Sunday the Twenty-Ninth

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Nearly six weeks, I notice, have slipped by. For a month and a half, apparently, the impulse to air my troubles went hibernating with the bears. Yet it has been a mild winter, so far, with very little snow and a great deal of sunshine—a great deal of sunshine which doesn’t elate me as it ought. I can’t remember who it was said a happy people has no history. But that’s not true of a happy woman. It’s when her heart is full that she makes herself heard, that she sings like a lark to the world. When she’s wretched, she retires with her grief....

I haven’t been altogether wretched, it’s true, just as I haven’t been altogether hilarious, but it disturbs me to find that for a month and a half I haven’t written a line in this, the mottled old book of my life. It’s not that the last month or two has been empty, for no months are really empty. They have to be 254 filled with something. But there are times, I suppose, when lives lie fallow, the same as fields lie fallow, times when the days drag like harrow-teeth across the perplexed loam of our soul and nothing comes of it at all. Not, I repeat, that I have been momentously unhappy. It’s more that a sort of sterilizing indifferency took possession of me and made the little ups and downs of existence as unworthy of record as the ups and downs of the waves on the deadest shores of the Dead Sea. It’s not that I’m idle, and it’s not that I’m old, and it’s not that there’s anything wrong with this disappointingly healthy body of mine. But I rather think I need a change of some kind. I even envy Susie, who has ambled on to the Coast and is staying with the Lougheeds in Victoria, playing golf and picking winter roses and writing back about her trips up Vancouver Island and her approaching journey down into California.

“What do we know of the New World,” she parodied in her last letter that came to me, “who only the old East know?” Then she goes on to say: “I’m just back from a West Coast trip on the roly-poly Maquinna and if my thoughts go wobbly and my 255 hand goes crooked it’s because my head is so prodigiously full of

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and alas, also Seasickness, that I can’t think straight!”

Susie’s soul, apparently, has had the dry-shampoo it was in need of. But as for me, I’m like an old horse-shoe with its calks worn off. The Master-Blacksmith of Life should poke me deep into His fires and fling me on His anvil and make me over!

I’ve been worrying about my Dinkie. It’s all so trivial, in a way, and yet I can’t persuade myself it isn’t also tragic. He told Susie, before she left, that he was quite willing to go to bed a little earlier one 256 night, because then “he could dream about Doreen.” And I noticed, not long ago, that instead of taking just one of our Newton Pippins to school with him, he had formed the habit of taking two. On making investigation, I discovered that this second apple ultimately and invariably found its way into the hands of Mistress Doreen O’Lone. And last week Dinkie autocratically commanded Whinstane Sandy to hitch Mudski up in the old cutter, to go sleigh-riding with the lady of his favor to the Teetzels’ taffy-pull. Dinkie’s mother was not consulted in the matter—and that is the disturbing feature of it all. I can’t help remembering what Duncan once said about my boy growing out of my reach. If I ever lost my Dinkie I would indeed be alone, terribly and hopelessly alone.


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