| Details:
Return to Pleasant Valley:
Louis Bromfield’s best from Malabar Farm
& his other country classics
George DeVault, ed.,
The American Botanist, 1996
IBSN 0-929332-06-7
320 pp
|
|
|
 |
April 5, 2004:
Return to Pleasant Valley is a compilation of some of Louis
Bromfield’s later and more popular works. In non-agricultural
circles, these essays may have escaped the notice of readers, so
George DeVault does the reading public a service even as he may
do a disservice to Bromfield. To condense and crystallize many books
into one short, pithy read is a difficult task, and DeVault probably
took a meat cleaver to his original stock of selections. In doing
so, he gives readers an inkling of the character and ideas of a
charismatic writer-turned-farmer. The downside to compilations is
that they give the reader a little knowledge, perhaps enough to
make rash judgments. DeVault admits that he includes certain sections
hoping to spark readers’ curiosity and send them looking for
the original books in their entirety. Readers may take that exact
course of action. However, in the worst case, some readers may feel
that they understand Bromfield and his writing when they find a
quote they disagree with, and opt out of further study.
Bromfield was a larger than life character, who strode about, hunted
wild game, wrote over 30 books, got into loud arguments, enjoyed
good food and big dogs, and farmed like he didn’t know any
better—likely because he didn’t. A few conversations
between Bromfield and his farm manager Max are recounted (from both
Max’s and Bromfield’s daughter Ellen’s perspectives),
and they illustrate Bromfield’s idealism, stubbornness and
manipulative tendencies. He thrived on doing things that made sense
to him, and took no one’s advice without testing the truth
of it for his own circumstances. Yet, if anyone came to him for
advice (or even if they didn’t) he could not keep himself
from imparting any helpful knowledge he had acquired. This is only
an apparent contradiction if you expect advice to be given and taken
in a quiet, trusting manner. Bromfield expected his advice-givers
to be both ready to fight for their point of view, and ready for
the full force of his convictions when he got rolling on a topic.
Despite becoming well-acquainted with the delicate balances of soil
health and the fragility of seedlings and soils, he was not always
a gentle man.
Some of Bromfield’s forceful convictions are widely shared,
and some ostracize both sides of a debate. He talks about the unharnessed
power of lackadaisical farmers. If we motivate farmers with education,
rather than dismissing them and their questions with poorly-informed
recommendations, we have a new class of citizen who can teach by
example or lecture the proper way to maintain fertility, yields,
and biodiversity while decreasing pests, erosion and pollution.
Bromfield also thought that government programs as a safety net
were a sham. To his mind, no public relief program provided the
security that healthy soil and various food crops did. He irked
ammoniated fertilizer companies by saying that their products were
no good without natural organic matter in the soil, and maddened
organic advocates by saying that the liquid fertilizer would be
helpful under certain circumstances. Bromfield formed some romanticized
notions about farming (he battled with his farm manager over the
notion that one could be completely self-sufficient [pp. 156-161];
writing about a barn, he said “it had never been painted,
but for that same reason it had a beauty, and above all a dignity,
which neatly painted barns never achieve, and there was about it
none of the toylike appearance of the classic red-painted barn”
[pp. 7-8]). Elsewhere, he indulged in harsh social classifications—I
take issue with his near-condemnation of settlers on the basis of
genetics (p. 83), but that allows me to join the crowd of people
that disagree with him on some issues.
That said, his writing does communicate an appealing and intrinsic
consciousness of food quality, watersheds, quality of life for all
animals and plants, and how vigor improves any organism's chance
for survival without toxic additives. Some excerpts from his stories
have wonderful descriptions that are completely devoid of the larger-than-life
Bromfield. I suspect that in most of his writing, he places life
and nature in the superior position, and counts himself a lucky
and gifted observer. In a short story titled “The Pond,”
the main character expresses to us his fleeting grasp of immortality,
feeling that he is an atom, a small part of the infinite wonder
of an immortal nature, which just changes form. Then he regains
his human sensibilities, and realizes that even as a human being,
he still takes part in the infinite ego-less flow of natural history,
and that in a sense—as a component and not an individual—he
attains immortality.
Living in France as the Germans invaded, Bromfield became intimately
aware of his feelings of mortality and felt strongly where his roots
lay. “[T]he feeling of frontiers, hostility and peril became
increasingly acute, and distant Pleasant Valley, fertile and remote
and secure, seemed more and more a haven, hidden away among the
hills of Ohio” (p. 27). He returned to Ohio and took steps
to ensure his security through hard work and conviction, and we
can read and judge his exploits from his own record. I’m sure
he would invite us to do so, and challenge us also to determine
how secure our own lives are, and what we intend to do about it.
Trina Smith is the CSA manager at Sunrise Acres Farm in Cumberland,
Maine.
|