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<h2> CHAPTER VII </h2>
<h3> HARD IT IS TO CLIMB </h3>
<p>So many a winter night went by in a hopeful and pleasant manner, with the
hissing of the bright round bullets, cast into the water, and the
spluttering of the great red apples which Annie was roasting for me. We
always managed our evening's work in the chimney of the back-kitchen,
where there was room to set chairs and table, in spite of the fire
burning. On the right-hand side was a mighty oven, where Betty threatened
to bake us; and on the left, long sides of bacon, made of favoured pigs,
and growing very brown and comely. Annie knew the names of all, and ran up
through the wood-smoke, every now and then, when a gentle memory moved
her, and asked them how they were getting on, and when they would like to
be eaten. Then she came back with foolish tears, at thinking of that
necessity; and I, being soft in a different way, would make up my mind
against bacon.</p>
<p>But, Lord bless you! it was no good. Whenever it came to breakfast-time,
after three hours upon the moors, I regularly forgot the pigs, but paid
good heed to the rashers. For ours is a hungry county, if such there be in
England; a place, I mean, where men must eat, and are quick to discharge
the duty. The air of the moors is so shrewd and wholesome, stirring a
man's recollection of the good things which have betided him, and whetting
his hope of something still better in the future, that by the time he sits
down to a cloth, his heart and stomach are tuned too well to say 'nay' to
one another.</p>
<p>Almost everybody knows, in our part of the world at least, how pleasant
and soft the fall of the land is round about Plover's Barrows farm. All
above it is strong dark mountain, spread with heath, and desolate, but
near our house the valleys cove, and open warmth and shelter. Here are
trees, and bright green grass, and orchards full of contentment, and a man
may scarce espy the brook, although he hears it everywhere. And indeed a
stout good piece of it comes through our farm-yard, and swells sometimes
to a rush of waves, when the clouds are on the hill-tops. But all below,
where the valley bends, and the Lynn stream comes along with it, pretty
meadows slope their breast, and the sun spreads on the water. And nearly
all of this is ours, till you come to Nicholas Snowe's land.</p>
<p>But about two miles below our farm, the Bagworthy water runs into the
Lynn, and makes a real river of it. Thence it hurries away, with strength
and a force of wilful waters, under the foot of a barefaced hill, and so
to rocks and woods again, where the stream is covered over, and dark,
heavy pools delay it. There are plenty of fish all down this way, and the
farther you go the larger they get, having deeper grounds to feed in; and
sometimes in the summer months, when mother could spare me off the farm, I
came down here, with Annie to help (because it was so lonely), and caught
well-nigh a basketful of little trout and minnows, with a hook and a bit
of worm on it, or a fern-web, or a blow-fly, hung from a hazel
pulse-stick. For of all the things I learned at Blundell's, only two abode
with me, and one of these was the knack of fishing, and the other the art
of swimming. And indeed they have a very rude manner of teaching children
to swim there; for the big boys take the little boys, and put them through
a certain process, which they grimly call 'sheep-washing.' In the third
meadow from the gate of the school, going up the river, there is a fine
pool in the Lowman, where the Taunton brook comes in, and they call it the
Taunton Pool. The water runs down with a strong sharp stickle, and then
has a sudden elbow in it, where the small brook trickles in; and on that
side the bank is steep, four or it may be five feet high, overhanging
loamily; but on the other side it is flat, pebbly, and fit to land upon.
Now the large boys take the small boys, crying sadly for mercy, and
thinking mayhap, of their mothers, with hands laid well at the back of
their necks, they bring them up to the crest of the bank upon the eastern
side, and make them strip their clothes off. Then the little boys, falling
on their naked knees, blubber upwards piteously; but the large boys know
what is good for them, and will not be entreated. So they cast them down,
one after other into the splash of the water, and watch them go to the
bottom first, and then come up and fight for it, with a blowing and a
bubbling. It is a very fair sight to watch when you know there is little
danger, because, although the pool is deep, the current is sure to wash a
boy up on the stones, where the end of the depth is. As for me, they had
no need to throw me more than once, because I jumped of my own accord,
thinking small things of the Lowman, after the violent Lynn. Nevertheless,
I learnt to swim there, as all the other boys did; for the greatest point
in learning that is to find that you must do it. I loved the water
naturally, and could not long be out of it; but even the boys who hated it
most, came to swim in some fashion or other, after they had been flung for
a year or two into the Taunton pool.</p>
<p>But now, although my sister Annie came to keep me company, and was not to
be parted from me by the tricks of the Lynn stream, because I put her on
my back and carried her across, whenever she could not leap it, or tuck up
her things and take the stones; yet so it happened that neither of us had
been up the Bagworthy water. We knew that it brought a good stream down,
as full of fish as of pebbles; and we thought that it must be very pretty
to make a way where no way was, nor even a bullock came down to drink. But
whether we were afraid or not, I am sure I cannot tell, because it is so
long ago; but I think that had something to do with it. For Bagworthy
water ran out of Doone valley, a mile or so from the mouth of it.</p>
<p>But when I was turned fourteen years old, and put into good small-clothes,
buckled at the knee, and strong blue worsted hosen, knitted by my mother,
it happened to me without choice, I may say, to explore the Bagworthy
water. And it came about in this wise.</p>
<p>My mother had long been ailing, and not well able to eat much; and there
is nothing that frightens us so much as for people to have no love of
their victuals. Now I chanced to remember that once at the time of the
holidays I had brought dear mother from Tiverton a jar of pickled loaches,
caught by myself in the Lowman river, and baked in the kitchen oven, with
vinegar, a few leaves of bay, and about a dozen pepper-corns. And mother
had said that in all her life she had never tasted anything fit to be
compared with them. Whether she said so good a thing out of compliment to
my skill in catching the fish and cooking them, or whether she really
meant it, is more than I can tell, though I quite believe the latter, and
so would most people who tasted them; at any rate, I now resolved to get
some loaches for her, and do them in the self-same manner, just to make
her eat a bit.</p>
<p>There are many people, even now, who have not come to the right knowledge
what a loach is, and where he lives, and how to catch and pickle him. And
I will not tell them all about it, because if I did, very likely there
would be no loaches left ten or twenty years after the appearance of this
book. A pickled minnow is very good if you catch him in a stickle, with
the scarlet fingers upon him; but I count him no more than the ropes in
beer compared with a loach done properly.</p>
<p>Being resolved to catch some loaches, whatever trouble it cost me, I set
forth without a word to any one, in the forenoon of St. Valentine's day,
1675-6, I think it must have been. Annie should not come with me, because
the water was too cold; for the winter had been long, and snow lay here
and there in patches in the hollow of the banks, like a lady's gloves
forgotten. And yet the spring was breaking forth, as it always does in
Devonshire, when the turn of the days is over; and though there was little
to see of it, the air was full of feeling.</p>
<p>It puzzles me now, that I remember all those young impressions so, because
I took no heed of them at the time whatever; and yet they come upon me
bright, when nothing else is evident in the gray fog of experience. I am
like an old man gazing at the outside of his spectacles, and seeing, as he
rubs the dust, the image of his grandson playing at bo-peep with him.</p>
<p>But let me be of any age, I never could forget that day, and how bitter
cold the water was. For I doffed my shoes and hose, and put them into a
bag about my neck; and left my little coat at home, and tied my
shirt-sleeves back to my shoulders. Then I took a three-pronged fork
firmly bound to a rod with cord, and a piece of canvas kerchief, with a
lump of bread inside it; and so went into the pebbly water, trying to
think how warm it was. For more than a mile all down the Lynn stream,
scarcely a stone I left unturned, being thoroughly skilled in the tricks
of the loach, and knowing how he hides himself. For being gray-spotted,
and clear to see through, and something like a cuttle-fish, only more
substantial, he will stay quite still where a streak of weed is in the
rapid water, hoping to be overlooked, not caring even to wag his tail.
Then being disturbed he flips away, like whalebone from the finger, and
hies to a shelf of stone, and lies with his sharp head poked in under it;
or sometimes he bellies him into the mud, and only shows his back-ridge.
And that is the time to spear him nicely, holding the fork very gingerly,
and allowing for the bent of it, which comes to pass, I know not how, at
the tickle of air and water.</p>
<p>Or if your loach should not be abroad when first you come to look for him,
but keeping snug in his little home, then you may see him come forth
amazed at the quivering of the shingles, and oar himself and look at you,
and then dart up-stream, like a little grey streak; and then you must try
to mark him in, and follow very daintily. So after that, in a sandy place,
you steal up behind his tail to him, so that he cannot set eyes on you,
for his head is up-stream always, and there you see him abiding still,
clear, and mild, and affable. Then, as he looks so innocent, you make full
sure to prog him well, in spite of the wry of the water, and the sun
making elbows to everything, and the trembling of your fingers. But when
you gird at him lovingly, and have as good as gotten him, lo! in the go-by
of the river he is gone as a shadow goes, and only a little cloud of mud
curls away from the points of the fork.</p>
<p>A long way down that limpid water, chill and bright as an iceberg, went my
little self that day on man's choice errand—destruction. All the
young fish seemed to know that I was one who had taken out God's
certificate, and meant to have the value of it; every one of them was
aware that we desolate more than replenish the earth. For a cow might come
and look into the water, and put her yellow lips down; a kingfisher, like
a blue arrow, might shoot through the dark alleys over the channel, or sit
on a dipping withy-bough with his beak sunk into his breast-feathers; even
an otter might float downstream likening himself to a log of wood, with
his flat head flush with the water-top, and his oily eyes peering quietly;
and yet no panic would seize other life, as it does when a sample of man
comes.</p>
<p>Now let not any one suppose that I thought of these things when I was
young, for I knew not the way to do it. And proud enough in truth I was at
the universal fear I spread in all those lonely places, where I myself
must have been afraid, if anything had come up to me. It is all very
pretty to see the trees big with their hopes of another year, though dumb
as yet on the subject, and the waters murmuring gaiety, and the banks
spread out with comfort; but a boy takes none of this to heart; unless he
be meant for a poet (which God can never charge upon me), and he would
liefer have a good apple, or even a bad one, if he stole it.</p>
<p>When I had travelled two miles or so, conquered now and then with cold,
and coming out to rub my legs into a lively friction, and only fishing
here and there, because of the tumbling water; suddenly, in an open space,
where meadows spread about it, I found a good stream flowing softly into
the body of our brook. And it brought, so far as I could guess by the
sweep of it under my knee-caps, a larger power of clear water than the
Lynn itself had; only it came more quietly down, not being troubled with
stairs and steps, as the fortune of the Lynn is, but gliding smoothly and
forcibly, as if upon some set purpose.</p>
<p>Hereupon I drew up and thought, and reason was much inside me; because the
water was bitter cold, and my little toes were aching. So on the bank I
rubbed them well with a sprout of young sting-nettle, and having skipped
about awhile, was kindly inclined to eat a bit.</p>
<p>Now all the turn of all my life hung upon that moment. But as I sat there
munching a crust of Betty Muxworthy's sweet brown bread, and a bit of cold
bacon along with it, and kicking my little red heels against the dry loam
to keep them warm, I knew no more than fish under the fork what was going
on over me. It seemed a sad business to go back now and tell Annie there
were no loaches; and yet it was a frightful thing, knowing what I did of
it, to venture, where no grown man durst, up the Bagworthy water. And
please to recollect that I was only a boy in those days, fond enough of
anything new, but not like a man to meet it.</p>
<p>However, as I ate more and more, my spirit arose within me, and I thought
of what my father had been, and how he had told me a hundred times never
to be a coward. And then I grew warm, and my little heart was ashamed of
its pit-a-patting, and I said to myself, 'now if father looks, he shall
see that I obey him.' So I put the bag round my back again, and buckled my
breeches far up from the knee, expecting deeper water, and crossing the
Lynn, went stoutly up under the branches which hang so dark on the
Bagworthy river.</p>
<p>I found it strongly over-woven, turned, and torn with thicket-wood, but
not so rocky as the Lynn, and more inclined to go evenly. There were bars
of chafed stakes stretched from the sides half-way across the current, and
light outriders of pithy weed, and blades of last year's water-grass
trembling in the quiet places, like a spider's threads, on the transparent
stillness, with a tint of olive moving it. And here and there the sun came
in, as if his light was sifted, making dance upon the waves, and shadowing
the pebbles.</p>
<p>Here, although affrighted often by the deep, dark places, and feeling that
every step I took might never be taken backward, on the whole I had very
comely sport of loaches, trout, and minnows, forking some, and tickling
some, and driving others to shallow nooks, whence I could bail them
ashore. Now, if you have ever been fishing, you will not wonder that I was
led on, forgetting all about danger, and taking no heed of the time, but
shouting in a childish way whenever I caught a 'whacker' (as we called a
big fish at Tiverton); and in sooth there were very fine loaches here,
having more lie and harbourage than in the rough Lynn stream, though not
quite so large as in the Lowman, where I have even taken them to the
weight of half a pound.</p>
<p>But in answer to all my shouts there never was any sound at all, except of
a rocky echo, or a scared bird hustling away, or the sudden dive of a
water-vole; and the place grew thicker and thicker, and the covert grew
darker above me, until I thought that the fishes might have good chance of
eating me, instead of my eating the fishes.</p>
<p>For now the day was falling fast behind the brown of the hill-tops, and
the trees, being void of leaf and hard, seemed giants ready to beat me.
And every moment as the sky was clearing up for a white frost, the cold of
the water got worse and worse, until I was fit to cry with it. And so, in
a sorry plight, I came to an opening in the bushes, where a great black
pool lay in front of me, whitened with snow (as I thought) at the sides,
till I saw it was only foam-froth.</p>
<p>Now, though I could swim with great ease and comfort, and feared no depth
of water, when I could fairly come to it, yet I had no desire to go over
head and ears into this great pool, being so cramped and weary, and cold
enough in all conscience, though wet only up to the middle, not counting
my arms and shoulders. And the look of this black pit was enough to stop
one from diving into it, even on a hot summer's day with sunshine on the
water; I mean, if the sun ever shone there. As it was, I shuddered and
drew back; not alone at the pool itself and the black air there was about
it, but also at the whirling manner, and wisping of white threads upon it
in stripy circles round and round; and the centre still as jet.</p>
<p>But soon I saw the reason of the stir and depth of that great pit, as well
as of the roaring sound which long had made me wonder. For skirting round
one side, with very little comfort, because the rocks were high and steep,
and the ledge at the foot so narrow, I came to a sudden sight and marvel,
such as I never dreamed of. For, lo! I stood at the foot of a long pale
slide of water, coming smoothly to me, without any break or hindrance, for
a hundred yards or more, and fenced on either side with cliff, sheer, and
straight, and shining. The water neither ran nor fell, nor leaped with any
spouting, but made one even slope of it, as if it had been combed or
planed, and looking like a plank of deal laid down a deep black staircase.
However, there was no side-rail, nor any place to walk upon, only the
channel a fathom wide, and the perpendicular walls of crag shutting out
the evening.</p>
<p>The look of this place had a sad effect, scaring me very greatly, and
making me feel that I would give something only to be at home again, with
Annie cooking my supper, and our dog Watch sniffing upward. But nothing
would come of wishing; that I had long found out; and it only made one the
less inclined to work without white feather. So I laid the case before me
in a little council; not for loss of time, but only that I wanted rest,
and to see things truly.</p>
<p>Then says I to myself—'John Ridd, these trees, and pools, and
lonesome rocks, and setting of the sunlight are making a gruesome coward
of thee. Shall I go back to my mother so, and be called her fearless boy?'</p>
<p>Nevertheless, I am free to own that it was not any fine sense of shame
which settled my decision; for indeed there was nearly as much of danger
in going back as in going on, and perhaps even more of labour, the journey
being so roundabout. But that which saved me from turning back was a
strange inquisitive desire, very unbecoming in a boy of little years; in a
word, I would risk a great deal to know what made the water come down like
that, and what there was at the top of it.</p>
<p>Therefore, seeing hard strife before me, I girt up my breeches anew, with
each buckle one hole tighter, for the sodden straps were stretching and
giving, and mayhap my legs were grown smaller from the coldness of it.
Then I bestowed my fish around my neck more tightly, and not stopping to
look much, for fear of fear, crawled along over the fork of rocks, where
the water had scooped the stone out, and shunning thus the ledge from
whence it rose like the mane of a white horse into the broad black pool,
softly I let my feet into the dip and rush of the torrent.</p>
<p>And here I had reckoned without my host, although (as I thought) so
clever; and it was much but that I went down into the great black pool,
and had never been heard of more; and this must have been the end of me,
except for my trusty loach-fork. For the green wave came down like great
bottles upon me, and my legs were gone off in a moment, and I had not time
to cry out with wonder, only to think of my mother and Annie, and knock my
head very sadly, which made it go round so that brains were no good, even
if I had any. But all in a moment, before I knew aught, except that I must
die out of the way, with a roar of water upon me, my fork, praise God
stuck fast in the rock, and I was borne up upon it. I felt nothing except
that here was another matter to begin upon; and it might be worth while,
or again it might not, to have another fight for it. But presently the
dash of the water upon my face revived me, and my mind grew used to the
roar of it, and meseemed I had been worse off than this, when first flung
into the Lowman.</p>
<p>Therefore I gathered my legs back slowly, as if they were fish to be
landed, stopping whenever the water flew too strongly off my shin-bones,
and coming along without sticking out to let the wave get hold of me. And
in this manner I won a footing, leaning well forward like a draught-horse,
and balancing on my strength as it were, with the ashen stake set behind
me. Then I said to my self, 'John Ridd, the sooner you get yourself out by
the way you came, the better it will be for you.' But to my great dismay
and affright, I saw that no choice was left me now, except that I must
climb somehow up that hill of water, or else be washed down into the pool
and whirl around it till it drowned me. For there was no chance of
fetching back by the way I had gone down into it, and further up was a
hedge of rock on either side of the waterway, rising a hundred yards in
height, and for all I could tell five hundred, and no place to set a foot
in.</p>
<p>Having said the Lord's Prayer (which was all I knew), and made a very bad
job of it, I grasped the good loach-stick under a knot, and steadied me
with my left hand, and so with a sigh of despair began my course up the
fearful torrent-way. To me it seemed half a mile at least of sliding water
above me, but in truth it was little more than a furlong, as I came to
know afterwards. It would have been a hard ascent even without the
slippery slime and the force of the river over it, and I had scanty hope
indeed of ever winning the summit. Nevertheless, my terror left me, now I
was face to face with it, and had to meet the worst; and I set myself to
do my best with a vigour and sort of hardness which did not then surprise
me, but have done so ever since.</p>
<p>The water was only six inches deep, or from that to nine at the utmost,
and all the way up I could see my feet looking white in the gloom of the
hollow, and here and there I found resting-place, to hold on by the cliff
and pant awhile. And gradually as I went on, a warmth of courage breathed
in me, to think that perhaps no other had dared to try that pass before
me, and to wonder what mother would say to it. And then came thought of my
father also, and the pain of my feet abated.</p>
<p>How I went carefully, step by step, keeping my arms in front of me, and
never daring to straighten my knees is more than I can tell clearly, or
even like now to think of, because it makes me dream of it. Only I must
acknowledge that the greatest danger of all was just where I saw no
jeopardy, but ran up a patch of black ooze-weed in a very boastful manner,
being now not far from the summit.</p>
<p>Here I fell very piteously, and was like to have broken my knee-cap, and
the torrent got hold of my other leg while I was indulging the bruised
one. And then a vile knotting of cramp disabled me, and for awhile I could
only roar, till my mouth was full of water, and all of my body was
sliding. But the fright of that brought me to again, and my elbow caught
in a rock-hole; and so I managed to start again, with the help of more
humility.</p>
<p>Now being in the most dreadful fright, because I was so near the top, and
hope was beating within me, I laboured hard with both legs and arms, going
like a mill and grunting. At last the rush of forked water, where first it
came over the lips of the fall, drove me into the middle, and I stuck
awhile with my toe-balls on the slippery links of the pop-weed, and the
world was green and gliddery, and I durst not look behind me. Then I made
up my mind to die at last; for so my legs would ache no more, and my
breath not pain my heart so; only it did seem such a pity after fighting
so long to give in, and the light was coming upon me, and again I fought
towards it; then suddenly I felt fresh air, and fell into it headlong.</p>
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