Date: Fri 13-Feb-1998
Date: Fri 13-Feb-1998
Publication: Bee
Author: DOTTIE
Quick Words:
stone-walls-essay
Full Text:
An Essay: Wild Stone Walls
(with cuts)
BY DOROTHY EVANS
After a light snowfall is the best time to see them.
While driving past a stretch of forest, slow down and look back through the
trees. Scan the wooded slopes and valleys.
Most likely, you will notice them snaking up hillsides or dipping down into
stream beds. They are like signatures scrawled across the Connecticut
landscape by men long gone.
The wild stone walls were built long ago - over a period of two centuries or
more - during the time when New England's virgin forest was being cleared for
fuel, building materials and farmland. The stone walls served to mark
boundaries or helped a farmer keep his cows at home.
Besides, what else could an early settler or countryman do with those frost
heaved stones but make a wall? Especially since every spring a new crop rose
out of the ground to fill up his pastures and snap his plow blade.
Now, our farming way of life has mostly disappeared. Any unplowed fields left
vacant have turned back into forest. As the decades go by, seedlings of birch,
maple and cedar are reclaiming the land.
Now, the wild stone walls are barely holding their own under the alien
onslaught of bittersweet and barberry that threaten to overwhelm them. Gaps
between the stones are softening, filling in with ferns, mosses and leaves.
Intruding roots and tree trunks fight for space, shoving aside even the
biggest foundation stones.
Ever so slowly, the oldest walls are tumbling down.
If we want, we can tame a wild stone wall. We can haul away the vines, clear
off the underbrush and call in a crew of Italian stone masons. Bring in more
stones.
With the help of backhoe, crowbar and plumb line, those old walls can be made
handsome and new, but then all traces of the first builder's touch will be
gone.
Sometimes, I wonder about him.
What were his thoughts as he wrestled to make the stones fit? Was he
preoccupied thinking about a loved one or worrying about how to pay his bills?
Was he concerned for parents or a friend fallen on hard times?
Did his family help him or did he work alone, cursing the stubbornness of
stones?
I would rather believe that he found contentment and purpose in the work, that
his mind was fully engaged in solving the immediate problem of where the next
stone should go.
What I do know is that those first builders lived long ago and their way of
life has vanished.
I love a wild stone wall for the things it reminds me of.
