The Friendly Road: New Adventures in Contentment
y I love best-a spicy, unexpected, amu
to watch me narrowly these days you would see I am slowly shedding my years. I suspect that some one of the clear hill streams f
n the hill, lurks the stuff of adventure. What a world it is! A mile south of here I shall
life-your life-is not all a gray smudge, as you think it is, but crammed, packed, loaded with miraculous things. I can show yo
imes I have had to learn this truth (what lesson so hard to learn as the lesson of humility!) and I suppose I shall have to learn it a th
hem in their garden with great delight most of the forenoon-I
the very roadside, all these things I love. They come to me with the same sort of charm and flavour, only vastly magnified, which I find often in the essays of the older writers-those leisurely old fellows who took time to write, REALLY write. T
a thank-you-ma'am to laugh over, nor a sinful hill to test your endurance-not so much as a dreamy valley! It pursues its hard, unshaded, practical way directly from some particula
hat very moment a motor-car whirled past me as I stood there and a girl with a merry face waved her hand at me. I lifted my h
oo," I said aloud-"and ma
amazing, interesting world. Here was I pitying them for their ben
ry thought in my mind and a song in m
f, "whether a man takes hold of life by the great
ied sorts of activity. Light winds stirred the tree-tops and rippled in the new grass; and from the thickets I heard the blackbirds crying. Everything animate and inanimate, that morning, seemed to have its own
never wished my own barn or fences to sing the praises of swamp root or sarsaparilla-and yet there is something wonderfully human about these painted and pasted vociferations of the roadside signs; and I don't know why they are less "natural" in their way than a house or ba
cks at the roadside: "Repent ye, for the kingdom of God is at hand," and though I am certain that the kingdom of God is already here, I stop always and repent-just a little-knowing that there is always room for it. At the entrance of the little towns, also, or in the squares of the villages, I stop often to read the signs of taxes assessed, or of political meetings; I see the evidences of homes broken up in the notices of auction sales,
ndeed rather inconspicuous-consisting of a single word rather crudely painted in black (as by an amateur
RE
e of enlivenment, of pleasure
"Indeed I will," and I sat
es
ought, evidently put that up; some quietist offering this mild protest against the breathless progress of the age. How often I have felt the same way myself
the curiosity of the traveller for the disclosure which he will make a mile or so farther on. Or else some humourist wasting his wit upon the Fraternity of
ust be a zealot rather than a trader or humourist. (Confidentially, I could not make a picture of him in which he was not endowed with plentiful long hair). As I walked onward agai
somewhat nearer the ground I was able to examine it caref
two other signs with nothing
perversely: it made me more restless than ever. I felt that I could not rest properly until I
roadside, but I could not tell exactly what. As I hastened nearer I discovered that he was a short, strongly built, sun-bronzed man in
ous signs. He looked up at me with a broad smil
d, "but they
follow the adv
then the other. "I have from Grabow Brook, but not the bridge, to the top o' Sullivan Hill, and all the c
or a moment. I love to watch the motions of vigorous men at work, the easy play of the muscles, the swing of the shoulders, the vigour of stoutly planted legs. He evidently considered the conversation closed, and I, as-well,
plies, I put my bag down by the roadside and, going up to the wagon, got out a shovel, and witho
evidently astonished and interested, as I knew he would be: it was something entirely new on the road. He didn't quite know whether to be a
e you
time, during which I shovelled valiantly and with great inward amusement. Oh, there is noth
opping my work, he himself paused and
ally, "did YOU read those si
eren't for me, either. My
oad-worker, are you
n inspiration, "that's exac
ner," he said, with a broa
ing into each other's eyes. We both knew the trade and the tricks of the trade; all bars were d
section?" he
section. It begins at a place called Prosy Common-do you know it?-and reaches t
ad-worker; "'tain't round here, is
ite of people for specific information, a motor-car whizzed past, the driver holding up his hand in
y is it, I'd like to know, that every one wants to run in the same
me, too," I said. "Why WILL pe
o good to put up signs
fact is, people have got to be bu
voice dropped into the tone of one speaking to a m
in an equally m
one or two
e a good hard tru-I mean stone, with a bit of common dust sprinkled over it, in
husky road-worker, chuckling
said I-"g
ever, curiously related to roads. Working all day long with his old horse, removing obstructions, draining out the culverts, filling ruts and holes with new stone, and repairing the damage of rain and storm, the road-worker was filled with a world o
pth. If you get a good solid foundation, the
I responded. "Get down to bedrock
ave too many
through life. You have observed that nearly all t
are!" he
n too sharply on his wa
ns turtle in
mit of enthusiastic agreement. Of all things on the road, or above the road, or in th
ed much and it ain't messy. But sometimes when you see oil pumped on a road, you know that e
almost impassable with ruts and rocks and dust, and immedia
visor is always sayin'
with messy and ill-smelling oil. Above everything, he doesn't want the road dug up and rebuilt-says it will interfere with traffic, injure business, and even set people to talking about changing the route entirely
of my companion, and as I now glanced at him I saw him standing with a curious look of astonishment
s get a drink.
the road where we had been once before. As we were drinking, silently, I
ws his job. I thought how well he was equipped with unilluminated knowledge, and
blue eyes of my friend I had a sudden swift inspiration, and before I could r
n reality a spe
ed uncomfortably
r of spectacles," I said. "I
bl
ion on his face. His hand went involuntarily to his ey
I first met you. You don't know it yourself
n my talk with him half jestingly, with the amusing idea of breaking through his shell, but I now found myself tremendously engrossed, and
"are you sure you aren't-" He tapped
ion at all, but continued,
ook about, you see everything there is to see, but as a m
he, making as if to turn back to work, but remaini
fiers"-he glanced again at the gray bag. "When you put them
all!" he said, evidently trying
es him more uncomfortable-yes, downright mad!-than to feel that he is being played with. I could see that I had nearly reached the limit
earnest in all my life. When I told you I was a road-worker I meant
I thought of another sort of oil for another sort of roads, and when he spoke of curves in his roads I was thinking of curves in the roads I dealt
aid I, "it was only a way of telling you how much I wante
I know now how the surgeon must feel at the crucial moment
ng breath as he came out
e, "you're trying to put a
ad
I exclaim
the first to speak-wi
as always sayin' things that meant something else and when you found ou
aug
man begins to feel queer in the insides. It
ain, not saying much. After quite a time, when we had nearly cleaned up the landslide,
things in a road th
hat the new spectac
ker laughed
ht," he said. "I see what Y
not going to sell them to you at all. I'm going to present them to you-for I hav
elings; but I have learned that if the feeling is real a
ker simply, but with a world o
work the road-worker insisted th
see my wife and
side of the road near the foot of a fine hill. And from time to time all night long, it seemed to me, I could hear the rush of cars goi
en back of the house, and of all the road-worker and his
e out to the smooth macadam (his wife standing in the doorway
ort o' interested in ro
aughing, "and I'll stop in and show you my new stoc
he smiled a broad,
together like havin
-in the best of spirits-ready
sit the Stanleys, and the Vedders, and the Minister, and drop in and sell another pair o
am not as uneasy about it as I was. I have seen two more of them alr