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    Chapter 9

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    LEAVES FROM A WINTER NOTE-BOOK

    (1895)

    We had walked abreast of the year from the very beginning, and that was
    when the first blood-root came up between the patches of April snow,
    while yet the big drift at the bottom of the meadow held fast. In the
    shadow of the woods and under the blown pine-needles, clots of snow lay
    till far into May, but neither the season nor the flowers took any note
    of them, and, before we were well sure Winter had gone, the lackeys of
    my Lord Baltimore in their new liveries came to tell us that Summer was
    in the valley, and please might they nest at the bottom of the garden?

    Followed, Summer, angry, fidgety, and nervous, with the corn and tobacco
    to ripen in five short months, the pastures to reclothe, and the fallen
    leaves to hide away under new carpets. Suddenly, in the middle of her
    work, on a stuffy-still July day, she called a wind out of the
    Northwest, a wind blown under an arch of steel-bellied clouds, a wicked
    bitter wind with a lacing of hail to it, a wind that came and was gone
    in less than ten minutes, but blocked the roads with fallen trees,
    toppled over a barn, and--blew potatoes out of the ground! When that was
    done, a white cloud shaped like a dumb-bell whirled down the valley
    across the evening blue, roaring and twisting and twisting and roaring
    all alone by itself. A West Indian hurricane could not have been quicker
    on its feet than our little cyclone, and when the house rose a-tiptoe,
    like a cockerel in act to crow, and a sixty-foot elm went by the board,
    and that which had been a dusty road became a roaring torrent all in
    three minutes, we felt that the New England summer had creole blood in
    her veins. She went away, red-faced and angry to the last, slamming all
    the doors of the hills behind her, and Autumn, who is a lady, took
    charge.

    No pen can describe the turning of the leaves--the insurrection of the
    tree-people against the waning year. A little maple began it, flaming
    blood-red of a sudden where he stood against the dark green of a
    pine-belt. Next morning there was an answering signal from the swamp
    where the sumacs grow. Three days later, the hill-sides as far as the
    eye could range were afire, and the roads paved, with crimson and gold.

    Then a wet wind blew, and ruined all the uniforms of that gorgeous army;
    and the oaks, who had held themselves in reserve, buckled on their dull
    and bronzed cuirasses and stood it out stiffly to the last blown leaf,
    till nothing remained but pencil-shading of bare boughs, and one could
    see into the most private heart of the woods.

    Frost may be looked for till the middle of May and after the middle of
    September, so Summer has little time for enamel-work or leaf-embroidery.
    Her sisters bring the
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