Select Story

Re-United

By J. Walter Amerman


Love will interpose
Its tiny touch, and cause the stern explosion
To burst, when the deviser’s least aware- Scorr

"Look!" Anson Kent pointed westward. “The shifting light resting upon those pine sentinels deep-rooted in the precipitous ledges of the neighboring hills resembles an arrowy gleam of sunshine quivering about the edges of a black thunder cloud. I am in a fair way to become an enthusiastic lover of nature if we recreate among the Catskills much longer.”

It was a romantic prospect—long extensive ranges environing in a small country village nestled at their feet, dark forests far beyond rising into the blue sky, a tapering church spire here and there through the valley, orchards and fields of rustling grain—so thought that motionless group of young men, some standing in the open doorway of the Elliott farm house, others knee-deep in the fragrant clover a few steps off. No thoughts went flitting back, then, to wearisome, brief and bulky ledger, or the working up of tedious cases in heated city courts; for the sweet scent of lilac, rose and new mown hay was the breath of freedom to those four who felt like languishing prisoners after long confinement, or sportive school children let out to play.

We had just returned from a piscatorial excursion through the Stoney Clove woods, bearing from the brawling trout streams where our lines had dropped that summer afternoon, a string of spotted beauties as prized trophies of our success, and now were silently watching the bright sunset’s glow as it slowly crept up ridge after ridge of the shadowy mountains, then blazed on a far off steeple’s mute bell, and vanished.

“I tell you, Anson, as I feel now it is impossible to electrify me with boyish rhapsodies over such execrable scenery as this, and expect a rapturous appreciation of… Read More