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Lo! sweetened with
the summer
light, The full-juiced apple, waxing over-mellow, Drops in silent autumn night. —
TENNYSON.
|
Not a little of the sunshine
of our northern winters is surely wrapped up in the apple. How could we
winter
over without it! How is life sweetened by its mild acids! A cellar well
filled
with apples is more valuable than a chamber filled with flax and wool.
So much
sound, ruddy life to draw upon, to strike one's roots down into, as it
were.
Especially to those whose
soil of life is inclined to be a little clayey and heavy, is the apple
a winter
necessity. It is the natural antidote of most of the ills the flesh is
heir to.
Full of vegetable acids and aromatics, qualities which act as
refrigerants and
antiseptics, what an enemy it is to jaundice, indigestion, torpidity of
liver,
etc.! It is a gentle spur and tonic to the whole biliary system. Then I
have
read that it has been found by analysis to contain more phosphorus than
any
other vegetable. This makes it the proper food of the scholar and the
sedentary
man; it feeds his brain and it stimulates his liver. Nor is this all.
Besides
its hygienic properties, the apple is full of sugar and mucilage, which
make it
highly nutritious. It is said "the operators of Cornwall, England,
consider ripe apples nearly as nourishing as bread, and far more so
than
potatoes. In the year 1801 — which was a year of much
scarcity — apples,
instead of being converted into cider, were sold to the poor, and the
laborers
asserted that they could 'stand their work' on baked apples without
meat;
whereas a potato diet required either meat or some other substantial
nutriment.
The French and Germans use apples extensively; so do the inhabitants of
all
European nations. The laborers depend upon them as an article of food,
and
frequently make a dinner of sliced apples and bread."
Yet the English apple is a
tame and insipid affair, compared with the intense, sun-colored, and
sun-steeped fruit our orchards yield. The English have no sweet apple,
I am
told, the saccharine element apparently being less abundant in
vegetable nature
in that sour and chilly climate than in our own.
It is well known that the
European maple yields no sugar, while both our birch and hickory have
sweet in
their veins. Perhaps this fact accounts for our excessive love of
sweets, which
may be said to be a national trait.
The Russian apple has a
lovely complexion, smooth and transparent, but the Cossack is not yet
all
eliminated from it. The only one I have seen — the Duchess of
Oldenburg — is as
beautiful as a Tartar princess, with a distracting odor, but it is the
least
bit puckery to the taste.
The best thing I know about
Chili is, not its guano beds, but this fact which I learn from Darwin's
"Voyage," namely, that the apple thrives well there. Darwin saw a
town there so completely buried in a wood of apple-trees, that its
streets were
merely paths in an orchard. The tree, indeed, thrives so well, that
large
branches cut off in the spring and planted two or three feet deep in
the ground
send out roots and develop into fine, full-bearing trees by the third
year. The
people know the value of the apple, too. They make cider and wine of
it, and
then from the refuse a white and finely flavored spirit; then, by
another process,
a sweet treacle is obtained, called honey. The children and the pigs
eat little
or no other food. He does not add that the people are healthy and
temperate,
but I have no doubt they are. We knew the apple had many virtues, but
these
Chilians have really opened a deep beneath a deep. We had found out the
cider
and the spirits, but who guessed the wine and the honey, unless it were
the
bees? There is a variety in our orchards called the winesap, a doubly
liquid
name that suggests what might be done with this fruit.
The apple is the commonest
and yet the most varied and beautiful of fruits. A dish of them is as
becoming
to the centre-table in winter as was the vase of flowers in the summer,
— a
bouquet of spitzenburgs and greenings and northern spies. A rose when
it
blooms, the apple is a rose when it ripens. It pleases every sense to
which it
can be addressed, the touch, the smell, the sight, the taste; and when
it
falls, in the still October days, it pleases the ear. It is a call to a
banquet, it is a signal that the feast is ready. The bough would fain
hold it,
but it can now assert its independence; it can now live a life of its
own.
Daily the stem relaxes its
hold, till finally it lets go completely and down comes the painted
sphere with
a mellow thump to the earth, toward which it has been nodding so long.
It
bounds away to seek its bed, to hide under a leaf, or in a tuft of
grass. It
will now take time to meditate and ripen! What delicious thoughts it
has there
nestled with its fellows under the fence, turning acid into sugar, and
sugar
into wine!
How pleasing to the touch! I
love to stroke its polished rondure with my hand, to carry it in my
pocket on
my tramp over the winter hills, or through the early spring woods. You
are
company, you red-checked spitz, or you salmon-fleshed greening! I toy
with you;
press your face to mine, toss you in the air, roll you on the ground,
see you
shine out where you lie amid the moss and dry leaves and sticks. You
are so
alive! You glow like a ruddy flower. You look so animated I almost
expect to
see you move! I postpone the eating of you, you are so beautiful! How
compact;
how exquisitely tinted! Stained by the sun and varnished against the
rains. An
independent vegetable existence, alive and vascular as my own flesh;
capable of
being wounded, bleeding, wasting away, or almost of repairing damages!
How it resists the cold!
holding out almost as long as the red cheeks of the boys do. A frost
that
destroys the potatoes and other roots only makes the apple more crisp
and
vigorous; it peeps out from the chance November snows unscathed. When I
see the
fruit-vender on the street corner stamping his feet and beating his
hands to
keep them warm, and his naked apples lying exposed to the blasts, I
wonder if
they do not ache, too, to clap their hands and enliven their
circulation. But
they can stand it nearly as long as the vender can.
Noble common fruit, best friend of man and most loved by him, following him, like his dog or his cow, wherever he goes! His homestead is not planted till you are planted, your roots intertwine with his; thriving best where he thrives best, loving the limestone and the frost, the plow and the pruning-knife: you are indeed suggestive of hardy, cheerful industry, and a healthy life in the open air. Temperate, chaste fruit! you mean neither luxury nor sloth, neither satiety nor indolence, neither enervating heats nor the frigid zones. Uncloying fruit, — fruit whose best sauce is the open air, whose finest flavors only he whose taste is sharpened by brisk work or walking knows; winter fruit, when the fire of life burns brightest; fruit always a little hyperborean, leaning toward the cold; bracing, sub-acid, active fruit! I think you must come from the north, you are so frank and honest, so sturdy and appetizing. You are stocky and homely like the northern races. Your quality is Saxon. Surely the fiery and impetuous south is not akin to you. Not spices or olives, or the sumptuous liquid fruits, but the grass, the snow, the grains, the coolness, is akin to you. I think if I could subsist on you, or the like of you, I should never have an intemperate or ignoble thought, never be feverish or despondent. So far as I could absorb or transmute your quality, I should be cheerful, continent, equitable, sweet-blooded, long-lived, and should shed warmth and contentment around.
Is there any other fruit
that has so much facial expression as the apple? What boy does not more
than
half believe they can see with that single eye of theirs? Do they not
look and
nod to him from the bough? The swaar has one look, the rambo another,
the spy
another. The youth recognizes the seek-no-further, buried beneath a
dozen other
varieties, the moment he catches a glance of its eye, or the
bonny-cheeked
Newtown pippin, or the gentle but sharp-nosed gillyflower. He goes to
the great
bin in the cellar, and sinks his shafts here and there in the garnered
wealth
of the orchards, mining for his favorites, sometimes coming plump upon
them,
sometimes catching a glimpse of them to the right or left, or
uncovering them
as keystones in an arch made up of many varieties.
In the dark he can usually
tell them by the sense of touch. There is not only the size and shape,
but
there is the texture and polish. Some apples are coarse-grained and
some are
fine; some are thin-skinned and some are thick. One variety is quick
and
vigorous beneath the touch, another gentle and yielding. The pinnock
has a
thick skin with a spongy lining; a bruise in it becomes like a piece of
cork.
The tallow apple has an unctuous feel, as its name suggests. It sheds
water
like a duck. What apple is that with a fat curved stem that blends so
prettily
with its own flesh, — the wine apple? Some varieties impress
me as masculine, —
weather-stained, freckled, lasting, and rugged; others are indeed lady
apples,
fair, delicate, shining, mild-flavored, white-meated, like the egg-drop
and the
lady-finger. The practiced hand knows each kind by the touch.
Do you remember the apple
hole in the garden or back of the house, Ben Bolt? In the fall, after
the bins
in the cellar had been well stocked, we excavated a circular pit in the
warm
mellow earth, and, covering the bottom with clean rye straw, emptied in
basketful after basketful of hardy choice varieties, till there was a
tent-shaped mound several feet high of shining variegated fruit. Then,
wrapping
it about with a thick layer of long rye straw, and tucking it up snug
and warm,
the mound was covered with a thin coating of earth, a flat stone on the
top
holding down the straw. As winter set in, another coating of earth was
put upon
it, with perhaps an overcoat of coarse dry stable manure, and the
precious pile
was left in silence and darkness till spring. No marmot, hibernating
under
ground in his nest of leaves and dry grass, more cozy and warm. No
frost, no
wet, but fragrant privacy and quiet. Then how the earth tempers and
flavors the
apples! It draws out all the acrid unripe qualities, and infuses into
them a
subtle refreshing taste of the soil. Some varieties perish, but the
ranker, hardier
kinds, like the northern spy, the greening, or the black apple, or the
russet,
or the pinnock, how they ripen and grow in grace, how the green becomes
gold,
and the bitter becomes sweet!
As the supply in the bins
and barrels gets low and spring approaches, the buried treasures in the
garden
are remembered. With spade and axe we go out and penetrate through the
snow and
frozen earth till the inner dressing of straw is laid bare. It is not
quite as
clear and bright as when we placed it there last fall, but the fruit
beneath,
which the hand soon exposes, is just as bright and far more luscious.
Then, as
day after day you resort to the hole, and, removing the straw and earth
from
the opening, thrust your arm into the fragrant pit, you have a better
chance than
ever before to become acquainted with your favorites by the sense of
touch. How
you feel for them, reaching to the right and left! Now you have got a
Talman
sweet; you imagine you can feel that single meridian line that divides
it into
two hemispheres. Now a greening fills your hand; you feel its fine
quality
beneath its rough coat. Now you have hooked a swaar, you recognize its
full
face; now a Vandevere or a King rolls down from the apex above and you
bag it
at once. When you were a schoolboy, you stowed these away in your
pockets, and
ate them along the road and at recess, and again at noontime; and they,
in a
measure, corrected the effects of the cake and pie with which your
indulgent
mother filled your lunch-basket.
The boy is indeed the true
apple-eater, and is not to be questioned how he came by the fruit with
which
his pockets are filled. It belongs to him, and he may steal it if it
cannot be
had in any other way. His own juicy flesh craves the juicy flesh of the
apple.
Sap draws sap. His fruit-eating has little reference to the state of
his
appetite. Whether he be full of meat or empty of meat, he wants the
apple just
the same. Before meal or after meal it never comes amiss. The farm-boy
munches
apples all day long. He has nests of them in the haymow, mellowing, to
which he
makes frequent visits. Sometimes old Brindle, having access through the
open
door, smells them out and makes short work of them.
In some countries the custom
remains of placing a rosy apple in the hand of the dead, that they may
find it
when they enter paradise. In northern mythology the giants eat apples
to keep
off old age.
The apple is indeed the
fruit of youth. As we grow old we crave apples less. It is an ominous
sign.
When you are ashamed to be seen eating them on the street; when you can
carry
them in your pocket and your hand not constantly find its way to them;
when
your neighbor has apples and you have none, and you make no nocturnal
visits to
his orchard; when you lunch-basket is without them, and you can pass a
winter's
night by the fireside with not thought of the fruit at your elbow,
— then be
assured you are no longer a boy, either in heart or in years.
The genuine apple-eater
comforts himself with an apple in its season, as others do with a pipe
or a
cigar. When he has nothing else to do, or is bored, he eats an apple.
While he
is waiting for the train he eats an apple, sometimes several of them.
When he
takes a walk he arms himself with apples. His traveling-bag is full of
apples.
He offers an apple to his companion, and takes one himself. They are
his chief
solace when on the road. He sows their seed all along the route. He
tosses the
core from the car window and from the top of the stage-coach. He would,
in
time, make the land one vast orchard. He dispenses with a knife. He
prefers
that his teeth shall have the first taste. Then he knows that the best
flavor
is immediately beneath the skin, and that in a pared apple this is
lost. If you
will stew the apple, he says, instead of baking it, by all means leave
the skin
on. It improves the color and vastly heightens the flavor of the dish.
The apple is a masculine
fruit; hence women are poor apple-eaters. It belongs to the open air,
and
requires an open-air taste and relish.
I instantly sympathized with
that clergyman I read of, who on pulling out his pocket-handkerchief in
the
midst of his discourse, pulled out two bouncing apples with it that
went
rolling across the pulpit floor and down the pulpit stairs. These
apples were,
do doubt, to be eaten after the sermon, on his way home, or to his next
appointment. They would take the taste of it out of his mouth. Then,
would a
minister be apt to grow tiresome with tow big apples in his coat-tail
pockets?
Would he not naturally hasten along to "lastly" and the big apples?
If they were the dominie apples, and it was April or May, he certainly
would.
How the early settlers
prized the apple! When their trees broke down or were split asunder by
the
storms, the neighbors turned out, the divided tree was put together
again and fastened
with iron bolts. In some of the oldest orchards one may still
occasionally see
a large dilapidated tree with the rusty iron bolt yet visible. Poor,
sour
fruit, too, but sweet in those early pioneer days. My grandfather, who
was one
of these heroes of the stump, used every fall to make a journey of
forty miles
for a few apples, which he brought home in a bag on horseback. He
frequently
started from home by two or three o'clock in the morning, and at one
time both
he and his horse were much frightened by the screaming of panthers in a
narrow
pass in the mountains through which the road led.
Emerson, I believe, has
spoken of the apple as the social fruit of New England. Indeed, what a
promoter
or abettor of social intercourse among our rural population the apple
has been,
the company growing more merry and unrestrained as soon as the basket
of apples
was passed round! When the cider followed, the introduction and good
understanding were complete. Then those rural gatherings that enlivened
the
autumn in the country, known as "apple-cuts," now, alas! nearly
obsolete, where so many things were cut and dried besides apples! The
larger
and more loaded the orchard, the more frequently the invitations went
round and
the higher the social and convivial spirit ran. Ours is eminently a
country of
the orchard. Horace Greeley said he had seen no land in which the
orchard
formed such a prominent feature in the rural and agricultural
districts. Nearly
every farmhouse in the Eastern and Northern States has its setting or
its
background of apple-trees, which generally date back to the first
settlement of
the farm. Indeed, the orchard, more than almost any other thing, tends
to
soften and humanize the country, and to give the place of which it is
an
adjunct a settled, domestic look. The apple-tree takes the rawness and
wildness
off any scene. On the top of a mountain, or in remote pastures, it
sheds the
sentiment of home. It never loses its domestic air, or lapses into a
wild
state. And in planting a homestead, or in choosing a building-site for
the new
house, what a help it is to have a few old, maternal apple-trees near
by, —
regular old grandmothers, who have seen trouble, who have been sad and
glad
through so many winters and summers, who have blossomed till the air
about them
is sweeter than elsewhere, and borne fruit till the grass beneath them
has
become thick and soft from human contact, and who have nourished robins
and
finches in their branches till they have a tender, brooding look! The
ground,
the turf, the atmosphere of an old orchard, seem several stages nearer
to man
than that of the adjoining field, as if the trees had given back to the
soil
more than they had taken from it; as if they had tempered the elements,
and
attracted all the genial and beneficent influences in the landscape
around.
An apple orchard is sure to
bear you several crops beside the apple. There is the crop of sweet and
tender
reminiscences, dating from childhood and spanning the seasons from May
to
October, and making the orchard a sort of outlying part of the
household. You
have played there as a child, mused there as a youth or lover, strolled
there
as a thoughtful, sad-eyed man. Your father, perhaps, planted the trees,
or
reared them from the seed, and you yourself have pruned and grafted
them, and
worked among them, till every separate tree has a peculiar history and
meaning
in your mind. Then there is the never-failing crop of birds,
— robins,
goldfinches, kingbirds, cedar-birds, hair-birds, orioles, starlings,
— all
nesting and breeding in its branches, and fitly described by Wilson
Flagg as
"Birds of the Garden and Orchard." Whether the pippin and sweet bough
bear or not, the "punctual birds" can always be depended on. Indeed,
there are few better places to study ornithology than in the orchard.
Besides
its regular occupants, many of the birds of the deeper forest find
occasion to
visit it during the season. The cuckoo comes for the tent-caterpillar,
the jay
for frozen apples, the ruffed grouse for buds, the crow foraging for
birds' eggs,
the woodpecker and chickadees for their food, and the high-hole for
ants. The
redbird comes, too, if only to see what a friendly covert its branches
form;
and the wood thrush now and then comes out of the grove near by, and
nests
alongside of its cousin, the robin. The smaller hawks know that this is
a most
likely spot for their prey, and in spring the shy northern warblers may
be
studied as they pause to feed on the fine insects amid its branches.
The mice
love to dwell here also, and hither come from the near woods the
squirrel and
the rabbit. The latter will put his head through the boy's
slipper-noose any
time for a taste of the sweet apple, and the red squirrel and chipmunk
esteem
its seeds a great rarity.
All the domestic animals
love the apple, but none so much as the cow. The taste of it wakes her
up as
few other things do, and bars and fences must be well looked after. No
need to
assort them or to pick out the ripe ones for her. An apple is an apple,
and
there is no best about it. I heard of a quick-witted old cow that
learned to
shake them down from the tree. While rubbing herself she had observed
that an
apple sometimes fell. This stimulated her to rub a little harder, when
more
apples fell. She then took the hint, and rubbed her shoulder with such
vigor
that the farmer had to check her and keep an eye on her, to save his
fruit.
But the cow is the friend of
the apple. How many trees she has planted about the farm, in the edge
of the
woods, and in remote fields and pastures! The wild apples, celebrated
by
Thoreau, are mostly of her planting. She browses them down, to be sure,
but
they are hers, and why should she not?
What an individuality the
apple-tree has, each variety being nearly as marked by its form as by
its
fruit. What a vigorous grower, for instance, is the Ribston pippin, an
English
apple, — wide-branching like the oak; its large ridgy fruit,
in late fall or
early winter, is one of my favorites. Or the thick and more pendent top
of the
bellflower, with its equally rich, sprightly, uncloying
fruit.
Sweet apples are perhaps the
most nutritious, and when baked are a feast in themselves. With a tree
of the
Jersey sweet or of the Talman sweet in bearing, no man's table need be
devoid
of luxuries and one of the most wholesome of all desserts. Or the red
astrachan, an August apple, — what a gap may be filled in the
culinary
department of a household at this season by a single tree of this
fruit! And
what a feast is its shining crimson coat to the eye before its
snow-white flesh
has reached the tongue! But the apple of apples for the household is
the
spitzenburg. In this casket Pomona has put her highest flavors. It can
stand
the ordeal of cooking, and still remain a spitz. I recently saw a
barrel of
these apples from the orchard of a fruit-grower in the northern part of
New
York, who has devoted especial attention to this variety. They were
perfect
gems. Not large, — that had not been the aim, — but
small, fair, uniform, and
red to the core. How intense, how spicy and aromatic!
But all the excellences of
the apple are not confined to the cultivated fruit. Occasionally a
seedling
springs up about the farm that produces fruit of rare beauty and worth.
In
sections peculiarly adapted to the apple, like a certain belt along the
Hudson
River, I have noticed that most of the wild, unbidden trees bear good,
edible
fruit. In cold and ungenial districts the seedlings are mostly sour and
crabbed, but in more favorable soils they are oftener mild and sweet. I
know
wild apples that ripen in August, and that do not need, if it could be
had,
Thoreau's sauce of sharp, November air to be eaten with. At the foot of
a hill
near me, and striking its roots deep in the shale, is a giant specimen
of
native tree that bears an apple that has about the clearest, waxiest,
most
transparent complexion I ever saw. It is of good size, and the color of
a tea
rose. Its quality is best appreciated in the kitchen. I know another
seedling
of excellent quality, and so remarkable for its firmness and density
that it is
known on the farm where it grows as the "heavy apple."
I have alluded to Thoreau,
to whom all lovers of the apple and its tree are under obligation. His
chapter
on Wild Apples is a most delicious piece of writing. It has a "tang and
smack" like the fruit it celebrates, and is dashed and streaked with
color
in the same manner. It has the hue and perfume of the crab, and the
richness
and raciness of the pippin. But Thoreau loved other apples than the
wild sorts,
and was obliged to confess that his favorites could not be eaten
indoors. Late
in November he found a blue-pearmain tree growing within the edge of a
swamp,
almost as good as wild. "You would not suppose," he says, "that
there was any fruit left there on the first survey, but you must look
according
to system. Those which lie exposed are quite brown and rotten now, or
perchance
a few still show one blooming cheek here and there amid the wet leaves.
Nevertheless, with experienced eyes I explore amid the bare alders, and
the
huckleberry bushes, and the withered sedge, and in the crevices of the
rocks,
which are full of leaves, and pry under the fallen and decaying ferns
which,
with apple and alder leaves, thickly strew the ground. For I know that
they lie
concealed, fallen into hollows long since, and covered up by the leaves
of the
tree itself, — a proper kind of packing. From these
lurking-places, anywhere
within the circumference of the tree, I draw forth the fruit all wet
and
glossy, maybe nibbled by rabbits and hollowed out by crickets, and
perhaps with
a leaf or two cemented to it (as Curzon an old manuscript from a
monastery's
mouldy cellar), but still with a rich bloom on it, and at least as ripe
and
well kept, if not better than those in barrels, more crisp and lively
than
they. If these resources fail to yield anything, I have learned to look
between
the bases of the suckers which spring thickly from some horizontal
limb, for
now and then one lodges there, or in the very midst of an alder-clump,
where
they are covered by leaves, safe from cows which may have smelled them
out. If
I am sharp-set, — for I do not refuse the blue-pearmain,
— I fill my pockets on
each side; and as I retrace my steps in the frosty eve, being perhaps
four or
five miles from home, I eat one first from this side, and then from
that, to
keep my balance."