登陆注册
6070400000025

第25章 CHAPTER IX.(1)

WE CAMP OUT.

My wife and I were both so fond of country life and country pursuits that month after month passed by at our little farm in a succession of delightful days. Time flew like a "limited express"train, and it was September before we knew it.

I had been working very hard at the office that summer, and was glad to think of my two weeks' vacation, which were to begin on the first Monday of the month. I had intended spending these two weeks in rural retirement at home, but an interview in the city with my family physician caused me to change my mind. I told him my plan.

"Now," said he, "if I were you, I'd do nothing of the kind. You have been working too hard; your face shows it. You need rest and change. Nothing will do you so much good as to camp out; that will be fifty times better than going to any summer resort. You can take your wife with you. I know she'll like it. I don't care where you go so that it's a healthy spot. Get a good tent and an outfit, be off to the woods, and forget all about business and domestic matters for a few weeks."This sounded splendid, and I propounded the plan to Euphemia that evening. She thought very well of it, and was sure we could do it.

Pomona would not be afraid to remain in the house, under the protection of Lord Edward, and she could easily attend to the cow and the chickens. It would be a holiday for her too. Old John, the man who occasionally worked for us, would come up sometimes and see after things. With her customary dexterity Euphemia swept away every obstacle to the plan, and all was settled before we went to bed.

As my wife had presumed, Pomona made no objections to remaining in charge of the house. The scheme pleased her greatly. So far, so good. I called that day on a friend who was in the habit of camping out to talk to him about getting a tent and the necessary "traps" for a life in the woods. He proved perfectly competent to furnish advice and everything else. He offered to lend me all Ineeded. He had a complete outfit; had done with them for the year, and I was perfectly welcome. Here was rare luck. He gave me a tent, camp-stove, dishes, pots, gun, fishing-tackle, a big canvas coat with dozens of pockets riveted on it, a canvas hat, rods, reels, boots that came up to my hips, and about a wagon-load of things in all. He was a real good fellow.

We laid in a stock of canned and condensed provisions, and I bought a book on camping out so as to be well posted on the subject. On the Saturday before the first Monday in September we would have been entirely ready to start had we decided on the place where we were to go.

We found it very difficult to make this decision. There were thousands of places where people went to camp out, but none of them seemed to be the place for us. Most of them were too far away. We figured up the cost of taking ourselves and our camp equipage to the Adirondacks, the lakes, the trout-streams of Maine, or any of those well-known resorts, and we found that we could not afford such trips, especially for a vacation of but fourteen days.

On Sunday afternoon we took a little walk. Our minds were still troubled about the spot toward which we ought to journey next day, and we needed the soothing influences of Nature. The country to the north and west of our little farm was very beautiful. About half a mile from the house a modest river ran; on each side of it were grass-covered fields and hills, and in some places there were extensive tracks of woodlands.

"Look here!" exclaimed Euphemia, stopping short in the little path that wound along by the river bank. "Do you see this river, those woods, those beautiful fields, with not a soul in them or anywhere near them; and those lovely blue mountains over there?"--as she spoke she waved her parasol in the direction of the objects indicated, and I could not mistake them. "Now what could we want better than this?" she continued. "Here we can fish, and do everything that we want to. I say, let us camp here on our own river. I can take you to the very spot for the tent. Come on!"And she was so excited about it that she fairly ran.

The spot she pointed out was one we had frequently visited in our rural walks. It was a grassy peninsula, as I termed it, formed by a sudden turn of a creek which, a short distance below, flowed into the river. It was a very secluded spot. The place was approached through a pasture-field,--we had found it by mere accident,--and where the peninsula joined the field (we had to climb a fence just there), there was a cluster of chestnut and hickory trees, while down near the point stood a wide-spreading oak.

"Here, under this oak, is the place for the tent," said Euphemia, her face flushed, her eyes sparkling, and her dress a little torn by getting over the fence in a hurry. "What do we want with your Adirondacks and your Dismal Swamps? This is the spot for us!""Euphemia," said I, in as composed a tone as possible, although my whole frame was trembling with emotion, "Euphemia, I am glad Imarried you!"

Had it not been Sunday, we would have set up our tent that night.

Early the next morning, old John's fifteen-dollar horse drew from our house a wagon-load of camp-fixtures. There was some difficulty in getting the wagon over the field, and there were fences to be taken down to allow of its passage; but we overcame all obstacles, and reached the camp-ground without breaking so much as a teacup.

Old John helped me pitch the tent, and as neither of us understood the matter very well, it took us some time. It was, indeed, nearly noon when old John left us, and it may have been possible that he delayed matters a little so as to be able to charge for a full half-day for himself and horse. Euphemia got into the wagon to ride back with him, that she might give some parting injunctions to Pomona.

"I'll have to stop a bit to put up the fences, ma'am," said old John, "or Misther Ball might make a fuss.""Is this Mr. Ball's land?" I asked.

"Oh yes, sir, it's Mr. Ball's land."

"I wonder how he'll like our camping on it?" I said, thoughtfully.

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 娑婆之主

    娑婆之主

    大千娑婆世界,众生皆苦。三千弱水流沙,如何得渡?我以掌托娑婆世界,娑婆之主渡尽众生。
  • 美丽的际遇dx

    美丽的际遇dx

    一次美丽的旅途美丽的际遇看到繁华的都市有梦想的年轻人一群群游客
  • G弦之歌

    G弦之歌

    你听过巴哈的G弦之歌吗?听起来似乎是哀伤的,可是背后却是感动的。安以贝一个看似普通却背负着身世秘密。很小的时候眼睁睁看着自己母亲死在自己面前,却不知道父亲是谁。从小生活在育幼院,却没有丧失爱人的本能,院长爸爸对她像自己的女儿,可是,上帝最后还是让她独自面对外边的世界。悲伤地咏叹调。交织着,爱情,亲情。至少,在这里是的。--情节虚构,请勿模仿
  • 海滨小城的安秀

    海滨小城的安秀

    本文讲述了安秀,一个其貌不扬,家庭贫穷的女孩子如何通过个人的努力改变命运的故事。她个人的性格与这座海滨小城息息相关。
  • 高仙

    高仙

    苍天有眼,找了个穿越的工作,居然还是个修真界。原以为会开始逆袭。哪成想,混得忒惨!看来混修真界全是个体力活,我动手能力比较弱,那只能靠秀智商了。
  • 天行

    天行

    号称“北辰骑神”的天才玩家以自创的“牧马冲锋流”战术击败了国服第一弓手北冥雪,被誉为天纵战榜第一骑士的他,却受到小人排挤,最终离开了效力已久的银狐俱乐部。是沉沦,还是再次崛起?恰逢其时,月恒集团第四款游戏“天行”正式上线,虚拟世界再起风云!
  • 狩猎传

    狩猎传

    韩非无意间得到一枚神奇的指环,从此被迫参与了一个叫狩猎空间的游戏,这个神奇的游戏彻底改变了他平凡的命运。
  • 追捕妖孽美男吸血鬼

    追捕妖孽美男吸血鬼

    命运让我走上追捕吸血鬼的道路,可是却阴差阳错让我爱上了他,一次次的历险让真相慢慢浮现,最亲信任的人却是我不共戴天的仇人......
  • 网王and偶活之旋律跃动

    网王and偶活之旋律跃动

    “就凭你,也想和我抢幸村大人。”“坂上,我说了,不要再纠缠我了,我不喜欢你。”一场命运的改变与邂逅,让夏颖穿到坂上真希的身体里,看她如何完美归来与白石藏之介的恋情的故事即将展开......
  • 赤鹤

    赤鹤

    “你好”校园里素不相识的两个人相遇了。在互相凝望的时候,男生呆了,为什么?为什么这么像那个人?男生冒了一身冷汗,他面色苍白,心“怦怦”直跳。女生的那声“你好”打破了这尴尬的局面,男生反映了过来,并没有停留太久,他擦擦汗,侧身而过:天啊,太不可思议了!想一想,为什么平时那么骄傲的他会这样?为什么平时那么冷酷那么镇定的他会闹这种笑话?男生在和她擦肩而过时嘴里不由自主地嘣出一句:“妈妈?”女生没有反应,只是甩给他一个背影,然后向教学楼走去,渐行渐远,这时男生走了过去一把拉住她……