A Walk With Hank
I invited my friend Henry David Thoreau along for a walk the other day, a bit of a hike actually. I wanted him to come home with me up north, to the Bulkley Valley in British Columbia. It’s a beautiful place, half-way between the two Princes of George and Rupert.
My two brothers and I, and our mother, lived there once upon a time, in a log cabin not far off the highway, surrounded by a forest and local farmers’ fields.
It was a sizable rural place with a couple of neighbours, where we boys took access to the wild for granted.
There were rolling grassed hills next to wheat fields, poplar, cottonwood and willow along the winding creek, and heavier coniferous forest on the upslope side of our property and down to the Bulkley River.
Henry David Thoreau likes to ramble
Hank likes to ramble through the woods for hours at a time so I invited him along to follow a stream down to its river. Maybe chat with a neighbour kid going fishing down the creek, if we run across one. See what else we find.
We start at the Deep Creek Bridge on a gravelled sideroad and walk up our short driveway to the log cabin on a long terraced meadow. Then we cut across the yard in between the cabin and the big workshed thrown up by a logging contractor one winter. Then down the slope to the creek’s old floodway and the big dark cottonwoods. One will have fallen over, bridging the creek.
It was always easier to get down to the river on the other side of the creek, and it was prettier over there too. So that was usually the way we went.
We made our way along the rough bark of the cottonwood and over the creek. Hank finally managed to throw out a few words. Whenever we get together, I keep waiting for him to say something, the wiser and more profound the better. This is hard on him I’ve finally realized. He looks at me now and again inconclusively, and keeps his mouth shut for long periods of time. This is something that I feel a little dismayed about. He could probably cite a few annoying things about me, so I never bring it up.
An early morning walk
At long last he says non-committally,
“An early-morning walk is a blessing for the whole day.”
This was good. Early morning it certainly was, with a golden light and the palest blue sky. Perhaps the beauty of the day could unleash statements beyond the obvious. Eventually.
“Hank, come with me over here. That’s the big pool where I used to fish along the creek below the cabin. We can just see the roofline from here.
“I believed there was a massive fish, at least one, in this deep, deep pool. I would dream about this fish, so huge and wise, surging from the depths, refusing to take my hook. It always cheered me enormously.”
Hank took a look at the pool and at me. He said: “All good things are wild and free.”
This is why I like to tramp around with Hank. Eventually, he just can’t help himself. Get him to open up just a little and before too long he will say something profound in an offhand kind of way.
I hoped he was going to warm up a bit now. (I’m sure he finds my expectations tiresome.)
I say, “We can follow the creek along here. There are many great little places, you know, as the creek winds downstream. Each one unique. Not just the look of the place. It’s more the light, the feel. And changing every year with maybe a different log and a different ripple, and a subtly different bank to form the channel.”
Launch yourself on every wave
Hank added thoughtfully: “You must live in the present, launch yourself on every wave, find your eternity in each moment. Fools stand on their island of opportunities and look toward another land. There is no other land; there is no other life but this.”
I was about to say something snarky about relevance, Hank, really…. but then I thought it over. Maybe he’s on point. Everything changes. The only constant is this moment.
“Does Waldo agree with you entirely on that — although I know you overlap a great deal?” I ask this due to other infrequent conversations with Ralph Waldo Emerson.
Hank nodded. “Mostly. He likes to fancy it up with high-falutin’ language.”
We pushed away ferns and dead broken hollow-stemmed plants to get to a really special place nestled in a wide curve of creek that amazingly looked exactly the same as it did when I was a kid.
The log was just so, mossy and aslant, and the creek ran over it between the ferns. The largest part glinted fluid white — a tiny waterfall — while downstream the noisy creek roiled and splashed past us over gravel, rocks and boulders. Drops sprayed on our walking boots where we stood in the shadows. We both breathed in, deeply.
We went on. But then Hank stopped and turned:
“By my intimacy with nature I find myself withdrawn from man. My interest in the sun and the moon, in the morning and the evening, compels me to solitude.”
Ah, a bit confessional today. He is a loner, as I have been, but he is much more so. I feel sad for him although he would reject that.
Hank smiled ruefully and continued to stroll onward over the grassed path in the narrow benched area around the creek below the hills.
On the gentle hills nearby we could see metre-high mounds of anthills, although some were reduced to their grass bases. Those had the twigs and dark debris of their structure scattered.
“The bears like them,” I said. “Must be a feast.”
We walked silently side by side for a time. The grassed floodplain narrowed and we passed through several copses of poplars, their silver leaves shimmering.
Living a sort of border life
We came into a clearing, the rushing creek noisy at our side. Up ahead we can see Harold, one of the neighbour kids from long ago, with a fishing rod. Before we got to Harold to say hello, Hank paused our stroll again and said:
“For my part, I feel that with regard to Nature I live a sort of border life, on the confines of a world, into which I make occasional and transient forays only, and my patriotism and allegiance to the state into whose territories I seem to retreat are those of a moss-trooper. Unto a life which I call natural I would gladly follow even a will-o’-the-wisp through bogs and sloughs unimaginable, but no moon nor fire-fly has shown me the cause-way to it. Nature is a personality so vast and universal that we have never seen one of her features.”
I musingly repeated, “Unto a life which I call natural I would gladly follow….” Hank nodded and made a wry expression. Not only is he introspective today but serious and unfixed in his mind.
By this time young Harold looked behind and marched over to us proudly, holding up a very respectably sized Dolly Varden trout. I mocked astonishment at its size, and Harold and I both laughed.
There were grave congratulations for Harold from Hank too, and the boy beamed at us. “I want to have this for lunch,” he said shaking the fish by the stick through its gills. We waved at him and he ran off back towards civilization, upstream.
I wonder whatever happened to him….
“It’s not far now,” I said.
“What’s that?” Hank asked cheerily. He really doesn’t care where we walk as long as we go.
“Half a mile or so,” I said. “Where Deep Creek finds the Bulkley River.”
In the old days, with relatives visiting or new friends we wanted to show off to, in the summers we would take them down to the mouth of Deep Creek just as we went now. Our mother usually acted as the master of ceremonies. Might take some snacks, but typically we just meandered our way down and back. We would return to the cabin with an appetite.
The path downstream Hank and I followed now became a little tricky as it worked through brush and over deadfalls.
Finally Hank and I could see the wide turbulent river, the dark forest on the other side. And the easy loop of sandbars through embedded fallen trees where Deep Creek met its joining.
Drown all our muskrats
Hank said, “The life in us is like the water in the river. It may rise this year higher than man has ever known it, and flood the parched uplands; even this may be the eventful year, which will drown out all our muskrats.”
I wasn’t completely clear what he meant, being unfamiliar with metaphorical muskrats, but it sounded hopeful.
“My mother is here,” I told Hank. He raised an eyebrow.
“After she died, we brought her ashes to this place, my brothers, our wives. We said a few words choked with emotion at this spot. Then one of my brothers took the slick white cardboard container of her remains and released the ashes to the river in a swirl of white and gray powder.”
“You said your good-byes,” Hank said.
“Yes.”
“At death our friends and relations either draw nearer to us and are found out, or depart further from us and are forgotten,” Hank observed.
We watched for awhile where the creek’s clear waters merged into the murkier, swifter river.
“Time to go back.” Hank nodded.
“Thank you for this,” he said. “It reminds me of the woods around Concord.”
He said one thing when we walked back to the cabin I remember well. He commented we shared a common experience when we shook hands just before he departed:
“My imagination, my love and reverence and admiration, my sense of miraculous, is not so excited by any event as by the remembrance of my youth.”
[Home]
Notes: This imagined walk with Henry David Thoreau follows upon something similar I did in a post a few years ago now about Ralph Waldo Emerson, Chant the Beauty of the Good. I finally got around to doing the same thing with Thoreau….
It took a different path than I anticipated. Thoreau was a serious man and quite distinct in temperament from Emerson, although they shared many of the same views. They were the Transcendentalists.
A good way to learn about Thoreau and Emerson is by quotations. The best source I’ve found for Thoreau online was at Henry David Thoreau Quotations Search. This is part of the Thoreau Institute at Walden Woods site.
Explore posts in the same categories: Awareness, Cascadia, Culture, Environment, Heroes, Remembering, Transcendentalists, WritingTags: family, Henry David Thoreau, history, learning, life, quotes, Ralph Waldo Emerson, society, story, Transcendentalists, truth
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November 10, 2018 at 9:43 am
Cool idea for a story. I always like reading Thoreau and Emerson although Emerson is a bit over my head sometimes. The guy can write an entire essay just on circles for heaven’s sake.
November 10, 2018 at 7:55 pm
Thanks, Mark, for dropping by and your comment. The time of Emerson and Thoreau, the culture where they made themselves known, was just so different….
Regards
January 17, 2022 at 7:14 pm
[…] my own encounters with Thoreau and Emerson, there are the posts A Walk With Hank, and Chant the Beauty of the […]