Read A Walk in the Woods Online

Authors: Bill Bryson

A Walk in the Woods (37 page)

I looked at him. “Stephen, we didn’t even
see
Mount Katahdin.”

He dismissed this as a petty quibble. “Another mountain,” he said. “How many do you need to see, Bryson?”

I snorted a small laugh. “Well, that’s one way of looking at it.”

“It’s the only way of looking at it,” Katz went on and quite earnestly. “As far as I’m concerned, I hiked the Appalachian Trail. I hiked it in snow and I hiked it in heat. I hiked it in the South and I hiked in the North. I hiked it till my feet bled. I hiked the Appalachian Trail, Bryson.”

“We missed out a lot of it, you know.”

“Details,” Katz sniffed.

I shrugged, not unhappily. “Maybe you’re right.”

“Of course I’m right,” he said, as if he were seldom otherwise.

We had reached the edge of town, by the little gas station/ grocery store where the lumberjacks had dropped us. It was still open.

“So what do you say to some cream soda?” Katz said brightly. “I’ll buy.”

I looked at him with deepened interest. “You don’t have any money.”

“I know. I’ll buy it with your money.”

I grinned and handed him a five-dollar bill from my wallet.

“‘X-Files’ tonight,” Katz said happily—very happily—and disappeared into the store. I watched him go, shaking my head, and wondered how he always knew.

So that is how it ended for me and Katz—with a six-pack of cream soda in Milo, Maine.

Katz returned to Des Moines to a small apartment, a job in construction, and a life of devoted sobriety. He calls from time to time and talks about coming out to try the Hundred Mile Wilderness again, though I don’t suppose he ever will.

I continued to hike, on and off, through the rest of summer and into fall. In mid-October, at the height of the foliage season, I went for what proved to be a final walk, a return visit to Killington Peak in Vermont, on one of those glorious days when the world is full of autumn muskiness and crisp, tangy perfection and the air so clear that you feel as if you could reach out and ping it with a finger. Even the colors were crisp: vivid blue sky, deep green fields, leaves in every sharp shade that nature can bestow. It is a truly astounding sight when every tree in a forest becomes individual; where formerly had sprawled a seamless cloak of green there now stood a million bright colors.

I hiked with enthusiasm and vigor, buoyed by fresh air and splendor. From the roof of Killington there was a 360-degree panorama over nearly the whole of New England and on to Quebec as far as the distant bluish nubbin of Mont Royal. Almost every peak of consequence in New England—Washington, Lafayette, Grey-lock, Monadnock, Ascutney, Moosilauke—stood etched in fine relief and looked ten times closer than it actually was. It was so beautiful I cannot tell you. That this boundless vista represented but a fragment of the Appalachians’ full sweep, that under my feet there lay a free and exquisitely maintained trail running for 2,200 miles through hills and woods of equal grandeur, was a thought almost too overpowering to hold. I don’t recall a moment in my life when I was more acutely aware of how providence has favored the land to which I was born. It seemed a perfect place to stop.

I would have had to anyway. Autumn is fleeting in New England. Within days of my walk up Killington, winter began blowing in; the hiking season was clearly at an end. One Sunday soon afterwards, I sat down at the kitchen table with my trail log and a calculator and at last totted up the miles I had done. I checked the numbers through twice, then looked up with an expression not unlike the one Katz and I had shared months before in Gatlinburg when we realized we were never going to hike the Appalachian Trail.

I had done 870 miles, considerably less than half the AT. All that effort and sweat and disgusting grubbiness, all those endless plodding days, the nights on hard ground—all that added up to just 39.5 percent of the trail. Goodness knows how anyone ever completes the whole thing. I am filled with admiration and incredulity for those who see it through. But hey and excuse me, 870 is still a lot of miles—from New York to Chicago, indeed somewhat beyond. If I had hiked that against almost any other measure, we would all be feeling pretty proud of me now.

I still quite often go for walks on the trail near my home, especially if I am stuck on something I am working on. Most of the time I am sunk in thought, but at some point on each walk there comes a moment when I look up and notice, with a kind of first-time astonishment, the amazing complex delicacy of the woods, the casual ease with which elemental things come together to form a composition that is—whatever the season, wherever I put my besotted gaze—perfect. Not just very fine or splendid, but perfect, unimprovable. You don’t have to walk miles up mountains to achieve this, don’t have to plod through blizzards, slip sputtering in mud, wade chest-deep through water, hike day after day to the edge of your limits—but believe me, it helps.

I have regrets, of course. I regret that I didn’t do Katahdin (though I will, I promise you, I will). I regret that I never saw a bear or wolf or followed the padding retreat of a giant hellbender salamander, never shooed away a bobcat or sidestepped a rattlesnake, never flushed a startled boar. I wish that just once I had truly stared death in the face (briefly, with a written assurance of
survival). But I got a great deal else from the experience. I learned to pitch a tent and sleep beneath the stars. For a brief, proud period I was slender and fit. I gained a profound respect for wilderness and nature and the benign dark power of woods. I understand now, in a way I never did before, the colossal scale of the world. I found patience and fortitude that I didn’t know I had. I discovered an America that millions of people scarcely know exists. I made a friend. I came home.

Best of all, these days when I see a mountain, I look at it slowly and appraisingly, with a narrow, confident gaze and eyes of chipped granite.

We didn’t walk 2,200 miles, it’s true, but here’s the thing: we tried. So Katz was right after all, and I don’t care what anybody says. We hiked the Appalachian Trail.

SUGGESTED READING

Attenborough, David.
The Private Life of Plants
. Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1995.

Bailyn, Bernard.
Voyagers to the West: A Passage in the Peopling of America on the Eve of the Revolution
. New York: Alfred A. Knopf, 1986.

Brooks, Maurice.
The Appalachians
. Boston: Houghton Mifflin Co., 1986.

Bruce, Dan “Wingfoot.”
The Thru-Hirer’s Handbook-
Harpers Ferry, WV: Appalachian Trail Conference, 1995.

Cruikshank, Helen Gere, ed.
John and William Bartram’s America: Selections from the Writings of the Philadelphia Naturalists
. New York: Devin-Adair Co., 1957.

Dale, Frank.
Delaware Diary: Episodes in the Life of a River
. New Brunswick, NJ: Rutgers University Press, 1996.

Emblidge, David (ed.).
The Appalachian Trail Reader
. New York: Oxford University Press, 1997.

Faragher, John Mack.
Daniel Boone: The Life and Legend of an American Pioneer
. New York: Henry Holt and Co., 1993.

Farwell, Byron.
Stonewall: A Biography of General Thomas J. Jackson
. New York: W.W. Norton and Co., 1993.

Foreman, Dave, and Howie Wolke.
The Big Outside: A Descriptive Inventory of the Big Wilderness Areas of the United States
. New York: Harmony Books, 1992.

Herrero, Stephen.
Bear Attacks: Their Causes and Avoidance
. New York: Lyons and Burford, 1988.

Houk, Rose.
Great Smoky Mountains National Park
. Boston: Houghton Mifflin Co., 1993.

Long, Priscilla.
Where the Sun Never Shines: A History of America’s Bloody Coal Industry
. New York: Paragon House, 1991.

Luxenberg, Larry.
Walfang the Appalachian Trail
. Mechanicsburg, Pennsylvania: Stackpole Books, 1994.

Matthiessen, Peter.
Wildlife in America
. New York: Penguin Books, 1995.

McKibben, Bill.
The End of Nature
. New York: Anchor, 1990. McPhee, John.
In Suspect Terrain
. New York: Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 1984.

Nash, Roderick.
Wilderness and the American Mind
. New Haven: Yale University Press, 1982.

Parker, Ronald B.
Inscrutable Earth: Explorations into the Science of Earth
. New York: Charles Scribner’s Sons, 1984.

Peattie, Donald Culross.
A Natural History of Trees of Eastern and Central North America
. Boston: Houghton Mifflin Co., 1991.

Putnam, William Lowell.
The Worst Weather on Earth: A History of the Mount Washington Observatory
. New York: American Alpine Club, 1993.

Quammen, David.
Natural Acts: A Sidelong View of Science and Nature
. New York: Avon Books, 1996.

Schultz, Gwen.
Ice Age host
. New York: Anchor, 1974.

Shaffer, Earl V.
Walking with Spring: The First Solo Thru-Hike of the Legendary Appalachian Trail
. Harpers Ferry, WV: Appalachian Trail Conference, 1996.

Stier, Maggie, and Ron McAdow.
Into the Mountains: Stories of New England’s Most Celebrated Peaks
. Boston: Appalachian Mountain Club Books, 1995.

Trefil, James.
Meditations at 10,000 Feet: A Natural History of the Appalachians
. New York: Macmillan, 1987.

Wilson, Edward O.
The Diversity of Life
. Cambridge, MA: Belknap Press/Harvard University Press, 1992.

FOR FURTHER INFORMATION

Appalachian Trail Conference
P.O. Box 807
Harpers Ferry
West Virginia 25425
(304) 535-6331

 

 

Go to the Next Page to Read Chapter 7 from
Bill Bryson’s
At Home

Coming in October 2010

 

An Excerpt from Bill Bryson’s At Home

THE DRAWING ROOM

I

If you had to summarize it in a sentence, you could say that the history of private life is a history of getting comfortable slowly. Until the eighteenth century, the idea of having comfort at home was so unfamiliar that no word existed for the condition.
Comfortable
meant merely “capable of being consoled.” Comfort was something you gave to the wounded or distressed. The first person to use the word in its modern sense was the writer Horace Walpole, who remarked in a letter to a friend in 1770 that a certain Mrs. White was looking after him well and making him “as comfortable as is possible.” By the early nineteenth century, everyone was talking about having a comfortable home or enjoying a comfortable living, but before Walpole’s day no one did.

Nowhere in the house is the spirit (if not always the actuality) of comfort better captured than in the curiously named room in which we find ourselves now, the drawing room. The term is a shortening of the much older
withdrawing room
, meaning a space where the family could withdraw from the rest of the household for greater privacy, and it has never settled altogether comfortably into widespread English usage. For a time in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries,
drawing room
was challenged in more refined circles by the French
salon
, which was sometimes anglicized to
saloon
, but both those words gradually became associated with spaces outside the home, so that
saloon
came first to signify a room for socializing in a hotel or on a ship, then a place for dedicated drinking, and finally, and a little unexpectedly, a type of automobile.
Salon
, meanwhile, became indelibly attached to places associated with artistic endeavors before being appropriated (from about 1910) by providers of hair care and beauty treatments.
Parlor
, the word long favored by Americans for the main room of the home, has a kind of nineteenth-century frontier feel to it, but in fact is the oldest word of all. It was first used in 1225, referring to a room where monks could go to talk (it is from the French
parler
, “to speak”), and was extended to secular contexts by the last quarter of the following century.

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