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- 2026-01-30T20:48:14.842Z
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- 8184
- text
- CHAPTER XLIII.
HE TAKES A DELIGHTFUL RAMBLE INTO THE COUNTRY; AND MAKES THE
ACQUAINTANCE OF THREE ADORABLE CHARMERS
Who that dwells in America has not heard of the bright fields and green
hedges of England, and longed to behold them? Even so had it been with
me; and now that I was actually in England, I resolved not to go away
without having a good, long look at the open fields.
On a Sunday morning I started, with a lunch in my pocket. It was a
beautiful day in July; the air was sweet with the breath of buds and
flowers, and there was a green splendor in the landscape that ravished
me. Soon I gained an elevation commanding a wide sweep of view; and
meadow and mead, and woodland and hedge, were all around me.
Ay, ay! this was old England, indeed! I had found it at last—there it
was in the country! Hovering over the scene was a soft, dewy air, that
seemed faintly tinged with the green of the grass; and I thought, as I
breathed my breath, that perhaps I might be inhaling the very particles
once respired by Rosamond the Fair.
On I trudged along the London road—smooth as an entry floor—and every
white cottage I passed, embosomed in honeysuckles, seemed alive in the
landscape.
But the day wore on; and at length the sun grew hot; and the long road
became dusty. I thought that some shady place, in some shady field,
would be very pleasant to repose in. So, coming to a charming little
dale, undulating down to a hollow, arched over with foliage, I crossed
over toward it; but paused by the road-side at a frightful
announcement, nailed against an old tree, used as a gate-post—
“MAN-TRAPS AND SPRING-GUNS!”
In America I had never heard of the like. What could it mean? They were
not surely _cannibals,_ that dwelt down in that beautiful little dale,
and lived by catching men, like weasels and beavers in Canada!
“A _man-trap!”_ It must be so. The announcement could bear but one
meaning—that there was something near by, intended to catch human
beings; some species of mechanism, that would suddenly fasten upon the
unwary rover, and hold him by the leg like a dog; or, perhaps, devour
him on the spot.
Incredible! In a Christian land, too! Did that sweet lady, Queen
Victoria, permit such diabolical practices? Had her gracious majesty
ever passed by this way, and seen the announcement?
And who put it there?
The proprietor, probably.
And what right had he to do so?
Why, he owned the soil.
And where are his title-deeds?
In his strong-box, I suppose.
Thus I stood wrapt in cogitations.
You are a pretty fellow, Wellingborough, thought I to myself; you are a
mighty traveler, indeed:—stopped on your travels by a _man-trap!_ Do
you think Mungo Park was so served in Africa? Do you think Ledyard was
so entreated in Siberia? Upon my word, you will go home not very much
wiser than when you set out; and the only excuse you can give, for not
having seen more sights, will be _man-traps—mantraps, my masters!_ that
frightened you!
And then, in my indignation, I fell back upon first principles. What
right has this man to the soil he thus guards with dragons? What
excessive effrontery, to lay sole claim to a solid piece of this
planet, right down to the earth’s axis, and, perhaps, straight through
to the antipodes! For a moment I thought I would test his traps, and
enter the forbidden Eden.
But the grass grew so thickly, and seemed so full of sly things, that
at last I thought best to pace off.
Next, I came to a hawthorn lane, leading down very prettily to a nice
little church; a mossy little church; a beautiful little church; just
such a church as I had always dreamed to be in England. The porch was
viny as an arbor; the ivy was climbing about the tower; and the bees
were humming about the hoary old head-stones along the walls.
Any man-traps here? thought I—any spring-guns?
No.
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