(copied from Monday and Tuesday's blog) HOMEWORK, DUE THURSDAY MARCH 1 In approximately 300-400 words, respond to this question: How did the immigrant experience in the Lower East Side of New York impact assimilation into mainstream America? Please write two paragraphs that take into consideration both the positive and negative experiences of the immigrants who lived in the Lower East Side of New York in the latter half of the 19th century. While it is NOT necessary to use specific textual evidence to write this, you should base your information on the Crane's Maggie, Girl of the Streets and Riis' How the Other Half Lives, specifically on the chapter you were assigned to read. (If you never read your chapter, now would be a good time!)
In class reading of Sarah Orne Jewett's A White Heron. See story
below, if you are absent. You are responsible for this material
Regionalism- when reading the following short story, please
note the imagery. This refers to words or phrases that create mental pictures,
or images that appeal to one or more of the senses: sight, hearing, touch,
smell or taste. Most often, images appeal to our sense of sight. For example,
Jewett presents a visual image in the first sentence: “the woods were already
filled with shadows…though a bright sunset still glimmered through the trees.” Yes many visual images also appeal to one or
more of the other sense, and some images appeal only to the senses other than
sight,.
Jewett and other
regionalist writers used imagery to present vivid, realistic description of the
environment. Because people’s lives are
often shaped by their environments; these descriptions were in in conveying the
essence of life in a particular region.
As you read “A White
Heron.” Underline the imagery
through which Jewett paints a portrait of life in rural New England. Be prepared to share these.
A WHITE HERON by Sarah Orne Jewett
I. The woods were already filled with shadows one June
evening, just before eight o'clock, though a bright sunset still glimmered
faintly among the trunks of the trees. A little girl was driving home her cow,
a plodding, dilatory, provoking creature in her behavior, but a valued
companion for all that. They were going away from whatever light there was, and
striking deep into the woods, but their feet were familiar with the path, and
it was no matter whether their eyes could see it or not.
There was hardly a night the summer through
when the old cow could be found waiting at the pasture bars; on the contrary,
it was her greatest pleasure to hide herself away among the huckleberry bushes,
and though she wore a loud bell she had made the discovery that if one stood
perfectly still it would not ring. So Sylvia had to hunt for her until she
found her, and call Co' ! Co' ! with never an answering Moo, until her childish
patience was quite spent. If the creature had not given good milk and plenty of
it, the case would have seemed very different to her owners. Besides, Sylvia
had all the time there was, and very little use to make of it. Sometimes in
pleasant weather it was a consolation to look upon the cow's pranks as an
intelligent attempt to play hide and seek, and as the child had no playmates
she lent herself to this amusement with a good deal of zest. Though this chase
had been so long that the wary animal herself had given an unusual signal of
her whereabouts, Sylvia had only laughed when she came upon Mistress Moolly at
the swamp-side, and urged her affectionately homeward with a twig of birch
leaves. The old cow was not inclined to wander farther, she even turned in the
right direction for once as they left the pasture, and stepped along the road
at a good pace. She was quite ready to be milked now, and seldom stopped to
browse. Sylvia wondered what her grandmother would say because they were so
late. It was a great while since she had left home at half-past five o'clock,
but everybody knew the difficulty of making this errand a short one. Mrs.
Tilley had chased the hornéd torment too many summer evenings herself to blame anyone
else for lingering, and was only thankful as she waited that she had Sylvia,
nowadays, to give such valuable assistance. The good woman suspected that
Sylvia loitered occasionally on her own account; there never was such a child
for straying about out-of-doors since the world was made! Everybody said that
it was a good change for a little maid who had tried to grow for eight years in
a crowded manufacturing town, but, as for Sylvia herself, it seemed as if she
never had been alive at all before she came to live at the farm. She thought
often with wistful compassion of a wretched geranium that belonged to a town
neighbor.
"'Afraid of folks,'" old Mrs. Tilley
said to herself, with a smile, after she had made the unlikely choice of Sylvia
from her daughter's houseful of children, and was returning to the farm.
"'Afraid of folks,' they said! I guess she won't be troubled no great with
'em up to the old place!" When they reached the door of the lonely house
and stopped to unlock it, and the cat came to purr loudly, and rub against
them, a deserted pussy, indeed, but fat with young robins, Sylvia whispered
that this was a beautiful place to live in, and she never should wish to go
home.
The companions followed the shady wood-road,
the cow taking slow steps and the child very fast ones. The cow stopped long at
the brook to drink, as if the pasture were not half a swamp, and Sylvia stood
still and waited, letting her bare feet cool themselves in the shoal water,
while the great twilight moths struck softly against her. She waded on through
the brook as the cow moved away, and listened to the thrushes with a heart that
beat fast with pleasure. There was a stirring in the great boughs overhead.
They were full of little birds and beasts that seemed to be wide awake, and
going about their world, or else saying good-night to each other in sleepy
twitters. Sylvia herself felt sleepy as she walked along. However, it was not
much farther to the house, and the air was soft and sweet. She was not often in
the woods so late as this, and it made her feel as if she were a part of the
gray shadows and the moving leaves. She was just thinking how long it seemed
since she first came to the farm a year ago, and wondering if everything went
on in the noisy town just the same as when she was there, the thought of the
great red-faced boy who used to chase and frighten her made her hurry along the
path to escape from the shadow of the trees.
Suddenly this little woods-girl is
horror-stricken to hear a clear whistle not very far away. Not a
bird's-whistle, which would have a sort of friendliness, but a boy's whistle,
determined, and somewhat aggressive. Sylvia left the cow to whatever sad fate
might await her, and stepped discreetly aside into the bushes, but she was just
too late. The enemy had discovered her, and called out in a very cheerful and
persuasive tone, "Halloa, little girl, how far is it to the road?" and
trembling Sylvia answered almost inaudibly, "A good ways."
She did not dare to look boldly at
the tall young man, who carried a gun over his shoulder, but she came out of
her bush and again followed the cow, while he walked alongside.
"I have been hunting for some
birds," the stranger said kindly, "and I have lost my way, and need a
friend very much. Don't be afraid," he added gallantly. "Speak up and
tell me what your name is, and whether you think I can spend the night at your
house, and go out gunning early in the morning."
Sylvia was more alarmed than before. Would not her grandmother consider
her much to blame? But who could have foreseen such an accident as this? It did
not seem to be her fault, and she hung her head as if the stem of it were broken,
but managed to answer "Sylvy," with much effort when her companion
again asked her name.
Mrs. Tilley was standing in the doorway when the trio came into view.
The cow gave a loud moo by way of explanation.
"Yes, you'd better speak up for yourself, you old trial! Where'd
she tucked herself away this time, Sylvy?" But Sylvia kept an awed
silence; she knew by instinct that her grandmother did not comprehend the
gravity of the situation. She must be mistaking the stranger for one of the farmer-lads
of the region.
The young man stood his gun beside the door,
and dropped a lumpy game-bag beside it; then he bade Mrs. Tilley good-evening,
and repeated his wayfarer's story, and asked if he could have a night's
lodging.
"Put me anywhere you like," he said. "I must be off early
in the morning, before day; but I am very hungry, indeed. You can give me some
milk at any rate, that's plain."
"Dear sakes,
yes," responded the hostess, whose long slumbering hospitality seemed to
be easily awakened. "You might fare better if you went out to the main
road a mile or so, but you're welcome to what we've got. I'll milk right off,
and you make yourself at home. You can sleep on husks or feathers," she
proffered graciously. "I raised them all myself. There's good pasturing
for geese just below here towards the ma'sh. Now step round and set a plate for
the gentleman, Sylvy!" And Sylvia promptly stepped. She was glad to have
something to do, and she was hungry herself.
It was a surprise to find so clean and comfortable a little dwelling in
this New England wilderness. The young man had known the horrors of its most
primitive housekeeping, and the dreary squalor of that level of society which
does not rebel at the companionship of hens. This was the best thrift of an
old-fashioned farmstead, though on such a small scale that it seemed like a
hermitage. He listened eagerly to the old woman's quaint talk, he watched
Sylvia's pale face and shining gray eyes with ever growing enthusiasm, and
insisted that this was the best supper he had eaten for a month, and afterward
the new-made friends sat down in the door-way together while the moon came up.
Soon it would be berry-time, and Sylvia was a
great help at picking. The cow was a good milker, though a plaguy thing to keep
track of, the hostess gossiped frankly, adding presently that she had buried
four children, so Sylvia's mother, and a son (who might be dead) in California
were all the children she had left. "Dan, my boy, was a great hand to go
gunning," she explained sadly. "I never wanted for pa'tridges or gray
squer'ls while he was to home. He's been a great wand'rer, I expect, and he's
no hand to write letters. There, I don't blame him, I'd ha' seen the world
myself if it had been so I could.
"Sylvy takes
after him," the grandmother continued affectionately, after a minute's
pause. "There ain't a foot o' ground she don't know her way over, and the
wild creatures counts her one o' themselves. Squer'ls she'll tame to come an'
feed right out o' her hands, and all sorts o' birds. Last winter she got the
jay-birds to bangeing here, and I believe she'd 'a' scanted herself of her own
meals to have plenty to throw out amongst 'em, if I hadn't kep' watch. Anything
but crows, I tell her, I'm willin' to help support -- though Dan he had a tamed
one o' them that did seem to have reason same as folks. It was round here a
good spell after he went away. Dan an' his father they didn't hitch, -- but he
never held up his head ag'in after Dan had dared him an' gone off."
The guest did not
notice this hint of family sorrows in his eager interest in something else.
"So Sylvy knows all about birds, does she?" he exclaimed, as
he looked round at the little girl who sat, very demure but increasingly
sleepy, in the moonlight. "I am making a collection of birds myself. I
have been at it ever since I was a boy." (Mrs. Tilley smiled.) "There
are two or three very rare ones I have been hunting for these five years. I
mean to get them on my own ground if they can be found."
"Do you cage 'em up?" asked Mrs.
Tilley doubtfully, in response to this enthusiastic announcement.
"Oh no,
they're stuffed and preserved, dozens and dozens of them," said the
ornithologist, "and I have shot or snared every one myself. I caught a
glimpse of a white heron a few miles from here on Saturday, and I have followed
it in this direction. They have never been found in this district at all. The
little white heron, it is," and he turned again to look at Sylvia with the
hope of discovering that the rare bird was one of her acquaintances.
But Sylvia was
watching a hop-toad in the narrow footpath.
"You would know
the heron if you saw it," the stranger continued eagerly. "A queer
tall white bird with soft feathers and long thin legs. And it would have a nest
perhaps in the top of a high tree, made of sticks, something like a hawk's
nest."
Sylvia's heart gave
a wild beat; she knew that strange white bird, and had once stolen softly near
where it stood in some bright green swamp grass, away over at the other side of
the woods. There was an open place where the sunshine always seemed strangely
yellow and hot, where tall, nodding rushes grew, and her grandmother had warned
her that she might sink in the soft black mud underneath and never be heard of
more. Not far beyond were the salt marshes just this side the sea itself, which
Sylvia wondered and dreamed much about, but never had seen, whose great voice
could sometimes be heard above the noise of the woods on stormy nights.
"I can't think
of anything I should like so much as to find that heron's nest," the
handsome stranger was saying. "I would give ten dollars to anybody who
could show it to me," he added desperately, "and I mean to spend my
whole vacation hunting for it if need be. Perhaps it was only migrating, or had
been chased out of its own region by some bird of prey."
Mrs. Tilley gave amazed attention to all this,
but Sylvia still watched the toad, not divining, as she might have done at some
calmer time, that the creature wished to get to its hole under the door-step,
and was much hindered by the unusual spectators at that hour of the evening. No
amount of thought, that night, could decide how many wished-for treasures the
ten dollars, so lightly spoken of, would buy.
The next day the
young sportsman hovered about the woods, and Sylvia kept him company, having
lost her first fear of the friendly lad, who proved to be most kind and
sympathetic. He told her many things about the birds and what they knew and
where they lived and what they did with themselves. And he gave her a
jack-knife, which she thought as great a treasure as if she were a
desert-islander. All day long he did not once make her troubled or afraid
except when he brought down some unsuspecting singing creature from its bough.
Sylvia would have liked him vastly better without his gun; she could not
understand why he killed the very birds he seemed to like so much. But as the
day waned, Sylvia still watched the young man with loving admiration. She had never
seen anybody so charming and delightful; the woman's heart, asleep in the
child, was vaguely thrilled by a dream of love. Some premonition of that great
power stirred and swayed these young creatures who traversed the solemn
woodlands with soft-footed silent care. They stopped to listen to a bird's
song; they pressed forward again eagerly, parting the branches -- speaking to
each other rarely and in whispers; the young man going first and Sylvia
following, fascinated, a few steps behind, with her gray eyes dark with
excitement.
She grieved because
the longed-for white heron was elusive, but she did not lead the guest, she
only followed, and there was no such thing as speaking first. The sound of her
own unquestioned voice would have terrified her -- it was hard enough to answer
yes or no when there was need of that. At last evening began to fall, and they
drove the cow home together, and Sylvia smiled with pleasure when they came to
the place where she heard the whistle and was afraid only the night before.
II. Half a mile from home, at the farther edge of
the woods, where the land was highest, a great pine-tree stood, the last of its
generation. Whether it was left for a boundary mark, or for what reason, no one
could say; the woodchoppers who had felled its mates were dead and gone long
ago, and a whole forest of sturdy trees, pines and oaks and maples, had grown
again. But the stately head of this old pine towered above them all and made a
landmark for sea and shore miles and miles away. Sylvia knew it well. She had
always believed that whoever climbed to the top of it could see the ocean; and
the little girl had often laid her hand on the great rough trunk and looked up
wistfully at those dark boughs that the wind always stirred, no matter how hot
and still the air might be below. Now she thought of the tree with a new
excitement, for why, if one climbed it at break of day, could not one see all
the world, and easily discover from whence the white heron flew, and mark the
place, and find the hidden nest?
What a spirit of
adventure, what wild ambition! What fancied triumph and delight and glory for
the later morning when she could make known the secret! It was almost too real
and too great for the childish heart to bear.
All night the door
of the little house stood open and the whippoorwills came and sang upon the
very step. The young sportsman and his old hostess were sound asleep, but
Sylvia's great design kept her broad awake and watching. She forgot to think of
sleep. The short summer night seemed as long as the winter darkness, and at
last when the whippoorwills ceased, and she was afraid the morning would after
all come too soon, she stole out of the house and followed the pasture path
through the woods, hastening toward the open ground beyond, listening with a
sense of comfort and companionship to the drowsy twitter of a half-awakened
bird, whose perch she had jarred in passing. Alas, if the great wave of human
interest which flooded for the first time this dull little life should sweep
away the satisfactions of an existence heart to heart with nature and the dumb
life of the forest!
There was the huge tree asleep yet in the
paling moonlight, and small and silly Sylvia began with utmost bravery to mount
to the top of it, with tingling, eager blood coursing the channels of her whole
frame, with her bare feet and fingers, that pinched and held like bird's claws
to the monstrous ladder reaching up, up, almost to the sky itself. First she
must mount the white oak tree that grew alongside, where she was almost lost
among the dark branches and the green leaves heavy and wet with dew; a bird
fluttered off its nest, and a red squirrel ran to and fro and scolded pettishly
at the harmless housebreaker. Sylvia felt her way easily. She had often climbed
there, and knew that higher still one of the oak's upper branches chafed
against the pine trunk, just where its lower boughs were set close together.
There, when she made the dangerous pass from one tree to the other, the great
enterprise would really begin.
She crept out along the swaying oak limb at last, and took the daring
step across into the old pine-tree. The way was harder than she thought; she
must reach far and hold fast, the sharp dry twigs caught and held her and
scratched her like angry talons, the pitch made her thin little fingers clumsy
and stiff as she went round and round the tree's great stem, higher and higher
upward. The sparrows and robins in the woods below were beginning to wake and
twitter to the dawn, yet it seemed much lighter there aloft in the pine-tree,
and the child knew she must hurry if her project were to be of any use.
The tree seemed to lengthen itself
out as she went up, and to reach farther and farther upward. It was like a
great main-mast to the voyaging earth; it must truly have been amazed that
morning through all its ponderous frame as it felt this determined spark of
human spirit wending its way from higher branch to branch. Who knows how
steadily the least twigs held themselves to advantage this light, weak creature
on her way! The old pine must have loved his new dependent. More than all the
hawks, and bats, and moths, and even the sweet voiced thrushes, was the brave,
beating heart of the solitary gray-eyed child. And the tree stood still and
frowned away the winds that June morning while the dawn grew bright in the
east.
Sylvia's face was like a pale star, if one had
seen it from the ground, when the last thorny bough was past, and she stood
trembling and tired but wholly triumphant, high in the tree-top. Yes, there was
the sea with the dawning sun making a golden dazzle over it, and toward that
glorious east flew two hawks with slow-moving pinions. How low they looked in
the air from that height when one had only seen them before far up, and dark
against the blue sky. Their gray feathers were as soft as moths; they seemed
only a little way from the tree, and Sylvia felt as if she too could go flying
away among the clouds. Westward, the woodlands and farms reached miles and
miles into the distance; here and there were church steeples, and white
villages, truly it was a vast and awesome world
The birds sang louder and louder.
At last the sun came up bewilderingly bright. Sylvia could see the white sails
of ships out at sea, and the clouds that were purple and rose-colored and
yellow at first began to fade away. Where was the white heron's nest in the sea
of green branches, and was this wonderful sight and pageant of the world the
only reward for having climbed to such a giddy height? Now look down again, Sylvia,
where the green marsh is set among the shining birches and dark hemlocks; there
where you saw the white heron once you will see him again; look, look! a white
spot of him like a single floating feather comes up from the dead hemlock and
grows larger, and rises, and comes close at last, and goes by the landmark pine
with steady sweep of wing and outstretched slender neck and crested head. And
wait! wait! do not move a foot or a finger, little girl, do not send an arrow
of light and consciousness from your two eager eyes, for the heron has perched
on a pine bough not far beyond yours, and cries back to his mate on the nest
and plumes his feathers for the new day!
The child gives a long sigh a minute later
when a company of shouting cat-birds comes also to the tree, and vexed by their
fluttering and lawlessness the solemn heron goes away. She knows his secret
now, the wild, light, slender bird that floats and wavers, and goes back like
an arrow presently to his home in the green world beneath. Then Sylvia, well
satisfied, makes her perilous way down again, not daring to look far below the
branch she stands on, ready to cry sometimes because her fingers ache and her
lamed feet slip. Wondering over and over again what the stranger would say to
her, and what he would think when she told him how to find his way straight to
the heron's nest.
"Sylvy,
Sylvy!" called the busy old grandmother again and again, but nobody
answered, and the small husk bed was empty and Sylvia had disappeared.
The guest waked
from a dream, and remembering his day's pleasure hurried to dress himself that
it might sooner begin. He was sure from the way the shy little girl looked once
or twice yesterday that she had at least seen the white heron, and now she must
really be made to tell. Here she comes now, paler than ever, and her worn old
frock is torn and tattered, and smeared with pine pitch. The grandmother and
the sportsman stand in the door together and question her, and the splendid
moment has come to speak of the dead hemlock-tree by the green marsh.
But Sylvia does
not speak after all, though the old grandmother fretfully rebukes her, and the
young man's kind, appealing eyes are looking straight in her own. He can make
them rich with money; he has promised it, and they are poor now. He is so well
worth making happy, and he waits to hear the story she can tell.
No, she must keep
silence! What is it that suddenly forbids her and makes her dumb? Has she been
nine years growing and now, when the great world for the first time puts out a
hand to her, must she thrust it aside for a bird's sake? The murmur of the
pine's green branches is in her ears, she remembers how the white heron came
flying through the golden air and how they watched the sea and the morning
together, and Sylvia cannot speak; she cannot tell the heron's secret and give
its life away.
Dear loyalty,
that suffered a sharp pang as the guest went away disappointed later in the
day, that could have served and followed him and loved him as a dog loves! Many
a night Sylvia heard the echo of his whistle haunting the pasture path as she
came home with the loitering cow. She forgot even her sorrow at the sharp
report of his gun and the sight of thrushes and sparrows dropping silent to the
ground, their songs hushed and their pretty feathers stained and wet with
blood. Were the birds better friends than their hunter might have been, -- who
can tell? Whatever treasures were lost to her, woodlands and summer-time,
remember! Bring your gifts and graces and tell your secrets to this lonely
country child!
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