登陆注册
4333700000039

第39章 WINTER TRAILS(1)

The snow had come, and with it a Christmas holiday. For weeks I had looked longingly out of college windows as the first tracking-snows came sifting down, my thoughts turning from books and the problems of human wisdom to the winter woods, with their wide white pages written all over by the feet of wild things. Then the sun would shine again, and I knew that the records were washed clean, and the hard-packed leaves as innocent of footmarks as the beach where plover feed when a great wave has chased them away. On the twentieth a change came. Outside the snow fell heavily, two days and a night; inside, books were packed away, professors said Merry Christmas, and students were scattering, like a bevy of flushed quail, to all points of the compass for the holidays. The afternoon of the twenty-first found me again in my room under the eaves of the old farmhouse.

Before dark I had taken a wide run over the hills and through the woods to the place of my summer camp. How wonderful it all was! The great woods were covered deep with their pure white mantle; not a fleck, not a track soiled its even whiteness; for the last soft flakes were lingering in the air, and fox and grouse and hare and lucivee were still keeping the storm truce, hidden deep in their coverts. Every fir and spruce and hemlock had gone to building fairy grottoes as the snow packed their lower branches, under which all sorts of wonders and beauties might be hidden, to say nothing of the wild things for whom Nature had been building innumerable tents of white and green as they slept. The silence was absolute, the forest's unconscious tribute to the Wonder Worker. Even the trout brook, running black as night among its white-capped boulders and delicate arches of frost and fern work, between massive banks of feathery white and green, had stopped its idle chatter and tinkled a low bell under the ice, as if only the Angelus could express the wonder of the world.

As I came back softly in the twilight a movement in an evergreen ahead caught my eye, and I stopped for one of the rare sights of the woods,--a partridge going to sleep in a warm room of his own making. Helooked all about among the trees most carefully, listened, kwit-kwitted in a low voice to himself, then, with a sudden plunge, swooped downward head-first into the snow. I stole to the spot where he had disappeared, noted the direction of his tunnel, and fell forward with arms outstretched, thinking perhaps to catch him under me and examine his feet to see how his natural snowshoes (Nature's winter gift to every grouse) were developing, before letting him go again. But the grouse was an old bird, not to be caught napping, who had thought on the possibilities of being followed ere he made his plunge. He had ploughed under the snow for a couple of feet, then swerved sharply to the left and made a little chamber for himself just under some snow-packed spruce tips, with a foot of snow for a blanket over him. When I fell forward, disturbing his rest most rudely ere he had time to wink the snow out of his eyes, he burst out with a great whirr and sputter between my left hand and my head, scattering snow all over me, and thundered off through the startled woods, flicking a branch here and there with his wings, and shaking down a great white shower as he rushed away for deeper solitudes. There, no doubt, he went to sleep in the evergreens, congratulating himself on his escape and preferring to take his chances with the owl, rather than with some other ground-prowler that might come nosing into his hole before the light snow had time to fill it up effectually behind him.

Next morning I was early afield, heading for a ridge where I thought the deer of the neighborhood might congregate with the intention of yarding for the winter. At the foot of a wild little natural meadow, made centuries ago by the beavers, I found the trail of two deer which had been helping themselves to some hay that had been cut and stacked there the previous summer. My big buck was not with them; so I left the trail in peace to push through a belt of woods and across a pond to an old road that led for a mile or two towards the ridge I was seeking.

Early as I was, the wood folk were ahead of me. Their tracks were everywhere, eager, hungry tracks, that poked their noses into every possible hiding place of food or game, showing how the two-days' fast had whetted their appetites and set them to running keenly the moment the last flakes were down and the storm truce ended.

A suspicious-looking clump of evergreens, where something had brushed the snow rudely from the feathery tips, stopped me as I hurried down the old road. Under the evergreens was a hole in the snow, and at the bottom of the hole hard inverted cups made by deer's feet. I followed on to another hole in the snow (it could scarcely be called a trail) and then to another, and another, some twelve or fifteen feet apart, leading in swift bounds to some big timber. There the curious track separated into three deer trails, one of which might well be that of a ten-point buck. Here was luck,--luck to find my quarry so early on the first day out, and better luck that, during my long absence, the cunning animal had kept himself and his consort clear of Old Wally and his devices.

When I ran to examine the back trail more carefully, I found that the deer had passed the night in a dense thicket of evergreen, on a hilltop overlooking the road. They had come down the hill, picking their way among the stumps of a burned clearing, stepping carefully in each other's tracks so as to make but a single trail. At the road they had leaped clear across from one thicket to another, leaving never a trace on the bare even whiteness. One might have passed along the road a score of times without noticing that game had crossed. There was no doubt now that these were deer that had been often hunted, and that had learned their cunning from long experience.

同类推荐
  • 书灵筵手巾

    书灵筵手巾

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • Letters on the Study and Use of History

    Letters on the Study and Use of History

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 神鼎一揆禅师语录

    神鼎一揆禅师语录

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • Iphigenia at Aulis

    Iphigenia at Aulis

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 公孙龙子注

    公孙龙子注

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
热门推荐
  • 告诉学生聪慧机敏的机智故事

    告诉学生聪慧机敏的机智故事

    书中各种故事的主人公因其巧妙而出人意料的应变之策,使人们在心生敬佩之余,同时获得某种智慧的启迪。在生活当中,我们常常会面临许许多多的突发状况,这往往需要急中生智、沉着应对方能解决问题。那么,就随本书一起,在这些机智勇敢的主人公的带领下,一起感受机智的力量。
  • 无敌换物系统

    无敌换物系统

    什么?宇宙飞船特价九千亿宇宙币?矿产星球特价7亿宇宙币一颗?我这是做梦吗?一个神奇的世界!
  • 始神复苏

    始神复苏

    盘古为何开天辟地?是天生的使命?还是另有隐情?舍弃生命孕育世界,是命运的归途?还是无可奈何?盘古,究竟来自何方?
  • 钻石宠婚之妻色似火

    钻石宠婚之妻色似火

    她把男神抢过来做老公,结果被他要求娶一送一。她把一纸怀孕诊断书拍在他的办公桌上:“我怀孕了!”“嗯。”他淡淡地应着,磁性醇厚的男中音分外的苏,“去年你的生日礼物是郁太太的身份,既然如此,我就再吃点亏,孩子是我今年送你的生日礼物。”她傻站在了原地:“那我们当初说好的离婚呢?”“离婚?”他的语气明显冷了几度,深邃的眼潭底浮起占有欲,“明年的生日礼物还是孩子,后年的生日礼物依然是……”“你把我当猪吗?”“就算你是猪,我养你一辈子也没有关系。”某女在心里打着小九九,喜上心头,这算是变相的告白吗?(本文一对一,双洁,宠文,男主看似高冷傲娇,对女主绝对宠爱无边,绝对占有。看男主如何秀恩爱撒狗粮。女主也不是柔弱小白花,她的男人她绝对要宣示主权,打倒一切妄想染指她老公的白莲花,绿茶婊和狐狸精。所以从现在开启一场老公保卫战!看女主如何击与妖精们过招!)
  • 越过梦境去爱你

    越过梦境去爱你

    梦里的他沉默寡言,就像他的名字一样,“薄言”。梦里的我是那样弱小,需要他的保护,每次危急的情况下,他总是能及时的出现在我身边,每次梦到他,我是哭着醒来的。后来我才明白,我所有的遗憾和不甘,所有的微笑和眼泪,所有的彻夜难眠与思念,都是因为我真的好爱你。
  • 追妻无门:女boss不好惹

    追妻无门:女boss不好惹

    青涩蜕变,如今她是能独当一面的女boss,爱了冷泽聿七年,也同样花了七年时间去忘记他。以为是陌路,他突然向他表白,扬言要娶她,她只当他是脑子抽风,他的殷勤她也全都无视。他帮她查她父母的死因,赶走身边情敌,解释当初拒绝她的告别,和故意对她冷漠都是无奈之举。突然爆出她父母的死居然和冷家有丝毫联系,还莫名跳出个公爵未婚夫,扬言要与她履行婚约。峰回路转,破镜还能重圆吗? PS:我又开新文了,每逢假期必书荒,新文《有你的世界遇到爱》,喜欢我的文的朋友可以来看看,这是重生类现言,对这个题材感兴趣的一定要收藏起来。
  • 隐谍

    隐谍

    这是个混乱的时代,也是个充满传奇的时代。越是无所顾忌,越让人相信这不是骗局,越是明目张胆,越不会露出马脚。冯怒经常说:绝境是给自己定下一个万难达到的目的所必须付出的代价,这种不可饶恕的罪是一个堕落或邪恶的人永远不会犯的。冯怒也知道,背叛朋友的人是不会有善终的,经常与死神游戏的人终有一天会被拉入地狱的深潭,死亡是路过的生命,生活是在路上的死亡。
  • 玄镜之恋

    玄镜之恋

    传说千年中:水神和火神以及花神,到底经历了什么?从万众瞩目的上神,一步步的走向了万劫不复的深渊?一场爱与恨的交织中,我们最后到底还剩下什么?前世的因,来世的果。当她最亲的人,为她了救下她,沉睡千百年。当她最爱的人,却在她遭受天刑,惨痛无比之时,不见踪迹。她白嫩皎洁的肌肤被仙界九道神鞭狠狠地鞭打,留下血渍血印,他却还是视若无睹是吗?在她跳下仙台,就在她想着他们连最后一面都不曾相见了是吗?她却见到了,那副平静,毫无波澜的爱人。她最好的朋友,她共同受罚,却在她最痛的一击将至时,甘愿为自己抵挡最狠一击……她迷茫了……什么是爱?前世的沉沦,今世的擦肩而过,来世我愿同你再无任何瓜葛……
  • 庄子

    庄子

    《庄子》不仅仅是一部哲学范畴的著作,它将哲学思想以一种艺术的表达呈现在世人面前。那些生动形象、幽默机智的寓言故事蕴含的不仅仅是人生大道理,更有着极其强烈的艺术感染力。“入则孔孟,出则老庄”,现代人的自处和处世准则,很大一部分有赖于老祖宗的智慧教导,而儒家道家的思想则在其中占据了极其重要的中坚地位。当我们遇到庄子,便深深折服于他的奇思妙想,他的聪敏,他的激情,他的快乐,他的独行于世。他尖锐而激烈地面对这个世界,他淡然却又悲悯地跨过俗世红尘。他眼中的一切都那么的与众不同偏又发人深省。
  • 狂神捕鱼系统

    狂神捕鱼系统

    林天:“美女,我看你印堂发黑,大凶之照!我这里有特制宝物可帮你抵挡此劫,你要不要试试?”美女面红耳赤:“流氓~”快步离去,林天:“小子,我看你骨骼惊奇,但是血脉不好,这里有一份逆天血脉,你要不要试试?”小孩:“我妈妈说主动贴上来的都不是好人,骗子!”骂完跑了!林天无奈,45度角仰天长叹:“系统出品,必定精品,为什么你们都不肯给我个机会证明我自己呢?”