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    Chapter 4

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    Hail! sober evening! Thee the harass'd brain
    And aching heart with fond orisons greet;
    The respite thou of toil; the balm of pain;
    To thoughtful mind the hour for musing meet,
    'Tis then the sage from forth his lone retreat,
    The rolling universe around espies;
    'Tis then the bard may hold communion sweet
    With lovely shapes unkenned by grosser eyes,
    And quick perception comes of finer mysteries.

    Sands.

    In the preceding chapter we closed the minuter narrative with a scene
    at the Hut, in the spring of 1765. We must now advance the time just
    ten years, opening, anew, in the month of May, 1775. This, it is
    scarcely necessary to tell the reader, is bringing him at once up to
    the earliest days of the revolution. The contest which preceded that
    great event had in fact occurred in the intervening time, and we are
    now about to plunge into the current of some of the minor incidents of
    the struggle itself.

    Ten years are a century in the history of a perfectly new settlement.
    The changes they produce are even surprising, though in ordinary cases
    they do not suffice to erase the signs of a recent origin. The forest
    is opened, and the light of day admitted, it is true; but its remains
    are still to be seen in multitudes of unsightly stumps, dead standing
    trees, and ill-looking stubs. These vestiges of the savage state
    usually remain a quarter of a century; in certain region they are to be
    found for even more than twice that period. All this, however, had
    captain Willoughby escaped, in consequence of limiting his clearing, in
    a great measure, to that which had been made by the beavers, and from
    which time and natural decay had, long before his arrival, removed
    every ungainly object. It is true, here and there a few acres had been
    cleared on the firmer ground, at the margin of the flats, where barns
    and farm buildings had been built, and orchards planted; but, in order
    to preserve the harmony of his view, the captain had caused all the
    stumps to be pulled and burnt, giving to these places the same air of
    agricultural finish as characterized the fields on the lower land.

    To this sylvan scene, at a moment which preceded the setting of the sun

    by a little more than an hour, and in the first week of the genial
    month of May, we must now bring the reader in fancy. The season had
    been early, and the Beaver Manor, or the part of it which was
    cultivated, lying low and sheltered, vegetation had advanced
    considerably beyond the point that is usual, at that date, in the
    elevated region of which we have been writing. The meadows were green
    with matted grasses, the wheat and rye resembled rich velvets, and the
    ploughed fields had the fresh and mellowed appearance of good husbandry
    and a rich soil.
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