Chapter 7: The Sugar Snow
百度搜索 Little HOUSE in the BIG WOODS 天涯 或 Little HOUSE in the BIG WOODS 天涯在线书库 即可找到本书最新章节.
FOR days the sun shone and the weather was warm. There was no frost on the windows in the ms. All day the icicles fell one by one from the eaves with soft smashing and crag sounds in the snowbanks beh. The trees shook their wet, black branches, and ks of snow fell down.When Mary and Laura pressed their noses against the cold window pahey could see the drip of water from the eaves and the bare branches of the trees. The snow did not glitter; it looked soft and tired. Uhe trees it itted where the c<samp>?99lib.</samp>hunks of snow had fallen, and the banks beside the path were shrinking aling.
Then one day Laura saatch of bare ground in the yard. All day it grew bigger, and before night the whole yard was bare mud. Only the icy path was left, and the snowbanks along the path and the fend beside the woodpile.
"t I go out to play, Ma?" Laura asked, and Ma said:
"May, Laura.”
"May I go out to play?" she asked.
"You may tomorrow," Ma promised.
That night L<tt>藏书网</tt>aura woke up, shivering. The bed-covers felt thin, and her nose was icy cold. Ma was tug another quilt over her.
"Snuggle close to Mary," Ma said, "and youll get warm.”
In the m the house was warm from the stove, but when Laura looked out of the window she saw that the ground was covered with soft, thiow. All along the branches of the trees the snoiled like feathers, and it lay in mounds along the top of the rail fence, and stood up i, white balls on top of the gate-posts.
Pa came in, shaking the soft snow from his shoulders and stamping it from his boots.
"Its a sugar snow," he said.
Laura put her tongue quickly to a little bit of the white snow that lay in a fold of his sleeve. It was nothing but wet oongue, like any snow. She was glad that nobody had seeaste it.
"Why is it a sugar snow, Pa? she asked him, but he said he didnt have time to explain now. He must hurry away, he was going to Grandpas.
Grandpa lived far away in the Big Woods, where the trees were clether and larger Laura stood at the window and watched Pa, big and swift and strong, walking away over the snow. His gun was on his shoulder, his hatchet and powder horn hung at his side, and his tall boots made great tracks in the soft snow. Laura watched him till he was out of sight in the woods.
It was late before he came home that night. Ma had already lighted the lamp when he came in. Under one arm he carried a large package, and iher hand was a big, covered, wooden bucket.
"Here, Caroline," he said, handing the package and the bucket to Ma, and the the gun on its hooks over the door.
"If Id met a bear," he said, "I couldnt have shot him without dropping my load." Then he laughed. "And if Id dropped that bucket and bundle, I wouldnt have had to shoot him. I could have stood and watched him eat whats in them and lick his chops.”
Ma uned the package and there were two hard, brown cakes, each as large as a milk pan. She uncovered the bucket, and it was full of dark brown syrup.
"Here, Laura and Mary," Pa said, and he gave them each a little round package out of his pocket.
They took off the paper ings, and each had a little, hard, brown cake, with beautifully kled edges.
"Bite it," said Pa, and his blue eyes twinkled.
Each bit off otle kle, and it was sweet. It crumbled in their mouths. It was better even than their Christmas dy.
"Maple sugar," said Pa.
Supper was ready, and Laura and Mary laid the little maple sugar cakes beside their plates, while they ate the maple syrup on their bread.
After supper, Pa took them on his knees as he sat before the fire, and told them about his day at Grandpas, and the sugar snow.
"All winter, Pa said, Grandpa has been making wooden buckets and little troughs. He made them of cedar and white ash, for those woods wont give a bad taste to the maple syrup.
"To make the troughs, h<var></var>e split out little sticks as long as my hand and as big as my two fingers. Near one end, Grandpa cut the stick half through, and split one half off. This left him a flat stick, with a square piece at one end. Then square part, and with his knife he whittled wood till it was only a thin shell around the round hole. The flat part of the stick he hollowed out with his kill it was a little trough.
"He made dozens of them, and he made ten new wooden buckets. He had them all ready when the first warm weather came and the sap began to move irees.
"Then he went into the maple woods and with the bit he bored a hole in each maple tree, and he hammered the round end of the little trough into the hole, a a cedar bucket on the ground uhe flat end.
"The sap, you know, is the blood of a tree. It es up from, the roots, when warm weather begins in the spring, and it goes to the very tip of each brand twig, to make the green leaves grow.
"Well, when the maple sap came to the hole iree, it ran out of the tree, dowtle trough and into the bucket.”
"Oh, didnt it hurt the poor tree?" Laura asked.
"No more than it hurts you when you prick your finger and it bleeds," said Pa.
"Every day Grandpa puts on his boots and his warm coat and his fur cap and he goes out into the snowy woods and gathers the sap. With a barrel on a sled, he drives from tree to tree aies the sap from the buckets into the barrel. Then he hauls it to a big irole, that hangs by a from a cross-timber between two trees.
"He empties the salt into the irole. There is a big bonfire uhe kettle, and the sap boils, and Grandpa watches it carefully. The fire must be hot enough to keep the sap boiling, but<big>99lib?</big> not hot enough to make it boil over.
"Every few mihe sap must be skimmed. Grandpa skims it with a big, long-handled, wooden ladle that he made of basswood. When the sap gets too hot, Grandpa lifts ladlefuls of high in the air and pours it back slowly. This cools the sap a little and keeps it from boiling over. "When the sap has boiled down just enough, he fills the buckets with the syrup. After that, he boils the sap until it grains when he cools it in a saucer.
"The instant the sap is graining, Grandpa jumps to the fire and rakes it all out from beh the kettle. Then as fast as he , he ladles; the thick syrup into the milk pans that are standing ready. In the pans the syrup turns to cakes of hard, brole sugar.”
"So thats why its a sugar snow, because Grandpa is making sugar?" Laura asked.
"No", Pa said. "Its called a sugar snow, because a snow this time of year means that men make more sugar. You see, this little cold spell and the snow will hold back the leafing of the trees, and that makes a longer run of sap.
"When theres a long run of sap, it means that Grandpa make enough maple sugar to last all the year, for on every day. Wheakes his furs to town, he will not o trade for much store sugar. He will get only a little store sugar, to have oable when pany es.”
"Grandpa must be glad theres a sugar snow" Laura said.
"Yes," Pa said, "hes very glad. Hes going to sugar off agai Monday, and he says we must all e,”
Pas blue eyes twinkled; he had been saving the best for the last, and he said to Ma:
"Hey, Caroliherell be a dance!”
Ma smiled. She looked very happy, and she laid down her mending for a minute. Oh, Charles! she said.
Then she went on with her mending, but she kept on smiling. She said, "Ill wear my delaine.”
Mas delaine dress was beautiful. It was a dark green, with a little pattern all over it that looked like ripe strawberries. A dressmaker had made it, in the East, in the place where Ma came from when she married Pa and moved out west to the Big Woods in Wissin. Ma had been very fashionable, before she married Pa, and a dressmaker had made her clothes.
The delaine was kept ed in paper and laid away. Laura and Mary had never seen Ma wear it, but she had shown it to them once. She had let them touch the beautiful dark red buttons that buttohe basque up the front, and she had shown them how ly the whalebones were put in the seams, inside, with hundreds of little criss-cross stitches.
It showed how important a dance was, if Ma was going to wear the beautiful delaine dress. Laura and Mary were excited. They bounced up and down on Pas knees, and asked questions about the dail at last he said:
"Now you girls run along to bed! Youll know all about the dance when you see it. I have to put a ring on my fiddle.”
There were sticky fingers and sweet mouths to be washed. Then there were prayers to be said. By the time Laura and Mary were snug irundle bed, Pa and the fiddle were both singing, while he kept time with his foot on the floor:
“Im Captain Jinks of the Horse Marines, I feed my horse on and beans, And I often go beyond my means, For Im Captain Jinks of the Horse Marines, Im captain in the army!”
百度搜索 Little HOUSE in the BIG WOODS 天涯 或 Little HOUSE in the BIG WOODS 天涯在线书库 即可找到本书最新章节.