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+This eBook, including all associated images, markup, improvements,
+metadata, and any other content or labor, has been confirmed to be
+in the PUBLIC DOMAIN IN THE UNITED STATES.
+
+Procedures for determining public domain status are described in
+the "Copyright How-To" at https://www.gutenberg.org.
+
+No investigation has been made concerning possible copyrights in
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+status under the laws that apply to them.
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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #51958 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/51958)
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-Project Gutenberg's The Mountain School-Teacher, by Melville Davisson Post
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most
-other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of
-the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at
-www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you'll have
-to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook.
-
-
-
-Title: The Mountain School-Teacher
-
-Author: Melville Davisson Post
-
-Release Date: May 2, 2016 [EBook #51958]
-Last Updated: March 16, 2018
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE MOUNTAIN SCHOOL-TEACHER ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by David Widger from page images generously
-provided by the Internet Archive
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-THE MOUNTAIN SCHOOL-TEACHER
-
-By Melville Davisson Post
-
-D. Appleton and Company
-
-New York, London
-
-1922
-
-[Illustration: 0001]
-
-[Illustration: 0002]
-
-[Illustration: 0003]
-
-[Illustration: 0007]
-
-
-
-
-
-THE MOUNTAIN SCHOOL-TEACHER
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER I
-
-|THERE had once been a path along the backbone of the mountain, but the
-wilderness had undertaken to remove it, and had almost succeeded. The
-wind had gathered bits of moss, twigs and dead stuff into the slight
-depression. The great hickories had covered it with leaves. The rain
-had packed it. There was no longer a path, only an open way between the
-trees running down the gentle slope of the ridge to the mountain road.
-The ridge was heavily wooded. The primeval forest was there. Great
-hickories shot up sixty feet without a limb, and so close that a man
-putting out his hand could reach from one tree to another. A gigantic
-poplar now and then arose, a sugar maple, an oak--huge at the butt, deep
-rooted in the good soil.
-
-The afternoon sun, excluded of the forest, seemed to pack itself into
-this abandoned path.
-
-The leaves fallen from the hickories, under the touch of waning summer,
-took on now, by the magic of this sun, golden tones of red and yellow.
-Woodpeckers hammered on the great trees along this path. Insects moved
-between the branches, the wild bee, the hornet, the yellow butterfly, as
-though the aerial life of the woods had been drawn here to the sun.
-
-A man was coming through the forest along this abandoned path. He walked
-slowly, his hands behind him, his head bare. He was a very young man--at
-that period of life when, within a day, as by the crossing of some
-unmarked line, the boy becomes a man. There was about him the vigor, the
-freshness, the joy of youth, under a certain maturity. He was not above
-middle height, his face was oval, his eyes gray-blue, his hair of that
-soft rich brown which a touch of the sun burnishes into a living yellow;
-the mouth was sensitive and mobile.
-
-There was a marked contrast between the man and the wild, rugged,
-primitive country in which he appeared. His hands were firm and white,
-and his skin was not in the least discolored by sun or weather.
-
-Now and then the man stopped and looked up at the dappled woodpeckers,
-and the swarms of yellow butterflies, gathered here along this sunlit
-path as though to welcome his arrival, and his mouth relaxed into an
-eager, luminous smile, as though, despite his maturity, he retained a
-child's sense of some universal kinship with all living things. He came
-down the long ridge toward the place where the mountain road crossed the
-low gap.
-
-Half a mile below him a patriarchal ox was plodding slowly up the
-mountain road. The ox was old. His red hair was worn away in a variety
-of places, by long labors at the sled and the plow. His ancient horns
-were capped with brass knobs. Astride the ox sat a small boy on a sack
-of corn, perhaps a bushel and a half shelled from the cob. Under the
-sack was a strip of homemade carpet dyed yellow with copperas. The
-little boy guided the ox with a piece of old rope tied to the left
-horn below the brass knob, precisely as the driver of a four-horse team
-directs it with a single line. When he wished the ox to go to the right,
-he jerked the rope and shouted, “Gee, Berry,” when to the left, he
-pulled on the rope and shouted, “Haw, Berry.”
-
-But the ox no longer required these elaborate directions.
-
-“Gee,”
-
-“Haw,” accompanied by a kicking of the rider's naked heels, were enough
-for the patriarch, or the soft heels alone on the broad iron ribs.
-
-The boy could not have been above six years old. He wore two garments, a
-little blue shirt of the material called “hickory,” and short trousers,
-with tiny hand-knitted woolen “galluses.”
-
-He was now engaged with an extreme difficulty.
-
-For more than a mile, under the ox's rolling gait, the corn had been
-moving over to one end of the sack. To keep the bag from falling, the
-boy had added his weight to the decreasing end. As the corn moved, he
-shifted his seat a little farther out on the sack. He sat now, well
-over the ox's side on the very end of the sack. His little mouth was
-contracted.
-
-It had been a long, painful struggle--this fight against the corn. Every
-inch, every fraction of an inch, contested.
-
-The grains had crept slowly over, and the child had considered and
-estimated the change, and moved with it. He had attributed to the corn
-a certain malicious intent, a certain insidious hostility, and he had
-resisted with dogged courage. It was all in the set of his little mouth,
-in the clutch of his tiny brown hand.
-
-For the sack to fall was a calamity which the child well understood.
-
-He could not lift the sack. He could not leave the ox and go for aid,
-because Berry, although a member of the family, was an eyeservant and
-not above making his dinner on the corn when the master's back was
-turned.
-
-Neither could he leave the corn lying in the road and return with
-the ox. Some one might carry it away and, besides, it was his bale of
-stuffs, the cargo with which he had been intrusted, and he could not
-leave it.
-
-The mountain road was deserted and the evening sun was beginning to
-descend.
-
-The child's whole energies were centered on his desperate struggle with
-the corn, and the ox traveled on leisurely as he liked. Presently, as
-he neared the top, the ox stepped on the root of a tree remaining in
-the road, and his shoulder went down. The sack slipped forward and fell,
-carrying with it the boy and the piece of carpet.
-
-The ox instantly stopped, the boy rose and sat down on the sack, resting
-his elbows on his knees and his chin in the hollow of his tiny brown
-hands. His features retained their set, dogged expression, but presently
-big tears began to trickle slowly down over his determined little face.
-He sat with his back toward the mountain gap, locking out over the vast
-wilderness of tree tops below him. The ox stood before him in the road,
-a figure of unending patience.
-
-The day waned, long shadows crossed the road, the sun withdrew to the
-high places. Far away through the deep wooded gorges night began to
-enter the mountains.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER II
-
-
-|WHEN the man came out into the mountain road, he saw the little boy
-sitting on the sack of corn beside the red ox, and he smiled as he had
-smiled at the hammering birds, at the yellow butterflies. He turned down
-toward the tragic picture, lengthening his steps. The sun, by some trick
-of the moving world, seemed to follow him out of the abandoned path.
-
-The little boy did not see the man approaching, but he observed that the
-ox, apparently resigned to passing the night on the mountain, was making
-ready to lie down, knees first, after the manner of cattle. And the
-comfortable assurance of Berry in this, the hour of their misfortune,
-was more than he could bear. He arose and began to beat the ox with his
-little fists.
-
-“Git up, Berry!” he cried. “You ole dog! You ole scalawag! Git up!”
-
-The ox slowly arose, and the child turned to find the man beside him.
-
-“Poor Berry!” said the man, smiling. “Is he a very bad ox?”
-
-“He's a lazy ole pup,” replied the little hoy, his wet eyes catching
-and reflecting the stranger's smile. “He's spilt!” Then he crowded his
-little fists into his eyes to remove the traces of weakness with which
-he had been taken unawares.
-
-“Do you reckon,” he said, “that both of us could put the corn on him if
-we lifted together?”
-
-“I think so,” replied the man; “at least we will try.”
-
-He took up the piece of yellow carpet and laid it over the ox's back.
-Then he stooped down, put his arms around the sack, linking his fingers
-together under it. The little hoy took hold of the corner. The man
-raised the sack with scarcely an effort, the child contributing his tiny
-might. Then, as though the child's help were essential to the task, he
-nodded.
-
-“Now,” he said, and with a swing lifted the sack onto the ox's back.
-
-The hoy straightened up, and put both little hands on his hips. His face
-was now radiant.
-
-“We got it up all right, didn't we?” he said, “both a-liftin'; an' now,”
- he paused and regarded the ox with some concern, “I've got to git on
-somehow-er-nuther.” The ordinary man would then have lifted the child
-and set him on the ox, but this man did not. He seemed to know and
-regard that self-reliance which was so dear a thing to this child. He
-stood back and looked over the patriarch.
-
-“Berry is a big ox,” he said. “We will lead him up to the bank.”
-
-The little boy walked across the road, with a bit of a swagger.
-
-“Yes,” he said, “Berry's a big ox.”
-
-He liked this strange man who understood and considered him.
-
-The man led the ox to the roadside, and standing by the beast's
-shoulder, set his knee against the bank. The little boy put his foot on
-the man's knee, caught hold of the ox's shoulder, and climbed up onto
-the sack of corn. He panted with the effort.
-
-“Berry's everlastin' big,” he observed in comment. Then he set himself
-squarely on the sack.
-
-“We're goin' to mill,” he said. “Where are you goin'?”
-
-“If you don't mind,” replied the man, “I shall go along with you and
-Berry.”
-
-The tiny chest expanded.
-
-“I don't mind,” he said, “ner Berry don't neither.”
-
-Then, as a sort of condescension, as a sort of return for the man's
-kindness, he gravely handed down the bit of ancient rope.
-
-“An' you k'n lead Berry if you want to.”
-
-They crossed the low gap and began to descend the mountain on the other
-side. The man walked in front with the rope in his hand, the ox followed
-with a slow, roiling gait, his head lowered, the child sitting astride
-the sack of corn. The sun seemed to linger on the crest of the mountain
-as though loath, now, to withdraw wholly from the world, a vagrant
-breeze began to move idly in the tree tops, a faint haze to gather over
-the forests, below the sun, as though it were some visible odor arising
-from the earth.
-
-The road was steep and rough, low stumps and the roots of trees remained
-in it, and it was washed out in great ruts. The winter rain had carried
-the loose earth out of it and left the stones and the tree roots
-uncovered. A modern vehicle could hardly have kept together on such a
-road, although it bore the marks of wheels where the mountaineer had
-gone over with his wagon.
-
-The little boy sat regarding the man who walked before him in the road.
-He seemed not to have felt with this man that fear of the stranger which
-is so strong an instinct with a child. From the first moment he had been
-wholly at his ease. He spoke without restraint.
-
-“Where's your hat?” he said.
-
-The man paused, and put up his hand as though he had not until this
-moment realized that he was bareheaded.
-
-A note of distress came into the child's voice.
-
-“You've lost your hat. Are you goin' back to look for it? 'Cause me an'
-Berry can go on to the mill by ourselves.”
-
-“No,” said the man, “I shall go on with you and Berry.”
-
-“But you ain't got no hat,” the child continued.
-
-“Perhaps I shall find one somewhere,” replied the man.
-
-“No,” said the child, “you won't never find one, 'cause nobody don't
-lose their hats up here. You'll have to buy one at the store.”
-
-Then he went on to tell of all the wonderful things that the store
-contained: Striped candy in sticks in a big glass jar, and fishhooks,
-and sea grass fishin' lines, and guns, and pistols, and knives. But
-principally knives. Upon this particular topic he spoke with deep
-personal interest. In that place of wonders were knives with six blades,
-with “peraly” handles, with gimlets and tweezers in them, little knives
-that one could hide between one's fingers and big ones with a ring in
-the handle so one could tie them to his “galluses.” And Barlows with IXL
-on the blade.
-
-He paused and thrust his hand into his pocket. He had one that his
-grandfather had given him at Christmas, and he held it up--a Barlow with
-a bone handle and a single blade.
-
-The man stopped and came back to the ox's shoulder. He took the knife
-and examined it carefully, opened it and tried the edge on his thumb.
-The blade was round and blunt at the end. The child explained this with
-an air of apology.
-
-“Gran'-pap was afraid I'd run it in my eye, so he grinded it off. Have
-you got a knife?”
-
-The man felt in his pockets.
-
-“No,” he replied, “I don't seem to have a knife.”
-
-“Well,” said the little boy, “you can git one when you go to git your
-hat.”
-
-The man walked on by the ox's shoulder, and the child continued to talk.
-There were difficulties to be met. The store was very far away, and one
-required money to obtain its treasures. The getting of money was a very
-troublesome affair. But he knew a way or two by which the thing could
-be accomplished. One could gather hickory nuts or one could dig ginseng.
-The latter method was to be advised--a pound brought a dollar and
-seventeen cents. But it must be dried. One strung it on a string and
-hung it over the fireplace. The storekeeper would not take it green.
-
-He spoke a word of comment concerning the storekeeper.
-
-He was hard to fool. He always broke the ginseng roots to see if there
-was a nail concealed inside. The child knew a man who had outwitted the
-storekeeper once by putting shot in the ends of the root, leaving the
-middle unmolested; but, he added, that was “no way to do.”
-
-The road on this side of the mountain was steep. The turns short. The
-little party soon reached the foot, and came out into a valley, cleared
-and sowed in timothy grass. Through this valley, between sodded banks,
-ran a dark-colored, swiftly flowing stream.
-
-The road followed the stream through the meadow until it approached the
-mill. There the stream descended swiftly over ridges of sandstone into a
-dam of ancient logs. The mill sat beside the road, its roof projecting,
-its porch raised above the ground, its door and its gable open, its
-entrance coated with white dust.
-
-The machinery was of the simplest, two stone burrs turned by a paddle
-wheel; the water carried down from the dam in a boxed sluice, covered
-with green moss.
-
-The mill evidently served two uses.
-
-There was a second door to one-half of it, also opening on the porch,
-and through the open door one could see a stove, a bed, a well-scrubbed
-table.
-
-As the man leading the red ox approached, a woman appeared in the mill
-door. She was a sturdy woman of middle life, her calico dress pulled
-up in front and girded around her ample waist with an apron string. Her
-sleeves were rolled to the elbows, and her fat, powerful hands rested on
-her hips. Her mouth was compressed, the muscles of her jaws protruded,
-her bright gray eyes rested on the strange man with a profound, unmoved
-scrutiny. When the ox stood beside the porch, the man spoke.
-
-“Good evening,” he said.
-
-The woman did not reply, she jerked her head; then she came slowly out,
-still looking at the man.
-
-“Jump off, David,” she said to the boy; then she took up the sack with
-ease, swung it into the hollow of her arm, and went with it into the
-mill, But over her shoulder she continued to regard the man standing in
-the road.
-
-She threw the sack down by the hopper, and came again into the mill
-door. Her fat hands returned to her hips and her eyes went again to the
-man. But she spoke to the boy.
-
-“You'll be late gittin' home.”
-
-“I ain't goin' home,” replied the child. “I'm goin' to Uncle Jimmie's,”
- and he pointed his linger up the valley.
-
-“You can make that by dark.” said the woman, “but you better be movin'
-along.”
-
-She came out and spread the piece of carpet on the ox. The small boy
-stepped off the mill porch and went out into the road behind the man,
-where a flat rock lay in the dust.
-
-He remained a moment squatted down on his bare legs. Then he returned,
-climbed onto the ox, and set out up the valley, kicking his heels
-against the patriarch's ancient ribs.
-
-At the bend of the road, the boy stopped and shouted. The man turned
-about where he was standing. The boy pointed his finger.
-
-“There's somethin' under that rock,” he called.
-
-Then he swung around on his piece of carpet, spoke to the ox, and was
-swallowed up in the shadows of the valley.
-
-The man stooped down and turned the fiat stone over. There lay the
-Barlow knife.
-
-The woman, watching the man, suddenly brought her bent palm to her
-forehead and looked up at the mountain, to see if some stray bit of the
-setting sun had entered the valley. But there was nothing.
-
-Night had descended.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER III
-
-|THE man stood out in the road looking toward the south. The country
-under his eye was primitive. The mountains rose in benches, heavily
-wooded. On one of these benches stood a log house to be seen among the
-trees, faintly, where the mountain road passed. Behind it, far away, a
-strip of green lay like a cloth across the very top of the mountain--a
-bit of farm in which two immense hickory trees stood like pillars. These
-trees must have been gigantic, since at the great distance they were to
-the eye huge. The man standing in the road seemed to be considering this
-country. His face was lifted and, in repose, melancholy.
-
-The woman continued to regard the men standing in the road. Finally she
-spoke, swinging her body a moment on her sturdy legs.
-
-“You're the new School-teacher, I reckon.”
-
-The man replied, without moving.
-
-“Yes,” he said.
-
-“You're a little behindhand.”
-
-“Yes.”
-
-“You've come a good piece to-day, I reckon.”
-
-“A long way.”
-
-The woman took her fat right hand from her hips, and began to brush the
-skirt of her calico dress, although there was nothing on it to remove.
-
-“Well,” she said, “you better come in and git your supper.”
-
-The man turned and faced the woman.
-
-His features appeared by a powerful effort to exclude something which
-he wished not to show and had been until this moment not wholly able to
-conceal.
-
-“You are very kind,” he said. “I am hungry.”
-
-“Just set down on the porch.” said the woman. “We've had our supper, but
-I'll git you a bite.”
-
-The man came over and sat down, his hands idly on his knees, his face
-looking out toward the mountains. The woman began her preparations for
-the stranger's meal. She entered the room where the wooden table stood,
-crossed to a cupboard, opened it and took out some dishes. These she
-began to put on the table. Then she stopped and stood with her hands
-resting on her hips. A moment later she removed the dishes, went over
-to a chest, standing in the corner, lifted the lid, took out a clean
-homespun linen cloth, and spread it over the table.
-
-As she moved about she talked.
-
-“When are you goin' to begin school?”
-
-“Monday morning,” replied the man. “Word ought to be sent 'round.”
-
-“I think the children will come.”
-
-“They'll come when they know it, an' they'll know it purty soon; news
-travels powerful fast. We looked for you yesterday.”
-
-“Yes.”
-
-“Somethin' kept you back, I s'pose.”
-
-“Yes.”
-
-“Well, there's allers somethin' to happen. You won't have much of a
-school, I expect. The big boys have all gone off to the sawmills, an'
-the big girls are helpin' with the work. It's a mighty busy time.”
-
-“I would rather have the little children.”
-
-“They're a heap of bother.”
-
-“I don't think I shall mind the bother.”
-
-“Don't you? Most people do. They're harder to teach than the big ones,
-ain't they?”
-
-“I think they are easier to teach.”
-
-“Do you? What makes you think they're easier to teach?”
-
-“They understand me better,” replied the man.
-
-The woman had taken down an old glass bowl with a notched glass cover
-from the top shelf of the cupboard, rinsed it with water, wiped it
-carefully and set it on the table. In this she had placed a comb of red,
-mountain honey. She continued to talk.
-
-“I want Martha to go to school. She's a-goin' on nine. I can't spare her
-very well, but I don't want to keep her back. She saves me a good many
-steps. She's gone after the cow. She ought to be comin'.”
-
-The woman was busy at the stove.
-
-“I don't see why a cow can't learn somethin', can't learn to come home
-at night, anyway. Everything else learns to come home at night. Ketch a
-dog forgittin' it. I 'spose old Bloss has gone as fur as she could git,
-an' you can't allears hear the bell. But Martha'll find her.”
-
-The woman came from the stove to the table.
-
-“Martha can read, an' she can spell out of the spellin' book. She's real
-smart.”
-
-A stone jar sat on a bench in the corner of the room, beside it was a
-yellow gourd with a long handle, the bowl of the gourd cut out to form
-a dipper. The woman got a plate out of the cupboard. A very old plate,
-somewhat chipped, with quaint little flowers painted on it in bright
-colors. The plate had not been used for a long time. It was covered with
-white dust. She carried the plate over to the jar, dipped up some water
-with the gourd, and holding the plate over a bucket, poured on the
-water, then she polished the plate carefully with a cloth and set it on
-the table. Her conversation continued.
-
-“The schoolhouse is old, but it's got a good roof on it. It'll turn the
-weather. Ole man Dix put that roof on three years ago. The clapboards
-are all smoothed with a drawin' knife. He was so slow that it made you
-tired jest to see him workin', but he done a good job. He used to have a
-savin' that he got out of the Bible--when you made fun of him for bein'
-so slow. He must have heard it in meetin'. He couldn't read. But I've
-heard him say it over an' over a thousand times, I reckon--'He that
-believeth shall not make haste.' I don't know what he believed. I know
-he was never paid nothin' for puttin' on the roof.”
-
-“How do you know that he was not paid?” said the man.
-
-“I know it very well,” said the woman. “He was dyin' of the janders all
-the time. He sawed the comb of the roof the very day before he went.”
-
-The iron skillet on which the woman was baking cakes, overheated, at
-this moment caught fire. She lifted it from the stove, blew out the
-flame, and turned the cake with a deft twist of her hand.
-
-Engaged with the pancakes for the man's supper, her conversation became
-a monologue.
-
-She reviewed the families living in the mountains, enumerated the
-children, named them, classed them as good or bad with a few clear
-strokes and attached the history of their ancestors, running on, as she
-moved about. Then, when she had finished, she got a little yellow bowl
-from the cupboard and came with it in her hand to the door.
-
-“I wonder what's keepin' Martha,” she murmured.
-
-At the door she came near to dropping the bowl out of her hand in her
-astonishment. A little figure in a red calico sun-bonnet sat beside the
-man on the mill porch; close beside him in the gloom of the descending
-night.
-
-“Goodness!” said the woman. “How you skeered me. When did you git back?”
-
-The child arose, laughing. In the darkness only the bonnet, the short
-dress, the little white legs were visible.
-
-“While you were talkin', Mother,” she replied.
-
-“Bless my life!” said the woman. “I didn't hear you.” She handed the
-child the bowl. “Run along to the spring house and git some butter.”
-
-The woman went back into the room, got a tallow candle, squeezed it
-into an old brass candlestick, and set it on the table. In a moment
-the little girl returned with the butter. She regarded the table for a
-moment, then she removed the old blue plate, drew out from under the
-bed a store box with a lid fastened with leather hinges--evidently her
-private chest--took out a plate, washed it with boiling water from the
-teakettle, and set it on the table. It was a little, cheap, porcelain
-plate with the letters of the alphabet raised around the rim. The woman
-watched the child with a certain smiling condescension. Then she went to
-the door, wiped her hands on her apron, stood back by the doorpost, and
-spoke to the man.
-
-“Now,” she said, “if you'll come in to supper.”
-
-The man got up, came into the room, and sat down at the table. Before
-him on the clean linen cloth were honey, brown corncakes, and a goblet
-of milk. The light of the candle seemed to gather and illumine his face;
-and curiously to bring out in his brown hair those touches of living
-yellow which the sun had so strikingly indicated on this afternoon.
-And more curiously, too, there was no stain of travel, no evidence of
-fatigue on the man. Instead of it, there was an abiding glow of fresh,
-vital, alluring youth.
-
-The woman moved about, setting the room in order, the little girl stood
-by the man's chair.
-
-Presently the woman finished and came over to the table, bringing with
-her a heavy, hickory, split-bottom chair. She stopped, snuffed the
-candle, and then sat down opposite the man. Her hands, as though
-accustomed to constant occupation, wandered to the table, smoothed
-the cloth by stretching the two corners, flicked away invisible dust.
-Finally she spoke.
-
-“You're goin' to board around, I 'spose.”
-
-“No,” replied the man, “I'm going to stay at Nicholas Parks' house.”
-
-The woman dropped her hands into her lap. Her mouth opened with
-astonishment.
-
-“Not with ole Nicholas!” she said. “Why, the devil couldn't live with
-ole Nicholas! He's the meanest man that ever drawed the breath of life!
-He wouldn't give you a meal's vittels if it was to save you from dying!”
-
-She arose to her feet.
-
-“Dear me!” she said, “that won't do at all.” She walked about the room
-moving articles of furniture, and crumpling her apron in her fat hands.
-Finally she came back to the table.
-
-“It ain't cold,” she said, “an' if you could sleep in the mill loft, you
-could stay right here with us.”
-
-She hastened to explain.
-
-“You could help me grind on Saturdays--that's the busiest day, an'
-maybe, if you're handy with tools, you could patch up the mill some. The
-wheel needs a new paddle, an' you could board up the loft, an' you could
-put in some steps.”
-
-The man listened.
-
-“Yes,” he said, “I can work with tools; I will do these things for you.”
-
-“Then you'll stay,” said the woman.
-
-“I am sorry,” replied the man, “but I cannot stay.”
-
-The woman sat down in her chair.
-
-“How you'll git on with ole Nicholas, I don't see,” she said.
-
-“He will not be there,” said the man.
-
-“Not be there!” the woman repeated.
-
-“No,” replied the man, “he is going away.”
-
-The woman's face became, on the instant, incredulous.
-
-The little girl, standing beside the man, saw it and shook her head. The
-woman, her mouth open, her chin lifted, marked the signal and respected
-it. She dropped her hands into her lap.
-
-“Well!” she said, and after a moment, to establish her composure, “you
-can't go on to ole Nicholas' to-night,--it's dark now.”
-
-“I am going to the schoolhouse tonight,” replied the man.
-
-“You're more'n welcome to stay with us,” said the woman, “if you'll
-stay.”
-
-The man had now finished his supper, and he rose.
-
-“I know that,” he said, “you are very kind to me.”
-
-The woman got up and went to the door.
-
-“Dear me,” she said, “I hate to see you goin' out in the night.”
-
-The man stopped to kiss the little girl.
-
-“I don't mind the night,” he said. “I have some things to do.”
-
-“The schoolhouse will need cleanin' up,” said the woman, “an'
-to-morrow's Sunday. I ought to a-helped you clean it.”
-
-“You have already helped me more than you realize,” replied the man. “If
-I need further help, another will help me.”
-
-Then he went down into the road. There was no moon, but under the
-brilliant stars, the road became a vague white way, leading the stranger
-up into the deeps of the forest.
-
-The woman remained standing in the door. Presently the little girl
-spoke.
-
-“Mother,” she said, “the Teacher has no clothes, he didn't even have a
-little bundle.”
-
-The woman came back to the table. She stood a moment with her hand
-resting on her hip.
-
-“That's so,” she said. “I reckon he didn't bring any. Carryin' things
-gits powerful tiresome, when you come a long ways.”
-
-Then the dominant quality in the woman--the instinct to find a resource
-for every condition that arose, moved her. She went over to the
-fireplace, above which, on the high mantel shelf sat an ancient clock.
-She stood on her tiptoes, opened the clock door, and took out a little
-brass key, then she crossed to the foot of the bed, stooped and dragged
-a little old horsehide trunk out into the floor. She fitted the key into
-the lock, but it was rusted and would not turn. The trunk had not been
-opened for many years. She came back to the table and rubbed the key
-with melted tallow from the candle.
-
-“There are some fine shirts in that trunk that we could give him,” she
-said. “Your grandma give them to your pap at our infair. She made them
-herself. But he never wore them. He said, they was too fine to skuff
-out. An' they've laid there for ten years. They're a heap too big for
-the Teacher. Your pap was twice as big as he is. But I can cut off the
-sleeves and take up the neckband, so he can wear them. They're good
-linen. Your grandma was mighty handy.”
-
-The little girl had removed the dishes from the table, while the woman
-was opening the trunk. She now came and held the horsehide lid, while
-her mother searched for the articles. Finally the woman found the
-shirts. She found also, at the bottom of the trunk, a folded piece of
-linen, as though that one making the shirts had used only a portion of
-her material.
-
-“Well, upon my word,” she said, “if here ain't a big piece that your
-grandma didn't make up.”
-
-She brought the shirts over to the table where the candle stood. She
-regarded them with surprise and admiration.
-
-“Bless my life, they're nice,” she said, “not a yaller spot on them.”
-
-A moment she stood in rapt appreciation of the beautiful, snowy linen.
-Then she caught up one of the shirts and spread the neckband with her
-fingers.
-
-“Well! Upon my soul!” she said. “Upon my soul!”
-
-She held the shirt up and measured it from shoulder to shoulder, and
-from the neckband to the wrist.
-
-“Why, they'll fit him! They'll fit him just as good as if they'd been
-made for him. If that don't beat all! Your pap was over six feet, and
-long armed. Now, how in the name of common sense did your grandma ever
-make such a mistake? It ain't like your grandma--she always sewed by
-pinnin' and measurin'.”
-
-The little girl was not listening. She had gone out onto the mill porch.
-She now spoke, but not in reply to these exclamations.
-
-“There are lights up at the schoolhouse, Mother.”
-
-The woman, still under her surprise, replied without looking up.
-
-“I reckon the Teacher's cleanin' the schoolhouse.”
-
-“But the lights look like they went up an' down through the tree tops.”
-
-“I suppose he's carryin' water down from the spring on the mountain,”
- replied the woman, still bending over the shirts that lay spread out on
-the table.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IV
-
-
-|AT SUNRISE the following morning, a man riding a lean bay horse came
-down the mountain road toward the mill. His left hand was deformed, as
-though from infancy. The fingers doubled in against the wrist. He held
-the bridle rein, tied in a knot, over the crook of his arm. He was a big
-man and he sat in the saddle as though more accustomed to that seat than
-to any other. The horse traveled in a running walk. He turned into
-the little valley and approached the mill. The miller was feeding her
-chickens in the road before the door, throwing out handfuls of yellow
-corn. The man called to her before the horse stopped.
-
-“Have you got enough of that corn for a horse-feed, Sally?”
-
-The woman turned, scattering the chickens.
-
-“Bless my life,” she said, “it's the doctor. Where you been?”
-
-“Up there,” he replied, jerking his deformed arm toward the summit of
-the mountain where lay the bit of farm, marked by the gigantic trees.
-
-“Is ole Nicholas sick?” said the woman. “He ain't sick now,” replied the
-doctor. “You cured h'm, did you?”
-
-“No, I didn't cure him,” said the doctor, getting down from his horse;
-“they were dyin' in Hickory Mountain before I come into it, an' they'll
-keep on a-dyin' after I've gone out.”
-
-He lifted his leather saddlebags down from the horse and carried it
-across to the mill porch.
-
-The woman remained standing in the road, her closed hand full of corn,
-the yellow grains showing between her fingers.
-
-“You arn't tellin' me ole Nicholas is dead!”
-
-“Yes, he's dead,” said the doctor. “New get me a gallon of corn; that
-horse ain't had a bite to eat since yesterday evening.”
-
-He went across the road, picked up a box, knocked the dust out of it
-and brought it over by the mill porch. Then he took the bit out of
-the horse's mouth, and put the bridle rein over the saddle, under the
-stirrup leather.
-
-“Ole Nicholas dead!” the woman repeated. “Well! Upon my word!”
-
-“Why shouldn't he be dead?” said the doctor. “Every damn thing's got to
-die.”
-
-“What killed him?” inquired the woman.
-
-“I don't know what killed him,” replied the doctor. “He was stretched
-out on the floor when I got there.”
-
-“Did he die just like anybody else?” said the woman.
-
-“No,” answered the doctor, “he didn't die like anybody that I ever saw.
-Will you get me that corn?”
-
-The woman went into the mill and presently came out with the toll
-measure full of corn. She poured it into the box. Then she sat down
-on the porch beside the doctor, and began to roll the end of her apron
-between her fat fingers.
-
-“When did ole Nicholas take down?” she began.
-
-“I don't know that,” said the doctor. “Jonas Black was crossing the
-mountain about noon, an' old Nicholas called to him and told him to tell
-me to come and see him. I went up last night.”
-
-“It's a wonder you went,” said the miller. “Ole Nicholas wouldn't pay
-you, would he?”
-
-“If he didn't pay me, I wouldn't go,” replied the doctor, “you can
-depend on that. I've quit bringin' 'em in or seein' 'em out unless I get
-the cash in my hand.”
-
-“I didn't think he had any money. He was always buyin' wild lands of the
-State.”
-
-“I don't know how much money he had,” replied the doctor, “but I do know
-that it was always there on the table for me when I went. If it hadn't
-a-been, I wouldn't have darkened his door.”
-
-“Did he die hard?” said the woman. “Everybody dies hard,” replied the
-doctor.
-
-“Did he want to go?”
-
-“None of us want to go.”
-
-“How long did he live after you got there?”
-
-“He lived until daylight.”
-
-“You must have had a bad night of it.”
-
-“It was awful!”
-
-“It must a-been terrible if you thought so. You are used to seein'
-people die.”
-
-“I'm not used to seein' them die like old Nicholas died,” replied the
-doctor. “He must a-been in powerful pain.”
-
-“It wasn't so much pain. I could stop the pain.”
-
-“Was he out of his head then?”
-
-“I don't know.”
-
-“Couldn't you tell by the way he talked?”
-
-“He didn't talk.”
-
-“Did he see things?”
-
-“I don't know what he saw.”
-
-“What was it that made his dyin' so awful?”
-
-“It was _fear_,” replied the doctor,
-
-“That he'd be lost?”
-
-“No,” said the doctor, “that he'd die before he could tell me something
-that he was tryin' to tell me.”
-
-“Goodness! Was he tryin' to tell you somethin' all night?”
-
-“All night,” said the doctor.
-
-The woman sat for a moment in silence, her fat hands clasped together in
-her lap, the muscles of her face tense, her eyes fixed on the mountain,
-then she spoke. “Did he ever tell you?”
-
-“Yes.”
-
-“Was it somethin' he'd done?”
-
-“N,” replied the doctor, “it was not anything he'd done.”
-
-“What was it?”
-
-“I did not understand it,” replied the doctor.
-
-The woman rose.
-
-“Good Lord!” she said, “a man on his deathbed a-trying all night to tell
-you somethin' an' then you didn't understand it!”
-
-“No, I didn't understand it,” said the doctor. “He kept
-whisperin'--'He's comin,' he's comin'. He's to have my things,' an' I
-kept askin' him if he meant some of his kin folks, but he always shook
-his head. I never saw a man in such mortal agony to speak. Finally just
-before he died, he got it out. He said, 'The Teacher.' Now, what did he
-mean?”
-
-“I know who he meant,” replied the woman, “he meant the School-teacher.”
-
-“What School-teacher?”
-
-“Why, the new School-teacher, the one that come last night. He was goin'
-to stay with Nicholas.”
-
-The horse had now finished with his breakfast, the doctor got up.
-
-“I didn't know you had a Schoolteacher,” he said.
-
-He went over to the horse, put the bit into its mouth, took up his
-leather saddle-hags and thrust his foot into the stirrup.
-
-“See here, Sally,” he said, “old Nicholas wanted me to get up at his
-funeral and say that he had left everything to the 'Teacher.' I suppose
-he meant this new School-teacher. I told him I'd see to it. Now, I don't
-want to come back here; couldn't you do it? The country will likely
-gather up and bury him this afternoon.”
-
-He swung up into the saddle and hooked the bridle rein over his crooked
-arm.
-
-“Yes, I'll do that,” said the woman. The doctor clucked to his horse,
-and disappeared down the little valley; his arm rising and falling with
-the regular motion of the swinging walk.
-
-The woman remained standing in the road, her hands spread out on her
-hips. She had suddenly remembered that the guest of last night had said
-that Nicholas Parks was going away!
-
-At noon the miller and her little girl set out up the mountain.
-
-They did not go by the road that wound tortuously through the forest to
-the summit. They followed a path that ascended more directly, crossing
-the road now and then, and climbing up steep ascents to the top, where
-it ended in the road running along the high ridge, through the little
-mountain farm.
-
-The farm was inclosed on either side by a rail fence. Below it was a
-cornfield of several acres, above a bit of fertile meadow, in which, on
-the very ridge, stood two gigantic trees lifting their branches eighty
-feet into the sky.
-
-A dozen paces of beautiful green turf lying between the great
-shellbarks.
-
-Farther out stood a log house with a clapboard roof and a chimney built
-halfway up with stone and finished with crossed sticks, daubed with
-yellow clay. Behind it was a garden inclosed with palings split out of
-long cuts of hickory timber. Midway between the garden and the house,
-opposite the door, was a whitewashed well curb. From a long pole,
-suspended in a forked tree on a round locust pin, hung a sapling
-fastened to a bucket. Everything about the little farm was well kept.
-The chimney and the palings were whitewashed, the fence was well laid
-up, the bit of land was clean. Midway in the meadow, a path entered
-through wooden bars and ran along inside the rail fence to the house.
-
-There was a little crowd of some half dozen men standing about these
-bars, when the woman and child came up.
-
-The woman stopped in the road.
-
-“What are you all standin' around for?” she said.
-
-The men did not immediately reply. Finally one of them answered.
-
-“We're waitin' for the preacher to come.”
-
-The woman looked at the apparently vacant house. The door open. The sun
-lying on the threshold.
-
-“There's a-plenty to do, till he gits here,” she said. “Somebody's got
-to dig a grave, an' somebody's got to make a coffin.”
-
-The man leaning against the bar post, who had spoken for the others, now
-jerked his head toward the meadow'.
-
-“It's dug,” he said.
-
-The woman looked in the direction he indicated; a pile of fresh earth
-lay heaped up in the meadow', not between the two trees, but below'
-them, some paces from the summit.
-
-“Well,” said the woman, “you didn't pick out the place I'd a picked; I'd
-a put it on the ridge between them two trees, that's the natural place
-for it, there couldn't be no grander place. Who did you think you was
-savin' that place for? It looks like you was puttin' ole Nicholas so
-he'd be at the foot of somebody else that you was a-goin' to bury.”
-
-“We didn't pick the place,” said the man.
-
-“Who done it?”
-
-“We don't know who done it, the grave was dug when we got here.”
-
-The conversation was interrupted by the little girl.
-
-“There comes the preacher,” she said.
-
-The woman turned and looked down the road in the direction from which
-she had just come.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER V
-
-|A MAN driving a country buggy was approaching. He was a tall, spare
-man, in a suit of black ready-made clothes that seemed not to fit him in
-any place, and to be a cheap imitation of a clergyman's frock suit.
-He wore cotton gloves. At his feet was a shiny handbag made of some
-inexpensive material to imitate alligator skin. His hair and his heavy,
-drooping mustache were black. His face was narrow, the cheek bones high,
-the mouth straight. One of the man's eyes was partly grown over with
-a cataract, and his effort to see equally with that eye gave him a
-curious, squinting expression. He pulled up on the roadside, got out,
-tied his horse to a fence rail with one of the lines, took out his
-handbag, and came over to the little group waiting by the bars.
-
-“Good evening, brethren,” he said. “The doctor told me that Nicholas
-Parks had been called to his account, so I came up to give him Christian
-burial.”
-
-“He died sudden, I guess,” replied one of the men.
-
-“It's God's way,” said the preacher. “The sinner is taken in the
-twinkling of an eye.”
-
-He drew off his cotton gloves and put them into his pocket.
-
-“Have any preparations been made for the burial?” he inquired.
-
-“The grave's dug,” said one of the men.
-
-“How about the coffin?”
-
-“We don't know about the coffin, we haven't been to the house.”
-
-“Is any one up at the house?”
-
-“We think the new School-teacher's up there. Little David went up to
-see, but he ain't come back.”
-
-“I didn't know the new School-teacher had come.”
-
-“He got here last night,” said the miller.
-
-“What kind of a man is he?”
-
-“He's a man that the children will like,” replied the woman.
-
-“Children,” said the preacher, “are not competent judges of men. Let us
-go up to the house. Is he elderly?”
-
-“I thought he was mighty young,” said the woman.
-
-“The young,” replied the preacher, “are rarely impressed with the awful
-solemnity of God's commandments.”
-
-“I think he's a good man,” said the woman. “Martha loved him right away,
-an' I'd trust him with anything I've got.”
-
-“Our Mother Eve trusted the serpent,” replied the preacher.
-
-And he extended his right arm, the fingers stiffly together, the thumb
-up.
-
-“The youth of the community ought to be brought up in the fear of God.”
-
-During the conversation, the miller's little daughter had gone on to the
-house.
-
-Something vague, intangible, undefined had stopped the men in the road
-below the house, and made them await the arrival of the preacher. But
-that thing had not affected the children. The little boy David and this
-child had gone on without the least hesitation.
-
-The preacher threw down one of the pole bars and went through into the
-meadow. The others followed him along the path to the house. As they
-drew near they heard the voices of the children. At the threshold the
-preacher stopped, and those behind him crowded up to look into the
-house.
-
-The door was open. The sun entering, filled the room with light.
-
-On chairs in the middle of this room stood a coffin made of the odds
-and ends of rough hoards, but marvelously joined. Beside it stood the
-School-teacher, and at either end was one of the children; the three of
-them were fitting a board on the coffin for a and, and they were talking
-together.
-
-When the minister entered, the Schoolteacher removed the board and laid
-it down on the floor, and the two children, as by some instinct, drew
-near to the man, on either side, and took hold of his hands.
-
-They became instantly silent.
-
-The minister went up to the chair, looked a moment into the coffin and
-took his place at the head of it. The others followed.
-
-The dead man lay in the rough box like one asleep. There was in his face
-a peace so profound that the hard, mean, ugly features of this old man
-seemed to have been remodeled under some marvelous fingers.
-
-The minister, with his bad eye, seemed not to observe this
-transfiguration, but the others marked it and crowded around the coffin.
-
-The minister took out his watch, looked at it, and snapped the case.
-
-“If you will find seats, we'll begin the service,” he said. “The
-stranger here seems to have made all necessary preparations for the
-burial.”
-
-The crowd drew back from the coffin, the School-teacher went and sat
-in the doorway in the sun; the little boy standing up by his knees, the
-little girl beside him on the doorstep.
-
-The minister began a discourse on the horrors of an eternal hell.
-
-But the attention of the audience moved past him to the man seated in
-the door. The harmony, grouping the man and these two children, seemed
-to enter and fill the room. A certain common sympathy uniting them, as
-though it were the purity of childhood.
-
-The man sitting in the door did not move.
-
-He looked out toward the south over a sea of sun washing a shore of tree
-tops. A vagrant breath of the afternoon moved his brown hair. He seemed
-not to hear the minister, not to regard the service, but to wait like
-one infinitely patient with the order of events.
-
-When the preacher had finished, the miller, sitting in a chair by the
-window, rose.
-
-“Just before ole Nicholas died,” she said, “he made the doctor promise
-to git up here at his funeral an' tell everybody that he left all his
-things to the Schoolteacher. The doctor couldn't come back, so he asked
-me to git up an' tell it for him.”
-
-The minister turned toward the woman.
-
-“Left his property to this stranger?”
-
-“Yes,” said the woman, “he tried all night to tell the doctor, an' he
-was mortally afeard that he would die before he could tell it.”
-
-The School-teacher was now standing in the door. Beside him, and framing
-in his body, dust danced in the sun, making a haze of gold.
-
-The minister addressed him.
-
-“Why did Nicholas Parks leave his possessions to you?”
-
-The School-teacher did not reply.
-
-He went over to the coffin, lifted the lid and began to fit it on the
-box. The men standing around the room came forward and took the coffin
-up. They carried it out of the house, their hands under the bottom of
-it. The preacher picked up his satchel and followed. Outside he stopped,
-pointed to the grave in the meadow, and spoke to the School-teacher.
-
-“You didn't put that grave where old Nicholas wanted it. He wanted to be
-buried on the top of the ridge between those two trees. It was a place
-he had picked out. He told me so at the last quarterly meeting.”
-
-The School-teacher lifted his face and looked at the two great hickories
-marking the spot on the summit of the little meadow. His eyes filled
-with melancholy shadows, the smile deepened and saddened about his
-mouth. But he did not reply.
-
-Then he walked away to where the two children stood, some distance from
-the path.
-
-The minister followed the coffin to the grave, but the School-teacher
-went with the two children through the meadow to the spot of green
-between the two hickories. He sat down there in the deep clover, the
-children beside him. Below came the sound of the earth on the coffin,
-and the high-pitched nervous voice of the minister. The School-teacher
-talked with the children.
-
-After a while a shadow fell across the grass.
-
-The minister was standing beside them. He had come up from the filled
-grave and the carpet of the meadow had hidden the sound of his approach.
-He spoke to the School-teacher.
-
-“Do you think that you are old enough to teach the children the fear of
-God?”
-
-“I shall not teach them the fear of God.”
-
-“Then I don't see how you are going to give them any Christian
-instruction.”
-
-The man sitting among the deep clover blossoms, looked up at the
-minister's face.
-
-“Isn't there something growing over your eye?” he said.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VI
-
-|THE School-teacher came out of the door of Nicholas Parks' house.
-It was early in the morning. Frost glistened on the rails of the worm
-fence. The air was crisp and sweet.
-
-There was a smell of faint wood smoke.
-
-The door of the house was fastened with a wooden latch on the inside
-from which a black leather string, tied in a knot, issuing from a worn
-hole, hung on the outside of the door. The man drew the door close
-and, pulling the string, dropped the latch into place. Then he left the
-house, walking slowly.
-
-In the direction that he moved there was no path. He crossed the little
-meadow, south of the house, climbed the rail fence and entered the
-forest. There was still no path, although the man moved like one who
-followed land marks that he knew.
-
-He descended through the forest for perhaps half a mile in the deep
-leaves.
-
-Then he came abruptly on a path that entered a little cove and continued
-around a shoulder of the mountain. A spring of water issuing here from a
-limestone strata trickled into a keg buried in the earth. On the broken
-branch of a dogwood sapling, beside the spring, hung a mottled gourd.
-
-The School-teacher stopped, dipped the gourd into the crystal water, and
-drank.
-
-At this moment three figures came into view along the path from
-the opposite direction: a child about two years old, a woman, and a
-rough-haired yellow dog.
-
-The child came first. He walked with the uncertain tottering gait of
-very little children. He wore a clean, white, muslin dress, a tiny apron
-and cheap baby shoes, such as one sees hanging on a string over the
-counter of mountain stores. He was a sturdy little boy, with soft yellow
-hair, burnished at the tips like that of the School-teacher, and big
-gray-blue eyes. He was laughing, stopping now and then to look back at
-the dog following, and his mother; and then running along ahead.
-
-The woman was young and slender. Her face, tanned by the weather, was
-a deep olive. Her hair was black, lustrous and heavy, and hung down her
-back in a thick plait. Her eyes were dark and big. The whole aspect of
-the woman was that of one untimely matured, and permanently saddened.
-Her blue dress was of a cheaper material than that of the child's.
-
-She carried a tin bucket with a wooden handle.
-
-The woman and the dog stopped when they saw the School-teacher standing
-by the spring. But the child greeted the stranger in his baby dialect.
-
-“How-da-do man,” he said. He went on, the little feet tottering over the
-uneven path. When he reached the Schoolteacher, he spoke again.
-
-“Up-a-go,” he said.
-
-The man stooped and lifted the child into his arms. The sunny smile that
-lighted the baby face seemed to enter and illumine his own. Something
-of it, too, moved into the face of the woman, but the cast there of
-perpetual melancholy seemed loath to depart, as though the muscles were
-unaccustomed to a change.
-
-The child turned about in the man's arms, and pointed his finger toward
-two catbirds that were fluttering in a neighboring bush.
-
-“Giggles,” he said.
-
-The manner in which the woman's big melancholy eyes followed every
-motion of the little boy indicated how her heart enveloped him. He was
-evidently her one treasure. The smile, struggling to possess the woman's
-face, seemed to descend and sweeten her mouth.
-
-“He means them birds,” she said. “He's got a kind a talk of his own.”
-
-“I understand him perfectly,” said the man.
-
-“Do you?” said the woman, the smile gaining in her face. “I thought
-nobody could understand him but me. You must take to little children.”
-
-“I love little children,” replied the School-teacher.
-
-The child put his hand into the pocket of his apron and drew out a
-battered toy--a cheap, little, painted, wooden toy, so broken and worn
-that no one could tell what animal it was originally intended to
-represent. He held it up for the Schoolteacher's admiration.
-
-“Gup,” he said.
-
-“He means a horse,” the woman explained. “He's heard folks down to the
-mill say 'git up' to horses they was ridin', an' he thinks that's the
-name of it, but he's got names of his own. Now he calls a bird an' a
-fish an' a mouse a 'giggle.' I don't know why. Because a bird ain't like
-a fish, an' neither one of them ain't like a mouse.”
-
-“I believe I understand why he gives them all the same name,” replied
-the School-teacher.
-
-The woman came closer to the man and the child. Her eyes took on an
-expression of deep inquiry.
-
-“What do you reckon is the reason? I've thought about it often.”
-
-“I think it's because a bird, a fish and a mouse all appear to him to
-have the same motion, to wiggle.”
-
-The woman's face cleared. “I never thought of that. I reckon that is it.
-But now, he's got names that ain't like the things at all. Because he
-calls milk 'bugala' and there ain't no such word as 'bugala.' An' if
-it's sour or anything he calls it 'nim bugala.'”
-
-The woman recalled with the word, the morning when, to wean him, she had
-blackened her breast with charcoal, and the child had pushed away the
-blackened breast with his little hand and said, “nim bugala.”
-
-“And he calls everything else to eat 'A B.' Now why would he call milk
-'bugala' an' bread an' butter 'A B'?”
-
-The School-teacher saw that this mystery attaching to the child was dear
-to the woman, and he could not disturb it.
-
-“Little children are very wonderful,” he said.
-
-“They are wonderful,” the woman continued. “Just think of the things
-they learn when they are real little.”
-
-She jerked her head toward the dog remaining behind her in the road.
-
-“Why, he learned Jim's name when he was awful little. He called him
-'Nim' an' that's purty near right.”
-
-Her face again became deeply thoughtful.
-
-“I'd like to know if his word 'nim,' like he says 'nun bugala,' has
-anything to do with Jim's name. It sounds like it, but I don't see how
-it could be, because 'nim' means something that he don't like, an' he
-does like Jim. He's powerful fond of Jim.”
-
-The School-teacher thoughtfully considered the problem.
-
-“It might be that he has watched you give Jim the things that you did
-not want to eat yourself, and so he came to the conclusion that all such
-food belonged to Jim. It would not mean that he did not like Jim. It
-would only mean that the things that did not taste right to him ought to
-be given to Jim. They were not good things, they were 'nim' things.”
-
-The woman's mouth opened.
-
-“Dear me,” she said, “just think of him putting things together like
-that, an' him so little?”
-
-Then she looked up at the man with a sort of wonder.
-
-“Why, you understand him better than I do, an' I'm his mother. Maybe
-you're married an' got a little boy of your own.”
-
-“I was never married,” replied the man.
-
-“Then maybe you've got a little baby brother.”
-
-“No.”
-
-“Was there never any little children at your house?”
-
-“My father's house,” replied the School-teacher, “is full of little
-children.”
-
-“Just little children that he takes care of?”
-
-“Yes.”
-
-“Then you've been with 'em a lot.”
-
-“I am always with them,” replied the School-teacher.
-
-“I could a-told that,” said the woman, “by the way Sonny takes to you.
-I could a-told that you was used to little children, an' that you liked
-them.” She indicated the tiny boy with a bob of the head. “He knows it
-right away; babies and dogs allers knows it right away.”
-
-She regarded the man for some minutes in silence. Then she spoke like
-one come after thought to a conclusion.
-
-“I 'spose you're the new School-teacher?”
-
-“Yes.”
-
-“An' you're goin' down to the school-house now.”
-
-“Yes.”
-
-“Then if you'll wait till I git a bucket of water, I'll show you the way
-down. The path goes out by our house.”
-
-She went over to the spring and dipped the bucket into the keg. The dog
-that had been lying down 'n the path, his head lowered between his paws,
-now craw led up to the man and began to lick his feet.
-
-The little boy looked down and shook his tiny fist at the dog.
-
-“Ge-out, Nim!” he said.
-
-The woman rose with the bucket of water.
-
-“You don't have to carry him,” she said, “he can walk real well.”
-
-“I would rather carry him,” replied the School-teacher.
-
-And he followed the woman along the path, the dog at his heels.
-
-They turned the shoulder of the ridge and came out on a flat bench of
-the mountain. Here stood a little cabin, built of logs and daubed with
-clay. It was roofed with rough clapboards. Before it was a porch roofed
-like the cabin. The door, swinging on wooden hinges, stood open. On
-the puncheon floor was a piece of handmade carpet--a circular mat,
-hand-plaited out of rags, a primitive cradle with wooden rockers, a bed
-covered with a pieced quilt, a rough stone fireplace, an iron pot with
-a lid and a black iron kettle. On the porch stood a split-basket full
-of beans in the hull, and beside the basket two chairs, the seats of
-plaited hickory bark. One of them was very small, a chair in miniature,
-made for the little boy. Near the path was an ax, a hacked log and some
-lighter limbs of trees, such as a woman might carry in from the forest.
-Beside the chimney was a primitive hopper made of clapboards, holding
-wood-ashes, and under this was a broken iron pot in which lye, obtained
-from the ashes by pouring water on it, dripped.
-
-Beyond the cabin was a bit of garden and a little cornfield, where the
-ripened corn stood in yellow shocks bound with grapevines. The shocks
-were small, such as a woman could reach around. About, on the bench,
-were a grove of sugar trees, scarred with the marks of an auger, and
-among them, here and there, a great hickory. Beyond the grove one heard
-the faint tinkling of a bell where a cow moved in the forest.
-
-The woman set the bucket of water on the porch and turned to take the
-child.
-
-“Come, sonny.”
-
-The little boy drew back in the man's arms.
-
-“No,” he said.
-
-“But, sonny,” the woman continued, “the Teacher's goin' away down the
-road.”
-
-“Baby go wif him down woad.”
-
-The woman coaxed, “Won't sonny stay with Jim and mother?”
-
-“Nim an' muvver go woad.”
-
-“No,” said the woman, “Jim an' mother ain't goin' down the road. Will
-sonny go an' leave Jim an' mother?”
-
-The little boy looked over the man's shoulder at the rough-haired yellow
-dog. Jim was his housemate and his brother. A decision was a sore trial,
-but he finally made it. He turned about in the man's arms.
-
-“Baby go woad,” he said.
-
-The man now entered the conversation. “Let him go with me.”
-
-“But he's too little to go to school.”
-
-“He is not too little to go with me.”
-
-“But he'll bother you, won't he?”
-
-“No, he will not bother me. He will help me.”
-
-“He can't help you.”
-
-“Yes, he can help me.”
-
-“I don't see how he can help you.”
-
-“He will remind me of the little children in my father's house.”
-
-“Keep you from gettin' homesick?”
-
-“Yes,” replied the School-teacher, “that is it. He will keep me from
-getting homesick.”
-
-“Well,” said the woman, “if I let him go, you'll take care of him, won't
-you?”
-
-“I will surely take care of him.”
-
-“An' you'll bring him back before sundown.”
-
-“Yes.”
-
-“Well, it'll be powerful lonesome, but I reckon I can finish gatherin'
-the beans. I will fix him somethin' to eat. You can put it in your
-pocket.”
-
-The woman went into the house, got a flat bottle, such as a cheap sort
-of liniment is sold in at the mountain stores, scalded it out with water
-and filled it with fresh milk. Then she cut some thin slices of a white
-bread called “salt rising” and spread it with butter. She stopped with
-the knife in her hand, considered a moment, and then cut two larger
-pieces of bread, buttered them, and wrapped them all in a piece of
-homespun linen towel. She went out to the man with the folded towel and
-the bottle in her hand.
-
-“Here's his milk an' here's his bread. I put in two pieces for you.”
-
-The man put the bottle and the bread into his pocket. The light of his
-great gray-blue eyes deepened.
-
-“You also thought of me,” he said.
-
-“I didn't see you carryin' any dinner.” replied the woman, “an' the
-bread's nice. I had powerful good luck yesterday. I don't allers have
-such luck, but everything turned out right with the bakin' somehow.”
-
-The men went on with the little boy in his arms, but the dog remained.
-He sat miserably in the path, his tail moving in the leaves, his
-eyes fixed on the woman's face. For a time the woman, watching the
-disappearing figures, did not notice the dog. Then she saw him, knew his
-distress and spoke.
-
-“You can go along, Jim,” she said.
-
-The dog ran barking after the man and little boy. He overtook them and
-went on ahead. At the point where the path entered the forest, the man
-turned and looked back at the woman. She did not move, but the smile,
-struggling all the morning to conquer her face, finally possessed it.
-
-The School-teacher, the little boy and the dog continued to descend the
-mountain. The child addressed every object with which he was familiar.
-When they passed the brindle cow, cropping broom sedge beside the path,
-he hailed it with a salutation..
-
-“How-da-do, boo,” he sard.
-
-Leaves, burning red with autumn color, he explained, were “dowers.”
-
-Finally they came to the river, running shallow between the foot of
-the mountain and the farther bench on which the school-house stood.
-The child had not crossed this water, and he was afraid for the man to
-attempt it. He put his little hand firmly on the man's arm to stop him.
-
-The School-teacher stopped, and the child considered this new and
-unaccustomed peril. He sat studying the water, his restraining hand on
-the man's arm. Finally, the dog, growing impatient at the delay, entered
-the river and began to wade across. The child removed his hand. His
-fears were ended. The crossing was safe. He directed the man's attention
-to the proof of it.
-
-“Nim walk in wat,” he said.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VII
-
-|IN THE grove before the log schoolhouse, the Teacher was playing a game
-with the children. It was a game in which every child to the tiniest
-one could join. Two, standing opposite, with raised arms and the fingers
-linked, formed a sore of arch, through which the others passed in a
-circle, holding one another's hands. They all sang as they marched some
-verses of a mountain song, ending with the line, “An' catch the one that
-you love best.”
-
-When the song came to this line, those forming the arch brought their
-arms down over the head of the child passing at that moment, and he left
-the circle and took the place of one of those forming the arch. As each
-child wished to catch the School-teacher, the man remained standing
-while the children changed.
-
-The little boy David had just been caught. The child, standing with the
-School-teacher, had taken his place. The circle had begun once more to
-move, the song to rise, when the miller's daughter, Martha, stopped,
-disengaged her hand from the child before her and pointed to the road.
-
-“There comes Sol an' Suse. I wonder what's the matter, for Sol's got his
-arm tied up.”
-
-The School-teacher stood up and looked over the heads of the children.
-A man was approaching. The sleeves of a red wammus were tied around his
-neck, forming a sort of rude sling in which his right arm rested, held
-horizontally across his breast. A woman, carrying a baby, was walking
-beside him.
-
-The School-teacher spoke to the little girl.
-
-“Martha,” he said, “you and David take the children into the
-schoolhouse, I am going out to meet these people.”
-
-When the children had gone in, and the door was closed, the man went
-down into the road. He waited there until the two persons approached.
-He saw that both the woman and the man were young, the baby but a
-few months old--a little family beginning to found a home in the
-inhospitable mountain.
-
-The man was evidently injured. The woman was in distress. Her eyes were
-red. The muscles of her mouth trembled. The baby, in her arms, wrapped
-in an old faded shawl, wailed.
-
-The School-teacher spoke to the woman.
-
-“What has happened?” he said.
-
-“My man's got hurt.”
-
-“How was he hurt?”
-
-“He was choppin' in his clearin', an' his ax ketched in a grapevine,
-an' throwed him. I reckon his shoulder's all broke. He can't use his arm
-none.”
-
-The School-teacher addressed the man. “How does your arm feel?”
-
-“I suppose the jint's smashed.”
-
-The tears began to run down over the woman's face.
-
-“I don't see why we have such luck,” she said, “an' just when we was
-a-gittin' sich a nice start. Now, he can't work in his clearin', an' if
-he don't git his clearin' done this winter, we won't have no crop, an' I
-don't know what'll become of us.”
-
-The man began to chew his lip.
-
-“Don' cry, Susie,” he said.
-
-“Yes, I'll cry,” replied the woman, “for here's me an' the baby with
-nothin', and you laid up.”
-
-“Maybe I ain't hurt so bad,” the man suggested.
-
-The woman continued to cry.
-
-“I know better'n that, you're hurt bad.”
-
-“Where were you going?” said the School-teacher.
-
-“We were a-goin' to the doctor,” replied the woman. “We thought we'd
-make as far as the mill, an' he could wait there, an' I could git Sally
-to keep the baby while I went after the doctor.”
-
-“How far is it to the doctor?”
-
-“It's a-goin' on fourteen mile from the mill, an' that ain't the worst
-of it. He won't come unless he gits the money, an' we ain't got no money
-to throw away on a doctor.”
-
-She opened her hand and disclosed a crumpled, greasy note.
-
-“That there five-dollar bill is the very last cent that we've got. An'
-when it's gone I don't know where we'll git any more, with him hurt, an'
-me with a little sucklin' baby.”
-
-The woman began to sob.
-
-“I'm jist ready to give up.”
-
-The School-teacher's big gray-blue eyes filled with a kindly light.
-
-“Don't cry,” he said, “perhaps I can do something for your husband's
-shoulder.”
-
-He went over to the man. What the School-teacher did, precisely, these
-persons were never afterward able to describe. The event in their minds
-seemed clouded in mystery. A wonder had been accomplished in the road,
-in the sun, in the light before them, but they could not lay hold upon
-the sequence of the detail. The voice of the School-teacher presently
-reached them as from a distance.
-
-“It's all right now,” he said.
-
-The man doubled the arm and extended it. The woman came running up.
-
-“Kin you use it, Sol?”
-
-The man continued to move the arm. “It 'pears like I kin,” he said; “it
-'pears like it's well.”
-
-“Kin you use it good?”
-
-“It 'pears like I kin use it good as I ever could.”
-
-“Well, sir!” ejaculated the woman, “if I hadn't a seen it with my own
-eyes, I wouldn't never a-believed it.”
-
-The School-teacher remained standing for a moment in the road after the
-mountaineers had gone.
-
-Then he went back to the children, waiting in the schoolhouse. He called
-them out into the grove before the door, and took his place in the game,
-bending over to hold the hands of the tiniest child. The circle began
-once more to move. The song to rise.
-
-“An' catch the one that you love best.”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VIII
-
-|IT WAS not the only adventure that the School-teacher was destined to
-meet with on this day. As he was returning along the mountain road, with
-the little boy on his shoulder, at the first ascent, beyond the river
-crossing, he met two men in a buckboard. The horses were gaunt as from
-hard usage. The man who drove them was known to the School-teacher. The
-other was a big man with a heavy black beard. He sat leaning over in the
-buckboard. His head down. His shoulders rising in a hump. He had gone
-stooped for so long that the hump on his shoulders was now a sort of
-permanent deformity.
-
-They drew up by the roadside as the School-teacher approached. The big,
-hump-shouldered man spoke, without taking the trouble to preface his
-remarks with any form of salutation.
-
-“Do you claim old Nicholas Parks' estate?”
-
-The School-teacher regarded him with his deep, tranquil, gray-blue eyes.
-
-“It belongs to my father,” he said.
-
-“Is your father related to old Nicholas?”
-
-“No.”
-
-“Has he got a deed from old Nicholas?”
-
-“No.”
-
-“Then how does he claim under him?”
-
-“He does not claim under him. Nicholas Parks had his possession from my
-father.”
-
-“You mean that your father owned it first?”
-
-“Yes.”
-
-“Did he sell to Nicholas?”
-
-“No.”
-
-“Then how did old Nicholas come to own it?”
-
-“He never owned it; my father permitted him to use it.”
-
-“Then your claim is that old Nicholas was just a tenant for life.”
-
-“Yes,” replied the School-teacher, “that was it, a tenant for life.”
-
-“Did your father give Nicholas any writing?”
-
-“No.”
-
-“Did Nicholas pay anything for the use of the land?”
-
-“No.”
-
-“Did he ever recognize your father's title while he was living?”
-
-“No.”
-
-“Then he never knew that your father owned these lands?”
-
-“Yes,” replied the School-teacher, “in the end he knew it.”
-
-“How did he know it, if he did not find it out while he was living?”
-
-“He found it out while he was dying,” replied the School-teacher.
-
-The big humpback looked out sidewise at the man standing in the road,
-with the child on his shoulder, its little arm around his neck, its
-little fingers on his face.
-
-“Didn't you come into these mountains about the time that old Nicholas
-died?”
-
-“On the very day that he died,” replied the School-teacher.
-
-“I see,” said the humpback, “then he found it out through you.”
-
-“No, man,” replied the School-teacher, “ever finds out anything about
-the affairs of my father except he find it out through me.”
-
-“Then you're here to look after your father's business?”
-
-“Yes,” replied the School-teacher, “that is it, I am here to look after
-my father's business.”
-
-“An' so you moved in when old Nicholas died?”
-
-“Yes.”
-
-“I see,” said the humpback, “now I want to ask you another question.
-These lands belonged to the state. Old Nicholas bought from the state,
-and the state made him a deed. Do you contend that your father's title
-is older than that of the state?”
-
-“Yes.”
-
-The humpback compressed the muscles of his mouth and nodded his head
-slowly.
-
-“I see,” he said, “your father claims the lands of Nicholas Parks under
-some old patent that gives him a color of title and he has sent you
-here to get into possession. A color of title is not good at law without
-possession. Well, I can tell you, the state's not going to lie by and
-allow you to acquire adverse possession. Old Nicholas Parks died without
-heirs, and, by the law, his property escheats to the state. So you can
-make up your mind to get off.”
-
-He reached over, caught the whip out of its socket, and struck the
-horses. They jumped and the buckboard went clattering down the mountain,
-the wheels bouncing on the stones.
-
-The little boy raised his hand and pointed his tiny finger at the
-departing horses.
-
-“Man hurt gups,” he said.
-
-The School-teacher stood in the road watching the humpback lash the
-half-starved team. His face was full of misery.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IX
-
-|THE School-teacher had been helping the miller.
-
-He had taken the shirts which she had offered to him, but he had refused
-to put upon her the labor of making up the big piece of linen that
-remained.
-
-“Keep it,” he said, “until I need it.” All of Saturday he had been at
-work mending the wooden water wheel. In the evening he set out to return
-to Nicholas Parks' house. He took the short way up the mountain. When
-he came out on the great hickory ridge, the sun was not yet down. He
-stopped where the path entered the two roads, one turning along the
-ridge to his house, the other winding down the mountain, eastward,
-toward the far-off lumber mills, sometimes faintly to be indicated by a
-tiny wisp of smoke on the horizon.
-
-There had been a gentle rain, and now under the soft evening sun the
-earth seemed to recover something of the virility of springtime, as
-though the impulse of life waning in the autumn were about to reconquer
-its dominion. Here and there, in the moist earth, a little flower crept
-out, as though tricked into the belief that it was springtime--a white
-strawberry, a tiny violet.
-
-The sap seemed about to move under the bark of the beech trees, the buds
-to issue from the twigs.
-
-In the forest the wren and the catbirds fluttered as under a nesting
-instinct, the gray squirrels fled around the rough shellbark trees and
-from one tree top to another, far off a pheasant drummed, and farther
-off a mountain bull lowed as he wandered through the forest.
-
-The road descending the mountain was decked out in color, banked along
-its border with the poison ivy and the Virginia creeper, now a mass of
-scarlet. Above the beech and hickory leaves were yellow, the clay of the
-road below was yellow, and the soft sunlight entered and fused the edges
-of these colors. The forest for this hour took on the ripe expectancy of
-springtime.
-
-The School-teacher stood where the path emerged from the forest
-
-Presently from below him, beyond the turn of the road, a voice arose,
-a voice full, rich and sensuous--a woman's voice singing a song. It
-carried through the forest, swaggering, defiant melody. The words could
-not be determined. Indeed, there seemed to be no words. The song was a
-thing of sounds--of tropical, sensuous sounds. As though all the love
-calls of the creatures of the forest had been fused into one great,
-barbaric symphony.
-
-A moment later the singer came into view.
-
-She was a young, buxom woman, and she walked, singing, in the middle
-of the road, with a defiant swagger. Her hair was heavy and yellow like
-wheat straw. Her lips, colored purple from the wild grapes which she had
-been eating, were full, the under one drooping a little at the middle.
-Her face was whitened with a cheap powder to be had at the village
-store. Her bodice and her petticoat were of bright vivid colors. There
-was a crimson handkerchief tied around her neck, a cheap glittering
-bangle on her wrist, heavy, gilded earrings hanging in the lobes of
-her ears, and at her throat a breastpin of jet set in a lattice work of
-brass.
-
-The School-teacher remained motionless. He watched the woman approaching
-in the middle of the road, her body swinging loose in her swaggering
-stride, and the full volume of her voice abandoned to her song.
-
-She was halfway up the bend of the road before she realized that another
-was within sound of her voice. Then she saw the School-teacher and
-stopped.
-
-The song ceased.
-
-Her head went up and her eyes opened wide. She remained as though the
-power to move had been on the instant stricken out of her. Her foot
-advanced, her heel lifted, her mouth shaped to sing. Then, slowly, her
-face changed to an expression of profound astonishment.
-
-The School-teacher did not speak. He did not move. The sun descending
-behind him slowly crept up the road to his feet, as though, bidden to
-withdraw from the world, it were loath to leave him.
-
-The woman's face again changed. It became troubled. She moved now a few
-steps closer, softly, on tiptoe. Then, suddenly, with a swift gesture,
-she covered her face with her hands and burst into tears. Her body shook
-as with a convulsion. The tears streamed through her fingers.
-
-Until now the School-teacher had not moved. Now he came slowly along the
-road to where she stood. As he approached, the woman sank down huddled
-together, her face covered, her bosom heaving, her hands wet. He stood
-before her in the road looking down at the bowed head.
-
-“Poor child!” he said.
-
-The woman continued to sob. The eyes of the School-teacher deepened with
-a profound sorrow. He stooped over to put his hand on the coarse yellow
-hair, redolent with a cheap perfume. But before the descending fingers
-touched her, the woman sprang up and flew like a wild thing into the
-forest.
-
-The sun was now gone.
-
-The tropical colors of the leaves, the vines, the yellow earth, departed
-with it. The gray twilight began to descend. The School-teacher walked
-slowly to the top of the ridge, and returned along the little meadow to
-Nicholas Parks' house. As he approached he saw a figure moving off down
-the mountain along the rail fence.
-
-When he came to the house he stopped.
-
-There was a paper tacked on the door. He looked at it for a moment, but
-he did not touch it. The four corners of the paper were doubled under
-and a tack at each end held it. He pulled the worn leather string,
-lifted the wooden latch and went in, leaving the paper fastened to the
-door.
-
-The night had descended.
-
-The house was dark. But when he entered it, on the instant, as though
-the opening of the door had made a draft through the fireplace, a log
-smoldering shot up a red flame that illumined the house.
-
-The School-teacher went over to a table that stood by the wall.
-
-On this table were a homemade cheese and the half of a loaf of bread.
-Beside them was a knife with a wooden handle and a thick china plate
-chipped at the rim. Before this table was a hickory chair, the seat of
-roughly plaited bark. The School-teacher sat down and ate his supper.
-
-Everything in this house remained as Nicholas Parks had left it.
-
-This chair, this table, a larger hickory chair with arms and a ragged
-cushion by the fireplace, a fourpost bed in the corner covered with a
-patchwork quilt. When Nicholas Parks died there had been, as now, a log
-on the fire, a cheese and a loaf of bread on the table.
-
-There were, however, now on this table, before the School-teacher, some
-objects that had not been there. There was a little worn, broken toy
-that had once been a wooden horse; there was a top whittled out of a
-spool with a hickory pin through it. There was a Barlow knife with an
-iron handle, the blade broken at the point; there was a brass ring tied
-to a cotton rib-hon; and there were little bunches of wild flowers, the
-stems of which were primly wrapped with black thread. These were laid
-out on the table beyond the cheese and the loaf. And before he sat down
-to eat, the School-teacher touched them.
-
-When he had finished his supper, the
-
-School-teacher went over to the fireplace and sat down in the armchair.
-He sat beside the hearth where he could see the doer. He remained for a
-long time without moving, except now and then he looked toward the
-door, and when there came to him any sound from the night outside, he
-listened.
-
-The night advanced. He remained in in the chair before the fire. The
-log continued to burn among the ashes in the fireplace. But it no longer
-flamed. It burned with a deep crimson glow that flooded the hair, the
-face, the hands of the School-teacher. The glow thus reflected seemed to
-take on a deeper crimson.
-
-It became like the crimson of blood.
-
-The School-teacher hardly ever moved except to raise his head to listen,
-but he was not asleep; there was no sleep in him. The glow of the
-smoldering log, changing on his face, gave it an expression of agony.
-
-The night continued to advance; the hours passed. The vagrant sounds of
-the world outside ceased. The profound silence of midnight arrived and
-passed. The temperature changed.
-
-But the School-teacher did not go to bed.
-
-He sat in the fantastic glow of the fire, with its agony on him. Now
-and then, when the playing of the light seemed to convulse his
-features--seemed to distort them with a deeper agony, he turned his face
-toward the table standing along the wall, near the door, and his eyes
-rested on the broken toy horse, the top, the Barlow knife, the ring and
-little hunches of flowers; and turned thus out of the glow of the fire,
-his features no longer presented the aspect of agony. Moreover, when
-his head was turned like that, the glow of the fire, that had been thus
-distorting his face, passed by him and streamed over the objects on the
-table, bringing them into vivid contrast with every other object in the
-room.
-
-The body of the night passed.
-
-The morning began to arrive. And still the School-teacher waited. No
-one came. The room was profoundly silent. The breath of the morning
-entering, distilled a faint perfume out of the little bunches of wild
-flowers, a vague odor that arose and sweetened the room. The night was
-dead. The day was beginning to be born. Then it was that the one for
-whom the School-teacher waited finally came.
-
-There was a faint sound outside, as though one approached walking softly
-on the grass, as though a hand passed gently along the door.
-
-The School-teacher rose.
-
-The latch of the door moved, the door turned noiselessly on its hinges,
-and the woman who had fled from the Schoolteacher into the forest
-entered.
-
-The whole aspect of the woman was changed.
-
-The purple stains on her mouth, the powder on her face, were gone.
-Her hair, too, had been cleansed of its cheap scent. It clung in damp
-strands about her face. The swagger, the defiance, the loud notes and
-color had gone out of her. And that which remained after these things
-were gone, now alone existed--as though the whole fabric of the woman
-had been washed with water. The woman put her hand swiftly to her face,
-to her hair; she caught her breath.
-
-“Oh!” she said, “I thought you were asleep.”
-
-The School-teacher's voice was incomparably gentle.
-
-“No,” he said, “I have been waiting for you.”
-
-“Then you thought I would come?”
-
-“I knew that you would come.”
-
-“I had to come,” she said. “I could not go back to--to--the other!”
-
-“No,” he said, “you never could go back to that.”
-
-“An'--an'--I had nowhere else to go.”
-
-“I know that,” replied the Schoolteacher, “there is no place that you
-could go, except to me.”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER X
-
-|THE children had bought the School-teacher a hat. It had been a large
-undertaking, and the cause of innumerable secret conferences in the
-grove behind the schoolhouse. The purchase of so costly a thing as a
-hat required a certain sum of money. To raise this sum of money, the
-children had been put to the most desperate straits. Every tiny store
-that any child possessed had been brought forward and contributed to the
-common fund. The difficulty did not lie in the drawing on this store.
-Although every contribution meant a sacrifice to the donor, no child had
-hesitated. There had been no question about what each should give, and
-no inquiry as to a holding back of resources. Every child had simply
-given all he had.
-
-Ancient two-cent pieces with holes in them, worn nickles, one or
-two long-treasured ten-cent pieces, and one-cent pieces thumbed with
-counting, were withdrawn from snuffboxes, essence of coffee boxes, pill
-boxes, holes in the wall, from under the loose stones of the hearth and
-other safety deposit places--wherever the child had deemed it expedient
-to keep his treasures. Sometimes, however, this treasure was in
-the custody of older persons, and the obtaining of it had presented
-difficulties.
-
-The whole school had often gone into counsel on these cases, ways and
-means devised, a proper motive constructed, and the child strengthened
-and drilled. When the device succeeded, the whole school for that
-day rejoiced, when it failed, the school was depressed, but it was not
-defeated, and some other plan was brought forward. Some of the plans
-were exceedingly ingenious, and, as a rule, the school prevailed.
-
-However, when the whole store was finally collected, or as much as could
-be had, the children were confronted with a staggering disappointment;
-the entire fund, for all the counting and recounting of it, could not be
-made to exceed sixty-four cents. A wholesale borrowing, right and left,
-had added only eleven cents. Now, 't was well-known that a hat could not
-be purchased for less than a dollar, and when it became evident that the
-fund must fail by a fourth of that sum the children were in despair.
-
-For a day or two almost the whole school was in tears.
-
-Then, individually, it resorted to desperate devices. One whose
-grandfather had been accustomed to present him with ten cents on
-Christmas day endeavored to secure an advancement. A small child had
-hailed the doctor as he passed along the road, and had offered to work
-for him all the remainder of his life for ten cents paid down in cash.
-Another had approached the minister, after the Sunday collection, and
-endeavored to borrow a twenty-five-cent piece out of the hat.
-
-These ventures had failed, and the latter with the perilous result that
-the minister had all but extracted the secret for the money, and his
-withering commentaries on a teacher who inculcated the spirit of avarice
-into little children had so stricken the child with terror that it had
-been afraid to tell the school what it had done.
-
-This brief lapse into madness, the practical leadership of Martha, the
-miller's little girl, and the small hoy, David, was presently able to
-cheek. They pointed out what it was useless to do. But for the present
-they were not able to bring forward any plan that it seemed worth while
-to undertake. At this season the only natural product of the mountain
-that could be exchanged for money was hickory nuts, and the value of
-this product was in doubt. Sometimes, early in certain seasons, the
-storekeeper had been known to give twenty-five cents for a bushel of
-choice hickory nuts, not the gross shellbark nut, but the small, round,
-sweet-kerneled nut of the smooth-bark hickory.
-
-The school had considered this, but had come always against two serious
-difficulties. To secure a bushel of these small nuts would require a
-considerable searching of the mountains, and, despite the fact that the
-children were very small, each had duties at home that occupied
-Saturdays, and the evening fragments of the day. On Sundays, an austere
-theology imposed by the minister compelled them to attend the Sunday
-sermon and to practice the most rigorous inactivity under pain of
-hideous consequences. The insurmountable difficulty, however, lay in
-the fact that they could not get a bushel of hickory nuts over the long
-distance to the country store.
-
-An unexpected event suddenly removed this difficulty. Coming
-breathlessly to the school on a Friday morning, little David announced
-that his father was going to the country store on Tuesday with the wagon
-to bring home a barrel of salt, and that he had obtained permission to
-accompany him. At once the school took up the possibility of securing
-the bushel of hickory nuts. It was immediately evident that within so
-brief a time the thing could not be done unless the whole of Sunday were
-devoted to the labor of it. The school promptly decided.
-
-This expedition did not arise from any failure to appreciate the perils
-of the decision. Corporal chastisement under the home roof was certain
-to follow; and the hideous tortures vividly presented by the minister,
-awaiting at the threshold of his future life, that one who broke the
-Sabbath day, was scarcely less certain. Nevertheless, not a child of the
-whole school hesitated.
-
-The complete success of the venture strengthened the school to bear the
-immediate consequences.
-
-Corporal chastisement in the mountains was not apt to be a thing lightly
-administered. But it was a hardship which even the smallest children had
-come to regard as one of the inevitable conditions of life. As to
-that other penalty, which awaited them at the hands of an outraged and
-vindictive deity, they were somehow of the opinion that this malignant
-god could not inflict his punishments except through some overt act of
-the minister who was his executive agent. Thus, if they could outwit
-this dangerous penal vicegerent, the thing could be turned aside. In
-travail of this problem, they hit upon the plan of going over the head
-of the minister and claiming a direct authorization for their act. When
-approached for an explanation of their conduct they solemnly announced
-that an angel had come down through the roof of the schoolhouse and
-directed them not to attend the religious services on this Sunday.
-
-Transported by the success of their undertaking; by the exquisite
-pleasure of making this presentation to the Schoolteacher; by the joy
-which his evident happiness in it carried to every heart; they had
-neglected to perfect the details of this story. Fortunately they agreed
-upon the personal aspect of the angel, since every child, when driven
-to describe this divine messenger, simply followed the guidance of
-his affections, and presented the School-teacher. But upon a close and
-searching examination there had been a divergence. How had the angel been
-clothed? Some of the children, put upon inquisition, had replied that
-he had nothing at all on; and others, feeling the need for appropriate
-vestments, had declared that the angel wore a red coat and blue
-breeches.
-
-Seizing upon this point, as a protruding limb, the minister had finally
-drawn up the whole hidden body of the incident. And he was now on
-his way to confront the School-teacher with this piece of outrageous
-conduct. It was evening when he arrived. The school was coming through
-the little grove down into the road. The School-teacher walked among
-them. The grove was full of voices--the laughter of children. The
-School-teacher wore his new hat, and every now and then he took it off
-and held it in his hand that he might the better admire it. From the day
-that he had received it, he had never ceased to express his appreciation
-of it. He continued always to regard it, as if in it were merged, as
-in a symbol, all the little sacrifices of every child, and all the love
-that had strengthened each one to bear what the thing had cost him.
-
-This never-ceasing appreciation of the School-teacher for his present
-had transported the school with pleasure. This acute happiness the
-children were not always able to control. Sometimes pride overcame one,
-and he would tell how much he had contributed.
-
-And always the smaller children wished to hold the hat in their hands,
-so that it quickly gathered a border of little fingerprints.
-
-Even the tiny boy, who had been too little to help in the purchase
-of the present, but who somehow dimly understood that all had given
-something toward this article, had brought forward a rooster feather,
-which he had found, and insisted that it be added to the hat. And the
-School-teacher had very carefully pinned this crimson feather to the
-band.
-
-Moreover, the habit which the Schoolteacher had acquired of taking off
-his hat in order to admire it before the children, seemed to adhere to
-him when he was by himself: Of late, those who had watched him as he
-passed along the mountain roads, had observed him at this habit and
-had marked how his face, profoundly sad when he was alone, always
-immediately brightened.
-
-The school trooping about the Schoolteacher was emerging from the grove
-when the minister got out of his buggy.
-
-He tied the horse to a sapling with one of the lines. Then he drew his
-cotton gloves a little closer over his hands, buttoned his long black
-coat down to its last button, and stood out in the road to await the
-coming of the School-teacher. The children and the School-teacher
-stopped when they saw him. The pleasant laughing voices ceased. The
-children gathered around the School-teacher. The smallest ones came
-close up and took hold of his hands.
-
-The minister addressed the Schoolteacher. His voice was high and sharp.
-
-“Do you know what the school children have done?”
-
-The School-teacher regarded the minister with his deep, calm, gray-blue
-eyes.
-
-“Yes,” he said.
-
-“Did you know that they were going to do it?”
-
-“Yes.”
-
-“Did you try to prevent it?”
-
-“No.”
-
-The lines in the minister's face hardened.
-
-“That's all I wanted to know,” he said. “It is now perfectly evident
-that you are no fit person to have charge of school children. The
-community must get rid of you.”
-
-He turned about in the road, untied his horse, got into his buggy and
-took up the lines. He raised one of the lines in his cotton-gloved
-hand to bring it down on the horse's back, but he paused with his arm
-extended, and turned about toward the School-teacher. He thrust his head
-to one side. His defective eye straining to see.
-
-“Do you have any fear of God at all?” he said.
-
-The School-teacher's calm, gentle voice did not change, it did not
-hesitate. “No,” he said, “none at all.”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XI
-
-|ON SATURDAY morning the miller hailed the doctor as he was passing the
-mill.
-
-“Are you goin' over to Black's?” she called.
-
-The doctor stopped his horse.
-
-“Yes,” he said, “they sent me word to come.”
-
-“By Jonas the first of the week?”
-
-“Yes.”
-
-“For to see old Jerry's eye?”
-
-“Yes.”
-
-“Well, it ain't no use for you to go.”
-
-“Did his eye get well of itself?” inquired the doctor.
-
-“No, it didn't git well of itself,” replied the woman. “It never would
-have got well of itself. Ole Jerry's been set-tin' around with that eye
-tied up ever since the day that he thrashed out his wheat. He'd a-been
-blind in it all the rest of his life if it hadn't a-been for the
-School-teacher.”
-
-The doctor turned around in his saddle.
-
-“What did the School-teacher do to him?” he said.
-
-“He cured him,” replied the miller.
-
-The doctor had ridden past the mill before he stopped. Now he rode hack.
-The miller stood on the porch before the door. The doctor sat on his
-horse in the road, the loose bridle rein over his crooked arm, his good
-hand resting heavily on the pommel of the saddle.
-
-“How did he cure him?” inquired the doctor.
-
-“I don't know how he cured him,” replied the miller.
-
-“Didn't you hear?” said the doctor.
-
-“Yes, I heard,” replied the miller.
-
-“Well,” said the doctor, “what did you hear?”
-
-“I heard that he took ole Jerry to one side an' he asked him if he could
-see anything with that eye. An' ole Jerry said that he couldn't tell a
-man from a tree with it. Then the School-teacher put his hands on his
-eye, an' he made him look up an' and when the School-teacher got through
-ole Jerry could see. But he complained that his eye felt hot an' the
-School-teacher told him to hold a piece of wet clay against it--you
-know' that's awful good to draw out soreness--an' the next morning ole
-Jerry's eye was well. Now, how do you suppose he done it?”
-
-“I don't suppose how he done 't,” replied the doctor. “I know how he
-done it. Ole Jerry got a wheat husk in that eye when he was thrashing,
-and it stuck against the lid back of the ball. The fools that looked
-into his eye by pushing the lid up couldn't see it. But when anybody
-come along with sense enough to turn the lid back he got the husk out
-and the eye got well.”
-
-The miller crumpled the corner of her apron in her hand.
-
-“I don't know about that,” she said. “D'd you hear how the
-School-teacher cured Sol Shreave's shoulder that he smashed in his
-clearing?”
-
-“Yes, I heard it,” replied the doctor. “I was pretty apt to hear it.”
-
-“Well, what did you think about that?” said the miller.
-
-“I thought it was a piece of meddling with my practice,” replied the
-doctor. “It kept me out of a five-dollar fee.”
-
-“But it was wonderful,” said the miller.
-
-“No, it wasn't wonderful,” replied the doctor.
-
-The miller spoke slowly. She nodded her head between each word.
-
-“To cure a man's shoulder that was smashed, just by takin' hold of his
-arm, wouldn't that be a wonder?”
-
-“Yes,” said the doctor, “that would be a hell of a wonder,”
-
-“Well,” said the woman, “didn't the School-teacher do it?”
-
-“No, he didn't do it,” replied the doctor. “Then you don't think 't's
-so, about the School-teacher fixin' Sol's shoulder?”
-
-“Yes, I know it's so,” replied the doctor.
-
-“Then what makes you say it ain't a wonder?”
-
-“Because it's a thing; anybody could do,” replied the doctor.
-
-“Charm a smashed shoulder well?”
-
-“No,” replied the doctor, “rotate a dislocated joint into place. When
-Sol Shreave caught his ax in the grapevine he twisted the ball on the
-big hone of his arm out of the socket of the shoulder, and when the
-School-teacher took hold of his arm and rotated it around in the right
-way it went back into place.”
-
-The miller crossed her hands over her apron. She took hold of the palm
-of her left with the fingers of her right. She gave her head a little
-jerk. Her eyebrows contracted.
-
-“I don't know about that,” she said.
-
-She remained for a moment looking down at the mill porch, then she
-looked up.
-
-“Doctor,” she said, “did you ever hear of anybody that was dead bein'
-brought back to life?”
-
-“Yes,” said the doctor, “I have heard of it ever since I could
-remember.”
-
-“Then it has happened?”
-
-“_No_,” said the doctor. “It never has happened. When you're dead,
-you're dead.”
-
-The doctor took a watch out of his pocket. It was a heavy, old, silver
-watch, tied to his waistcoat buttonhole with a buckskin string. He
-opened it, examined it for a moment, then snapped the lid and thrust it
-back into his pocket. When he looked around the miller was standing in
-the roadside beside the horse.
-
-“Doctor,” she said, “I'm a-goin' to tell you somethin' that I never told
-anybody.”
-
-“What about?” said the doctor.
-
-“About what I've just said,” replied the woman.
-
-The doctor reflected for an instant, then he remembered. He shifted his
-position in the saddle. His voice showed annoyance.
-
-“What cock-an'-bull story have you got a-hold of now?” he said.
-
-“It's no cock-an'-bull story,” replied the miller. “It's the God's
-truth.”
-
-The doctor made a deprecating gesture with his crooked arm.
-
-“Now, look here, Sal,” lie said, “I haven't time to listen to all the
-tales you've heard.”
-
-“It ain't anything I've heard,” replied the miller.
-
-“What is it, then?”
-
-“It's something I saw.”
-
-“Did you see it yourself?”
-
-“Yes, I did.”
-
-“Now, Sal,” said the doctor, “don't begin to tell me something you
-thought you saw.”
-
-“I'm not a-goin' to tell you somethin' that I thought I saw. I'm a-goin'
-to tell you something that I did see.”
-
-“All right,” said the doctor, “go on and tell it. What did you see?”
-
-The woman drew a little closer.
-
-“Well,” she said, “one Saturday the School-teacher come down here to
-help me, an' he brought Mary Jane's little hoy with him. He's awful
-little. He ain't two yet. The School-teacher left him with me while he
-went down under the mill to fix one of the wheel paddles. Well, Martha
-was gone an' there was nobody here but me to 'tend things. An' I got
-to movin' around and forgot the little boy. An' when I went to look for
-him--I hope I may die!--if he wasn't a-layin' drown-ded at the bottom
-of the millrace. Lord-amighty! I was crazy. I jumped in an' got him out,
-an' begun to holler for the School-teacher to come. But he was dead. I
-knowed he was dead. His little lips was blue, an' his poor little hands
-was cold.”
-
-The tears came into the woman's eyes at the memory.
-
-“Lordy, Lordy!” she said, “I knowed he was all that Mary Jane had in the
-world. I knowed her soul was wrapped up in him. I knowed it would kill
-her.”
-
-The woman stopped and wiped her eyes with her apron.
-
-“Well, the School-teacher come a-run-nin' an' took him out of my arms,
-an' carried him into the house. An' I just stood there in the road like
-I was dazed. But after a while I sort a come to myself, an' I tiptoed up
-on the porch, an' I looked in the door. An' the little boy was layin' on
-the bed, an' the School-teacher was a-bendin' over him. Then I thought
-of Mary Jane again. An' Lord-a'-mighty! I thought I'd die. I went down
-off the porch. An' I reckon I was crazy, because I started out, an' I
-run just as hard as I could right up the road. I reckon I run for half
-a mile. Then I thought I heard the School-teacher callin' me. An' I come
-hack with my apron over my head a-cryin'. An' when I got right here in
-the road, I did hear him, an' he said, 'Don't be distressed, for the
-child's all right.' An' I took my apron off my head, an' I looked in the
-door, an' there set the School-teacher by the stove with the little boy
-wrapped in a blanket--an' he was _alive_.”
-
-The woman stopped, lifted her shoulders, and took in a deep breath, like
-one who has concluded a violent exertion. She wiped her face with her
-apron.
-
-“Well, he told me to make haste, an' dry out the little boy's
-clothes--he had nice, little, white clothes, Mary Jane's awful
-particular about him--an' I did, an' I ironed them so they'd be just
-like they was before he fell in. Then we put the clothes back on him.
-An' the Schoolteacher took him home. An' he was just as well as he
-was before he was drownded. An' the School-teacher told me not to tell
-anybody. I suppose he didn't want Mary Jane to find it out. It would
-only distress her for nothing.”
-
-The woman folded her arms across her bosom, and looked up at the doctor.
-
-“Now, then?” she said.
-
-The doctor sat back in his saddle. He dropped his crooked arm by his
-side. He addressed the woman, speaking with a perceptible pause between
-each word.
-
-“So you thought he raised the dead, did you?”
-
-“Didn't I see him do it?” replied the woman.
-
-“Well,” said the doctor, “if you're that big a fool, there's no use to
-talk to you.”
-
-He turned around in the saddle, gath-tred up the reins, and kicked the
-horse with his heel. He passed out of sight in the direction of Jerry
-Black's house. The miller remained standing in the road.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XII
-
-|JERRY BLACK'S house was beyond Hickory Mountain, in the direction of
-the far-off lumber mills.
-
-It was afternoon before the doctor returned. He rode hard in anger. He
-had gone on to Black's house, determined to make the old man pay him
-for his visit. But the mountaineer, now that his eye was healed, had
-refused. The doctor stormed and threatened, but the mountaineer was
-obdurate. The School-teacher had cured him. He owed nothing. He would
-pay nothing.
-
-The doctor was compelled to return empty-handed, and he rode hard.
-
-A deep resentment against the man who thus interfered with his practice
-moved within him. When he came to Hickory Mountain, instead of following
-the road around by the mill, he took the one leading across through the
-lands of Nicholas Parks. It was mid-afternoon when he stopped in the
-road before the Schoolteacher's house. He called. A woman came to
-the door, her heavy hair the color of wheat straw. The doctor made an
-exclamation of profound astonishment.
-
-“Yaller Mag!” he said. “Now what's that hussy doin' here?”
-
-When the woman saw that the person in the road was the doctor, she went
-hack into the house and presently came out with a brown earthen crock.
-She walked down the path from the door bearing the crock in her hand.
-When she came out into the road, she held the crock up to the doctor.
-
-“The School-teacher told me to give you this money when you come,” she
-said.
-
-There was a handful of silver coins in the crock.
-
-Again the doctor was astonished.
-
-“When I come!” he echoed. “How did he know that I was coming?”
-
-“I don't know how he knew it,” replied the woman.
-
-“What did he tell you to give it to me for?”
-
-“He didn't tell me.”
-
-The doctor looked at the pieces of silver.
-
-“I suppose this is money that the people have paid him. How much did old
-Black pay him?”
-
-“He never paid him anything,” replied the woman. “Nobody ever paid him
-anything.”
-
-“Who give him this money then?”
-
-“Nobody give it to him,” said the woman. “It was in that crock on the
-shelf when old Nicholas Parks died. It ain't been touched.”
-
-The doctor looked at the dust-covered handful of silver.
-
-“If nobody pays him, an' he hasn't used any of this, where does he get
-money to buy things with?”
-
-“He don't buy anything.”
-
-“What does he live on, then?”
-
-“Well,” said the woman, “when Nicholas Parks died, there was flour in
-the barrel. It ain't run out. It looks like it never would run out. Now,
-will you take the money, so I can get some feed for the horse?”
-
-Again the doctor was astonished.
-
-“How do you know that the horse hasn't been fed?”
-
-“I don't know it,” replied the woman.
-
-“Then what do you want to feed him for?”
-
-“I want to feed him,” replied the woman, “because the School-teacher
-told me to.”
-
-“Told you to feed my horse?”
-
-“Yes, he told me to give you this money and to feed your horse. Are you
-goin' to take the money?”
-
-“No,” said the doctor. “I'm not goin' to take it. I want to see the
-Schoolteacher himself. Where is he?”
-
-“He's down at Mary Jane's house.”
-
-“Is she the one that's got the woods-colt?”
-
-“She's the one that's got the little boy,” replied the woman.
-
-“Huh!” said the doctor. “What's he doin' there?”
-
-“He's huskin' her corn.”
-
-“So he spends his time helpin' the women who have no men folks about,
-too, does he?”
-
-The woman looked up at the doctor. Her face undisturbed by the taunt.
-
-“Yes,” she said. “He spends his time helpin' those who have nobody else
-to help them.”
-
-The doctor did not reply. He gathered his bridle up in his hand. The
-woman moved around in front of the doctor.
-
-“Ain't you goin' to let me feed the horse?”
-
-“The horse can stand it just as well as I can,” said the doctor.
-
-“But you can help it,” replied the woman, “an' the horse can't help it.”
-
-“It won't hurt him to wait till I eat.”
-
-“Would it hurt you to wait till he eats?”
-
-“It wouldn't do me much good, if anybody was to sec me waitin' here,”
- said the doctor.
-
-A flush of color sprang into the woman's face.
-
-“I only wanted to feed him,” she said, “because the School-teacher told
-me to.”
-
-“Get out of my way,” said the doctor. “This School-teacher has
-interfered with my business just about as much as I'm going to put up
-with.”
-
-He clucked to his horse, and rode around the woman. When he had gone
-forward a few paces, he made a gesture with his crooked arm.
-
-“Is there a path over the mountain this way?” he called without turning
-in his saddle.
-
-“Yes,” replied the woman, “it runs down past the house.”
-
-She remained standing by the gate with the crock in her hand.
-
-The doctor entered the forest.
-
-The colors lying far down the mountain in the sun were like those of an
-oriental carpet. Soft shades of green, of yellow, of crimson, kneaded
-into a harmony of low, unobtrusive tones that the sun warmed and
-illumined. Near at hand, along the path, where the doctor rode, the
-sumacs stood a dull red, the chestnut bushes yellow, the wild cherry
-leaves turning on their edges, the oaks crimson like a flame, the water
-beeches green, the hickory leaves curling on their twigs like shavings
-of gold.
-
-The scene lay out below the doctor in the sun, incomparably painted, but
-he did not see it. He rode looking down at the pommel of his saddle. Now
-and then, when the horse stumbled, he brought it up with a wrench of the
-bit. The horse was tired. It went forward with its head down. Dust
-lay around its eye-pits. There were gray bands of dried sweat running
-parallel with the leather of the headstall, and beyond the borders of
-the saddle blanket.
-
-At a turn of the path a dog appeared, his yellow hair rising on his
-back. As the doctor came on, the dog slowly retreated, growling,
-holding his place in the road until the horse was almost upon him, then
-springing hack, his teeth flashing, his eyes on the doctor. The dog did
-not bark, he made no considerable sound, he refused to attack the horse,
-but he continued always to menace the approach of the doctor.
-
-They passed the spring and came out before the house and the little
-cornfield. Then the dog began, to bark, and a tiny voice arose.
-
-“Ge-out, Nim!” it said.
-
-This patch of clearing, lying within the many-colored garden of the
-forest, seemed illumined with a warmer sunlight. The effect doubtless
-arose from the carpet of coarse brown fox-grass grown up over the
-cornfield, into which the sun seemed to enter and remain. Two or three
-small maple trees, abundantly leaved, stood about, flaming scarlet.
-
-Under one of these trees the Schoolteacher was at work.
-
-A corn shock, unbound, lying on the ground before him. He was on his
-knees, bareheaded, without a coat, ripping the husk from the ear with a
-wooden “peg” bound to his middle finger, snapping it at the socket and
-tossing it out on a heap before him.
-
-The ears coming from the Schoolteacher's hands were long, full-grained
-and of a deep yellow.
-
-The two children, Martha and David, were gathering this corn into a
-split basket and carrying it to a crib made of rails and roofed with
-clapboards. Near the School-teacher, sitting on his coat spread out on
-the ground, was the tiny boy who had called to the dog. He was shelling
-a red ear of corn into the School-teacher's hat.
-
-A brush fence inclosed the cornfield.
-
-The doctor pulled up in the path beside the fence. The School-teacher
-arose. He stood bareheaded in the sun under the canopy of darning
-leaves. He looked past the doctor to the horse, standing with its legs
-out, its head down.
-
-“I understand you're practicin' medicine,” said the doctor.
-
-“Your horse is tired,” replied the School-teacher.
-
-“There's a law against practicin' medicine without a license,” said the
-doctor.
-
-“Your horse is hungry,” continued the School-teacher.
-
-The doctor, riding on, replied with an oath.
-
-“You're going to get into trouble,” he said.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIII
-
-|EARLY on Monday morning an old man driving a gray mare in a two-wheeled
-cart came slowly up the road to the schoolhouse. A lank colt followed
-the mare. The cart was very old, no vestige of paint remained on it,
-one of the shafts was wrapped with wire, the bottom of the cart, made of
-small slats, was loose. The man was heavy and the cart creaked. He drove
-slowly, his big body filling the seat on which for comfort he had placed
-a folded bedquilt.
-
-He stopped in the road below the schoolhouse and got slowly out of the
-creaking cart.
-
-One of his legs was swollen with scrofula, and stiff to the knee. He
-moved it with difficulty. He left the mare standing in the road, the
-colt beside her, and came through the grove to the school-house door.
-The stiff leg gave his heavy body an awkward swing. He supported himself
-with a stout stick.
-
-When he came finally to the school-house, he sat down on the step before
-the door. He had evidently moved faster than he was accustomed to do,
-and he remained for a moment breathing heavily, his big bulk covering
-the step. Then he got a memorandum hook and a pencil out of his pocket.
-The memorandum book was one of those cheap advertisements of patent
-medicine which are given away at the country store. It contained a few
-pages blank on one side and printed with virtues of the medicine on the
-other. The pencil was a little more pretentious than the ordinary one.
-It consisted of a tin case containing a long, thin core of purple lead,
-the end of which could be made to protrude for writing by pressing the
-thumb on the opposite end of the case.
-
-The old man turned the leaves of the memorandum book, wetting his
-forefinger in his mouth, until he found a blank page. Then he laid the
-book on his knee, pressed the case of the pencil, touched the tip of the
-lead to his tongue, and laboriously wrote.
-
-“This schoolhouse is closed, by order of P. Hamrick, Trustee.”
-
-He tore the leaf out, rose and pinned it to the door.
-
-It was some distance through the grove of ancient trees to the road,
-and he started to return. In spite of his bulk and his stiff leg he
-endeavored to hurry. He thrust his stout stick out before him on the
-path, and swung forward, his weight forcing the point of the stick into
-the earth. In order that he might not fall, and to find each time a safe
-place for the stick, he moved with his eyes on the ground.
-
-Presently the end of the stick slipped on a pebble, and he lurched
-forward. He saved himself from falling by grasping the crook, of the
-stick with both hands, tottered a moment, then he regained his balance
-and looked up.
-
-The School-teacher stood before him.
-
-The old man remained holding to the stick, breathing with difficulty.
-The School-teacher was some distance away, motionless in the path. He
-had evidently seen the man coming from the schoolhouse door, and had
-stopped there in the path to observe him.
-
-The School-teacher spoke.
-
-“Have you been to the schoolhouse?” he said.
-
-“Yes,” replied the man, “I've--I've been out to the schoolhouse.”
-
-“To see me?” said the School-teacher. “Well, no,” replied the man, “not
-exactly to see you.”
-
-“To see the school?”
-
-“Well, no, not exactly to see the school.” Then he added, “I'm the
-trustee. I've been looking over the schoolhouse. I think I'll be goin'
-on.”
-
-“Why do you hurry?” said the Schoolteacher.
-
-“I must be gettin' home,” said the old man.
-
-He reached forward with his stick, but again the point of it slipped and
-he nearly fell.
-
-The School-teacher looked past the man toward the schoolhouse.
-
-“What is that on the door?” he said. The old man turned around. The leaf
-from the memorandum book, fastened with the pin, fluttered on the door,
-as though 't were a living thing struggling to free itself.
-
-“That's a piece of paper,” said the old man.
-
-“Who put it there?”
-
-“I did.”
-
-“What for?”
-
-“It's a kind of notice.”
-
-“A notice to me?”
-
-“A notice about the schoolhouse.”
-
-“Is there anything wrong with the schoolhouse?”
-
-“Well,” said the old man, “I don't think it's just exactly safe.”
-
-“Not safe for the children?”
-
-“Well, no, it mightn't he safe for the children.”
-
-“What is wrong with the schoolhouse?” said the School-teacher.
-
-The old man began to talk. “Well,” he said, “it's got a good roof.
-Old Dix put that roof on. Every one of the clapboards is planed with
-a drawin' knife. An' the weatherboardin' is good. It was seasoned
-weatherboardin'. But the floor might be bad.”
-
-“I have mended the floor,” replied the School-teacher.
-
-“It ain't so much the floor,” continued the old man. “It's the sills.
-The sills might be rotten.”
-
-“I have examined the sills,” replied the School-teacher. “The sills are
-sound.”
-
-“Well,” said the old man, “failin' weather's comin' on. I think the
-school had better stop anyway.”
-
-He turned a little and put his stick out on the path into the leaves as
-though he would go down the hill a shorter way to the road.
-
-The School-teacher read his intent in the moving of the cane.
-
-“You would better stay in the path,” he said. “If you get out of the
-path you will fall.”
-
-The old man turned back into the path before the School-teacher.
-
-There was come now a certain dogged expression into his face.
-
-“If you want to know,” he said, “there's been some complaint about you.”
-
-“Who has complained of me?” said the School-teacher.
-
-“Good men have complained.”
-
-“What good men?”
-
-“Why, men as good as the minister. Why, men as good as the doctor.”
-
-Then he looked out sharp at the Schoolteacher.
-
-“Ain't that hussy, Yaller Mag, up there with you at Nicholas Parks'
-house?” The School-teacher regarded the old man standing before him.
-
-“Do you think this woman ought to be sent away?”
-
-“Yes, I do,” replied the old man.
-
-“Then some one ought to tell her to go.”
-
-“Yes, they ought.”
-
-“It's a difficult thing to do,” said the School-teacher.
-
-“To find some one to tell her?”
-
-“Yes,” said the School-teacher, “that is it, to find some one to tell
-her.”
-
-“If that's all,” said the old man, “I'm goin' home by Nicholas Park's
-house, that's my shortest way. I'll stop an' tell her myself.”
-
-“But have you thought how difficult it will be to tell her?” inquired
-the Schoolteacher.
-
-“What's the trouble about tellin' her?”
-
-“Well,” replied the School-teacher, his eyes resting on the old man's
-swollen scrofuletic leg, “the trouble is that the one who goes to tell
-her ought to be better than she is. He ought, himself, to have lived a
-clean life.... Perhaps you have, perhaps you can tell her.”
-
-The old man thought that the Schoolteacher saw something lying on the
-ground, for he stooped over and his finger moved in the dust of the
-path. And while he remained thus, the old man hurried along to the road.
-The mare stood facing in the direction of the way over the mountain by
-Nicholas Parks' house.
-
-The old man took her by the bridle and turned her around in the road.
-
-Then he climbed slowly into the creaking cart. He looked back when he
-had got his big bulk on the folded bedquilt. The School-teacher was
-standing upright where he had passed him in the path. The old man put
-his hand on the corner of the seat and turned heavily about.
-
-“There's another thing,” he said. “I'd like to know why you're always
-carryin' that bastard brat around with you.”
-
-Then he drove away, but not on the road that crossed the mountain by
-Nicholas Park's house.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIV
-
-|ALL day long the little boy was with the School-teacher. The child and
-the dog watched for the man to come out of the forest in the morning.
-When the dog barked, the little boy would say:
-
-“Nim, see Teacher.”
-
-The woman standing before the door watched for the three of them to come
-out of the forest in the evening. She listened for the laughter, the
-voices, the barking of the dog. The sense of perfect understanding among
-the three of them was to her a perpetual wonder. The child had only a
-few words, the dog had none. How could the man know so well, what they
-meant? It was a wonder that she turned about, and at last, out of the
-deeps of her own feelings, she got an answer that she held to.
-
-“If you love a thing enough, it's goin' to understand you.”
-
-The relation of the School-teacher to this tiniest child was also that
-of his relation to every other one. The sense of it spread throughout
-the school. This school became a family. What the cheerless home
-withheld, it gave. No child could have told one what that was.
-
-The teacher understood him, would have been the answer.
-
-The School-teacher required no built-up explanations, he required no
-justification of one's act by the unfamiliar standards of another, he
-required no trick, no artifice, no pretending, to get on with.
-
-To the question, “What is he like?” a little boy had answered, “Why,
-just like me.”
-
-For some time there had been a secret in the school.
-
-The School-teacher had talked with every child apart. The talk had been
-confidential. The School-teacher had spoken with each one, even the
-tiniest, as with an equal. He had spoken with him from day to day as
-the occasion arose. It was the way of this secret to make the child with
-whom he talked for a time unhappy. But as the School-teacher continued
-each day to strengthen him, to show him how much he depended on him,
-and to blow on the embers of his courage, he came at length to carry the
-secret with equanimity.
-
-On Thursday evening this secret became the common property of all. The
-School-teacher was going away! There would be no more school!
-
-On this afternoon the School-teacher had again talked with each child
-apart, told him that the time of which he had spoken had now come, and
-called upon him for the evidence of his courage. But, in spite of all,
-when the hour arrived, the school broke down. It left the little benches
-and gathered around the Schoolteacher. For a moment the Schoolteacher
-hesitated, before the group of wet faces, then, one by one, he took each
-child up in his arms, carried him to the window and told him something.
-Something which he had not told him before. No one, outside of the
-school, knew exactly what it was. But each child coming from the
-School-teacher's arms was strengthened, and set out for his home, the
-tears drying on his sturdy little face. An idea of what this something
-was, afterwards arose. A little boy had said, “Everybody's a-goin' to
-live at the School-teacher's house.” But he was in the extremity of
-illness when he said it, and they thought he spoke in delirium.
-
-It, was mid-afternoon when the Schoolteacher left the schoolhouse. He
-was accompanied by the two children, Martha and David. The dog Jim went
-before him and he carried the tiny boy on his shoulder. They went along
-the road to the river, crossed on the stones and ascended the mountain.
-The little boy fell asleep, his arms around the Schoolteacher's neck.
-
-The two children walked beside the man.
-
-For the most part they were silent. Finally they came to the little
-clearing. The children stopped in the road, and the man went up onto the
-cabin porch, the little sleeping boy in his arms. The woman at work in
-the kitchen, hearing the footsteps, came out to the door. When she saw
-who it was, she was surprised.
-
-“School's out early to-day,” she said. “Yes,” replied the
-School-teacher. “What's the matter?”
-
-“It's the last day of the school.”
-
-“Won't there be any more school?”
-
-“No.”
-
-The woman's lips trembled. “Then, then...” she said, and she began to
-cry.
-
-“Mary,” said the School-teacher, “have you forgotten what I told you?”
-
-The woman sobbed,
-
-“But it's come so soon.”
-
-Then she looked at the little boy sleeping in the School-teacher's arms
-and the tears streamed down her face.
-
-“Now, what'll I do?” she said. “Now, what'll I do? He'll set there
-by the door, him an' Jim, an' he'll look for you every morning, an'
-whenever Jim barks he'll say 'Nim see Teacher,' but he won't never see
-you.”
-
-“Yes,” replied the School-teacher, “he will see me again.”
-
-“Then you won't be so awful far away?”
-
-“I shall never be very far away from him.”
-
-Then he put the sleeping child into the woman's arms.
-
-“Don't wake him,” he said, “and don't cry. Remember, Mary, that if he
-should go with me, then he could not stay with you.”
-
-He went down the road, and with the two children beside him, passed on
-along the path. They went by the spring, with its keg sunk in the earth,
-and up the mountain to Nicholas Parks' house. There, in the road, they
-found the woman with the yellow hair, feeding the chickens, a measure of
-corn in her apron.
-
-“You're back early,” she said.
-
-“It's the last day of the school,” replied the School-teacher.
-
-The woman's whole body was convulsed. The corn spilled out of her apron.
-Then she fled along the road, and up the path to the house. At the door
-she stopped, turned about, and then huddled down by the steps, her apron
-over her head.
-
-The School-teacher bade the children await him, then he went up the
-path. He passed by the woman and entered the house. Within the house, he
-went over to the table by the wall, on which lay a little, worn, broken
-toy, that had once been a wooden horse, a top whittled out of a spool, a
-brass ring with its cotton ribbon, a Harlow knife, and little bunches
-of wild flowers. These he took up, one by one, and put into the bosom of
-his coat. Then he came out and closed the door. As he passed, the woman
-put out her hand and touched him. And he stopped. For a moment he stood
-looking down at the woman sobbing at his feet, the apron over her heed.
-Then he spoke.
-
-“Margaret,” he said, “is this how you will keep your promise to me?”
-
-Then he went down the path, and, accompanied by the two children,
-followed the road along the ridge to the little path descending the
-mountain toward the mill. As the School-teacher walked he endeavored to
-strengthen and encourage the two children. He bade them remember what he
-had said, and not to cry. They managed not to cry when he left them at
-the point where the path entered the road below. But when he was gone
-out of their sight and hearing, in the direction of the schoolhouse,
-they held to each other and wept.
-
-They stood for a long time, there, in tears, holding to one another.
-Then they heard sounds approaching and hid themselves. Two men rode past
-in the direction of the schoolhouse. One of them carried a rifle across
-the saddle before him.
-
-A great fear fell on the two children and they followed at a distance.
-They saw the two men dismount before the school-house, knock on the door
-and enter. After a while they came out with the Schoolteacher.
-
-They got on their horses and, with the School-teacher walking between
-them, set out along the road in the direction of the town.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XV
-
-THE several influences moving against the School-teacher, having formed
-a conjunction, at last determined to act.
-
-On Wednesday night, in the church at the county seat, two persons
-attended the minister's mid-weekly meeting, who were not members of the
-congregation. These two persons, the sheriff and the doctor, sat on
-the last bench nearest the door. When the service was concluded and the
-congregation withdrew, these two persons remained with the minister. The
-three of them moved up to the table before the altar, where there was a
-small oil lamp.
-
-They remained for a long time in conference around this table.
-
-It seemed that the minister's efforts to get rid of the School-teacher
-by prevailing on the trustee to close the schoolhouse, had not
-succeeded.
-
-The school went on in spite of the notice.
-
-And now some more effective measures must be found. The sheriff, when
-the minister informed him of the occupancy of Nicholas Parks' estate by
-this stranger, had caused a proceeding to be instituted in the circuit
-court, and had obtained an order restraining any one from entering on
-the lands of Nicholas Parks until the right of the state thereto could
-be determined. This order had been posted on the door of Nicholas Parks'
-house. But this order, like the one on the door of the schoolhouse, the
-stranger had not regarded.
-
-It was evident that a firmer step must be taken.
-
-Two plans were available. As the School-teacher had continued to remain
-on Nicholas Parks' lands after the restraining order had been posted on
-the door, the sheriff could apply to the circuit judge for a _rule_ and
-cause him to be brought before the court and imprisoned for contempt.
-The second plan was for the doctor to go before a justice of the peace
-and take out a warrant against the School-teacher charging him with
-practicing medicine without a license.
-
-These two plans were now under discussion in the empty, dimly lighted
-church.
-
-The little hand oil lamps had been put out except one on a wooden
-bracket by the door, and the one smoking on the table before the altar.
-The silence, the empty church, or something in the atmosphere of the
-place, caused the men to draw together and to discuss the matter in
-undertones.
-
-The minister sat with his back to the altar.
-
-On the bench beside him was his hat containing the money which he had
-collected from the congregation at the close of the service. On
-either side were the doctor and the sheriff. The latter's big hump now
-prominent as he leaned over the table. The minister led the discussion,
-and they remained for some time thus, in conference. The minister's
-defective eye batting, the doctor's crooked arm on the table, and the
-sheriff's back throwing its humped shadow against the wall.
-
-Finally it was determined that the sheriff should go before the court
-on Thursday and obtain the _rule_ upon which the School-teacher could
-be arrested and brought down out of the mountain. At the same time the
-doctor should take out his warrant before the justice of the peace, so
-it might be available in case the circuit judge should not commit the
-Schoolteacher upon the proceeding for contempt.
-
-This plan having been settled upon, it became necessary to consider how
-the arrest should be made.
-
-The sheriff could send his deputy, who served legal papers in the
-county, but the deputy had never seen the School-teacher and did not
-know him. And, besides this, if the School-teacher resisted, and those
-about him should come to his support, there might be considerable
-trouble to take him. One man conducting a prisoner through the mountains
-in the night might easily be compelled to release him. Moreover,
-the deputy, knowing the danger of making an arrest in the mountain
-districts, could not be got to go up alone.
-
-A discussion of who should be found to assist the deputy then arose. No
-one could be thought of except Jonas Black, a worthless hanger-on
-about the village. This man was the son of Jerry Black, whose eye the
-School-teacher had cured.
-
-He had been the sheriff's driver on the occasion of that official's
-interview with the School-teacher. He was familiar with the mountains,
-and it was thought less likely to be resisted, since he was one of the
-mountain people. He knew the School-teacher. It was said that for a time
-he had hung about him, hoping to be employed to go from house to house
-and collect the School-teacher's salary, until he discovered to his
-astonishment, that this stranger was charging nothing for his service.
-
-The sheriff rose and went out into the village to seek this man, while
-the others awaited his return. The sheriff was not gone very long. He
-presently entered the church with another. This man had a curious deep
-red birthmark covering the entire side of his face. He came up the
-church aisle behind the sheriff, stepping softly and glancing furtively
-about him. He slipped into a seat before the table facing the altar, and
-remained there shifting his hat in his lingers.
-
-The sheriff took his place at the table.
-
-“I found Jonas,” he said.
-
-The minister looked across the table at the man.
-
-“Will you go?” he inquired.
-
-“Yes, I'll go,” replied the man, “if I git paid enough for it.”
-
-“How much do you want?” said the minister.
-
-“Well,” replied the man, “it ought to be worth about five dollars.”
-
-The three men at the table protested.
-
-The sum was excessive. The sheriff would provide a horse. The journey
-would not take longer than one night. Besides, there was no way by which
-the fees of a deputy, for such service, could be made to aggregate that
-sum. The man persisted, and, while the sheriff considered how the sum
-allowed under the law could be augmented, the minister bargained. The
-man finally reduced his demand to three dollars. And the sheriff, seeing
-now a plan by which an additional charge could be officially added,
-said:
-
-“There are a couple of bad characters in the jail, held to the grand
-jury for breaking into a store. They may try to give me some trouble.
-Now, if you would watch the jail for a few nights, I might manage to get
-that fee for you.”
-
-“Well,” replied the man, “I'd sorter keep an eye on the jail for a night
-or two. I wouldn't mind doin' that. But I won't wait for my money. I
-won't take it in costs.”
-
-“How soon will you want it?” inquired the sheriff.
-
-“Right now,” said the man.
-
-“I couldn't give it to you to-night,” replied the sheriff.
-
-The man got up.
-
-“Then I won't go,” he said.
-
-An idea occurred to the minister. He turned around, picked up his
-hat, containing the recent collection, and placed it on the table. He
-whispered a moment to the others, then he spoke to the man.
-
-“I'll pay you the money,” he said.
-
-He began to count it out on the table. The money from the collection
-was in small silver coins and he selected the largest of them. He leaned
-over the table, his fingers in the hat, his defective eye close to the
-lamp.
-
-And the man standing before the altar, one half of his face in the
-shadow, one half discolored by the crimson birthmark dimly in the light,
-received the money. Two dollars and sixty cents in ten-cent pieces,
-three five-cent pieces, and one twenty-five cent piece.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XVI
-
-|THEY took the School-teacher into the courthouse early in the morning.
-
-The county seat of this mountain county was nothing more than a village,
-lying in the foothills. The courthouse stood in a grove of oak trees, in
-the middle of the village. It was a two-story structure. On the ground
-floor was the jail in the custody of the sheriff.
-
-The second floor was the courthouse.
-
-This second story was entered exclusively from without. Broad stone
-steps led up to a portico, on which stood round, plaster-covered pillars
-supporting the projecting roof. On either side, entering between these
-pillars, were the offices of the county and circuit clerks. Beyond
-was the court room filled with benches. A portion of this room at the
-farther end was separated from the benches by a railing. Within it were
-chairs and two tables for attorneys, a desk for the clerk, and a raised
-platform, ascended by steps on either side, for the judge.
-
-It was the custom of the judges traveling on these mountain circuits to
-open court as early as eight o'clock in the morning, and before that, if
-they were come into the court room, to hear informally motions and the
-like.
-
-When they brought the School-teacher into the courthouse, the sheriff,
-the doctor, the minister, the old trustee who had ridden down out of the
-mountains in his cart, were already there.
-
-The deputy and Jonas led the Schoolteacher inside the railing. Then they
-sat down. The School-teacher remained standing.
-
-The hearing before the circuit judge followed the informal custom of
-these mountain circuits.
-
-The School-teacher made no defense.
-
-He stood before the bench. The early sunlight of the morning, entering
-through the high windows, fell on his face, on his soft brown hair, on
-his deep gray-blue eyes, on his clothing covered with the dust of the
-road.
-
-The judge heard the oral evidence in open court, He inquired into
-the service of the restraining order, and the prisoner's subsequent
-disregard of it. But he was not convinced. The prisoner's conduct seemed
-inconsistent with an intent to resist the State's title to these lands.
-Moreover, the silence, the calm demeanor, the strange personality of the
-prisoner, profoundly impressed him. He felt that some ulterior motive
-lay behind the cover of this accusation.
-
-At this moment a woman appeared at the door of the courthouse and
-sent in a note to the judge. This note was sealed in an envelope and
-addressed in a fine hand. The judge opened it at once. When he had
-read it, he sat for some time looking down at the prisoner. He did not
-believe in dreams; but the insistence of his wife impressed him.
-
-He turned to the sheriff, and inquired if there was a man in the
-courtroom who knew anything about the prisoner.
-
-The sheriff indicated the others near him.
-
-“Yes, Your Honor,” he replied, “the minister, the school trustee of that
-district, and the doctor here, all know about him. He seems to have made
-himself generally troublesome to the community. I believe the justice
-of the peace had issued a warrant against him for practicing medicine
-without a license.”
-
-When the circuit judge heard of this action of the justice, he ordered
-the School-teacher to be taken before that official. He said that if
-the justice of the peace has issued a warrant antedating the _rule_, he
-would yield to him the custody of the prisoner.
-
-They took the School-teacher out of the courthouse and across the
-village street to the office of the justice of the peace.
-
-The justice was greatly pleased when the deputy and Jonas came in with
-the prisoner. A good many stories had drifted down from the mountains to
-him concerning the miraculous cures which this man had effected, and he
-was anxious to see him. He removed his spectacles, put them carefully
-into a tin case, set his feet on the rounds of a chair and, after
-having thus made himself comfortable, he requested the School-teacher to
-explain to him in detail, exactly how he had accomplished the marvels of
-which he had heard.
-
-The School-teacher did not reply.
-
-He remained standing as he had stood before the circuit judge. His
-head lifted. The features of his face unmoving. His deep gray-blue eyes
-tilled with a tranquil, melancholy light.
-
-When the justice of the peace saw that his curiosity was not likely to
-be gratified, he, at once, sent the prisoner back to the circuit judge.
-He took this act of the judge to be a delicate courtesy, a tender regard
-for the jurisdictional rights of an inferior tribunal, and he was not
-to be outdone. In several instances the circuit judge had recently
-curtailed his jurisdiction, and he had been smarting under it. This act
-was a friendly overture, and he hastened to evidence his appreciation of
-it.
-
-He returned the prisoner, saying that as his warrant had not been
-served, his jurisdiction had not attached, and the prisoner was
-exclusively in the custody of the circuit court. Moreover, that he would
-hold his warrant in abeyance until the circuit court had disposed of the
-case.
-
-When the School-teacher came again before the circuit judge, that
-official no longer hesitated to indicate his opinion. He said that the
-prisoner did not seem disposed to contest the state's title to these
-lands, that he appeared to have taken up his residence in Nicholas
-Parks' house anterior to the date of the order, and upon some verbal
-direction of the decedent; that while there was here perhaps a technical
-contempt, he was not certain that it was intended, and consequently that
-he was disposed to dismiss the prisoner.
-
-The minister, the sheriff, the doctor, the old school trustee, under
-this informal procedure, came forward with a protest. They said that the
-School-teacher was a person dangerous to the community; that he had set
-himself against the authority of the state in disregarding the order of
-the court; that he had set himself against the authority of the county
-by disregarding the notice placed on the schoolhouse door; that he had
-openly violated the law in practicing medicine without a license; that
-he harbored immoral persons, and encouraged the children in acts of
-irreverence.
-
-The judge endeavored to compromise with this opposition. He said that
-he would reprimand the prisoner, suspend sentence and release him on his
-own recognizance.
-
-The general protest now took on a definite form. The minister spoke for
-the others. He was little accustomed to the diplomacy of the advocate
-and he thinly disguised the threat that was the tenor of this speech.
-He said that one in the position of a circuit judge ought to sustain
-the better elements of the community in their efforts to get rid of an
-undesirable person; that the will of the people was not lightly to be
-disregarded; that the object of making offices elective was that one
-who refused to consider what the people desired might be replaced by
-another; and the like.
-
-The judge came up presently for reelection. It was notice to him that
-the powerful elements which these protesting persons represented would
-hold him to account. The strength of his political party lay in these
-mountain counties. He required the support of these elements. And he
-especially feared a sectarian sentiment against him. He knew the danger
-of such a sentiment; and how little, once on its way, explanations would
-avail. This covert threat angered the judge, but he feared to resist
-it. He dipped his pen into the inkpot before him, and wrote an order
-committing the prisoner to the county jail. Then he handed it down to
-the sheriff.
-
-The persons standing about the sheriff drew near to him and read the
-order. The minister and the school trustee objected to something in the
-body of the writing, and the sheriff went with them to the judge.
-
-They pointed out that the order directed the commitment of the
-“Schoolteacher of Hickory Mountain District,” that this term was
-incorrect, that the prisoner had not been employed by the trustees, that
-he was not the School-teacher of Hickory Mountain District, and that the
-order ought not so to designate him.
-
-But the judge, smarting under the lash that had been laid on him, was in
-no mood to receive a further dictation.
-
-He refused to change what he had written.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XVII
-
-|THE several persons who had forced the judge to commit the
-School-teacher to the county jail, having gone down from the courthouse,
-remained throughout the day in conference. It was evident that the
-circuit judge had acted against his own inclination, and that he could
-not be depended upon to hold the prisoner in custody. Some other method
-for ridding the community of this undesirable person must be found.
-Finally, after long reflection, they hit upon a plan.
-
-Night descended.
-
-In the village saloon, beyond the grove of oak trees behind the
-courthouse, the man who had received the money from the minister sat
-playing at cards. A rifle stood in the corner behind him. From time to
-time he arose, took up the rifle and went to the door. Keeping thus, in
-his fashion, an agreement which the sheriff had forgotten.
-
-The night advanced.
-
-At twelve o'clock the sheriff went down into the jail. He carefully
-unfastened the door opening into the grove of oak trees. Then he came
-along the corridor to the one iron cage that the jail contained. The
-door to this cage he likewise carefully unlocked. On a bedtick filled
-with straw, two men, convicted of larceny, were apparently asleep
-beside this door. On a bench against the wall behind them sat the
-School-teacher. His hat with its little crimson feather lay beside him.
-He sat unmoving, looking at something in his hand. When he observed the
-sheriff, he put the thing which he held in his hand back into the bosom
-of his coat. It was the broken toy horse which the little boy had given
-him. The sheriff beckoned with his finger.
-
-The School-teacher lifted his head and looked at the man, but he did not
-move from his place against the wall.
-
-The sheriff stepped delicately past the men, whom he believed to be
-asleep, and approached the School-teacher.
-
-“The door's open,” he said, “you can get out of the county before 't's
-daylight.”
-
-The School-teacher did not reply, and the sheriff went noiselessly out.
-Presently the two men got up from their pretended sleep and slipped out
-of the cage. The School-teacher rose and spoke to them. But they crept
-down the corridor. He followed. He came upon them as they opened the
-door leading out of the jail into the grove, stepped between them in the
-door and thrust them back. The act saved the men's lives, but it cost
-the School-teacher his own.
-
-There was the flash of a rifle from the saloon beyond the oak trees, and
-the School-teacher fell forward, his arms outstretched.
-
-In the evening some women and children from the mountains came to the
-circuit judge and asked him for the body of the School-teacher. He gave
-it to them, and at night they took it away.
-
-An ox, led by a little boy, bore the body, and women walking beside it
-supported it with their hands.
-
-They traveled back into the mountains.
-
-And at daybreak they laid the body in a grave which they had made
-between the two great hickories on the ridge beyond Nicholas Parks'
-house. They lined the grave with bright-colored leaves, and wrapped the
-body in that piece of linen which the School-teacher had bade the miller
-keep for him until he should need it. The hands of women and children
-filled the grave with earth. Then they went away down the mountain,
-toward the mill, leaving a woman crouched beside the grave. Her apron
-covering her yellow hail. Her body rocking.
-
-It was morning.
-
-They went down the mountain, the boy and the ox, the little girl, the
-two remaining women--one of them carrying a tiny sleeping hoy wrapped in
-a shawl, a dog beside her.
-
-On a bench of the mountain below, where a tree, uprooted by the wind,
-lay with its broken trunk pointing toward the ridge, they stopped and
-looked back. As they looked, the sun arose, a disc of gold between the
-two great hickories.
-
-With a wild harking, the dog leaped onto the fallen trunk, ran out to
-the projecting end of it, and stood there looking toward the sun.
-
-The tiny boy moved 'n his mother's arms.
-
-“Nim see Teacher,” he said.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of The Mountain School-Teacher, by
-Melville Davisson Post
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-
-<html xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml" lang="en">
- <head>
- <title>
- The Mountain School-teacher, by Melville Davisson Post
- </title>
- <link rel="coverpage" href="images/cover.jpg" />
- <style type="text/css" xml:space="preserve">
-
- body { margin:5%; background:#faebd0; text-align:justify}
- P { text-indent: 1em; margin-top: .25em; margin-bottom: .25em; }
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- hr { width: 50%; text-align: center;}
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- .mynote {background-color: #DDE; color: #000; padding: .5em; margin-left: 10%; margin-right: 10%; font-family: sans-serif; font-size: 95%;}
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-<pre>
-
-Project Gutenberg's The Mountain School-Teacher, by Melville Davisson Post
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most
-other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of
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-to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook.
-
-
-
-Title: The Mountain School-Teacher
-
-Author: Melville Davisson Post
-
-Release Date: May 2, 2016 [EBook #51958]
-Last Updated: March 16, 2018
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE MOUNTAIN SCHOOL-TEACHER ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by David Widger from page images generously
-provided by the Internet Archive
-
-
-
-
-
-
-</pre>
-
- <div style="height: 8em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h1>
- THE MOUNTAIN SCHOOL-TEACHER
- </h1>
- <h2>
- By Melville Davisson Post
- </h2>
- <h3>
- D. Appleton and Company
- </h3>
- <h3>
- New York, London
- </h3>
- <h4>
- 1922
- </h4>
- <p>
- <br /><br /><a name="linkimage-0001" id="linkimage-0001"> </a>
- </p>
- <div class="fig" style="width:50%;">
- <img src="images/0001.jpg" alt="0001 " width="100%" /><br />
- </div>
- <h5>
- <a href="images/0001.jpg"><img src="images/enlarge.jpg" alt="" /> </a>
- </h5>
- <p>
- <br /><br /><a name="linkimage-0002" id="linkimage-0002"> </a>
- </p>
- <div class="fig" style="width:50%;">
- <img src="images/0002.jpg" alt="0002 " width="100%" /><br />
- </div>
- <h5>
- <a href="images/0002.jpg"><img src="images/enlarge.jpg" alt="" /> </a>
- </h5>
-
- <p>
- <br /><br /><a name="linkimage-0004" id="linkimage-0004"> </a>
- </p>
- <div class="fig" style="width:50%;">
- <img src="images/0007.jpg" alt="0007 " width="100%" /><br />
- </div>
- <h5>
- <a href="images/0007.jpg"><img src="images/enlarge.jpg" alt="" /> </a>
- </h5>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <p>
- <b>CONTENTS</b>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2H_4_0001"> THE MOUNTAIN SCHOOL-TEACHER </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2HCH0001"> CHAPTER I </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2HCH0002"> CHAPTER II </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2HCH0003"> CHAPTER III </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2HCH0004"> CHAPTER IV </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2HCH0005"> CHAPTER V </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2HCH0006"> CHAPTER VI </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2HCH0007"> CHAPTER VII </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2HCH0008"> CHAPTER VIII </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2HCH0009"> CHAPTER IX </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2HCH0010"> CHAPTER X </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2HCH0011"> CHAPTER XI </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2HCH0012"> CHAPTER XII </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2HCH0013"> CHAPTER XIII </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2HCH0014"> CHAPTER XIV </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2HCH0015"> CHAPTER XV </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2HCH0016"> CHAPTER XVI </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2HCH0017"> CHAPTER XVII </a>
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2H_4_0001" id="link2H_4_0001"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- THE MOUNTAIN SCHOOL-TEACHER
- </h2>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0001" id="link2HCH0001"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER I
- </h2>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">T</span>HERE had once been
- a path along the backbone of the mountain, but the wilderness had
- undertaken to remove it, and had almost succeeded. The wind had gathered
- bits of moss, twigs and dead stuff into the slight depression. The great
- hickories had covered it with leaves. The rain had packed it. There was no
- longer a path, only an open way between the trees running down the gentle
- slope of the ridge to the mountain road. The ridge was heavily wooded. The
- primeval forest was there. Great hickories shot up sixty feet without a
- limb, and so close that a man putting out his hand could reach from one
- tree to another. A gigantic poplar now and then arose, a sugar maple, an
- oak&mdash;huge at the butt, deep rooted in the good soil.
- </p>
- <p>
- The afternoon sun, excluded of the forest, seemed to pack itself into this
- abandoned path.
- </p>
- <p>
- The leaves fallen from the hickories, under the touch of waning summer,
- took on now, by the magic of this sun, golden tones of red and yellow.
- Woodpeckers hammered on the great trees along this path. Insects moved
- between the branches, the wild bee, the hornet, the yellow butterfly, as
- though the aerial life of the woods had been drawn here to the sun.
- </p>
- <p>
- A man was coming through the forest along this abandoned path. He walked
- slowly, his hands behind him, his head bare. He was a very young man&mdash;at
- that period of life when, within a day, as by the crossing of some
- unmarked line, the boy becomes a man. There was about him the vigor, the
- freshness, the joy of youth, under a certain maturity. He was not above
- middle height, his face was oval, his eyes gray-blue, his hair of that
- soft rich brown which a touch of the sun burnishes into a living yellow;
- the mouth was sensitive and mobile.
- </p>
- <p>
- There was a marked contrast between the man and the wild, rugged,
- primitive country in which he appeared. His hands were firm and white, and
- his skin was not in the least discolored by sun or weather.
- </p>
- <p>
- Now and then the man stopped and looked up at the dappled woodpeckers, and
- the swarms of yellow butterflies, gathered here along this sunlit path as
- though to welcome his arrival, and his mouth relaxed into an eager,
- luminous smile, as though, despite his maturity, he retained a child's
- sense of some universal kinship with all living things. He came down the
- long ridge toward the place where the mountain road crossed the low gap.
- </p>
- <p>
- Half a mile below him a patriarchal ox was plodding slowly up the mountain
- road. The ox was old. His red hair was worn away in a variety of places,
- by long labors at the sled and the plow. His ancient horns were capped
- with brass knobs. Astride the ox sat a small boy on a sack of corn,
- perhaps a bushel and a half shelled from the cob. Under the sack was a
- strip of homemade carpet dyed yellow with copperas. The little boy guided
- the ox with a piece of old rope tied to the left horn below the brass
- knob, precisely as the driver of a four-horse team directs it with a
- single line. When he wished the ox to go to the right, he jerked the rope
- and shouted, &ldquo;Gee, Berry,&rdquo; when to the left, he pulled on the rope and
- shouted, &ldquo;Haw, Berry.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- But the ox no longer required these elaborate directions.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Gee,&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Haw,&rdquo; accompanied by a kicking of the rider's naked heels, were enough
- for the patriarch, or the soft heels alone on the broad iron ribs.
- </p>
- <p>
- The boy could not have been above six years old. He wore two garments, a
- little blue shirt of the material called &ldquo;hickory,&rdquo; and short trousers,
- with tiny hand-knitted woolen &ldquo;galluses.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- He was now engaged with an extreme difficulty.
- </p>
- <p>
- For more than a mile, under the ox's rolling gait, the corn had been
- moving over to one end of the sack. To keep the bag from falling, the boy
- had added his weight to the decreasing end. As the corn moved, he shifted
- his seat a little farther out on the sack. He sat now, well over the ox's
- side on the very end of the sack. His little mouth was contracted.
- </p>
- <p>
- It had been a long, painful struggle&mdash;this fight against the corn.
- Every inch, every fraction of an inch, contested.
- </p>
- <p>
- The grains had crept slowly over, and the child had considered and
- estimated the change, and moved with it. He had attributed to the corn a
- certain malicious intent, a certain insidious hostility, and he had
- resisted with dogged courage. It was all in the set of his little mouth,
- in the clutch of his tiny brown hand.
- </p>
- <p>
- For the sack to fall was a calamity which the child well understood.
- </p>
- <p>
- He could not lift the sack. He could not leave the ox and go for aid,
- because Berry, although a member of the family, was an eyeservant and not
- above making his dinner on the corn when the master's back was turned.
- </p>
- <p>
- Neither could he leave the corn lying in the road and return with the ox.
- Some one might carry it away and, besides, it was his bale of stuffs, the
- cargo with which he had been intrusted, and he could not leave it.
- </p>
- <p>
- The mountain road was deserted and the evening sun was beginning to
- descend.
- </p>
- <p>
- The child's whole energies were centered on his desperate struggle with
- the corn, and the ox traveled on leisurely as he liked. Presently, as he
- neared the top, the ox stepped on the root of a tree remaining in the
- road, and his shoulder went down. The sack slipped forward and fell,
- carrying with it the boy and the piece of carpet.
- </p>
- <p>
- The ox instantly stopped, the boy rose and sat down on the sack, resting
- his elbows on his knees and his chin in the hollow of his tiny brown
- hands. His features retained their set, dogged expression, but presently
- big tears began to trickle slowly down over his determined little face. He
- sat with his back toward the mountain gap, locking out over the vast
- wilderness of tree tops below him. The ox stood before him in the road, a
- figure of unending patience.
- </p>
- <p>
- The day waned, long shadows crossed the road, the sun withdrew to the high
- places. Far away through the deep wooded gorges night began to enter the
- mountains.
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0002" id="link2HCH0002"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER II
- </h2>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">W</span>HEN the man came
- out into the mountain road, he saw the little boy sitting on the sack of
- corn beside the red ox, and he smiled as he had smiled at the hammering
- birds, at the yellow butterflies. He turned down toward the tragic
- picture, lengthening his steps. The sun, by some trick of the moving
- world, seemed to follow him out of the abandoned path.
- </p>
- <p>
- The little boy did not see the man approaching, but he observed that the
- ox, apparently resigned to passing the night on the mountain, was making
- ready to lie down, knees first, after the manner of cattle. And the
- comfortable assurance of Berry in this, the hour of their misfortune, was
- more than he could bear. He arose and began to beat the ox with his little
- fists.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Git up, Berry!&rdquo; he cried. &ldquo;You ole dog! You ole scalawag! Git up!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The ox slowly arose, and the child turned to find the man beside him.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Poor Berry!&rdquo; said the man, smiling. &ldquo;Is he a very bad ox?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;He's a lazy ole pup,&rdquo; replied the little boy, his wet eyes catching and
- reflecting the stranger's smile. &ldquo;He's spilt!&rdquo; Then he crowded his little
- fists into his eyes to remove the traces of weakness with which he had
- been taken unawares.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Do you reckon,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;that both of us could put the corn on him if we
- lifted together?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I think so,&rdquo; replied the man; &ldquo;at least we will try.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- He took up the piece of yellow carpet and laid it over the ox's back. Then
- he stooped down, put his arms around the sack, linking his fingers
- together under it. The little boy took hold of the corner. The man raised
- the sack with scarcely an effort, the child contributing his tiny might.
- Then, as though the child's help were essential to the task, he nodded.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Now,&rdquo; he said, and with a swing lifted the sack onto the ox's back.
- </p>
- <p>
- The boy straightened up, and put both little hands on his hips. His face
- was now radiant.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;We got it up all right, didn't we?&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;both a-liftin'; an' now,&rdquo;
- he paused and regarded the ox with some concern, &ldquo;I've got to git on
- somehow-er-nuther.&rdquo; The ordinary man would then have lifted the child and
- set him on the ox, but this man did not. He seemed to know and regard that
- self-reliance which was so dear a thing to this child. He stood back and
- looked over the patriarch.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Berry is a big ox,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;We will lead him up to the bank.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The little boy walked across the road, with a bit of a swagger.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;Berry's a big ox.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- He liked this strange man who understood and considered him.
- </p>
- <p>
- The man led the ox to the roadside, and standing by the beast's shoulder,
- set his knee against the bank. The little boy put his foot on the man's
- knee, caught hold of the ox's shoulder, and climbed up onto the sack of
- corn. He panted with the effort.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Berry's everlastin' big,&rdquo; he observed in comment. Then he set himself
- squarely on the sack.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;We're goin' to mill,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;Where are you goin'?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;If you don't mind,&rdquo; replied the man, &ldquo;I shall go along with you and
- Berry.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The tiny chest expanded.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I don't mind,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;ner Berry don't neither.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Then, as a sort of condescension, as a sort of return for the man's
- kindness, he gravely handed down the bit of ancient rope.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;An' you k'n lead Berry if you want to.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- They crossed the low gap and began to descend the mountain on the other
- side. The man walked in front with the rope in his hand, the ox followed
- with a slow, roiling gait, his head lowered, the child sitting astride the
- sack of corn. The sun seemed to linger on the crest of the mountain as
- though loath, now, to withdraw wholly from the world, a vagrant breeze
- began to move idly in the tree tops, a faint haze to gather over the
- forests, below the sun, as though it were some visible odor arising from
- the earth.
- </p>
- <p>
- The road was steep and rough, low stumps and the roots of trees remained
- in it, and it was washed out in great ruts. The winter rain had carried
- the loose earth out of it and left the stones and the tree roots
- uncovered. A modern vehicle could hardly have kept together on such a
- road, although it bore the marks of wheels where the mountaineer had gone
- over with his wagon.
- </p>
- <p>
- The little boy sat regarding the man who walked before him in the road. He
- seemed not to have felt with this man that fear of the stranger which is
- so strong an instinct with a child. From the first moment he had been
- wholly at his ease. He spoke without restraint.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Where's your hat?&rdquo; he said.
- </p>
- <p>
- The man paused, and put up his hand as though he had not until this moment
- realized that he was bareheaded.
- </p>
- <p>
- A note of distress came into the child's voice.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You've lost your hat. Are you goin' back to look for it? 'Cause me an'
- Berry can go on to the mill by ourselves.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;No,&rdquo; said the man, &ldquo;I shall go on with you and Berry.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;But you ain't got no hat,&rdquo; the child continued.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Perhaps I shall find one somewhere,&rdquo; replied the man.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;No,&rdquo; said the child, &ldquo;you won't never find one, 'cause nobody don't lose
- their hats up here. You'll have to buy one at the store.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Then he went on to tell of all the wonderful things that the store
- contained: Striped candy in sticks in a big glass jar, and fishhooks, and
- sea grass fishin' lines, and guns, and pistols, and knives. But
- principally knives. Upon this particular topic he spoke with deep personal
- interest. In that place of wonders were knives with six blades, with
- &ldquo;peraly&rdquo; handles, with gimlets and tweezers in them, little knives that
- one could hide between one's fingers and big ones with a ring in the
- handle so one could tie them to his &ldquo;galluses.&rdquo; And Barlows with IXL on
- the blade.
- </p>
- <p>
- He paused and thrust his hand into his pocket. He had one that his
- grandfather had given him at Christmas, and he held it up&mdash;a Barlow
- with a bone handle and a single blade.
- </p>
- <p>
- The man stopped and came back to the ox's shoulder. He took the knife and
- examined it carefully, opened it and tried the edge on his thumb. The
- blade was round and blunt at the end. The child explained this with an air
- of apology.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Gran'-pap was afraid I'd run it in my eye, so he grinded it off. Have you
- got a knife?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The man felt in his pockets.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;No,&rdquo; he replied, &ldquo;I don't seem to have a knife.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well,&rdquo; said the little boy, &ldquo;you can git one when you go to git your
- hat.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The man walked on by the ox's shoulder, and the child continued to talk.
- There were difficulties to be met. The store was very far away, and one
- required money to obtain its treasures. The getting of money was a very
- troublesome affair. But he knew a way or two by which the thing could be
- accomplished. One could gather hickory nuts or one could dig ginseng. The
- latter method was to be advised&mdash;a pound brought a dollar and
- seventeen cents. But it must be dried. One strung it on a string and hung
- it over the fireplace. The storekeeper would not take it green.
- </p>
- <p>
- He spoke a word of comment concerning the storekeeper.
- </p>
- <p>
- He was hard to fool. He always broke the ginseng roots to see if there was
- a nail concealed inside. The child knew a man who had outwitted the
- storekeeper once by putting shot in the ends of the root, leaving the
- middle unmolested; but, he added, that was &ldquo;no way to do.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The road on this side of the mountain was steep. The turns short. The
- little party soon reached the foot, and came out into a valley, cleared
- and sowed in timothy grass. Through this valley, between sodded banks, ran
- a dark-colored, swiftly flowing stream.
- </p>
- <p>
- The road followed the stream through the meadow until it approached the
- mill. There the stream descended swiftly over ridges of sandstone into a
- dam of ancient logs. The mill sat beside the road, its roof projecting,
- its porch raised above the ground, its door and its gable open, its
- entrance coated with white dust.
- </p>
- <p>
- The machinery was of the simplest, two stone burrs turned by a paddle
- wheel; the water carried down from the dam in a boxed sluice, covered with
- green moss.
- </p>
- <p>
- The mill evidently served two uses.
- </p>
- <p>
- There was a second door to one-half of it, also opening on the porch, and
- through the open door one could see a stove, a bed, a well-scrubbed table.
- </p>
- <p>
- As the man leading the red ox approached, a woman appeared in the mill
- door. She was a sturdy woman of middle life, her calico dress pulled up in
- front and girded around her ample waist with an apron string. Her sleeves
- were rolled to the elbows, and her fat, powerful hands rested on her hips.
- Her mouth was compressed, the muscles of her jaws protruded, her bright
- gray eyes rested on the strange man with a profound, unmoved scrutiny.
- When the ox stood beside the porch, the man spoke.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Good evening,&rdquo; he said.
- </p>
- <p>
- The woman did not reply, she jerked her head; then she came slowly out,
- still looking at the man.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Jump off, David,&rdquo; she said to the boy; then she took up the sack with
- ease, swung it into the hollow of her arm, and went with it into the mill,
- But over her shoulder she continued to regard the man standing in the
- road.
- </p>
- <p>
- She threw the sack down by the hopper, and came again into the mill door.
- Her fat hands returned to her hips and her eyes went again to the man. But
- she spoke to the boy.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You'll be late gittin' home.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I ain't goin' home,&rdquo; replied the child. &ldquo;I'm goin' to Uncle Jimmie's,&rdquo;
- and he pointed his linger up the valley.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You can make that by dark.&rdquo; said the woman, &ldquo;but you better be movin'
- along.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- She came out and spread the piece of carpet on the ox. The small boy
- stepped off the mill porch and went out into the road behind the man,
- where a flat rock lay in the dust.
- </p>
- <p>
- He remained a moment squatted down on his bare legs. Then he returned,
- climbed onto the ox, and set out up the valley, kicking his heels against
- the patriarch's ancient ribs.
- </p>
- <p>
- At the bend of the road, the boy stopped and shouted. The man turned about
- where he was standing. The boy pointed his finger.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;There's somethin' under that rock,&rdquo; he called.
- </p>
- <p>
- Then he swung around on his piece of carpet, spoke to the ox, and was
- swallowed up in the shadows of the valley.
- </p>
- <p>
- The man stooped down and turned the fiat stone over. There lay the Barlow
- knife.
- </p>
- <p>
- The woman, watching the man, suddenly brought her bent palm to her
- forehead and looked up at the mountain, to see if some stray bit of the
- setting sun had entered the valley. But there was nothing.
- </p>
- <p>
- Night had descended.
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0003" id="link2HCH0003"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER III
- </h2>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">T</span>HE man stood out
- in the road looking toward the south. The country under his eye was
- primitive. The mountains rose in benches, heavily wooded. On one of these
- benches stood a log house to be seen among the trees, faintly, where the
- mountain road passed. Behind it, far away, a strip of green lay like a
- cloth across the very top of the mountain&mdash;a bit of farm in which two
- immense hickory trees stood like pillars. These trees must have been
- gigantic, since at the great distance they were to the eye huge. The man
- standing in the road seemed to be considering this country. His face was
- lifted and, in repose, melancholy.
- </p>
- <p>
- The woman continued to regard the men standing in the road. Finally she
- spoke, swinging her body a moment on her sturdy legs.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You're the new School-teacher, I reckon.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The man replied, without moving.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; he said.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You're a little behindhand.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You've come a good piece to-day, I reckon.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;A long way.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The woman took her fat right hand from her hips, and began to brush the
- skirt of her calico dress, although there was nothing on it to remove.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well,&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;you better come in and git your supper.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The man turned and faced the woman.
- </p>
- <p>
- His features appeared by a powerful effort to exclude something which he
- wished not to show and had been until this moment not wholly able to
- conceal.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You are very kind,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;I am hungry.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Just set down on the porch.&rdquo; said the woman. &ldquo;We've had our supper, but
- I'll git you a bite.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The man came over and sat down, his hands idly on his knees, his face
- looking out toward the mountains. The woman began her preparations for the
- stranger's meal. She entered the room where the wooden table stood,
- crossed to a cupboard, opened it and took out some dishes. These she began
- to put on the table. Then she stopped and stood with her hands resting on
- her hips. A moment later she removed the dishes, went over to a chest,
- standing in the corner, lifted the lid, took out a clean homespun linen
- cloth, and spread it over the table.
- </p>
- <p>
- As she moved about she talked.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;When are you goin' to begin school?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Monday morning,&rdquo; replied the man. &ldquo;Word ought to be sent 'round.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I think the children will come.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;They'll come when they know it, an' they'll know it purty soon; news
- travels powerful fast. We looked for you yesterday.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Somethin' kept you back, I s'pose.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well, there's allers somethin' to happen. You won't have much of a
- school, I expect. The big boys have all gone off to the sawmills, an' the
- big girls are helpin' with the work. It's a mighty busy time.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I would rather have the little children.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;They're a heap of bother.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I don't think I shall mind the bother.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Don't you? Most people do. They're harder to teach than the big ones,
- ain't they?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I think they are easier to teach.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Do you? What makes you think they're easier to teach?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;They understand me better,&rdquo; replied the man.
- </p>
- <p>
- The woman had taken down an old glass bowl with a notched glass cover from
- the top shelf of the cupboard, rinsed it with water, wiped it carefully
- and set it on the table. In this she had placed a comb of red, mountain
- honey. She continued to talk.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I want Martha to go to school. She's a-goin' on nine. I can't spare her
- very well, but I don't want to keep her back. She saves me a good many
- steps. She's gone after the cow. She ought to be comin'.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The woman was busy at the stove.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I don't see why a cow can't learn somethin', can't learn to come home at
- night, anyway. Everything else learns to come home at night. Ketch a dog
- forgittin' it. I 'spose old Bloss has gone as fur as she could git, an'
- you can't allears hear the bell. But Martha'll find her.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The woman came from the stove to the table.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Martha can read, an' she can spell out of the spellin' book. She's real
- smart.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- A stone jar sat on a bench in the corner of the room, beside it was a
- yellow gourd with a long handle, the bowl of the gourd cut out to form a
- dipper. The woman got a plate out of the cupboard. A very old plate,
- somewhat chipped, with quaint little flowers painted on it in bright
- colors. The plate had not been used for a long time. It was covered with
- white dust. She carried the plate over to the jar, dipped up some water
- with the gourd, and holding the plate over a bucket, poured on the water,
- then she polished the plate carefully with a cloth and set it on the
- table. Her conversation continued.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;The schoolhouse is old, but it's got a good roof on it. It'll turn the
- weather. Ole man Dix put that roof on three years ago. The clapboards are
- all smoothed with a drawin' knife. He was so slow that it made you tired
- jest to see him workin', but he done a good job. He used to have a savin'
- that he got out of the Bible&mdash;when you made fun of him for bein' so
- slow. He must have heard it in meetin'. He couldn't read. But I've heard
- him say it over an' over a thousand times, I reckon&mdash;'He that
- believeth shall not make haste.' I don't know what he believed. I know he
- was never paid nothin' for puttin' on the roof.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;How do you know that he was not paid?&rdquo; said the man.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I know it very well,&rdquo; said the woman. &ldquo;He was dyin' of the janders all
- the time. He sawed the comb of the roof the very day before he went.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The iron skillet on which the woman was baking cakes, overheated, at this
- moment caught fire. She lifted it from the stove, blew out the flame, and
- turned the cake with a deft twist of her hand.
- </p>
- <p>
- Engaged with the pancakes for the man's supper, her conversation became a
- monologue.
- </p>
- <p>
- She reviewed the families living in the mountains, enumerated the
- children, named them, classed them as good or bad with a few clear strokes
- and attached the history of their ancestors, running on, as she moved
- about. Then, when she had finished, she got a little yellow bowl from the
- cupboard and came with it in her hand to the door.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I wonder what's keepin' Martha,&rdquo; she murmured.
- </p>
- <p>
- At the door she came near to dropping the bowl out of her hand in her
- astonishment. A little figure in a red calico sun-bonnet sat beside the
- man on the mill porch; close beside him in the gloom of the descending
- night.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Goodness!&rdquo; said the woman. &ldquo;How you skeered me. When did you git back?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The child arose, laughing. In the darkness only the bonnet, the short
- dress, the little white legs were visible.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;While you were talkin', Mother,&rdquo; she replied.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Bless my life!&rdquo; said the woman. &ldquo;I didn't hear you.&rdquo; She handed the child
- the bowl. &ldquo;Run along to the spring house and git some butter.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The woman went back into the room, got a tallow candle, squeezed it into
- an old brass candlestick, and set it on the table. In a moment the little
- girl returned with the butter. She regarded the table for a moment, then
- she removed the old blue plate, drew out from under the bed a store box
- with a lid fastened with leather hinges&mdash;evidently her private chest&mdash;took
- out a plate, washed it with boiling water from the teakettle, and set it
- on the table. It was a little, cheap, porcelain plate with the letters of
- the alphabet raised around the rim. The woman watched the child with a
- certain smiling condescension. Then she went to the door, wiped her hands
- on her apron, stood back by the doorpost, and spoke to the man.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Now,&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;if you'll come in to supper.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The man got up, came into the room, and sat down at the table. Before him
- on the clean linen cloth were honey, brown corncakes, and a goblet of
- milk. The light of the candle seemed to gather and illumine his face; and
- curiously to bring out in his brown hair those touches of living yellow
- which the sun had so strikingly indicated on this afternoon. And more
- curiously, too, there was no stain of travel, no evidence of fatigue on
- the man. Instead of it, there was an abiding glow of fresh, vital,
- alluring youth.
- </p>
- <p>
- The woman moved about, setting the room in order, the little girl stood by
- the man's chair.
- </p>
- <p>
- Presently the woman finished and came over to the table, bringing with her
- a heavy, hickory, split-bottom chair. She stopped, snuffed the candle, and
- then sat down opposite the man. Her hands, as though accustomed to
- constant occupation, wandered to the table, smoothed the cloth by
- stretching the two corners, flicked away invisible dust. Finally she
- spoke.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You're goin' to board around, I 'spose.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;No,&rdquo; replied the man, &ldquo;I'm going to stay at Nicholas Parks' house.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The woman dropped her hands into her lap. Her mouth opened with
- astonishment.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Not with ole Nicholas!&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;Why, the devil couldn't live with ole
- Nicholas! He's the meanest man that ever drawed the breath of life! He
- wouldn't give you a meal's vittels if it was to save you from dying!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- She arose to her feet.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Dear me!&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;that won't do at all.&rdquo; She walked about the room
- moving articles of furniture, and crumpling her apron in her fat hands.
- Finally she came back to the table.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It ain't cold,&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;an' if you could sleep in the mill loft, you
- could stay right here with us.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- She hastened to explain.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You could help me grind on Saturdays&mdash;that's the busiest day, an'
- maybe, if you're handy with tools, you could patch up the mill some. The
- wheel needs a new paddle, an' you could board up the loft, an' you could
- put in some steps.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The man listened.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;I can work with tools; I will do these things for you.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Then you'll stay,&rdquo; said the woman.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I am sorry,&rdquo; replied the man, &ldquo;but I cannot stay.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The woman sat down in her chair.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;How you'll git on with ole Nicholas, I don't see,&rdquo; she said.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;He will not be there,&rdquo; said the man.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Not be there!&rdquo; the woman repeated.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;No,&rdquo; replied the man, &ldquo;he is going away.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The woman's face became, on the instant, incredulous.
- </p>
- <p>
- The little girl, standing beside the man, saw it and shook her head. The
- woman, her mouth open, her chin lifted, marked the signal and respected
- it. She dropped her hands into her lap.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well!&rdquo; she said, and after a moment, to establish her composure, &ldquo;you
- can't go on to ole Nicholas' to-night,&mdash;it's dark now.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I am going to the schoolhouse tonight,&rdquo; replied the man.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You're more'n welcome to stay with us,&rdquo; said the woman, &ldquo;if you'll stay.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The man had now finished his supper, and he rose.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I know that,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;you are very kind to me.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The woman got up and went to the door.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Dear me,&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;I hate to see you goin' out in the night.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The man stopped to kiss the little girl.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I don't mind the night,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;I have some things to do.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;The schoolhouse will need cleanin' up,&rdquo; said the woman, &ldquo;an' to-morrow's
- Sunday. I ought to a-helped you clean it.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You have already helped me more than you realize,&rdquo; replied the man. &ldquo;If I
- need further help, another will help me.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Then he went down into the road. There was no moon, but under the
- brilliant stars, the road became a vague white way, leading the stranger
- up into the deeps of the forest.
- </p>
- <p>
- The woman remained standing in the door. Presently the little girl spoke.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Mother,&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;the Teacher has no clothes, he didn't even have a
- little bundle.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The woman came back to the table. She stood a moment with her hand resting
- on her hip.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;That's so,&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;I reckon he didn't bring any. Carryin' things gits
- powerful tiresome, when you come a long ways.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Then the dominant quality in the woman&mdash;the instinct to find a
- resource for every condition that arose, moved her. She went over to the
- fireplace, above which, on the high mantel shelf sat an ancient clock. She
- stood on her tiptoes, opened the clock door, and took out a little brass
- key, then she crossed to the foot of the bed, stooped and dragged a little
- old horsehide trunk out into the floor. She fitted the key into the lock,
- but it was rusted and would not turn. The trunk had not been opened for
- many years. She came back to the table and rubbed the key with melted
- tallow from the candle.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;There are some fine shirts in that trunk that we could give him,&rdquo; she
- said. &ldquo;Your grandma give them to your pap at our infair. She made them
- herself. But he never wore them. He said, they was too fine to skuff out.
- An' they've laid there for ten years. They're a heap too big for the
- Teacher. Your pap was twice as big as he is. But I can cut off the sleeves
- and take up the neckband, so he can wear them. They're good linen. Your
- grandma was mighty handy.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The little girl had removed the dishes from the table, while the woman was
- opening the trunk. She now came and held the horsehide lid, while her
- mother searched for the articles. Finally the woman found the shirts. She
- found also, at the bottom of the trunk, a folded piece of linen, as though
- that one making the shirts had used only a portion of her material.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well, upon my word,&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;if here ain't a big piece that your
- grandma didn't make up.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- She brought the shirts over to the table where the candle stood. She
- regarded them with surprise and admiration.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Bless my life, they're nice,&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;not a yaller spot on them.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- A moment she stood in rapt appreciation of the beautiful, snowy linen.
- Then she caught up one of the shirts and spread the neckband with her
- fingers.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well! Upon my soul!&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;Upon my soul!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- She held the shirt up and measured it from shoulder to shoulder, and from
- the neckband to the wrist.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Why, they'll fit him! They'll fit him just as good as if they'd been made
- for him. If that don't beat all! Your pap was over six feet, and long
- armed. Now, how in the name of common sense did your grandma ever make
- such a mistake? It ain't like your grandma&mdash;she always sewed by
- pinnin' and measurin'.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The little girl was not listening. She had gone out onto the mill porch.
- She now spoke, but not in reply to these exclamations.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;There are lights up at the schoolhouse, Mother.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The woman, still under her surprise, replied without looking up.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I reckon the Teacher's cleanin' the schoolhouse.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;But the lights look like they went up an' down through the tree tops.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I suppose he's carryin' water down from the spring on the mountain,&rdquo;
- replied the woman, still bending over the shirts that lay spread out on
- the table.
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0004" id="link2HCH0004"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER IV
- </h2>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">A</span>T SUNRISE the
- following morning, a man riding a lean bay horse came down the mountain
- road toward the mill. His left hand was deformed, as though from infancy.
- The fingers doubled in against the wrist. He held the bridle rein, tied in
- a knot, over the crook of his arm. He was a big man and he sat in the
- saddle as though more accustomed to that seat than to any other. The horse
- traveled in a running walk. He turned into the little valley and
- approached the mill. The miller was feeding her chickens in the road
- before the door, throwing out handfuls of yellow corn. The man called to
- her before the horse stopped.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Have you got enough of that corn for a horse-feed, Sally?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The woman turned, scattering the chickens.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Bless my life,&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;it's the doctor. Where you been?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Up there,&rdquo; he replied, jerking his deformed arm toward the summit of the
- mountain where lay the bit of farm, marked by the gigantic trees.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Is ole Nicholas sick?&rdquo; said the woman. &ldquo;He ain't sick now,&rdquo; replied the
- doctor. &ldquo;You cured h'm, did you?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;No, I didn't cure him,&rdquo; said the doctor, getting down from his horse;
- &ldquo;they were dyin' in Hickory Mountain before I come into it, an' they'll
- keep on a-dyin' after I've gone out.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- He lifted his leather saddlebags down from the horse and carried it across
- to the mill porch.
- </p>
- <p>
- The woman remained standing in the road, her closed hand full of corn, the
- yellow grains showing between her fingers.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You arn't tellin' me ole Nicholas is dead!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes, he's dead,&rdquo; said the doctor. &ldquo;New get me a gallon of corn; that
- horse ain't had a bite to eat since yesterday evening.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- He went across the road, picked up a box, knocked the dust out of it and
- brought it over by the mill porch. Then he took the bit out of the horse's
- mouth, and put the bridle rein over the saddle, under the stirrup leather.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Ole Nicholas dead!&rdquo; the woman repeated. &ldquo;Well! Upon my word!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Why shouldn't he be dead?&rdquo; said the doctor. &ldquo;Every damn thing's got to
- die.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;What killed him?&rdquo; inquired the woman.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I don't know what killed him,&rdquo; replied the doctor. &ldquo;He was stretched out
- on the floor when I got there.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Did he die just like anybody else?&rdquo; said the woman.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;No,&rdquo; answered the doctor, &ldquo;he didn't die like anybody that I ever saw.
- Will you get me that corn?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The woman went into the mill and presently came out with the toll measure
- full of corn. She poured it into the box. Then she sat down on the porch
- beside the doctor, and began to roll the end of her apron between her fat
- fingers.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;When did ole Nicholas take down?&rdquo; she began.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I don't know that,&rdquo; said the doctor. &ldquo;Jonas Black was crossing the
- mountain about noon, an' old Nicholas called to him and told him to tell
- me to come and see him. I went up last night.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It's a wonder you went,&rdquo; said the miller. &ldquo;Ole Nicholas wouldn't pay you,
- would he?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;If he didn't pay me, I wouldn't go,&rdquo; replied the doctor, &ldquo;you can depend
- on that. I've quit bringin' 'em in or seein' 'em out unless I get the cash
- in my hand.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I didn't think he had any money. He was always buyin' wild lands of the
- State.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I don't know how much money he had,&rdquo; replied the doctor, &ldquo;but I do know
- that it was always there on the table for me when I went. If it hadn't
- a-been, I wouldn't have darkened his door.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Did he die hard?&rdquo; said the woman. &ldquo;Everybody dies hard,&rdquo; replied the
- doctor.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Did he want to go?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;None of us want to go.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;How long did he live after you got there?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;He lived until daylight.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You must have had a bad night of it.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It was awful!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It must a-been terrible if you thought so. You are used to seein' people
- die.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I'm not used to seein' them die like old Nicholas died,&rdquo; replied the
- doctor. &ldquo;He must a-been in powerful pain.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It wasn't so much pain. I could stop the pain.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Was he out of his head then?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I don't know.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Couldn't you tell by the way he talked?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;He didn't talk.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Did he see things?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I don't know what he saw.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;What was it that made his dyin' so awful?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It was <i>fear</i>,&rdquo; replied the doctor,
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;That he'd be lost?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;No,&rdquo; said the doctor, &ldquo;that he'd die before he could tell me something
- that he was tryin' to tell me.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Goodness! Was he tryin' to tell you somethin' all night?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;All night,&rdquo; said the doctor.
- </p>
- <p>
- The woman sat for a moment in silence, her fat hands clasped together in
- her lap, the muscles of her face tense, her eyes fixed on the mountain,
- then she spoke. &ldquo;Did he ever tell you?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Was it somethin' he'd done?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;N,&rdquo; replied the doctor, &ldquo;it was not anything he'd done.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;What was it?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I did not understand it,&rdquo; replied the doctor.
- </p>
- <p>
- The woman rose.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Good Lord!&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;a man on his deathbed a-trying all night to tell
- you somethin' an' then you didn't understand it!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;No, I didn't understand it,&rdquo; said the doctor. &ldquo;He kept whisperin'&mdash;'He's
- comin,' he's comin'. He's to have my things,' an' I kept askin' him if he
- meant some of his kin folks, but he always shook his head. I never saw a
- man in such mortal agony to speak. Finally just before he died, he got it
- out. He said, 'The Teacher.' Now, what did he mean?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I know who he meant,&rdquo; replied the woman, &ldquo;he meant the School-teacher.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;What School-teacher?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Why, the new School-teacher, the one that come last night. He was goin'
- to stay with Nicholas.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The horse had now finished with his breakfast, the doctor got up.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I didn't know you had a Schoolteacher,&rdquo; he said.
- </p>
- <p>
- He went over to the horse, put the bit into its mouth, took up his leather
- saddle-hags and thrust his foot into the stirrup.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;See here, Sally,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;old Nicholas wanted me to get up at his
- funeral and say that he had left everything to the 'Teacher.' I suppose he
- meant this new School-teacher. I told him I'd see to it. Now, I don't want
- to come back here; couldn't you do it? The country will likely gather up
- and bury him this afternoon.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- He swung up into the saddle and hooked the bridle rein over his crooked
- arm.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes, I'll do that,&rdquo; said the woman. The doctor clucked to his horse, and
- disappeared down the little valley; his arm rising and falling with the
- regular motion of the swinging walk.
- </p>
- <p>
- The woman remained standing in the road, her hands spread out on her hips.
- She had suddenly remembered that the guest of last night had said that
- Nicholas Parks was going away!
- </p>
- <p>
- At noon the miller and her little girl set out up the mountain.
- </p>
- <p>
- They did not go by the road that wound tortuously through the forest to
- the summit. They followed a path that ascended more directly, crossing the
- road now and then, and climbing up steep ascents to the top, where it
- ended in the road running along the high ridge, through the little
- mountain farm.
- </p>
- <p>
- The farm was inclosed on either side by a rail fence. Below it was a
- cornfield of several acres, above a bit of fertile meadow, in which, on
- the very ridge, stood two gigantic trees lifting their branches eighty
- feet into the sky.
- </p>
- <p>
- A dozen paces of beautiful green turf lying between the great shellbarks.
- </p>
- <p>
- Farther out stood a log house with a clapboard roof and a chimney built
- halfway up with stone and finished with crossed sticks, daubed with yellow
- clay. Behind it was a garden inclosed with palings split out of long cuts
- of hickory timber. Midway between the garden and the house, opposite the
- door, was a whitewashed well curb. From a long pole, suspended in a forked
- tree on a round locust pin, hung a sapling fastened to a bucket.
- Everything about the little farm was well kept. The chimney and the
- palings were whitewashed, the fence was well laid up, the bit of land was
- clean. Midway in the meadow, a path entered through wooden bars and ran
- along inside the rail fence to the house.
- </p>
- <p>
- There was a little crowd of some half dozen men standing about these bars,
- when the woman and child came up.
- </p>
- <p>
- The woman stopped in the road.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;What are you all standin' around for?&rdquo; she said.
- </p>
- <p>
- The men did not immediately reply. Finally one of them answered.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;We're waitin' for the preacher to come.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The woman looked at the apparently vacant house. The door open. The sun
- lying on the threshold.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;There's a-plenty to do, till he gits here,&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;Somebody's got to
- dig a grave, an' somebody's got to make a coffin.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The man leaning against the bar post, who had spoken for the others, now
- jerked his head toward the meadow'.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It's dug,&rdquo; he said.
- </p>
- <p>
- The woman looked in the direction he indicated; a pile of fresh earth lay
- heaped up in the meadow', not between the two trees, but below' them, some
- paces from the summit.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well,&rdquo; said the woman, &ldquo;you didn't pick out the place I'd a picked; I'd a
- put it on the ridge between them two trees, that's the natural place for
- it, there couldn't be no grander place. Who did you think you was savin'
- that place for? It looks like you was puttin' ole Nicholas so he'd be at
- the foot of somebody else that you was a-goin' to bury.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;We didn't pick the place,&rdquo; said the man.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Who done it?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;We don't know who done it, the grave was dug when we got here.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The conversation was interrupted by the little girl.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;There comes the preacher,&rdquo; she said.
- </p>
- <p>
- The woman turned and looked down the road in the direction from which she
- had just come.
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0005" id="link2HCH0005"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER V
- </h2>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">A</span> MAN driving a
- country buggy was approaching. He was a tall, spare man, in a suit of
- black ready-made clothes that seemed not to fit him in any place, and to
- be a cheap imitation of a clergyman's frock suit. He wore cotton gloves.
- At his feet was a shiny handbag made of some inexpensive material to
- imitate alligator skin. His hair and his heavy, drooping mustache were
- black. His face was narrow, the cheek bones high, the mouth straight. One
- of the man's eyes was partly grown over with a cataract, and his effort to
- see equally with that eye gave him a curious, squinting expression. He
- pulled up on the roadside, got out, tied his horse to a fence rail with
- one of the lines, took out his handbag, and came over to the little group
- waiting by the bars.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Good evening, brethren,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;The doctor told me that Nicholas Parks
- had been called to his account, so I came up to give him Christian
- burial.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;He died sudden, I guess,&rdquo; replied one of the men.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It's God's way,&rdquo; said the preacher. &ldquo;The sinner is taken in the twinkling
- of an eye.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- He drew off his cotton gloves and put them into his pocket.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Have any preparations been made for the burial?&rdquo; he inquired.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;The grave's dug,&rdquo; said one of the men.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;How about the coffin?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;We don't know about the coffin, we haven't been to the house.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Is any one up at the house?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;We think the new School-teacher's up there. Little David went up to see,
- but he ain't come back.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I didn't know the new School-teacher had come.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;He got here last night,&rdquo; said the miller.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;What kind of a man is he?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;He's a man that the children will like,&rdquo; replied the woman.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Children,&rdquo; said the preacher, &ldquo;are not competent judges of men. Let us go
- up to the house. Is he elderly?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I thought he was mighty young,&rdquo; said the woman.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;The young,&rdquo; replied the preacher, &ldquo;are rarely impressed with the awful
- solemnity of God's commandments.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I think he's a good man,&rdquo; said the woman. &ldquo;Martha loved him right away,
- an' I'd trust him with anything I've got.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Our Mother Eve trusted the serpent,&rdquo; replied the preacher.
- </p>
- <p>
- And he extended his right arm, the fingers stiffly together, the thumb up.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;The youth of the community ought to be brought up in the fear of God.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- During the conversation, the miller's little daughter had gone on to the
- house.
- </p>
- <p>
- Something vague, intangible, undefined had stopped the men in the road
- below the house, and made them await the arrival of the preacher. But that
- thing had not affected the children. The little boy David and this child
- had gone on without the least hesitation.
- </p>
- <p>
- The preacher threw down one of the pole bars and went through into the
- meadow. The others followed him along the path to the house. As they drew
- near they heard the voices of the children. At the threshold the preacher
- stopped, and those behind him crowded up to look into the house.
- </p>
- <p>
- The door was open. The sun entering, filled the room with light.
- </p>
- <p>
- On chairs in the middle of this room stood a coffin made of the odds and
- ends of rough hoards, but marvelously joined. Beside it stood the
- School-teacher, and at either end was one of the children; the three of
- them were fitting a board on the coffin for a and, and they were talking
- together.
- </p>
- <p>
- When the minister entered, the Schoolteacher removed the board and laid it
- down on the floor, and the two children, as by some instinct, drew near to
- the man, on either side, and took hold of his hands.
- </p>
- <p>
- They became instantly silent.
- </p>
- <p>
- The minister went up to the chair, looked a moment into the coffin and
- took his place at the head of it. The others followed.
- </p>
- <p>
- The dead man lay in the rough box like one asleep. There was in his face a
- peace so profound that the hard, mean, ugly features of this old man
- seemed to have been remodeled under some marvelous fingers.
- </p>
- <p>
- The minister, with his bad eye, seemed not to observe this
- transfiguration, but the others marked it and crowded around the coffin.
- </p>
- <p>
- The minister took out his watch, looked at it, and snapped the case.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;If you will find seats, we'll begin the service,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;The stranger
- here seems to have made all necessary preparations for the burial.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The crowd drew back from the coffin, the School-teacher went and sat in
- the doorway in the sun; the little boy standing up by his knees, the
- little girl beside him on the doorstep.
- </p>
- <p>
- The minister began a discourse on the horrors of an eternal hell.
- </p>
- <p>
- But the attention of the audience moved past him to the man seated in the
- door. The harmony, grouping the man and these two children, seemed to
- enter and fill the room. A certain common sympathy uniting them, as though
- it were the purity of childhood.
- </p>
- <p>
- The man sitting in the door did not move.
- </p>
- <p>
- He looked out toward the south over a sea of sun washing a shore of tree
- tops. A vagrant breath of the afternoon moved his brown hair. He seemed
- not to hear the minister, not to regard the service, but to wait like one
- infinitely patient with the order of events.
- </p>
- <p>
- When the preacher had finished, the miller, sitting in a chair by the
- window, rose.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Just before ole Nicholas died,&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;he made the doctor promise to
- git up here at his funeral an' tell everybody that he left all his things
- to the Schoolteacher. The doctor couldn't come back, so he asked me to git
- up an' tell it for him.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The minister turned toward the woman.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Left his property to this stranger?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; said the woman, &ldquo;he tried all night to tell the doctor, an' he was
- mortally afeard that he would die before he could tell it.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The School-teacher was now standing in the door. Beside him, and framing
- in his body, dust danced in the sun, making a haze of gold.
- </p>
- <p>
- The minister addressed him.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Why did Nicholas Parks leave his possessions to you?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The School-teacher did not reply.
- </p>
- <p>
- He went over to the coffin, lifted the lid and began to fit it on the box.
- The men standing around the room came forward and took the coffin up. They
- carried it out of the house, their hands under the bottom of it. The
- preacher picked up his satchel and followed. Outside he stopped, pointed
- to the grave in the meadow, and spoke to the School-teacher.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You didn't put that grave where old Nicholas wanted it. He wanted to be
- buried on the top of the ridge between those two trees. It was a place he
- had picked out. He told me so at the last quarterly meeting.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The School-teacher lifted his face and looked at the two great hickories
- marking the spot on the summit of the little meadow. His eyes filled with
- melancholy shadows, the smile deepened and saddened about his mouth. But
- he did not reply.
- </p>
- <p>
- Then he walked away to where the two children stood, some distance from
- the path.
- </p>
- <p>
- The minister followed the coffin to the grave, but the School-teacher went
- with the two children through the meadow to the spot of green between the
- two hickories. He sat down there in the deep clover, the children beside
- him. Below came the sound of the earth on the coffin, and the high-pitched
- nervous voice of the minister. The School-teacher talked with the
- children.
- </p>
- <p>
- After a while a shadow fell across the grass.
- </p>
- <p>
- The minister was standing beside them. He had come up from the filled
- grave and the carpet of the meadow had hidden the sound of his approach.
- He spoke to the School-teacher.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Do you think that you are old enough to teach the children the fear of
- God?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I shall not teach them the fear of God.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Then I don't see how you are going to give them any Christian
- instruction.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The man sitting among the deep clover blossoms, looked up at the
- minister's face.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Isn't there something growing over your eye?&rdquo; he said.
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0006" id="link2HCH0006"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER VI
- </h2>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">T</span>HE School-teacher
- came out of the door of Nicholas Parks' house. It was early in the
- morning. Frost glistened on the rails of the worm fence. The air was crisp
- and sweet.
- </p>
- <p>
- There was a smell of faint wood smoke.
- </p>
- <p>
- The door of the house was fastened with a wooden latch on the inside from
- which a black leather string, tied in a knot, issuing from a worn hole,
- hung on the outside of the door. The man drew the door close and, pulling
- the string, dropped the latch into place. Then he left the house, walking
- slowly.
- </p>
- <p>
- In the direction that he moved there was no path. He crossed the little
- meadow, south of the house, climbed the rail fence and entered the forest.
- There was still no path, although the man moved like one who followed land
- marks that he knew.
- </p>
- <p>
- He descended through the forest for perhaps half a mile in the deep
- leaves.
- </p>
- <p>
- Then he came abruptly on a path that entered a little cove and continued
- around a shoulder of the mountain. A spring of water issuing here from a
- limestone strata trickled into a keg buried in the earth. On the broken
- branch of a dogwood sapling, beside the spring, hung a mottled gourd.
- </p>
- <p>
- The School-teacher stopped, dipped the gourd into the crystal water, and
- drank.
- </p>
- <p>
- At this moment three figures came into view along the path from the
- opposite direction: a child about two years old, a woman, and a
- rough-haired yellow dog.
- </p>
- <p>
- The child came first. He walked with the uncertain tottering gait of very
- little children. He wore a clean, white, muslin dress, a tiny apron and
- cheap baby shoes, such as one sees hanging on a string over the counter of
- mountain stores. He was a sturdy little boy, with soft yellow hair,
- burnished at the tips like that of the School-teacher, and big gray-blue
- eyes. He was laughing, stopping now and then to look back at the dog
- following, and his mother; and then running along ahead.
- </p>
- <p>
- The woman was young and slender. Her face, tanned by the weather, was a
- deep olive. Her hair was black, lustrous and heavy, and hung down her back
- in a thick plait. Her eyes were dark and big. The whole aspect of the
- woman was that of one untimely matured, and permanently saddened. Her blue
- dress was of a cheaper material than that of the child's.
- </p>
- <p>
- She carried a tin bucket with a wooden handle.
- </p>
- <p>
- The woman and the dog stopped when they saw the School-teacher standing by
- the spring. But the child greeted the stranger in his baby dialect.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;How-da-do man,&rdquo; he said. He went on, the little feet tottering over the
- uneven path. When he reached the Schoolteacher, he spoke again.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Up-a-go,&rdquo; he said.
- </p>
- <p>
- The man stooped and lifted the child into his arms. The sunny smile that
- lighted the baby face seemed to enter and illumine his own. Something of
- it, too, moved into the face of the woman, but the cast there of perpetual
- melancholy seemed loath to depart, as though the muscles were unaccustomed
- to a change.
- </p>
- <p>
- The child turned about in the man's arms, and pointed his finger toward
- two catbirds that were fluttering in a neighboring bush.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Giggles,&rdquo; he said.
- </p>
- <p>
- The manner in which the woman's big melancholy eyes followed every motion
- of the little boy indicated how her heart enveloped him. He was evidently
- her one treasure. The smile, struggling to possess the woman's face,
- seemed to descend and sweeten her mouth.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;He means them birds,&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;He's got a kind a talk of his own.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I understand him perfectly,&rdquo; said the man.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Do you?&rdquo; said the woman, the smile gaining in her face. &ldquo;I thought nobody
- could understand him but me. You must take to little children.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I love little children,&rdquo; replied the School-teacher.
- </p>
- <p>
- The child put his hand into the pocket of his apron and drew out a
- battered toy&mdash;a cheap, little, painted, wooden toy, so broken and
- worn that no one could tell what animal it was originally intended to
- represent. He held it up for the Schoolteacher's admiration.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Gup,&rdquo; he said.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;He means a horse,&rdquo; the woman explained. &ldquo;He's heard folks down to the
- mill say 'git up' to horses they was ridin', an' he thinks that's the name
- of it, but he's got names of his own. Now he calls a bird an' a fish an' a
- mouse a 'giggle.' I don't know why. Because a bird ain't like a fish, an'
- neither one of them ain't like a mouse.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I believe I understand why he gives them all the same name,&rdquo; replied the
- School-teacher.
- </p>
- <p>
- The woman came closer to the man and the child. Her eyes took on an
- expression of deep inquiry.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;What do you reckon is the reason? I've thought about it often.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I think it's because a bird, a fish and a mouse all appear to him to have
- the same motion, to wiggle.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The woman's face cleared. &ldquo;I never thought of that. I reckon that is it.
- But now, he's got names that ain't like the things at all. Because he
- calls milk 'bugala' and there ain't no such word as 'bugala.' An' if it's
- sour or anything he calls it 'nim bugala.'&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The woman recalled with the word, the morning when, to wean him, she had
- blackened her breast with charcoal, and the child had pushed away the
- blackened breast with his little hand and said, &ldquo;nim bugala.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;And he calls everything else to eat 'A B.' Now why would he call milk
- 'bugala' an' bread an' butter 'A B'?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The School-teacher saw that this mystery attaching to the child was dear
- to the woman, and he could not disturb it.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Little children are very wonderful,&rdquo; he said.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;They are wonderful,&rdquo; the woman continued. &ldquo;Just think of the things they
- learn when they are real little.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- She jerked her head toward the dog remaining behind her in the road.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Why, he learned Jim's name when he was awful little. He called him 'Nim'
- an' that's purty near right.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Her face again became deeply thoughtful.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I'd like to know if his word 'nim,' like he says 'nun bugala,' has
- anything to do with Jim's name. It sounds like it, but I don't see how it
- could be, because 'nim' means something that he don't like, an' he does
- like Jim. He's powerful fond of Jim.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The School-teacher thoughtfully considered the problem.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It might be that he has watched you give Jim the things that you did not
- want to eat yourself, and so he came to the conclusion that all such food
- belonged to Jim. It would not mean that he did not like Jim. It would only
- mean that the things that did not taste right to him ought to be given to
- Jim. They were not good things, they were 'nim' things.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The woman's mouth opened.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Dear me,&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;just think of him putting things together like that,
- an' him so little?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Then she looked up at the man with a sort of wonder.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Why, you understand him better than I do, an' I'm his mother. Maybe
- you're married an' got a little boy of your own.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I was never married,&rdquo; replied the man.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Then maybe you've got a little baby brother.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;No.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Was there never any little children at your house?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;My father's house,&rdquo; replied the School-teacher, &ldquo;is full of little
- children.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Just little children that he takes care of?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Then you've been with 'em a lot.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I am always with them,&rdquo; replied the School-teacher.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I could a-told that,&rdquo; said the woman, &ldquo;by the way Sonny takes to you. I
- could a-told that you was used to little children, an' that you liked
- them.&rdquo; She indicated the tiny boy with a bob of the head. &ldquo;He knows it
- right away; babies and dogs allers knows it right away.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- She regarded the man for some minutes in silence. Then she spoke like one
- come after thought to a conclusion.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I 'spose you're the new School-teacher?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;An' you're goin' down to the school-house now.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Then if you'll wait till I git a bucket of water, I'll show you the way
- down. The path goes out by our house.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- She went over to the spring and dipped the bucket into the keg. The dog
- that had been lying down 'n the path, his head lowered between his paws,
- now craw led up to the man and began to lick his feet.
- </p>
- <p>
- The little boy looked down and shook his tiny fist at the dog.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Ge-out, Nim!&rdquo; he said.
- </p>
- <p>
- The woman rose with the bucket of water.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You don't have to carry him,&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;he can walk real well.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I would rather carry him,&rdquo; replied the School-teacher.
- </p>
- <p>
- And he followed the woman along the path, the dog at his heels.
- </p>
- <p>
- They turned the shoulder of the ridge and came out on a flat bench of the
- mountain. Here stood a little cabin, built of logs and daubed with clay.
- It was roofed with rough clapboards. Before it was a porch roofed like the
- cabin. The door, swinging on wooden hinges, stood open. On the puncheon
- floor was a piece of handmade carpet&mdash;a circular mat, hand-plaited
- out of rags, a primitive cradle with wooden rockers, a bed covered with a
- pieced quilt, a rough stone fireplace, an iron pot with a lid and a black
- iron kettle. On the porch stood a split-basket full of beans in the hull,
- and beside the basket two chairs, the seats of plaited hickory bark. One
- of them was very small, a chair in miniature, made for the little boy.
- Near the path was an ax, a hacked log and some lighter limbs of trees,
- such as a woman might carry in from the forest. Beside the chimney was a
- primitive hopper made of clapboards, holding wood-ashes, and under this
- was a broken iron pot in which lye, obtained from the ashes by pouring
- water on it, dripped.
- </p>
- <p>
- Beyond the cabin was a bit of garden and a little cornfield, where the
- ripened corn stood in yellow shocks bound with grapevines. The shocks were
- small, such as a woman could reach around. About, on the bench, were a
- grove of sugar trees, scarred with the marks of an auger, and among them,
- here and there, a great hickory. Beyond the grove one heard the faint
- tinkling of a bell where a cow moved in the forest.
- </p>
- <p>
- The woman set the bucket of water on the porch and turned to take the
- child.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Come, sonny.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The little boy drew back in the man's arms.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;No,&rdquo; he said.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;But, sonny,&rdquo; the woman continued, &ldquo;the Teacher's goin' away down the
- road.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Baby go wif him down woad.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The woman coaxed, &ldquo;Won't sonny stay with Jim and mother?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Nim an' muvver go woad.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;No,&rdquo; said the woman, &ldquo;Jim an' mother ain't goin' down the road. Will
- sonny go an' leave Jim an' mother?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The little boy looked over the man's shoulder at the rough-haired yellow
- dog. Jim was his housemate and his brother. A decision was a sore trial,
- but he finally made it. He turned about in the man's arms.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Baby go woad,&rdquo; he said.
- </p>
- <p>
- The man now entered the conversation. &ldquo;Let him go with me.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;But he's too little to go to school.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;He is not too little to go with me.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;But he'll bother you, won't he?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;No, he will not bother me. He will help me.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;He can't help you.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes, he can help me.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I don't see how he can help you.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;He will remind me of the little children in my father's house.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Keep you from gettin' homesick?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; replied the School-teacher, &ldquo;that is it. He will keep me from
- getting homesick.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well,&rdquo; said the woman, &ldquo;if I let him go, you'll take care of him, won't
- you?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I will surely take care of him.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;An' you'll bring him back before sundown.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well, it'll be powerful lonesome, but I reckon I can finish gatherin' the
- beans. I will fix him somethin' to eat. You can put it in your pocket.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The woman went into the house, got a flat bottle, such as a cheap sort of
- liniment is sold in at the mountain stores, scalded it out with water and
- filled it with fresh milk. Then she cut some thin slices of a white bread
- called &ldquo;salt rising&rdquo; and spread it with butter. She stopped with the knife
- in her hand, considered a moment, and then cut two larger pieces of bread,
- buttered them, and wrapped them all in a piece of homespun linen towel.
- She went out to the man with the folded towel and the bottle in her hand.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Here's his milk an' here's his bread. I put in two pieces for you.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The man put the bottle and the bread into his pocket. The light of his
- great gray-blue eyes deepened.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You also thought of me,&rdquo; he said.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I didn't see you carryin' any dinner.&rdquo; replied the woman, &ldquo;an' the
- bread's nice. I had powerful good luck yesterday. I don't allers have such
- luck, but everything turned out right with the bakin' somehow.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The men went on with the little boy in his arms, but the dog remained. He
- sat miserably in the path, his tail moving in the leaves, his eyes fixed
- on the woman's face. For a time the woman, watching the disappearing
- figures, did not notice the dog. Then she saw him, knew his distress and
- spoke.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You can go along, Jim,&rdquo; she said.
- </p>
- <p>
- The dog ran barking after the man and little boy. He overtook them and
- went on ahead. At the point where the path entered the forest, the man
- turned and looked back at the woman. She did not move, but the smile,
- struggling all the morning to conquer her face, finally possessed it.
- </p>
- <p>
- The School-teacher, the little boy and the dog continued to descend the
- mountain. The child addressed every object with which he was familiar.
- When they passed the brindle cow, cropping broom sedge beside the path, he
- hailed it with a salutation..
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;How-da-do, boo,&rdquo; he sard.
- </p>
- <p>
- Leaves, burning red with autumn color, he explained, were &ldquo;dowers.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Finally they came to the river, running shallow between the foot of the
- mountain and the farther bench on which the school-house stood. The child
- had not crossed this water, and he was afraid for the man to attempt it.
- He put his little hand firmly on the man's arm to stop him.
- </p>
- <p>
- The School-teacher stopped, and the child considered this new and
- unaccustomed peril. He sat studying the water, his restraining hand on the
- man's arm. Finally, the dog, growing impatient at the delay, entered the
- river and began to wade across. The child removed his hand. His fears were
- ended. The crossing was safe. He directed the man's attention to the proof
- of it.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Nim walk in wat,&rdquo; he said.
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0007" id="link2HCH0007"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER VII
- </h2>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">I</span>N THE grove before
- the log schoolhouse, the Teacher was playing a game with the children. It
- was a game in which every child to the tiniest one could join. Two,
- standing opposite, with raised arms and the fingers linked, formed a sore
- of arch, through which the others passed in a circle, holding one
- another's hands. They all sang as they marched some verses of a mountain
- song, ending with the line, &ldquo;An' catch the one that you love best.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- When the song came to this line, those forming the arch brought their arms
- down over the head of the child passing at that moment, and he left the
- circle and took the place of one of those forming the arch. As each child
- wished to catch the School-teacher, the man remained standing while the
- children changed.
- </p>
- <p>
- The little boy David had just been caught. The child, standing with the
- School-teacher, had taken his place. The circle had begun once more to
- move, the song to rise, when the miller's daughter, Martha, stopped,
- disengaged her hand from the child before her and pointed to the road.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;There comes Sol an' Suse. I wonder what's the matter, for Sol's got his
- arm tied up.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The School-teacher stood up and looked over the heads of the children. A
- man was approaching. The sleeves of a red wammus were tied around his
- neck, forming a sort of rude sling in which his right arm rested, held
- horizontally across his breast. A woman, carrying a baby, was walking
- beside him.
- </p>
- <p>
- The School-teacher spoke to the little girl.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Martha,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;you and David take the children into the schoolhouse,
- I am going out to meet these people.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- When the children had gone in, and the door was closed, the man went down
- into the road. He waited there until the two persons approached. He saw
- that both the woman and the man were young, the baby but a few months old&mdash;a
- little family beginning to found a home in the inhospitable mountain.
- </p>
- <p>
- The man was evidently injured. The woman was in distress. Her eyes were
- red. The muscles of her mouth trembled. The baby, in her arms, wrapped in
- an old faded shawl, wailed.
- </p>
- <p>
- The School-teacher spoke to the woman.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;What has happened?&rdquo; he said.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;My man's got hurt.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;How was he hurt?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;He was choppin' in his clearin', an' his ax ketched in a grapevine, an'
- throwed him. I reckon his shoulder's all broke. He can't use his arm
- none.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The School-teacher addressed the man. &ldquo;How does your arm feel?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I suppose the jint's smashed.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The tears began to run down over the woman's face.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I don't see why we have such luck,&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;an' just when we was
- a-gittin' sich a nice start. Now, he can't work in his clearin', an' if he
- don't git his clearin' done this winter, we won't have no crop, an' I
- don't know what'll become of us.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The man began to chew his lip.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Don' cry, Susie,&rdquo; he said.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes, I'll cry,&rdquo; replied the woman, &ldquo;for here's me an' the baby with
- nothin', and you laid up.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Maybe I ain't hurt so bad,&rdquo; the man suggested.
- </p>
- <p>
- The woman continued to cry.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I know better'n that, you're hurt bad.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Where were you going?&rdquo; said the School-teacher.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;We were a-goin' to the doctor,&rdquo; replied the woman. &ldquo;We thought we'd make
- as far as the mill, an' he could wait there, an' I could git Sally to keep
- the baby while I went after the doctor.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;How far is it to the doctor?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It's a-goin' on fourteen mile from the mill, an' that ain't the worst of
- it. He won't come unless he gits the money, an' we ain't got no money to
- throw away on a doctor.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- She opened her hand and disclosed a crumpled, greasy note.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;That there five-dollar bill is the very last cent that we've got. An'
- when it's gone I don't know where we'll git any more, with him hurt, an'
- me with a little sucklin' baby.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The woman began to sob.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I'm jist ready to give up.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The School-teacher's big gray-blue eyes filled with a kindly light.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Don't cry,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;perhaps I can do something for your husband's
- shoulder.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- He went over to the man. What the School-teacher did, precisely, these
- persons were never afterward able to describe. The event in their minds
- seemed clouded in mystery. A wonder had been accomplished in the road, in
- the sun, in the light before them, but they could not lay hold upon the
- sequence of the detail. The voice of the School-teacher presently reached
- them as from a distance.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It's all right now,&rdquo; he said.
- </p>
- <p>
- The man doubled the arm and extended it. The woman came running up.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Kin you use it, Sol?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The man continued to move the arm. &ldquo;It 'pears like I kin,&rdquo; he said; &ldquo;it
- 'pears like it's well.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Kin you use it good?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It 'pears like I kin use it good as I ever could.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well, sir!&rdquo; ejaculated the woman, &ldquo;if I hadn't a seen it with my own
- eyes, I wouldn't never a-believed it.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The School-teacher remained standing for a moment in the road after the
- mountaineers had gone.
- </p>
- <p>
- Then he went back to the children, waiting in the schoolhouse. He called
- them out into the grove before the door, and took his place in the game,
- bending over to hold the hands of the tiniest child. The circle began once
- more to move. The song to rise.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;An' catch the one that you love best.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0008" id="link2HCH0008"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER VIII
- </h2>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">I</span>T WAS not the only
- adventure that the School-teacher was destined to meet with on this day.
- As he was returning along the mountain road, with the little boy on his
- shoulder, at the first ascent, beyond the river crossing, he met two men
- in a buckboard. The horses were gaunt as from hard usage. The man who
- drove them was known to the School-teacher. The other was a big man with a
- heavy black beard. He sat leaning over in the buckboard. His head down.
- His shoulders rising in a hump. He had gone stooped for so long that the
- hump on his shoulders was now a sort of permanent deformity.
- </p>
- <p>
- They drew up by the roadside as the School-teacher approached. The big,
- hump-shouldered man spoke, without taking the trouble to preface his
- remarks with any form of salutation.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Do you claim old Nicholas Parks' estate?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The School-teacher regarded him with his deep, tranquil, gray-blue eyes.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It belongs to my father,&rdquo; he said.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Is your father related to old Nicholas?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;No.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Has he got a deed from old Nicholas?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;No.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Then how does he claim under him?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;He does not claim under him. Nicholas Parks had his possession from my
- father.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You mean that your father owned it first?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Did he sell to Nicholas?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;No.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Then how did old Nicholas come to own it?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;He never owned it; my father permitted him to use it.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Then your claim is that old Nicholas was just a tenant for life.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; replied the School-teacher, &ldquo;that was it, a tenant for life.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Did your father give Nicholas any writing?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;No.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Did Nicholas pay anything for the use of the land?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;No.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Did he ever recognize your father's title while he was living?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;No.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Then he never knew that your father owned these lands?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; replied the School-teacher, &ldquo;in the end he knew it.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;How did he know it, if he did not find it out while he was living?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;He found it out while he was dying,&rdquo; replied the School-teacher.
- </p>
- <p>
- The big humpback looked out sidewise at the man standing in the road, with
- the child on his shoulder, its little arm around his neck, its little
- fingers on his face.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Didn't you come into these mountains about the time that old Nicholas
- died?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;On the very day that he died,&rdquo; replied the School-teacher.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I see,&rdquo; said the humpback, &ldquo;then he found it out through you.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;No, man,&rdquo; replied the School-teacher, &ldquo;ever finds out anything about the
- affairs of my father except he find it out through me.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Then you're here to look after your father's business?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; replied the School-teacher, &ldquo;that is it, I am here to look after my
- father's business.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;An' so you moved in when old Nicholas died?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I see,&rdquo; said the humpback, &ldquo;now I want to ask you another question. These
- lands belonged to the state. Old Nicholas bought from the state, and the
- state made him a deed. Do you contend that your father's title is older
- than that of the state?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The humpback compressed the muscles of his mouth and nodded his head
- slowly.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I see,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;your father claims the lands of Nicholas Parks under
- some old patent that gives him a color of title and he has sent you here
- to get into possession. A color of title is not good at law without
- possession. Well, I can tell you, the state's not going to lie by and
- allow you to acquire adverse possession. Old Nicholas Parks died without
- heirs, and, by the law, his property escheats to the state. So you can
- make up your mind to get off.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- He reached over, caught the whip out of its socket, and struck the horses.
- They jumped and the buckboard went clattering down the mountain, the
- wheels bouncing on the stones.
- </p>
- <p>
- The little boy raised his hand and pointed his tiny finger at the
- departing horses.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Man hurt gups,&rdquo; he said.
- </p>
- <p>
- The School-teacher stood in the road watching the humpback lash the
- half-starved team. His face was full of misery.
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0009" id="link2HCH0009"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER IX
- </h2>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">T</span> HE School-teacher
- had been helping the miller.
- </p>
- <p>
- He had taken the shirts which she had offered to him, but he had refused
- to put upon her the labor of making up the big piece of linen that
- remained.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Keep it,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;until I need it.&rdquo; All of Saturday he had been at work
- mending the wooden water wheel. In the evening he set out to return to
- Nicholas Parks' house. He took the short way up the mountain. When he came
- out on the great hickory ridge, the sun was not yet down. He stopped where
- the path entered the two roads, one turning along the ridge to his house,
- the other winding down the mountain, eastward, toward the far-off lumber
- mills, sometimes faintly to be indicated by a tiny wisp of smoke on the
- horizon.
- </p>
- <p>
- There had been a gentle rain, and now under the soft evening sun the earth
- seemed to recover something of the virility of springtime, as though the
- impulse of life waning in the autumn were about to reconquer its dominion.
- Here and there, in the moist earth, a little flower crept out, as though
- tricked into the belief that it was springtime&mdash;a white strawberry, a
- tiny violet.
- </p>
- <p>
- The sap seemed about to move under the bark of the beech trees, the buds
- to issue from the twigs.
- </p>
- <p>
- In the forest the wren and the catbirds fluttered as under a nesting
- instinct, the gray squirrels fled around the rough shellbark trees and
- from one tree top to another, far off a pheasant drummed, and farther off
- a mountain bull lowed as he wandered through the forest.
- </p>
- <p>
- The road descending the mountain was decked out in color, banked along its
- border with the poison ivy and the Virginia creeper, now a mass of
- scarlet. Above the beech and hickory leaves were yellow, the clay of the
- road below was yellow, and the soft sunlight entered and fused the edges
- of these colors. The forest for this hour took on the ripe expectancy of
- springtime.
- </p>
- <p>
- The School-teacher stood where the path emerged from the forest
- </p>
- <p>
- Presently from below him, beyond the turn of the road, a voice arose, a
- voice full, rich and sensuous&mdash;a woman's voice singing a song. It
- carried through the forest, swaggering, defiant melody. The words could
- not be determined. Indeed, there seemed to be no words. The song was a
- thing of sounds&mdash;of tropical, sensuous sounds. As though all the love
- calls of the creatures of the forest had been fused into one great,
- barbaric symphony.
- </p>
- <p>
- A moment later the singer came into view.
- </p>
- <p>
- She was a young, buxom woman, and she walked, singing, in the middle of
- the road, with a defiant swagger. Her hair was heavy and yellow like wheat
- straw. Her lips, colored purple from the wild grapes which she had been
- eating, were full, the under one drooping a little at the middle. Her face
- was whitened with a cheap powder to be had at the village store. Her
- bodice and her petticoat were of bright vivid colors. There was a crimson
- handkerchief tied around her neck, a cheap glittering bangle on her wrist,
- heavy, gilded earrings hanging in the lobes of her ears, and at her throat
- a breastpin of jet set in a lattice work of brass.
- </p>
- <p>
- The School-teacher remained motionless. He watched the woman approaching
- in the middle of the road, her body swinging loose in her swaggering
- stride, and the full volume of her voice abandoned to her song.
- </p>
- <p>
- She was halfway up the bend of the road before she realized that another
- was within sound of her voice. Then she saw the School-teacher and
- stopped.
- </p>
- <p>
- The song ceased.
- </p>
- <p>
- Her head went up and her eyes opened wide. She remained as though the
- power to move had been on the instant stricken out of her. Her foot
- advanced, her heel lifted, her mouth shaped to sing. Then, slowly, her
- face changed to an expression of profound astonishment.
- </p>
- <p>
- The School-teacher did not speak. He did not move. The sun descending
- behind him slowly crept up the road to his feet, as though, bidden to
- withdraw from the world, it were loath to leave him.
- </p>
- <p>
- The woman's face again changed. It became troubled. She moved now a few
- steps closer, softly, on tiptoe. Then, suddenly, with a swift gesture, she
- covered her face with her hands and burst into tears. Her body shook as
- with a convulsion. The tears streamed through her fingers.
- </p>
- <p>
- Until now the School-teacher had not moved. Now he came slowly along the
- road to where she stood. As he approached, the woman sank down huddled
- together, her face covered, her bosom heaving, her hands wet. He stood
- before her in the road looking down at the bowed head.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Poor child!&rdquo; he said.
- </p>
- <p>
- The woman continued to sob. The eyes of the School-teacher deepened with a
- profound sorrow. He stooped over to put his hand on the coarse yellow
- hair, redolent with a cheap perfume. But before the descending fingers
- touched her, the woman sprang up and flew like a wild thing into the
- forest.
- </p>
- <p>
- The sun was now gone.
- </p>
- <p>
- The tropical colors of the leaves, the vines, the yellow earth, departed
- with it. The gray twilight began to descend. The School-teacher walked
- slowly to the top of the ridge, and returned along the little meadow to
- Nicholas Parks' house. As he approached he saw a figure moving off down
- the mountain along the rail fence.
- </p>
- <p>
- When he came to the house he stopped.
- </p>
- <p>
- There was a paper tacked on the door. He looked at it for a moment, but he
- did not touch it. The four corners of the paper were doubled under and a
- tack at each end held it. He pulled the worn leather string, lifted the
- wooden latch and went in, leaving the paper fastened to the door.
- </p>
- <p>
- The night had descended.
- </p>
- <p>
- The house was dark. But when he entered it, on the instant, as though the
- opening of the door had made a draft through the fireplace, a log
- smoldering shot up a red flame that illumined the house.
- </p>
- <p>
- The School-teacher went over to a table that stood by the wall.
- </p>
- <p>
- On this table were a homemade cheese and the half of a loaf of bread.
- Beside them was a knife with a wooden handle and a thick china plate
- chipped at the rim. Before this table was a hickory chair, the seat of
- roughly plaited bark. The School-teacher sat down and ate his supper.
- </p>
- <p>
- Everything in this house remained as Nicholas Parks had left it.
- </p>
- <p>
- This chair, this table, a larger hickory chair with arms and a ragged
- cushion by the fireplace, a fourpost bed in the corner covered with a
- patchwork quilt. When Nicholas Parks died there had been, as now, a log on
- the fire, a cheese and a loaf of bread on the table.
- </p>
- <p>
- There were, however, now on this table, before the School-teacher, some
- objects that had not been there. There was a little worn, broken toy that
- had once been a wooden horse; there was a top whittled out of a spool with
- a hickory pin through it. There was a Barlow knife with an iron handle,
- the blade broken at the point; there was a brass ring tied to a cotton
- rib-hon; and there were little bunches of wild flowers, the stems of which
- were primly wrapped with black thread. These were laid out on the table
- beyond the cheese and the loaf. And before he sat down to eat, the
- School-teacher touched them.
- </p>
- <p>
- When he had finished his supper, the
- </p>
- <p>
- School-teacher went over to the fireplace and sat down in the armchair. He
- sat beside the hearth where he could see the doer. He remained for a long
- time without moving, except now and then he looked toward the door, and
- when there came to him any sound from the night outside, he listened.
- </p>
- <p>
- The night advanced. He remained in in the chair before the fire. The log
- continued to burn among the ashes in the fireplace. But it no longer
- flamed. It burned with a deep crimson glow that flooded the hair, the
- face, the hands of the School-teacher. The glow thus reflected seemed to
- take on a deeper crimson.
- </p>
- <p>
- It became like the crimson of blood.
- </p>
- <p>
- The School-teacher hardly ever moved except to raise his head to listen,
- but he was not asleep; there was no sleep in him. The glow of the
- smoldering log, changing on his face, gave it an expression of agony.
- </p>
- <p>
- The night continued to advance; the hours passed. The vagrant sounds of
- the world outside ceased. The profound silence of midnight arrived and
- passed. The temperature changed.
- </p>
- <p>
- But the School-teacher did not go to bed.
- </p>
- <p>
- He sat in the fantastic glow of the fire, with its agony on him. Now and
- then, when the playing of the light seemed to convulse his features&mdash;seemed
- to distort them with a deeper agony, he turned his face toward the table
- standing along the wall, near the door, and his eyes rested on the broken
- toy horse, the top, the Barlow knife, the ring and little hunches of
- flowers; and turned thus out of the glow of the fire, his features no
- longer presented the aspect of agony. Moreover, when his head was turned
- like that, the glow of the fire, that had been thus distorting his face,
- passed by him and streamed over the objects on the table, bringing them
- into vivid contrast with every other object in the room.
- </p>
- <p>
- The body of the night passed.
- </p>
- <p>
- The morning began to arrive. And still the School-teacher waited. No one
- came. The room was profoundly silent. The breath of the morning entering,
- distilled a faint perfume out of the little bunches of wild flowers, a
- vague odor that arose and sweetened the room. The night was dead. The day
- was beginning to be born. Then it was that the one for whom the
- School-teacher waited finally came.
- </p>
- <p>
- There was a faint sound outside, as though one approached walking softly
- on the grass, as though a hand passed gently along the door.
- </p>
- <p>
- The School-teacher rose.
- </p>
- <p>
- The latch of the door moved, the door turned noiselessly on its hinges,
- and the woman who had fled from the Schoolteacher into the forest entered.
- </p>
- <p>
- The whole aspect of the woman was changed.
- </p>
- <p>
- The purple stains on her mouth, the powder on her face, were gone. Her
- hair, too, had been cleansed of its cheap scent. It clung in damp strands
- about her face. The swagger, the defiance, the loud notes and color had
- gone out of her. And that which remained after these things were gone, now
- alone existed&mdash;as though the whole fabric of the woman had been
- washed with water. The woman put her hand swiftly to her face, to her
- hair; she caught her breath.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Oh!&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;I thought you were asleep.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The School-teacher's voice was incomparably gentle.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;No,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;I have been waiting for you.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Then you thought I would come?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I knew that you would come.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I had to come,&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;I could not go back to&mdash;to&mdash;the
- other!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;No,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;you never could go back to that.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;An'&mdash;an'&mdash;I had nowhere else to go.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I know that,&rdquo; replied the Schoolteacher, &ldquo;there is no place that you
- could go, except to me.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0010" id="link2HCH0010"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER X
- </h2>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">T</span>HE children had
- bought the School-teacher a hat. It had been a large undertaking, and the
- cause of innumerable secret conferences in the grove behind the
- schoolhouse. The purchase of so costly a thing as a hat required a certain
- sum of money. To raise this sum of money, the children had been put to the
- most desperate straits. Every tiny store that any child possessed had been
- brought forward and contributed to the common fund. The difficulty did not
- lie in the drawing on this store. Although every contribution meant a
- sacrifice to the donor, no child had hesitated. There had been no question
- about what each should give, and no inquiry as to a holding back of
- resources. Every child had simply given all he had.
- </p>
- <p>
- Ancient two-cent pieces with holes in them, worn nickles, one or two
- long-treasured ten-cent pieces, and one-cent pieces thumbed with counting,
- were withdrawn from snuffboxes, essence of coffee boxes, pill boxes, holes
- in the wall, from under the loose stones of the hearth and other safety
- deposit places&mdash;wherever the child had deemed it expedient to keep
- his treasures. Sometimes, however, this treasure was in the custody of
- older persons, and the obtaining of it had presented difficulties.
- </p>
- <p>
- The whole school had often gone into counsel on these cases, ways and
- means devised, a proper motive constructed, and the child strengthened and
- drilled. When the device succeeded, the whole school for that day
- rejoiced, when it failed, the school was depressed, but it was not
- defeated, and some other plan was brought forward. Some of the plans were
- exceedingly ingenious, and, as a rule, the school prevailed.
- </p>
- <p>
- However, when the whole store was finally collected, or as much as could
- be had, the children were confronted with a staggering disappointment; the
- entire fund, for all the counting and recounting of it, could not be made
- to exceed sixty-four cents. A wholesale borrowing, right and left, had
- added only eleven cents. Now, 't was well-known that a hat could not be
- purchased for less than a dollar, and when it became evident that the fund
- must fail by a fourth of that sum the children were in despair.
- </p>
- <p>
- For a day or two almost the whole school was in tears.
- </p>
- <p>
- Then, individually, it resorted to desperate devices. One whose
- grandfather had been accustomed to present him with ten cents on Christmas
- day endeavored to secure an advancement. A small child had hailed the
- doctor as he passed along the road, and had offered to work for him all
- the remainder of his life for ten cents paid down in cash. Another had
- approached the minister, after the Sunday collection, and endeavored to
- borrow a twenty-five-cent piece out of the hat.
- </p>
- <p>
- These ventures had failed, and the latter with the perilous result that
- the minister had all but extracted the secret for the money, and his
- withering commentaries on a teacher who inculcated the spirit of avarice
- into little children had so stricken the child with terror that it had
- been afraid to tell the school what it had done.
- </p>
- <p>
- This brief lapse into madness, the practical leadership of Martha, the
- miller's little girl, and the small boy, David, was presently able to
- cheek. They pointed out what it was useless to do. But for the present
- they were not able to bring forward any plan that it seemed worth while to
- undertake. At this season the only natural product of the mountain that
- could be exchanged for money was hickory nuts, and the value of this
- product was in doubt. Sometimes, early in certain seasons, the storekeeper
- had been known to give twenty-five cents for a bushel of choice hickory
- nuts, not the gross shellbark nut, but the small, round, sweet-kerneled
- nut of the smooth-bark hickory.
- </p>
- <p>
- The school had considered this, but had come always against two serious
- difficulties. To secure a bushel of these small nuts would require a
- considerable searching of the mountains, and, despite the fact that the
- children were very small, each had duties at home that occupied Saturdays,
- and the evening fragments of the day. On Sundays, an austere theology
- imposed by the minister compelled them to attend the Sunday sermon and to
- practice the most rigorous inactivity under pain of hideous consequences.
- The insurmountable difficulty, however, lay in the fact that they could
- not get a bushel of hickory nuts over the long distance to the country
- store.
- </p>
- <p>
- An unexpected event suddenly removed this difficulty. Coming breathlessly
- to the school on a Friday morning, little David announced that his father
- was going to the country store on Tuesday with the wagon to bring home a
- barrel of salt, and that he had obtained permission to accompany him. At
- once the school took up the possibility of securing the bushel of hickory
- nuts. It was immediately evident that within so brief a time the thing
- could not be done unless the whole of Sunday were devoted to the labor of
- it. The school promptly decided.
- </p>
- <p>
- This expedition did not arise from any failure to appreciate the perils of
- the decision. Corporal chastisement under the home roof was certain to
- follow; and the hideous tortures vividly presented by the minister,
- awaiting at the threshold of his future life, that one who broke the
- Sabbath day, was scarcely less certain. Nevertheless, not a child of the
- whole school hesitated.
- </p>
- <p>
- The complete success of the venture strengthened the school to bear the
- immediate consequences.
- </p>
- <p>
- Corporal chastisement in the mountains was not apt to be a thing lightly
- administered. But it was a hardship which even the smallest children had
- come to regard as one of the inevitable conditions of life. As to that
- other penalty, which awaited them at the hands of an outraged and
- vindictive deity, they were somehow of the opinion that this malignant god
- could not inflict his punishments except through some overt act of the
- minister who was his executive agent. Thus, if they could outwit this
- dangerous penal vicegerent, the thing could be turned aside. In travail of
- this problem, they hit upon the plan of going over the head of the
- minister and claiming a direct authorization for their act. When
- approached for an explanation of their conduct they solemnly announced
- that an angel had come down through the roof of the schoolhouse and
- directed them not to attend the religious services on this Sunday.
- </p>
- <p>
- Transported by the success of their undertaking; by the exquisite pleasure
- of making this presentation to the Schoolteacher; by the joy which his
- evident happiness in it carried to every heart; they had neglected to
- perfect the details of this story. Fortunately they agreed upon the
- personal aspect of the angel, since every child, when driven to describe
- this divine messenger, simply followed the guidance of his affections, and
- presented the School-teacher. But upon a close and searching examination
- there had been a divergence. How had the angel been clothed? Some of the
- children, put upon inquisition, had replied that he had nothing at all on;
- and others, feeling the need for appropriate vestments, had declared that
- the angel wore a red coat and blue breeches.
- </p>
- <p>
- Seizing upon this point, as a protruding limb, the minister had finally
- drawn up the whole hidden body of the incident. And he was now on his way
- to confront the School-teacher with this piece of outrageous conduct. It
- was evening when he arrived. The school was coming through the little
- grove down into the road. The School-teacher walked among them. The grove
- was full of voices&mdash;the laughter of children. The School-teacher wore
- his new hat, and every now and then he took it off and held it in his hand
- that he might the better admire it. From the day that he had received it,
- he had never ceased to express his appreciation of it. He continued always
- to regard it, as if in it were merged, as in a symbol, all the little
- sacrifices of every child, and all the love that had strengthened each one
- to bear what the thing had cost him.
- </p>
- <p>
- This never-ceasing appreciation of the School-teacher for his present had
- transported the school with pleasure. This acute happiness the children
- were not always able to control. Sometimes pride overcame one, and he
- would tell how much he had contributed.
- </p>
- <p>
- And always the smaller children wished to hold the hat in their hands, so
- that it quickly gathered a border of little fingerprints.
- </p>
- <p>
- Even the tiny boy, who had been too little to help in the purchase of the
- present, but who somehow dimly understood that all had given something
- toward this article, had brought forward a rooster feather, which he had
- found, and insisted that it be added to the hat. And the School-teacher
- had very carefully pinned this crimson feather to the band.
- </p>
- <p>
- Moreover, the habit which the Schoolteacher had acquired of taking off his
- hat in order to admire it before the children, seemed to adhere to him
- when he was by himself: Of late, those who had watched him as he passed
- along the mountain roads, had observed him at this habit and had marked
- how his face, profoundly sad when he was alone, always immediately
- brightened.
- </p>
- <p>
- The school trooping about the Schoolteacher was emerging from the grove
- when the minister got out of his buggy.
- </p>
- <p>
- He tied the horse to a sapling with one of the lines. Then he drew his
- cotton gloves a little closer over his hands, buttoned his long black coat
- down to its last button, and stood out in the road to await the coming of
- the School-teacher. The children and the School-teacher stopped when they
- saw him. The pleasant laughing voices ceased. The children gathered around
- the School-teacher. The smallest ones came close up and took hold of his
- hands.
- </p>
- <p>
- The minister addressed the Schoolteacher. His voice was high and sharp.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Do you know what the school children have done?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The School-teacher regarded the minister with his deep, calm, gray-blue
- eyes.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; he said.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Did you know that they were going to do it?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Did you try to prevent it?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;No.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The lines in the minister's face hardened.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;That's all I wanted to know,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;It is now perfectly evident that
- you are no fit person to have charge of school children. The community
- must get rid of you.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- He turned about in the road, untied his horse, got into his buggy and took
- up the lines. He raised one of the lines in his cotton-gloved hand to
- bring it down on the horse's back, but he paused with his arm extended,
- and turned about toward the School-teacher. He thrust his head to one
- side. His defective eye straining to see.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Do you have any fear of God at all?&rdquo; he said.
- </p>
- <p>
- The School-teacher's calm, gentle voice did not change, it did not
- hesitate. &ldquo;No,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;none at all.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0011" id="link2HCH0011"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER XI
- </h2>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">O</span>N SATURDAY morning
- the miller hailed the doctor as he was passing the mill.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Are you goin' over to Black's?&rdquo; she called.
- </p>
- <p>
- The doctor stopped his horse.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;they sent me word to come.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;By Jonas the first of the week?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;For to see old Jerry's eye?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well, it ain't no use for you to go.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Did his eye get well of itself?&rdquo; inquired the doctor.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;No, it didn't git well of itself,&rdquo; replied the woman. &ldquo;It never would
- have got well of itself. Ole Jerry's been set-tin' around with that eye
- tied up ever since the day that he thrashed out his wheat. He'd a-been
- blind in it all the rest of his life if it hadn't a-been for the
- School-teacher.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The doctor turned around in his saddle.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;What did the School-teacher do to him?&rdquo; he said.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;He cured him,&rdquo; replied the miller.
- </p>
- <p>
- The doctor had ridden past the mill before he stopped. Now he rode hack.
- The miller stood on the porch before the door. The doctor sat on his horse
- in the road, the loose bridle rein over his crooked arm, his good hand
- resting heavily on the pommel of the saddle.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;How did he cure him?&rdquo; inquired the doctor.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I don't know how he cured him,&rdquo; replied the miller.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Didn't you hear?&rdquo; said the doctor.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes, I heard,&rdquo; replied the miller.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well,&rdquo; said the doctor, &ldquo;what did you hear?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I heard that he took ole Jerry to one side an' he asked him if he could
- see anything with that eye. An' ole Jerry said that he couldn't tell a man
- from a tree with it. Then the School-teacher put his hands on his eye, an'
- he made him look up an' and when the School-teacher got through ole Jerry
- could see. But he complained that his eye felt hot an' the School-teacher
- told him to hold a piece of wet clay against it&mdash;you know' that's
- awful good to draw out soreness&mdash;an' the next morning ole Jerry's eye
- was well. Now, how do you suppose he done it?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I don't suppose how he done 't,&rdquo; replied the doctor. &ldquo;I know how he done
- it. Ole Jerry got a wheat husk in that eye when he was thrashing, and it
- stuck against the lid back of the ball. The fools that looked into his eye
- by pushing the lid up couldn't see it. But when anybody come along with
- sense enough to turn the lid back he got the husk out and the eye got
- well.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The miller crumpled the corner of her apron in her hand.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I don't know about that,&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;D'd you hear how the School-teacher
- cured Sol Shreave's shoulder that he smashed in his clearing?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes, I heard it,&rdquo; replied the doctor. &ldquo;I was pretty apt to hear it.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well, what did you think about that?&rdquo; said the miller.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I thought it was a piece of meddling with my practice,&rdquo; replied the
- doctor. &ldquo;It kept me out of a five-dollar fee.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;But it was wonderful,&rdquo; said the miller.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;No, it wasn't wonderful,&rdquo; replied the doctor.
- </p>
- <p>
- The miller spoke slowly. She nodded her head between each word.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;To cure a man's shoulder that was smashed, just by takin' hold of his
- arm, wouldn't that be a wonder?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; said the doctor, &ldquo;that would be a hell of a wonder,&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well,&rdquo; said the woman, &ldquo;didn't the School-teacher do it?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;No, he didn't do it,&rdquo; replied the doctor. &ldquo;Then you don't think 't's so,
- about the School-teacher fixin' Sol's shoulder?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes, I know it's so,&rdquo; replied the doctor.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Then what makes you say it ain't a wonder?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Because it's a thing; anybody could do,&rdquo; replied the doctor.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Charm a smashed shoulder well?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;No,&rdquo; replied the doctor, &ldquo;rotate a dislocated joint into place. When Sol
- Shreave caught his ax in the grapevine he twisted the ball on the big hone
- of his arm out of the socket of the shoulder, and when the School-teacher
- took hold of his arm and rotated it around in the right way it went back
- into place.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The miller crossed her hands over her apron. She took hold of the palm of
- her left with the fingers of her right. She gave her head a little jerk.
- Her eyebrows contracted.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I don't know about that,&rdquo; she said.
- </p>
- <p>
- She remained for a moment looking down at the mill porch, then she looked
- up.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Doctor,&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;did you ever hear of anybody that was dead bein'
- brought back to life?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; said the doctor, &ldquo;I have heard of it ever since I could remember.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Then it has happened?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;<i>No</i>,&rdquo; said the doctor. &ldquo;It never has happened. When you're dead,
- you're dead.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The doctor took a watch out of his pocket. It was a heavy, old, silver
- watch, tied to his waistcoat buttonhole with a buckskin string. He opened
- it, examined it for a moment, then snapped the lid and thrust it back into
- his pocket. When he looked around the miller was standing in the roadside
- beside the horse.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Doctor,&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;I'm a-goin' to tell you somethin' that I never told
- anybody.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;What about?&rdquo; said the doctor.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;About what I've just said,&rdquo; replied the woman.
- </p>
- <p>
- The doctor reflected for an instant, then he remembered. He shifted his
- position in the saddle. His voice showed annoyance.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;What cock-an'-bull story have you got a-hold of now?&rdquo; he said.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It's no cock-an'-bull story,&rdquo; replied the miller. &ldquo;It's the God's truth.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The doctor made a deprecating gesture with his crooked arm.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Now, look here, Sal,&rdquo; lie said, &ldquo;I haven't time to listen to all the
- tales you've heard.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It ain't anything I've heard,&rdquo; replied the miller.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;What is it, then?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It's something I saw.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Did you see it yourself?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes, I did.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Now, Sal,&rdquo; said the doctor, &ldquo;don't begin to tell me something you thought
- you saw.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I'm not a-goin' to tell you somethin' that I thought I saw. I'm a-goin'
- to tell you something that I did see.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;All right,&rdquo; said the doctor, &ldquo;go on and tell it. What did you see?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The woman drew a little closer.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well,&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;one Saturday the School-teacher come down here to help
- me, an' he brought Mary Jane's little boy with him. He's awful little. He
- ain't two yet. The School-teacher left him with me while he went down
- under the mill to fix one of the wheel paddles. Well, Martha was gone an'
- there was nobody here but me to 'tend things. An' I got to movin' around
- and forgot the little boy. An' when I went to look for him&mdash;I hope I
- may die!&mdash;if he wasn't a-layin' drown-ded at the bottom of the
- millrace. Lord-amighty! I was crazy. I jumped in an' got him out, an'
- begun to holler for the School-teacher to come. But he was dead. I knowed
- he was dead. His little lips was blue, an' his poor little hands was
- cold.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The tears came into the woman's eyes at the memory.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Lordy, Lordy!&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;I knowed he was all that Mary Jane had in the
- world. I knowed her soul was wrapped up in him. I knowed it would kill
- her.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The woman stopped and wiped her eyes with her apron.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well, the School-teacher come a-run-nin' an' took him out of my arms, an'
- carried him into the house. An' I just stood there in the road like I was
- dazed. But after a while I sort a come to myself, an' I tiptoed up on the
- porch, an' I looked in the door. An' the little boy was layin' on the bed,
- an' the School-teacher was a-bendin' over him. Then I thought of Mary Jane
- again. An' Lord-a'-mighty! I thought I'd die. I went down off the porch.
- An' I reckon I was crazy, because I started out, an' I run just as hard as
- I could right up the road. I reckon I run for half a mile. Then I thought
- I heard the School-teacher callin' me. An' I come hack with my apron over
- my head a-cryin'. An' when I got right here in the road, I did hear him,
- an' he said, 'Don't be distressed, for the child's all right.' An' I took
- my apron off my head, an' I looked in the door, an' there set the
- School-teacher by the stove with the little boy wrapped in a blanket&mdash;an'
- he was <i>alive</i>.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The woman stopped, lifted her shoulders, and took in a deep breath, like
- one who has concluded a violent exertion. She wiped her face with her
- apron.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well, he told me to make haste, an' dry out the little boy's clothes&mdash;he
- had nice, little, white clothes, Mary Jane's awful particular about him&mdash;an'
- I did, an' I ironed them so they'd be just like they was before he fell
- in. Then we put the clothes back on him. An' the Schoolteacher took him
- home. An' he was just as well as he was before he was drownded. An' the
- School-teacher told me not to tell anybody. I suppose he didn't want Mary
- Jane to find it out. It would only distress her for nothing.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The woman folded her arms across her bosom, and looked up at the doctor.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Now, then?&rdquo; she said.
- </p>
- <p>
- The doctor sat back in his saddle. He dropped his crooked arm by his side.
- He addressed the woman, speaking with a perceptible pause between each
- word.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;So you thought he raised the dead, did you?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Didn't I see him do it?&rdquo; replied the woman.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well,&rdquo; said the doctor, &ldquo;if you're that big a fool, there's no use to
- talk to you.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- He turned around in the saddle, gath-tred up the reins, and kicked the
- horse with his heel. He passed out of sight in the direction of Jerry
- Black's house. The miller remained standing in the road.
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0012" id="link2HCH0012"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER XII
- </h2>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">J</span>ERRY BLACK'S house
- was beyond Hickory Mountain, in the direction of the far-off lumber mills.
- </p>
- <p>
- It was afternoon before the doctor returned. He rode hard in anger. He had
- gone on to Black's house, determined to make the old man pay him for his
- visit. But the mountaineer, now that his eye was healed, had refused. The
- doctor stormed and threatened, but the mountaineer was obdurate. The
- School-teacher had cured him. He owed nothing. He would pay nothing.
- </p>
- <p>
- The doctor was compelled to return empty-handed, and he rode hard.
- </p>
- <p>
- A deep resentment against the man who thus interfered with his practice
- moved within him. When he came to Hickory Mountain, instead of following
- the road around by the mill, he took the one leading across through the
- lands of Nicholas Parks. It was mid-afternoon when he stopped in the road
- before the Schoolteacher's house. He called. A woman came to the door, her
- heavy hair the color of wheat straw. The doctor made an exclamation of
- profound astonishment.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yaller Mag!&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;Now what's that hussy doin' here?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- When the woman saw that the person in the road was the doctor, she went
- hack into the house and presently came out with a brown earthen crock. She
- walked down the path from the door bearing the crock in her hand. When she
- came out into the road, she held the crock up to the doctor.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;The School-teacher told me to give you this money when you come,&rdquo; she
- said.
- </p>
- <p>
- There was a handful of silver coins in the crock.
- </p>
- <p>
- Again the doctor was astonished.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;When I come!&rdquo; he echoed. &ldquo;How did he know that I was coming?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I don't know how he knew it,&rdquo; replied the woman.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;What did he tell you to give it to me for?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;He didn't tell me.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The doctor looked at the pieces of silver.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I suppose this is money that the people have paid him. How much did old
- Black pay him?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;He never paid him anything,&rdquo; replied the woman. &ldquo;Nobody ever paid him
- anything.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Who give him this money then?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Nobody give it to him,&rdquo; said the woman. &ldquo;It was in that crock on the
- shelf when old Nicholas Parks died. It ain't been touched.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The doctor looked at the dust-covered handful of silver.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;If nobody pays him, an' he hasn't used any of this, where does he get
- money to buy things with?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;He don't buy anything.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;What does he live on, then?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well,&rdquo; said the woman, &ldquo;when Nicholas Parks died, there was flour in the
- barrel. It ain't run out. It looks like it never would run out. Now, will
- you take the money, so I can get some feed for the horse?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Again the doctor was astonished.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;How do you know that the horse hasn't been fed?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I don't know it,&rdquo; replied the woman.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Then what do you want to feed him for?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I want to feed him,&rdquo; replied the woman, &ldquo;because the School-teacher told
- me to.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Told you to feed my horse?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes, he told me to give you this money and to feed your horse. Are you
- goin' to take the money?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;No,&rdquo; said the doctor. &ldquo;I'm not goin' to take it. I want to see the
- Schoolteacher himself. Where is he?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;He's down at Mary Jane's house.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Is she the one that's got the woods-colt?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;She's the one that's got the little boy,&rdquo; replied the woman.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Huh!&rdquo; said the doctor. &ldquo;What's he doin' there?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;He's huskin' her corn.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;So he spends his time helpin' the women who have no men folks about, too,
- does he?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The woman looked up at the doctor. Her face undisturbed by the taunt.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;He spends his time helpin' those who have nobody else to
- help them.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The doctor did not reply. He gathered his bridle up in his hand. The woman
- moved around in front of the doctor.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Ain't you goin' to let me feed the horse?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;The horse can stand it just as well as I can,&rdquo; said the doctor.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;But you can help it,&rdquo; replied the woman, &ldquo;an' the horse can't help it.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It won't hurt him to wait till I eat.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Would it hurt you to wait till he eats?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It wouldn't do me much good, if anybody was to sec me waitin' here,&rdquo; said
- the doctor.
- </p>
- <p>
- A flush of color sprang into the woman's face.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I only wanted to feed him,&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;because the School-teacher told me
- to.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Get out of my way,&rdquo; said the doctor. &ldquo;This School-teacher has interfered
- with my business just about as much as I'm going to put up with.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- He clucked to his horse, and rode around the woman. When he had gone
- forward a few paces, he made a gesture with his crooked arm.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Is there a path over the mountain this way?&rdquo; he called without turning in
- his saddle.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; replied the woman, &ldquo;it runs down past the house.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- She remained standing by the gate with the crock in her hand.
- </p>
- <p>
- The doctor entered the forest.
- </p>
- <p>
- The colors lying far down the mountain in the sun were like those of an
- oriental carpet. Soft shades of green, of yellow, of crimson, kneaded into
- a harmony of low, unobtrusive tones that the sun warmed and illumined.
- Near at hand, along the path, where the doctor rode, the sumacs stood a
- dull red, the chestnut bushes yellow, the wild cherry leaves turning on
- their edges, the oaks crimson like a flame, the water beeches green, the
- hickory leaves curling on their twigs like shavings of gold.
- </p>
- <p>
- The scene lay out below the doctor in the sun, incomparably painted, but
- he did not see it. He rode looking down at the pommel of his saddle. Now
- and then, when the horse stumbled, he brought it up with a wrench of the
- bit. The horse was tired. It went forward with its head down. Dust lay
- around its eye-pits. There were gray bands of dried sweat running parallel
- with the leather of the headstall, and beyond the borders of the saddle
- blanket.
- </p>
- <p>
- At a turn of the path a dog appeared, his yellow hair rising on his back.
- As the doctor came on, the dog slowly retreated, growling, holding his
- place in the road until the horse was almost upon him, then springing
- hack, his teeth flashing, his eyes on the doctor. The dog did not bark, he
- made no considerable sound, he refused to attack the horse, but he
- continued always to menace the approach of the doctor.
- </p>
- <p>
- They passed the spring and came out before the house and the little
- cornfield. Then the dog began, to bark, and a tiny voice arose.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Ge-out, Nim!&rdquo; it said.
- </p>
- <p>
- This patch of clearing, lying within the many-colored garden of the
- forest, seemed illumined with a warmer sunlight. The effect doubtless
- arose from the carpet of coarse brown fox-grass grown up over the
- cornfield, into which the sun seemed to enter and remain. Two or three
- small maple trees, abundantly leaved, stood about, flaming scarlet.
- </p>
- <p>
- Under one of these trees the Schoolteacher was at work.
- </p>
- <p>
- A corn shock, unbound, lying on the ground before him. He was on his
- knees, bareheaded, without a coat, ripping the husk from the ear with a
- wooden &ldquo;peg&rdquo; bound to his middle finger, snapping it at the socket and
- tossing it out on a heap before him.
- </p>
- <p>
- The ears coming from the Schoolteacher's hands were long, full-grained and
- of a deep yellow.
- </p>
- <p>
- The two children, Martha and David, were gathering this corn into a split
- basket and carrying it to a crib made of rails and roofed with clapboards.
- Near the School-teacher, sitting on his coat spread out on the ground, was
- the tiny boy who had called to the dog. He was shelling a red ear of corn
- into the School-teacher's hat.
- </p>
- <p>
- A brush fence inclosed the cornfield.
- </p>
- <p>
- The doctor pulled up in the path beside the fence. The School-teacher
- arose. He stood bareheaded in the sun under the canopy of darning leaves.
- He looked past the doctor to the horse, standing with its legs out, its
- head down.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I understand you're practicin' medicine,&rdquo; said the doctor.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Your horse is tired,&rdquo; replied the School-teacher.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;There's a law against practicin' medicine without a license,&rdquo; said the
- doctor.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Your horse is hungry,&rdquo; continued the School-teacher.
- </p>
- <p>
- The doctor, riding on, replied with an oath.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You're going to get into trouble,&rdquo; he said.
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0013" id="link2HCH0013"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER XIII
- </h2>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">E</span>ARLY on Monday
- morning an old man driving a gray mare in a two-wheeled cart came slowly
- up the road to the schoolhouse. A lank colt followed the mare. The cart
- was very old, no vestige of paint remained on it, one of the shafts was
- wrapped with wire, the bottom of the cart, made of small slats, was loose.
- The man was heavy and the cart creaked. He drove slowly, his big body
- filling the seat on which for comfort he had placed a folded bedquilt.
- </p>
- <p>
- He stopped in the road below the schoolhouse and got slowly out of the
- creaking cart.
- </p>
- <p>
- One of his legs was swollen with scrofula, and stiff to the knee. He moved
- it with difficulty. He left the mare standing in the road, the colt beside
- her, and came through the grove to the school-house door. The stiff leg
- gave his heavy body an awkward swing. He supported himself with a stout
- stick.
- </p>
- <p>
- When he came finally to the school-house, he sat down on the step before
- the door. He had evidently moved faster than he was accustomed to do, and
- he remained for a moment breathing heavily, his big bulk covering the
- step. Then he got a memorandum hook and a pencil out of his pocket. The
- memorandum book was one of those cheap advertisements of patent medicine
- which are given away at the country store. It contained a few pages blank
- on one side and printed with virtues of the medicine on the other. The
- pencil was a little more pretentious than the ordinary one. It consisted
- of a tin case containing a long, thin core of purple lead, the end of
- which could be made to protrude for writing by pressing the thumb on the
- opposite end of the case.
- </p>
- <p>
- The old man turned the leaves of the memorandum book, wetting his
- forefinger in his mouth, until he found a blank page. Then he laid the
- book on his knee, pressed the case of the pencil, touched the tip of the
- lead to his tongue, and laboriously wrote.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;This schoolhouse is closed, by order of P. Hamrick, Trustee.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- He tore the leaf out, rose and pinned it to the door.
- </p>
- <p>
- It was some distance through the grove of ancient trees to the road, and
- he started to return. In spite of his bulk and his stiff leg he endeavored
- to hurry. He thrust his stout stick out before him on the path, and swung
- forward, his weight forcing the point of the stick into the earth. In
- order that he might not fall, and to find each time a safe place for the
- stick, he moved with his eyes on the ground.
- </p>
- <p>
- Presently the end of the stick slipped on a pebble, and he lurched
- forward. He saved himself from falling by grasping the crook, of the stick
- with both hands, tottered a moment, then he regained his balance and
- looked up.
- </p>
- <p>
- The School-teacher stood before him.
- </p>
- <p>
- The old man remained holding to the stick, breathing with difficulty. The
- School-teacher was some distance away, motionless in the path. He had
- evidently seen the man coming from the schoolhouse door, and had stopped
- there in the path to observe him.
- </p>
- <p>
- The School-teacher spoke.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Have you been to the schoolhouse?&rdquo; he said.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; replied the man, &ldquo;I've&mdash;I've been out to the schoolhouse.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;To see me?&rdquo; said the School-teacher. &ldquo;Well, no,&rdquo; replied the man, &ldquo;not
- exactly to see you.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;To see the school?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well, no, not exactly to see the school.&rdquo; Then he added, &ldquo;I'm the
- trustee. I've been looking over the schoolhouse. I think I'll be goin'
- on.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Why do you hurry?&rdquo; said the Schoolteacher.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I must be gettin' home,&rdquo; said the old man.
- </p>
- <p>
- He reached forward with his stick, but again the point of it slipped and
- he nearly fell.
- </p>
- <p>
- The School-teacher looked past the man toward the schoolhouse.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;What is that on the door?&rdquo; he said. The old man turned around. The leaf
- from the memorandum book, fastened with the pin, fluttered on the door, as
- though 't were a living thing struggling to free itself.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;That's a piece of paper,&rdquo; said the old man.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Who put it there?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I did.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;What for?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It's a kind of notice.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;A notice to me?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;A notice about the schoolhouse.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Is there anything wrong with the schoolhouse?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well,&rdquo; said the old man, &ldquo;I don't think it's just exactly safe.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Not safe for the children?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well, no, it mightn't he safe for the children.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;What is wrong with the schoolhouse?&rdquo; said the School-teacher.
- </p>
- <p>
- The old man began to talk. &ldquo;Well,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;it's got a good roof. Old Dix
- put that roof on. Every one of the clapboards is planed with a drawin'
- knife. An' the weatherboardin' is good. It was seasoned weatherboardin'.
- But the floor might be bad.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I have mended the floor,&rdquo; replied the School-teacher.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It ain't so much the floor,&rdquo; continued the old man. &ldquo;It's the sills. The
- sills might be rotten.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I have examined the sills,&rdquo; replied the School-teacher. &ldquo;The sills are
- sound.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well,&rdquo; said the old man, &ldquo;failin' weather's comin' on. I think the school
- had better stop anyway.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- He turned a little and put his stick out on the path into the leaves as
- though he would go down the hill a shorter way to the road.
- </p>
- <p>
- The School-teacher read his intent in the moving of the cane.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You would better stay in the path,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;If you get out of the path
- you will fall.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The old man turned back into the path before the School-teacher.
- </p>
- <p>
- There was come now a certain dogged expression into his face.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;If you want to know,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;there's been some complaint about you.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Who has complained of me?&rdquo; said the School-teacher.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Good men have complained.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;What good men?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Why, men as good as the minister. Why, men as good as the doctor.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Then he looked out sharp at the Schoolteacher.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Ain't that hussy, Yaller Mag, up there with you at Nicholas Parks'
- house?&rdquo; The School-teacher regarded the old man standing before him.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Do you think this woman ought to be sent away?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes, I do,&rdquo; replied the old man.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Then some one ought to tell her to go.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes, they ought.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It's a difficult thing to do,&rdquo; said the School-teacher.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;To find some one to tell her?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; said the School-teacher, &ldquo;that is it, to find some one to tell
- her.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;If that's all,&rdquo; said the old man, &ldquo;I'm goin' home by Nicholas Park's
- house, that's my shortest way. I'll stop an' tell her myself.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;But have you thought how difficult it will be to tell her?&rdquo; inquired the
- Schoolteacher.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;What's the trouble about tellin' her?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well,&rdquo; replied the School-teacher, his eyes resting on the old man's
- swollen scrofuletic leg, &ldquo;the trouble is that the one who goes to tell her
- ought to be better than she is. He ought, himself, to have lived a clean
- life.... Perhaps you have, perhaps you can tell her.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The old man thought that the Schoolteacher saw something lying on the
- ground, for he stooped over and his finger moved in the dust of the path.
- And while he remained thus, the old man hurried along to the road. The
- mare stood facing in the direction of the way over the mountain by
- Nicholas Parks' house.
- </p>
- <p>
- The old man took her by the bridle and turned her around in the road.
- </p>
- <p>
- Then he climbed slowly into the creaking cart. He looked back when he had
- got his big bulk on the folded bedquilt. The School-teacher was standing
- upright where he had passed him in the path. The old man put his hand on
- the corner of the seat and turned heavily about.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;There's another thing,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;I'd like to know why you're always
- carryin' that bastard brat around with you.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Then he drove away, but not on the road that crossed the mountain by
- Nicholas Park's house.
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0014" id="link2HCH0014"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER XIV
- </h2>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">A</span>LL day long the
- little boy was with the School-teacher. The child and the dog watched for
- the man to come out of the forest in the morning. When the dog barked, the
- little boy would say:
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Nim, see Teacher.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The woman standing before the door watched for the three of them to come
- out of the forest in the evening. She listened for the laughter, the
- voices, the barking of the dog. The sense of perfect understanding among
- the three of them was to her a perpetual wonder. The child had only a few
- words, the dog had none. How could the man know so well, what they meant?
- It was a wonder that she turned about, and at last, out of the deeps of
- her own feelings, she got an answer that she held to.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;If you love a thing enough, it's goin' to understand you.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The relation of the School-teacher to this tiniest child was also that of
- his relation to every other one. The sense of it spread throughout the
- school. This school became a family. What the cheerless home withheld, it
- gave. No child could have told one what that was.
- </p>
- <p>
- The teacher understood him, would have been the answer.
- </p>
- <p>
- The School-teacher required no built-up explanations, he required no
- justification of one's act by the unfamiliar standards of another, he
- required no trick, no artifice, no pretending, to get on with.
- </p>
- <p>
- To the question, &ldquo;What is he like?&rdquo; a little boy had answered, &ldquo;Why, just
- like me.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- For some time there had been a secret in the school.
- </p>
- <p>
- The School-teacher had talked with every child apart. The talk had been
- confidential. The School-teacher had spoken with each one, even the
- tiniest, as with an equal. He had spoken with him from day to day as the
- occasion arose. It was the way of this secret to make the child with whom
- he talked for a time unhappy. But as the School-teacher continued each day
- to strengthen him, to show him how much he depended on him, and to blow on
- the embers of his courage, he came at length to carry the secret with
- equanimity.
- </p>
- <p>
- On Thursday evening this secret became the common property of all. The
- School-teacher was going away! There would be no more school!
- </p>
- <p>
- On this afternoon the School-teacher had again talked with each child
- apart, told him that the time of which he had spoken had now come, and
- called upon him for the evidence of his courage. But, in spite of all,
- when the hour arrived, the school broke down. It left the little benches
- and gathered around the Schoolteacher. For a moment the Schoolteacher
- hesitated, before the group of wet faces, then, one by one, he took each
- child up in his arms, carried him to the window and told him something.
- Something which he had not told him before. No one, outside of the school,
- knew exactly what it was. But each child coming from the School-teacher's
- arms was strengthened, and set out for his home, the tears drying on his
- sturdy little face. An idea of what this something was, afterwards arose.
- A little boy had said, &ldquo;Everybody's a-goin' to live at the
- School-teacher's house.&rdquo; But he was in the extremity of illness when he
- said it, and they thought he spoke in delirium.
- </p>
- <p>
- It, was mid-afternoon when the Schoolteacher left the schoolhouse. He was
- accompanied by the two children, Martha and David. The dog Jim went before
- him and he carried the tiny boy on his shoulder. They went along the road
- to the river, crossed on the stones and ascended the mountain. The little
- boy fell asleep, his arms around the Schoolteacher's neck.
- </p>
- <p>
- The two children walked beside the man.
- </p>
- <p>
- For the most part they were silent. Finally they came to the little
- clearing. The children stopped in the road, and the man went up onto the
- cabin porch, the little sleeping boy in his arms. The woman at work in the
- kitchen, hearing the footsteps, came out to the door. When she saw who it
- was, she was surprised.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;School's out early to-day,&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; replied the School-teacher.
- &ldquo;What's the matter?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It's the last day of the school.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Won't there be any more school?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;No.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The woman's lips trembled. &ldquo;Then, then...&rdquo; she said, and she began to cry.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Mary,&rdquo; said the School-teacher, &ldquo;have you forgotten what I told you?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The woman sobbed,
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;But it's come so soon.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Then she looked at the little boy sleeping in the School-teacher's arms
- and the tears streamed down her face.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Now, what'll I do?&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;Now, what'll I do? He'll set there by the
- door, him an' Jim, an' he'll look for you every morning, an' whenever Jim
- barks he'll say 'Nim see Teacher,' but he won't never see you.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; replied the School-teacher, &ldquo;he will see me again.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Then you won't be so awful far away?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I shall never be very far away from him.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Then he put the sleeping child into the woman's arms.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Don't wake him,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;and don't cry. Remember, Mary, that if he
- should go with me, then he could not stay with you.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- He went down the road, and with the two children beside him, passed on
- along the path. They went by the spring, with its keg sunk in the earth,
- and up the mountain to Nicholas Parks' house. There, in the road, they
- found the woman with the yellow hair, feeding the chickens, a measure of
- corn in her apron.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You're back early,&rdquo; she said.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It's the last day of the school,&rdquo; replied the School-teacher.
- </p>
- <p>
- The woman's whole body was convulsed. The corn spilled out of her apron.
- Then she fled along the road, and up the path to the house. At the door
- she stopped, turned about, and then huddled down by the steps, her apron
- over her head.
- </p>
- <p>
- The School-teacher bade the children await him, then he went up the path.
- He passed by the woman and entered the house. Within the house, he went
- over to the table by the wall, on which lay a little, worn, broken toy,
- that had once been a wooden horse, a top whittled out of a spool, a brass
- ring with its cotton ribbon, a Harlow knife, and little bunches of wild
- flowers. These he took up, one by one, and put into the bosom of his coat.
- Then he came out and closed the door. As he passed, the woman put out her
- hand and touched him. And he stopped. For a moment he stood looking down
- at the woman sobbing at his feet, the apron over her heed. Then he spoke.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Margaret,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;is this how you will keep your promise to me?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Then he went down the path, and, accompanied by the two children, followed
- the road along the ridge to the little path descending the mountain toward
- the mill. As the School-teacher walked he endeavored to strengthen and
- encourage the two children. He bade them remember what he had said, and
- not to cry. They managed not to cry when he left them at the point where
- the path entered the road below. But when he was gone out of their sight
- and hearing, in the direction of the schoolhouse, they held to each other
- and wept.
- </p>
- <p>
- They stood for a long time, there, in tears, holding to one another. Then
- they heard sounds approaching and hid themselves. Two men rode past in the
- direction of the schoolhouse. One of them carried a rifle across the
- saddle before him.
- </p>
- <p>
- A great fear fell on the two children and they followed at a distance.
- They saw the two men dismount before the school-house, knock on the door
- and enter. After a while they came out with the Schoolteacher.
- </p>
- <p>
- They got on their horses and, with the School-teacher walking between
- them, set out along the road in the direction of the town.
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0015" id="link2HCH0015"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER XV
- </h2>
- <p>
- THE several influences moving against the School-teacher, having formed a
- conjunction, at last determined to act.
- </p>
- <p>
- On Wednesday night, in the church at the county seat, two persons attended
- the minister's mid-weekly meeting, who were not members of the
- congregation. These two persons, the sheriff and the doctor, sat on the
- last bench nearest the door. When the service was concluded and the
- congregation withdrew, these two persons remained with the minister. The
- three of them moved up to the table before the altar, where there was a
- small oil lamp.
- </p>
- <p>
- They remained for a long time in conference around this table.
- </p>
- <p>
- It seemed that the minister's efforts to get rid of the School-teacher by
- prevailing on the trustee to close the schoolhouse, had not succeeded.
- </p>
- <p>
- The school went on in spite of the notice.
- </p>
- <p>
- And now some more effective measures must be found. The sheriff, when the
- minister informed him of the occupancy of Nicholas Parks' estate by this
- stranger, had caused a proceeding to be instituted in the circuit court,
- and had obtained an order restraining any one from entering on the lands
- of Nicholas Parks until the right of the state thereto could be
- determined. This order had been posted on the door of Nicholas Parks'
- house. But this order, like the one on the door of the schoolhouse, the
- stranger had not regarded.
- </p>
- <p>
- It was evident that a firmer step must be taken.
- </p>
- <p>
- Two plans were available. As the School-teacher had continued to remain on
- Nicholas Parks' lands after the restraining order had been posted on the
- door, the sheriff could apply to the circuit judge for a <i>rule</i> and
- cause him to be brought before the court and imprisoned for contempt. The
- second plan was for the doctor to go before a justice of the peace and
- take out a warrant against the School-teacher charging him with practicing
- medicine without a license.
- </p>
- <p>
- These two plans were now under discussion in the empty, dimly lighted
- church.
- </p>
- <p>
- The little hand oil lamps had been put out except one on a wooden bracket
- by the door, and the one smoking on the table before the altar. The
- silence, the empty church, or something in the atmosphere of the place,
- caused the men to draw together and to discuss the matter in undertones.
- </p>
- <p>
- The minister sat with his back to the altar.
- </p>
- <p>
- On the bench beside him was his hat containing the money which he had
- collected from the congregation at the close of the service. On either
- side were the doctor and the sheriff. The latter's big hump now prominent
- as he leaned over the table. The minister led the discussion, and they
- remained for some time thus, in conference. The minister's defective eye
- batting, the doctor's crooked arm on the table, and the sheriff's back
- throwing its humped shadow against the wall.
- </p>
- <p>
- Finally it was determined that the sheriff should go before the court on
- Thursday and obtain the <i>rule</i> upon which the School-teacher could be
- arrested and brought down out of the mountain. At the same time the doctor
- should take out his warrant before the justice of the peace, so it might
- be available in case the circuit judge should not commit the Schoolteacher
- upon the proceeding for contempt.
- </p>
- <p>
- This plan having been settled upon, it became necessary to consider how
- the arrest should be made.
- </p>
- <p>
- The sheriff could send his deputy, who served legal papers in the county,
- but the deputy had never seen the School-teacher and did not know him.
- And, besides this, if the School-teacher resisted, and those about him
- should come to his support, there might be considerable trouble to take
- him. One man conducting a prisoner through the mountains in the night
- might easily be compelled to release him. Moreover, the deputy, knowing
- the danger of making an arrest in the mountain districts, could not be got
- to go up alone.
- </p>
- <p>
- A discussion of who should be found to assist the deputy then arose. No
- one could be thought of except Jonas Black, a worthless hanger-on about
- the village. This man was the son of Jerry Black, whose eye the
- School-teacher had cured.
- </p>
- <p>
- He had been the sheriff's driver on the occasion of that official's
- interview with the School-teacher. He was familiar with the mountains, and
- it was thought less likely to be resisted, since he was one of the
- mountain people. He knew the School-teacher. It was said that for a time
- he had hung about him, hoping to be employed to go from house to house and
- collect the School-teacher's salary, until he discovered to his
- astonishment, that this stranger was charging nothing for his service.
- </p>
- <p>
- The sheriff rose and went out into the village to seek this man, while the
- others awaited his return. The sheriff was not gone very long. He
- presently entered the church with another. This man had a curious deep red
- birthmark covering the entire side of his face. He came up the church
- aisle behind the sheriff, stepping softly and glancing furtively about
- him. He slipped into a seat before the table facing the altar, and
- remained there shifting his hat in his lingers.
- </p>
- <p>
- The sheriff took his place at the table.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I found Jonas,&rdquo; he said.
- </p>
- <p>
- The minister looked across the table at the man.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Will you go?&rdquo; he inquired.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes, I'll go,&rdquo; replied the man, &ldquo;if I git paid enough for it.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;How much do you want?&rdquo; said the minister.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well,&rdquo; replied the man, &ldquo;it ought to be worth about five dollars.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The three men at the table protested.
- </p>
- <p>
- The sum was excessive. The sheriff would provide a horse. The journey
- would not take longer than one night. Besides, there was no way by which
- the fees of a deputy, for such service, could be made to aggregate that
- sum. The man persisted, and, while the sheriff considered how the sum
- allowed under the law could be augmented, the minister bargained. The man
- finally reduced his demand to three dollars. And the sheriff, seeing now a
- plan by which an additional charge could be officially added, said:
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;There are a couple of bad characters in the jail, held to the grand jury
- for breaking into a store. They may try to give me some trouble. Now, if
- you would watch the jail for a few nights, I might manage to get that fee
- for you.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well,&rdquo; replied the man, &ldquo;I'd sorter keep an eye on the jail for a night
- or two. I wouldn't mind doin' that. But I won't wait for my money. I won't
- take it in costs.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;How soon will you want it?&rdquo; inquired the sheriff.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Right now,&rdquo; said the man.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I couldn't give it to you to-night,&rdquo; replied the sheriff.
- </p>
- <p>
- The man got up.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Then I won't go,&rdquo; he said.
- </p>
- <p>
- An idea occurred to the minister. He turned around, picked up his hat,
- containing the recent collection, and placed it on the table. He whispered
- a moment to the others, then he spoke to the man.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I'll pay you the money,&rdquo; he said.
- </p>
- <p>
- He began to count it out on the table. The money from the collection was
- in small silver coins and he selected the largest of them. He leaned over
- the table, his fingers in the hat, his defective eye close to the lamp.
- </p>
- <p>
- And the man standing before the altar, one half of his face in the shadow,
- one half discolored by the crimson birthmark dimly in the light, received
- the money. Two dollars and sixty cents in ten-cent pieces, three five-cent
- pieces, and one twenty-five cent piece.
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0016" id="link2HCH0016"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER XVI
- </h2>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">T</span> HEY took the
- School-teacher into the courthouse early in the morning.
- </p>
- <p>
- The county seat of this mountain county was nothing more than a village,
- lying in the foothills. The courthouse stood in a grove of oak trees, in
- the middle of the village. It was a two-story structure. On the ground
- floor was the jail in the custody of the sheriff.
- </p>
- <p>
- The second floor was the courthouse.
- </p>
- <p>
- This second story was entered exclusively from without. Broad stone steps
- led up to a portico, on which stood round, plaster-covered pillars
- supporting the projecting roof. On either side, entering between these
- pillars, were the offices of the county and circuit clerks. Beyond was the
- court room filled with benches. A portion of this room at the farther end
- was separated from the benches by a railing. Within it were chairs and two
- tables for attorneys, a desk for the clerk, and a raised platform,
- ascended by steps on either side, for the judge.
- </p>
- <p>
- It was the custom of the judges traveling on these mountain circuits to
- open court as early as eight o'clock in the morning, and before that, if
- they were come into the court room, to hear informally motions and the
- like.
- </p>
- <p>
- When they brought the School-teacher into the courthouse, the sheriff, the
- doctor, the minister, the old trustee who had ridden down out of the
- mountains in his cart, were already there.
- </p>
- <p>
- The deputy and Jonas led the Schoolteacher inside the railing. Then they
- sat down. The School-teacher remained standing.
- </p>
- <p>
- The hearing before the circuit judge followed the informal custom of these
- mountain circuits.
- </p>
- <p>
- The School-teacher made no defense.
- </p>
- <p>
- He stood before the bench. The early sunlight of the morning, entering
- through the high windows, fell on his face, on his soft brown hair, on his
- deep gray-blue eyes, on his clothing covered with the dust of the road.
- </p>
- <p>
- The judge heard the oral evidence in open court, He inquired into the
- service of the restraining order, and the prisoner's subsequent disregard
- of it. But he was not convinced. The prisoner's conduct seemed
- inconsistent with an intent to resist the State's title to these lands.
- Moreover, the silence, the calm demeanor, the strange personality of the
- prisoner, profoundly impressed him. He felt that some ulterior motive lay
- behind the cover of this accusation.
- </p>
- <p>
- At this moment a woman appeared at the door of the courthouse and sent in
- a note to the judge. This note was sealed in an envelope and addressed in
- a fine hand. The judge opened it at once. When he had read it, he sat for
- some time looking down at the prisoner. He did not believe in dreams; but
- the insistence of his wife impressed him.
- </p>
- <p>
- He turned to the sheriff, and inquired if there was a man in the courtroom
- who knew anything about the prisoner.
- </p>
- <p>
- The sheriff indicated the others near him.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes, Your Honor,&rdquo; he replied, &ldquo;the minister, the school trustee of that
- district, and the doctor here, all know about him. He seems to have made
- himself generally troublesome to the community. I believe the justice of
- the peace had issued a warrant against him for practicing medicine without
- a license.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- When the circuit judge heard of this action of the justice, he ordered the
- School-teacher to be taken before that official. He said that if the
- justice of the peace has issued a warrant antedating the <i>rule</i>, he
- would yield to him the custody of the prisoner.
- </p>
- <p>
- They took the School-teacher out of the courthouse and across the village
- street to the office of the justice of the peace.
- </p>
- <p>
- The justice was greatly pleased when the deputy and Jonas came in with the
- prisoner. A good many stories had drifted down from the mountains to him
- concerning the miraculous cures which this man had effected, and he was
- anxious to see him. He removed his spectacles, put them carefully into a
- tin case, set his feet on the rounds of a chair and, after having thus
- made himself comfortable, he requested the School-teacher to explain to
- him in detail, exactly how he had accomplished the marvels of which he had
- heard.
- </p>
- <p>
- The School-teacher did not reply.
- </p>
- <p>
- He remained standing as he had stood before the circuit judge. His head
- lifted. The features of his face unmoving. His deep gray-blue eyes tilled
- with a tranquil, melancholy light.
- </p>
- <p>
- When the justice of the peace saw that his curiosity was not likely to be
- gratified, he, at once, sent the prisoner back to the circuit judge. He
- took this act of the judge to be a delicate courtesy, a tender regard for
- the jurisdictional rights of an inferior tribunal, and he was not to be
- outdone. In several instances the circuit judge had recently curtailed his
- jurisdiction, and he had been smarting under it. This act was a friendly
- overture, and he hastened to evidence his appreciation of it.
- </p>
- <p>
- He returned the prisoner, saying that as his warrant had not been served,
- his jurisdiction had not attached, and the prisoner was exclusively in the
- custody of the circuit court. Moreover, that he would hold his warrant in
- abeyance until the circuit court had disposed of the case.
- </p>
- <p>
- When the School-teacher came again before the circuit judge, that official
- no longer hesitated to indicate his opinion. He said that the prisoner did
- not seem disposed to contest the state's title to these lands, that he
- appeared to have taken up his residence in Nicholas Parks' house anterior
- to the date of the order, and upon some verbal direction of the decedent;
- that while there was here perhaps a technical contempt, he was not certain
- that it was intended, and consequently that he was disposed to dismiss the
- prisoner.
- </p>
- <p>
- The minister, the sheriff, the doctor, the old school trustee, under this
- informal procedure, came forward with a protest. They said that the
- School-teacher was a person dangerous to the community; that he had set
- himself against the authority of the state in disregarding the order of
- the court; that he had set himself against the authority of the county by
- disregarding the notice placed on the schoolhouse door; that he had openly
- violated the law in practicing medicine without a license; that he
- harbored immoral persons, and encouraged the children in acts of
- irreverence.
- </p>
- <p>
- The judge endeavored to compromise with this opposition. He said that he
- would reprimand the prisoner, suspend sentence and release him on his own
- recognizance.
- </p>
- <p>
- The general protest now took on a definite form. The minister spoke for
- the others. He was little accustomed to the diplomacy of the advocate and
- he thinly disguised the threat that was the tenor of this speech. He said
- that one in the position of a circuit judge ought to sustain the better
- elements of the community in their efforts to get rid of an undesirable
- person; that the will of the people was not lightly to be disregarded;
- that the object of making offices elective was that one who refused to
- consider what the people desired might be replaced by another; and the
- like.
- </p>
- <p>
- The judge came up presently for reelection. It was notice to him that the
- powerful elements which these protesting persons represented would hold
- him to account. The strength of his political party lay in these mountain
- counties. He required the support of these elements. And he especially
- feared a sectarian sentiment against him. He knew the danger of such a
- sentiment; and how little, once on its way, explanations would avail. This
- covert threat angered the judge, but he feared to resist it. He dipped his
- pen into the inkpot before him, and wrote an order committing the prisoner
- to the county jail. Then he handed it down to the sheriff.
- </p>
- <p>
- The persons standing about the sheriff drew near to him and read the
- order. The minister and the school trustee objected to something in the
- body of the writing, and the sheriff went with them to the judge.
- </p>
- <p>
- They pointed out that the order directed the commitment of the
- &ldquo;Schoolteacher of Hickory Mountain District,&rdquo; that this term was
- incorrect, that the prisoner had not been employed by the trustees, that
- he was not the School-teacher of Hickory Mountain District, and that the
- order ought not so to designate him.
- </p>
- <p>
- But the judge, smarting under the lash that had been laid on him, was in
- no mood to receive a further dictation.
- </p>
- <p>
- He refused to change what he had written.
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0017" id="link2HCH0017"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER XVII
- </h2>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">T</span>HE several persons
- who had forced the judge to commit the School-teacher to the county jail,
- having gone down from the courthouse, remained throughout the day in
- conference. It was evident that the circuit judge had acted against his
- own inclination, and that he could not be depended upon to hold the
- prisoner in custody. Some other method for ridding the community of this
- undesirable person must be found. Finally, after long reflection, they hit
- upon a plan.
- </p>
- <p>
- Night descended.
- </p>
- <p>
- In the village saloon, beyond the grove of oak trees behind the
- courthouse, the man who had received the money from the minister sat
- playing at cards. A rifle stood in the corner behind him. From time to
- time he arose, took up the rifle and went to the door. Keeping thus, in
- his fashion, an agreement which the sheriff had forgotten.
- </p>
- <p>
- The night advanced.
- </p>
- <p>
- At twelve o'clock the sheriff went down into the jail. He carefully
- unfastened the door opening into the grove of oak trees. Then he came
- along the corridor to the one iron cage that the jail contained. The door
- to this cage he likewise carefully unlocked. On a bedtick filled with
- straw, two men, convicted of larceny, were apparently asleep beside this
- door. On a bench against the wall behind them sat the School-teacher. His
- hat with its little crimson feather lay beside him. He sat unmoving,
- looking at something in his hand. When he observed the sheriff, he put the
- thing which he held in his hand back into the bosom of his coat. It was
- the broken toy horse which the little boy had given him. The sheriff
- beckoned with his finger.
- </p>
- <p>
- The School-teacher lifted his head and looked at the man, but he did not
- move from his place against the wall.
- </p>
- <p>
- The sheriff stepped delicately past the men, whom he believed to be
- asleep, and approached the School-teacher.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;The door's open,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;you can get out of the county before 't's
- daylight.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The School-teacher did not reply, and the sheriff went noiselessly out.
- Presently the two men got up from their pretended sleep and slipped out of
- the cage. The School-teacher rose and spoke to them. But they crept down
- the corridor. He followed. He came upon them as they opened the door
- leading out of the jail into the grove, stepped between them in the door
- and thrust them back. The act saved the men's lives, but it cost the
- School-teacher his own.
- </p>
- <p>
- There was the flash of a rifle from the saloon beyond the oak trees, and
- the School-teacher fell forward, his arms outstretched.
- </p>
- <p>
- In the evening some women and children from the mountains came to the
- circuit judge and asked him for the body of the School-teacher. He gave it
- to them, and at night they took it away.
- </p>
- <p>
- An ox, led by a little boy, bore the body, and women walking beside it
- supported it with their hands.
- </p>
- <p>
- They traveled back into the mountains.
- </p>
- <p>
- And at daybreak they laid the body in a grave which they had made between
- the two great hickories on the ridge beyond Nicholas Parks' house. They
- lined the grave with bright-colored leaves, and wrapped the body in that
- piece of linen which the School-teacher had bade the miller keep for him
- until he should need it. The hands of women and children filled the grave
- with earth. Then they went away down the mountain, toward the mill,
- leaving a woman crouched beside the grave. Her apron covering her yellow
- hail. Her body rocking.
- </p>
- <p>
- It was morning.
- </p>
- <p>
- They went down the mountain, the boy and the ox, the little girl, the two
- remaining women&mdash;one of them carrying a tiny sleeping boy wrapped in
- a shawl, a dog beside her.
- </p>
- <p>
- On a bench of the mountain below, where a tree, uprooted by the wind, lay
- with its broken trunk pointing toward the ridge, they stopped and looked
- back. As they looked, the sun arose, a disc of gold between the two great
- hickories.
- </p>
- <p>
- With a wild harking, the dog leaped onto the fallen trunk, ran out to the
- projecting end of it, and stood there looking toward the sun.
- </p>
- <p>
- The tiny boy moved 'n his mother's arms.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Nim see Teacher,&rdquo; he said.
- </p>
- <div style="height: 6em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-<pre>
-
-
-
-
-
-End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of The Mountain School-Teacher, by
-Melville Davisson Post
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-Project Gutenberg's The Mountain School-Teacher, by Melville Davisson Post
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most
-other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of
-the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at
-www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you'll have
-to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook.
-
-
-
-Title: The Mountain School-Teacher
-
-Author: Melville Davisson Post
-
-Release Date: May 2, 2016 [EBook #51958]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: ASCII
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE MOUNTAIN SCHOOL-TEACHER ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by David Widger from page images generously
-provided by the Internet Archive
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-THE MOUNTAIN SCHOOL-TEACHER
-
-By Melville Davisson Post
-
-D. Appleton and Company
-
-New York, London
-
-1922
-
-[Illustration: 0001]
-
-[Illustration: 0002]
-
-[Illustration: 0003]
-
-[Illustration: 0007]
-
-
-
-
-
-THE MOUNTAIN SCHOOL-TEACHER
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER I
-
-|THERE had once been a path along the backbone of the mountain, but the
-wilderness had undertaken to remove it, and had almost succeeded. The
-wind had gathered bits of moss, twigs and dead stuff into the slight
-depression. The great hickories had covered it with leaves. The rain
-had packed it. There was no longer a path, only an open way between the
-trees running down the gentle slope of the ridge to the mountain road.
-The ridge was heavily wooded. The primeval forest was there. Great
-hickories shot up sixty feet without a limb, and so close that a man
-putting out his hand could reach from one tree to another. A gigantic
-poplar now and then arose, a sugar maple, an oak--huge at the butt, deep
-rooted in the good soil.
-
-The afternoon sun, excluded of the forest, seemed to pack itself into
-this abandoned path.
-
-The leaves fallen from the hickories, under the touch of waning summer,
-took on now, by the magic of this sun, golden tones of red and yellow.
-Woodpeckers hammered on the great trees along this path. Insects moved
-between the branches, the wild bee, the hornet, the yellow butterfly, as
-though the aerial life of the woods had been drawn here to the sun.
-
-A man was coming through the forest along this abandoned path. He walked
-slowly, his hands behind him, his head bare. He was a very young man--at
-that period of life when, within a day, as by the crossing of some
-unmarked line, the boy becomes a man. There was about him the vigor, the
-freshness, the joy of youth, under a certain maturity. He was not above
-middle height, his face was oval, his eyes gray-blue, his hair of that
-soft rich brown which a touch of the sun burnishes into a living yellow;
-the mouth was sensitive and mobile.
-
-There was a marked contrast between the man and the wild, rugged,
-primitive country in which he appeared. His hands were firm and white,
-and his skin was not in the least discolored by sun or weather.
-
-Now and then the man stopped and looked up at the dappled woodpeckers,
-and the swarms of yellow butterflies, gathered here along this sunlit
-path as though to welcome his arrival, and his mouth relaxed into an
-eager, luminous smile, as though, despite his maturity, he retained a
-child's sense of some universal kinship with all living things. He came
-down the long ridge toward the place where the mountain road crossed the
-low gap.
-
-Half a mile below him a patriarchal ox was plodding slowly up the
-mountain road. The ox was old. His red hair was worn away in a variety
-of places, by long labors at the sled and the plow. His ancient horns
-were capped with brass knobs. Astride the ox sat a small boy on a sack
-of corn, perhaps a bushel and a half shelled from the cob. Under the
-sack was a strip of homemade carpet dyed yellow with copperas. The
-little boy guided the ox with a piece of old rope tied to the left
-horn below the brass knob, precisely as the driver of a four-horse team
-directs it with a single line. When he wished the ox to go to the right,
-he jerked the rope and shouted, "Gee, Berry," when to the left, he
-pulled on the rope and shouted, "Haw, Berry."
-
-But the ox no longer required these elaborate directions.
-
-"Gee,"
-
-"Haw," accompanied by a kicking of the rider's naked heels, were enough
-for the patriarch, or the soft heels alone on the broad iron ribs.
-
-The boy could not have been above six years old. He wore two garments, a
-little blue shirt of the material called "hickory," and short trousers,
-with tiny hand-knitted woolen "galluses."
-
-He was now engaged with an extreme difficulty.
-
-For more than a mile, under the ox's rolling gait, the corn had been
-moving over to one end of the sack. To keep the bag from falling, the
-boy had added his weight to the decreasing end. As the corn moved, he
-shifted his seat a little farther out on the sack. He sat now, well
-over the ox's side on the very end of the sack. His little mouth was
-contracted.
-
-It had been a long, painful struggle--this fight against the corn. Every
-inch, every fraction of an inch, contested.
-
-The grains had crept slowly over, and the child had considered and
-estimated the change, and moved with it. He had attributed to the corn
-a certain malicious intent, a certain insidious hostility, and he had
-resisted with dogged courage. It was all in the set of his little mouth,
-in the clutch of his tiny brown hand.
-
-For the sack to fall was a calamity which the child well understood.
-
-He could not lift the sack. He could not leave the ox and go for aid,
-because Berry, although a member of the family, was an eyeservant and
-not above making his dinner on the corn when the master's back was
-turned.
-
-Neither could he leave the corn lying in the road and return with
-the ox. Some one might carry it away and, besides, it was his bale of
-stuffs, the cargo with which he had been intrusted, and he could not
-leave it.
-
-The mountain road was deserted and the evening sun was beginning to
-descend.
-
-The child's whole energies were centered on his desperate struggle with
-the corn, and the ox traveled on leisurely as he liked. Presently, as
-he neared the top, the ox stepped on the root of a tree remaining in
-the road, and his shoulder went down. The sack slipped forward and fell,
-carrying with it the boy and the piece of carpet.
-
-The ox instantly stopped, the boy rose and sat down on the sack, resting
-his elbows on his knees and his chin in the hollow of his tiny brown
-hands. His features retained their set, dogged expression, but presently
-big tears began to trickle slowly down over his determined little face.
-He sat with his back toward the mountain gap, locking out over the vast
-wilderness of tree tops below him. The ox stood before him in the road,
-a figure of unending patience.
-
-The day waned, long shadows crossed the road, the sun withdrew to the
-high places. Far away through the deep wooded gorges night began to
-enter the mountains.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER II
-
-
-|WHEN the man came out into the mountain road, he saw the little boy
-sitting on the sack of corn beside the red ox, and he smiled as he had
-smiled at the hammering birds, at the yellow butterflies. He turned down
-toward the tragic picture, lengthening his steps. The sun, by some trick
-of the moving world, seemed to follow him out of the abandoned path.
-
-The little boy did not see the man approaching, but he observed that the
-ox, apparently resigned to passing the night on the mountain, was making
-ready to lie down, knees first, after the manner of cattle. And the
-comfortable assurance of Berry in this, the hour of their misfortune,
-was more than he could bear. He arose and began to beat the ox with his
-little fists.
-
-"Git up, Berry!" he cried. "You ole dog! You ole scalawag! Git up!"
-
-The ox slowly arose, and the child turned to find the man beside him.
-
-"Poor Berry!" said the man, smiling. "Is he a very bad ox?"
-
-"He's a lazy ole pup," replied the little hoy, his wet eyes catching
-and reflecting the stranger's smile. "He's spilt!" Then he crowded his
-little fists into his eyes to remove the traces of weakness with which
-he had been taken unawares.
-
-"Do you reckon," he said, "that both of us could put the corn on him if
-we lifted together?"
-
-"I think so," replied the man; "at least we will try."
-
-He took up the piece of yellow carpet and laid it over the ox's back.
-Then he stooped down, put his arms around the sack, linking his fingers
-together under it. The little hoy took hold of the corner. The man
-raised the sack with scarcely an effort, the child contributing his tiny
-might. Then, as though the child's help were essential to the task, he
-nodded.
-
-"Now," he said, and with a swing lifted the sack onto the ox's back.
-
-The hoy straightened up, and put both little hands on his hips. His face
-was now radiant.
-
-"We got it up all right, didn't we?" he said, "both a-liftin'; an' now,"
-he paused and regarded the ox with some concern, "I've got to git on
-somehow-er-nuther." The ordinary man would then have lifted the child
-and set him on the ox, but this man did not. He seemed to know and
-regard that self-reliance which was so dear a thing to this child. He
-stood back and looked over the patriarch.
-
-"Berry is a big ox," he said. "We will lead him up to the bank."
-
-The little boy walked across the road, with a bit of a swagger.
-
-"Yes," he said, "Berry's a big ox."
-
-He liked this strange man who understood and considered him.
-
-The man led the ox to the roadside, and standing by the beast's
-shoulder, set his knee against the bank. The little boy put his foot on
-the man's knee, caught hold of the ox's shoulder, and climbed up onto
-the sack of corn. He panted with the effort.
-
-"Berry's everlastin' big," he observed in comment. Then he set himself
-squarely on the sack.
-
-"We're goin' to mill," he said. "Where are you goin'?"
-
-"If you don't mind," replied the man, "I shall go along with you and
-Berry."
-
-The tiny chest expanded.
-
-"I don't mind," he said, "ner Berry don't neither."
-
-Then, as a sort of condescension, as a sort of return for the man's
-kindness, he gravely handed down the bit of ancient rope.
-
-"An' you k'n lead Berry if you want to."
-
-They crossed the low gap and began to descend the mountain on the other
-side. The man walked in front with the rope in his hand, the ox followed
-with a slow, roiling gait, his head lowered, the child sitting astride
-the sack of corn. The sun seemed to linger on the crest of the mountain
-as though loath, now, to withdraw wholly from the world, a vagrant
-breeze began to move idly in the tree tops, a faint haze to gather over
-the forests, below the sun, as though it were some visible odor arising
-from the earth.
-
-The road was steep and rough, low stumps and the roots of trees remained
-in it, and it was washed out in great ruts. The winter rain had carried
-the loose earth out of it and left the stones and the tree roots
-uncovered. A modern vehicle could hardly have kept together on such a
-road, although it bore the marks of wheels where the mountaineer had
-gone over with his wagon.
-
-The little boy sat regarding the man who walked before him in the road.
-He seemed not to have felt with this man that fear of the stranger which
-is so strong an instinct with a child. From the first moment he had been
-wholly at his ease. He spoke without restraint.
-
-"Where's your hat?" he said.
-
-The man paused, and put up his hand as though he had not until this
-moment realized that he was bareheaded.
-
-A note of distress came into the child's voice.
-
-"You've lost your hat. Are you goin' back to look for it? 'Cause me an'
-Berry can go on to the mill by ourselves."
-
-"No," said the man, "I shall go on with you and Berry."
-
-"But you ain't got no hat," the child continued.
-
-"Perhaps I shall find one somewhere," replied the man.
-
-"No," said the child, "you won't never find one, 'cause nobody don't
-lose their hats up here. You'll have to buy one at the store."
-
-Then he went on to tell of all the wonderful things that the store
-contained: Striped candy in sticks in a big glass jar, and fishhooks,
-and sea grass fishin' lines, and guns, and pistols, and knives. But
-principally knives. Upon this particular topic he spoke with deep
-personal interest. In that place of wonders were knives with six blades,
-with "peraly" handles, with gimlets and tweezers in them, little knives
-that one could hide between one's fingers and big ones with a ring in
-the handle so one could tie them to his "galluses." And Barlows with IXL
-on the blade.
-
-He paused and thrust his hand into his pocket. He had one that his
-grandfather had given him at Christmas, and he held it up--a Barlow with
-a bone handle and a single blade.
-
-The man stopped and came back to the ox's shoulder. He took the knife
-and examined it carefully, opened it and tried the edge on his thumb.
-The blade was round and blunt at the end. The child explained this with
-an air of apology.
-
-"Gran'-pap was afraid I'd run it in my eye, so he grinded it off. Have
-you got a knife?"
-
-The man felt in his pockets.
-
-"No," he replied, "I don't seem to have a knife."
-
-"Well," said the little boy, "you can git one when you go to git your
-hat."
-
-The man walked on by the ox's shoulder, and the child continued to talk.
-There were difficulties to be met. The store was very far away, and one
-required money to obtain its treasures. The getting of money was a very
-troublesome affair. But he knew a way or two by which the thing could
-be accomplished. One could gather hickory nuts or one could dig ginseng.
-The latter method was to be advised--a pound brought a dollar and
-seventeen cents. But it must be dried. One strung it on a string and
-hung it over the fireplace. The storekeeper would not take it green.
-
-He spoke a word of comment concerning the storekeeper.
-
-He was hard to fool. He always broke the ginseng roots to see if there
-was a nail concealed inside. The child knew a man who had outwitted the
-storekeeper once by putting shot in the ends of the root, leaving the
-middle unmolested; but, he added, that was "no way to do."
-
-The road on this side of the mountain was steep. The turns short. The
-little party soon reached the foot, and came out into a valley, cleared
-and sowed in timothy grass. Through this valley, between sodded banks,
-ran a dark-colored, swiftly flowing stream.
-
-The road followed the stream through the meadow until it approached the
-mill. There the stream descended swiftly over ridges of sandstone into a
-dam of ancient logs. The mill sat beside the road, its roof projecting,
-its porch raised above the ground, its door and its gable open, its
-entrance coated with white dust.
-
-The machinery was of the simplest, two stone burrs turned by a paddle
-wheel; the water carried down from the dam in a boxed sluice, covered
-with green moss.
-
-The mill evidently served two uses.
-
-There was a second door to one-half of it, also opening on the porch,
-and through the open door one could see a stove, a bed, a well-scrubbed
-table.
-
-As the man leading the red ox approached, a woman appeared in the mill
-door. She was a sturdy woman of middle life, her calico dress pulled
-up in front and girded around her ample waist with an apron string. Her
-sleeves were rolled to the elbows, and her fat, powerful hands rested on
-her hips. Her mouth was compressed, the muscles of her jaws protruded,
-her bright gray eyes rested on the strange man with a profound, unmoved
-scrutiny. When the ox stood beside the porch, the man spoke.
-
-"Good evening," he said.
-
-The woman did not reply, she jerked her head; then she came slowly out,
-still looking at the man.
-
-"Jump off, David," she said to the boy; then she took up the sack with
-ease, swung it into the hollow of her arm, and went with it into the
-mill, But over her shoulder she continued to regard the man standing in
-the road.
-
-She threw the sack down by the hopper, and came again into the mill
-door. Her fat hands returned to her hips and her eyes went again to the
-man. But she spoke to the boy.
-
-"You'll be late gittin' home."
-
-"I ain't goin' home," replied the child. "I'm goin' to Uncle Jimmie's,"
-and he pointed his linger up the valley.
-
-"You can make that by dark." said the woman, "but you better be movin'
-along."
-
-She came out and spread the piece of carpet on the ox. The small boy
-stepped off the mill porch and went out into the road behind the man,
-where a flat rock lay in the dust.
-
-He remained a moment squatted down on his bare legs. Then he returned,
-climbed onto the ox, and set out up the valley, kicking his heels
-against the patriarch's ancient ribs.
-
-At the bend of the road, the boy stopped and shouted. The man turned
-about where he was standing. The boy pointed his finger.
-
-"There's somethin' under that rock," he called.
-
-Then he swung around on his piece of carpet, spoke to the ox, and was
-swallowed up in the shadows of the valley.
-
-The man stooped down and turned the fiat stone over. There lay the
-Barlow knife.
-
-The woman, watching the man, suddenly brought her bent palm to her
-forehead and looked up at the mountain, to see if some stray bit of the
-setting sun had entered the valley. But there was nothing.
-
-Night had descended.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER III
-
-|THE man stood out in the road looking toward the south. The country
-under his eye was primitive. The mountains rose in benches, heavily
-wooded. On one of these benches stood a log house to be seen among the
-trees, faintly, where the mountain road passed. Behind it, far away, a
-strip of green lay like a cloth across the very top of the mountain--a
-bit of farm in which two immense hickory trees stood like pillars. These
-trees must have been gigantic, since at the great distance they were to
-the eye huge. The man standing in the road seemed to be considering this
-country. His face was lifted and, in repose, melancholy.
-
-The woman continued to regard the men standing in the road. Finally she
-spoke, swinging her body a moment on her sturdy legs.
-
-"You're the new School-teacher, I reckon."
-
-The man replied, without moving.
-
-"Yes," he said.
-
-"You're a little behindhand."
-
-"Yes."
-
-"You've come a good piece to-day, I reckon."
-
-"A long way."
-
-The woman took her fat right hand from her hips, and began to brush the
-skirt of her calico dress, although there was nothing on it to remove.
-
-"Well," she said, "you better come in and git your supper."
-
-The man turned and faced the woman.
-
-His features appeared by a powerful effort to exclude something which
-he wished not to show and had been until this moment not wholly able to
-conceal.
-
-"You are very kind," he said. "I am hungry."
-
-"Just set down on the porch." said the woman. "We've had our supper, but
-I'll git you a bite."
-
-The man came over and sat down, his hands idly on his knees, his face
-looking out toward the mountains. The woman began her preparations for
-the stranger's meal. She entered the room where the wooden table stood,
-crossed to a cupboard, opened it and took out some dishes. These she
-began to put on the table. Then she stopped and stood with her hands
-resting on her hips. A moment later she removed the dishes, went over
-to a chest, standing in the corner, lifted the lid, took out a clean
-homespun linen cloth, and spread it over the table.
-
-As she moved about she talked.
-
-"When are you goin' to begin school?"
-
-"Monday morning," replied the man. "Word ought to be sent 'round."
-
-"I think the children will come."
-
-"They'll come when they know it, an' they'll know it purty soon; news
-travels powerful fast. We looked for you yesterday."
-
-"Yes."
-
-"Somethin' kept you back, I s'pose."
-
-"Yes."
-
-"Well, there's allers somethin' to happen. You won't have much of a
-school, I expect. The big boys have all gone off to the sawmills, an'
-the big girls are helpin' with the work. It's a mighty busy time."
-
-"I would rather have the little children."
-
-"They're a heap of bother."
-
-"I don't think I shall mind the bother."
-
-"Don't you? Most people do. They're harder to teach than the big ones,
-ain't they?"
-
-"I think they are easier to teach."
-
-"Do you? What makes you think they're easier to teach?"
-
-"They understand me better," replied the man.
-
-The woman had taken down an old glass bowl with a notched glass cover
-from the top shelf of the cupboard, rinsed it with water, wiped it
-carefully and set it on the table. In this she had placed a comb of red,
-mountain honey. She continued to talk.
-
-"I want Martha to go to school. She's a-goin' on nine. I can't spare her
-very well, but I don't want to keep her back. She saves me a good many
-steps. She's gone after the cow. She ought to be comin'."
-
-The woman was busy at the stove.
-
-"I don't see why a cow can't learn somethin', can't learn to come home
-at night, anyway. Everything else learns to come home at night. Ketch a
-dog forgittin' it. I 'spose old Bloss has gone as fur as she could git,
-an' you can't allears hear the bell. But Martha'll find her."
-
-The woman came from the stove to the table.
-
-"Martha can read, an' she can spell out of the spellin' book. She's real
-smart."
-
-A stone jar sat on a bench in the corner of the room, beside it was a
-yellow gourd with a long handle, the bowl of the gourd cut out to form
-a dipper. The woman got a plate out of the cupboard. A very old plate,
-somewhat chipped, with quaint little flowers painted on it in bright
-colors. The plate had not been used for a long time. It was covered with
-white dust. She carried the plate over to the jar, dipped up some water
-with the gourd, and holding the plate over a bucket, poured on the
-water, then she polished the plate carefully with a cloth and set it on
-the table. Her conversation continued.
-
-"The schoolhouse is old, but it's got a good roof on it. It'll turn the
-weather. Ole man Dix put that roof on three years ago. The clapboards
-are all smoothed with a drawin' knife. He was so slow that it made you
-tired jest to see him workin', but he done a good job. He used to have a
-savin' that he got out of the Bible--when you made fun of him for bein'
-so slow. He must have heard it in meetin'. He couldn't read. But I've
-heard him say it over an' over a thousand times, I reckon--'He that
-believeth shall not make haste.' I don't know what he believed. I know
-he was never paid nothin' for puttin' on the roof."
-
-"How do you know that he was not paid?" said the man.
-
-"I know it very well," said the woman. "He was dyin' of the janders all
-the time. He sawed the comb of the roof the very day before he went."
-
-The iron skillet on which the woman was baking cakes, overheated, at
-this moment caught fire. She lifted it from the stove, blew out the
-flame, and turned the cake with a deft twist of her hand.
-
-Engaged with the pancakes for the man's supper, her conversation became
-a monologue.
-
-She reviewed the families living in the mountains, enumerated the
-children, named them, classed them as good or bad with a few clear
-strokes and attached the history of their ancestors, running on, as she
-moved about. Then, when she had finished, she got a little yellow bowl
-from the cupboard and came with it in her hand to the door.
-
-"I wonder what's keepin' Martha," she murmured.
-
-At the door she came near to dropping the bowl out of her hand in her
-astonishment. A little figure in a red calico sun-bonnet sat beside the
-man on the mill porch; close beside him in the gloom of the descending
-night.
-
-"Goodness!" said the woman. "How you skeered me. When did you git back?"
-
-The child arose, laughing. In the darkness only the bonnet, the short
-dress, the little white legs were visible.
-
-"While you were talkin', Mother," she replied.
-
-"Bless my life!" said the woman. "I didn't hear you." She handed the
-child the bowl. "Run along to the spring house and git some butter."
-
-The woman went back into the room, got a tallow candle, squeezed it
-into an old brass candlestick, and set it on the table. In a moment
-the little girl returned with the butter. She regarded the table for a
-moment, then she removed the old blue plate, drew out from under the
-bed a store box with a lid fastened with leather hinges--evidently her
-private chest--took out a plate, washed it with boiling water from the
-teakettle, and set it on the table. It was a little, cheap, porcelain
-plate with the letters of the alphabet raised around the rim. The woman
-watched the child with a certain smiling condescension. Then she went to
-the door, wiped her hands on her apron, stood back by the doorpost, and
-spoke to the man.
-
-"Now," she said, "if you'll come in to supper."
-
-The man got up, came into the room, and sat down at the table. Before
-him on the clean linen cloth were honey, brown corncakes, and a goblet
-of milk. The light of the candle seemed to gather and illumine his face;
-and curiously to bring out in his brown hair those touches of living
-yellow which the sun had so strikingly indicated on this afternoon.
-And more curiously, too, there was no stain of travel, no evidence of
-fatigue on the man. Instead of it, there was an abiding glow of fresh,
-vital, alluring youth.
-
-The woman moved about, setting the room in order, the little girl stood
-by the man's chair.
-
-Presently the woman finished and came over to the table, bringing with
-her a heavy, hickory, split-bottom chair. She stopped, snuffed the
-candle, and then sat down opposite the man. Her hands, as though
-accustomed to constant occupation, wandered to the table, smoothed
-the cloth by stretching the two corners, flicked away invisible dust.
-Finally she spoke.
-
-"You're goin' to board around, I 'spose."
-
-"No," replied the man, "I'm going to stay at Nicholas Parks' house."
-
-The woman dropped her hands into her lap. Her mouth opened with
-astonishment.
-
-"Not with ole Nicholas!" she said. "Why, the devil couldn't live with
-ole Nicholas! He's the meanest man that ever drawed the breath of life!
-He wouldn't give you a meal's vittels if it was to save you from dying!"
-
-She arose to her feet.
-
-"Dear me!" she said, "that won't do at all." She walked about the room
-moving articles of furniture, and crumpling her apron in her fat hands.
-Finally she came back to the table.
-
-"It ain't cold," she said, "an' if you could sleep in the mill loft, you
-could stay right here with us."
-
-She hastened to explain.
-
-"You could help me grind on Saturdays--that's the busiest day, an'
-maybe, if you're handy with tools, you could patch up the mill some. The
-wheel needs a new paddle, an' you could board up the loft, an' you could
-put in some steps."
-
-The man listened.
-
-"Yes," he said, "I can work with tools; I will do these things for you."
-
-"Then you'll stay," said the woman.
-
-"I am sorry," replied the man, "but I cannot stay."
-
-The woman sat down in her chair.
-
-"How you'll git on with ole Nicholas, I don't see," she said.
-
-"He will not be there," said the man.
-
-"Not be there!" the woman repeated.
-
-"No," replied the man, "he is going away."
-
-The woman's face became, on the instant, incredulous.
-
-The little girl, standing beside the man, saw it and shook her head. The
-woman, her mouth open, her chin lifted, marked the signal and respected
-it. She dropped her hands into her lap.
-
-"Well!" she said, and after a moment, to establish her composure, "you
-can't go on to ole Nicholas' to-night,--it's dark now."
-
-"I am going to the schoolhouse tonight," replied the man.
-
-"You're more'n welcome to stay with us," said the woman, "if you'll
-stay."
-
-The man had now finished his supper, and he rose.
-
-"I know that," he said, "you are very kind to me."
-
-The woman got up and went to the door.
-
-"Dear me," she said, "I hate to see you goin' out in the night."
-
-The man stopped to kiss the little girl.
-
-"I don't mind the night," he said. "I have some things to do."
-
-"The schoolhouse will need cleanin' up," said the woman, "an'
-to-morrow's Sunday. I ought to a-helped you clean it."
-
-"You have already helped me more than you realize," replied the man. "If
-I need further help, another will help me."
-
-Then he went down into the road. There was no moon, but under the
-brilliant stars, the road became a vague white way, leading the stranger
-up into the deeps of the forest.
-
-The woman remained standing in the door. Presently the little girl
-spoke.
-
-"Mother," she said, "the Teacher has no clothes, he didn't even have a
-little bundle."
-
-The woman came back to the table. She stood a moment with her hand
-resting on her hip.
-
-"That's so," she said. "I reckon he didn't bring any. Carryin' things
-gits powerful tiresome, when you come a long ways."
-
-Then the dominant quality in the woman--the instinct to find a resource
-for every condition that arose, moved her. She went over to the
-fireplace, above which, on the high mantel shelf sat an ancient clock.
-She stood on her tiptoes, opened the clock door, and took out a little
-brass key, then she crossed to the foot of the bed, stooped and dragged
-a little old horsehide trunk out into the floor. She fitted the key into
-the lock, but it was rusted and would not turn. The trunk had not been
-opened for many years. She came back to the table and rubbed the key
-with melted tallow from the candle.
-
-"There are some fine shirts in that trunk that we could give him," she
-said. "Your grandma give them to your pap at our infair. She made them
-herself. But he never wore them. He said, they was too fine to skuff
-out. An' they've laid there for ten years. They're a heap too big for
-the Teacher. Your pap was twice as big as he is. But I can cut off the
-sleeves and take up the neckband, so he can wear them. They're good
-linen. Your grandma was mighty handy."
-
-The little girl had removed the dishes from the table, while the woman
-was opening the trunk. She now came and held the horsehide lid, while
-her mother searched for the articles. Finally the woman found the
-shirts. She found also, at the bottom of the trunk, a folded piece of
-linen, as though that one making the shirts had used only a portion of
-her material.
-
-"Well, upon my word," she said, "if here ain't a big piece that your
-grandma didn't make up."
-
-She brought the shirts over to the table where the candle stood. She
-regarded them with surprise and admiration.
-
-"Bless my life, they're nice," she said, "not a yaller spot on them."
-
-A moment she stood in rapt appreciation of the beautiful, snowy linen.
-Then she caught up one of the shirts and spread the neckband with her
-fingers.
-
-"Well! Upon my soul!" she said. "Upon my soul!"
-
-She held the shirt up and measured it from shoulder to shoulder, and
-from the neckband to the wrist.
-
-"Why, they'll fit him! They'll fit him just as good as if they'd been
-made for him. If that don't beat all! Your pap was over six feet, and
-long armed. Now, how in the name of common sense did your grandma ever
-make such a mistake? It ain't like your grandma--she always sewed by
-pinnin' and measurin'."
-
-The little girl was not listening. She had gone out onto the mill porch.
-She now spoke, but not in reply to these exclamations.
-
-"There are lights up at the schoolhouse, Mother."
-
-The woman, still under her surprise, replied without looking up.
-
-"I reckon the Teacher's cleanin' the schoolhouse."
-
-"But the lights look like they went up an' down through the tree tops."
-
-"I suppose he's carryin' water down from the spring on the mountain,"
-replied the woman, still bending over the shirts that lay spread out on
-the table.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IV
-
-
-|AT SUNRISE the following morning, a man riding a lean bay horse came
-down the mountain road toward the mill. His left hand was deformed, as
-though from infancy. The fingers doubled in against the wrist. He held
-the bridle rein, tied in a knot, over the crook of his arm. He was a big
-man and he sat in the saddle as though more accustomed to that seat than
-to any other. The horse traveled in a running walk. He turned into
-the little valley and approached the mill. The miller was feeding her
-chickens in the road before the door, throwing out handfuls of yellow
-corn. The man called to her before the horse stopped.
-
-"Have you got enough of that corn for a horse-feed, Sally?"
-
-The woman turned, scattering the chickens.
-
-"Bless my life," she said, "it's the doctor. Where you been?"
-
-"Up there," he replied, jerking his deformed arm toward the summit of
-the mountain where lay the bit of farm, marked by the gigantic trees.
-
-"Is ole Nicholas sick?" said the woman. "He ain't sick now," replied the
-doctor. "You cured h'm, did you?"
-
-"No, I didn't cure him," said the doctor, getting down from his horse;
-"they were dyin' in Hickory Mountain before I come into it, an' they'll
-keep on a-dyin' after I've gone out."
-
-He lifted his leather saddlebags down from the horse and carried it
-across to the mill porch.
-
-The woman remained standing in the road, her closed hand full of corn,
-the yellow grains showing between her fingers.
-
-"You arn't tellin' me ole Nicholas is dead!"
-
-"Yes, he's dead," said the doctor. "New get me a gallon of corn; that
-horse ain't had a bite to eat since yesterday evening."
-
-He went across the road, picked up a box, knocked the dust out of it
-and brought it over by the mill porch. Then he took the bit out of
-the horse's mouth, and put the bridle rein over the saddle, under the
-stirrup leather.
-
-"Ole Nicholas dead!" the woman repeated. "Well! Upon my word!"
-
-"Why shouldn't he be dead?" said the doctor. "Every damn thing's got to
-die."
-
-"What killed him?" inquired the woman.
-
-"I don't know what killed him," replied the doctor. "He was stretched
-out on the floor when I got there."
-
-"Did he die just like anybody else?" said the woman.
-
-"No," answered the doctor, "he didn't die like anybody that I ever saw.
-Will you get me that corn?"
-
-The woman went into the mill and presently came out with the toll
-measure full of corn. She poured it into the box. Then she sat down
-on the porch beside the doctor, and began to roll the end of her apron
-between her fat fingers.
-
-"When did ole Nicholas take down?" she began.
-
-"I don't know that," said the doctor. "Jonas Black was crossing the
-mountain about noon, an' old Nicholas called to him and told him to tell
-me to come and see him. I went up last night."
-
-"It's a wonder you went," said the miller. "Ole Nicholas wouldn't pay
-you, would he?"
-
-"If he didn't pay me, I wouldn't go," replied the doctor, "you can
-depend on that. I've quit bringin' 'em in or seein' 'em out unless I get
-the cash in my hand."
-
-"I didn't think he had any money. He was always buyin' wild lands of the
-State."
-
-"I don't know how much money he had," replied the doctor, "but I do know
-that it was always there on the table for me when I went. If it hadn't
-a-been, I wouldn't have darkened his door."
-
-"Did he die hard?" said the woman. "Everybody dies hard," replied the
-doctor.
-
-"Did he want to go?"
-
-"None of us want to go."
-
-"How long did he live after you got there?"
-
-"He lived until daylight."
-
-"You must have had a bad night of it."
-
-"It was awful!"
-
-"It must a-been terrible if you thought so. You are used to seein'
-people die."
-
-"I'm not used to seein' them die like old Nicholas died," replied the
-doctor. "He must a-been in powerful pain."
-
-"It wasn't so much pain. I could stop the pain."
-
-"Was he out of his head then?"
-
-"I don't know."
-
-"Couldn't you tell by the way he talked?"
-
-"He didn't talk."
-
-"Did he see things?"
-
-"I don't know what he saw."
-
-"What was it that made his dyin' so awful?"
-
-"It was _fear_," replied the doctor,
-
-"That he'd be lost?"
-
-"No," said the doctor, "that he'd die before he could tell me something
-that he was tryin' to tell me."
-
-"Goodness! Was he tryin' to tell you somethin' all night?"
-
-"All night," said the doctor.
-
-The woman sat for a moment in silence, her fat hands clasped together in
-her lap, the muscles of her face tense, her eyes fixed on the mountain,
-then she spoke. "Did he ever tell you?"
-
-"Yes."
-
-"Was it somethin' he'd done?"
-
-"N," replied the doctor, "it was not anything he'd done."
-
-"What was it?"
-
-"I did not understand it," replied the doctor.
-
-The woman rose.
-
-"Good Lord!" she said, "a man on his deathbed a-trying all night to tell
-you somethin' an' then you didn't understand it!"
-
-"No, I didn't understand it," said the doctor. "He kept
-whisperin'--'He's comin,' he's comin'. He's to have my things,' an' I
-kept askin' him if he meant some of his kin folks, but he always shook
-his head. I never saw a man in such mortal agony to speak. Finally just
-before he died, he got it out. He said, 'The Teacher.' Now, what did he
-mean?"
-
-"I know who he meant," replied the woman, "he meant the School-teacher."
-
-"What School-teacher?"
-
-"Why, the new School-teacher, the one that come last night. He was goin'
-to stay with Nicholas."
-
-The horse had now finished with his breakfast, the doctor got up.
-
-"I didn't know you had a Schoolteacher," he said.
-
-He went over to the horse, put the bit into its mouth, took up his
-leather saddle-hags and thrust his foot into the stirrup.
-
-"See here, Sally," he said, "old Nicholas wanted me to get up at his
-funeral and say that he had left everything to the 'Teacher.' I suppose
-he meant this new School-teacher. I told him I'd see to it. Now, I don't
-want to come back here; couldn't you do it? The country will likely
-gather up and bury him this afternoon."
-
-He swung up into the saddle and hooked the bridle rein over his crooked
-arm.
-
-"Yes, I'll do that," said the woman. The doctor clucked to his horse,
-and disappeared down the little valley; his arm rising and falling with
-the regular motion of the swinging walk.
-
-The woman remained standing in the road, her hands spread out on her
-hips. She had suddenly remembered that the guest of last night had said
-that Nicholas Parks was going away!
-
-At noon the miller and her little girl set out up the mountain.
-
-They did not go by the road that wound tortuously through the forest to
-the summit. They followed a path that ascended more directly, crossing
-the road now and then, and climbing up steep ascents to the top, where
-it ended in the road running along the high ridge, through the little
-mountain farm.
-
-The farm was inclosed on either side by a rail fence. Below it was a
-cornfield of several acres, above a bit of fertile meadow, in which, on
-the very ridge, stood two gigantic trees lifting their branches eighty
-feet into the sky.
-
-A dozen paces of beautiful green turf lying between the great
-shellbarks.
-
-Farther out stood a log house with a clapboard roof and a chimney built
-halfway up with stone and finished with crossed sticks, daubed with
-yellow clay. Behind it was a garden inclosed with palings split out of
-long cuts of hickory timber. Midway between the garden and the house,
-opposite the door, was a whitewashed well curb. From a long pole,
-suspended in a forked tree on a round locust pin, hung a sapling
-fastened to a bucket. Everything about the little farm was well kept.
-The chimney and the palings were whitewashed, the fence was well laid
-up, the bit of land was clean. Midway in the meadow, a path entered
-through wooden bars and ran along inside the rail fence to the house.
-
-There was a little crowd of some half dozen men standing about these
-bars, when the woman and child came up.
-
-The woman stopped in the road.
-
-"What are you all standin' around for?" she said.
-
-The men did not immediately reply. Finally one of them answered.
-
-"We're waitin' for the preacher to come."
-
-The woman looked at the apparently vacant house. The door open. The sun
-lying on the threshold.
-
-"There's a-plenty to do, till he gits here," she said. "Somebody's got
-to dig a grave, an' somebody's got to make a coffin."
-
-The man leaning against the bar post, who had spoken for the others, now
-jerked his head toward the meadow'.
-
-"It's dug," he said.
-
-The woman looked in the direction he indicated; a pile of fresh earth
-lay heaped up in the meadow', not between the two trees, but below'
-them, some paces from the summit.
-
-"Well," said the woman, "you didn't pick out the place I'd a picked; I'd
-a put it on the ridge between them two trees, that's the natural place
-for it, there couldn't be no grander place. Who did you think you was
-savin' that place for? It looks like you was puttin' ole Nicholas so
-he'd be at the foot of somebody else that you was a-goin' to bury."
-
-"We didn't pick the place," said the man.
-
-"Who done it?"
-
-"We don't know who done it, the grave was dug when we got here."
-
-The conversation was interrupted by the little girl.
-
-"There comes the preacher," she said.
-
-The woman turned and looked down the road in the direction from which
-she had just come.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER V
-
-|A MAN driving a country buggy was approaching. He was a tall, spare
-man, in a suit of black ready-made clothes that seemed not to fit him in
-any place, and to be a cheap imitation of a clergyman's frock suit.
-He wore cotton gloves. At his feet was a shiny handbag made of some
-inexpensive material to imitate alligator skin. His hair and his heavy,
-drooping mustache were black. His face was narrow, the cheek bones high,
-the mouth straight. One of the man's eyes was partly grown over with
-a cataract, and his effort to see equally with that eye gave him a
-curious, squinting expression. He pulled up on the roadside, got out,
-tied his horse to a fence rail with one of the lines, took out his
-handbag, and came over to the little group waiting by the bars.
-
-"Good evening, brethren," he said. "The doctor told me that Nicholas
-Parks had been called to his account, so I came up to give him Christian
-burial."
-
-"He died sudden, I guess," replied one of the men.
-
-"It's God's way," said the preacher. "The sinner is taken in the
-twinkling of an eye."
-
-He drew off his cotton gloves and put them into his pocket.
-
-"Have any preparations been made for the burial?" he inquired.
-
-"The grave's dug," said one of the men.
-
-"How about the coffin?"
-
-"We don't know about the coffin, we haven't been to the house."
-
-"Is any one up at the house?"
-
-"We think the new School-teacher's up there. Little David went up to
-see, but he ain't come back."
-
-"I didn't know the new School-teacher had come."
-
-"He got here last night," said the miller.
-
-"What kind of a man is he?"
-
-"He's a man that the children will like," replied the woman.
-
-"Children," said the preacher, "are not competent judges of men. Let us
-go up to the house. Is he elderly?"
-
-"I thought he was mighty young," said the woman.
-
-"The young," replied the preacher, "are rarely impressed with the awful
-solemnity of God's commandments."
-
-"I think he's a good man," said the woman. "Martha loved him right away,
-an' I'd trust him with anything I've got."
-
-"Our Mother Eve trusted the serpent," replied the preacher.
-
-And he extended his right arm, the fingers stiffly together, the thumb
-up.
-
-"The youth of the community ought to be brought up in the fear of God."
-
-During the conversation, the miller's little daughter had gone on to the
-house.
-
-Something vague, intangible, undefined had stopped the men in the road
-below the house, and made them await the arrival of the preacher. But
-that thing had not affected the children. The little boy David and this
-child had gone on without the least hesitation.
-
-The preacher threw down one of the pole bars and went through into the
-meadow. The others followed him along the path to the house. As they
-drew near they heard the voices of the children. At the threshold the
-preacher stopped, and those behind him crowded up to look into the
-house.
-
-The door was open. The sun entering, filled the room with light.
-
-On chairs in the middle of this room stood a coffin made of the odds
-and ends of rough hoards, but marvelously joined. Beside it stood the
-School-teacher, and at either end was one of the children; the three of
-them were fitting a board on the coffin for a and, and they were talking
-together.
-
-When the minister entered, the Schoolteacher removed the board and laid
-it down on the floor, and the two children, as by some instinct, drew
-near to the man, on either side, and took hold of his hands.
-
-They became instantly silent.
-
-The minister went up to the chair, looked a moment into the coffin and
-took his place at the head of it. The others followed.
-
-The dead man lay in the rough box like one asleep. There was in his face
-a peace so profound that the hard, mean, ugly features of this old man
-seemed to have been remodeled under some marvelous fingers.
-
-The minister, with his bad eye, seemed not to observe this
-transfiguration, but the others marked it and crowded around the coffin.
-
-The minister took out his watch, looked at it, and snapped the case.
-
-"If you will find seats, we'll begin the service," he said. "The
-stranger here seems to have made all necessary preparations for the
-burial."
-
-The crowd drew back from the coffin, the School-teacher went and sat
-in the doorway in the sun; the little boy standing up by his knees, the
-little girl beside him on the doorstep.
-
-The minister began a discourse on the horrors of an eternal hell.
-
-But the attention of the audience moved past him to the man seated in
-the door. The harmony, grouping the man and these two children, seemed
-to enter and fill the room. A certain common sympathy uniting them, as
-though it were the purity of childhood.
-
-The man sitting in the door did not move.
-
-He looked out toward the south over a sea of sun washing a shore of tree
-tops. A vagrant breath of the afternoon moved his brown hair. He seemed
-not to hear the minister, not to regard the service, but to wait like
-one infinitely patient with the order of events.
-
-When the preacher had finished, the miller, sitting in a chair by the
-window, rose.
-
-"Just before ole Nicholas died," she said, "he made the doctor promise
-to git up here at his funeral an' tell everybody that he left all his
-things to the Schoolteacher. The doctor couldn't come back, so he asked
-me to git up an' tell it for him."
-
-The minister turned toward the woman.
-
-"Left his property to this stranger?"
-
-"Yes," said the woman, "he tried all night to tell the doctor, an' he
-was mortally afeard that he would die before he could tell it."
-
-The School-teacher was now standing in the door. Beside him, and framing
-in his body, dust danced in the sun, making a haze of gold.
-
-The minister addressed him.
-
-"Why did Nicholas Parks leave his possessions to you?"
-
-The School-teacher did not reply.
-
-He went over to the coffin, lifted the lid and began to fit it on the
-box. The men standing around the room came forward and took the coffin
-up. They carried it out of the house, their hands under the bottom of
-it. The preacher picked up his satchel and followed. Outside he stopped,
-pointed to the grave in the meadow, and spoke to the School-teacher.
-
-"You didn't put that grave where old Nicholas wanted it. He wanted to be
-buried on the top of the ridge between those two trees. It was a place
-he had picked out. He told me so at the last quarterly meeting."
-
-The School-teacher lifted his face and looked at the two great hickories
-marking the spot on the summit of the little meadow. His eyes filled
-with melancholy shadows, the smile deepened and saddened about his
-mouth. But he did not reply.
-
-Then he walked away to where the two children stood, some distance from
-the path.
-
-The minister followed the coffin to the grave, but the School-teacher
-went with the two children through the meadow to the spot of green
-between the two hickories. He sat down there in the deep clover, the
-children beside him. Below came the sound of the earth on the coffin,
-and the high-pitched nervous voice of the minister. The School-teacher
-talked with the children.
-
-After a while a shadow fell across the grass.
-
-The minister was standing beside them. He had come up from the filled
-grave and the carpet of the meadow had hidden the sound of his approach.
-He spoke to the School-teacher.
-
-"Do you think that you are old enough to teach the children the fear of
-God?"
-
-"I shall not teach them the fear of God."
-
-"Then I don't see how you are going to give them any Christian
-instruction."
-
-The man sitting among the deep clover blossoms, looked up at the
-minister's face.
-
-"Isn't there something growing over your eye?" he said.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VI
-
-|THE School-teacher came out of the door of Nicholas Parks' house.
-It was early in the morning. Frost glistened on the rails of the worm
-fence. The air was crisp and sweet.
-
-There was a smell of faint wood smoke.
-
-The door of the house was fastened with a wooden latch on the inside
-from which a black leather string, tied in a knot, issuing from a worn
-hole, hung on the outside of the door. The man drew the door close
-and, pulling the string, dropped the latch into place. Then he left the
-house, walking slowly.
-
-In the direction that he moved there was no path. He crossed the little
-meadow, south of the house, climbed the rail fence and entered the
-forest. There was still no path, although the man moved like one who
-followed land marks that he knew.
-
-He descended through the forest for perhaps half a mile in the deep
-leaves.
-
-Then he came abruptly on a path that entered a little cove and continued
-around a shoulder of the mountain. A spring of water issuing here from a
-limestone strata trickled into a keg buried in the earth. On the broken
-branch of a dogwood sapling, beside the spring, hung a mottled gourd.
-
-The School-teacher stopped, dipped the gourd into the crystal water, and
-drank.
-
-At this moment three figures came into view along the path from
-the opposite direction: a child about two years old, a woman, and a
-rough-haired yellow dog.
-
-The child came first. He walked with the uncertain tottering gait of
-very little children. He wore a clean, white, muslin dress, a tiny apron
-and cheap baby shoes, such as one sees hanging on a string over the
-counter of mountain stores. He was a sturdy little boy, with soft yellow
-hair, burnished at the tips like that of the School-teacher, and big
-gray-blue eyes. He was laughing, stopping now and then to look back at
-the dog following, and his mother; and then running along ahead.
-
-The woman was young and slender. Her face, tanned by the weather, was
-a deep olive. Her hair was black, lustrous and heavy, and hung down her
-back in a thick plait. Her eyes were dark and big. The whole aspect of
-the woman was that of one untimely matured, and permanently saddened.
-Her blue dress was of a cheaper material than that of the child's.
-
-She carried a tin bucket with a wooden handle.
-
-The woman and the dog stopped when they saw the School-teacher standing
-by the spring. But the child greeted the stranger in his baby dialect.
-
-"How-da-do man," he said. He went on, the little feet tottering over the
-uneven path. When he reached the Schoolteacher, he spoke again.
-
-"Up-a-go," he said.
-
-The man stooped and lifted the child into his arms. The sunny smile that
-lighted the baby face seemed to enter and illumine his own. Something
-of it, too, moved into the face of the woman, but the cast there of
-perpetual melancholy seemed loath to depart, as though the muscles were
-unaccustomed to a change.
-
-The child turned about in the man's arms, and pointed his finger toward
-two catbirds that were fluttering in a neighboring bush.
-
-"Giggles," he said.
-
-The manner in which the woman's big melancholy eyes followed every
-motion of the little boy indicated how her heart enveloped him. He was
-evidently her one treasure. The smile, struggling to possess the woman's
-face, seemed to descend and sweeten her mouth.
-
-"He means them birds," she said. "He's got a kind a talk of his own."
-
-"I understand him perfectly," said the man.
-
-"Do you?" said the woman, the smile gaining in her face. "I thought
-nobody could understand him but me. You must take to little children."
-
-"I love little children," replied the School-teacher.
-
-The child put his hand into the pocket of his apron and drew out a
-battered toy--a cheap, little, painted, wooden toy, so broken and worn
-that no one could tell what animal it was originally intended to
-represent. He held it up for the Schoolteacher's admiration.
-
-"Gup," he said.
-
-"He means a horse," the woman explained. "He's heard folks down to the
-mill say 'git up' to horses they was ridin', an' he thinks that's the
-name of it, but he's got names of his own. Now he calls a bird an' a
-fish an' a mouse a 'giggle.' I don't know why. Because a bird ain't like
-a fish, an' neither one of them ain't like a mouse."
-
-"I believe I understand why he gives them all the same name," replied
-the School-teacher.
-
-The woman came closer to the man and the child. Her eyes took on an
-expression of deep inquiry.
-
-"What do you reckon is the reason? I've thought about it often."
-
-"I think it's because a bird, a fish and a mouse all appear to him to
-have the same motion, to wiggle."
-
-The woman's face cleared. "I never thought of that. I reckon that is it.
-But now, he's got names that ain't like the things at all. Because he
-calls milk 'bugala' and there ain't no such word as 'bugala.' An' if
-it's sour or anything he calls it 'nim bugala.'"
-
-The woman recalled with the word, the morning when, to wean him, she had
-blackened her breast with charcoal, and the child had pushed away the
-blackened breast with his little hand and said, "nim bugala."
-
-"And he calls everything else to eat 'A B.' Now why would he call milk
-'bugala' an' bread an' butter 'A B'?"
-
-The School-teacher saw that this mystery attaching to the child was dear
-to the woman, and he could not disturb it.
-
-"Little children are very wonderful," he said.
-
-"They are wonderful," the woman continued. "Just think of the things
-they learn when they are real little."
-
-She jerked her head toward the dog remaining behind her in the road.
-
-"Why, he learned Jim's name when he was awful little. He called him
-'Nim' an' that's purty near right."
-
-Her face again became deeply thoughtful.
-
-"I'd like to know if his word 'nim,' like he says 'nun bugala,' has
-anything to do with Jim's name. It sounds like it, but I don't see how
-it could be, because 'nim' means something that he don't like, an' he
-does like Jim. He's powerful fond of Jim."
-
-The School-teacher thoughtfully considered the problem.
-
-"It might be that he has watched you give Jim the things that you did
-not want to eat yourself, and so he came to the conclusion that all such
-food belonged to Jim. It would not mean that he did not like Jim. It
-would only mean that the things that did not taste right to him ought to
-be given to Jim. They were not good things, they were 'nim' things."
-
-The woman's mouth opened.
-
-"Dear me," she said, "just think of him putting things together like
-that, an' him so little?"
-
-Then she looked up at the man with a sort of wonder.
-
-"Why, you understand him better than I do, an' I'm his mother. Maybe
-you're married an' got a little boy of your own."
-
-"I was never married," replied the man.
-
-"Then maybe you've got a little baby brother."
-
-"No."
-
-"Was there never any little children at your house?"
-
-"My father's house," replied the School-teacher, "is full of little
-children."
-
-"Just little children that he takes care of?"
-
-"Yes."
-
-"Then you've been with 'em a lot."
-
-"I am always with them," replied the School-teacher.
-
-"I could a-told that," said the woman, "by the way Sonny takes to you.
-I could a-told that you was used to little children, an' that you liked
-them." She indicated the tiny boy with a bob of the head. "He knows it
-right away; babies and dogs allers knows it right away."
-
-She regarded the man for some minutes in silence. Then she spoke like
-one come after thought to a conclusion.
-
-"I 'spose you're the new School-teacher?"
-
-"Yes."
-
-"An' you're goin' down to the school-house now."
-
-"Yes."
-
-"Then if you'll wait till I git a bucket of water, I'll show you the way
-down. The path goes out by our house."
-
-She went over to the spring and dipped the bucket into the keg. The dog
-that had been lying down 'n the path, his head lowered between his paws,
-now craw led up to the man and began to lick his feet.
-
-The little boy looked down and shook his tiny fist at the dog.
-
-"Ge-out, Nim!" he said.
-
-The woman rose with the bucket of water.
-
-"You don't have to carry him," she said, "he can walk real well."
-
-"I would rather carry him," replied the School-teacher.
-
-And he followed the woman along the path, the dog at his heels.
-
-They turned the shoulder of the ridge and came out on a flat bench of
-the mountain. Here stood a little cabin, built of logs and daubed with
-clay. It was roofed with rough clapboards. Before it was a porch roofed
-like the cabin. The door, swinging on wooden hinges, stood open. On
-the puncheon floor was a piece of handmade carpet--a circular mat,
-hand-plaited out of rags, a primitive cradle with wooden rockers, a bed
-covered with a pieced quilt, a rough stone fireplace, an iron pot with
-a lid and a black iron kettle. On the porch stood a split-basket full
-of beans in the hull, and beside the basket two chairs, the seats of
-plaited hickory bark. One of them was very small, a chair in miniature,
-made for the little boy. Near the path was an ax, a hacked log and some
-lighter limbs of trees, such as a woman might carry in from the forest.
-Beside the chimney was a primitive hopper made of clapboards, holding
-wood-ashes, and under this was a broken iron pot in which lye, obtained
-from the ashes by pouring water on it, dripped.
-
-Beyond the cabin was a bit of garden and a little cornfield, where the
-ripened corn stood in yellow shocks bound with grapevines. The shocks
-were small, such as a woman could reach around. About, on the bench,
-were a grove of sugar trees, scarred with the marks of an auger, and
-among them, here and there, a great hickory. Beyond the grove one heard
-the faint tinkling of a bell where a cow moved in the forest.
-
-The woman set the bucket of water on the porch and turned to take the
-child.
-
-"Come, sonny."
-
-The little boy drew back in the man's arms.
-
-"No," he said.
-
-"But, sonny," the woman continued, "the Teacher's goin' away down the
-road."
-
-"Baby go wif him down woad."
-
-The woman coaxed, "Won't sonny stay with Jim and mother?"
-
-"Nim an' muvver go woad."
-
-"No," said the woman, "Jim an' mother ain't goin' down the road. Will
-sonny go an' leave Jim an' mother?"
-
-The little boy looked over the man's shoulder at the rough-haired yellow
-dog. Jim was his housemate and his brother. A decision was a sore trial,
-but he finally made it. He turned about in the man's arms.
-
-"Baby go woad," he said.
-
-The man now entered the conversation. "Let him go with me."
-
-"But he's too little to go to school."
-
-"He is not too little to go with me."
-
-"But he'll bother you, won't he?"
-
-"No, he will not bother me. He will help me."
-
-"He can't help you."
-
-"Yes, he can help me."
-
-"I don't see how he can help you."
-
-"He will remind me of the little children in my father's house."
-
-"Keep you from gettin' homesick?"
-
-"Yes," replied the School-teacher, "that is it. He will keep me from
-getting homesick."
-
-"Well," said the woman, "if I let him go, you'll take care of him, won't
-you?"
-
-"I will surely take care of him."
-
-"An' you'll bring him back before sundown."
-
-"Yes."
-
-"Well, it'll be powerful lonesome, but I reckon I can finish gatherin'
-the beans. I will fix him somethin' to eat. You can put it in your
-pocket."
-
-The woman went into the house, got a flat bottle, such as a cheap sort
-of liniment is sold in at the mountain stores, scalded it out with water
-and filled it with fresh milk. Then she cut some thin slices of a white
-bread called "salt rising" and spread it with butter. She stopped with
-the knife in her hand, considered a moment, and then cut two larger
-pieces of bread, buttered them, and wrapped them all in a piece of
-homespun linen towel. She went out to the man with the folded towel and
-the bottle in her hand.
-
-"Here's his milk an' here's his bread. I put in two pieces for you."
-
-The man put the bottle and the bread into his pocket. The light of his
-great gray-blue eyes deepened.
-
-"You also thought of me," he said.
-
-"I didn't see you carryin' any dinner." replied the woman, "an' the
-bread's nice. I had powerful good luck yesterday. I don't allers have
-such luck, but everything turned out right with the bakin' somehow."
-
-The men went on with the little boy in his arms, but the dog remained.
-He sat miserably in the path, his tail moving in the leaves, his
-eyes fixed on the woman's face. For a time the woman, watching the
-disappearing figures, did not notice the dog. Then she saw him, knew his
-distress and spoke.
-
-"You can go along, Jim," she said.
-
-The dog ran barking after the man and little boy. He overtook them and
-went on ahead. At the point where the path entered the forest, the man
-turned and looked back at the woman. She did not move, but the smile,
-struggling all the morning to conquer her face, finally possessed it.
-
-The School-teacher, the little boy and the dog continued to descend the
-mountain. The child addressed every object with which he was familiar.
-When they passed the brindle cow, cropping broom sedge beside the path,
-he hailed it with a salutation..
-
-"How-da-do, boo," he sard.
-
-Leaves, burning red with autumn color, he explained, were "dowers."
-
-Finally they came to the river, running shallow between the foot of
-the mountain and the farther bench on which the school-house stood.
-The child had not crossed this water, and he was afraid for the man to
-attempt it. He put his little hand firmly on the man's arm to stop him.
-
-The School-teacher stopped, and the child considered this new and
-unaccustomed peril. He sat studying the water, his restraining hand on
-the man's arm. Finally, the dog, growing impatient at the delay, entered
-the river and began to wade across. The child removed his hand. His
-fears were ended. The crossing was safe. He directed the man's attention
-to the proof of it.
-
-"Nim walk in wat," he said.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VII
-
-|IN THE grove before the log schoolhouse, the Teacher was playing a game
-with the children. It was a game in which every child to the tiniest
-one could join. Two, standing opposite, with raised arms and the fingers
-linked, formed a sore of arch, through which the others passed in a
-circle, holding one another's hands. They all sang as they marched some
-verses of a mountain song, ending with the line, "An' catch the one that
-you love best."
-
-When the song came to this line, those forming the arch brought their
-arms down over the head of the child passing at that moment, and he left
-the circle and took the place of one of those forming the arch. As each
-child wished to catch the School-teacher, the man remained standing
-while the children changed.
-
-The little boy David had just been caught. The child, standing with the
-School-teacher, had taken his place. The circle had begun once more to
-move, the song to rise, when the miller's daughter, Martha, stopped,
-disengaged her hand from the child before her and pointed to the road.
-
-"There comes Sol an' Suse. I wonder what's the matter, for Sol's got his
-arm tied up."
-
-The School-teacher stood up and looked over the heads of the children.
-A man was approaching. The sleeves of a red wammus were tied around his
-neck, forming a sort of rude sling in which his right arm rested, held
-horizontally across his breast. A woman, carrying a baby, was walking
-beside him.
-
-The School-teacher spoke to the little girl.
-
-"Martha," he said, "you and David take the children into the
-schoolhouse, I am going out to meet these people."
-
-When the children had gone in, and the door was closed, the man went
-down into the road. He waited there until the two persons approached.
-He saw that both the woman and the man were young, the baby but a
-few months old--a little family beginning to found a home in the
-inhospitable mountain.
-
-The man was evidently injured. The woman was in distress. Her eyes were
-red. The muscles of her mouth trembled. The baby, in her arms, wrapped
-in an old faded shawl, wailed.
-
-The School-teacher spoke to the woman.
-
-"What has happened?" he said.
-
-"My man's got hurt."
-
-"How was he hurt?"
-
-"He was choppin' in his clearin', an' his ax ketched in a grapevine,
-an' throwed him. I reckon his shoulder's all broke. He can't use his arm
-none."
-
-The School-teacher addressed the man. "How does your arm feel?"
-
-"I suppose the jint's smashed."
-
-The tears began to run down over the woman's face.
-
-"I don't see why we have such luck," she said, "an' just when we was
-a-gittin' sich a nice start. Now, he can't work in his clearin', an' if
-he don't git his clearin' done this winter, we won't have no crop, an' I
-don't know what'll become of us."
-
-The man began to chew his lip.
-
-"Don' cry, Susie," he said.
-
-"Yes, I'll cry," replied the woman, "for here's me an' the baby with
-nothin', and you laid up."
-
-"Maybe I ain't hurt so bad," the man suggested.
-
-The woman continued to cry.
-
-"I know better'n that, you're hurt bad."
-
-"Where were you going?" said the School-teacher.
-
-"We were a-goin' to the doctor," replied the woman. "We thought we'd
-make as far as the mill, an' he could wait there, an' I could git Sally
-to keep the baby while I went after the doctor."
-
-"How far is it to the doctor?"
-
-"It's a-goin' on fourteen mile from the mill, an' that ain't the worst
-of it. He won't come unless he gits the money, an' we ain't got no money
-to throw away on a doctor."
-
-She opened her hand and disclosed a crumpled, greasy note.
-
-"That there five-dollar bill is the very last cent that we've got. An'
-when it's gone I don't know where we'll git any more, with him hurt, an'
-me with a little sucklin' baby."
-
-The woman began to sob.
-
-"I'm jist ready to give up."
-
-The School-teacher's big gray-blue eyes filled with a kindly light.
-
-"Don't cry," he said, "perhaps I can do something for your husband's
-shoulder."
-
-He went over to the man. What the School-teacher did, precisely, these
-persons were never afterward able to describe. The event in their minds
-seemed clouded in mystery. A wonder had been accomplished in the road,
-in the sun, in the light before them, but they could not lay hold upon
-the sequence of the detail. The voice of the School-teacher presently
-reached them as from a distance.
-
-"It's all right now," he said.
-
-The man doubled the arm and extended it. The woman came running up.
-
-"Kin you use it, Sol?"
-
-The man continued to move the arm. "It 'pears like I kin," he said; "it
-'pears like it's well."
-
-"Kin you use it good?"
-
-"It 'pears like I kin use it good as I ever could."
-
-"Well, sir!" ejaculated the woman, "if I hadn't a seen it with my own
-eyes, I wouldn't never a-believed it."
-
-The School-teacher remained standing for a moment in the road after the
-mountaineers had gone.
-
-Then he went back to the children, waiting in the schoolhouse. He called
-them out into the grove before the door, and took his place in the game,
-bending over to hold the hands of the tiniest child. The circle began
-once more to move. The song to rise.
-
-"An' catch the one that you love best."
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VIII
-
-|IT WAS not the only adventure that the School-teacher was destined to
-meet with on this day. As he was returning along the mountain road, with
-the little boy on his shoulder, at the first ascent, beyond the river
-crossing, he met two men in a buckboard. The horses were gaunt as from
-hard usage. The man who drove them was known to the School-teacher. The
-other was a big man with a heavy black beard. He sat leaning over in the
-buckboard. His head down. His shoulders rising in a hump. He had gone
-stooped for so long that the hump on his shoulders was now a sort of
-permanent deformity.
-
-They drew up by the roadside as the School-teacher approached. The big,
-hump-shouldered man spoke, without taking the trouble to preface his
-remarks with any form of salutation.
-
-"Do you claim old Nicholas Parks' estate?"
-
-The School-teacher regarded him with his deep, tranquil, gray-blue eyes.
-
-"It belongs to my father," he said.
-
-"Is your father related to old Nicholas?"
-
-"No."
-
-"Has he got a deed from old Nicholas?"
-
-"No."
-
-"Then how does he claim under him?"
-
-"He does not claim under him. Nicholas Parks had his possession from my
-father."
-
-"You mean that your father owned it first?"
-
-"Yes."
-
-"Did he sell to Nicholas?"
-
-"No."
-
-"Then how did old Nicholas come to own it?"
-
-"He never owned it; my father permitted him to use it."
-
-"Then your claim is that old Nicholas was just a tenant for life."
-
-"Yes," replied the School-teacher, "that was it, a tenant for life."
-
-"Did your father give Nicholas any writing?"
-
-"No."
-
-"Did Nicholas pay anything for the use of the land?"
-
-"No."
-
-"Did he ever recognize your father's title while he was living?"
-
-"No."
-
-"Then he never knew that your father owned these lands?"
-
-"Yes," replied the School-teacher, "in the end he knew it."
-
-"How did he know it, if he did not find it out while he was living?"
-
-"He found it out while he was dying," replied the School-teacher.
-
-The big humpback looked out sidewise at the man standing in the road,
-with the child on his shoulder, its little arm around his neck, its
-little fingers on his face.
-
-"Didn't you come into these mountains about the time that old Nicholas
-died?"
-
-"On the very day that he died," replied the School-teacher.
-
-"I see," said the humpback, "then he found it out through you."
-
-"No, man," replied the School-teacher, "ever finds out anything about
-the affairs of my father except he find it out through me."
-
-"Then you're here to look after your father's business?"
-
-"Yes," replied the School-teacher, "that is it, I am here to look after
-my father's business."
-
-"An' so you moved in when old Nicholas died?"
-
-"Yes."
-
-"I see," said the humpback, "now I want to ask you another question.
-These lands belonged to the state. Old Nicholas bought from the state,
-and the state made him a deed. Do you contend that your father's title
-is older than that of the state?"
-
-"Yes."
-
-The humpback compressed the muscles of his mouth and nodded his head
-slowly.
-
-"I see," he said, "your father claims the lands of Nicholas Parks under
-some old patent that gives him a color of title and he has sent you
-here to get into possession. A color of title is not good at law without
-possession. Well, I can tell you, the state's not going to lie by and
-allow you to acquire adverse possession. Old Nicholas Parks died without
-heirs, and, by the law, his property escheats to the state. So you can
-make up your mind to get off."
-
-He reached over, caught the whip out of its socket, and struck the
-horses. They jumped and the buckboard went clattering down the mountain,
-the wheels bouncing on the stones.
-
-The little boy raised his hand and pointed his tiny finger at the
-departing horses.
-
-"Man hurt gups," he said.
-
-The School-teacher stood in the road watching the humpback lash the
-half-starved team. His face was full of misery.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IX
-
-|THE School-teacher had been helping the miller.
-
-He had taken the shirts which she had offered to him, but he had refused
-to put upon her the labor of making up the big piece of linen that
-remained.
-
-"Keep it," he said, "until I need it." All of Saturday he had been at
-work mending the wooden water wheel. In the evening he set out to return
-to Nicholas Parks' house. He took the short way up the mountain. When
-he came out on the great hickory ridge, the sun was not yet down. He
-stopped where the path entered the two roads, one turning along the
-ridge to his house, the other winding down the mountain, eastward,
-toward the far-off lumber mills, sometimes faintly to be indicated by a
-tiny wisp of smoke on the horizon.
-
-There had been a gentle rain, and now under the soft evening sun the
-earth seemed to recover something of the virility of springtime, as
-though the impulse of life waning in the autumn were about to reconquer
-its dominion. Here and there, in the moist earth, a little flower crept
-out, as though tricked into the belief that it was springtime--a white
-strawberry, a tiny violet.
-
-The sap seemed about to move under the bark of the beech trees, the buds
-to issue from the twigs.
-
-In the forest the wren and the catbirds fluttered as under a nesting
-instinct, the gray squirrels fled around the rough shellbark trees and
-from one tree top to another, far off a pheasant drummed, and farther
-off a mountain bull lowed as he wandered through the forest.
-
-The road descending the mountain was decked out in color, banked along
-its border with the poison ivy and the Virginia creeper, now a mass of
-scarlet. Above the beech and hickory leaves were yellow, the clay of the
-road below was yellow, and the soft sunlight entered and fused the edges
-of these colors. The forest for this hour took on the ripe expectancy of
-springtime.
-
-The School-teacher stood where the path emerged from the forest
-
-Presently from below him, beyond the turn of the road, a voice arose,
-a voice full, rich and sensuous--a woman's voice singing a song. It
-carried through the forest, swaggering, defiant melody. The words could
-not be determined. Indeed, there seemed to be no words. The song was a
-thing of sounds--of tropical, sensuous sounds. As though all the love
-calls of the creatures of the forest had been fused into one great,
-barbaric symphony.
-
-A moment later the singer came into view.
-
-She was a young, buxom woman, and she walked, singing, in the middle
-of the road, with a defiant swagger. Her hair was heavy and yellow like
-wheat straw. Her lips, colored purple from the wild grapes which she had
-been eating, were full, the under one drooping a little at the middle.
-Her face was whitened with a cheap powder to be had at the village
-store. Her bodice and her petticoat were of bright vivid colors. There
-was a crimson handkerchief tied around her neck, a cheap glittering
-bangle on her wrist, heavy, gilded earrings hanging in the lobes of
-her ears, and at her throat a breastpin of jet set in a lattice work of
-brass.
-
-The School-teacher remained motionless. He watched the woman approaching
-in the middle of the road, her body swinging loose in her swaggering
-stride, and the full volume of her voice abandoned to her song.
-
-She was halfway up the bend of the road before she realized that another
-was within sound of her voice. Then she saw the School-teacher and
-stopped.
-
-The song ceased.
-
-Her head went up and her eyes opened wide. She remained as though the
-power to move had been on the instant stricken out of her. Her foot
-advanced, her heel lifted, her mouth shaped to sing. Then, slowly, her
-face changed to an expression of profound astonishment.
-
-The School-teacher did not speak. He did not move. The sun descending
-behind him slowly crept up the road to his feet, as though, bidden to
-withdraw from the world, it were loath to leave him.
-
-The woman's face again changed. It became troubled. She moved now a few
-steps closer, softly, on tiptoe. Then, suddenly, with a swift gesture,
-she covered her face with her hands and burst into tears. Her body shook
-as with a convulsion. The tears streamed through her fingers.
-
-Until now the School-teacher had not moved. Now he came slowly along the
-road to where she stood. As he approached, the woman sank down huddled
-together, her face covered, her bosom heaving, her hands wet. He stood
-before her in the road looking down at the bowed head.
-
-"Poor child!" he said.
-
-The woman continued to sob. The eyes of the School-teacher deepened with
-a profound sorrow. He stooped over to put his hand on the coarse yellow
-hair, redolent with a cheap perfume. But before the descending fingers
-touched her, the woman sprang up and flew like a wild thing into the
-forest.
-
-The sun was now gone.
-
-The tropical colors of the leaves, the vines, the yellow earth, departed
-with it. The gray twilight began to descend. The School-teacher walked
-slowly to the top of the ridge, and returned along the little meadow to
-Nicholas Parks' house. As he approached he saw a figure moving off down
-the mountain along the rail fence.
-
-When he came to the house he stopped.
-
-There was a paper tacked on the door. He looked at it for a moment, but
-he did not touch it. The four corners of the paper were doubled under
-and a tack at each end held it. He pulled the worn leather string,
-lifted the wooden latch and went in, leaving the paper fastened to the
-door.
-
-The night had descended.
-
-The house was dark. But when he entered it, on the instant, as though
-the opening of the door had made a draft through the fireplace, a log
-smoldering shot up a red flame that illumined the house.
-
-The School-teacher went over to a table that stood by the wall.
-
-On this table were a homemade cheese and the half of a loaf of bread.
-Beside them was a knife with a wooden handle and a thick china plate
-chipped at the rim. Before this table was a hickory chair, the seat of
-roughly plaited bark. The School-teacher sat down and ate his supper.
-
-Everything in this house remained as Nicholas Parks had left it.
-
-This chair, this table, a larger hickory chair with arms and a ragged
-cushion by the fireplace, a fourpost bed in the corner covered with a
-patchwork quilt. When Nicholas Parks died there had been, as now, a log
-on the fire, a cheese and a loaf of bread on the table.
-
-There were, however, now on this table, before the School-teacher, some
-objects that had not been there. There was a little worn, broken toy
-that had once been a wooden horse; there was a top whittled out of a
-spool with a hickory pin through it. There was a Barlow knife with an
-iron handle, the blade broken at the point; there was a brass ring tied
-to a cotton rib-hon; and there were little bunches of wild flowers, the
-stems of which were primly wrapped with black thread. These were laid
-out on the table beyond the cheese and the loaf. And before he sat down
-to eat, the School-teacher touched them.
-
-When he had finished his supper, the
-
-School-teacher went over to the fireplace and sat down in the armchair.
-He sat beside the hearth where he could see the doer. He remained for a
-long time without moving, except now and then he looked toward the
-door, and when there came to him any sound from the night outside, he
-listened.
-
-The night advanced. He remained in in the chair before the fire. The
-log continued to burn among the ashes in the fireplace. But it no longer
-flamed. It burned with a deep crimson glow that flooded the hair, the
-face, the hands of the School-teacher. The glow thus reflected seemed to
-take on a deeper crimson.
-
-It became like the crimson of blood.
-
-The School-teacher hardly ever moved except to raise his head to listen,
-but he was not asleep; there was no sleep in him. The glow of the
-smoldering log, changing on his face, gave it an expression of agony.
-
-The night continued to advance; the hours passed. The vagrant sounds of
-the world outside ceased. The profound silence of midnight arrived and
-passed. The temperature changed.
-
-But the School-teacher did not go to bed.
-
-He sat in the fantastic glow of the fire, with its agony on him. Now
-and then, when the playing of the light seemed to convulse his
-features--seemed to distort them with a deeper agony, he turned his face
-toward the table standing along the wall, near the door, and his eyes
-rested on the broken toy horse, the top, the Barlow knife, the ring and
-little hunches of flowers; and turned thus out of the glow of the fire,
-his features no longer presented the aspect of agony. Moreover, when
-his head was turned like that, the glow of the fire, that had been thus
-distorting his face, passed by him and streamed over the objects on the
-table, bringing them into vivid contrast with every other object in the
-room.
-
-The body of the night passed.
-
-The morning began to arrive. And still the School-teacher waited. No
-one came. The room was profoundly silent. The breath of the morning
-entering, distilled a faint perfume out of the little bunches of wild
-flowers, a vague odor that arose and sweetened the room. The night was
-dead. The day was beginning to be born. Then it was that the one for
-whom the School-teacher waited finally came.
-
-There was a faint sound outside, as though one approached walking softly
-on the grass, as though a hand passed gently along the door.
-
-The School-teacher rose.
-
-The latch of the door moved, the door turned noiselessly on its hinges,
-and the woman who had fled from the Schoolteacher into the forest
-entered.
-
-The whole aspect of the woman was changed.
-
-The purple stains on her mouth, the powder on her face, were gone.
-Her hair, too, had been cleansed of its cheap scent. It clung in damp
-strands about her face. The swagger, the defiance, the loud notes and
-color had gone out of her. And that which remained after these things
-were gone, now alone existed--as though the whole fabric of the woman
-had been washed with water. The woman put her hand swiftly to her face,
-to her hair; she caught her breath.
-
-"Oh!" she said, "I thought you were asleep."
-
-The School-teacher's voice was incomparably gentle.
-
-"No," he said, "I have been waiting for you."
-
-"Then you thought I would come?"
-
-"I knew that you would come."
-
-"I had to come," she said. "I could not go back to--to--the other!"
-
-"No," he said, "you never could go back to that."
-
-"An'--an'--I had nowhere else to go."
-
-"I know that," replied the Schoolteacher, "there is no place that you
-could go, except to me."
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER X
-
-|THE children had bought the School-teacher a hat. It had been a large
-undertaking, and the cause of innumerable secret conferences in the
-grove behind the schoolhouse. The purchase of so costly a thing as a
-hat required a certain sum of money. To raise this sum of money, the
-children had been put to the most desperate straits. Every tiny store
-that any child possessed had been brought forward and contributed to the
-common fund. The difficulty did not lie in the drawing on this store.
-Although every contribution meant a sacrifice to the donor, no child had
-hesitated. There had been no question about what each should give, and
-no inquiry as to a holding back of resources. Every child had simply
-given all he had.
-
-Ancient two-cent pieces with holes in them, worn nickles, one or
-two long-treasured ten-cent pieces, and one-cent pieces thumbed with
-counting, were withdrawn from snuffboxes, essence of coffee boxes, pill
-boxes, holes in the wall, from under the loose stones of the hearth and
-other safety deposit places--wherever the child had deemed it expedient
-to keep his treasures. Sometimes, however, this treasure was in
-the custody of older persons, and the obtaining of it had presented
-difficulties.
-
-The whole school had often gone into counsel on these cases, ways and
-means devised, a proper motive constructed, and the child strengthened
-and drilled. When the device succeeded, the whole school for that
-day rejoiced, when it failed, the school was depressed, but it was not
-defeated, and some other plan was brought forward. Some of the plans
-were exceedingly ingenious, and, as a rule, the school prevailed.
-
-However, when the whole store was finally collected, or as much as could
-be had, the children were confronted with a staggering disappointment;
-the entire fund, for all the counting and recounting of it, could not be
-made to exceed sixty-four cents. A wholesale borrowing, right and left,
-had added only eleven cents. Now, 't was well-known that a hat could not
-be purchased for less than a dollar, and when it became evident that the
-fund must fail by a fourth of that sum the children were in despair.
-
-For a day or two almost the whole school was in tears.
-
-Then, individually, it resorted to desperate devices. One whose
-grandfather had been accustomed to present him with ten cents on
-Christmas day endeavored to secure an advancement. A small child had
-hailed the doctor as he passed along the road, and had offered to work
-for him all the remainder of his life for ten cents paid down in cash.
-Another had approached the minister, after the Sunday collection, and
-endeavored to borrow a twenty-five-cent piece out of the hat.
-
-These ventures had failed, and the latter with the perilous result that
-the minister had all but extracted the secret for the money, and his
-withering commentaries on a teacher who inculcated the spirit of avarice
-into little children had so stricken the child with terror that it had
-been afraid to tell the school what it had done.
-
-This brief lapse into madness, the practical leadership of Martha, the
-miller's little girl, and the small hoy, David, was presently able to
-cheek. They pointed out what it was useless to do. But for the present
-they were not able to bring forward any plan that it seemed worth while
-to undertake. At this season the only natural product of the mountain
-that could be exchanged for money was hickory nuts, and the value of
-this product was in doubt. Sometimes, early in certain seasons, the
-storekeeper had been known to give twenty-five cents for a bushel of
-choice hickory nuts, not the gross shellbark nut, but the small, round,
-sweet-kerneled nut of the smooth-bark hickory.
-
-The school had considered this, but had come always against two serious
-difficulties. To secure a bushel of these small nuts would require a
-considerable searching of the mountains, and, despite the fact that the
-children were very small, each had duties at home that occupied
-Saturdays, and the evening fragments of the day. On Sundays, an austere
-theology imposed by the minister compelled them to attend the Sunday
-sermon and to practice the most rigorous inactivity under pain of
-hideous consequences. The insurmountable difficulty, however, lay in
-the fact that they could not get a bushel of hickory nuts over the long
-distance to the country store.
-
-An unexpected event suddenly removed this difficulty. Coming
-breathlessly to the school on a Friday morning, little David announced
-that his father was going to the country store on Tuesday with the wagon
-to bring home a barrel of salt, and that he had obtained permission to
-accompany him. At once the school took up the possibility of securing
-the bushel of hickory nuts. It was immediately evident that within so
-brief a time the thing could not be done unless the whole of Sunday were
-devoted to the labor of it. The school promptly decided.
-
-This expedition did not arise from any failure to appreciate the perils
-of the decision. Corporal chastisement under the home roof was certain
-to follow; and the hideous tortures vividly presented by the minister,
-awaiting at the threshold of his future life, that one who broke the
-Sabbath day, was scarcely less certain. Nevertheless, not a child of the
-whole school hesitated.
-
-The complete success of the venture strengthened the school to bear the
-immediate consequences.
-
-Corporal chastisement in the mountains was not apt to be a thing lightly
-administered. But it was a hardship which even the smallest children had
-come to regard as one of the inevitable conditions of life. As to
-that other penalty, which awaited them at the hands of an outraged and
-vindictive deity, they were somehow of the opinion that this malignant
-god could not inflict his punishments except through some overt act of
-the minister who was his executive agent. Thus, if they could outwit
-this dangerous penal vicegerent, the thing could be turned aside. In
-travail of this problem, they hit upon the plan of going over the head
-of the minister and claiming a direct authorization for their act. When
-approached for an explanation of their conduct they solemnly announced
-that an angel had come down through the roof of the schoolhouse and
-directed them not to attend the religious services on this Sunday.
-
-Transported by the success of their undertaking; by the exquisite
-pleasure of making this presentation to the Schoolteacher; by the joy
-which his evident happiness in it carried to every heart; they had
-neglected to perfect the details of this story. Fortunately they agreed
-upon the personal aspect of the angel, since every child, when driven
-to describe this divine messenger, simply followed the guidance of
-his affections, and presented the School-teacher. But upon a close and
-searching examination there had been a divergence. How had the angel been
-clothed? Some of the children, put upon inquisition, had replied that
-he had nothing at all on; and others, feeling the need for appropriate
-vestments, had declared that the angel wore a red coat and blue
-breeches.
-
-Seizing upon this point, as a protruding limb, the minister had finally
-drawn up the whole hidden body of the incident. And he was now on
-his way to confront the School-teacher with this piece of outrageous
-conduct. It was evening when he arrived. The school was coming through
-the little grove down into the road. The School-teacher walked among
-them. The grove was full of voices--the laughter of children. The
-School-teacher wore his new hat, and every now and then he took it off
-and held it in his hand that he might the better admire it. From the day
-that he had received it, he had never ceased to express his appreciation
-of it. He continued always to regard it, as if in it were merged, as
-in a symbol, all the little sacrifices of every child, and all the love
-that had strengthened each one to bear what the thing had cost him.
-
-This never-ceasing appreciation of the School-teacher for his present
-had transported the school with pleasure. This acute happiness the
-children were not always able to control. Sometimes pride overcame one,
-and he would tell how much he had contributed.
-
-And always the smaller children wished to hold the hat in their hands,
-so that it quickly gathered a border of little fingerprints.
-
-Even the tiny boy, who had been too little to help in the purchase
-of the present, but who somehow dimly understood that all had given
-something toward this article, had brought forward a rooster feather,
-which he had found, and insisted that it be added to the hat. And the
-School-teacher had very carefully pinned this crimson feather to the
-band.
-
-Moreover, the habit which the Schoolteacher had acquired of taking off
-his hat in order to admire it before the children, seemed to adhere to
-him when he was by himself: Of late, those who had watched him as he
-passed along the mountain roads, had observed him at this habit and
-had marked how his face, profoundly sad when he was alone, always
-immediately brightened.
-
-The school trooping about the Schoolteacher was emerging from the grove
-when the minister got out of his buggy.
-
-He tied the horse to a sapling with one of the lines. Then he drew his
-cotton gloves a little closer over his hands, buttoned his long black
-coat down to its last button, and stood out in the road to await the
-coming of the School-teacher. The children and the School-teacher
-stopped when they saw him. The pleasant laughing voices ceased. The
-children gathered around the School-teacher. The smallest ones came
-close up and took hold of his hands.
-
-The minister addressed the Schoolteacher. His voice was high and sharp.
-
-"Do you know what the school children have done?"
-
-The School-teacher regarded the minister with his deep, calm, gray-blue
-eyes.
-
-"Yes," he said.
-
-"Did you know that they were going to do it?"
-
-"Yes."
-
-"Did you try to prevent it?"
-
-"No."
-
-The lines in the minister's face hardened.
-
-"That's all I wanted to know," he said. "It is now perfectly evident
-that you are no fit person to have charge of school children. The
-community must get rid of you."
-
-He turned about in the road, untied his horse, got into his buggy and
-took up the lines. He raised one of the lines in his cotton-gloved
-hand to bring it down on the horse's back, but he paused with his arm
-extended, and turned about toward the School-teacher. He thrust his head
-to one side. His defective eye straining to see.
-
-"Do you have any fear of God at all?" he said.
-
-The School-teacher's calm, gentle voice did not change, it did not
-hesitate. "No," he said, "none at all."
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XI
-
-|ON SATURDAY morning the miller hailed the doctor as he was passing the
-mill.
-
-"Are you goin' over to Black's?" she called.
-
-The doctor stopped his horse.
-
-"Yes," he said, "they sent me word to come."
-
-"By Jonas the first of the week?"
-
-"Yes."
-
-"For to see old Jerry's eye?"
-
-"Yes."
-
-"Well, it ain't no use for you to go."
-
-"Did his eye get well of itself?" inquired the doctor.
-
-"No, it didn't git well of itself," replied the woman. "It never would
-have got well of itself. Ole Jerry's been set-tin' around with that eye
-tied up ever since the day that he thrashed out his wheat. He'd a-been
-blind in it all the rest of his life if it hadn't a-been for the
-School-teacher."
-
-The doctor turned around in his saddle.
-
-"What did the School-teacher do to him?" he said.
-
-"He cured him," replied the miller.
-
-The doctor had ridden past the mill before he stopped. Now he rode hack.
-The miller stood on the porch before the door. The doctor sat on his
-horse in the road, the loose bridle rein over his crooked arm, his good
-hand resting heavily on the pommel of the saddle.
-
-"How did he cure him?" inquired the doctor.
-
-"I don't know how he cured him," replied the miller.
-
-"Didn't you hear?" said the doctor.
-
-"Yes, I heard," replied the miller.
-
-"Well," said the doctor, "what did you hear?"
-
-"I heard that he took ole Jerry to one side an' he asked him if he could
-see anything with that eye. An' ole Jerry said that he couldn't tell a
-man from a tree with it. Then the School-teacher put his hands on his
-eye, an' he made him look up an' and when the School-teacher got through
-ole Jerry could see. But he complained that his eye felt hot an' the
-School-teacher told him to hold a piece of wet clay against it--you
-know' that's awful good to draw out soreness--an' the next morning ole
-Jerry's eye was well. Now, how do you suppose he done it?"
-
-"I don't suppose how he done 't," replied the doctor. "I know how he
-done it. Ole Jerry got a wheat husk in that eye when he was thrashing,
-and it stuck against the lid back of the ball. The fools that looked
-into his eye by pushing the lid up couldn't see it. But when anybody
-come along with sense enough to turn the lid back he got the husk out
-and the eye got well."
-
-The miller crumpled the corner of her apron in her hand.
-
-"I don't know about that," she said. "D'd you hear how the
-School-teacher cured Sol Shreave's shoulder that he smashed in his
-clearing?"
-
-"Yes, I heard it," replied the doctor. "I was pretty apt to hear it."
-
-"Well, what did you think about that?" said the miller.
-
-"I thought it was a piece of meddling with my practice," replied the
-doctor. "It kept me out of a five-dollar fee."
-
-"But it was wonderful," said the miller.
-
-"No, it wasn't wonderful," replied the doctor.
-
-The miller spoke slowly. She nodded her head between each word.
-
-"To cure a man's shoulder that was smashed, just by takin' hold of his
-arm, wouldn't that be a wonder?"
-
-"Yes," said the doctor, "that would be a hell of a wonder,"
-
-"Well," said the woman, "didn't the School-teacher do it?"
-
-"No, he didn't do it," replied the doctor. "Then you don't think 't's
-so, about the School-teacher fixin' Sol's shoulder?"
-
-"Yes, I know it's so," replied the doctor.
-
-"Then what makes you say it ain't a wonder?"
-
-"Because it's a thing; anybody could do," replied the doctor.
-
-"Charm a smashed shoulder well?"
-
-"No," replied the doctor, "rotate a dislocated joint into place. When
-Sol Shreave caught his ax in the grapevine he twisted the ball on the
-big hone of his arm out of the socket of the shoulder, and when the
-School-teacher took hold of his arm and rotated it around in the right
-way it went back into place."
-
-The miller crossed her hands over her apron. She took hold of the palm
-of her left with the fingers of her right. She gave her head a little
-jerk. Her eyebrows contracted.
-
-"I don't know about that," she said.
-
-She remained for a moment looking down at the mill porch, then she
-looked up.
-
-"Doctor," she said, "did you ever hear of anybody that was dead bein'
-brought back to life?"
-
-"Yes," said the doctor, "I have heard of it ever since I could
-remember."
-
-"Then it has happened?"
-
-"_No_," said the doctor. "It never has happened. When you're dead,
-you're dead."
-
-The doctor took a watch out of his pocket. It was a heavy, old, silver
-watch, tied to his waistcoat buttonhole with a buckskin string. He
-opened it, examined it for a moment, then snapped the lid and thrust it
-back into his pocket. When he looked around the miller was standing in
-the roadside beside the horse.
-
-"Doctor," she said, "I'm a-goin' to tell you somethin' that I never told
-anybody."
-
-"What about?" said the doctor.
-
-"About what I've just said," replied the woman.
-
-The doctor reflected for an instant, then he remembered. He shifted his
-position in the saddle. His voice showed annoyance.
-
-"What cock-an'-bull story have you got a-hold of now?" he said.
-
-"It's no cock-an'-bull story," replied the miller. "It's the God's
-truth."
-
-The doctor made a deprecating gesture with his crooked arm.
-
-"Now, look here, Sal," lie said, "I haven't time to listen to all the
-tales you've heard."
-
-"It ain't anything I've heard," replied the miller.
-
-"What is it, then?"
-
-"It's something I saw."
-
-"Did you see it yourself?"
-
-"Yes, I did."
-
-"Now, Sal," said the doctor, "don't begin to tell me something you
-thought you saw."
-
-"I'm not a-goin' to tell you somethin' that I thought I saw. I'm a-goin'
-to tell you something that I did see."
-
-"All right," said the doctor, "go on and tell it. What did you see?"
-
-The woman drew a little closer.
-
-"Well," she said, "one Saturday the School-teacher come down here to
-help me, an' he brought Mary Jane's little hoy with him. He's awful
-little. He ain't two yet. The School-teacher left him with me while he
-went down under the mill to fix one of the wheel paddles. Well, Martha
-was gone an' there was nobody here but me to 'tend things. An' I got
-to movin' around and forgot the little boy. An' when I went to look for
-him--I hope I may die!--if he wasn't a-layin' drown-ded at the bottom
-of the millrace. Lord-amighty! I was crazy. I jumped in an' got him out,
-an' begun to holler for the School-teacher to come. But he was dead. I
-knowed he was dead. His little lips was blue, an' his poor little hands
-was cold."
-
-The tears came into the woman's eyes at the memory.
-
-"Lordy, Lordy!" she said, "I knowed he was all that Mary Jane had in the
-world. I knowed her soul was wrapped up in him. I knowed it would kill
-her."
-
-The woman stopped and wiped her eyes with her apron.
-
-"Well, the School-teacher come a-run-nin' an' took him out of my arms,
-an' carried him into the house. An' I just stood there in the road like
-I was dazed. But after a while I sort a come to myself, an' I tiptoed up
-on the porch, an' I looked in the door. An' the little boy was layin' on
-the bed, an' the School-teacher was a-bendin' over him. Then I thought
-of Mary Jane again. An' Lord-a'-mighty! I thought I'd die. I went down
-off the porch. An' I reckon I was crazy, because I started out, an' I
-run just as hard as I could right up the road. I reckon I run for half
-a mile. Then I thought I heard the School-teacher callin' me. An' I come
-hack with my apron over my head a-cryin'. An' when I got right here in
-the road, I did hear him, an' he said, 'Don't be distressed, for the
-child's all right.' An' I took my apron off my head, an' I looked in the
-door, an' there set the School-teacher by the stove with the little boy
-wrapped in a blanket--an' he was _alive_."
-
-The woman stopped, lifted her shoulders, and took in a deep breath, like
-one who has concluded a violent exertion. She wiped her face with her
-apron.
-
-"Well, he told me to make haste, an' dry out the little boy's
-clothes--he had nice, little, white clothes, Mary Jane's awful
-particular about him--an' I did, an' I ironed them so they'd be just
-like they was before he fell in. Then we put the clothes back on him.
-An' the Schoolteacher took him home. An' he was just as well as he
-was before he was drownded. An' the School-teacher told me not to tell
-anybody. I suppose he didn't want Mary Jane to find it out. It would
-only distress her for nothing."
-
-The woman folded her arms across her bosom, and looked up at the doctor.
-
-"Now, then?" she said.
-
-The doctor sat back in his saddle. He dropped his crooked arm by his
-side. He addressed the woman, speaking with a perceptible pause between
-each word.
-
-"So you thought he raised the dead, did you?"
-
-"Didn't I see him do it?" replied the woman.
-
-"Well," said the doctor, "if you're that big a fool, there's no use to
-talk to you."
-
-He turned around in the saddle, gath-tred up the reins, and kicked the
-horse with his heel. He passed out of sight in the direction of Jerry
-Black's house. The miller remained standing in the road.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XII
-
-|JERRY BLACK'S house was beyond Hickory Mountain, in the direction of
-the far-off lumber mills.
-
-It was afternoon before the doctor returned. He rode hard in anger. He
-had gone on to Black's house, determined to make the old man pay him
-for his visit. But the mountaineer, now that his eye was healed, had
-refused. The doctor stormed and threatened, but the mountaineer was
-obdurate. The School-teacher had cured him. He owed nothing. He would
-pay nothing.
-
-The doctor was compelled to return empty-handed, and he rode hard.
-
-A deep resentment against the man who thus interfered with his practice
-moved within him. When he came to Hickory Mountain, instead of following
-the road around by the mill, he took the one leading across through the
-lands of Nicholas Parks. It was mid-afternoon when he stopped in the
-road before the Schoolteacher's house. He called. A woman came to
-the door, her heavy hair the color of wheat straw. The doctor made an
-exclamation of profound astonishment.
-
-"Yaller Mag!" he said. "Now what's that hussy doin' here?"
-
-When the woman saw that the person in the road was the doctor, she went
-hack into the house and presently came out with a brown earthen crock.
-She walked down the path from the door bearing the crock in her hand.
-When she came out into the road, she held the crock up to the doctor.
-
-"The School-teacher told me to give you this money when you come," she
-said.
-
-There was a handful of silver coins in the crock.
-
-Again the doctor was astonished.
-
-"When I come!" he echoed. "How did he know that I was coming?"
-
-"I don't know how he knew it," replied the woman.
-
-"What did he tell you to give it to me for?"
-
-"He didn't tell me."
-
-The doctor looked at the pieces of silver.
-
-"I suppose this is money that the people have paid him. How much did old
-Black pay him?"
-
-"He never paid him anything," replied the woman. "Nobody ever paid him
-anything."
-
-"Who give him this money then?"
-
-"Nobody give it to him," said the woman. "It was in that crock on the
-shelf when old Nicholas Parks died. It ain't been touched."
-
-The doctor looked at the dust-covered handful of silver.
-
-"If nobody pays him, an' he hasn't used any of this, where does he get
-money to buy things with?"
-
-"He don't buy anything."
-
-"What does he live on, then?"
-
-"Well," said the woman, "when Nicholas Parks died, there was flour in
-the barrel. It ain't run out. It looks like it never would run out. Now,
-will you take the money, so I can get some feed for the horse?"
-
-Again the doctor was astonished.
-
-"How do you know that the horse hasn't been fed?"
-
-"I don't know it," replied the woman.
-
-"Then what do you want to feed him for?"
-
-"I want to feed him," replied the woman, "because the School-teacher
-told me to."
-
-"Told you to feed my horse?"
-
-"Yes, he told me to give you this money and to feed your horse. Are you
-goin' to take the money?"
-
-"No," said the doctor. "I'm not goin' to take it. I want to see the
-Schoolteacher himself. Where is he?"
-
-"He's down at Mary Jane's house."
-
-"Is she the one that's got the woods-colt?"
-
-"She's the one that's got the little boy," replied the woman.
-
-"Huh!" said the doctor. "What's he doin' there?"
-
-"He's huskin' her corn."
-
-"So he spends his time helpin' the women who have no men folks about,
-too, does he?"
-
-The woman looked up at the doctor. Her face undisturbed by the taunt.
-
-"Yes," she said. "He spends his time helpin' those who have nobody else
-to help them."
-
-The doctor did not reply. He gathered his bridle up in his hand. The
-woman moved around in front of the doctor.
-
-"Ain't you goin' to let me feed the horse?"
-
-"The horse can stand it just as well as I can," said the doctor.
-
-"But you can help it," replied the woman, "an' the horse can't help it."
-
-"It won't hurt him to wait till I eat."
-
-"Would it hurt you to wait till he eats?"
-
-"It wouldn't do me much good, if anybody was to sec me waitin' here,"
-said the doctor.
-
-A flush of color sprang into the woman's face.
-
-"I only wanted to feed him," she said, "because the School-teacher told
-me to."
-
-"Get out of my way," said the doctor. "This School-teacher has
-interfered with my business just about as much as I'm going to put up
-with."
-
-He clucked to his horse, and rode around the woman. When he had gone
-forward a few paces, he made a gesture with his crooked arm.
-
-"Is there a path over the mountain this way?" he called without turning
-in his saddle.
-
-"Yes," replied the woman, "it runs down past the house."
-
-She remained standing by the gate with the crock in her hand.
-
-The doctor entered the forest.
-
-The colors lying far down the mountain in the sun were like those of an
-oriental carpet. Soft shades of green, of yellow, of crimson, kneaded
-into a harmony of low, unobtrusive tones that the sun warmed and
-illumined. Near at hand, along the path, where the doctor rode, the
-sumacs stood a dull red, the chestnut bushes yellow, the wild cherry
-leaves turning on their edges, the oaks crimson like a flame, the water
-beeches green, the hickory leaves curling on their twigs like shavings
-of gold.
-
-The scene lay out below the doctor in the sun, incomparably painted, but
-he did not see it. He rode looking down at the pommel of his saddle. Now
-and then, when the horse stumbled, he brought it up with a wrench of the
-bit. The horse was tired. It went forward with its head down. Dust
-lay around its eye-pits. There were gray bands of dried sweat running
-parallel with the leather of the headstall, and beyond the borders of
-the saddle blanket.
-
-At a turn of the path a dog appeared, his yellow hair rising on his
-back. As the doctor came on, the dog slowly retreated, growling,
-holding his place in the road until the horse was almost upon him, then
-springing hack, his teeth flashing, his eyes on the doctor. The dog did
-not bark, he made no considerable sound, he refused to attack the horse,
-but he continued always to menace the approach of the doctor.
-
-They passed the spring and came out before the house and the little
-cornfield. Then the dog began, to bark, and a tiny voice arose.
-
-"Ge-out, Nim!" it said.
-
-This patch of clearing, lying within the many-colored garden of the
-forest, seemed illumined with a warmer sunlight. The effect doubtless
-arose from the carpet of coarse brown fox-grass grown up over the
-cornfield, into which the sun seemed to enter and remain. Two or three
-small maple trees, abundantly leaved, stood about, flaming scarlet.
-
-Under one of these trees the Schoolteacher was at work.
-
-A corn shock, unbound, lying on the ground before him. He was on his
-knees, bareheaded, without a coat, ripping the husk from the ear with a
-wooden "peg" bound to his middle finger, snapping it at the socket and
-tossing it out on a heap before him.
-
-The ears coming from the Schoolteacher's hands were long, full-grained
-and of a deep yellow.
-
-The two children, Martha and David, were gathering this corn into a
-split basket and carrying it to a crib made of rails and roofed with
-clapboards. Near the School-teacher, sitting on his coat spread out on
-the ground, was the tiny boy who had called to the dog. He was shelling
-a red ear of corn into the School-teacher's hat.
-
-A brush fence inclosed the cornfield.
-
-The doctor pulled up in the path beside the fence. The School-teacher
-arose. He stood bareheaded in the sun under the canopy of darning
-leaves. He looked past the doctor to the horse, standing with its legs
-out, its head down.
-
-"I understand you're practicin' medicine," said the doctor.
-
-"Your horse is tired," replied the School-teacher.
-
-"There's a law against practicin' medicine without a license," said the
-doctor.
-
-"Your horse is hungry," continued the School-teacher.
-
-The doctor, riding on, replied with an oath.
-
-"You're going to get into trouble," he said.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIII
-
-|EARLY on Monday morning an old man driving a gray mare in a two-wheeled
-cart came slowly up the road to the schoolhouse. A lank colt followed
-the mare. The cart was very old, no vestige of paint remained on it,
-one of the shafts was wrapped with wire, the bottom of the cart, made of
-small slats, was loose. The man was heavy and the cart creaked. He drove
-slowly, his big body filling the seat on which for comfort he had placed
-a folded bedquilt.
-
-He stopped in the road below the schoolhouse and got slowly out of the
-creaking cart.
-
-One of his legs was swollen with scrofula, and stiff to the knee. He
-moved it with difficulty. He left the mare standing in the road, the
-colt beside her, and came through the grove to the school-house door.
-The stiff leg gave his heavy body an awkward swing. He supported himself
-with a stout stick.
-
-When he came finally to the school-house, he sat down on the step before
-the door. He had evidently moved faster than he was accustomed to do,
-and he remained for a moment breathing heavily, his big bulk covering
-the step. Then he got a memorandum hook and a pencil out of his pocket.
-The memorandum book was one of those cheap advertisements of patent
-medicine which are given away at the country store. It contained a few
-pages blank on one side and printed with virtues of the medicine on the
-other. The pencil was a little more pretentious than the ordinary one.
-It consisted of a tin case containing a long, thin core of purple lead,
-the end of which could be made to protrude for writing by pressing the
-thumb on the opposite end of the case.
-
-The old man turned the leaves of the memorandum book, wetting his
-forefinger in his mouth, until he found a blank page. Then he laid the
-book on his knee, pressed the case of the pencil, touched the tip of the
-lead to his tongue, and laboriously wrote.
-
-"This schoolhouse is closed, by order of P. Hamrick, Trustee."
-
-He tore the leaf out, rose and pinned it to the door.
-
-It was some distance through the grove of ancient trees to the road,
-and he started to return. In spite of his bulk and his stiff leg he
-endeavored to hurry. He thrust his stout stick out before him on the
-path, and swung forward, his weight forcing the point of the stick into
-the earth. In order that he might not fall, and to find each time a safe
-place for the stick, he moved with his eyes on the ground.
-
-Presently the end of the stick slipped on a pebble, and he lurched
-forward. He saved himself from falling by grasping the crook, of the
-stick with both hands, tottered a moment, then he regained his balance
-and looked up.
-
-The School-teacher stood before him.
-
-The old man remained holding to the stick, breathing with difficulty.
-The School-teacher was some distance away, motionless in the path. He
-had evidently seen the man coming from the schoolhouse door, and had
-stopped there in the path to observe him.
-
-The School-teacher spoke.
-
-"Have you been to the schoolhouse?" he said.
-
-"Yes," replied the man, "I've--I've been out to the schoolhouse."
-
-"To see me?" said the School-teacher. "Well, no," replied the man, "not
-exactly to see you."
-
-"To see the school?"
-
-"Well, no, not exactly to see the school." Then he added, "I'm the
-trustee. I've been looking over the schoolhouse. I think I'll be goin'
-on."
-
-"Why do you hurry?" said the Schoolteacher.
-
-"I must be gettin' home," said the old man.
-
-He reached forward with his stick, but again the point of it slipped and
-he nearly fell.
-
-The School-teacher looked past the man toward the schoolhouse.
-
-"What is that on the door?" he said. The old man turned around. The leaf
-from the memorandum book, fastened with the pin, fluttered on the door,
-as though 't were a living thing struggling to free itself.
-
-"That's a piece of paper," said the old man.
-
-"Who put it there?"
-
-"I did."
-
-"What for?"
-
-"It's a kind of notice."
-
-"A notice to me?"
-
-"A notice about the schoolhouse."
-
-"Is there anything wrong with the schoolhouse?"
-
-"Well," said the old man, "I don't think it's just exactly safe."
-
-"Not safe for the children?"
-
-"Well, no, it mightn't he safe for the children."
-
-"What is wrong with the schoolhouse?" said the School-teacher.
-
-The old man began to talk. "Well," he said, "it's got a good roof.
-Old Dix put that roof on. Every one of the clapboards is planed with
-a drawin' knife. An' the weatherboardin' is good. It was seasoned
-weatherboardin'. But the floor might be bad."
-
-"I have mended the floor," replied the School-teacher.
-
-"It ain't so much the floor," continued the old man. "It's the sills.
-The sills might be rotten."
-
-"I have examined the sills," replied the School-teacher. "The sills are
-sound."
-
-"Well," said the old man, "failin' weather's comin' on. I think the
-school had better stop anyway."
-
-He turned a little and put his stick out on the path into the leaves as
-though he would go down the hill a shorter way to the road.
-
-The School-teacher read his intent in the moving of the cane.
-
-"You would better stay in the path," he said. "If you get out of the
-path you will fall."
-
-The old man turned back into the path before the School-teacher.
-
-There was come now a certain dogged expression into his face.
-
-"If you want to know," he said, "there's been some complaint about you."
-
-"Who has complained of me?" said the School-teacher.
-
-"Good men have complained."
-
-"What good men?"
-
-"Why, men as good as the minister. Why, men as good as the doctor."
-
-Then he looked out sharp at the Schoolteacher.
-
-"Ain't that hussy, Yaller Mag, up there with you at Nicholas Parks'
-house?" The School-teacher regarded the old man standing before him.
-
-"Do you think this woman ought to be sent away?"
-
-"Yes, I do," replied the old man.
-
-"Then some one ought to tell her to go."
-
-"Yes, they ought."
-
-"It's a difficult thing to do," said the School-teacher.
-
-"To find some one to tell her?"
-
-"Yes," said the School-teacher, "that is it, to find some one to tell
-her."
-
-"If that's all," said the old man, "I'm goin' home by Nicholas Park's
-house, that's my shortest way. I'll stop an' tell her myself."
-
-"But have you thought how difficult it will be to tell her?" inquired
-the Schoolteacher.
-
-"What's the trouble about tellin' her?"
-
-"Well," replied the School-teacher, his eyes resting on the old man's
-swollen scrofuletic leg, "the trouble is that the one who goes to tell
-her ought to be better than she is. He ought, himself, to have lived a
-clean life.... Perhaps you have, perhaps you can tell her."
-
-The old man thought that the Schoolteacher saw something lying on the
-ground, for he stooped over and his finger moved in the dust of the
-path. And while he remained thus, the old man hurried along to the road.
-The mare stood facing in the direction of the way over the mountain by
-Nicholas Parks' house.
-
-The old man took her by the bridle and turned her around in the road.
-
-Then he climbed slowly into the creaking cart. He looked back when he
-had got his big bulk on the folded bedquilt. The School-teacher was
-standing upright where he had passed him in the path. The old man put
-his hand on the corner of the seat and turned heavily about.
-
-"There's another thing," he said. "I'd like to know why you're always
-carryin' that bastard brat around with you."
-
-Then he drove away, but not on the road that crossed the mountain by
-Nicholas Park's house.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIV
-
-|ALL day long the little boy was with the School-teacher. The child and
-the dog watched for the man to come out of the forest in the morning.
-When the dog barked, the little boy would say:
-
-"Nim, see Teacher."
-
-The woman standing before the door watched for the three of them to come
-out of the forest in the evening. She listened for the laughter, the
-voices, the barking of the dog. The sense of perfect understanding among
-the three of them was to her a perpetual wonder. The child had only a
-few words, the dog had none. How could the man know so well, what they
-meant? It was a wonder that she turned about, and at last, out of the
-deeps of her own feelings, she got an answer that she held to.
-
-"If you love a thing enough, it's goin' to understand you."
-
-The relation of the School-teacher to this tiniest child was also that
-of his relation to every other one. The sense of it spread throughout
-the school. This school became a family. What the cheerless home
-withheld, it gave. No child could have told one what that was.
-
-The teacher understood him, would have been the answer.
-
-The School-teacher required no built-up explanations, he required no
-justification of one's act by the unfamiliar standards of another, he
-required no trick, no artifice, no pretending, to get on with.
-
-To the question, "What is he like?" a little boy had answered, "Why,
-just like me."
-
-For some time there had been a secret in the school.
-
-The School-teacher had talked with every child apart. The talk had been
-confidential. The School-teacher had spoken with each one, even the
-tiniest, as with an equal. He had spoken with him from day to day as
-the occasion arose. It was the way of this secret to make the child with
-whom he talked for a time unhappy. But as the School-teacher continued
-each day to strengthen him, to show him how much he depended on him,
-and to blow on the embers of his courage, he came at length to carry the
-secret with equanimity.
-
-On Thursday evening this secret became the common property of all. The
-School-teacher was going away! There would be no more school!
-
-On this afternoon the School-teacher had again talked with each child
-apart, told him that the time of which he had spoken had now come, and
-called upon him for the evidence of his courage. But, in spite of all,
-when the hour arrived, the school broke down. It left the little benches
-and gathered around the Schoolteacher. For a moment the Schoolteacher
-hesitated, before the group of wet faces, then, one by one, he took each
-child up in his arms, carried him to the window and told him something.
-Something which he had not told him before. No one, outside of the
-school, knew exactly what it was. But each child coming from the
-School-teacher's arms was strengthened, and set out for his home, the
-tears drying on his sturdy little face. An idea of what this something
-was, afterwards arose. A little boy had said, "Everybody's a-goin' to
-live at the School-teacher's house." But he was in the extremity of
-illness when he said it, and they thought he spoke in delirium.
-
-It, was mid-afternoon when the Schoolteacher left the schoolhouse. He
-was accompanied by the two children, Martha and David. The dog Jim went
-before him and he carried the tiny boy on his shoulder. They went along
-the road to the river, crossed on the stones and ascended the mountain.
-The little boy fell asleep, his arms around the Schoolteacher's neck.
-
-The two children walked beside the man.
-
-For the most part they were silent. Finally they came to the little
-clearing. The children stopped in the road, and the man went up onto the
-cabin porch, the little sleeping boy in his arms. The woman at work in
-the kitchen, hearing the footsteps, came out to the door. When she saw
-who it was, she was surprised.
-
-"School's out early to-day," she said. "Yes," replied the
-School-teacher. "What's the matter?"
-
-"It's the last day of the school."
-
-"Won't there be any more school?"
-
-"No."
-
-The woman's lips trembled. "Then, then..." she said, and she began to
-cry.
-
-"Mary," said the School-teacher, "have you forgotten what I told you?"
-
-The woman sobbed,
-
-"But it's come so soon."
-
-Then she looked at the little boy sleeping in the School-teacher's arms
-and the tears streamed down her face.
-
-"Now, what'll I do?" she said. "Now, what'll I do? He'll set there
-by the door, him an' Jim, an' he'll look for you every morning, an'
-whenever Jim barks he'll say 'Nim see Teacher,' but he won't never see
-you."
-
-"Yes," replied the School-teacher, "he will see me again."
-
-"Then you won't be so awful far away?"
-
-"I shall never be very far away from him."
-
-Then he put the sleeping child into the woman's arms.
-
-"Don't wake him," he said, "and don't cry. Remember, Mary, that if he
-should go with me, then he could not stay with you."
-
-He went down the road, and with the two children beside him, passed on
-along the path. They went by the spring, with its keg sunk in the earth,
-and up the mountain to Nicholas Parks' house. There, in the road, they
-found the woman with the yellow hair, feeding the chickens, a measure of
-corn in her apron.
-
-"You're back early," she said.
-
-"It's the last day of the school," replied the School-teacher.
-
-The woman's whole body was convulsed. The corn spilled out of her apron.
-Then she fled along the road, and up the path to the house. At the door
-she stopped, turned about, and then huddled down by the steps, her apron
-over her head.
-
-The School-teacher bade the children await him, then he went up the
-path. He passed by the woman and entered the house. Within the house, he
-went over to the table by the wall, on which lay a little, worn, broken
-toy, that had once been a wooden horse, a top whittled out of a spool, a
-brass ring with its cotton ribbon, a Harlow knife, and little bunches
-of wild flowers. These he took up, one by one, and put into the bosom of
-his coat. Then he came out and closed the door. As he passed, the woman
-put out her hand and touched him. And he stopped. For a moment he stood
-looking down at the woman sobbing at his feet, the apron over her heed.
-Then he spoke.
-
-"Margaret," he said, "is this how you will keep your promise to me?"
-
-Then he went down the path, and, accompanied by the two children,
-followed the road along the ridge to the little path descending the
-mountain toward the mill. As the School-teacher walked he endeavored to
-strengthen and encourage the two children. He bade them remember what he
-had said, and not to cry. They managed not to cry when he left them at
-the point where the path entered the road below. But when he was gone
-out of their sight and hearing, in the direction of the schoolhouse,
-they held to each other and wept.
-
-They stood for a long time, there, in tears, holding to one another.
-Then they heard sounds approaching and hid themselves. Two men rode past
-in the direction of the schoolhouse. One of them carried a rifle across
-the saddle before him.
-
-A great fear fell on the two children and they followed at a distance.
-They saw the two men dismount before the school-house, knock on the door
-and enter. After a while they came out with the Schoolteacher.
-
-They got on their horses and, with the School-teacher walking between
-them, set out along the road in the direction of the town.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XV
-
-THE several influences moving against the School-teacher, having formed
-a conjunction, at last determined to act.
-
-On Wednesday night, in the church at the county seat, two persons
-attended the minister's mid-weekly meeting, who were not members of the
-congregation. These two persons, the sheriff and the doctor, sat on
-the last bench nearest the door. When the service was concluded and the
-congregation withdrew, these two persons remained with the minister. The
-three of them moved up to the table before the altar, where there was a
-small oil lamp.
-
-They remained for a long time in conference around this table.
-
-It seemed that the minister's efforts to get rid of the School-teacher
-by prevailing on the trustee to close the schoolhouse, had not
-succeeded.
-
-The school went on in spite of the notice.
-
-And now some more effective measures must be found. The sheriff, when
-the minister informed him of the occupancy of Nicholas Parks' estate by
-this stranger, had caused a proceeding to be instituted in the circuit
-court, and had obtained an order restraining any one from entering on
-the lands of Nicholas Parks until the right of the state thereto could
-be determined. This order had been posted on the door of Nicholas Parks'
-house. But this order, like the one on the door of the schoolhouse, the
-stranger had not regarded.
-
-It was evident that a firmer step must be taken.
-
-Two plans were available. As the School-teacher had continued to remain
-on Nicholas Parks' lands after the restraining order had been posted on
-the door, the sheriff could apply to the circuit judge for a _rule_ and
-cause him to be brought before the court and imprisoned for contempt.
-The second plan was for the doctor to go before a justice of the peace
-and take out a warrant against the School-teacher charging him with
-practicing medicine without a license.
-
-These two plans were now under discussion in the empty, dimly lighted
-church.
-
-The little hand oil lamps had been put out except one on a wooden
-bracket by the door, and the one smoking on the table before the altar.
-The silence, the empty church, or something in the atmosphere of the
-place, caused the men to draw together and to discuss the matter in
-undertones.
-
-The minister sat with his back to the altar.
-
-On the bench beside him was his hat containing the money which he had
-collected from the congregation at the close of the service. On
-either side were the doctor and the sheriff. The latter's big hump now
-prominent as he leaned over the table. The minister led the discussion,
-and they remained for some time thus, in conference. The minister's
-defective eye batting, the doctor's crooked arm on the table, and the
-sheriff's back throwing its humped shadow against the wall.
-
-Finally it was determined that the sheriff should go before the court
-on Thursday and obtain the _rule_ upon which the School-teacher could
-be arrested and brought down out of the mountain. At the same time the
-doctor should take out his warrant before the justice of the peace, so
-it might be available in case the circuit judge should not commit the
-Schoolteacher upon the proceeding for contempt.
-
-This plan having been settled upon, it became necessary to consider how
-the arrest should be made.
-
-The sheriff could send his deputy, who served legal papers in the
-county, but the deputy had never seen the School-teacher and did not
-know him. And, besides this, if the School-teacher resisted, and those
-about him should come to his support, there might be considerable
-trouble to take him. One man conducting a prisoner through the mountains
-in the night might easily be compelled to release him. Moreover,
-the deputy, knowing the danger of making an arrest in the mountain
-districts, could not be got to go up alone.
-
-A discussion of who should be found to assist the deputy then arose. No
-one could be thought of except Jonas Black, a worthless hanger-on
-about the village. This man was the son of Jerry Black, whose eye the
-School-teacher had cured.
-
-He had been the sheriff's driver on the occasion of that official's
-interview with the School-teacher. He was familiar with the mountains,
-and it was thought less likely to be resisted, since he was one of the
-mountain people. He knew the School-teacher. It was said that for a time
-he had hung about him, hoping to be employed to go from house to house
-and collect the School-teacher's salary, until he discovered to his
-astonishment, that this stranger was charging nothing for his service.
-
-The sheriff rose and went out into the village to seek this man, while
-the others awaited his return. The sheriff was not gone very long. He
-presently entered the church with another. This man had a curious deep
-red birthmark covering the entire side of his face. He came up the
-church aisle behind the sheriff, stepping softly and glancing furtively
-about him. He slipped into a seat before the table facing the altar, and
-remained there shifting his hat in his lingers.
-
-The sheriff took his place at the table.
-
-"I found Jonas," he said.
-
-The minister looked across the table at the man.
-
-"Will you go?" he inquired.
-
-"Yes, I'll go," replied the man, "if I git paid enough for it."
-
-"How much do you want?" said the minister.
-
-"Well," replied the man, "it ought to be worth about five dollars."
-
-The three men at the table protested.
-
-The sum was excessive. The sheriff would provide a horse. The journey
-would not take longer than one night. Besides, there was no way by which
-the fees of a deputy, for such service, could be made to aggregate that
-sum. The man persisted, and, while the sheriff considered how the sum
-allowed under the law could be augmented, the minister bargained. The
-man finally reduced his demand to three dollars. And the sheriff, seeing
-now a plan by which an additional charge could be officially added,
-said:
-
-"There are a couple of bad characters in the jail, held to the grand
-jury for breaking into a store. They may try to give me some trouble.
-Now, if you would watch the jail for a few nights, I might manage to get
-that fee for you."
-
-"Well," replied the man, "I'd sorter keep an eye on the jail for a night
-or two. I wouldn't mind doin' that. But I won't wait for my money. I
-won't take it in costs."
-
-"How soon will you want it?" inquired the sheriff.
-
-"Right now," said the man.
-
-"I couldn't give it to you to-night," replied the sheriff.
-
-The man got up.
-
-"Then I won't go," he said.
-
-An idea occurred to the minister. He turned around, picked up his
-hat, containing the recent collection, and placed it on the table. He
-whispered a moment to the others, then he spoke to the man.
-
-"I'll pay you the money," he said.
-
-He began to count it out on the table. The money from the collection
-was in small silver coins and he selected the largest of them. He leaned
-over the table, his fingers in the hat, his defective eye close to the
-lamp.
-
-And the man standing before the altar, one half of his face in the
-shadow, one half discolored by the crimson birthmark dimly in the light,
-received the money. Two dollars and sixty cents in ten-cent pieces,
-three five-cent pieces, and one twenty-five cent piece.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XVI
-
-|THEY took the School-teacher into the courthouse early in the morning.
-
-The county seat of this mountain county was nothing more than a village,
-lying in the foothills. The courthouse stood in a grove of oak trees, in
-the middle of the village. It was a two-story structure. On the ground
-floor was the jail in the custody of the sheriff.
-
-The second floor was the courthouse.
-
-This second story was entered exclusively from without. Broad stone
-steps led up to a portico, on which stood round, plaster-covered pillars
-supporting the projecting roof. On either side, entering between these
-pillars, were the offices of the county and circuit clerks. Beyond
-was the court room filled with benches. A portion of this room at the
-farther end was separated from the benches by a railing. Within it were
-chairs and two tables for attorneys, a desk for the clerk, and a raised
-platform, ascended by steps on either side, for the judge.
-
-It was the custom of the judges traveling on these mountain circuits to
-open court as early as eight o'clock in the morning, and before that, if
-they were come into the court room, to hear informally motions and the
-like.
-
-When they brought the School-teacher into the courthouse, the sheriff,
-the doctor, the minister, the old trustee who had ridden down out of the
-mountains in his cart, were already there.
-
-The deputy and Jonas led the Schoolteacher inside the railing. Then they
-sat down. The School-teacher remained standing.
-
-The hearing before the circuit judge followed the informal custom of
-these mountain circuits.
-
-The School-teacher made no defense.
-
-He stood before the bench. The early sunlight of the morning, entering
-through the high windows, fell on his face, on his soft brown hair, on
-his deep gray-blue eyes, on his clothing covered with the dust of the
-road.
-
-The judge heard the oral evidence in open court, He inquired into
-the service of the restraining order, and the prisoner's subsequent
-disregard of it. But he was not convinced. The prisoner's conduct seemed
-inconsistent with an intent to resist the State's title to these lands.
-Moreover, the silence, the calm demeanor, the strange personality of the
-prisoner, profoundly impressed him. He felt that some ulterior motive
-lay behind the cover of this accusation.
-
-At this moment a woman appeared at the door of the courthouse and
-sent in a note to the judge. This note was sealed in an envelope and
-addressed in a fine hand. The judge opened it at once. When he had
-read it, he sat for some time looking down at the prisoner. He did not
-believe in dreams; but the insistence of his wife impressed him.
-
-He turned to the sheriff, and inquired if there was a man in the
-courtroom who knew anything about the prisoner.
-
-The sheriff indicated the others near him.
-
-"Yes, Your Honor," he replied, "the minister, the school trustee of that
-district, and the doctor here, all know about him. He seems to have made
-himself generally troublesome to the community. I believe the justice
-of the peace had issued a warrant against him for practicing medicine
-without a license."
-
-When the circuit judge heard of this action of the justice, he ordered
-the School-teacher to be taken before that official. He said that if
-the justice of the peace has issued a warrant antedating the _rule_, he
-would yield to him the custody of the prisoner.
-
-They took the School-teacher out of the courthouse and across the
-village street to the office of the justice of the peace.
-
-The justice was greatly pleased when the deputy and Jonas came in with
-the prisoner. A good many stories had drifted down from the mountains to
-him concerning the miraculous cures which this man had effected, and he
-was anxious to see him. He removed his spectacles, put them carefully
-into a tin case, set his feet on the rounds of a chair and, after
-having thus made himself comfortable, he requested the School-teacher to
-explain to him in detail, exactly how he had accomplished the marvels of
-which he had heard.
-
-The School-teacher did not reply.
-
-He remained standing as he had stood before the circuit judge. His
-head lifted. The features of his face unmoving. His deep gray-blue eyes
-tilled with a tranquil, melancholy light.
-
-When the justice of the peace saw that his curiosity was not likely to
-be gratified, he, at once, sent the prisoner back to the circuit judge.
-He took this act of the judge to be a delicate courtesy, a tender regard
-for the jurisdictional rights of an inferior tribunal, and he was not
-to be outdone. In several instances the circuit judge had recently
-curtailed his jurisdiction, and he had been smarting under it. This act
-was a friendly overture, and he hastened to evidence his appreciation of
-it.
-
-He returned the prisoner, saying that as his warrant had not been
-served, his jurisdiction had not attached, and the prisoner was
-exclusively in the custody of the circuit court. Moreover, that he would
-hold his warrant in abeyance until the circuit court had disposed of the
-case.
-
-When the School-teacher came again before the circuit judge, that
-official no longer hesitated to indicate his opinion. He said that the
-prisoner did not seem disposed to contest the state's title to these
-lands, that he appeared to have taken up his residence in Nicholas
-Parks' house anterior to the date of the order, and upon some verbal
-direction of the decedent; that while there was here perhaps a technical
-contempt, he was not certain that it was intended, and consequently that
-he was disposed to dismiss the prisoner.
-
-The minister, the sheriff, the doctor, the old school trustee, under
-this informal procedure, came forward with a protest. They said that the
-School-teacher was a person dangerous to the community; that he had set
-himself against the authority of the state in disregarding the order of
-the court; that he had set himself against the authority of the county
-by disregarding the notice placed on the schoolhouse door; that he had
-openly violated the law in practicing medicine without a license; that
-he harbored immoral persons, and encouraged the children in acts of
-irreverence.
-
-The judge endeavored to compromise with this opposition. He said that
-he would reprimand the prisoner, suspend sentence and release him on his
-own recognizance.
-
-The general protest now took on a definite form. The minister spoke for
-the others. He was little accustomed to the diplomacy of the advocate
-and he thinly disguised the threat that was the tenor of this speech.
-He said that one in the position of a circuit judge ought to sustain
-the better elements of the community in their efforts to get rid of an
-undesirable person; that the will of the people was not lightly to be
-disregarded; that the object of making offices elective was that one
-who refused to consider what the people desired might be replaced by
-another; and the like.
-
-The judge came up presently for reelection. It was notice to him that
-the powerful elements which these protesting persons represented would
-hold him to account. The strength of his political party lay in these
-mountain counties. He required the support of these elements. And he
-especially feared a sectarian sentiment against him. He knew the danger
-of such a sentiment; and how little, once on its way, explanations would
-avail. This covert threat angered the judge, but he feared to resist
-it. He dipped his pen into the inkpot before him, and wrote an order
-committing the prisoner to the county jail. Then he handed it down to
-the sheriff.
-
-The persons standing about the sheriff drew near to him and read the
-order. The minister and the school trustee objected to something in the
-body of the writing, and the sheriff went with them to the judge.
-
-They pointed out that the order directed the commitment of the
-"Schoolteacher of Hickory Mountain District," that this term was
-incorrect, that the prisoner had not been employed by the trustees, that
-he was not the School-teacher of Hickory Mountain District, and that the
-order ought not so to designate him.
-
-But the judge, smarting under the lash that had been laid on him, was in
-no mood to receive a further dictation.
-
-He refused to change what he had written.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XVII
-
-|THE several persons who had forced the judge to commit the
-School-teacher to the county jail, having gone down from the courthouse,
-remained throughout the day in conference. It was evident that the
-circuit judge had acted against his own inclination, and that he could
-not be depended upon to hold the prisoner in custody. Some other method
-for ridding the community of this undesirable person must be found.
-Finally, after long reflection, they hit upon a plan.
-
-Night descended.
-
-In the village saloon, beyond the grove of oak trees behind the
-courthouse, the man who had received the money from the minister sat
-playing at cards. A rifle stood in the corner behind him. From time to
-time he arose, took up the rifle and went to the door. Keeping thus, in
-his fashion, an agreement which the sheriff had forgotten.
-
-The night advanced.
-
-At twelve o'clock the sheriff went down into the jail. He carefully
-unfastened the door opening into the grove of oak trees. Then he came
-along the corridor to the one iron cage that the jail contained. The
-door to this cage he likewise carefully unlocked. On a bedtick filled
-with straw, two men, convicted of larceny, were apparently asleep
-beside this door. On a bench against the wall behind them sat the
-School-teacher. His hat with its little crimson feather lay beside him.
-He sat unmoving, looking at something in his hand. When he observed the
-sheriff, he put the thing which he held in his hand back into the bosom
-of his coat. It was the broken toy horse which the little boy had given
-him. The sheriff beckoned with his finger.
-
-The School-teacher lifted his head and looked at the man, but he did not
-move from his place against the wall.
-
-The sheriff stepped delicately past the men, whom he believed to be
-asleep, and approached the School-teacher.
-
-"The door's open," he said, "you can get out of the county before 't's
-daylight."
-
-The School-teacher did not reply, and the sheriff went noiselessly out.
-Presently the two men got up from their pretended sleep and slipped out
-of the cage. The School-teacher rose and spoke to them. But they crept
-down the corridor. He followed. He came upon them as they opened the
-door leading out of the jail into the grove, stepped between them in the
-door and thrust them back. The act saved the men's lives, but it cost
-the School-teacher his own.
-
-There was the flash of a rifle from the saloon beyond the oak trees, and
-the School-teacher fell forward, his arms outstretched.
-
-In the evening some women and children from the mountains came to the
-circuit judge and asked him for the body of the School-teacher. He gave
-it to them, and at night they took it away.
-
-An ox, led by a little boy, bore the body, and women walking beside it
-supported it with their hands.
-
-They traveled back into the mountains.
-
-And at daybreak they laid the body in a grave which they had made
-between the two great hickories on the ridge beyond Nicholas Parks'
-house. They lined the grave with bright-colored leaves, and wrapped the
-body in that piece of linen which the School-teacher had bade the miller
-keep for him until he should need it. The hands of women and children
-filled the grave with earth. Then they went away down the mountain,
-toward the mill, leaving a woman crouched beside the grave. Her apron
-covering her yellow hail. Her body rocking.
-
-It was morning.
-
-They went down the mountain, the boy and the ox, the little girl, the
-two remaining women--one of them carrying a tiny sleeping hoy wrapped in
-a shawl, a dog beside her.
-
-On a bench of the mountain below, where a tree, uprooted by the wind,
-lay with its broken trunk pointing toward the ridge, they stopped and
-looked back. As they looked, the sun arose, a disc of gold between the
-two great hickories.
-
-With a wild harking, the dog leaped onto the fallen trunk, ran out to
-the projecting end of it, and stood there looking toward the sun.
-
-The tiny boy moved 'n his mother's arms.
-
-"Nim see Teacher," he said.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of The Mountain School-Teacher, by
-Melville Davisson Post
-
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