It was gentility in
tatters. Often retaining a scholarlike or clerical air, you might
have taken us for the denizens of Grub Street, intent on getting a
comfortable livelihood by agricultural labor; or Coleridge's
projected Pantisocracy in full experiment; or Candide and his
motley associates at work in their cabbage garden; or anything else
that was miserably out at elbows, and most clumsily patched in the
rear. We might have been sworn comrades to Falstaff's ragged
regiment. Little skill as we boasted in other points of husbandry,
every mother's son of us would have served admirably to stick up
for a scarecrow. And the worst of the matter was, that the first
energetic movement essential to one downright stroke of real labor
was sure to put a finish to these poor habiliments. So we gradually
flung them all aside, and took to honest homespun and
linsey-woolsey, as preferable, on the whole, to the plan
recommended, I think, by Virgil,—"Ara nudus; sere nudus, "—which as
Silas Foster remarked, when I translated the maxim, would be apt to
astonish the women-folks.
After a reasonable training, the yeoman life throve well with
us. Our faces took the sunburn kindly; our chests gained in
compass, and our shoulders in breadth and squareness; our great
brown fists looked as if they had never been capable of kid gloves.
The plough, the hoe, the scythe, and the hay-fork grew familiar to
our grasp. The oxen responded to our voices. We could do almost as
fair a day's work as Silas Foster himself, sleep dreamlessly after
it, and awake at daybreak with only a little stiffness of the
joints, which was usually quite gone by breakfast-time.
To be sure, our next neighbors pretended to be incredulous as to
our real proficiency in the business which we had taken in hand.
They told slanderous fables about our inability to yoke our own
oxen, or to drive them afield when yoked, or to release the poor
brutes from their conjugal bond at nightfall. They had the face to
say, too, that the cows laughed at our awkwardness at milking-time,
and invariably kicked over the pails; partly in consequence of our
putting the stool on the wrong side, and partly because, taking
offence at the whisking of their tails, we were in the habit of
holding these natural fly-flappers with one hand and milking with
the other. They further averred that we hoed up whole acres of
Indian corn and other crops, and drew the earth carefully about the
weeds; and that we raised five hundred tufts of burdock, mistaking
them for cabbages; and that by dint of unskilful planting few of
our seeds ever came up at all, or, if they did come up, it was
stern-foremost; and that we spent the better part of the month of
June in reversing a field of beans, which had thrust themselves out
of the ground in this unseemly way. They quoted it as nothing more
than an ordinary occurrence for one or other of us to crop off two
or three fingers, of a morning, by our clumsy use of the
hay-cutter. Finally, and as an ultimate catastrophe, these
mendacious rogues circulated a report that we communitarians were
exterminated, to the last man, by severing ourselves asunder with
the sweep of our own scythes! and that the world had lost nothing
by this little accident.
But this was pure envy and malice on the part of the neighboring
farmers. The peril of our new way of life was not lest we should
fail in becoming practical agriculturists, but that we should
probably cease to be anything else. While our enterprise lay all in
theory, we had pleased ourselves with delectable visions of the
spiritualization of labor. It was to be our form of prayer and
ceremonial of worship. Each stroke of the hoe was to uncover some
aromatic root of wisdom, heretofore hidden from the sun. Pausing in
the field, to let the wind exhale the moisture from our foreheads,
we were to look upward, and catch glimpses into the far-off soul of
truth. In this point of view, matters did not turn out quite so
well as we anticipated. It is very true that, sometimes, gazing
casually around me, out of the midst of my toil, I used to discern
a richer picturesqueness in the visible scene of earth and sky.
There was, at such moments, a novelty, an unwonted aspect, on the
face of Nature, as if she had been taken by surprise and seen at
unawares, with no opportunity to put off her real look, and assume
the mask with which she mysteriously hides herself from mortals.
But this was all. The clods of earth, which we so constantly
belabored and turned over and over, were never etherealized into
thought. Our thoughts, on the contrary, were fast becoming
cloddish. Our labor symbolized nothing, and left us mentally
sluggish in the dusk of the evening. Intellectual activity is
incompatible with any large amount of bodily exercise. The yeoman
and the scholar—the yeoman and the man of finest moral culture,
though not the man of sturdiest sense and integrity—are two
distinct individuals, and can never be melted or welded into one
substance.
Zenobia soon saw this truth, and gibed me about it, one evening,
as Hollingsworth and I lay on the grass, after a hard day's
work.
"I am afraid you did not make a song today, while loading the
hay-cart," said she, "as Burns did, when he was reaping
barley."
"Burns never made a song in haying-time," I answered very
positively. "He was no poet while a farmer, and no farmer while a
poet."
"And on the whole, which of the two characters do you like
best?" asked Zenobia. "For I have an idea that you cannot combine
them any better than Burns did. Ah, I see, in my mind's eye, what
sort of an individual you are to be, two or three years hence. Grim
Silas Foster is your prototype, with his palm of sole-leather, and
his joints of rusty iron (which all through summer keep the
stiffness of what he calls his winter's rheumatize), and his brain
of—I don't know what his brain is made of, unless it be a Savoy
cabbage; but yours may be cauliflower, as a rather more delicate
variety. Your physical man will be transmuted into salt beef and
fried pork, at the rate, I should imagine, of a pound and a half a
day; that being about the average which we find necessary in the
kitchen.
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