to the
hour of harvest. The air-like the tingle of water from a mountain-spring
in the throat of the worn wayfarer, bringing a sense of the dust of the
world flushed away.
Arcady? Look closely. Like islands in the shining yellow sea, are
houses--sometimes in a clump of trees, sometimes only like
bare-backed domesticity or naked industry in the workfield. Also rising
here and there in the expanse, clouds that wind skyward, spreading out
in a powdery mist. They look like the rolling smoke of incense, of
sacrifice. Sacrifice it is. The vast steam-threshers are mightily
devouring what their servants, the monster steam-reapers, have gleaned
for them. Soon, when September comes, all that waving sea will be still.
What was gold will still be a rusted gold, but near to the earth-the
stubble of the corn now lying in vast garners by the railway lines,
awaiting transport east and west and south and across the seas.
Not Arcady this, but a land of industry in the grip of industrialists,
whose determination to achieve riches is, in spite of themselves,
chastened by the magnitude and orderly process of nature's travail
which is not pain. Here Nature hides her internal striving under a
smother of white for many months in every year, when what is now
gold in the sun will be a soft--sometimes, too, a hard-shining coverlet
like impacted wool. Then, instead of the majestic clouds of incense
from the threshers, will rise blue spiral wreaths of smoke from the
lonely home. There the farmer rests till spring, comforting himself in
the thought that while he waits, far under the snow the wheat is slowly
expanding; and as in April, the white frost flies out of the soil into the
sun, it will push upward and outward, green and vigorous, greeting his
eye with the "What cheer, partner!" of a mate in the scheme of nature.
Not Arcady; and yet many of the joys of Arcady are here--bright,
singing birds, wide adventurous rivers, innumerable streams, the
squirrel in the wood and the bracken, the wildcat stealing through the
undergrowth, the lizard glittering by the stone, the fish leaping in the
stream, the plaint of the whippoorwill, the call of the bluebird, the
golden flash of the oriole, the honk of the wild geese overhead, the
whirr of the mallard from the sedge. And, more than all, a human voice
declaring by its joy in song that not only God looks upon the world and
finds it very good.
CHAPTER I
"PIONEERS, O PIONEERS"
If you had stood on the borders of Askatoon, a prairie town, on the
pathway to the Rockies one late August day not many years ago, you
would have heard a fresh young human voice singing into the morning,
as its possessor looked, from a coat she was brushing, out over the
"field of the cloth of gold," which your eye has already been invited to
see. With the gift of singing for joy at all, you should be able to sing
very joyously at twenty-two. This morning singer was just that age; and
if you had looked at the golden carpet of wheat stretching for scores of
miles, before you looked at her, you would have thought her curiously
in tone with the scene. She was a symphony in gold--nothing less. Her
hair, her cheeks, her eyes, her skin, her laugh, her voice they were all
gold. Everything about her was so demonstratively golden that you
might have had a suspicion it was made and not born; as though it was
unreal, and the girl herself a proper subject of suspicion. The eyelashes
were so long and so black, the eyes were so topaz, the hair was so like
such a cloud of gold as would be found on Joan of Are as seen by a
mediaeval painter, that an air of faint artificiality surrounded what was
in every other way a remarkable effort of nature to give this region,
where she was so very busy, a keynote.
Poseurs have said that nature is garish or exaggerated more often than
not; but it is a libel. She is aristocratic to the nth degree, and is never
over done; courage she has, but no ostentation. There was, however,
just a slight touch of over-emphasis in this singing-girl's
presentation--that you were bound to say, if you considered her quite
apart from her place in this nature-scheme. She was not wholly
aristocratic; she was lacking in that high, social refinement which
would have made her gold not so golden, her black eyelashes not so
black. Being unaristocratic is not always a matter of birth, though it
may be a matter of parentage.
Her parentage was honest and respectable and not exalted. Her father
had been an engineer, who had lost his
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