It was not long after sunrise, and Stephen Waterman, fresh from
his dip in the river, had scrambled up the hillside from the hut
in the alder-bushes where he had made his morning toilet.
An early ablution of his sort was not the custom of the farmers
along the banks of the Saco, but the Waterman house was hardly a
stone's throw from the water, and there was a clear, deep
swimming-hole in the Willow Cove that would have tempted the
busiest man, or the least cleanly, in York County. Then, too,
Stephen was a child of the river, born, reared, schooled on its
very brink, never happy unless he were on it, or in it, or beside
it, or at least within sight or sound of it.
The immensity of the sea had always silenced and overawed him,
left him cold in feeling. The river wooed him, caressed him, won
his heart. It was just big enough to love. It was full of
charms and changes, of varying moods and sudden surprises. Its
voice stole in upon his ear with a melody far sweeter and more
subtle than the boom of the ocean. Yet it was not without
strength, and when it was swollen with the freshets of the spring
and brimming with the bounty of its sister streams, it could dash
and roar, boom and crash, with the best of them.
Stephen stood on the side porch, drinking in the glory of the
sunrise, with the Saco winding like a silver ribbon through the
sweet loveliness of the summer landscape.
And the river rolled on toward the sea, singing its morning song,
creating and nourishing beauty at every step of its onward path.
Cradled in the heart of a great mountain-range, it pursued its
gleaming way, here lying silent in glassy lakes, there rushing
into tinkling little falls, foaming great falls, and thundering
cataracts. Scores of bridges spanned its width, but no steamers
flurried its crystal depths. Here and there a rough little
rowboat, tethered to a willow, rocked to and fro in some quiet
bend of the shore. Here the silver gleam of a rising perch,
chub, or trout caught the eye; there a pickerel lay rigid in the
clear water, a fish carved in stone: here eels coiled in the
muddy bottom of some pool; and there, under the deep shadows of
the rocks, lay fat, sleepy bass, old, and incredibly wise, quite
untempted by, and wholly superior to, the rural fisherman's worm.
The river lapped the shores of peaceful meadows; it flowed along
banks green with maple, beech, sycamore, and birch; it fell
tempestuously over darns and fought its way between rocky cliffs
crowned with stately firs. It rolled past forests of pine and
hemlock and spruce, now gentle, now terrible; for there is said
to be an Indian curse upon the Saco, whereby, with every great
sun, the child of a paleface shall be drawn into its cruel
depths. Lashed into fury by the stony reefs that impeded its
progress, the river looked now sapphire, now gold, now white, now
leaden gray; but always it was hurrying, hurrying on its
appointed way to the sea.
After feasting his eyes and filling his heart with a morning
draught of beauty, Stephen went in from the porch and, pausing at
the stairway, called in stentorian tones: "Get up and eat your
breakfast, Rufus! The boys will be picking the side jams today,
and I'm going down to work on the logs. If you come along, bring
your own pick-pole and peavey." Then, going to the kitchen
pantry, he collected, from the various shelves, a pitcher of
milk, a loaf of bread, half an apple-pie, and a bowl of
blueberries, and, with the easy methods of a household unswayed
by feminine rule, moved toward a seat under an apple-tree and
took his morning meal in great apparent content. Having
finished, and washed his dishes with much more thoroughness than
is common to unsuperintended man, and having given Rufus the
second call to breakfast with the vigor and acrimony that usually
marks that unpleasant performance, he strode to a high point on
the river-bank and, shading his eyes with his hand, gazed
steadily down stream.
Patches of green fodder and blossoming potatoes melted into soft
fields that had been lately mown, and there were glimpses of
tasseling corn rising high to catch the sun. Far, far down on
the opposite bank of the river was the hint of a brown roof, and
the tip of a chimney that sent a slender wisp of smoke into the
clear air. Beyond this, and farther back from the water, the
trees apparently hid a cluster of other chimneys, for thin
spirals of smoke ascended here and there. The little brown roof
could never have revealed itself to any but a lover's eye; and
that discerned something even smaller, something like a pinkish
speck, that moved hither and thither on a piece of greensward
that sloped to the waterside.
"She's up!" Stephen exclaimed under his breath, his eyes shining,
his lips smiling. His voice had a note of hushed exaltation
about it, as if "she," whoever she might be, had, in
condescending to rise, conferred a priceless boon upon a waiting
universe. If she were indeed a "up" (so his tone implied), then
the day, somewhat falsely heralded by the sunrise, had really
begun, and the human race might pursue its appointed tasks,
inspired and uplifted by the consciousness of her existence. It
might properly be grateful for the fact of her birth; that she
had grown to woman's estate; and, above all, that, in common with
the sun, the lark, the morning-glory, and other beautiful things
of the early day, she was up and about her lovely, cheery,
heart-warming business.
The handful of chimneys and the smoke spirals rising here and
there among the trees on the river-bank belonged to what was
known as the Brier Neighborhood. There were only a few houses in
all, scattered along a side road leading from the river up to
Liberty Centre. There were no great signs of thrift or
prosperity, but the Wiley cottage, the only one near the water,
was neat and well cared for, and Nature had done her best to
conceal man's indolence, poverty, or neglect.
Bushes of sweetbrier grew in fragrant little forests as tall as
the fences. Clumps of wild roses sprang up at every turn, and
over all the stone walls, as well as on every heap of rocks by
the wayside, prickly blackberry vines ran and clambered and
clung, yielding fruit and thorns impartially to the neighborhood
children.
The pinkish speck that Stephen Waterman had spied from his side
of the river was Rose Wiley of the Brier Neighborhood on the
Edgewood side. As there was another of her name on Brigadier
Hill, the Edgewood minister called one of them the climbing Rose
and the other the brier Rose, or sometimes Rose of the river.
She was well named, the pinkish speck. She had not only some of
the sweetest attributes of the wild rose, but the parallel might
have been extended as far as the thorns, for she had wounded her
scores,--hearts, be it understood, not hands. The wounding was,
on the whole, very innocently done; and if fault could be imputed
anywhere, it might rightly have been laid at the door of the kind
powers who had made her what she was, since the smile that
blesses a single heart is always destined to break many more.
She had not a single silk gown, but she had what is far better, a
figure to show off a cotton one. Not a brooch nor a pair of
earrings was numbered among her possessions, but any ordinary
gems would have looked rather dull and trivial when compelled to
undergo comparison with her bright eyes. As to her hair, the
local milliner declared it impossible for Rose Wiley to get an
unbecoming hat; that on one occasion, being in a frolicsome mood,
Rose had tried on all the headgear in the village emporium,--
children's gingham "Shakers," mourning bonnets for aged dames,
men's haying hats and visored caps,--and she proved superior to
every test, looking as pretty as a pink in the best ones and
simply ravishing in the worst. In fact, she had been so
fashioned and finished by Nature that, had she been set on a
revolving pedestal in a show-window, the bystanders would have
exclaimed, as each new charm came into view: "Look at her
waist!" "See her shoulders!" "And her neck and chin!" "And
her hair!" While the children, gazing with raptured admiration,
would have shrieked, in unison, "I choose her for mine."
All this is as much as to say that Rose of the river was a
beauty, yet it quite fails to explain, nevertheless, the secret
of her power. When she looked her worst the spell was as potent
as when she looked her best. Hidden away somewhere was a vital
spark which warmed every one who came in contact with it. Her
lovely little person was a trifle below medium height, and it
might as well be confessed that her soul, on the morning when
Stephen Waterman saw her hanging out the clothes on the river
bank, was not large enough to be at all out of proportion; but
when eyes and dimples, lips and cheeks, enslave the onlooker, the
soul is seldom subjected to a close or critical scrutiny.
Besides, Rose Wiley was a nice girl, neat as wax, energetic,
merry, amiable, economical. She was a dutiful granddaughter to
two of the most irritating old people in the county; she never
patronized her pug-nosed, pasty-faced girl friends; she made
wonderful pies and doughnuts; and besides, small souls, if they
are of the right sort, sometimes have a way of growing, to the
discomfiture of cynics and the gratification of the angels.
So, on one bank of the river grew the brier rose, a fragile
thing, swaying on a slender stalk and looking at its pretty
reflection in the water; and on the other a sturdy pine tree,
well rooted against wind and storm. And the sturdy pine yearned
for the wild rose; and the rose, so far as it knew, yearned for
nothing at all, certainly not for rugged pine trees standing tall
and grim in rocky soil. If, in its present stage of development,
it gravitated toward anything in particular, it would have been a
well-dressed white birch growing on an irreproachable lawn.
And the river, now deep, now shallow, now smooth, now tumultuous,
now sparkling in sunshine, now gloomy under clouds, rolled on to
the engulfing sea. It could not stop to concern itself with the
petty comedies and tragedies that were being enacted along its
shores, else it would never have reached its destination. Only
last night, under a full moon, there had been pairs of lovers
leaning over the rails of all the bridges along its course; but
that was a common sight, like that of the ardent couples sitting
on its shady banks these summer days, looking only into each
other's eyes, but exclaiming about the beauty of the water.
Lovers would come and go, sometimes reappearing with successive
installments of loves in a way wholly mysterious to the river.
Meantime it had its own work to do and must be about it, for the
side jams were to be broken and the boom "let out" at the
Edgewood bridge.