Sylvia's Lovers - Page 4/290

There was comparative fertility and luxuriance down below in the

rare green dales. The narrow meadows stretching along the brookside

seemed as though the cows could really satisfy their hunger in the

deep rich grass; whereas on the higher lands the scanty herbage was

hardly worth the fatigue of moving about in search of it. Even in

these 'bottoms' the piping sea-winds, following the current of the

stream, stunted and cut low any trees; but still there was rich

thick underwood, tangled and tied together with brambles, and

brier-rose, [sic] and honeysuckle; and if the farmer in these

comparatively happy valleys had had wife or daughter who cared for

gardening, many a flower would have grown on the western or southern

side of the rough stone house. But at that time gardening was not a

popular art in any part of England; in the north it is not yet.

Noblemen and gentlemen may have beautiful gardens; but farmers and

day-labourers care little for them north of the Trent, which is all

I can answer for. A few 'berry' bushes, a black currant tree or two

(the leaves to be used in heightening the flavour of tea, the fruit

as medicinal for colds and sore throats), a potato ground (and this

was not so common at the close of the last century as it is now), a

cabbage bed, a bush of sage, and balm, and thyme, and marjoram, with

possibly a rose tree, and 'old man' growing in the midst; a little

plot of small strong coarse onions, and perhaps some marigolds, the

petals of which flavoured the salt-beef broth; such plants made up a

well-furnished garden to a farmhouse at the time and place to which

my story belongs. But for twenty miles inland there was no

forgetting the sea, nor the sea-trade; refuse shell-fish, seaweed,

the offal of the melting-houses, were the staple manure of the

district; great ghastly whale-jaws, bleached bare and white, were

the arches over the gate-posts to many a field or moorland stretch.

Out of every family of several sons, however agricultural their

position might be, one had gone to sea, and the mother looked

wistfully seaward at the changes of the keen piping moorland winds.

The holiday rambles were to the coast; no one cared to go inland to

see aught, unless indeed it might be to the great annual horse-fairs

held where the dreary land broke into habitation and cultivation.

Somehow in this country sea thoughts followed the thinker far

inland; whereas in most other parts of the island, at five miles

from the ocean, he has all but forgotten the existence of such an

element as salt water. The great Greenland trade of the coasting

towns was the main and primary cause of this, no doubt. But there

was also a dread and an irritation in every one's mind, at the time

of which I write, in connection with the neighbouring sea.