Citation
The farmer's boy

Material Information

Title:
The farmer's boy
Creator:
Johnson, Clifton, 1865-1940
D. Appleton and Company ( publisher )
Appleton Press
Place of Publication:
New York
Publisher:
D. Appleton and Company
Manufacturer:
Electrotyped and printed by Appleton Press
Publication Date:
Language:
English
Physical Description:
vii-viii, 116 p., [12] leaves of plates : ill. ; 23 cm.

Subjects

Subjects / Keywords:
Children -- Conduct of life -- Juvenile fiction ( lcsh )
Conduct of life -- Juvenile fiction ( lcsh )
Farm life -- Juvenile fiction ( lcsh )
Country life -- Juvenile fiction ( lcsh )
Seasons -- Juvenile fiction ( lcsh )
Brothers and sisters -- Juvenile fiction ( lcsh )
Amusements -- Juvenile fiction ( lcsh )
Friendship -- Juvenile fiction ( lcsh )
Bldn -- 1894
Genre:
novel ( marcgt )
Spatial Coverage:
United States -- New York -- New York
Target Audience:
juvenile ( marctarget )

Notes

Statement of Responsibility:
text and illustrations by Clifton Johnson.

Record Information

Source Institution:
University of Florida
Holding Location:
University of Florida
Rights Management:
This item is presumed to be in the public domain. The University of Florida George A. Smathers Libraries respect the intellectual property rights of others and do not claim any copyright interest in this item. Users of this work have responsibility for determining copyright status prior to reusing, publishing or reproducing this item for purposes other than what is allowed by fair use or other copyright exemptions. Any reuse of this item in excess of fair use or other copyright exemptions may require permission of the copyright holder. The Smathers Libraries would like to learn more about this item and invite individuals or organizations to contact The Department of Special and Area Studies Collections (special@uflib.ufl.edu) with any additional information they can provide.
Resource Identifier:
026635054 ( ALEPH )
ALG4225 ( NOTIS )
06137490 ( OCLC )

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Meditations by a streamside,



ap felts!

Pan WE NS BO

TEXT AND ILLUSTRATIONS BY

Ci ONE Olan Onn

AUTHOR OF THE COUNTRY SCHOOL IN NEW ENGLAND



NEW YORK
D. APPLETON AND COMPANY

1894



CopyRriGHT, 1894,
By D. APPLETON AND COMPANY.

ELECTROTYPED AND PRINTED
AT THE APPLETON Press, U.S.A.



PNP AOR Ye NOME,

In what this volume tells of the farmer’s boy, readers will
find that many episodes and interests in the life of the boy are
not even mentioned. One book, indeed, would not contain them
all. There is, however, one important omission that is intentional
—his school life. The reason for this is that the writer treated the
subject in detail in a volume uniform with this, published last year.
Its title is The Country School in New England, and its pub-
lishers are D. Appleton and Company, of New York. It is also to
be explained that, while the present volume is primarily about the
doy on the farm, it is intended that the rest of the family, in par-
ticular the girl, shall not altogether lack attention either in text

or pictures. :
2 CLIFTON JOHNSON.

Hapv.tey, Mass., June, 1894.



GON TNT S.

PART I.
PAGE
WINTER. : ‘ I
IPANR AC JOG
SPRING. : 3 : : : f : : i 24
IBAVR ales elele
SUMMER . ; : : : : : : : : : : AO
PART IV.
AUTUMN . . : : : : : : : : : 5 75
PART V.

COUNTRY CHILDREN IN GENERAL. : : : : ; : o OY



EIGIP OL? MLIGUGIWIRAMINON |S,

Meditations by a streamside .

The morning scrub at the sink
Late to supper

In the January thaw—wet feet
Sliding by the riverside . :
Comfort by the fire on a cold day
Doorstep pets

Bringing in wood .

Coasting

Winding the clock

On the fence over the brook
Rubbing down old Billy

A drink of sap

A new picture paper

Catching flood-wood

A hillside sheep pasture

Spring chickens

Willow whistles :

The opening of the fishing season
Leap-frog in the front yard .

A blossom for the baby

Playing “ Indian”

On the way to pasture .
Discussing the colt

A little housekeeper

Some fun in a boat
Advising the hired boy .
Waiting for the dinner horn.
Eating clover blossoms .

(vii)

PAGE
Frontispiece

aOonum Ww

. Facing
10
Il
: ayels3
. Facing 15
16
19
21
22
24
26
. Facing 28
31
32
: eae
. Facing 37
39
40
4I
. Facing 42
. - 43
. Facing 44
47
48
50



viii LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS.

In swimming

Cutting their names in a tree-trunk
Weeding onions

Working out his “stent”
Fishing

A faithful follower

Two who have been a-borrowing
The Fourth of July

Getting ready to mow.

On the hay tedder

The boy rakes after

A summer evening game of tag.
Waders—they wet their “pants”

A voyage on a log

Potato-bugging

A chipmunk up a tree.

Baiting the cows by the oie

The boys and their steers

Shooting with a sling .

A corner of the sheep yard.

Helping grandpa husk .

Out for a tramp . :

A drink at the tub in the mee ae

Over the pasture hills to the chestnut trees

A mud turtle

Weeding the posy bed : : 3

Grandpa husks sweet corn for dinner, and tells a story at the same time
A game of croquet

Afternoon on the front porch

A sawmill

Going up for a slide

A winter ride : s

Washing the supper dishes .

Sliding on the frost

Tailpiece

. Facing

. Facing

. Facing

. Facing

. Facing

PAGE
51
52
54
57
58
60
63
65
67
68
71
72
73
76
78
81
82
85
87
89
go
gI
g2
93
95
98

100
102
104
107
108
III
112
114
116



THE FARMER'S BOY.

FUN,

WINTER.

N New-Years morning the first thing the boy hears is the
() voice of his father calling from the foot of the stairs,
“Come, Frank—time to get up!”

You may perhaps imagine that the boy leaps lightly from his
bed, and that he is soon clattering merrily down the stairs to the
tune of his own whistle. But the real, live boy who will fit so
romantic and pretty an impression it would be hard to find.

Our boy Frank is so unheroic as to barely grunt out a response
that shall give his father to understand that he has heard him, and
then he turns over and slumbers again. It is six o’clock. The first
gray hints of the coming day have begun to penetrate the little
chamber. The boy’s clothing lies in a heap on the floor just where
he jumped out of it in his haste the night before to get out of
the frosty atmosphere and into his bed. In one corner of the
room is a decrepit chair, whose cane-seat bottom had some time
ago increased its original leakiness to such a degree that it had
been judged unsuited to the pretensions of the sitting-room below

stairs, and been banished to the chambers. An old trunk with a
I



2 THE FARMER'S BOY.

cloth cover thrown over it, and a stand with a cracked little mirror
above, are the other most striking articles of furnishing.

The walls of the room are not papered, and where the bed stands
the bedposts have bruised the plaster so that you catch a glimpse
or two of the lath behind. Yet the walls are not so bare as they
might be, for the vacant space is made interesting by a large, legal-
looking certificate that affirms that the boy’s father, by the payment
of thirty dollars, has been made a life member of the Home Mis-
sionary Society. The boy is rather proud of this fact; for, though
he does not know what it all means, he feels sure it is something
good and religious. He often reads the certificate, and ciphers out
the names of the distinguished men who have put their signatures
at the foot of the document; and he likes to look at the Bible scene
pictured at the top, and takes pleasure in the elaborate frame, all
made out of hemlock and pine cones. He is tempted to the belief
that he is blessed above most boys in having a father who has the
honor to be a life member of the Home Missionary Society, and
who possesses such a certificate in such a frame. Indeed, he has
gone much further than this upon occasion, and has complaisantly
concluded that his folks were pretty sure of going to heaven in
the end—at any rate, their chances were better than those of most
of the neighbors. He knew very well his folks were more religious
than most, and wasn’t his father a life member of the Home Mis-
sionary Society ?

Our boy did not think these thoughts on New-Year’s morning.
Getting-up time came while it was still too dark to make out much

besides the dim shapes of the articles about the room. Even the



WINTER. 3

gayly colored soap advertisement he had hung next to the mis-
sionary certificate was dull and shapeless, and the garments depend-
ing from the long row of nails in the wall at the foot of the bed
could not be told apart,

The morning is very
cold. The window panes
are rimed with frost, so
that hardly a spot of
clear glass remains un-
touched, and there is a
cloudy puff of vapor
from among the pillows
with the boy’s every
outgoing breath.

The boy’s father,
after he had _ properly
warned his son of the
approach of day, made
the kitchen fire and
went out to the barn to . 2
feed the cattle. When a



he returns to the house The morning scrub at the sink.

he appears to be aston-

ished that Frank has not come down, though one would think
he might have got used to it by this time. He stalks to the up-
stairs door and says, in tones whose sternness seems to prophesy

dire things if not met with prompt obedience: “ Frank! don’t you



4 THE FARMER’S BOY.

hear me? I called you a quarter o’ an hour ago. I want you to
get up right off!”

“Comin’,” says Frank, and he rubs his eyes and tries to muster
resolution to get out into the cold.

“Well, it’s bout time!” returns his father, “ and you better be
spry about it, too.”

When you sleep on a feather bed it lets you down into its
yielding mass, so that if you have enough clothes on top you can
sleep in tropical contentment. There is no chance for the frost to
get in at any of the corners. Frank felt that his happiness would
be complete were he allowed to doze on half the morning in his
snug nest, but he knew it was hopeless aspiring to such bliss, and
a few minutes later he appeared down-stairs, and the way he ap-
peared was this: his hair was tumbled topsy-turvy, his eyes had still
a sleepy droop, and he was in his shirt sleeves and stocking feet.
He had no fondness for freezing in his room any longer than was
necessary after he was once out of bed, and he always left such
garments as he could spare down-stairs by the stove. Of course,
he had not washed. That he would do just before breakfast, at the
kitchen sink, after the outdoor work was done.

The half-dressed boy, as soon as he gets down-stairs, hastens to
make friends with the sitting-room stove, where a fire, with the aid
of “chunks,” has been kept all night. kitchen, and his mother is clattering about there, thawing things
out and getting breakfast. The boy hugs the stove as closely
as the nature of it will allow, and turns himself this way and

that to let the heat soak in thoroughly all around. Then he puts



WINTER. 5



Late to supper.

on the heavy pair of shoes he left the night before in a comfort-
able place back of the stove, gets his collar on, and his vest and
coat, pulls a cap down over his ears, and shuffles off to the barn.

Frank is thirteen years old, but he has been one of the workers
whom it has seemed necessary to stir out the first thing in the morn-
ing for years back. He knew how to milk when he was seven, and
he began to bring in wood—a stick at a time—about as soon as he
could walk. He did not grumble at his lot nor think it a hard one,
nor would he had it been ten times worse. Indeed, children, unless
set a bad example by the complaining habits of their elders, or

because they are spoiled by petting and lack of employment, accept



6 THE FARMER’S BOY.

things as they find them, and make the best of them. Even the
farm debt, which may burden the elders very heavily and keep all
the family on the borders of shabbiness for years, makes but a light
and occasional impression on the youngsters. Then as to those acci-
dents that are continually happening on a farm, and that are so
heart-breaking and discouraging to the poorer ones—the collapse
of a wagon, the sickness of the best cow, the death of the old horse,
the giving out of the kitchen stove so that a new one is absolutely
necessary; the children may shed a few tears, but work, and the
little pleasures they so readily discover under the most untoward
conditions, soon make the sun shine again and the mists of trouble
melt into forgetfulness.

Boys on small farms which have only two or three cows do not
milk regularly —the father or an older brother does it; but if the
Test wy Ole themiamate
away from home or
too busy with other
work, the boy is
called upon. Per-
haps the father has
to go so many miles

over the hills to



market, that he will

not get home until

In the January thaw—wet feet.

well on in the even-
ing. In that case you find the boy at nightfall poking about

the glooms of the barn with a lantern, and doing all the odd



WINTER. 7

jobs that need to be done before he can milk. When these are
finished, the little fellow gets the big tin pail at the house, hangs
his lantern on a nail in the stable, and sits down beside one of the
cows. He sets the milk streams playing a pleasant tune on the reso-
nant bottom of the pail, and from time to time snuggles his head
up against the cow for the sake of the warmth. If the cow gives a
pailful, his knees begin to ache and shake with the weight of the
milk before he has done, and his fingers grow cramped and stiff with
their long-continued action. However, the boy always perseveres
to the end; and if, when he takes the milk in, his mother says he
has got more than his pa does, he grows an inch taller in conscious
pride of his merits.

There is a difference in cows. Some requite a good deal more
muscle than others to bring the milk; some are skittish. One of
these uneasy cows will keep whacking you on the ear with her tail
every minute or two ali through the milking, and at the same time
the coarse and not overclean tuft of hair on the end will go stinging
along your cheek. Then the cow will be continually stepping away
from you sidewise, and you have to keep edging after her with your
stool. These unexpected and uncalled-for dodges make the streams
of milk go astray, aid you get your overalls and boots well splashed
as one of the results; another is that you lose your temper, and
give the cow a fierce rap with your fist. That makes matters worse
instead of better. The cow seems to have no notion of what you
are chastising her for, and gets livelier than ever. It sometimes
happens, in the end, that the cow gives the boy a sudden poke with
a hind foot that sends him sprawling—pail, stool, and all. Then the



8 THE FARMER’S BOY.

boy feels that his cup of sorrow has run over; he knows that his
pail of milk has,

When a boy gets into trouble he always feels that the best thing
he can do is to go and hunt up his mother. That is what our boy
who met disaster in the cow-stable did. He left his lantern behind,
but he carried in the pail with the dribble of milk and foam that
was still left in the bottom.

His mother was cutting a loaf of bread on the supper-table.
“Are you through so soon?” she asked. “Why, Johnny, what’s
the matter?” she says, noticing his woe-begone face.

“The cow kicked me!” replies Johnny.

' His mother gets excited, and steps over to examine him. “ Well,
I should say so!” she exclaimed. “You're completely plastered
from head to foot. Spilt all the milk, too, didn’t it? Well, well,
what’s the matter with the old cow?”

“T don’ know,” replied Johnny tearfully. “She just up and
kicked me right over.”

“Well, now, Johnny, never mind,” said his mother soothingly.
“You needn’t try to milk her any more to-night. You better tie
her legs together next time when you milk. She’s real hateful,
that cow is. I’ve seen the way she'll hook around the other
cows lots of times. Here, you run into the bedroom, and I'll
get your Sunday clothes for you to change into. Wait a min-
ute till I lay down a newspaper for you to put your old duds
onto.”

A little later Johnny went out to the barn and brought in the
lantern. Then he sat down to supper, and by the time he had





rside,

by the river

s

Slidin



WINTER. 9

eaten ten mouthfuls of bread and milk he felt entirely comforted
and blissful after his late trials.

The boy’s usual work at night was to let the cows in from the
barnyard where they had been standing, to get down hay and cut
up stalks for them, water and feed the horses, bring in wood, not
forgetting kindlings for the kitchen stove and chunks to keep the
sitting-room fire overnight, and, last but not least, he had to do
all the odd helping his father happened to call on him for.

The boy enjoyed most of this, more or less, but his real happi-
ness came when work was done and he could wash up and sit down
to his supper. The consciousness that he had got through the day’s
labor, the comfort of the indoor warmth, the keen appetite he had
won—all combined to give such a complaisancy, both physical and
mental, as might move many a grown-up and pampered son of
fortune to envy.

The boy usually spends his evenings very quietly. He studies
his lessons on the kitchen table, or he draws up close to the sitting-
room fire and reads a story paper. There is not so much literature
in the average family but that the boy will go through this paper
from beginning to end, advertisements and all, and the pictures half
a dozen times over. In the end, the paper is laid away in a closet
up-stairs, and when he happens on dull times and doesn’t know what
else to do with himself, he wanders up there and delves in this pile
of papers. He finds it very pleasant, too, stirring up the echoes of
past enjoyment by a renewed acquaintance with the stories and
pictures he had found interesting long before.

Evenings are varied with family talks, and sometimes the boy



10 THE FARMER'S BOY.

induces his grandfather to repeat some old rhymes, tell a story, or
sing a song. When there are several children in the family things
often become quite lively of an evening. The older children are
called upon to amuse the younger ones, and they have some high

times. There are lots of fun and noise, and squalling, too, and some



Comfort by the fire on a cold day.

energetic remarks and actions on the part of the elders, calculated
to put a sudden stop to certain of the most enterprising and reck-
less of the proceedings.

The baby is a continual subject of solicitude. His tottering steps
give him many a fall, anyway, and he aspires to climb everything
climbable ; and if he doesn’t tumble down two or three times getting

up, he is pretty sure to do it after the accomplishment of his ambi-



WINTER. IT

tion. Then he makes astonishing expeditions on his hands and
knees. You feel yourself liable to stumble over and annihilate him
almost anywhere. The parents realize these things, and is it any
wonder, when the rest of the flock get to flying around the room
full tilt, that they become alarmed for the baby, and that their voices
get raspy and forceful ?

Blindman’s buff and tag and general skirmishing are not alto-
gether suited to the little room where, besides the chairs and lounge
and organ, there is a hot stove and a table with a lamp on it.

You need some practice to
get much satisfaction from a
conversation carried on amid | : | i i
the hubbub. You have to

shout every word; and if the



children happen to have a
special fondness for you, they ~
do most of their tumbling pee
right around your chair. es
Some of the children’s best +
times come when the father =
ae

and mother throw off all other



eye titi

cares and thoughts, and be-

‘

come for the time being their
companions in the evening en-
joyment. What roaring fun
they have when papa plays ae

wheelbarrow with them, and Doorstep pets.



12 THE FARMER’S BOY,

puzzles them with some of the sleight-of-hand tricks he learned when
he was young; or when mamma becomes a much- entertained lis-
tener while the oldest boy speaks a piece, and rolls his voice, and
keeps his arms waving in gestures from beginning to end! The
other children are quite overpowered by the larger boy’s eloquence.
Even the baby sits in quiet on the floor, and lets his mouth drop
open in astonishment.

The mother is apt to be more in sympathy with these goings on
than the father, and I fancy it is on such occasions as he happens to
be absent that they have most of this sort of celebration. At such
a time, too, the children wax confidential, and tell what they intend
to be when they grow up: this one will be a storekeeper, this one
will be a minister, this one a doctor, this one a singer. They all
intend to be rich and famous, and to do some fine things for their
mother some day. They do not pick out any of the callings for love
of gain primarily, but because they think they will enjoy the life. In-
deed, when Tommy said he was going to be a minister, the reason he
gave for this desire was that he wanted to ring the bell every Sunday.

Bedtime comes on a progressive scale, gauged by the age of the
individual. First the baby is metamorphosed and tucked away in
his crib; then the three-year-old goes through a lingering process
of preparation, and, after a little run in his nightgown about the
room, he is stowed away in crib number two, and his mother sings
him a lullaby, or a song from Gospel Hymns, and that fixes zm for
the night. These two occupy the same sleeping room as the parents,
and it adjoins the sitting room. The door to it has been open

all the evening, and it is comfortably warm.



WINTER, 13

Girls and boys of eight or ten years old will take their own lamps
and march off to the cold upper chambers at eight o’clock or before.
Some of the upper rooms may have a stovepipe running through,
which serves to blunt the edge of the cold a trifle, or: there may be

a register or hole in the floor to allow the heat to come up from



Bringing tn wood.

below; but, as a rule, the chambers are shivery places in winter,
and when the youngsters jump in between the icy sheets their teeth
are set chattering, and it is some minutes before the delightful
warmth which follows gains its gradual ascendency.

The boy who sits up as late as his elders is usually well started



14 THE FARMER’S BOY.

in his teens. The children are not inclined to complain of early
hours unless something uncommon is going on. They are tired
enough by bedtime. Even the older members of the family are
physically weary with the day’s work, and the evening talk is apt
to be lagging and sleepy in its tone, and the father gets to yawning
over his reading, and the mother to nodding over her sewing. Many
times the chiefs of the household will start bedward soon after eight ;
and as to the growing boy, he usually disregards the privilege of late
hours, and takes himself off at whatever time after supper his tired-
ness begins to get overpowering.

It would be difficult to say surely that the boy’s room I described
early in this chapter was an average one. The boy is not coddled
with the best room in the house. In some dwellings the upper
story has but two or three rooms that are entirely finished. The
rest is open space roughly floored, and with no ceiling but the rafters
and boards of the roof. There are boys who have a bed or two in
such quarters as these, or in a little half-garret room in the L.
These unfinished quarters are the less agreeable if the roof happens
to be leaky. Sounds of dripping water or sifting snow within one’s
room are not pleasant. On the other hand, there are plenty of boys
who have rooms with striped paper on the walls, and possibly a rag
carpet under foot, not to speak of other things no less ornate.

In the matter of knickknacks, most boys do not fill their rooms
to any extent with them—the girls are more apt to do this. But a
boy is pretty sure to have some treasures in his room. He is not
very particular where he stows them, and he is likely to have some

severe trials about house-cleaning time. His mother fails to appre-





Coasting.



WINTER. 15

ciate the value of his special belongings, and is not in sympathy
with his method of placing them. They get disarranged and thrown
away. If fortune favors the boy with the drawers of an old bureau,
he is fairly safe; but things he puts on the shelf and stand, and espe-
cially those he puts right along there in a row under the head of
the bed—oh, where are they?

A winter breakfast on a farm is over about sunrise. All the
rolling hills near and far lie pure and white beneath the dome of
blue, and they sparkle with many a frosty diamond, and sunward
gleam with dazzling radiance. I doubt if the boy cares very much
about this. He is no stickler for beauty. Questions of comfort
and a good time lie uppermost in his mind. Nature's shifting
forms and colors and movements affect him usually but mildly as
a matter of beauty or sentiment, though in a simple way many
things touch him to a degree; but commonly the phase that pre-
sents itself uppermost is a physical one. The sun shines on the
snow—it blinds his eyes. A gray day is the dismal forerunner of
a storm. Sunsets, unless particularly gaudy, have no interest, except
as they suggest some weather sign. He delights more in days that
are crystal clear, when every object in the distant hills and valleys
stands sharply distinct, than in the mellow days that soften the
landscape with their gauzy blues. He loves action, not dreams.

Boys, like animals, feel a friskiness in their bones on the approach
of a storm. They will run and shout then for the mere pleasure
of it, and play, of whatever sort, gets an added zest. It may be
the dead of winter, but that does not keep them indoors. If the

wind blows a gale and whistles and rattles about the home build-



16 THE FARMER’S BOY.

ings and makes the trees crack and creak, so much the better. Nor
will the onset of the storm itself drive them indoors. The whirling
flakes may increase
in number till they
blur all the land-
scape, and go seeth-
ing in shifting wind-
rows over every hil-
lock ; yet it will be
some time before
the children will
pause in their slid-
ing, skating, or run-
ning to think of
the indoor fire.
When they do
go in, it is as if
all the out-of-door
breezes had gained
sudden entrance.
They all come tum-

bling through the



door with a_ bang

Winding the clock.

and a rush, and
there is a scattering of clinging snow when they pull off their
Wraps and throw them into convenient chairs or corners. They

declare they are almost frozen as they stamp their feet about the





WINTER. 17

kitchen fire, and hug their elbows to their bodies and rub their
fingers over the stove’s iron top.

“Well, why didn’t you come in before, then?” asks their mother.

“Oh, we was playing,” is the answer. “We been having a lots
of fun. The snow’s drifted up the road so it’s over our shoes now.”

“You better take off your shoes, if you've got any snow in
em,” the mother says. “I declare, how you have slopped up the
floor! And you've made it cold as a barn here, comin’ in all in a
lump that way.—Here, Johnny, don’t you go into the sittin’ room
till you get kind o’ dried off and decent.”

“T just wanted to get the cat,” says Johnny.

“Well, you can’t go in on the carpet with such lookin’ shoes,
cat or no cat!” is his mother’s response.

Meanwhile she has taken her broom and brushed out on the
piazza some of the snow lumps and puddles of water the children
have scattered.

The indoor stoves are an important item in the boy’s winter
life. It is a matter of perpetual astonishment to him how much
wood those stoves will burn. He has to bring it all in, and he
finds it as much of a drudgery as his sister does the everlasting
washing and wiping of dishes. It is his duty to fill the wood-
boxes about nightfall each day. The wood shed is half dark, and
the day has lost every particle of glow and warmth. He can
rarely get up his resolution to the point of filling the wood-boxes
“chuck full.” He puts in what he thinks will “do,” and lives in
hopes he will not be disturbed in other plans by having to re-

plenish the stock before the regulation time the night following.



18 THE FARMER'S BOY.

Sometimes he tries to avoid the responsibility of a doubtfully filled
wood-box by referring the case to his mother.

“Ts that enough, mamma?” he says.

“Well, have you filled it?” she asks.

“Tt’s pretty full,” replies the boy.

“Well, perhaps that'll do,” responds his mother sympathetically,
and the boy becomes at once conscience free and cheerful.

All through the day, when the boy is in the home neighborhood,
he is continually resorting to the stoves to get warmed up. Every
time he comes in he makes a few passes over the stove with his
hands, and he must be crowded for time if he can not take a turn
or two before the fire to give the heat a chance at all sides. If he
has still more leisure, he gets an apple from the cellar, or a cooky
from the pantry, and eats it while he warms up; or he goes in and
sits by the sitting-room stove and reads a little in the paper. One
curious thing he early finds out is, that he gets cold much quicker
when he is working than when he is playing.

Probably the majority of New England boys spend most of the
winter in school; though in the hill towns, where roads are bad and
houses much scattered, the smaller schools are closed. While he
attends school the boy has not much time for anything but the
home chores; but on Saturdays, and in vacation, he may at times
go into the woods with the men. There is no small excitement
in clinging to the sled as it pitches along through the rough
wood roads amid a clanking of chains and the shouts of the
driver. The man, who is familiar with the work, seems to have

no hesitation in driving anywhere and over all sorts of obsta-



WINTER. 19

cles. The boy does






not know whether he
is most exhilarated or
frightened, but he has
no thought of show-
ing a lack of cour-
age, and he hangs
on, and when he
gets to the end

of the journey

thinks he has

been having



On the fence over the brook,
some great fun.

The boy has his own small axe, and is all eagerness to prove
his virtues as a woodsman. He whacks away energetically at some
of the young growths, and when he brings a sapling four inches
through to the ground he is triumphant, and wants all the others to
look and see what he has done. He finds himself getting into quite
a sweat over his work, and he has to roll up his earlaps and get
his overcoat off and hang it on a stump. Then he digs into the
work again.

In time the labor becomes monotonous to him, and he is moved
to tramp through the snows and investigate the work of the others.
There is his father making a clean, wide gash in the side of a great
hemlock. Every blow tells, and seems to go just where he wanted
it to. The boy wonders why, when he cuts off a tree, he makes his

cut so jagged. He stands a long time watching his father’s chips fly,



20 THE FARMER'S BOY.

and then gains a safe distance to see the tree tremble and totter as
the opposite cuts deepen, at the base, near its heart. What a mighty
crash it makes when it falls! How the snow flies and the branches
snap! The boy is awed for the moment, then is fired with enthu-
siasm, and rushes in with his small axe to help trim off the branches.
After a time there comes a willingness that his father should finish
the operation, and he wanders off to see how the others are get-
ting on.

By and by he stirs up the neighborhood with shouts to the effect
that he has found some tracks. His mind immediately becomes
chaotic with ideas of hunting and trapping. Now that he has
begun to notice, he finds frequent other tracks, and some, he is
pretty sure, are those of foxes and some of rabbits and some of
squirrels. Why, the woods are just full of game!—he will bring
out his box trap to-morrow, and the certainty grows on him that
he will not only get some creatures that will prove a pleasant
addition to the family larder, but will have some furs nailed up
on the side of the barn that will bring him a nice little sum of
pocket money.

That evening he brought out the box trap and got it into
practice, and made all the younger children wild with excitement
over the tracks he had seen and his plans for trapping. They all
wanted a share, and were greatly disappointed the next day when
their father would not let them go too.

The boy set his trap, and moved it every few days to what he
thought would prove a more favorable place, but he had no luck

to boast of. Yet he caught something three times. The first time



WINTER. 21

he had the trap set in an evergreen thicket in a little space almost
bare of snow. He was pleased enough, one day, to find the trap
sprung, and at once became all eagerness to know what he had
inside. He pulled out the spindle at the back and looked in, but
the tiny hole did not let in light enough. Very cautiously he lifted
the lid a trifle. Still nothing was to be seen, and he feared the
trap had sprung itself’ When he ventured to raise the lid a bit
more, a little, slim-legged field mouse leaped out. The boy clapped

the lid down hard, but the mouse hopped away, and in a flash had



Rubbing down Old Billy.



22 THE FARMER’S BOY.

disappeared in a hole at the foot of a small tree. The boy was
disappointed in having even such a creature escape him.
The next time, whatever it was he caught gnawed a hole through

the corner of the box, and had gone about its business when our



A drink of sap.

boy made his morning visit to the trap. Then he took the trap
home and lined the inside with tin.

He had no luck for some days after, and finally forgot the trap
altogether. It was not till spring that he happened upon it again.

He felt a tingle of the old excitement in his veins when he saw
that the lid was down. He opened it with all the caution born

of experience, but the red squirrel which was within had been long



WINTER. 23

dead; and when the boy thought of its slow death by starvation
in that dark box, he felt that he never would want to trap any
more in that way.

The boy finds the woods much more enjoyable than the wood-
pile when it is deposited in the home yard. He knows that as
long as there is a stick of it left he will never have a moment of
leisure that will not be liable to be interrupted with a suggestion
that he go out and shake the saw awhile. The hardest woods, that
make the hottest fires, are the ones that the saw bites into most
slowly and are the most discouraging. The best the boy can do
is to hunt out such soft wood as the pile contains, and all the small
sticks. He makes some variety in his labor by piling up the sawed
sticks in a bulwark to keep the wind off, only it has to be acknowl-
edged that he never really succeeds in accomplishing this purpose.
But the unsawed pile grows gradually smaller, and his folks are
not so severe that they expect the boy to do a man’s work or
to keep at it as steadily. He stops now and then to play with
the smaller children, and to go to the house to see what time it
is or to get something to eat. Besides, his father works with him
a good deal, and if there are times when the minutes go slowly,
the days, as a whole, slip along quickly, and, before the boy is

aware, winter is at an end if the woodpile isn’t.



PVEIRIT I,

SPRING.

ITH the coming of March comes
spring, according to the almanac,

but in New England the snow-



storms and wintry gales hold sway
often to the edge of April. Yet
you can generally look for some
vigorous thaws before Aemcm Canoe
the month. There are occasional
days of such warmth and quiet that
you can fairly hear the snow melt,
and the air is full of the tinkle of
running brooks. You catch the sound
of a woodpecker tapping in the orch-
ard, and the small boy tumbles into
vee: the house, jubilant over the fact that
LUE OE Ee he has seen a bluebird flitting through
the branches of the elm before the house. All the children make
haste to run out into the yard to see the sight. Even the mother
throws a shawl over her head and steps out on the piazza.
“Yessir! there he is!” says Tommy, excitedly. “ That’s a blue-

bird, sure pop!”
(24)



SPRING. 25

Puddles have gathered in the soggy snow along the roadside,
and the little stream in the meadow has overflowed its banks. When
the boy perceives this, he becomes immediately anxious to get into
his rubber boots and go wading. His mother has a doubtful opinion
of these wadings, but it is such a matter of life and death to the
boy that she has not the heart to refuse him, and contents herself
with admonitions not to stay out too long, not to wade in too deep,
not to get his clothes wet, etc., etc.

The boy begins with one of the small puddles, for he has these
cautions in his mind, but the scope of his enterprise continually en-
larges, and he presently finds himself trying to determine just how
deep a place he can get into without letting the water in over his
boot-tops. He does not desist from the experiment until he feels a
cold trickle down one of his legs, from which he concludes that he
got in just a little too far that time, and he makes a hasty retreat.
But he has made his mind easy on the point as to how deep he
can go, and now turns his attention to poking about with a stick
he has picked up. He is quite charmed with the way he can make
the water and slush spatter with it. When he gets tired with this,
and the accumulating wet begins to penetrate his clothing here and
there, he adjourns to the meadow and sets his stick sailing down
the stream there. It fills his heart with delight to see the way it
pitches and whirls, and he slumps along the brook borders and
shouts at it as he keeps it company. Later he returns to the road-
way and makes half a dozen dams or more to stop the tiny rills
that are coursing down its furrows. He does this with such

serious thoughtfulness and with such frequent, studious pauses



26 THE FARMER’S BOY.



Catching flood-wood,

as would well fit the actions of some of the world’s great phi-
losophers.

No doubt the boy is making discoveries and learning lessons;
for the farm, with varied Nature always so close, is an excellent
kindergarten, and the farm child is all the time improving its oppor-
tunities after some fashion.

When our boy goes indoors his mother shows symptoms of
alarm over his condition. Ye thinks he has kept pretty dry, but

his mother wants to know what on earth he’s been doing to get
so wet.

“Ain't been doin’ nothin’,” says Tommy.

“Well, I should say so!” remarks his mother. “Here, you let



SPRING. oy,

me sit you in this chair to kind o’ drean off, while I pull off them
soppin’ mittens.”

She has to wring the mittens out at the sink before she hangs
them on the line back of the stove. Next she pulls off the boy’s
boots, and stands him up while she takes off his overcoat, and lastly
pushes him, chair and all, up by the fire, where he can put his feet
on the stove-hearth. Tommy did not see the necessity for all this
fuss. He felt dry enough, and all right; yet, as long as his mother
does not get disturbed to the chastising point, he finds a good deal
of comfort in having her attend to him in this way.

It was on one of these still, sunshiny March days that it occurred
to the oldest boy of the household that it was about time for the
sap to begin to run. He does not waste much time in making
tracks for the shop, where he hunts up some old spouts and an
auger. He will tap two or three of the trees near the house, any-
Way. There is no lack of helpers. All the smaller children are on
hand to watch and advise him, and to fetch pans from the house
and prop them up under the spouts. They watch eagerly for the
appearance of the first drops, and when they sight them each tells the
rest that “ There they are!” and “It does run!” and they want their
older brother to stop his boring at the next tree and come and look.
But William feels that he is too old to show enthusiasm about such
things, and he simply tells them that he guesses that he’s “seen sap
‘fore now.” The children take turns applying their mouths to the
end of spout number one to catch the first drops that trickle down
it. In days following they are frequent visitors to these tapped

trees, with the avowed purpose of seeing how the sap is running;



28 THE FARMER’S BOY.

but it is to be noticed that at the same time they seem always to
find it convenient to take a drink from a pan.

In the more hilly regions of New England most of the farms
have a sugar orchard on them, and the tree-tapping that begins
about the house is soon transferred to the woods. The boy goes
along, too—indeed, what work is there about a farm that he does
not have a hand in, either of his own will or because he has to?
But the phase I wish now to speak of is that found on the farms
that possess no maple orchard. The boy sees that the trees about
the house are attended to, as a matter of course, and he guards the
pans and warns off the neighbors’ boys when he thinks they are
making too free with the pans’ contents. Each morning he goes
out with a pail, gathers the sap, and sets it boiling in a kettle on
the stove. In time comes the final triumph, when, some morning,
the family leaves the molasses pot in the cupboard, and they have
maple sirup on their griddle-cakes.

It is not every boy whose enterprise stops with the tapping of
the shade trees in front of the house. On many farms there is an
occasional maple about the fields, and sometimes there are a few in
a patch of near woodland. In such a case the boy gathers a lot of
elder-stalks while it is still winter, cleans out the pith, and shapes
them into spouts. At the first approach of mild weather he taps the
scattered trees and distributes among them every receptacle the
house affords that does not leak, or whose leaks can be soldered or
beeswaxed, to catch the sap. After that, while the season lasts, he
and his brother swing a heavy tin can on a staff between them and

make periodical tours sap-collecting. These frequent tramps through



A hillside

sheep pasture,





SPRING. 29

mud and snow in all kinds of weather soon become monotonously
wearisome, and the boys usually find one season of this kind of ex-
perience enough.

With the going of the snow comes a mud spell that lasts fully a
month. It takes you forever to drive anywhere with a team. It is
drag, drag, drag, and slop, slop, slop all the way. Even the home
dooryard is little better than a bog, and the boy can never seem to
step out anywhere without coming in loaded with mud—at least, so
his mother says. She has continually to be warning him to keep
out of the sitting-room, and at times seems to be thrown into as
much consternation over some of his footprints that she finds on
the kitchen floor as was Robinson Crusoe over the discovery of that
lone footprint in the sand. Just as soon as she hears the boy’s
shuffle on the piazza and catches sight of him coming in at the
kitchen door, she says, “There, Willy, don’t you come in till you've
wiped your feet.”

“T have,” says Willy.

“Why, just look at ’em!” his mother responds. “I should
think you’d got about all the mud there was in the yard on
fem

“T never saw such sticky old stuff,” says Willy. “Your broom’s
most wore out already.”

“Well,” remarked his mother, “ what are you gettin’ into the mud
for all over that way, every time you step out? Pa’s laid down
boards all around the yard to walk on. Why don’t you go on
them ?”

“They ain’t laid where I want to go,” replies Willy.



30 THE FARMER'S BOY.

« Anyway,” is his mother’s final remark, “I can’t have my kitchen
floor mussed up by you trackin’ in every five minutes.”

But the really severe experiences in this line come when the barn-
yard is cleaned out. For several days the boy’s shoes are “a sight,”
and his journeyings are accompanied with such an odor that his
mother warns him off entirely from her domains. He is not allowed
to walk in and get that piece of pie for his lunch, but has it handed
out to him through the narrowly opened kitchen door. When meal-
time comes he has to leave his shoes and overalls in the woodshed,
and comes into the house in his stocking-feet. Even then his
mother makes derogatory remarks, though he tells her Ze “can’t
smell anything.”

It is astonishing how quickly, after the snow goes, the green will
clothe the fields, and how, with bursting buds and the first blossoms,
all Nature seems teeming with life again. I think the sentiment of
the boy is touched by this season more than by any other. The
unfolding of all this new life is full of mysterious charm. It is a
delight to tread the velvety turf, to find the first flowers, to catch the
oft-repeated sweetness of a phoebe’s song, or the more forceful trill-
ing of a robin at sundown. It is at nightfall that spring appeals to
the boy most strongly. He can still feel the heat of the sun when
it lingers at the horizon, and in the gentle warmth of its rays en-
joys a run about the yard, and claps at the little clouds of midges
that are sporting in the air. As soon as the sun disappears there
is a gathering of cool evening damps, and from the swampy hol-
lows come many strange pipings and croakings. The boy wonders

vaguely about all the creatures that make these noises, and imitates



SPRING. 31

their voices from the home lawn. When the dusk begins to deepen

into darkness he is glad to get into the light and warmth of the
kitchen.

To tell the truth, our boy is rather afraid of the dark. Just what



Spring chickens,

he fears is but dimly defined, though bears, thieves, and Indians are
among the fearsome shades that people the night glooms. It does
not take much of a noise, when he is out alone in the dark, to set his

heart thumping, and his imagination pictures dreadful possibilities

’
e



32 ' THE FARMER’S BOY.

in the shapes and movements that greet his eyesight. This fear is
not confined to out-of-doors. He has a notion that there may be a
lurking savage in the pantry, or the cellar, or the dusky corners of

the hallways, or, worst of all, under his bed. Those fears are most



Willow whistles.

vivid after he has been reading some tale of desperate adventure or
of mystery, dark doings and evil characters. Very good books and
papers often have in them the elements that produce these scary
effects. These are the sources of his timidity, for dime-novel trash,
although not altogether absent, is not common in the country.
The boy does not usually acquire much of his fear from the talk of

his fellows, and his parents certainly do not foster such feelings. It



SPRING. 33

is undoubtedly his reading, mainly. He rarely feels fear if he has
company, or if he is where there is light, or after he gets into bed—
that is, unless there are noises. What makes these noises you hear
sometimes in the night? You certainly don’t hear such noises in
the daytime. The boy does not mind rats. He knows them. They
can race tarough the walls, and grit their teeth on the plastering,
and throw all those bricks and things, whatever they are, down
inside there that they want to. But it’s these creakings and crack-
ings and softer noises, that you can’t tell what they are, that are
the trouble. Tie very best that you can do is to pull the covers
up over your head and shiver into sleep again. But if the boy
has frights, they are intermittent, for the most part, and soon
forgotten.

With the thawing of the snow on the hills‘and the early rains
comes, each spring, a time of flood on all the brooks and rivers that
no one appreciates more than the boy who is so fortunate as to have
a home on their banks. Water, in whatever shape, possesses a fas-
cination for the boy, if we except that for washing purposes. It
does not matter whether it is a dirty puddle or a sparkling brook or
the spirting jet at the highway watering-trough—he wants to paddle
and splash in every one. He even sees a touch of the beautiful and
sublime in water in some of its effects. There is a charm to him
in the placid pond that mirrors every object along its banks, or, on
brisker days, in the choppy waves that break the surface and curl
up on the muddy shore. He likes to follow the course of a brook,
and takes pleasure in noting the clearness of its waters and in watch-

ing its crystal leaps. When spring changes the quiet streams into



34 THE FARMER’S BOY.

muddy torrents, and they become foaming and wild and unfamiliar,
the boy finds the sight impressive and exhilarating.

But it is on the larger rivers that the floods have most meaning.
The water sets back in all the hollows, and broadens into wide lakes
on the meadows, and covers portions of the main road. The boy
cuts a notch in a stick and sets his mark at the water’s edge, that
he may keep posted as to how fast the river is rising. He gets out
the spike pole and fishes out the flood-wood that floats within
reach. If he is old enough to manage a boat, he rows out into the
stream and hitches on to an occasional log or large stick that is
sailing along on the swift current. For this purpose, if he is alone,
he has an iron hook fastened at the back end of the boat that he
pounds into the log. It is hard, jerky work towing a log to shore,
and he does not always succeed in landing his capture. Sometimes
the hook will keep pulling out; sometimes the thing he hitches
onto is too bulky or clumsy, and, after a long, hard pull, panting
and exhausted, he finds himself getting so far downstream that he
reluctantly knocks out the hook, rows inshore, and creeps in the
eddies along the bank back to his starting place. There is just one
trouble about this catching flood-wood—it increases the woodpile
materially, and makes a lot of work, sawing and chopping, that the
boy has little fancy for.

In the early spring there is sometimes a long-continued spell of
dry weather. In the woods the trees are still bare, and the sunlight
has free access to the leaf-carpeted earth. At such a time, if a fire
gets started among the shriveled and tinderlike leaves it is no easy

task to put it out. Whole neighborhoods turn out to fight it, and



SPRING, 35



The opening of the fishing season.

several days and nights may pass before it is under control. The
boy is among the first on the spot with his hoe, and immediately
begins a vigorous scratching to clear a path in the leaves that the
fire will not burn across. The company scatters, and sometimes the
boy finds himself alone. Close in front, extending away in both
directions, is the ragged fire line leaping and crackling. The woods
are still, the sun shines bright, and there is a sense of mystery and
danger in the presence of those sullen, devouring flames. Now
comes a puff of wind that causes the fire to make a sudden dash

forward and shrouds the boy with smoke. He runs back to a point
6



30 ; THE FARMER'S BOY.

of safety and listens to the far-off shouts of the men. The fire is
across the path he hoed, and he picks a piece of birch to eat while
he clambers up the hill to find company.

When night comes the boy wanders off home, to do his work and
eat supper. If he is allowed, he is out again with his hoe in the
evening. The scene is full of a wild charm. From the somberness
of the unburned tracts you look into the hot, wavering line of daz-
zling flames and on into regions where linger many sparkling embers
which the fire has not yet burned out, and now and then there is a
pile of wood that is a great mass of glowing coals, and again the
high stump of some dead tree that burns like a torch in the black-
ness. The boy thinks the men do more talking and advising than
work. Fle does not accomplish much himself The men keep to-
gether, and he hangs about the dark, half-lighted groups, listens to
what is said, and with the others does some desultory scratching to
keep the fire from gaining new ground at the point they are guard-
ing. By-and-by there comes a man hallooing his way through
the woods to them, who has brought a milk-can full of coffee.
Every man and boy takes a drink, and they all crack jokes and ex-
change opinions with the bearer till he starts off to find the next
group. Some of the men stay on guard all night, but the boy and
his father, about ten o’clock, leave the crackle and darting of the
flames behind them, and take a gloomy wood-road that leads toward
home. There has been nothing very alarming in the day’s adven-
tures, but the boy never forgets the experience.

Fire is fascinating to the boy in any form. He burned his

fingers at the stove damper when he was a baby. He likes to look





Leap-frog in the front yard,



SPRING. 37

at the glow of a lamp; and a candle, with its soft flicker and halo,
is especially pleasing. Then those new matches his folks have got,
that go off with a snap and burst at once into a sudden blaze—he
has never seen anything like them. They remind him of the de-
lights of Fourth of July.

A chief event of the spring is a bonfire in the garden. There is
an accumulation of dead vines and old pea-brush and apple-tree trim-
mings that often makes a large heap. The fire is enjoyable at what-
ever time it comes, but it is at its best if they touch it off in the
evening. The whole family comes out to see it then, and Frank
fixes up a seat for his mother and the baby out of a board and some
blocks, and invites some of the neighbors’ boys to be on hand. He
puts an armful of leaves under a corner of the pile and sets it going
with some of those parlor matches. The neighbors’ boys stand
around and tell him how, and even offer to do it themselves. When
the blaze fairly starts and begins to trickle up through the twigs
above it the smaller children jump for joy and clap their hands, and
tun to get handfuls of leaves and scattered rubbish to throw on.
Frank pokes the pile this way and that with his pitchfork, and the
neighbors’ boys light the ends of long sticks and wave them about
in the air. Even the baby coos with delight. The father has a rake
and does most of the work that is really necessary, while the boys
furnish all the action and noise needful to make the occasion a suc-
cess. When the blaze is at its highest and the heat penetrates far
back, the company becomes quiet, and they stand about exchanging
occasional words and simply watching the flames lick up the brush

and flash upward and disappear amid the smoke and sparks that



38 THE FARMER'S BOY.

rise high toward the dark deeps of the sky. The frolic is resumed
when the pile of brush begins to fall inward, and presently mother
says she and the baby and the smallest children must go Tee vite
latter protest, but they have to go, and not long after the embers of
the fire are all raked together, and Frank and the neighbors’ boys
fool around a little longer, and get about a half-dozen final warm-
ing-ups and then tramp off homeward in whistling happiness.

On the day following the garden is plowed and harrowed. Then
the boy has to help scratch it over and even it off with a rake, and
is kept on the jump all the time getting out seeds and planters and
tools, that never seem to be in the right place at the right time.

Meanwhile he induces his father to let him have a corner of the
garden for his own, and gets his advice as to what he had best put
in it to make his fortune. He scratches over the plot about twice
as fine as the rest of the garden, and won't let any of the old hens
that are hanging around looking for worms ccme near it. He has
concluded that peas are the things to bring in money, but he is
tempted to try three or four hills of potatoes between the rows
after he has the peas in. He has saved space for a hill of water-
melons, and, just to fill up the blanks, which seem rather large with
nothing yet up, he puts in as a matter of experiment a number of
other seeds here and there of one sort and another. He puts these
in from time to time along when it comes handy and the thought
occurs to him. He was somewhat astonished at the way things
came up. Indeed, he thought they would never get done coming
up, and they were pretty well mixed in their arrangement. He got

so discouraged over the things that kept sprouting in one corner



SPRING. 39

that he hoed the whole thing up on that spot and transplanted a
few cabbages on it. He used to get his mother to come out and
look at his garden-patch, and he enjoyed telling her his plans; but
he left that off for a while when the things became so erratic, and
waited till he could thin them out and bring their proceedings within
his comprehension.

It is in spring, more than any other season, that the boy’s ideas
bud with new enterprises. He forgets most of them by the time
he has them fairly started, and none of them are apt to have any
pecuniary value. But that never damps his enthusiasm in rushing
into new ones. The hunting fever is apt to take him pretty soon
after the snow goes, and he makes a bow and whittles out some

arrows and turns Indian. He may even visit




the resorts of the hens and collect enough
feathers to make a circlet to wear round
his head. Then he goes off and hunts
bears and things, and scalps the neigh-
bors’ boys. Sometimes, instead of
being an Indian, he gets his father
to saw out a wooden gun and
turns pioneer. Then savages and
wild animals both have to catch

it. He will skulk around in the most

A blossom for the baby.

approved fashion and say “Bang!” for
his gun every time he fires, and he will like enough kill half a hun-
dred Indians and a dozen grizzly bears in one forenoon. He is

fearless as you please—until night comes.



40 THE FARMER’S BOY.

Not all the boy’s hunting is so mild as to stop at the killing off

of bears and Indians. Sometimes he shoots his arrows at real, live



Playing “ Indian.”

things, or he has a rubber sling, or he practices throwing stones; and
does not resist the temptation to make the birds and squirrels, and
possibly the cats and the chickens, his marks, It is true he rarely
hits any of them; and the sensitive boy, if he seriously hurts one
of the creatures fired at, has a twinge of remorse. But there are
those who will only glory in the straightness of their aim. There
is something of the savage still in their nature, and they feel a
sense of prowess and power in bringing down that which, in spite
of its life and movement, did not escape them. It is to them a

much grander and more enjoyable thing than to hit a lifeless and

unmoving mark.



SPRING. 4I

The boys—at any rate many of them—are at times, in a thought-
less way, downright cruel. See how they will bang about the old
horse upon occasion! They have no compunctions about drown-
ing a cat or wringing the neck of a chicken, and will run half a mile
to be present at a hog-killing. They have barely a grain of sym-
pathy for the worm they impale on their fish-hooks; they kill the
grasshopper who will not give them “molasses”; they crush the
butterfly’s wings in catching it with their straw hats; and they pull
off insects’ limbs to see them wriggle, or to find out how the insect

will get along without them. I will not extend the horrible list,



On the way to pasture.



42 THE FARMER’S BOY.

and I am not sure but that most boys would be guiltless of the
majority of these charges. However, they are much too apt to
play the part of destroyers. This spirit is shown in the way the
boy will whip off the heads of flowers along his path, if he has a
stick in his hand, and the manner in which he gathers them when
gathering happens to be his purpose. He never thinks of their life
or of their beauty where they stand, or of the future. He picks
them all, snaps off the heads, pulls them up by the roots—any way
to get the whole thing in the shortest possible time. If the boy was
as thorough as he is ruthless, you could never find more flowers
of the same sort on that spot. This does not argue a total
disregard for the flowers, but it is a pity to love a thing to de-
struction.

The first token of spring in the flower line that the boy brings
into the house is probably a sprig of pussy-willow. The fuzzy catkins
are to his mind very odd and interesting and pretty. The ground is
still snow-covered, and they have started with the first real thaw.
Before the pastures get their first green the boy goes off to find the
new arbutus buds, that smell sweetest of all the flowers he knows,
unless it may be honeysuckle, that comes later. Already by the
brook are the queer skunk-cabbage blossoms, and the boy some-
times pulls one to pieces, and even sniffs the odor, just to learn how
bad it really is. He may find a stout, short-stemmed dandelion thus
early open in some warm, grassy hollow, and a few days later the
anemone’s dainty cups are out in full and trembling on their slender
stems with every breath of air. In pasture bogs and along the

brooks are violets—mostly blue; but in places there are yellow and





Discussing the colt,



SPRING. 43

white ones, ready to delight their finder. The higher and drier
slopes of the pastures are in spots sometimes almost blue with the
coarse bird-foot violets, while lower down the ground is as white
with the multitudes of innocents as if there had been a light snow-
fall. Along the roadways and fences the wild-cherry trees are
clouded full of white petals, and in the woods are great dashes of
white where the dogwoods have unfurled their blossoms. By the
end of May the meadows are like a night sky full of stars, so thick
are the dandelions, and on the rocks of the hillside the columbines
sway, full of their oddly shaped, pendulous bells. In some damp
woodpath the boy is filled with rejoicing by the finding of one of
the rare lady’s-slippers where he has been gathering wakerobin. The
only other spring flower I will mention as of special interest to the
boy is the Jack-in-the-pulpit, and that hardly seems a flower to him,
it is so queer.

Spring has three days with an individuality that makes them
stand out among the rest. The 1st
of April is “April Fool's Day. The
only idea the boy has about it is
that the more things he can make
the rest of the world think on that
day are not so, the better. It has
to be acknowledged that most of
the tricks are not very clever or

commendable, and the boy himself



feels that he is sometimes getting

A little housekeeper.
uncomfortably close to lying. The papa eeu



44 THE FARMER’S BOY.

common form of fooling is to get a person to look at something
that is not in sight.

“See that crow out there!” says the boy to his father.

“Where?” asks his father, when he looks out.

“April fool!” shouts the boy, and he is pleased with the “slick”
way he fooled his pa, for about half an hour, when he discovers that
he has been walking around for he doesn’t know how long with a
slip of paper on his back that his sister pinned there; and what he
reads on it when he gets it off is “ April fool!” He does not feel
so happy then, but he saves the paper to pin on some one else. All
day his brain is full of schemes to get people looking at the imagi-
nary objects he calls their attention to, and at the same time he is
full of suspicions himself, and you have to be very sharp and sudden
to fool him. When night comes he rejoices in the fact that he has
got one or two “fools” off on every member of the family, and there
is no knowing what a nuisance he has made of himself among the
rest of his friends. It gives him a grand good appetite, and he feels
inclined to be quite conversational. His remarks, however, assume
a milder tenor when he bites into a portly doughnut and finds it
made of cotton. He is afraid his mother is trying to fool him. He
wouldn’t have thought it of her!

Soon after this day comes Fast Day. School “lets out,” and
there’s meeting at the church, but most folks do not pay much
attention to that, and, it being a holiday, they eat rather more
than on other days, if anything, and they joke about its being
“fast” in the sense that it is not slow. Our boy does what work

he has to do, and then asks the privilege of going off to see some





Some fun in a boat,



SPRING. ; 45

other boy and have some fun. However, that is a thing that hap-
pens on all sorts of days. He is always ready with that request
when he has leisure, and makes it oftentimes, too, when he has no
leisure in any one’s opinion but his own.

The 30th of May is Decoration Day, and a company of sol-
diers will come with a band and flags, and will decorate the graves
of the soldiers in the little cemetery, and there will be singing
and other exercises, and everybody will be there. The boy has his
bouquet, and he is on the spot promptly and chatting with some
of his companions.. It may be the quiet of the early morning that
is the appointed time. There are lines of teams hitched along the
roadside, and two or three score of waiting people have gathered
near the entrance. The occasion has something of the solemnity
of a funeral, and even the boys lower their voices as they talk. The
sound of a drum and fife is heard around the turn of the road; the
soldiers, under their drooping flag, approach and file into the ceme-

tery. A song, an address, and a prayer follow



all very impressive
to the boy, out there under the skies with the wide, blossoming
landscape about. Finally, he lays his flowers with the others on
the graves, the soldiers form in line, the fife pipes once more, the
drum beats, and off they go down the road. Then thé people
begin a more cheerful visiting, and there is a cramping of wheels
as the teams turn to go homeward. The boy, with his friends,
pokes about among some of the old stones, and then lingers along
in the rear of the scattered groups that are taking the road that
leads to the village.

8



Fy AGRa a dr

SUMMER.

HE boy feels that summer has really come about the time

a be gets a new straw hat and begins to go barefoot.

When he first gets on the earth without shoes and stock-

ings he is as frisky as are the cows when, after the winter’s sojourn

in the barn, they are let out to go to pasture for the first time.

The boy remembers very well how he nearly ran his legs off on

that occasion, for the cows wanted to career all through the neigh-

borhood, and they kicked and capered and ran and hoisted their
tails in the air, and were as bad as a circus broke loose.

The boy would have gone barefoot some weeks before, only
he could not get his mother to understand how warm the earth
really was. It is cooler now than he thought, but he gets into a
glow running, and in a few days the exposure toughens his feet so
that he can stand almost anything—anything but shoes and stock-
ings. He hates to put those uncomfortable things on, and, when
he does, is glad to kick them off at the earliest opportunity. Even
the first frosts of autumn do not at once bring the shoes out. He
will drive the cows up the whitened lane, and slip shivering along
in the tracks brushed half clear of frost by the herd, certain that
he will be entirely comfortable a little later when the sun gets

well up.
(46)



SUMMER. 47

But the joy of bare feet is not altogether complete even in
summer. About half the time the boy goes with a limp. He has
hurt his toe, cut his heel, or met with some like mishap. There is
something always lying around for him to step on, and in the late
summer certain wicked burs ripen in the meadow that have hooks
to their prickles, that
hurt enough going in,
but are, oh, so much
worse pulling out!
The boy never likes to
walk on newly mown
land on account of
the stiff grass stubs
thatecOver itm yactale
can manage pretty well
by sliding his feet
along and making the
stubble lie flat when he
steps on it. However,

the gains of bare feet



certainly much more

than offset the losses,

Advising the hired boy.

to his mind; for he

can tramp and wade almost everywhere and in all kinds of weather,
with no fear of tearing his stockings, muddying his shoes, or “ get-
ting his feet wet.”

He appreciates this going barefoot most, perhaps, after a rain-



48 THE FARMER'S BOY.

storm. You have no idea, unless you have been a boy yourself,
what fun it is to. slide and spatter through the pools and puddles
of the roadway. There is the boy’s mother, for instance—she fails

to have the mildest kind of appreciation of it. She has even less,

ey



Waiting for the dinner horn.

if that is possible, when the boy comes in to her after he has
astonished himself by a sudden slip that seats him in the middle
of one of these puddles.

When the air, after a storm, is very still, the boy is sometimes
impressed by the apparent depth of these shallow pools. They
seem to go down miles and miles, and he can see the clouds and

sky reflected in their clear deeps. He is half inclined to keep



SUMMER. 49

away from their edges, lest he should fall over and go down and
down till he was drowned among those far-off cloud reflections.

Another roadway sentiment the boy sometimes entertains is con-
nected with the ridges of dirt thrown up by the wagon-wheels.
Their shadows make pictures to him as of a great line of jagged
rocks—like the wild coast of Norway in his geography. He feels
like an explorer as he follows the ever-changing craggedness of
their outlines.

I mentioned that the boy had a new straw hat with the be-
ginning of summer. You would not think it two days afterward.
It had by then lost its store manner and had taken to itself an in-
dividual shape all its own. It did not take long for the ribbon to
begin to fly loose on the breezes, and then the colt took a bite
out of the edge, and a general dissolution set in. The boy used
it to chase grasshoppers and butterflies with, and one day he
brought it home half full of strawberries he had picked in a field.
On another occasion he utilized it to catch pollywogs in when he
was wading, and he hastened its ruin by using it as a ball on sum-
mer evenings to throw in the air, He thought, one night, he had
put it past all usefulness when, not thinking where he had placed
it, he went and sat down in the chair where it was. You would not
have known it for a hat when he picked it up, though he straight-
ened it out after a fashion and concluded it would serve for a
while longer, anyway. But things presently got to that desperate
pass where the brim was gone and there was a bristly hole in the
top, and “the folks” saw the hat could not possibly last the

summer through, and the next time his father went to town he



50 THE FARMER’S BOY.



Lating clover blossoms.

bought the boy a new one. Of course, he told him to be more
careful with this than with the old one, when he gave it to him.

The summer was not far advanced when the boy became anx-
ious as to whether the water had warmed up enough in the streams
to make it allowable to go in swimming. As for the little rivers
among the hills, they never did get warmed up, and in the hottest
spells of midsummer it made the boy’s teeth chatter to jump into
their cold pools. But there was a glowing reaction after the
plunge, and if he did not stay in too long he came out quite en-
livened by his bath. The bathing places on these woodland streams
are often quite picturesque. It may be a spot where the stream

widens into a little pond hemmed in by walls of green foliage,



SUMMER. SI

whose branches in places droop far out over the water. It may
be in a rocky gorge strewn with bowlders, where the stream fills
the air with a continual roar and murmur as it dashes down the
rapids and plunges from pool to pool. On the large rivers of the
valleys the swimming places have usually muddy shores and a
willow-screened bank, and there are logs to float on or an old boat
to push about. In favorable weather the boys will go in swimming
every evening, and they make the air resound for half a mile about

with their shouts and splashings.



In swimming.



52 THE FARMER’S BOY.

June comes in with lots of work in the planting line. The boy
has to drop fertilizer and drop potatoes some days from morning
till night, by which time he is ready to drop himself. In corn plant-
ing he has his own bag of tarred corn and his hoe, and takes the
row next to his father’s. For a spell he may keep up with the
rest, but as the day advances he lags behind, and his father plants
a few hills occasionally on the boy’s row to encourage him. One
of the things a boy soon becomes an adept at is leaning on his hoe.
He naturally does this most when he is alone in the field and not
liable to sudden interruptions in his meditations. At such times
he gets lonesome and has “that tired feeling,” and gets to wonder-
ing why the dinner horn doesn’t blow. You would not think a hoe
an easy thing to lean on; but the boy will stand on one leg, with
the hoe-handle hocked under his shoulder, for any length of time.

The corn is no sooner in the ground than the crows begin to
happen around to investigate. They will pull it even after it gets
an inch or two high and snap off the kernel at the roots, and it
seems sometimes as if they rather liked the flavor of the tar put
on to destroy their appetite. The boy’s indignation waxes high,
and he wishes he had a gun or a pistol, or something, to “ fix” those
old crows. His mother does not like firearms. She is afraid he
will shoot himself; but she gives him some old clothes, and he
goes off to the shop to tack a scarecrow together and stuff him
with hay. When his father appears and pretends to be scared by
the scarecrow’s terrible figure, the boy is quite elated. After supper
he and his mother and the smaller children go out in the field

and set the man up, and the boy shakes hands with him and





Cutting their names in a tree-trunk,



SUMMER. 53

holds a little conversation with him. His small brothers and sis-
ters are sure the crows won't “dast” to come around there any more,
and they are kind of scared of the old scarecrow themselves.

The days wax hotter and hotter as the season advances, and the
boy presently gets down to the simplest elements in the clothing
line. Indeed, if his folks do not insist on something more elabo-
rate, he goes about entirely content in a shirt and a pair of over-
alls. His hair is apt to grow rather long between the cuttings his
mother gives it, and about this time he looks up an uncle or a
cousin who is an adept in the hair-cutting line, and gets a tight clip
that leaves him as bald as his most ancient ancestor. He feels
delightfully cool, anyway, and looks don’t count much with him at
that age.

As soon as the first plowing was done in the spring the onions
were sowed. Their little green needles soon prickled up through
the ground, and now they had the company of a multitude of
weeds, and must be hoed and weeded out. One thing the boy
never quite gets to understand is the curious fact that weeds, at
first start, will grow twice as fast as any useful crop. He wishes
weeds had some value. All you'd have to do would be to let them
grow. They’d take care of themselves.

In the case of the onions the hoeing-out part is not very bad,
but when you get down on your hands and knees to scratch the
weeds out of the rows with your fingers your trouble begins. The
boy says his back aches. His father comforts him by telling him
that he guesses not—that he’s too young to have the backache—

that he’d better wait till he’s fifty or sixty, and his joints get stiff



54 THE FARMER'S BOY,

and he has the rheumatism; then he’ll have something to talk
about.

But the boy knows very well that his back does ache, and the
sun is as hot again as it was when he was standing up, and his head
feels as if it were going to drop off. He gets up once in a while

to stretch, and to see if there are any signs of his mother’s wanting



Weeding onions.

him at the house, or hens around that ought to be chased off, or
anything else going on that will give him a chance for a change.
He bends to his work again presently, and tries various changes
from the plain stoop, such as one knee down and the other raised
to support the chest, or a sit down in the row and an attempt to
weed backward. When left to himself he takes long rests at the

ends of the rows, lying in the grass on his back under the shadow



SUMMER. 55

of an apple tree, or he gets thirsty and goes in the house for a drink.
He is afflicted with thirst a great deal when he is weeding onions,
and gets cooky-hungry remarkably often, too.

His most agreeable respite while weeding occurs when he dis-
covers that the neighbor's boy has come out and is at work just
over the fence. He throws a lump of dirt at him to attract his
attention, and then they exchange “hulloes!”

They soon come together and lean on the fence and compare
gardens, and likely enough get to boasting and on the borders of a
quarrel before they are through. Our boy goes back to work in
time, and his aches are not so severe afterward—at least, so long
as he has the neighbor’s boy over the fence to call at.

When the boy’s father goes away from home, to be gone all
day, he is apt to set the boy a “stent.”

“You put into it, now,” he says, “and hoe those eighteen rows
of corn, and then you can play the rest of the day.”

The boy is inclined to be dubious when he contemplates his
task; it doesn’t look to him as if he could get it done in the
whole day. But he makes a start, and concludes it is not so bad,
after all. We keeps at work with considerable perseverance, and
only stops to sit on the fence for a little while at the end of every
other row, and once to go up the lane to pick a few raspberries
that have turned almost black. As the rows dwindle he becomes
increasingly exuberant, and whistles all through the last one; and
when that is done, and he puts the hoe over his shoulder and
marches home, he has not a care in the world.

He made up his mind early in the day that he would go fish-



56 THE FARMER'S BOY.

ing when he was free, and now he digs some worms back of the
shop, gets out his pole, and hunts up his best friend. The best
friend is watering tobacco. He can’t go just then, but if Tommy
will pitch in and help him for about fifteen minutes, he'll have
that job done and will be with him.

The boys make the water fly, and it is not long before they
and their poles and their tin bait-box are at the river side. The
water just dimples in the light breeze. The warm afternoon sun-
light shines in the boys’ faces and glitters on the ripples. They
conclude, after a little while, that it is not a good afternoon for fish-
ing, and think wading will prove more profitable. As a result, they
get their “pants” wet and their jackets spattered, though where on
earth all that water came from they can’t make out. They thought
they were careful. They are afraid their mothers will make some
unpleasant remarks when they get home. It seems best they
should roll down their trousers and give them a chance to dry a
little before they have to leave. Meanwhile they do not suffer
for lack of amusement, for they find a lot of rubbish to throw into
the water, and some flat stones to skip, and some lucky-bugs to
catch, and lastly Charlie Thompson’s spotted dog shows himself
on the bank, and they entice him down to the shore and take
to wading again, and have great fun, and get wetter than ever.

As they walked home, Tommy said, “ Let’s go fishing again,
some day,” and Sammy agreed without any hesitation.

They caught not even a shiner this time, but on some occasions
they brought home a perch or two and a bullhead and a sucker,

strung on a willow twig. lainy days were those on which they



SUMMER. 57



Working out his “ stent.”

were freest to go fishing, and on such days the fish were supposed
to bite best. The boy seemed perfectly willing to don an old coat
and an old felt hat and spend a whole drizzling morning at almost
any time slopping along the muddy margin of the river. No one
could accuse him of being over-fastidious.

At some time in his career the boy was pretty sure to bring
home a live fish in his tin lunch-pail and turn him loose in the
water-tub at the barn; and he might catch a dozen or two min-
nows in a pool left landlocked by a fall of the water, and put
those in. He would see them chasing around in there, and the

old big fish lurking, very solemn, in the darkest depths, and he fed



58 THE FARMER’S BOY.

them bits of bread and worms, and planned for them a very happy
and comfortable life till they should be grown up and he was

ready to eat them. But they disappeared in time, and there was



Ries
not one left. The boy has an idea they must have eaten each
other, and then the cow swallowed the last one. If it wasn’t that,
what was it?

In the early summer strawberries are ripe. They are the first
berries to come that amount to anything. You can pick a few
wintergreen and partridge berries on the hillsides in spring, but
those hardly count. The boy always knows spots on the farm

where the strawberries grow wild, and when, some early morning,



SUMMER. 59

he goes up with the cows and is late to breakfast, it proves he
has been tramping in the pasture after berries) He has pushed
about among the dew-laden tangles of the grass until he is as
wet as if he had been in the river, but he is in a glowing tri-
umph on his return over the red clusters he pulls from his hat
to display to the family.

Probably some farmer in the neighborhood raises strawberries
for market, and pays two cents a quart for picking. If so, the boy
can not rest easy till his folks agree to let him improve this chance
to gain pocket money, which is a thing he never fails to be short
of. He will get up at three o’clock in the morning and carry
his breakfast with him in order to be on hand with the rest of the
children on the field at daybreak. His eagerness cools off in a few
days, and it is only with the greatest difficulty that the employer
can get his youthful help to stick to the work through the season.
They have eaten the berries till they are sick of them; they are
tired of stooping, and they have earned so much that their longings
for wealth are satisfied. They are apt to get to squabbling about
rows while picking, and to enliven the work on dull days by
“sassing” one another. The proper position for picking is a stoop-
ing posture, but when the boy comes home you can see by the
spotted pattern on the knees and seat of his trousers that he had
made some sacrifices to comfort. The proprietor of the berry fields,
and all concerned, are glad when they get to the end of the season.

When the boy got up so early those June mornings he was in
time to hear the air full of bird-songs as it would be at no other

time through the day. What made the birds so madly happy as

10



60 THE FARMER’S BOY.

soon as the east caught the first tints of the coming sun? The
village trees seemed fairly alive with the songsters, and every bird
was doing his best to outdo the rest. Most boys have not a very
wide acquaintance with the birds, but there are certain ones that

never fail to interest them. The boy’s favorite is pretty sure to be



A faithful follower.

the bobolink—he is such a happy fellow; he reels through the air
in such delight over his singing and the sunny weather. How his
song gurgles and glitters! How he swells out his throat! How pret-
tily he balances and sways on the woody stem of some tall meadow

flower! He has a beautiful coat of black and white, and the boy



SUMMER. 61

wonders at the rusty feathers of his mate, which looks like an en-
tirely different bird. As the season advances bobolink changes, and
not for the better. His handsome coat gets dingy, and he loses his
former gayety. He has forgotten almost altogether the notes of
his earlier song of tumbling happiness, and croaks harshly as he
stuffs himself on the seeds with which the fields now teem. Ease
and high living seem to have spoiled his character, just as if he had
been human. Before summer is done the bobolinks gather in com-
panies, and wheel about the fields in little clouds preparatory to
migrating. Sometimes the whole flock flies into some big tree, and
from amid the foliage come scores of tinkling notes as of many tiny
bells jingling. The boy sees no more of the bobolinks till they
return in the spring to once more pour forth their overflowing joy
on the blossom-scented air of the meadows.

One of the other birds that the boy is familiar with is the lark,
a coarse, large bird with two or three white feathers in its tail; but
the lark is too sober to interest him much. Then there is the cat-
bird, of sleek form and slatey plumage, flitting and mewing among
the shadows of the apple-tree boughs. The brisk robin, who always
has a scared look and therefore is out of character as a robber, he
knows very well. Robin builds a rough nest of straws and mud in
the crotches of the fruit trees, and he has a habit of crying in sharp
notes at sundown, as if he were afraid sorrow was coming to him in
some shape. The robin has a caroling song, too, but that the boy
is not so sure of separating from the music of the other birds.

He always knows the woodpeckers by their long bills and the

way they can trot up and down the tree trunks, bottom-side up,



62 THE FARMER’S BOY.

or anyhow. He knows the bluebird by its color and the phoebe
by its song. The orioles are not numerous enough for him to have
much acquaintance with, but he is familiar with the dainty nest they
swing far out on the tips of the branches of the big shade trees. He
sees numbers of little birds when the cherries ripen and the peapods
fill out that are as bright as glints of golden sunlight. They vary
in their tinting and size, but he calls them all yellow-birds, and has
a poor opinion of them, for he rarely sees them except when they
are stealing.

Along the water courses he now and then glimpses a heavy-
headed kingfisher sitting in solemn watchfulness on a limb or
making a startling, headlong plunge into a pool. Along shore the
sandpipers run about in a nervous way on their thin legs, always
teetering and complaining, and taking fright and flitting away like
a shot at the least sound. On the borders of the ponds the boy
sometimes comes upon a crane or a blue heron meditating on one
leg up to his knee in water. Off he goes in awkward flight, trailing
his long legs behind him. On the ponds, too, the wild ducks alight
in the fall and spring on their journeys South and North. There
may be as many as twenty of the compact, glossy-backed creatures
in a single flock, but a much smaller number is more common. The
swallows, on summer days, are to be found skimming over the
waters of the streams and ponds, and they make flying dips and
twitter and rise and fall and twist and turn, and seem very happy.
They have holes in a high bank in the vicinity, and if the boy
thinks he wants to get a collection of birds’ eggs he arms himself

with a trowel, some day, and climbs the steep dirt bank to dig them



SUMMER. 63

out. The holes go in about an arm’s length, and at the end is a
rude little nest, and some white eggs with such tender sheils that

the boy breaks many more than he succeeds in carrying away.



Two who have been a-borrowing.

He stores such eggs as he gathers from time to time in small
wooden or pasteboard boxes, with cotton in the bottoms, until too

many of them get broken, when he throws the whole thing away.



64 THE FARMER’S BOY.

His interest has been destructive and temporary, and he would
much better have studied ina different fashion, or turned his talent
to something else.

Several other birds are still to be mentioned that get his atten-
tion. There are the humming birds, that are so small and that
buzz about among the blossoms and prick them with their long
bills, and poise so still on their misty wings, and have hues of
rainbow in their feathers, and flash out of sight across the yard
in no time when they see you. There are the barn and chimney
swallows that you notice most at twilight, darting in tangled
flights in upper air or skimming low over the fields in twittering
alertness. How they worry the old cat as she crouches in the
hayfield! Again and again they almost touch her head in their
circling, but they are so swift and changeful that the cat has no
chance of catching them. Then there is the kingbird the boy
very much admires. He is a vigorous, well-looking fellow, with
an admirable antipathy for tyrants and bullies. Size makes no
difference with him. He puts the crow to ungainly flight; he fol-
lows the hawk, and you can see him high in air darting down at
the great bird’s back again and again; and he does not even fear
the eagle. In corn-planting time the whip - poor- will makes the
evening air ring with his lonely calls, and the boy has sometimes
seen his dusky form standing lengthwise of a fence rail just as he
was about to flit far off across the fields and renew more distantly
his whistling cry. The most distressing bird of all is the little
screech-owl. His tremulous and long- drawn wail suggests that

some one human is out there in the orchard crying out in his last



SUMMER, 65

feeble agonies. To put it mildly, the boy is scared when he hears
the screech-owl.

The great and only holiday of the summer is Fourth of July.
The boy very likely does not know or especially care what the
philosophic meaning of the day is. As he understands it, the occa-

sion is one whose first requirement is lots of noise. To furnish this



The Fourth of July.

in plenty, he is willing to begin the day by getting up at midnight
to parade the village street with the rest of the boys, and toot horns
and set off firecrackers, and liven up the sleepy occupants of the
houses by making particular efforts before each dwelling. They
have a care in their operations to be on guard, that they may
hasten to a safe distance if any one rushes out to lecture or chas-

tise them; but if all continues quiet within doors they will hoot



66 THE FARMER’S BOY.

and howl about for some time, and even blow up the mail-box
with a cannon cracker, or commit other mild depredations, to add
to the glory of the occasion. When some particularly brilliant
brain conceived the idea of getting all the boys to take hold of
an old mowing machine and gallop it through the dark street in
full clatter, it may be supposed that the final touch was given to
American independence and liberty. It was not all the boys that
went roaming around thus, and it was the older and rougher ones
who were the leaders. The smaller boys did not enter very heartily
into all of the fun, though they dared not openly hang back; and
when the stars paled and the first gray approach of dawn _be-
gan to lighten the east, the little fellows felt very sleepy and
lonely in spite of the company and noise. They were glad enough
when, soon after, the band broke up and they could steal away
home and to bed. The day itself was enlivened by much popping
of firecrackers and torpedoes in farm dooryards—by a village
picnic, in the afternoon, and by a grand setting off in the even-
ing of pin- wheels, Roman cazdles, a nigger-chaser, and a rocket.
After the rocket had gone up into the sky with its wild whirr and
its showering of sparks, and had toppled and burst and burned
out into blackness, the day was ended, and the boy retired with the
happiness that comes from labor done and duty well performed.
The work of ali others that fills the summer months is haying.
In the hill towns the land is stony and steep, and much of it is
cut over with scythes, but the majority of New England farmers
do most of their grass-cutting with mowing machines. A boy will

hardly do much of the actual mowing in either case until he is in



SUMMER. 67

his teens; but long before that he is called on to turn the grind-
stone-—an operation that precedes the mowing of each fresh field.
He gets pretty sick of that grindstone before the summer is
through.

He likes to follow after the mowing machine. There is some-
thing enlivening in its clatter, and he enjoys seeing the grass
tumble backward as the darting knives strike their stalks. He
does not care so much about following his father when he mows

with a scythe; for then he is expected to carry a fork and spread



Getting ready to mow.

the swath his father piles up behind him. On the little farms
machines are lacking to a degree, and the boys have to do much

of the turning and raking by hand. Finally, they have to borrow
II



68 THE FARMER’S BOY.

a horse to get it in. The best-provided farmer usually does some
borrowing, and there are those who are running all the time—that
is, they keep the boy running; boys are made for running. The
boy does not like this job very well, for the lender is too often
doubtful in his manner, if not in his words,

On still summer days the hayfield is apt to be a very hot
place. The hay itself has a gray glisten, and the low-lying air
shimmers with the heat. It is all very well if you can ride on
the tedder or rake, but it makes the perspiration start if you have
to do any work by hand. You do not have to be much of a boy
to be called on by your father to rake up the scatterings back of

the load, and you find you have to be on the jump all the time



On the hay tedder.



SUMMER. 69

to keep up. If you can rake, you are large enough to be on the
load and tread the hay into place as it is thrown up. It is not
till you are pretty well grown that you have the strength to do
the pitching on. Whatever the boy does in the field, in the barn
his place is up under the roof “mowing away.” The place is dusky,
and the dust flies, and a cricket or some uncomfortable many-
legged creature crawls down your back; it is hot and stifling, and
the hay comes up about twice as fast as you want it to. Before
the load is quarter off you begin to listen for the welcome scratch
of your father’s fork on the wagon rack that signals the nearing
of the bottom of the load. Even then you have to creep all
around under the eaves to tread the hay more solidly. You are
glad enough when you can crawl down the ladder and go into
the house and give your head a soak under the pump, and get a
drink of water. There’s nothing tastes much better than water
when you are dry that way, unless it is sweetened water that you
take in a jug right down to the hayfield with you.

I do not wish to give the impression that haying is made up
too much of sweat and toil, and that the boy finds it altogether
a season of trial and tribulation. It is not at all bad on cool
days, and some boys like the jumping about on load and mow.
There is fun in the jolting, rattling ride in the springless wagon
to the hayfield, and when the haycocks in the orchard are rolled
up for the night the boys have great sport turning somersaults
over them. Then there are exhilarating occasions when the sky
blackens, and from the distant horizon comes the flashing and

muttering of an approaching thunderstorm. Everybody does his



70 THE FARMER'S BOY.

best then; you race the horses, and the hay is rolled up and goes,
forkful after forkful, twinkling up on the load in no time. But
the storm is likely to come before you have done. There is a
spattering of great drops, that gives warning, and a dash of cold
wind, and everybody—teams and all—will be seen racing helter-
skelter to the barns. You are in luck if you get there before the
whole air is filled with the flying drops. It is a pleasurable excite-
ment, anyway, and you feel very comfortable, in spite of your wet
clothes, as you sit on the meal-chest talking with the others, listen-
ing to the rolling thunder and the rain rattling on the roof and
splashing into the yard from the eaves-spout. You look out of the
big barn doors into the sheeted rain that veils the fields with its
hurrying mists, and see its half-glooms lit up now and then by the
pallid flashes of the lightning. Then comes a burst of sunlight,
the rain ceases, and as the storm recedes a rainbow arches its
shredded tatters. All Nature glitters and drips and tinkles. The
trees and fields have the freshness of spring; the tip of every leaf
and every blade of grass twinkles with a diamond drop of water.
The boy runs out with a shout to the roadside puddles. The
chickens leave the shelter of the sheds, and rejoice in the number
of worms crawling about the hard-packed earth of the dooryard,
and all kinds of birds begin singing in jubilee.

But whatever incidental pleasures there may be in haying, it
is generally considered a season of uncommonly hard work, and
at its end the farm family thinks itself entitled to a picnic and a
season of milder labor. The picnic idea usually develops into a

plan to spend a whole day at some resort of picnickers, where you



SUMMER. 71

have to pay twenty-five cents for admission—children half price.
Of course, there are all sorts of ways that you can spend a good
deal more than that at these places, but it is mostly the young
men, who feel called upon to demonstrate their fondness for the

girls they have brought with them, that patronize the extras. The



The boy rakes after.

farm family is economical; it carries feed for its horses and a big
lunch-basket packed full for itself, and simply goes in for all the
things that are free; though Johnny and Tommy are allowed to
draw on their meager supply of pocket money to the extent of

five cents each for candy. There are swings to swing in and tables



72 THE FARMER’S BOY.

to eat on in a grove, and, if it is by a lake or river, there are boats
to row in and fish to catch, only you can’t catch them. Meanwhile
the horses are tied conveniently in the woods, and spend the day
kicking and switching at the flies that happen around. Toward
evening the wagon is backed about and loaded up, the horses
hitched into it, and everybody piles in and noses are counted, and
off they go homeward. The sun sets, the bright skies fade, and
the stars sparkle out one by one and look down on them as the
horses jog along the glooms of the half-wooded, unfamiliar road-
ways. Some of the children get down under the seats and croon
ina shaking gurele as the wagon jolts their voices; and they shut
their eyes and fancy the wagon is going backward—oh, so swiftly !
Then they open their eyes, and there are the tree leaves fluttering
overhead and the deep night sky above, and they see they are
going on, after all. When they near home they all sit up on the
seats once more and watch for familiar objects along the road.
There is the house at last; the horses turn into the yard; they all
alight, and in a few minutes a lamp is lighted in the kitchen. A
neighbor has milked the cows. There are the full pails on the
bench in the back room. The children are so tired they can hardly
keep their eyes open, but they must have a slice of bread and _ but-
ter all around, and a piece of pie. Then, tired but happy, they
bundle off to bed.

Not every excursion of this kind is to a public pleasure resort.
Sometimes the family goes after huckleberries or blackberries, or
for a day’s visit to relatives who live in a neighboring town, or

to see a circus-parade at the county seat. The family vehicle is apt





A summer evening game of tag.



SUMMER. 73

to be the high, two-seated spring wagon. It is not particularly
handsome to look at, but I fancy it holds more happiness than the
gilded cars with their gaudy occupants that they see pass in the
parade.

The strawberries are the first heralds of a summer full of good
things to eat. The boy begins sampling each in turn as soon as
they show signs
of ripening, and
-on farms where
children are nu-
merous and fruits
are not, very few
things ever get
ripe. You would
not think, to look
at him, that a

small boy could



eat as much as he

can. He will be

Waders—thev wet their “ pants.”

chewing on some-

thing all the morning, and have just as good an appetite for
dinner as ever. In the afternoon he will eat seventeen green
apples, and be on hand for supper as lively as a cricket. Still,
there are times when he repents his eating indiscretion in sack-
cloth and ashes. There is a point in the green-apple line beyond
which even the small boy can not safely go. The twisting pains

get hold of his stomach, and he has to go to his mother and
I2



74 THE FARMER’S BOY.

get her to do something to keep him in the land of the living.
He repents of all his misdeeds while the pain is on him, just as he
would in a thunderstorm in the night that waked and scared him;
and he says his prayers, and hopes, after all, if these are his last days,
he has not been so bad but that he will go to the good place.
When he gets better, however, he forgets these vows and does
some more things to repent of. But that is not peculiarly a boy-

ish trait. Grown-up people do that.



ASR Ae Ve

AUTUMN.

Y September you begin to find dashes of color among the
upland trees. It is some weakling bush, perhaps, so
poorly nourished, or by chance injured, that it must

shorten its year and burn out thus early its meager foliage; but as
soon as you see these pale flames among the greens, you feel that
the year has passed its prime.

Grown people may experience a touch of melancholy with the
approach of autumn. The years fly fast—another of those allotted
them is almost gone; the brightening foliage is a presage of bare
twigs, of frost and frozen earth, and the gales and snows of winter.
This is not the boy’s view. He is not retrospective; his interests
are bound up in the present and the future. There is a good deal
of unconscious wisdom in this mental attitude. He looks forward,
whatever the time of year, with unflagging enthusiasm to the days
approaching, and he rejoices in what he sees and experiences for
what these things then’ are, and does not worry himself with
allegories.

The bright-leaved tree at the end of summer is a matter of
interest both for its brightness and its unexpectedness. The boy
will pick a branch and take it home to show his mother, and the

next day he will carry it to school and give it to the teacher. He
(75)



76 THE FARMER’S BOY,

would be glad to share all. the good things of life that come to
him with his teacher. Next to his mother, she is the best person
he knows of. He never finds anything in his wanderings about
home or in the fields or woods that is curious or beautiful or good

to eat but that the thought of the teacher flashes into his mind.



A voyage on a log.

His intentions are better than his ability to carry them out, for
he often forgets himself, and eats all the berries he picked on the
way home, or he gets tired and throws away the treasures he has
gathered. But what he does take to the teacher is sure of a wel-
come and an interest that makes him happy, and more her faithful

follower than ever.



AUTUMN. 77

Summer merges so gently into autumn that it is hard to tell
where to draw the line of separation. September, as a rule, is a
month of mild days mingled with some that have all the heat of
midsummer; but the nights are cooler, and the dew feels icy cold
to the boy’s bare feet at times on his morning trips to and from
pasture.

Yet, if you notice the fields closely, you will see that many
changes are coming in to mark the season. The meadows are
being clipped of their second crop of grass ; the potato tops have
withered and lost themselves in the motley masses of green weeds
that continue to flourish after they have ripened; the loaded apple
trees droop their branches and sprinkle the earth with early fallen
fruit; the coarse grasses and woody creepers along the fences turn
russet and crimson, and the garden becomes increasingly ragged
and forlorn.

The garden reached its fullness and began to go to pieces in
July. First among its summer treasures came a green cucumber,
then peas and sweet corn and string beans and early potatoes.
The boy had a great deal more to do with these things than he
liked, for the gathering of them was among those small jobs
it is so handy to call on the boy to do. However, he got
not a little consolation out of it by eating of the things he
gathered. Raw string beans were not at all bad, and a pod
full of peas made a pleasant and juicy mouthful, while a small
ear of sweet corn or a stalk of rhubarb or an onion, and even
a green cucumber, could be used to vary the bill of fare. Along

one side of the garden was a row of currant bushes. He



78 THE FARMER’S BOY.

was supposed to let those mostly alone, as his mother had
warned him she wanted them for “jelly.” But he did not
interpret her warning so literally but that he allowed himself
to rejoice his palate with an occasional full cluster. It was
when the tomatoes ripened that the garden reached the top
NOCH Ny ets OL
fering of raw deli-
cacies. Those red,
full- skinned _ tro-
phies fairly melt-
ed in the boy’s
mouth. He liked
them better than
green apples.

The potatoes
were the hardest

things to manage



of all the garden

vegetables he was

Potato-bugging.

sent out to gather
for dinner. His folks had an idea that you could dig into
the sides of the hills and pull out the big potatoes, and then
cover up and let the rest keep on growing; but when the boy
tried this and had done with a hill, he had to acknowledge
that it didn’t look as if it would ever amount to much after-
ward.

The sweet-corn stalks from which the ears were picked had to



AUTUMN. 79

be cut from time to time and fed to the cows. It was this thin-
ning out of the corn, as much as the withering of the pea and
cucumber vines and irregular digging of the potatoes, that gave the
garden its early forlornness.

By August the pasture grass had been cropped short by the
cows, and the drier slopes had withered into brown. Thenceforth
it was deemed necessary to furnish the cows extra feed from
other sources of supply. The farmer would mow with his scythe,
on many evenings, in the nooks and corners about his build-
ings or along the roadside and in the lanes, and the results of
these small mowings were left for the boy to bring in on his
wheelbarrow.

Another source of fodder supply was the field of Indian corn.
Around the bases of the hills there sprouted up many surplus
shoots of a foot or two in length known as “suckers.” These were
of no earthly use where they were, and the boy on a small farm had
often the privilege, of an afternoon, of cutting a load of these suckers
for the cows. Among them he gathered a good many full-grown
stalks that had no ears on them. Later there was a whole patch
of fodder corn sown in furrows on some piece of late-plowed ground
to gather from. He had to bring in as heavy a load as he could
wheel every night, and on Saturday an extra one to last over
Sunday.

The cows had to have attention one way or another the year
through. They were most aggravating, perhaps, when in September
the shortness of feed in the pasture made them covetous of the con-

tents of the neighboring fields. Sometimes the boy would sight them



80 THE FARMER'S BOY.

in the corn. His first great anxiety was not about the corn, but as to
whether they were his folks’ cows or some of the neighbors’. He
would much rather warn some one else than undertake the cow-
chasing himself. If his study of the color and spotting of the cows
proved they were his, he went in and told his mother, then got his
stick and took a bee-line across the fields. He was wrathfully in-
clined when he started, and he became much more so when he found
how much disposed the cows were to keep tearing around in the corn
or to racing about the fields in as many different directions as there
were animals. He and the rest of the school had lately become
members of the Band of Mercy, and on ordinary occasions he had
a kindly feeling for his cows; but now he was ready to throw all
sentiment overboard, and he would break his stick over the back of
any one of these cows if she would give him the chance, which
she very unkindly would not. He had lost his temper, and now he
lost his breath, and he just dripped with perspiration. He dragged
himself along at a panting walk, and he found, after all, that this
did fully as well as all the racing and shouting he had been indulging
in. Indeed, he was not sure but that the cows had got the notion
that he had come out to have a little caper over the farm with
them for his personal enjoyment. All things have an end, and in
time the boy made the last cow leap the gap in the broken fence
back into the pasture. They every one went to browsing as if
nothing had happened, or looked at him mildly with an inquiring
forward tilt of the ears, as if they wanted to know what all this
row was about, anyway. The boy put back the knocked-down

rails, staked things up as well as he knew how, picked some pep-



AUTUMN. 81

permint by the brook to munch on, and trudged off home. When
he had drunk a quart or so of water and eaten three cookies, he
began to feel himself again.

Besides all the extra foddering mentioned, it is customary on

the small farms to give the cows, late in the year, an hour or



A chipmunk up a tree.

two's baiting each day. The cows are baited along the road-
side at first, but after the rowen is cut they are allowed to roam
about the grass fields. Of course, it is the boy who has to watch
them. There are unfenced crops and the apples that lie thick under

the trees to be guarded, not to mention the turnips in the newly
13



82 THE FARMER’S BOY.

seeded lot, and the cabbages on the hill that will spoil the milk if
the cows get them. The boundary-line fences, too, are out of re-
pair, and the cows seem to have a great anxiety to get over on
the neighbors’ premises, even if the feed is much scantier than
in the field where
they are feeding.



The boy brings
out a book, and
he settles himself
with his back
against a fence-
post and plans
for an easy time.
The cows seem

to understand the

Baiting the cows by the roadside.

situation, and they
go exploring round, as the boy says, “in the most insensible
fashion he ever saw—wouldn’t keep nowhere, nor any where else.”
He tries to make them stay within bounds by yelling at them
while sitting where he is, but they do not seem to care the least
bit about his remarks unless he is right behind them with a stick
in his hand. The cows do not allow the boy to suffer for lack of
exercise, and the hero in the book he is reading has continually to
be deserted in the most desperate situations while he runs off to
give those cows a training.

There is one of the cow’s relations that the boy has a particular

fondness for—I mean the calf. On small farms the lone summer



AUTUMN. 83

calf is tethered handily about the premises somewhere out-of-doors.
Every day or two, when it has nibbled and trodden the circuit of
grass in its tether pretty thoroughly, it is moved to a fresh spot.
The boy does this, and he feeds the calf its milk each night and
morning. If the calf is very young it does not know enough to
drink, and the boy has to dip his fingers in the milk and let the
calf suck them while he entices it, by gradually lowering his hand,
to put its nose in the pail. When he gets his hand into the milk
and the calf imagines it is getting lots of milk out of the boy’s
fingers, he will gently withdraw them. The calf is inclined to re-
sent this by giving a vigorous buck with his head. Very likely
the boy gets slopped, but he knows well enough what to expect,
not to allow himself to be sent sprawling. He repeats the finger
process until in time the calf will drink alone, but he never can get
it to stop bucking. Indeed, he does not try very hard, except
occasionally, for he finds this butting rather entertaining, and
sometimes he does not object to butting his own head against the
calf’s. He and the calf cut many a caper together before the sum-
mer is through. Things become most exciting when the calf gets
loose. It will go galloping all about the premises. It has no regard
for the garden or the flower plants, or,the linen laid out on the grass
to dry. It makes the chickens squawk and scamper, and the turkeys
gobble and the geese gabble. Its heels go kicking through the
air in all sorts of positions, its tail is elevated like a flag-pole, and
there is a rattling chain hitched to its neck that is jerking along
in its company. The calf is liable to step on this chain, and then

it stands on its head with marvelous suddenness. The women



Full Text
z
i
z}

4

ie
i
H
i





Meditations by a streamside,
ap felts!

Pan WE NS BO

TEXT AND ILLUSTRATIONS BY

Ci ONE Olan Onn

AUTHOR OF THE COUNTRY SCHOOL IN NEW ENGLAND



NEW YORK
D. APPLETON AND COMPANY

1894
CopyRriGHT, 1894,
By D. APPLETON AND COMPANY.

ELECTROTYPED AND PRINTED
AT THE APPLETON Press, U.S.A.
PNP AOR Ye NOME,

In what this volume tells of the farmer’s boy, readers will
find that many episodes and interests in the life of the boy are
not even mentioned. One book, indeed, would not contain them
all. There is, however, one important omission that is intentional
—his school life. The reason for this is that the writer treated the
subject in detail in a volume uniform with this, published last year.
Its title is The Country School in New England, and its pub-
lishers are D. Appleton and Company, of New York. It is also to
be explained that, while the present volume is primarily about the
doy on the farm, it is intended that the rest of the family, in par-
ticular the girl, shall not altogether lack attention either in text

or pictures. :
2 CLIFTON JOHNSON.

Hapv.tey, Mass., June, 1894.
GON TNT S.

PART I.
PAGE
WINTER. : ‘ I
IPANR AC JOG
SPRING. : 3 : : : f : : i 24
IBAVR ales elele
SUMMER . ; : : : : : : : : : : AO
PART IV.
AUTUMN . . : : : : : : : : : 5 75
PART V.

COUNTRY CHILDREN IN GENERAL. : : : : ; : o OY
EIGIP OL? MLIGUGIWIRAMINON |S,

Meditations by a streamside .

The morning scrub at the sink
Late to supper

In the January thaw—wet feet
Sliding by the riverside . :
Comfort by the fire on a cold day
Doorstep pets

Bringing in wood .

Coasting

Winding the clock

On the fence over the brook
Rubbing down old Billy

A drink of sap

A new picture paper

Catching flood-wood

A hillside sheep pasture

Spring chickens

Willow whistles :

The opening of the fishing season
Leap-frog in the front yard .

A blossom for the baby

Playing “ Indian”

On the way to pasture .
Discussing the colt

A little housekeeper

Some fun in a boat
Advising the hired boy .
Waiting for the dinner horn.
Eating clover blossoms .

(vii)

PAGE
Frontispiece

aOonum Ww

. Facing
10
Il
: ayels3
. Facing 15
16
19
21
22
24
26
. Facing 28
31
32
: eae
. Facing 37
39
40
4I
. Facing 42
. - 43
. Facing 44
47
48
50
viii LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS.

In swimming

Cutting their names in a tree-trunk
Weeding onions

Working out his “stent”
Fishing

A faithful follower

Two who have been a-borrowing
The Fourth of July

Getting ready to mow.

On the hay tedder

The boy rakes after

A summer evening game of tag.
Waders—they wet their “pants”

A voyage on a log

Potato-bugging

A chipmunk up a tree.

Baiting the cows by the oie

The boys and their steers

Shooting with a sling .

A corner of the sheep yard.

Helping grandpa husk .

Out for a tramp . :

A drink at the tub in the mee ae

Over the pasture hills to the chestnut trees

A mud turtle

Weeding the posy bed : : 3

Grandpa husks sweet corn for dinner, and tells a story at the same time
A game of croquet

Afternoon on the front porch

A sawmill

Going up for a slide

A winter ride : s

Washing the supper dishes .

Sliding on the frost

Tailpiece

. Facing

. Facing

. Facing

. Facing

. Facing

PAGE
51
52
54
57
58
60
63
65
67
68
71
72
73
76
78
81
82
85
87
89
go
gI
g2
93
95
98

100
102
104
107
108
III
112
114
116
THE FARMER'S BOY.

FUN,

WINTER.

N New-Years morning the first thing the boy hears is the
() voice of his father calling from the foot of the stairs,
“Come, Frank—time to get up!”

You may perhaps imagine that the boy leaps lightly from his
bed, and that he is soon clattering merrily down the stairs to the
tune of his own whistle. But the real, live boy who will fit so
romantic and pretty an impression it would be hard to find.

Our boy Frank is so unheroic as to barely grunt out a response
that shall give his father to understand that he has heard him, and
then he turns over and slumbers again. It is six o’clock. The first
gray hints of the coming day have begun to penetrate the little
chamber. The boy’s clothing lies in a heap on the floor just where
he jumped out of it in his haste the night before to get out of
the frosty atmosphere and into his bed. In one corner of the
room is a decrepit chair, whose cane-seat bottom had some time
ago increased its original leakiness to such a degree that it had
been judged unsuited to the pretensions of the sitting-room below

stairs, and been banished to the chambers. An old trunk with a
I
2 THE FARMER'S BOY.

cloth cover thrown over it, and a stand with a cracked little mirror
above, are the other most striking articles of furnishing.

The walls of the room are not papered, and where the bed stands
the bedposts have bruised the plaster so that you catch a glimpse
or two of the lath behind. Yet the walls are not so bare as they
might be, for the vacant space is made interesting by a large, legal-
looking certificate that affirms that the boy’s father, by the payment
of thirty dollars, has been made a life member of the Home Mis-
sionary Society. The boy is rather proud of this fact; for, though
he does not know what it all means, he feels sure it is something
good and religious. He often reads the certificate, and ciphers out
the names of the distinguished men who have put their signatures
at the foot of the document; and he likes to look at the Bible scene
pictured at the top, and takes pleasure in the elaborate frame, all
made out of hemlock and pine cones. He is tempted to the belief
that he is blessed above most boys in having a father who has the
honor to be a life member of the Home Missionary Society, and
who possesses such a certificate in such a frame. Indeed, he has
gone much further than this upon occasion, and has complaisantly
concluded that his folks were pretty sure of going to heaven in
the end—at any rate, their chances were better than those of most
of the neighbors. He knew very well his folks were more religious
than most, and wasn’t his father a life member of the Home Mis-
sionary Society ?

Our boy did not think these thoughts on New-Year’s morning.
Getting-up time came while it was still too dark to make out much

besides the dim shapes of the articles about the room. Even the
WINTER. 3

gayly colored soap advertisement he had hung next to the mis-
sionary certificate was dull and shapeless, and the garments depend-
ing from the long row of nails in the wall at the foot of the bed
could not be told apart,

The morning is very
cold. The window panes
are rimed with frost, so
that hardly a spot of
clear glass remains un-
touched, and there is a
cloudy puff of vapor
from among the pillows
with the boy’s every
outgoing breath.

The boy’s father,
after he had _ properly
warned his son of the
approach of day, made
the kitchen fire and
went out to the barn to . 2
feed the cattle. When a



he returns to the house The morning scrub at the sink.

he appears to be aston-

ished that Frank has not come down, though one would think
he might have got used to it by this time. He stalks to the up-
stairs door and says, in tones whose sternness seems to prophesy

dire things if not met with prompt obedience: “ Frank! don’t you
4 THE FARMER’S BOY.

hear me? I called you a quarter o’ an hour ago. I want you to
get up right off!”

“Comin’,” says Frank, and he rubs his eyes and tries to muster
resolution to get out into the cold.

“Well, it’s bout time!” returns his father, “ and you better be
spry about it, too.”

When you sleep on a feather bed it lets you down into its
yielding mass, so that if you have enough clothes on top you can
sleep in tropical contentment. There is no chance for the frost to
get in at any of the corners. Frank felt that his happiness would
be complete were he allowed to doze on half the morning in his
snug nest, but he knew it was hopeless aspiring to such bliss, and
a few minutes later he appeared down-stairs, and the way he ap-
peared was this: his hair was tumbled topsy-turvy, his eyes had still
a sleepy droop, and he was in his shirt sleeves and stocking feet.
He had no fondness for freezing in his room any longer than was
necessary after he was once out of bed, and he always left such
garments as he could spare down-stairs by the stove. Of course,
he had not washed. That he would do just before breakfast, at the
kitchen sink, after the outdoor work was done.

The half-dressed boy, as soon as he gets down-stairs, hastens to
make friends with the sitting-room stove, where a fire, with the aid
of “chunks,” has been kept all night. kitchen, and his mother is clattering about there, thawing things
out and getting breakfast. The boy hugs the stove as closely
as the nature of it will allow, and turns himself this way and

that to let the heat soak in thoroughly all around. Then he puts
WINTER. 5



Late to supper.

on the heavy pair of shoes he left the night before in a comfort-
able place back of the stove, gets his collar on, and his vest and
coat, pulls a cap down over his ears, and shuffles off to the barn.

Frank is thirteen years old, but he has been one of the workers
whom it has seemed necessary to stir out the first thing in the morn-
ing for years back. He knew how to milk when he was seven, and
he began to bring in wood—a stick at a time—about as soon as he
could walk. He did not grumble at his lot nor think it a hard one,
nor would he had it been ten times worse. Indeed, children, unless
set a bad example by the complaining habits of their elders, or

because they are spoiled by petting and lack of employment, accept
6 THE FARMER’S BOY.

things as they find them, and make the best of them. Even the
farm debt, which may burden the elders very heavily and keep all
the family on the borders of shabbiness for years, makes but a light
and occasional impression on the youngsters. Then as to those acci-
dents that are continually happening on a farm, and that are so
heart-breaking and discouraging to the poorer ones—the collapse
of a wagon, the sickness of the best cow, the death of the old horse,
the giving out of the kitchen stove so that a new one is absolutely
necessary; the children may shed a few tears, but work, and the
little pleasures they so readily discover under the most untoward
conditions, soon make the sun shine again and the mists of trouble
melt into forgetfulness.

Boys on small farms which have only two or three cows do not
milk regularly —the father or an older brother does it; but if the
Test wy Ole themiamate
away from home or
too busy with other
work, the boy is
called upon. Per-
haps the father has
to go so many miles

over the hills to



market, that he will

not get home until

In the January thaw—wet feet.

well on in the even-
ing. In that case you find the boy at nightfall poking about

the glooms of the barn with a lantern, and doing all the odd
WINTER. 7

jobs that need to be done before he can milk. When these are
finished, the little fellow gets the big tin pail at the house, hangs
his lantern on a nail in the stable, and sits down beside one of the
cows. He sets the milk streams playing a pleasant tune on the reso-
nant bottom of the pail, and from time to time snuggles his head
up against the cow for the sake of the warmth. If the cow gives a
pailful, his knees begin to ache and shake with the weight of the
milk before he has done, and his fingers grow cramped and stiff with
their long-continued action. However, the boy always perseveres
to the end; and if, when he takes the milk in, his mother says he
has got more than his pa does, he grows an inch taller in conscious
pride of his merits.

There is a difference in cows. Some requite a good deal more
muscle than others to bring the milk; some are skittish. One of
these uneasy cows will keep whacking you on the ear with her tail
every minute or two ali through the milking, and at the same time
the coarse and not overclean tuft of hair on the end will go stinging
along your cheek. Then the cow will be continually stepping away
from you sidewise, and you have to keep edging after her with your
stool. These unexpected and uncalled-for dodges make the streams
of milk go astray, aid you get your overalls and boots well splashed
as one of the results; another is that you lose your temper, and
give the cow a fierce rap with your fist. That makes matters worse
instead of better. The cow seems to have no notion of what you
are chastising her for, and gets livelier than ever. It sometimes
happens, in the end, that the cow gives the boy a sudden poke with
a hind foot that sends him sprawling—pail, stool, and all. Then the
8 THE FARMER’S BOY.

boy feels that his cup of sorrow has run over; he knows that his
pail of milk has,

When a boy gets into trouble he always feels that the best thing
he can do is to go and hunt up his mother. That is what our boy
who met disaster in the cow-stable did. He left his lantern behind,
but he carried in the pail with the dribble of milk and foam that
was still left in the bottom.

His mother was cutting a loaf of bread on the supper-table.
“Are you through so soon?” she asked. “Why, Johnny, what’s
the matter?” she says, noticing his woe-begone face.

“The cow kicked me!” replies Johnny.

' His mother gets excited, and steps over to examine him. “ Well,
I should say so!” she exclaimed. “You're completely plastered
from head to foot. Spilt all the milk, too, didn’t it? Well, well,
what’s the matter with the old cow?”

“T don’ know,” replied Johnny tearfully. “She just up and
kicked me right over.”

“Well, now, Johnny, never mind,” said his mother soothingly.
“You needn’t try to milk her any more to-night. You better tie
her legs together next time when you milk. She’s real hateful,
that cow is. I’ve seen the way she'll hook around the other
cows lots of times. Here, you run into the bedroom, and I'll
get your Sunday clothes for you to change into. Wait a min-
ute till I lay down a newspaper for you to put your old duds
onto.”

A little later Johnny went out to the barn and brought in the
lantern. Then he sat down to supper, and by the time he had


rside,

by the river

s

Slidin
WINTER. 9

eaten ten mouthfuls of bread and milk he felt entirely comforted
and blissful after his late trials.

The boy’s usual work at night was to let the cows in from the
barnyard where they had been standing, to get down hay and cut
up stalks for them, water and feed the horses, bring in wood, not
forgetting kindlings for the kitchen stove and chunks to keep the
sitting-room fire overnight, and, last but not least, he had to do
all the odd helping his father happened to call on him for.

The boy enjoyed most of this, more or less, but his real happi-
ness came when work was done and he could wash up and sit down
to his supper. The consciousness that he had got through the day’s
labor, the comfort of the indoor warmth, the keen appetite he had
won—all combined to give such a complaisancy, both physical and
mental, as might move many a grown-up and pampered son of
fortune to envy.

The boy usually spends his evenings very quietly. He studies
his lessons on the kitchen table, or he draws up close to the sitting-
room fire and reads a story paper. There is not so much literature
in the average family but that the boy will go through this paper
from beginning to end, advertisements and all, and the pictures half
a dozen times over. In the end, the paper is laid away in a closet
up-stairs, and when he happens on dull times and doesn’t know what
else to do with himself, he wanders up there and delves in this pile
of papers. He finds it very pleasant, too, stirring up the echoes of
past enjoyment by a renewed acquaintance with the stories and
pictures he had found interesting long before.

Evenings are varied with family talks, and sometimes the boy
10 THE FARMER'S BOY.

induces his grandfather to repeat some old rhymes, tell a story, or
sing a song. When there are several children in the family things
often become quite lively of an evening. The older children are
called upon to amuse the younger ones, and they have some high

times. There are lots of fun and noise, and squalling, too, and some



Comfort by the fire on a cold day.

energetic remarks and actions on the part of the elders, calculated
to put a sudden stop to certain of the most enterprising and reck-
less of the proceedings.

The baby is a continual subject of solicitude. His tottering steps
give him many a fall, anyway, and he aspires to climb everything
climbable ; and if he doesn’t tumble down two or three times getting

up, he is pretty sure to do it after the accomplishment of his ambi-
WINTER. IT

tion. Then he makes astonishing expeditions on his hands and
knees. You feel yourself liable to stumble over and annihilate him
almost anywhere. The parents realize these things, and is it any
wonder, when the rest of the flock get to flying around the room
full tilt, that they become alarmed for the baby, and that their voices
get raspy and forceful ?

Blindman’s buff and tag and general skirmishing are not alto-
gether suited to the little room where, besides the chairs and lounge
and organ, there is a hot stove and a table with a lamp on it.

You need some practice to
get much satisfaction from a
conversation carried on amid | : | i i
the hubbub. You have to

shout every word; and if the



children happen to have a
special fondness for you, they ~
do most of their tumbling pee
right around your chair. es
Some of the children’s best +
times come when the father =
ae

and mother throw off all other



eye titi

cares and thoughts, and be-

‘

come for the time being their
companions in the evening en-
joyment. What roaring fun
they have when papa plays ae

wheelbarrow with them, and Doorstep pets.
12 THE FARMER’S BOY,

puzzles them with some of the sleight-of-hand tricks he learned when
he was young; or when mamma becomes a much- entertained lis-
tener while the oldest boy speaks a piece, and rolls his voice, and
keeps his arms waving in gestures from beginning to end! The
other children are quite overpowered by the larger boy’s eloquence.
Even the baby sits in quiet on the floor, and lets his mouth drop
open in astonishment.

The mother is apt to be more in sympathy with these goings on
than the father, and I fancy it is on such occasions as he happens to
be absent that they have most of this sort of celebration. At such
a time, too, the children wax confidential, and tell what they intend
to be when they grow up: this one will be a storekeeper, this one
will be a minister, this one a doctor, this one a singer. They all
intend to be rich and famous, and to do some fine things for their
mother some day. They do not pick out any of the callings for love
of gain primarily, but because they think they will enjoy the life. In-
deed, when Tommy said he was going to be a minister, the reason he
gave for this desire was that he wanted to ring the bell every Sunday.

Bedtime comes on a progressive scale, gauged by the age of the
individual. First the baby is metamorphosed and tucked away in
his crib; then the three-year-old goes through a lingering process
of preparation, and, after a little run in his nightgown about the
room, he is stowed away in crib number two, and his mother sings
him a lullaby, or a song from Gospel Hymns, and that fixes zm for
the night. These two occupy the same sleeping room as the parents,
and it adjoins the sitting room. The door to it has been open

all the evening, and it is comfortably warm.
WINTER, 13

Girls and boys of eight or ten years old will take their own lamps
and march off to the cold upper chambers at eight o’clock or before.
Some of the upper rooms may have a stovepipe running through,
which serves to blunt the edge of the cold a trifle, or: there may be

a register or hole in the floor to allow the heat to come up from



Bringing tn wood.

below; but, as a rule, the chambers are shivery places in winter,
and when the youngsters jump in between the icy sheets their teeth
are set chattering, and it is some minutes before the delightful
warmth which follows gains its gradual ascendency.

The boy who sits up as late as his elders is usually well started
14 THE FARMER’S BOY.

in his teens. The children are not inclined to complain of early
hours unless something uncommon is going on. They are tired
enough by bedtime. Even the older members of the family are
physically weary with the day’s work, and the evening talk is apt
to be lagging and sleepy in its tone, and the father gets to yawning
over his reading, and the mother to nodding over her sewing. Many
times the chiefs of the household will start bedward soon after eight ;
and as to the growing boy, he usually disregards the privilege of late
hours, and takes himself off at whatever time after supper his tired-
ness begins to get overpowering.

It would be difficult to say surely that the boy’s room I described
early in this chapter was an average one. The boy is not coddled
with the best room in the house. In some dwellings the upper
story has but two or three rooms that are entirely finished. The
rest is open space roughly floored, and with no ceiling but the rafters
and boards of the roof. There are boys who have a bed or two in
such quarters as these, or in a little half-garret room in the L.
These unfinished quarters are the less agreeable if the roof happens
to be leaky. Sounds of dripping water or sifting snow within one’s
room are not pleasant. On the other hand, there are plenty of boys
who have rooms with striped paper on the walls, and possibly a rag
carpet under foot, not to speak of other things no less ornate.

In the matter of knickknacks, most boys do not fill their rooms
to any extent with them—the girls are more apt to do this. But a
boy is pretty sure to have some treasures in his room. He is not
very particular where he stows them, and he is likely to have some

severe trials about house-cleaning time. His mother fails to appre-


Coasting.
WINTER. 15

ciate the value of his special belongings, and is not in sympathy
with his method of placing them. They get disarranged and thrown
away. If fortune favors the boy with the drawers of an old bureau,
he is fairly safe; but things he puts on the shelf and stand, and espe-
cially those he puts right along there in a row under the head of
the bed—oh, where are they?

A winter breakfast on a farm is over about sunrise. All the
rolling hills near and far lie pure and white beneath the dome of
blue, and they sparkle with many a frosty diamond, and sunward
gleam with dazzling radiance. I doubt if the boy cares very much
about this. He is no stickler for beauty. Questions of comfort
and a good time lie uppermost in his mind. Nature's shifting
forms and colors and movements affect him usually but mildly as
a matter of beauty or sentiment, though in a simple way many
things touch him to a degree; but commonly the phase that pre-
sents itself uppermost is a physical one. The sun shines on the
snow—it blinds his eyes. A gray day is the dismal forerunner of
a storm. Sunsets, unless particularly gaudy, have no interest, except
as they suggest some weather sign. He delights more in days that
are crystal clear, when every object in the distant hills and valleys
stands sharply distinct, than in the mellow days that soften the
landscape with their gauzy blues. He loves action, not dreams.

Boys, like animals, feel a friskiness in their bones on the approach
of a storm. They will run and shout then for the mere pleasure
of it, and play, of whatever sort, gets an added zest. It may be
the dead of winter, but that does not keep them indoors. If the

wind blows a gale and whistles and rattles about the home build-
16 THE FARMER’S BOY.

ings and makes the trees crack and creak, so much the better. Nor
will the onset of the storm itself drive them indoors. The whirling
flakes may increase
in number till they
blur all the land-
scape, and go seeth-
ing in shifting wind-
rows over every hil-
lock ; yet it will be
some time before
the children will
pause in their slid-
ing, skating, or run-
ning to think of
the indoor fire.
When they do
go in, it is as if
all the out-of-door
breezes had gained
sudden entrance.
They all come tum-

bling through the



door with a_ bang

Winding the clock.

and a rush, and
there is a scattering of clinging snow when they pull off their
Wraps and throw them into convenient chairs or corners. They

declare they are almost frozen as they stamp their feet about the


WINTER. 17

kitchen fire, and hug their elbows to their bodies and rub their
fingers over the stove’s iron top.

“Well, why didn’t you come in before, then?” asks their mother.

“Oh, we was playing,” is the answer. “We been having a lots
of fun. The snow’s drifted up the road so it’s over our shoes now.”

“You better take off your shoes, if you've got any snow in
em,” the mother says. “I declare, how you have slopped up the
floor! And you've made it cold as a barn here, comin’ in all in a
lump that way.—Here, Johnny, don’t you go into the sittin’ room
till you get kind o’ dried off and decent.”

“T just wanted to get the cat,” says Johnny.

“Well, you can’t go in on the carpet with such lookin’ shoes,
cat or no cat!” is his mother’s response.

Meanwhile she has taken her broom and brushed out on the
piazza some of the snow lumps and puddles of water the children
have scattered.

The indoor stoves are an important item in the boy’s winter
life. It is a matter of perpetual astonishment to him how much
wood those stoves will burn. He has to bring it all in, and he
finds it as much of a drudgery as his sister does the everlasting
washing and wiping of dishes. It is his duty to fill the wood-
boxes about nightfall each day. The wood shed is half dark, and
the day has lost every particle of glow and warmth. He can
rarely get up his resolution to the point of filling the wood-boxes
“chuck full.” He puts in what he thinks will “do,” and lives in
hopes he will not be disturbed in other plans by having to re-

plenish the stock before the regulation time the night following.
18 THE FARMER'S BOY.

Sometimes he tries to avoid the responsibility of a doubtfully filled
wood-box by referring the case to his mother.

“Ts that enough, mamma?” he says.

“Well, have you filled it?” she asks.

“Tt’s pretty full,” replies the boy.

“Well, perhaps that'll do,” responds his mother sympathetically,
and the boy becomes at once conscience free and cheerful.

All through the day, when the boy is in the home neighborhood,
he is continually resorting to the stoves to get warmed up. Every
time he comes in he makes a few passes over the stove with his
hands, and he must be crowded for time if he can not take a turn
or two before the fire to give the heat a chance at all sides. If he
has still more leisure, he gets an apple from the cellar, or a cooky
from the pantry, and eats it while he warms up; or he goes in and
sits by the sitting-room stove and reads a little in the paper. One
curious thing he early finds out is, that he gets cold much quicker
when he is working than when he is playing.

Probably the majority of New England boys spend most of the
winter in school; though in the hill towns, where roads are bad and
houses much scattered, the smaller schools are closed. While he
attends school the boy has not much time for anything but the
home chores; but on Saturdays, and in vacation, he may at times
go into the woods with the men. There is no small excitement
in clinging to the sled as it pitches along through the rough
wood roads amid a clanking of chains and the shouts of the
driver. The man, who is familiar with the work, seems to have

no hesitation in driving anywhere and over all sorts of obsta-
WINTER. 19

cles. The boy does






not know whether he
is most exhilarated or
frightened, but he has
no thought of show-
ing a lack of cour-
age, and he hangs
on, and when he
gets to the end

of the journey

thinks he has

been having



On the fence over the brook,
some great fun.

The boy has his own small axe, and is all eagerness to prove
his virtues as a woodsman. He whacks away energetically at some
of the young growths, and when he brings a sapling four inches
through to the ground he is triumphant, and wants all the others to
look and see what he has done. He finds himself getting into quite
a sweat over his work, and he has to roll up his earlaps and get
his overcoat off and hang it on a stump. Then he digs into the
work again.

In time the labor becomes monotonous to him, and he is moved
to tramp through the snows and investigate the work of the others.
There is his father making a clean, wide gash in the side of a great
hemlock. Every blow tells, and seems to go just where he wanted
it to. The boy wonders why, when he cuts off a tree, he makes his

cut so jagged. He stands a long time watching his father’s chips fly,
20 THE FARMER'S BOY.

and then gains a safe distance to see the tree tremble and totter as
the opposite cuts deepen, at the base, near its heart. What a mighty
crash it makes when it falls! How the snow flies and the branches
snap! The boy is awed for the moment, then is fired with enthu-
siasm, and rushes in with his small axe to help trim off the branches.
After a time there comes a willingness that his father should finish
the operation, and he wanders off to see how the others are get-
ting on.

By and by he stirs up the neighborhood with shouts to the effect
that he has found some tracks. His mind immediately becomes
chaotic with ideas of hunting and trapping. Now that he has
begun to notice, he finds frequent other tracks, and some, he is
pretty sure, are those of foxes and some of rabbits and some of
squirrels. Why, the woods are just full of game!—he will bring
out his box trap to-morrow, and the certainty grows on him that
he will not only get some creatures that will prove a pleasant
addition to the family larder, but will have some furs nailed up
on the side of the barn that will bring him a nice little sum of
pocket money.

That evening he brought out the box trap and got it into
practice, and made all the younger children wild with excitement
over the tracks he had seen and his plans for trapping. They all
wanted a share, and were greatly disappointed the next day when
their father would not let them go too.

The boy set his trap, and moved it every few days to what he
thought would prove a more favorable place, but he had no luck

to boast of. Yet he caught something three times. The first time
WINTER. 21

he had the trap set in an evergreen thicket in a little space almost
bare of snow. He was pleased enough, one day, to find the trap
sprung, and at once became all eagerness to know what he had
inside. He pulled out the spindle at the back and looked in, but
the tiny hole did not let in light enough. Very cautiously he lifted
the lid a trifle. Still nothing was to be seen, and he feared the
trap had sprung itself’ When he ventured to raise the lid a bit
more, a little, slim-legged field mouse leaped out. The boy clapped

the lid down hard, but the mouse hopped away, and in a flash had



Rubbing down Old Billy.
22 THE FARMER’S BOY.

disappeared in a hole at the foot of a small tree. The boy was
disappointed in having even such a creature escape him.
The next time, whatever it was he caught gnawed a hole through

the corner of the box, and had gone about its business when our



A drink of sap.

boy made his morning visit to the trap. Then he took the trap
home and lined the inside with tin.

He had no luck for some days after, and finally forgot the trap
altogether. It was not till spring that he happened upon it again.

He felt a tingle of the old excitement in his veins when he saw
that the lid was down. He opened it with all the caution born

of experience, but the red squirrel which was within had been long
WINTER. 23

dead; and when the boy thought of its slow death by starvation
in that dark box, he felt that he never would want to trap any
more in that way.

The boy finds the woods much more enjoyable than the wood-
pile when it is deposited in the home yard. He knows that as
long as there is a stick of it left he will never have a moment of
leisure that will not be liable to be interrupted with a suggestion
that he go out and shake the saw awhile. The hardest woods, that
make the hottest fires, are the ones that the saw bites into most
slowly and are the most discouraging. The best the boy can do
is to hunt out such soft wood as the pile contains, and all the small
sticks. He makes some variety in his labor by piling up the sawed
sticks in a bulwark to keep the wind off, only it has to be acknowl-
edged that he never really succeeds in accomplishing this purpose.
But the unsawed pile grows gradually smaller, and his folks are
not so severe that they expect the boy to do a man’s work or
to keep at it as steadily. He stops now and then to play with
the smaller children, and to go to the house to see what time it
is or to get something to eat. Besides, his father works with him
a good deal, and if there are times when the minutes go slowly,
the days, as a whole, slip along quickly, and, before the boy is

aware, winter is at an end if the woodpile isn’t.
PVEIRIT I,

SPRING.

ITH the coming of March comes
spring, according to the almanac,

but in New England the snow-



storms and wintry gales hold sway
often to the edge of April. Yet
you can generally look for some
vigorous thaws before Aemcm Canoe
the month. There are occasional
days of such warmth and quiet that
you can fairly hear the snow melt,
and the air is full of the tinkle of
running brooks. You catch the sound
of a woodpecker tapping in the orch-
ard, and the small boy tumbles into
vee: the house, jubilant over the fact that
LUE OE Ee he has seen a bluebird flitting through
the branches of the elm before the house. All the children make
haste to run out into the yard to see the sight. Even the mother
throws a shawl over her head and steps out on the piazza.
“Yessir! there he is!” says Tommy, excitedly. “ That’s a blue-

bird, sure pop!”
(24)
SPRING. 25

Puddles have gathered in the soggy snow along the roadside,
and the little stream in the meadow has overflowed its banks. When
the boy perceives this, he becomes immediately anxious to get into
his rubber boots and go wading. His mother has a doubtful opinion
of these wadings, but it is such a matter of life and death to the
boy that she has not the heart to refuse him, and contents herself
with admonitions not to stay out too long, not to wade in too deep,
not to get his clothes wet, etc., etc.

The boy begins with one of the small puddles, for he has these
cautions in his mind, but the scope of his enterprise continually en-
larges, and he presently finds himself trying to determine just how
deep a place he can get into without letting the water in over his
boot-tops. He does not desist from the experiment until he feels a
cold trickle down one of his legs, from which he concludes that he
got in just a little too far that time, and he makes a hasty retreat.
But he has made his mind easy on the point as to how deep he
can go, and now turns his attention to poking about with a stick
he has picked up. He is quite charmed with the way he can make
the water and slush spatter with it. When he gets tired with this,
and the accumulating wet begins to penetrate his clothing here and
there, he adjourns to the meadow and sets his stick sailing down
the stream there. It fills his heart with delight to see the way it
pitches and whirls, and he slumps along the brook borders and
shouts at it as he keeps it company. Later he returns to the road-
way and makes half a dozen dams or more to stop the tiny rills
that are coursing down its furrows. He does this with such

serious thoughtfulness and with such frequent, studious pauses
26 THE FARMER’S BOY.



Catching flood-wood,

as would well fit the actions of some of the world’s great phi-
losophers.

No doubt the boy is making discoveries and learning lessons;
for the farm, with varied Nature always so close, is an excellent
kindergarten, and the farm child is all the time improving its oppor-
tunities after some fashion.

When our boy goes indoors his mother shows symptoms of
alarm over his condition. Ye thinks he has kept pretty dry, but

his mother wants to know what on earth he’s been doing to get
so wet.

“Ain't been doin’ nothin’,” says Tommy.

“Well, I should say so!” remarks his mother. “Here, you let
SPRING. oy,

me sit you in this chair to kind o’ drean off, while I pull off them
soppin’ mittens.”

She has to wring the mittens out at the sink before she hangs
them on the line back of the stove. Next she pulls off the boy’s
boots, and stands him up while she takes off his overcoat, and lastly
pushes him, chair and all, up by the fire, where he can put his feet
on the stove-hearth. Tommy did not see the necessity for all this
fuss. He felt dry enough, and all right; yet, as long as his mother
does not get disturbed to the chastising point, he finds a good deal
of comfort in having her attend to him in this way.

It was on one of these still, sunshiny March days that it occurred
to the oldest boy of the household that it was about time for the
sap to begin to run. He does not waste much time in making
tracks for the shop, where he hunts up some old spouts and an
auger. He will tap two or three of the trees near the house, any-
Way. There is no lack of helpers. All the smaller children are on
hand to watch and advise him, and to fetch pans from the house
and prop them up under the spouts. They watch eagerly for the
appearance of the first drops, and when they sight them each tells the
rest that “ There they are!” and “It does run!” and they want their
older brother to stop his boring at the next tree and come and look.
But William feels that he is too old to show enthusiasm about such
things, and he simply tells them that he guesses that he’s “seen sap
‘fore now.” The children take turns applying their mouths to the
end of spout number one to catch the first drops that trickle down
it. In days following they are frequent visitors to these tapped

trees, with the avowed purpose of seeing how the sap is running;
28 THE FARMER’S BOY.

but it is to be noticed that at the same time they seem always to
find it convenient to take a drink from a pan.

In the more hilly regions of New England most of the farms
have a sugar orchard on them, and the tree-tapping that begins
about the house is soon transferred to the woods. The boy goes
along, too—indeed, what work is there about a farm that he does
not have a hand in, either of his own will or because he has to?
But the phase I wish now to speak of is that found on the farms
that possess no maple orchard. The boy sees that the trees about
the house are attended to, as a matter of course, and he guards the
pans and warns off the neighbors’ boys when he thinks they are
making too free with the pans’ contents. Each morning he goes
out with a pail, gathers the sap, and sets it boiling in a kettle on
the stove. In time comes the final triumph, when, some morning,
the family leaves the molasses pot in the cupboard, and they have
maple sirup on their griddle-cakes.

It is not every boy whose enterprise stops with the tapping of
the shade trees in front of the house. On many farms there is an
occasional maple about the fields, and sometimes there are a few in
a patch of near woodland. In such a case the boy gathers a lot of
elder-stalks while it is still winter, cleans out the pith, and shapes
them into spouts. At the first approach of mild weather he taps the
scattered trees and distributes among them every receptacle the
house affords that does not leak, or whose leaks can be soldered or
beeswaxed, to catch the sap. After that, while the season lasts, he
and his brother swing a heavy tin can on a staff between them and

make periodical tours sap-collecting. These frequent tramps through
A hillside

sheep pasture,


SPRING. 29

mud and snow in all kinds of weather soon become monotonously
wearisome, and the boys usually find one season of this kind of ex-
perience enough.

With the going of the snow comes a mud spell that lasts fully a
month. It takes you forever to drive anywhere with a team. It is
drag, drag, drag, and slop, slop, slop all the way. Even the home
dooryard is little better than a bog, and the boy can never seem to
step out anywhere without coming in loaded with mud—at least, so
his mother says. She has continually to be warning him to keep
out of the sitting-room, and at times seems to be thrown into as
much consternation over some of his footprints that she finds on
the kitchen floor as was Robinson Crusoe over the discovery of that
lone footprint in the sand. Just as soon as she hears the boy’s
shuffle on the piazza and catches sight of him coming in at the
kitchen door, she says, “There, Willy, don’t you come in till you've
wiped your feet.”

“T have,” says Willy.

“Why, just look at ’em!” his mother responds. “I should
think you’d got about all the mud there was in the yard on
fem

“T never saw such sticky old stuff,” says Willy. “Your broom’s
most wore out already.”

“Well,” remarked his mother, “ what are you gettin’ into the mud
for all over that way, every time you step out? Pa’s laid down
boards all around the yard to walk on. Why don’t you go on
them ?”

“They ain’t laid where I want to go,” replies Willy.
30 THE FARMER'S BOY.

« Anyway,” is his mother’s final remark, “I can’t have my kitchen
floor mussed up by you trackin’ in every five minutes.”

But the really severe experiences in this line come when the barn-
yard is cleaned out. For several days the boy’s shoes are “a sight,”
and his journeyings are accompanied with such an odor that his
mother warns him off entirely from her domains. He is not allowed
to walk in and get that piece of pie for his lunch, but has it handed
out to him through the narrowly opened kitchen door. When meal-
time comes he has to leave his shoes and overalls in the woodshed,
and comes into the house in his stocking-feet. Even then his
mother makes derogatory remarks, though he tells her Ze “can’t
smell anything.”

It is astonishing how quickly, after the snow goes, the green will
clothe the fields, and how, with bursting buds and the first blossoms,
all Nature seems teeming with life again. I think the sentiment of
the boy is touched by this season more than by any other. The
unfolding of all this new life is full of mysterious charm. It is a
delight to tread the velvety turf, to find the first flowers, to catch the
oft-repeated sweetness of a phoebe’s song, or the more forceful trill-
ing of a robin at sundown. It is at nightfall that spring appeals to
the boy most strongly. He can still feel the heat of the sun when
it lingers at the horizon, and in the gentle warmth of its rays en-
joys a run about the yard, and claps at the little clouds of midges
that are sporting in the air. As soon as the sun disappears there
is a gathering of cool evening damps, and from the swampy hol-
lows come many strange pipings and croakings. The boy wonders

vaguely about all the creatures that make these noises, and imitates
SPRING. 31

their voices from the home lawn. When the dusk begins to deepen

into darkness he is glad to get into the light and warmth of the
kitchen.

To tell the truth, our boy is rather afraid of the dark. Just what



Spring chickens,

he fears is but dimly defined, though bears, thieves, and Indians are
among the fearsome shades that people the night glooms. It does
not take much of a noise, when he is out alone in the dark, to set his

heart thumping, and his imagination pictures dreadful possibilities

’
e
32 ' THE FARMER’S BOY.

in the shapes and movements that greet his eyesight. This fear is
not confined to out-of-doors. He has a notion that there may be a
lurking savage in the pantry, or the cellar, or the dusky corners of

the hallways, or, worst of all, under his bed. Those fears are most



Willow whistles.

vivid after he has been reading some tale of desperate adventure or
of mystery, dark doings and evil characters. Very good books and
papers often have in them the elements that produce these scary
effects. These are the sources of his timidity, for dime-novel trash,
although not altogether absent, is not common in the country.
The boy does not usually acquire much of his fear from the talk of

his fellows, and his parents certainly do not foster such feelings. It
SPRING. 33

is undoubtedly his reading, mainly. He rarely feels fear if he has
company, or if he is where there is light, or after he gets into bed—
that is, unless there are noises. What makes these noises you hear
sometimes in the night? You certainly don’t hear such noises in
the daytime. The boy does not mind rats. He knows them. They
can race tarough the walls, and grit their teeth on the plastering,
and throw all those bricks and things, whatever they are, down
inside there that they want to. But it’s these creakings and crack-
ings and softer noises, that you can’t tell what they are, that are
the trouble. Tie very best that you can do is to pull the covers
up over your head and shiver into sleep again. But if the boy
has frights, they are intermittent, for the most part, and soon
forgotten.

With the thawing of the snow on the hills‘and the early rains
comes, each spring, a time of flood on all the brooks and rivers that
no one appreciates more than the boy who is so fortunate as to have
a home on their banks. Water, in whatever shape, possesses a fas-
cination for the boy, if we except that for washing purposes. It
does not matter whether it is a dirty puddle or a sparkling brook or
the spirting jet at the highway watering-trough—he wants to paddle
and splash in every one. He even sees a touch of the beautiful and
sublime in water in some of its effects. There is a charm to him
in the placid pond that mirrors every object along its banks, or, on
brisker days, in the choppy waves that break the surface and curl
up on the muddy shore. He likes to follow the course of a brook,
and takes pleasure in noting the clearness of its waters and in watch-

ing its crystal leaps. When spring changes the quiet streams into
34 THE FARMER’S BOY.

muddy torrents, and they become foaming and wild and unfamiliar,
the boy finds the sight impressive and exhilarating.

But it is on the larger rivers that the floods have most meaning.
The water sets back in all the hollows, and broadens into wide lakes
on the meadows, and covers portions of the main road. The boy
cuts a notch in a stick and sets his mark at the water’s edge, that
he may keep posted as to how fast the river is rising. He gets out
the spike pole and fishes out the flood-wood that floats within
reach. If he is old enough to manage a boat, he rows out into the
stream and hitches on to an occasional log or large stick that is
sailing along on the swift current. For this purpose, if he is alone,
he has an iron hook fastened at the back end of the boat that he
pounds into the log. It is hard, jerky work towing a log to shore,
and he does not always succeed in landing his capture. Sometimes
the hook will keep pulling out; sometimes the thing he hitches
onto is too bulky or clumsy, and, after a long, hard pull, panting
and exhausted, he finds himself getting so far downstream that he
reluctantly knocks out the hook, rows inshore, and creeps in the
eddies along the bank back to his starting place. There is just one
trouble about this catching flood-wood—it increases the woodpile
materially, and makes a lot of work, sawing and chopping, that the
boy has little fancy for.

In the early spring there is sometimes a long-continued spell of
dry weather. In the woods the trees are still bare, and the sunlight
has free access to the leaf-carpeted earth. At such a time, if a fire
gets started among the shriveled and tinderlike leaves it is no easy

task to put it out. Whole neighborhoods turn out to fight it, and
SPRING, 35



The opening of the fishing season.

several days and nights may pass before it is under control. The
boy is among the first on the spot with his hoe, and immediately
begins a vigorous scratching to clear a path in the leaves that the
fire will not burn across. The company scatters, and sometimes the
boy finds himself alone. Close in front, extending away in both
directions, is the ragged fire line leaping and crackling. The woods
are still, the sun shines bright, and there is a sense of mystery and
danger in the presence of those sullen, devouring flames. Now
comes a puff of wind that causes the fire to make a sudden dash

forward and shrouds the boy with smoke. He runs back to a point
6
30 ; THE FARMER'S BOY.

of safety and listens to the far-off shouts of the men. The fire is
across the path he hoed, and he picks a piece of birch to eat while
he clambers up the hill to find company.

When night comes the boy wanders off home, to do his work and
eat supper. If he is allowed, he is out again with his hoe in the
evening. The scene is full of a wild charm. From the somberness
of the unburned tracts you look into the hot, wavering line of daz-
zling flames and on into regions where linger many sparkling embers
which the fire has not yet burned out, and now and then there is a
pile of wood that is a great mass of glowing coals, and again the
high stump of some dead tree that burns like a torch in the black-
ness. The boy thinks the men do more talking and advising than
work. Fle does not accomplish much himself The men keep to-
gether, and he hangs about the dark, half-lighted groups, listens to
what is said, and with the others does some desultory scratching to
keep the fire from gaining new ground at the point they are guard-
ing. By-and-by there comes a man hallooing his way through
the woods to them, who has brought a milk-can full of coffee.
Every man and boy takes a drink, and they all crack jokes and ex-
change opinions with the bearer till he starts off to find the next
group. Some of the men stay on guard all night, but the boy and
his father, about ten o’clock, leave the crackle and darting of the
flames behind them, and take a gloomy wood-road that leads toward
home. There has been nothing very alarming in the day’s adven-
tures, but the boy never forgets the experience.

Fire is fascinating to the boy in any form. He burned his

fingers at the stove damper when he was a baby. He likes to look


Leap-frog in the front yard,
SPRING. 37

at the glow of a lamp; and a candle, with its soft flicker and halo,
is especially pleasing. Then those new matches his folks have got,
that go off with a snap and burst at once into a sudden blaze—he
has never seen anything like them. They remind him of the de-
lights of Fourth of July.

A chief event of the spring is a bonfire in the garden. There is
an accumulation of dead vines and old pea-brush and apple-tree trim-
mings that often makes a large heap. The fire is enjoyable at what-
ever time it comes, but it is at its best if they touch it off in the
evening. The whole family comes out to see it then, and Frank
fixes up a seat for his mother and the baby out of a board and some
blocks, and invites some of the neighbors’ boys to be on hand. He
puts an armful of leaves under a corner of the pile and sets it going
with some of those parlor matches. The neighbors’ boys stand
around and tell him how, and even offer to do it themselves. When
the blaze fairly starts and begins to trickle up through the twigs
above it the smaller children jump for joy and clap their hands, and
tun to get handfuls of leaves and scattered rubbish to throw on.
Frank pokes the pile this way and that with his pitchfork, and the
neighbors’ boys light the ends of long sticks and wave them about
in the air. Even the baby coos with delight. The father has a rake
and does most of the work that is really necessary, while the boys
furnish all the action and noise needful to make the occasion a suc-
cess. When the blaze is at its highest and the heat penetrates far
back, the company becomes quiet, and they stand about exchanging
occasional words and simply watching the flames lick up the brush

and flash upward and disappear amid the smoke and sparks that
38 THE FARMER'S BOY.

rise high toward the dark deeps of the sky. The frolic is resumed
when the pile of brush begins to fall inward, and presently mother
says she and the baby and the smallest children must go Tee vite
latter protest, but they have to go, and not long after the embers of
the fire are all raked together, and Frank and the neighbors’ boys
fool around a little longer, and get about a half-dozen final warm-
ing-ups and then tramp off homeward in whistling happiness.

On the day following the garden is plowed and harrowed. Then
the boy has to help scratch it over and even it off with a rake, and
is kept on the jump all the time getting out seeds and planters and
tools, that never seem to be in the right place at the right time.

Meanwhile he induces his father to let him have a corner of the
garden for his own, and gets his advice as to what he had best put
in it to make his fortune. He scratches over the plot about twice
as fine as the rest of the garden, and won't let any of the old hens
that are hanging around looking for worms ccme near it. He has
concluded that peas are the things to bring in money, but he is
tempted to try three or four hills of potatoes between the rows
after he has the peas in. He has saved space for a hill of water-
melons, and, just to fill up the blanks, which seem rather large with
nothing yet up, he puts in as a matter of experiment a number of
other seeds here and there of one sort and another. He puts these
in from time to time along when it comes handy and the thought
occurs to him. He was somewhat astonished at the way things
came up. Indeed, he thought they would never get done coming
up, and they were pretty well mixed in their arrangement. He got

so discouraged over the things that kept sprouting in one corner
SPRING. 39

that he hoed the whole thing up on that spot and transplanted a
few cabbages on it. He used to get his mother to come out and
look at his garden-patch, and he enjoyed telling her his plans; but
he left that off for a while when the things became so erratic, and
waited till he could thin them out and bring their proceedings within
his comprehension.

It is in spring, more than any other season, that the boy’s ideas
bud with new enterprises. He forgets most of them by the time
he has them fairly started, and none of them are apt to have any
pecuniary value. But that never damps his enthusiasm in rushing
into new ones. The hunting fever is apt to take him pretty soon
after the snow goes, and he makes a bow and whittles out some

arrows and turns Indian. He may even visit




the resorts of the hens and collect enough
feathers to make a circlet to wear round
his head. Then he goes off and hunts
bears and things, and scalps the neigh-
bors’ boys. Sometimes, instead of
being an Indian, he gets his father
to saw out a wooden gun and
turns pioneer. Then savages and
wild animals both have to catch

it. He will skulk around in the most

A blossom for the baby.

approved fashion and say “Bang!” for
his gun every time he fires, and he will like enough kill half a hun-
dred Indians and a dozen grizzly bears in one forenoon. He is

fearless as you please—until night comes.
40 THE FARMER’S BOY.

Not all the boy’s hunting is so mild as to stop at the killing off

of bears and Indians. Sometimes he shoots his arrows at real, live



Playing “ Indian.”

things, or he has a rubber sling, or he practices throwing stones; and
does not resist the temptation to make the birds and squirrels, and
possibly the cats and the chickens, his marks, It is true he rarely
hits any of them; and the sensitive boy, if he seriously hurts one
of the creatures fired at, has a twinge of remorse. But there are
those who will only glory in the straightness of their aim. There
is something of the savage still in their nature, and they feel a
sense of prowess and power in bringing down that which, in spite
of its life and movement, did not escape them. It is to them a

much grander and more enjoyable thing than to hit a lifeless and

unmoving mark.
SPRING. 4I

The boys—at any rate many of them—are at times, in a thought-
less way, downright cruel. See how they will bang about the old
horse upon occasion! They have no compunctions about drown-
ing a cat or wringing the neck of a chicken, and will run half a mile
to be present at a hog-killing. They have barely a grain of sym-
pathy for the worm they impale on their fish-hooks; they kill the
grasshopper who will not give them “molasses”; they crush the
butterfly’s wings in catching it with their straw hats; and they pull
off insects’ limbs to see them wriggle, or to find out how the insect

will get along without them. I will not extend the horrible list,



On the way to pasture.
42 THE FARMER’S BOY.

and I am not sure but that most boys would be guiltless of the
majority of these charges. However, they are much too apt to
play the part of destroyers. This spirit is shown in the way the
boy will whip off the heads of flowers along his path, if he has a
stick in his hand, and the manner in which he gathers them when
gathering happens to be his purpose. He never thinks of their life
or of their beauty where they stand, or of the future. He picks
them all, snaps off the heads, pulls them up by the roots—any way
to get the whole thing in the shortest possible time. If the boy was
as thorough as he is ruthless, you could never find more flowers
of the same sort on that spot. This does not argue a total
disregard for the flowers, but it is a pity to love a thing to de-
struction.

The first token of spring in the flower line that the boy brings
into the house is probably a sprig of pussy-willow. The fuzzy catkins
are to his mind very odd and interesting and pretty. The ground is
still snow-covered, and they have started with the first real thaw.
Before the pastures get their first green the boy goes off to find the
new arbutus buds, that smell sweetest of all the flowers he knows,
unless it may be honeysuckle, that comes later. Already by the
brook are the queer skunk-cabbage blossoms, and the boy some-
times pulls one to pieces, and even sniffs the odor, just to learn how
bad it really is. He may find a stout, short-stemmed dandelion thus
early open in some warm, grassy hollow, and a few days later the
anemone’s dainty cups are out in full and trembling on their slender
stems with every breath of air. In pasture bogs and along the

brooks are violets—mostly blue; but in places there are yellow and


Discussing the colt,
SPRING. 43

white ones, ready to delight their finder. The higher and drier
slopes of the pastures are in spots sometimes almost blue with the
coarse bird-foot violets, while lower down the ground is as white
with the multitudes of innocents as if there had been a light snow-
fall. Along the roadways and fences the wild-cherry trees are
clouded full of white petals, and in the woods are great dashes of
white where the dogwoods have unfurled their blossoms. By the
end of May the meadows are like a night sky full of stars, so thick
are the dandelions, and on the rocks of the hillside the columbines
sway, full of their oddly shaped, pendulous bells. In some damp
woodpath the boy is filled with rejoicing by the finding of one of
the rare lady’s-slippers where he has been gathering wakerobin. The
only other spring flower I will mention as of special interest to the
boy is the Jack-in-the-pulpit, and that hardly seems a flower to him,
it is so queer.

Spring has three days with an individuality that makes them
stand out among the rest. The 1st
of April is “April Fool's Day. The
only idea the boy has about it is
that the more things he can make
the rest of the world think on that
day are not so, the better. It has
to be acknowledged that most of
the tricks are not very clever or

commendable, and the boy himself



feels that he is sometimes getting

A little housekeeper.
uncomfortably close to lying. The papa eeu
44 THE FARMER’S BOY.

common form of fooling is to get a person to look at something
that is not in sight.

“See that crow out there!” says the boy to his father.

“Where?” asks his father, when he looks out.

“April fool!” shouts the boy, and he is pleased with the “slick”
way he fooled his pa, for about half an hour, when he discovers that
he has been walking around for he doesn’t know how long with a
slip of paper on his back that his sister pinned there; and what he
reads on it when he gets it off is “ April fool!” He does not feel
so happy then, but he saves the paper to pin on some one else. All
day his brain is full of schemes to get people looking at the imagi-
nary objects he calls their attention to, and at the same time he is
full of suspicions himself, and you have to be very sharp and sudden
to fool him. When night comes he rejoices in the fact that he has
got one or two “fools” off on every member of the family, and there
is no knowing what a nuisance he has made of himself among the
rest of his friends. It gives him a grand good appetite, and he feels
inclined to be quite conversational. His remarks, however, assume
a milder tenor when he bites into a portly doughnut and finds it
made of cotton. He is afraid his mother is trying to fool him. He
wouldn’t have thought it of her!

Soon after this day comes Fast Day. School “lets out,” and
there’s meeting at the church, but most folks do not pay much
attention to that, and, it being a holiday, they eat rather more
than on other days, if anything, and they joke about its being
“fast” in the sense that it is not slow. Our boy does what work

he has to do, and then asks the privilege of going off to see some


Some fun in a boat,
SPRING. ; 45

other boy and have some fun. However, that is a thing that hap-
pens on all sorts of days. He is always ready with that request
when he has leisure, and makes it oftentimes, too, when he has no
leisure in any one’s opinion but his own.

The 30th of May is Decoration Day, and a company of sol-
diers will come with a band and flags, and will decorate the graves
of the soldiers in the little cemetery, and there will be singing
and other exercises, and everybody will be there. The boy has his
bouquet, and he is on the spot promptly and chatting with some
of his companions.. It may be the quiet of the early morning that
is the appointed time. There are lines of teams hitched along the
roadside, and two or three score of waiting people have gathered
near the entrance. The occasion has something of the solemnity
of a funeral, and even the boys lower their voices as they talk. The
sound of a drum and fife is heard around the turn of the road; the
soldiers, under their drooping flag, approach and file into the ceme-

tery. A song, an address, and a prayer follow



all very impressive
to the boy, out there under the skies with the wide, blossoming
landscape about. Finally, he lays his flowers with the others on
the graves, the soldiers form in line, the fife pipes once more, the
drum beats, and off they go down the road. Then thé people
begin a more cheerful visiting, and there is a cramping of wheels
as the teams turn to go homeward. The boy, with his friends,
pokes about among some of the old stones, and then lingers along
in the rear of the scattered groups that are taking the road that
leads to the village.

8
Fy AGRa a dr

SUMMER.

HE boy feels that summer has really come about the time

a be gets a new straw hat and begins to go barefoot.

When he first gets on the earth without shoes and stock-

ings he is as frisky as are the cows when, after the winter’s sojourn

in the barn, they are let out to go to pasture for the first time.

The boy remembers very well how he nearly ran his legs off on

that occasion, for the cows wanted to career all through the neigh-

borhood, and they kicked and capered and ran and hoisted their
tails in the air, and were as bad as a circus broke loose.

The boy would have gone barefoot some weeks before, only
he could not get his mother to understand how warm the earth
really was. It is cooler now than he thought, but he gets into a
glow running, and in a few days the exposure toughens his feet so
that he can stand almost anything—anything but shoes and stock-
ings. He hates to put those uncomfortable things on, and, when
he does, is glad to kick them off at the earliest opportunity. Even
the first frosts of autumn do not at once bring the shoes out. He
will drive the cows up the whitened lane, and slip shivering along
in the tracks brushed half clear of frost by the herd, certain that
he will be entirely comfortable a little later when the sun gets

well up.
(46)
SUMMER. 47

But the joy of bare feet is not altogether complete even in
summer. About half the time the boy goes with a limp. He has
hurt his toe, cut his heel, or met with some like mishap. There is
something always lying around for him to step on, and in the late
summer certain wicked burs ripen in the meadow that have hooks
to their prickles, that
hurt enough going in,
but are, oh, so much
worse pulling out!
The boy never likes to
walk on newly mown
land on account of
the stiff grass stubs
thatecOver itm yactale
can manage pretty well
by sliding his feet
along and making the
stubble lie flat when he
steps on it. However,

the gains of bare feet



certainly much more

than offset the losses,

Advising the hired boy.

to his mind; for he

can tramp and wade almost everywhere and in all kinds of weather,
with no fear of tearing his stockings, muddying his shoes, or “ get-
ting his feet wet.”

He appreciates this going barefoot most, perhaps, after a rain-
48 THE FARMER'S BOY.

storm. You have no idea, unless you have been a boy yourself,
what fun it is to. slide and spatter through the pools and puddles
of the roadway. There is the boy’s mother, for instance—she fails

to have the mildest kind of appreciation of it. She has even less,

ey



Waiting for the dinner horn.

if that is possible, when the boy comes in to her after he has
astonished himself by a sudden slip that seats him in the middle
of one of these puddles.

When the air, after a storm, is very still, the boy is sometimes
impressed by the apparent depth of these shallow pools. They
seem to go down miles and miles, and he can see the clouds and

sky reflected in their clear deeps. He is half inclined to keep
SUMMER. 49

away from their edges, lest he should fall over and go down and
down till he was drowned among those far-off cloud reflections.

Another roadway sentiment the boy sometimes entertains is con-
nected with the ridges of dirt thrown up by the wagon-wheels.
Their shadows make pictures to him as of a great line of jagged
rocks—like the wild coast of Norway in his geography. He feels
like an explorer as he follows the ever-changing craggedness of
their outlines.

I mentioned that the boy had a new straw hat with the be-
ginning of summer. You would not think it two days afterward.
It had by then lost its store manner and had taken to itself an in-
dividual shape all its own. It did not take long for the ribbon to
begin to fly loose on the breezes, and then the colt took a bite
out of the edge, and a general dissolution set in. The boy used
it to chase grasshoppers and butterflies with, and one day he
brought it home half full of strawberries he had picked in a field.
On another occasion he utilized it to catch pollywogs in when he
was wading, and he hastened its ruin by using it as a ball on sum-
mer evenings to throw in the air, He thought, one night, he had
put it past all usefulness when, not thinking where he had placed
it, he went and sat down in the chair where it was. You would not
have known it for a hat when he picked it up, though he straight-
ened it out after a fashion and concluded it would serve for a
while longer, anyway. But things presently got to that desperate
pass where the brim was gone and there was a bristly hole in the
top, and “the folks” saw the hat could not possibly last the

summer through, and the next time his father went to town he
50 THE FARMER’S BOY.



Lating clover blossoms.

bought the boy a new one. Of course, he told him to be more
careful with this than with the old one, when he gave it to him.

The summer was not far advanced when the boy became anx-
ious as to whether the water had warmed up enough in the streams
to make it allowable to go in swimming. As for the little rivers
among the hills, they never did get warmed up, and in the hottest
spells of midsummer it made the boy’s teeth chatter to jump into
their cold pools. But there was a glowing reaction after the
plunge, and if he did not stay in too long he came out quite en-
livened by his bath. The bathing places on these woodland streams
are often quite picturesque. It may be a spot where the stream

widens into a little pond hemmed in by walls of green foliage,
SUMMER. SI

whose branches in places droop far out over the water. It may
be in a rocky gorge strewn with bowlders, where the stream fills
the air with a continual roar and murmur as it dashes down the
rapids and plunges from pool to pool. On the large rivers of the
valleys the swimming places have usually muddy shores and a
willow-screened bank, and there are logs to float on or an old boat
to push about. In favorable weather the boys will go in swimming
every evening, and they make the air resound for half a mile about

with their shouts and splashings.



In swimming.
52 THE FARMER’S BOY.

June comes in with lots of work in the planting line. The boy
has to drop fertilizer and drop potatoes some days from morning
till night, by which time he is ready to drop himself. In corn plant-
ing he has his own bag of tarred corn and his hoe, and takes the
row next to his father’s. For a spell he may keep up with the
rest, but as the day advances he lags behind, and his father plants
a few hills occasionally on the boy’s row to encourage him. One
of the things a boy soon becomes an adept at is leaning on his hoe.
He naturally does this most when he is alone in the field and not
liable to sudden interruptions in his meditations. At such times
he gets lonesome and has “that tired feeling,” and gets to wonder-
ing why the dinner horn doesn’t blow. You would not think a hoe
an easy thing to lean on; but the boy will stand on one leg, with
the hoe-handle hocked under his shoulder, for any length of time.

The corn is no sooner in the ground than the crows begin to
happen around to investigate. They will pull it even after it gets
an inch or two high and snap off the kernel at the roots, and it
seems sometimes as if they rather liked the flavor of the tar put
on to destroy their appetite. The boy’s indignation waxes high,
and he wishes he had a gun or a pistol, or something, to “ fix” those
old crows. His mother does not like firearms. She is afraid he
will shoot himself; but she gives him some old clothes, and he
goes off to the shop to tack a scarecrow together and stuff him
with hay. When his father appears and pretends to be scared by
the scarecrow’s terrible figure, the boy is quite elated. After supper
he and his mother and the smaller children go out in the field

and set the man up, and the boy shakes hands with him and


Cutting their names in a tree-trunk,
SUMMER. 53

holds a little conversation with him. His small brothers and sis-
ters are sure the crows won't “dast” to come around there any more,
and they are kind of scared of the old scarecrow themselves.

The days wax hotter and hotter as the season advances, and the
boy presently gets down to the simplest elements in the clothing
line. Indeed, if his folks do not insist on something more elabo-
rate, he goes about entirely content in a shirt and a pair of over-
alls. His hair is apt to grow rather long between the cuttings his
mother gives it, and about this time he looks up an uncle or a
cousin who is an adept in the hair-cutting line, and gets a tight clip
that leaves him as bald as his most ancient ancestor. He feels
delightfully cool, anyway, and looks don’t count much with him at
that age.

As soon as the first plowing was done in the spring the onions
were sowed. Their little green needles soon prickled up through
the ground, and now they had the company of a multitude of
weeds, and must be hoed and weeded out. One thing the boy
never quite gets to understand is the curious fact that weeds, at
first start, will grow twice as fast as any useful crop. He wishes
weeds had some value. All you'd have to do would be to let them
grow. They’d take care of themselves.

In the case of the onions the hoeing-out part is not very bad,
but when you get down on your hands and knees to scratch the
weeds out of the rows with your fingers your trouble begins. The
boy says his back aches. His father comforts him by telling him
that he guesses not—that he’s too young to have the backache—

that he’d better wait till he’s fifty or sixty, and his joints get stiff
54 THE FARMER'S BOY,

and he has the rheumatism; then he’ll have something to talk
about.

But the boy knows very well that his back does ache, and the
sun is as hot again as it was when he was standing up, and his head
feels as if it were going to drop off. He gets up once in a while

to stretch, and to see if there are any signs of his mother’s wanting



Weeding onions.

him at the house, or hens around that ought to be chased off, or
anything else going on that will give him a chance for a change.
He bends to his work again presently, and tries various changes
from the plain stoop, such as one knee down and the other raised
to support the chest, or a sit down in the row and an attempt to
weed backward. When left to himself he takes long rests at the

ends of the rows, lying in the grass on his back under the shadow
SUMMER. 55

of an apple tree, or he gets thirsty and goes in the house for a drink.
He is afflicted with thirst a great deal when he is weeding onions,
and gets cooky-hungry remarkably often, too.

His most agreeable respite while weeding occurs when he dis-
covers that the neighbor's boy has come out and is at work just
over the fence. He throws a lump of dirt at him to attract his
attention, and then they exchange “hulloes!”

They soon come together and lean on the fence and compare
gardens, and likely enough get to boasting and on the borders of a
quarrel before they are through. Our boy goes back to work in
time, and his aches are not so severe afterward—at least, so long
as he has the neighbor’s boy over the fence to call at.

When the boy’s father goes away from home, to be gone all
day, he is apt to set the boy a “stent.”

“You put into it, now,” he says, “and hoe those eighteen rows
of corn, and then you can play the rest of the day.”

The boy is inclined to be dubious when he contemplates his
task; it doesn’t look to him as if he could get it done in the
whole day. But he makes a start, and concludes it is not so bad,
after all. We keeps at work with considerable perseverance, and
only stops to sit on the fence for a little while at the end of every
other row, and once to go up the lane to pick a few raspberries
that have turned almost black. As the rows dwindle he becomes
increasingly exuberant, and whistles all through the last one; and
when that is done, and he puts the hoe over his shoulder and
marches home, he has not a care in the world.

He made up his mind early in the day that he would go fish-
56 THE FARMER'S BOY.

ing when he was free, and now he digs some worms back of the
shop, gets out his pole, and hunts up his best friend. The best
friend is watering tobacco. He can’t go just then, but if Tommy
will pitch in and help him for about fifteen minutes, he'll have
that job done and will be with him.

The boys make the water fly, and it is not long before they
and their poles and their tin bait-box are at the river side. The
water just dimples in the light breeze. The warm afternoon sun-
light shines in the boys’ faces and glitters on the ripples. They
conclude, after a little while, that it is not a good afternoon for fish-
ing, and think wading will prove more profitable. As a result, they
get their “pants” wet and their jackets spattered, though where on
earth all that water came from they can’t make out. They thought
they were careful. They are afraid their mothers will make some
unpleasant remarks when they get home. It seems best they
should roll down their trousers and give them a chance to dry a
little before they have to leave. Meanwhile they do not suffer
for lack of amusement, for they find a lot of rubbish to throw into
the water, and some flat stones to skip, and some lucky-bugs to
catch, and lastly Charlie Thompson’s spotted dog shows himself
on the bank, and they entice him down to the shore and take
to wading again, and have great fun, and get wetter than ever.

As they walked home, Tommy said, “ Let’s go fishing again,
some day,” and Sammy agreed without any hesitation.

They caught not even a shiner this time, but on some occasions
they brought home a perch or two and a bullhead and a sucker,

strung on a willow twig. lainy days were those on which they
SUMMER. 57



Working out his “ stent.”

were freest to go fishing, and on such days the fish were supposed
to bite best. The boy seemed perfectly willing to don an old coat
and an old felt hat and spend a whole drizzling morning at almost
any time slopping along the muddy margin of the river. No one
could accuse him of being over-fastidious.

At some time in his career the boy was pretty sure to bring
home a live fish in his tin lunch-pail and turn him loose in the
water-tub at the barn; and he might catch a dozen or two min-
nows in a pool left landlocked by a fall of the water, and put
those in. He would see them chasing around in there, and the

old big fish lurking, very solemn, in the darkest depths, and he fed
58 THE FARMER’S BOY.

them bits of bread and worms, and planned for them a very happy
and comfortable life till they should be grown up and he was

ready to eat them. But they disappeared in time, and there was



Ries
not one left. The boy has an idea they must have eaten each
other, and then the cow swallowed the last one. If it wasn’t that,
what was it?

In the early summer strawberries are ripe. They are the first
berries to come that amount to anything. You can pick a few
wintergreen and partridge berries on the hillsides in spring, but
those hardly count. The boy always knows spots on the farm

where the strawberries grow wild, and when, some early morning,
SUMMER. 59

he goes up with the cows and is late to breakfast, it proves he
has been tramping in the pasture after berries) He has pushed
about among the dew-laden tangles of the grass until he is as
wet as if he had been in the river, but he is in a glowing tri-
umph on his return over the red clusters he pulls from his hat
to display to the family.

Probably some farmer in the neighborhood raises strawberries
for market, and pays two cents a quart for picking. If so, the boy
can not rest easy till his folks agree to let him improve this chance
to gain pocket money, which is a thing he never fails to be short
of. He will get up at three o’clock in the morning and carry
his breakfast with him in order to be on hand with the rest of the
children on the field at daybreak. His eagerness cools off in a few
days, and it is only with the greatest difficulty that the employer
can get his youthful help to stick to the work through the season.
They have eaten the berries till they are sick of them; they are
tired of stooping, and they have earned so much that their longings
for wealth are satisfied. They are apt to get to squabbling about
rows while picking, and to enliven the work on dull days by
“sassing” one another. The proper position for picking is a stoop-
ing posture, but when the boy comes home you can see by the
spotted pattern on the knees and seat of his trousers that he had
made some sacrifices to comfort. The proprietor of the berry fields,
and all concerned, are glad when they get to the end of the season.

When the boy got up so early those June mornings he was in
time to hear the air full of bird-songs as it would be at no other

time through the day. What made the birds so madly happy as

10
60 THE FARMER’S BOY.

soon as the east caught the first tints of the coming sun? The
village trees seemed fairly alive with the songsters, and every bird
was doing his best to outdo the rest. Most boys have not a very
wide acquaintance with the birds, but there are certain ones that

never fail to interest them. The boy’s favorite is pretty sure to be



A faithful follower.

the bobolink—he is such a happy fellow; he reels through the air
in such delight over his singing and the sunny weather. How his
song gurgles and glitters! How he swells out his throat! How pret-
tily he balances and sways on the woody stem of some tall meadow

flower! He has a beautiful coat of black and white, and the boy
SUMMER. 61

wonders at the rusty feathers of his mate, which looks like an en-
tirely different bird. As the season advances bobolink changes, and
not for the better. His handsome coat gets dingy, and he loses his
former gayety. He has forgotten almost altogether the notes of
his earlier song of tumbling happiness, and croaks harshly as he
stuffs himself on the seeds with which the fields now teem. Ease
and high living seem to have spoiled his character, just as if he had
been human. Before summer is done the bobolinks gather in com-
panies, and wheel about the fields in little clouds preparatory to
migrating. Sometimes the whole flock flies into some big tree, and
from amid the foliage come scores of tinkling notes as of many tiny
bells jingling. The boy sees no more of the bobolinks till they
return in the spring to once more pour forth their overflowing joy
on the blossom-scented air of the meadows.

One of the other birds that the boy is familiar with is the lark,
a coarse, large bird with two or three white feathers in its tail; but
the lark is too sober to interest him much. Then there is the cat-
bird, of sleek form and slatey plumage, flitting and mewing among
the shadows of the apple-tree boughs. The brisk robin, who always
has a scared look and therefore is out of character as a robber, he
knows very well. Robin builds a rough nest of straws and mud in
the crotches of the fruit trees, and he has a habit of crying in sharp
notes at sundown, as if he were afraid sorrow was coming to him in
some shape. The robin has a caroling song, too, but that the boy
is not so sure of separating from the music of the other birds.

He always knows the woodpeckers by their long bills and the

way they can trot up and down the tree trunks, bottom-side up,
62 THE FARMER’S BOY.

or anyhow. He knows the bluebird by its color and the phoebe
by its song. The orioles are not numerous enough for him to have
much acquaintance with, but he is familiar with the dainty nest they
swing far out on the tips of the branches of the big shade trees. He
sees numbers of little birds when the cherries ripen and the peapods
fill out that are as bright as glints of golden sunlight. They vary
in their tinting and size, but he calls them all yellow-birds, and has
a poor opinion of them, for he rarely sees them except when they
are stealing.

Along the water courses he now and then glimpses a heavy-
headed kingfisher sitting in solemn watchfulness on a limb or
making a startling, headlong plunge into a pool. Along shore the
sandpipers run about in a nervous way on their thin legs, always
teetering and complaining, and taking fright and flitting away like
a shot at the least sound. On the borders of the ponds the boy
sometimes comes upon a crane or a blue heron meditating on one
leg up to his knee in water. Off he goes in awkward flight, trailing
his long legs behind him. On the ponds, too, the wild ducks alight
in the fall and spring on their journeys South and North. There
may be as many as twenty of the compact, glossy-backed creatures
in a single flock, but a much smaller number is more common. The
swallows, on summer days, are to be found skimming over the
waters of the streams and ponds, and they make flying dips and
twitter and rise and fall and twist and turn, and seem very happy.
They have holes in a high bank in the vicinity, and if the boy
thinks he wants to get a collection of birds’ eggs he arms himself

with a trowel, some day, and climbs the steep dirt bank to dig them
SUMMER. 63

out. The holes go in about an arm’s length, and at the end is a
rude little nest, and some white eggs with such tender sheils that

the boy breaks many more than he succeeds in carrying away.



Two who have been a-borrowing.

He stores such eggs as he gathers from time to time in small
wooden or pasteboard boxes, with cotton in the bottoms, until too

many of them get broken, when he throws the whole thing away.
64 THE FARMER’S BOY.

His interest has been destructive and temporary, and he would
much better have studied ina different fashion, or turned his talent
to something else.

Several other birds are still to be mentioned that get his atten-
tion. There are the humming birds, that are so small and that
buzz about among the blossoms and prick them with their long
bills, and poise so still on their misty wings, and have hues of
rainbow in their feathers, and flash out of sight across the yard
in no time when they see you. There are the barn and chimney
swallows that you notice most at twilight, darting in tangled
flights in upper air or skimming low over the fields in twittering
alertness. How they worry the old cat as she crouches in the
hayfield! Again and again they almost touch her head in their
circling, but they are so swift and changeful that the cat has no
chance of catching them. Then there is the kingbird the boy
very much admires. He is a vigorous, well-looking fellow, with
an admirable antipathy for tyrants and bullies. Size makes no
difference with him. He puts the crow to ungainly flight; he fol-
lows the hawk, and you can see him high in air darting down at
the great bird’s back again and again; and he does not even fear
the eagle. In corn-planting time the whip - poor- will makes the
evening air ring with his lonely calls, and the boy has sometimes
seen his dusky form standing lengthwise of a fence rail just as he
was about to flit far off across the fields and renew more distantly
his whistling cry. The most distressing bird of all is the little
screech-owl. His tremulous and long- drawn wail suggests that

some one human is out there in the orchard crying out in his last
SUMMER, 65

feeble agonies. To put it mildly, the boy is scared when he hears
the screech-owl.

The great and only holiday of the summer is Fourth of July.
The boy very likely does not know or especially care what the
philosophic meaning of the day is. As he understands it, the occa-

sion is one whose first requirement is lots of noise. To furnish this



The Fourth of July.

in plenty, he is willing to begin the day by getting up at midnight
to parade the village street with the rest of the boys, and toot horns
and set off firecrackers, and liven up the sleepy occupants of the
houses by making particular efforts before each dwelling. They
have a care in their operations to be on guard, that they may
hasten to a safe distance if any one rushes out to lecture or chas-

tise them; but if all continues quiet within doors they will hoot
66 THE FARMER’S BOY.

and howl about for some time, and even blow up the mail-box
with a cannon cracker, or commit other mild depredations, to add
to the glory of the occasion. When some particularly brilliant
brain conceived the idea of getting all the boys to take hold of
an old mowing machine and gallop it through the dark street in
full clatter, it may be supposed that the final touch was given to
American independence and liberty. It was not all the boys that
went roaming around thus, and it was the older and rougher ones
who were the leaders. The smaller boys did not enter very heartily
into all of the fun, though they dared not openly hang back; and
when the stars paled and the first gray approach of dawn _be-
gan to lighten the east, the little fellows felt very sleepy and
lonely in spite of the company and noise. They were glad enough
when, soon after, the band broke up and they could steal away
home and to bed. The day itself was enlivened by much popping
of firecrackers and torpedoes in farm dooryards—by a village
picnic, in the afternoon, and by a grand setting off in the even-
ing of pin- wheels, Roman cazdles, a nigger-chaser, and a rocket.
After the rocket had gone up into the sky with its wild whirr and
its showering of sparks, and had toppled and burst and burned
out into blackness, the day was ended, and the boy retired with the
happiness that comes from labor done and duty well performed.
The work of ali others that fills the summer months is haying.
In the hill towns the land is stony and steep, and much of it is
cut over with scythes, but the majority of New England farmers
do most of their grass-cutting with mowing machines. A boy will

hardly do much of the actual mowing in either case until he is in
SUMMER. 67

his teens; but long before that he is called on to turn the grind-
stone-—an operation that precedes the mowing of each fresh field.
He gets pretty sick of that grindstone before the summer is
through.

He likes to follow after the mowing machine. There is some-
thing enlivening in its clatter, and he enjoys seeing the grass
tumble backward as the darting knives strike their stalks. He
does not care so much about following his father when he mows

with a scythe; for then he is expected to carry a fork and spread



Getting ready to mow.

the swath his father piles up behind him. On the little farms
machines are lacking to a degree, and the boys have to do much

of the turning and raking by hand. Finally, they have to borrow
II
68 THE FARMER’S BOY.

a horse to get it in. The best-provided farmer usually does some
borrowing, and there are those who are running all the time—that
is, they keep the boy running; boys are made for running. The
boy does not like this job very well, for the lender is too often
doubtful in his manner, if not in his words,

On still summer days the hayfield is apt to be a very hot
place. The hay itself has a gray glisten, and the low-lying air
shimmers with the heat. It is all very well if you can ride on
the tedder or rake, but it makes the perspiration start if you have
to do any work by hand. You do not have to be much of a boy
to be called on by your father to rake up the scatterings back of

the load, and you find you have to be on the jump all the time



On the hay tedder.
SUMMER. 69

to keep up. If you can rake, you are large enough to be on the
load and tread the hay into place as it is thrown up. It is not
till you are pretty well grown that you have the strength to do
the pitching on. Whatever the boy does in the field, in the barn
his place is up under the roof “mowing away.” The place is dusky,
and the dust flies, and a cricket or some uncomfortable many-
legged creature crawls down your back; it is hot and stifling, and
the hay comes up about twice as fast as you want it to. Before
the load is quarter off you begin to listen for the welcome scratch
of your father’s fork on the wagon rack that signals the nearing
of the bottom of the load. Even then you have to creep all
around under the eaves to tread the hay more solidly. You are
glad enough when you can crawl down the ladder and go into
the house and give your head a soak under the pump, and get a
drink of water. There’s nothing tastes much better than water
when you are dry that way, unless it is sweetened water that you
take in a jug right down to the hayfield with you.

I do not wish to give the impression that haying is made up
too much of sweat and toil, and that the boy finds it altogether
a season of trial and tribulation. It is not at all bad on cool
days, and some boys like the jumping about on load and mow.
There is fun in the jolting, rattling ride in the springless wagon
to the hayfield, and when the haycocks in the orchard are rolled
up for the night the boys have great sport turning somersaults
over them. Then there are exhilarating occasions when the sky
blackens, and from the distant horizon comes the flashing and

muttering of an approaching thunderstorm. Everybody does his
70 THE FARMER'S BOY.

best then; you race the horses, and the hay is rolled up and goes,
forkful after forkful, twinkling up on the load in no time. But
the storm is likely to come before you have done. There is a
spattering of great drops, that gives warning, and a dash of cold
wind, and everybody—teams and all—will be seen racing helter-
skelter to the barns. You are in luck if you get there before the
whole air is filled with the flying drops. It is a pleasurable excite-
ment, anyway, and you feel very comfortable, in spite of your wet
clothes, as you sit on the meal-chest talking with the others, listen-
ing to the rolling thunder and the rain rattling on the roof and
splashing into the yard from the eaves-spout. You look out of the
big barn doors into the sheeted rain that veils the fields with its
hurrying mists, and see its half-glooms lit up now and then by the
pallid flashes of the lightning. Then comes a burst of sunlight,
the rain ceases, and as the storm recedes a rainbow arches its
shredded tatters. All Nature glitters and drips and tinkles. The
trees and fields have the freshness of spring; the tip of every leaf
and every blade of grass twinkles with a diamond drop of water.
The boy runs out with a shout to the roadside puddles. The
chickens leave the shelter of the sheds, and rejoice in the number
of worms crawling about the hard-packed earth of the dooryard,
and all kinds of birds begin singing in jubilee.

But whatever incidental pleasures there may be in haying, it
is generally considered a season of uncommonly hard work, and
at its end the farm family thinks itself entitled to a picnic and a
season of milder labor. The picnic idea usually develops into a

plan to spend a whole day at some resort of picnickers, where you
SUMMER. 71

have to pay twenty-five cents for admission—children half price.
Of course, there are all sorts of ways that you can spend a good
deal more than that at these places, but it is mostly the young
men, who feel called upon to demonstrate their fondness for the

girls they have brought with them, that patronize the extras. The



The boy rakes after.

farm family is economical; it carries feed for its horses and a big
lunch-basket packed full for itself, and simply goes in for all the
things that are free; though Johnny and Tommy are allowed to
draw on their meager supply of pocket money to the extent of

five cents each for candy. There are swings to swing in and tables
72 THE FARMER’S BOY.

to eat on in a grove, and, if it is by a lake or river, there are boats
to row in and fish to catch, only you can’t catch them. Meanwhile
the horses are tied conveniently in the woods, and spend the day
kicking and switching at the flies that happen around. Toward
evening the wagon is backed about and loaded up, the horses
hitched into it, and everybody piles in and noses are counted, and
off they go homeward. The sun sets, the bright skies fade, and
the stars sparkle out one by one and look down on them as the
horses jog along the glooms of the half-wooded, unfamiliar road-
ways. Some of the children get down under the seats and croon
ina shaking gurele as the wagon jolts their voices; and they shut
their eyes and fancy the wagon is going backward—oh, so swiftly !
Then they open their eyes, and there are the tree leaves fluttering
overhead and the deep night sky above, and they see they are
going on, after all. When they near home they all sit up on the
seats once more and watch for familiar objects along the road.
There is the house at last; the horses turn into the yard; they all
alight, and in a few minutes a lamp is lighted in the kitchen. A
neighbor has milked the cows. There are the full pails on the
bench in the back room. The children are so tired they can hardly
keep their eyes open, but they must have a slice of bread and _ but-
ter all around, and a piece of pie. Then, tired but happy, they
bundle off to bed.

Not every excursion of this kind is to a public pleasure resort.
Sometimes the family goes after huckleberries or blackberries, or
for a day’s visit to relatives who live in a neighboring town, or

to see a circus-parade at the county seat. The family vehicle is apt


A summer evening game of tag.
SUMMER. 73

to be the high, two-seated spring wagon. It is not particularly
handsome to look at, but I fancy it holds more happiness than the
gilded cars with their gaudy occupants that they see pass in the
parade.

The strawberries are the first heralds of a summer full of good
things to eat. The boy begins sampling each in turn as soon as
they show signs
of ripening, and
-on farms where
children are nu-
merous and fruits
are not, very few
things ever get
ripe. You would
not think, to look
at him, that a

small boy could



eat as much as he

can. He will be

Waders—thev wet their “ pants.”

chewing on some-

thing all the morning, and have just as good an appetite for
dinner as ever. In the afternoon he will eat seventeen green
apples, and be on hand for supper as lively as a cricket. Still,
there are times when he repents his eating indiscretion in sack-
cloth and ashes. There is a point in the green-apple line beyond
which even the small boy can not safely go. The twisting pains

get hold of his stomach, and he has to go to his mother and
I2
74 THE FARMER’S BOY.

get her to do something to keep him in the land of the living.
He repents of all his misdeeds while the pain is on him, just as he
would in a thunderstorm in the night that waked and scared him;
and he says his prayers, and hopes, after all, if these are his last days,
he has not been so bad but that he will go to the good place.
When he gets better, however, he forgets these vows and does
some more things to repent of. But that is not peculiarly a boy-

ish trait. Grown-up people do that.
ASR Ae Ve

AUTUMN.

Y September you begin to find dashes of color among the
upland trees. It is some weakling bush, perhaps, so
poorly nourished, or by chance injured, that it must

shorten its year and burn out thus early its meager foliage; but as
soon as you see these pale flames among the greens, you feel that
the year has passed its prime.

Grown people may experience a touch of melancholy with the
approach of autumn. The years fly fast—another of those allotted
them is almost gone; the brightening foliage is a presage of bare
twigs, of frost and frozen earth, and the gales and snows of winter.
This is not the boy’s view. He is not retrospective; his interests
are bound up in the present and the future. There is a good deal
of unconscious wisdom in this mental attitude. He looks forward,
whatever the time of year, with unflagging enthusiasm to the days
approaching, and he rejoices in what he sees and experiences for
what these things then’ are, and does not worry himself with
allegories.

The bright-leaved tree at the end of summer is a matter of
interest both for its brightness and its unexpectedness. The boy
will pick a branch and take it home to show his mother, and the

next day he will carry it to school and give it to the teacher. He
(75)
76 THE FARMER’S BOY,

would be glad to share all. the good things of life that come to
him with his teacher. Next to his mother, she is the best person
he knows of. He never finds anything in his wanderings about
home or in the fields or woods that is curious or beautiful or good

to eat but that the thought of the teacher flashes into his mind.



A voyage on a log.

His intentions are better than his ability to carry them out, for
he often forgets himself, and eats all the berries he picked on the
way home, or he gets tired and throws away the treasures he has
gathered. But what he does take to the teacher is sure of a wel-
come and an interest that makes him happy, and more her faithful

follower than ever.
AUTUMN. 77

Summer merges so gently into autumn that it is hard to tell
where to draw the line of separation. September, as a rule, is a
month of mild days mingled with some that have all the heat of
midsummer; but the nights are cooler, and the dew feels icy cold
to the boy’s bare feet at times on his morning trips to and from
pasture.

Yet, if you notice the fields closely, you will see that many
changes are coming in to mark the season. The meadows are
being clipped of their second crop of grass ; the potato tops have
withered and lost themselves in the motley masses of green weeds
that continue to flourish after they have ripened; the loaded apple
trees droop their branches and sprinkle the earth with early fallen
fruit; the coarse grasses and woody creepers along the fences turn
russet and crimson, and the garden becomes increasingly ragged
and forlorn.

The garden reached its fullness and began to go to pieces in
July. First among its summer treasures came a green cucumber,
then peas and sweet corn and string beans and early potatoes.
The boy had a great deal more to do with these things than he
liked, for the gathering of them was among those small jobs
it is so handy to call on the boy to do. However, he got
not a little consolation out of it by eating of the things he
gathered. Raw string beans were not at all bad, and a pod
full of peas made a pleasant and juicy mouthful, while a small
ear of sweet corn or a stalk of rhubarb or an onion, and even
a green cucumber, could be used to vary the bill of fare. Along

one side of the garden was a row of currant bushes. He
78 THE FARMER’S BOY.

was supposed to let those mostly alone, as his mother had
warned him she wanted them for “jelly.” But he did not
interpret her warning so literally but that he allowed himself
to rejoice his palate with an occasional full cluster. It was
when the tomatoes ripened that the garden reached the top
NOCH Ny ets OL
fering of raw deli-
cacies. Those red,
full- skinned _ tro-
phies fairly melt-
ed in the boy’s
mouth. He liked
them better than
green apples.

The potatoes
were the hardest

things to manage



of all the garden

vegetables he was

Potato-bugging.

sent out to gather
for dinner. His folks had an idea that you could dig into
the sides of the hills and pull out the big potatoes, and then
cover up and let the rest keep on growing; but when the boy
tried this and had done with a hill, he had to acknowledge
that it didn’t look as if it would ever amount to much after-
ward.

The sweet-corn stalks from which the ears were picked had to
AUTUMN. 79

be cut from time to time and fed to the cows. It was this thin-
ning out of the corn, as much as the withering of the pea and
cucumber vines and irregular digging of the potatoes, that gave the
garden its early forlornness.

By August the pasture grass had been cropped short by the
cows, and the drier slopes had withered into brown. Thenceforth
it was deemed necessary to furnish the cows extra feed from
other sources of supply. The farmer would mow with his scythe,
on many evenings, in the nooks and corners about his build-
ings or along the roadside and in the lanes, and the results of
these small mowings were left for the boy to bring in on his
wheelbarrow.

Another source of fodder supply was the field of Indian corn.
Around the bases of the hills there sprouted up many surplus
shoots of a foot or two in length known as “suckers.” These were
of no earthly use where they were, and the boy on a small farm had
often the privilege, of an afternoon, of cutting a load of these suckers
for the cows. Among them he gathered a good many full-grown
stalks that had no ears on them. Later there was a whole patch
of fodder corn sown in furrows on some piece of late-plowed ground
to gather from. He had to bring in as heavy a load as he could
wheel every night, and on Saturday an extra one to last over
Sunday.

The cows had to have attention one way or another the year
through. They were most aggravating, perhaps, when in September
the shortness of feed in the pasture made them covetous of the con-

tents of the neighboring fields. Sometimes the boy would sight them
80 THE FARMER'S BOY.

in the corn. His first great anxiety was not about the corn, but as to
whether they were his folks’ cows or some of the neighbors’. He
would much rather warn some one else than undertake the cow-
chasing himself. If his study of the color and spotting of the cows
proved they were his, he went in and told his mother, then got his
stick and took a bee-line across the fields. He was wrathfully in-
clined when he started, and he became much more so when he found
how much disposed the cows were to keep tearing around in the corn
or to racing about the fields in as many different directions as there
were animals. He and the rest of the school had lately become
members of the Band of Mercy, and on ordinary occasions he had
a kindly feeling for his cows; but now he was ready to throw all
sentiment overboard, and he would break his stick over the back of
any one of these cows if she would give him the chance, which
she very unkindly would not. He had lost his temper, and now he
lost his breath, and he just dripped with perspiration. He dragged
himself along at a panting walk, and he found, after all, that this
did fully as well as all the racing and shouting he had been indulging
in. Indeed, he was not sure but that the cows had got the notion
that he had come out to have a little caper over the farm with
them for his personal enjoyment. All things have an end, and in
time the boy made the last cow leap the gap in the broken fence
back into the pasture. They every one went to browsing as if
nothing had happened, or looked at him mildly with an inquiring
forward tilt of the ears, as if they wanted to know what all this
row was about, anyway. The boy put back the knocked-down

rails, staked things up as well as he knew how, picked some pep-
AUTUMN. 81

permint by the brook to munch on, and trudged off home. When
he had drunk a quart or so of water and eaten three cookies, he
began to feel himself again.

Besides all the extra foddering mentioned, it is customary on

the small farms to give the cows, late in the year, an hour or



A chipmunk up a tree.

two's baiting each day. The cows are baited along the road-
side at first, but after the rowen is cut they are allowed to roam
about the grass fields. Of course, it is the boy who has to watch
them. There are unfenced crops and the apples that lie thick under

the trees to be guarded, not to mention the turnips in the newly
13
82 THE FARMER’S BOY.

seeded lot, and the cabbages on the hill that will spoil the milk if
the cows get them. The boundary-line fences, too, are out of re-
pair, and the cows seem to have a great anxiety to get over on
the neighbors’ premises, even if the feed is much scantier than
in the field where
they are feeding.



The boy brings
out a book, and
he settles himself
with his back
against a fence-
post and plans
for an easy time.
The cows seem

to understand the

Baiting the cows by the roadside.

situation, and they
go exploring round, as the boy says, “in the most insensible
fashion he ever saw—wouldn’t keep nowhere, nor any where else.”
He tries to make them stay within bounds by yelling at them
while sitting where he is, but they do not seem to care the least
bit about his remarks unless he is right behind them with a stick
in his hand. The cows do not allow the boy to suffer for lack of
exercise, and the hero in the book he is reading has continually to
be deserted in the most desperate situations while he runs off to
give those cows a training.

There is one of the cow’s relations that the boy has a particular

fondness for—I mean the calf. On small farms the lone summer
AUTUMN. 83

calf is tethered handily about the premises somewhere out-of-doors.
Every day or two, when it has nibbled and trodden the circuit of
grass in its tether pretty thoroughly, it is moved to a fresh spot.
The boy does this, and he feeds the calf its milk each night and
morning. If the calf is very young it does not know enough to
drink, and the boy has to dip his fingers in the milk and let the
calf suck them while he entices it, by gradually lowering his hand,
to put its nose in the pail. When he gets his hand into the milk
and the calf imagines it is getting lots of milk out of the boy’s
fingers, he will gently withdraw them. The calf is inclined to re-
sent this by giving a vigorous buck with his head. Very likely
the boy gets slopped, but he knows well enough what to expect,
not to allow himself to be sent sprawling. He repeats the finger
process until in time the calf will drink alone, but he never can get
it to stop bucking. Indeed, he does not try very hard, except
occasionally, for he finds this butting rather entertaining, and
sometimes he does not object to butting his own head against the
calf’s. He and the calf cut many a caper together before the sum-
mer is through. Things become most exciting when the calf gets
loose. It will go galloping all about the premises. It has no regard
for the garden or the flower plants, or,the linen laid out on the grass
to dry. It makes the chickens squawk and scamper, and the turkeys
gobble and the geese gabble. Its heels go kicking through the
air in all sorts of positions, its tail is elevated like a flag-pole, and
there is a rattling chain hitched to its neck that is jerking along
in its company. The calf is liable to step on this chain, and then

it stands on its head with marvelous suddenness. The women
84 THE FARMER'S BOY.

and girls all come out to save their linen and “shoo” the calf off
when it approaches the flowers, but it is the boy that takes on
himself the task of capturing the crazy animal. The women folks
seem much distressed by the calf’s performances, while the boy is
so overcome with the funniness of his calf that he is only halfway
effective in his chasing. At last the calf apparently sees some-
thing it never noted before; for it comes down on its four legs
stock still and stretches its ears forward as if in great amazement.
Now is the boy’s chance. He steals up and grabs the end of the
chain; but at that moment the calf concludes that it sees nothing
worthy of astonishment, and starts off again full tilt, trailing a
small boy behind, whose twinkling legs never went so fast before
and it is a question if things are not in a more desperate state
than they were previously. By this time the boy’s father and a
few of the neighbors’ boys appear on the scene, and between them
all the calf gets confused, and allows himself to be tethered once
more in the most docile subjection, You would not think the
gentle little creature, who is so mildly nibbling off the clover
leaves, was capable of such wild doings.

On farms where oxen are used the boy is allowed to bring up
and train a pair of steers. While the training is going on you can
hear the boy shouting out his threats and commands from one end
of the town to the other. Even old Grandpa Smith, who has
been deaf as a stone these ten years, asked what the noise was
about when our boy began training steers. By dint of his shoutings
and whackings it was no great time before the boy had the steers

so that they were quite respectable. He got them so they would
AUTUMN. 85

turn and twist according to his directions almost any way, and he
could make them snake the clumsy old cart he hitched them into

over any sort of country he pleased. He trained them so they



The boys and thetr steers,

would trot quite well, too. Altogether, he was proud of them,
and believed they would beat any steers in the county ciean out of
sight. He was going to take them to the cattle-show some time
and see if they would not.

Cattle-show comes in the autumn, usually about the time of
the first frosts. There is some early rising among the farmers on
the morning of the great day, for they must get their flocks under
way promptly or they will be late. Every kind of farm creature
has its place on the grounds; and in the big hall are displayed
quantities of fruits and vegetables that are the biggest and_ best
ever seen, and samples of cooking and samples of sewing, and a

bedquilt, that an old lady made after she was ninety years old, that
86 THE FARMER'S BOY.

has about a million pieces in it; and another one that Ann Maria
Totkins made, who is only ten years old, that has about nine hun-
dred thousand pieces in it; and a picture in oils that this same
Ann Maria Totkins painted; and some other paintings, and lots of
fancy things, and all sorts of remarkable work that women and
girls can do and a boy isn’t good for anything at. However, the
boy admires all this handiwork, and is astonished at the big squash
that grew in one summer and weighs twice as much as he does,
and surveys the fruits with watery mouth, and exclaims, when he
gets to the potatoes, any one of which would almost fill a quart
measure, “Jiminy! wouldn’t those be the fellers to pick up,
though 2”

«J don't think you use very nice language,” says Eddie’s older
sister, who is nearly through the high school.

“Well, you don’t know much about picking up potatoes,” is
Eddie’s retort.

There are more chances to spend money than you can “shake
a stick at” on the cattle-show grounds. All sorts of men are
walking around through the crowd with popcorn and candies,
and gay little balloons and whistles and such things to sell, and
there are booths where you can see how much you can pound
and how much you can lift and how straight you can throw an
ego at a “niggers” head stuck through a canvas two rods away.
There are shooting galleries, and there is a phonograph, where you
tuck some little tubes into your ears and can hear the famous
baritone, Augustus William de Monk, sing the latest songs, and it

is so funny you can not help laughing. Of course, the boy can not
AUTUMN. 87

invest in all the things he sees at the fair; he has to stop when
his pocket money runs out. But there is lots of free fun, such as
the chance to roam around and look on at everything, and he
has quantities of handbills and brightly colored cards and pam-
phlets thrust upon
him, all of which
he faithfully stows
away in his gradu-
ally bulging pockets
and takes home to
consider at leisure.
For a number of
days afterward he
squeaks about on
his journeyings with
his whistles and

jew’s - harps and



other noise - makers

Shooting with a sling.

purchased at the fair,
with great persistency; but these things soon get broken, and the
pamphlets and circulars he gathered get scattered, and the occasion
may be said to have been brought to an end by his finding, two
Sundays later, a lone peanut in his jacket pocket. It was in church
time, and he was at great pains to crack it quietly, so that he could
eat it at once. He succeeded, though he had to assume great inno-
cence and a remarkably steadfast interest in the preacher when his

mother glanced his way suspiciously as she heard the shucks crush.
88 THE FARMER’S BOY.

Autumn is a time of harvest. The potato field has first atten-
tion. When the boy’s father is otherwise busied, he has to go out
alone and do digging and all, unless he can persuade his smaller
brothers and sisters to bring along their little express wagon and
assist. In such a case he spends about half his time showing them
how, and offering inducements to keep them at work. Usually
it is the men folks who dig, and the boy has to do most of the
picking up. After he has handled about five bushels of the dirty
things he has had enough of it; but he can not desert. It is one
of the great virtues of farm life that the boy must learn to do
disagreeable tasks, and to stick to them to the finish however irk-
some they are. It gives the right kind of boy a decided advan-
tage in the battles of life that come later, whatever his field of
industry. He has courage to undertake and persistence to carry
out plans that boys of milder experience will never dare to cope
with.

Potato fields that have been neglected in the drive of other
work in their ripening weeks, flourish often at digging time with
many weedy jungles. This makes digging slow, but the econom-
ical small farmer sees some gain in the fact, for he can feed the
weeds to the pigs. After the midday digging, while his father is
carrying the bags of potatoes down cellar, the boy gets in a few
loads of the weeds. The pigs are very glad to come wallowing
up from the barnyard mire to the bars where the boy throws the
weeds over. They grunt and crunch with great satisfaction. When
the boy brings in the last load he has a little conversation with

the pigs, and he scratches the fattest one’s back with a piece of
AUTUMN. 89

board, until it lies down on its side and curls up the corners of its

mouth and grunts as if in the seventh heaven of bliss.



A corner of the sheep yard.

A little later in the fall the onions have to be topped, the
beets pulled, the carrots spaded out, and the corn cut. Work at
the corn, in one shape or another, hangs on until snow flies. The
men do most of the cutting and binding, though the boy often
assists; but what he is sure to do is to drop the straw and to hand
up the bundles when they are ready for stacking, and gather the
scattered pumpkins and put them under the stacks to protect them

from the frost. He likes to play that these stacks are Indian tents,
14
go THE FARMER’S BOY.

and he will crowd himself in among their slanting stalks till he is
out of sight. He picks out one or two good-sized green pumpkins
that night from among those they have brought home to feed to the
cows, and hollows them out and cuts awful faces on them for jack-
o’-lanterns. He fixes with considerable trouble a place in the
bottom for a candle, and gets the younger children to come out
on the steps while he lights up. They are filled with delight and
fright by the ghostly heads with their strangely glowing features
and their grinning, saw-toothed mouths. The boy goes sailing
around the yard with them, and puts them on fence-posts and car-
ries them up a ladder, and cuts up all sorts of antics with them.
Finally, the younger children are called in, and the boy gets lone-
some and blows out his candles, and puts the jack-o-lanterns away
for another occasion.

On days following there is much corn-husking in the fields,
which the boy assists at, though the breaking off of the tough cobs
is often no easy matter, and it makes his wrists and fingers ache.
Toward sundown the farmer frequently brings home a load to husk
in the evening, or for the morrow’s work should the day chance
to be rainy. In the autumn it is quite common to do an hour or
two’s work in the barn of an evening, though the boy does not
fancy the arrangement much, and begs off when he can think of
a good excuse.

In October the apples have to be picked. The pickers go to
the orchard armed with baskets, ropes, and ladders, and the wagon
brings out a load of barrels and scatters them about among the

trees. It looks dangerous the way the boy will worm about


Lelping grandpa husk.
AUTUMN. gl

among the branches and pursue the apples out to the tips of the
smallest limbs. He never falls, though he many times comes near
it. The way he hangs on seems to confirm the truth of the theory

that he was descended from monkey ancestors. But the boy is on



Out for a tramp.

the ground much of the time, emptying the baskets the men let
down into the barrels and picking up the best of the windfalls, and
gathering the rest of the apples on the ground into heaps for
cider.

It is a treat to take the cider apples to mill. There is always
something going on there—always other teams and other boys,

and great bins of waiting apples and creaking machinery, and an
92 THE FARMER’S BOY.

atmosphere full of cidery odors. The boy

loses no time in hunting

up a good straw and finding a newly filled barrel with the bung

out. He establishes prompt connections

f



took to

with the cider by means
of the straw, and fills
himself up with sweet-
ness. When he has
enough, and has wiped
his mouth with his sleeve,
he remarks that he
guesses he has lowered
that cider some. When
they brought their own
cider home and propped
up the barrels in the yard
next the shop, the boy
kept a bunch of straws
conveniently stored, and

as long as he called

the cider sweet he fre-

quently drew on the
barrels’ contents. When
the cider grew hard he

visiting the apple bins

A drink at the tub in the backyard. more frequently, and, if you no-

ticed him closely, you would almost always see that he had bunches

in his pockets that showed that he was well provided with these

food stores.


Over the pasture hills to the chestnut trees,
AUTUMN. 93

The great day of the fall for the boy was that on which he
and a lot of the other fellows went chestnutting. They had been
planning it and talking it over for a week beforehand. The sun
had not been long up when they started off across the frosty quiet
of the pastures. Some had tin pails, some had bags, some had both.
One boy had hopes so high that he carried three bags that would
hold half a bushel each. Most of them had salt bags that would
contain two or three quarts. Several carried clubs to knock off the
chestnuts that still clung in the burs. They were all in eager chatter
as they tramped and skipped and climbed the fences and _ rolled
stones down the hillside and whirled their pails about their heads,
and waited for the smallest boy, who was getting left behind, to
catch up, and did all those other things that boys do when they are
off that way. How they raced to be first when they neared the
chestnut trees! There was a scattering, and a shouting over finds,
and a rustling among the fallen leaves. The nuts were not so
numerous that it took them long to clear the ground. Then they
threw their clubs, but the limbs were too high for their strength
to be effective, and they soon gave up and went on to find more
trees. The chestnuts rattled on the bottoms of their tin pails, and
the boys with bags twisted them up and exhibited to each other
the knob of nuts within. As the sun rose higher the grass be-
came wet with melted frost, and the wind began to blow in dash-
ing little breezes that kept increasing in force till the whole wood
was set to singing and fluttering. The boys enjoyed the briskness
of the gale, and agreed, besides, that it would bring down the

chestnuts. They wandered on over knolls and through hollows,
15
94 THE FARMER'S BOY.

sometimes in the brown pastures, sometimes in the ragged, autumn
forest patches. They clubbed and climbed and picked, and bruised
their shins, and got chestnut-bur prickles into their fingers, and
they had some squabbles among themselves, and the smallest boy
tumbled and got the nose-bleed and shed tears, and it took the
whole company to comfort him. On the whole, though, they got
on very well. At noon the biggest boy, who had a watch, told
them it was twelve o'clock, and they stopped on the sunny side
of a pine grove, where there was a brook that slipped down over
some rocks near by, and ate their dinner. The wind was whistling
and swaying high up among the pine-tops, and now and then a
tiny whirlwind caught up the leaves beyond the brook and dashed
them into a white-birch thicket. In the sheltered nook where the
boys sat the wind barely touched them, and they ate, and drank
from the brook, and lounged about afterward in great comfort.
They followed the little stream down a rough ravine, when they
again started and went through the same experiences as those of
the morning. They saw two gray squirrels, they heard a hound
baying on the mountain, and there was a gun fired off some-
where in the woods. They found a crow’s nest, only it was so
high in a tree that they could not get it, and they picked up many
pretty stones by the side of the brook that they put in with their
chestnuts. They got under one tree that was in sight of an orchard
where a man was picking apples. The man hallooed to them to
“get out of there!” and after a little hesitation—for the spot was
a promising one—they straggled off into the woods again. While

they traveled they did a good deal of odd eating. They made
AUTUMN, 95



A mud turtle.

way with an occasional chestnut, and they found birch and moun-
tain mint, and dug some sassafras root, which they ate after getting
most of the dirt off The biggest boy’s name was Tom Cook,
and he would eat almost anything. He would eat acorns, which
the rest found too bitter, and he would chew pine and hemlock
needles and sweet-fern leaves, and all such things. He got out
his knife while they were crossing a pasture and cut out a plug
of bark from a pine tree and scraped out the pitch and juice next
the wood, and said it was sweet. The others tried it, and it was
sweet, though they did not care much for it.

In the late afternoon the squad of boys came out on a preci-

pice of rocks that overhung a pond. The wind had gone down
96 THE FARMER'S BOY.

and the sun was getting low, and it seemed best that they should
start homeward. They were back among the scattered houses of
the village just as the evening had begun to get dusky and frosty.
The smallest boy had more than a pint of chestnuts, and the big-
gest boy had as many as three quarts, not counting stones and
other rubbish. The day had been a great success, but they felt
as if they had trudged a thousand miles, and were almost too tired
to eat supper. However, when the boy began to tell his adven-
tures, and set forth in glowing terms his triumphs and trials, and
listed the wonderful things he had seen, his spirits revived, and in
the evening he was able to superintend the boiling of a cup of the
chestnuts he had gathered, and to do his share of the eating.
When the chestnut burs opened, autumn was at its height.
Now it began to decline. Every breeze set loose relays of the
gaudy leaves and sent them fluttering to the earth in a many-
tinted shower, and the bare twigs and the increasing sharpness
of the morning frosts warned the farm dwellers that winter was

fast approaching.
Fee AUN nan,

COUNTRY CHILDREN IN GENERAL.

N this final chapter I propose to gather up some of the loose

] threads of my narrative that for one reason or another
missed attention in the earlier chapters, and to study the

effect on his character of the life the farmer's boy leads. Besides, I
wish to tell something of the farmer’s girls. They are an impor-
tant part of the family life which this book attempts to portray, and
I have given them too scant attention. They are not so important
as the boys, to be sure, if we accept the latter's opinion, though
you might think, after he gets to be sixteen or seventeen, he
thought them more so, from the amount of attention he gives them.
The small girl’s likes and dislikes, her enthusiasms and pleas-
ures, are to a large degree identical with the boy’s. She will beat
him half the time in the races that they run. If she has rubber
boots, she is just as good a wader. She can _ play ball, climb fences,
slide down hill, skate—indeed, do almost anything the boy can,
with just the same interest and enjoyment. The girl is often a
leader in roaming and adventure, and some girls make excellent
outdoor workers too. A lively and capable girl often wishes, I
fancy, that she was a boy, and might have the boy’s outdoor free-
dom ; and sometimes, too, she envies his opportunity to cope with

vigorous work and win a name and place in the world. At any
(97)
98 THE FARMER'S BOY.

rate, she wishes she could slip away from the confining house-
work and more sober demeanor which she is expected to have.
On farms where boys are lacking, the girls sometimes, of neces-
sity, do the boy’s work. They drive the cows to pasture, help in
hoeing and weeding, load the hay, and pick up potatoes. But



Weeding the posy bed.

usually they only hover around the edges of the outdoor work.
They take care of a corner in the garden and a strip of flower-bed,
feed the chickens, run on errands, and help pick apples. The
smallest girls, unless their folks are uncommonly particular, run
around about as they please, and dip into as many different
kinds of work as they choose, and they get just as smutty and

dirty as any of the boys. When the girls get into long dresses
COUNTRY CHILDREN IN GENERAL. 99

they become moire and more particular as to what they are seen
doing about the fields, and they avoid anything but the lightest
muscular exertion, and not all of them even dare to make a spec-
tacle of themselves by riding around on the horse-rake and tedder.

The girl is early taught to wash and wipe the dishes, to sweep,
to mend rents and sew on buttons. The boy has to acknowledge
that in these things his sister beats him. She can do every one
quicker and better than he can, though he claims that the buttons
she sews on will come off, and that, give him time enough, he can
sew a button on so that he can depend on that button’s staying
where it was put to his last days. It is certain, too, that the girl
is apt to be quicker with her mind than the boy. She has her
lessons better in school, and she is more docile in her behavior.
Often she is the boy’s helper and adviser in all sorts of difficulties
and troubles, and is a companion who is safer and better for him
in almost every way than any of his mates. We all crave a sym-
pathetic understanding and interest in our doings. It is the mothers
and sisters who are most apt to have these qualities, and it is to
them that the boys go most freely with their woes and_pleas-
ures. They are far safer confidants than the rest of the world, and
the boy is likely to have reason for sorrow in later life because he
did not follow their wishes and advice more closely.

All kinds of boys are to be found on our New England farms—
good and bad, handsome and homely, bright and dull, strong and
weak, courageous and timid, generous and mean. I think the better
qualities predominate. The typical boy is a sturdy, wholesome-

looking little fellow, with chubby cheeks that are well tanned and
100 THE FARMER’S BOY.

freckled in summer, and that in the winter take a rosy glow from

the keenness of the air. The same is more mildly true of the



Grandpa husks sweet corn for dinner, and tells a story at the same time.

appearance of the little girls, and with some advantages in their
favor. You take a group of country girls some June morning, on
their way to school, with their fresh faces and clean, starched aprons
—they look, as Artemus Ward says, “nice enough to eat without
sass or seasonin’,”

As the children grow up they are apt to lose much of their
simplicity and attraction. They become self-conscious and in many
ways artificial, particularly in their manner and in their pleasures.

This is not especially apparent in their work, and there are those
COUNTRY CHILDREN IN GENERAL. IOI

who continue to a large degree refreshingly earnest and natural in
whatever they do; and country life all through, with its general
habits of labor and economy and its comparative seclusion, is less
artificial than that of the cities. Yet there are the same tendencies
in both places. The girl becomes increasingly anxious about the
mode of her dress—she wants to have all the latest puckers of the
world of fashion. She twists and cuts off and curls and frizzes her
hair, and she braids it and rolls it and makes it stand on end in
her effort to find the adjustment most becoming to her style of
beauty. The result sometimes is that she has the appearance of
having gone crazy. She wears toothpick-toed, high-heeled shoes,
and declares publicly that they couldn’t be more comfortable, while
privately she complains of corns. For society use she cultivates a
cultured tone of voice and some tosses of the head, rolling up of
the eyeballs, shrugging of the shoulders, etc. calculated to be “kill-
ing.” She has an idea that it is becoming in her to appear to
take fright easily, and she screeches at sudden noises, and is in a
panic at the appearance of the most scared and tiny of mice.

A good deal of this is done for its effect on the boys. It
seems to interest and entertain them, and keep them hanging
around. The girls sentimentalize a good deal about the boys when
they get into their teens. They keep track of who is going with
who, and pick his looks and characteristics, in their shallow way,
all to ravelings. What a fellow says, how he curls his mustache,
how he parts his hair, how horridly or how well he dances, how
late it was when he got home from the last party, etc. are dis-

cussed at all kinds of times and places. Two girls who have come
16
102 THE FARMER'S BOY.

home from meeting together some cold autumn night will loiter
and freeze to death at the gate where they are to part, talking for
an hour or more over the “ fellows” after this manner. The result
is that their minds come into a state where subjects without a
gossipy or sentimental turn have no interest.

As arule, the boys fall into the girls’ ways, and, noting how the

current runs, encourage them. There is among the young people



A game of croguet.

a good deal of flirtation, which I take to be a kind of aimless play
both of talk and manner that hangs around the borders of the sen-
timental, and often gets a good way beyond it. The boy who

avoids this sort of thing is said to be bashful; he is afraid of the
COUNTRY CHILDREN IN GENERAL. 103

girls, has no sentiment, and all that. This may be a sufficient ex-
planation in some cases, but in others the trouble is not in the
girls, but in this kind of girls, It may be because the boy has
more sentiment than the average that this sort of society is dis-
tasteful to him.

Most boys are not as sentimental as are most girls. They are
more workaday and practical. Their life, in the matter of getting a
living, has more responsibility than the girls. At the same time,
the boy gains a coarseness of thought and feeling often in his
companionship with the men and boys he is thrown in with that
the girl is almost altogether free from.

It is a curious idea of manliness a boy sometimes has. He
tries to express a grown-up competence to take care of himself
by a rough manner and rude speech, and ability to enter into
the spirit of the worst kind of conversation and_ stories not
only without a blush but with sympathetic guffaws of laughter.
He resents his parents’ authority; he likes to resort to the loafing
places when he has leisure. He aspires to smoke and chew and
spit, like the rest of the loafers there. This may be an extreme
picture, but there are a vast number of boys it will fit to a degree.
Most country boys admire the gentility of smoking, and will be
at great pains to acquire the habit after they get to be fifteen or
sixteen years old. Perhaps the average boy never becomes a {re-
quent smoker, but he likes the pleasurable feeling of independence
it gives him, when he starts off for a ride, to have a cigar tilted
neatly upward from the corner of his mouth. It stamps him a

gentleman to all beholders, and the lookers-on know from his
104 THE FARMER’S BOY.

manner and cigar that he is a person of vigorous and stoutly held
opinions that it would be best not to attempt any fooling with.
When you see a young man gayly riding by, sitting up very
straight, with his best clothes on and his five-cent cigar scenting
the air with its gentle
aroma, you may know
he is going to take his
girl to ride. If he can
by any manner of means
find the money at this
time of his career, the
young man buys a fast
horse and a_ shiny
buggy carriage. He
fairly dazzles your eyes
as he flits swiftly past.
Sometimes it takes

more than one horse



to finish his courting,

Afternoon on the front porch,

; for the first one may
die of old age before he gets through. But whatever disappoint-
ment the young man suffers in his love affairs, and however his
fancy or what not makes him change one girl for another, you can
not see, when he starts on his journeys, that he has ever lost
aught of that first freshness of demeanor that characterized him,
and the perfume of his cigar has the same old five-cent fragrance.

After all, these young fellows who go skirmishing around in this
COUNTRY CHILDREN IN GENERAL. 105

fashion are mostly hearty and good-natured. When such a one
marries, his horse goes slower, the polish wears off from his
carriage, he neglects his cigar, and the two settle down, as a rule,
into a very staid and comfortable sort of folks. They might have
been wiser, they might have got more from life; so could we all
of us.

Shakespere said that “all the world loves a lover,’ and people
are fond of repeating this saying; but that was three hundred years
ago. I don’t know how it was then, nor how it is in other parts
of the world now. I am very sure, however, that New England
people do not love a lover. He is a butt for more poor jokes
than any other character. We think he is ridiculous. We call him
off and set him on, and scare him and encourage him. We at
least make that other saying come true, that “faint heart ne’er
won fair lady.” As for the girl, I imagine that among her friends
she gets a gentler and more coddling treatment.

Even the smallest children in some families have to endure a
lot of talk from their elders about their “girls” and “fellows” that
is the most sickly sort of sentimentality. If let alone, the children’s
minds do not run much on these lines, though they occasionally,
in their innocent way, build some very pretty castles in the air, that
soon melt away harmlessly into nothing in the warmth of their
other interests.

Boys, when they begin to go to the larger schools of a town,
are apt to learn a variety of rough tricks, exclamations, and slang
that shock the folks at home when the boys get to showing off

within their sight and hearing. With the best of them the largest
106 THE FARMER'S BOY.

part of this presently wears off. Others cultivate their accomplish-
ments, and even make their conversation emphatic with certain
of the swear words. Such boys the righteous of the community
condemn as altogether bad, though it sometimes happens that even
they have redeeming traits. I do not think that lying is a com-
mon fault of country boys, though most of them find themselves
at times in circumstances that make it difficult to abstain from
giving the truth a pretty severe straining; and perhaps most have
two or three lies on their consciences that are undoubtedly black.
But the boy has probably repented these in shame and sorrow,
and hopes he never will be tempted again to tell one of the un-
truths he so despises. Really bad and unblushing lying a boy is
apt to learn, if ever, after he gets among the older and rougher
boys who hang around the post offices every evening at mail-time,
or who attend the center schools of the town.

The farm, more than most places, tends to give children habits
of thrift and singleness of purpose in the pursuit of education.
There is seclusion enough on the majority of farms, so that the
children are not confused by a multiplicity of amusements and too
much going on. This seclusion may make some dull, but to others
it gives a concentrated energy that makes them all through life
untiring workers and stout thinkers. Often from such a start they
become the world’s leaders in many widely scattered fields of use-
fulness. Because you are a farm-boy, it is not, however, certain
that you have only to seek the city to win fame and _ fortune.
The city is already crowded with workers and with ability. It is

a lonely, homesick place, and many years must pass before a per-
COUNTRY CHILDREN IN GENERAL. 107

son can win even a position of safety and comfort. The boys with
good habits and health and a strong will have the best chance. The
boy with loose habits and lack of energy will find more tempta-

tions to a weak and purposeless career than in the country. Some



A sawomill,

boys and girls can live lives of wider usefulness in the large towns
than in the country, and it is best for them to go there; but it
is a serious question for most whether they will gain anything by
the change.

It was my plan, in this book, to take the farmer’s boy straight
through the year. There still remains a final month that has not
been treated. With Thanksgiving, autumn ends and winter begins.
The trees have been bare for some time, the grasses withered

brown, and the landscape white with frost every morning. There
108 THE FARMER’S BOY.

have been high winds whistling about the farm buildings and
scurrying through the leaf litter of the fields) Snow squalls have
whitened the air, and the roadway pools have frequently been glazed
with ice. But the solid freezing and snows of winter are not looked
for until after Thanksgiving. The boy gets out his old mittens, and
his cloth cap that he can pull down over his ears, and he keeps
his coat collar turned up, and hugs himself and draws himself into
a narrower compass as he does his outdoor work. On some cold
morning he gets out his sled, and if he finds a bank steep enough
he slides down on the frost very well. He tries such ice as comes
in his way, and of course breaks through and gets

his feet muddy.
Then real winter comes,
and the world is all white,
and sleighbells jingle
along the road, and
the ponds and riv-
ers are bridged with
solid ice. The boy,
with some other

boys, and perhaps



some of the girls,

Going up for a slide.

too, is often out
with his sled. They
do a good deal of sliding down the steepest kind of hills—indeed,
that is the sort they search out; and if it has a few lively humps

in it, so much the better. They dash down the decline in the most


COUNTRY CHILDREN IN GENERAL. 109

reckless fashion, and then keep going up a little higher to make the
descent still faster and more exciting. One little fellow, who lies flat
on his sled and steers with his toes, gets slewed out of the track and
goes rolling over and over with his sled in a cloud of flying snow.
You would think it would be the end of him; but he gets up
dazed, and powdered white from head to foot, and his lip quivers,
and some tears trickle from his eyes. He says in his shaky voice
that he is going home. The other boys gather round and brush
him off, and Willie Hooper lends him his handkerchief, when the
boy can’t find his own; and they tell him how he looked going
over and over, and what he ought to have done; and that he is
all right, and to “come on, now; there ain’t no use of goin’ in
just for that; we'll have a lot of fun yet.” The boy finds him-
self comforted, and in a few minutes he is as lively, careering down
the hill with the others, as ever.

By the time a boy gets to be six or seven years old he expects
to find a pair of skates in his Christmas stocking. For some time
after that his head accumulates bumps of a kind that would be apt
to puzzle a phrenologist. It is astonishing in what a sudden and
unexpected manner the skates will slip from under you! There’s not
even a chance to throw out your hands to save yourself. You are
in luck if you can manage to sit down instead of going full-length.
Your ankles wobble unaccountably, and the moment you leave off
mincing along in a sort of awkward, short-stepped walk and try
to strike out, down you go on your head. Then your skate-straps
are always loosening, or getting under your skates and tripping

you up, and your feet become cold and your mittens get wet.
17
110 THE FARMER'S BOY.

But the boy keeps at it with a perseverance under difficulty and
disaster that would accomplish wonders if applied to work. In
time he can skim around with any of them, and play shinny and
skate backward and in a circle, and cut a figure 8 in the ice, and
almost do a number of other remarkable things.

The boy who skates much has to experience a few break-
ings through the ice. On the little ponds and near the shore this
is often fun, and the boy who dares go nearest to the weak places
and slides longest on a bender is a hero in his mates’ estimation,
and, I might add, in his own. When he does break in he very
likely only gets his feet wet, and he does not mind that very much;
but when he breaks through in some deep place, and does not grip
the ice until he is in up to his arms, it is no smiling matter. He
usually scambles out quickly enough, but the worst of it comes in
getting home in his freezing clothing, that conducts the chill of the
frosty air clear to his bones. Yet it rarely happens that anything
serious comes of these accidents.

The year goes out with Christmas, the holiday that perhaps
shines brightest of all the list in the boy’s mind. A few days be-
fore its advent he and his folks visit the town, where all the stores
are, to make the necessary purchases. They do much mysterious
advising together, but never as a family group; there always is at
least one shut out. It takes a great deal of consideration and
calculation to make forty-nine cents go around among all your
friends. But the members of the family are usually considerate,
and when the boy fishes for hints of their likes, they make it clear,

in suggesting the thing they most want, that he will not have to
COUNTRY CHILDREN IN GENERAL. III

spend such a great deal. Then, while he is buying in the store, the
others that happen to be with him are always good enough to stand
by the door and look the other way, so that, of course, when they

get their presents they are a great surprise to them.



A winter ride.

Each of the children brings home various little packages, which
they are at great pains to hide away from the others, though they
can not forbear to talk about them darkly, and make the others
guess, until they are almost telling themselves. Some of them, par-
ticularly the girls, are apt to be “making things” about this time,
and you have to be careful how you notice what is left lying around,

or you discover secrets, and there is likely to be a sudden hustling
112 THE FARMER'S BOY.

of things out of sight when you come into the room, and looks
of such exaggerated innocence that you know something is going
on. If you show an inclination to stop, your sister says, “Come,
now, Tommy, do go along!”

“What for?” says Tommy.

“Oh, you’ve been in the house long enough!” is the reply.

“Well, I guess I want to get warm,” Tommy continues. “It’s
pretty cold outdoors. Say, what is it you're sitting on, Nell, any-
way ?”

“I didn’t say I was sitting on anything,” says Nellie. “ You
just go along out, or you sha’n’t have it.”

Tommy blows his nose and laughs, and pulls on his mittens
and shuffles off.

On Christmas eve the children hang up their stockings back
of the stove, and are hopeful of presents, in spite of the disbelief
they express in the possibility of Santa Claus coming down the
stovepipe. Sure enough, in the morning the stockings are all
bunchy with the things in them, and the children have a great
celebration pulling them out and getting the wraps off the pack-
ages. They do all this without stopping to get more than half
dressed, and breakfast has to wait for them. They are in no haste,
for they have popcorn and candy to munch on that they found
in their stockings, and every one has to show all his things to
each of the rest, and see all the others have, and spring the baby’s
jack-in-the-box about half a dozen times till they get used to the
fright of it.

They have better things to eat that day than usual, and more


18

Washing the swpper dishes.
COUNTRY CHILDREN IN GENERAL. 113

of them, and with that and the sweetmeats and extras some of
the children are likely to get sick and quarrelsome before the day
is out.

In the evening there is, perhaps, a Christmas tree at the school-
house. There has been a turmoil of preparation in the neighbor-
hood for several days previous; for the children have to be set
learning pieces, and practising, and fixing up costumes, and cake
and cookies and all the good things to eat have to be made
ready, and some one has to collect the dimes and nickels and
quarters to get candy and oranges and Christmas-tree trimmings
with. Then some two or three have to make a journey to the
woods and chop a good branchy hemlock or spruce of the right
size and get it set up in the corner of the schoolhouse. Finally,
the green curtains have to be hung that will separate the audience
from the stage, where the small people do their acting and speak
their pieces.

The whole village turned out in the evening. They came on
foot and they came in teams. Usually each group carried a lantern
to light its way, and these were set in the entry when their bearers
went in. The schoolhouse windows were aglow with light, and
within things fairly glittered to the children’s eyés. There were
six lamps along the walls, besides those back of the curtains, and
every one was lighted and turned up almost to the smoking point.
Everybody was there, besides four boys from the next village, who
sat on a front seat, and James Peterson’s dog. Some of the big
people got into some of the small seats, and certain of the neigh-

bors who didn’t get along very well with certain others had to man-
D> oD y
114 THE FARMER’S BOY.

age carefully not to run across each other’s courses. The air was
full of the hum of talk, and the young people were running all
about the open space and in and out the door, and there were
consultations and gigglings and flurries over things forgotten or

lost or something else, without number. The curtain was drawn,



Sliding on the frost.

but you could see the top of the gayly loaded tree over it, and
the movement of feet under it, and you could see queer shadows
of figures within, doing mysterious things on it. Sometimes a
figure brushed against the curtain, and it came bulging way out
into the room, and the four boys from the next town had the

greatest work to keep from exploding over the funniness of this;
COUNTRY CHILDREN IN GENERAL. 115

and, as it was, one of them tumbled off from the narrow seat he
occupied.

By-and-by there was a quieting in the flurry up in front, and
some one stood before the curtain with a paper in his hand and
announced that the first exercise of the evening would be so-and-so.
There was no astonishing genius shown in what followed, but a
person would have to be very dyspeptic not to enjoy the simplicity
and earnestness of it all. Each child had his or her individual way,
and some were so small they could only pipe and lisp the words,
and you didn’t know what they said; but when they made their
little bows and hurried off to find their mothers, you and the rest
of the audience were delighted, and applauded just the same. There
was a melodeon at one side of the room, and the school sang some
songs, and one of the young ladies sang a solo all alone, and
they had a dialogue with Santa Claus in it, who was so dressed up
in a long beard and a fur coat and a deep voice that you wouldn't
have any idea it was only Hiram Taylor!

At length came the Christmas tree. How handsome it looked,
with all the packages and bright things hung among its green
twigs, and the strings of popcorn looped all about, and the oranges
and candy bags dangling everywhere! Three or four of the young
people took off the presents and called out names, and kept every-
body growing happier and happier. When the tree was bare, and
even the popcorn and candy bags and oranges had _ been distributed,
some of the women folks got lively in a corner where there was a
table piled all over with baskets and boxes. Then plates began to

circulate around, and it was found that there was a pot boiling on
116 THE FARMER'S BOY.

the stove and a smell of coffee and chocolate in the air, About nine-
teen different kinds of cake started on their wanderings, and there
were biscuit and something to drink, and nuts that were partly
walnuts and partly store nuts; and you had a chance to talk with
everybody and show your presents, and altogether had so good a
time that you felt as if it would last the whole year through.

It would take many books to tell all there is to tell about the
farmer’s boy; and what better place is there to leave him than this
Christmas night, with the rest of the family, snugged up among
the robes of the sleigh, on the way home? The lantern on the
dashboard flashes its light along the road ahead, the horses’ hoofs
strike crisply on the frozen snow, the bells jingle, and the sky over-
head glitters full of radiant stars. In the gliding sleigh are the
children, holding their precious presents in their laps, and, still in
animated conversation, they review the events of the evening. The

sleigh moves on, they are lost to sight—the book is ended.






















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