intruder, though they did not offer to peck at me, and we parted company very soon. It was good to stand at last on the great shoulder of the hill. The wind was coming in from the sea, there was a fine fragrance from the pines, and the air grew sweeter every moment. I took new pleasure in the thought that in a piece of wild pasture land like this one may get closest to Nature, and subsist upon what she gives of her own free will. There have been no drudging, heavy-shod ploughmen to overturn the soil, and vex it into yielding artificial crops. Here one has to take just what Nature is pleased to give, whether one is a yellow-bird or a human being. It is very good entertainment for a summer wayfarer, and I am asking my reader now to share the winter provision which I harvested that day. Let us hope that the small birds are also faring well after their fashion, but I give them an anxious thought while the snow goes hurrying in long waves across the buried fields, this windy winter night.
I next went farther down the hill, and got a drink of fresh cool water from the brook, and pulled a tender sheaf of sweet flag beside it. The mossy old fence just beyond was the last barrier between me and the pasture which had sent an invisible messenger earlier in the day, but I saw that somebody else had come first to the rendezvous: there was a brown gingham cape-bonnet and a sprigged shoulder-shawl bobbing up and down, a little way off among the junipers. I had taken such uncommon pleasure in being alone that I instantly felt a sense of disappointment; then a warm glow of pleasant satisfaction rebuked my selfishness. This could be no one but dear old Mrs. Goodsoe, the friend of my childhood and fond dependence of my maturer years. I had not seen her for many weeks, but here she was, out on one of her famous campaigns for herbs, or perhaps just returning from a blueberrying expedition. I approached with care, so as not to startle the gingham bonnet; but she heard the rustle of the bushes against my dress, and looked up quickly, as she knelt, bending over the turf. In that position she was hardly taller than the luxuriant junipers themselves.
âIâm a-gittinâ in my mulleins,â she said briskly, âanâ Iâve been thinking oâ you these twenty times since I come out oâ the house. I begun to believe you must haâ forgot me at last.â
âI have been away from home,â I explained. âWhy donât you get in your pennyroyal too? Thereâs a great plantation of it beyond the next fence but one.â
âPennyrâyal!â repeated the dear little old woman, with an air of compassion for inferior knowledge; âât ainât the right time, darlinâ. Pennyrâyalâs too rank now. But for mulleins this day is prime. Iâve got a dreadful graspinâ fit for âem this year; seems if I must be goinâ to need âem extry. I feel like the squirrels must when they know a hard winterâs cominâ.â And Mrs. Goodsoe bent over her work again, while I stood by and watched her carefully cut the best full-grown leaves with a clumsy pair of scissors, which might have served through at least half a century of herb-gathering. They were fastened to her apron-strings by a long piece of list.
âIâm going to take my jack-knife and help you,â I suggested, with some fear of refusal. âI just passed a flourishing family of six or seven heads that must have been growing on purpose for you.â
âNow be keerful, dear heart,â was the anxious response; âchoose âem well. Thereâs odds in mulleins sameâs there is in angels. Take a plant thatâs all run up to stalk, and there ainât but little goodness in the leaves. This one Iâm at now must haâ been stepped on by some creaturâ and blighted of its bloom, and the leaves is hanâsome! When I was small I used to have a notion that Adam
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