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A Week on the Concord and Merrimack Rivers
by Henry D. Thoreau
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Whereer thou sailst who sailed with me,
Though now thou climbest loftier mounts,
And fairer rivers dost ascend,
Be thou my Muse, my Brother—.
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I am bound, I am bound, for a distant shore.
By a lonely isle, by a far Azore,
There it is, there it is, the treasure I seek,
On the barren sands of a desolate creek.
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I sailed up a river with a pleasant wind,
New lands, new people, and new thoughts to find;
Many fair reaches and headlands appeared,
And many dangers were there to be feared;
But when I remember where I have been,
And the fair landscapes that I have seen,
THOU seemest the only permanent shore,
The cape never rounded, nor wandered oer.
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Fluminaque obliquis cinxit declivia ripis;
Quæ, diversa locis, partim sorbentur ab ipsa;
In mare perveniunt partim, campoque recepta
Liberioris aquæ, pro ripis litora pulsant.
He confined the rivers within their sloping banks,
Which in different places are part absorbed by the earth,
Part reach the sea, and being received within the plain
Of its freer waters, beat the shore for banks.
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OVID, Met. I. 39
Concord River.
Beneath low hills, in the broad interval
Through which at will our Indian rivulet
Winds mindful still of sannup and of squaw,
Whose pipe and arrow oft the plough unburies,
Here, in pine houses, built of new-fallen trees,
Supplanters of the tribe, the farmers dwell.
EMERSON.
The Musketaquid,
or Grass-ground River, though probably as old as the Nile or Euphrates, did not begin to
have a place in civilized history, until the fame of its grassy meadows and its fish
attracted settlers out of England in 1635, when it received the other but kindred name of
CONCORD from the first plantation on its banks, which appears to have been commenced in a
spirit of peace and harmony. It will be Grass-ground River as long as grass grows and
water runs here; it will be Concord River only while men lead peaceable lives on its
banks. To an extinct race it was grass-ground, where they hunted and fished, and it is
still perennial grass-ground to Concord farmers, who own the Great Meadows, and get the
hay from year to year. "One branch of it," according to the historian of
Concord, for I love to quote so good authority, "rises in the south part of
Hopkinton, and another from a pond and a large cedar-swamp in Westborough," and
flowing between Hopkinton and Southborough, through Framingham, and between Sudbury and
Wayland, where it is sometimes called Sudbury River, it enters Concord at the south part of
the town, and after receiving the North or Assabet River, which has its source a little
farther to the north and west, goes out at the northeast angle, and flowing between
Bedford and Carlisle, and through Billerica, empties into the Merrimack at Lowell. In
Concord it is, in summer, from four to fifteen feet deep, and from one hundred to three
hundred feet wide, but in the spring freshets, when it overflows its banks, it is in some
places nearly a mile wide. Between Sudbury and Wayland the meadows acquire their greatest
breadth, and when covered with water, they form a handsome chain of shallow vernal lakes,
resorted to by numerous gulls and ducks. Just above Shermans Bridge, between these
towns, is the largest expanse, and when the wind blows freshly in a raw March day, heaving
up the surface into dark and sober billows or regular swells, skirted as it is in the
distance with alder-swamps and smoke-like maples, it looks like a smaller Lake Huron, and
is very pleasant and exciting for a landsman to row or sail over. The farm-houses along
the Sudbury shore, which rises gently to a considerable height, command fine water
prospects at this season. The shore is more flat on the Wayland side, and this town is the
greatest loser by the flood. Its farmers tell me that thousands of acres are flooded now,
since the dams have been erected, where they remember to have seen the white honeysuckle
or clover growing once, and they could go dry with shoes only in summer. Now there is
nothing but blue-joint and sedge and cut-grass there, standing in water all the year
round. For a long time, they made the most of the driest season to get their hay, working
sometimes till nine oclock at night, sedulously paring with their scythes in the
twilight round the hummocks left by the ice; but now it is not worth the getting when they
can come at it, and they look sadly round to their wood-lots and upland as a last
resource.
It is worth the
while to make a voyage up this stream, if you go no farther than Sudbury, only to see how
much country there is in the rear of us; great hills, and a hundred brooks, and
farm-houses, and barns, and haystacks, you never saw before, and men everywhere, Sudbury,
that is Southborough men, and Wayland, and Nine-Acre-Corner men, and Bound Rock,
where four towns bound on a rock in the river, Lincoln, Wayland, Sudbury, Concord. Many
waves are there agitated by the wind, keeping nature fresh, the spray blowing in your
face, reeds and rushes waving; ducks by the hundred, all uneasy in the surf, in the raw
wind, just ready to rise, and now going off with a clatter and a whistling like riggers
straight for Labrador, flying against the stiff gale with reefed wings, or else circling
round first, with all their paddles briskly moving, just over the surf, to reconnoitre you
before they leave these parts; gulls wheeling overhead, muskrats swimming for dear life,
wet and cold, with no fire to warm them by that you know of; their labored homes rising
here and there like haystacks; and countless mice and moles and winged titmice along the
sunny windy shore; cranberries tossed on the waves and heaving up on the beach, their
little red skiffs beating about among the alders;such healthy natural tumult as
proves the last day is not yet at hand. And there stand all around the alders, and
birches, and oaks, and maples full of glee and sap, holding in their buds until the waters
subside. You shall perhaps run aground on Cranberry Island, only some spires of last
years pipe-grass above water, to show where the danger is, and get as good a
freezing there as anywhere on the Northwest Coast. I never voyaged so far in all my life.
You shall see men you never heard of before, whose names you dont know, going away
down through the meadows with long ducking-guns, with water-tight boots wading through the
fowl-meadow grass, on bleak, wintry, distant shores, with guns at half-cock, and they
shall see teal, blue-winged, green-winged, shelldrakes, whistlers, black ducks, ospreys,
and many other wild and noble sights before night, such as they who sit in parlors never
dream of. You shall see rude and sturdy, experienced and wise men, keeping their castles,
or teaming up their summers wood, or chopping alone in the woods, men fuller of talk
and rare adventure in the sun and wind and rain, than a chestnut is of meat; who were out
not only in 75 and 1812, but have been out every day of their lives; greater men
than Homer, or Chaucer, or Shakespeare, only they never got time to say so; they never
took to the way of writing. Look at their fields, and imagine what they might write, if
ever they should put pen to paper. Or what have they not written on the face of the earth
already, clearing, and burning, and scratching, and harrowing, and ploughing, and
subsoiling, in and in, and out and out, and over and over, again and again, erasing what
they had already written for want of parchment.
As yesterday and the historical ages are past, as the work of to-day is present, so some
flitting perspectives, and demi-experiences of the life that is in nature are in time
veritably future, or rather outside to time, perennial, young, divine, in the wind and
rain which never die.
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The respectable folks,
Where dwell they?
They whisper in the oaks,
And they sigh in the hay;
Summer and winter, night and day,
Out on the meadow, there dwell they.
They never die,
Nor snivel, nor cry,
Nor ask our pity
With a wet eye.
A sound estate they ever mend,
To every asker readily lend;
To the ocean wealth,
To the meadow health,
To Time his length,
To the rocks strength,
To the stars light,
To the weary night,
To the busy day,
To the idle play;
And so their good cheer never ends,
For all are their debtors, and all their friends.
Concord
River is remarkable for the gentleness of its current, which is scarcely perceptible, and
some have referred to its influence the proverbial moderation of the inhabitants of
Concord, as exhibited in the Revolution, and on later occasions. It has been proposed,
that the town should adopt for its coat of arms a field verdant, with the Concord circling
nine times round. I have read that a descent of an eighth of an inch in a mile is
sufficient to produce a flow. Our river has, probably, very near the smallest allowance.
The story is current, at any rate, though I believe that strict history will not bear it
out, that the only bridge ever carried away on the main branch, within the limits of the
town, was driven up stream by the wind. But wherever it makes a sudden bend it is
shallower and swifter, and asserts its title to be called a river. Compared with the other
tributaries of the Merrimack, it appears to have been properly named Musketaquid, or
Meadow River, by the Indians. For the most part, it creeps through broad meadows, adorned
with scattered oaks, where the cranberry is found in abundance, covering the ground like a
moss-bed. A row of sunken dwarf willows borders the stream on one or both sides, while at
a greater distance the meadow is skirted with maples, alders, and other fluviatile trees,
overrun with the grape-vine, which bears fruit in its season, purple, red, white, and
other grapes. Still farther from the stream, on the edge of the firm land, are seen the
gray and white dwellings of the inhabitants. According to the valuation of 1831, there
were in Concord two thousand one hundred and eleven acres, or about one seventh of the
whole territory in meadow; this standing next in the list after pasturage and unimproved
lands, and, judging from the returns of previous years, the meadow is not reclaimed so
fast as the woods are cleared.
Let us
here read what old Johnson says of these meadows in his "Wonder-working
Providence," which gives the account of New England from 1628 to 1652, and see how
matters looked to him. He says of the Twelfth Church of Christ gathered at Concord:
"This town is seated upon a fair fresh river, whose rivulets are filled with fresh
marsh, and her streams with fish, it being a branch of that large river of Merrimack.
Allwifes and shad in their season come up to this town, but salmon and dace cannot come
up, by reason of the rocky falls, which causeth their meadows to lie much covered with
water, the which these people, together with their neighbor town, have several times
essayed to cut through but cannot, yet it may be turned another way with an hundred pound
charge as it appeared." As to their farming he says: "Having laid out their
estate upon cattle at 5 to 20 pound a cow, when they came to winter them with inland hay,
and feed upon such wild fother as was never cut before, they could not hold out the
winter, but, ordinarily the first or second year after their coming up to a new
plantation, many of their cattle died." And this from the same author "Of the
Planting of the 19th Church in the Massachusetts Government, called Sudbury":
"This year [does he mean 1654] the town and church of Christ at Sudbury began to have
the first foundation stones laid, taking up her station in the inland country, as her
elder sister Concord had formerly done, lying further up the same river, being furnished
with great plenty of fresh marsh, but, it lying very low is much in damaged with land
floods, insomuch that when the summer proves wet they lose part of their hay; yet are they
so sufficiently provided that they take in cattle of other towns to winter."
The
sluggish artery of the Concord meadows steals thus unobserved through the town, without a
murmur or a pulse-beat, its general course from southwest to northeast, and its length
about fifty miles; a huge volume of matter, ceaselessly rolling through the plains and
valleys of the substantial earth with the moccasined tread of an Indian warrior, making
haste from the high places of the earth to its ancient reservoir. The murmurs of many a
famous river on the other side of the globe reach even to us here, as to more distant
dwellers on its banks; many a poets stream floating the helms and shields of heroes
on its bosom. The Xanthus or Scamander is not a mere dry channel and bed of a mountain
torrent, but fed by the ever-flowing springs of fame:
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"And thou Simois, that as an arrowe, clere
Through Troy rennest, aie downward to the sea";
and I trust that I may be allowed to associate our muddy but much abused Concord River
with the most famous in history.
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"Sure there are poets which did never dream
Upon Parnassus, nor did taste the stream
Of Helicon; we therefore may suppose
Those made not poets, but the poets those."
The
Mississippi, the Ganges, and the Nile, those journeying atoms from the Rocky Mountains,
the Himmaleh, and Mountains of the Moon, have a kind of personal importance in the annals
of the world. The heavens are not yet drained over their sources, but the Mountains of the
Moon still send their annual tribute to the Pasha without fail, as they did to the
Pharaohs, though he must collect the rest of his revenue at the point of the sword. Rivers
must have been the guides which conducted the footsteps of the first travellers. They are
the constant lure, when they flow by our doors, to distant enterprise and adventure, and,
by a natural impulse, the dwellers on their banks will at length accompany their currents
to the lowlands of the globe, or explore at their invitation the interior of continents.
They are the natural highways of all nations, not only levelling the ground and removing
obstacles from the path of the traveller, quenching his thirst and bearing him on their
bosoms, but conducting him through the most interesting scenery, the most populous
portions of the globe, and where the animal and vegetable kingdoms attain their greatest
perfection.
I had often stood on the banks of
the Concord, watching the lapse of the current, an emblem of all progress, following the
same law with the system, with time, and all that is made; the weeds at the bottom gently
bending down the stream, shaken by the watery wind, still planted where their seeds had
sunk, but erelong to die and go down likewise; the shining pebbles, not yet anxious to
better their condition, the chips and weeds, and occasional logs and stems of trees that
floated past, fulfilling their fate, were objects of singular interest to me, and at last
I resolved to launch myself on its bosom and float whither it would bear me.
Next
chapter
A
Note on the Text:
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Source:
A Week on the Concord and Merrimack Rivers [The Writings of
Henry David Thoreau (Boston: Houghton Mifflin, 1906) p. [1]-11]
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