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When Life Was Young
Away down East in the Pine Tree
State, there is a
lake dearer to my heart than all the other waters of this fair earth,
for its
shores were the scenes of my boyhood, when Life was young and the world
a
romance still unread. Dearer to the heart; — for then
glowed that roseate
young joy and faith in life and its grand possibilities; that hope and
confidence that great things can be done and that the doing of them
will prove
of high avail. For such is ever our natural, normal first view of life;
the
clear young brain's first vision of this wondrous bright universe of
earth and
sky; the first picture on the sentient plate of consciousness, and the
true
one, before error blurs and evil dims it; a joy and a faith in life
which as
yet, on this still imperfect earth of ours, comes but once, with youth. The white settlers called it the
Great Pond; but long
before they came to Maine, the Indians had named it Pennesseewassee,
pronounced
Penny-see-was-see, the lake-where-the-women-died, from the Abnaki
words,
penem-pegouas-abem, in memory, perhaps, of some unhistoric tragedy. From their villages on the upper
Saco waters, the
Pequawkets were accustomed to cross over to the Androscoggin and often
stopped
at this lake, midway, to fish in the spring, and again in winter to
hunt for
moose, then snowbound in their "yards." On snowshoes, or paddling
their birch canoes along the pine-shadowed streams, these tawny,
pre-Columbian
warriors came and camped on the Pennesseewassee; we still pick up their
flint
arrow-heads along the shore; and it may even be that the short, brown
Skraellings were here before them, in neolithic days. There are two ponds, or lakes,
of this name, the
Great and the Little Pennesseewassee, the latter lying a mile and a
half to the
west of the larger expanse and connected with it by a brook. To the northeast, north and
west, the land rises in
long, picturesque ridges and mountains of medium altitude; and still
beyond and
above these, in the west and northwest, loom Mt. Washington, Madison,
Kearsarge
and other White Mountain peaks. The larger lake is a fine sheet
of water, five miles
in length, containing four dark-green islets; and the view from its
bosom is
one of the most beautiful in this our State-of-Lakes. Hither, shortly after the
"Revolution,"
came the writer's great-grandfather, poor in purse; for he had served
throughout that long, and at times hopeless struggle for liberty. In
payment he
had received a large roll of "Continental Money," all of which would
at that time have sufficed, scarcely, to procure him a tavern dinner.
No
"bounties," no "pensions," then stimulated the citizen
soldiery. With little to aid him save his axe on his shoulder, the
unremunerated
patriot made a clearing on the slopes, looking southward upon the lake;
and
here, after some weeks, or months, of toil, he brought his young
family,
consisting of my great-grandmother and two children. They came up the
lake in a
skiff, fashioned from a pine log. Landing on a still remembered rock,
it is
said that the ex-soldier turned about, and taking the roll of
Continental scrip
from his pocket, threw it far out into the water, exclaiming, — "So much for soldiering! But
here, by the
blessing of God, we will have a home yet!" While going through the forest
from the lake up to
the clearing, a distance of a mile or more, they lost their way, for
night had
fallen, and after wandering for an hour, were obliged to sleep in the
woods
beneath the boughs of a pine; and it was not till the next forenoon
that they
found the clearing and the little log house in which my
great-grandmother began
her humble housekeeping. Other settlers made their way
hither; and other farms
were cleared. Indians and moose departed and came no more. Then
followed half a
century of robust, agricultural life, on a virgin soil. The boys grew
large and
tall; the girls were strong and handsome. It was a hearty and happy era. But no happy era is enduring;
the young men began to
take what was quaintly called "the western fever," and leave the home
county for greater opportunities in Illinois, Wisconsin and Iowa. The
young
women, too, went away in numbers to work in the cotton factories at
Lowell,
Lawrence and Biddeford; few of them came back; or if they returned,
they were
not improved in health, or otherwise. The third son of the
Revolutionary soldier and
pioneer remained at the old farm and lived on alone there after his own
sons
had left home, to enter other and less certain avocations than farming. Then came war again, the
terrible Civil War, when
every one of these sons, true to their soldier ancestry, entered the
army of
the Republic. Of the five not one survived that murderous conflict. And
so it
happened that we, the grandchildren, war waifs and orphaned, came back
in
1865-6, to live at grandfather's old farm on the Pennesseewassee. We came from four different
states of the Union, and
two of us had never before even seen the others. It is, therefore, not
remarkable that at first there were some small disagreements, due to
our
different ideas of things. We were, of course, a great
burden upon the old
folks, who were compelled to begin life over again, so to speak, on our
account. At the age of sixty-five grandfather set himself to till the
farm on a
larger scale, and to renew his lumbering operations, winters.
Grandmother, too,
was constrained to increase her dairy, her flocks of geese and other
poultry,
and to begin anew the labor of spinning and knitting. It is but fair to say, however,
that we all — with
one exception, perhaps — had a decent sense of the obligations we
incurred, and
on most occasions, I believe, we did what we could to aid in the labors
of the
farm. Much as we added to the burdens
of our grandparents,
I can now see that our coming lent fresh zest to their lives; they had
something new to live for; they took hold of life again, for another
ten years. Ten years of youth. It was Life's happy era with us, full of hopes and plans for the future, full, too, of those many jolts which young folks get from inexperience, nor yet free from those mistakes which all of us make, when we first set off on Life's journey. Like some bright panorama it passes on Memory's walls, so many pictures of that hopeful young life of ours at the old farm, as we grew up together, getting an education, or the rudiments of one, at the district school, and later at the village Academy, Kent's Hill Seminary and Bowdoin College. And later I may try to relate how we came out and what we are still doing in life. |