York City, — Came on from West Philadelphia, June 13, in the 2 p. m. train to Jersey city, and so across and to 176 SPECIMEN DA YS my friends, Mr. and Mrs. J. H. J., and their large house, large family and large hearts,) amid which I feel at home, at peace — away up on Fifth avenue, near Eighty-sixth street, quiet, breezy, overlooking the dense woody fringe of the park — plenty of space and sky, birds chirping, and air comparatively fresh and odorless. Two hours before start- ing, saw the announcement of William Oullen Bryant's funeral, and felt a strong desire to attend. I had known Mr. Bryant over thirty years ago, and he had been markedly kind to me. Off and on, along that time for years as they pass'd, we met and chatted together. I thought him very sociable in his way, and a man to become attach'd to. We were both walkers, and when I work'd in Brooklyn he several times came over, middle of afternoons, and we took rambles miles long, till dark, out towards Bedford or Flatbush, in company. On these occasions he gave me clear accounts of scenes in Europe — the cities, looks, architecture, art, especially Italy — where he had travel'd a good deal. June 14. — The Funeral, — And so the good, stainless, noble old citizen and poet lies in the closed coffin there — and this is his funeral. A solemn, impressive, simple scene, to spirit and senses. The remarkable gathering of gray heads, celebrities — the finely render'd anthem, and other music — the church, dim even now at approaching noon, in its light from the mellow-stain'd windows — the pronounc'd eulogy on the bard who loved Nature so fondly, and sung so well her shows and seasons — ending with these appropriate well-known lines : I gazed upon the glorious sky, And the green mountains round, And thought that when I came to lie At rest within the ground, IN AMERICA, 177 'Twere pleasant that in flowery June, When brooks send up a joyous tune, And groves a cheerful sound, The sexton's hand, my grave to make, The rich green mountain turf should break. JAUNT UP THE HUDSON. June 20th, — On the "Mary Powell," enjoy'd everything beyond precedent. The delicious tender summer day, just warm enough — the constantly changing but ever beautiful panorama on both sides of the river — (went up near a hun- dred miles) — the high straight walls of the stony Palisades — beautiful Yonkers, and beautiful Irvington — the never- ending hills, mostly in rounded lines, swathed with verdure, — the distant turns, like great shoulders in blue veils — the frequent gray and brown of the tall-rising rocks — the river itself, now narrowing, now expanding — the white sails of the many sloops, yachts, (fee, some near, some in the dis- tance — the rapid succession of handsome villages and cities, (our boat is a swift traveler, and makes few stops) — the Race — picturesque West Point, and indeed all along — the costly and often turreted mansions forever showing in some cheery light color, through the woods — make up the scene. HAPPINESS AND RASPBERRIES. June 21. — Here I am, on the west bank of the Hudson, 80 miles north of New York, near Esopus, at the hand- some, roomy, honey suckle-and-rose-embower'd cottage of John Burroughs. The place, the perfect June days and nights, (leaning toward crisp and cool,) the hospitality of J. and Mrs. B., the air, the fruit, (especially my favorite dish, currants and raspberries, mixed, sugar'd, fresh and ripe from the bushes — I pick 'em myself,) — the room I 283 178 SPECIMEN DA YS occupy at night, the perfect bed, the window giving an ample view of the Hudson and the opposite shores, so won- derful toward sunset, and the rolling music of the RR. trains, far over there — the peaceful rest — the early Yenus- heralded dawn — the noiseless splash of sunrise, the light and warmth indescribably glorious, in which, (soon as the sun is well up,) I have a capital rubbing and rasping with the ilesh-brush — with an extra scour on the back by Al. J., who is here with us — all inspiriting my invalid frame with new life, for the day. Then, after some whiffs of morning air, the delicious coffee of Mrs. B., with the cream, straw- berries, and many substantial, for breakfast. A SPECIMEN TRAMP FAMILY. June 22. — This afternoon we went out (J. B., Al. and I) on quite a drive around the country. The scenery, the perpetual stone fences, (some venerable old fellows, dark- spotted with lichens) — the many fine locust-trees — the runs of brawling water, often over descents of rock — these, and lots else. It is lucky the roads are first-rate here, (as they are,) for it is up or down hill everywhere, and sometimes steep enough. B. has a tip-top horse, strong; young, and both gentle and fast. There is a great deal of waste land and hills on the river edge of Ulster county, with a wonderful luxuriance of wild flowers and bushes — and it seems to me I never saw more vitality of trees — eloquent hemlocks, plenty of locusts and fine maples, and the balm of Gilead, giving out aroma. In the fields and along the road-sides unusual crops of the tall-stem m'd wild daisy, white as milk and yellow as gold. We pass'd quite a number of tramps, singly or in couples — one squad, a family in a rickety one-horse wagon, with IN AMERICA. 179 some baskets evidently their work and trade — the man seated on a low board, in front, driving — the gauntish woman by his side, with a baby well bundled in her arms, its little red feet and lower legs sticking out right towards us as we pass'd — and in the wagon behind, we saw two (or three) crouching little children. It was a queer, taking, rather sad picture. If I had been alone and on foot, I should have stopped and held confab. But on our return nearly two hours afterward, we found them a ways further along the same road, in a lonesome open spot, haul'd aside, unhitch'd, and evidently going to camp for the night. The freed horse was not far off, quietly cropping the grass. The man was busy at the wagon, the boy had gather'd some dry wood, and was making a fire — and as we went a little further we met the woman afoot. I could not see her face, in its great sun-bonnet, but somehow her figure and gait told misery, terror, destitution. She had the rag-bundled, half-starv'd infant still in her arms, and in her hands held two or three baskets, which she had evidently taken to the next house for sale. A little barefoot five-year old girl- child, with fine eyes, trotted behind her, clutching her gown. We stopp'd, asking about the baskets, which we bought. As we paid the money, she kept her face hidden in the recesses of her bonnet. Then as we started, and stopp'd again, AL, (whose sympathies were evidently aroused,) went back to the camping group to get another basket. He caught a look of her face, and talk'd with her a little. Eyes, voice and manner were those of a corpse, animated by electricity. She was quite young — the man she was traveling with, middle-aged. Poor woman — what story was it, out of her fortunes, to account for that inexpressibly scared way, those glassy eyes, and that hollow voice? i8o SPECIMEN DAYS MANHATTAN FROM THE BAY. June 25. — Returned to New York last night. Out to- day on the waters for a sail in the wide bay, southeast of Staten island — a rough, tossing tide, and a free sight — the long stretch of Sandy Hook, the highlands of Navesink, and the many vessels outward and inward bound. We came up through the midst of all, in the full sun. I especially enjoy'd the last hour or two. A moderate sea- breeze had set in ; yet over the city, and the waters adjacent, was a thin haze, concealing nothing, only adding to the beauty. From my point of view, as I write amid the soft breeze, with a sea-temperature, surely nothing on earth of its kind can go beyond this show. To the left the North river with its far vista — nearer, three or four war- ships, anchor'd peacefully — the Jersey side, the banks of Weehawken, the Palisades, and the gradually receding blue, lost in the distance — to the right the East river — the mast-heram'd shores — the grand obelisk-like towers of the bridge, one on either side, in haze, yet plainly defin'd, giant brothers twain, throwing free graceful interlinking loops high across the tumbled tumultuous current below — (the tide is just changing to its ebb) — the broad water-spread everywhere crowded — no, not crowded, but thick as stars in the sky — with all sorts and sizes of sail and steam vessels, plying ferry-boats, arriving and departing coasters, great ocean Dons, iron-black, modern, magnificent in size and power, filPd with their incalculable value of human life and precious merchandise — with here and there, above all, those daring, careening things of grace and wonder, those white and shaded swift-darting fish-birds, (I wonder if shore or sea elsewhere can outvie them,) ever with their slanting spars, and fierce, pure, hawk-like beauty and motion — first- IN AMERICA. i8i class New York sloop or schooner yachts, sailing, this fine day, the free sea in a good wind. And rising out of the midst, tall-topt, ship-hemm'd, modern, American, yet strangely oriental, Y-shaped Manhattan, with its compact mass, its spires, its cloud-touching edifices group'd at the centre — the green of the trees, and all the w^hite, brown and gray of the architecture well blended, as I see it, under a miracle of limpid sky, delicious light of heaven above, and June haze on the surface below. HUMAN AND HEROIC NEW YORK. The general subjective view of New York and Brooklyn — (will not the time hasten when the two shall be municipally united in one, and named Manhattan *?) — what I may call the human interior and exterior of these great seething oceanic populations, as I get it in this visit, is to me best of all. After an absence of many years, (I went away at the outbreak of the secession war, and have never been back to stay since,) again I resume with curiosity the crowds, the streets I knew so well, Broadway, the ferries, the west side of the city, democratic Bowery — human appearances and manners as seen in all these, and along the wharves, and in the perpetual travel of the horse-cars, or the crowded excursion steamers, or in Wall and Nassau streets by day — in the places of amusement at night — bubbling and whirling and moving like its own environment of waters — endless humanity in all phases — Brooklyn also — ^taken in for the last three weeks. No need to specify minutely — enough to say that (making all allowances for the shadows and side- streaks of a million-headed-city) the brief total of the impressions, the human qualities, of these vast cities, is to me comforting, even heroic, beyond statement. Alertness, i82 SPECIMEN DA YS generally fine physique, clear eyes that look straight at you, a singular combination of reticence and self-possession, with good nature and friendliness-— a prevailing range of according manners, taste and intellect, surely beyond any elsewhere upon earth — and a palpable outcropping of that personal comradeship I look forward to as the subtlest, strongest future hold of this many-item'd Union — are not only constantly visible here in these mighty channels of men, but they form the rule and average. To-day, I should say — defiant of cynics and pessimists, and with a full knowledge of all their exceptions — an appreciative and perceptive study of the current humanity of New York gives the directest proof yet of successful Democracy, and of the solution of that paradox, the eligibility of the free and fully developed individual with the paramount aggregate. In old age, lame and sick, pondering for years on many a doubt and danger for this republic of ours — fully aware of all that can be said on the other side — I find in this visit to New York, and the daily contact and rapport with its myriad people, on the scale of the oceans and tides, the best, most effective medicine my soul has yet partaken — the grandest physical habitat and surroundings of land and water the globe affords — namely, Manhattan island and Brooklyn, which the future shall join in one city — city of superb democracy, amid superb surroundings. HOURS FOR THE SOUL. July 22dy 1878. — Living down in the country again. A wonderful conjunction of all that goes to make those some- time miracle-hours after sunset — so near and yet so far. Perfect, or nearly perfect days, I notice, are not so very uncommon ; but the combinations that make perfect nights are few, even in a life time. We have one of tliose IN AMERICA. 183 perfections to-night. Sunset left things pretty clear ; the larger stars were visible soon as the shades allow'd. A while after 8, three or four great black clouds suddenly rose, seemingly from different points, and sweeping with broad swirls of wind but no thunder, underspread the orbs from view everywhere, and indicated a violent heat-storm. But without storm, clouds, blackness and all, sped and vanish'd as suddenly as they had risen ; and from a little after 9 till 11 the atmosphere and the whole show above were in that state of exceptional clearness and glory just alluded to. In the northwest turned the Great Dipper with it pointers round the Cynosure. A little south of east the constellation of the Scorpion was fully up, with red Antares glowing in its neck ; while dominating, majestic Jupiter swam, an hour and a half risen, in the east — (no moon till after 11.) A large part of the sky seem'd just laid in great splashes of phosphorus. You could look deeper in, farther through, than usual ; the orbs thick as heads of wheat in a field. Not that there was any special brilliancy either — nothing near as sharp as I have seen of keen winter nights, but a curious general luminousness throughout to sight, sense, and soul. The latter had much to do with it. (I am convinced there are hours of Nature, especially of the atmosphere, mornings and evenings, address'd to the soul. Night transcends, for that purpose, what the proudest day can do.) Now, indeed, if never before, the heavens declared the glory of God. It was to the full the sky of the Bible, of Arabia, of the prophets, and of the oldest poems. There, in abstrac- tion and stillness, (I had gone off by myself to absorb the scene, to have the spell unbroken,) the copiousness, the removedness, vitality, loose-clear-crowdedness, of that stellar concave spreading overhead, softly absorb'd into me, rising i84 SPECIMEN DA YS so free, interminably high, stretching east, west, north, south — and I, though but a point in the centre below, embodying all. As if for the first time, indeed, creation noiselessly sank into and through me its placid and untellable lesson, beyond — 0, so infinitely beyond ! — anything from art, books, sermons, or from science, old or new. The spirit's hour — religion's hour — the visible suggestion of God in space and time — now once definitely indicated, if never again. The untold pointed at — the heavens all paved with it. The Milky Way, as if some superhuman symphony, some ode of universal vagueness, disdaining syllable and sound — a flashing glance of Deity, address'd to the soul. All silently — the indescribable night and stars — far off and silently. The Dawn. — July 23. — This morning, between one and two hours before sunrise, a spectacle wrought on the same background, yet of quite difierent beauty and meaning. The moon well up in the heavens, and past her half, is shining brightly — the air and sky of that cynical -clear, Minerva-like quality, virgin cool — not the weight of senti- ment or mystery, or passion's ecstasy indefinable — not the religious sense, the varied All, distill'd and sublimated into one, of the night just described. Every star now clear-cut, showing for just what it is, there in the colorless ether. The character of the heralded morning, ineffably sweet and fresh and limpid, but for the esthetic sense alone, and for purity without sentiment. I have itemized the night — but dare I attempt the cloudless dawn % (What subtle tie is this between one's soul and the break of day % Alike, and yet no two nights or morning shows ever exactly alike.) Preceded by an immense star, almost unearthly in its effusion of white splendor, with two or three long IN AMERICA, 185 unequal spoke-rays of diamond radiance, shedding down through the fresh morning air below — an hour of this, and then the sunrise. The East. — What a subject for a poem ! Indeed, where else a more pregnant, more splendid one % Where one more idealistic-real, more subtle, more sensuous-delicate % The East, answering all lands, all ages, peoples ; touching all senses, here, immediate, now — and yet so indescribably far off — such retrospect ! The East — long-stretching — so losing itself — the orient, the gardens of Asia, the womb of history and song — forth-issuing all those strange, dim cavalcades — Florid with blood, pensive, rapt with musings, hot with passion, Sultry with perfume, with ample and flowing garments, "With sunburnt visage, intense soul and glittering eyes. Always the East — old, how incalculably old ! And yet here the same — ours yet, fresh as a rose, to every morning, every life, to-day — and always will be. Se'pt 17. — Another presentation — same theme — just before sunrise again, (a favorite hour with me.) The clear gray sky, a faint glow in the dull liver-color of the east, the cool fresh odor and the moisture — the cattle and horses off there grazing in the fields — the star Venus again, two hours high. For sounds, the chirping of crickets in the grass, the clarion of chanticleer, and the distant cawing of an early crow. Quietly over the dense fringe of cedars and pines rises that dazzling, red, transparent disk of flame, and the low sheets of white vapor roll and roll into dissolution. The Moon. — May 18. — I went to bed early last night, but found myself waked shortly after 12, and, turning awhile sleepless and mentally feverish, I rose, dress'd myself, sallied forth and walk'd down the lane. The full 1 86 SPECIMEN DAYS moon, some three or four hours up — a sprinkle of light and less-light clouds just lazily moving — Jupiter an hour high in the east, and here and there throughout the heavens a random star appearing and disappearing. So, beauti- fully veil'd and varied — the air, with that early-summer perfume, not at all damp or raw — at times Luna languidly emerging in richest brightness for minutes, and then partially envelop'd again. Far off a whip-poor-will plied his notes incessantly. It was that silent time between 1 and 3. The rare nocturnal scene, how soon it sooth'd and pacified me ! Is there not something about the moon, some relation or reminder, which no poem or literature has yet caught? (In very old and primitive ballads I have come across lines or asides that suggest it.) After a while the clouds mostly clear'd, and as the moon swam on, she carried, shimmering and shifting, delicate color-effects of pellucid green and tawny vapor. Let me conclude this part with an extract, (some writer in the "Tribune," May 16, 1878 :) No one ever gets tired of the moon. Goddess that she is by dower of her eternal beauty, she is a true woman by her tact — ^knows the charm of being seldom seen, of coming by surprise and staying but a little while ; never wears the same dress two nights running, nor all night the same way ; commends herself to the matter-of-fact people by her usefulness, and makes her uselessness adored by poets, artists, and all lovers in all lands ; lends herself to every symbolism and to every emblem ; is Diana's bow and Venus's mirror and Mary's throne ; is a sickle, a scarf, an eyebrow, his face or her face, as look'd at by her or by him ; is the madman's hell, the poet's heaven, the baby's toy, the philosopher's study ; and while her admirers follow her footsteps, and hang on her lovely looks, she knows how to keep her woman's secret — her other side — unguess'd and unguessable. Furthermore. — February 19, 1880. — Just before 10 p. m. cold and entirely clear again, the show overhead, bearing IN AMERICA, 187 southwest, of wonderful and crowded magnificence. The moon in her third quarter — the clusters of the Hyades and Pleiades, with the planet Mars between — in full crossing sprawl in the sky the great Egyptian X, (Sirius, Procyon, and the main stars in the constellations of the Ship, the Dove, and of Orion ;) just north of east Bootes, and in his knee Arcturus, an hour high, mounting the heaven, ambi- tiously large and sparkling, as if he meant to challenge with Sirius the stellar supremacy. With the sentiment of the stars and moon such nights I get all the free margins and indefiniteness of music or poetry, fused in geometry's utmost exactness. STRAW-COLOR'D AND OTHER PSYCHES. Aug. 4. — A pretty sight ! Where I sit in the shade — a warm day, the sun shining from cloudless skies, the forenoon well advanced — I look over a ten-acre field of luxuriant clover-hay, (the second crop) — the livid-ripe red blossoms and dabs of August brown thickly spotting the prevailing dark-green. Over all flutter myriads of light- yellow butterflies, mostly skimming along the surface, dipping and oscillating, giving a curious animation to the scene. The beautiful, spiritual insects ! straw-color'd Psyches ! Occasionally one of them leaves his mates, and mounts, perhaps spirally, perhaps in a straight line in the air, fluttering up, up, till literally out of sight. In the lane as I came along just now I noticed one spot, ten feet square or so, where more than a hundred had collected, holding a revel, a gyration-dance, or butterfly good-time, winding and circling, down and across, but always keeping within the limits. The little creatures have come out all of a sudden the last few days, and are now very plentiful, 1 88 SPECIMEN DA YS As I sit outdoors, or walk, I hardly look around without somewhere seeing two (always two) fluttering through the air in amorous dalliance. Then their inimitable color, their fragility, peculiar motion — and that strange, frequent way of one leaving the crowd and mounting up, up in the free ether, and apparently never returning. As I look over the field, these yellow- wings everywhere mildly spark- ling, many snowy blossoms of the wild carrot gracefully bending on their tall and taper stems — while for sounds, the distant guttural screech of a flock of guinea-hens comes shrilly yet somehow musically to my ears. And now a faint growl of heat-thunder in the north — and ever the low rising and falling wind-purr from the tops of the maples and willows. Aug, 20. — Butterflies and butterflies, (taking the place of the bumble-bees of three months since, who have quite disappear 'd,) continue to flit to and fro, all sorts, white, yellow, brown, purple — now and then some gorgeous fellow flashing lazily by on wings like artists' palettes dabb'd with every color. Over the breast of the pond I notice many white ones, crossing, pursuing their idle capricious flight. Near where I sit grows a tall-stemm'd weed topt with a profusion of rich scarlet blossoms, on which the snowy insects alight and dally, sometimes four or five of them at a time. By-and-by a humming-bird visits the same, and I watch him coming and going, daintily balancing and shimmering about. These white butterflies give new beautiful contrasts to the pure greens of the August foliage, (we have had some copious rains lately,) and over the glistening bronze of the pond-surface. You can tame even such insects ; I have one big and handsome moth down here, knows and comes to me, likes me to hold him up on my extended hand. IN AMERICA, 189 Another Day, later. — A grand twelve-acre field of ripe cabbages with their prevailing hue of malachite green, and floating-flying over and among them in all directions myriads of these same white butterflies. As I came up the lane to-day I saw a living globe of the same, two to three feet in diameter, many scores cluster'd together and rolling along in the air, adhering to their ball-shape, six or eight feet above the ground. A NIGHT REMEMBRANCE. Aug. 25, 9-10 a. m. — I sit by the edge of the pond, everything quiet, the broad polish'd surface spread before me — the blue of the heavens and the white clouds returned from it — and flitting across, now and then, the reflection of some flying bird. Last night I was down here with a friend till after midnight; everything a miracle of splendor — the glory of the stars, and the completely rounded moon — the passing clouds, silver and luminous-tawny — now and then masses of vapory illuminated scud — and silently by my side my dear friend. The shades of the trees, and patches of moonlight on the grass — the softly blowing breeze, and just-palpable odor of the neighboring ripening corn — the indolent and spiritual night, inexpressibly rich, tender, suggestive — something altogether to filter through one's soul, and nourish and feed and soothe the memory long afterwards. WILD FLOWERS. This has been and is yet a great season for wild flowers ; oceans of them line the roads through the woods, border the edges of the water-runlets, grow all along the old fences, 190 SPECIMEN DAYS and are scatter'd in profusion over the fields. An eight- petal'd blossom of gold-yellow, clear and bright, with a brown tuft in the middle, nearly as large as a silver half- dollar, is very common ; yesterday on. a long drive I noticed it thickly lining the borders of the brooks every- where. Then there is a beautiful weed cover 'd with blue flowers, (the blue of the old Chinese teacups treasur'd by our grand-aunts,) I am continually stopping to admire — a little larger than a dime, and very plentiful. White, however, is the prevailing color. The wild carrot I have spoken of; also the fragrant life-everlasting. But there are all hues and beauties, especially on the frequent tracts of half -open scrub-oak and dwarf-cedar hereabput — wild asters of all colors. Notwithstanding the frost-touch the hardy little chaps maintain themselves in all their bloom. The tree-leaves, too, some of them are beginning to turn yellow or drab or dull green. The deep wine-color of the sumachs and gum-trees is already visible, and the straw- color of the dog-wood and beech. Let me give the names of some of these perennial blossoms and friendly weeds I have made acquaintance with hereabout one season or another in my walks : wild azalea, dandelions, wild honeysuckle, yarrow, wild roses, coreopsis, golden rod, wild pea, larkspur, woodbine, early crocus, elderberry, sweet flag, (great patches of it,) poke-weed, creeper, trumpet-flower, sun-flower, scented marjoram. chamomile, snakeroot, violets, Solomon's seal, clematis, sweet balm, bloodroot, IN AMERICA, 191 mint, (great plenty, ) swamp magnolia, wild geranium, milk-weed, wild heliotrope, wild daisy, (plenty,) burdock, wild chrysanthemum. A CIVILITY TOO LONG NEGLECTED. The foregoing reminds me of something. As the indi- vidualities I would mainly portray have certainly been slighted by folks who make pictures, volumes, poems, out of them — as a faint testimonial of ray own gratitude for many hours of peace and comfort in half-sickness, (and not by any means sure but they will somehow get wind of the compliment,) I hereby dedicate the last half of these Specimen Days to the bees, water- snakes, black-birds, crows, dragon-flies, millers, pond-turtles, mosquitoes, mulleins, tansy, peppermint, butterflies, moths (great and little, some wasps and hornets, splendid fellows,) cat birds (and all other birds,) glow-worms, (swarming millions cedars, of them indescribably strange tulip-trees (and all other trees,) and beautiful at night over the and to the spots and memories of pond and creek,) those days, and of the creek, DELAWARE RIVER— DAYS AND NIGHTS. April 5, 1879. — With the return of spring to the skies, airs, waters of the Delaware, depart the sea-gulls. I never tired of watching their broad and easy flight, in spirals, or as they oscillated with slow unflapping wings, or look'd down with curved beak, or dipping to the water after food. The crows, plenty enough all through the winter, have also 192 SPECIMEN DAYS vanished with the ice ; not one of them now to be seen. The steamboats have again come forth — bustling up, hand- some, freshly painted, for summer work — the Columbia, the Edwin Forrest, (the Republic not yet out,) the Reybold, the Nelly White, the Twilight, the Ariel, the Warner, the Perry, the Taggart, the Jersey Blue — even the hulky old Trenton — not forgetting those saucy little bull-pups of the current, the steamtugs. But let me bunch and catalogue the affair — the river itself, all the way from the sea — cape Island on one side and Henlopen light on the other — up the broad bay north, and so to Philadelphia, and on further to Trenton ; — the sights I am most familiar with, (as I live a good part of the time in Camden, I view matters from that outlook) — the great arrogant, black, full-freighted ocean steamers, inward or outward bound — the ample width here between the two cities, intersected by Windmill island — an occasional man- of-war, sometimes a foreigner, at anchor, with her guns and port-holes, and the boats, and the brown-faced sailors, and the regular oar-strokes, and the gay crowds of "visiting day'' — the frequent large and handsome three-masted schooners, (a favorite style of marine build, hereabout of late years,) some of them new and very jaunty, with their white-gray sails and yellow pine spars — the sloops dashing along in a fair wind — (I see one now, coming up, under broad canvas, her gaff-topsail shining in the sun, high and picturesque — what a thing of beauty amid the sky and waters !) — the crowded wharf-slips along the city — the flags of different nationalities, the sturdy English cross on its ground of blood, the French tricolor, the banner of the great North German empire, and the Italian and the Spanish colors-— sometimes, of an afternoon, the whole scene enliven'd by a fleet of yachts, in a half calm, lazily returning from a race IN AMERICA, 193 down at Gloucester; — the neat, rakish, revenue steamer ''Hamilton" in mid-stream, with her perpendicular stripes flaunting aft — and, turning the eyes north, the long ribands of fleecy- white steam, or dingy-black smoke, stretching far, fan-shaped, slanting diagonally across from the Kensington or Richmond shores, in the west-by-south- west wind. SCENES ON FERRY AND RIVER— LAST WINTER'S NIGHTS. Then the Camden ferry. What exhilaration, change, people, business, by day. What soothing, silent, wondrous hours, at night, crossing on the boat, most all to myself — pacing the deck, alone, forward or aft. What communion with the waters, the air, the exquisite chiaroscuro — the sky and stars, that speak no word, nothing to the intellect, yet so eloquent, so communicative to the soul. And the ferry men — little they know how much they have been to me, day and night — how many spells of listlessness, ennui, debility, they and their hardy ways have dispell'd. And the pilots — captains Hand, Walton, and Giberson by day, and captain Olive at night; Eugene Crosby, with his strong young arm so often supporting, circling, convoying me over the gaps of the bridge, through impediments, safely aboard. Indeed all my ferry friends — captain Frazee the superin- tendent, Lindell, Hiskey, Fred Rauch, Price, Watson, and a dozen more. And the ferry itself, with its queer scenes — sometimes children suddenly born in the waiting-houses (an actual fact — and more than once) — sometimes a mas- querade party, going over at night, with a band of music, dancing and whirling like mad on the broad deck, in their fantastic dresses ; sometimes the astronomer, Mr. Whitall, (who posts me up in points about the stars by a living 284 194 SPECIMEN DA YS lesson there and then, and answering every question) — sometimes a prolific family group, eight, nine, ten, even twelve I (Yesterday, as I crossed, a mother, father, and eight children, waiting in the ferry-house, bound westward somewhere.) I have mentioned the crows. I always watch them from the boats. They play quite a part in the winter scenes on the river, by day. Their black splatches are seen in relief against the snow and ice everywhere at that season — some- times flying and flapping — sometimes on little or larger cakes, sailing up or down the stream. One day the river was mostly clear — only a single long ridge of broken ice making a narrow stripe by itself, running along down the current for over a mile, quite rapidly. On this white stripe the crows were congregated, hundreds of them — a funny procession — (" half mourning" was the comment of some one.) Then the reception room, for passengers waiting — life illustrated thoroughly. Take a March picture I jotted there two or three weeks since. Afternoon, about 3 J o'clock, it begins to snow. There has been a matinee performance at the theater — from 4 J to 5 comes a stream of homeward bound ladies. I never knew the spacious room to present a gayer, more lively scene — handsome, well- drest Jersey women and girls, scores of them, streaming in for nearly an hour — the bright eyes and glowing faces, coming in from the air — a sprinkling of snow on bonnets or dresses as they enter — the ^\q or ten minutes' waiting — the chatting and laughing — (women can have capital times among themselves, with plenty of wit, lunches, jovial abandon) — Lizzie, the pleasant-manner'd waiting-room woman — for sound, the bell-taps and steam-signals of the departing boats with their rhythmic break and undertone — the domestic pictures, mothers with bevies of daughters. IN AMERICA. 195 (a charming sight) — children, countrymen — the railroad men in their blue clothes and caps— all the various characters of city and country represented or suggested. Then outside some belated passenger frantically running, jumping after the boat. Towards six o'clock the human stream gradually thickening — now a pressure of vehicles, drays, piled railroad crates — now a drove of cattle, making quite an excitement, the drovers with heavy sticks, belaboring the steaming sides of the frighten'd brutes. Inside the reception room, business bargains, flirting, love- making, eclair cissements J proposals — pleasant, sober-faced Phil coming in with his burden of afternoon papers — or Jo, or Charley (who jump'd in the dock last week, and saved a stout lady from drowning,) to replenish the stove, after clearing it with long crow-bar poker. Besides all this ** comedy human," the river affords nutriment of a higher order. Here are some of my memoranda of the past winter, just as pencilled down on the spot. A January Night. — Fine trips across the wide Delaware to-night. Tide pretty high, and a strong ebb. E-iver, a little after 8, full of ice, mostly broken, but some large cakes making our strong-timber'd steamboat hum and quiver as she strikes them. In the clear moonlight they spread, strange, unearthly, silvery, faintly glistening, as far as I can see. Bumping, trembling, sometimes hissing like a thousand snakes, the tide-procession, as we wend with or through it, affording a grand undertone, in keeping with the scene. Overhead, the splendor indescribable ; yet some- thing haughty, almost supercilious, in the night. Never did I realize more latent sentiment, almost passion^ in those silent interminable stars up there. One can understand, such a night, why, from the days of the Pharaohs or Job, 196 SPECIMEN DA YS the dome of heaven, sprinkled with planets, has supplied the subtlest, deepest criticism on human pride, glory, ambition. Another Winter Night, — I don't know anything more filling than to be on the wide firm deck of a powerful boat, a clear, cool, extra-moonlight night, crushing proudly and resistlessly through this thick, marbly, glistening ice. The whole river is now spread with it — some immense cakes. There is such weirdness about the scene — partly the quality of the light, with its tinge of blue, the lunar twilight — only the large stars holding their own in the radiance of the moon. Temperature sharp, comfortable for motion, dry, full of oxygen. But the sense of power — the steady, scorn- ful, imperious urge of our strong new engine, as she ploughs her way through the big and little cakes. Another, — For two hours I cross'd and recross'd, merely for pleasure — for a still excitement. Both sky and river went through several changes. The first for awhile held two vast fan-shaped echelons of light clouds, through which the moon waded, now radiating, carrying with her an aureole of tawny transparent brown, and now flooding the whole vast with clear vapory light-green, through which, as through an illuminated veil, she moved with measur'd womanly motion. Then, another trip, the heavens would be absolutely clear, and Luna in all her efi'ulgence. The big Dipper in the north, with the double star in the handle much plainer than common. Then the sheeny track of light in the water, dancing and rippling. Such transformations ; such pictures and poems, inimitable. Another, — I am studying the stars, under advantages, as I cross to-night. (It is late in February, and again extra clear.) High toward the west, the Pleiades, tremulous with delicate sparkle, in the soft heavens. Aldebaran, IN AMERICA, 197 leading the V-shaped Hyades — and overhead Capella and her kids. Most majestic of all, in full display in the high south, Orion, vast-spread, roomy, chief histrion of the stage, with his shiny yellow rosette on his shoulder, and his three Kings — and a little to the east, Sirius, calmly arrogant, most wondrous single star. Going late ashore, (I couldn't give up the beauty and soothingness of the night,) as I staid around, or slowly wander'd, I heard the echoing calls of the railroad men in the West Jersey depot yard, shifting and switching trains, engines, &c. ; amid the general silence otherways, and something in the acoustic quality of the air, musical, emotional effects, never thought of before. I linger'd long and long, listening to them. Night of March 18, '79. — One of the calm, pleasantly cool, exquisitely clear and cloudless, early spring nights — the atmosphere again that rare vitreous blue-black, welcom'd by astronomers. Just at 8, evening, the scene overhead of certainly solemnest beauty, never surpass'd. Venus nearly down in the west, of a size and lustre as if trying to outshow herself, before departing. Teeming, maternal orb — I take you again to myself. I am reminded of that spring preceding Abraham Lincoln's murder, when I, restlessly haunting the Potomac banks, around Washington city, watch'd you, off there, aloof, moody as myself : As we walk'd up and down in the dark blue so mystic, As we walk'd in silence the transparent shadowy night, As I saw you had something to tell, as you bent to me night after night, As you droop'd from the sky low down, as if to my side, (while the other stars all look'd on,) As we wander'd together the solemn night. With departing Venus, large to the last, and shining even 1 98 SPECIMEN DA YS to the edge of the horizon, the vast dome presents at this moment, such a spectacle ! Mercury was visible just after sunset — a rare sight. Arcturus is now risen, just north of east. In calm glory all the stars of Orion hold the place of honor, in meridian, to the south — with the Dog-star a little to the left. And now, just rising, Spica, late, low, and slightly veil'd. Castor, E with their twinkling lamps, and hear the husky panting of the steamers ; or catch the sloops' and schooners' shadowy forms, like phantoms, white, silent, indefinite, out there. Then the Hudson of a clear moonlight night. But there is one sight the very grandest. Sometimes in the fiercest driving storm of wind, rain, haij or snow, a great eagle will appear over the river, now soaring with steady and now overhended wings — always confronting the gale, or perhaps cleaving into, or at times literally sitting upon it. It is like reading some first-class natural tragedy or epic, or hearing martial trumpets. The splendid bird enjoys the hubbub — is adjusted and equal to it — finishes it so artistically. His pinions just oscillating — the position of his head and neck — his resistless, occasionally varied flight — now a swirl, now an upward movement — the black clouds driving — the angry wash below — the hiss of rain, the wind's piping (perhaps the ice colliding, grunting) — he tacking or jibing — now, as it were, for a change, aban- doning himself to the gale, moving with it with such velocity — and now, resuming control, he comes up against it, lord of the situation and the storm — lord, amid it, of power and savage joy. Sometimes (as at present writing,) middle of sunny after- noon, the old "Yanderbilt" steamer stalking ahead — I plainly hear her rhythmic, slushing paddles — drawing by 2o6 SPECIMEN DA YS long hawsers an immense and varied following string, (" an old sow and pigs," the river folks call it.) First comes a big barge, with a house built on it, and spars towering over the roof ; then canal boats, a lengthened, clustering train, fasten'd and link'd together — the one in the middle, with high staff, flaunting a broad and gaudy flag — others with the almost invariable lines of new-wash'd clothes, drying ; two sloops and a schooner aside the tow — little wind, and that adverse — with three long, dark, empty barges bringing up the rear. People are on the boats : men lounging, women in sun-bonnets, children, stovepipes with streaming smoke. TWO CITY AREAS, CERTAIN HOURS. New York, May 24, 79. — Perhaps no quarters of this city (I have return'd again for awhile,) make more brilliant, animated, crowded, spectacular human presentations these fine May afternoons than the two I am now going to describe from personal observation. First : that area comprising Fourteenth street (especially the short range between Broadway and Fifth avenue) with Union square, its adjacencies, and so retrostretching down Broadway for half a mile. All the walks here are wide, and the spaces ample and free — now flooded with liquid gold from the last two hours of powerful sunshine. The whole area at 5 o'clock, the days of my observations, must have contain'd from thirty to forty thousand finely-dress'd people, all in motion, plenty of them good-looking, many beautiful women, often youths and children, the latter in groups with their nurses, — the trottoirs everywhere close-spread, thick-tangled, (yet no collision, no trouble,) with masses of bright color, action, and tasty toilets ; (surely the women dress better than ever before, and the men do too.) As if IN AMERICA. 207 New York would show these afternoons what it can do in its humanity, its choicest physique and physiognomy, and its countless prodigality of locomotion, dry goods, glitter, magnetism, and happiness. Second : also from 5 to 7 P. M. the stretch of Fifth avenue, all the way from the Central Park exits at Fifty- ninth street, down to Fourteenth, especially along the high grade by Fortieth street, and down the hill. A Mississippi of horses and rich vehicles, not by dozens and scores, but hundreds and thousands — the broad avenue filled and cramm'd with them — a moving, sparkling, hurrying crush, for more than two miles. (I wonder they don't get block'd, but I believe they never do.) Altogether it is to me the marvel sight of New York. I like to get in one of the Fifth avenue stages and ride up, stemming the swift- moving procession. I doubt if London or Paris or any city in the world can show such a carriage carnival as I have seen here ^^^ or six times these beautiful May afternoons. CENTRAL PARK WALKS AND TALKS. May 16 to 22. — I visit Central Park now almost every day, sitting, or slowly rambling, or riding around. The whole place presents its very best appearance this current month — the full flush of the trees, the plentiful white and pink of the flowering shrubs, the emerald green of the grass spreading everywhere, yellow dotted still with dandelions — the specialty of the plentiful gray rocks, peculiar to these grounds, cropping out, miles and miles — and over all the beauty and purity, three days out of four, of our summer skies. As I sit, placidly, early afternoon, off against Ninetieth street, the policeman, C. C, a well- form'd sandy-complexion'd young fellow, comes over and 2o8 SPECIMEN DA YS stands near me. We grow quite friendly and chatty forthwith. He is a New Yorker born and raised, and in answer to my questions tells me about the life of a New York Park policeman, (while he talks keeping his eyes and ears vigilantly open, occasionally pausing and moving where he can get full views of the vistas of the road, up and down, and the spaces around.) The pay is $2 40 a day (seven days to a week) — the men come on and work eight hours straight ahead, which is all that is required of them out of the twenty-four. The position has more risks than one might suppose — for instance if a team or horse runs away (which happens daily) each man is expected not only to be prompt, but to waive safety and stop wildest nag or nags — (do it, and don't be thinking of your bones or face) — give the alarm-whistle too, so that other guards may repeat, and the vehicles up and down the tracks be warn'd. Injuries to the men are continually happening. There is much alertness and quiet strength. (Few appre- ciate, I have often thought, the Ulyssean capacity, derring do, quick readiness in emergencies, practicality, unwitting devotion and heroism, among our American young men and working-people — the firemen, the railroad employes, the steamer and ferry men, the police, the conductors and drivers — the whole splendid average of native stock, city and country.) It is good work, though; and upon the whole, the Park force members like it. They see life, and the exciteme it keeps them up. There is not so much difficulty as might be supposed from tramps, roughs, or in keeping people " off the grass." The worst trouble of the regular Park employ^ is from malarial fever, chills, and the like. IN AMERICA. 209 A FINE AFTERNOON, 4 TO 6. Ten thousand vehicles careering through the Park this perfect afternoon. Such a show ! and I have seen all — watch'd it narrowly, and at my leisure. Private barouches, cabs, and coupds, some fine horseflesh — lapdogs, footmen fashions, foreigners, cockades on hats, crests on panels — the full oceanic tide of New York's wealth and '^gentility." It was an impressive, rich, interminable circus on a grand scale, full of action and color in the beauty of the day, under the clear sun and moderate breeze. Family groups, couples, single drivers — of course dresses generally elegant — much "style," (yet perhaps little or nothing, even in that direc- tion, that fully justified itself.) Through the windows of two or three of the richest carriages I saw faces almost corpse-like, so ashy and listless. Indeed the whole afiair exhibited less of sterling America, either in spirit or countenance, than I had counted on from such a select mass-spectacle. I suppose, as a proof of limitless wealth, leisure, and the aforesaid " gentility," it was tremendous. Yet what I saw those hours (I took two other occasions, two other afternoons to watch the same scene,) confirms a thought that haunts me every additional glimpse I get of our top-loftical general or rather exceptional phases of wealth and fashion in this country — namely, that they are ill at ease, much too conscious, cased in too many cere- ments, and far from happy — that there is nothing in them which we who are poor and plain need at all envy, and that instead of the perennial smell of the grass and woods and shores, their typical redolence is of soaps and essences, very rare may be, but suggesting the barber shop — something that turns stale and musty in a few hours anyhow. Perhaps the show on the horseback road was prettiest. 285 2 lo SPECIMEN DA YS Many groups (threes a favorite number,) some couples, some singly — many ladies — frequently horses or parties dashing along on a full run — fine riding the rule — a few really first-class animals. As the afternoon waned, the wheel'd carriages grew less, but the saddle-riders seemed to increase. They lingered long — and I saw some charming forms and faces. DEPARTING OF THE BIG STEAMERS. May 15. — A three hours' bay-trip from 12 to 3 this afternoon, accompanying " the City of Brussels " down as far as the Narrows, in behoof of some Europe-bound friends, to give them a good send ofi". Our spirited little tug, the " Seth Low," kept close to the great black ** Brussels," sometimes one side, sometimes the other, always up to her, or even pressing ahead, (like the blooded pony accompany- ing the royal elephant.) The whole afiair, from the first, was an animated, quick-passing, characteristic New York scene ; the large, good-looking, well-dress'd crowd on the wharf-end — men and women come to see their friends depart, and bid them God-speed — the ship's sides swarming with passengers — groups of bronze-faced sailors, with uniform'd officers at their posts — the quiet directions, as she quickly unfastens and moves out, prompt to a minute — the emotional faces, adieus and fluttering handkerchiefs, and many smiles and some tears on the wharf — the answering faces, smiles, tears and fluttering handkerchiefs, from the ship — (what can be subtler and finer than this play of faces on such occasions in these responding crowds ? — what go more to one's heart ?) — the proud, steady, noiseless cleaving of the grand oceaner down the bay — we speeding by her side a few miles, and then turning, wheeling, amid a babel IN AMERICA. 211 of wild hurrahs, shouted partings, ear-splitting steam whistles, kissing of hands and waving of handkerchiefs. This departing of the big steamers, noons or afternoons — there is no better medicine when one is listless or vapory. I am fond of going down Wednesdays and Saturdays — their more special days — to watch them and the crowds on the wharves, the arriving passengers, the general bustle and activity, the eager looks from the faces, the clear-toned voices, (a travel'd foreigner, a musician, told me the other day she thinks an American crowd has the finest voices in the world,) the whole look of the great, shapely black ships themselves, and their groups and lined sides — in the setting of our bay with the blue sky overhead. Two days after the above I saw the "Britannic," the "Donau," the " Helvetia" and the ^* Schiedam " steam out, all off for Europe — a magnificent sight. TWO HOURS ON THE MINNESOTA. From 7 to 9, aboard the United States school-ship Minnesota, lying up the North river. Captain Luce sent his gig for us about sundown, to the foot of Twenty-third street, and received us aboard with officer-like hospitality and sailor heartiness. There are several hundred youths on the Minnesota to be train'd for efficiently manning the government navy. I like the idea much ; and, so far as I have seen to-night, I like the way it is carried out on this huge vessel. Below, on the gun-deck, were gather'd nearly a hundred of the boys, to give us some of their singing exercises, with a melodeon accompaniment, play'd by one of their number. They sang with a will. The best part, however, was the sight of the young fellows themselves. I went over among them before the singing began, and talk'd 2 1 2 SPECIMEN DA YS a few minutes informally. They are from all the States ; I asked for the Southerners, but could only find one, a lad from Baltimore. In age, apparently, they range from about fourteen years to nineteen or twenty. They are all of American birth, and have to pass a rigid medical examin- ation ; well-grown youths, good flesh, bright eyes, looking straight at you, healthy, intelligent, nob a slouch among them, nor a menial — in every one the promise of a man. I have been to many public aggregations of young and old, and of schools and colleges, in my day, but I confess I have never been so near satisfied, so comforted, (both from the fact of the school itself, and the splendid proof of our country, our composite race, and the sample-promises of its good average capacities, its future,) as in the collection from all parts of the United States on this navy training ship. (" Are there going to be any men there ?" was the dry and pregnant reply of Emerson to one who had been crowding him with the rich material statistics and possibilities of some western or Pacific region.) May 26. — Aboard the Minnesota again. Lieut. Murphy kindly came for me in his boat. Enjoy 'd specially those brief trips to and fro — the sailors, tann'd, strong, so bright and able-looking, pulling their oars in long side-swing, man- of-war style, as they row'd me across. I saw the boys in companies drilling with small arms ; had a talk with Chaplain Rawson. At 11 o'clock all of us gathered to breakfast around a long table in the great ward room — I among the rest — a genial, plentiful, hospitable affair eveiy way — plenty to eat, and of the best ; became acquainted with several new ofiicers. This second visit, with its observations, talks, (two or three at random with the boys,) confirm'd my first impressions. IN AMERICA, 213 MATURE SUMMER DAYS AND NIGHTS. Aug. 4. — Forenoon — as I sit under the willow shade, (have retreated down in the country again,) a little bird is leisurely dousing and flirting himself amid the brook almost within reach of me. He evidently fears me not — takes me for some concomitant of the neighboring earthy banks, free bushery and wild weeds. 6 'p. m. — The last three days have been perfect ones for the season, (four nights ago copious rains, with vehement thunder and lightning.) I write this sitting by the creek watching my two kingfishers at their sundown sport. The strong, beautiful, joyous creatures ! Their wings glisten in the slanted sunbeams as they circle and circle around, occasionally dipping and dashing the water, and making long stretches up and down the creek. Wherever I go over fields, through lanes, in by-places, blooms the white-flowering wild-carrot, its delicate pat of snow-flakes crowning its slender stem, gracefully oscillating in the breeze. EXPOSITION BUILDING— NEW CITY HALL- RIVER TRIP. Philadelphia, Aug. 26. — Last night and to-night of unsurpass'd clearness, after two days' rain ; moon splendor and star splendor. Being out toward the great Exposition building. West Philadelphia, I saw it lit up, and thought I would go in. There was a ball, democratic but nice ; plenty of young couples waltzing and quadrilling — music by a good string-band. To the sight and hearing of these — to moderate strolls up and down the roomy spaces — to getting off" aside, resting in an arm-chair and looking up a long while at the grand high roof with its graceful and multitudinous work of iron rods, angles, gray colors, plays of 214 SPECIMEN DAYS light and shade, receding into dim outlines — to absorbing (in the intervals of the string band,) some capital volun- taries and rolling caprices from the big organ at the other end of the building — to sighting a shadow'd figure or group or couple of lovers every now and then passing some near or farther aisle — I abandon'd myself for over an hour. Returning home, riding down Market street in an open summer car, something detain'd us between Fifteenth and Broad, and I got out to view better the new, three-fifths- built marble edifice, the City Hall, of magnificent propor- tions — a majestic and lovely show there in the moonlight — flooded all over, " fagades, myriad silver-white lines and carved heads and mouldings, with the soft dazzle — silent, weird, beautiful — well, I know that never when tinish'd will that magnificent pile impress one as it impress'd me those fifteen minutes. To-night, since, I have been long on the river. I watch the C-shaped Northern Crown, (with the star Alshacca that blazed out so suddenly, alarmingly, one night a few years ago.) The moon in her third quarter, and up nearly all night. And there, as I look eastward, my long-absent Pleiades, welcome again to sight. For an hour I enjoy the soothing and vital scene to the low splash of waves — new stars steadily, noiselessly rising in the east. As I cross the Delaware, one of the deck-hands, F. R., tells me how a woman jump'd overboard and was drowned a couple of hours since. It happened in mid-channel — she leaped from the forward part of the boat, which went over her. He saw her rise on the other side in the swift running water, throw her arms and closed hands high up, (white hands and bare forearms in the moonlight like a flash,) and then she sank. (I found out afterwards that this young fellow had promptly jump'd in, swam after the IN AMERICA. 215 poor creature, and made, though unsuccessfully, the bravest efforts to rescue her ; but he didn't mention that part at all in telling me the story.) SWALLOWS ON THE RIVER; Sept, 3. — Cloudy and wet, and wind due east ; air without palpable fog, but very heavy with moisture — wel- come for a change. Forenoon, crossing the Delaware, I noticed unusual numbers of swallows in flight, circling, darting, graceful beyond description, close to the water. Thick, around the bows of the ferry-boat as she lay tied in her slip, they flew; and as we went out I watch'd beyond the pier-heads, and across the broad stream, their swift-winding loop-ribands of motion, down close to it, cutting and intersect- ing. Though I had seen swallows all my life, seem'd as though I never before realized their peculiar beauty and character in the landscape. (Some time ago, for an hour, in a huge old country barn, watching these birds flying, recall'd the 2 2d book of the Odyssey, where Ulysses slays the suitors, bringing things to eclaircissementy and Minerva, swallow-bodied, darts up through the spaces of the hall, sits high on a beam, looks complacently on the show of slaughter, and feels in her element, exulting, joyous.) BEGIN A LONG JAUNT WEST. The following three or four months (Sept. to Dec. '79) I made quite a western journey, fetching up at Denver, Colorado, and penetrating the Kocky Mountain region enough to get a good notion of it all. Left West Philadelphia after 9 o'clock one night, middle of September, in a comfortable sleeper. Oblivious of the two or three hundred miles across Pennsylvania ; at Pittsburgh in the 2 1 6 SPECIMEN DA YS morning to breakfast. Pretty good view of the city and Birmingham — fog and damp, smoke, coke-furnaces, flames, discolor'd wooden houses, and vast collections of coal- barges. Presently a bit of fine region, West Virginia, the Panhandle, and crossing the river, the Ohio. By day through the latter State — then Indiana — and so rock'd to slumber for a second night, flying like lightning through Illinois. IN THE SLEEPER, What a fierce weird pleasure to lie in my berth at night in the luxurious palace-car, drawn by the mighty Baldwin — embodying, and filling me, too, full of the swiftest motion, and most resistless strength ! It is late, perhaps midnight or after — distances join'd like magic — as we speed through Harrisburg, Columbus, Indianapolis. The element of danger adds zest to it all. On we go, rumbling and flashing, with our loud whinnies thrown out from time to time, or trumpet-blasts, into the darkness. Passing the homes of men, the farms, barns, cattle — the silent villages. And the car itself, the sleeper, with curtains drawn and lights turn'd down — in the berths the slumberers, many of them women and children — as on, on, on, we fly like lightning through the night — how strangely sound and sweet they sleep ! (They say the French Voltaire in his time designated the grand opera and a ship of war the most signal illustrations of the growth of humanity's and art's advance beyond primitive barbarism. Perhaps if the witty philosopher were here these days, and went in the same car with perfect bedding and feed from New York to San Francisco, he would shift his type and sample to one of our American sleepers.) IN AMERICA, 217 MISSOURI STATE. We should have made the run of 960 miles from Philadelphia to St. Louis in thirty-six hours, but we had a collision and bad locomotive smash about two-thirds of the way, which set us back. So merely stopping over night that time in St. Louis, I sped on westward. As I cross'd Missouri State the whole distance by the St. Louis and Kansas City Northern Railroad, a fine early autumn day, I thought my eyes had never looked on scenes of greater pas- toral beauty. For over two hundred miles successive rolling prairies, agriculturally perfect view'd by Pennsylvania and New Jersey eyes, and dotted here and there with fine timber. Yet fine as the land is, it isn't the finest portion ; (there is a bed of impervious clay and hard-pan beneath this section that holds water too firmly, "drowns the land in wet weather, and bakes it in dry," as a cynical farmer told me.) South are some richer tracts, though perhaps the beauty- spots of the State are the northwestern counties. Altogether, I am clear, (now, and from what I have seen and learn'd since,) that Missouri, in climate, soil, relative situation, wheat, grass, mines, railroads, and every import- ant materialistic respect, stands in the front rank of the Union. Of Missouri averaged politically and socially I have heard all sorts of talk, some pretty severe — but I should have no fear myself of getting along safely and comfortably anywhere among the Missourians. They raise a good deal of tobacco. You see at this time quantities of the light greenish-gray leaves pulled and hanging out to dry on temporary frameworks or rows of sticks. Looks much like the mullein familiar to eastern eyes. 2 18 SPECIMEN DA YS LAWRENCE AND TOPEKA, KANSAS. We thought of stopping in Kansas City, but when we got there we found a train ready and a crowd of hospitable Kansians to take us on to Lawrence, to which I proceeded. I shall not soon forget my good days in L., in company with Judge Usher and his sons, (especially John and Linton,) true westerners of the noblest type. Nor the similar days in Topeka. Nor the brotherly kindness of my E/E;. friends there, and the city and State officials. Lawrence and Topeka are large, bustling, half-rural, hand- some cities. I took two or three long drives about the latter, drawn by a spirited team over smooth roads. THE PRAIRIES. And an Undeliverd Speech. At a large popular meeting at Topeka — the Kansas State Silver Wedding, fifteen or twenty thousand people — I had been erroneously bilFd to deliver a poem. As I seem'd to be made much of, and wanted to be good-natured, I hastily pencill'd out the following little speech. Unfortunately, (or fortunately,) I had such a good time and rest, and talk and dinner, with the U. boys, that I let the hours slip away and didn't drive over to the meeting and speak my piece. But here it is just the same : ** My friends, your bills announce me as giving a poem ; but I have no poem — have composed none for this occasion. And I can honestly say I am now glad of it. Under these skies resplendent in September beauty — amid the peculiar landscape you are used to, but which is new to me — these interminable and stately prairies — in the freedom and vigor and sane enthusiasm of this perfect western air and autumn sunshine — it seems to me a poem would be almost an impertinence. But if you care to have a word from me, I should speak it about these very prairies ; they impress me most, of all the objective shows I see IN AMERICA, 219 or have seen on this, my first real visit to the West. As I have roU'd rapidly hither for more than a thousand miles, through fair Ohio, through bread-raising Indiana and Illinois — through ample Missouri, that contains and raises everything ; as I have partially explor'd your charming city during the last two days^ and, standing on Oread hill, by the university, have launch'd my view across broad expanses of living green, in every direction — I have again been most impress'd, I say, and shall remain for the rest of my life most impress'd, with that feature of the topography of your western central world — that vast Something, stretching out on its own unbounded scale, unconfined, which there is in these prairies, combining the real and ideal, and beautiful as dreams. ** I wonder indeed if the people of this continental inland West know how much of first-class art they have in these prairies — how original and all your own — how much of the influences of a character for your future humanity, broad, patriotic, heroic and new ? how entirely they tally on land the grandeur and superb monotony of the skies of heaven, and the ocean with its waters ? how freeing, soothing, nourishing they are to the soul ? " Then is it not subtly they who have given us our leading modern Americans, Lincoln and Grant ? — vast-spread, average men — their foregrounds of character altogether practical and real, yet (to those who have eyes to see) with finest backgrounds of the ideal, towering high as any. And do we not see, in them, foreshadowings of the future races that shall fill these prairies ? "Not but what the Yankee and Atlantic States, and every other part — Texas, and the States flanking the south-east and the Gulf of Mexico — the Pacific shore empire — the Territories and Lakes, and the Canada line (the day is not yet, but it will come, including Canada entire) — are equally and integrally and indissolubly this Nation, the sine qua non of the human, political and commercial New World. But this favor'd central area of (in round numbers) two thousand miles square seems fated to be the home both of what I would call America's distinctive ideas and distinctive realities." ON TO DENVER— A FRONTIER INCIDENT. The jaunt of five or six hundred miles from Topeka to Denver took me through a variety of country, but all 22(5 SPECIMEN DA YS unmistakably prolific, western, America, and on the largest scale. For a long distance we follow the line of the Kansas river, (I like better the old name, Kaw,) a stretch of very rich, dark soil, famed for its wheat, and call'd the Golden Belt — then plains and plains, hour after hour — Ellsworth county, the centre of the State — where I must stop a moment to tell a characteristic story of early days — scene the very spot where I am passing — time 1868. In a scrimmage at some public gathering in the town, A. had shot B. quite badly, but had not kill'd him. The sober men of Ellsworth conferr'd with one another and decided that A. deserved punishment. As they wished to set a good example and establish their reputation the reverse of a Lynching town, they open an informal court and bring both men before them for deliberate trial. Soon as this trial begins the wounded man is led forward to give his testimony. Seeing his enemy in durance and unarmed, B. walks suddenly up in a fury and shoots A. through the head — shoots him dead. The court is instantly adjourn'd, and its unanimous members, without a word of debate, walk the murderer B. out, wounded as he is, and hang him. In due time we reach Denver, which city I fall in love with from the first, and have that feeling confirm'd, the longer I stay there. One of my pleasantest days was a jaunt, via Platte canon, to Leadville. AN HOUR ON KENOSHA SUMMIT. Jottings from the Rocky Mountains, mostly pencill'd during a day's trip over the South Park BR., returning from Leadville, and especially the hour we were detain' d, (much to my satisfaction,) at Kenosha summit. As after- noon advances, novelties, far-reaching splendors, accumulate IN AMERICA. 221 under the bright sun in this pure air. But I had better commence with the day. The confronting of Platte caflon just at dawn, after a ten miles' ride in early darkness on the rail from Denver — the seasonable stoppage at the entrance of the canon, and good breakfast of eggs, trout, and nice griddle-cakes — then as we travel on, and get well in the gorge, all the wonders, beauty, savage power of the scene — the wild stream of water, from sources of snows, brawling continually in sight one side — the dazzling sun, and the morning lights on the rocks — such turns and grades in the track, squirming around corners, or up and down hills — far glimpses of a hundred peaks, titanic necklaces, stretching north and south — the huge rightly- named Dome-rock — and as we dash along, others similar, simple, monolithic, elephantine. AN EGOTISTICAL "FIND." *' I have found the law of my own poems,'' was the unspoken but more-and-more decided feeling that came to me as I pass'd, hour after hour, amid all this grim yet joyous elemental abandon — this plenitude of material, entire absence of art, untrammel'd play of primitive Nature — the chasm, the gorge, the crystal mountain stream, repeated scores, hundreds of miles — the broad handling and absolute uncrampedness — the fantastic forms, bathed in transparent browns, faint reds and grays, towering some- times a thousand, sometimes two or three thousand feet high — at their tops now and then huge masses pois'd, and mixing with the clouds, with only their outlines, hazed in misty lilac, visible. (**In Nature's grandest shows," says an old Dutch writer, an ecclesiastic, " amid the ocean's depth, if so might be, or countless worlds rolling above at 222 SPECIMEN DA YS. night, a man thinks of them, weighs all, not for themselves or the abstract, but with reference to his own personality, and how they may affect him or color his destinies.") NEW SENSES— NEW JOYS. "We follow the stream of amber and bronze brawling along its bed, with its frequent cascades and snow-white foam. Through the caiion we fly — mountains not only each side, but seemingly, till we get near, right in front of us — every rood a new view flashing, and each flash defying description — on the almost perpendicular sides, clinging pines, cedars, spruces, crimson sumach bushes, spots of wild grass — but dominating all, those towering rocks, rocks, rocks, bathed in delicate vari-colors, with the clear sky of autumn overhead. New senses, new joys, seem develop'd. Talk as you like, a typical Eocky Mountain caiion, or a limitless sea-like stretch of the great Kansas or Colorado plains, under favoring circumstances, tallies, perhaps ex- presses, certainly awakes, those grandest and subtlest element-emotions in the human soul, that all the marble temples and sculptures from Phidias to Thorwaldsen — all paintings, poems, reminiscences, or even music, probably never can. STEAM-POWER, TELEGRAPHS, &c. I get out on a ten minutes' stoppage at Deer creek, to enjoy the unequaVd combination of hill, stone and wood. As we speed again, the yellow granite in the sunshine, with natural spires, minarets, castellated perches far aloft — then long stretches of straight-upright palisades, rhinoceros color — then gamboge and tinted chromes. Ever the best of my pleasures the cool-fresh Colorado atmosphere, yet sufficiently IN AMERICA, 223 warm. Signs of man's restless advent and pioneerage, hard as Nature's face is — deserted dug-outs by dozens in the side-hills — the scantling hut, the telegraph-pole, the smoke of some impromptu chimney or outdoor fire — at intervals little settlements of log-houses, or parties of surveyors or telegraph builders, with their comfortable tents. Once, a canvas office where you could send a message by electricity anywhere around the world ! Yes, pronounc'd signs of the man of latest dates, dauntlessly grappling with these grisliest shows of the old kosmos. At several places steam saw-mills, with their piles of logs and boards, and the pipes puffing. Occasionally Platte canon expanding into a grassy fiat of a few acres. At one such place, toward the end, where we stop, and I get out to stretch my legs, as I look skyward, or rather mountain-topward, a huge hawk or eagle (a rare sight here) is idly soaring, balancing along the ether, now sinking low and coming quite near, and then up again in stately-languid circles — then higher, higher, slanting to the north, and gradually out of sight. AMERICA'S BACK-BONE. I jot these lines literally at Kenosha summit, where we return, afternoon, and take a long rest, 10,000 feet above sea-level. At this immense height the South Park stretches fifty miles before me. Mountainous chains and peaks in every variety of perspective, every hue of vista, fringe the view, in nearer, or middle, or far-dim distance, or fade on the horizon. We have now reach'd, penetrated the Rockies (Hay den calls it the Front Range,) for a hundred miles or so \ and though these chains spread away in every direction, specially north and south, thousands and thou- sands farther, I have seen specimens of the utmost of them, 2 24 SPECIMEN DA YS and know henceforth at least what they are, and what they look like. Not themselves alone, for they typify stretches and areas of half the globe — are, in fact, the vertebrae or back-bone of our hemisphere. As the anatomists say a man is only a spine, topp'd, footed, breasted and radiated, so the whole Western world is, in a sense, but an expansion of these mountains. In South America they are the Andes, in Central America and Mexico the Cordilleras, and in our States they go under different names — in California the Coast and Cascade ranges — thence more eastwardly the Sierra Nevadas — but mainly and more centrally here the Rocky Mountains proper, with many an elevation such as Lincoln's, Grey's, Harvard's, Yale's, Long's and Pike's peaks, all over 14,000 feet high. (East, the highest peaks of the Alleghanies, the Adirondacks, the Cattskills, and the White Mountains, range from 2000 to 5500 feet — only Mount Washington, in the latter, 6300 feet.) THE PARKS. In the midst of all here, lie such beautiful contrasts as the sunken basins of the North, Middle, and South Parks, (the latter I am now on one side of, and overlooking,) each the size of a large, level, almost quadrangular, grassy, western county, wall'd in by walls of hills, and each park the source of a river. The ones I specify are the largest in Colorado, but the whole of that State, and of Wyoming, Utah, Nevada and western California, through their sierras and ravines, are copiously mark'd by similar spreads and openings, many of the small ones of paradisiac loveliness and perfection, with their offsets of mountains, streams, atmosphere and hues beyond compare. IN AMERICA, 225 ART FEATURES. Talk, I say again, of going to Europe, of visiting the ruins of feudal castles, or Coliseum remains, or kings' palaces — when you can come here. The alternations one gets, too ; after the Illinois and Kansas prairies of a thou- sand miles — smooth and easy areas of the corn and wheat of ten million democratic farms in the future — here start up in every conceivable presentation of shape, these non- utilitarian piles, coping the skies, emanating a beauty, terror, power, more than Dante or Angelo ever knew. Yes, I think the chyle of not only poetry and painting, but oratory, and even the metaphysics and music fit for the New World, before being finally assimilated, need first and feeding visits here. Mountain streams. — The spiritual contrast and etheriality of the whole region consist largely to me in its never-absent peculiar streams — the snows of inaccessible upper areas melting and running down through the gorges continually. Nothing like the water of pastoral plains, or creeks with wooded banks and turf, or anything of the kind elsewhere. The shapes that element takes in the shows of the globe cannot be fully understood by an artist until he has studied these unique rivulets. Aerial effects. — But perhaps as I gaze around me the rarest sight of all is in atmospheric hues. The prairies — as I cross'd them in my journey hither — and these mountains and parks, seem to me to afford new lights and shades. Every where the aerial gradations and sky-effects inimitable; nowhere else such perspectives, such transparent lilacs and grays. I can conceive of some superior landscape painter, some fine colorist, after sketching awhile out here, discard- ing all his previous work, delightful to stock exhibition 286 226 SPECIMEN DA YS amateurs, as muddy, raw and artificial. Near one's eye ranges an infinite variety ; high up, the bare whitey-brown, above timber line ; in certain spots afar patches of snow any time of year ; (no trees, no flowers, no birds, at those chilling altitudes.) As I write I see the Snowy Range through the blue mist, beautiful and far off. I plainly see the patches of snow. DENVER IMPRESSIONS. Through the long-lingering half-light of the most superb of evenings we returned to Denver, where I staid several days leisurely exploring, receiving impressions, with which I may as well taper off this memorandum, itemizing what I saw there. The best was the men, three-fourths of them large, able, calm, alert, American. And cash 1 why they create it here. Out in the smelting works, (the biggest and most improv'd ones, for the precious metals, in the world,) I saw long rows of vats, pans, cover'd by bubbling-boiling water, and fill'd with pure silver, four or five inches thick, many thousand dollars' worth in a pan. The foreman who was showing me shovel'd it carelessly up with a little wooden shovel, as one might toss beans. Then large silver bricks, worth $2000 a brick, dozens of piles, twenty in a pile. In one place in the mountains, at a mining camp, I had a few days before seen rough bullion on the ground in the open air, like the confectioner's pyramids at some swell dinner in New York. (Such a sweet morsel to roll over with a poor author's pen and ink — and appropriate to slip in here — that the silver product of Colorado and Utah, with the gold product of California, New Mexico, Nevada and Dakota, foots up an addition to the world's coin of perhaps towards a hundred millions every year.) IN AMERICA, 227 A city, this Denver, well-laid out — Laramie street, and 15th and 16th and Champa streets, with others, particularly- fine — some with tall storehouses of stone or iron, and windows of plate-glass — all the streets with little canals of mountain water running along the sides — plenty of people, " business," modernness — yet not without a certain racy wild snack, all its own. A place of fast horses, (many mares with their colts,) and I saw lots of big greyhounds for antelope hunting. Now and then groups of miners, some just come in, some starting out, very picturesque. One of the papers here interview'd me, and reported me as saying ofF-hand : " I have lived in or visited all the great cities on the Atlantic third of the republic — Boston, Brooklyn with its hills, New Orleans, Baltimore, stately Washington, broad Philadelphia, teeming Cincinnati and Chicago, and for thirty years in that wonder, wash'd by hurried and glittering tides, my own New York, not only the New World's but the world's city — but, newcomer to Denver as I am, and threading its streets, breathing its air, warm'd by its sunshine, and having what there is of its human as well as aerial ozone flashed upon me now for only three or four days, I am very much like a man feels some- times toward certain people he meets with, and warms to, and hardly knows why. I, too, can hardly tell why, but as I enter'd the city in the slight haze of a late September afternoon, and have breath'd its air, and slept well o' nights, and have roam'd or rode leisurely, and watch'd the comers and goers at the hotels, and absorb'd the climatic magnetism of this curiously attractive region, there has steadily grown upon me a feeling of affection for the spot, which, sudden as it is, has become so definite and strong that I must put it on record." So much for my feeling toward the Queen city of the 228 SPECIMEN DA YS plains and peaks, where she sits in her delicious rare atmosphere, over 5000 feet above sea-level, irrigated by mountain streams, one way looking east over the prairies for a thousand miles, and having the other, westward, in constant view by day, draped in their violet haze, mountain tops innumerable. Yes, I fell in love with Denver, and even felt a wish to spend my declining and dying days there. I TURN SOUTH— AND THEN EAST AGAIN. Leave Denver at 8 A. m. by the Eio Grande RR. going south. Mountains constantly in sight in the apparently near distance, veiFd slightly, but still clear and very grand — their cones, colors, sides, distinct against the sky — hundreds, it seem'd thousands, interminable necklaces of them, their tops and slopes hazed more or less slightly in that blue-gray, under the autumn sun, for over a hundred miles — the most spiritual show of objective Nature I ever beheld, or ever thought possible. Occasionally the light strengthens, making a contrast of yellow-tinged silver on one side, with dark and shaded gray on the other. I took a long look at Pike's peak, and was a little disappointed. (I suppose I had expected something stunning.) Our view over plains to the left stretches amply, with corrals here and there, the frequent cactus and wild sage, and herds of cattle feeding. Thus about 120 miles to Pueblo. At that town we board the comfortable and well-equipt Atchison, Topeka and Santa Fe RR., now striking east. UNFULFILL'D WANTS— THE ARKANSAS RIVER. I had wanted to go to the Yellowstone river region — wanted specially to see the National Park, and the geysers IJ>r AMERICA, 229 and the " hoodoo '' or goblin land of that country ; indeed, hesitated a little at Pueblo, the turning point — wanted to thread the Yeta pass — wanted to go over the Santa Fe trail away southwestward to New Mexico — but turn'd and set my face eastward — leaving behind me whetting glimpse- tastes of southeastern Colorado, Pueblo, Bald mountain, the Spanish peaks, Sangre de Christos, Mile-Shoe-curve (which my veteran friend on the locomotive told me was ^'the boss railroad curve of the universe,") fort Garland on the plains, Yeta, and the three great peaks of the Sierra Blancas. The Arkansas river plays quite a part in the whole of this region — I see it, or its high-cut rocky northern shore, for miles, and cross and recross it frequently, as it winds and squirms like a snake. The plains vary here even more than usual — sometimes a long sterile stretch of scores of miles — then green, fertile and grassy, an equal length. , Some very large herds of sheep. (One wants new words in writing about these plains, and all the inland American West — the terms, /ar, large, vast, &c., are insufficient.) A SILENT LITTLE FOLLOWER— THE COREOPSIS. Here I must say a word about a little follower, present even now before my eyes. I have been accompanied on my whole journey from Barnegat to Pike's Peak by a pleasant floricultural friend, or rather millions of friends — nothing more or less than a hardy little yellow five-petal'd Sep- tember and October wild-flower, growing I think every- where in the middle and northern United States. I had seen it on the Hudson and over Long Island, and along the banks of the Delaware and through New Jersey, (as years ago up the Connecticut, and one fall by Lake Champlain.) This trip it follow'd me regularly, with its slender stem and 230 SPECIMEN DAYS eyes of gold, from Cape May to the Kaw valley, and so through the cafions and to these plains. In Missouri I saw immense fields all bright with it. Toward western Illinois I woke up one morning in the sleeper and the first thing when I drew the curtain of my berth and look'd out was its pretty countenance and bending neck. Se'pt. ^Wi. — Early morning — still going east after we leave Sterling, Kansas, where I stopp'd a day and night. The sun up about half an hour ; nothing can be fresher or more beautiful than this time, this region. I see quite a field of my yellow flower in full bloom. At intervals dots of nice two-story houses, as we ride swiftly by. Over the immense area, flat as a floor, visible for twenty miles in every direction in the clear air, a prevalence of autumn- drab and reddish-tawny herbage — sparse stacks of hay and enclosures, breaking the landscape — as we rumble by, flocks of prairie-hens starting up. Between Sterling and Florence , a fine country. (Remembrances to E. L., my old-young soldier friend of war times, and his wife and boy at S.) THE PRAIRIES AND GREAT PLAINS IN POETRY. {After traveling Illinois^ Missouri, Kansas and Colorado. ) Grand as the thought that doubtless the child is already born who will see a hundred millions of people, the most prosperous and advanc'd of the world, inhabiting these Prairies, the great Plains, and the valley of the Mississippi, I could not help thinking it would be grander still to see all those inimitable American areas fused in the alembic of a perfect poem, or other esthetic work, entirely western, fresh and limitless — altogether our own, without a trace or taste of Europe's soil, reminiscence, technical letter or spirit. My days and nights, as I travel here — what an exhilar- IN AMERICA, 231 ation !— not the air alone, and the sense of vastness, but every local sight and feature. Everywhere something characteristic — the cactuses, pinks, buffalo grass, wild sage — the receding perspective, and the far circle-line of the horizon all times of day, especially forenoon — the clear, pure, cool, rarefied nutriment for the lungs, previously quite unknown — the black patches and streaks left by surface-conflagrations — the deep-plough'd furrow of the "fire- guard '' — the slanting snow-racks built all along to shield the railroad from winter drifts — the prairie-dogs and the herds of antelope — the curious "dry rivers" — occasionally a " dug-out " or corral — Fort E-iley and Fort Wallace — — those towns of the northern plains, (like ships on the sea,) Eagle-Tail, Coyote, Cheyenne, Agate, Monotony, Kit Carson — with ever the ant-hill and the buffalo- wallow — ever the herds of cattle and the cow-boys (" cow-punchers ") to me a strangely interesting class, bright-eyed as hawks, with their swarthy complexions and their broad-brimm'd hats — apparently always on horseback, with loose arms slightly raised and swinging as they ride. THE SPANISH PEAKS -EVENING ON THE PLAINS. Between Pueblo and Bent's fort, southward, in a clear afternoon sun-spell I catch exceptionally good glimpses of the Spanish peaks. We are in southeastern Colorado — pass immense herds of cattle as our first-class locomotive rushes us along — two or three times crossing the Arkansas, which we follow many miles, and of which river I get fine views, sometimes for quite a distance, its stony, upright, not very high, palisade banks, and then its muddy flats. We pass Fort Lyon — lots of adobie houses — limitless pasturage, appropriately fleck'd with those herds of cattle 232 SPECIMEN DA YS —in due time the declining sun in the west — a sky of limpid pearl over all — and so evening on the great plains. A calm, pensive, boundless landscape — the perpendicular rocks of the north Arkansas, hued in twilight — a thin line of violet on the southwestern horizon — the palpable cool- ness and slight aroma — a belated cow-boy with some unruly member of his herd — an emigrant wagon toiling yet a little further, the horses slow and tired — two men, apparently father and son, jogging along on foot — and around all the indescribable chiaroscuro and sentiment, (profounder than anything at sea,) athwart these endless wilds. AMERICA'S CHARACTERISTIC LANDSCAPE. Speaking generally as to the capacity and sure future destiny of that plain and prairie area (larger than any European kingdom) it is the inexhaustible land of wheat, maize, wool, flax, coal, iron, beef and pork, butter and cheese, apples and grapes — land of ten million virgin farms — to the eye at present wild and unproductive — yet experts say that upon it when irrigated may easily be grown enough wheat to feed the world. Then as to scenery (giving my own thought and feeling,) while I know the standard claim is that Yosemite, Niagara falls, the upper Yellowstone and the like, afford the greatest natural shows, I am not so sure but the Prairies and Plains, while less stunning at first sight, last longer, fill the esthetic sense fuller, precede all the rest, and make North America's characteristic landscape. Indeed through the whole of this journey, with all its shows and varieties, what most impress'd me, and will longest remain with me, are these same prairies. Day after day, and night after night, to my eyes, to all my IN AMERICA. 233 senses — the esthetic one most of all — they silently and broadly unfolded. Even their simplest statistics are sublime. EARTH'S MOST IMPORTANT STREAM. The valley of the Mississippi river and its tributaries, (this stream and its adjuncts involve a big part of the question,) comprehends more than twelve hundred thousand square miles, the greater part prairies. It is by far the most important stream on the globe, and would seem to have been marked out by design, slow-flowing from north to south, through a dozen climates, all fitted for man's healthy occupancy, its outlet unfrozen all the year, and its line forming a safe, cheap continental avenue for commerce and passage from the north temperate to the torrid zone. Not even the mighty Amazon (though larger in volume) on its line of east and west — not the Nile in Africa, nor the Danube in Europe, nor the three great rivers of China, compare with it. Only the Mediterranean sea has play'd some such part in history, and all through the past, as the Mississippi is destined to play in the future. By its demesnes, water'd and welded by its branches, the Mis- souri, the Ohio, the Arkansas, the E,ed, the Yazoo, the St. Francis and others, it already compacts twenty-five millions of people, not merely the most peaceful and money-making, but the most restless and warlike on earth. Its valley, or reach, is rapidly concentrating the political power of the American Union. One almost thinks it is the Union — or soon will be. Take it out, with its radiations, and what would be left ? From the car windows through Indiana, Illinois, Missouri, or stopping some days along the Topeka and Santa Fe road, in southern Kansas, and indeed wherever I went, hundreds and thousands of miles through 234 SPECIMEN DA VS this region, my eyes feasted on primitive and rich meadows, some of them partially inhabited, but far, immensely far more untouch'd, unbroken — and much of it more lovely and fertile in its unplough'd innocence than the fair and valuable fields of New York's, Pennsylvania's, Maryland's or Virginia's richest farms. PRAIRIE ANALOGIES— THE TREE QUESTION. The word Prairie is French, and means literally meadow. The cosmical analogies of our North American plains are the Steppes of Asia, the Pampas and Llanos of South America, and perhaps the Saharas of Africa. Some think the plains have been originally lake-beds ; others attribute the absence of forests to the fires that almost annually sweep over them — (the cause, in vulgar estimation, of Indian summer.) The tree question will soon become a grave one. Although the Atlantic slope, the Rocky mountain region, and the southern portion of the Mississippi valley, are well wooded, there are here stretches of hundreds and thousands of miles where either not a tree grows, or often useless destruction has prevail'd ; and the matter of the cultivation and spread of forests may well be press'd upon thinkers who look to the coming generations of the prairie States. MISSISSIPPI VALLEY LITERATURE. Lying by one rainy day in Missouri to rest after quite a long exploration — first trying a big volume I found there of " Milton, Young, Gray, Beattie and Collins," but giving it up for a bad job — enjoying however for awhile, as often before, the reading of Walter Scott's poems, " Lay of the Last Minstrel," " Marmion," and so on — I stopp'd and laid IN AMERICA, 235 down the book, and ponder'd the thought of a poetry that should in due time express and supply the teeming region I was in the midst of, and have briefly touch'd upon. One's mind needs but a moment's deliberation anywhere in the United States to see clearly enough that all the prevalent book and library poets, either as imported from Great Britain, or follow'd and doppel-gang^d here, are foreign to our States, copiously as they are read by us all. But to fully understand not only how absolutely in opposition to our times and lands, and how little and cramp'd, and what anachronisms and absurdities many of their pages are, for American purposes, one must dwell or travel awhile in Missouri, Kansas and Colorado, and get rapport with their people and country. Will the day ever come — no matter how long deferr'd — when those models and lay-figures from the British islands — and even the precious traditions of the classics — will be reminiscences, studies only? The pure breath, primitive- ness, boundless prodigality and amplitude, strange mixture of delicacy and power, of continence, of real and ideal, and of all original and first-class elements, of these prairies, the Rocky mountains, and of the Mississippi and Missouri rivers — will they ever appear in, and in some sort form a standard for our poetry and art ? (I sometimes think that even the ambition of my friend Joaquin Miller to put them in, and illustrate them, places him ahead of the whole crowd.) Not long ago I was down iNew York bay, on a steamer, watching the sunset over the dark green heights of Navesink, and viewing all that inimitable spread of shore, shipping and sea, around Sandy hook. But an intervening week or two, and my eyes catch the shadowy outlines of the Spanish peaks. In the more than two thousand 236 SPECIMEN DA YS miles between, though of infinite and paradoxical variety, a curious and absolute fusion is doubtless steadily anneal- ing, compacting, identifying all. But subtler and wider and more solid, (to produce such compaction,) than the laws of the States, or the common ground of Congress or the Supreme Court, or the grim welding of our national wars, or the steel ties of railroads, or all the kneading and fusing processes of our material and business history, past or present, would in my opinion be a great throbbing, vital, imaginative work, or series of works, or literature, in constructing which the Plains, the Prairies, and the Mississippi river, with the demesnes of its varied and ample valley, should be the concrete background, and America's humanity, passions, struggles, hopes, there and now — an eclaircissement as it is and is to be, on the stage of the New World, of all Time's hitherto drama of war, romance and evolution — should furnish the lambent fire, the ideal. AN INTERVIEWER'S ITEM. Oct. 17, 79. — To-day one of the newspapers of St. Louis prints the following informal remarks of mine on American, especially Western literature : " We called on Mr. Whit- man yesterday and after a somewhat desultory conversation abruptly asked him : * Do you think we are to have a distinctively American literature 1 ' * It seems to me,' said he, * that our work at present is to lay the foundations of a great nation in products, in agriculture, in commerce, in networks of intercommunication, and in all that relates to the comforts of vast masses of men and families, with freedom of speech, ecclesiasticism, &c. These we have founded and are carrying out on a grander scale than ever hitherto, and Ohio, Illinois, Indiana, Missouri, Kansas and Colorado, seem to me to be the seat and field of these very IN AMERICA. 237 facts and ideas. Materialistic prosperity in all its varied forms, with those other points that I mentioned, intercom- munication and freedom, are first to be attended to. When those have their results and get settled, then a literature worthy of us will begin to be defined. Our American superiority and vitality are in the bulk of our people, not in a gentry like the old world. The greatness of our army during the secession war, was in the rank and file, and so with the nation. Other lands have their vitality in a few, a class, but we have it in the bulk of the people. Our leading men are not of much account and never have been, but the average of the people is immense, beyond all history. Sometimes I think in all departments, literature and art included, that will be the way our superiority will exhibit itself. We will not have great individuals or great leaders, but a great average bulk, unprecedentedly great.' " THE WOMEN OF THE WEST. Kansas City. — I am not so well satisfied with what I see of the women of the prairie cities. I am writing this where I sit leisurely in a store in Main street, Kansas city, a streaming crowd on the sidewalks flowing by. The ladies (and the same in Denver) are all fashionably drest, and have the look of " gentility " in face, manner and action, but they do not have, either in physique or the mentality appropriate to them, any high native originality of spirit or body, (as the men certainly have, appropriate to them.) They are "intellectual" and fashionable, but dyspeptic- looking and generally doll-like ; their ambition evidently is to copy their eastern sisters. Something far different and in advance must appear, to tally and complete the superb masculinity of the West, and maintain and continue it. 238 SPECIMEN DA YS THE SILENT GENERAL. Se'pt, 28, '79. — So General Grant, after circumambiating the world, has arrived home again — landed in San Francisco yesterday, from the ship City of Tokio from Japan. What a man he is ! what a history ! what an illustration — his life — of the capacities of that American individuality common to us all. Cynical critics are wondering " what the people can see in Grant " to make such a hubbub about. They aver (and it is no doubt true) that he has hardly the average of our day's literary and scholastic culture, and absolutely no pronounced genius or conventional eminence of any sort. Correct : but he proves how an average western farmer, mechanic, boatman, carried by tides of circumstances, per- haps caprices, into a position of incredible military or civic responsibilities, (history has presented none more trying, no born monarch's, no mark more shining for attack or envy,) may steer his way fitly and steadily through them all, carrying the country and himself with credit year after year — command over a million armed men — fight more than fifty heavy battles — rule for eight years a land larger than all the kingdoms of Europe combined — and then, retiring, quietly (with a cigar in his mouth) make the promenade of the whole world, through its courts and coteries, and kings and czars and mikados, and splendidest glitters and etiquettes, as phlegm atically as he ever walk'd the portico of a Missouri hotel after dinner. I say all this is what people like — and 1 am sure I like it. Seems to me it transcends Plutarch. How those old Greeks, indeed, would have seized on him ! A mere plain man — no art, no poetry — only practical sense, ability to do, or try his best to do, what devolv'd upon him. A common trader, money-maker, tanner, farmer of Illinois — general for the republic, in its IN AMERICA, 239 terrific struggle with itself, in the war of attempted secession — President following, (a task of peace, more diffi- cult than the war itself) — nothing heroic, as the authorities put it — and yet the greatest hero. The gods, the destinies, seem to have concentrated upon him. PRESIDENT HAYES'S SPEECHES. 8e^t, 30. — I see President Hayes has come out West, passing quite informally from point to point, with his wife and a small cortege of big officers, receiving ovations, and making daily and sometimes double-daily addresses to the people. To these addresses — all impromptu, and some would call them ephemeral — I feel to devote a memorandum. They are shrewd, good-natur'd, face-to-face speeches, on easy topics not too deep ; but they give me some revised ideas of oratory — of a new, opportune theory and practice of that art, quite changed from the classic rules, and adapted to our days, our occasions, to American democracy, and to the swarming populations of the West. I hear them criticised as wanting in dignity, but to me they are just what they should be, considering all the circumstances, who they come from, and who they are addressed to. Underneath, his objects are to compact and fraternize the States, encourage their materialistic and industrial development, soothe and expand their self-poise, and tie all and each with resistless double ties not only of inter-trade barter, but human comradeship. From Kansas city I went on to St. Louis, where I remain'd nearly three months, with my brother T. J. W., and my dear nieces. 240 SPECIMEN DA VS ST. LOUIS MEMORANDA. Oct, N'ov., and Dec, '79. — The points of St. Louis are its position, its absolute wealth, (the long accumulations of time and trade, solid riches, probably a higher average thereof than any city,) the unrivall'd amplitude of its well- laid out environage of broad plateaus, for future expansion — and the great State of which it is the head. It fuses northern and southern qualities, perhaps native and foreign ones, to perfection, rendezvous the whole stretch of the Mississippi and Missouri rivers, and its American electricity goes well with its German phlegm. Fourth, Fifth and Third streets are store-streets, showy, modern, metropolitan, . with hurrying crowds, vehicles, horse-cars, hubbub, plenty of people, rich goods, plate-glass windows, iron fronts often five or six stories high. You can purchase anything in St. Louis (in most of the big western cities for the matter of that) just as readily and cheaply as in the Atlantic marts. Often in going about the town you see reminders of old, even decay'd civilization. The water of the west, in some places, is not good, but they make it up here by plenty of very fair wine, and inexhaustible quantities of the best beer in the world. There are immense establishments for slaughtering beef and pork — and I saw flocks of sheep, 5000 in a flock. (In Kansas city I had visited a packing estab- lishment that kills and packs an average of 2500 hogs a day the whole year round, for export. Another in Atchison, Kansas, same extent ; others nearly equal elsewhere. And just as big ones here.) NIGHTS ON THE MISSISSIPPI. Oct. 29th, 30th, and 3 Is^.— Wonderfully fine, with the full harvest moon, dazzling and silvery, I have haunted IN AMERICA. 241 the river every night lately, where I could get a look at the bridge by moonlight. It is indeed a structure of perfection and beauty unsurpassable, and I never tire of it. The river at present is very low ; I noticed to-day it had much more of a blue-clear look than usual. I hear the slight ripples, the air is fresh and cool, and the view, up or down, wonder- fully clear, in the moonlight. I am out pretty late : it is so fascinating, dreamy. The cool night-air, all the influences, the silence, with those far-off eternal stars, do me good. I have been quite ill of late. And so, well-near the centre of our national demesne, these night views of the Mississippi. UPON OUR OWN LAND. " Always, after supper, take a walk half a mile long," says an old proverb, dryly adding, *' and if convenient let it be upon your own land." I wonder does any other nation but ours afford opportunity for such a jaunt as this % Indeed has any previous period afforded it % No one, I discover, begins to know the real geographic, democratic, indissoluble American Union in the present, or suspect it in the future, until he explores these Central States, and dwells awhile observantly on their prairies, or amid their busy towns, and the mighty father of waters. A ride of two or three thousand miles, *' on one's own land," with hardly a disconnection, could certainly be had in no other place than the United States, and at no period before this. If you want to see what the railroad is, and how civilization and progress date from it — how it is the conqueror of crude nature, which it turns to man's use, both on small scales and on the largest — come hither to inland America. I returned home, east, Jan. 5, 1880, having travers'd, to and fro and across, 10,000 miles and more. I soon resumed 287 242 SPECIMEN DA VS my seclusions down in the woods, or by the creek, or gaddings about cities, and an occasional disquisition, as will be seen following. EDGAR POE'S SIGNIFICANCE. Jan. 1, '80. — In diagnosing this disease called humanity — to assume for the nonce what seems a chief mood of the personality and writings of my subject — I have thought that poets, somewhere or other on the list, present the most mark'd indications. Comprehending artists in a mass, musicians, painters, actors, and so on, and considering each and all of them as radiations or flanges of that furious whirling wheel, poetry, the centre and axis of the whole, where else indeed may we so well investigate the causes, growths, tally-marks of the time — the age's matter and malady % By common consent there is nothing better for man or woman than a perfect and noble life, morally without flaw, happily balanced in activity, physically sound and pure, giving its due proportion, and no more, to the sympathetic, the human emotional element — a life, in all these, unhasting unresting, untiring to the end. And yet there is another shape of personality dearer far to the artist-sense, (which likes the play of strongest lights and shades,) where the perfect character, the good, the heroic, although never attain'd, is never lost sight of, but through failures, sorrows, temporary downfalls, is return'd to again and again, and while often violated, is passionately adhered to as long as mind, muscles, voice, obey the power we call volition. This sort of personality we see more or less in Burns, Byron, Schiller, and George Sand. But we do not see it in Edgar Poe. (All this is the result of reading at intervals the last three days a new volume of his poems — I took it IN AMERICA. 243 on my rambles down by the pond, and by degrees read it all through there.) While to the character first outlined the service Poe renders is certainly that entire contrast and contradiction which is next best to fully exemplifying it. Almost without the first sign of moral principle, or of the concrete or its heroisms, or the simpler affections of the heart, Poe's verses illustrate an intense faculty for technical and abstract beauty, with the rhyming art to excess, an incorrigible propensity toward nocturnal themes, a demoniac undertone behind every page — and, by final judgment, probably belong among the electric lights of imaginative literature, brilliant and dazzling, but with no heat. There is an indescribable magnetism about the poet's life and reminiscences, as well as the poems. To one who could work out their subtle retracing and retrospect, the latter would make a close tally no doubt between the authors birth and antecedents, his childhood and youth, his physique, his so-call'd education, his studies and associates, the literary and social Baltimore, Richmond, Philadelphia and New York, of those times — not only the places and circum- stances in themselves, but often, very often, in a strange spurning of, and reaction from them all. The following from a report in the Washington " Star '* of November 16, 1875, may afford those who care for it something further of my point of view toward this interest- ing figure and influence of our era. There occurr'd about that date in Baltimore a public reburial of Poe's remains, and dedication of a monument over the grave : *• Being in Washington on a visit at the time, * the old gray ' went over to Baltimore, and though ill from paralysis, consented to hobble up and silently take a seat on the platform, but refused to make any speech, saying, * I have felt a strong impulse to come over and he here to-day myself in memory of Poe, which I have obey'd, but not 244 SPECIMEN DA YS the slightest impulse to make a speech, which, my dear friends, must also be obeyed.' In an informal circle, however, in conversation after the ceremonies, Whitman said : ' For a long while, and until lately, I had a distaste for Poe's writings. I wanted, and still want for poetry, the clear sun shining, and fresh air blowing — the strength and power of health, not of delirium, even amid the stormiest passions — with always the background of the eternal moralities. Non-comply- ing with these requirements, Poe's genius has yet conquer'd a special recognition for itself, and I too have come to fully admit it, and appreciate it and him. " * In a dream I once had, I saw a vessel on the sea, at midnight, in a storm. It was no great fuU-rigg'd ship, nor majestic steamer, steering firmly through the gale, but seem'd one of those superb little schooner yachts I had often seen lying anchor'd, rocking so jauntily, in the waters around New York, or up Long Island sound — now flying uncontroll'd with torn sails and broken spars through the wild sleet and winds and waves of the night. On the deck was a slender, slight, beautiful figure, a dim man, apparently enjoying all the terror, the murk, and the dislocation of which he was the centre and the victim. That figure of my lurid dream might stand for Edgar Poe, his spirit, his fortunes, and his poems — themselves all lurid dreams.' " Much more may be said, but I most desired to exploit the idea put at the beginning. By its popular poets the calibres of an age, the weak spots of its embankments, its sub-currents, (often more significant than the biggest sur- face ones,) are unerringly indicated. The lush and the weird that have taken such extraordinary possession of Nineteenth century verse-lovers — what mean they ? The inevitable tendency of poetic culture to morbidity, abnor- mal beauty — the sickliness of all technical thought or refinement in itself — the abnegation of the perennial and democratic concretes at first hand, the body, the earth and sea, sex and the like — and the substitution of something for them at second or third hand — what bearings have they on current pathological study % IN AMERICA. 245 BEETHOVEN'S SEPTETTE. Feb. 11, '80. — At a good concert to-night in the foyer of the opera house, Philadelphia — the band a small but first- rate one. Never did music more sink into and soothe and fill me — never so prove its soul-rousing power, its impos- sibility of statement. Especially in the rendering of one of Beethoven's master septettes by the well-chosen and per- fectly-combined instruments (violins, viola, clarionet, horn, 'cello and contrabass,) was I carried away, seeing, absorbing many wonders. Dainty abandon, sometimes as if Nature laughing on a hillside in the sunshine ; serious and firm monotonies, as of winds; a horn sounding through the tangle of the forest, and the dying echoes ; soothing floating of waves, but presently rising in surges, angrily lashing, muttering, heavy ; piercing peals of laughter, for interstices ; now and then weird, as Nature herself is in certain moods — but mainly spontaneous, easy, careless — often the sentiment of the postures of naked children playing or sleeping. It did me good even to watch the violinists drawing their bows so masterly — every motion a study. I allow'd myself, as I sometimes do, to wander out of myself. The conceit came to me of a copious grove of singing birds, and in their midst a simple harmonic duo, two human souls, steadily asserting their own pensiveness, joyousness. A HINT OF WILD NATURE. Feb. 13. — As I was crossing the Delaware to-day, saw a large flock of wild geese, right overhead, not very high up^ ranged in V-shape, in relief against the noon clouds of light smoke-color. Had a capital though momentary view of them, and then of their course on and on southeast, till gradually fading — (my eyesight yet first rate for the open 246 SPECIMEN DA YS air and its distances, but I use glasses for reading.) Queer thoughts melted into me the two or three minutes, or less, seeing these creatures cleaving the sky — the spacious, airy realm — even the prevailing smoke-gray color everywhere, (no sun shining) — the waters below — the rapid flight of the birds, appearing just for a minute — flashing to me such a hint of the whole spread of Nature, with her eternal un- sophisticated freshness, her never-visited recesses of sea, sky, shore — and then disappearing in the distance. LOAFING IN THE WOODS. March 8. — I write this down in the country again, but in a new spot, seated on a log in the woods, warm, sunny, mid- day. Have been loafing here deep among the trees, shafts of tall pines, oak, hickory, with a thick undergrowth of laurels and grapevines — the ground covered everywhere by debris, dead leaves, breakage, moss — everything solitary, ancient, grim. Paths (such as they are) leading hither and yon — (how made I know not, for nobody seems to come here, nor man nor cattle-kind.) Temperature to-day about 60, the wind through the pine-tops ; I sit and listen to its hoarse sighing above (and to the stillness) long and long, varied by aimless rambles in the old roads and paths, and by exercise-pulls at the young saplings, to keep my joints from getting stiff. Blue-birds, robins, meadow-larks begin to appear. Next day, 9th» — A snowstorm in the morning, and con- tinuing most of the day. But I took a walk over two hours, the same woods and paths, amid the falling flakes. No wind, yet the musical low murmur through the pines, quite pronounced, curious, like waterfalls, now stilPd, now pouring again. All the senses, sight, sound, smell, deli- IN AMERICA. 247 cately gratified. Every snowflake lay where it fell on the evergreens, holly- trees, laurels, &c., the multitudinous leaves and branches piled, bulging-white, defined by edge-lines of emerald — the tall straight columns of the plentiful bronze- topt pines — a slight resinous odor blending with that of the snow. (For there is a scent to everything, even the snow, if you can only detect it — no two places, hardly any two hours, anywhere, exactly alike. How difierent the odor of noon from midnight, or winter from summer, or a windy spell from a still one.) A CONTRALTO VOICE. May 9, Sunday. — Yisit this evening to my friends the J.'s — good supper, to which I did justice — lively chat witli Mrs. J. and I. and J. As I sat out front on the walk afterward, in the evening air, the church-choir and organ on the corner opposite gave Luther's hymn Ein feste herg, very finely. The air was borne by a rich contralto. For nearly half an hour there in the dark, (there was a good string of English stanzas,) came the music, firm and un^ hurried, with long pauses. The full silver star-beams of Lyra rose silently over the church's dim roof-ridge. Yari- color'd lights from the stain'd glass windows broke through the tree-shadows. And under all — under the Northern Crown up there, and in the fresh breeze below, and the chiaroscuro of the night, that liquid-full contralto. SEEING NIAGARA TO ADVANTAGE. June 4, '80. — For really seizing a great picture or book, or piece of music, or architecture, or grand scenery — or perhaps for the first time even the common sunshine, or landscape, or may-be even the mystery of identity, most 248 SPECIMEN DA YS curious mystery of all — there comes some lucky five minutes of a man's life, set amid a fortuitous concurrence of circumstances, and bringing in a brief flash the culmina- tion of years of reading and travel and thought. The pre- sent case about two o'clock this afternoon, gave me Niagara, its superb severity of action and color and majesty grouping, in one short, indescribable show. We were very slowly crossing the Suspension bridge — not a full stop anywhere, but next to it-=-the day clear, sunny, still — and I out on the platform. The falls were in plain view about a mile off, but very distinct, and no roar — hardly a murmur. The river tumbling green and white, far below me ; the dark high banks, the plentiful umbrage, many bronze cedars, in shadow; and tempering and arching all the immense materiality, a clear sky overhead, with a few white clouds, limpid, spiritual, silent. Brief, and as quiet as brief, that picture — a remembrance always afterwards. Such are the things, indeed, I lay away with my life's rare and blessed bits of hours^ reminiscent, past — the wild sea-storm I once saw one winter day, off Fire island — the elder Booth in Richard, that famous night forty years ago in the old Bowery — or Alboni in the children's scene in Norma — or night-views, I remember, on the field, after battles in Virginia — or the peculiar sentiment of moonlight and stars over the great Plains, western Kansas — or scooting up New York bay, with a stiff breeze and a good yacht, off Nave- sink. With these, I say, I henceforth place that view, that afternoon, that combination complete, that five minutes' perfect absorption of Niagara — not the great majestic gem alone by itself, but set complete in all its varied, full, indispensable surroundings. IN AMERICA, 249 JAUNTING TO CANADA. To go back a little, I left Philadelphia, 9th and Green streets, at 8 o'clock p. M., June 3, on a first-class sleeper, by the Lehigh Valley (North Pennsylvania) route, through Bethlehem Wilkesbarre, Waverly, and so (by Erie) on through Corning to Hornellsville, where we arrived at 8, morning, and had a bounteous breakfast. I must say I never put in such a good night on any railroad track — - smooth, firm, the minimum of jolting, and all the swiftness compatible with safety. So without change to Buffalo, and thence to Clifton, where we arrived early afternoon ; then on to London, Ontario, Canada, in four more — less than twenty-two hours altogether. I am domiciled at the hospitable house of my friends Dr. and Mrs. Bucke, in the ample and charming garden and lawns of the asylum. SUNDAY WITH THE INSANE. June 6. — Went over to the religious services (Episcopal) main Insane asylum, held in a lofty, good-sized hall, third story. Plain boards, whitewash, plenty of cheap chairs, no ornament or color, yet all scrupulously clean and sweet. Some three hundred persons present, mostly patients. Everything, the prayers, a short sermon, the firm, orotund voice of the minister, and most of all, beyond any portray- ing or suggesting, that audience^ deeply impress'd me. I was furnish'd with an arm-chair near the pulpit, and sat facing the motley, yet perfectly well-behaved and orderly congregation. The quaint dresses and bonnets of some of the women, several very old and gray, here and there like the heads in old pictures. O the looks that came from those faces ! There were two or three I shall probably 250 SPECIMEN DA YS never forget. Nothing at all markedly repulsive or hideous — strange enough I did not see one such. Our common humanity, mine and yours, everywhere : *' The same old blood — the same red, running blood ; " yet behind most, an inferred arriere of such storms, such wrecks, such mysteries, fires, love, wrong, greed for wealth, religious problems, crosses — mirror'd from those crazed faces (yet now temporarily so calm, like still waters,) all the woes and sad happenings of life and death — now from every one the devotional element radiating — was it not, indeed, the 'peace of God that passeth all under standing ^ strange as it may sound 1 I can only say that I took long and searching eye-sweeps as I sat there, and it seem'd so, rousing unprecedented thoughts, problems unanswerable. A very fair choir, and melodeon accompaniment. They sang " Lead, kindly light," after the sermon. Many join'd in the beautiful hymn, to which the minister read the introductory text, " In the daytime also He led them with a cloud, and all the night with a light of fireP Then the words : Lead, kindly light, amid the encircling gloom, Lead thou me on. The night is dark, and I am far from home ; Lead thou me on. Keep thou my feet ; I do not ask to see The distant scene ; one step enough for me, I was not ever thus, nor pray'd that thou Should'st lead me on ; I lov'd to choose and see my path ; but now Lead thou me on. I loved the garish day, and spite of fears Pride ruled my will ; remember not past years. A couple of days after, I went to the " Refractory build- ing," under special charge of Dr. Beemer, and through the IN AMERICA, 251 wards pretty thoroughly, both the men's and women's. I have since made many other visits of the kind through the asylum, and around among the detach'd cottages. As far as I could see, this is among the most advanced, perfected, and kindly and rationally carried on, of all its kind in America. It is a town in itself, with many buildings and a thousand inhabitants. I learn that Canada, and especially this ample and populous province, Ontario, has the very best and plentiest benevolent institutions in all departments. REMINISCENCE OF ELIAS HICKS. June 8. — To-day a letter from Mrs. E. S. L., Detroit, accompanied in a little post-office roll by a rare old engraved head of Elias Hicks, (from a portrait in oil by Henry Inman, painted for J. Y. S., must have been 60 years or more ago, in New York) — among the rest the following excerpt about E. H. in the letter : *' I have listen'd to his preaching so often when a child, and sat with my mother at social gatherings where he was the centre, and every one so pleas'd and stirr'd by his conversation. I hear that you contemplate writing or speaking about him, and I wonder'd whether you had a picture of him. As \ am the owner of two, I send you one," GRAND NATIVE GROWTH. In a few days I go to lake Huron, and may have some- thing to say of that region and people. From what I already see, I should say the young native population of Canada was growing up, forming a hardy, democratic, intelligent, radically sound, and just as American, good- natured and individualistic race, as the average range of best specimens among us. As among us, too, I please 252 SPECIMEN DA YS myself by considering that this element, though it may not be the majority, promises to be the leaven which must eventually leaven the whole being. A ZOLLVEREIN BETWEEN THE U. S. AND CANADA. Some of the more liberal of the presses here are discussing the question of a zollverein between the United States ami Canada. It is proposed to form a union for commercial purposes — to altogether abolish the frontier tariff line, with its double sets of custom house officials now existing between the two countries, and to agree upon one tariff for both, the proceeds of this tariff to be divided between the two governments on the basis of population. It is said that a large proportion of the merchants of Canada are in favor of this step, as they believe it would materially add to the business of the country, by removing the restrictions that now exist on trade between Canada and the States. Those persons who are opposed to the measure believe that it would increase the material welfare of the country, but it would loosen the bonds between Canada and England ; and this sentiment overrides the desire for commercial prosperity. Whether the sentiment can continue to bear the strain put upon it is a question. It is thought by many that commercial considerations must in the end prevail. It seems also to be generally agreed that such a zollverein, or common customs union, would bring prac- tically more benefits to the Canadian provinces than to the United States. (It seems to me a certainty of time, sooner or later, that Canada shall form two or three grand States, equal and independent, with the rest of the American Union. The St. Lawrence and lakes are not for a frontier line, but a grand interior or mid-channel.) IN AMERICA. 253 THE ST. LAWRENCE LINE. August 20. — Premising that my three or four months in Canada were intended, among the rest, as an exploration of the line of the St. Lawrence, from lake Superior to the sea, (the engineers here insist upon considering it as one stream, over 2000 miles long, including lakes and Niagara and all) — that I have only partially carried out my programme ; but for the seven or eight hundred miles so far fulfill'd, I find that the Canada question is absolutely control'd by this vast water line, with its first-class features and points of trade, humanity, and many more — here I am writing this nearly a thousand miles north of my Philadelphia starting-point (by way of Montreal and Quebec) in the midst of regions that go to a further extreme of grimness, wildness of beauty, and a sort of still and pagan scaredness, while yet Christian, inhabitable, and partially fertile, than perhaps any other on earth. The weather remains perfect ; some might call it a little cool, but I wear my old gray overcoat and find it just right. The days are full of sun- beams and oxygen. Most of the forenoons and afternoons I am on the forward deck of the steamer. THE SAVAGE SAGUENAY. Up these black waters, over a hundred miles — always strong, deep, (hundreds of feet, sometimes thousands,) ever with high, rocky hills for banks, green and gray — at times a little like some parts of the Hudson, but much more pronounc'd and defiant. The hills rise higher — keep their ranks more unbroken. The river is straighter and of more resolute flow, and its hue, though dark as ink, exquisitely polished and sheeny under the August sun. Different, indeed, this Saguenay from all other rivers — different effects iit54 SPECIMEN DA YS — a bolder, more vehement play of lights and shades. Of a rare charm of singleness and simplicity. (Like the organ- chant at midnight from the old Spanish convent, in " Favorita " — one strain only, simple and monotonous and unornamented — but indescribably penetrating and grand and masterful.) Great place for echoes ; while our steamer was tied at the wharf at Tadousac (taj-oo-sac) waiting, the escape-pipe letting off steam, I was sure I heard a band at the hotel up in the rocks — could even make out some of the tunes. Only when our pipe stopp'd, I knew what caused it. Then at cape Eternity and Trinity rock, the pilot with his whistle producing similar marvellous results, echoes indescribably weird, as we lay off in the still bay under their shadows. CAPES ETERNITY AND TRINITY. But the great, haughty, silent capes themselves ; I doubt if any crack points, or hills, or historic places of note, or anything of the kind elsewhere in the world, outvies these objects — (I write while I am before them face to face.) They are very simple, they do not startle — at least they did not me — but they linger in one's memory forever. They are placed very near each other, side by side, each a mountain rising flush out of the Saguenay. A good thrower could throw a stone on each in passing — at least it seems so. Then they are as distinct in form as a perfect physical man or a perfect physical woman. Cape Eternity is bare, rising, as just said, sheer out of the water, rugged and grim (yet with an indescribable beauty) nearly two thousand feet high. Trinity rock, even a little higher, also rising flush, top-rounded like a great head with close-cut verdure of hair. I consider myself well repaid for coming my thousand miles to get the sight and memory of they m AMERICA, S5S unrivaird duo. They have stirr'd me more profoundly than anything of the kind I have yet seen. If Europe or Asia had them, we should certainly hear of them in all sorts of sent-back poems, rhapsodies, &c., a dozen times a year through our papers and magazines. CHICOUTIMI AND HA-HA BAY. No indeed — life and travel and memory have offer'd and will preserve to me no deeper-cut incidents, panorama, or sights to cheer my soul, than these at Chicoutimi and Ha-ha bay, and my days and nights up and down this fascinating savage river — the rounded mountains, some bare and gray, some dull red, some draped close all over with matted green verdure or vines — the ample, calm, eternal rocks every where — the long streaks of motley foam, a milk-white curd on the glistening breast of the stream — the little two-masted schooner, dingy yellow, with patch'd sails, set wing-and- wing, nearing us, coming saucily up the water with a couple of swarthy, black-hair'd men aboard — the strong shades falling on the light or yellow outlines of the hills all through the forenoon, as we steam within gunshot of them — while ever the pure and delicate sky spreads over all. And the splendid sunsets, and the sights of evening — the same old stars, (relatively a little different, I see, so far north) Arcturus and Lyra, and the Eagle, and great Jupiter like a silver globe, and the constellation of the Scorpion. Then northern lights nearly every night. THE INHABITANTS— GOOD LIVING. Grim and rocky and black-water'd as the demesne here- about is, however, you must not think genial humanity, and comfort, and good-living are not to be met. Before I began 256 SPECIMEN DA YS this memorandum I made a first-rate breakfast of sea-trout, finishing off with wild raspberries. I find smiles and courtesy everywhere — physiognomies in general curiously like those in the United States — (I was astonish'd to find the same resemblance all through the province of Quebec.) In general the inhabitants of this rugged country (Charle- voix, Chicoutimi and Tadousac counties, and lake St. John region) a simple, hardy population, lumbering, trapping furs, boating, fishing, berry-picking and a little farming. I was watching a group of young boatmen eating their early dinner — nothing but an immense loaf of bread, had appar- ently been the size of a bushel measure, from which they cut chunks with a jack-knife. Must be a tremendous winter country this, when the solid frost and ice fully set in. CEDAR-PLUMS LIKE— NAMES. {Back again in Camden and down in Jersey. ) One time I thought of naming this collection ** Cedar- Plums Like " (which I still fancy wouldn't have been a bad name, nor inappropriate.) A melange of loafing, looking, hobbling, sitting, traveling — a little thinking thrown in for salt, but very little — not only summer but all seasons — not only days but nights — some literary meditations — books, authors examined, Carlyle, Poe, Emerson tried, (always under my cedar-tree, in the open air, and never in the library) — mostly the scenes everybody sees, but some of my own caprices, meditations, egotism — truly an open air and mainly summer formation — singly, or in clusters — wild and free and somewhat acrid — indeed more like cedar-plums than you might guess at first glance. But do you know what they are ? (To city man, or some sweet parlor lady, I now talk.) As you go along roads, or IN AMERICA, 257 barrens, or across country, anywhere through these States, middle, eastern, western, or southern, you will see, certain seasons of the year, the thick woolly tufts of the cedar mottled with bunches of china-blue berries, about as big as fox-grapes. But first a special word for the tree itself : everybody knows that the cedar is a healthy, cheap, democratic wood, streak'd red and white — an evergreen — that it is not a cultivated tree — that it keeps away moths — that it grows inland or seaboard, all climates, hot or cold, any soil — in fact rather prefers sand and bleak side spots-— content if the plough, the fertilizer and the trimming-axe, will but keep away and let it alone. After a long rain, when everything looks bright, often have I stopt in my wood-saunters, south or north, or far west, to take in its dusky green, wash'd clean and sweet, and speck'd copiously with its fruit of clear, hardy blue. The wood of the cedar is of use — but what profit on earth are those sprigs of acrid plums % A question impossible to answer satisfactorily. True, some of the herb doctors give them for stouiachic afiections, but the remedy is as bad as the disease. Then in my rambles down in Camden county I once found an old crazy woman gathering the clusters with zeal and joy. She showed, as I was told afterward, a sort of infatuation for them, and every year placed and kept profuse bunches high and low about her room. They had a strange charm on her uneasy head, and efiected docility and peace. (She was harmless, and lived near by with her well-off married daughter.) Whether there is any connection between those bunches, and being out of one's wits, I cannot say, but I myself entertain a weakness for them. Indeed, I love the cedar, anyhow — its naked ruggedness, its just palpable odor, (so different from the perfumer's best,) its silence, its equable acceptance of winter's cold and summer's heat, of 288 258 SPECIMEN DA YS rain or drouth — its shelter to me from those, at times — its associations — (well, I never could explain why I love anybody, or anything.) The service I now specially owe to the cedar is, while I cast around for a name for my proposed collection, hesitating, puzzled — after rejecting a long, long string, I lift my eyes, and lo ! the very term I want. At any rate, I go no further — I tire in the search. I take what some invisible kind spirit has put before me. Besides, who shall say there is not affinity enough between (at least the bundle of sticks that produced) many of these pieces^ or granulations, and those blue berries'? their uselessness grow- ing wild — a certain aroma of Nature I would so like to have in my pages — the thin soil whence they come — their content in being let alone — their stolid and deaf repugnance to answering questions, (this latter the nearest, dearest trait affinity of all.) Then reader dear, in conclusion, as to the point of the name for the present collection, let us be satisfied to have a name — something to identify and bind it together, to concrete all its vegetable, mineral, personal memoranda, abrupt raids of criticism, crude gossip of philosophy, varied sands and clumps — without bothering ourselves because certain pages do not present themselves to you or me as coming under their own name with entire fitness or amiability. (It is a profound, vexatious, never-explicable matter — this of names. I have been exercised deeply about it my whole life.*) * In the pocket of my receptacle-book I find a list of suggested and rejected names for this volume, or parts of it — such as the following : As the wild bee hums in May^