This volume was first published over twenty years ago. If any of the boys described in it were real, they have long since grown up, got married, gone West, become selectmen or sheriffs, gone to Congress, invented an electric churn, become editors or preachers or commercial travelers, written a book, served a term as consul to a country the language of which they did not know, or plodded along on a farm, cultivating rheumatism and acquiring invaluable knowledge of the most fickle weather known in a region which has all the fascination and all the power of being disagreeable belonging to the most accomplished coquette in the world. The rural life described is that of New England between 1830 and 1850, in a period of darkness, before the use of lucifer matches; but when, although religion had a touch of gloom and all pleasure was heightened by a timorous apprehension that it was sin, the sun shone, the woods were full of pungent scents, nature was strong in its invitations to cheerfulness, and girls were as sweet and winsome as they are in the old ballads. The object of the papers composing the volume—though "object" is a strong word to use about their waywardness—was to recall scenes in the boy-life of New England, or the impressions that a boy had of that life. There was no attempt at the biography of any particular boy; the experiences given were common to the boyhood of the time and place. While the book, therefore, was not consciously biographical, it was of necessity written out of a personal How far I succeeded in keeping the man out of the boy's life, my readers can judge better than the writer. The volume originally made no sensation—how could it, pitched in such a key?—but it has gone on peacefully, and, I am glad to acknowledge, has made many valuable friends. It started a brook, and a brook it has continued. In sending out this new edition with Mr. Clifton Johnson's pictures, lovingly taken from the real life and heart of New England, I may express the hope that the boy of the remote generation will lose no friends. C. D. W. Hartford, May 8, 1897. |