| In
A Small Mountain Town In June...
It was the beginning of a June afternoon. The springlike transparent
sky shed a rain of silver sunshine on the roofs of the village,
and on the pastures and larchwoods surrounding it. A little wind
moved among the round white clouds on the shoulders of the hills,
driving their shadows across the fields and down the grassy road
that takes the name of street when it passes through North Dormer.
The place lies high and in the open, and lacks the lavish shade
of the more protected New England villages. The clump of weeping-willows
about the duck pond, and the Norway spruces in front of the Hatchard
gate, cast almost the only roadside shadow between lawyer Royall's
house and the point where, at the other end of the village, the
road rises above the church and skirts the black hemlock wall
enclosing the cemetery. The little June wind, frisking down the
street, shook the doleful fringes of the Hatchard spruces, caught
the straw hat of a young man just passing under them, and spun
it clean across the road into the duck-pond. As he ran to fish
it out the girl on lawyer Royall's doorstep noticed that he was
a stranger, that he wore city clothes, and that he was laughing
with all his teeth, as the young and careless laugh at such mishaps.
Her heart contracted a little, and the shrinking that sometimes
came over her when she saw people with holiday faces made her
draw back into the house and pretend to look for the key that
she knew she had already put into her pocket. A narrow greenish
mirror with a gilt eagle over it hung on the passage wall, and
she looked critically at her reflection, wished for the thousandth
time that she had blue eyes like Annabel Balch, the girl who sometimes
came from Springfield to spend a week with old Miss Hatchard,
straightened the sunburnt hat over her small swarthy face, and
turned out again into the sunshine. "How I hate everything!"
she murmured. The young man had passed through the Hatchard gate,
and she had the street to herself. North Dormer is at all times
an empty place, and at three o'clock on a June afternoon its few
able-bodied men are off in the fields or woods, and the women
indoors, engaged in languid household drudgery. The girl walked
along, swinging her key on a finger, and looking about her with
the heightened attention produced by the presence of a stranger
in a familiar place. What, she wondered, did North Dormer look
like to people from other parts of the world? She herself had
lived there since the age of five, and had long supposed it to
be a place of some importance. But about a year before, Mr. Miles,
the new Episcopal clergyman at Hepburn, who drove over every other
Sunday-when the roads were not ploughed up by hauling- to hold
a service in the North Dormer church, had proposed, in a fit of
missionary zeal, to take the young people down to Nettleton to
hear an illustrated lecture on the Holy Land; and the dozen girls
and boys who represented the future of North Dormer had been piled
into a farm-waggon, driven over the hills to Hepburn, put into
a way-train and carried to Nettleton. In the course of that incredible
day Charity Royall had, for the first and only time, experienced
railway-travel, looked into shops with plate-glass fronts, tasted
cocoanut pie, sat in a theatre, and listened to a gentleman saying
unintelligible things before pictures that she would have enjoyed
looking at if his explanations had not prevented her from understanding
them. This initiation had shown her that North Dormer was a small
place, and developed in her a thirst for information that her
position as custodian of the village library had previously failed
to excite. For a month or two she dipped feverishly and disconnectedly
into the dusty volumes of the Hatchard Memorial Library; then
the impression of Nettleton began to fade, and she found it easier
to take North Dormer as the norm of the universe than to go on
reading. The sight of the stranger once more revived memories
of Nettleton, and North Dormer shrank to its real size. As she
looked up and down it, from lawyer Royall's faded red house at
one end to the white church at the other, she pitilessly took
its measure. There it lay, a weather-beaten sunburnt village of
the hills, abandoned of men, left apart by railway, trolley, telegraph,
and all the forces that link life to life in modern communities.
It had no shops, no theatres, no lectures, no "business block";
only a church that was opened every other Sunday if the state
of the roads permitted, and a library for which no new books had
been bought for twenty years, and where the old ones mouldered
undisturbed on the damp shelves. Yet Charity Royall had always
been told that she ought to consider it a privilege that her lot
had been cast in North Dormer. She knew that, compared to the
place she had come from, North Dormer represented all the blessings
of the most refined civilization. Everyone in the village had
told her so ever since she had been brought there as a child.
Even old Miss Hatchard had said to her, on a terrible occasion
in her life: "My child, you must never cease to remember
that it was Mr. Royall who brought you down from the Mountain."
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