Aa

Ethan Frome

por Unknown

CapĂ­tulo 1

I

The village lay under two feet of snow, with drifts at the windy

corners. In a sky of iron the points of the Dipper hung like icicles

and Orion flashed his cold fires. The moon had set, but the night was

so transparent that the white house-fronts between the elms looked gray

against the snow, clumps of bushes made black stains on it, and the

basement windows of the church sent shafts of yellow light far across

the endless undulations.

Young Ethan Frome walked at a quick pace along the deserted street, past

the bank and Michael Eady’s new brick store and Lawyer Varnum’s house

with the two black Norway spruces at the gate. Opposite the Varnum gate,

where the road fell away toward the Corbury valley, the church reared

its slim white steeple and narrow peristyle. As the young man walked

toward it the upper windows drew a black arcade along the side wall of

the building, but from the lower openings, on the side where the ground

sloped steeply down to the Corbury road, the light shot its long bars,

illuminating many fresh furrows in the track leading to the basement

door, and showing, under an adjoining shed, a line of sleighs with

heavily blanketed horses.

The night was perfectly still, and the air so dry and pure that it gave

little sensation of cold. The effect produced on Frome was rather of

a complete absence of atmosphere, as though nothing less tenuous than

ether intervened between the white earth under his feet and the metallic

dome overhead. “It’s like being in an exhausted receiver,” he

thought. Four or five years earlier he had taken a year’s course at a

technological college at Worcester, and dabbled in the laboratory with

a friendly professor of physics; and the images supplied by that

experience still cropped up, at unexpected moments, through the totally

different associations of thought in which he had since been living. His

father’s death, and the misfortunes following it, had put a premature

end to Ethan’s studies; but though they had not gone far enough to be

of much practical use they had fed his fancy and made him aware of huge

cloudy meanings behind the daily face of things.

As he strode along through the snow the sense of such meanings glowed in

his brain and mingled with the bodily flush produced by his sharp tramp.

At the end of the village he paused before the darkened front of the

church. He stood there a moment, breathing quickly, and looking up and

down the street, in which not another figure moved. The pitch of

the Corbury road, below lawyer Varnum’s spruces, was the favourite

coasting-ground of Starkfield, and on clear evenings the church corner

rang till late with the shouts of the coasters; but to-night not a sled

darkened the whiteness of the long declivity. The hush of midnight lay

on the village, and all its waking life was gathered behind the church

windows, from which strains of dance-music flowed with the broad bands

of yellow light.

The young man, skirting the side of the building, went down the slope

toward the basement door. To keep out of range of the revealing rays

from within he made a circuit through the untrodden snow and gradually

approached the farther angle of the basement wall. Thence, still hugging

the shadow, he edged his way cautiously forward to the nearest window,

holding back his straight spare body and craning his neck till he got a

glimpse of the room.

Seen thus, from the pure and frosty darkness in which he stood, it

seemed to be seething in a mist of heat. The metal reflectors of the

gas-jets sent crude waves of light against the whitewashed walls, and

the iron flanks of the stove at the end of the hall looked as though

they were heaving with volcanic fires. The floor was thronged with

girls and young men. Down the side wall facing the window stood a row of

kitchen chairs from which the older women had just risen. By this time

the music had stopped, and the musicians—a fiddler, and the young lady

who played the harmonium on Sundays—were hastily refreshing themselves

at one corner of the supper-table which aligned its devastated

pie-dishes and ice-cream saucers on the platform at the end of the hall.

The guests were preparing to leave, and the tide had already set toward

the passage where coats and wraps were hung, when a young man with a

sprightly foot and a shock of black hair shot into the middle of

the floor and clapped his hands. The signal took instant effect.

The musicians hurried to their instruments, the dancers—some already

half-muffled for departure—fell into line down each side of the room,

the older spectators slipped back to their chairs, and the lively young

man, after diving about here and there in the throng, drew forth a girl

who had already wound a cherry-coloured “fascinator” about her head,

and, leading her up to the end of the floor, whirled her down its length

to the bounding tune of a Virginia reel.

Frome’s heart was beating fast. He had been straining for a glimpse

of the dark head under the cherry-coloured scarf and it vexed him that

another eye should have been quicker than his. The leader of the reel,

who looked as if he had Irish blood in his veins, danced well, and his

partner caught his fire. As she passed down the line, her light figure

swinging from hand to hand in circles of increasing swiftness, the scarf

flew off her head and stood out behind her shoulders, and Frome, at each

turn, caught sight of her laughing panting lips, the cloud of dark hair

about her forehead, and the dark eyes which seemed the only fixed points

in a maze of flying lines.

The dancers were going faster and faster, and the musicians, to keep

up with them, belaboured their instruments like jockeys lashing their

mounts on the home-stretch; yet it seemed to the young man at the window

that the reel would never end. Now and then he turned his eyes from the

girl’s face to that of her partner, which, in the exhilaration of the

dance, had taken on a look of almost impudent ownership. Denis Eady was

the son of Michael Eady, the ambitious Irish grocer, whose suppleness

and effrontery had given Starkfield its first notion of “smart” business

methods, and whose new brick store testified to the success of the

attempt. His son seemed likely to follow in his steps, and was meanwhile

applying the same arts to the conquest of the Starkfield maidenhood.

Hitherto Ethan Frome had been content to think him a mean fellow; but

now he positively invited a horse-whipping. It was strange that the

girl did not seem aware of it: that she could lift her rapt face to her

dancer’s, and drop her hands into his, without appearing to feel the

offence of his look and touch.

Frome was in the habit of walking into Starkfield to fetch home his

wife’s cousin, Mattie Silver, on the rare evenings when some chance of

amusement drew her to the village. It was his wife who had suggested,

when the girl came to live with them, that such opportunities should be

put in her way. Mattie Silver came from Stamford, and when she entered

the Fromes’ household to act as her cousin Zeena’s aid it was thought

best, as she came without pay, not to let her feel too sharp a contrast

between the life she had left and the isolation of a Starkfield farm.

But for this—as Frome sardonically reflected—it would hardly have

occurred to Zeena to take any thought for the girl’s amusement.

When his wife first proposed that they should give Mattie an occasional

evening out he had inwardly demurred at having to do the extra two miles

to the village and back after his hard day on the farm; but not long

afterward he had reached the point of wishing that Starkfield might give

all its nights to revelry.

Mattie Silver had lived under his roof for a year, and from early

morning till they met at supper he had frequent chances of seeing her;

but no moments in her company were comparable to those when, her arm in

his, and her light step flying to keep time with his long stride, they

walked back through the night to the farm. He had taken to the girl from

the first day, when he had driven over to the Flats to meet her, and

she had smiled and waved to him from the train, crying out, “You must be

Ethan!” as she jumped down with her bundles, while he reflected, looking

over her slight person: “She don’t look much on housework, but she ain’t

a fretter, anyhow.” But it was not only that the coming to his house of

a bit of hopeful young life was like the lighting of a fire on a cold

hearth. The girl was more than the bright serviceable creature he had

thought her. She had an eye to see and an ear to hear: he could show her

things and tell her things, and taste the bliss of feeling that all he

imparted left long reverberations and echoes he could wake at will.

It was during their night walks back to the farm that he felt most

intensely the sweetness of this communion. He had always been more

sensitive than the people about him to the appeal of natural beauty. His

unfinished studies had given form to this sensibility and even in his

unhappiest moments field and sky spoke to him with a deep and powerful

persuasion. But hitherto the emotion had remained in him as a silent

ache, veiling with sadness the beauty that evoked it. He did not even

know whether any one else in the world felt as he did, or whether he

was the sole victim of this mournful privilege. Then he learned that

one other spirit had trembled with the same touch of wonder: that at his

side, living under his roof and eating his bread, was a creature to whom

he could say: “That’s Orion down yonder; the big fellow to the right is

Aldebaran, and the bunch of little ones—like bees swarming—they’re the

Pleiades...” or whom he could hold entranced before a ledge of granite

thrusting up through the fern while he unrolled the huge panorama of the

ice age, and the long dim stretches of succeeding time. The fact that

admiration for his learning mingled with Mattie’s wonder at what he

taught was not the least part of his pleasure. And there were other

sensations, less definable but more exquisite, which drew them together

with a shock of silent joy: the cold red of sunset behind winter

hills, the flight of cloud-flocks over slopes of golden stubble, or the

intensely blue shadows of hemlocks on sunlit snow. When she said to him

once: “It looks just as if it was painted!” it seemed to Ethan that the

art of definition could go no farther, and that words had at last been

found to utter his secret soul....

As he stood in the darkness outside the church these memories came back

with the poignancy of vanished things. Watching Mattie whirl down the

floor from hand to hand he wondered how he could ever have thought

that his dull talk interested her. To him, who was never gay but in her

presence, her gaiety seemed plain proof of indifference. The face she

lifted to her dancers was the same which, when she saw him, always

looked like a window that has caught the sunset. He even noticed two or

three gestures which, in his fatuity, he had thought she kept for him:

a way of throwing her head back when she was amused, as if to taste her

laugh before she let it out, and a trick of sinking her lids slowly when

anything charmed or moved her.

The sight made him unhappy, and his unhappiness roused his latent fears.

His wife had never shown any jealousy of Mattie, but of late she had

grumbled increasingly over the house-work and found oblique ways of

attracting attention to the girl’s inefficiency. Zeena had always been

what Starkfield called “sickly,” and Frome had to admit that, if she

were as ailing as she believed, she needed the help of a stronger arm

than the one which lay so lightly in his during the night walks to the

farm. Mattie had no natural turn for housekeeping, and her training had

done nothing to remedy the defect. She was quick to learn, but forgetful

and dreamy, and not disposed to take the matter seriously. Ethan had

an idea that if she were to marry a man she was fond of the dormant

instinct would wake, and her pies and biscuits become the pride of the

county; but domesticity in the abstract did not interest her. At first

she was so awkward that he could not help laughing at her; but she

laughed with him and that made them better friends. He did his best to

supplement her unskilled efforts, getting up earlier than usual to light

the kitchen fire, carrying in the wood overnight, and neglecting the

mill for the farm that he might help her about the house during the day.

He even crept down on Saturday nights to scrub the kitchen floor after

the women had gone to bed; and Zeena, one day, had surprised him at the

churn and had turned away silently, with one of her queer looks.

Of late there had been other signs of her disfavour, as intangible but

more disquieting. One cold winter morning, as he dressed in the dark,

his candle flickering in the draught of the ill-fitting window, he had

heard her speak from the bed behind him.

“The doctor don’t want I should be left without anybody to do for me,”

she said in her flat whine.

He had supposed her to be asleep, and the sound of her voice had

startled him, though she was given to abrupt explosions of speech after

long intervals of secretive silence.

He turned and looked at her where she lay indistinctly outlined under

the dark calico quilt, her high-boned face taking a grayish tinge from

the whiteness of the pillow.

“Nobody to do for you?” he repeated.

“If you say you can’t afford a hired girl when Mattie goes.”

Frome turned away again, and taking up his razor stooped to catch the

reflection of his stretched cheek in the blotched looking-glass above

the wash-stand.

“Why on earth should Mattie go?”

“Well, when she gets married, I mean,” his wife’s drawl came from behind

him.

“Oh, she’d never leave us as long as you needed her,” he returned,

scraping hard at his chin.

“I wouldn’t ever have it said that I stood in the way of a poor girl

like Mattie marrying a smart fellow like Denis Eady,” Zeena answered in

a tone of plaintive self-effacement.

Ethan, glaring at his face in the glass, threw his head back to draw

the razor from ear to chin. His hand was steady, but the attitude was an

excuse for not making an immediate reply.

“And the doctor don’t want I should be left without anybody,” Zeena

continued. “He wanted I should speak to you about a girl he’s heard

about, that might come—”

Ethan laid down the razor and straightened himself with a laugh.

“Denis Eady! If that’s all, I guess there’s no such hurry to look round

for a girl.”

“Well, I’d like to talk to you about it,” said Zeena obstinately.

He was getting into his clothes in fumbling haste. “All right. But I

haven’t got the time now; I’m late as it is,” he returned, holding his

old silver turnip-watch to the candle.

Zeena, apparently accepting this as final, lay watching him in silence

while he pulled his suspenders over his shoulders and jerked his arms

into his coat; but as he went toward the door she said, suddenly and

incisively: “I guess you’re always late, now you shave every morning.”

That thrust had frightened him more than any vague insinuations about

Denis Eady. It was a fact that since Mattie Silver’s coming he had taken

to shaving every day; but his wife always seemed to be asleep when he

left her side in the winter darkness, and he had stupidly assumed that

she would not notice any change in his appearance. Once or twice in the

past he had been faintly disquieted by Zenobia’s way of letting things

happen without seeming to remark them, and then, weeks afterward, in

a casual phrase, revealing that she had all along taken her notes and

drawn her inferences. Of late, however, there had been no room in his

thoughts for such vague apprehensions. Zeena herself, from an oppressive

reality, had faded into an insubstantial shade. All his life was lived

in the sight and sound of Mattie Silver, and he could no longer conceive

of its being otherwise. But now, as he stood outside the church, and saw

Mattie spinning down the floor with Denis Eady, a throng of disregarded

hints and menaces wove their cloud about his brain....

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Title: Ethan Frome

Author: Edith Wharton

Release date: October 1, 2003 [eBook #4517]

Most recently updated: March 15, 2024

Language: English

Credits: Produced by Charles Aldarondo and David Widger

*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK ETHAN FROME ***

ETHAN FROME

By Edith Wharton

ETHAN FROME

I had the story, bit by bit, from various people, and, as generally

happens in such cases, each time it was a different story.

If you know Starkfield, Massachusetts, you know the post-office. If you

know the post-office you must have seen Ethan Frome drive up to it, drop

the reins on his hollow-backed bay and drag himself across the brick

pavement to the white colonnade; and you must have asked who he was.

It was there that, several years ago, I saw him for the first time; and

the sight pulled me up sharp. Even then he was the most striking figure

in Starkfield, though he was but the ruin of a man. It was not so much

his great height that marked him, for the “natives” were easily singled

out by their lank longitude from the stockier foreign breed: it was the

careless powerful look he had, in spite of a lameness checking each step

like the jerk of a chain. There was something bleak and unapproachable

in his face, and he was so stiffened and grizzled that I took him for an

old man and was surprised to hear that he was not more than fifty-two.

I had this from Harmon Gow, who had driven the stage from Bettsbridge

to Starkfield in pre-trolley days and knew the chronicle of all the

families on his line.

“He’s looked that way ever since he had his smash-up; and that’s

twenty-four years ago come next February,” Harmon threw out between

reminiscent pauses.

The “smash-up” it was—I gathered from the same informant—which, besides

drawing the red gash across Ethan Frome’s forehead, had so shortened and

warped his right side that it cost him a visible effort to take the few

steps from his buggy to the post-office window. He used to drive in

from his farm every day at about noon, and as that was my own hour for

fetching my mail I often passed him in the porch or stood beside him

while we waited on the motions of the distributing hand behind the

grating. I noticed that, though he came so punctually, he seldom

received anything but a copy of the Bettsbridge Eagle, which he put

without a glance into his sagging pocket. At intervals, however, the

post-master would hand him an envelope addressed to Mrs. Zenobia—or Mrs.

Zeena—Frome, and usually bearing conspicuously in the upper left-hand

corner the address of some manufacturer of patent medicine and the name

of his specific. These documents my neighbour would also pocket without

a glance, as if too much used to them to wonder at their number and

variety, and would then turn away with a silent nod to the post-master.

Every one in Starkfield knew him and gave him a greeting tempered to

his own grave mien; but his taciturnity was respected and it was only on

rare occasions that one of the older men of the place detained him for

a word. When this happened he would listen quietly, his blue eyes on the

speaker’s face, and answer in so low a tone that his words never reached

me; then he would climb stiffly into his buggy, gather up the reins in

his left hand and drive slowly away in the direction of his farm.

“It was a pretty bad smash-up?” I questioned Harmon, looking after

Frome’s retreating figure, and thinking how gallantly his lean brown

head, with its shock of light hair, must have sat on his strong

shoulders before they were bent out of shape.

“Wust kind,” my informant assented. “More’n enough to kill most men. But

the Fromes are tough. Ethan’ll likely touch a hundred.”

“Good God!” I exclaimed. At the moment Ethan Frome, after climbing to

his seat, had leaned over to assure himself of the security of a wooden

box—also with a druggist’s label on it—which he had placed in the back

of the buggy, and I saw his face as it probably looked when he thought

himself alone. “That man touch a hundred? He looks as if he was dead and

in hell now!”

Harmon drew a slab of tobacco from his pocket, cut off a wedge and

pressed it into the leather pouch of his cheek. “Guess he’s been in

Starkfield too many winters. Most of the smart ones get away.”

“Why didn’t he?”

“Somebody had to stay and care for the folks. There warn’t ever anybody

but Ethan. Fust his father—then his mother—then his wife.”

“And then the smash-up?”

Harmon chuckled sardonically. “That’s so. He had to stay then.”

“I see. And since then they’ve had to care for him?”

Harmon thoughtfully passed his tobacco to the other cheek. “Oh, as to

that: I guess it’s always Ethan done the caring.”

Though Harmon Gow developed the tale as far as his mental and moral

reach permitted there were perceptible gaps between his facts, and I had

the sense that the deeper meaning of the story was in the gaps. But

one phrase stuck in my memory and served as the nucleus about which I

grouped my subsequent inferences: “Guess he’s been in Starkfield too

many winters.”

Before my own time there was up I had learned to know what that meant.

Yet I had come in the degenerate day of trolley, bicycle and rural

delivery, when communication was easy between the scattered mountain

villages, and the bigger towns in the valleys, such as Bettsbridge and

Shadd’s Falls, had libraries, theatres and Y. M. C. A. halls to which

the youth of the hills could descend for recreation. But when winter

shut down on Starkfield and the village lay under a sheet of snow

perpetually renewed from the pale skies, I began to see what life

there—or rather its negation—must have been in Ethan Frome’s young

manhood.

I had been sent up by my employers on a job connected with the big

power-house at Corbury Junction, and a long-drawn carpenters’ strike

had so delayed the work that I found myself anchored at Starkfield—the

nearest habitable spot—for the best part of the winter. I chafed at

first, and then, under the hypnotising effect of routine, gradually

began to find a grim satisfaction in the life. During the early part of

my stay I had been struck by the contrast between the vitality of

the climate and the deadness of the community. Day by day, after the

December snows were over, a blazing blue sky poured down torrents

of light and air on the white landscape, which gave them back in an

intenser glitter. One would have supposed that such an atmosphere must

quicken the emotions as well as the blood; but it seemed to produce

no change except that of retarding still more the sluggish pulse of

Starkfield. When I had been there a little longer, and had seen this

phase of crystal clearness followed by long stretches of sunless cold;

when the storms of February had pitched their white tents about the

devoted village and the wild cavalry of March winds had charged down to

their support; I began to understand why Starkfield emerged from its

six months’ siege like a starved garrison capitulating without quarter.

Twenty years earlier the means of resistance must have been far fewer,

and the enemy in command of almost all the lines of access between the

beleaguered villages; and, considering these things, I felt the sinister

force of Harmon’s phrase: “Most of the smart ones get away.” But if that

were the case, how could any combination of obstacles have hindered the

flight of a man like Ethan Frome?

During my stay at Starkfield I lodged with a middle-aged widow

colloquially known as Mrs. Ned Hale. Mrs. Hale’s father had been the

village lawyer of the previous generation, and “lawyer Varnum’s house,”

where my landlady still lived with her mother, was the most considerable

mansion in the village. It stood at one end of the main street, its

classic portico and small-paned windows looking down a flagged path

between Norway spruces to the slim white steeple of the Congregational

church. It was clear that the Varnum fortunes were at the ebb, but the

two women did what they could to preserve a decent dignity; and Mrs.

Hale, in particular, had a certain wan refinement not out of keeping

with her pale old-fashioned house.

In the “best parlour,” with its black horse-hair and mahogany weakly

illuminated by a gurgling Carcel lamp, I listened every evening to

another and more delicately shaded version of the Starkfield chronicle.

It was not that Mrs. Ned Hale felt, or affected, any social superiority

to the people about her; it was only that the accident of a finer

sensibility and a little more education had put just enough distance

between herself and her neighbours to enable her to judge them with

detachment. She was not unwilling to exercise this faculty, and I had

great hopes of getting from her the missing facts of Ethan Frome’s

story, or rather such a key to his character as should co-ordinate the

facts I knew. Her mind was a store-house of innocuous anecdote and any

question about her acquaintances brought forth a volume of detail; but

on the subject of Ethan Frome I found her unexpectedly reticent. There

was no hint of disapproval in her reserve; I merely felt in her an

insurmountable reluctance to speak of him or his affairs, a low “Yes, I

knew them both ... it was awful ...” seeming to be the utmost concession

that her distress could make to my curiosity.

So marked was the change in her manner, such depths of sad initiation

did it imply, that, with some doubts as to my delicacy, I put the case

anew to my village oracle, Harmon Gow; but got for my pains only an

uncomprehending grunt.

“Ruth Varnum was always as nervous as a rat; and, come to think of it,

she was the first one to see ’em after they was picked up. It happened

right below lawyer Varnum’s, down at the bend of the Corbury road, just

round about the time that Ruth got engaged to Ned Hale. The young folks

was all friends, and I guess she just can’t bear to talk about it. She’s

had troubles enough of her own.”

All the dwellers in Starkfield, as in more notable communities, had had

troubles enough of their own to make them comparatively indifferent to

those of their neighbours; and though all conceded that Ethan Frome’s

had been beyond the common measure, no one gave me an explanation of the

look in his face which, as I persisted in thinking, neither poverty

nor physical suffering could have put there. Nevertheless, I might have

contented myself with the story pieced together from these hints had

it not been for the provocation of Mrs. Hale’s silence, and—a little

later—for the accident of personal contact with the man.

On my arrival at Starkfield, Denis Eady, the rich Irish grocer, who was

the proprietor of Starkfield’s nearest approach to a livery stable, had

entered into an agreement to send me over daily to Corbury Flats, where

I had to pick up my train for the Junction. But about the middle of the

winter Eady’s horses fell ill of a local epidemic. The illness spread

to the other Starkfield stables and for a day or two I was put to it to

find a means of transport. Then Harmon Gow suggested that Ethan Frome’s

bay was still on his legs and that his owner might be glad to drive me

over.

I stared at the suggestion. “Ethan Frome? But I’ve never even spoken to

him. Why on earth should he put himself out for me?”

Harmon’s answer surprised me still more. “I don’t know as he would; but

I know he wouldn’t be sorry to earn a dollar.”

I had been told that Frome was poor, and that the saw-mill and the arid

acres of his farm yielded scarcely enough to keep his household through

the winter; but I had not supposed him to be in such want as Harmon’s

words implied, and I expressed my wonder.

“Well, matters ain’t gone any too well with him,” Harmon said. “When a

man’s been setting round like a hulk for twenty years or more, seeing

things that want doing, it eats inter him, and he loses his grit. That

Frome farm was always ’bout as bare’s a milkpan when the cat’s been

round; and you know what one of them old water-mills is wuth nowadays.

When Ethan could sweat over ’em both from sunup to dark he kinder choked

a living out of ’em; but his folks ate up most everything, even then,

and I don’t see how he makes out now. Fust his father got a kick, out

haying, and went soft in the brain, and gave away money like Bible texts

afore he died. Then his mother got queer and dragged along for years as

weak as a baby; and his wife Zeena, she’s always been the greatest hand

at doctoring in the county. Sickness and trouble: that’s what Ethan’s

had his plate full up with, ever since the very first helping.”

The next morning, when I looked out, I saw the hollow-backed bay between

the Varnum spruces, and Ethan Frome, throwing back his worn bearskin,

made room for me in the sleigh at his side. After that, for a week, he

drove me over every morning to Corbury Flats, and on my return in the

afternoon met me again and carried me back through the icy night to

Starkfield. The distance each way was barely three miles, but the old

bay’s pace was slow, and even with firm snow under the runners we were

nearly an hour on the way. Ethan Frome drove in silence, the reins

loosely held in his left hand, his brown seamed profile, under the

helmet-like peak of the cap, relieved against the banks of snow like the

bronze image of a hero. He never turned his face to mine, or

answered, except in monosyllables, the questions I put, or such slight

pleasantries as I ventured. He seemed a part of the mute melancholy

landscape, an incarnation of its frozen woe, with all that was warm

and sentient in him fast bound below the surface; but there was nothing

unfriendly in his silence. I simply felt that he lived in a depth of

moral isolation too remote for casual access, and I had the sense that

his loneliness was not merely the result of his personal plight, tragic

as I guessed that to be, but had in it, as Harmon Gow had hinted, the

profound accumulated cold of many Starkfield winters.

Only once or twice was the distance between us bridged for a moment;

and the glimpses thus gained confirmed my desire to know more. Once I

happened to speak of an engineering job I had been on the previous year

in Florida, and of the contrast between the winter landscape about us

and that in which I had found myself the year before; and to my surprise

Frome said suddenly: “Yes: I was down there once, and for a good while

afterward I could call up the sight of it in winter. But now it’s all

snowed under.”

He said no more, and I had to guess the rest from the inflection of his

voice and his sharp relapse into silence.

Another day, on getting into my train at the Flats, I missed a volume

of popular science—I think it was on some recent discoveries in

bio-chemistry—which I had carried with me to read on the way. I thought

no more about it till I got into the sleigh again that evening, and saw

the book in Frome’s hand.

“I found it after you were gone,” he said.

I put the volume into my pocket and we dropped back into our usual

silence; but as we began to crawl up the long hill from Corbury Flats to

the Starkfield ridge I became aware in the dusk that he had turned his

face to mine.

“There are things in that book that I didn’t know the first word about,”

he said.

I wondered less at his words than at the queer note of resentment in

his voice. He was evidently surprised and slightly aggrieved at his own

ignorance.

“Does that sort of thing interest you?” I asked.

“It used to.”

“There are one or two rather new things in the book: there have been

some big strides lately in that particular line of research.” I waited

a moment for an answer that did not come; then I said: “If you’d like to

look the book through I’d be glad to leave it with you.”

He hesitated, and I had the impression that he felt himself about to

yield to a stealing tide of inertia; then, “Thank you—I’ll take it,” he

answered shortly.

I hoped that this incident might set up some more direct communication

between us. Frome was so simple and straightforward that I was sure his

curiosity about the book was based on a genuine interest in its subject.

Such tastes and acquirements in a man of his condition made the contrast

more poignant between his outer situation and his inner needs, and I

hoped that the chance of giving expression to the latter might at least

unseal his lips. But something in his past history, or in his present

way of living, had apparently driven him too deeply into himself for any

casual impulse to draw him back to his kind. At our next meeting he made

no allusion to the book, and our intercourse seemed fated to remain as

negative and one-sided as if there had been no break in his reserve.

Frome had been driving me over to the Flats for about a week when one

morning I looked out of my window into a thick snow-fall. The height of

the white waves massed against the garden-fence and along the wall of

the church showed that the storm must have been going on all night,

and that the drifts were likely to be heavy in the open. I thought

it probable that my train would be delayed; but I had to be at the

power-house for an hour or two that afternoon, and I decided, if Frome

turned up, to push through to the Flats and wait there till my train

came in. I don’t know why I put it in the conditional, however, for I

never doubted that Frome would appear. He was not the kind of man to be

turned from his business by any commotion of the elements; and at

the appointed hour his sleigh glided up through the snow like a

stage-apparition behind thickening veils of gauze.

I was getting to know him too well to express either wonder or gratitude

at his keeping his appointment; but I exclaimed in surprise as I saw him

turn his horse in a direction opposite to that of the Corbury road.

“The railroad’s blocked by a freight-train that got stuck in a drift

below the Flats,” he explained, as we jogged off into the stinging

whiteness.

“But look here—where are you taking me, then?”

“Straight to the Junction, by the shortest way,” he answered, pointing

up School House Hill with his whip.

“To the Junction—in this storm? Why, it’s a good ten miles!”

“The bay’ll do it if you give him time. You said you had some business

there this afternoon. I’ll see you get there.”

He said it so quietly that I could only answer: “You’re doing me the

biggest kind of a favour.”

“That’s all right,” he rejoined.

Abreast of the schoolhouse the road forked, and we dipped down a lane

to the left, between hemlock boughs bent inward to their trunks by the

weight of the snow. I had often walked that way on Sundays, and knew

that the solitary roof showing through bare branches near the bottom of

the hill was that of Frome’s saw-mill. It looked exanimate enough, with

its idle wheel looming above the black stream dashed with yellow-white

spume, and its cluster of sheds sagging under their white load. Frome

did not even turn his head as we drove by, and still in silence we began

to mount the next slope. About a mile farther, on a road I had never

travelled, we came to an orchard of starved apple-trees writhing over

a hillside among outcroppings of slate that nuzzled up through the snow

like animals pushing out their noses to breathe. Beyond the orchard

lay a field or two, their boundaries lost under drifts; and above the

fields, huddled against the white immensities of land and sky, one of

those lonely New England farm-houses that make the landscape lonelier.

“That’s my place,” said Frome, with a sideway jerk of his lame elbow;

and in the distress and oppression of the scene I did not know what to

answer. The snow had ceased, and a flash of watery sunlight exposed the

house on the slope above us in all its plaintive ugliness. The black

wraith of a deciduous creeper flapped from the porch, and the thin

wooden walls, under their worn coat of paint, seemed to shiver in the

wind that had risen with the ceasing of the snow.

“The house was bigger in my father’s time: I had to take down the ‘L,’

a while back,” Frome continued, checking with a twitch of the left rein

the bay’s evident intention of turning in through the broken-down gate.

I saw then that the unusually forlorn and stunted look of the house was

partly due to the loss of what is known in New England as the “L”:

that long deep-roofed adjunct usually built at right angles to the main

house, and connecting it, by way of storerooms and tool-house, with the

wood-shed and cow-barn. Whether because of its symbolic sense, the image

it presents of a life linked with the soil, and enclosing in itself the

chief sources of warmth and nourishment, or whether merely because

of the consolatory thought that it enables the dwellers in that harsh

climate to get to their morning’s work without facing the weather, it

is certain that the “L” rather than the house itself seems to be the

centre, the actual hearth-stone of the New England farm. Perhaps this

connection of ideas, which had often occurred to me in my rambles about

Starkfield, caused me to hear a wistful note in Frome’s words, and to

see in the diminished dwelling the image of his own shrunken body.

“We’re kinder side-tracked here now,” he added, “but there was

considerable passing before the railroad was carried through to the

Flats.” He roused the lagging bay with another twitch; then, as if the

mere sight of the house had let me too deeply into his confidence for

any farther pretence of reserve, he went on slowly: “I’ve always set

down the worst of mother’s trouble to that. When she got the rheumatism

so bad she couldn’t move around she used to sit up there and watch the

road by the hour; and one year, when they was six months mending the

Bettsbridge pike after the floods, and Harmon Gow had to bring his stage

round this way, she picked up so that she used to get down to the gate

most days to see him. But after the trains begun running nobody ever

come by here to speak of, and mother never could get it through her head

what had happened, and it preyed on her right along till she died.”

As we turned into the Corbury road the snow began to fall again, cutting

off our last glimpse of the house; and Frome’s silence fell with it,

letting down between us the old veil of reticence. This time the wind

did not cease with the return of the snow. Instead, it sprang up to

a gale which now and then, from a tattered sky, flung pale sweeps of

sunlight over a landscape chaotically tossed. But the bay was as good

as Frome’s word, and we pushed on to the Junction through the wild white

scene.

In the afternoon the storm held off, and the clearness in the west

seemed to my inexperienced eye the pledge of a fair evening. I finished

my business as quickly as possible, and we set out for Starkfield with

a good chance of getting there for supper. But at sunset the clouds

gathered again, bringing an earlier night, and the snow began to fall

straight and steadily from a sky without wind, in a soft universal

diffusion more confusing than the gusts and eddies of the morning. It

seemed to be a part of the thickening darkness, to be the winter night

itself descending on us layer by layer.

The small ray of Frome’s lantern was soon lost in this smothering

medium, in which even his sense of direction, and the bay’s homing

instinct, finally ceased to serve us. Two or three times some ghostly

landmark sprang up to warn us that we were astray, and then was sucked

back into the mist; and when we finally regained our road the old horse

began to show signs of exhaustion. I felt myself to blame for having

accepted Frome’s offer, and after a short discussion I persuaded him

to let me get out of the sleigh and walk along through the snow at the

bay’s side. In this way we struggled on for another mile or two, and

at last reached a point where Frome, peering into what seemed to me

formless night, said: “That’s my gate down yonder.”

The last stretch had been the hardest part of the way. The bitter cold

and the heavy going had nearly knocked the wind out of me, and I could

feel the horse’s side ticking like a clock under my hand.

“Look here, Frome,” I began, “there’s no earthly use in your going any

farther—” but he interrupted me: “Nor you neither. There’s been about

enough of this for anybody.”

I understood that he was offering me a night’s shelter at the farm, and

without answering I turned into the gate at his side, and followed him

to the barn, where I helped him to unharness and bed down the tired

horse. When this was done he unhooked the lantern from the sleigh,

stepped out again into the night, and called to me over his shoulder:

“This way.”

Far off above us a square of light trembled through the screen of snow.

Staggering along in Frome’s wake I floundered toward it, and in the

darkness almost fell into one of the deep drifts against the front of

the house. Frome scrambled up the slippery steps of the porch, digging

a way through the snow with his heavily booted foot. Then he lifted his

lantern, found the latch, and led the way into the house. I went

after him into a low unlit passage, at the back of which a ladder-like

staircase rose into obscurity. On our right a line of light marked the

door of the room which had sent its ray across the night; and behind the

door I heard a woman’s voice droning querulously.

Frome stamped on the worn oil-cloth to shake the snow from his boots,

and set down his lantern on a kitchen chair which was the only piece of

furniture in the hall. Then he opened the door.

“Come in,” he said; and as he spoke the droning voice grew still....

It was that night that I found the clue to Ethan Frome, and began to put

together this vision of his story.

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