POINT
OF VIEW
An Artist Visits The Mountain...
There had never been such a summer in Eagle County. Usually it
was a month of moods, with abrupt alternations of belated frost
and mid-summer heat; this year, day followed day in a sequence
of temperate beauty. Every morning a breeze blew steadily from
the hills. Toward noon it built up great canopies of white cloud
that threw a cool shadow over fields and woods; then before sunset
the clouds dissolved again, and the western light rained its unobstructed
brightness on the valley. On such an afternoon Charity Royall
lay on a ridge above a sunlit hollow, her face pressed to the
earth and the warm currents of the grass running through her.
Directly in her line of vision a blackberry branch laid its frail
white flowers and blue-green leaves against the sky. Just beyond,
a tuft of sweet-fern uncurled between the beaded shoots of the
grass, and a small yellow butterfly vibrated over them like a
fleck of sunshine. This was all she saw; but she felt, above her
and about her, the strong growth of the beeches clothing the ridge,
the rounding of pale green cones on countless spruce-branches,
the push of myriads of sweet-fern fronds in the cracks of the
stony slope below the wood, and the crowding shoots of meadowsweet
and yellow flags in the pasture beyond. All this bubbling of sap
and slipping of sheaths and bursting of calyxes was carried to
her on mingled currents of fragrance. Every leaf and bud and blade
seemed to contribute its exhalation to the pervading sweetness
in which the pungency of pine-sap prevailed over the spice of
thyme and the subtle perfume of fern, and all were merged in a
moist earth-smell that was like the breath of some huge sun-warmed
animal. Charity had lain there a long time, passive and sun-warmed
as the slope on which she lay, when there came between her eyes
and the dancing butterfly the sight of a man's foot in a large
worn boot covered with red mud. "Oh, don't!" she exclaimed,
raising herself on her elbow and stretching out a warning hand.
"Don't what?" a hoarse voice asked above her head. "Don't
stamp on those bramble flowers, you dolt!" she retorted,
springing to her knees. The foot paused and then descended clumsily
on the frail branch, and raising her eyes she saw above her the
bewildered face of a slouching man with a thin sunburnt beard,
and white arms showing through his ragged shirt. "Don't you
ever SEE anything, Liff Hyatt?" she assailed him, as he stood
before her with the look of a man who has stirred up a wasp's
nest. He grinned. "I seen you! That's what I come down for."
"Down from where?" she questioned, stooping to gather
up the petals his foot had scattered. He jerked his thumb toward
the heights. "Been cutting down trees for Dan Targatt."
Charity sank back on her heels and looked at him musingly. She
was not in the least afraid of poor Liff Hyatt, though he "came
from the Mountain," and some of the girls ran when they saw
him. Among the more reasonable he passed for a harmless creature,
a sort of link between the mountain and civilized folk, who occasionally
came down and did a little wood cutting for a farmer when hands
were short. Besides, she knew the Mountain people would never
hurt her: Liff himself had told her so once when she was a little
girl, and had met him one day at the edge of lawyer Royall's pasture.
"They won't any of 'em touch you up there, f'ever you was
to come up.... But I don't s'pose you will," he had added
philosophically, looking at her new shoes, and at the red ribbon
that Mrs. Royall had tied in her hair. Charity had, in truth,
never felt any desire to visit her birthplace. She did not care
to have it known that she was of the Mountain, and was shy of
being seen in talk with Liff Hyatt. But today she was not sorry
to have him appear. A great many things had happened to her since
the day when young Lucius Harney had entered the doors of the
Hatchard Memorial, but none, perhaps, so unforeseen as the fact
of her suddenly finding it a convenience to be on good terms with
Liff Hyatt. She continued to look up curiously at his freckled
weather-beaten face, with feverish hollows below the cheekbones
and the pale yellow eyes of a harmless animal. "I wonder
if he's related to me?" she thought, with a shiver of disdain.
"Is there any folks living in the brown house by the swamp,
up under Porcupine?" she presently asked in an indifferent
tone. Liff Hyatt, for a while, considered her with surprise; then
he scratched his head and shifted his weight from one tattered
sole to the other. "There's always the same folks in the
brown house," he said with his vague grin. "They're
from up your way, ain't they?" "Their name's the same
as mine," he rejoined uncertainly. Charity still held him
with resolute eyes. "See here, I want to go there some day
and take a gentleman with me that's boarding with us. He's up
in these parts drawing pictures." She did not offer to explain
this statement. It was too far beyond Liff Hyatt's limitations
for the attempt to be worth making. "He wants to see the
brown house, and go all over it," she pursued. Liff was still
running his fingers perplexedly through his shock of straw-colored
hair. "Is it a fellow from the city?" he asked. "Yes.
He draws pictures of things. He's down there now drawing the Bonner
house." She pointed to a chimney just visible over the dip
of the pasture below the wood. "The Bonner house?" Liff
echoed incredulously. s. You won't understand-and it don't matter."
He looked away at the blue mountains on the horizon; then his
gaze dropped to the chimney-top below the pasture. "He's
down there now?" from the novel SUMMER by Edith Wharton.
|