summaryrefslogtreecommitdiff
diff options
context:
space:
mode:
authornfenwick <nfenwick@pglaf.org>2025-02-07 01:20:03 -0800
committernfenwick <nfenwick@pglaf.org>2025-02-07 01:20:03 -0800
commitc3e7aa0a0906ac86a6bb2656f3c4bf755247e864 (patch)
tree5b5d6c540ea70274a5b6b64fca52870b7e9321af
parente4b59872de4d3e307a25c967b7dda00210e243ba (diff)
NormalizeHEADmain
-rw-r--r--.gitattributes4
-rw-r--r--LICENSE.txt11
-rw-r--r--README.md2
-rw-r--r--old/54572-0.txt6784
-rw-r--r--old/54572-0.zipbin133182 -> 0 bytes
-rw-r--r--old/54572-h.zipbin186079 -> 0 bytes
-rw-r--r--old/54572-h/54572-h.htm9243
-rw-r--r--old/54572-h/images/cover.jpgbin39427 -> 0 bytes
-rw-r--r--old/54572-h/images/cum-facent-clamant.jpgbin5771 -> 0 bytes
9 files changed, 17 insertions, 16027 deletions
diff --git a/.gitattributes b/.gitattributes
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..d7b82bc
--- /dev/null
+++ b/.gitattributes
@@ -0,0 +1,4 @@
+*.txt text eol=lf
+*.htm text eol=lf
+*.html text eol=lf
+*.md text eol=lf
diff --git a/LICENSE.txt b/LICENSE.txt
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..6312041
--- /dev/null
+++ b/LICENSE.txt
@@ -0,0 +1,11 @@
+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
+jurisdictions other than the United States. Anyone seeking to utilize
+this eBook outside of the United States should confirm copyright
+status under the laws that apply to them.
diff --git a/README.md b/README.md
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..a69909b
--- /dev/null
+++ b/README.md
@@ -0,0 +1,2 @@
+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #54572 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/54572)
diff --git a/old/54572-0.txt b/old/54572-0.txt
deleted file mode 100644
index b75b633..0000000
--- a/old/54572-0.txt
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,6784 +0,0 @@
-The Project Gutenberg eBook, The Chronic Loafer, by Nelson Lloyd
-
-
-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 Chronic Loafer
-
-
-Author: Nelson Lloyd
-
-
-
-Release Date: April 19, 2017 [eBook #54572]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-
-***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE CHRONIC LOAFER***
-
-
-E-text prepared by MWS, Peter Vachuska, and the Online Distributed
-Proofreading Team (http://www.pgdp.net)
-
-
-
-THE CHRONIC LOAFER
-
-by
-
-NELSON LLOYD
-
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-
-
-
-
-New York
-J. F. Taylor & Company
-1900
-
-Copyright, 1900,
-By
-J. F. Taylor & Company.
-
-
-
-
-CONTENTS.
-
-
- CHAPTER PAGE
-
- I. The Reunion 5
-
- II. The Spelling Bee 17
-
- III. Absalom Bunkel 28
-
- IV. The Missus 37
-
- V. The Awfullest Thing 54
-
- VI. The Wrestling Match 63
-
- VII. The Tramp’s Romance 74
-
- VIII. Ambition--An Argument 80
-
- IX. Bumbletree’s Bass-Horn 97
-
- X. Little Si Berrybush 107
-
- XI. Cupid and a Mule 126
-
- XII. The Haunted Store 136
-
- XIII. Rivals 149
-
- XIV. Buddies 159
-
- XV. Joe Varner’s Belling 169
-
- XVI. The Sentimental Tramp 176
-
- XVII. Hiram Gum, the Fiddler 183
-
- XVIII. The “Good Un” 193
-
- XIX. Breaking the Ice 202
-
- XX. Two Stay-at-Homes 212
-
- XXI. Eben Huckin’s Conversion 219
-
- XXII. A Piece in the Paper 237
-
-
-
-
-THE CHRONIC LOAFER.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER I.
-
-_The Reunion._
-
-
-In the center of one of the most picturesque valleys in the heart of
-Pennsylvania lies the village and at one end of its single street stands
-the store. On the broad porch of this homely and ancient edifice there is
-a long oak bench, rough, and hacked in countless places by the knives of
-many generations of loungers. From this bench, looking northward across
-an expanse of meadows, a view is had of a low, green ridge, dotted here
-and there with white farm buildings. Behind that rise the mountains,
-along whose sides on bright days play the fanciful shadows of the clouds.
-Close by the store is the rumbling mill, and beyond it runs the creek,
-spanned by a wooden bridge whose planking now and then resounds with
-the beat of horses’ hoofs, so that it adds its music to the roar of the
-mill-wheels and ring of the anvil in the blacksmith shop across the
-stream.
-
-One July day the stage rattled over the bridge, past the mill and drew up
-at the store. The G. A. R. Man, the only passenger, climbed out of the
-lumbering vehicle, dragging after him a shapeless, battered carpet-bag.
-He limped up the steps in the wake of the driver, who was helping the
-Storekeeper with the mail-pouch, and when on the porch stopped and nodded
-a greeting to the men who were sitting on the bench kicking their heels
-together--the Patriarch, the School Teacher, the Miller, the Tinsmith
-and the Chronic Loafer. The loungers gazed solemnly at the new arrival;
-at his broad-brimmed, black slouch hat, which though drawn down over his
-left temple did not hide the end of a band of court-plaster; at his blue
-coat, two of its brass buttons missing; at his trousers, in which there
-were several rents that had been clumsily sewed together.
-
-The silence was broken by the School Teacher, who remarked with a
-contemptuous curl of the nose, “So you’ve got home from Gettysburg, have
-you? From your appearance one would judge that you had come from a battle
-instead of a reunion.”
-
-“Huh! A good un--a good un!”
-
-All eyes were turned toward the end of the bench, where sat the Chronic
-Loafer. He was a tall, thin, loose-jointed man. Thick, untrimmed locks
-of tawny hair fell from beneath his ragged, straw hat, framing a face
-whose most prominent features were a pair of deep-set, dull blue eyes,
-two sharp, protruding cheek-bones and a week’s growth of red beard. His
-attire was simple in the extreme. It consisted of a blue striped, hickory
-shirt, at the neck-band of which glistened a large, white china button,
-which buttoned nothing, but served solely as an ornament, since no collar
-had ever embraced the thin, brown neck above it. A piece of heavy twine
-running over the left shoulder and down across the chest supported a pair
-of faded, brown overalls, which were adorned at the right knee by a large
-patch of white cotton. He was sitting in a heap. His head seemed to join
-his body somewhere in the region of his heart. His bare left foot rested
-on his right knee and his left knee was encircled by his long arms.
-
-“A good un!” he cried again.
-
-Then he suddenly uncoiled himself, throwing back his head until it struck
-the wall behind him, and swung his legs wildly to and fro.
-
-“Well, what air you so tickled about now?” growled the G. A. R. Man.
-
-“I was jest a-thinkin’ that you’d never come outen no battle lookin’ like
-that,” drawled the Loafer.
-
-He nudged the Miller with his elbow and winked at the Teacher. Forthwith
-the three broke into loud fits of laughter.
-
-The Patriarch pounded his hickory stick vigorously on the floor, pulled
-his heavy platinum rimmed spectacles down to the tip of his nose and over
-their tops gazed in stern disapproval.
-
-“Boys, boys,” he said, “no joshing. It ain’t right to josh.”
-
-“True--true,” said the Loafer. He had wrapped himself up again and was
-in repose. “My pap allus use to say, ‘A leetle joshin’ now an’ then is
-relished be the wisest men--that is, ef they hain’t the fellys what’s
-bein’ joshed.’”
-
-The G. A. R. Man had been leaning uneasily against a pillar. On this
-amicable speech from his chief tormenter, the frown that had been playing
-over his face gave way to a broad grin, three white teeth glistening in
-the open space between his stubby mustache and beard.
-
-“Yes,” he said, “I hev come home afore my ’scursion ticket expired.” He
-removed his hat and disclosed a great patch of plaster on his forehead.
-“Ye see Gettysburg was a sight hotter fer me yesterday than in ’63. But
-I’ve got to the eend o’ my story.”
-
-“So that same old yarn you’ve ben tellin’ at every camp-fire sence the
-war is finished at last. That’s a blessin’!” cried the Miller.
-
-“I never knowd you was in the war. I thot you jest drawed a pension,”
-interrupted the Loafer.
-
-The veteran did not heed these jibes but fixed himself comfortably on
-the upturned end of his carpet-bag.
-
-“Teacher, I’ve never seen you at any of our camp-fires,” he began.
-“Consekently the eend o’ my story won’t do you no good ’less you knows
-the first part. So I’ll tell you ’bout my experience at the battle o’
-Gettysburg an’ then explain my second fight there. I was in the war
-bespite the insinooations o’ them ez was settin’ on that same bench
-in the day o’ the nation’s danger. I served as a corporal in the
-Two-hundred-and-ninety-fifth Pennsylwany Wolunteers an’ was honorable
-discharged in ’63.”
-
-“Fer which discharge he gits his pension,” the Loafer ventured.
-
-“That ain’t so. I cot malary an’ several other complaints in the
-Wilterness that henders me workin’ steady. It was no wonder, either, fer
-our retchment was allus fightin’. We was knowd ez the Bloody Pennsylwany
-retchment, fer we’d ben in every battle from Bull Run on, an’ hed had
-some wery desp’rate engagements. ’Henever they was any chargin’ to be
-done, we done it; ef they was a fylorn hope, we was on it; ef they was
-a breastwork to be tuk, we tuk it. You uns can imagine that be the eend
-o’ two years sech work, we was pretty bad cut up. ’Hen the army chased
-the rebels up inter this state we was with it, but afore the fight at
-Gettysburg it was concided that sence they wasn’t many of us, we’d better
-be put to guardin’ baggage wagons. That was a kind o’ work that didn’t
-take many men, but required fighters in caset the enemy give the boys in
-front a slip an’ sneaked een on our rear.”
-
-The School Teacher coughed learnedly and raised a hand to indicate that
-he had something to say. Having secured the floor, he began: “When Darius
-the First invaded Europe he had so many women, children and baggage
-wagons in his train that----”
-
-“See here,” cried the Patriarch, testily. “Dar’us was afore my time, I
-allow. We don’t care two snaps o’ a ram’s tail ’bout Dar’us. We wants to
-know ’bout them bloody Pennsylwanians.”
-
-The pedagogue shook his head in condemnation of the ignorance of his
-companions, but allowed the G. A. R. Man to proceed.
-
-“Durin’ the first day’s engagement our retchment, with a couple of
-others, an’ the trains, was ’bout three mile ahint Cemetary Hill, but on
-the next mornin’ we was ordered back twenty mile. It was hard to hev to
-drive off inter the country ’hen the boys was hevin’ it hot bangin’ away
-at the enemy, but them was orders, an’ a soldier allus obeys orders.
-
-“The fightin’ begin airly that day. We got the wagons a-goin’ afore
-sun-up, but it wasn’t long tell we could hear the roar o’ the guns, an’
-see the smoke risin’ in clouds an’ then settlin’ down over the country.
-We felt pretty blue, too, ez we went trampin’ along, fer the wounded an’
-stragglers was faster ’an we. They’d come hobblin’ up with bad news,
-sayin’ how the boys was bein’ cut up along the Emmettsburg road, an’
-how we’d better move faster, ez the army was losin’ an’ the rebels ’ud
-soon be een on us. Then they’d hobble away agin. Them wasn’t our only
-troubles, either. The mules was behavin’ mean an’ cuttin’ up capers, an’
-the wagons was breakin’ down. Then we hed to be continual watchin’ fer
-them Confederate cavalry we was expectin’ was a-goin’ to pounce down on
-us.
-
-“Evenin’ come, an’ we lay to fer the night. The fires was started, an’
-the coffee set a-boilin’, an’ we had a chancet to rest a while. The
-wounded an’ the stragglers that jest filled the country kep’ comin’ in
-all the time, sometim’s alone, sometim’s in twos an’ threes, some with
-their arms tied up in all sorts o’ queer ways, or hobblin’ on sticks, or
-with their heads bandaged; about the miserablest lot o’ men I ever see.
-The noise of the fight stopped, an’ everything was quiet an’ peaceful
-like nawthin’ hed ben happenin’. The quiet an’ the dark an’ the fear we
-was goin’ to meet the enemy at any minute made it mighty onpleasant, an’
-what with the stories them wounded fellys give us, we didn’t rest wery
-easy.
-
-“I went out on the picket line at ten o’clock. Seemed I hedn’t ben there
-an hour tell I made out the dark figure of a man comin’ th’oo the fiel’s
-wery slow like. Me an’ the fellys with me watched sharp. Sudden the man
-stopped, hesitated like an’ sank down in a heap. Then he picked himself
-up an’ come staggerin’ on. He couldn’t ’a’ ben more’n fifty yards away
-’hen he th’owed up his hands an’ pitched for’a’d on his face. Me an’ me
-buddy run out an’ carried him inter the fire. But it wasn’t no uset. He
-was dead.
-
-“They was a bullet wound in his shoulder, an’ his clothes was soaked
-with blood that hed ben drippin’, drippin’ tell he fell the last time. I
-opened his coat, an’ in his pocket foun’ a letter, stamped, an’ directed
-apparent to his wife--that was all to tell who he was. So I went back to
-me post thinkin’ no more of it an’ never noticin’ that that man’s coat
-’ud ’a’ fit two of him.
-
-“Mornin’ come, an’ the firin’ begin over toward Gettysburg. We could see
-the smoke risin’ agin an’ hear the big guns bellerin’ tell the ground
-beneath our feet seemed to swing up an’ down. I tell you uns that was a
-grand scene. We was awful excited, fer we knowd the first two days hed
-gone agin us, an’ more an’ more stragglers an’ wounded come limpin’ back,
-all with bad news. I was gittin’ nervous, thinkin’ an’ thinkin’ over it,
-an’ wishin’ I was where the fun was. Then I concided mebbe I wasn’t so
-bad off, fer I might ’a’ been killed like the poor felly I seen the night
-before, an’ in thinkin’ o’ the man I remembered the letter an’ got it
-out. I didn’t ’tend to open it, but final I thot it wasn’t safe to go
-mailin’ letters ’thout knowin’ jest what was in ’em, so I read it.
-
-“The letter was wrote on a piece o’ wrappin’ paper in an awful bad
-handwrite, but ’hen I got th’oo it I set plumb down an’ cried like a
-chil’. It was from John Parker to his wife Mary, livin’ somewhere out in
-western Pennsylwany. He begin be mentionin’ how we was on the eve of a
-big fight an’ how he ’tended to do his duty even ef it come to fallin’
-at his post. It was hard, he sayd, but he knowd she’d ruther hev no
-husban’ than a coward. He was allus thinkin’ o’ her an’ the baby he’d
-never seen, but felt satisfaction in knowin’ they was well fixed. It was
-sorrerful, he continyerd, that she was like to be a widdy so young, an’
-he wasn’t goin’ to be mean about it. He allus knowd, he sayd, how she’d
-hed a hankerin’ after young Silas Quincy ’fore she tuk him. Ef he fell,
-he thot she’d better merry Silas ’hen she’d recovered from the ’fects o’
-his goin’. He ended up with a lot o’ last ‘good-bys’ an’ talk about duty
-to his country.
-
-“Right then an’ there I set down an’ wrote that poor woman a few lines
-tellin’ how I’d foun’ the letter in her dead husban’s pocket. I was
-goin’ to quit at that, but I concided it ’ud be nice to add somethin’
-consolin’, so I told how we’d foun’ him on the fiel’ o’ battle, face to
-the enemy, an’ how his last words was fer her an’ the baby. That day we
-won the fight, an’ the next I mailed Mrs. Parker her letter. It seemed
-about the plum blamedest, saddest thing I ever hed to do with.”
-
-“I’ve allus ben cur’ous ’bout that widdy, too,” the Chronic Loafer
-remarked.
-
-The Teacher cleared his throat and recited:
-
- “Now night her course began, and over heaven
- Inducing darkness grateful truce imposed,
- And silence on the odious din of war;
- Under her cloud----”
-
-“No poetry jist yet, Teacher,” said the veteran. “Wait tell you hear the
-sekal o’ the story.”
-
-“Yes, let’s hev somethin’ new,” growled the Miller.
-
-Having silenced the pedagogue, the G. A. R. Man resumed his narrative.
-
-“I never heard no more o’ Widdy Parker tell last night, an’ then it come
-most sudden. Our retchment hed a reunion on the fiel’ this year, you
-know, an’ on Monday I went back to Gettysburg fer the first time sence I
-was honorable discharged. The boys was all there, what’s left o’ ’em, an’
-we jest hed a splendid time wisitin’ the monyments an’ talkin’ over the
-days back in ’63. There was my old tent-mate, Sam Thomas, on one leg,
-an’ Jim Luckenbach, who was near tuk be yaller janders afore Petersburg.
-There was the colonel, growed old an’ near blind, an’ our captain an’ a
-hundred odd others.
-
-“Well, last night we was a lot of us a-settin’ in the hotel tellin’
-stories. It come my turn an’ I told about the dead soldier’s letter. A
-big felly in a unyform hed ben leanin’ agin the bar watchin’ us. ’Hen
-I begin he pricked up his ears a leetle. Ez I got furder an’ furder he
-seemed to git more an’ more interested, I noticed. By an’ by I seen he
-was becomin’ red an’ oneasy, an’ final ’hen I’d finished he walks acrosst
-the room to where we was settin’ an’ stands there starin’ at me, never
-sayin’ nawthin’.
-
-“A minute passed. I sais, sais I, ‘Well, comrade, what air you starin’ so
-fer?’
-
-“Sais he, ‘That letter was fer Mary Parker?’
-
-“‘True,’ sais I, surprised.
-
-“‘Dead sure?’ sais he.
-
-“‘Sure,’ sais I.
-
-“Then he shakes his fist an’ yells, ‘I’ve ’tended most every reunion here
-sence the war hopin’ to meet the idjet that sent that letter to my wife
-an’ wrote that foolishness ’bout findin’ my dead body. After twenty-five
-years I’ve foun’ you!’
-
-“He pulls off his coat. The boys all jumps up.
-
-“I, half skeert to death, cries, ‘But you ain’t the dead man!’
-
-“‘Dead,’ he yells. ‘Never ben near it. Nor did I ’tend to hev every blame
-fool in the army mailin’ my letters nuther. Because you finds a man with
-my coat on, that hain’t no reason he’s me. I was gittin’ to the rear with
-orders ez lively ez a cricket an’ th’owed off that coat jest because it
-was warm runnin’.’
-
-“‘Hen I seen what I’d done I grabs his arm, I was so excited, an’ cries,
-‘Did she merry Silas Quincy?’
-
-“‘It wasn’t your fault she didn’t,’ he sais, deliberate like, rollin’
-up his sleeves. ‘I got home two days after the letter an’ stopped the
-weddin’ party on their way to church.’”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER II.
-
-_The Spelling Bee._
-
-
-The Chronic Loafer stretched his legs along the counter and rested his
-back comfortably against a pile of calicoes.
-
-“I allus held,” he said, “that they hain’t no sech things ez a
-roarinborinallus. I know some sais they is ’lectric lights, but ’hen I
-seen that big un last night I sayd to my Missus, an’ I hol’ I’m right, I
-sayd that it was nawthin’ but the iron furnaces over the mo’ntain. Fer
-s’pose, ez the Teacher claims, they was lights at the North Pole--does
-you uns believe we could see ’em all that distance? Well now!”
-
-He gazed impressively about the store. The Patriarch, the Miller and
-the G.A.R. Man were disposed to agree with him. The School Teacher was
-sarcastic.
-
-“Where ignorance is bliss ’twere folly to be wise,” he said. He tilted
-back on two legs of his chair and adjusted his thumbs in the arm-holes of
-his waistcoat, so that all eight of his long quivering fingers seemed to
-be pointing in scorn at the man on the counter.
-
-The Loafer rolled slowly over on one side and eyed the pedagogue.
-
-“Ben readin’ the almanick lately, hain’t ye?” he drawled.
-
-“If you devoted less time to the almanac and more to physical geography,”
-retorted the Teacher, “you’d know that the Aurora Borealis hain’t a light
-made on _terra firma_ but that it is a peculiar magnetic condition of
-the atmosphere. And the manner in which you pronounce it is exceedingly
-ludicrous. It’s not a roarinborinallus. It is spelled _A-u-r-o-r-a
-B-o-r-e-a-l-i-s_.”
-
-The Loafer sat up, crossed his legs and embraced his knee, thus forming a
-natural fortification behind which he could collect his thoughts before
-hurling them at his glib and smiling foe. He gazed dully at his rival a
-moment; then said suddenly, “My pap was a cute man.”
-
-“He hasn’t left any living monument to his good sense,” said the Teacher.
-
-The Loafer looked at the Storekeeper, who was sitting beneath him on
-an empty egg-crate. “Do you mind how he use to say that Solerman meant
-‘teacher’ ’hen he sayd ‘wine’; how Solerman meant, ‘Look not upon the
-teacher ’hen he is read,’ fer a leetle learnin’ leaveneth the whole lump
-an’ puffs him up so----”
-
-The pedagogue’s chair came down on all four legs with a crash. His
-right thumb left the seclusion of his waistcoat, his right arm shot out
-straight, and a trembling forefinger pointed at the eyes that were just
-visible over the top of the white-patched knee.
-
-“See here!” he shouted. “I’m ready for an argyment, but no callin’ names.
-This is no place for abuse.”
-
-The Loafer resumed his reclining attitude and fixed his gaze on the dim
-recesses of the ceiling.
-
-“I hain’t callin’ no one names,” he said slowly, “I was jest tellin’ what
-my pap use to say.”
-
-“Tut-tut-tut, boys,” interrupted the Patriarch, thumping the floor with
-his stick. “Don’t git quarrelin’ over sech a leetle thing ez the meanin’
-o’ a word. Mebbe ye’s both right.”
-
-The Tinsmith had hitherto occupied a nail keg near the stove, unnoticed.
-Now he began to rub his hands together gleefully and to chuckle. The
-Teacher was convinced that his own discomfiture was the cause of the
-other’s mirth.
-
-“Well, what are you so tickled about?” he snapped.
-
-“Aurory Borealis. Perry Muthersbaugh spelled down Jawhn Jimson on that
-very word. Yes, he done it on that very word. My, but that there was a
-bee, Perfessor!”
-
-“Now ’fore you git grindin’ away, sence you’ve got on spellin’,” said the
-Chronic Loafer, “I want to tell a good un----”
-
-“Let him tell us about Perry Muthersbaugh,” said the Teacher in decisive
-tones. The title “professor” had had a softening effect, and he repaid
-the compliment by supporting the Tinsmith’s claim to the floor.
-
-Compelled to silence, the Chronic Loafer closed his eyes as though
-oblivious to all about him, but a hand stole to his ear and formed a
-trumpet there to aid his hearing.
-
-“Some folks is nat’ral spellers jest ez others is nat’ral musicians,”
-began the Tinsmith. “Agin, it’s jest ez hard to make a good speller be
-edication ez it is to make a good bass-horn player, fer a felly that
-hain’t the inborn idee o’ how many letters is needed to make a word’ll
-never spell no better than the man that hain’t the nat’ral sense o’ how
-much wind’s needed to make a note, ’ll play the bass-horn.”
-
-“I cannot wholly agree with you,” the Teacher interrupted. “Give a child
-first words of one syllable, then two; drill him in words ending in
-_t-i-o-n_ until----”
-
-“We won’t discuss that, Perfessor. It don’t affect our case, fer Jawhn
-Jimson was a nat’ral speller. You never seen the like. Give him a
-word o’ six or seven syllables an’ he’d spell it out like it was on a
-blackboard right before him. ’Hen he was twenty he’d downed all the
-scholars in Happy Grove an’ won about six bees. Then he went to Pikestown
-Normal School, an’ ’hen he come back you never knowd the beat. He hed
-stedied Lating an’ algebray there, but I guesst he must also ’a’ spent
-considerable time a-brushin’ up his spellin’, fer they was only one felly
-’bout these parts could keep with him any time at all. He was my frien’
-Perry Muthersbaugh, who tot up to Kishikoquillas.
-
-“You uns mind the winter we hed the big blizzard, ’hen the snow covered
-all the fences an’ was piled so high in the roads that we hed to drive
-th’oo the fiel’s. They was a heap sight goin’ on that year--church
-sosh’bles, singin’ school an’ spellin’ bees. Me an’ Perry Muthersbaugh
-was buddies, an’ not a week passed ’thout we went some’eres together.
-Fore I knowd it him an’ Jawhn Jimson was keepin’ company with Hannah
-Ciders. She was jest ez pretty ez a peach, plump an rosy, with the
-slickest nat’ral hair an’ teeth you uns ever seen. She was fond o’
-edication, too, so ’hen them teachers was after her she couldn’t make
-up her min’. She favored both. Perry was good lookin’ an’ steady an’ no
-fool. He’d set all evenin’ along side o’ her an’ never say nawthin’ much,
-but she kind o’ thot him good company. It allus seemed to me that Jimson
-was a bit conceity an’ bigitive, but he was amusin’ an’ hed the advantage
-of a normal school edication. He kind o’ dazzled her. She didn’t know
-which of ’em to take, an’ figured on it tell well inter the winter. Her
-color begin to go an’ she was gittin’ thin. Perry an’ Jawhn was near
-wild with anxiousness an’ was continual quarrelin’. Then what d’ye s’pose
-they done?”
-
-“It’ll take a long time fer ’em to do much the way you tells it,” the
-Chronic Loafer grumbled.
-
-“She give out,” continued the Tinsmith, not heeding the interruption,
-“that she’d take the best edicated. That tickled Jawhn, an’ he blowed
-around to his frien’s how he was goin’ to send ’em invites to his
-weddin’. Perry jest grit his teeth an’ sayd nawthin’ ’cept that he was
-ready. Then he got out his spellin’ book an’ went to sawin’ wood jest ez
-hard an’ fast ez he could.”
-
-“That there reminds me o’ my pap.” The Chronic Loafer was sitting up
-again.
-
-“Well, if your pap was anything like his son,” said the Teacher, “I guess
-he could ’a’ sawed most of his wood with a spellin’ book.”
-
-The author of this witticism laughed long and loud, having support in the
-Miller and the G.A. R. Man. The Patriarch put his hand under his chin and
-dexterously turned his long beard upward so that it hid his face. In the
-seclusion thus formed he had a quiet chuckle all to himself, for he was a
-politic old person and loath to offend.
-
-“Boys, boys,” he said when the mirth was subsiding, “remember what the
-Scriptur’ sais----”
-
-“Pap didn’t git it from the Scriptur’,” said the Loafer complacently. “He
-use to give it ez a text tho’, somethin’ like this, ‘He that goeth at
-the wood-pile too fast gen’rally breaketh his saw on the fust nail an’
-freezeth all winter.’”
-
-“Not ef he gits the right kind o’ firewood--the kind that hasn’t no
-nails,” said the Miller hotly.
-
-“Huh!” exclaimed the Loafer, and he sprawled out upon the counter once
-more.
-
-The Tinsmith took up the narrative again.
-
-“It was agreed that the two teachers ’ud hev it out at the big spellin’
-bee ’tween their schools the follyin’ week. The night set come. Sech a
-crowd ez gathered at the Happy Grove school house! They was sleighin’,
-an’ fer a quarter of a mile in front o’ the buildin’ they was nawthin’
-but horses hitched to the fences. The room was decorated with greens
-an’ lighted with ile lamps fer the occasion, an’ was jest packed. All
-the seats was filled with girls. The men was lined three deep along the
-walls an’ banked up on top of one another at the back. On one side o’ the
-platform, settin’ on a long bench under the blackboard, was the sixteen
-best scholars o’ Happy Grove school led be Jawhn Jimson. He was smilin’
-an’ conferdent, an’ gazed longin’ at Hannah Ciders, who was on one o’ the
-front seats an’ ’peared rather nervous.
-
-“Perry Muthersbaugh come up to me ez I was standin’ be the stove warmin’
-up, an’ I whispered him a few words of encouragement, tho’ I felt sorry
-fer him. He was a leetle excited but ’lowed it ’ud come out all right.
-Then he tuk his place on the other side o’ the platform with his sixteen
-scholars, an’ the proceedin’s begin.
-
-“Teacher Long from Lemon township give out the words, while me an’
-another felly kep’ tally. The first word was soupeny. Perry missed it.
-He spelled it _s-u-p-e-n-a_. It jest made me sick to hev to mark down
-one agin his side. Jimson tuk it, spelled it all right, an’ commenced to
-smile. Muthersbaugh looked solemn. The next felly on his side spelled
-supersedes correct, while the girl beside Jawhn missed superannuation.
-Happy Grove and Kishikoquillas was even.
-
-“I tell you uns it was most excitin’ to see them trained spellers
-battlin’. They kep’ it up fer half an hour, an’ ’hen they quit Happy
-Grove hed two misses less than Kishikoquillas. Jimson was smilin’
-triumphant. Perry didn’t do nawthin’ but set there quiet like.
-
-“Then come the final test--the spellin’ down. After a recess o’ ten
-minutes the sides lined up agin, an’ ’henever one missed a word he hed
-to go sit in the aud’ence. They spelled an’ spelled tell they was no
-one left but Jawhn Jimson an’ Perry Muthersbaugh, standin’ glarin’ at
-each other an’ singin’ out letters. It was a grand sight. Hannah Ciders
-was pale an’ tremblin’, fer she knowd the valley of an idle word then.
-The aud’ence was most stretchin’ their necks outen joint they was so
-interested. Two lamps went out an’ no one fixed them. The air was blue
-with steam made be the snow meltin’ offen the fellys’ boots, the stove
-begin to smoke, an’ the room was suffocatin’, yit no one thot to put up a
-winder, the excitemen’ was so bad.
-
-“Sech words ez penultimate, concatenation, pentateuch an’ silhouette
-come dead easy to them teachers. They kep’ glarin’ at each other an’
-spellin’ like their life depended on it. Poor Long’s voice got weaker an’
-weaker givin’ out words, an’ I was that nervous I could hairdly see. They
-spelled all the _ations_ an’ _entions_, all the words endin’ in _i-s-m_,
-_d-l-e_ an’ _ness_, tell it seemed they’d use up the book. Perry was
-gittin’ more excited. Jimson’s knees was tremblin’ visible.
-
-“Then Rorybory Allus was give out. You could ’a’ heard a pin drop in that
-room. Jimson he begin slow, ez ef it was dead easy: ‘_A-r-o-r-a_, Aurora;
-_b-o-r_, Aurora Bor; _e-a-l-i-s_, Aurora Borealis.’
-
-“A mumble went over the room. He seen he was wrong an’ yelled, ‘_A-u_, I
-mean!’
-
-“‘Too late,’ sais Long. ‘Only one chancet at a time. The gentleman who
-gits it right first, wins.’
-
-“Jawhn was white ez a sheet, an’ his face an’ han’s was twitchin’ ez he
-stood there glarin’ at Perry. Muthersbaugh looked at the floor like he
-was stedyin’. I seen Hannah Ciders lean for’a’d an’ grip the desk with
-her han’s. Then I knowd she’d made up her min’ which she favored.
-
-“He begin, ‘_A-u_, au; _r-o-r_, ror, Auror; _a_, Aurora; _B-o-r-e_, bore,
-Aurora Bore; _a-l_, al, Aurora Boreal--’ Then he stopped, an’ looked up
-at the ceilin’, an’ stedied.
-
-“I seen tears in Hannah Ciders’ eyes ez she leaned for’a’d, not
-breathin’. I seen Jimson grin, an’ knowd he remembered he’d left out the
-_u_ an’ ’ud spell it jest ez quick ez he got a chancet. I believed Perry
-was goin’ to say _a_, that it was all up with him an’ that Hannah Ciders
-knowd too late who she favored.
-
-“All o’ a sudden the door flew open an’ they was a cry: ‘Hoss thief!
-thieves! Some un’s run off with Teacher Jimson’s sleigh.’
-
-“You uns never seen sech a panic. The weemen jumped up an’ yelled. The
-men all piled outen the door. Jawhn Jimson climbed th’oo the winder, an’
-Teacher Long dropped his spellin’ book an’ followed. To my surprise Perry
-Muthersbaugh never moved. He jest stood there lookin’ at Hannah Ciders
-an’ smilin’ while she gazed back. I was gittin’ outen the winder among
-the last an’ turned to see ef Perry was ahint me--that’s how I noticed
-it. Fer three minutes them two stared at each other an’ I stared at them,
-not knowin’ what to make of it. Meantime the room was cleared. Outside we
-heard the sleigh-bells ringin’ ez the boys started off after the thieves;
-we heard Jawhn Jimson an’ Teacher Long callin’ to ’em to go in this an’
-that direction; we heard the weemen complainin’ because so many’d hev to
-walk home.
-
-“Jest then the rear winder, right back o’ where Perry was standin’, slid
-up an’ his young brother Sam stuck in his head. He looked ’round, an’ he
-seen the coast was clear. Then he whispered, ‘I give that ’larm in time,’
-Perry, didn’t I? Teacher Jimson’s horse is hitched right here ahint the
-school-house, an’ you can take her home jest ez soon ez the last o’ these
-fools gits away.’
-
-“Perry wheeled round an’ run at the youngster, ketchin’ him be the collar
-an’ draggin’ him inter the room.
-
-“‘What you mean,’ sais he, shakin’ him like a rat. ‘What you mean be
-spoilin’ the bee?’
-
-“Sam begin to yowl. ‘I seen ye was stuck,’ he sais, ‘an’ I thot I’d help
-ye out.’
-
-“With that Perry th’owed his brother off into a corner o’ the room. Then
-he stood up straight an’ looked Hannah Ciders right in the eye.
-
-“‘He thot I was stuck,’ he sayd, steppin’ off the platform an’ walkin’ up
-to the girl. ‘But I ain’t. The last syllable’s _e-a-l-a-s_!
-
-“‘No,’ she answers quiet like. ‘It’s _e-a-l-i-s_--but that ain’t no
-difference.’”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER III.
-
-_Absalom Bunkel._
-
-
-The Patriarch flattened his nose against the grimy windowpane and peered
-out into the storm.
-
-“Mighty souls!” he cried. “Jest look at it a-comin’ down! Hed I a-knowd
-we was goin’ to hev it like this, you’d ’a’ seen me a-leavin’ home--you’d
-’a’ seen me a-leavin’ home.”
-
-The old man thoughtfully stroked his beard. He felt that he had met but
-just retribution for coming to the store to loaf. When an hour before
-he had awakened from a doze in his arm-chair, picked up his stick and
-hobbled to the village, the sky was clear and blue; not a cloud was
-visible anywhere, and the sun was blazing down on the fields of yellow
-grain that he overlooked from the porch of his little house on the hill.
-But the storm had been gathering its force unseen behind the neighboring
-mountains, piling black cloud on black cloud. And then, like an army
-charging on a sleeping enemy, it swept forth from its hiding-place, amid
-the flash of lightning and the crash of thunder, and deluged the valley.
-
-“My, oh, my!” muttered the old man. “It serves me right. I ought to ’a’
-knowd better. ’Henever I runs down here fer a minute’s loaf, it rains;
-never a team comes ’long to give me a lift home, an’ I hes to paddle back
-in me leaky ole boots.”
-
-He hobbled to his chair by the empty stove, about which were gathered the
-men of the village, despite the fact that no fire blazed within and the
-cold weather was far ahead.
-
-“I hope the company ain’t displeasin’,” drawled the Chronic Loafer. He
-knocked the ashes out of his pipe, refilled and lighted it, and sprawled
-out upon the counter.
-
-“Not at all--at all. It’s the loafin’ I hate. I never could loaf jest
-right,” replied the Patriarch, glancing at the prostrate form.
-
-The Loafer gave no answer save a faint “Huh!”
-
-“Jest because a felly sets ’round the stove hain’t no sign he’s lazy,
-Grandpap,” said the Miller with warmth.
-
-“Fur be it from me from sayin’ so, boys--fur be it,” said the old man.
-“But ez I was sayin’ a while ago, I don’t want to git inter no sech
-habits ez Absalom Bunkel.”
-
-“Ab’slom Bunkel--Bunkel--Bunkel?” repeated the Tinsmith, punctuating his
-remark with puffs of tobacco smoke.
-
-“Bunkel--Bunkel?” said the Storekeeper inquiringly, tapping the end of
-his nose with his pencil.
-
-“Who’s Abs’lom Bunkel?” the Loafer cried.
-
-“Absalom Bunkel was a man ez was nat’rally so lazy it was a credit to
-him every time he moved,” the Patriarch began. He fixed his stick firmly
-on the floor, piled his two fat hands on its big knob head, and leaned
-forward until his chin almost rested on his knuckles. “You uns knows the
-old lawg house that stands where the Big Run crosses the road over the
-mo’ntain. It’s all tumbled down now. They ain’t no daubin’ atween the
-lawgs; the chimbley’s fallen, the fence is gone, an’ the lot’s choked
-up with weeds. It’s a forlorn place to-day, but ’hen I was a lad it
-was jest about the slickest thing along the ridge yander. That’s where
-Absalom Bunkel lived, an’ his pap, an’ his pap’s pap lived afore him.
-Ezry Bunkel was a mean man, an’ he come nat’ral by his meanness, fer they
-never was one o’ the name who was knowed to buy anything he could borry
-or give away anything he could sell. So ’hen he died he left Absalom a
-neat little pile o’ about nine hundred dollars. An’ a fortunate thing it
-was fer the son, fer he’d ruther by fur set on the porch with the pangs
-o’hunger gnawin’ th’oo him, a-listenin’ to the birds an’ watchin’ the
-bees a-hummin’ over the sunflowers, than to ’a’ worked.
-
-“Now Absalom was afore my time, an’ I never seen him myself, but I’ve
-heard tell of him from my pap, an’ what my pap sayd was allus true--true
-ez gawspel it was. He otter ’a’ knowd all about it, too, fer he was a
-pall-bearer at Ezry’s funeral. Absalom was thirty-five year old ’hen that
-happened. He didn’t go off spendin’ his fortune--not much. He jest set
-right down in a rockin’ chair on the front porch an’ let his sister Nancy
-look after the place. Nance done the farmin’; Nance made the garden;
-Nance milked the cow; Nance done the housework an’ come to the store. He
-done nawthin’--absolute nawthin’.
-
-“He was never out o’ bed afore sun-up. Ef it was warm he’d set on the
-leetle porch all day lookin’ over the walley, watchin’ the folks goin’ by
-an’ the birds swoopin’ th’oo the fiel’s, an’ listenin’ to the dreamy hum
-o’ nature. Ef it was cold he’d loaf all day be the fireplace, bakin’ his
-shins. Sometim’s Nance ’ud go away fer a spell an’ fergit to leave him
-wood. Does he cut some fer himself like an ordinary man? Not him. He jest
-walks to the nearest possible fence-rail, kerrys it inter the house, puts
-one eend inter the fire an’ keeps pushin’ een ez it burns off. That’s the
-kind o’ a felly Absalom Bunkel was.
-
-“Now it happened that ’hen he’d been livin’ this way tell his forty-fifth
-year ole Andy Crimmel tuk a placet about a miled beyant his. One nice
-afternoon ez Absalom set a-dozin’ on the porch, Andy’s dotter, Annie May,
-come trippin’ down the road on her way to the store, lookin’ pretty ez a
-pictur in her red sunbonnet, swingin’ a basket an’ singin’ a melancholy
-piece. Absalom woke with a start an’ rubbed his heavy eyes. He got sight
-of her pink cheeks afore she ducked under her bonnet, fer ’hen she seen
-him she sudden stopped her singin’ an’ walked by a-lookin’ over the
-walley. That one glance done Absalom Bunkel. He stayed awake tell she
-come back.
-
-“That night he didn’t eat no supper.
-
-“‘Nance,’ sais he to his sister, ‘how fur is it to Crimmel’s?’
-
-“‘Nigh onter a miled,’ sais she.
-
-“An’ he jest groaned, drawed his boots, tuk a candle an’ went up to bed.
-
-“Twicet a week all that summer Annie May Crimmel come a-singin’ down the
-road. An’ Absalom, dozin’ on the porch, ’ud hear her voice tell she’d
-reach the edge o’ the woods. There she’d stop her song an’ go ploddin’
-by, gazin’ over the walley like he wasn’t about or wasn’t wuth lookin’
-at. Absalom kept gittin’ fatter an’ fatter from doin’ nawthin’, an’ it
-seemed to him like Annie May Crimmel was prettier every time she went to
-store. He was onrastless. He was onhappy. He knowd what was wrong, an’ he
-seen no cure, fer to him that girl walkin’ ’long the road not twenty rods
-from his house was like a bit o’ bread danglin’ jest beyant the reach o’
-a starvin’ man.
-
-“Perhaps you uns wonders why he didn’t go down an’ speak to her. That
-wasn’t Absalom’s way. He might ’a’ walked that fur to git warm. But to
-speak to a girl? Never.
-
-“Oncet he called to her, but she paid no attention, an’ hung her head
-bashful like, an’ walked on the faster.
-
-“‘Nance,’ sais he to his sister that night at supper, ‘I’ve kind o’ a
-notion fer Annie May Crimmel,’ he sais.
-
-“‘Hev you?’ sais she, lookin’ surprised, tho’ of course she knowd it an’
-fer weeks hed ben wonderin’ what ’ud become o’ her.
-
-“‘An’ mebbe,’ sais he, ‘you wouldn’t mind steppin’ over there to-morrow
-an’ tellin’ her.’
-
-“‘Umph,’ she sais, perkin’ up her nose. ‘You’ll see me a-gaddin’ round
-the walley settin’ up with the girls fer you!’
-
-“He set thinkin’ a spell. Then he sais, trem’lous like, ‘Nance, how fur
-is it to Crimmel’s?’
-
-“‘A miled to an inch,’ sais she.
-
-“He jest groaned an’ went off to bed agin.
-
-“They say that next day toward evenin’ Absalom was seen to rise from his
-chair; to hesitate; to set down; to get up agin an’ move toward the road.
-He got to the gate, pushed it half open, an’ leaned on it. Tell sunset
-he stood there, gazin’ wistful like toward Crimmel’s placet. Then Nance
-called him in fer supper.
-
-“Winter drove the lazy felly inter the house. All day long he’d set be
-the windy watchin’ fer Annie May; an’ ez she passed he’d smile soft-like;
-’hen she was gone he’d look solemn agin. An’ all the time he kep’ gittin’
-fatter an’ fatter, an’ more an’ more onrastless.
-
-“Winter broke an’ March went by. Apryl first was a fine warm day, so
-Absalom took his chair out on the porch an’ set there lookin’ down the
-ridge into the walley, where the men was a-plow-in’. All at oncet he
-heard a creakin’ o’ wheels an’ a rattle o’ gears that caused him to
-turn his eyes up the road. Outen the woods come a wagon piled high with
-furnitur’. It was a flittin’, the Crimmel’s flittin’, ez he knowd ’hen
-he seen Andy drivin’ an’ the Missus an’ Annie May ridin’ on the horses.
-Bunkel was stunned--clean stunned. The flittin’ went creakin’ past the
-house, him jest settin’ there starin’. He knowd what it meant to him.
-He knowd it was fer him jest the same ez the death of Annie May, but he
-couldn’t do nawthin’. The wagon swung ’round the bend an’ was out o’
-sight.
-
-“‘Hen Absalom seen the last o’ the red bonnet flashin’ in the sun, he
-th’owed his hands to his head like they was a pain there. Sudden he
-jumped from his chair an’ run toward the road yellin’, ‘Hey! hey! Annie
-May!’
-
-“He tore th’oo the gate, down the hill, an’ ’round the turn. They was in
-sight agin.
-
-“‘Annie May!’ he called, ‘Annie May!’
-
-“The wagon stopped. The girl climbed offen the horse an’ run toward him,
-stretchin’ out her hands an’ cryin’, ‘Absalom, Absalom!’
-
-“‘Hen he seen her comin’ he set right down in the road to wait fer her.
-Her arms fell to her side, an’ she stopped.
-
-“‘Annie May,’ he called, ‘come here. I’ve somethin’ to tell yer.’
-
-“She turned an’ walked with hangin’ head back to the wagon. She climbed
-on her horse, an’ a minute later the flittin’ disappeared in the hollow
-at the foot o’ the ridge.”
-
-The Patriarch arose from his chair, walked slowly to the door and stood
-there looking out into the rain. The men about the stove gazed in
-astonished silence at his back.
-
-The Miller spoke first. “Well, Grandpap?”
-
-“Well?” said the old man, wheeling about.
-
-“What happened?”
-
-“Who sayd anything was a-goin’ to happen?” snapped the Patriarch.
-
-“What become o’ Absalom?” asked the Storekeeper timidly.
-
-“Oh, he died o’ over-exertin’,” said the Chronic Loafer, wearily, as he
-threw himself back on the counter.
-
-The Patriarch gave no heed to this remark, but raising his right hand and
-emphasizing each word with a solemn wag of the forefinger, said, “Boys,
-I don’t know what happened. Pap never sayd. But now, ’henever I thinks
-o’ a lazy man, I picturs Absalom Bunkel, settin’ there in the road, his
-fat legs stretched out afore him, his fat arms proppin’ up that unwieldy
-body o’ hisn, his eyes an’ his ears a-strainin’ to see an’ hear th’oo the
-darkness that gathered ’round him what he might ’a’ seen an’ heard allus
-hed he only hed the ambition to ’a’ gone a few steps furder.”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IV.
-
-_The Missus._
-
-
-“A man without a missus is like an engyne without a governor--he either
-goes too slow or too fast,” said the Chronic Loafer.
-
-“Mighty souls!” cried the Miller. “What in the name o’ common sense put
-that idee into yer head?”
-
-“It was planted there be accident, cultiwated be experience, an’ to-day
-it jest blossomed,” was the reply.
-
-The Loafer had come in from a morning on the ridges hunting rabbits.
-His old muzzle loader leaned against the counter and his hound Tiger
-was sitting at his side, his head resting on the master’s knee and his
-solitary eye watching every movement of the thin, grizzled face, which
-was almost hidden by a blue cloth cap, with a low hanging visor, and
-ear-tabs. The Loafer removed the tabs and stuffed them into his pocket.
-Then he laid his hand on his dog’s head and stroked it.
-
-The ticking of the clock, which had a place on a shelf between two jars
-of stick-candy, accentuated the long silence that followed. Tiger seemed
-to feel that the hush boded ill to his lord, and cocked one ear and
-uttered a low growl.
-
-The Teacher pointed his forefinger at the Loafer and said, “I judge
-that you intended to imply that havin’ a governor you run regular. Some
-engines, you know, run regular but very slow.”
-
-“An’ some runs wery fast,” was the retort. “An’ they buzzes pretty loud
-’thout doin’ a tremendous amount o’ labor.”
-
-“Now you’re gettin’ personal and----”
-
-“Boys, boys!” The Patriarch was rapping for order. “Don’t git quarrelin’
-over the question of engynes. Fer my part the plain ole waterwheel beats
-’em holly.”
-
-The Miller tilted over on his nail keg and tapped the Loafer on the elbow.
-
-“Tell me,” he said. “Where did ye git that idee? It sounds almanacky.”
-
-“That idee was ginirated this mornin’ ez me an’ Tige was roamin’ ’round
-Gum hill tryin’ to start a rabbit. They bein’ no rabbits, me an’ Tige
-set down an’ gunned for idees. It was peaceful an’ nice there on the
-ridge. The woods hed the reg’lar cheery November rattle, like a dried
-up, jolly ole man. The wind was a-shakin’ the dead leaves, an’ they
-was a-chipperin’ an’ chirpin’. The pignuts was jumpin’ from the limbs,
-sloshin’ th’oo the branches an’ tumblin’ ’round the ground. Overhead a
-couple of crows was a-floppin’ about an’ whoopin’ like a lot of boys on
-skates, fer the air was bitin’ like, an’ put life in ye.
-
-“Ez I set there on a lawg I minded a felly I oncet heard up to liter’ry
-society, who read a piecet ’bout how the year was dyin’ fer autumn was at
-hand. I noticed Tige ez he was rollin’ ’round chasin’ pignuts, an’ I sais
-to meself, sais I: ‘Dyin’? Why, no. It’s only in its second chil’hood.’
-An’ I looked down the hill into the gut an’ seen the smoke curlin’ up
-th’oo the trees in the ole Horner clearin’. That’s where I got the
-Missus. Then it was that that idee ’bout engynes an’ weemen blossomed.
-
-“Before the first time I ever seen that clearin’ I kind o’ lived in
-jerks. Sometimes I’d run hard an’ fast, an’ ’ud make a heap o’ noise, an’
-smash all the machinery. Then I’d hev to lay off a month or so to git
-patched up agin. My pap was a cute man. He seen right th’oo me an’ he
-knowd what was wrong. ‘What you need is a governor,’ sayd he. An’ I got
-one. Sence then I’ve ben runnin’ smooth an’ reg’lar an’ not wery fast.
-But I hain’t broke no machinery, an’ I’ve never stopped entirely.
-
-“Now it went pretty hard with Pap after Mother died, fer he never did
-like housework an’ was continual beggin’ me to git merried. He was
-a-naggin’ an’ naggin’ all the time, petickler ’hen he was washin’
-dishes. He’d p’int out certain girls in the walley that he thot ’ud hev
-me, an’ he’d argy that I otter step up like a leetle man an’ speak me
-mind to ’em. He even went so fur as to ’low he’d give me the whole placet
-ef unly I’d git some un to take the housework offen his hands. First it
-was Mary Potzer. She hed five hundred dollars an’ was a special good
-match, but her looks was agin her. She was Omish, an’ like most Omish
-folk was square built, ’cept fer bein’ rounded off a leetle on top. The
-ole man wouldn’t give me no peace tell I ast her. I didn’t dast do that,
-but I tol’ him I hed, an’ that she sayd she ’ud take me ef he kep’ on
-doin’ the cookin’. That kind o’ quieted him fer a spell, an’ some months
-passed afore he tuk up the subject agin. Next he got to backin’ Rosey
-Simpson. She was tolable good-lookin’ an’ lively, he sayd, an’ I ’lowed
-he was right, unly she was too lively fer me. I minded the time I seen
-her sail inter Bumbletree’s Durham bull ’hen he’d butted a petickler pet
-sheep o’ hers. She made the ole beast feel so humble that I concided she
-might do fer a defender but never fer a wife. Next it was Sue Kindler an’
-then Sairy Somthin’-else, tell I was clean tired o’ the whole idee.
-
-“One night ’hen he’d ben pesterin’ me most mighty bad I gits mad an’
-sais, ‘See here, I ain’t courtin’ trouble. I’m comf’table an’ happy ez
-I am,’ I sais. ‘I’ve got you an’ Major--Major was the dog--so why do I
-want to go settin’ a trap ’hen I can’t be sure what I’m goin’ to catch?’
-
-“‘My boy,’ Pap answered, ‘use the proper bait an’ you’ll git the right
-game.’
-
-“Now Pap use to git off some good uns oncet in a while, but I wasn’t
-in fer givin’ him the credit. I scatted the whole plan. I didn’t know
-so much then ez I knows now. Still, sometim’s I ’low that ef it hedn’t
-’a’ ben fer Major, I might o’ dissypinted the ole man anyhow. Major was
-a coon dog, an’ a mighty fine one, bein’ half setter, quarter houn’,
-an’ last quarter coach. Me an’ him was great buddies. Wherever we went
-he allus hed an’ eye out fer game. He knowd the seasons, too. Ef it
-was September he was watchin’ fer squirrels; October, fer patridges;
-November, rabbits; springtime, girls. It was in the spring ’hen I
-happened to hear Si Bumbletree speakin’ o’ a petickler fine lot o’
-saplin’s fer walkin’ sticks that was growin’ on the chestnut flats at
-the foot o’ the mo’ntain jest above Andy Horner’s clearin’. So I sais to
-meself, I sais, it bein’ a fine warm day, I’ll jest mosey up there an’
-git me one o’ them staffs. It was a good th’ee mile up the walley an’
-over the ridge an’ acrosst the gut, but I found the placet all right an’
-cut me a nice straight cane. I was comin’ home, peelin’ off the bark an’
-not thinkin’ o’ anything in petickler, ’hen I hear Major givin’ a low
-growl. I looked up. We was passin’ Horner’s clearin’. There stood the
-dog, foreleg lifted, tail straight out, nose pintin’ th’oo the blackberry
-bushes ’long the fence.
-
-“‘There is somethin’ pretty important,’ I sais to meself.
-
-“An’ with that I walks up to the hedge an’ peeks over.
-
-“Settin’ on the groun’, weedin’ the onion-patch, was the prettiest girl
-I ever laid eyes on. She looked up from een under her sunbonnet outen
-a pair o’ sparklin’ blue eyes, an’ showed two rosy cheeks with a perk
-leetle nose atween ’em. Major he hed ducked th’oo a hole in the fence an’
-come out on the other side, an’ was standin’ solemn-like, lookin’ at her.
-All o’ a sudden he begin jumpin’ up an’ down, first on his front legs an’
-then on his hint legs, archin’ his neck, waggin’ his tail, an’ showin’
-his teeth like he was smilin’ all over.
-
-“‘That’s a nice dog you hev,’ sais the girl, kind o’ musical. She had
-stopped her weedin’ an’ was settin’ up lookin’ at the houn’.
-
-“‘Yes,’ sais I, ‘he is a tolable nice animal.’
-
-“Then I thinks to meself, ‘Major seems to like her; I wonder how she’d
-suit Pap.’
-
-“Soon ez that come into me mind I seen it was time I got out. I turned
-an’ walked down the road harder than I’d ever walked afore.
-
-“That night I couldn’t eat no supper. I’d never felt that same way an’
-it worrit me. I knowd no cause fer it, yit I kind o’ thot I didn’t keer
-whether I lived or died. It worrit Pap too. He ’lowed he’d hev to powwow
-me.
-
-“‘How are ye goin’ to powwow me,’ sais I, ‘’hen ye don’t know what I’m
-sufferin’ from? What I’ve got ain’t nawthin’, yit I wish it was somethin’
-jest to take me mind offen it.’
-
-“That was ez near ez I could git to the disease. Pap leaned back in his
-cheer an’ laughed like he’d die. ’Hen he’d finished splittin’ his sides
-he come over to where I was settin’ be the fire.
-
-“‘What you needs,’ sais he, ‘is to go out an’ look at the moon.’
-
-“Before that I’d never thot o’ the moon ’cept ez a kind o’ lantern to
-hunt coons by. But ’hen I tuk his adwice, an’ lit me pipe, an’ went out
-an’ set on the pump trough, watchin’ the ole felly come climbin’ over the
-ridges, all yeller an’ smilin’ an’ friendly, I seen he hed a new uset.
-Whatever it was I’d ben sufferin’ from kind o’ passed away an’ left me
-ca’m an’ peaceful. Me brain seemed like a pool o’ wotter in a wood, all
-still-like, ’cept fer a few ripples o’ idees on the surface. How long I
-set there I don’t know. I might ’a’ ben there all night hed the ole man
-not called me een.
-
-“The first thing I seen ez I went into the house, was Major crouchin’ be
-the fire watchin’ it wery intent. His supper lay beside him. Not a bone
-hed ben teched.
-
-“‘Whatever it is,’ sais I, ‘it’s ketchin’.’
-
-“They was nawthin’ doin’ ’round the house next day after breakfast, so I
-minded that Pap hedn’t a walkin’-stick. I concided I’d mosey up to the
-chestnut flats an’ cut me a staff fer the ole man. Major went along, an’
-we got a petickler nice piece o’ kinnykinnick wood. On the road home we
-happened to pass be Horner’s clearin’. Ez we was opposite the house I
-heard some un a-choppin’ an’ seen the chips flyin’ up over the hedge.
-Feelin’ kind o’ thirsty I stopped een to git a drink o’ wotter. There she
-was a-splittin’ firewood. ’Hen I explained, she pinted out the spring an’
-went on with her work. Ye might ’a’ s’posed we was unly two coon dogs hed
-dropped een fer a call, she was so cool. But I wasn’t fer goin’ tell I’d
-at least passed the time a day, so I fixed meself on a block o’ oak with
-Major beside me.
-
-“‘What are ye doin’?’ I asts, be way o’ openin’ up.
-
-“‘It doesn’t look like ez tho’ I was knittin’, does it?’ she sais kind o’
-sharp.
-
-“With that she drove the axe th’oo a stick o’ hickory ez big ’round
-ez my body. It was all I could git outen her. So me an’ Major jest
-set there watchin’ quiet-like. It was amazin’ the way she could chop
-wood--amazin’--an’ I enjoyed it most a mighty well. The axe ’ud swish
-th’oo the air over her head; down it ’ud come on the lawg, straight an’
-true; out ’ud fly a th’ee-cornered chip ez neat ez ef it hed ben sawed.
-She never looked one way nor the other, nor paid no attention, but kep’
-a-pilin’ up firewood tell they was enough to last a week. Then she stuck
-the axe in the choppin’ block and walked inter the house. Me an’ Major
-moved on.
-
-“That night I couldn’t git no sleep. The ole trouble come on agin,
-an’ I went out an’ looked at the moon tell final I dozed off in the
-pump-trough. ’Hen I woke next mornin’ I knowd what was wrong. I knowd
-that what I hed was somethin’ I’d be better without, yit hed I to do it
-over agin I wouldn’t hev awoided it. I knowd I could cut all the saplin’s
-offen the chestnut flats an’ I wouldn’t git no ease. ’Hen I went over
-the ridge that day I didn’t try to fool meself cuttin’ staffs. No sir.
-I walked straight fer the clearin’. Ez I come near the house I whistled
-pretty loud to give warnin’. At the gate I looked een. No one was ’round.
-I thot to meself she was in the house, so I whistled louder. Major
-seemed to understand too, an’ begin barkin’ to beat all. But it hedn’t
-no effect. That kind o’ made me feel down like an’ me heart weighed wery
-heavy ez I set on the stoop to wait fer her. All o’ a sudden I hear a
-rat-tat-tat comin’ from the barn. There she was on the roof, a-nailin’
-shingles. I walked down an’ looked up at her.
-
-“‘Hello!’ I calls.
-
-“‘Hello!’ sais she. With that she drove five shingle nails one after
-another, never payin’ no attention.
-
-“‘What are ye doin’?’ I asts ez I fixed meself on a chicken-coop an’
-lighted me pipe. It’s pretty hard talkin’ to a girl ’hen she’s mendin’ a
-barn roof, an’ ez I didn’t git no answer I stood up an’ yelled at the top
-o’ me woice, ‘What are ye doin’?’
-
-“‘Well,’ sais she, ‘I s’pose it does look ez tho’ I’m playin’ the
-melodium, don’t it?’
-
-“She wasn’t in a wery sociable turn o’ mind, but I’m one o’ those felly’s
-that oncet he gits his plow in the furrow don’t pull it out tell he has
-at least gone oncet ’round the field. So I jest set there smokin’ while
-she kep’ on workin’. By an’ by the dinner-bells over in the walley begin
-to ring, an’ she come down. She never sayd a word ’hen she reached the
-ground, but I wasn’t to be put back that ’ay. I steps up wery polite
-an’ gits her hammer an’ kerrys it inter the house fer her. Weemen allus
-likes them leetle attentions. She did any way, fer she smiled, an’ ’hen I
-’lowed I must be goin’, she sayd good-by. An’ I went.
-
-“That night ez I set on the pump-trough with Major beside me, watchin’
-the moon ez it come climbin’ up over the ridges, I hear plain an’
-distinct the rat-tat-tat o’ the hammer an’ the shingle nails. I leaned
-back agin the pump, closed me eyes an’ drank in the music. Soon I seen
-it all agin--the barnyard with the razor-back pig an’ the broken-horned
-cow browsin’ ’round; the barn, so ole an’ tumble-down that the hay was
-stickin’ out all over it like it growed on the boards; the roof, half a
-dozen pigeons cooin’ on one end, an’ her on the other tackin’ away. What
-a pictur it ’ud made fer a reg’lar hand-paintin’!
-
-“After breakfast Pap lighted his pipe, leaned back in his cheer an’ asted
-me, ‘How’s that ailment o’ yours gittin’ now?’
-
-“‘Ailment?’ sais I, cool ez ye please. ‘Why, I found it didn’t amount to
-nawthin’. It’s all gone.’
-
-“Pap smoked a bit. He was blinkin’ like somethin’ amused him powerful.
-
-“‘By the way,’ he sais, ‘I was up past Horner’s clearin’ yestidy an’ I
-seen that humly dotter o’ Andy’s a----’
-
-“It was so quick an’ sudden, I forgot meself. Never afore hed I felt so
-peculiarly, so almighty mad.
-
-“‘See here,’ I cries, jumpin’ up an’ liftin’ me cheer, ‘don’t you dast
-talk o’ Andy Horner’s dotter that ’ay,’ I sais. ‘Ef ye do----’
-
-“I stopped, fer he’d leaned back, an’ was lookin’ at the ceilin’ an’
-laughin’ an’ laughin’.
-
-“‘I thot ye hedn’t no ailment,’ he sais.
-
-“Be the twinkle in his eye I seen how he’d fooled me, an’ I set down
-feelin’ smaller than a bunty hen.
-
-“‘Ye see,’ sais he, ‘I was comin’ th’oo the flats this mornin’ after
-I’d ben fishin’ trout up in the big run, an’ ez I passed Horner’s I
-noticed a most remarkable sight. There was Pet Horner a-nailin’ shingles
-on the barn roof while a strange man set on a chicken-coop smokin’. I
-sais to meself, I sais, ‘Ef that’s the way he gits a missus, I’ll do the
-housework tell me dyin’ day.’
-
-“The ole man wasn’t laughin’ now. He was on a subject that was wery dear
-to him. His woice was husky with earnestness.
-
-“‘Why don’t ye spruce up?’ he sais. ‘Can’t ye chop wood fer her, or churn
-fer her, or pick some stone offen the clearin’ fer her? Unly do somethin’
-to show her ye ain’t the laziest man in the walley. Show her your right
-side.’
-
-“‘Pap,’ sais I, ‘’hen my Missus takes me I wants her to know me jest ez
-I am, not as I otter be. Ef there’s any lettin’ on afore the weddin’
-there’ll be no lettin’ up after it.’
-
-“With that I gits up an’ walks outen the house, whistlin’ fer Major.
-
-“Him an’ me went up to Horner’s together. We found her churnin’, an’ set
-down in the grass an’ watched. Ez I watched I got to thinkin’ over what
-the ole man hed sayd. I seen that perhaps he was right; that I’d git her
-quicker ef I worked harder. The pictur of gittin’ her quicker almost made
-me git up an’ do the churnin’. But I thot agin. Ef I churned now I’d hev
-to churn allus or else I’d be cheatin’ her. Ef she knowd she was takin’
-a man who was agin the wery suggestion’ she’d never hev no cause to
-complain. So I jest lay there chewin’ a straw an’ lookin’.
-
-“That’s the way I done me courtin’ day after day all that summer. It was
-slow. Mighty, but it was slow! Sometim’s I got discouraged an’ thot the
-eend was never comin’ an’ I’d better give up. Then she’d drop a word or
-a look or somethin’ that kind o’ kep’ me hangin’ on. It seemed like she
-was gittin’ used to me. We seldom sayd anything, fer she was a thinkin’
-woman. Fer me, I remembered how Pap allus allowed it was less dangerous
-fer a man to put a boy in charge o’ his saw-mill than to let his heart
-run his tongue. So I set an’ sayd nawthin’, but looked a heap.
-
-“It was October ’hen I concided I’d make a trial, fer even ef nawthin’
-come of it no petickler harm ’ud be done. So I ast her. She jest th’owed
-back her head, folded her arms an’ looked at me.
-
-“‘Well?’ I sais.
-
-“She looked a leetle harder an’ a leetle sterner. Her eyes kind o’
-snapped.
-
-“‘Well?’ I sais agin.
-
-“‘I hevn’t no petickler dislike,’ sais she, ‘but ye ain’t my idee of a
-man. A man should move sometim’s.’
-
-“‘Pet,’ I sais, ‘I know I ain’t much on leetle things, but wait tell
-they’s big things to do. Then I’ll startle ye!’
-
-“I turned an’ walked out o’ the gate an’ ’long the road toward home.
-
-“She didn’t hev to wait long. That wery night ez I set on the porch, I
-seen a big snake o’ fire come pokin’ his head over the mo’ntain top to
-the north’ard of us. Fer a time he laid ’round in the huckleberry shelf
-there, rollin’ an’ floppin’ about the bushes, like he was takin’ in
-the walley an’ wonderin’ what was the easiest way down the side to the
-chestnut flats where they was big piles o’ leaves, laurel bushes dry ez
-chips, an’ hundreds o’ dead trees, all waitin’ to be devoured. Mighty
-fine the ole snake looked, an’ a heap o’ pleasure it give me watchin’ him.
-
-“The thin line o’ fire begin to spread ez it adwanced, an’ soon the whole
-side o’ the mo’ntain was ablaze. It was jest a solid bed o’ red. Now an’
-then the flames ’ud jump to the top o’ some ole pine, the tree ’ud beat
-wild like, to an’ fro, tryin’ to shake ’em off, an’ showers o’ sparks ’ud
-go whirlin’ away inter the sky.
-
-“‘Mighty souls!’ I sais to meself. ‘It’s jest like a monstrous big band
-festival ’hen all the boys is out with torches an’ they hes a bonfire an’
-fireworks an’ music.’
-
-“Music? I hear agin the rat-tat-tat o’ the hammer an’ the shingle nails;
-an’ I thot o’ her.
-
-“The fire hed reached the flats. It was movin’ right on the clearin’
-where she was all alone, fer Andy was workin’ in the saw-mill in Windy
-Gap.
-
-“You uns otter seen me an’ Major skippin’ up the lane then. They was no
-loafin’ about it. Never oncet did we stop tell we reached the ridge.
-There we left the road an’ cut th’oo the fiel’s. Soon we was over them
-an’ in the woods. We stumbled on an’ on, tumblin’ over lawgs an’ stones,
-an’ fallin’ inter bushes tell we reached the top o’ the hill an’ looked
-right down inter the gut.
-
-“There we stopped, fer we was spelled like--me an’ Major--an’ jest stood
-an’ stared. The smoke filled the whole leetle walley. Th’oo it we could
-see the glare o’ the burnin’ chestnut flats. Big tongues o’ flame was
-shootin’ up an’ lickin’ ’round in the air. We could hear the snappin’
-an’ crashin’ o’ the trees. We could hear the scream o’ the wild cats ez
-they was tearin’ fer the open country. A coon run right inter Major, an’
-scampered away agin, snarlin’, but the hound never oncet lifted his eyes
-offen the gut. A loud snortin’ startled me, an’ a razor-backed pig come
-gallopin’ over the hill. Then they was a bellerin’ an’ a crashin’ o’
-bushes, below us. The broken-horned cow run pantin’ up the ridge, an’ by
-us an’ on th’oo the woods. ’Hen me an Major seen her we jumped for’a’d
-together an’ tore down th’oo the blindin’ smoke to the clearin’.
-
-“She was standin’ in the doorway, her head buried in her apron, cryin’
-like her heart ’ud break. The minute I set eyes on her I forgot all about
-the fire an’ thot unly o’ her. I jest stood there awkward an’ looked at
-the girl, fer I was spelled agin, unly worse.
-
-“‘Pet,’ I sais, after a bit, ‘what’s wrong?’
-
-“‘Wrong,’ she cries th’oo her apron. ‘They’s all gone--the cow, the pig,
-the chickens--gone fer the walley. Soon the clearin’ ’ll go too.’
-
-“With that she raised her hand an’ pinted th’oo the woods, over the flats
-to the solid wall o’ fire.
-
-“Then I laughed. An’ I hed the right to laugh, fer ez I looked at them
-flames dartin’ among the trees it seemed like they was the best friends I
-ever had.
-
-“‘It’s mean to cheat sech good fellers out o’ sech a nice clearin’,’ I
-sais to meself ez I run along the wood road puttin’ the torch to the dry
-leaves. ‘It’s mean, but I can’t spend the rest o’ me life settin’ on the
-pump-trough watchin’ the moon.’
-
-“An’ cheat ’em I did. The leaves an’ the under-brush cot like powder, an’
-the counter-fire went runnin’ over the flats towards the mo’ntain to tell
-the ole fire snakes that it wasn’t no uset to try to git to the clearin’
-fer they was no path to it ’cept over ashes.
-
-“We stood there in the wood-road watchin’ it--Pet on one side, then
-Major, then me. Fer a long time we sayd nawthin’, tell I couldn’t stand
-it no more.
-
-“‘Pet,’ sais I, wery abrupt, ‘do you think now I’m so awful slow?’
-
-“‘It ain’t them ez runs fastest allus goes the straightest an’ truest,’
-she answers.
-
-“It wasn’t wery much to say. Any girl might ’a’ done jest the same thing.
-But from the way she looked, I knowd I’d got my Missus.”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER V.
-
-_The Awfullest Thing._
-
-
-The Chronic Loafer sat upon the anvil. A leather apron was tied about his
-neck, and behind him stood the Blacksmith, nipping at his great shock of
-hair with a tiny pair of scissors. He was facing the Tinsmith and the
-Miller, who had climbed up on the carpenter bench, and by twisting his
-neck at the risk of his balance, he could see the tall, thin man standing
-by the mule which the helper was shoeing. The stranger had hair that
-reached to his shoulders, a clean-shaven upper lip, a long beard and
-a benign aspect that denoted him a Dunkard. He had been telling a few
-stories of the recent events in Raccoon Valley, whence he hailed.
-
-“So it ain’t sech a slow-goin’, out-o’-the-way placet ez you unsez
-think--still,” he said.
-
-The Blacksmith thoughtfully turned to address him.
-
-“Well, stranger----”
-
-“Ow--ow!” cried the Loafer. “Is you a barber or a butcher?”
-
-“Sights!” exclaimed the worthy smith. “Now that was a jag I give ye,
-wasn’t it?”
-
-He resumed his task with redoubled vigor. The Loafer closed his eyes and
-commenced to sputter.
-
-“Mighty souls! Go easy. Are you tryin’ to choke me?”
-
-“Sights!” said the other in apologetic tones, “I didn’t notice. Now I did
-come near chokin’ ye, didn’t I? I was interested in Raccoon Walley.”
-
-Then he began to clip very slowly.
-
-The Loafer opened one eye cautiously and fixed it on the stranger.
-
-“What was that awful thing I heard ye tellin’ ’bout snakes, jest afore I
-was smothered under that last hay-load o’ hair?”
-
-“Oh, hoop-snakes,” replied the Dunkard. He paused from his work of
-brushing the flies from the mule’s legs with a horse-tail. “We hev plenty
-o’ them ’round our placet. They don’t trouble no one tho’ tell ye bother
-them. Then they’re awful.”
-
-He turned his attention to the beast’s hoofs and began sweeping them. A
-smile was lurking about the corners of his mouth.
-
-“Did ye ever run agin any o’ these hoop----”
-
-The Blacksmith’s query was cut short by a loud “Ouch!”
-
-“See here,” said the Loafer with emphasis. “Either he’ll hev to quit
-tellin’ stories or I quit gittin’ me hair cut.” Then to the stranger, “Is
-hoop-snakes so wery pisonous?”
-
-“Pisonous!” replied the Dunkard. “Well, I should say they was. One o’ the
-awfullest things I ever seen was jest the ozzer day ’hen I was workin’
-in the fiel’. All o’ a suddent one o’ these wipers jumps outen the hay
-an’ strikes. I seen it jest in time to step aside. Its fangs struck the
-han’le o’ me fork.”
-
-The stranger fell to brushing flies again.
-
-“Well, what happened that----”
-
-“There ye go,” the Loafer cried, ducking forward and almost tumbling from
-the anvil. “Keep your eye on my head an’ not on every Tom, Dick an’ Harry
-in the shop.” He readjusted himself on his perch and blew away a bunch of
-hair that had settled on his nose.
-
-“What happened?” he inquired, fixing his least exposed eye on the man
-from Raccoon Valley.
-
-“Quick ez a flash the han’le o’ my pitch-fork swole up tell it was thick
-ez my arm.”
-
-The Dunkard had fixed his gaze intently on the forefeet of the mule and
-was beating them industriously with the horse-tail.
-
-The smith wheeled about abruptly and gazed at the stranger.
-
-“That was an awful thing to experience,” he said. But there was a ring of
-doubt in his voice.
-
-The Loafer peered over his shoulder and ventured. “Yes. It was the worst
-jag yit. But I don’t mind. I’m gittin’ accustomed.”
-
-The rattle of the pile of wheels upon which the G. A. R. Man was sitting
-announced that the veteran was getting restless and was preparing for
-action. For a long time he had been smoking in silence, listening to the
-strange tales of the strange man from Raccoon Valley. Now he spoke.
-
-“If your story is true then that was an awful thing.” He seemed to be
-weighing each word. “Still, it wasn’t so awful ez a thing that happened
-to me durin’ the war.”
-
-“There ye are agin,” cried the Loafer. “Can’t a man tell a story ’thout
-you tryin’ to go him one better? I don’t believe ye was in the war
-anyway.”
-
-“Don’t I git a pension?” The veteran closed one eye and stuck out his
-lower jaw threateningly.
-
-“That ain’t no sign,” ventured the Miller from the carpenter bench.
-
-“Well, what fer a sign does you unsez want?” roared the G. A. R. Man.
-“Does you expect a felly to go th’oo life carryin’ a musket? Ef ye
-does----”
-
-“See here,” said the Blacksmith, “youse fellys is gittin’ that mule all
-excited. Ef you’re goin’ to quarrel you’d better go outside where there’s
-lots o’ room fer ye to run away in.”
-
-“Now--now--now!” said the Dunkard, wagging the horse-tail at the company.
-“Don’t git fightin’. Ef he knows anything awfuller then that hoop-snake
-wenture let him out with it.”
-
-“I do,” said the veteran. “But I don’t perpose to hev it drug outen me
-fer you uns to hoot at.”
-
-His tone was pacific, and his companions promised not to hoot.
-
-“The awfullest thing I ever hed to do with,” he said, “was down in front
-o’ Richmon’ durin’ the war. Our retchment--the Bloody Pennsylwany--was
-posted kind o’ out like from the rest o’ the army. We lay there fer th’ee
-weeks doin’ nawthin’ but eatin’, sleepin’, drinkin’ an’ listenin’ to the
-roar o’ the guns over to the front. Still it wasn’t pleasant, fer we was
-allus expectin’ somethin’ to happen. It’s a heap sight better to hev
-somethin’ happenin’ then to be waitin’ fer it to come. But final it come.
-
-“One mornin’ at daybreak the guard was bein’ changed, an’ down on one
-post they found the picket dead, but not a mark was they on him. It
-looked wery queer. We’d seen no enemy fer a week an’ yit here was a felly
-killed plumb on his post, within stone th’ow of our camp. It made the
-boys feel clammy like, I tell ye, an’ they wasn’t many a-hankerin’ to
-go on that beat at night. It was a lonely placet, anyway, right on the
-edge o’ a leetle clump o’ woods in a holler th’oo which run a creek,
-gurglin’ in a way that made ye creep from your heel-taps to your hat.
-But the post hed to be covered. Ez luck ’ud hev it, my tent-mate, Jim
-Miggins, ez nicet a man ez ever shouldered a musket, was stationed there.
-Next mornin’ the relief goes around, an’ Jim Miggins is lyin’ dead be the
-stream--not a mark on him nowhere. Still they was no sign o’ the enemy,
-an’ we’d a clean sweep o’ fiel’s five miles acrosst the country. Mebbe we
-wasn’t puzzled.”
-
-“Why didn’t the general put a whole regiment in them woods an’ stop it?”
-asked the Loafer.
-
-“That wasn’t tactics,” answered the veteran. “Ye may think you knows
-better how to run a war then our general, but ye don’t. It wasn’t
-tactics, an’ even ef it hed ben it wasn’t the way the Bloody Pennsylwany
-done things. One man takes the post next night ez usual, young Harry
-Hopple o’ my company, a lad with more grit then a horse that cribs. In
-the mornin’--Harry’s dead--no mark on him--no sign o’ the enemy nowhere.
-Don’t tell me that wasn’t awfuller then hoop-snakes. Why, every man knowd
-now that ef he drawed that post he was a goner. That was a recognized
-rule--he was a goner. ’Hen a felly gits it he sets down an’ packs up his
-duds; then he writes home to his ma or his girl, sais good-by to the
-boys an’ goes out. Mornin’ comes--he’s dead be the stream--not a mark on
-him--no enemy in sight. That was the way Andy Young, leetle Hiram Dole,
-Clayton Binks o’ my company, an’ a dozen others was tuk off.”
-
-“I can’t see, nuther, why the general didn’t fill them woods with
-soldiers,” the Miller interrupted.
-
-“Why! It wasn’t tactics; that’s why,” the G. A. R. Man replied brusquely.
-“The Bloody Pennsylwany didn’t do things that way. No, sir. The general
-he cal’lated that we couldn’t be in that placet more’n four weeks more,
-which would cost jest twenty-eight men. He sais it wasn’t square to order
-a man there, so he calls fer wolunteers. What does I do? I wolunteers.
-I goes to the general an’ sais I’m willin’ to try my luck first. An’ he
-sais, sais he, a-layin’ one hand on me shoulder, ‘Me man, ef we’d a few
-more like you, the war ’ud soon be ended. An’----’”
-
-“Meanin’ the other side ’ud ’a’ licked,” the Loafer interposed.
-
-The veteran paid no attention to this remark but continued: “He promised
-me a promotion ef I come out alive. That night I packs up me things,
-writes a letter to me wife, an’ sais good-by to the boys. Then I gits me
-gun, pours in th’ee inches o’ powder, puts in a wad; next, th’ee bullets
-an’ a wad; next a half dozen buckshot an’ a wad. An’ on top o’ it all,
-jest fer luck, I rammed a bit o’ tobacky. At twelve o’clock I relieved
-the man on post in the holler. Mebbe me heart didn’t beat. Mebbe it
-wasn’t awfuller then hoop-snakes. The wind was sighin’ mournful th’oo
-the leaves; a leetle slice o’ moon was peekin’ down th’oo the trees ’hen
-the clouds give it a chancet; an’ there gurglin’ along was the creek be
-which I expected I’d be found in the mornin’ layin’ dead, no mark on me
-nowhere.
-
-“I’d made up me mind, tho’, that I was goin’ to come out of it whole ef
-I could. I wasn’t no fool to set down an’ be tuk off without raisin’ a
-rumpus about it. No, sir. I kept a sharp eye in every direction ez I
-walked to an’ fro, down the holler on one side, up on the other, back
-agin, an’ never stoppin’. It come one o’clock, an’ I give number eight
-an’ all’s well. I hear the report go ’long the posts; then everything
-was quiet. It come two o’clock an’ I give all’s well agin. Hardly was
-everything still ’hen I hear a rustlin’ noise, right out in the fiel’
-beyant the creek, not twenty feet away, an’ yit me eyes had ben coverin’
-that petickler spot fer an hour an’ not a hate hed I seen. But there it
-was, a standin’ hazy-like in the dark, the awfullest thing I ever laid
-eyes on.”
-
-The veteran had arisen from the pile of wheels and was glaring at the
-company, “What does I do? Does I set down an’ be tuk off like the other
-fellys? No. I ups an’ fires an’ hits it right atween the eyes.”
-
-He resumed his seat and began refilling his pipe. An expectant silence
-reigned in the shop. The Blacksmith waited until he saw the veteran
-light a match and fall to smoking.
-
-“Go on,” he cried, making a threatening movement with his scissors.
-
-“They ain’t no more to tell,” said the G. A. R. Man nonchalantly. “Wasn’t
-that awfuller then a dozen hoop-snakes?”
-
-“Well, what was the thing ye shot?” asked the Loafer, slipping off the
-anvil and facing the pile of wheels.
-
-The old soldier’s clay pipe fell from his hand and crashed into a hundred
-pieces on the floor. He opened wide his mouth in vain effort to speak,
-but the words failed to come.
-
-“What was it?” shouted the Loafer.
-
-“Well, I’ll swan ef I know,” replied the veteran meekly.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VI.
-
-_The Wrestling Match._
-
-
-The village had awakened from its long winter of sleep. It had shaken off
-its lethargy and stepped forth into the light and sunshine to take up
-life in the free air until the months should speed around and the harsh
-winds and the snows drive it back again to a close kitchen and a stifling
-stove. The antiquated saw-mill down by the creek buzzed away with a vim
-that plainly told that the stream was swollen with the melted snows of
-the winter just passed. The big grist-mill bumped and thumped in deep
-melodious tones, as though it were making an effort to drown the rasping,
-discordant music of its small but noisy neighbor. From the field beyond
-the line of houses came the melancholy “haw, gee, haw, gee-up” of the man
-at the plow and the triumphant calls of the chickens, as they discovered
-each luscious worm in the newly-turned furrow. A few robins flitted among
-the still leafless branches of the trees, and down in the meadows beyond
-the bridge an occasional venturesome lark or snipe whistled merrily.
-
-The double doors of the store were wide open. Had all the other signs of
-spring been missing, this fact alone would have indicated to the knowing
-that if the snows had not melted and the birds not come back, it was high
-time they did. Those doors never stood open until the Patriarch felt it
-in his bones that the winter was gone and he could with safety leave the
-side of the stove within and migrate to the long bench without, to bask
-in the sunshine. This morning the old man arose from his accustomed chair
-with a look of wonderment on his face. He swung one leg to and fro for a
-moment, then rapped on his knee gently with the heavy knob of his cane.
-He tapped his head mysteriously with his forefinger and gazed in silence
-out of the window, taking in the outward signs.
-
-“Boys,” he said at length, “it’s time we was gittin’ out agin. Spring has
-come.”
-
-With that he hobbled toward the door.
-
-“Good, Gran’pap,” said the Chronic Loafer, rolling off the counter and
-following.
-
-Then the Storekeeper opened both doors.
-
-The old oak bench that had stood neglected through the long winter,
-exposed to wind and warping rain, gave a joyous creak as it felt again on
-its broad, knife-hacked back the weight of the Patriarch and his friends.
-It kicked up its one short, hickory leg with such vehemence as to cause
-the Storekeeper to throw out his hands, as though the world had dropped
-from under him and he was grasping at a cloud for support.
-
-“Mighty souls!” he cried, when he had recovered his equilibrium and
-composure.
-
-“My, oh, my!” murmured the old man, his face beaming with contentment as
-he sat basking in the sun. “Don’t the old bench feel good agin? Why, me
-an’ this oak board hes ben buddies fer nigh onter sixty years.”
-
-The season seemed to have imposed new life into the Chronic Loafer as it
-had nature. He suddenly tossed off his coat, with one leap cleared the
-steps and began dancing up and down in the road.
-
-“It jest makes a felly feel like wrastlin’, Gran’pap,” he shouted, waving
-his arms defiantly at the bench. “Come on.”
-
-The Patriarch stroked his long beard and smiled amusedly at this
-unexpected exhibition of energy. The Miller’s nose curled contemptuously
-skyward, and he fell to beating the flour out of his coat to show his
-indifference to the challenge. The Tinsmith puffed more vigorously at his
-pipe, so that the great clouds of smoke that swept upward from the clay
-bowl, enveloped the Storekeeper and caused him to sneeze violently.
-
-At this indisposition on the part of the four to take up the gauntlet he
-had thrown down, the Loafer became still more defiant.
-
-“Hedgins!” he sneered. “You uns is all afraid, eh?”
-
-“Nawthin’ to be afraid of,” snapped the Miller. “Simple because spring’s
-come, ez it’s ben comin’ ever since I can remember, I hain’t a-goin’ to
-waller ’round in a muddy road.”
-
-The School Teacher laid his left hand upon his heart, and fixing a solemn
-gaze on the roof of the porch, recited: “In the spring the young man’s
-fancy lightly turns to thoughts of love.”
-
-“There ye go agin,” cried the Loafer, “quotin’ that ole Fifth Reader o’
-yourn.”
-
-“That,” said the pedagogue, “is Tennyson.”
-
-“I thot it was familar,” exclaimed the Storekeeper. A smile crept into
-his usually vacant face, and he slapped the Teacher on the knee. “You
-mean ole Seth Tennyson that runs the Shingletown creamery. He’s a cute
-un.”
-
-The reply was a withering, pitying glance.
-
-“It sounds a heap more like Seth’s brother Bill,” ventured the Miller.
-
-“Don’t git argyin’ on that,” said the Loafer. “There’s nawthin’
-particular new or good in it any way. The main pint is I bantered ye an’
-you uns ’s all dead skeert.”
-
-“Come, come,” said the Patriarch, beating his stick on the floor to call
-the boaster to order. “Ef I was five year younger I’d take your banter;
-I’d druv yer head inter the mud tell you’d be afraid of showin’ up at the
-store fer a year, fer fear some un’d shovel ye inter the road. That’s
-what I’d do. I hates blowin’, I do--I hates blowin’. Fur be it from me to
-blow, particular ez I was somethin’ of a wrastler ’hen I was a young un.”
-
-“I bet I could ’a’ th’owed you in less time ’an it takes me to set down,”
-the Loafer said, as he seated himself on the steps and got out his pipe.
-
-“Th’owed me, would you? Well, I’d ’a’ liked to hev seen you a-th’owin’
-me.” He shook his stick at the braggart. “Why, don’t you know that ’hen
-I was young I was the best wrastler in the walley; didn’t you ever hear
-o’ the great wrastlin’ me and Simon Cruller done up to Swampy Holler
-school-house?”
-
-“Did Noar act as empire?” asked the Loafer.
-
-“What does you mean be talkin’ of Noar an’ sech like ’hen I’m tellin’
-of wrastlin’? Tryin’ to change the subject I s’pose, eh?” cried the
-Patriarch, reddening with anger. “Don’t you know----”
-
-“Tut-tut, Gran’pap,” said the Storekeeper, gently taking the raised cane
-in his hand and forcing it back into an upright position, one end resting
-on the floor, while on the other were piled the old man’s two fat hands.
-“Don’t mind him. Go on with your story.”
-
-The Patriarch’s wrath passed as quickly as it had come. He speedily
-wandered back into his youth, and soon was so deep in the history of
-Simon Cruller, of Simon Cruller’s family and of Becky Stump as to be
-completely oblivious to his tormentor’s presence.
-
-“Me an’ Sime Cruller was buddies,” he began at length. “That was tell
-we both kind o’ set our minds on gittin’ Becky Stump. You uns never
-seen her, eh? Well, mebbe you never seen her grave-stun. It stands be
-the alderberry bushes in the buryin’-groun’, an’ ef you hain’t seen it
-ye otter, fer then ye might git an idee what sort o’ a woman she was.
-Pretty? Why, she was a model, she was--a perfect model. Hair? You uns
-don’t often see sech hair nowadays ez Becky Stump hed--soft an’ black
-like. Eyes? Why, they sparkled jest like new buggy paint. An’ mighty
-souls, but she could plough! She wasn’t none of your modern girls ez is
-too proud to plough. Many a day I set over on the porch at our placet an’
-looked down acrosst the walley an’ seen her a-steppin’ th’oo the fiel’,
-an’ I thot how I’d like to hev one han’le while she’d hev the other, an’
-we’d go trampin’ along life’s furrow together.”
-
-“Now Gran’pap, I ’low you’ve ben readin’----”
-
-“Can’t you keep still a piece?” roared the Miller.
-
-The Loafer returned to his pipe and silence.
-
-“The whole thing come to a pint at a spellin’ bee up to Swampy Holler
-school,” continued the Patriarch, unmindful of the interruption. “Becky
-Stump was there an’ looked onusual pretty, fer it was cold outside an’
-the win’ hed made her face all red on the drive over from home. Sime was
-there, too, togged out in store clothes, his hair all plastered down with
-bear ile, an’ with a fine silk tie aroun’ his collar that ’ud ’a’ ketched
-the girls real hard hed I not hed a prettier one.
-
-“Ez luck ’ud hev it, me an’ Sime Cruller was on opposite sides. It wasn’t
-long afore I seen he was tryin’ to show off with his spellin’. It’s
-strange, but it’s a failin’ with men that ez soon ez they gits their
-minds set on a particular girl they wants to show off before her. Why
-most of ’em taller up their boots, put on their Sunday clothes an’ go
-walkin’ by their girl’s house twicet a day fer no reason at all but jest
-to be seen lookin’ togged up an’ han’som. Men allus seems to want the
-weemen to know they is better spellers, or better somethin’ else ’an some
-other feller. They ain’t no reason fer it. No common-sense woman is goin’
-to merry no man simple because he can spell or wrastle better or husk
-more corn than anybody else. An’ yit men’ll insist on showin’ off in them
-wery things ’henever they gits a chancet.
-
-“It didn’t take me five minutes to see that Sime Cruller was tryin’ to
-show off afore Becky Stump; was tryin’ to prove to her that he was a
-smarter lad than me. An’ it didn’t take me that long to concide I’d hev
-none of it. I seen him every time he spelled a hard un, look triumphant
-like at her, settin’ ez she was down be the stove; then he’d grin at
-me. I seen it all, an’ I spelled ez I never spelled afore, an’ a mighty
-fine speller I was, too, ’hen I was young. Mebbe I didn’t set all over
-Sime Cruller. Mebbe I didn’t spile his showin’ off. I don’t jest exactly
-remember what the word was, but it must ’a’ ben a long un with a heap of
-syllables, fer he missed it an’ set down lookin’ ez mad ez a bull ’hen he
-steps inter a bees’ nes’. Three others missed it, an’ it come to me. Why
-do you know them letters jest rolled off my tongue ez easy. You otter ’a’
-seen the look Becky Stump give me an’ the look Sime give me. Huh!
-
-“When intermission come, Sime he gits off in one corner an’ begins
-blowin’ to a lot of the boys. I heard him talkin’ loud ’bout me, so
-I steps over. He sayd it was all a mistake; that he could beat me at
-anything--spellin’, wrastlin’ or fishin’. He was showin’ off agin, fer he
-talked loud like Becky Stump could hear. I makes up me mind I wouldn’t
-stand his blowin’.
-
-“‘See here, Sime Cruller!’ I sais, sais I, ‘you uns is nawthin’ but a
-blow-horn,’ I sais. ‘You claims you can wrastle. Why, I can th’ow you in
-less time than it takes to tell it, an’ if you steps outside I’ll prove
-me words.’
-
-“That kinder took Sime Cruller down, fer wrastlin’ was his speciality an’
-he’d th’owed every felly in the walley ’ceptin’ me, an’ him an’ me hed
-never clinched, fer I wasn’t considered much at a fight. But me dander
-was up an’ I wasn’t in fer lettin’ him show off.
-
-“‘You th’ow me!’ he sais. Then he begin to laugh like he’d die at the
-wery idee.
-
-“With that we went outside, follered by the rest of the boys. They was a
-quarter-moon overhead, an’ the girls put two candles in the school-house
-winders, so, with the snow, we could see pretty well.
-
-“At it we went. Boys, you otter ’a’ ben there! You otter ’a’ seen it!
-That was wrastlin’! ’Hen Sime an’ me clinched I ketched him ’round the
-waist with my right arm an’ got a hold of the strap of his right boot
-with the forefinger of me left hand. He gits his left arm ’round my neck
-an’ down my back somehow, an’ with his right hand tears the buttons
-off me coat an’ grabs me in the armhole of me waistcoat. Over we goes,
-like two dogs, snarlin’, an’ snappin’, while the boys in a ring around
-us cheered, an’ the girls crowdin’ the school-house porch trembled an’
-screamed with fright. We twisted, we turned, we rolled over an’ over tell
-we looked like livin’ snowballs. Sime got off the boot I’d a holt on, an’
-give me a sudden turn that almost sent me on me back. But I was quick.
-Mighty souls, but I was quick! I ups with me foot an’ lands me heel right
-on his chist, an’ he went flyin’ ten feet inter a snow-bank, kerryin’ me
-coat-sleeve with him. He was lookin’ up at the moon ’hen I run up to
-him, an’ I’d hed him down, but he turned over, an’ they wasn’t nawthin’
-fer me to do but to set on his back. I ’low I must ’a’ set there fer half
-an hour, restin’ an’ gittin’ me wind. Anyway, I was so long I almost
-forgot I was wrastlin’, fer he give me a sudden turn, an’ ’fore I knowd
-it he hed the waist holt an’ hed almost th’owed me.
-
-“But I was quick. Mighty souls, but I was quick! I keeps me feet an’
-gits one hand inter his waistcoat pocket an’ hung to him. ’Henever you
-wrastles, git your man be the boot strap or the pocket, an’ you has the
-best holt they is. Ef I hedn’t done that I might not ’a’ ben here to-day.
-But I done it, an’ fer a full hour me an’ Sime Cruller rolled ’round,
-even matched. Time an’ agin I got sight o’ Becky Stump standin’ on the
-porch, her hands gripped together, her face pale, her eyes almost poppin’
-outen her head, she was watchin’ us so hard, an’ the wery sight of her
-urged me on to inhuman efforts. It seemed to hev the same ’fect on Sime.
-Me heart beat so hard it made me buttons rattle. Still I kep’ at it. Sime
-was so hot it was fer me jest like wrastlin’ with a stove, an’ still we
-kep’ at it. Then all of a sudden--it was two hours after we hed fust
-clinched--everything seemed to swim--I couldn’t feel no earth beneath--I
-only knowd I was still holdin’ onto Sime--then I knowd nawthin’.
-
-“‘Hen I come to, I was layin’ be the school-house stove, an’ Becky Stump
-was leanin’ over me rubbin’ a snowball acrosst me forehead. The other
-folks was standin’ back like, fer they seemed to think that after sech an
-exhibition it was all settled an’ they didn’t want to disturb us.
-
-“‘Becky,’ I whispers, ‘did I win?’
-
-“‘You did,’ she sais. ‘You both fainted at oncet, but you fainted on top.’
-
-“‘An’ now I s’pose you’ll hev me,’ I sais, fer it seemed like they was
-somethin’ in her eyes that kinder urged me on.
-
-“She was quiet a piece; an’ then she leans down an’ answers, ‘Do you
-think I wants to merry a fien’?’”
-
-The Patriarch ceased his narration and fell to stroking his beard and
-humming softly.
-
-“Well?” cried the Loafer.
-
-“Well?” retorted the old man.
-
-“Did she ever merry?”
-
-The Patriarch shook his head.
-
-“Go look at the grave-stun,” he said, “an’ on it you’ll see wrote: ‘Here
-lies Becky Stump. Her peaceful soul’s at rest!’”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VII.
-
-_The Tramp’s Romance._
-
-
-“Was you ever dissypinted in love?” inquired the Chronic Loafer of the
-Tramp.
-
-A light summer shower had driven the traveller to the shelter of the
-store porch for a few hours, and he was stretched easily along the floor
-with his back resting against a pillar. In reply to the question he
-brought the butt of his heavy hickory stick down on the loose boards with
-such vigor as to raise a small cloud of dust from the cracks, and cried,
-“Wull, have I!”
-
-“Come tell us about it, ole feller,” said the Tinsmith.
-
-“Not muchy.”
-
-“We ain’t surprised at your hevin’ ben dissypinted,” said the Loafer,
-“but it’s your persumption catches me. What’s her name?”
-
-“I called her Emily Kate,” answered the Tramp, wiping one of his eyes
-with his sleeve. “She’ll allus be Emily Kate to me, though to other folks
-she ain’t nothin’.”
-
-“A truly remarkable state of affairs,” said the Teacher. “I presume that
-the young woman must have been a mere chimera, a hallucination.”
-
-“Mebbe she was; mebbe she wasn’t,” the traveller replied. “I never knowd
-her well enough to git acquainted with all her qualities. In fact I’ve
-allus kept Emily Kate pretty much to meself an’ have never said nothin’
-’bout her to nobody. But youse gentlemens asts so many questions, I
-s’pose yez might ez well know the hull thing. ’Bout three year ago I was
-workin’ th’oo this valley toward the Sussykehanner River, an’ one fine
-day--it was one o’ them days when you feels like settin’ down an’ jest
-doin’ nothin’--I come th’oo this very town an’ went up the main road
-’bout two mile tell I reached Shale Hill. I never knowd why I done it--it
-must ’a’ ben fate--but I switched off onter the by-road there ’stead o’
-stickin’ to the pike. I walked on ’bout a mile an’ didn’t meet no one or
-see no houses tell I come to a farm wit’ a peach orchard sout’ o’ the
-barn.
-
-“They was a nice grassy place under an apple tree on the other side the
-road, an’ ez it was one o’ them warm, lazy, summer days I made up me
-min’ to rest, an’ lay down there. Ye kin laugh at folks who allus talks
-weather, but I tell ye it does a powerful sight wit’ a man. I know ef
-that had ’a’ ben a rainy day I’d never had that fairy-core, ez the French
-calls it, that hit me then an’ come near spoilin’ me life.
-
-“I was layin’ there watchin’ the clouds overhead, an’ listenin’ to the
-plover whistlin’ out in the fiel’s, an’ to the tree-frawg bellerin’ up
-in the locus’, when all of a sudden I see a blue gleam in an apple tree
-in the orchard ’crosst the way. I watched it an’ pretty soon made out
-that it was a woman. She was settin’ there quiet an’ still, like she was
-readin’, an’ down below I see the top of a chicking coop an’ hear the ole
-hen cluckin’. I couldn’t see much fer the leaves an’ didn’t git sight o’
-her face, but I made out the outlines o’ that blue caliker dress an’ jest
-kind o’ drank ’em in.
-
-“It was the day done it all. ’Fore I knowd it I begin to imagine the face
-that must ’a’ fit that form. I pictured her like the girls that rides
-the mowin’ machines in the agricult’ral advertisemen’ chromos--yeller
-hair an’ all. I wanted to try an’ git sight o’ her face but didn’t dast,
-fer she’d ’a’ seen me an’ that ’ud a spoilt my chancet. So I lay there
-dreamin’ like, an’ ’fore I knowd it I could think o’ nothin’ but that
-girl in the tree, who I figured must ’a’ ben a heap better-lookin’ than a
-circus lady.
-
-“It come sundown, an’ ez I had to hustle to git supper I dragged meself
-together an’ moved on. I went up the valley fer three days an’ got ’bout
-thirty mile nearer the river. But I didn’t have no peace. The hull time I
-was thinkin’ o’ nothin’ but the girl in the blue caliker dress. I never
-felt so queer before, an’ didn’t know jest what to do. Last I decided
-I’d hev to go back an’ hev another look at her, so I turned ’round an’
-kivered me tracks.
-
-“‘Bout one day later, in the afternoon, I reached the orchard. Hanged ef
-she wasn’t there an’ settin’ in a tree closer to the road! I didn’t dast
-go near her, fer I knows how ’fraid the weemen is of us men. But I slid
-inter me ole placet, an’ lay there watchin’ her blue dress wavin’ in the
-breeze. Then when I seen ez how she’d changed trees, I begin to think
-mebbe she’d seen me an’ moved up a tree nearer the road kinder so ez we’d
-be closer.”
-
-The Tramp’s voice broke and he paused.
-
-“Now quit yer blubberin’, Trampy,” cried the Loafer, “an’ git to the end
-o’ this here yarn.”
-
-The vagrant rubbed his sleeve across his eyes and continued,
-
-“Wull, ez I lay there watchin’ her so still an’ quiet, I begin to think.
-I wondered what her name must be, an’ ’lowed it orter be a pretty one.
-I kind o’ thought, bein’ ez I didn’t know it, I might give her one--the
-prettiest I could git up. I racked me brain an’ final’ sot on Emily
-Kate--that sounded high-toned. Then I begin to wonder who’d be so
-fort’nit ez ter git Emily, an’ cussed meself for bein’ sich a bum. I kind
-o’ thought I might reform, but last I ’lowed ef she’d take me without me
-havin’ to reform, it ’ud be a sight pleasanter all ’round. I see how
-she’d moved up a tree an’ kind o’ wondered ef she’d notice me. The more I
-thought on it, the worse I got. I begin to think mebbe ef I cleaned up I
-wouldn’t be so bad--in fact a heap better ’an lots o’ folks I knows. By
-the time it come sunset I had concided to resk it, an’ was thinkin’ o’
-crawlin’ over the fence an’ interducin’ meself. But me heart failed me. I
-put it off tell the next day an’ slid over the fiel’s to a barn an’ spent
-the night.
-
-“I didn’t eat no breakfas’. I couldn’t. When it come sun up I went down
-to the spring an’ washed up. Then I cut fer the orchard, tendin’ to wait
-tell she come. I didn’t expect she’d be there so airly sence she’d likely
-do up the breakfas’ dishes.
-
-“I climbed the fence inter the road. Then what a sight I seen! I near
-yelled. A great big feller had his arm ’round her wais’. She was layin’
-all limp like, wit’ her head pitched for’a’d so I couldn’t see it, an’
-her feet was draggin’ th’oo the timothy, fer the man was pullin’ her
-’long down the orchard. First I was fer runnin’ to her resky, but I
-thought mebbe I’d better wait tell I see what come of it.
-
-“The big feller, he pulled her, all limp, down to the other side, an’
-leaned her up agin a tree, an’ hit her a punch wit’ his fis’. The blue
-caliker sunbonnet drooped. Then he jumped the fence an’ started away over
-the meddy.
-
-“Me heart was a-thumpin’ awful. I waited tell he was out o’ sight. Then
-I slipped down to where Emily Kate lay half dead agin the tree. I seen
-a chicking coop there an’ hear the ole hen cluckin’. I stepped up an’
-raised the girl’s head. She had a straw face an’ was keepin’ hawks away
-from them chickings. My Emily Kate was a scare----”
-
-The Tramp’s voice grew husky and he faltered.
-
-“See here, you ole fool,” cried the Loafer, “it’s quit rainin’ this ten
-minutes an’ you’ve kep’ me from splittin’ to-morrer’s wood with yer
-bloomin’ story.”
-
-The wanderer picked up his bandana and stick, arose and replied,
-
-“Youse gentlemen ’sisted that I tell ye ’bout it. I tol’ ye. Now I must
-be movin’.”
-
-A moment later he disappeared around the bend in the road just beyond the
-mill.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VIII.
-
-_Ambition--An Argument._
-
-
-“I know that I travels slow,” said the Chronic Loafer, “but ’hen a felly
-travels fast, it keeps him so busy watchin’ the horses, he sees mighty
-leetle o’ the country an’ gits awful jolted besides. It’s a heap sight
-better to go slow, stoppin’ at a stream to fish trout, or in the woods to
-take a bang at a coon, or at the store fer a leetle discussion--it’s a
-heap sight easier.”
-
-He was sitting at the end of the porch, his back against the pillar; one
-leg stretched along the floor, the bare foot resting on its heel and
-wiggling to and fro in unison with his words; the other leg hanging down
-and swinging backward and forward like a pendulum.
-
-The Patriarch had the end of the bench nearest him. Next sat the Miller
-meditatively chewing his forefinger. Then there was the Tinsmith smoking
-thoughtfully, and beside him, a stranger. This last person was a young
-man. His jaunty golf cap, fresh pink shirt, spotless duck trousers and
-canvas shoes marked him as a barbarian. In fact he had swooped down from
-the mountains to the north but a few days before on a bicycle, taken
-board at the Shoemaker’s, fixed a short briar pipe between his teeth
-and seated himself on the bench. At first he had been coldly received.
-The Store was suspicious. It closed its mouth and waited until it could
-find out something of the character of the newcomer. He volunteered no
-explanation, but sat and smoked. The Store grew desperate. At length it
-could stand the suspense no longer and nudged the stranger and inquired
-if he might not be a detective? The stranger laughed, said no, and busied
-himself with the making of smoke rings. Three days passed. Then the Store
-allowed maybe he might not be a drummer? No, he was not a drummer. The
-mystery was deepening. There were two things he was not. Now the Store
-smoked and smoked, and watched the mountains many days, until it had
-drawn an inspiration therefrom. It winked at the young man and guessed he
-had run away from his wife. But the stranger answered that he had never
-married.
-
-Knowing that he was not a detective, a drummer, or a fugitive from some
-domestic hearthstone, the Store felt that it had learned something of his
-history and could afford to melt just a little. So now it was talking
-before him.
-
-As the Loafer finished speaking, the stranger drew forth a leather case,
-carefully tucked his pipe away in it and returned it to his pocket. Then
-he remarked calmly, “I cannot agree with you. What would the world be
-to-day if all men held such ideas as you?”
-
-The Patriarch, the Miller and the Tinsmith pricked up their ears and
-gazed at the speaker. At last the truth would be out.
-
-The Loafer saw his opportunity.
-
-“What do you do fer a livin’?” he asked.
-
-“I’m a college man,” was the bland reply.
-
-Drawing his pendulum leg up on the porch, the Loafer clasped both knees
-in his arms. “Well,” he drawled, “I ’low ef you is a kawledge man, they
-ain’t nawthin’ young enough to be a kawledge boy, is they?”
-
-The Patriarch dropped his cane, clasped his hands to his fat sides,
-leaned back so that his head rested against the wall, and gagged. The
-Tinsmith and the Storekeeper laughed so loud that the School Teacher
-tossed aside the county paper and came running to the door to inquire
-what the joke was.
-
-“I’m blessed ef I know,” said the Miller, he being the only one of the
-party who had retained his powers of speech. He laid a hand on the
-student’s knee and asked, “Did you make a joke?”
-
-But the young man had dived into his pocket and got out his pipe again,
-and was busy filling it and lighting it and smoking it, by this act
-asserting his manhood. He now joined good-naturedly in the laughter.
-
-“How much does a kawledge man git a week?” asked the Loafer. “It must pay
-pretty well, jedgin’ from your clothes.”
-
-“He gets nothing,” was the reply. “I am studying, preparing myself for my
-work in life.”
-
-“My, oh, my!” murmured the Patriarch. “Preparin’--preparin’? Why, ’hen I
-was your age I was prepared long ago. I was in full, complete charge o’
-me father’s saw-mill.”
-
-The student was nettled, not at the reflection on his own intellectual
-attainments which this remark seemed to contain, but he felt that in
-this company he was the representative of modern ideas, of education and
-enlightenment. The Middle Ages were attacking the Nineteenth Century,
-and it was his duty to combat the forces of Ignorance. So he removed
-his briar from his mouth and sent a ring of smoke floating away on the
-listless air. He watched it intently as it passed out from the shelter of
-the porch into the great world, and grew broader and bigger and finally
-disappeared altogether. There was something very impressive in the young
-man’s act. His voice had fallen an octave when he turned to address the
-Patriarch.
-
-“Had I chosen a saw-mill as my career, I think I too should have long
-since been prepared for it. But to fit oneself for work in the world as
-a lawyer, a doctor, a minister, requires preparation. It takes years of
-study.”
-
-“How many?” asked the Loafer, turning around and eyeing the student over
-his knees.
-
-“Well, I’ll be twenty-four when I get through studying and become a
-lawyer.”
-
-“Then what’ll ye do?”
-
-“I’ll work at my profession and make money.”
-
-“How long’ll ye do that?”
-
-“Why, I don’t know particularly--till I have a fair fortune, I suppose.”
-
-“How old’ll ye be then?”
-
-“Around sixty, I guess.”
-
-“Then what’ll ye do?”
-
-“What does every man do eventually? Die.”
-
-“Then ye’ve spent all them years learnin’ to die, eh? Does a felly go off
-any easier ef his head is crammed full of algebray or physical g’ography?
-Mighty souls! Why my pap couldn’t ’a’ tol’ ye, ef ye dewided an apple in
-two halves an’ et one how many was left, yit ’hen his time come he jest
-emptied out his ole pipe, leaned back in his rocker, stretched his feet
-toward the fire an’ went.”
-
-“Well, what are you tryin’ to prove anyway?” asked the Teacher, who had
-seated himself on an egg-crate. His furrowed brow, one closed eye and
-forefinger resting on his chin, showed that he was struggling hard to
-catch the thread of the discussion.
-
-“I was jest sayin’ that the best life, the sensiblest life, was the slow
-easy-goin’ one, ’hen this young man conterdicted me,” said the Loafer.
-
-His air was very condescending and it angered the student. The
-inquisition just ended had left him in a rather equivocal position, he
-could see by the way the Patriarch and the Tinsmith nodded their heads.
-
-“You misunderstood me,” he said. “You have shown, I see, that from a
-purely selfish standpoint, ambition is senseless. In the end the man who
-works hard is no better off than the man who loafs. But remember there is
-another call--duty.”
-
-“That’s the idee,” cried the Teacher. “The sense of duty moves the world
-to----”
-
-“Hol’ on!” the Loafer exclaimed. “Hol’ on! Duty to who?”
-
-“Why, duty to society,” the student, answered. “Every man is endowed with
-certain faculties, and it is his duty to use those faculties to the best
-of his ability for the advancement of himself and his fellow-man.”
-
-“Certainly--certainly,” said the pedagogue. “It’s the old parable of the
-talents all over agin.”
-
-“Yes, they is some argyment in that,” said the Loafer. “Yit they ain’t.
-Pap allus used to say that too many fellys was speckilatin’ in their
-talents, an’ ’hen their employer called an accountin’ they was only able
-to pass in a lot o’ counterfeit coin.”
-
-“But suppose all men sat down and folded their hands and lived as you
-would have them. What would happen?” asked the college man.
-
-“D’ye see yon pastur’ down there?” The Loafer pointed his thumb over his
-shoulder, indicating the meadow below the bridge, where half a score of
-cattle were grazing.
-
-The student nodded. The bony forefinger was pointed at him now.
-
-“Well, now s’posin’ ye was a hog an’----”
-
-“I object to such a supposition,” was the angry retort.
-
-“Well then s’posin’, jest fer argyment--ye know ye can s’pose anything
-’hen ye argy--s’posin’ ye was a cow. Yon fiel’ ’ll pastur’ ten head o’
-cattle comf’table all summer, ’lowin’ they is easy-goin’ an’ without no
-ambition. Now you uns gits the high-flyin’ idee ye must dewelop your
-heaven-given faculties fer the benefit o’ your sufferin’ fellys. The main
-talent a cow has is that o’ eatin’; so ye dewelop it be grazin’ night an’
-day. ’Hen the other cows is friskin’ up an’ down the meadow or splashin’
-’round the creek, you are nibblin’ off the choice grass an’ digestin’ all
-the turnip tops ye can reach th’oo the holes in the fence. Mebbe you’ll
-git to be a slicker animal, but fer the life o’ me, I can’t see how
-you’re benefitin’ the rest o’ the cattle.”
-
-“See here,” interrupted the Miller, “you are the onsenselessest
-argyer I ever set eyes on. Ye starts but on edycation an’ lands up on
-cattle-raisin’.”
-
-“No--no, you misunderstand him,” said the student. “His method of
-argument is all right, but it seems that the figure is bad. It doesn’t
-quite apply. Every man who leads an industrious, upright life, every man
-who in so doing prospers and raises himself, does an incalculable service
-to the community in which he lives. His example inspires others.”
-
-“I jedge, then,” replied the Loafer, “that this here petickler cow
-we’ve ben speakin’ of, in eatin’ night an’ day an’ fattenin’ itself, is
-elewatin’ the rest o’ the cattle be its example. They’ll be encouraged to
-quit sloshin’ ’round the creek an’ friskin’ ’bout the pastur’ an’ ’ll be
-after grass night an’ day, an’ the grass’ll git skeercer an’ they’ll take
-to buttin’ one another, an’ your efforts at elewatin’ ’em ends in turnin’
-a peaceful pastur’ inter a battle-fiel’.”
-
-The student sent three rings of smoke whirling from his mouth in rapid
-succession, but he made no reply.
-
-“Did ye ever hear o’ Zebulon Pole?” asked the Loafer.
-
-“I never did. But what has he to do with this matter?”
-
-“Zebulon Pole was a livin’ answer to it, he was. He used to have a
-shanty up in Buzzard Walley near me an’ Pap, an’ was young an’ full o’
-all them noble idees. No--he wasn’t allus full of ’em. They hed ben a
-time ’hen he was easy-goin’ an’ happy, askin’ nawthin’ better o’ his
-Maker than a trout stream, a hook an’ a line, an’ a place to borry a
-shot-gun. All o’ a sudden he bloomed out full o’ ambition an’ high
-notions. He hed a call. He was wastin’ his life loafin’ ’long the creeks
-or settin’ day after day on a lawg, whistlin’ fer wild turkeys. The world
-needed Zebulon Pole, an’ he answered by comin’ out ez candidate fer
-superwisor. He was elected. From that day the citizens o’ our township
-hed no peace. They’d allus ben used to goin’ out on the roads in the
-spring, stickin’ their shovels in the groun’, leanin’ on ’em an’ gittin’
-paid a dollar a day fer it. The new superwisor was ambitious, an’ the
-good ole system o’ makin’ roads seemed a thing o’ the past. So the boys
-put their heads together an’ concided that a man o’ Pole’s parts was too
-good fer his place an’ should hev a higher an’ nobler job. They made him
-a school-director, an’ leaned on their shovels oncet more an’ drawed a
-dollar a day fer it ez usual.
-
-“Zebulon hed never gone beyant the Third Reader in school or th’oo
-fractions, an’ yit ’hen he become a school-director, he seen the hand
-o’ a higher power instead o’ the wotes o’ citizens who wasn’t agin
-improvin’ the roads, but was agin hevin’ it done ’hen they was workin’
-out their road tax. He was called to the service o’ his felly-man. He was
-sacrificin’ his own happiness, givin’ up his fishin’ an’ huntin’ that he
-might dewote his life to helpin’ others. He hedn’t ben school-director a
-month tell he concided it was an honor, a great honor, yit the sphwere
-was too narrer fer a man o’ his talents. Zebulon Pole was learnin’. He’d
-found out they was better an’ higher things in this worl’ then a mountain
-stream full o’ trout, a soft bed o’ moss on the bank, a half cloudy day,
-a pipe an’ a hook an’ line. He’d found out they was nobler things, so he
-come out ez candidate fer county commissioner, ’lowin’ that after that
-he’d be Gov’nor, an’ then Presydent. But the woters remembered how they’d
-over-exerted themselves in his days ez superwisor; they minded how in his
-first week ez school-director, he’d changed the spellin’ book an’ cost
-’em twenty-five cents a head fer every blessed child in the district.
-They jest snowed him under. He was plain Zeb Pole agin. He’d tasted the
-sweets o’ power an’ lost his appytite fer fishin’. His hopes o’ bein’
-Presydent was gone. They was nawthin’ left fer him to look for’a’d to but
-dyin’.”
-
-The student shook his head gravely.
-
-“There is some argument in what you have been saying,” he said slowly.
-“I admit that. But you know your ideas are not new. You simply carry one
-back to the Stoics of Greece.”
-
-The Loafer was puzzled. “What did you say they was?” he asked.
-
-“The Stoics of Greece. You remind me of the Stoics of Greece.”
-
-“Is that a complyment or a name?” The Loafer leaned sharply forward and
-thrust his long chin toward the speaker ominously.
-
-“Why, a compliment,” was the reply. “The Stoics were a great school of
-philosophers. They taught simplicity in life. Diogenes was a Stoic.”
-
-“Who?” asked the Patriarch, bending over and fixing his hand to his ear.
-
-“Diogenes.”
-
-“D’ogenes--D’ogenes,” said the old man. He paused; then added,
-“D’ogenes--yes, I’ve heard the name but I can’t exactly place him.”
-
-“Well, you certainly never met him,” said the collegian. “He lived a
-couple of thousand years ago in Athens. His idea was to get as close as
-possible to nature, so he lived in a tub.”
-
-“Didn’t they hev no suylums in them days?” asked the Loafer.
-
-“Diogenes wasn’t crazy,” cried the student. “He was a great philosopher.
-They tell one story of how he went walking around Athens carrying a
-lantern in broad daylight. When asked what he was doing, he said he was
-looking for an honest man.”
-
-“What was the lantern fer?” the Miller inquired.
-
-“Why, he was looking for an honest man,” shouted the collegian.
-
-“I s’pose it never struck him to go to the store fer one,” drawled the
-Loafer.
-
-“You miss the point--the whole of you. Diogenes was a man who spurned
-the material things of this world. He tried to forget the body in the
-development of the mind and soul, so he lived in a tub, and----”
-
-“See here, young felly,” interrupted the Loafer, “fer an argyer you beat
-the band. First off ye conterdicted me fer sayin’ a man should take his
-time. Now ye come ’round my way, only worse. I never sayd a man should
-keep house in a tub. Why, his missus ’ud never give him no peace. No,
-sir; don’t ye git no fool idees like that in your head.”
-
-“But that is the truest philosophy----”
-
-“I know. Zebulon Pole got that wery idee after he was defeated fer
-county commissioner. He moped ’round the walley fer a year an’ final
-one day come to me an’ sayd he was goin’ to dewote the rest o’ his life
-to religious medytation. ‘It’s less trouble to git to heaven then the
-White House,’ he sayd, ‘fer a good deed is easier to do then an opposin’
-candidate.’ It happened that at this time they hed ben a woman preacher
-holdin’ bush-meetin’s in our walley an’ he was a reg’lar attendant. She
-pounded away at wanity. All was wanity, she sayd. They wasn’t nawthin’
-in this world wuth livin’ fer. Fine houses, fine clothes, slick buggies,
-fast horses, low-cut waist-coats--all them things was extrys which was
-no more needed fer man’s sperritual comfort then napkins fer his bodily
-nourishment. It didn’t take long fer them idees to spread in our walley,
-an’ Pole was one o’ the first to catch ’em. I mind comin’ home from
-fishin’ one day, I seen him a-settin’ on a fence chewin’ a straw an’
-watchin’ the clouds scootin’ ’long overhead.
-
-“‘Ho, Zeb!’ I sais, shakin’ a nice string o’ trout under his nose. ‘Why
-ain’t ye out? They’s bitin’ good.’
-
-“He looks at me outen the corner o’ his eye wery solemn.
-
-“‘Fishin’?’ he sais.
-
-“‘Yes, fishin’,’ I yells, kind o’ s’prised. ‘They’s bitin’ good.’
-
-“‘All them things is wanity,’ sais he, straightenin’ up an’ pintin’ a
-finger o’ scorn at me. ‘Wanity o’ wanities. Let me warn ye, man. I’ve
-give up all them worldly pleasures. I’m set on higher things.’
-
-“‘Six-rail fences,’ I answers, ‘all day long--chewin’ a straw--watchin’
-clouds--wery elewatin’.’
-
-“He give me a sad look.
-
-“‘What are ye doin’ now?’ sais I, not intendin’ to be put down even ef he
-hed ben school director.
-
-“‘I’m a lily,’ he sais. ‘I’m followin’ the words o’ that dear sister who
-has cast her lot among us. Henceforth I no longer considers the morrer. I
-toil not, nuther spin.’
-
-“‘See here, Zeb,’ sais I. ‘You ain’t a bit my idee of a lily.’
-
-“‘I don’t ast the approval o’ the world,’ sais he.
-
-“‘An’ ye wouldn’t git it ef ye did,’ sais I. ‘But still I s’pose ye might
-do pretty well in this new ockypation ef it wasn’t fer one thing.’
-
-“‘What’s that?’ he asts.
-
-“‘Lilies don’t use tobacker,’ I answers.
-
-“That kind o’ jolted him. His eyes opened wide, an’ I seen a few tears.
-
-“‘I never thot o’ that,’ sais he.
-
-“‘Oh, it’s unimportant,’ sais I. ‘You’ll make a fair lily. It’ll come
-hard fer ye first off, after your last suit of clothes is wore out.
-Let’s hope that happens in summer so ye’ll break in fer winter easier.
-You’ll git used to not eatin’,’ I sais. ‘Eatin’ is wanity. An’ ez fer
-tobacker--I never seen a lily smokin’. But still, Zeb, ’hen ye runs out
-o’ cut an’ dried, they is allus a placet ye can git a leetle ’hen ye
-takes a rest from bloomin’ in the fiels.’
-
-“That wery night Zebulon ’cepted my inwite an’ come over to our placet
-an’ got a handful o’ cut an’ dried. He borryed a loaf o’ bread an’ a
-can’le beside. I didn’t begrudge it a bit. Nuther did Pap. But this lily
-business begin spreadin’, an’ all o’ Hen Jossel’s folks tuk to toilin’
-not nuther spinin’, ’long o’ Herman Brewbocker’s family an’ Widdy Spade
-an’ half a dozen others. They was dependin’ on us fer flour, matches,
-tobacker an’ sech wanities, an’ it come a leetle hard. We stood it a
-month but things got goin’ from bad to worse. They wasn’t a day passed
-’thout a lily or two droppin’ in at our placet an’ ’lowin’ mebbe we
-mightn’t like to loan a piece o’ ham, a tin o’ zulicks or a bit o’ oil.
-It worrit Pap terrible.
-
-“One night I come home from store an’ found all the doors locked. The
-shutters was tight closed an’ they was no sign o’ life ’cept a leetle bit
-o’ smoke dancin’ up an’ down on the chimbley top. I give a loud knock.
-They was no answer. I knocked agin an’ yelled. The garret winder slid up
-an’ out come the bawrel o’ a gun, then Pap’s head.
-
-“‘Hello!’ sais he. ‘Is you a friend or a lily o’ the walley?’
-
-“‘Pap,’ I sais, ‘it’s your own lovin’ son,’ sais I. ‘Don’t leave me out
-here unprotected, the prey to the next lily that comes along lookin’
-where-withal he shall borrer.’
-
-“The ole man opened the door an’ let me in. Then he locked it agin an’
-barred it. He picked up his musket wery solemn like an’ run the rammer
-down the bawrel to show it was loaded half way to the muzzle.
-
-“‘They was ten lilies here, one after the other, to-day,’ he sais.
-‘They’ve left us the bed, the dough tray, three chairs, a table, an’ a
-few odds an’ ends. ’Hen I seen the last foot o’ our sausage disappearin’
-down the road under Widdy Spade’s arm I made a wow. The next lily that
-blooms about this clearin’ gits its blossoms blowed off.’
-
-“It didn’t take long fer the news o’ Pap’s wow to fly from one eend of
-Buzzard Walley to the other. Zeb Pole got a job in the saw-mill. Hen
-Jossel went back to bark-peelin’ an’ cuttin’ ties. Widdy Spade planted
-her garden.”
-
-“Well,” exclaimed the Miller, as the Loafer closed his account of the
-idiosyncracies of Zebulon Pole, “I can’t see any way why your pap was
-raisin’ sech fool things ez lilies. They’s only good to look at.”
-
-“I understand that all right,” said the student. “What I want to know is,
-what have you demonstrated by all this talk?”
-
-“I ain’t demonstratened nawthin’,” replied the Loafer. “You conterdicted
-me because I sayd a man should travel slow an’ take things easy in this
-world, an’ I proved that them ez travels fast is fools, gainin’ nawthin’
-in the eend fer themselves or other folks. Then ye switches right ’round
-an’ adwises livin’ in a tub. I showed ye what that led to.”
-
-“Then are we all to commit suicide?”
-
-“No. Travel comf’table th’oo this world. Travel slow but allus keep
-movin’. Ye can see the country ez ye go, stoppin’ now an’ then to fish
-trout, or take a bang at a coon, or at the store to discuss a leetle.
-Don’t live too fast--don’t live too slow--live mejum.”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IX.
-
-_Bumbletree’s Bass-Horn._
-
-
-From the thick limbs of the maples came the discordant chatter of the
-cricket, the katydid and the tree-frog; from the creek beyond the mill
-the hoarse bellow of the bull-frog; from the darkening sky the shrill
-call of the night-hawk; and out of the woods across the flats the
-plaintive cry of the whippoorwill and the hoot of the owl. It was the
-evening chorus, but the loungers on the store porch did not hear it, for
-to them it was a part of the night’s stillness. But when, wafted across
-the meadows from the hills beyond, the notes of a horn sounded faint and
-clear, the Chronic Loafer, who for a long time had been smoking his pipe
-in silence, cried, “What’s that?”
-
-“Slatter up the Dingdang,” said the Storekeeper. He was sitting on the
-steps.
-
-“No, it ain’t; it’s Nellie Grey,” said the School Teacher in a voice that
-brooked no contradiction. Then in a deep bass he began singing,
-
- “Oh, me little Nellie Grey, they have taken her away,
- An’ I’ll never see me darlin’ any more,
- I’m a-settin’ be the river with----”
-
-“You’re a-settin’ on my porch,” cried the Storekeeper, for he was nettled
-at having had his knowledge of music questioned. “Sam Butter can’t blow
-that tune, an’ he has ben out every night a-practisin’ ‘Slatter up the
-Dingdang!’”
-
-The music on the hill ceased, leaving no tangible ground on which the
-debate could be continued. The Chronic Loafer had too long been the butt
-of the pedagogue’s cutting sarcasm to miss this opportunity of scoring
-him.
-
-“Ef that ain’t a good un,” he roared. “Why, you uns doesn’t know nawthin’
-’bout tunes, Teacher. Jim Clock he was een last night an’ hear Sam
-a-blowin’ that wery piece. He sayd it was ‘Slatter up the Dingdang,’ an’
-I conjure that Jim knows, fer he is ’bout the best bass-horn player they
-is.”
-
-The Storekeeper feared that this support from the Loafer might somewhat
-prejudice his own case in the minds of the others, so he ventured, “Not
-the best they is.”
-
-“Well, the best they is in Pennsylwany,” said the Loafer.
-
-“There are some ignoramuses don’t know nothin’,” exclaimed the Teacher.
-It was dark, but by the light of the lantern that hung in the window the
-men could see that he was gazing meaningly at his adversary. “But I know
-some that knows less than nothin’. The best horn-blower they is! Why,
-where’s your Rubensteins, your Paddyrewskies, your Pattis?”
-
-He stopped, for he saw that the mention of these names had had the
-desired effect on his audience, as there was a wise wagging of heads.
-
-But the Loafer was irrepressible. “Why,” he retorted, “Patti ain’t a
-horn-player. He’s a singer. I was readin’ a piece in the paper ’bout him
-jest last week. An’ ez fer ole Rube Stein, he never played nawthin’ but
-checkers.”
-
-“Well, can’t a man both sing an’ play the horn?” the Teacher snapped.
-
-“Perfessor, I agree with ye, I agree with ye entirely.” The Tinsmith had
-been silent hitherto, on the end of the bench. Now he leaned into view,
-resting an elbow on his knee and supporting his head with his hand. “Jim
-Clock don’t know no more ’bout blowin’ a bass-horn then my ole friend,
-Borax Bumbletree. Borax he knowd jest that leetle he was fired outen the
-Kishikoquillas In’epen’en’ Ban’. He come of a musical fam’ly, too. His
-mother an’ pap use to play the prettiest kind o’ duets on the melodium
-an’ ’cordine. His sister Amandy Lucy an’ his brother Hiram could sing
-like nightingales an’ b’longed to the choir at Happy Grove Church. It
-seems like Borax was left out in the distributin’ o’ music in that
-fam’ly, an’ consequent it went hard with him. ’Henever strangers was
-at the house it was allus, ‘Mr. Bumbletree, do play the melodium,’ or,
-‘Now, Amanda Lucy, sing one o’ your beautiful pieces,’ an’ all that. Poor
-Borax, he jest set an’ moped.
-
-“Final he ’lowed he’d give the fam’ly a s’prise an’ learn the bass-horn,
-cal’latin’ to make up be hard hustlin’ what he’d missed be natur’--the
-knowledge of the dif’rence ’tween a sharp an’ a flat, a note an’ a bar,
-a treble an’ a soprany, an’ all them things. He begin be j’inin’ the
-In’pen’en’ Ban’. Fer six weeks he practised hard, an’ at last he did
-git to playin’ a couple o’ pieces. But the other fellys in the ban’ was
-continual’ complainin’ that Borax didn’t keep no kind o’ time; an’ not
-only that, but he drownded ’em all out, fer he could make a heap o’
-noise. They sayd they wouldn’t play with him no more tell he learned
-to blow time. Borax was clean discouraged, but he didn’t give up. He
-practised six weeks more an’ tried it with the ban’ boys agin. They sayd
-now that he didn’t know pitch an’ ruined their pieces a-bellerin’ way
-down in _A_ ’hen they was blowin’ up in high _C_. He was pretty well cut
-up, but ’lowed he’d quit.
-
-“I think he meant what he sayd an’ ’ud ’a’ kep’ his promise ef it hedn’t
-’a’ ben that a woman interfered with his good intentions. She was Pet
-Parsley--Widdy Parsley, who lived with her mother back in Buzzard
-Walley. Borax hed a shine fer her afore she merried, an’ after she become
-a widdy he was wus ’an ever. One night at a ban’ festival, ’hen she was
-standin’ sellin’ at the ice-crim counter, he was a-jollyin’ her. Now he
-noticed that young Bill Hooker, who’d tuk his place in the ban’, was
-makin’ eyes at her over the top o’ his bass-horn while he was playin’.
-That near drove Bumbletree mad, fer him an’ Bill hed ben runnin’ neck an’
-neck, an’ he knowd they was approachin’ the string.
-
-“‘Don’t Mr. Hooker play gran’?’ sais Pet kind o’ timid like.
-
-“‘Well, I don’t know,’ answers Borax, ‘I’ve heerd better.’
-
-“‘Oh, hev ye,’ sais she, kind o’ perkin’ up her nose. ’I ’low you’re
-jealous. Can you play at all?’
-
-“‘Well, can I?’ sais Borax. ‘Why, I can blow all ’round him.’
-
-“‘I’d like to hear you,’ sais Pet. ‘Won’t you come an’ blow fer me
-sometim’?’
-
-“‘I will,’ he answers, wery determined.
-
-“He went home that night bound to git time an’ pitch together. He started
-to practise ’round the house but his fam’ly objected. The missus ’lowed
-she could never play the ’cordine with sech a bellerin’ goin’ on. Amandy
-Lucy went so fur ez to say it ’ud ruin her voice. But that didn’t stop
-Borax. He sayd he’d practise ’way from the house. Every night after the
-feedin’ was done he use to take his horn, his music marks an’ a lantern,
-an’ go out on the hill ahint the barn. There, settin’ on a lawg, with
-the lantern hangin’ on a saplin’, he’d blow away. Many a night that
-summer ez I set over at our placet on the next ridge, I’d hear Borax a
-boom-boom-boomin’ to git the time. The big tones ’ud go echoin’ way over
-in the mo’ntain. Oncet in a while he’d hit it good, an’ I tell you uns
-it sounded pretty to hear them notes a-rollin’ deep acrosst the gut,
-a-sighin’ th’oo the trees an’ a-dyin’ way off in the woods.
-
-“Then he tuk up pitch. He blowed pitch fer a week an’ then tried pitch
-an’ time together. I thot he was doin’ pretty well. Still them ban’ boys
-wasn’t satisfied. They sayd he didn’t go up an’ down right, an’ that they
-couldn’t hev him a-blowin’ ’way at pitch an’ time an’ never makin’ no
-new notes. He ’lowed to me that they was a heap to learn ’bout blowin’ a
-bass-horn, but he was goin’ to git it ef it ’ud only be of uset in the
-next worl’.
-
-“At nights I could see his light a-twinklin’ in the woods acrosst the
-gut an’ hear him tryin’ to blow time an’ pitch an’ ups an’ downs all at
-oncet. He’d git his wind fixed to blow _A_, an’ out ’ud come a _C_; or
-he’d try fer a _D_ an’ land an _E_. He ’lowed to me oncet that sometim’
-he thot mebbe it was willed that he was never to git a tune. But he kep’
-at it.
-
-“Now Bill Hooker hed ben to Horrisburg that summer an’ got him a brown
-cady hat. That was a new kind o’ headgear ’round Kishikoquillas an’ it
-cot on wonderful well. All the boys ’lowed they’d git ’em, but tell
-they had a chancet o’ buyin’ one they got to depend on Bill fer the
-loan o’ hisn ’hen they was goin’ out shinin’. So Hooker wasn’t s’prised
-one night ’hen Borax Bumbletree drove up to his placet an’ ’lowed mebbe
-Hooker mightn’t like to loan him his cady, ez he was goin’ callin’. Bill
-allus was obligin’ an’ thot no harm ’hen he watched Borax a-drivin’ away
-with his cady settin’ way up on top o’ his head. Bumbletree hitched his
-buckboard to a saplin’ on the edge o’ Pet Parsley’s clearin’. Then he
-got his horn out from in under the seat, fixed himself on a stump ’bout
-fifty feet from the house, put up his music marks so the moonlight shone
-on ’em, an’ begin to play. He started the serynade with ‘Soft th’oo the
-Eventide,’ that bein’ sentymental an’ his most famil’ar piece. He put his
-whole heart into the work an’ was soon blowin’ time an’ pitch an’ ups
-an’ downs all at oncet. The lamp that hed ben settin’ in the windy went
-out--that was all to show he’d ben heard. He blowed ‘Pull fer the Shore,
-Sailor.’ No sign o’ life in the house. He blowed ‘The Star Spangled
-Banner.’ Still no sign. He then begin all over agin with ‘Soft th’oo the
-Eventide.’ Be this time the whole chicken-house hed j’ined in, an’ the
-cows was takin’ a hand too. He was desp’rit, dissypinted fearful an’ all
-used up. So he went home.
-
-“You take a reg’lar thief. He knows they’s only one eend to
-thievin’--jail. An’ he’ll keep on stealin’ tell he gits there. Take a
-reg’lar murderer. He knows they’s only one eend to murder--the galluses;
-yit he’ll continyer murderin’ tell he gits there. So it is with a reg’lar
-man. He knows they’s only one result o’ bein’ in lawv--to be merried
-or git the mitten. An’ yit he’ll keep right on tell he gits one or the
-other. So it was with Borax Bumbletree. He hed no reason to think he’d
-git anything but the mitten, yit he went right up to Pet Parsley’s next
-night to take his punishment. He tol’ me that day that he guesst his
-serynade hed spoiled all the chancet he ever had, but he wanted it over.
-
-“So he was kind o’ sheepish an’ hang-dog ’hen he’d sayd good evenin’ to
-the widdy an’ set down melancholy like, on the wood-box. They was quiet a
-piecet.
-
-“Then he sayd, ‘I hear ye hed some music up here last night.’
-
-“He was jest fishin’.
-
-“‘Did I!’ sais she, flarin’ up. ‘Well, I guesst I did. An’ the chickens
-was so stirred up they kep’ on all night an’ not a wink o’ sleep did we
-git in this house. I never heerd sech bass-horn blowin’.’
-
-“Borax jest hung his head an’ shuffled his feet.
-
-“The widdy spoke up agin. ‘Does you ever see Bill Hooker?’
-
-“‘Oncet in a long while,’ Borax answers.
-
-“‘Well, you tell him,’ she sais, ‘that next time he comes up here to
-serynade me to send notice so I can git over the other side the mo’ntain.’
-
-“Borax Bumbletree gasped an’ almost fell offen the wood-box.
-
-“‘How’d you know it was Bill Hooker?’ he asts quick.
-
-“‘Well, didn’t I see that new fandangled hat o’ hisn--that cady I’ve
-heerd so much about. Why, I’d ’a’ knowd him a mile.’
-
-“Now Borax wasn’t ez slow on everything ez he was on music. He was right
-smart, he was. He seen the way the wind blowed.
-
-“Gittin’ offen the wood-box he went over to the settee alongside o’ her.
-
-“‘Pet,’ he sais, ‘I allus told you Bill Hooker couldn’t blow the
-bass-horn.’
-
-“‘I otter ’a’ knowd you could blow a heap sight better,’ she sais quiet
-like, but meanin’ business.
-
-“‘That I can,’ sais he. ‘An’ after we’re merried--not tell after, mind
-ye--I’ll blow sech music fer ye ez ye never dreamed of.’”
-
-“My sights, but he was innercent!” the Loafer cried.
-
-“What do you know ’bout it?” snapped the Tinsmith.
-
-“Why, him thinkin’ she’d give him a chancet to blow.”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER X.
-
-_Little Si Berrybush._
-
-
-The Chronic Loafer held in his hand a single sheet of a Philadelphia
-paper nine days old. The other pages had long since left the store in
-service as wrappings. This treasure he had rescued from such ignominious
-use and now was poring over it letter by letter. The center of the page
-was within three inches of the end of his nose. His brow was furrowed
-and his lips moved. At intervals he lifted his right hand and with the
-forefinger beat time to his reading. He was comfortably fixed on an
-egg-crate close by the stove. The paper hid him from the view of his
-companions. They could not see the earnest workings of his features but
-they could hear a steady, sonorous mumble and were curious. They knew
-better than to interrupt him in his arduous task, however, and awaited
-with commendable patience the time when he should choose to come forth
-from his seclusion and tell them all about it.
-
-They had not long to wait. Suddenly he jerked his head forward three
-times, viciously butting the paper, simultaneously emitting a burring
-sound not unlike that of an angry bull when he tears up the sod with
-his horns. The curtain fell to show him calm again but with a puzzled
-expression on his countenance.
-
-“Teacher,” he said, “what does _h-a-b-e-a-s_ spell?”
-
-“Hab-by-ace,” replied the pedagogue promptly. He threw out his chest and
-fixed his thumbs in their favorite resting-place, the arm-holes of his
-waistcoat. His attitude was that of a man who was full to the neck with
-general information and only needed uncorking.
-
-“Habbyace,” said the Loafer. “Habbyace--habbyace--that’s a new un on me.”
-
-“Doubtless it is,” the other retorted, “if you have never studied Latin.
-It means _have_.”
-
-“Have--have,” muttered the Loafer, more puzzled than ever. “Then what’s
-_c-o-r-p-u-s_ spell?”
-
-“Corpuse,” replied the pedagogue, “being the Latin for body.”
-
-“Then I’m stumped.” The Loafer crumpled up his paper in one hand and
-shook the other at the assembled company. “Them ceety lawyers certainly
-beat the band.”
-
-“What’s all the trouble now?” inquired the Tinsmith.
-
-The Loafer unfolded the sheet again and smoothed it out on his knees.
-Then he leaned over it and eyed it intently.
-
-“I was jest readin’ a piece about a man called Jawhn O’Brien,” he said
-slowly. “He was ’rested fer killin’ his wife an’ two young uns. It sais
-the evydence is dead agin him an’ he is sure to hang. He has hired J.
-Montgomery Cole to defend him. The first thing the lawyer does is to go
-inter court an’ ast fer a habbyace corpuse. Mighty souls! The idee! How’s
-that to defend a man--jest to ast fer his dead body.”
-
-The Patriarch shook his head solemnly. “Terrible--terrible,” he said.
-“Sech men ought never git diplomys.”
-
-“Yit, Gran’pap,” suggested the Tinsmith, “don’t ye think after all it’s
-best they is some sech lawyers? Why, ef it wasn’t fer the dumb lawyers
-they’d never be no murderers brought to jestice.”
-
-“True--true,” said the old man. “Now it used to be that ’hen a man
-committed murder he was tried, an’ ef the evydence was agin him, he was
-hung. Nowadays a felly commits murder an’ a year is spent hevin’ him
-indickted. After he’s indickted a year is ockypied with these habbyace
-corpuse proceedin’s. They settles who gits the body in caset he’s hung
-an’ then they finds what they calls a ‘flaw in the indicktment.’ They
-indickts him agin. Next comes the question of a ‘change in vendue.’ It
-takes a year to argy that pint an’ after it the trial begins. Ef he’s
-found innercent it means he’s ben livin’ th’ee years doin’ nawthin’ at
-the county’s expense. Ef he’s found guilty his lawyer takes what they
-calls an ‘exception,’ meanin’ he objects to him bein’ hung. It takes a
-year to----”
-
-“But, Gran’pap,” interrupted the Loafer, “ye must remember that the
-principle o’ the law is that because a man commits murder is no sign he’s
-guilty.”
-
-“I know--I know,” the Patriarch said. “Ye can’t catch me on law. I thot
-o’ stedyin’ it oncet. But ez I was sayin’--where was it I left off?”
-
-“What’s a ‘change o’ vendue,’ Gran’pap?” inquired the Miller.
-
-The old man glared at the speaker.
-
-“That wasn’t the pint where I left off,” he snapped.
-
-“Yes, but what is it, Gran’pap?” the Tinsmith asked.
-
-But the Patriarch had forgotten all about the defects of the law. He had
-leaned forward, resting his hands on his cane and his head on his hands,
-and was studying the floor intently.
-
-“Buttonporgie stood six feet two in his stockin’s,” he said half aloud,
-after a long silence. “That there was the way to do ’em. Now ef Si
-Berrybush hed ben livin’ to-day, he’d be fussin’ with indicktments an’
-changes of vendues an’ all them things an’----”
-
-“Who air you talkin’ to now?” exclaimed the Loafer.
-
-The old man looked up. “Oh!” he said. “I forgot. Sure, I forgot. Ye never
-heard o’ Tom Buttonporgie did ye, or Si Berrybush?”
-
-None of the company had heard of the pair, so the Patriarch consented to
-enlighten them.
-
-“I got the main pints o’ the story from Tom himself,” he began. “He used
-to tell it ’hen he stayed at my pap’s place ’hen I was a bit of a boy.
-He allus told it the same way, too, which was evydence of it bein’ true.
-I wish all you uns could ’a’ heard him. Mighty, but it was a treat! Why,
-he was never in our house two minutes till us children was runnin’ ’round
-him callin’ to him to tell us how he done Si Berrybush. But he’d never
-give us a word till he’d opened his pedler’s pack an’ sold somethin’ to
-Ma an’ the girls. Next it was his supper an’ a pipe. Then I’d climb on
-his one knee an’ my sister Solly on the other. Ed an’ May ’ud git on
-the wood-box an’ Pap an’ Ma on the settee. It took th’ee pipes to wind
-Tom up. Then he’d go beautiful. The words ’ud role out like music an’
-you’d fergit the kitchen an’ the folks around. You’d be out in the woods
-with him, steppin’ along with him hour after hour ez he was carryin’ Si
-Berrybush to freedom. You’d see the things ez he saw, an’ you’d feel
-the things ez he felt. Now ye was low down an’ discouraged. Everything
-was dark ez ye stumbled on an’ on, achin’ in every limb, expectin’ each
-minute ’ud be your last. Now ye was hopin’. They was a chance fer ye yit.
-The light broke. The load was gone. Si Berrybush was gone, an’ ye was
-back in the ole kitchen agin, with Pap an’ Ma sound asleep on the settee.
-
-“Ez I was sayin’, Tom Buttonporgie stood six feet two in his stockin’s
-an’ was a most powerful man, fer walkin’ day after day, luggin’ a great
-pack on his back, hed give him the muscles of an ox. He used to come to
-this walley oncet every summer so he knowd well o’ Si Berrybush, who
-was the desperatest man ever seen in these parts. Si’s ockypation was
-robbin’. He made his headquarters in the mo’ntain acrosst the river. His
-hand was agin everybody an’ everybody knowd it, yit he never was catched.
-Oncet a pedler was found dead in the bushes with a bullet hole in his
-head an’ his pack turned inside out. They sayd Berrybush did it, so he
-went down to the Sheriff’s an’ give himself up. They was no evydence an’
-he walked home agin. A couple o’ times things like that happened an’ yit
-they was never an ioty o’ proof. He’d ’a’ died a nat’ral death, I guess,
-ef he hedn’t forgot himself one night in the willage an’ shot Joe Hyde.
-They was too many fellys handy who hed grudges agin him to let him git
-away, an’ they clapped him in jail, tried him an’ sentenced him to be
-hung.
-
-“Now, about this time, Tom Buttonporgie come over the mo’ntain inter the
-walley. Late in the afternoon he reached Ben Clock’s place near Eden, an’
-ez they knowd him well they ast him to spend the night. After supper the
-family hed a game o’ cards an’ about nine o’clock Tom tuk up his pack
-an’ started fer the barn where he was to sleep, fer the house was full.
-Clock lighted the way with a lantern an’ saw him comfortable fixed. The
-pack was stowed away in a corner o’ the barn-floor, while the pedler was
-settled nice ez ye please on a horse-blanket in the hay-mow.
-
-“Tom Buttonporgie slept sound an’ hard. Everything in this world was
-pleasant fer him. Things was goin’ his way. It’s strange that it should
-be so, boys, but yit it is true that sleep comes easiest an’ quickest to
-them ez hes nawthin’ but good things to forget in it. So from the time he
-laid his head down on the hay till a kick awoke him, Tom knowd nawthin’.
-He opened his eyes with a jerk an’ set up an’ rubbed ’em. The airly
-mornin’ light was jest creepin’ inter the barn, but he could make out
-only a small, dark figure a few feet away.
-
-“‘Good morning, Mr. Clock,’ sais he wery pleasant, tho’ he was a leetle
-put out at the rough way he’d ben woke.
-
-“‘Good mornin’, Tom,’ sais the figure wery cheerful. ‘You’ve mistook me,
-fer my name is Berrybush.’
-
-“‘Hen the pedler hear that he made a grab fer his pistol. He’d laid it in
-the hay close to him, but now it was gone. He started to rise but he felt
-a steel bawrel pressed agin his head. Buttonporgie was big an’ full o’
-grit, but he knowd that ye can’t argy with lead. So he set down.
-
-“‘Well,’ sais he, ‘I guess you’ve got me, Mr. Berrybush.’
-
-“‘I think I hev,’ the murderer answers, ‘an’ I’ve got ye good,’ he sais.
-‘I intend to keep ye, too, fer I’m right fresh out o’ jail an’ soon the
-whole country’ll be lookin’ fer me. Excuse the familiarity,’ he goes on
-polite like, ‘but we’ll be Tom an’ Si fer some hours to come, fer you’re
-to carry me outen these parts in your pack.’
-
-“That idee made Buttonporgie gasp. He tried to git up but bumped agin the
-pistol.
-
-“Si Berrybush laughed an’ went on in that pleasant way o’ his: ‘I notice
-the plan ain’t takin’ well with ye, Tom, but you’ll see how nice it
-works. While you slept,’ he sais, ‘I fixed the pack. The goods is all
-stowed away here in the hay an’ I find I fit the leather box to a T. I
-git in it; you put it on your back an’ go th’ee mile an hour. Nawthin’s
-easier.’
-
-“Then he laughed like he’d die.
-
-“Be this time they was quite some light in the barn an’ the pedler was
-able to see who he hed to deal with. The first sight was encouragin’, fer
-he was but a bit of a man, not more than five feet th’ee. He’d a wery
-small body set on crooked spindle legs. His face was pleasant enough,
-fer they was nawthin’ in his leetle, black eyes an’ heavy, red beard to
-mark him ez a desperaydo. The only real onlikely thing about him was the
-pedler’s pistol.
-
-“Tom kind o’ cheers up now an’ sais, sais he, ‘Si, you’ve mistook the
-whole thing. Don’t ye see I’ll turn ye over to the first men we meet?’
-
-“At that Si th’owed back his head an’ laughed.
-
-“‘Will ye?’ he sais. ‘Well I guess ye would, only this pistol’ll be
-stickin’ th’oo a hole in the back o’ the pack. Ef you go to carry out
-sech an idee two bullets’ll end the both of us, an’ that’s a sight better
-than hangin’. So come on,’ he sais. ‘We must be movin’.’
-
-“Tom wasn’t in fer undertakin’ sech a job without objectin’.
-
-“‘See here, Si!’ he sais. ‘I appeals to you ez a gentleman,’ he sais.
-‘I’ve allus heard you was a gentleman in spite o’ your faults--I appeal
-to you to tell me what good it would do you to kill yourself an’ me too.
-You hain’t no particular spite agin me,’ Tom goes on, ‘an’ I hain’t no
-particular spite agin you. I’m willin’ fer you to stay in this barn an’
-me git out, or fer you to git out an’ me stay, both of us keepin’ quiet.’
-
-“Si’s eyes kind o’ twinkled an’ he pulled his beard like he was thinkin’
-wery hard.
-
-“‘Shake me, Tom!’ he sais at last, ‘ef I don’t like a man o’ your
-sperrit. Ef I wasn’t in sech a bad hole I’d be tempted to accept your
-offer. But onfortunate fer both of us,’ he sais, ‘this whole walley will
-be overrun with searchin’ parties in a few hours. They’ve got a chancet
-to hang Si Berrybush an’ they ain’t goin’ to lose it ef they can help it.’
-
-“Buttonporgie was a nice man an’ a smart man at his business, but they
-was some things that it was a leetle hard to git into his head.
-
-“‘See here!’ he sais, not satisfied. ‘I can’t see what good it ’ud do
-you to shoot me ef I was to call one o’ them searchin’ parties to take
-a look in my pack. You’d hev to hang anyway. Why couldn’t ye jest shoot
-yourself?’
-
-“‘You’re wastin’ walable time,’ Si answers. ‘I’ll kill myself sooner than
-be catched. Ez long ez you know that you’ll be killed ef I am catched,
-you won’t bother callin’ folks to see what you are carryin’. An’, Tom,’
-he went on, ‘I might jest ez well tell you now that ’hen we git well out
-o’ harm’s way, I’m goin’ to shoot ye anyhow. I don’t want to leave no one
-’round to blab.’
-
-“Si Berrybush smiled the innercentest smile you uns ever see, an’ the
-pedler chewed a straw a spell.
-
-“Then he looks up an’ sais, ‘You must take me for a dummy?’
-
-“‘Why?’ Si asts.
-
-“‘Do you think I’ll lug you thirty or forty mile jest so you can shoot
-me?’ answers Buttonporgie. ‘I might ez well call it up now!’ he sais.
-
-“Si cocked his pistol careless-like an’ pinted it at the other man’s
-head ez tho’ it was his finger an’ he was jest makin’ a good argyment on
-religion.
-
-“‘You are a dummy,’ he sais, laughin’. ‘Now don’t you s’pose that ez long
-ez you think there’s hope, a chancet o’ your comin’ out alive, you’ll
-carry me. Of course ye will,’ he sais. ‘Not till there’s not an ioty of a
-possibility o’ your doin’ me, will you let me finish you.’”
-
-“Mighty souls, but that Si was an argyer, now wasn’t he!” the Miller
-interrupted.
-
-“He’d ’a’ looked like small potatys ’long side o’ my Missus. I mind the
-time ’hen jest fer fun I----”
-
-The Patriarch tapped the Loafer gently on the knee with his cane.
-
-“My dear man,” he said gently, “never interrupt a good story. It ain’t
-polite. There is some peculiarly minded folks ez is never happy ’less
-they is doin’ all the talkin’. Now where did I leave off?”
-
-“Where there was hope--some hope,” the Miller answered.
-
-“Hope--oh, yes--hope,” the old man continued. “Mighty! Why I’ve knowd
-a sensible hen to set four weeks on a chiny egg, jest in hope that
-she might be mistaken. Si Berrybush knowd human natur’ well, fer it
-didn’t need but a wiggle or two o’ the pistol to bring Buttonporgie to
-takin’ his view o’ the sensibleness o’ hopin’. The pedler looked kind o’
-sheepish an’ ’lowed he guesst Si was right. Si sayd he guesst he was, an’
-climbed into the pack, an’ most mighty snug he fit it. Then Buttonporgie
-knelt down, put his arms th’oo the straps an’ lifted the load high on his
-back. Si closed down the flap. A second later Tom felt the muzzle o’ the
-pistol pressin’ him gentle like atween the shoulders.
-
-“‘Now we’re off,’ sais Si, ‘over the mo’ntains th’oo Windy Gap. Step
-light, ole hoss,’ he sais, ‘fer the gun’s cocked an’ too much joltin’ll
-send it off.’”
-
-“Mighty souls!” interrupted the Loafer. “An’ how fur did he hev to carry
-him, Gran’pap? A mile?”
-
-“A mile!” exclaimed the Patriarch. “Pshaw! Does you uns think a mile ’ud
-’a’ put Si Berrybush outen the way o’ the sheriff’s posse. Why, the whole
-county was alive that mornin’. It was hardly sun-up ’hen Tom Buttonporgie
-stepped outen Clock’s barn an’ went ploddin’ up the big road with his
-pack, yit at the eend o’ the first mile he met th’ee men on horseback,
-an’ they pulled up an’ told him all about Berrybush an’ warned him to
-keep out a sharp eye. Tom felt the pistol bawrel kind o’ nosin’ ’round
-his shoulders, so he laughed wery pleasant an’ ’lowed it was all right;
-he was obliged fer the warnin’ but there was no help fer Si Berrybush ef
-he ever come within the length o’ his arm. On he went agin. Ez the last
-o’ the horses’ hoofs died away down the road he hear a gentle chucklin’
-coming from his pack.
-
-“‘Wery good,’ sais Si, ‘most a mighty good.’
-
-“The pedler was a religious man yit he swore. At that he could feel his
-pack palpitatin’, fer his load was laughin’ an’ laughin’ to beat all. Tom
-swore some more, but he kept up his walkin’.
-
-“Si ’lowed it wasn’t nice fer Tom to carry on so.
-
-“‘It makes me feel bad,’ he sayd, talkin’ th’oo a slit in the top o’ the
-pack. ‘It makes me feel bad, Tom, to hear you behavin’ like that. I don’t
-mind killin’ a good man, fer I knows he’ll git his reward in the next
-world. But shootin’ a felly after he’s used sech language hurts me,’ he
-sayd.
-
-“With that he rubbed the nose o’ the pistol between Tom’s
-shoulder-blades. The pedler jest bubbled.
-
-“‘Keep on hopin’, Tom,’ he heard the woice at his back. ‘Mebbe
-somethin’ll happen ’twixt now an’ to-morrow mornin’ that’ll let you free
-o’ your pack!’
-
-“The sun come out hot, an’ the road was dusty. The load was heavy an’
-they was a good many long hills. Time an’ agin Tom ’ud slow down. ‘Git
-up, ole hoss,’ he’d hear come from behind him. Then they’d be that
-pistol jabbin’ him. He’d make a face an’ pick up his gait. Time an’ agin
-he met parties ez was out huntin’ the murderer. Sometim’s he’d hurry by
-them; others he stopped an’ talked to, askin’ all about Si Berrybush an’
-his escape, thankin’ ’em fer their adwice an’ ’lowin’ over an’ over agin
-he’d give his last cent jest to have the leetle man in his grasp.
-
-“Be noon he’d covered nine mile an’ reached the foot o’ the mo’ntain.
-
-“‘Now see here, Si,’ he sais, sais he, ‘you ain’t goin’ to kill your
-horse be overwork, are ye? S’posn I drop down in the road!’
-
-“‘Nobody’s sorrier than I am fer your trouble, Tom,’ come the answer.
-‘It’s really pitiful. But I’ll risk your givin’ out--I’ll risk it.’
-
-“Then there was the pistol agin.
-
-“At the last house in the walley Tom stopped an’ got a loaf o’ bread
-be special permission. The woman wanted to hev a look at his pack, but
-he sayd no; what he had in it wasn’t worth lookin’ at. He was carryin’
-low-down, mean, mis’able stock that wasn’t fit to show to no lady.
-Besides--the pistol was jabbin’ him--he hed to hurry on to git over the
-mo’ntain be sunset. An’ on he went.
-
-“Si begin laughin’ so hard it set the pack joltin’ up an’ down on Tom’s
-back an’ almost upset him.
-
-“‘That was a mean undercut you give me, Thomas,’ sais the murderer. ‘A
-gentleman should never abuse a gentleman behind his back!’ he sais. ‘Now
-s’posn you pass that bread in here.’
-
-“‘But I got it fer meself,’ Tom wentures.
-
-“‘Did ye?’ answers Berrybush, pressin’ on the butt of the gun jest a
-leetle. ‘Well, s’posn ye pass it in anyway an’ dewote the rest o’ the
-afternoon to hopin’. Mebbe you’ll git it after all.’
-
-“Tom passed it.
-
-“The road was steep an’ the way was rough in the mo’ntain. Strong ez
-he was an’ light ez was the murderer, the work begin to go heavy with
-him. But the pistol was allus at his back proddin’ him on. Oncet he
-stepped inter a chuckhole an pitched for’a’d, his hands jest savin’ him
-from strikin’ his face to the ground. He thot that all was up with him,
-fer the pack was jerked up on his head, wrenchin’ his shoulders most
-dreadful. He closed his eyes expectin’ to hear the crack o’ the gun an’
-then go plungin’ on agin fer ever an’ ever.
-
-“Nawthin’ happened. He climbed to his feet kind o’ dissypinted, fer
-instead o’ his journey bein’ ended he hed to go limpin’ ahead. Si was
-a-cursin’ him dreadful. Tom walked like an ellyphant, he sayd, an’ was
-joltin’ his bones all out o’ j’int. Next time he stumbled the gun ’ud be
-cocked dead sure.
-
-“The sun was settin’ ’hen they reached the edge o’ the woods on yon side
-the mo’ntain. The murderer pushed up the lid o’ the pack an’ looked out
-over Tom’s shoulder. He pinted acrosst the walley twenty mile to where
-they could see the hills agin. There, he sayd, he’d be th’oo with his
-mule.
-
-“Th’oo with him! Tom knowd what that meant. He knowd now Si Berrybush
-’ud keep his word; that he’d never git out o’ that pack an’ leave a man
-alive an’ runnin’ round to tell where he could be found. He was almost
-willin’ to call the game up right there an’ lay down his load an’ his
-life together, but still there was hope. It was precious leetle, to be
-sure, but still some. Ez Si sayd, they was no tellin’ what might happen
-agin they got to the end o’ that twenty mile.
-
-“Berrybush pulled in his head an’ let the flap down over it. ‘Git up’, he
-sais, ‘git up, ole Tom.’ An’ with that he give him a prod.
-
-“On Buttonporgie went, down the slope inter the walley, each step takin’
-him nearer an’ nearer the hills. The sun set an’ the darkness come to add
-to his troubles. The lights went out in the houses ’long the way an’ they
-wasn’t no sound to cheer him up, not a sound but the steady breathin’ in
-his pack an’ the rattle o’ the gravel under his own shufflin’ feet. It
-was awful travellin’ that way, straight on an’ on to the hills where he
-was to die, feelin’ allus on his back the weight o’ the man who was to
-kill him.
-
-“Final he couldn’t stand the silence no more. ‘Si,’ he cried, ‘Si, won’t
-ye talk to me!’
-
-“They wasn’t no answer. He only heard a heavy breathin’ in the pack.
-
-“The moon come up an’ lighted the road an’ the dogs begin to bay at it.
-That might ’a’ cheered him up some had he ’a’ heard ’em, but he didn’t
-hear nawthin’ now. Tom Buttonporgie was dazed like. He kept on a-walkin’
-an’ a-walkin’, but the straps no longer cut his shoulders an’ he forgot
-the load on his back. The road with the moonlight pourin’ over it seemed
-like a broad white pavement crosst the walley, smooz ez marble. They was
-no chuckholes now to stumble in, no thank-ye-ma’ams to jump over, no ruts
-to twist his ankles. It was all smooz--smooz ez marble it was. On he
-went, faster an’ faster. He wanted to git to the eend o’ the white road
-now an’ lay down his pack an’ sleep. He was walkin’ mechanical.
-
-“All o’ a sudden a queer sound woke him from his doze an’ he stopped
-short. It all come back agin. He was in the road an’ the road was
-rough, an’ the straps was cuttin’ dreadful, an’ his legs felt like they
-was givin’ way under him. The pack was on his back an’ awful heavy
-too. He reached up his hand an’ felt it. But a queer sound was comin’
-from it--most a mighty queer. Tom didn’t dast breathe. He stood still
-listenin’. Then it come louder--a soft purrin’, gentle ez a cat’s. An’
-the peddler laughed. Natur’ hed tackled Si Berrybush an’ walloped him. He
-was snorin’.
-
-“There was an oneasy movement in the pack. Tom’s heart fell. He stepped
-on wery cautious. Now agin come the sound, louder an’ louder.
-
-“The road took a sudden turn ’round a thick clump o’ woods an’ crossed
-a stream on a rickety timber bridge. There Buttonporgie stopped. An’ ez
-he leaned agin the rail an’ looked down into the water there below him,
-gleamin’ along in the moonlight, everything kind o’ passed away from his
-mind. He only knowd that he was wery hot, an’ the pool looked so cool
-an’ inwitin’. He only knowd that he was wery tired, an’ the pool looked
-so soft an’ nice, ez ef it was jest intended for limbs achin’ like ez
-his. He’d miles yit to go afore he reached the hills. Si was sleepin’.
-Si wouldn’t mind. Si wouldn’t know. They’d be movin’ agin afore Si woke
-up. So he climbed over the rail an’ stepped off. The wotter closed over
-his head an’ he went down an’ down, the great weight on his back draggin’
-him. But that wasn’t what he wanted. He was jest goin’ to lay there in
-the cool stream an’ look up at the stars an’ rest. His feet struck the
-bottom an’ he tore his arms free o’ the straps that held the awful weight
-to him. In a second he was on the surface an’ swimmin’, fer he was wide
-awake.
-
-“He used to say that ez he stood there on the bank lookin’ at that quiet
-pool it seemed ez tho’ it was all a dream; that he’d never met the
-murderer an’ carried him thirty mile on his back, or felt the prod of his
-pistol every time his steps lagged. But ef it was a dream, he thot, then
-what was that he seen that rose to the surface an’ went bobbin’ away on
-the current? It was Si Berrybush’s ole cloth cap.”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XI.
-
-_Cupid and a Mule._
-
-
-The wind went shrieking through the bare attic above and singing among
-the boxes and barrels in the cellar below. The big show window in front
-groaned in a deep bass; the little window in the rear accompanied it in
-a high treble. The lamp, with its vague, flickering flame, cast a gloomy
-glare over the store, and lighted up the faces of the little group of
-men, seated on box, counter, keg and chair, huddled about the great
-center of heat.
-
-The Chronic Loafer raised himself from his favorite pile of calicoes and
-turned up his coat collar.
-
-“Shet that stove door an’ put on the draught,” he cried. “What’s the uset
-o’ freezin’!”
-
-“Cold Chrisermas to morrer,” said the Storekeeper, as he banged the door
-shut and turned on the draught in obedience to the demand.
-
-“Turn up the lamp,” growled the Miller. “It’s ez dark an’ gloomy ez a
-barn here.”
-
-“They ain’t no uset o’ wastin’ ile,” the Storekeeper muttered as he
-complied with the second request.
-
-The great egg stove roared right merrily as the flames darted up out of
-its heart, until its large body grew red-hot and sent forth genial rays
-of heat and light--the veritable sun of the narrow village universe.
-
-“Listen to the wind! Ain’t it howlin’?” said the Loafer.
-
-“Col’est Chrisermas Eve in years,” the Tinsmith responded.
-
-The Loafer pushed himself off the counter onto an empty crate that stood
-below him. He leaned forward and almost embraced the stove in his effort
-to toast his hands.
-
-“This, I’ve heard tell,” he said, “is the one night in all the year ’hen
-the cattle talks jest like men.”
-
-“Some sais it’s Holly E’en,” ventured the Miller.
-
-“No, it ain’t. It’s Chrisermas,” the Loafer replied emphatically. He
-leaned back, placed his thumbs in the arm-holes of his waistcoat and
-glared about the circle in defiance.
-
-The brief silence that followed was broken by the School Teacher.
-
-“Superstition! Mere superstition!”
-
-“That’s what I sais,” cried the Storekeeper. He was leaning over the
-counter munching a candy lion. “What ’ud a mule talk about ’hen he only
-had a chancet oncet a year?”
-
-A thin, meaning smile crept over the Loafer’s face and he bent forward,
-thrusting his long chin in the direction of the venturesome merchant.
-
-“In my time,” he drawled, “I’ve met some mules pullin’ plows that hed
-they ben able to talk ’ud ’a’ sayd sensibler things then some ez is
-engaged in easier an’ more money-makin’ ockypations.”
-
-The Store was usually loath to accord recognition to the Loafer, but this
-was the season of good-will to all, and it lifted up its voice in one
-mighty guffaw. Even the Teacher joined in, and the G. A. R. Man slapped
-his knee and cried, “Good shot!”
-
-The victim hid his burning face in the recesses of the sugar barrel, and
-under pretense of hunting for the scoop finished the candy toy.
-
-“My father-in-law was a superstitious man and always believed in them
-fool things,” said the pedagogue. “I never give them any credit myself,
-for they say that education is as great an enemy to superstition as light
-is to darkness. In other words, learnin’ illumines a man’s mind and
-drives out all them black, unholy beliefs that are bred in ignorance.”
-
-He paused to give effect to his words, but the Loafer seized the
-opportunity, thus unintentionally offered, to remark, “Then it ’ud seem
-like most men’s brains is like cellars. They is allus some hole or corner
-in a cellar that ye can’t light lest ye put a special lantern in it, an’
-ye hev trouble keepin’ that burnin’.”
-
-“But the brain’s perfectly round,” interposed the Miller, shaking his
-head sagely.
-
-The Teacher sighed. “It’s no use talking to you men in figures----”
-
-“Go on. Let’s hev figgers,” cried the Storekeeper, eagerly.
-
-The pedagogue leaned back on two legs of his chair and pillowed his
-head on a cheese box that stood on the counter. After having carefully
-extinguished the flame in his cigar, blown out the smoke and placed the
-stump in his pocket, he began:
-
-“While I give no credit to the current superstitions, I cherish a
-peculiar affection for this old belief that the cattle talk on Christmas
-Eve. I feel that to it I owe part of my happiness in life, and I’ve had
-a good deal of it, too, in spite of the hardships I had to endure as a
-boy. You know my parents died when I was but seventeen year old and left
-me practically penniless and a charge on the township. So I was bound
-over to Abraham Buttenberger, who had a fine farm up near West Eden. But
-for one thing life with him would have gone hard with me, for he was a
-crotchety old fellow, a bit stingy, and inclined to get the greatest
-possible amount of work out of a husky lad that was gettin’ no pay but
-his keep. The one thing I mentioned was Abraham’s dotter Kate. I have
-seen many weemen in my day, and I can honestly say that I have looked
-on few such pictures as she was when I first knew her. She was sixteen
-then----”
-
-“I don’t know ’bout that,” the Loafer interrupted. “Did you uns ever see
-my Missus ’hen she was sixteen an’----”
-
-“She was sixteen then,” repeated the Teacher, ignoring the remark; “she
-was sixteen and extremely good lookin’. But most of you have seen her
-since and it’s no use for me to dwell on that point. As the years went
-by I got to set a heap of store by Kate and she set a heap of store by
-me. But we kept it to ourselves till we was twenty. Then we agreed to be
-married. Our agreement didn’t do any good, for Abraham set his foot down
-on the scheme. He wasn’t goin’ to have no hirelin’ of his a-merryin’ his
-dotter. I explained to him how his days was drawin’ to an end; how a time
-was a-comin’ when the place wouldn’t do him any more good and no more
-harm ’ud come to him whether his farm-hand was runnin’ it or not; how his
-dotter would need lookin’ after and all that. His answer was to drive me
-away with a horse-whip.
-
-“That was in November. For seven weeks I never laid eyes on the girl, for
-the old man watched her like a hawk. But he tired of that, and one night
-let her go to literary society meetin’ at Kishikoquillas school. I saw
-her there and wanted her to elope right on the spot. She said no. It was
-too sudden. Besides, she wanted her things, for she knew her father would
-keep them just for spite if she run away without them. So we fixed it
-up that next night--that was Christmas Eve--she was to meet me at their
-barn, and we would take one of the horses and a sleigh and skip.
-
-“Now, as I said, Abraham was a superstitious man and continual readin’
-the almanac and perusin’ charms. He believed in that old sayin’ about the
-cattle talkin’ on Christmas Eve. Many a night he’d argued the point with
-me. I always said if he thot it was true, why didn’t he go listen to it.
-He declared he would, but he never did--leastways he put it off to a most
-onexpected time. If there was any place the cattle was likely to talk,
-I used to tell him, it was right in that big, spooky barn of his; and
-if there was any place where one could hear them perfect, it was right
-there. The stables was in the basement and the mows was overhead. The hay
-was stored above the horses and mules. A hole about ten feet across and
-twenty feet deep run from the top of the mow into that particular stable.
-I explained to him how he could lay at the top of the hay, put his head
-down into the hole and hear everything that passed. But that Christmas
-Eve I’d forgot all about our argument. I’d other things to think of.
-
-“I reached the barn at midnight. Kate was there, standin’ by the gate
-waitin’. Everything was clear. The old man, she said, had gone to bed
-and didn’t have any suspicions. So we got the sleigh ready and went
-into the horse stable to harness up. It was clear moonlight outside but
-inside it was dark as pitch and fearful ghostly. There were all kinds
-of noises--hay rattlin’, rats skippin’ around, chains clinkin’; and
-every now and then a hen roostin’ up in the racks would begin to cluck
-and scare Kate awful. Grave-yards is bad at night but they ain’t a
-circumstance to a big barn.
-
-“I picked out the white John mule, for I knew he was a good traveler, and
-gettin’ the harness, I went into his stall and began to fix it on him.
-Then I couldn’t find any bridles. I whispered to Kate. She said they was
-over in the cow stable, and went to get one. It seemed to me she was gone
-an awful long time. I could hear her trampin’ around, but as she didn’t
-appear to be havin’ much success I called, not very loud, ‘What’s wrong?’
-
-“‘Nothin’,’ she answered, ‘I’ll have them in a minute.’
-
-“It seemed like I heard a suspicious noise come down the hayhole from the
-mow above. I listened, but I didn’t hear any more sounds, so guessed it
-was a rat.
-
-“Then I called louder to Kate, for I was mad at Abraham for all the
-trouble he’d given us, ‘The old man is a mean customer if there ever was
-one!’
-
-“She tramped around in the straw for a spell. Then her answer came from
-the cow stable, ‘That’s what I say.’
-
-“‘A nice way he treats his own dotter,’ I went on, just talkin’ for
-company. ‘He thinks he’ll take his farm with him when he dies. What a
-shame in a man of his age!’
-
-“Again I heard a rattle of hay up above and whispered, ‘Ssh!’ But the
-girl didn’t catch it and said particularly loud and spiteful, ‘He has
-treated me powerful mean.’
-
-“I put my hand to my ear and listened, but all was quiet, so I thinks to
-myself, ‘It’s a chicken.’
-
-“‘Don’t you think kickin’ is too good for a man like that, John?’ Kate
-asks.
-
-“‘Well, I’d like to have it to do,’ I answers. ‘Oh! just you wait till I
-get a chance, and if I don’t----’
-
-“There was an awful scream in the mow--an unearthly scream. A great,
-black thing came tumblin’ out of the hayhole into the stable, lettin’ out
-fearful groans all the time. I couldn’t see it very plain and didn’t stop
-to investigate. I bumped into Kate as she was pilin’ into the kitchen.
-We set down a minute to get our breath. Then I put my head out of the
-door. For a piece all was quiet. Then a faint call come from the barn.
-She thot maybe it was a tramp had fallen down the hayhole. I wanted to go
-alone and see, but Kate wouldn’t hear of it. She insisted on goin’ with
-me and takin’ a gun and a lantern.
-
-“I opened the stable door, peeped in and said, ‘Who’s there?’
-
-“The answer was a moan and, ‘Is that you, John? Help!’
-
-“There Abraham Buttenberger lay on a little pile of hay at the back of
-the stable, writhin’ and moanin’.
-
-“‘I always knew it,’ he groaned. ‘I always told you they talked on
-Christmas Eve. But why did you ever get me to try and hear them? See what
-you’ve led me to. Look at me layin’ here with a broken leg and see what
-you’ve done. It was the white John mule--I know his voice. T’other was
-the brindle cow.’
-
-“‘Look out for the mule! Look out!’ he cried, as we carried him out of
-the stable and put him on a wheelbarrow.
-
-“That’s the way he took on. When we’d got him into the house I went up
-to town for a doctor. I attended him that night. The next day after he’d
-had breakfast, he set up in bed and says to me: ‘John, I’ve heard people
-laugh about the sayin’ that the cattle talk on Christmas Eve. I’ve heard
-you make fun of the idee. But you’d never laugh at it again if you heard
-what I did last night; if you’d had a mule heapin’ coals of fire on your
-head. And that cow! Oh, it’s awful to have the very animals on the farm
-down on you like that.’
-
-“‘What did they say?’ says I.
-
-“‘Say!’ he answers. ‘What didn’t they say? I’ll never have no peace
-behind that John mule again.’
-
-“The old man was quiet a spell. Then he says, ‘John, you can have my
-dotter, my only dotter.’
-
-“And he begin to moan.
-
-“Missus and I were married at home that Christmas just fifteen years ago.
-We never explained it to Abraham. There was no particular use in it. We
-couldn’t ’a’ convinced him anyway. Why, do you know he was so set on
-makin’ up all around that he insisted that the brindle cow and the white
-mule know all about it. The ceremony was performed in the kitchen and
-them two knowin’ beasts was hitched to the window so they could look in.
-He was bound to appease ’em.”
-
-The Teacher chuckled softly as he finished his narration.
-
-The Storekeeper bit the legs off a candy ostrich. “It do beat all!” he
-exclaimed.
-
-“I knowd it,” the Loafer cried triumphantly. “I allus knowd it. I thank
-you, Teacher, fer backin’ me up with this petickler instance of it. The
-cattle do talk on Chrisermas Eve.”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XII.
-
-_The Haunted Store._
-
-
-The Chronic Loafer cautiously opened the door and peered out into the
-black night. A blinding flash of lightning zigzagged across the heavens
-and descended to earth in a nearby wheat field, disclosing to his view
-the clear outlines of a great oak whose limbs were thrashing wildly in
-the wind. There was a sound of splintering wood, a crash of thunder
-overhead, then darkness again. The door swung shut with a startled bang.
-The rain beat violently against the windows.
-
-“The ole tree’s hit agin,” the Loafer cried. “Did ye see that flash?
-Mighty souls, what a night! I wisht I’d gone home ’fore it begin to come
-down so heavy. I hevn’t no umbrelly, an’ the Missus’ll never hear me
-callin’ in sech a storm.”
-
-The store was a gloomy place, lighted as it was by a solitary oil lamp
-which cast weird shadows in the recesses of the dusty ceiling and
-over the shelves, laden with their motley collection of crockery and
-glassware, boxes and cans. There was no fire in the stove, for it was
-late in the spring, so the atmosphere was damp and chilly.
-
-The G. A. R. Man joined the Loafer at the door.
-
-“Bad, ain’t it?” he said. “I guesst I don’t go home be way o’ the
-Meth’dis’ buryin’-ground to-night.”
-
-The other laughed and cried, “My sights! ’Fraid o’ the buryin’-ground!”
-
-The pair sauntered back to their places about the cheerless stove. The
-Storekeeper leaned his chair against the counter, fixed his feet firmly
-on the rungs and clasped both knees tightly with his hands.
-
-“You can laugh an’ say they ain’t no sech things ez spooks,” he said,
-“but I notice that you uns an’ most other folks ’hen ye walks be the
-buryin’-ground at night, cuts th’oo the fields ez fur ’way from it ez ye
-can git.”
-
-The Loafer reddened. For a moment he beat his feet slowly against the
-side of the counter on which he had seated himself between the Miller and
-the Tinsmith. Then he retorted hotly, “I hain’t sayd they was no sech
-things ez spooks.”
-
-“Mebbe they is an’ mebbe they ain’t,” ventured the Miller in a low tone.
-“But ef they ain’t, why hesn’t Abe Scissors ben able to git a tenant fer
-that leetle place o’ his back on the ridge? They sais it hes a ha’nt, an’
-tho’ I’ve never seen it, I knows folks that sais they hes, an’ I’ve no
-reasons to doubt their words.”
-
-The G. A. R. Man nodded his head in assent. “I don’t b’lieve in them
-ghosts meself, but ’hen it comes to goin’ home be way o’ the Meth’dis’
-buryin’-ground at night I allus goes the back road, even ef it is furder.”
-
-There was silence. Outside the rain beat furiously against the windows;
-in the garret overhead the wind whistled mournfully; from the cellar
-below came the faint clatter of loose boards as the rats scampered to and
-fro.
-
-The Storekeeper reached behind him and turned the wick of the lamp up a
-little higher.
-
-The Miller slipped from his place on the counter and seated himself on
-the box beside the veteran. He filled and lighted his clay pipe, and
-began: “My gran’pap used to tell how night after night he heard the churn
-splashin’ down in his spring-house; an’ how he stepped out once to find
-out what done it. He seen the sperrit of his first wife churnin’ an’
-churnin’, an’ she told him how lest some un ’ud break the spell she’d hev
-to----”
-
-The Chronic Loafer had glided off the counter and was rolling a keg close
-to the speaker. He fixed himself comfortably on it; then cried, “Turn up
-that there light. This dark hurts a felly’s eyes.”
-
-The Tinsmith glanced furtively behind him into the blackness beneath the
-counter. He pushed himself from his perch, intending to join the little
-knot about the stove. Hardly had he reached the floor and taken one step
-when he halted.
-
-“Ssh! What’s that?”
-
-The Miller dropped his pipe. The Storekeeper paled and nervously grasped
-the back of his chair. The Chronic Loafer arose to his feet, his upraised
-arms trembling visibly. The G. A. R. Man, with eyes and mouth wide open,
-sat up rigidly upon his keg.
-
-From the cellar beneath, low, but so distinct as to be heard above the
-patter of the rain and the rattle of the windows, came the sound of
-footsteps. It lasted but a moment, and then seemed to die away in the
-distance.
-
-The Chronic Loafer broke the silence. “Sights! I’m goin’. The Missus’ll
-be gittin’ worrit.”
-
-He hurried to the door, but as he opened it there was a blinding flash of
-lightning, a crash of thunder, and the whole building trembled. A gust of
-wind drove the rain against the windows with redoubled vigor. He slammed
-the door shut and returned to his keg.
-
-“Wha--what’s that?” exclaimed the G. A. R. Man.
-
-The Storekeeper shook his head mournfully. “It’s the ha’nt that give my
-pap so much trouble.”
-
-“A ha’nt!” cried the Loafer and the Miller, their teeth chattering.
-
-“Yes,” replied the Storekeeper, leaning his chair back on two legs.
-“That’s what Pap use to say it was. He seen it. I never did, but ef you
-uns draws up closer I’ll tell ye what he sayd about it.”
-
-Nothing loath to get as near as possible to each other the men, seated on
-chairs, kegs and boxes, formed a little circle about the Storekeeper, who
-began his story in a voice hardly above a whisper.
-
-“My pap, you uns knows, run this here store an’ done a pretty lively
-trade tell the year ’fore he died. He bo’t it off o’ ole Ed Harmon, who’d
-kep’ it a long while. You uns may remember Ed, or mebbe ye don’t. He was
-a mean man ef they ever was one; never hesytatin’ to give short measure
-in sellin’ butter an’ takin’ long in buyin’; allus buyin’ eggs be the
-baker’s dozen an’ sellin’ ’em the reg’lar way; usin’ a caliker stick an
-inch short of the yard. It don’t take many years o’ that kind o’ tradin’
-to hurt a man’s repytation in these parts, an’ consequent ’hen he died
-he’d the name o’ bein’ ’bout the dishonestest felly in the county, ef you
-uns reck’lect.”
-
-“That I do,” the Miller interposed. “An’ the sugar he sold was that wet
-ye could ’a’ squeezed a tin o’ wotter outen every pound.”
-
-“My sights!” cried the Loafer.
-
-“Sure,” continued the Storekeeper, “an’ ’cordin’ to Pap, who hed the name
-fer tellin’ the truth, them was his footsteps we heard jest now.”
-
-“Sam Hill!” muttered the G. A. R. Man. “His body’s in the Meth’dis’
-buryin’-ground.”
-
-The Chronic Loafer cast an anxious glance toward the entrance to the
-store-room, from which a stairway wound down into the cellar. The
-Tinsmith shifted his chair closer into the circle. There was a roll of
-thunder along the mountains, a flash of lightning that seemed to find the
-earth somewhere among the distant ridges, but the rain was still pouring
-down in torrents.
-
-“True. That’s what Pap sayd,” the Storekeeper continued in a low, awed
-tone. “He told me all about it afore he died, an’ I guesst he told me
-right, fer we’ve heard his footsteps an’ my sugar hes ben wet lately.”
-
-“So my Missus hes ben complainin’--still--but----”
-
-The Storekeeper was slightly ruffled by this interruption and glared for
-a moment at its author, the Loafer. Then he resumed his narrative.
-
-“It tuk Pap considerable time to build up his trade, but he give square
-measure, an’ by an’ by the folks begin comin’ here ’stead o’ goin’ to
-Kishikoquillas. Then the trouble started. One day he found a chip stuck
-in the scales he used fer buyin’ meat on, so it wouldn’t weigh more’n
-fifty pounds. He licked me, that he did, tho’ I never done it. Next day
-he found another stick there, an’ he was that mad he licked me agin. Then
-I went away fer a week, an’ every mornin’ reg’lar he found that chip. He
-begin to feel queer ’bout it ’hen he seen I wasn’t responsible. So every
-day he pulled the chip out, tell final it stopped. He thot it was rats.
-
-“Things run ’long all right fer a year, an’ then folks begin to complain
-that the sugar was damp, an’ blamed Pap fer wettin’ it to make it weigh.
-He sayd he didn’t, an’ he didn’t, fer he wasn’t no man to tell nawthin’
-but the truth, let alone to treat his sugar dishonest. But the customers
-begin to drop off buyin’ an’ he to be afraid o’ losin’ his trade. What
-was more, he seen that sugar he got in the bawrel ez dry ez a chip one
-night was damp next mornin’. ’Hen he declared it wasn’t his fault, folks
-wouldn’t believe him, an’ they was no denyin’ it, them goods was soakin’.
-So he concided he’d find out jest what was wrong. He found out an’ never
-hed no more peace. What happened I tell you exactly ez he told me, an’
-I ain’t hed no cause to disbelieve what he sayd, fer he wasn’t a man to
-waste words.
-
-“One night, jest after he’d got in a bawrel o’ granilated, he went to
-the cellar an’ made ’rangements to discover the trouble. He hed his ole
-shot-gun along an’ hung an ile lantern to a joist in the middle. Then
-he set down on a pile o’ sacks in a corner to watch. He wasn’t a bit
-skeered at first, fer the lantern was burnin’ cheery. An hour went by,
-an’ he begin to git weary; they was no signs of anything wrong. Then
-another, an’ he begin to doze off. How long he slep’ he didn’t know, but
-a foot-fall woke him, an’ he set up on the pile o’ sacks an’ looked. The
-lantern was flickerin’ low, fer the ile hed most burned out, so they was
-only a dim light in the placet. His heart stopped beatin’, an’ his breath
-wouldn’t come. Fer a moment they was dead silence. The lantern seemed
-like it was a-goin’ to go out.
-
-“Over from the other end of the cellar come a faint sound like the
-splashin’ of wotter, drippin’, drippin’, drippin’. Pap raised hisself on
-his knees, all a-tremblin’. They was another spell o’ quiet; then the
-same sound of a foot-fall; then ’nother an’ ’nother; an’ every time it
-made his heart thump like ’twould break an’ jarred him all over. Out o’
-the dark, into the light o’ the lantern, come the figur’ of an ole man,
-walkin’ slow, step be step, ’crosst the cellar toward the sugar bawrel.
-Pap rubbed his eyes in surprise, fer the felly was Ed Harmon, who for
-eight year had ben layin’ in the Meth’dis’ buryin’-ground, never missed.
-He wore that ole shiny black coat o’ hisn, his broken, patched boots, an’
-gray cap; ’bout his neck was wound a blue woolen comforter, an’ in his
-hand he kerried a bucket o’ wotter. He’d wrapped a piece o’ paper ’round
-the han’le to keep it from cuttin’ his fingers. His face was all white
-like it used to be, ’cept his nose, which was red from his drinkin’ too
-much hard cider. He walked all doubled up, fer the bucket seemed to blow
-him consid’able.
-
-“Pap laid quiet at first, he was so scared, tremblin’ all over, with his
-teeth chatterin’ to beat all. Sudden Ed stopped right under the lantern
-an’ set the bucket down, the wotter splashin’ over the side an’ goin’
-up in a fog ’hen it struck the floor. Then he straightened up like to
-stretch his back, an’ raised his hands to his mouth an’ begin to blow on
-’em. Pap didn’t hear no sound but he seen the lamp flickerin’; an’ at the
-sight o’ Ed standin’ there so nat’ral his courage come back.
-
-“After the ghos’ hed stopped a minute his face twisted like he was
-groanin’, an’ he picked up the bucket an’ started on toward the sugar
-bawrel. ’Hen Pap seen that, he clean forgot it was a sperrit, it looked
-so lifelike. He jumped up an’ run out yellin’, ‘Here you, Ed Harmon,
-don’t you dast put that wotter on my sugar!’
-
-“The ghos’ stopped, turned ’round an’ looked at Pap. Pap stopped an’
-looked at the ghos’. The appyrition set the bucket down easy an’ blowed
-on his hands. That kind o’ cooled the ole man.
-
-“‘You uns ain’t ben treatin’ me right,’ sais Pap, polite like, ‘dampin’
-my sugar an’ sp’ilin’ my trade.’
-
-“Ed didn’t say nawthin’, but jest looked at him quiet like an’ give his
-comforter another lap ’round the neck.
-
-“‘Now, see here,’ sais Pap, a leetle louder. ‘I’ve found you out, Ed
-Harmon, an’ I’ll make it pretty hot fer you ’round these parts ef you
-don’t let up.’
-
-“The sperrit turned proud like, blowed on its hands, leaned over an’
-picked up the bucket, an’ started trampin’ toward the bawrel agin. Pap
-clean forgot hisself. He give a run an’ a kick at the pail, for he’d no
-desires to hurt the ole man, but ’tended jest to spill the wotter. He
-near dropped dead on the spot, fer his feet went right inter it ’thout
-his feelin’ it; the ole thing broke in a dozen pieces, the staves fallin’
-in a heap on the floor; the wotter ’rose up in a fog like, an’ fer an
-instant he could see nawthin’. It cleared away an’ he noticed one o’ the
-hoops rollin’ off inter the dark. He made a run fer it an’ grabbed at it,
-but his hand went right up th’oo it. He th’owed his arm out, thinkin’ to
-ketch it that ’ay. Ez he looked up he seen the ole hoop revolvin’ there
-in the air above him. He give a wild jump at it. His hand struck the
-lantern an’ knocked it off the nail. They was a loud crash ez the glass
-broke. What happened after that he didn’t know. I found him sleepin’ on
-the pile o’ sacks next mornin’.”
-
-“Sights!” cried the Chronic Loafer. He drew his chair closer into
-the circle, which by this time had reached the smallest possible
-circumference.
-
-The Tinsmith glanced surreptitiously over his shoulder toward the dark
-corner where lay the entrance to the store-room.
-
-“It do beat all,” he said.
-
-From the mountains there came the low reverberation of thunder. The storm
-had passed the valley and now the rain was falling lightly and the breeze
-was dying.
-
-“Was the sugar wet next day?” asked the Miller, nervously biting the end
-off the stem of his clay pipe.
-
-“Ssh! Listen!” whispered the Loafer.
-
-There was no sound save the gentle patter of the rain and the swish of
-the wind in the maples outside the door.
-
-“It wasn’t,” the Storekeeper answered. “But the trouble began a week
-later.”
-
-“It’s a strange story,” said the Tinsmith, “an’ ef any one but your Pap
-hed told it I’d hev my suspitchions. But his sugar was damp.”
-
-There was a long silence.
-
-From the cellar came again the weird sound, low but distinct.
-
-The G. A. R. Man arose and seized the lamp from the counter.
-
-“They ain’t no sech things ez ghos’,” he cried. “This is all
-foolershness. Ef you fellys comes we’ll find out what that is.”
-
-He shuffled slowly toward the dark end of the store. For a moment his
-companions hesitated. Then the Storekeeper joined the leader of the
-hazardous enterprise and one by one the others followed. They tiptoed
-through the door; they wound their way among the boxes and barrels that
-filled the store-room, and reached the head of the stairway that led to
-the cellar. Here the G. A. R. Man halted. The lamp in his hand vibrated
-to and fro, throwing grotesque shadows on the white ceiling and walls.
-The men clustered about him and gazed timidly into the darkness beneath.
-He placed one foot on the step, then stopped.
-
-“They ain’t no sech things ez ghos’,” he said.
-
-“Course th-th-they ain’t,” chattered the Miller, who was holding the
-Storekeeper by the arm.
-
-“It’s r-r-rats,” the Tinsmith ventured.
-
-“Or a l-l-loose b-b-board,” suggested the veteran.
-
-“Foolershness,” whispered the Loafer, “‘v-v-v-vestig-g-gatin’ ghosts ’hen
-they ain’t no sech things. The Missus is settin’ up fer me an’ I’ll hev
-to be goin’.”
-
-“Pap allus was superstitchous,” exclaimed the Storekeeper, as he made his
-way back through the maze of boxes and barrels to the store in the wake
-of the Loafer. The others were hurrying along in the rear.
-
-The rain had ceased. Overhead the black clouds, visible in the bright
-starlight, were scurrying away towards the hills. The G. A. R. Man and
-the Loafer were parting at the latter’s gate at the end of the village.
-
-“Hev you ben gittin’ any sugar o’ him lately?” asked the veteran,
-pointing his thumb over his shoulder in the direction whence they had
-come.
-
-“I hev,” replied the Loafer. “An’ I guess ole Ed Harmon is still at it.”
-
-“What do ye think it was?”
-
-“It might ’a’ ben a rat. It might ’a’ ben a loose board. It might ’a’
-ben a hundred things like that. I ain’t superstitchous--not a bit
-superstitchous.” The speaker paused. “But jest the same I ain’t fer
-investigatin’ ghosts,” he added.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIII.
-
-_Rivals._
-
-
-“What was the question fer debate?” asked the School Teacher.
-
-“Resawlved that the Negro is more worthy o’ government support than the
-Indian,” replied the Miller.
-
-“And the decision?”
-
-“One jedge voted fer the affirmative an’ one fer the negative.”
-
-“And the third?”
-
-“That’s where the trouble come. Ye see, Theophilus Bones was the third
-jedge, an’ he got up an’ sayd that after hearin’ an’ weighin’ all the
-argyments o’ the debaters he hed to concide that neither the Negro nor
-the Indian was worthy.”
-
-“Deadlocked!” cried the pedagogue, bringing his chair down on all four
-legs with a crash, waving his arms and snapping his fingers. “Deadlocked,
-sure. What did ye do?”
-
-“See here,” interrupted the Chronic Loafer from his perch on a sugar
-barrel, “I can’t see that it makes any diff’rence what they done.
-S’posin’ the Airy View Liter’ry Society is deadlocked. How’s the poor
-Injun goin’ to suffer any more by it?”
-
-“But did you uns ever see sech dum jedges?” asked the Miller appealingly.
-“I was on the negative.”
-
-“The point is this,” said the Teacher, shaking his cigar at the occupant
-of the barrel. “Here is a modern liter’ry society, whose main purpose is
-trainin’ its members in the art of debate. An important question is put
-before this same society for formal discussion, and yet these self-same
-trained debaters makes their points so badly that one o’ the jedges can’t
-decide on the merits o’ the question.”
-
-“It ain’t so bad at all,” the Tinsmith exclaimed. “I once heard Aleck
-Bolum on that wery question. He argyed both affirmative an’ negative. All
-three o’ the jedges was deadlocked. None of ’em could concide.”
-
-“Bolum must ’a’ ben a wonderful talker,” the Loafer said.
-
-“Wonderful? Well, I guesst he was. Why, it was his debatin’ broke up the
-Kishikoquillas Liter’ry Society. An’ that was a flourishin’ organization,
-too. Me an’ my old frien’ Perry Muthersbaugh started it together. After
-he went west Andrew Magill tuk a holt of it. He run it tell Aleck Bolum
-stepped in. Then it was a tug-o-war.
-
-“Bolum was a livin’ Roberts-rules-of-order. He was a walkin’ encyclopedy
-of information. He knowd it an’ never lost no opportunity of showin’ it.
-Kishikoquillas school-house was his principal place fer exhibitin’. From
-the time Andrew Magill’s gavel fell on Friday night tell a motion was
-made to adjourn, Aleck was on his feet. Ef he wasn’t gittin’ off a select
-readin’ or a recytation or debatin’, he was risin’ to pints of order,
-appealin’ from the decision o’ the chair, callin’ fer divisions or movin’
-we proceed to new business. Ye couldn’t git any fresh wood put in the
-stove ’thout hevin’ him move the ’pointment of a committee to do it. Ef a
-lamp burned low he’d want to hev it referred to the committee on lights.
-He even tried to git the recordin’ seckertary impeached because she kep’
-the minutes in lead-pencil.”
-
-“What fer a lookin’ felly was this Aleck Bolum?” asked the Chronic Loafer.
-
-“He was a thin, leetle man, with a clean-shaved, hatchet face, an’ a
-bald spot on the top o’ his head over which he plastered a few skein o’
-lemon-colored hair.”
-
-“An’ he wore a Prince Al-bert coat?” inquired the Loafer anxiously.
-
-“Yes, a shiny black un. An’ he’d stand up an’ th’ow out his chist.”
-
-“Why, that’s where half the trouble come,” interrupted the Loafer. “Don’t
-you know that ef ye put a Prince Al-bert coat on a clothes-horse, it’ll
-stan’ right up an’ begin argyin’ with ye?”
-
-“My dear felly,” replied the Tinsmith, “Aleck Bolum ’ud ’a’ argyed in his
-grave clothes. They wasn’t no stoppin’ him. We thot mebbe we could quiet
-him be givin’ him an office, so we ’lected him correspondin’ seckertary,
-cal’latin’ he’d hev nawthin’ to do an’ ’ud be satisfied with the honor.
-We’d complete misjedged him. He got up a debate be correspondence with
-a liter’ry society out in Kansas an’ tuk up half our evenin’s readin’
-reports on it.
-
-“So Aleck Bolum didn’t give Andrew Magill much chancet, even tho’ he was
-president. It went hard with Andrew, too, fer he liked to fill in all
-the cracks in the meetin’ hisself, an’ objected to havin’ Aleck bobbin’
-up with pints of order every time he opened his mouth. But fer my part
-I allus preferred Bolum to Magill. Bolum wasn’t musical. Magill was.
-’Henever one o’ the reg’lar men on the progrim ’ud fail to be on hand an’
-he could head Aleck off, Andrew ’ud git up an’ say, ‘Mister So-an’-so,
-who hed the ess’y fer the evenin’, bein’ absent, the chair has consented
-to fill in the interval be singin’ a solo.’ Or the chair ’ud sing a duet
-with the seckertary; or the chair ’ud sing an anthem ’sisted be the
-society quartette. Then he’d stand up with his music marks an’ start away
-on twenty verses about Mother or Alice.
-
-“Things kept gittin’ worse an’ worse. They final come to a head one
-night ’hen Aleck Bolum rose to a pint of order durin’ one of Andrew’s
-highest notes. Magill hed to stop singin’ an’ ast him to state his pint.
-Then Aleck moved the solo be the president be taken up under onfinished
-business. Andrew jest choked.
-
-“‘Hen the president got th’oo chokin’, we tuk up the debate. Everything
-was subdued like. Andrew set on the platform wery quiet an’ solemn. The
-debaters didn’t put no heart in their work fer they was busy keepin’
-one eye on him an’ the other on Bolum. Every one was kind o’ nervous
-an’ hushed--that is, every one ’cept Aleck. He argyed that the pen was
-mightier then the sword in the reg’lar debate. ’Hen the argyment was
-th’owed open to all he got up agin an’ proved that the sword was mightier
-then the pen.
-
-“We got th’oo with the debate an’ nawthin’ hed happened. Then Andrew
-Magill rose to give out the progrim fer the next meetin’. He looked
-solemn like at his paper a minute; then gazed ’round the room. Ye could
-’a’ heard a pin drop.
-
-“‘Several o’ our members,’ sais he, ‘complains that they ain’t hed no
-opportunity to be heard afore this society. This progrim is got up
-especial to satisfy these gentlemen.’
-
-“An’ the progrim fer the follyin’ Friday, which he read out, run like
-this: ‘Readin’ o’ the Scriptur’ be the president; roll call; select
-readin’, Mr. Aleck Bolum; recytation, Mr. Aleck Bolum; extemporaneous
-oration, Mr. Aleck Bolum; ess’y, The True Patriot, Mr. Aleck Bolum;
-debate, Resawlved that works o’ natur’ is more beautiful then works o’
-art--affirmative, Mr. Aleck Bolum; negative, Mr. Aleck Bolum.’
-
-“Andrew finished an’ set down in his chair. They wasn’t even a whisper
-fer every eye in the room was turned on the correspondin’ seckertary. He
-arose deliberate like, cleared his th’oat, th’owed open his coat so his
-red tie showed better, put the thumb o’ his left hand in his waistcoat
-pocket, raised the other hand, pintin’ his forefinger at the president.
-We was ready fer somethin’ hot.
-
-“‘Mr. Chairman,’ he sayd, never crackin’ a smile. ‘I desires right here
-to express my approval o’ this new plan o’ yours o’ hevin’ the same man
-debate both sides o’ the question. It’s an excellent idee. Under the
-ole rule, where the debater was allowed to speak only on one side, we
-developed lopsided speakers. An’ I want to say right here an’ now an’ to
-everybody in this room that I, fer my part, ’ll do my best to make next
-week’s meetin’ beneficial to us all.’
-
-“‘Hen Andrew Magill seen how he’d played right into Aleck Bolum’s hand,
-thots failed to express his indignation. He adjourned the meetin’,
-blowed out the lamps, put on his overcoat an’ hat an’ walked outen the
-school-house an’ down the road, jest all bubblin’ over. But Andrew wasn’t
-easy beaten. He’d no idee o’ settin’ all evenin’ listenin’ to Aleck
-Bolum’s ess’ys an’ select readin’s. He slipped ’round ’mong the members
-on the quiet an’ explained how he’d an invite from the Happy Grove
-Social Singin’ Club, to bring the whole society up there the follyin’
-Friday. He explained what a good un it ’ud be on Aleck ’hen he got to the
-school-house with his progrim all prepared an’ found fer an aud’ence--Mr.
-Aleck Bolum. An’ ez he offered to kerry three sled loads o’ members to
-the grove hisself, everybody agreed. It really begin to look ez ef Aleck
-was goin’ to be squelched.
-
-“The snow was two feet deep, an’ the sleighin’ was fine. It tuk jest
-’bout an hour an’ a half to cover the twelve mile ’tween Kishikoquillas
-an’ Happy Grove. We’d a splendid time, too. Andrew was in high sperrits.
-He pictured Aleck arunnin’ the liter’ry meetin’ all hisself, an’ give
-an imytation o’ the debate on the question whether works o’ natur’ was
-more beautiful then works of art. It was killin’. I mind now how Andrew
-hed jest started in showin’ us Bolum’s recytation, ’hen we reached the
-clearin’ where the school-house stood.
-
-“The place was dark, absolute dark, an’ the door was locked. They wasn’t
-a soul in sight. Magill got out his watch. It sayd eight-fifteen an’
-the singin’ school was set fer eight. It looked pecul’ar. We guesst we’d
-better wait. So one o’ the boys climbed th’oo a winder an’ unlocked the
-door, an’ we all went in. A few can’les was found an’ lit. Then we set
-down to watch fer the arrival o’ the Happy Grove Social Singin’ Club.
-They wasn’t any fire, an’ the place was cold an’ disygreeable. Some
-wanted to go home, but Andrew sayd no. We was the club’s guests. Some of
-’em ’ud be ’long any minute. It wouldn’t be right fer them to find us
-gone. So we kep’ settin’, an’ wonderin’, an’ guessin’.
-
-“At the end of an hour we hear sleigh-bells down the road. Then they was
-a stampin’ o’ boots outside on the portico.
-
-“‘Here they is at last,’ sais Andrew, gittin’ up on the platform an’
-rappin’ fer order.
-
-“The door opened. In steps Aleck Bolum. The whole society give a groan.
-
-“‘What’s the trouble?’ sais he, walkin’ to the middle o’ the room. ‘I
-don’t hear no singin’.’
-
-“The society jest hung their heads an’ looked sheepish.
-
-“‘Where’s the Happy Grove Social Singin Club?’ sais he pleasant like. ‘I
-sees only our own members.’
-
-“No one sayd nawthin’.
-
-“Aleck unwound his comforter, unbottoned his coat, th’owed out his chist
-an’ cried, ‘Mr. Chairman, hev I the floor?’
-
-“Magill kind o’ mumbled.
-
-“‘Then,’ sais Bolum, ‘Mebbe I can th’ow some light on the hushed voices
-I see gethered ’round me here to-night. Firstly, I’d like to say that
-we’d a most excellent meetin’ at Kishikoquillas this evenin’. After we
-adjourned I thot I’d run up here an’ see how you was makin’ out, fer
-I hed pecul’ar interest in this getherin’. Th’oo some mistake I was
-not properly notified that our members was comin’ here, but I learned
-of it. I wanted to see the Kishikoquillas Liter’ry Society do itself
-proud to-night at music ez well ez literature. So in my capacity ez
-correspondin’ seckertary I got up a musical progrim yeste’day an’
-forwarded it to the president of the Happy Grove Social Singin’ Club,
-explainin’ how our organization ’ud entertain his organization to-night
-with melody, instrumental an’ vocal.’
-
-“Bolum stopped an’ drawed a paper out o’ his pocket.
-
-“‘Will the seckertary please read the progrim?’ he sayd.
-
-“Josiah Weller tuk the paper. He looked at it. Then he piked one eye on
-the president.
-
-“‘Ye may read the progrim, Mr. Seckertary,’ sais Andrew, wery dignified.
-
-“An’ Josiah read like this, ‘The Kishikoquillas Liter’ry Society will
-be pleased to render fer the entertainment o’ the Happy Grove Social
-Singin’ Club the follyin’ selections: bass-horn solo, The Star Spangled
-Banner, Mr. Andrew Magill.’
-
-“The chairman’s gavel come down on the table, an’ he rose an’ said, ‘I
-feels flattered be Mr. Bolum puttin’ me on the progrim, but he otter ’a’
-notified me, so I could ’a’ brung me horn.’
-
-“‘Go on, Mr. Seckertary,’ sais Aleck, wery cool.
-
-“Josiah continyerd, ‘Vocal solo, I see Mother’s Face at the Window, Mr.
-Andrew Magill.’
-
-“The Chairman looked wery pleased.
-
-“‘Go on, Mr. Seckertary,’ sayd Aleck.
-
-“‘An ole time jig, jewsharp an’ harmonica mixed, Mr. Andrew Magill; vocal
-solo, Meet Me Alice at the Golden Gate, Mr. Andrew Magill; anthem, Angel
-Voices, Mr. Andrew Magill, ’sisted be the society.’
-
-“Josiah Weller didn’t git no furder. They was a low roar went over the
-room. Some felly in the rear ’lowed we otter put him in the pond. But
-they wasn’t no one to put. Aleck Bolum hed dissypeared. We got to the
-door in time to hear his sleigh-bells jinglin’ way off th’oo the woods.
-Seemed like we could ’most hear him chucklin’, too.”
-
-“But what hed become o’ the Happy Grove Social Singin’ Club?” asked the
-Miller. “Why wasn’t they there?”
-
-“I guesst you never heard Andrew Magill sing, did ye?” replied the
-Tinsmith.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIV.
-
-_Buddies._
-
-
-The Patriarch sat on the store porch. An old cob pipe, the smoke oozing
-lazily from its mouth, protruded from the recesses of his white beard.
-His eyes were fixed on the mountains over whose sides the black, sharp
-shadows of the clouds were wandering. His mood was so pensive as to
-awaken the curiosity of the Storekeeper, who had been watching the old
-man sitting upright on the bench, his gaze fastened on the distant hills.
-
-“What are ye thinkin’ of, Gran’pap?” the young man asked.
-
-“I was thinkin’ o’ Hen Wheedle. I hain’t thot o’ him fer a year, so I
-sais to meself to-day, I sais, ‘You otter think o’ Hen Wheedle!’ An’ I
-set right down, an’ a mighty good time I’ve hed a medytatin’ over him.”
-
-The Miller laid the county paper over his knees and smoothed it out. Then
-he looked at the Patriarch.
-
-“My souls!” he cried. “Why, Hen’s ben over the mo’ntain nigh onto forty
-year.”
-
-“That’s jest the pint,” was the rejoinder. “‘Hen folks is gone ye otter
-think on ’em.”
-
-To the old man there was nothing beyond the mountains but infinite space.
-To him the world was bounded by the green range before him and the range
-back by the river. The two sprang out of the blue at a point some nine
-miles to the north, went their own ways some fifteen miles to the south,
-joined, and made the valley and the world. To go over the mountain to him
-meant voluntary annihilation. He would step off into space beyond and
-become nothingness. In the seventy-five years of his life he had known
-men to return, but it was as though they had arisen from the dead.
-
-“You uns knowd Hen Wheedle?” he inquired.
-
-“He was afore my time but I’ve heard o’ him,” replied the Miller.
-
-The Chronic Loafer looked up from the steps, where he had been sitting,
-whittling a piece of soft white pine.
-
-“I s’posn you’ve heard o’ Bill Siler?” he asked, in a pleasant, alluring
-tone.
-
-“Bill Siler,” repeated the Miller. He laid his forefinger against his
-forehead and thought a minute. “I think I hev. His name’s wery famil’ar.
-But why did ye ast?”
-
-“Oh, jest because I’ve noticed that most everybody was afore your time
-an’ you’ve heard o’ ’em. I never knowd Bill Siler. His name was jest
-ginirated in my head, an’ I thot ye might tell me who he was.”
-
-“You thot ye’d ketch me, heigh,” cried the other. “Ye thot ye’d be smart
-an’----”
-
-“Boys, boys,” the Patriarch shook his stick at his companions. “Don’t
-quarrel--don’t. Mebbe some day one o’ ye’ll go over the mo’ntain an’
-then every mean word ye ever sayd’ll come back. Mean words is like
-them wooden balls on a ’lastic string that they sells the children at
-the county fair. The harder they is an’ the wiolenter ye th’ow ’em the
-quicker they bounces home to ye an’ the more they hurt. I otter know.
-Hen Wheedle otter know. Why every time he thinks o’ me his conscience
-must jest roll around inside o’ him.” The light in the old man’s pipe
-had gone out. He applied a sulphur match to it and sneezed violently.
-“But I’ve forgot the wrong Hen done me. He must ’a’ suffered innardly fer
-it. Ef he ever returns I’ll put this right hand in hisn an’ say, ’Hen,
-you done wrong, but you’ve suffered innardly an’ I fergive ye.’ They’s
-a heap o’ difference ’tween plain, ord’nary sufferin’ inside o’ ye, an’
-sufferin’ innardly. Fer the first ye takes bitters, stops smokin’ an’ in
-a day you’re all right. But ’hen the conscience gits out o’ order all the
-bitters in the world an’ all the stoppin’ smokin’ in creation’ll give ye
-no ease. That’s what I sais, an’ I otter know, fer I can jest see how Hen
-Wheedle feels.”
-
-No sulphurous fume was blazing around the Patriarch’s nose, but he
-sneezed again and choked himself with a piece of canton-flannel that
-served him as a handkerchief.
-
-“Hen an’ me was raised on joinin’ farms. From the time we was big enough
-to gether eggs we was buddies. At school the boy that licked me had to
-lick both; the boy that was licked be one was licked be both. It was a
-reg’lar caset o’ David an’ Joshuay all over agin.
-
-“They’s only one thing in the world’ll separate buddies like me an’ him
-was. A crow-bar won’t do it; a gun won’t; nothin’ won’t but a combination
-o’ yeller hair an’ dreamy blue eyes an’ pink cheeks. Melissy Flower hed
-’em all. But what she done she didn’t do intentional. I didn’t want her
-without Hen hevin’ her; he didn’t want her without me hevin’ her--so they
-was a hitch. We used to go over to her house together allus, an’ we’d
-sing duets to her melodium playin’. He sung tenor an’ I bass. At the
-eend of each piece she distributed her praise jest equal. ’Hen we wasn’t
-hevin’ music we’d be on the settee, all three, first him, then her, then
-me. Ef Hen was so fortnit ez to catch the sparkle o’ her eyes, she’d turn
-her head my way an’ give me a chancet too.
-
-“Now things went on this way tell one night we was comin’ home from her
-house together. We reached the covered bridge where the road dewided,
-one fork goin’ to his placet an’ one to mine. How clear I remembers it!
-
-“‘Henry,’ I sais, lookin’ right inter his eyes--it was moonlight an’
-I could almost read his thots, ’Henry, it seems to me like you’ve ben
-thinkin’ more ’an usual o’ Melissy lately.’
-
-“‘I was thinkin’ the same of you,’ sais he.
-
-“‘You’re right,’ I answers. ‘But I won’t treat no buddy o’ mine mean.’
-
-“‘An’ the same with me,’ sais he.
-
-“We was quiet a piece. Then I sais, ’Henry, ef ever I finds I can’t stand
-it no longer I’ll tell you.’
-
-“‘An’ ef ever I gits the same way I’ll tell you,’ sais he.
-
-“We shook hands an’ went home.
-
-“I s’pose things ’ud ’a’ gone on ez they was fer a good many year hed
-not a young town felly from up the walley come drivin’ down in slick
-clothes an’ in a slick buggy. You uns hev all heard the old sayin’ that
-it ain’t the clothes that makes the man. Ye never heard the proverb that
-it ain’t the paint that makes the house, did ye? I guess ye didn’t, yit
-it’s jest ’bout ez sensible. It ain’t the paint that makes the house,
-but it’s the paint that keeps the boards from rottin’ an’ the hull thing
-from fallin’ to pieces out o’ pure bein’ ashamed o’ itself. Solerman was
-the wisest man that ever lived, yit the Bible sais that he allus run to
-fine raiment. He hed a thousand an’ odd wives an’ knowd well enough that
-he wouldn’t hev no peace with ’em ef he run ’round in his bare feet an’
-overalls. ’Hen the Queen o’ Sheby called on him ye can bet your bottom
-dollar she didn’t find him settin’ on the throne with a hickory shirt
-’thout no collar, an’ his second-best pants held up be binder-twine
-galluses.”
-
-The old man had been talking very fast and was out of breath. He paused
-to gather the threads of his story.
-
-The School Teacher seized the opportunity to remark: “An’ yet Solerman in
-all his glory was restless an’ unhappy.”
-
-“He knowd too much,” drawled the Loafer, looking up from his stick. “An’
-Gran’pap, with all of his wisdom, with all the good uns he sayd, Solerman
-never knowd what it was to light his ole pipe an’ set plumb down on the
-wood-pile an’ play with the dog. Why, he’d sp’iled his gown.”
-
-“Boys,” resumed the Patriarch, “slick clothes an’ a slick hoss an’ a
-slick buggy goes ten times furder with a woman then a slick brain. She
-can see a man’s clothes; she can see his hoss; she can see his buggy. But
-it takes her fifty year to git her eyes adjusted so she can see his mind.
-That’s why I got worrit ’hen this here Perry felly got to drivin’ down to
-wisit Melissy. He come oncet; he come agin, an’ I begin thinkin’ more o’
-him then I did o’ the girl. Sometimes it seemed like I was goin’ mad yit
-I couldn’t do nawthin’ on Hen’s account. Many an afternoon I set here
-on this wery porch rewolvin’ it over an’ over: ‘Ef I don’t git her I’ll
-die; ef I git her Hen’ll die; ef Perry gits her both on us’ll die.’ It
-was a hard puzzle. A couple o’ times I was near solvin’ it be leavin’ the
-main part o’ the sufferin’ to the other fellys, but then I minded how Hen
-looked at me that night ez we parted at the fork o’ the road, an’ I sais,
-‘I’ll treat no buddy o’ mine mean. Git behind me, Satan, an’ make yerself
-comf’table tell I need ye.’
-
-“But one afternoon ’hen I was feelin’ petickler low in sperrits, oneasy,
-onrastless, I seen Perry drivin’ th’oo, his hoss curried tell his coat
-was smooth ez silk, his buggy shinin’ like it ’ud blind me, an’ him
-settin’ inside in a full new suit o’ clothes. I knowd she couldn’t stand
-all that wery long. So after supper I went right over to Wheedle’s
-to git Hen, ’lowin’ we’d go down to Flower’s an’ let Melissy settle
-the business be choosin’. He wasn’t een. His ma sayd he’d jest left,
-but she s’posed he’d be right hum agin. So I fixed meself on the pump
-trough an’ waited. My, but them hours did drag! The sun set an’ it got
-dark. I could look down the hill to Flower’s placet an’ see a light
-twinklin’ in the best room where I knowd she was with Perry. I pictured
-her at the melodium twiddlin’ her fingers soft-like over the keys while
-he leaned over her singin’, ‘Thine eyes so blue an’ tender.’ Boys, it
-was terrible--terrible. The lamp was allus a-twinklin’ to me to hurry
-up. Then final it seemed to git tired an’ went out. It was only eight
-o’clock. Now I pictured ’em settin’ in the dark. I wanted to leave right
-there an’ run down the hill, but I sais, ‘No; I’ll treat no buddy o’ mine
-mean.’
-
-“By an’ by the moon come up an’ the chickens in the barn quit cluckin’
-at the rats. I begin to git dozy an’ leaned my head agin the pump. ’Hen
-I come to me senses the roosters was crowin’ an’ the light was creepin’
-over the ridges yander. I went home. Ez I come ’round the corner o’ the
-house, there I see Hen Wheedle sound asleep on the back stoop.
-
-“‘Hen,’ sais I, ‘what hev you ben doin’?’
-
-“‘Waitin’ fer you,’ he answers, ez he gits up an’ rubs his eyes. ‘I come
-over last night to git you an’ go over to Flower’s. Perry’s there.’
-
-“I told him how I’d waited all night fer him, an’ he jest groaned. He had
-’em wery bad. I mind oncet readin’ in the weemen’s column in the paper
-how spilt milk could be sopped up with a sponge. It seemed jest ez tho’
-that was what we was doin’ ’hen we went over to Flower’s that mornin’. It
-was wery early an’ we’d a long time to wait ’fore Melissy come down to
-git breakfast. Then Hen an’ me stepped inter the kitchen.
-
-“I thot she’d faint.
-
-“‘Why, you’re airly,’ she sais.
-
-“‘We’ve come airly a purpose, Melissy,’ sais I. ‘We wants you to choose
-atween us.’
-
-“That girl must ’a’ thot a heap o’ one o’ we two--which un I don’t know,
-but one sure, fer she kind o’ fell agin the table, graspin’ it fer
-support. She raised her apron over her face an’ gasped like.
-
-“‘Take whichever one ye want,’ sais Hen kind o’ soft.
-
-“She didn’t answer.
-
-“‘Don’t keep us een suspenders,’ sais I.
-
-“Then the apron fell from her face, showin’ it all a rosy red, an’ she
-tells us, ‘Boys, I’m awful sorry, but you’re late. I tuk Perry last
-night.’
-
-“Hen an’ me turned on our heels an’ walked out. We didn’t say nawthin’
-tell we come to the fork in the road.
-
-“Hen stopped an’ wentured, ‘We’ve ben fools.’
-
-“‘We hev,’ I sais.
-
-“‘Them town fellys doesn’t last long,’ sais he after a spell. ‘She’s like
-to be a widdy.’
-
-“‘In which caset,’ sais I, our agreement stands. We notify each other
-’fore we ast her.’
-
-“‘It does,’ he answers, quiet an’ wery solemn. ‘We’ve allus ben buddies,
-you an’ me, an’ we allus will be.’
-
-“Melissy Flower become a widdy ez Hen ’lowed an’ a mighty nice un, too.
-Perry was hardly cold tell me an’ Wheedle was over singin’ duets with
-her. The ole trouble come on agin fer me worse than ever, but this time I
-made up me mind I wouldn’t be fooled. ’Hen I could stand it no longer,
-I walks one night over to Wheedle’s to notify him. He wasn’t there.
-I’d ’a’ gone on to Flower’s but I minded our agreement an’ was true.
-It was a temptation, but I’d never treat no buddy o’ mine mean. I was
-true. It come twelve o’clock an’ they was no sign o’ him, so I went back
-home feelin’ a leetle heavy here.” The old man laid his hand across the
-watch-pocket of his waistcoat. “Next day they was a postal in the mail
-fer me. It was from Hen, an’ it run like this: ‘I’m on me way to Flower’s
-to ast her. I drop this in the box to notify you ez I promised.’
-
-“That’s the way he give me notice. While I was waitin’ to notify him
-right, he was astin’ her. He done wrong. His conscience was agin him, fer
-’hen I went over to his placet to give him an idee what I thot, I found
-him an’ she hed gone--gone over the mo’ntain yander.”
-
-The Patriarch arose and shook his stick angrily at the distant hills. He
-shook it until his strength had given out and his anger had ebbed away.
-
-“That was forty year ago,” he said after a long silence, “but ef ever Hen
-Wheedle comes back I’ll lay this here right hand in hisn an’ say, ’Hen,
-you done wrong, but you’ve suffered innardly. I fergive ye.’”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XV.
-
-_Joe Varner’s Belling._
-
-
-The wind rattled the windows and made creepy, unpleasant noises in the
-trees outside. At long intervals it ventured down the chimney with sudden
-spurts and playfully blew the smoke out into the room, causing momentary
-discomfort to the eyes of all three of us. Then as quickly it would
-retire, giving a triumphant whistle as though it enjoyed the joke hugely.
-The soot would come tumbling down and envelop the flames in a cloud of
-black dust. A crackle, a splutter, and the logs blazed up as cheerily as
-ever.
-
-I stretched my feet toward the fire and buried myself deeper in my great
-arm-chair. Flash, the setter, curled at my side, poking his nose between
-his fore-paws, fixed his earnest eyes on a tiny tongue of flame that
-was eating its way along a gnarled bit of hickory. Facing us, rocking
-slowly to and fro on two legs of his frail wooden chair, was Theophilus
-Winter, the lawyer and our companion on many a day’s hunt. This was
-to Theophilus the acme of comfort, for he had a good cigar for an
-inspiration and the best of audiences, an intelligent dog and a tired man.
-
-“Yes, as I was saying before that last gust interrupted us, I am not
-a superstitious man, but as long as no harm can come of it I prefer
-to plant my garden in the right sign. While I am not in the least
-superstitious I must confess some timidity on this one point--that is,
-as to passing the small log house that stands just at the foot of the
-ridge on the road to Kishikoquillas on the night of the twenty-ninth
-of December, or indeed almost any time after sunset. Not that I am
-afraid--far from it--but strange tales have been abroad for the last
-thirty years regarding the doings there after nightfall. They say
-that the sound of fiddles can be heard, the clanging of cow-bells and
-occasionally the dull report of a gun. This, the young folks declare, is
-the ghosts belling Joe Varner.
-
-“Perhaps you have seen the house of which I have spoken. It stands in
-a little clearing, about fifty feet from the roadside. The great stone
-chimney is now almost completely demolished. The plaster daubing has
-fallen from the chinks between the logs, revealing to the passer-by the
-barren interior. The glass has been removed from the shattered windows to
-let the light into some more respectable dwelling. The weeds and briars
-grow rank over all. The place presented a far different picture thirty
-years ago. Then all was scrupulously clean. Not a stone on the chimney
-top was out of place, not an iota of daubing had fallen away, nor was the
-smallest spot left unwhitewashed. Everywhere was the evidence of industry
-and thrift.
-
-“For twenty years Joe Varner had lived his lonely life there, with no
-other companion than a mongrel dog. He was a strange man, tall and gaunt
-in appearance, taciturn and surly in manner, doing his bad deeds in
-public and his good ones in private, for his pride would not allow him to
-parade the latter before his neighbors. Yet with it all he was at heart
-a kindly old fellow who had simply been spoiled by his way of living.
-And why he had chosen this way was a puzzle to all our people. He was
-not a native of our county, but had simply appeared one day, bought this
-secluded plot, built his house and settled here. Twice, leaving no one
-behind him, he went away, remained a week and then as quietly returned to
-resume his lonely life. On each occasion his return was marked by a fit
-of melancholy which attracted the attention but repelled the curiosity
-of his nearest neighbors. That he had visited his old home in a distant
-county was all they could ever learn.
-
-“Just thirty years ago this coming December, Varner left for the third
-time. A week passed, and he did not return. Two weeks went by, and he
-was still absent. Strange rumors were abroad as to the cause of this
-unaccountable delay. When the third week had reached its end he came
-home, bringing with him a wizened little woman, with a hard face and of a
-most slovenly appearance. This person he introduced laconically, but with
-a very evident touch of pride, as his wife.
-
-“Just who the woman was or where from no one knew and none dared ask, but
-the news of her arrival spread quickly. Here was an opportunity not to
-be lost--to bell old Joe and his mysterious bride. Never before had the
-valley made such preparations for a serenade. Full fifty men and boys met
-at my father’s barn on the night following the old man’s home-coming, and
-armed with old guns, fiddles, sleigh bells and horns we set out for the
-scene of our operations. It was a good two mile walk to the house on the
-ridge, and we reached it just as the full moon was climbing over the tree
-tops and peeping into the clearing. There was no sign of life anywhere
-save a few dim rays of light that shone through a crevice in the shutters.
-
-“Silently we stationed ourselves about the cabin. At each corner we
-placed a horse-fiddle, an unmusical instrument made by drawing the edge
-of a board, coated with resin, over the corner of a large box. The signal
-was given, and forthwith arose the greatest din that had ever been heard
-in our county. The banging of the muskets, the bells, the horns, with
-the melancholy wail of the horse-fiddles rising above them all, made
-an indescribable tumult. But the result was not as we had expected.
-We believed that Joe and his wife would come to the door, bow their
-acknowledgments and invite us in to a feast of cake and cider, as is the
-custom. Instead the light died suddenly. No sound was heard within.
-
-“We kept to our work bravely. A half hour passed. Cries of ‘Bring out the
-bride’ arose above the din, giving evidence that lusty lungs were coming
-to the aid of wearied limbs. ‘Bring her out. Fetch out Mrs. Varner, Joe!’
-we called again and again.
-
-“It was of no avail. An hour passed and not a sign of life had come
-from the interior of the cabin. The noise began to weaken in volume,
-the owners of the guns grew chary of wasting their powder, and at last,
-much to our chagrin, we were compelled to retire to the woods for a
-consultation.
-
-“A thin stream of smoke pouring from the mouth of the chimney suggested
-a plan resorted to only on the most desperate occasions--that of smoking
-out the newly wedded pair. It was the work of but a few minutes to obtain
-a board suitable for the purpose and for one of the young men to climb
-to the roof with it. He made his way noiselessly to the peak, laid his
-burden across the top of the chimney, then crouched low to await the
-outcome. The smoke ceased to escape. Another half hour passed and still
-no sign from the house. Anxious looks appeared on the faces of the
-serenaders. The man on the roof removed the cover and a dense volume of
-smoke arose, showing that the fire had done well the work we required.
-From beneath the doorway, too, a few thin wreaths were circling vaguely
-out.
-
-“A chill of dread passed over us. It seemed that something out of the
-ordinary must have happened within. At first we were inclined to the
-belief that the fact that the smoke had not driven out the occupants of
-the house proved that it was empty. But we remembered the light that we
-had seen burning on our approach. It augured evil.
-
-“Four stalwart fellows, holding between them a large log, attacked the
-door. One blow--it cracked. No sound inside. Another blow and the heavy
-oak fell back on its hinges. The smoke, released from its prison, poured
-out in dense clouds, driving the excited bellers from the doorway. One
-man dashed through it and across the single apartment, which passed as
-living-room and kitchen, and in another instant the window was up, the
-shutters open and the wind was whistling through, driving before it the
-heavy veil that had hidden the interior from our view. The moonlight
-streamed in.
-
-“There, sitting in a great wooden rocking-chair, his feet resting
-almost in the fire, his head fallen low upon his breast, his stern,
-hard features calmly set as if in sleep, sat he whom we had come to
-bell--dead. On the spotless table by his side stood a candlestick from
-which the candle had burned away, only a bit of charred taper remaining
-to tell us that in all likelihood Joe had died before we reached his home
-and that the last spark of the unattended light had fluttered out, just
-as we began the hideous turmoil outside. Clutched in the old man’s right
-hand was the explanation of his lonely life as well as of the grewsome
-ending of the great belling.”
-
-Theophilus Winter ceased his narration. He drew out his pocketbook and
-after fumbling a moment in its recesses, took from it a bit of paper.
-It was yellow with age and soiled, and the writing on it had almost
-faded out, but I could read: “Deer Joe--you and me was never ment for
-one another. i knowed that 40 years ago and thats wi i run way with si
-tompson, you was good to take me back them too other times i left, this
-last time i thought i was gettin to old an you was so fergivin i had
-better spend my las days with you. i cant stand the quiet country livin
-an am gone back to harrisburg. they aint no one with me. fergive me. i
-gess youll be better off without your old wife--sarah.”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XVI.
-
-_The Sentimental Tramp._
-
-
-“Anything new ben happenin’ to you uns, Trampy?” asked the Chronic
-Loafer. “We ain’t seen ye ’bout these parts sence corn-plantin’ a year.”
-
-“Nothin’ unusu’l,” replied the Tramp, laying on the porch his stick and
-the bandana handkerchief that contained his wardrobe. He seated himself
-on the step. “Nothin’ unusu’l. I wintered in Philadelphy an’ started fer
-these parts in May.”
-
-“Seems like you’re lookin’ mighty glum,” said the Storekeeper. He had
-ceased his whittling and was examining every detail of the wanderer’s
-dress and physiognomy. “Might s’pose ye was in love agin.”
-
-The traveller sighed.
-
-“You air the sentimentalist tramp I ever seen,” the Miller cried. “Every
-time ye comes th’oo these parts, it’s a new un. Does ye think the weemen
-is so almighty blind ez to git struck on a hoodoo like you?”
-
-“I keeps me passions an’ me shortcomin’s to meself,” replied the wanderer
-after he had lighted his corncob pipe. “I’ve had a heap o’ hard luck. I
-wouldn’t min’ gittin’ in love or in jail fer murder sep’rate, but both at
-oncet is too much even fer a man like me.”
-
-“Hedgins!” the Loafer exclaimed, edging toward the end of the bench
-furthest from the vagrant. “In jail fer murder!”
-
-A faint smile flitted across the face of the Tramp. Then he began his
-story:
-
-“In jail fer murder an’ in love wit’ the Sher’ff’s dotter--that’s exactly
-what happened to me. It’s onjust; it ain’t right, it ain’t, even fer a
-man o’ my shortcomin’s. Let’s see. This is hay harvest, ain’t it. Well,
-it was jest about corn-plantin’ it all come about. I’d been workin’ me
-way easy up along the Sussykehanner, an’ one night put up wit’ an ole
-feller named Noah Punk, who lived in a lawg house at the foot o’ the big
-mo’ntain this side o’ Pillersville. They was no one there but him an’ his
-woman. She was a bad-tempered creetur’ an’ made things hum ’round that
-ranch when me an’ the ole man was playin’ kyards after supper. They put
-me to bed in the garret, an’ next day I set out agin. Punk he sayd he’d
-walk up the road a piece wit’ me, an’ he did. We parted at a crossroads
-two mile from his house. That was the last I ever seen of him. I’d never
-thot no more of him nuther ef it hedn’t been that two days later, when
-I was joggin’ easy like into Jimstontown, I was ’rested--’rested, mind
-ye, fer the murder o’ Noah Punk. I never knowd jest what it was all ’bout
-tell I was comf’table fixed in the kyounty jail. An’ then I didn’t keer,
-fer I’d met the Sher’ff’s dotter.
-
-“Oh, but she was a star! Jest ez plump ez ye make ’em, wit’ a dimple,
-an’ yaller shiny hair, an’ jest ez red ez a ripe rambo apple. When she
-brought me up me supper the fust night, I ast her what I was up fer, an’
-she tol’ me.
-
-“It seems like no one ever seen Noah Punk after him an’ me left the
-house. He never come back, an’ when they hunted fer him they found
-nothin’ but one o’ his ole shoes, all covered wit’ blood, be the canal
-where him an’ me parted. They ’rested me bekase I was last seen wit’ him.
-Then the Sher’ff wanted to hang some un.
-
-“When I heard that I was kind o’ tired, an’ fer a time jest held me head
-down, never sayin’ nothin’. Then I looks up an’ seen Em’ly standin’ there
-so sorrerful.
-
-“‘How long’ll it be tell they hangs me?’ I ast.
-
-“‘They’ll try you next month,’ she sais. ‘Then I’d ’low another month
-tell----’ She bust plum inter tears.
-
-“‘Two months, Em’ly,’ sais I, I sais, ‘an’ you feeds the prisoners.
-They’ll be the bless’dest two months o’ me life.’
-
-“‘Deed, an’ that’s jest how I felt. Them words was true ef I ever sayd a
-true word. The bless’dest two months o’ my life.
-
-“But them days did fly! I never thot no more o’ Noah Punk or o’ hangin’.
-It was all of Em’ly. They was four other prisoners in the jail, an’ I
-never played no kyards wit’ them, but jest sot a-thinkin’ o’ her. She use
-ter bring us our meals three times a day. Quick ez I’d finish eatin’ I’d
-set waitin’ fer her to come agin. Jail was a happy place fer me. I never
-wanted to leave it.
-
-“You uns otter ’a’ seen me in them days. I wasn’t sich a bum ez I am now.
-The Sher’ff give me a shave an’ a new suit. Puttin’ all in all, I was a
-pretty slick lookin’ individu’l--no red hair an’ whiskers shootin’ out in
-all directions, makin’ me look like an’ ile lamp, ez I hear one feller
-put it. Me coat didn’t hang like curtains, an’ me pants was all made o’
-the same piece o’ goods. I was a dude, I was, in spite o’ me present
-shortcomin’s in that respect. Sometim’s I think mebbe Em’ly thot so too,
-fer she use to allus give me a bigger potaty than the other fellers. They
-guyed me a heap about it.
-
-“A month went by, an’ I was gittin’ wus an’ wus, when they tuk me out an’
-tried me fer killin’ Noah Punk. They was a smart little chap they called
-the ’strict ’torney what done all the work agin me. He showed the jury
-Punk’s bloody shoe an’ my clothes. A doctor sayd the spots on my clothes
-was huming blood. They was, but it was mine, an’ it got there be my
-leanin’ agin a nail. Missus Punk told how I slep’ at the house. Another
-feller sayd how he’d seen me an’ Punk walkin’ along the canal. I ’lowed I
-didn’t kill Punk an’ that jedgin’ from what I seen o’ Missus Punk, he’d
-’a’ thanked me ef I had. Missus Punk an’ the ’strict ’torney got riled
-at that, an’ the jedge come down so hard I didn’t dast say another word.
-Then the jury found I was guilty, an’ the jedge ’lowed they’d hang me
-that day four weeks. But I didn’t keer, fer it was one month more in jail
-to be fed be Em’ly.
-
-“That night she brought me a bigger potaty ’an ever. When I seen it I
-sais, sais I, ‘Em’ly, will you be sorry when I’m goin’?’
-
-“‘’Deed an’ I will, Tom,’ sais she.
-
-“‘Then I’ll be glad to go,’ sais I. An’ ’bout half that potaty went down
-inter me lungs, I choked so bad.”
-
-The Chronic Loafer observed, “It do seem like Em’ly were jest a leetle
-gone, Trampy.”
-
-“Mebbe she was. I don’t know. But that very night the other pris’ners
-onloosed all the locks wit’ a penknife. They wanted me to go. I ’lowed
-I’d stay. I never let on what was wrong, but sayd I was an innercent man
-an’ wouldn’t run. They give me the laugh, an’ that was the last I ever
-seen of ’em.
-
-“The day o’ the hangin’ come. I’d ben gittin’ wus an’ wus ’bout the
-Sher’ff’s dotter. I didn’t keer much ’bout goin’, but I hated to leave
-the ole jail. I’d a heap sight ruther ’a’ gone, tho’, wit’ flyin’ colors
-an’ hed her sorry then to ’a’ ben kicked out to trampin’. Em’ly didn’t
-give me breakfas’ that mornin’. Instead, the Sher’ff served me chicken
-an’ eggs an’ a lot of other things they only gives a tramp ’fore they
-hangs ’im. He togged me out in a nice fittin’ black suit and tuk me out
-ter go. Mighty, but they was a crowd to see me off! The jail-yard was
-filled with prom’nent citizens; the housetops an’ trees around the wall
-was jest black wit’ men an’ boys. I braced right up an’ never feazed a
-bit when I seen the rope. The Sher’ff sayd I could make a speech, so I
-gits up an’ sais, easy like,’Me frien’s,’ I sais, ‘I haven’t no regrets
-in leavin’ this ’ere world, fer I hain’t been onduly conf’table. It’s the
-jail I’ll miss, an’ the Sher’ff’s pretty dotter. I’ve----’
-
-“Jest then the Sher’ff yelled, ‘Hold on!’
-
-“I turned an’ seen him readin’ a letter. It had come from Noah Punk out
-in Kansas. He sayd he wrote bekase he seen be the papers they was hangin’
-a man fer killin’ him. He wanted to explain that he was still livin’ an’
-hed only run away from Mrs. Punk. The blood on his shoes come from his
-steppin’ on a piece of glass. He’d tuk off his boots an’ gone west on a
-freight.
-
-“When the crowd hear that they give the Sher’ff a groan. The Sher’ff
-he got mad, an’ tuk all me new duds, give me me ole ones an’ turned me
-looset.
-
-“I was a common ord’nary tramp an’ I was clean discouratched. I knowd I’d
-never have Em’ly feed me agin ’less I got back in that jail, so I set
-right down on the steps. The Sher’ff jest wouldn’t ’rest me but druv me
-off wit’ a club. I busted two o’ his winders next day. Still he wouldn’t
-’rest me. I broke three more winders an’ he nabbed me. I was nigh tickled
-to death wit’ me luck. But then I hain’t no luck. That there man treated
-me jest the way a farmer does a cat that eats chickens. He put me on a
-train, tuk me out to Altony an’ turned me looset.”
-
-The Tramp sighed and puffed vigorously on his pipe.
-
-“An’ now what air ye doin’?” asked the Storekeeper.
-
-“What else ’ud a man do?” replied the traveller. “I’m hustlin’ jest ez
-fast ez I kin to git back to that jail. An’ I’m goin’ ter git in it. I’ll
-never eat another potaty onless it comes from the hand o’ the Sher’ff’s
-dotter.”
-
-“Does you know what I wisht?” inquired the Chronic Loafer earnestly.
-
-“What?”
-
-“I wisht Noah Punk hedn’t wrote that letter.”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XVII.
-
-_Hiram Gum, the Fiddler._
-
-
-The last red rays of the evening sun disappeared below the mountains and
-the gray twilight settled over the valley. The mill ceased its rumbling.
-The mower that all day long had been clicking merrily in the meadow
-behind the store stood silent in the swaths, and the horses that had
-drawn it were playfully dipping their noses in the cool waters of the
-creek. The birds--the plover, the lark and the snipe that had whistled
-since daybreak over the fields and the robins and sparrows that had
-chirped overhead in the trees--had long since made themselves comfortable
-for the impending night. By and by the woods beyond the flats assumed
-a formless blackness and from their dark midst came the lonely call of
-the whippoorwill. The horses splashed out of the creek and clattered
-through the village to the white barn at the end of the street. The
-Miller padlocked the heavy door of the mill and bid good night to his
-helper, who trudged away over the bridge swinging his dinner pail. Then
-he beat the flour out of his cap on the hitching-post and lounged up to
-the store. He threw himself along the floor, and after propping his back
-against a pillar, lighted his pipe.
-
-“‘Hen it comes to fiddlin’,” the Chronic Loafer was saying, “they is few
-men can beat Sam Washin’ton. Why I’ve knowd him to set down at a party at
-seven at night an’ fiddle till six next mornin’ an’ play a different tune
-every time.”
-
-“Did you ever hear o’ Hiram Gum?” asked the Patriarch.
-
-“Hiram Gum!” cried the G. A. R. Man. “My father used often to speak o’
-him, but he was afore my time. Drowned in the canal.”
-
-“Wonderful, wonderful, I’ve heard tell,” exclaimed the Miller. “I can
-jest remember seein’ him oncet ’hen I was a wee bit o’ a boy--a leetle
-man with long hair an’ big eyes an’ a withered arm.”
-
-“Yes, yes,” the old man murmured, beating his stick upon the porch. “An’
-a wonderful fiddler was Hiram Gum. They was few ’round these parts could
-han’le a bow with that man.”
-
-“But Sam Washin’ton’s the best fiddler they is,” the Loafer interposed
-emphatically.
-
-“My dear man, Hiram Gum was more’n an earthly fiddler,” the Patriarch
-retorted. “He hed charms. He knowd words.”
-
-“I don’t b’lieve in them charms furder then they ’fect snakes an’ bees.”
-
-“But Hiram Gum was more’n an ord’nary man, an’ I otter know, fer I
-remember him well. He was leetle, ez the Miller sayd, an’ hed long black
-hair an’ a red beard that waved all around his neck, an’ big black eyes,
-an’ cheeks that shined like they was scoured. Then his left arm was all
-withered an’ wasn’t no use exceptin’ that he could crook it up like an’
-work the long fingers on the fiddle-strings. No one knowd how old Hiram
-was, no more’n they knowd where he come from ’hen he settled up the
-walley sixty years ago, fer he never sayd. No one ever dast ask him ’bout
-sech things, fer he’d jest look black an’ say nawthin’, an’ give you sech
-a glance with them big eyes that you felt all creepy. Aside from that he
-was allus a pleasant, cheery kind of a man, an’ talked entertainin’, fer
-he’d traveled a heap.
-
-“Hiram settled in a little lawg house that stood on South Ridge near
-where Silver’s peach orchard is now. Peter Billings’s farm joined his
-lot, an’ it wasn’t long ’fore the leetle man tuk to strollin’ over to see
-his neighbors of an evenin’. By an’ by he seemed to take a considerable
-shine fer Peter’s dotter Susan. First no one thot nawthin’ of it, fer
-it hairdly seemed likely that ez pretty a girl ez she would care much
-about sech a dried-up leetle speciment ez Hiram Gum. Besides, fer a long
-time she’d ben keepin’ company with young Jawhn McCullagh, whose father
-owned ’bout the best piece o’ farmin’ land up the walley. He was a big,
-fine-lookin’ felly, a bit o’ a boaster, an’ with a likin’ fer his own way.
-
-“So no one ever dreamt anything ’ud come o’ Hiram Gum loafin’ over at
-Billings’s. But, boys, ’hen you’ve lived ez long ez I hev, an’ seen ez
-much o’ the worl’ ez I hev, you’ll come to the conclusion that they is a
-heap o’ truth in the old sayin’ that matches is made in Heaven. But it do
-seem sometim’s like they wasn’t much time or thot spent in the makin’.
-Fust thing we heard that Hi hed ben drove off the Billings’s place an’
-Susan was kep’ locked in her room fer a week. An’ sech a change ez come
-over that man. It was airly in the spring ’hen it happened. He’d allus
-met a man with a hearty ‘howde’ before, but after that he never spoke
-’hen he passed. From one o’ the pleasantest o’ men he become one o’ the
-blackest. From comin’ to store every day, he got to comin’ only ’hen he
-needed things. The rest o’ the time he spent mopin’ up in his placet on
-the hill. Susan changed too. She lost color an’ got solemn like. Many a
-time I seen her leanin’ over the gate, lookin’ away up the ridge to where
-Hiram’s placet lay.
-
-“Then come the Lander’s big party. It was the last o’ the season fer the
-hot weather was near ’hen they wasn’t no time fer swingin’ corners, let
-alone the overheatin’ that ’ud come by it, so everybody in the walley
-was there. Young an’ old danced that night. They was three sets in the
-settin’-room an’ two in the kitchen; they was two in the entry an’ one on
-the porch. Save fer layin’ off at ten o’clock fer sweet-cake an’ cider we
-done wery leetle restin’. They was mighty few wanted to rest much ’hen
-Hiram Gum played. He’d no sooner tuk his placet in the corner then every
-inch o’ the floor was covered with sets. Bow yer corners! an’ we was off.”
-
-The old man beat his stick on the porch and waved his body to and fro.
-
-“My, but that was fiddlin’! It jest went th’oo a man like one o’ them
-’lectric shockin’ machines. Yer feet was started an’ away ye went; ole
-Hiram settin’ there with his withered arm crooked up to hold the fiddle,
-the long, crooked fingers flyin’ over the strings, the bow goin’ so
-fast ye could hairdly see it, his big black eyes lookin’ down inter the
-instermen’, his long hair an’ beard wavin’ ez he swung to an’ fro. Now
-yer own! Oh, them was dancin’ days ’hen Hi Gum played!
-
-“They never was a more inweterate hat-passer then Hiram, fer be his
-playin’ he made his livin’, an’ never a note ’ud he make tell they was
-fifty cents in his ole white beaver. Then he’d play that out an’ ’round
-he’d come agin. That night he didn’t ast a cent, but jest sat there glum
-an’ never oncet stopped the music.
-
-“Susan was a wonderful dancer--jest ez quick ez a flash, untirin’, an’
-so light on her feet that ye felt like ye was holtin’ to a fairy ’hen
-ye swung corners with her. She was on the floor continual’. I done one
-set with her an’ noticed how she could scarce keep her eyes offen Hi. She
-only danced one set with McCullagh an’ lay kind o’ limp like in swingin’
-corners an’ didn’t say nawthin’, so ’hen they finished he left the house.
-I seen him go out o’ the door with a black look in his face.
-
-“Most all hed gone ’hen I left Lander’s airly in the mornin’. We lived
-over the river, an’ ez they wasn’t no bridge we use to cross in a couple
-o’ ole boats that was kep’ tied along the bank jest below the canal lock.
-I went down over the flat an’ th’oo the woods tell I come to the canal,
-where I crossed the lock an’ walked along the towpath, whistlin’ all the
-time fer company. It was a clear night. The moon was shinin’ bright th’oo
-the trees. The canal was on one side o’ me, an’ th’oo the open places in
-the bushes on the other I could see the river gleamin’ along. I got to
-the bend jest a couple of hundred yards above where the boats lay an’ was
-jest steppin’ out inter the clearin’ there ’hen sudden I heard a loud
-voice. I stopped. Then it come louder, an’ I recognized Jawhn McCullagh’s
-rough talk. I went cautious tell I was out o’ the woods. There, jest
-ahead, I seen him, near the path, facin’ ole Hiram Gum, who, with his
-fiddle under his arm, was standin’ with his back to the canal, lookin’
-quiet at the big felly. I dropped to the ground an’ watched, scarce
-breathin’ I was so excited.
-
-“Jawhn raised a heavy stick, an’ shook it, an’ stepped slow-like toward
-the leetle fiddler, crowdin’ him nearer the bank.
-
-“‘Hiram Gum!’ he sayd, ‘I’ve hed ’nough o’ you. Git out o’ this country
-an’ never come back, or you’ll never fiddle agin!’
-
-“Hiram lowered his fiddle an’ answered, ‘You can’t skeer me, Jawhn
-McCullagh, fer Susan doesn’t keer fer you!’
-
-“‘You sha’n’t run off with her!’ the other yelled, shakin’ his stick.
-
-“I could see his face workin’ ez he swung his club up an’ down, an’
-step be step kep’ edgin’ the leetle felly nearer the wotter. I jest lay
-tremblin’, I was that frightened, fer I was but a lad in them days. I
-knowd I otter run out an’ stop it, but ’fore I got me couritch up I hear
-the soft notes o’ the fiddle. There was ole Hiram with his withered hand
-holdin’ the instermen’, his long fingers flyin’ over the strings, the bow
-slidin’ slow like up an’ down.
-
-“‘Swing yer corners, Jawhn!’ he cried, fixin’ them black eyes on the big
-feller.
-
-“Then the notes come quick an’ short. Jawhn’s stick dropped, an’ his arm
-fell limp like. He passed one hand confused over his forehead. He bowed.
-The notes come faster. In another minute he was swingin’ corners with
-his arms graspin’ the air. The dead sticks cracked under his feet ez he
-flung around. An’ ez ole Hi called the figgers he followed him, yellin’
-’em louder an’ kickin’ like mad. It was the wildest dancin’ ever I seen.
-He bowed an’ twisted, back’ard an’ for’a’d, an’ chassayed an’ chained,
-his feet movin’ faster an’ faster ez the notes come quicker an’ quicker
-an’ the bow slid to an’ fro like lightnin’. Ole Hiram kep’ movin’ ’round
-cautious like, never takin’ his eyes off the dancer tell he was on the
-river side an’ Jawhn skippin’ ’round on the beaten towpath.
-
-“Them was awful minutes fer me. I could do nawthin’, fer the playin’ kind
-o’ spelled me. ’Hen I seen the fiddler begin to move toward the canal an’
-the mad dancin’ felly backin’ nearer an’ nearer the bank, I tried to git
-up but I kicked out with both feet an’ fell sprawlin’ on the groun’.
-
-“‘Back to your corner, Jawhn!’ the ole man called.
-
-“‘Corners next!’ yelled the dancer, kickin’ up his heels an’ th’owin’ out
-his arms like he was grabbin’ somethin’. Then come an awful cry. They was
-a splash. He’d gone over the bank.
-
-“I jumped out, fer the music hed stopped, an’ started toward the spot.
-But ’fore I got there Hiram hed th’owed away his fiddle an’ run to the
-canal, an’ was down on his knees starin’ inter the wotter. A head come
-above the surface. Then an arm reached wildly out. The ole man bent over
-an’ grasped the hand. But it wasn’t no uset, fer he’d nawthin’ to support
-himself with. He took holt o’ the bank with his withered fingers, but the
-arm give ’way an’ he toppled over. Fer a minute all was still. I leaned
-over the wotter an’ waited. They was a ripple toward the middle, an’
-two heads come up. I seen Hiram Gum’s long black hair an’ beard an’ his
-drawn face ez he looked at the sky overhead. Then they disappeared agin.
-The surface of the canal become quiet an’ still like nawthin’ hed ben
-happenin’. Then I turned an’ run.
-
-“I flew along the towpath, acrosst the clearin’, inter the woods agin,
-an’ down toward the river where the boats lay hid among the willer
-bushes. An’ ez I went crashin’ th’oo the branches I hear a girl’s voice
-callin’.
-
-“‘Hiram,’ she sais, ‘why was you fiddlin’? I thot you was never comin’.’
-
-“Another second an’ I was th’oo the willers an’ on the bank. There,
-settin’ in a boat, her hands on the oars ready to pull away, was Susan
-Billings.”
-
-The Patriarch beat his cane softly on the floor and hummed a snatch of a
-tune.
-
-There came a short, quick puffing as the Loafer drew on his pipe, until
-the bright coals shone in the darkness.
-
-“But Sam Washin’ton----”
-
-The old man arose slowly.
-
-“I don’t keer ’bout Sam Washin’ton. I must be goin’ home. I’ll git
-the rhuem’tism on sech a night sure, fer I’ve no horse-chestnut in me
-pocket.”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XVIII.
-
-_The “Good Un.”_
-
-
-An air of gloom pervaded the store. Outside the rain came pattering down.
-It ran in torrents off the porch roof and across the entrance made a
-formidable moat, which had been temporarily bridged by an empty soapbox.
-It gathered on the limbs of the leafless trees and poured in steady
-streams upon the backs of the three forlorn horses, that, shivering
-under water-logged blankets, stood patiently, with hanging heads, at the
-hitching rail. Within everything was dry, to be sure, but the firewood,
-which was damp and would not burn, so the big egg stove sent forth no
-cheerful rays of heat and light. Out from its heart came the sound of
-sizzle and splutter as some isolated flame attacked a piece of wet
-hickory. It seemed to have conveyed its ill-humor to the little group
-around it.
-
-The Tinsmith arose from the nail keg upon which he had been seated,
-walked disconsolately to the door and gazed through the begrimed glass
-at the dreary village street. He stood there a moment, and then lounged
-back to the stove.
-
-As he rubbed his hands on the pipe in vain effort to absorb a little
-heat, he grumbled, “This here rain’s upset all my calkerlations. I was
-goin’ to bile to-morrow, but you uns doesn’t catch me makin’ cider sech a
-day ez this. My weemen sayd they’d hev the schnitz done up to-day an’ we
-could start the kittles airly in the mornin’. Now all this time is loss.”
-
-“Seems like ye’re bilin’ kind o’ late,” said the Storekeeper, resting
-both elbows on the counter and clasping his chin in his hands. “Luther
-Jimson was tellin’ me the other day how all the folks up the walley hes
-made.”
-
-The storm had kept the Patriarch at home, so the Chronic Loafer had the
-old man’s chair. He leaned back on two legs of it; then twisted his long
-body to one side so his head rested comfortably against his favorite pile
-of calicoes.
-
-“Speakin’ o’ apple butter,” he said, “reminds me of a good un I hed on my
-Missus last week.”
-
-“It allser remin’s me,” interposed the Tinsmith, “that I met Abe Scissors
-up to preachin’ a Sunday, an’ he was wond’rin’ when you was goin’ to
-return his copper kittle.”
-
-“Abe Scissors needn’t git worrit ’bout his kittle. I’ve a good un on him
-ez well ez on the Missus. His copper kittle----”
-
-The Farmer, who had almost been hidden by the stove, at this juncture
-leaned forward in his chair and interrupted, “But Abe Scissors hain’t got
-no kittle. That there----”
-
-“Let him tell his good one,” cried the School Teacher. “He’s been tryin’
-it every night this week. Let us get done with it.”
-
-The Farmer grunted discontentedly but threw himself back in silence. With
-marked attention, however, he followed the Loafer’s narration.
-
-“The Missus made up her mind she’d bile apple-butter this year, bespite
-all my objections, an’ two weeks ago this comin’ Saturday she done it.
-They ain’t no trees on our lot, so I got Jawhn Longnecker to give me six
-burshel o’ Pippins an’ York Imper’als mixed, on condition I helped with
-his thrashin’ next month. I give Hiram Thompson that there red shote I’d
-ben fattenin’ fer a bawrel o’ cider. She’d cal’lated to put up ’bout
-fourteen gallon o’ butter. I sayd it was all foolershness, fer I could
-buy it a heap sight cheaper an’ was gittin’ tired o’ Pennsylwany salve
-any way. Fer all year round, zulicks is ’bout the best thing to go with
-bread.”
-
-“Mentionin’ zulicks,” interrupted the Storekeeper, “remin’s me that
-yesterday I got in a bawrel o’ the very finest. It’s none o’ yer common
-cookin’ m’lasses but was made special fer table use.”
-
-“I’ll bring a tin down an’ hev it filled,” continued the Loafer, “fer
-there’s nawthin’ better’n plain bread an’ zulicks. But the Missus don’t
-see things my way allus, an’ they was nawthin’ but fer me to borry the
-Storekeeper’s horse an’ wagon an’ drive over to Abe Scissors’s an’ git
-the loan o’ his copper kittle an’ stirrer.”
-
-“But Abe Scissors hain’t got no copper kittle,” cried the Farmer
-vehemently.
-
-“He sayd it was his copper kittle an’ I didn’t ast no questions,” the
-Loafer replied. “My pap allus used to say that ’bout one half the
-dissypintments an’ onhappinesses in this worl’ was due to questionin’,
-an’ I ’low he was right. So I didn’t catechize Abe Scissors. He ’lowed
-I could hev the kittle jest ez long ez I didn’t burn it, fer he claimed
-he’d give twenty-five dollar fer it at a sale last spring. Hevin’ made
-satisfactory ’rangements fer the apples, the cider, the kittle an’ the
-stirrer, they was nawthin’ left to do but bile. Two weeks ago to-morrer
-we done it.
-
-“The Missus inwited several o’ her weemen frien’s in the day before to
-help schnitz, an’ I tell you uns, what with talkin’ ’bout how many pared
-apples was needed with so much cider biled down to so much, an’ how much
-sugar an’ cinn’mon otter be used fer so many crocks o’ butter, them folks
-hed a great time. ’Hen they finished they was a washtub full o’ the
-finest schnitzed apples ye ever seen.”
-
-“Borryed my washtub-still,” exclaimed the Tinsmith.
-
-“A gentleman is knowd be the way he lends, my pap use to say,” drawled
-the Loafer, gazing absently at the ceiling.
-
-“Well, ef your father was anything like his son he knowd the truth o’
-that sayin’,” snapped the Tinsmith.
-
-“He use to argy,” continued the Loafer, ignoring this remark, “that them
-ez hesn’t the mawral courage to refuse to lend ’hen they don’t want to,
-is allus weak enough to bemoan their good deeds in public. But it ain’t
-no use discussin’ them pints. I got everything I needed, an’ on the next
-mornin’ the Missus was up airly an’ at six o’clock hed the fire goin’ in
-the back yard, with the kittle rigged over it an’ hed begin to bile down
-that bawrel o’ cider.
-
-“Bilin’ down ain’t bad fer they hain’t nawthin’ to do. It’s ’hen ye
-begins puttin’ in the schnitz an’ hes to stir ketches ye. I didn’t ’low
-I’d stir. Missus, ’hen the cider was all biled down to a kittle full,
-sayd I hev ter, but I claimed I’d worked enough gittin’ the things.
-Besides I’d a ’pointment to see Sam Shores, the stage-driver, ’hen
-he come th’oo here that afternoon. The Missus an’ her weemen frien’s
-grumbled, but begin dumpin’ the schnitz in with the bilin’ cider an’ to
-do their own stirrin’. I come over here an’ was waitin’ fer the stage.
-After an’ hour I concided I’d run over to the house an’ git a drink o’
-cider. I went in the back way, an’ there I seen Ike Lauterbach’s wife
-a-standin’ stirrin’. The rest o’ the weemen was in the kitchen.
-
-“‘Hen Mrs. Lauterbach seen me she sais pleasant like, ‘I’m so glad you’ve
-come. Your wife an’ the rest o’ the ladies hes made a batch o’ cookies.
-Now you jest stir here a minute an’ I’ll go git some fer ye.’
-
-“I was kind o’ afraid to take holt on that there stirrer, so sayd I’d git
-’em meself. But she ’sisted she’d be right out, an’ foolish I tuk the
-han’le. I regret it the minute I done it. I stirred an’ stirred, an’ Mrs.
-Lauterbach didn’t come. Then I hear the weemen in the house laughin’ like
-they’d die.
-
-“The Missus she puts her head out an’ sais, ‘Jest you keep on stirrin’.
-Don’t you dast stop fer the butter’ll stick to the kittle an’ burn it ef
-ye does.’
-
-“Down went the windy. I was jest that hoppin’ mad I’d a notion to quit
-right there an’ leave the ole thing burn, but then I was afraid Abe
-Scissors might kerry on ef I did. So I stirred, an’ stirred, an’ stirred.
-I tell ye I don’t know any work ez mean ez that. Stop movin’ the stick
-an’ the kittle burns. Ef any o’ you uns ever done it you’ll know it ain’t
-no man’s work.”
-
-“The weemen allus does it with us,” said the Miller in a superior tone.
-
-“I cal’lated they was to do it with us, but I mistook,” the Loafer
-continued. “I stirred, an’ stirred, an’ stirred. The fire got hotter
-an’ hotter an’ hotter, an’ ez it got warmer the han’le o’ the stirrer
-seemed to git shorter, an’ me face begin to blister. I kep’ at it fer an’
-hour an’ a half, tell me legs was near givin’ way under me, me fingers
-was stiff an’ achin’, me arms felt like they’d drop off from pushin’ an’
-twistin’ that long stick. The apples was all dissolved but the butter was
-thin yit, an’ I knowd it meant th’ee hours afore we could take the kittle
-offen the fire.
-
-“Then I yelled fer help. One o’ the weemen come out. I was that mad I
-most swore, but she jest laughed an’ poked some more wood on the fire
-an’ sayd ef I didn’t push the stick livelier the kittle’d burn. The fire
-blazed up hotter an’ hotter, an’ it seemed like me clothes ’ud begin to
-smoke at any minute. Me arms an’ legs was achin’ more’n more. Me back was
-’most broke from me tryin’ to lean ’way from the heat. Me neck was ’most
-twisted off be me ’temptin’ to keep the blaze from blindin’ me. It come
-four o’clock an’ I yelled fer help agin.
-
-“The Missus stuck her head outen the windy an’ called, ‘Don’t you let
-that kittle burn!’
-
-“I was desp’rate, but I kep’ stirrin’ an’ stirrin’. It come sundown an’
-begin to git darker an’ darker, an’ the butter got thicker an’ thicker,
-but I knowd be the feel that they was a couple o’ hours yit. I begin to
-think o’ lettin’ the ole thing drop an’ Abe Scissors’ kittle burn, fer
-I held he didn’t hev no business to lend it to me ’hen he knowd well
-enough it ’ud spoil ef I ever quit stirrin’. Oncet I was fer lettin’ go
-an’ slippin’ over here to the store, fer I heard several o’ the fellys
-drive up an’ hitch an’ the door bang shet. But ’hen I tried to drop the
-stick I jest couldn’t. Me fingers seemed to think it wasn’t right an’
-held to the pole, an’ me arms kep’ on pushin’ an’ pushin’ tho’ every
-motion give me an ache. I jest didn’t dast, so kep’ stirrin’ an’ stirrin’
-an’ stirrin’, an’ thinkin’ an’ thinkin’ an’ thinkin’, an’ wond’rin’ who
-was over here an’ what was doin’. An’ ez I kep’ pushin’ an’ pushin’,
-an’ thinkin’ an’ thinkin’, I clean forgot meself an’ all about the
-apple-butter.
-
-“I come to with a jump fer some un hed me be the beard. ’Hen I looked
-up I seen the Missus an’ her weemen frien’s standin’ ’round me
-gestickelatin’. The Missus was wavin’ what was left o’ the stirrer. It
-was jest ’bout half ez long ez ’hen I begin with it, fer the cross piece
-that runs down into the butter an’ ’bout half the han’le was burned off.
-Seems I’d got the ole thing clean outen the kittle an’ hed ben stirrin’
-it ’round the fire.”
-
-“Reflex action,” suggested the Teacher.
-
-“The butter was fairly smokin’. An’ the kittle! Well, say, ef that there
-wasn’t jest ez black on the inside ez ef if was iron ’stead o’ copper.
-An’ the weemen! Mebbe it was reflect actin’ they done, ez the teacher
-sais, but whatever it was it skeered me considerable. But final I seen
-how funny it was, how the joke was on the Missus who’d loss all her
-apple-butter, ’stead o’ on me, an’ how I’d got square with Abe Scissors
-fer lendin’ me his copper kittle ’hen he knowd it ’ud burn ef I ever
-stopped stirrin’. An’ I jest laughed.”
-
-The Loafer straightened up in his chair and began to rock violently to
-and fro and to chuckle.
-
-The Farmer arose and walked around the stove.
-
-“What fer a kittle was that?” he asked in a low, pleasant tone. “Was they
-a big S stamped on the inside next the rim?”
-
-“That’s the one exact. He! he!” cried the Loafer, with great hilarity. “S
-fer Scissors an’----”
-
-“S stands fer Silver too,” yelled the Farmer. “My name’s Silver. I lent
-that kittle to Abe Scissors four weeks ago.”
-
-The Loafer gathered himself together and arose from the muddy pool at the
-foot of the store steps. He gazed ruefully for a moment at the closed
-door, and seemed undecided whether or not to return to the place from
-which he had been so unceremoniously ejected. Then the sound of much
-laughing came to his ears, and he exclaimed, “Well, ef that ain’t a good
-un!”
-
-And he ambled off home to the Missus.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIX.
-
-_Breaking the Ice._
-
-
-When William Larker irrevocably made up his mind to take Mary Kuchenbach
-to the great county picnic at Blue Bottle Springs he did not tell his
-father, as was his custom in most matters. To a straight-laced Dunkard
-like Herman Larker, the very thought of attendance on such a carousal,
-with its round dancing and square dancing, would have seemed impiety.
-Henry Kuchenbach was likewise a member of that strict sect, but he was
-not quite so narrow in his ideas as his more pious neighbor. Yet to
-him, also, the suggestion of his daughter being a participant in such
-frivolity would have met with scant approval.
-
-But William was longing to dance. For many years he had fondly cherished
-the belief that he was possessed of much inborn ability in that art--a
-genius compelled to remain dormant, by the narrowness of his family’s
-views. Many a rainy afternoon had he given vent to his desire by swinging
-corners and _deux-et-deux-ing_ about his father’s barn-floor, with
-no other partner than a sheaf of wheat and no other music than that
-produced by his own capacious lips.
-
-So one beautiful July day, when, attired in his best, he stepped into his
-buggy, tapped his sleek mare with the whip and started at a brisk pace
-toward the Kuchenbach farm, his stern father believed that he was going
-to the great bush-meeting, twelve miles up the turnpike and was devoutly
-thankful to see his son growing in piety. William’s best was a black
-frock coat, with short tails, trousers of the same material reaching
-just below his shoe-tops, a huge derby, once black but now green from
-long exposure to the elements, and a new pair of shoes well tallowed.
-As he drove up to the gate of the neighboring farm Mary was waiting for
-him, looking very buxom and rosy and neat in her plain black dress, the
-sombreness of which was relieved by a white kerchief at the neck and the
-gray poke bonnet of her sect. As she took the vacant place beside him in
-the buggy and the vehicle rattled away, Henry Kuchenbach called after
-them, “Don’t fergit to bring back some o’ the good things the brethren
-sais.” And good Mrs. Kuchenbach threw up her hands and exclaimed, “Ain’t
-them a lovely pair?”
-
-“Yais,” said her husband grimly, “an’ fer six year they’ve ben keepin’
-comp’ny an’ he ain’t yit spoke his mind.”
-
-The buggy sped along the road, the rattle of its wheels, the clatter of
-the mare’s hoofs and the shrill calls of the killdeer skimming over the
-meadows, being the sole sounds to break the silence of the country.
-
-A mile was gone over. Then the girl said falteringly, “Beel, a’n’t it
-wrong?”
-
-In response William gave his horse a vicious cut with the whip and
-replied, “It don’t seem jest right to fool ’em, but you’ll fergit all
-about it ’hen we git dancin’.”
-
-There was silence between them--a silence broken only at rare intervals
-when one or the other ventured some commonplace remark which would be
-rewarded with a laconic “Yais” or “Ye don’t say.”
-
-Up hill and down rattled the buggy, following the crooked road across
-the valley, over three low wooded ridges, then up the broad meadows that
-border the river, until at length the grove in which lies Blue Bottle
-Spring was reached. The festivities had already begun. The outskirts
-of the wood were filled with vehicles of every description--buggies,
-buckboards, spring-wagons, omnibuses and ancient phaetons. The horses
-had been unhitched and tied to trees and fences, and were munching at
-their midday meal, gnawing the bark from the limbs, snatching at the
-leaves or kicking at the flies while their masters gave themselves up
-to the pursuit of pleasure. Having seen his mare comfortably settled at
-a small chestnut, William Larker took his lunch basket on one arm and
-his companion on the other and proceeded eagerly to the inner part of
-the grove, whence came the sounds of the fiddle and cornet. They passed
-through the outer circle of elderly women, who were unpacking baskets
-and tastefully arranging their contents on table-cloths spread on the
-ground--jars of pickles, cans of fruit, bags of sandwiches, bottles of
-cold tea, layer cakes of wondrous size and construction, and the scores
-of other dainties necessary to pass a pleasant day with nature. They went
-through a second circle of venders of peanuts, lemonade and ice-cream,
-about whose stands were gathered many elderly men discussing the topics
-of the day and exchanging greetings.
-
-The young Dunkards had now arrived at the center of interest, the
-platform, and joined the crowd that was eagerly watching the course of
-the dance. An orchestra of three pieces, a bass-viol, a violin and a
-cornet, operated by three men in shirt sleeves, sent forth wheezy strains
-to the time of which men and women, young and old, gaily swung corners
-and partners, galloped forward and back, made ladies’ chains, winding in
-and out, then back and bowing, until William Larker and his companion
-fairly grew dizzy.
-
-The crowd of dancers was a heterogeneous one. There were young men from
-the neighboring county town, gorgeous in blazers of variegated colors,
-and young farmers whose movements were not the less agile for the reason
-that they wore heavy sombre clothing and high-crowned, broad-brimmed felt
-hats. There were three particularly forward youths in bicycle attire, and
-three gay young men from a not far distant city, whose shining silk hats
-and dancing pumps made them centers of admiration and envy. The women,
-likewise, went to both extremes. Gaily flowered, airy calico, cashmere
-and gingham bobbed about among glistening, frigid satins and silks.
-
-“Oh, ain’t it grand?” cried Mary Kuchenbach, clasping her hands.
-
-“That’s good dancin’, I tell ye,” replied her companion with enthusiasm.
-
-She had seated herself on a stump, and he was leaning against a tree at
-her side, both with eyes fixed on the platform.
-
-Now in seemingly inextricable chaos; now in perfectly orderly form, six
-sets bowing and scraping; now winding into a dazzling mass of silk,
-calico, high hats, felt hats, flower-covered bonnets and blazers, then
-out again went the dancers.
-
-“Good dancin’, I should say!” William exclaimed. “Jest look at them
-th’ee ceety fellys, with them shiny hats, a-swingin’ corners. Now, a’n’t
-they cuttin’ it? Next comes ‘a-la-man-all.’ Watch ’em--them two in the
-fur set--the way they th’ow their feet--the gal in pink with the felly
-in short pants an’ a stripped coat. Now back! Thet there is dancin’,
-I tell ye, Mary! ‘Gents dozy-dough’ next. Thet ’ere felly don’t call
-figgers loud ’nough. There they goes--bad in the rear set--thet’s better.
-See them ceety fellys agin, swingin’ partners. Grand chain! Good all
-’round--no--there’s a break. See thet girl in blue sating--she turned too
-soon. Thet’s better. T’other way--bow yer corners--now yer own. What! so
-soon? Why, they otter kep’ it up.”
-
-The music had stopped. The dancers, panting from their exertions, mopping
-and fanning, left the platform and scattered among the audience.
-
-William Larker’s eyes were aglow. His companion, seated upon the stump,
-gazed curiously, timidly, at the gay crowd about her, while he stood
-frigidly beside her mentally picturing the pleasure to come. He was to
-dance to real music with a flesh-and-blood partner after all those years
-of secret practise with a wheat sheaf in the seclusion of his father’s
-barn. He was to put his arms around Mary Kuchenbach. His feet could
-hardly keep still when a purely imaginary air floated through his brain
-and he fancied himself “dozy-doughing” and “goin’-a-visitin’” with the
-rosy girl at his side.
-
-The man with the bass-viol was rubbing resin on his bow, the violinist
-was tuning up and the cornetist giving the stops of his instrument the
-usual preliminary exercise when the floor-master announced the next
-dance. One after another the couples sifted from the crowd and clambered
-on to the platform.
-
-“Two more pair,” cried the conductor.
-
-“Come ’long, Mary. Now’s our chancet,” whispered the young Dunkard to his
-companion.
-
-“Oh, Beel, really I can’t. I never danced in puberlick afore.”
-
-“But you kin. It ain’t hard. All ye’ll hev to do is to keep yer feet
-a-movin’ an’ mind the felly thet’s callin’ figgers.”
-
-The girl hesitated.
-
-“One more couple,” roared the floor-master.
-
-William was getting excited.
-
-“You can dance with the best of ’em. Come ’long.”
-
-“Really now, Beel, jest a minute.”
-
-The twang of the fiddle commenced and the cracked, quavering notes of the
-horn arose above the buzz of conversation.
-
-“Bow yer corners--now yer own,” cried the leader.
-
-And the young man sat down on the stump in disgust.
-
-“We’ll hev to git in the next,” he said. “Why, it’s eesy. You see this
-here’s only a plain quadreel. Ye otter see one thet ain’t plain--one o’
-them where they hes sech figgers ez ‘first lady on the war-dance,’ like
-they done at the big weddin’ up in Raccoon Walley th’ee year ago. These
-is plain. I never danced ’em afore meself, but I’ve seen ’em do it an’
-I’ve ben practisin’. All ye’ll hev to do is to mind me.”
-
-So the following dance found them on the platform among the first.
-The girl was trembling, blushing and self-conscious; the young man
-self-conscious but triumphant and composed.
-
-“Bow yer partners,” cried the floor-master when the orchestra had started
-its scraping.
-
-Down went the gray poke bonnet. Down went the great derby, and a smile of
-joy overspread the broad face beneath it.
-
-“Swing yer partners!”
-
-The great arms went around the plump form, lifting it from its feet;
-their owner spun about, carefully replaced his burden on the floor,
-bowed, smiled and whispered, “Ain’t it grand?”
-
-“Corners!”
-
-The young woman in blue satin gave a slight scream that was metamorphosed
-into a giggle, as she felt herself swung through space in the arms of the
-muscular person toward whom she had careened. Her partner, one of the
-city men with silk hats, grinned and whispered in her ear, “Oatcake.”
-
-“Leads for’a’d an’ back!”
-
-William Larker seized his partner’s plump hand and bounded forward,
-bowing and twisting, his free arm gesticulating in unison with his legs
-and feet. He was in the thick of the dance now; in it with his whole
-heart. Whenever there was any “dozy-doughing” to be done, William did
-it. If a couple went “visitin’,” he was with them. When “ladies in the
-center” was called, he was there. In every grand chain he turned the
-wrong way. He gripped the women’s hands until they groaned inwardly. He
-tramped on and crushed the patent leather pumps of a young city man, and
-in response to a muttered something smiled his unconcern, bolted back to
-his corner, swung his partner and murmured, “Ain’t it grand?” The young
-women giggled and winked at their acquaintances in the next set; the
-forward youth in a bicycle suit talked about roadsweepers, and the city
-man said again, “Oatcake.”
-
-But the young Dunkard was unconscious of it all to the end--the end that
-came most suddenly and broke up the dancing.
-
-“Swing yer partners!” bawled the floor-master.
-
-William Larker obeyed. A ragged bit of the sole of his shoe caught in a
-crack and over he went, off the high platform, with his partner clasped
-tight in his arms.
-
-When he recovered his senses he found himself lying by the spring, the
-center of all eyes. His first glance fell upon Mary, who was seated at
-his side, weeping heartily, despite the efforts of a large crowd of
-sympathizing women to allay her fears.
-
-Next his eyes met those of the young woman in blue satin, and he saw her
-laugh and turn and speak to the crowd. He thought that he noticed a
-silk hat and heard the word “Oatcake.” And then and there he resolved to
-return to and never again depart from the quiet ways of his fathers.
-
-William and Mary drove back in the early evening. They had crossed the
-last ridge and were looking out over the broad valley toward the dark
-mountain at whose foot lay their homes, when the first word was spoken.
-
-“Beel,” said the girl with a sidelong glance, “ain’t dancin’ dangerous?”
-
-The young man cut the mare with the whip and flushed.
-
-“Yais, kind o’,” he replied. “But I’m sorry I drug you off o’ the
-platform like thet.”
-
-She covered her mouth with her hand. William just saw the corner of one
-of her eyes as she looked up at him from under the gray bonnet.
-
-“Oh, I didn’t min’ thet,” she said. “It was jes’ lovely tell we hit.”
-
-The mare swerved to one side, toward the fence. The driver seized the
-rein he had dropped and pulled her back into the beaten track. Then the
-whip fell from his hands, and he stopped and clambered down into the road
-and recovered it. But when he regained his place in the buggy he wrapped
-his reins twice around the whip, and the intelligent beast trotted home
-unguided.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XX.
-
-_Two Stay-at-Homes._
-
-
-“If wantin’ to was doin’ an’ they weren’t no weemen, I’d ’a’ ben in
-Sandyago long ago,” said the G. A. R. Man. He rolled a nail-keg close to
-the stove, seated himself upon it, dipped a handful of crushed tobacco
-leaves from his coat pocket into his pipe and lighted the odorous weed
-with a sulphur match. Then he wagged his beard at the assembled company
-and repeated, “Yes, sir, I’d ben in Sandyago long ago.”
-
-“Weemen ain’t much on fightin’ away from home,” observed the Chronic
-Loafer, biting a cubic inch out of a plug of Agriculturist’s Charm which
-he had borrowed from the man who was sitting next him on the counter. The
-charm had passed half way around the circle and the remaining cubic inch
-of it had been restored to its owner, when the veteran, not catching the
-full intent of the remark, replied: “Yas. They’s a heap o’ truth in that
-there. Weemen is sot agin furrin wars. Leastways my weemen is. Now----”
-
-“Do they prefer the domestic kind?” asked the School Teacher.
-
-“Not at all--not at all,” said the old soldier. “Ye see, my missus passed
-th’oo sech terrible times back in ’60, ’hen I was bangin’ away at the
-rebels down in the Wilterness, that ’hen this here Spaynish war broke out
-she sais to me, sais she, ‘Ye jest sha’n’t go.’
-
-“‘Marthy,’ sais I, ‘I’m a weteran. The Governor o’ Pennsylwany hes call
-fer ten thousand men, an’ he don’t name me, but he means me jest the
-same. Be every moral an’ jest right, I bein’ a weteran am included in
-that ten thousand.’
-
-“With that I puts on me blues, an’ gits down me musket, an’ kisses the
-little ones all ’round, an’ starts fer the door. Well, sir, you uns never
-seen sech a time ez was raised ’hen they see I was off to fight the
-Spaynyards. Mary Alice, the eldest, jest th’owed her arms ’round my neck
-an’ bust out with tears. The seven others begin to cry, ‘Pap, Pap, you’ll
-git shooted.’
-
-“‘Children,’ I sais, sais I, ‘your pap’s a weteran an’ a experienced
-soldier. Duty calls an’ he obeys.’
-
-“The missus didn’t see things that way. She jest gits me be the collar
-an’ sets me down in an arm-chair, draws me boots, walks off with them an’
-me musket an’ hides ’em. She weren’t goin’ to hev no foolin’ ’round the
-shanty, she sayd.
-
-“Marthy seemed to think that that there settled it, but she didn’t know
-me, fer all the evenin’, ez I set there be the fire so meek-like, I was
-a-thinkin’. Scenes wasn’t to my likin’, so I concided I’d jest let on
-like I hed give up all idee o’ fightin’ Spaynyards, wait tell the family
-was asleep an’ then vanish.
-
-“At midnight I sets up in bed. The moon was shinin’ th’oo the winder,
-jest half-lightin’ the room, so I could move ’round without trippin’
-over the furnitur’. The missus was a-snorin’ gentle like, an’ overhead
-in the attic I could hear a soft snifflin’ jest ez a thrasher engine
-goes ’hen the men has shet down fer dinner. It was the childern asleep.
-I climbs out over the footboard an’ looks ’round fer me boots. There
-they was, stickin’ out under the missus’s pillow. Knowin’ I couldn’t git
-’em without wakin’ her, I concided to vanish barefoot. But they was one
-thing agin this, an’ that was that the door was locked an’ some un hed
-took the key. I tried the winder, but that hed ben nailed shet. Then I
-gits mad--that there kind o’ quiet-like mad ’hen ye boils up inside an’
-hes to keep yer mouth shet. It’s the meanest kind o’ mad, too. It seemed
-like they was a smile playin’ ’round the missus’s face, an’ that made me
-sourer than ever, an’ kind o’ spurred me on.
-
-“Well, sirs, ez I stood there in the middle o’ the room thinkin’ what I’d
-do next an’ wonderin’ whether I hedn’t better jest slip back to bed, me
-eye ketched sight o’ an ole comf’table that filled a hole in the wall
-where the daubin’ hed fell out from atween the lawgs. That put me in mind
-o’ a scheme that I wasn’t long in kerryin’ out, fer the hole was pretty
-good sized an’ I’m a small man an’ wiry. In less’n no time the comf’table
-was outen that hole an’ I was in it. I stayed in it, too, fer jest ez me
-head an’ arms an’ shoulders got out o’ doors I felt a sharp prickin’ in
-me side. I pushed back an’ a great big splinter jagged me. I tried to
-go on for’a’d, an’ it jagged me agin so bad I ’most yelled. So I stayed
-right there--one-half outen the house an’ the other half een. Seemed like
-time begin to move awful slow then, an’ it ’peared a whole day ’fore
-the moon went from the top o’ the old lone pine tree into Grandaddy’s
-chestnut, which is jest twenty feet. Then me feet an’ legs was bakin’
-over the stove, an’ the cold Apryl winds was a-whistlin’ down me neck.
-
-“I took to countin’ jest to pass time, an’ I ’low I must ’a’ counted
-fifteen million afore I heard footsteps up the road. A man come outen the
-woods an’ inter the moonlit clearin’, where I could see he was ole Hen
-Bingle. I whistled. He stopped an’ looked. I whistled agin an’ called
-soft like to him. He sneaked up to the gate an’ looked agin.
-
-“‘Hen, help,’ I whispers.
-
-“‘Who in the heck is you a-growin’ outen the side o’ that shanty?’ he
-calls, kind o’ hoarse an’ scared. With that he pints a musket at me wery
-threatenin’.
-
-“‘Hen Bingle!’ sais I. ‘Don’t you dast shoot. It’s me an’ I want you to
-pull me out. I’m goin’ to war.’
-
-“Then it dawned on him what was up, an’ he come over an’ looks at me. I
-seen he hed on his blues, too, an’ I knowd ez he hed give his woman the
-sneak an’ was off to fight Spaynyards. He wanted to laugh, but I told him
-it were no time fer sech foolin’, but jest to break off that splinter an’
-pull me loose.
-
-“Now, Hen’s an obligin’, patriotic kind o’ a feller, an’ tho’, ez he
-sayd, he hedn’t much time to waste, ez his woman was likely to wake up
-any minute an’ find him gone, he reached up an’ broke off the splinter.
-But I fit the hole so tight I couldn’t budge, an’ he sayd he’d pull me
-out. So he gits up on the wall o’ the well which was jest below me, an’
-grabs me be both hands an’ drawed. I’d moved about an inch, ’hen he
-kicked out wild like an’ hung to me like a ton o’ hay, an’ gasped an’
-groaned. I thought that yank hed disj’inted me all over, an’ yells, ‘Let
-go!’
-
-“‘Don’t you dast let go!’ he sayd, lookin’ up at me kind o’ agonizin’.
-
-“Then I see that neither me nor Hen Bingle was ever goin’ to fight
-Spaynyards, fer he’d stepped off the wall an’ was hangin’ down inter the
-well.
-
-“Splinters! Why, I’d ’a’ ruther hed a splinter stickin’ in every inch
-o’ my body then ole Hen Bingle’s two hundred pound a-drawin’ me from my
-nat’ral height o’ five feet six inter a man o’ six feet five. That’s what
-it seemed like. He ast how deep me well was, an’ ’hen I answered forty
-foot with fifteen foot o’ wotter at the bottom, he sayd he’d never speak
-to me agin if I let go my holt on him. I sayd I guesst he wouldn’t, an’
-he let out a whoop that brought the missus an’ the little ones a-tumblin’
-outen the house.
-
-“Marthy stared at us a minute. Then she sais, ‘Where was you a-goin’?’
-
-“‘To fight Spaynyards,’ sais I, sheepish like.
-
-“‘An’ you, Hen Bingle?’ she asts.
-
-“‘Same,’ gasps Hen.
-
-“‘Does your wife know you’re out?’ sais the missus, stern ez a jedge.
-
-“‘No,’ sais Hen.
-
-“‘Then I’ve a mind to go over to your placet an’ git her,’ sais Marthy.
-
-“‘It’s two miled,’ Hen groaned, ‘an’ I’ll be drownded agin you git back.
-Lemme up now an’ I’ll go home an’ stay there.’
-
-“Marthy turns around quiet like, walks inter the house an’ comes out with
-the family Bible.
-
-“‘Hen Bingle,’ she sais solemn-like, holdin’ the book to his mouth, ‘does
-you promise to tell the whole truth an’ nothin’ but the truth, an’ not to
-go to war?’
-
-“Hen didn’t waste no time in kissin’ that book so loud I could hear an
-echo of it over along the ridge. I kissed it pretty loud meself, to be
-sure. The missus lifted Hen outen the well an’ he snuck off home. His
-woman never knowd nawthin’ about the trouble tell she met my missus two
-weeks later, at protracted meetin’ over to Pine Swamp church. Ez fer me,
-but fer that splinter I’d be in Sandyago now.”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXI.
-
-_Eben Huckin’s Conversion._
-
-
-Eben Huckin’s father had been a United Presbyterian and his mother a
-Methodist. Eben belonged to neither church, a fact which he ascribed to
-his having been drawn toward both denominations by forces so exactly
-equal that he had never become affiliated with either. Yet he prided
-himself on being a man of profound religious convictions. How could it be
-otherwise with one whose forefathers had for generations sung psalms and
-slept through two-hour sermons on the hard, uncomfortable benches of the
-bluest of blue-stocking Presbyterianism or prostrated themselves at the
-mourners’ bench on every opportunity? The austerity of these ancestors
-afforded him a reason for habitually absenting himself from Sunday
-services in either of the two temples where his parents had so long and
-faithfully worshiped. The church-folk in the valley were getting entirely
-too liberal. He was a conservative.
-
-“‘Hen the United Presbyter’ans hes to hev an organ to sing by an’ the
-Methydists gits to hevin’ necktie parties an’ dancin’, it’s time for a
-blue-stockin’ like me to set at home o’ Sundays an’ dewote himself to
-readin’ Lamentations,” he was wont to explain to his cronies at the store.
-
-Holding as he did such puritanical ideas, it is not to be wondered that
-he viewed with bitter hostility the coming of an Episcopal clergyman to
-West Salem. He had offered no objection when Samuel Marsden, who owned
-nearly all the land surrounding the village, married a woman from the
-city, but when that young autocrat turned the United Presbyterians out of
-the building where they had worshiped for a century and had an Episcopal
-minister come from down the river to hold weekly services there, the
-blood of all the Huckins boiled and Eben felt called upon to protest.
-
-At first these protests took the form of long discourses, delivered on
-the store porch and touching on the evil of introducing “ceety notions
-an’ new-fandangled idees” into the spiritual life of the community.
-They continued in this strain until one fine April day when the sun was
-shining with sufficient warmth to allow Eben and his cronies to move from
-the darkness within the store to the old hacked bench without, where they
-could bask in the cheering rays.
-
-The green shoots on the tall maple by the hitching rail, the shouts of
-the boys fishing in the creek below the rumbling mill, the faint “gee
-haw” of the man who was plowing in the meadow across the stream, the
-contented clucking of a trio of mother hens, wandering up and down the
-village street with a score of piping children in their wake--these and
-a hundred other things told that spring was at hand. After their long
-winter of imprisonment the shoemaker, the squire and the blacksmith would
-have been contented to enjoy themselves in silence, but Eben was in one
-of his talkative moods. That very morning his niece had announced her
-intention of forsaking the church in which her fathers had worshiped, and
-becoming an Episcopalian. His cup of woe was overflowing. He had been
-able to view with complacence such defections in other families. They had
-afforded him splendid illustrations with which to enliven his discourses
-on the weakness of the generality of mankind. He had set the Huckins
-above the generality. It had seemed to him impossible that one could err
-who boasted the blood of men who had gone to church with the Bible in one
-hand and a gun in the other. He had always laid particular stress on that
-point. He was a firm believer in heredity and had long contended that
-the descendants of those who first settled the valley were blessed with
-strong characters. Yet one of the blood had become an Episcopalian! And
-he had met the rector!
-
-“The first I knowd of it was this mornin’ at breakfast,” said Eben,
-adjusting his steel-rimmed spectacles that he might look over their tops
-so sternly as to check any hilarity on the part of his auditors. “Mary
-sais to me, ‘Uncle, I wish you’d spruce up a leetle this afternoon ez the
-rector’s comin’.’
-
-“‘Mary,’ sais I, thinkin’ I’d cod her jest a leetle, ‘a miller runs a
-mill, a tinner works in tin, a farmer farms, but what in the name of
-common sense does a rector do?’
-
-“‘I mean the preacher,’ she answers.
-
-“‘Mary,’ I sais, ‘ef the parson heard you a callin’ him sech
-new-fandangled names, he’d hev you up before the session.’
-
-“She was quiet a piece, for she seen I was in a wery sewere turn o’ mind.
-I didn’t pay no more attention tell I was jest about gittin’ up from the
-table ’hen she spoke up agin.
-
-“‘Uncle,’ she sais, ‘I hope you won’t mind, but that’s what we
-Piscopaleens calls preachers--rectors. Mr. Dawson is a rector.’
-
-“Well, sirs, I was so took back, I jest set down an’ gasped. I thot I
-was goin’ to hev a stroke. Here was one o’ my blood, my own brother’s
-dotter, raised on the milk o’ Presbyter’anism, fergittin’ the precepts
-o’ her youth, strayin’ out o’ the straight an’ narrow way an’ takin’ up
-with the new-fandangled idees o’ the Piscopaleens. An’ why? Because she
-liked the singin’! ’Hen I heard that I rose in my wrath an’ started down
-here to cool off. On reachin’ the apple tree be the bend in the road,
-I set down on the grassy bank to rest a leetle an’ look ’round. Pretty
-soon I see a man comin’ over the medder, an’ ez he got close I knowd be
-the cut o’ his coat an’ the flatness o’ his black slouch that it was the
-preacher hisself. ’Hen he reached the creek he give a run an’ jump an’
-went flyin’ over it in the most ondignifiedest way I ever seen. ‘It seems
-like he thinks he’s an angel a’ready an’ is spreadin’ his wings,’ I sais
-to meself. Then he puts both hands on the top o’ the six-rail fence an’
-waults over it like a circus performer, landin’ almost at me feet.
-
-“‘Hello,’ he sais.
-
-“‘Hello,’ sais I, never liftin’ me eyes offen the wheat field acrosst the
-road.
-
-“‘Fine day,’ sais he.
-
-“‘I was jest tryin’ to make up me mind whether it was or not,’ sais I.
-
-“I thot that ’ud settle him, but I mistook me man. He were the thickest
-headedest, forwardest felly I ever laid eyes on. He jest laughed. Now I
-admits that ’hen he laughed he ’peared a tol’able pleasant enough sort o’
-a leetle person, but I wasn’t in no frame o’ mind fer jollyin’.
-
-“‘I was jest on me way up to your placet to see ye,’ he sais.
-
-“‘Was ye?’ I answers. ‘Well--I heard ye was comin’. I’m jest on me way to
-store.’
-
-“It almost seemed I could see that gentle hint comin’ outen his one ear
-after it hed gone in the other.
-
-“‘So ye waited here fer me,’ sais he. ‘How nice of ye! We’ll jest stroll
-down to the willage together.’
-
-“‘Well,’ sais I, ‘I’ve changed me mind. I’m goin’ to stay where I am.’
-
-“‘Ye couldn’t a picked a nicer placet,’ he sais.
-
-“An’ with that he set right down be me side. Mad? Why, I was jest
-bubblin’. An’ I hed a right to be, fixed ez I was with a Piscopaleen
-preacher stickin’ to me closer then a burdock burr to a setter dog’s
-tail. I didn’t say a word, but jest set there with me eyes on the
-mo’ntain like he wasn’t about.
-
-“By an’ by he speaks. ‘Mr. Huckin, that’s a nice mule you hev runnin’
-’round the pasture adjoinin’ our church.’
-
-“‘So,’ sais I.
-
-“‘An’ mebbe you wouldn’t mind pasturin’ him in some other field a
-Sunday,’ he went on. ‘Ye mind a few weeks ago I sent you a message askin’
-that you keep your cattle out o’ that field on the Sabbath because they
-disturbs our service. Ye mind it, don’t ye?’
-
-“‘Dimly,’ I answers.
-
-“‘Well,’ he went on, ‘I guesst it must ’a’ ben pretty dim, fer last week
-ye forgot to take ’em out an’ added that nice mule to the flock. I like
-that beast mighty well, but I objects to his puttin’ his head in the
-chancery winder durin’ the most solemn part of our service, like he done
-the other day.’
-
-“‘Hen I pictured that ole mule attendin’ the ’Piscopaleen preachin’ I
-wanted to laugh all over, but I didn’t dast fer it ’ud ’a’ give him an
-openin’. I jest turned an’ looked at the preacher ez stern ez I could.
-
-“‘Perhaps,’ I sais, ‘these new-fandangled, ceetyfied goin’s on o’ yourn
-amused him.’
-
-“He didn’t smile then--not a bit of it. He was riled--bad riled, an’
-pinted his finger at me an’ cried, ‘See here, you old hardshell.’ That
-was the wery name he called me. ‘See here,’ he sais. ‘Since I’ve ben a
-missionary in this community I’ve tried to conduct meself in a proper an’
-humble sperrit, but ef I hev to carry my missionary efforts on among the
-mules, I’ll do it with a gun.’
-
-“‘Hen I heard that I stood right up an’ glared at him. I didn’t mind his
-shootin’. It wasn’t that what stirred me up. It wasn’t that what made me
-shake me stick in the air like I was scotchin’ a chestnut tree. No, sirs.
-
-“‘Mission’ry!’ I sais. ‘Then all we is heathen,’ I sais. ‘Parson, folks
-hev ben singin’ sams in this walley fer a hundred an’ fifty year. The
-folks in this walley hes ben contributin’ to the support o’ mission’ries
-in furrin lan’s fer the last cent’ry. There are more camp-meetin’s, an’
-bush-meetin’s, an’ protracted meetin’s, an’ revivals an’ love-feasts in
-this walley in a year than they are years in your life. Yit you calls
-yourself a mission’ry. You complains about my cattle disturbin’ your
-meetin’s. Ef they enjoy listenin’ to your mission’ry efforts in behalf o’
-we heathen, I don’t think I otter stop it. You might do ’em some good.’
-
-“With that I turned an’ walked down the road. I never looked ’round
-tell I come to the edge o’ the peach orchard. Then I peeked back over
-me shoulder. There was the preacher, still standin’ be the apple tree
-lookin’ after me. He was smilin’. Mighty souls! Smilin’! I could ’a’
-choked him.”
-
- * * * * *
-
-An oak tree, upturned, its roots stretched forth appealingly in the air,
-its branches washing helplessly to and fro in the stream, a broken scow
-lying high upon the beach, bottom up, a great crevasse in the side of the
-canal through which could be seen an imprisoned and deserted canal-boat,
-told of the spring flood. The Juniata had fallen again to its natural
-courses, but it was still turbulent and the current was running strongly.
-It was fast growing dark. Heavy clouds were rolling along the mountains
-from the west whence sounded the low grumbling of the coming storm.
-
-Eben Huckin, standing by his boat, looked anxiously up the river, and
-then across to where the village had been lost in the fast gathering
-blackness. By a hard pull to the opposite bank and a run up half a mile
-of level road he might make the shelter of the mill before the clouds
-broke. But this meant tremendous exertion and Eben, with the rust of
-sixty years in his joints, preferred a drenching. So he tucked his basket
-in the locker in the stern and fixed his oars as deliberately as though
-the sun were smiling overhead. Then he began to push out into the stream.
-
-The rattle of gravel flying before fast falling feet and a crashing of
-laurel bushes along the towpath caused him to pause.
-
-“Hold on there!” came a voice. “Take me over.”
-
-A moment later a man emerged from among the trees and came tumbling down
-the bank. It was Dawson. He stopped short and hesitated when he saw Eben,
-and was about to turn back when the old man said brusquely, “Git in.”
-
-Impelled by a flash of lightning on the mountain side and a crash of
-thunder overhead, the rector scrambled into the stern of the boat. Eben
-gave it a shove and climbed in after him. The river had seized the clumsy
-craft and had swept it far out from the bank before the old man could fix
-his oars and get it under control. Then with steady strokes he bore away
-for the other side.
-
-As Dawson sat watching the coming storm and felt the boat moving along
-through the water, carrying him nearer and nearer to the lights of the
-village, he forgot the incident of the mule and the quarrel of the
-previous day and remembered only that his enemy was taking him from the
-dark, forbidding mountains behind, where the very trees were thrashing
-their limbs and straining to and fro as though they would break from
-their imprisonment and run for shelter too.
-
-“I can never thank you enough for rowing me over, Mr. Huckin,” he said.
-
-There was no reply save a vicious creak of the row-locks. The old man
-paused at the end of the stroke but kept his eyes fixed on the sky
-overhead. It seemed as if he was about to answer and then thought better
-of it, for, ignoring his companion completely, he leaned sharply forward,
-caught the water with the blades and sent a shower splashing over the
-stern. Dawson was wet through. He was a young man with a temper, and
-while he could enjoy an intellectual combat with the rough old fellow
-before him, he had no mind to be under dog in a physical encounter.
-
-“See here, Eben Huckin,” he said quietly, but in a voice of
-determination. “Just handle those oars a little more properly or I’ll
-take command of this craft.”
-
-There was another loud rattle of the row-locks, and the rector
-involuntarily closed his eyes and ducked, thinking to catch the
-oncoming wave on the top of his broad hat. The expected deluge did not
-materialize, and he looked up in surprise to see Eben leaning over the
-side of the boat grasping wildly at an oar which was now far out of his
-reach and floating rapidly away.
-
-“Oh, my Gawd!” cried the old man, throwing himself into the bottom of the
-boat. “We’re loss, Parson, we’re loss!”
-
-He covered his face with his hands and swung despairingly to and fro,
-crying, “We’re loss--we’re loss!”
-
-The boat had turned around and was being swept along stern foremost by
-the swift current. Dawson saw this, but the peril of their position was
-not yet clear to him.
-
-“Pardon me,” he said quietly, “but I don’t understand just what has
-happened.”
-
-“Happened!” cried Eben. “Happened? Why, your talkin’ done it. I was
-listenin’ to you, an’ an oar got caught in some brushwood an’ twisted
-outen my hand. I jumped fer it, lettin’ go o’ the other. Now they’re both
-gone.”
-
-“But as far as I can see the only difference is we’re going in another
-direction and a great deal faster,” said the rector calmly.
-
-“We’re just goin’ right fer the canal dam,” groaned the old man. “It’s
-only four mile straight away, an’ ’hen the river’s like this here, it’s a
-reg’lar Niagry.”
-
-“Hum!” Dawson glanced to his left anxiously. The mountains were now lost
-in the darkness. He looked to the right to see the lights of the village
-already far up the river.
-
-“Eben,” he asked, “is there no way we can steer her into the shore?”
-
-“All the rudders in the worl’, ef we had ’em, wouldn’t git us outen this
-current.”
-
-“Is there no island we are likely to run into?”
-
-“Nawthin’ but Bass Rock, an’ ez it’s only ten feet square we mowt ez well
-hope--no, no, it ain’t no uset.”
-
-“We might swim.”
-
-“I can’t swim.”
-
-“I can--a little. If you could we would get out.”
-
-Then the clouds broke and the rain came down in torrents. They were
-enveloped in blackness and could no longer see one another.
-
-To Dawson, sitting in the stern, his hands grasping the sides of the
-boat, his head bowed against the storm, it seemed as though they had
-suddenly been carried out on a great sea. Land was near, but it might as
-well have been a thousand miles away. A plunge over the side and a few
-strong strokes might take him to safety. But he could not desert the old
-man--not till he felt the craft sinking beneath him and the water closing
-over his head. The boat swung up and down in monotonous cadence, and he
-felt himself being carried helplessly on and on.
-
-There was a flash of lightning, a deafening crash overhead, and all was
-dark again. It was but for an instant, and yet he saw clearly, hardly
-a stone’s throw away, a small house on the river bank. A thin wreath
-of smoke was fighting its way out of the chimney against the rain. In
-one window there was a light, and in that light a man was standing,
-complacently smoking a pipe and peering out through the narrow panes and
-over the river, watching the play of the lightning along the Tuscaroras.
-
-Huckin half rose to his feet.
-
-“It’s ole Hen Andrews,” he cried. “I wonder ef he seen us.”
-
-Thereupon he shouted lustily for help. He continued his unavailing cries
-for some minutes, and then sank back to his seat.
-
-“Parson,” he said, as if by a sudden thought, “Parson, kin you pray?”
-
-“I’ve been praying all along, Eben,” was the quiet reply.
-
-“Mebbe it’ll do some good,” Eben rejoined, “I hain’t never ben much on
-it meself--not ez much ez I otter ’a’ ben, but my pap he was powerful in
-prayer.”
-
-He was silent a moment, and added regretfully, “Oh, don’t I wish he was
-here now!”
-
-“You are not afraid to die, are you?” asked Dawson.
-
-“Most any other way, I’m not,” was the answer. “But I don’t like
-drownin’, an’ I don’t make no bones about it. Our family hes allus gone
-be apoplexy, an’ I had an idee I’d go that way, too. All this here comes
-so sudden. Oh, Parson, it’s sech an onrastless, oncertain way o’ goin’,
-a-washin’ roun’ like this fer hours. Ef it ’ud stop after we was gone, I
-wouldn’t min’ so much, but to keep on a-washin’ an’ bobbin’ roun’ this
-ole river--Parson, Parson, pray agin.”
-
-The old man leaned forward and clasped his companion’s hand.
-
-“Pray agin, Parson, pray agin!” he cried.
-
-A flash of lightning lit up the river. Just ahead Dawson saw a broad
-rock. As they were going they would sweep by it. He sprang forward over
-the seats until he reached the bow. Then he leaped into the water, still
-keeping a fast hold with one hand on the side of the boat. A few strong
-strokes and the clumsy craft turned her head. The swimmer’s feet touched
-the shelving stone, and he reached out blindly till he felt a jagged bit
-of rock. The stern of the boat swung around and it tugged hard to release
-itself from the firm grasp that had checked its wild career.
-
-Eben Huckin tumbled into the water. Dawson seized him and dragged him
-from the river, while the boat, now free, went whirling away down stream.
-
-For a long time the two men lay in silence, face downward, on the stone.
-Then the storm went by and the moon came climbing up the other side of
-the mountain, and by its light they could make out the narrow confines
-of their refuge. It was hardly ten feet in length and breadth, and was
-divided down the middle by a crevice. They could see the river whirling
-on all sides. To their right, over the stretch of water, rose the
-Tuscaroras; to their other hand they looked into the blackness of the
-woods which extended from the bank to the ridges miles away.
-
-“Parson, do ye hear that rumblin’, that rumblin’ jest like the mill in
-busy times, ’hen all the wheels is goin’?” Huckin was sitting up watching
-Dawson wring the water from his felt hat. The rector strained his ears.
-
-“That’s the dam, Parson. It’s jest a piece below here, an’ mighty near we
-come to hearin’ that soun’ most onpleasant loud. Who’d ’a’ thot we’d ever
-hit this here bit o’ rock?”
-
-“Why, Eben, I rather had an idea all along that we might do so,” Dawson
-laughed. “I was watching for it. I had no intention of letting myself get
-drowned when you heathen in the valley needed a missionary so badly.”
-
-“True, Parson, true,” said the old man fervently. “It ’ud ’a’ ben a hard
-blow fer the walley to hed you tuk jest at this time.”
-
-The rector smiled faintly. He gazed inquiringly at his companion. The
-moon shining full on Eben’s countenance gave him a saintly appearance,
-for the rougher features had disappeared in the half-light, and the long
-white hair and beard, so unkempt in the full glare of day, now framed a
-benevolent, serious face. Dawson was satisfied.
-
-For a long time nothing passed between the two. Then Eben nudged the
-rector gently and whispered, “D’ye believe in sperrits?”
-
-“Why, of course not,” was the reply.
-
-“Well, I’m glad you don’t.”
-
-“Why did you ask?”
-
-“Well, I thot ef ye did you’d like to know this here rock is sayd to have
-a ha’nt.”
-
-“To be haunted!” exclaimed Dawson, edging a little closer.
-
-“Yes, be Bill Springle’s ghos’. I never put much stock in the story
-meself, but that’s what folks sais. I know them ez claims to hev seen
-it. I knows one man ez refused to sleep here all night fer a five-dollar
-bill.”
-
-“Goodness me!” said the rector. “I had no idea the people hereabouts were
-so superstitious.”
-
-“It ain’t jest superstition, Parson. It’s mostly seein’ an’ believin’.
-Bill Springle’s ben dead these thirty year, an’ in that time, they sais,
-many folks hes seen him.”
-
-“Eben, the spirits of the dead have better things to do than to spend
-their nights sitting on cold, damp rocks.”
-
-“I know, Parson, I know; but the case o’ Springle was onusual. He lived
-back along the other mo’ntain an’ one night killed a pedler fer his
-money. The sheriff’s posse chased him clean acrosst the walley to the
-river, an’ here they loss sight o’ him. Fer a whole week they beat up an’
-down the bank an’ then give up the chase. A year after they foun’ all
-that was left o’ Bill Springle wedged right in that crack ahint me.”
-
-Dawson arose to his knees and peered over the prostrate body of his
-companion into the interesting crevice. Then he fell back to his old
-place, giving vent, as he did so, to a little laugh.
-
-“He’d starved to death,” Eben continued, “an’ they sais that sometimes on
-stormy nights he kin be seen settin’ here. I never put much faith in the
-story meself, ez----”
-
-“I’m glad you don’t, Eben,” the rector interrupted. “But suppose we talk
-of something more cheerful.”
-
-A long silence followed.
-
-“Parson,” the old man at length said, “why don’t ye sleep?”
-
-“On this narrow rock? I’d roll into the river.”
-
-“I’ll watch ye. D’ye see that lone pine tree standin’ out o’ that
-charcoal clearin’ on top o’ the mo’ntain?” Huckin indicated the spot with
-his hand, and Dawson nodded. “Well, ’hen the moon gits over that tree
-I’ll wake ye up. Then I’ll sleep.”
-
-The rector replied by rolling over on his back and watching the stars
-until his eyes closed. Soon the old man heard a soft, contented purring
-and he knew that for a time he was alone--at least till Bill Springle
-joined him. For a long while he sat in deep thought with his eyes fixed
-on the whirling waters below him. Suddenly he leaned over and peered into
-the face of the man sleeping at his side.
-
-“Parson,” he said softly, “I guesst ye needn’t mind no more about that
-mule.”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXII.
-
-_A Piece in the Paper._
-
-
-The Chronic Loafer arose from the bench and stepped to the edge of the
-porch. He rested his left hand on the pillar, thrust his right hand into
-his pocket and gazed searchingly at the mountains.
-
-“What’s keepin’ you so quiet to-day?” asked the Teacher, lifting his eyes
-from the county paper. “One might suppose from the way you was watchin’
-those mountains, you was expectin’ them to come over here so you could go
-fishin’.”
-
-The Loafer turned and looked down on the pedagogue. There was pity in his
-eyes and disdain lurking about the corners of his mouth.
-
-“Well, you don’t feel hurt, do you?” snapped the Teacher.
-
-“I guess you never fished,” was the reply.
-
-“To tell the truth I prefer more active pursuits.” The learned man said
-this with the air of one who was in the front rank in the great battle of
-life. “I prefer doin’ things to loungin’ along a creek tryin’ to catch a
-few small trout that never did me any harm.”
-
-“I thot you’d never fished much,” said the Loafer, letting himself down
-on the steps and getting out his pipe. “Ef you hed you’d know that half
-the pleasure of it is gittin’ to the stream. You figure on how nice it’ll
-be ’hen you’re away from the dusty road, in the woods, lyin’ in the grass
-’longside of a cool, gurglin’ pool, with the trout squabblin’ among
-themselves to git at your bait. You arrive there, an’ first thing you set
-on a rattlesnake. That makes you oneasy fer the rest o’ the day. Then you
-find you’ve left your bait-can at home an’ stirs up some yeller-jackets,
-ez you are huntin’ under rocks fer worms. You lays down your extry hooks
-where you can find ’em quick, an’ then ’hen you need ’em you discovers
-they’re in your foot. No, sir, ef I was wantin’ to go fishin’ in them
-mo’ntains, an’ I hed the power, I’d tell ’em to git back five mile so I’d
-hev furder to walk to reach the run.”
-
-“I hain’t got nawthin’ agin your idees o’ fishin’,” said the Patriarch
-from his place on the bench between the Tinsmith and the G. A. R. Man,
-“but what you say about expectin’ is ridic’lous. You was sayin’ a bit
-ago that you was goin’ to hev chicken an’ waffles fer supper to-night.
-You’ve put in a fine day expectin’ it. But ef you goes home an’ sets down
-to sausage an’ zulicks, I can see things flyin’ ’round your shanty most
-amazin’. All the joys o’ expectation ’ll be wiped outen your mind by
-dissypintment.”
-
-“But you are talkin’ o’ great expectations, Gran’pap,” said the Loafer.
-“They result in great dissypintments. I’ve been speakin’ o’ the leetle
-things o’ life. Now there’s the old soldier.” He pointed to the veteran.
-“He was eight year expectin’ to git a pension. He talked o’ nawthin’
-else. Ef he’d only git it he’d be happy. Well, he got it, an’ he lost the
-pleasure o’ lookin’ for’a’d to it. Is he satisfied? No. He’s jest put in
-wouchers claimin’ that th’ee new diseases hev cropped out on him an’ that
-he laid the foundations fer ’em in the Wilderness thirty year ago. He
-wants a raise. He’s happy agin, fer he is expectin’.”
-
-The G. A. R. Man arose.
-
-“I’m goin’ home,” he said, “an’ I guess I might ez well stop in at your
-place an’ tell your missus to never mind the chicken an’ waffles ez
-you’ve hed enough fun jest expectin’ ’em.”
-
-“Well, that would be a good idee,” the Loafer drawled. “But you’d better
-jest yell it to her over the fence. You know she’s ben expectin’ chicken
-an’ waffles, too.”
-
-The veteran dropped back to his place on the bench.
-
-The Patriarch nudged him and said pleasantly, “Why don’t you go on?”
-
-“I guesst I’d better wait fer the stage an’ git the news,” was the
-growling reply.
-
-“You hain’t answered my first question yet,” said the Teacher to the
-Loafer. “You was standin’ there half an hour lookin’ at them mountains
-as though they was made of chicken an’ waffles. You were thinkin’ of
-somethin’.”
-
-“True,” the Loafer replied. “I was thinkin’ o’ Reginal’ Deeverox an’ Lord
-Desmon.”
-
-“Mighty souls!” the Patriarch cried. “Reginal’ Deeverox an’ Lord Desmon!
-You are the greatest man fer makin’ acquaintances I ever seen.”
-
-“Deeverox was that new segare drummer that come th’oo here yesterday,
-wasn’t he?” the Tinsmith inquired.
-
-“No,” the Loafer responded. “He was never a segare drummer ez fur ez I
-know. He was the real hair to the Earldom of Desmon.”
-
-“Desmon! An’ where in all nations is Desmon?” the Patriarch exclaimed.
-
-“Englan’,” was the calm reply.
-
-“Then I s’pose you was fussin’ ’round Englan’ last week, ’hen we thot ye
-was wisitin’ your ma’s folks in Buzzard Walley,” cried the Tinsmith. “Now
-what air you givin’ us?”
-
-“‘Hen I told you uns I was wisitin’ Mother’s folks, I sayd what was
-true.” The Loafer was undisturbed by the storm he had raised and spoke
-very slowly, emphasizing his words by a shake of his pipe. “You see it
-was this ’ay. The man I was speakin’ of was called Lord Desmon, tho’ his
-reg’lar name was Earl o’ Desmon. His pap’s name was Lord Desmon, too, an’
-so was his gran’pap’s. Before his gran’pap died, his pap’s older brother,
-that is the uncle o’ the man I’m referrin’ to, merried a beautiful maid
-who was workin’ about the placet. The old man cast him off an’ he went to
-South Ameriky, leavin’ a son who went be the name o’ Reginal’ Deeverox.
-Be rights this Deeverox should ’a’ hed the property, bein’ the hair o’
-the oldest son. He didn’t know it tho’, an’ his uncle didn’t take the
-trouble to hunt him up ’hen the gran’pap died, but jest settled down on
-the farm himself.”
-
-“What in the name o’ common sense is an earl?” asked the Miller. “What
-does he do?”
-
-“Nawthin’,” the Loafer explained. “In Englan’ an earl is a descendant o’
-them ez first cleared the land. He usually hes a good bit o’ property an’
-farms it on the half.”
-
-“What gits me is jest how many o’ them Lord Desmons they was,” the
-Tinsmith interposed.
-
-“There was the original gran’pap--he’s one. Then there was his son that
-merried the maid an’ ought to ’a’ ben earl--he is two. Next there was
-his brother who got the property--he is th’ee. His son makes four, an’
-Reginal’ Deeverox, whose right name was Lord Desmon, is five.”
-
-“That there name Lord seemed to run in the family,” said the Miller. “I
-don’t wonder they got mixed. Why didn’t they hev a Joe or a Jawhn?”
-
-“Was these here some o’ your pap’s friends?” asked the Patriarch.
-
-“I only wished he hed ’a’ knowd them,” the Loafer answered. “I don’t
-think he did tho’. Mebbe he was acquainted with Alice Fairfax, but I
-never heard him speak o’ her an’ _The Home an’ Fireplace_ never mentioned
-him ez bein’ at her castel. I guessed ef Pap hed ’a’ been there he would
-’a’ told me, fer he wasn’t much on keepin’ things secret.”
-
-The Patriarch brought his stick down on the floor with a vigorous bang.
-
-“See here,” he cried, “what has got into you anyway? Ef you knows
-anything about this here Lord Desmon, Reginal’ Deeverox, Alice Fairfax
-business, out with it, I sais. ’Hen you hears a piece o’ news ye jest set
-an’ smiles all over it to yourself like ez tho’ you was tormentin’ us. Ez
-ef we cared! Let anybody else hev a bit o’ news tho’ an’ you don’t give
-’em no rest tell you’ve wormed it out of ’em--not tell you’ve wormed it
-all out of ’em.”
-
-“Now see here,” was the spirited answer, “it ain’t jest that I should be
-accused this ’ay. _The Home an’ Fireplace_ magazine was layin’ ’round the
-counter a whole week afore I even looked at it. I s’posed you’d all ben
-readin’ it. That’s why I thot ye might help me out.”
-
-“Shucks! So all this here is nothin’ but somethin’ you’ve been readin’ in
-the paper,” the Teacher sneered.
-
-“Exact. An’ ef you’d read the same piecet I guess you’d ben worrit, too.”
-
-“Reginal’ Deeverox--Deeverox.” The Patriarch was thinking hard and
-talking to himself. “I don’t mind that piecet, an’ I read most o’ that
-paper,” he said, looking up. “What page was it on?”
-
-“I don’t mind the number,” the Loafer answered, “but it begins on a page
-that hes a pictur o’ the house o’ Miss Annie Milliken in Tootlesbury,
-Massachusetts, an’ a long letter from her sayin’ how she hed been bed-rid
-fer thirty year tell a kind friend recommended Dr. Tarball’s Indian
-Wegetable Pacific.”
-
-“Now I do recklect somethin’ about that caset,” the Tinsmith interposed.
-“It was a fight over a bit o’ property an’ a girl.”
-
-“Exact,” said the Loafer.
-
-“Well, how d’ye know it’s so?” the Miller asked. “Because it’s in the
-paper is no sign it’s true.”
-
-“See here,” was the sharp reply, “do you s’pose ’hen they is so much in
-this world that’s true the editor o’ _The Home an’ Fireplace_ ’ud go to
-the trouble o’ makin’ up lies to print? Why, it wouldn’t pay.”
-
-The Miller was about to argue against this proposition, but the
-Patriarch leaned over and laid a hand on his knee, checking him.
-
-“Jest wait tell we find out who got the property,” the old man said.
-
-“An’ the girl,” cried the Tinsmith.
-
-“That’s jest what I’ve ben tryin’ to find out,” said the Loafer.
-Forthwith he plunged into the history of Reginald Devereux and Lord
-Desmond. “You see I found the paper on the counter yesterday ez I was
-waitin’ for the mail. I remember now ’most everything that was in that
-piecet, an’ most a mighty puzzlin’ piecet it was, too. It begin at a
-placet called Fairfax Castel, which was the home o’ Alice Fairfax, who
-the paper sayd was most tremendous good-lookin’, bein’ tall an’ willowy,
-with gold-colored hair an’ what it called _p-a-t-r-i-c-i-a-n_ cast o’
-features. She was twenty year old an’ hed an income o’ ten thousand pound
-a year.”
-
-“Pound o’ what?” inquired the Patriarch.
-
-“The paper didn’t tell. It jest sayd pound.”
-
-“That’s the way with them editors,” cried the old man. “They allus
-forgits important points. They expects a man to know everything.”
-
-“I guess that them must ’a’ ben pound o’ somethin’ they raised on the
-place,” the Tinsmith suggested.
-
-“That’s jest the way I looked at it,” the Loafer continued. “It didn’t
-make no difference, anyhow, ez long ez she hed somethin’ to live on.
-This here Lord Desmon hed a placet near hers an’ used to ride over every
-day regular an’ set up with her. He was tall an’ hed keen black eyes.
-Wherever he went he tuk with him a hound he called _M-e-p-h-i-s-t-o_ or
-somethin’ like that.”
-
-“Now ye mind that he hed no real claim on the Desmon placet an’ he knowd
-it. Before his pap died he hed called him to his bedside an’ sayd to him,
-‘Beware of a man with an eagle tattooed on his right arm. He’s the real
-hair.’ So Lord re’lized that he was livin’ on a farm that belonged to the
-son o’ his pap’s brother. He knowd that afore his uncle died he’d sent
-word home that his son an’ hair could be told be the eagle. Of course the
-warnin’ made Lord kind o’ oneasy at first, but ez the years went by an’
-he heard nawthin’ o’ his cousin he concided that the ole man hed jest ben
-th’owin’ a scare inter him. Meantime he’d ben doin’ wery well with Alice
-Fairfax, an’ things was all goin’ his way. Then a strange artist come
-th’oo the walley. He was paintin’----”
-
-The Patriarch interrupted with a hilarious chuckle.
-
-“Now, boys, look out,” he cried. “They never yit was a painter that
-wasn’t catchin’ with the weemen. Ye mind Bill Spiegelsole’s widdy an’ how
-she’d fixed it up to merry Joe Dumple? She hired a regular painter to
-come out from town to put a new coat on the house, an’ he made himself
-so all-fired handy ’round the placet mendin’ stove-pipes, puttin’ in
-glass an’ slickin’ up the furnitur’ she took him afore Joe got there.”
-
-“This here artist wasn’t one o’ that kind,” the Loafer said. “He made
-them regular hand-paintin’s they hangs in parlors, an’ done a leetle in
-the way o’ portrates. He put up at the tavern an’ then started out fer a
-stroll th’oo the Fairfax placet. He hed jest entered the park, the paper
-sayd, ’hen----”
-
-“The what?” asked the Miller.
-
-“The park. Don’t ye know, one o’ them places fixed up special fer walkin’
-in, with benches, an’ brick pavements, a fountain, an’ flower-beds an’ a
-crowket set. Hain’t ye never seen the one at Horrisburg?”
-
-“Oh, one o’ them!” the Miller said. “Well, I guesst those must ’a’ ben
-pound o’ gold Alice Fairfax got a year.”
-
-The Loafer resumed the narrative.
-
-“Ez the artist walked along th’oo the park he heard a scream, follered
-be a beautiful girl who run down the road pursued be a ferocious dog.
-The paper sayd the great hound was in the act o’ leapin’ at her to catch
-her be the neck ’hen the stranger run for’a’d an’ grabbin’ the brute
-be the th’oat throttled the life outen him. The anymal’s fiery breath,
-the paper sayd, was blowin’ in the artist’s face ’hen his hands closed
-on the furry neck. It was a mighty close shave, I should jedge. A
-minute later Lord Desmon run up all out o’ wind. The dead beast was his
-_M-e-p-h-i-s-t-o_. He thot a heap o’ the hound, an’ the paper sayd that
-’hen he looked on the still quiverin’ body of his dead companion he swore
-to be _a-v-e-n-g-e-d_. An’ ez he looked up at the stranger that young man
-knowd Lord hed it in fer him.
-
-“Alice Fairfax couldn’t thank the artist enough, an’ nawthin’ ’ud do but
-he must come up to her house an’ meet her pap. ’Hen the ole man hear the
-story he wouldn’t hev it any other way but that the stranger must stop
-with them. The paper sayd that he quickly pushed a button----”
-
-“He done what?” cried the Patriarch.
-
-“He pushed a button an’----”
-
-“Pushed a button! Well, mighty souls!” the G. A. R. Man exclaimed. “What
-a fool thing to do.”
-
-“He pushed a button an’ one o’ the hands appeared. This felly’s name
-was Butler an’ he was employed jest a purpose to do chores ’round the
-house. The ole man give him orders to hev Reginal’ Deeverox’s--that was
-the artist’s name--trunk brought up from the tavern an’ put in the spare
-room.”
-
-“I ain’t got it clear yit,” the Miller interposed. “Ef ole man Fairfax
-pushed one o’ his own waistcoat buttons how in the name o’ all the
-prophets ’ud Butler feel it?”
-
-“Don’t ye s’pose he might ’a’ pushed one o’ Butler’s waistcoat buttons?”
-replied the Loafer. “That’s a pint o’ no importance. The main thing is
-that Deeverox put up at Fairfax’s an’ from that day things went wrong
-with Lord.
-
-“Reginal’ was a wonderful good-lookin’ chap He was six-foot tall an’
-wery soople. He’d long, curly hair that flowed over his shoulders like a
-golden shower, ez the editor put it. His bearings was free an’ noble. Now
-Lord was no slouch either, an’ with his money he was pretty hard fer a
-poor painter to beat, yit----”
-
-“Joe Dumple hed th’ee hundred a year an’ a fifty-acre farm,” the
-Patriarch cried, “but choosin’ between him an’ the painter, Bill
-Spiegelsole’s widdy tuk----”
-
-“I’ve told ye afore that this here Deeverox was a portrate painter, an’
-ye can’t settle this question be referrin’ to the Spiegelsoles any way.
-Ez I was sayin’, Reginal’ hed no money but he hed a brilliant mind. His
-face was like an open book, the paper sayd----”
-
-“That’s rather pecul’ar.” It was the veteran who broke into the story
-this time. “There’s Jerry Sprout, who lives beyant Sloshers Mills, he hes
-a head jest the shape of a fam’ly Bible, but ye can shoot me ef I can see
-how a man could hev a face like an----”
-
-“Open book,” the Loafer said. “Well, you hev no ’magination. But ef ye
-don’t believe what I’m tellin’, you can go git the paper an’ read it
-yourself.”
-
-“Come, come; no argyin’.” The Patriarch was in his soothing mood. “What
-become o’ Lord?”
-
-“Lord hated Reginal’ with a bitter hatred, the paper sayd, because of the
-death of _M-e-p-h-i-s-t-o_, an’ now, ez Alice Fairfax begin to look not
-onkindly on the handsome stranger, his cup was more embittered an’ he
-wowed revenge. Things kept gittin’ hotter an’ hotter ’round the castel.
-Ole man Fairfax was tickled to death with Reginal’ an’ ’sisted on him
-stayin’ all summer. Lord come over regular every day, spyin’ ’round an’
-settin’ up with Alice ’hen he’d git a chancet. Time an’ agin, the paper
-sayd, he asted her to be his own, but she spurned him. The last time
-he asted her was at a huntin’ party they hed at the castel. Everybody
-in the county was there--Lord Mussex, Duke Dumford, Earl Minnows, Lady
-Montezgewy an’ a lot of others--all over to hunt.”
-
-“Hunt what?” asked the Miller.
-
-“Well, I s’pose they would be likely to drive five or six mile over to
-Fairfax’s to hunt eggs--wouldn’t they?” roared the Loafer. “Hunt what?
-Mighty souls! What would they hunt? Foxes, of course. The whole party
-started off after the hounds, Alice Fairfax an’ Lord Desmon leadin’
-with----”
-
-“Hol’ on!” cried the Patriarch. “Did you say weemen an’ all, a-huntin’
-foxes? That Englan’ must be a strange placet. Why, it ain’t safe to
-trust a woman with a gun. Oh, what a pictur! S’pose we was to go huntin’
-that ’ay with our weemen.” The old man leaned back and shook. “Pictur it!
-Jest pictur it! Why, they ’ud be blowed afore they got to the top o’ the
-first ridge.”
-
-“An’ we’d hev to spend most of our time lettin’ the bars up an’ down so
-they could git th’oo the fences,” the Tinsmith said.
-
-“Well, the weemen over there was along--least that’s what the article
-sayd,” the Loafer continued. “They got track o’ a fox an’ final catched
-him in a lonely bit o’ woods. They give his tail to Lady Montezgewy,
-who----”
-
-“She couldn’t ’a’ made much of a hat outen jest the tail,” said the G. A.
-R. Man.
-
-“Well, the article doesn’t explain much about that. It sais while these
-things is occurrin’ we will take the reader to another part o’ the fiel’
-where Lord Desmon kneels at the feet of Alice Fairfax. The paper sais she
-sais, ‘I loves another.’ ‘What,’ sais he, the paper sais, springin’ to
-his feet an’ makin’ a movement ez tho’ graspin’ an unseen foe. ‘What,’ he
-sais, ‘that low painter varlet!’ Jest then, the paper sais, the bushes
-was pushed aside an’ forth jumped Reginal’ Deeverox. ‘You here, Miss
-Fairfax?’ he sais, the paper sais. ‘I’ve hunted fer ye fur an’ near.’ In
-his eagerness to reach her side a twig cot his coat-sleeve an’ tore it
-wide open. The paper sais ez Lord Desmon looked upon the splendid figure
-of his rival he seen there on his arm--What? the paper sais. An eagle!”
-
-“Now, watch for a good ole wrastle,” cried the Patriarch.
-
-“You’re wrong, Gran’pap,” said the Loafer. “They didn’t dast fight afore
-a lady. Instead Lord jest ground his teeth. The paper sayd he knowd that
-the lost hair o’ the broad acres o’ the Desmons hed come to claim his
-own.”
-
-The Miller’s clay pipe fell to the floor and shattered into a hundred
-pieces.
-
-“Well, I’ll swan!” he exclaimed. “Why, this here artist was one o’ them
-Desmon boys ye was speakin’ of first off, wasn’t he?”
-
-“What happened next?” inquired the Teacher.
-
-“The article didn’t tell,” the Loafer replied. “It cut right off there
-an’ carried the reader back to Fairfax Castel. It was evenin’ an’ they
-was hevin’ a hunt ball.”
-
-“A hunt what?” The Patriarch leaned forward with his hand to his ear.
-
-“A hunt ball--a dance,” the pedagogue explained. “Over there after
-huntin’ they always have a dance.”
-
-“Mighty souls! but them English does enjoy themselves,” the old man
-murmured. “Goes huntin’ all day--takes the weemen along leavin’ no one
-behind to look after the place--then hes a dance after they gits back.
-Now ’hen I hunted foxes I was allus so low down tired an’ scratched up be
-the briars agin I got home, I was satisfied to draw me boots, rub some
-linnyment on me shins an’ go to bed. But go on. I guesst the paper’s
-right.”
-
-“That night, walkin’ up an’ down the terrace, Reginal’ Deeverox told
-Alice Fairfax the secret o’ his life, the article sayd, how he was Lord
-Desmon an’ how the other Lord Desmon was livin’ on stolen property. He
-ast her to hev him, an’ ez she didn’t say nawthin’ he jest clasped her
-to his boosum, the paper sayd. All this time Lord hed ben watchin’ from
-behind a statute. ’Hen the girl run away to tell her pap about it, Lord
-stepped out an’ faced Reginal’.
-
-“He sayd, ‘One of us must die.’ With that he catched Deeverox be the
-th’oat an’ tried to push him off the terrace. They was a clean drop
-o’ fifty foot there, with runnin’ water at the bottom. Reginal’ was
-quick an’ grabbed his foe ’round the waist. Back’ard an’ for’a’d they
-writhed, the paper sayd, twistin’ an’ cursin’. Now they was on the edge
-o’ the precipice, an’ Alice Fairfax, runnin’ to meet her loved one, ez
-the article explained, seen dimly outlined in the glare o’ the castel
-lights the black figures o’ the cousins ez they fought o’er the terrace
-of death. She was spelled. Sudden the one Desmon hurled the other Desmon
-from him. They was an awful cry ez the black thing toppled over the
-edge, the paper sayd.”
-
-The Loafer put his hand in his coat-pocket and brought it forth full of
-crushed tobacco leaves, with which he filled his pipe. Then he lighted a
-match and began smoking.
-
-“Well?” cried the men on the bench in unison.
-
-“Well?” repeated the Loafer.
-
-“Which Desmon was it?” asked the Tinsmith.
-
-“That’s jest where I’m stumped,” was the reply. “That’s jest what’s ben
-puzzlin’ me, too. Ye see that page hed ben tore out an’----”
-
-“Mighty souls!” gasped the Patriarch.
-
-“Did ye look fer it?” asked the Miller, rising and moving toward the door.
-
-“Well of course I looked. D’ye s’pose I ain’t ez anxious ez you to know
-which Desmon was kilt?”
-
-“What does you mean be gittin’ us anxious,” yelled the old man. “Why
-don’t ye keep your troubles to yourself ’stead o’ unloadin’ em on other
-folks?”
-
-“Don’t blame me that ’ay,” said the Loafer. “I done the best I could. I
-looked all over the store fer that page. I didn’t git no sleep last night
-jest from thinkin’ what become of it. Now I mind that last Soturday I
-seen a felly from Raccoon Walley carry it off wrapped ’round a pound o’
-sugar. I done the best I could fer ye.”
-
-The Teacher arose and walked to the end of the porch. Here he wheeled
-about and faced the company, stretching his legs wide apart, throwing out
-his chest and snapping his suspenders with his thumbs.
-
-“You should never begin a story if you can’t tell it to the end,” he
-said. “I might as well teach my scholars how to add only half down a
-column of figures.”
-
-“Yes,” said the Patriarch, “I would like to know most a mighty well which
-o’ them Desmon boys was kilt. But I’m too ole to chase a pound o’ sugar
-nine mile to Raccoon Walley to find out. They are terrible things, these
-struggles caused be onrastless human passions. This here petickler story
-is all the more terrible because them boys was cousins. While we do all
-feel a bit put out at not knowin’ which of ’em licked, we’ve at least
-learned somethin’ ’bout how they lives in Englan’. An’ it should teach us
-a lesson o’ thankfulness that we was born an’ raised in a walley where
-folks is sensible--that is most of ’em.”
-
-
-
-***END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE CHRONIC LOAFER***
-
-
-******* This file should be named 54572-0.txt or 54572-0.zip *******
-
-
-This and all associated files of various formats will be found in:
-http://www.gutenberg.org/dirs/5/4/5/7/54572
-
-
-Updated editions will replace the previous one--the old editions will
-be renamed.
-
-Creating the works from print editions not protected by U.S. copyright
-law means that no one owns a United States copyright in these works,
-so the Foundation (and you!) can copy and distribute it in the United
-States without permission and without paying copyright
-royalties. Special rules, set forth in the General Terms of Use part
-of this license, apply to copying and distributing Project
-Gutenberg-tm electronic works to protect the PROJECT GUTENBERG-tm
-concept and trademark. Project Gutenberg is a registered trademark,
-and may not be used if you charge for the eBooks, unless you receive
-specific permission. If you do not charge anything for copies of this
-eBook, complying with the rules is very easy. You may use this eBook
-for nearly any purpose such as creation of derivative works, reports,
-performances and research. They may be modified and printed and given
-away--you may do practically ANYTHING in the United States with eBooks
-not protected by U.S. copyright law. Redistribution is subject to the
-trademark license, especially commercial redistribution.
-
-START: FULL LICENSE
-
-THE FULL PROJECT GUTENBERG LICENSE
-PLEASE READ THIS BEFORE YOU DISTRIBUTE OR USE THIS WORK
-
-To protect the Project Gutenberg-tm mission of promoting the free
-distribution of electronic works, by using or distributing this work
-(or any other work associated in any way with the phrase "Project
-Gutenberg"), you agree to comply with all the terms of the Full
-Project Gutenberg-tm License available with this file or online at
-www.gutenberg.org/license.
-
-Section 1. General Terms of Use and Redistributing Project
-Gutenberg-tm electronic works
-
-1.A. By reading or using any part of this Project Gutenberg-tm
-electronic work, you indicate that you have read, understand, agree to
-and accept all the terms of this license and intellectual property
-(trademark/copyright) agreement. If you do not agree to abide by all
-the terms of this agreement, you must cease using and return or
-destroy all copies of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works in your
-possession. If you paid a fee for obtaining a copy of or access to a
-Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work and you do not agree to be bound
-by the terms of this agreement, you may obtain a refund from the
-person or entity to whom you paid the fee as set forth in paragraph
-1.E.8.
-
-1.B. "Project Gutenberg" is a registered trademark. It may only be
-used on or associated in any way with an electronic work by people who
-agree to be bound by the terms of this agreement. There are a few
-things that you can do with most Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works
-even without complying with the full terms of this agreement. See
-paragraph 1.C below. There are a lot of things you can do with Project
-Gutenberg-tm electronic works if you follow the terms of this
-agreement and help preserve free future access to Project Gutenberg-tm
-electronic works. See paragraph 1.E below.
-
-1.C. The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation ("the
-Foundation" or PGLAF), owns a compilation copyright in the collection
-of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works. Nearly all the individual
-works in the collection are in the public domain in the United
-States. If an individual work is unprotected by copyright law in the
-United States and you are located in the United States, we do not
-claim a right to prevent you from copying, distributing, performing,
-displaying or creating derivative works based on the work as long as
-all references to Project Gutenberg are removed. Of course, we hope
-that you will support the Project Gutenberg-tm mission of promoting
-free access to electronic works by freely sharing Project Gutenberg-tm
-works in compliance with the terms of this agreement for keeping the
-Project Gutenberg-tm name associated with the work. You can easily
-comply with the terms of this agreement by keeping this work in the
-same format with its attached full Project Gutenberg-tm License when
-you share it without charge with others.
-
-1.D. The copyright laws of the place where you are located also govern
-what you can do with this work. Copyright laws in most countries are
-in a constant state of change. If you are outside the United States,
-check the laws of your country in addition to the terms of this
-agreement before downloading, copying, displaying, performing,
-distributing or creating derivative works based on this work or any
-other Project Gutenberg-tm work. The Foundation makes no
-representations concerning the copyright status of any work in any
-country outside the United States.
-
-1.E. Unless you have removed all references to Project Gutenberg:
-
-1.E.1. The following sentence, with active links to, or other
-immediate access to, the full Project Gutenberg-tm License must appear
-prominently whenever any copy of a Project Gutenberg-tm work (any work
-on which the phrase "Project Gutenberg" appears, or with which the
-phrase "Project Gutenberg" is associated) is accessed, displayed,
-performed, viewed, copied or distributed:
-
- 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.
-
-1.E.2. If an individual Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work is
-derived from texts not protected by U.S. copyright law (does not
-contain a notice indicating that it is posted with permission of the
-copyright holder), the work can be copied and distributed to anyone in
-the United States without paying any fees or charges. If you are
-redistributing or providing access to a work with the phrase "Project
-Gutenberg" associated with or appearing on the work, you must comply
-either with the requirements of paragraphs 1.E.1 through 1.E.7 or
-obtain permission for the use of the work and the Project Gutenberg-tm
-trademark as set forth in paragraphs 1.E.8 or 1.E.9.
-
-1.E.3. If an individual Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work is posted
-with the permission of the copyright holder, your use and distribution
-must comply with both paragraphs 1.E.1 through 1.E.7 and any
-additional terms imposed by the copyright holder. Additional terms
-will be linked to the Project Gutenberg-tm License for all works
-posted with the permission of the copyright holder found at the
-beginning of this work.
-
-1.E.4. Do not unlink or detach or remove the full Project Gutenberg-tm
-License terms from this work, or any files containing a part of this
-work or any other work associated with Project Gutenberg-tm.
-
-1.E.5. Do not copy, display, perform, distribute or redistribute this
-electronic work, or any part of this electronic work, without
-prominently displaying the sentence set forth in paragraph 1.E.1 with
-active links or immediate access to the full terms of the Project
-Gutenberg-tm License.
-
-1.E.6. You may convert to and distribute this work in any binary,
-compressed, marked up, nonproprietary or proprietary form, including
-any word processing or hypertext form. However, if you provide access
-to or distribute copies of a Project Gutenberg-tm work in a format
-other than "Plain Vanilla ASCII" or other format used in the official
-version posted on the official Project Gutenberg-tm web site
-(www.gutenberg.org), you must, at no additional cost, fee or expense
-to the user, provide a copy, a means of exporting a copy, or a means
-of obtaining a copy upon request, of the work in its original "Plain
-Vanilla ASCII" or other form. Any alternate format must include the
-full Project Gutenberg-tm License as specified in paragraph 1.E.1.
-
-1.E.7. Do not charge a fee for access to, viewing, displaying,
-performing, copying or distributing any Project Gutenberg-tm works
-unless you comply with paragraph 1.E.8 or 1.E.9.
-
-1.E.8. You may charge a reasonable fee for copies of or providing
-access to or distributing Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works
-provided that
-
-* You pay a royalty fee of 20% of the gross profits you derive from
- the use of Project Gutenberg-tm works calculated using the method
- you already use to calculate your applicable taxes. The fee is owed
- to the owner of the Project Gutenberg-tm trademark, but he has
- agreed to donate royalties under this paragraph to the Project
- Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation. Royalty payments must be paid
- within 60 days following each date on which you prepare (or are
- legally required to prepare) your periodic tax returns. Royalty
- payments should be clearly marked as such and sent to the Project
- Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation at the address specified in
- Section 4, "Information about donations to the Project Gutenberg
- Literary Archive Foundation."
-
-* You provide a full refund of any money paid by a user who notifies
- you in writing (or by e-mail) within 30 days of receipt that s/he
- does not agree to the terms of the full Project Gutenberg-tm
- License. You must require such a user to return or destroy all
- copies of the works possessed in a physical medium and discontinue
- all use of and all access to other copies of Project Gutenberg-tm
- works.
-
-* You provide, in accordance with paragraph 1.F.3, a full refund of
- any money paid for a work or a replacement copy, if a defect in the
- electronic work is discovered and reported to you within 90 days of
- receipt of the work.
-
-* You comply with all other terms of this agreement for free
- distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm works.
-
-1.E.9. If you wish to charge a fee or distribute a Project
-Gutenberg-tm electronic work or group of works on different terms than
-are set forth in this agreement, you must obtain permission in writing
-from both the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation and The
-Project Gutenberg Trademark LLC, the owner of the Project Gutenberg-tm
-trademark. Contact the Foundation as set forth in Section 3 below.
-
-1.F.
-
-1.F.1. Project Gutenberg volunteers and employees expend considerable
-effort to identify, do copyright research on, transcribe and proofread
-works not protected by U.S. copyright law in creating the Project
-Gutenberg-tm collection. Despite these efforts, Project Gutenberg-tm
-electronic works, and the medium on which they may be stored, may
-contain "Defects," such as, but not limited to, incomplete, inaccurate
-or corrupt data, transcription errors, a copyright or other
-intellectual property infringement, a defective or damaged disk or
-other medium, a computer virus, or computer codes that damage or
-cannot be read by your equipment.
-
-1.F.2. LIMITED WARRANTY, DISCLAIMER OF DAMAGES - Except for the "Right
-of Replacement or Refund" described in paragraph 1.F.3, the Project
-Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation, the owner of the Project
-Gutenberg-tm trademark, and any other party distributing a Project
-Gutenberg-tm electronic work under this agreement, disclaim all
-liability to you for damages, costs and expenses, including legal
-fees. YOU AGREE THAT YOU HAVE NO REMEDIES FOR NEGLIGENCE, STRICT
-LIABILITY, BREACH OF WARRANTY OR BREACH OF CONTRACT EXCEPT THOSE
-PROVIDED IN PARAGRAPH 1.F.3. YOU AGREE THAT THE FOUNDATION, THE
-TRADEMARK OWNER, AND ANY DISTRIBUTOR UNDER THIS AGREEMENT WILL NOT BE
-LIABLE TO YOU FOR ACTUAL, DIRECT, INDIRECT, CONSEQUENTIAL, PUNITIVE OR
-INCIDENTAL DAMAGES EVEN IF YOU GIVE NOTICE OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH
-DAMAGE.
-
-1.F.3. LIMITED RIGHT OF REPLACEMENT OR REFUND - If you discover a
-defect in this electronic work within 90 days of receiving it, you can
-receive a refund of the money (if any) you paid for it by sending a
-written explanation to the person you received the work from. If you
-received the work on a physical medium, you must return the medium
-with your written explanation. The person or entity that provided you
-with the defective work may elect to provide a replacement copy in
-lieu of a refund. If you received the work electronically, the person
-or entity providing it to you may choose to give you a second
-opportunity to receive the work electronically in lieu of a refund. If
-the second copy is also defective, you may demand a refund in writing
-without further opportunities to fix the problem.
-
-1.F.4. Except for the limited right of replacement or refund set forth
-in paragraph 1.F.3, this work is provided to you 'AS-IS', WITH NO
-OTHER WARRANTIES OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT
-LIMITED TO WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY OR FITNESS FOR ANY PURPOSE.
-
-1.F.5. Some states do not allow disclaimers of certain implied
-warranties or the exclusion or limitation of certain types of
-damages. If any disclaimer or limitation set forth in this agreement
-violates the law of the state applicable to this agreement, the
-agreement shall be interpreted to make the maximum disclaimer or
-limitation permitted by the applicable state law. The invalidity or
-unenforceability of any provision of this agreement shall not void the
-remaining provisions.
-
-1.F.6. INDEMNITY - You agree to indemnify and hold the Foundation, the
-trademark owner, any agent or employee of the Foundation, anyone
-providing copies of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works in
-accordance with this agreement, and any volunteers associated with the
-production, promotion and distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm
-electronic works, harmless from all liability, costs and expenses,
-including legal fees, that arise directly or indirectly from any of
-the following which you do or cause to occur: (a) distribution of this
-or any Project Gutenberg-tm work, (b) alteration, modification, or
-additions or deletions to any Project Gutenberg-tm work, and (c) any
-Defect you cause.
-
-Section 2. Information about the Mission of Project Gutenberg-tm
-
-Project Gutenberg-tm is synonymous with the free distribution of
-electronic works in formats readable by the widest variety of
-computers including obsolete, old, middle-aged and new computers. It
-exists because of the efforts of hundreds of volunteers and donations
-from people in all walks of life.
-
-Volunteers and financial support to provide volunteers with the
-assistance they need are critical to reaching Project Gutenberg-tm's
-goals and ensuring that the Project Gutenberg-tm collection will
-remain freely available for generations to come. In 2001, the Project
-Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation was created to provide a secure
-and permanent future for Project Gutenberg-tm and future
-generations. To learn more about the Project Gutenberg Literary
-Archive Foundation and how your efforts and donations can help, see
-Sections 3 and 4 and the Foundation information page at
-www.gutenberg.org
-
-Section 3. Information about the Project Gutenberg Literary
-Archive Foundation
-
-The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation is a non profit
-501(c)(3) educational corporation organized under the laws of the
-state of Mississippi and granted tax exempt status by the Internal
-Revenue Service. The Foundation's EIN or federal tax identification
-number is 64-6221541. Contributions to the Project Gutenberg Literary
-Archive Foundation are tax deductible to the full extent permitted by
-U.S. federal laws and your state's laws.
-
-The Foundation's principal office is in Fairbanks, Alaska, with the
-mailing address: PO Box 750175, Fairbanks, AK 99775, but its
-volunteers and employees are scattered throughout numerous
-locations. Its business office is located at 809 North 1500 West, Salt
-Lake City, UT 84116, (801) 596-1887. Email contact links and up to
-date contact information can be found at the Foundation's web site and
-official page at www.gutenberg.org/contact
-
-For additional contact information:
-
- Dr. Gregory B. Newby
- Chief Executive and Director
- gbnewby@pglaf.org
-
-Section 4. Information about Donations to the Project Gutenberg
-Literary Archive Foundation
-
-Project Gutenberg-tm depends upon and cannot survive without wide
-spread public support and donations to carry out its mission of
-increasing the number of public domain and licensed works that can be
-freely distributed in machine readable form accessible by the widest
-array of equipment including outdated equipment. Many small donations
-($1 to $5,000) are particularly important to maintaining tax exempt
-status with the IRS.
-
-The Foundation is committed to complying with the laws regulating
-charities and charitable donations in all 50 states of the United
-States. Compliance requirements are not uniform and it takes a
-considerable effort, much paperwork and many fees to meet and keep up
-with these requirements. We do not solicit donations in locations
-where we have not received written confirmation of compliance. To SEND
-DONATIONS or determine the status of compliance for any particular
-state visit www.gutenberg.org/donate
-
-While we cannot and do not solicit contributions from states where we
-have not met the solicitation requirements, we know of no prohibition
-against accepting unsolicited donations from donors in such states who
-approach us with offers to donate.
-
-International donations are gratefully accepted, but we cannot make
-any statements concerning tax treatment of donations received from
-outside the United States. U.S. laws alone swamp our small staff.
-
-Please check the Project Gutenberg Web pages for current donation
-methods and addresses. Donations are accepted in a number of other
-ways including checks, online payments and credit card donations. To
-donate, please visit: www.gutenberg.org/donate
-
-Section 5. General Information About Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works.
-
-Professor Michael S. Hart was the originator of the Project
-Gutenberg-tm concept of a library of electronic works that could be
-freely shared with anyone. For forty years, he produced and
-distributed Project Gutenberg-tm eBooks with only a loose network of
-volunteer support.
-
-Project Gutenberg-tm eBooks are often created from several printed
-editions, all of which are confirmed as not protected by copyright in
-the U.S. unless a copyright notice is included. Thus, we do not
-necessarily keep eBooks in compliance with any particular paper
-edition.
-
-Most people start at our Web site which has the main PG search
-facility: www.gutenberg.org
-
-This Web site includes information about Project Gutenberg-tm,
-including how to make donations to the Project Gutenberg Literary
-Archive Foundation, how to help produce our new eBooks, and how to
-subscribe to our email newsletter to hear about new eBooks.
-
diff --git a/old/54572-0.zip b/old/54572-0.zip
deleted file mode 100644
index 06b8c3c..0000000
--- a/old/54572-0.zip
+++ /dev/null
Binary files differ
diff --git a/old/54572-h.zip b/old/54572-h.zip
deleted file mode 100644
index f958ab6..0000000
--- a/old/54572-h.zip
+++ /dev/null
Binary files differ
diff --git a/old/54572-h/54572-h.htm b/old/54572-h/54572-h.htm
deleted file mode 100644
index 5a1013d..0000000
--- a/old/54572-h/54572-h.htm
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,9243 +0,0 @@
-<!DOCTYPE html PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD XHTML 1.0 Strict//EN"
- "http://www.w3.org/TR/xhtml1/DTD/xhtml1-strict.dtd">
-<html xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml">
-<head>
-<meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html; charset=UTF-8" />
-<title>The Project Gutenberg eBook of The Chronic Loafer, by Nelson Lloyd</title>
-<link rel="coverpage" href="images/cover.jpg" />
-<style type="text/css">
-
-a {
- text-decoration: none;
-}
-
-body {
- margin-left: 10%;
- margin-right: 10%;
-}
-
-h1,h2,h3 {
- text-align: center;
- clear: both;
-}
-
-hr {
- margin-top: 2em;
- margin-bottom: 2em;
- clear: both;
-}
-
-hr.tb {
- width: 45%;
- margin-left: 27.5%;
- margin-right: 27.5%;
-}
-
-hr.chap {
- width: 65%;
- margin-left: 17.5%;
- margin-right: 17.5%;
-}
-
-p {
- margin-top: 0.5em;
- text-align: justify;
- margin-bottom: 0.5em;
- text-indent: 1em;
-}
-
-table {
- margin: 1em auto 1em auto;
- max-width: 40em;
- border-collapse: collapse;
-}
-
-td {
- padding-left: 0.25em;
- padding-right: 0.25em;
- vertical-align: top;
-}
-
-.box {
- border: thin solid black;
- padding: 1em;
- margin: 1em auto;
- max-width: 20em;
-}
-
-.box-outer {
- border: thick solid black;
- padding: 0.5em 1em;
- margin: 1em auto;
- max-width: 22em;
-}
-
-.center {
- text-align: center;
- text-indent: 0em;
-}
-
-.figcenter {
- margin: auto;
- text-align: center;
-}
-
-.larger {
- font-size: 150%;
-}
-
-.pagenum {
- position: absolute;
- right: 4%;
- font-size: smaller;
- text-align: right;
- font-style: normal;
-}
-
-.poetry-container {
- text-align: center;
- margin: 1em;
-}
-
-.poetry {
- display: inline-block;
- text-align: left;
-}
-
-.poetry .verse {
- text-indent: -3em;
- padding-left: 3em;
-}
-
-.right {
- text-align: right;
-}
-
-.smaller {
- font-size: 80%;
-}
-
-.smcap {
- font-variant: small-caps;
- font-style: normal;
-}
-
-.titlepage {
- text-align: center;
- margin-top: 3em;
- text-indent: 0em;
-}
-
-@media handheld {
-
-img {
- max-width: 100%;
- width: auto;
- height: auto;
-}
-
-.poetry {
- display: block;
- margin-left: 1.5em;
-}
-}
-
- hr.full { width: 100%;
- margin-top: 3em;
- margin-bottom: 0em;
- margin-left: auto;
- margin-right: auto;
- height: 4px;
- border-width: 4px 0 0 0; /* remove all borders except the top one */
- border-style: solid;
- border-color: #000000;
- clear: both; }
- </style>
-</head>
-<body>
-<h1>The Project Gutenberg eBook, The Chronic Loafer, by Nelson Lloyd</h1>
-<p>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 <a
-href="http://www.gutenberg.org">www.gutenberg.org</a>. 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.</p>
-<p>Title: The Chronic Loafer</p>
-<p>Author: Nelson Lloyd</p>
-<p>Release Date: April 19, 2017 [eBook #54572]</p>
-<p>Language: English</p>
-<p>Character set encoding: UTF-8</p>
-<p>***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE CHRONIC LOAFER***</p>
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-<h3>E-text prepared by MWS, Peter Vachuska,<br />
- and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team<br />
- (http://www.pgdp.net)</h3>
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-<hr class="full" />
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_1" id="Page_1">[1]</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="box-outer">
-
-<div class="box">
-
-<p class="center larger"><span class="smaller">THE</span><br />
-CHRONIC LOAFER</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="box">
-
-<p class="center larger"><span class="smaller">BY</span><br />
-NELSON LLOYD</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 100px;">
-<img src="images/cum-facent-clamant.jpg" width="100" height="135" alt="Publisher's mark" />
-</div>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="box">
-
-<p class="center"><span class="smaller">NEW YORK</span><br />
-J. F. TAYLOR &amp; COMPANY<br />
-<span class="smaller">1900</span></p>
-
-</div>
-
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_2" id="Page_2">[2]</a></span></p>
-
-<p class="titlepage smaller">Copyright, 1900,<br />
-By<br />
-<span class="smcap">J. F. Taylor &amp; Company</span>.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_3" id="Page_3">[3]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2>CONTENTS.</h2>
-
-<table summary="Contents">
- <tr>
- <td class="right smaller">CHAPTER</td>
- <td></td>
- <td class="right smaller">PAGE</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="right">I.</td>
- <td>The Reunion</td>
- <td class="right"><a href="#CHAPTER_I">5</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="right">II.</td>
- <td>The Spelling Bee</td>
- <td class="right"><a href="#CHAPTER_II">17</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="right">III.</td>
- <td>Absalom Bunkel</td>
- <td class="right"><a href="#CHAPTER_III">28</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="right">IV.</td>
- <td>The Missus</td>
- <td class="right"><a href="#CHAPTER_IV">37</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="right">V.</td>
- <td>The Awfullest Thing</td>
- <td class="right"><a href="#CHAPTER_V">54</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="right">VI.</td>
- <td>The Wrestling Match</td>
- <td class="right"><a href="#CHAPTER_VI">63</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="right">VII.</td>
- <td>The Tramp’s Romance</td>
- <td class="right"><a href="#CHAPTER_VII">74</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="right">VIII.</td>
- <td>Ambition&mdash;An Argument</td>
- <td class="right"><a href="#CHAPTER_VIII">80</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="right">IX.</td>
- <td>Bumbletree’s Bass-Horn</td>
- <td class="right"><a href="#CHAPTER_IX">97</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="right">X.</td>
- <td>Little Si Berrybush</td>
- <td class="right"><a href="#CHAPTER_X">107</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="right">XI.</td>
- <td>Cupid and a Mule</td>
- <td class="right"><a href="#CHAPTER_XI">126</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="right">XII.</td>
- <td>The Haunted Store</td>
- <td class="right"><a href="#CHAPTER_XII">136</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="right">XIII.</td>
- <td>Rivals</td>
- <td class="right"><a href="#CHAPTER_XIII">149</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="right">XIV.</td>
- <td>Buddies</td>
- <td class="right"><a href="#CHAPTER_XIV">159</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="right">XV.</td>
- <td>Joe Varner’s Belling</td>
- <td class="right"><a href="#CHAPTER_XV">169</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="right">XVI.</td>
- <td>The Sentimental Tramp</td>
- <td class="right"><a href="#CHAPTER_XVI">176</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="right">XVII.</td>
- <td>Hiram Gum, the Fiddler</td>
- <td class="right"><a href="#CHAPTER_XVII">183</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="right">XVIII.</td>
- <td>The “Good Un”</td>
- <td class="right"><a href="#CHAPTER_XVIII">193</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="right"><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_4" id="Page_4">[4]</a></span>XIX.</td>
- <td>Breaking the Ice</td>
- <td class="right"><a href="#CHAPTER_XIX">202</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="right">XX.</td>
- <td>Two Stay-at-Homes</td>
- <td class="right"><a href="#CHAPTER_XX">212</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="right">XXI.</td>
- <td>Eben Huckin’s Conversion</td>
- <td class="right"><a href="#CHAPTER_XXI">219</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="right">XXII.</td>
- <td>A Piece in the Paper</td>
- <td class="right"><a href="#CHAPTER_XXII">237</a></td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_5" id="Page_5">[5]</a></span></p>
-
-<h1>THE CHRONIC LOAFER.</h1>
-
-<h2 id="CHAPTER_I">CHAPTER I.<br />
-<span class="smaller"><i>The Reunion.</i></span></h2>
-
-<p>In the center of one of the most picturesque
-valleys in the heart of Pennsylvania lies the village
-and at one end of its single street stands the
-store. On the broad porch of this homely and
-ancient edifice there is a long oak bench, rough,
-and hacked in countless places by the knives of
-many generations of loungers. From this bench,
-looking northward across an expanse of meadows,
-a view is had of a low, green ridge, dotted here
-and there with white farm buildings. Behind that
-rise the mountains, along whose sides on bright
-days play the fanciful shadows of the clouds.
-Close by the store is the rumbling mill, and beyond
-it runs the creek, spanned by a wooden
-bridge whose planking now and then resounds
-with the beat of horses’ hoofs, so that it adds
-its music to the roar of the mill-wheels and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_6" id="Page_6">[6]</a></span>
-ring of the anvil in the blacksmith shop across
-the stream.</p>
-
-<p>One July day the stage rattled over the bridge,
-past the mill and drew up at the store. The
-G. A. R. Man, the only passenger, climbed out of
-the lumbering vehicle, dragging after him a shapeless,
-battered carpet-bag. He limped up the steps
-in the wake of the driver, who was helping the
-Storekeeper with the mail-pouch, and when on
-the porch stopped and nodded a greeting to the
-men who were sitting on the bench kicking their
-heels together&mdash;the Patriarch, the School Teacher,
-the Miller, the Tinsmith and the Chronic Loafer.
-The loungers gazed solemnly at the new arrival;
-at his broad-brimmed, black slouch hat, which
-though drawn down over his left temple did not
-hide the end of a band of court-plaster; at his
-blue coat, two of its brass buttons missing; at
-his trousers, in which there were several rents that
-had been clumsily sewed together.</p>
-
-<p>The silence was broken by the School Teacher,
-who remarked with a contemptuous curl of the
-nose, “So you’ve got home from Gettysburg,
-have you? From your appearance one would
-judge that you had come from a battle instead of
-a reunion.”</p>
-
-<p>“Huh! A good un&mdash;a good un!”</p>
-
-<p>All eyes were turned toward the end of the
-bench, where sat the Chronic Loafer. He was a
-tall, thin, loose-jointed man. Thick, untrimmed<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_7" id="Page_7">[7]</a></span>
-locks of tawny hair fell from beneath his ragged,
-straw hat, framing a face whose most prominent
-features were a pair of deep-set, dull blue eyes,
-two sharp, protruding cheek-bones and a week’s
-growth of red beard. His attire was simple in the
-extreme. It consisted of a blue striped, hickory
-shirt, at the neck-band of which glistened a large,
-white china button, which buttoned nothing, but
-served solely as an ornament, since no collar had
-ever embraced the thin, brown neck above it. A
-piece of heavy twine running over the left shoulder
-and down across the chest supported a pair of
-faded, brown overalls, which were adorned at the
-right knee by a large patch of white cotton. He
-was sitting in a heap. His head seemed to join
-his body somewhere in the region of his heart.
-His bare left foot rested on his right knee and his
-left knee was encircled by his long arms.</p>
-
-<p>“A good un!” he cried again.</p>
-
-<p>Then he suddenly uncoiled himself, throwing
-back his head until it struck the wall behind him,
-and swung his legs wildly to and fro.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, what air you so tickled about now?”
-growled the G. A. R. Man.</p>
-
-<p>“I was jest a-thinkin’ that you’d never come
-outen no battle lookin’ like that,” drawled the
-Loafer.</p>
-
-<p>He nudged the Miller with his elbow and
-winked at the Teacher. Forthwith the three
-broke into loud fits of laughter.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_8" id="Page_8">[8]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>The Patriarch pounded his hickory stick vigorously
-on the floor, pulled his heavy platinum
-rimmed spectacles down to the tip of his nose and
-over their tops gazed in stern disapproval.</p>
-
-<p>“Boys, boys,” he said, “no joshing. It ain’t
-right to josh.”</p>
-
-<p>“True&mdash;true,” said the Loafer. He had wrapped
-himself up again and was in repose. “My pap
-allus use to say, ‘A leetle joshin’ now an’ then is
-relished be the wisest men&mdash;that is, ef they hain’t
-the fellys what’s bein’ joshed.’”</p>
-
-<p>The G. A. R. Man had been leaning uneasily
-against a pillar. On this amicable speech from
-his chief tormenter, the frown that had been playing
-over his face gave way to a broad grin, three
-white teeth glistening in the open space between
-his stubby mustache and beard.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes,” he said, “I hev come home afore my
-’scursion ticket expired.” He removed his hat
-and disclosed a great patch of plaster on his forehead.
-“Ye see Gettysburg was a sight hotter fer
-me yesterday than in ’63. But I’ve got to the
-eend o’ my story.”</p>
-
-<p>“So that same old yarn you’ve ben tellin’ at
-every camp-fire sence the war is finished at last.
-That’s a blessin’!” cried the Miller.</p>
-
-<p>“I never knowd you was in the war. I thot
-you jest drawed a pension,” interrupted the
-Loafer.</p>
-
-<p>The veteran did not heed these jibes but fixed<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_9" id="Page_9">[9]</a></span>
-himself comfortably on the upturned end of his
-carpet-bag.</p>
-
-<p>“Teacher, I’ve never seen you at any of our
-camp-fires,” he began. “Consekently the eend o’
-my story won’t do you no good ’less you knows the
-first part. So I’ll tell you ’bout my experience at
-the battle o’ Gettysburg an’ then explain my
-second fight there. I was in the war bespite the
-insinooations o’ them ez was settin’ on that same
-bench in the day o’ the nation’s danger. I served
-as a corporal in the Two-hundred-and-ninety-fifth
-Pennsylwany Wolunteers an’ was honorable discharged
-in ’63.”</p>
-
-<p>“Fer which discharge he gits his pension,” the
-Loafer ventured.</p>
-
-<p>“That ain’t so. I cot malary an’ several other
-complaints in the Wilterness that henders me
-workin’ steady. It was no wonder, either, fer
-our retchment was allus fightin’. We was knowd
-ez the Bloody Pennsylwany retchment, fer we’d
-ben in every battle from Bull Run on, an’ hed
-had some wery desp’rate engagements. ’Henever
-they was any chargin’ to be done, we done it; ef
-they was a fylorn hope, we was on it; ef they was
-a breastwork to be tuk, we tuk it. You uns can
-imagine that be the eend o’ two years sech work,
-we was pretty bad cut up. ’Hen the army chased
-the rebels up inter this state we was with it, but
-afore the fight at Gettysburg it was concided
-that sence they wasn’t many of us, we’d better be<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_10" id="Page_10">[10]</a></span>
-put to guardin’ baggage wagons. That was a
-kind o’ work that didn’t take many men, but
-required fighters in caset the enemy give the boys
-in front a slip an’ sneaked een on our rear.”</p>
-
-<p>The School Teacher coughed learnedly and
-raised a hand to indicate that he had something
-to say. Having secured the floor, he began:
-“When Darius the First invaded Europe he had
-so many women, children and baggage wagons in
-his train that&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>“See here,” cried the Patriarch, testily.
-“Dar’us was afore my time, I allow. We don’t
-care two snaps o’ a ram’s tail ’bout Dar’us. We
-wants to know ’bout them bloody Pennsylwanians.”</p>
-
-<p>The pedagogue shook his head in condemnation
-of the ignorance of his companions, but
-allowed the G. A. R. Man to proceed.</p>
-
-<p>“Durin’ the first day’s engagement our retchment,
-with a couple of others, an’ the trains, was
-’bout three mile ahint Cemetary Hill, but on the
-next mornin’ we was ordered back twenty mile.
-It was hard to hev to drive off inter the country
-’hen the boys was hevin’ it hot bangin’ away at
-the enemy, but them was orders, an’ a soldier
-allus obeys orders.</p>
-
-<p>“The fightin’ begin airly that day. We got
-the wagons a-goin’ afore sun-up, but it wasn’t
-long tell we could hear the roar o’ the guns, an’
-see the smoke risin’ in clouds an’ then settlin’<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_11" id="Page_11">[11]</a></span>
-down over the country. We felt pretty blue, too,
-ez we went trampin’ along, fer the wounded
-an’ stragglers was faster ’an we. They’d come
-hobblin’ up with bad news, sayin’ how the boys
-was bein’ cut up along the Emmettsburg road, an’
-how we’d better move faster, ez the army was
-losin’ an’ the rebels ’ud soon be een on us. Then
-they’d hobble away agin. Them wasn’t our only
-troubles, either. The mules was behavin’ mean
-an’ cuttin’ up capers, an’ the wagons was breakin’
-down. Then we hed to be continual watchin’ fer
-them Confederate cavalry we was expectin’ was
-a-goin’ to pounce down on us.</p>
-
-<p>“Evenin’ come, an’ we lay to fer the night.
-The fires was started, an’ the coffee set a-boilin’,
-an’ we had a chancet to rest a while. The
-wounded an’ the stragglers that jest filled the
-country kep’ comin’ in all the time, sometim’s
-alone, sometim’s in twos an’ threes, some with
-their arms tied up in all sorts o’ queer ways, or
-hobblin’ on sticks, or with their heads bandaged;
-about the miserablest lot o’ men I ever see. The
-noise of the fight stopped, an’ everything was
-quiet an’ peaceful like nawthin’ hed ben happenin’.
-The quiet an’ the dark an’ the fear we was
-goin’ to meet the enemy at any minute made it
-mighty onpleasant, an’ what with the stories
-them wounded fellys give us, we didn’t rest wery
-easy.</p>
-
-<p>“I went out on the picket line at ten o’clock.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_12" id="Page_12">[12]</a></span>
-Seemed I hedn’t ben there an hour tell I made
-out the dark figure of a man comin’ th’oo the
-fiel’s wery slow like. Me an’ the fellys with me
-watched sharp. Sudden the man stopped, hesitated
-like an’ sank down in a heap. Then he
-picked himself up an’ come staggerin’ on. He
-couldn’t ’a’ ben more’n fifty yards away ’hen he
-th’owed up his hands an’ pitched for’a’d on his
-face. Me an’ me buddy run out an’ carried him
-inter the fire. But it wasn’t no uset. He was
-dead.</p>
-
-<p>“They was a bullet wound in his shoulder,
-an’ his clothes was soaked with blood that
-hed ben drippin’, drippin’ tell he fell the last
-time. I opened his coat, an’ in his pocket foun’
-a letter, stamped, an’ directed apparent to his
-wife&mdash;that was all to tell who he was. So I went
-back to me post thinkin’ no more of it an’ never
-noticin’ that that man’s coat ’ud ’a’ fit two of
-him.</p>
-
-<p>“Mornin’ come, an’ the firin’ begin over toward
-Gettysburg. We could see the smoke risin’ agin
-an’ hear the big guns bellerin’ tell the ground beneath
-our feet seemed to swing up an’ down. I
-tell you uns that was a grand scene. We was
-awful excited, fer we knowd the first two days
-hed gone agin us, an’ more an’ more stragglers
-an’ wounded come limpin’ back, all with bad
-news. I was gittin’ nervous, thinkin’ an’ thinkin’
-over it, an’ wishin’ I was where the fun was.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_13" id="Page_13">[13]</a></span>
-Then I concided mebbe I wasn’t so bad off, fer I
-might ’a’ been killed like the poor felly I seen the
-night before, an’ in thinkin’ o’ the man I remembered
-the letter an’ got it out. I didn’t ’tend to
-open it, but final I thot it wasn’t safe to go mailin’
-letters ’thout knowin’ jest what was in ’em, so
-I read it.</p>
-
-<p>“The letter was wrote on a piece o’ wrappin’
-paper in an awful bad handwrite, but ’hen I got
-th’oo it I set plumb down an’ cried like a chil’.
-It was from John Parker to his wife Mary, livin’
-somewhere out in western Pennsylwany. He
-begin be mentionin’ how we was on the eve of a
-big fight an’ how he ’tended to do his duty even
-ef it come to fallin’ at his post. It was hard, he
-sayd, but he knowd she’d ruther hev no husban’
-than a coward. He was allus thinkin’ o’ her an’
-the baby he’d never seen, but felt satisfaction in
-knowin’ they was well fixed. It was sorrerful, he
-continyerd, that she was like to be a widdy so
-young, an’ he wasn’t goin’ to be mean about it.
-He allus knowd, he sayd, how she’d hed a hankerin’
-after young Silas Quincy ’fore she tuk him.
-Ef he fell, he thot she’d better merry Silas ’hen
-she’d recovered from the ’fects o’ his goin’. He
-ended up with a lot o’ last ‘good-bys’ an’ talk
-about duty to his country.</p>
-
-<p>“Right then an’ there I set down an’ wrote
-that poor woman a few lines tellin’ how I’d foun’
-the letter in her dead husban’s pocket. I was<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_14" id="Page_14">[14]</a></span>
-goin’ to quit at that, but I concided it ’ud be
-nice to add somethin’ consolin’, so I told how
-we’d foun’ him on the fiel’ o’ battle, face to the
-enemy, an’ how his last words was fer her an’ the
-baby. That day we won the fight, an’ the next I
-mailed Mrs. Parker her letter. It seemed about
-the plum blamedest, saddest thing I ever hed to do
-with.”</p>
-
-<p>“I’ve allus ben cur’ous ’bout that widdy, too,”
-the Chronic Loafer remarked.</p>
-
-<p>The Teacher cleared his throat and recited:</p>
-
-<div class="poem">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="verse">“Now night her course began, and over heaven</div>
-<div class="verse">Inducing darkness grateful truce imposed,</div>
-<div class="verse">And silence on the odious din of war;</div>
-<div class="verse">Under her cloud&mdash;&mdash;”</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>“No poetry jist yet, Teacher,” said the veteran.
-“Wait tell you hear the sekal o’ the story.”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, let’s hev somethin’ new,” growled the
-Miller.</p>
-
-<p>Having silenced the pedagogue, the G. A. R.
-Man resumed his narrative.</p>
-
-<p>“I never heard no more o’ Widdy Parker tell
-last night, an’ then it come most sudden. Our
-retchment hed a reunion on the fiel’ this year,
-you know, an’ on Monday I went back to Gettysburg
-fer the first time sence I was honorable discharged.
-The boys was all there, what’s left o’
-’em, an’ we jest hed a splendid time wisitin’ the
-monyments an’ talkin’ over the days back in ’63.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_15" id="Page_15">[15]</a></span>
-There was my old tent-mate, Sam Thomas, on one
-leg, an’ Jim Luckenbach, who was near tuk be
-yaller janders afore Petersburg. There was the
-colonel, growed old an’ near blind, an’ our captain
-an’ a hundred odd others.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, last night we was a lot of us a-settin’ in
-the hotel tellin’ stories. It come my turn an’ I
-told about the dead soldier’s letter. A big felly
-in a unyform hed ben leanin’ agin the bar watchin’
-us. ’Hen I begin he pricked up his ears a leetle.
-Ez I got furder an’ furder he seemed to git more
-an’ more interested, I noticed. By an’ by I seen
-he was becomin’ red an’ oneasy, an’ final ’hen
-I’d finished he walks acrosst the room to where
-we was settin’ an’ stands there starin’ at me,
-never sayin’ nawthin’.</p>
-
-<p>“A minute passed. I sais, sais I, ‘Well, comrade,
-what air you starin’ so fer?’</p>
-
-<p>“Sais he, ‘That letter was fer Mary Parker?’</p>
-
-<p>“‘True,’ sais I, surprised.</p>
-
-<p>“‘Dead sure?’ sais he.</p>
-
-<p>“‘Sure,’ sais I.</p>
-
-<p>“Then he shakes his fist an’ yells, ‘I’ve ’tended
-most every reunion here sence the war hopin’
-to meet the idjet that sent that letter to my
-wife an’ wrote that foolishness ’bout findin’ my
-dead body. After twenty-five years I’ve foun’
-you!’</p>
-
-<p>“He pulls off his coat. The boys all jumps
-up.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_16" id="Page_16">[16]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“I, half skeert to death, cries, ‘But you ain’t
-the dead man!’</p>
-
-<p>“‘Dead,’ he yells. ‘Never ben near it. Nor
-did I ’tend to hev every blame fool in the army
-mailin’ my letters nuther. Because you finds a
-man with my coat on, that hain’t no reason he’s
-me. I was gittin’ to the rear with orders ez lively
-ez a cricket an’ th’owed off that coat jest because
-it was warm runnin’.’</p>
-
-<p>“‘Hen I seen what I’d done I grabs his arm, I
-was so excited, an’ cries, ‘Did she merry Silas
-Quincy?’</p>
-
-<p>“‘It wasn’t your fault she didn’t,’ he sais, deliberate
-like, rollin’ up his sleeves. ‘I got home
-two days after the letter an’ stopped the weddin’
-party on their way to church.’”</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_17" id="Page_17">[17]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2 id="CHAPTER_II">CHAPTER II.<br />
-<span class="smaller"><i>The Spelling Bee.</i></span></h2>
-
-<p>The Chronic Loafer stretched his legs along the
-counter and rested his back comfortably against a
-pile of calicoes.</p>
-
-<p>“I allus held,” he said, “that they hain’t no
-sech things ez a roarinborinallus. I know some
-sais they is ’lectric lights, but ’hen I seen that big
-un last night I sayd to my Missus, an’ I hol’ I’m
-right, I sayd that it was nawthin’ but the iron
-furnaces over the mo’ntain. Fer s’pose, ez the
-Teacher claims, they was lights at the North Pole&mdash;does
-you uns believe we could see ’em all that
-distance? Well now!”</p>
-
-<p>He gazed impressively about the store. The
-Patriarch, the Miller and the G.A.R. Man were
-disposed to agree with him. The School Teacher
-was sarcastic.</p>
-
-<p>“Where ignorance is bliss ’twere folly to be
-wise,” he said. He tilted back on two legs of his
-chair and adjusted his thumbs in the arm-holes of
-his waistcoat, so that all eight of his long quivering<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_18" id="Page_18">[18]</a></span>
-fingers seemed to be pointing in scorn at the
-man on the counter.</p>
-
-<p>The Loafer rolled slowly over on one side and
-eyed the pedagogue.</p>
-
-<p>“Ben readin’ the almanick lately, hain’t ye?”
-he drawled.</p>
-
-<p>“If you devoted less time to the almanac and
-more to physical geography,” retorted the Teacher,
-“you’d know that the Aurora Borealis hain’t a
-light made on <i lang="la">terra firma</i> but that it is a peculiar
-magnetic condition of the atmosphere. And the
-manner in which you pronounce it is exceedingly
-ludicrous. It’s not a roarinborinallus. It is
-spelled <em>A-u-r-o-r-a B-o-r-e-a-l-i-s</em>.”</p>
-
-<p>The Loafer sat up, crossed his legs and embraced
-his knee, thus forming a natural fortification
-behind which he could collect his thoughts
-before hurling them at his glib and smiling foe.
-He gazed dully at his rival a moment; then said
-suddenly, “My pap was a cute man.”</p>
-
-<p>“He hasn’t left any living monument to his
-good sense,” said the Teacher.</p>
-
-<p>The Loafer looked at the Storekeeper, who was
-sitting beneath him on an empty egg-crate. “Do
-you mind how he use to say that Solerman meant
-‘teacher’ ’hen he sayd ‘wine’; how Solerman
-meant, ‘Look not upon the teacher ’hen he is
-read,’ fer a leetle learnin’ leaveneth the whole
-lump an’ puffs him up so&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>The pedagogue’s chair came down on all four<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_19" id="Page_19">[19]</a></span>
-legs with a crash. His right thumb left the
-seclusion of his waistcoat, his right arm shot out
-straight, and a trembling forefinger pointed at
-the eyes that were just visible over the top of the
-white-patched knee.</p>
-
-<p>“See here!” he shouted. “I’m ready for an
-argyment, but no callin’ names. This is no place
-for abuse.”</p>
-
-<p>The Loafer resumed his reclining attitude and
-fixed his gaze on the dim recesses of the ceiling.</p>
-
-<p>“I hain’t callin’ no one names,” he said slowly,
-“I was jest tellin’ what my pap use to say.”</p>
-
-<p>“Tut-tut-tut, boys,” interrupted the Patriarch,
-thumping the floor with his stick. “Don’t git
-quarrelin’ over sech a leetle thing ez the meanin’
-o’ a word. Mebbe ye’s both right.”</p>
-
-<p>The Tinsmith had hitherto occupied a nail keg
-near the stove, unnoticed. Now he began to rub
-his hands together gleefully and to chuckle. The
-Teacher was convinced that his own discomfiture
-was the cause of the other’s mirth.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, what are you so tickled about?” he
-snapped.</p>
-
-<p>“Aurory Borealis. Perry Muthersbaugh spelled
-down Jawhn Jimson on that very word. Yes, he
-done it on that very word. My, but that there
-was a bee, Perfessor!”</p>
-
-<p>“Now ’fore you git grindin’ away, sence you’ve
-got on spellin’,” said the Chronic Loafer, “I want
-to tell a good un&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_20" id="Page_20">[20]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“Let him tell us about Perry Muthersbaugh,”
-said the Teacher in decisive tones. The title
-“professor” had had a softening effect, and he
-repaid the compliment by supporting the Tinsmith’s
-claim to the floor.</p>
-
-<p>Compelled to silence, the Chronic Loafer closed
-his eyes as though oblivious to all about him, but
-a hand stole to his ear and formed a trumpet
-there to aid his hearing.</p>
-
-<p>“Some folks is nat’ral spellers jest ez others is
-nat’ral musicians,” began the Tinsmith. “Agin,
-it’s jest ez hard to make a good speller be edication
-ez it is to make a good bass-horn player, fer
-a felly that hain’t the inborn idee o’ how many
-letters is needed to make a word’ll never spell no
-better than the man that hain’t the nat’ral sense
-o’ how much wind’s needed to make a note, ’ll play
-the bass-horn.”</p>
-
-<p>“I cannot wholly agree with you,” the Teacher
-interrupted. “Give a child first words of one
-syllable, then two; drill him in words ending in
-<em>t-i-o-n</em> until&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>“We won’t discuss that, Perfessor. It don’t
-affect our case, fer Jawhn Jimson was a nat’ral
-speller. You never seen the like. Give him a
-word o’ six or seven syllables an’ he’d spell it out
-like it was on a blackboard right before him.
-’Hen he was twenty he’d downed all the scholars
-in Happy Grove an’ won about six bees. Then
-he went to Pikestown Normal School, an’ ’hen he<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_21" id="Page_21">[21]</a></span>
-come back you never knowd the beat. He hed
-stedied Lating an’ algebray there, but I guesst he
-must also ’a’ spent considerable time a-brushin’
-up his spellin’, fer they was only one felly ’bout
-these parts could keep with him any time at all.
-He was my frien’ Perry Muthersbaugh, who tot
-up to Kishikoquillas.</p>
-
-<p>“You uns mind the winter we hed the big
-blizzard, ’hen the snow covered all the fences an’
-was piled so high in the roads that we hed to
-drive th’oo the fiel’s. They was a heap sight
-goin’ on that year&mdash;church sosh’bles, singin’ school
-an’ spellin’ bees. Me an’ Perry Muthersbaugh
-was buddies, an’ not a week passed ’thout we went
-some’eres together. Fore I knowd it him an’
-Jawhn Jimson was keepin’ company with Hannah
-Ciders. She was jest ez pretty ez a peach, plump
-an rosy, with the slickest nat’ral hair an’ teeth
-you uns ever seen. She was fond o’ edication, too,
-so ’hen them teachers was after her she couldn’t
-make up her min’. She favored both. Perry
-was good lookin’ an’ steady an’ no fool. He’d
-set all evenin’ along side o’ her an’ never say
-nawthin’ much, but she kind o’ thot him good
-company. It allus seemed to me that Jimson
-was a bit conceity an’ bigitive, but he was amusin’
-an’ hed the advantage of a normal school edication.
-He kind o’ dazzled her. She didn’t know which
-of ’em to take, an’ figured on it tell well inter the
-winter. Her color begin to go an’ she was gittin’<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_22" id="Page_22">[22]</a></span>
-thin. Perry an’ Jawhn was near wild with anxiousness
-an’ was continual quarrelin’. Then what
-d’ye s’pose they done?”</p>
-
-<p>“It’ll take a long time fer ’em to do much the
-way you tells it,” the Chronic Loafer grumbled.</p>
-
-<p>“She give out,” continued the Tinsmith, not
-heeding the interruption, “that she’d take the
-best edicated. That tickled Jawhn, an’ he blowed
-around to his frien’s how he was goin’ to send ’em
-invites to his weddin’. Perry jest grit his teeth
-an’ sayd nawthin’ ’cept that he was ready. Then
-he got out his spellin’ book an’ went to sawin’
-wood jest ez hard an’ fast ez he could.”</p>
-
-<p>“That there reminds me o’ my pap.” The
-Chronic Loafer was sitting up again.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, if your pap was anything like his son,”
-said the Teacher, “I guess he could ’a’ sawed
-most of his wood with a spellin’ book.”</p>
-
-<p>The author of this witticism laughed long and
-loud, having support in the Miller and the G.A.
-R. Man. The Patriarch put his hand under his
-chin and dexterously turned his long beard upward
-so that it hid his face. In the seclusion thus
-formed he had a quiet chuckle all to himself, for
-he was a politic old person and loath to offend.</p>
-
-<p>“Boys, boys,” he said when the mirth was subsiding,
-“remember what the Scriptur’ sais&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>“Pap didn’t git it from the Scriptur’,” said the
-Loafer complacently. “He use to give it ez a
-text tho’, somethin’ like this, ‘He that goeth at<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_23" id="Page_23">[23]</a></span>
-the wood-pile too fast gen’rally breaketh his saw
-on the fust nail an’ freezeth all winter.’”</p>
-
-<p>“Not ef he gits the right kind o’ firewood&mdash;the
-kind that hasn’t no nails,” said the Miller hotly.</p>
-
-<p>“Huh!” exclaimed the Loafer, and he sprawled
-out upon the counter once more.</p>
-
-<p>The Tinsmith took up the narrative again.</p>
-
-<p>“It was agreed that the two teachers ’ud hev it
-out at the big spellin’ bee ’tween their schools
-the follyin’ week. The night set come. Sech
-a crowd ez gathered at the Happy Grove school
-house! They was sleighin’, an’ fer a quarter of a
-mile in front o’ the buildin’ they was nawthin’
-but horses hitched to the fences. The room was
-decorated with greens an’ lighted with ile lamps
-fer the occasion, an’ was jest packed. All the
-seats was filled with girls. The men was lined
-three deep along the walls an’ banked up on top
-of one another at the back. On one side o’ the
-platform, settin’ on a long bench under the blackboard,
-was the sixteen best scholars o’ Happy
-Grove school led be Jawhn Jimson. He was
-smilin’ an’ conferdent, an’ gazed longin’ at Hannah
-Ciders, who was on one o’ the front seats an’
-’peared rather nervous.</p>
-
-<p>“Perry Muthersbaugh come up to me ez I was
-standin’ be the stove warmin’ up, an’ I whispered
-him a few words of encouragement, tho’ I felt
-sorry fer him. He was a leetle excited but ’lowed
-it ’ud come out all right. Then he tuk his place<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_24" id="Page_24">[24]</a></span>
-on the other side o’ the platform with his sixteen
-scholars, an’ the proceedin’s begin.</p>
-
-<p>“Teacher Long from Lemon township give out
-the words, while me an’ another felly kep’ tally.
-The first word was soupeny. Perry missed it.
-He spelled it <em>s-u-p-e-n-a</em>. It jest made me sick to
-hev to mark down one agin his side. Jimson
-tuk it, spelled it all right, an’ commenced to smile.
-Muthersbaugh looked solemn. The next felly on
-his side spelled supersedes correct, while the girl
-beside Jawhn missed superannuation. Happy
-Grove and Kishikoquillas was even.</p>
-
-<p>“I tell you uns it was most excitin’ to see them
-trained spellers battlin’. They kep’ it up fer half
-an hour, an’ ’hen they quit Happy Grove hed
-two misses less than Kishikoquillas. Jimson was
-smilin’ triumphant. Perry didn’t do nawthin’ but
-set there quiet like.</p>
-
-<p>“Then come the final test&mdash;the spellin’ down.
-After a recess o’ ten minutes the sides lined up
-agin, an’ ’henever one missed a word he hed to go
-sit in the aud’ence. They spelled an’ spelled tell
-they was no one left but Jawhn Jimson an’ Perry
-Muthersbaugh, standin’ glarin’ at each other an’
-singin’ out letters. It was a grand sight. Hannah
-Ciders was pale an’ tremblin’, fer she knowd the
-valley of an idle word then. The aud’ence was
-most stretchin’ their necks outen joint they was so
-interested. Two lamps went out an’ no one fixed
-them. The air was blue with steam made be the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_25" id="Page_25">[25]</a></span>
-snow meltin’ offen the fellys’ boots, the stove
-begin to smoke, an’ the room was suffocatin’, yit
-no one thot to put up a winder, the excitemen’
-was so bad.</p>
-
-<p>“Sech words ez penultimate, concatenation,
-pentateuch an’ silhouette come dead easy to them
-teachers. They kep’ glarin’ at each other an’
-spellin’ like their life depended on it. Poor
-Long’s voice got weaker an’ weaker givin’ out
-words, an’ I was that nervous I could hairdly see.
-They spelled all the <em>ations</em> an’ <em>entions</em>, all the
-words endin’ in <em>i-s-m</em>, <em>d-l-e</em> an’ <em>ness</em>, tell it seemed
-they’d use up the book. Perry was gittin’ more
-excited. Jimson’s knees was tremblin’ visible.</p>
-
-<p>“Then Rorybory Allus was give out. You
-could ’a’ heard a pin drop in that room. Jimson
-he begin slow, ez ef it was dead easy: ‘<em>A-r-o-r-a</em>,
-Aurora; <em>b-o-r</em>, Aurora Bor; <em>e-a-l-i-s</em>, Aurora
-Borealis.’</p>
-
-<p>“A mumble went over the room. He seen he
-was wrong an’ yelled, ‘<em>A-u</em>, I mean!’</p>
-
-<p>“‘Too late,’ sais Long. ‘Only one chancet at
-a time. The gentleman who gits it right first,
-wins.’</p>
-
-<p>“Jawhn was white ez a sheet, an’ his face an’
-han’s was twitchin’ ez he stood there glarin’ at
-Perry. Muthersbaugh looked at the floor like he
-was stedyin’. I seen Hannah Ciders lean for’a’d
-an’ grip the desk with her han’s. Then I knowd
-she’d made up her min’ which she favored.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_26" id="Page_26">[26]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“He begin, ‘<em>A-u</em>, au; <em>r-o-r</em>, ror, Auror; <em>a</em>, Aurora;
-<em>B-o-r-e</em>, bore, Aurora Bore; <em>a-l</em>, al, Aurora
-Boreal&mdash;’ Then he stopped, an’ looked up at the
-ceilin’, an’ stedied.</p>
-
-<p>“I seen tears in Hannah Ciders’ eyes ez she
-leaned for’a’d, not breathin’. I seen Jimson grin,
-an’ knowd he remembered he’d left out the <em>u</em> an’
-’ud spell it jest ez quick ez he got a chancet. I
-believed Perry was goin’ to say <em>a</em>, that it was all
-up with him an’ that Hannah Ciders knowd too
-late who she favored.</p>
-
-<p>“All o’ a sudden the door flew open an’ they
-was a cry: ‘Hoss thief! thieves! Some un’s run
-off with Teacher Jimson’s sleigh.’</p>
-
-<p>“You uns never seen sech a panic. The weemen
-jumped up an’ yelled. The men all piled outen
-the door. Jawhn Jimson climbed th’oo the
-winder, an’ Teacher Long dropped his spellin’
-book an’ followed. To my surprise Perry Muthersbaugh
-never moved. He jest stood there
-lookin’ at Hannah Ciders an’ smilin’ while she
-gazed back. I was gittin’ outen the winder among
-the last an’ turned to see ef Perry was ahint me&mdash;that’s
-how I noticed it. Fer three minutes them
-two stared at each other an’ I stared at them, not
-knowin’ what to make of it. Meantime the room
-was cleared. Outside we heard the sleigh-bells
-ringin’ ez the boys started off after the thieves;
-we heard Jawhn Jimson an’ Teacher Long callin’
-to ’em to go in this an’ that direction; we heard<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_27" id="Page_27">[27]</a></span>
-the weemen complainin’ because so many’d hev
-to walk home.</p>
-
-<p>“Jest then the rear winder, right back o’ where
-Perry was standin’, slid up an’ his young brother
-Sam stuck in his head. He looked ’round, an’
-he seen the coast was clear. Then he whispered,
-‘I give that ’larm in time,’ Perry, didn’t I?
-Teacher Jimson’s horse is hitched right here ahint
-the school-house, an’ you can take her home jest
-ez soon ez the last o’ these fools gits away.’</p>
-
-<p>“Perry wheeled round an’ run at the youngster,
-ketchin’ him be the collar an’ draggin’ him
-inter the room.</p>
-
-<p>“‘What you mean,’ sais he, shakin’ him like a
-rat. ‘What you mean be spoilin’ the bee?’</p>
-
-<p>“Sam begin to yowl. ‘I seen ye was stuck,’ he
-sais, ‘an’ I thot I’d help ye out.’</p>
-
-<p>“With that Perry th’owed his brother off into a
-corner o’ the room. Then he stood up straight
-an’ looked Hannah Ciders right in the eye.</p>
-
-<p>“‘He thot I was stuck,’ he sayd, steppin’ off
-the platform an’ walkin’ up to the girl. ‘But
-I ain’t. The last syllable’s <em>e-a-l-a-s</em>!</p>
-
-<p>“‘No,’ she answers quiet like. ‘It’s <em>e-a-l-i-s</em>&mdash;but
-that ain’t no difference.’”</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_28" id="Page_28">[28]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2 id="CHAPTER_III">CHAPTER III.<br />
-<span class="smaller"><i>Absalom Bunkel.</i></span></h2>
-
-<p>The Patriarch flattened his nose against the
-grimy windowpane and peered out into the
-storm.</p>
-
-<p>“Mighty souls!” he cried. “Jest look at it a-comin’
-down! Hed I a-knowd we was goin’ to
-hev it like this, you’d ’a’ seen me a-leavin’ home&mdash;you’d
-’a’ seen me a-leavin’ home.”</p>
-
-<p>The old man thoughtfully stroked his beard.
-He felt that he had met but just retribution for
-coming to the store to loaf. When an hour before
-he had awakened from a doze in his arm-chair,
-picked up his stick and hobbled to the village, the
-sky was clear and blue; not a cloud was visible
-anywhere, and the sun was blazing down on the
-fields of yellow grain that he overlooked from the
-porch of his little house on the hill. But the
-storm had been gathering its force unseen behind
-the neighboring mountains, piling black cloud on
-black cloud. And then, like an army charging on
-a sleeping enemy, it swept forth from its hiding-place,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_29" id="Page_29">[29]</a></span>
-amid the flash of lightning and the crash of
-thunder, and deluged the valley.</p>
-
-<p>“My, oh, my!” muttered the old man. “It
-serves me right. I ought to ’a’ knowd better.
-’Henever I runs down here fer a minute’s loaf, it
-rains; never a team comes ’long to give me a lift
-home, an’ I hes to paddle back in me leaky ole
-boots.”</p>
-
-<p>He hobbled to his chair by the empty stove,
-about which were gathered the men of the village,
-despite the fact that no fire blazed within and the
-cold weather was far ahead.</p>
-
-<p>“I hope the company ain’t displeasin’,” drawled
-the Chronic Loafer. He knocked the ashes out
-of his pipe, refilled and lighted it, and sprawled
-out upon the counter.</p>
-
-<p>“Not at all&mdash;at all. It’s the loafin’ I hate. I
-never could loaf jest right,” replied the Patriarch,
-glancing at the prostrate form.</p>
-
-<p>The Loafer gave no answer save a faint “Huh!”</p>
-
-<p>“Jest because a felly sets ’round the stove
-hain’t no sign he’s lazy, Grandpap,” said the
-Miller with warmth.</p>
-
-<p>“Fur be it from me from sayin’ so, boys&mdash;fur
-be it,” said the old man. “But ez I was sayin’ a
-while ago, I don’t want to git inter no sech habits
-ez Absalom Bunkel.”</p>
-
-<p>“Ab’slom Bunkel&mdash;Bunkel&mdash;Bunkel?” repeated
-the Tinsmith, punctuating his remark with puffs
-of tobacco smoke.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_30" id="Page_30">[30]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“Bunkel&mdash;Bunkel?” said the Storekeeper inquiringly,
-tapping the end of his nose with his
-pencil.</p>
-
-<p>“Who’s Abs’lom Bunkel?” the Loafer cried.</p>
-
-<p>“Absalom Bunkel was a man ez was nat’rally
-so lazy it was a credit to him every time he moved,”
-the Patriarch began. He fixed his stick firmly on
-the floor, piled his two fat hands on its big knob
-head, and leaned forward until his chin almost
-rested on his knuckles. “You uns knows the old
-lawg house that stands where the Big Run crosses
-the road over the mo’ntain. It’s all tumbled down
-now. They ain’t no daubin’ atween the lawgs;
-the chimbley’s fallen, the fence is gone, an’ the
-lot’s choked up with weeds. It’s a forlorn place
-to-day, but ’hen I was a lad it was jest about the
-slickest thing along the ridge yander. That’s
-where Absalom Bunkel lived, an’ his pap, an’ his
-pap’s pap lived afore him. Ezry Bunkel was a
-mean man, an’ he come nat’ral by his meanness,
-fer they never was one o’ the name who was
-knowed to buy anything he could borry or give
-away anything he could sell. So ’hen he died he
-left Absalom a neat little pile o’ about nine hundred
-dollars. An’ a fortunate thing it was fer the
-son, fer he’d ruther by fur set on the porch with the
-pangs o’hunger gnawin’ th’oo him, a-listenin’ to
-the birds an’ watchin’ the bees a-hummin’ over
-the sunflowers, than to ’a’ worked.</p>
-
-<p>“Now Absalom was afore my time, an’ I never<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_31" id="Page_31">[31]</a></span>
-seen him myself, but I’ve heard tell of him from
-my pap, an’ what my pap sayd was allus true&mdash;true
-ez gawspel it was. He otter ’a’ knowd all
-about it, too, fer he was a pall-bearer at Ezry’s
-funeral. Absalom was thirty-five year old ’hen
-that happened. He didn’t go off spendin’ his fortune&mdash;not
-much. He jest set right down in a
-rockin’ chair on the front porch an’ let his sister
-Nancy look after the place. Nance done the
-farmin’; Nance made the garden; Nance milked
-the cow; Nance done the housework an’ come to
-the store. He done nawthin’&mdash;absolute nawthin’.</p>
-
-<p>“He was never out o’ bed afore sun-up. Ef
-it was warm he’d set on the leetle porch all day
-lookin’ over the walley, watchin’ the folks goin’
-by an’ the birds swoopin’ th’oo the fiel’s, an’
-listenin’ to the dreamy hum o’ nature. Ef it was
-cold he’d loaf all day be the fireplace, bakin’ his
-shins. Sometim’s Nance ’ud go away fer a spell
-an’ fergit to leave him wood. Does he cut some
-fer himself like an ordinary man? Not him. He
-jest walks to the nearest possible fence-rail, kerrys
-it inter the house, puts one eend inter the fire
-an’ keeps pushin’ een ez it burns off. That’s the
-kind o’ a felly Absalom Bunkel was.</p>
-
-<p>“Now it happened that ’hen he’d been livin’
-this way tell his forty-fifth year ole Andy Crimmel
-tuk a placet about a miled beyant his. One
-nice afternoon ez Absalom set a-dozin’ on the
-porch, Andy’s dotter, Annie May, come trippin’<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_32" id="Page_32">[32]</a></span>
-down the road on her way to the store, lookin’
-pretty ez a pictur in her red sunbonnet, swingin’
-a basket an’ singin’ a melancholy piece. Absalom
-woke with a start an’ rubbed his heavy eyes.
-He got sight of her pink cheeks afore she ducked
-under her bonnet, fer ’hen she seen him she
-sudden stopped her singin’ an’ walked by a-lookin’
-over the walley. That one glance done Absalom
-Bunkel. He stayed awake tell she come back.</p>
-
-<p>“That night he didn’t eat no supper.</p>
-
-<p>“‘Nance,’ sais he to his sister, ‘how fur is it
-to Crimmel’s?’</p>
-
-<p>“‘Nigh onter a miled,’ sais she.</p>
-
-<p>“An’ he jest groaned, drawed his boots, tuk a
-candle an’ went up to bed.</p>
-
-<p>“Twicet a week all that summer Annie May
-Crimmel come a-singin’ down the road. An’
-Absalom, dozin’ on the porch, ’ud hear her voice
-tell she’d reach the edge o’ the woods. There
-she’d stop her song an’ go ploddin’ by, gazin’
-over the walley like he wasn’t about or wasn’t
-wuth lookin’ at. Absalom kept gittin’ fatter an’
-fatter from doin’ nawthin’, an’ it seemed to him
-like Annie May Crimmel was prettier every time
-she went to store. He was onrastless. He was
-onhappy. He knowd what was wrong, an’ he
-seen no cure, fer to him that girl walkin’ ’long
-the road not twenty rods from his house was like
-a bit o’ bread danglin’ jest beyant the reach o’ a
-starvin’ man.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_33" id="Page_33">[33]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“Perhaps you uns wonders why he didn’t go
-down an’ speak to her. That wasn’t Absalom’s
-way. He might ’a’ walked that fur to git warm.
-But to speak to a girl? Never.</p>
-
-<p>“Oncet he called to her, but she paid no attention,
-an’ hung her head bashful like, an’ walked
-on the faster.</p>
-
-<p>“‘Nance,’ sais he to his sister that night at
-supper, ‘I’ve kind o’ a notion fer Annie May
-Crimmel,’ he sais.</p>
-
-<p>“‘Hev you?’ sais she, lookin’ surprised, tho’
-of course she knowd it an’ fer weeks hed ben
-wonderin’ what ’ud become o’ her.</p>
-
-<p>“‘An’ mebbe,’ sais he, ‘you wouldn’t mind
-steppin’ over there to-morrow an’ tellin’ her.’</p>
-
-<p>“‘Umph,’ she sais, perkin’ up her nose. ‘You’ll
-see me a-gaddin’ round the walley settin’ up with
-the girls fer you!’</p>
-
-<p>“He set thinkin’ a spell. Then he sais, trem’lous
-like, ‘Nance, how fur is it to Crimmel’s?’</p>
-
-<p>“‘A miled to an inch,’ sais she.</p>
-
-<p>“He jest groaned an’ went off to bed agin.</p>
-
-<p>“They say that next day toward evenin’ Absalom
-was seen to rise from his chair; to hesitate;
-to set down; to get up agin an’ move toward the
-road. He got to the gate, pushed it half open,
-an’ leaned on it. Tell sunset he stood there,
-gazin’ wistful like toward Crimmel’s placet. Then
-Nance called him in fer supper.</p>
-
-<p>“Winter drove the lazy felly inter the house.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_34" id="Page_34">[34]</a></span>
-All day long he’d set be the windy watchin’ fer
-Annie May; an’ ez she passed he’d smile soft-like;
-’hen she was gone he’d look solemn agin.
-An’ all the time he kep’ gittin’ fatter an’ fatter,
-an’ more an’ more onrastless.</p>
-
-<p>“Winter broke an’ March went by. Apryl first
-was a fine warm day, so Absalom took his chair
-out on the porch an’ set there lookin’ down the
-ridge into the walley, where the men was a-plow-in’.
-All at oncet he heard a creakin’ o’ wheels
-an’ a rattle o’ gears that caused him to turn his
-eyes up the road. Outen the woods come a
-wagon piled high with furnitur’. It was a flittin’,
-the Crimmel’s flittin’, ez he knowd ’hen he seen
-Andy drivin’ an’ the Missus an’ Annie May
-ridin’ on the horses. Bunkel was stunned&mdash;clean
-stunned. The flittin’ went creakin’ past the house,
-him jest settin’ there starin’. He knowd what it
-meant to him. He knowd it was fer him jest the
-same ez the death of Annie May, but he couldn’t
-do nawthin’. The wagon swung ’round the bend
-an’ was out o’ sight.</p>
-
-<p>“‘Hen Absalom seen the last o’ the red bonnet
-flashin’ in the sun, he th’owed his hands to his
-head like they was a pain there. Sudden he
-jumped from his chair an’ run toward the road
-yellin’, ‘Hey! hey! Annie May!’</p>
-
-<p>“He tore th’oo the gate, down the hill, an’
-’round the turn. They was in sight agin.</p>
-
-<p>“‘Annie May!’ he called, ‘Annie May!’</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_35" id="Page_35">[35]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“The wagon stopped. The girl climbed offen
-the horse an’ run toward him, stretchin’ out her
-hands an’ cryin’, ‘Absalom, Absalom!’</p>
-
-<p>“‘Hen he seen her comin’ he set right down in
-the road to wait fer her. Her arms fell to her
-side, an’ she stopped.</p>
-
-<p>“‘Annie May,’ he called, ‘come here. I’ve
-somethin’ to tell yer.’</p>
-
-<p>“She turned an’ walked with hangin’ head back
-to the wagon. She climbed on her horse, an’ a
-minute later the flittin’ disappeared in the hollow
-at the foot o’ the ridge.”</p>
-
-<p>The Patriarch arose from his chair, walked
-slowly to the door and stood there looking out
-into the rain. The men about the stove gazed in
-astonished silence at his back.</p>
-
-<p>The Miller spoke first. “Well, Grandpap?”</p>
-
-<p>“Well?” said the old man, wheeling about.</p>
-
-<p>“What happened?”</p>
-
-<p>“Who sayd anything was a-goin’ to happen?”
-snapped the Patriarch.</p>
-
-<p>“What become o’ Absalom?” asked the Storekeeper
-timidly.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, he died o’ over-exertin’,” said the Chronic
-Loafer, wearily, as he threw himself back on the
-counter.</p>
-
-<p>The Patriarch gave no heed to this remark, but
-raising his right hand and emphasizing each word
-with a solemn wag of the forefinger, said, “Boys,
-I don’t know what happened. Pap never sayd.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_36" id="Page_36">[36]</a></span>
-But now, ’henever I thinks o’ a lazy man, I picturs
-Absalom Bunkel, settin’ there in the road,
-his fat legs stretched out afore him, his fat arms
-proppin’ up that unwieldy body o’ hisn, his eyes
-an’ his ears a-strainin’ to see an’ hear th’oo the
-darkness that gathered ’round him what he
-might ’a’ seen an’ heard allus hed he only hed the
-ambition to ’a’ gone a few steps furder.”</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_37" id="Page_37">[37]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2 id="CHAPTER_IV">CHAPTER IV.<br />
-<span class="smaller"><i>The Missus.</i></span></h2>
-
-<p>“A man without a missus is like an engyne
-without a governor&mdash;he either goes too slow or
-too fast,” said the Chronic Loafer.</p>
-
-<p>“Mighty souls!” cried the Miller. “What in
-the name o’ common sense put that idee into yer
-head?”</p>
-
-<p>“It was planted there be accident, cultiwated
-be experience, an’ to-day it jest blossomed,” was
-the reply.</p>
-
-<p>The Loafer had come in from a morning on the
-ridges hunting rabbits. His old muzzle loader
-leaned against the counter and his hound Tiger
-was sitting at his side, his head resting on the
-master’s knee and his solitary eye watching every
-movement of the thin, grizzled face, which was
-almost hidden by a blue cloth cap, with a low
-hanging visor, and ear-tabs. The Loafer removed
-the tabs and stuffed them into his pocket. Then
-he laid his hand on his dog’s head and stroked it.</p>
-
-<p>The ticking of the clock, which had a place on
-a shelf between two jars of stick-candy, accentuated<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_38" id="Page_38">[38]</a></span>
-the long silence that followed. Tiger seemed
-to feel that the hush boded ill to his lord, and
-cocked one ear and uttered a low growl.</p>
-
-<p>The Teacher pointed his forefinger at the
-Loafer and said, “I judge that you intended to
-imply that havin’ a governor you run regular.
-Some engines, you know, run regular but very
-slow.”</p>
-
-<p>“An’ some runs wery fast,” was the retort.
-“An’ they buzzes pretty loud ’thout doin’ a tremendous
-amount o’ labor.”</p>
-
-<p>“Now you’re gettin’ personal and&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>“Boys, boys!” The Patriarch was rapping for
-order. “Don’t git quarrelin’ over the question
-of engynes. Fer my part the plain ole waterwheel
-beats ’em holly.”</p>
-
-<p>The Miller tilted over on his nail keg and
-tapped the Loafer on the elbow.</p>
-
-<p>“Tell me,” he said. “Where did ye git that
-idee? It sounds almanacky.”</p>
-
-<p>“That idee was ginirated this mornin’ ez me
-an’ Tige was roamin’ ’round Gum hill tryin’ to
-start a rabbit. They bein’ no rabbits, me an’
-Tige set down an’ gunned for idees. It was
-peaceful an’ nice there on the ridge. The woods
-hed the reg’lar cheery November rattle, like a
-dried up, jolly ole man. The wind was a-shakin’
-the dead leaves, an’ they was a-chipperin’ an’
-chirpin’. The pignuts was jumpin’ from the
-limbs, sloshin’ th’oo the branches an’ tumblin’<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_39" id="Page_39">[39]</a></span>
-’round the ground. Overhead a couple of crows
-was a-floppin’ about an’ whoopin’ like a lot of
-boys on skates, fer the air was bitin’ like, an’ put
-life in ye.</p>
-
-<p>“Ez I set there on a lawg I minded a felly I
-oncet heard up to liter’ry society, who read a
-piecet ’bout how the year was dyin’ fer autumn
-was at hand. I noticed Tige ez he was rollin’
-’round chasin’ pignuts, an’ I sais to meself, sais I:
-‘Dyin’? Why, no. It’s only in its second chil’hood.’
-An’ I looked down the hill into the gut
-an’ seen the smoke curlin’ up th’oo the trees in
-the ole Horner clearin’. That’s where I got the
-Missus. Then it was that that idee ’bout engynes
-an’ weemen blossomed.</p>
-
-<p>“Before the first time I ever seen that clearin’ I
-kind o’ lived in jerks. Sometimes I’d run hard
-an’ fast, an’ ’ud make a heap o’ noise, an’ smash
-all the machinery. Then I’d hev to lay off a
-month or so to git patched up agin. My pap
-was a cute man. He seen right th’oo me an’ he
-knowd what was wrong. ‘What you need is a
-governor,’ sayd he. An’ I got one. Sence then
-I’ve ben runnin’ smooth an’ reg’lar an’ not wery
-fast. But I hain’t broke no machinery, an’ I’ve
-never stopped entirely.</p>
-
-<p>“Now it went pretty hard with Pap after
-Mother died, fer he never did like housework an’
-was continual beggin’ me to git merried. He
-was a-naggin’ an’ naggin’ all the time, petickler<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_40" id="Page_40">[40]</a></span>
-’hen he was washin’ dishes. He’d p’int out certain
-girls in the walley that he thot ’ud hev me,
-an’ he’d argy that I otter step up like a leetle
-man an’ speak me mind to ’em. He even went
-so fur as to ’low he’d give me the whole placet
-ef unly I’d git some un to take the housework
-offen his hands. First it was Mary Potzer. She
-hed five hundred dollars an’ was a special good
-match, but her looks was agin her. She was
-Omish, an’ like most Omish folk was square built,
-’cept fer bein’ rounded off a leetle on top. The
-ole man wouldn’t give me no peace tell I ast her.
-I didn’t dast do that, but I tol’ him I hed, an’ that
-she sayd she ’ud take me ef he kep’ on doin’ the
-cookin’. That kind o’ quieted him fer a spell, an’
-some months passed afore he tuk up the subject
-agin. Next he got to backin’ Rosey Simpson.
-She was tolable good-lookin’ an’ lively, he sayd,
-an’ I ’lowed he was right, unly she was too lively
-fer me. I minded the time I seen her sail inter
-Bumbletree’s Durham bull ’hen he’d butted a
-petickler pet sheep o’ hers. She made the ole
-beast feel so humble that I concided she might
-do fer a defender but never fer a wife. Next it
-was Sue Kindler an’ then Sairy Somthin’-else,
-tell I was clean tired o’ the whole idee.</p>
-
-<p>“One night ’hen he’d ben pesterin’ me most
-mighty bad I gits mad an’ sais, ‘See here, I ain’t
-courtin’ trouble. I’m comf’table an’ happy ez I
-am,’ I sais. ‘I’ve got you an’ Major&mdash;Major was<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_41" id="Page_41">[41]</a></span>
-the dog&mdash;so why do I want to go settin’ a trap
-’hen I can’t be sure what I’m goin’ to catch?’</p>
-
-<p>“‘My boy,’ Pap answered, ‘use the proper bait
-an’ you’ll git the right game.’</p>
-
-<p>“Now Pap use to git off some good uns oncet
-in a while, but I wasn’t in fer givin’ him the
-credit. I scatted the whole plan. I didn’t know
-so much then ez I knows now. Still, sometim’s I
-’low that ef it hedn’t ’a’ ben fer Major, I might o’
-dissypinted the ole man anyhow. Major was a
-coon dog, an’ a mighty fine one, bein’ half setter,
-quarter houn’, an’ last quarter coach. Me an’
-him was great buddies. Wherever we went he
-allus hed an’ eye out fer game. He knowd the
-seasons, too. Ef it was September he was watchin’
-fer squirrels; October, fer patridges; November,
-rabbits; springtime, girls. It was in the spring
-’hen I happened to hear Si Bumbletree speakin’
-o’ a petickler fine lot o’ saplin’s fer walkin’ sticks
-that was growin’ on the chestnut flats at the foot
-o’ the mo’ntain jest above Andy Horner’s clearin’.
-So I sais to meself, I sais, it bein’ a fine warm
-day, I’ll jest mosey up there an’ git me one o’
-them staffs. It was a good th’ee mile up the
-walley an’ over the ridge an’ acrosst the gut, but
-I found the placet all right an’ cut me a nice
-straight cane. I was comin’ home, peelin’ off the
-bark an’ not thinkin’ o’ anything in petickler, ’hen
-I hear Major givin’ a low growl. I looked up.
-We was passin’ Horner’s clearin’. There stood<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_42" id="Page_42">[42]</a></span>
-the dog, foreleg lifted, tail straight out, nose
-pintin’ th’oo the blackberry bushes ’long the
-fence.</p>
-
-<p>“‘There is somethin’ pretty important,’ I sais
-to meself.</p>
-
-<p>“An’ with that I walks up to the hedge an’
-peeks over.</p>
-
-<p>“Settin’ on the groun’, weedin’ the onion-patch,
-was the prettiest girl I ever laid eyes on. She
-looked up from een under her sunbonnet outen a
-pair o’ sparklin’ blue eyes, an’ showed two rosy
-cheeks with a perk leetle nose atween ’em. Major
-he hed ducked th’oo a hole in the fence an’ come
-out on the other side, an’ was standin’ solemn-like,
-lookin’ at her. All o’ a sudden he begin jumpin’
-up an’ down, first on his front legs an’ then on his
-hint legs, archin’ his neck, waggin’ his tail, an’
-showin’ his teeth like he was smilin’ all over.</p>
-
-<p>“‘That’s a nice dog you hev,’ sais the girl, kind
-o’ musical. She had stopped her weedin’ an’ was
-settin’ up lookin’ at the houn’.</p>
-
-<p>“‘Yes,’ sais I, ‘he is a tolable nice animal.’</p>
-
-<p>“Then I thinks to meself, ‘Major seems to like
-her; I wonder how she’d suit Pap.’</p>
-
-<p>“Soon ez that come into me mind I seen it was
-time I got out. I turned an’ walked down the
-road harder than I’d ever walked afore.</p>
-
-<p>“That night I couldn’t eat no supper. I’d
-never felt that same way an’ it worrit me. I knowd
-no cause fer it, yit I kind o’ thot I didn’t keer<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_43" id="Page_43">[43]</a></span>
-whether I lived or died. It worrit Pap too. He
-’lowed he’d hev to powwow me.</p>
-
-<p>“‘How are ye goin’ to powwow me,’ sais I, ‘’hen
-ye don’t know what I’m sufferin’ from? What I’ve
-got ain’t nawthin’, yit I wish it was somethin’ jest
-to take me mind offen it.’</p>
-
-<p>“That was ez near ez I could git to the disease.
-Pap leaned back in his cheer an’ laughed like he’d
-die. ’Hen he’d finished splittin’ his sides he come
-over to where I was settin’ be the fire.</p>
-
-<p>“‘What you needs,’ sais he, ‘is to go out an’
-look at the moon.’</p>
-
-<p>“Before that I’d never thot o’ the moon ’cept
-ez a kind o’ lantern to hunt coons by. But ’hen
-I tuk his adwice, an’ lit me pipe, an’ went out an’
-set on the pump trough, watchin’ the ole felly
-come climbin’ over the ridges, all yeller an’ smilin’
-an’ friendly, I seen he hed a new uset. Whatever
-it was I’d ben sufferin’ from kind o’ passed away
-an’ left me ca’m an’ peaceful. Me brain seemed
-like a pool o’ wotter in a wood, all still-like, ’cept
-fer a few ripples o’ idees on the surface. How
-long I set there I don’t know. I might ’a’
-ben there all night hed the ole man not called
-me een.</p>
-
-<p>“The first thing I seen ez I went into the house,
-was Major crouchin’ be the fire watchin’ it wery
-intent. His supper lay beside him. Not a bone
-hed ben teched.</p>
-
-<p>“‘Whatever it is,’ sais I, ‘it’s ketchin’.’</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_44" id="Page_44">[44]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“They was nawthin’ doin’ ’round the house
-next day after breakfast, so I minded that Pap
-hedn’t a walkin’-stick. I concided I’d mosey up
-to the chestnut flats an’ cut me a staff fer the ole
-man. Major went along, an’ we got a petickler
-nice piece o’ kinnykinnick wood. On the road
-home we happened to pass be Horner’s clearin’.
-Ez we was opposite the house I heard some un
-a-choppin’ an’ seen the chips flyin’ up over the
-hedge. Feelin’ kind o’ thirsty I stopped een to
-git a drink o’ wotter. There she was a-splittin’
-firewood. ’Hen I explained, she pinted out the
-spring an’ went on with her work. Ye might ’a’
-s’posed we was unly two coon dogs hed dropped
-een fer a call, she was so cool. But I wasn’t fer
-goin’ tell I’d at least passed the time a day, so I
-fixed meself on a block o’ oak with Major beside
-me.</p>
-
-<p>“‘What are ye doin’?’ I asts, be way o’ openin’
-up.</p>
-
-<p>“‘It doesn’t look like ez tho’ I was knittin’,
-does it?’ she sais kind o’ sharp.</p>
-
-<p>“With that she drove the axe th’oo a stick o’
-hickory ez big ’round ez my body. It was all I
-could git outen her. So me an’ Major jest set
-there watchin’ quiet-like. It was amazin’ the way
-she could chop wood&mdash;amazin’&mdash;an’ I enjoyed it
-most a mighty well. The axe ’ud swish th’oo the
-air over her head; down it ’ud come on the lawg,
-straight an’ true; out ’ud fly a th’ee-cornered<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_45" id="Page_45">[45]</a></span>
-chip ez neat ez ef it hed ben sawed. She never
-looked one way nor the other, nor paid no attention,
-but kep’ a-pilin’ up firewood tell they was
-enough to last a week. Then she stuck the axe
-in the choppin’ block and walked inter the house.
-Me an’ Major moved on.</p>
-
-<p>“That night I couldn’t git no sleep. The ole
-trouble come on agin, an’ I went out an’ looked
-at the moon tell final I dozed off in the pump-trough.
-’Hen I woke next mornin’ I knowd what
-was wrong. I knowd that what I hed was somethin’
-I’d be better without, yit hed I to do it over
-agin I wouldn’t hev awoided it. I knowd I could
-cut all the saplin’s offen the chestnut flats an’ I
-wouldn’t git no ease. ’Hen I went over the ridge
-that day I didn’t try to fool meself cuttin’ staffs.
-No sir. I walked straight fer the clearin’. Ez I
-come near the house I whistled pretty loud to
-give warnin’. At the gate I looked een. No one
-was ’round. I thot to meself she was in the house,
-so I whistled louder. Major seemed to understand
-too, an’ begin barkin’ to beat all. But it
-hedn’t no effect. That kind o’ made me feel
-down like an’ me heart weighed wery heavy ez I
-set on the stoop to wait fer her. All o’ a sudden
-I hear a rat-tat-tat comin’ from the barn. There
-she was on the roof, a-nailin’ shingles. I walked
-down an’ looked up at her.</p>
-
-<p>“‘Hello!’ I calls.</p>
-
-<p>“‘Hello!’ sais she. With that she drove five<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_46" id="Page_46">[46]</a></span>
-shingle nails one after another, never payin’ no
-attention.</p>
-
-<p>“‘What are ye doin’?’ I asts ez I fixed meself
-on a chicken-coop an’ lighted me pipe. It’s
-pretty hard talkin’ to a girl ’hen she’s mendin’ a
-barn roof, an’ ez I didn’t git no answer I stood up
-an’ yelled at the top o’ me woice, ‘What are ye
-doin’?’</p>
-
-<p>“‘Well,’ sais she, ‘I s’pose it does look ez tho’
-I’m playin’ the melodium, don’t it?’</p>
-
-<p>“She wasn’t in a wery sociable turn o’ mind,
-but I’m one o’ those felly’s that oncet he gits his
-plow in the furrow don’t pull it out tell he has at
-least gone oncet ’round the field. So I jest set
-there smokin’ while she kep’ on workin’. By an’
-by the dinner-bells over in the walley begin to
-ring, an’ she come down. She never sayd a word
-’hen she reached the ground, but I wasn’t to be
-put back that ’ay. I steps up wery polite an’ gits
-her hammer an’ kerrys it inter the house fer her.
-Weemen allus likes them leetle attentions. She
-did any way, fer she smiled, an’ ’hen I ’lowed I
-must be goin’, she sayd good-by. An’ I went.</p>
-
-<p>“That night ez I set on the pump-trough with
-Major beside me, watchin’ the moon ez it come
-climbin’ up over the ridges, I hear plain an’
-distinct the rat-tat-tat o’ the hammer an’ the
-shingle nails. I leaned back agin the pump,
-closed me eyes an’ drank in the music. Soon I
-seen it all agin&mdash;the barnyard with the razor-back<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_47" id="Page_47">[47]</a></span>
-pig an’ the broken-horned cow browsin’ ’round;
-the barn, so ole an’ tumble-down that the hay was
-stickin’ out all over it like it growed on the boards;
-the roof, half a dozen pigeons cooin’ on one end,
-an’ her on the other tackin’ away. What a pictur
-it ’ud made fer a reg’lar hand-paintin’!</p>
-
-<p>“After breakfast Pap lighted his pipe, leaned
-back in his cheer an’ asted me, ‘How’s that ailment
-o’ yours gittin’ now?’</p>
-
-<p>“‘Ailment?’ sais I, cool ez ye please. ‘Why,
-I found it didn’t amount to nawthin’. It’s all
-gone.’</p>
-
-<p>“Pap smoked a bit. He was blinkin’ like
-somethin’ amused him powerful.</p>
-
-<p>“‘By the way,’ he sais, ‘I was up past Horner’s
-clearin’ yestidy an’ I seen that humly dotter o’
-Andy’s a&mdash;&mdash;’</p>
-
-<p>“It was so quick an’ sudden, I forgot meself.
-Never afore hed I felt so peculiarly, so almighty
-mad.</p>
-
-<p>“‘See here,’ I cries, jumpin’ up an’ liftin’ me
-cheer, ‘don’t you dast talk o’ Andy Horner’s
-dotter that ’ay,’ I sais. ‘Ef ye do&mdash;&mdash;’</p>
-
-<p>“I stopped, fer he’d leaned back, an’ was lookin’
-at the ceilin’ an’ laughin’ an’ laughin’.</p>
-
-<p>“‘I thot ye hedn’t no ailment,’ he sais.</p>
-
-<p>“Be the twinkle in his eye I seen how he’d
-fooled me, an’ I set down feelin’ smaller than a
-bunty hen.</p>
-
-<p>“‘Ye see,’ sais he, ‘I was comin’ th’oo the flats<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_48" id="Page_48">[48]</a></span>
-this mornin’ after I’d ben fishin’ trout up in the
-big run, an’ ez I passed Horner’s I noticed a most
-remarkable sight. There was Pet Horner a-nailin’
-shingles on the barn roof while a strange man set
-on a chicken-coop smokin’. I sais to meself, I
-sais, ‘Ef that’s the way he gits a missus, I’ll do
-the housework tell me dyin’ day.’</p>
-
-<p>“The ole man wasn’t laughin’ now. He was
-on a subject that was wery dear to him. His
-woice was husky with earnestness.</p>
-
-<p>“‘Why don’t ye spruce up?’ he sais. ‘Can’t
-ye chop wood fer her, or churn fer her, or pick
-some stone offen the clearin’ fer her? Unly do
-somethin’ to show her ye ain’t the laziest man in
-the walley. Show her your right side.’</p>
-
-<p>“‘Pap,’ sais I, ‘’hen my Missus takes me I
-wants her to know me jest ez I am, not as I otter
-be. Ef there’s any lettin’ on afore the weddin’
-there’ll be no lettin’ up after it.’</p>
-
-<p>“With that I gits up an’ walks outen the
-house, whistlin’ fer Major.</p>
-
-<p>“Him an’ me went up to Horner’s together.
-We found her churnin’, an’ set down in the grass
-an’ watched. Ez I watched I got to thinkin’
-over what the ole man hed sayd. I seen that
-perhaps he was right; that I’d git her quicker
-ef I worked harder. The pictur of gittin’ her
-quicker almost made me git up an’ do the
-churnin’. But I thot agin. Ef I churned now
-I’d hev to churn allus or else I’d be cheatin’ her.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_49" id="Page_49">[49]</a></span>
-Ef she knowd she was takin’ a man who was agin
-the wery suggestion’ she’d never hev no cause to
-complain. So I jest lay there chewin’ a straw an’
-lookin’.</p>
-
-<p>“That’s the way I done me courtin’ day after
-day all that summer. It was slow. Mighty, but
-it was slow! Sometim’s I got discouraged an’
-thot the eend was never comin’ an’ I’d better
-give up. Then she’d drop a word or a look or
-somethin’ that kind o’ kep’ me hangin’ on. It
-seemed like she was gittin’ used to me. We seldom
-sayd anything, fer she was a thinkin’ woman.
-Fer me, I remembered how Pap allus allowed it
-was less dangerous fer a man to put a boy in
-charge o’ his saw-mill than to let his heart run his
-tongue. So I set an’ sayd nawthin’, but looked
-a heap.</p>
-
-<p>“It was October ’hen I concided I’d make a
-trial, fer even ef nawthin’ come of it no petickler
-harm ’ud be done. So I ast her. She jest
-th’owed back her head, folded her arms an’
-looked at me.</p>
-
-<p>“‘Well?’ I sais.</p>
-
-<p>“She looked a leetle harder an’ a leetle sterner.
-Her eyes kind o’ snapped.</p>
-
-<p>“‘Well?’ I sais agin.</p>
-
-<p>“‘I hevn’t no petickler dislike,’ sais she, ‘but
-ye ain’t my idee of a man. A man should move
-sometim’s.’</p>
-
-<p>“‘Pet,’ I sais, ‘I know I ain’t much on leetle<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_50" id="Page_50">[50]</a></span>
-things, but wait tell they’s big things to do.
-Then I’ll startle ye!’</p>
-
-<p>“I turned an’ walked out o’ the gate an’ ’long
-the road toward home.</p>
-
-<p>“She didn’t hev to wait long. That wery night
-ez I set on the porch, I seen a big snake o’ fire
-come pokin’ his head over the mo’ntain top to
-the north’ard of us. Fer a time he laid ’round in
-the huckleberry shelf there, rollin’ an’ floppin’
-about the bushes, like he was takin’ in the walley
-an’ wonderin’ what was the easiest way down the
-side to the chestnut flats where they was big piles
-o’ leaves, laurel bushes dry ez chips, an’ hundreds
-o’ dead trees, all waitin’ to be devoured. Mighty
-fine the ole snake looked, an’ a heap o’ pleasure
-it give me watchin’ him.</p>
-
-<p>“The thin line o’ fire begin to spread ez it adwanced,
-an’ soon the whole side o’ the mo’ntain
-was ablaze. It was jest a solid bed o’ red. Now
-an’ then the flames ’ud jump to the top o’ some
-ole pine, the tree ’ud beat wild like, to an’ fro,
-tryin’ to shake ’em off, an’ showers o’ sparks ’ud
-go whirlin’ away inter the sky.</p>
-
-<p>“‘Mighty souls!’ I sais to meself. ‘It’s jest
-like a monstrous big band festival ’hen all the
-boys is out with torches an’ they hes a bonfire
-an’ fireworks an’ music.’</p>
-
-<p>“Music? I hear agin the rat-tat-tat o’ the
-hammer an’ the shingle nails; an’ I thot o’ her.</p>
-
-<p>“The fire hed reached the flats. It was movin’<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_51" id="Page_51">[51]</a></span>
-right on the clearin’ where she was all alone, fer
-Andy was workin’ in the saw-mill in Windy Gap.</p>
-
-<p>“You uns otter seen me an’ Major skippin’ up
-the lane then. They was no loafin’ about it.
-Never oncet did we stop tell we reached the ridge.
-There we left the road an’ cut th’oo the fiel’s.
-Soon we was over them an’ in the woods. We
-stumbled on an’ on, tumblin’ over lawgs an’
-stones, an’ fallin’ inter bushes tell we reached
-the top o’ the hill an’ looked right down inter
-the gut.</p>
-
-<p>“There we stopped, fer we was spelled like&mdash;me
-an’ Major&mdash;an’ jest stood an’ stared. The
-smoke filled the whole leetle walley. Th’oo it
-we could see the glare o’ the burnin’ chestnut
-flats. Big tongues o’ flame was shootin’ up an’
-lickin’ ’round in the air. We could hear the
-snappin’ an’ crashin’ o’ the trees. We could
-hear the scream o’ the wild cats ez they was
-tearin’ fer the open country. A coon run right
-inter Major, an’ scampered away agin, snarlin’,
-but the hound never oncet lifted his eyes offen
-the gut. A loud snortin’ startled me, an’ a
-razor-backed pig come gallopin’ over the hill.
-Then they was a bellerin’ an’ a crashin’ o’ bushes,
-below us. The broken-horned cow run pantin’
-up the ridge, an’ by us an’ on th’oo the woods.
-’Hen me an Major seen her we jumped for’a’d
-together an’ tore down th’oo the blindin’ smoke
-to the clearin’.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_52" id="Page_52">[52]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“She was standin’ in the doorway, her head
-buried in her apron, cryin’ like her heart ’ud break.
-The minute I set eyes on her I forgot all about
-the fire an’ thot unly o’ her. I jest stood there
-awkward an’ looked at the girl, fer I was spelled
-agin, unly worse.</p>
-
-<p>“‘Pet,’ I sais, after a bit, ‘what’s wrong?’</p>
-
-<p>“‘Wrong,’ she cries th’oo her apron. ‘They’s
-all gone&mdash;the cow, the pig, the chickens&mdash;gone
-fer the walley. Soon the clearin’ ’ll go too.’</p>
-
-<p>“With that she raised her hand an’ pinted
-th’oo the woods, over the flats to the solid wall
-o’ fire.</p>
-
-<p>“Then I laughed. An’ I hed the right to
-laugh, fer ez I looked at them flames dartin’
-among the trees it seemed like they was the best
-friends I ever had.</p>
-
-<p>“‘It’s mean to cheat sech good fellers out o’
-sech a nice clearin’,’ I sais to meself ez I run along
-the wood road puttin’ the torch to the dry leaves.
-‘It’s mean, but I can’t spend the rest o’ me life
-settin’ on the pump-trough watchin’ the moon.’</p>
-
-<p>“An’ cheat ’em I did. The leaves an’ the
-under-brush cot like powder, an’ the counter-fire
-went runnin’ over the flats towards the mo’ntain
-to tell the ole fire snakes that it wasn’t no uset to
-try to git to the clearin’ fer they was no path to
-it ’cept over ashes.</p>
-
-<p>“We stood there in the wood-road watchin’ it&mdash;Pet
-on one side, then Major, then me. Fer a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_53" id="Page_53">[53]</a></span>
-long time we sayd nawthin’, tell I couldn’t stand
-it no more.</p>
-
-<p>“‘Pet,’ sais I, wery abrupt, ‘do you think now
-I’m so awful slow?’</p>
-
-<p>“‘It ain’t them ez runs fastest allus goes the
-straightest an’ truest,’ she answers.</p>
-
-<p>“It wasn’t wery much to say. Any girl might
-’a’ done jest the same thing. But from the way
-she looked, I knowd I’d got my Missus.”</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_54" id="Page_54">[54]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2 id="CHAPTER_V">CHAPTER V.<br />
-<span class="smaller"><i>The Awfullest Thing.</i></span></h2>
-
-<p>The Chronic Loafer sat upon the anvil. A
-leather apron was tied about his neck, and behind
-him stood the Blacksmith, nipping at his great
-shock of hair with a tiny pair of scissors. He
-was facing the Tinsmith and the Miller, who had
-climbed up on the carpenter bench, and by
-twisting his neck at the risk of his balance, he
-could see the tall, thin man standing by the mule
-which the helper was shoeing. The stranger had
-hair that reached to his shoulders, a clean-shaven
-upper lip, a long beard and a benign aspect that
-denoted him a Dunkard. He had been telling a
-few stories of the recent events in Raccoon Valley,
-whence he hailed.</p>
-
-<p>“So it ain’t sech a slow-goin’, out-o’-the-way
-placet ez you unsez think&mdash;still,” he said.</p>
-
-<p>The Blacksmith thoughtfully turned to address
-him.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, stranger&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>“Ow&mdash;ow!” cried the Loafer. “Is you a
-barber or a butcher?”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_55" id="Page_55">[55]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“Sights!” exclaimed the worthy smith. “Now
-that was a jag I give ye, wasn’t it?”</p>
-
-<p>He resumed his task with redoubled vigor.
-The Loafer closed his eyes and commenced to
-sputter.</p>
-
-<p>“Mighty souls! Go easy. Are you tryin’ to
-choke me?”</p>
-
-<p>“Sights!” said the other in apologetic tones,
-“I didn’t notice. Now I did come near chokin’
-ye, didn’t I? I was interested in Raccoon Walley.”</p>
-
-<p>Then he began to clip very slowly.</p>
-
-<p>The Loafer opened one eye cautiously and fixed
-it on the stranger.</p>
-
-<p>“What was that awful thing I heard ye tellin’
-’bout snakes, jest afore I was smothered under
-that last hay-load o’ hair?”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, hoop-snakes,” replied the Dunkard. He
-paused from his work of brushing the flies from
-the mule’s legs with a horse-tail. “We hev plenty
-o’ them ’round our placet. They don’t trouble
-no one tho’ tell ye bother them. Then they’re
-awful.”</p>
-
-<p>He turned his attention to the beast’s hoofs and
-began sweeping them. A smile was lurking about
-the corners of his mouth.</p>
-
-<p>“Did ye ever run agin any o’ these hoop&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>The Blacksmith’s query was cut short by a loud
-“Ouch!”</p>
-
-<p>“See here,” said the Loafer with emphasis.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_56" id="Page_56">[56]</a></span>
-“Either he’ll hev to quit tellin’ stories or I quit
-gittin’ me hair cut.” Then to the stranger, “Is
-hoop-snakes so wery pisonous?”</p>
-
-<p>“Pisonous!” replied the Dunkard. “Well, I
-should say they was. One o’ the awfullest things
-I ever seen was jest the ozzer day ’hen I was
-workin’ in the fiel’. All o’ a suddent one o’ these
-wipers jumps outen the hay an’ strikes. I seen
-it jest in time to step aside. Its fangs struck the
-han’le o’ me fork.”</p>
-
-<p>The stranger fell to brushing flies again.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, what happened that&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>“There ye go,” the Loafer cried, ducking forward
-and almost tumbling from the anvil. “Keep
-your eye on my head an’ not on every Tom, Dick
-an’ Harry in the shop.” He readjusted himself
-on his perch and blew away a bunch of hair that
-had settled on his nose.</p>
-
-<p>“What happened?” he inquired, fixing his
-least exposed eye on the man from Raccoon
-Valley.</p>
-
-<p>“Quick ez a flash the han’le o’ my pitch-fork
-swole up tell it was thick ez my arm.”</p>
-
-<p>The Dunkard had fixed his gaze intently on
-the forefeet of the mule and was beating them
-industriously with the horse-tail.</p>
-
-<p>The smith wheeled about abruptly and gazed
-at the stranger.</p>
-
-<p>“That was an awful thing to experience,” he
-said. But there was a ring of doubt in his voice.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_57" id="Page_57">[57]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>The Loafer peered over his shoulder and ventured.
-“Yes. It was the worst jag yit. But I
-don’t mind. I’m gittin’ accustomed.”</p>
-
-<p>The rattle of the pile of wheels upon which
-the G. A. R. Man was sitting announced that the
-veteran was getting restless and was preparing for
-action. For a long time he had been smoking in
-silence, listening to the strange tales of the strange
-man from Raccoon Valley. Now he spoke.</p>
-
-<p>“If your story is true then that was an awful
-thing.” He seemed to be weighing each word.
-“Still, it wasn’t so awful ez a thing that happened
-to me durin’ the war.”</p>
-
-<p>“There ye are agin,” cried the Loafer. “Can’t
-a man tell a story ’thout you tryin’ to go him one
-better? I don’t believe ye was in the war anyway.”</p>
-
-<p>“Don’t I git a pension?” The veteran closed
-one eye and stuck out his lower jaw threateningly.</p>
-
-<p>“That ain’t no sign,” ventured the Miller from
-the carpenter bench.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, what fer a sign does you unsez want?”
-roared the G. A. R. Man. “Does you expect a
-felly to go th’oo life carryin’ a musket? Ef ye
-does&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>“See here,” said the Blacksmith, “youse fellys
-is gittin’ that mule all excited. Ef you’re goin’
-to quarrel you’d better go outside where there’s
-lots o’ room fer ye to run away in.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_58" id="Page_58">[58]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“Now&mdash;now&mdash;now!” said the Dunkard, wagging
-the horse-tail at the company. “Don’t git
-fightin’. Ef he knows anything awfuller then that
-hoop-snake wenture let him out with it.”</p>
-
-<p>“I do,” said the veteran. “But I don’t perpose
-to hev it drug outen me fer you uns to hoot
-at.”</p>
-
-<p>His tone was pacific, and his companions
-promised not to hoot.</p>
-
-<p>“The awfullest thing I ever hed to do with,”
-he said, “was down in front o’ Richmon’ durin’
-the war. Our retchment&mdash;the Bloody Pennsylwany&mdash;was
-posted kind o’ out like from the rest
-o’ the army. We lay there fer th’ee weeks doin’
-nawthin’ but eatin’, sleepin’, drinkin’ an’ listenin’
-to the roar o’ the guns over to the front. Still it
-wasn’t pleasant, fer we was allus expectin’ somethin’
-to happen. It’s a heap sight better to hev
-somethin’ happenin’ then to be waitin’ fer it to
-come. But final it come.</p>
-
-<p>“One mornin’ at daybreak the guard was bein’
-changed, an’ down on one post they found the
-picket dead, but not a mark was they on him. It
-looked wery queer. We’d seen no enemy fer a
-week an’ yit here was a felly killed plumb on his
-post, within stone th’ow of our camp. It made
-the boys feel clammy like, I tell ye, an’ they
-wasn’t many a-hankerin’ to go on that beat at
-night. It was a lonely placet, anyway, right on
-the edge o’ a leetle clump o’ woods in a holler<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_59" id="Page_59">[59]</a></span>
-th’oo which run a creek, gurglin’ in a way that
-made ye creep from your heel-taps to your hat.
-But the post hed to be covered. Ez luck ’ud hev
-it, my tent-mate, Jim Miggins, ez nicet a man ez
-ever shouldered a musket, was stationed there.
-Next mornin’ the relief goes around, an’ Jim Miggins
-is lyin’ dead be the stream&mdash;not a mark on
-him nowhere. Still they was no sign o’ the
-enemy, an’ we’d a clean sweep o’ fiel’s five miles
-acrosst the country. Mebbe we wasn’t puzzled.”</p>
-
-<p>“Why didn’t the general put a whole regiment
-in them woods an’ stop it?” asked the Loafer.</p>
-
-<p>“That wasn’t tactics,” answered the veteran.
-“Ye may think you knows better how to run a war
-then our general, but ye don’t. It wasn’t tactics,
-an’ even ef it hed ben it wasn’t the way the Bloody
-Pennsylwany done things. One man takes the
-post next night ez usual, young Harry Hopple
-o’ my company, a lad with more grit then a horse
-that cribs. In the mornin’&mdash;Harry’s dead&mdash;no
-mark on him&mdash;no sign o’ the enemy nowhere.
-Don’t tell me that wasn’t awfuller then hoop-snakes.
-Why, every man knowd now that ef he
-drawed that post he was a goner. That was a
-recognized rule&mdash;he was a goner. ’Hen a felly
-gits it he sets down an’ packs up his duds; then
-he writes home to his ma or his girl, sais good-by
-to the boys an’ goes out. Mornin’ comes&mdash;he’s
-dead be the stream&mdash;not a mark on him&mdash;no
-enemy in sight. That was the way Andy Young,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_60" id="Page_60">[60]</a></span>
-leetle Hiram Dole, Clayton Binks o’ my company,
-an’ a dozen others was tuk off.”</p>
-
-<p>“I can’t see, nuther, why the general didn’t
-fill them woods with soldiers,” the Miller interrupted.</p>
-
-<p>“Why! It wasn’t tactics; that’s why,” the G.
-A. R. Man replied brusquely. “The Bloody Pennsylwany
-didn’t do things that way. No, sir.
-The general he cal’lated that we couldn’t be in
-that placet more’n four weeks more, which would
-cost jest twenty-eight men. He sais it wasn’t
-square to order a man there, so he calls fer wolunteers.
-What does I do? I wolunteers. I
-goes to the general an’ sais I’m willin’ to try my
-luck first. An’ he sais, sais he, a-layin’ one hand
-on me shoulder, ‘Me man, ef we’d a few more like
-you, the war ’ud soon be ended. An’&mdash;&mdash;’”</p>
-
-<p>“Meanin’ the other side ’ud ’a’ licked,” the
-Loafer interposed.</p>
-
-<p>The veteran paid no attention to this remark
-but continued: “He promised me a promotion ef
-I come out alive. That night I packs up me
-things, writes a letter to me wife, an’ sais good-by
-to the boys. Then I gits me gun, pours in
-th’ee inches o’ powder, puts in a wad; next, th’ee
-bullets an’ a wad; next a half dozen buckshot
-an’ a wad. An’ on top o’ it all, jest fer luck, I
-rammed a bit o’ tobacky. At twelve o’clock I
-relieved the man on post in the holler. Mebbe me
-heart didn’t beat. Mebbe it wasn’t awfuller then<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_61" id="Page_61">[61]</a></span>
-hoop-snakes. The wind was sighin’ mournful
-th’oo the leaves; a leetle slice o’ moon was
-peekin’ down th’oo the trees ’hen the clouds give
-it a chancet; an’ there gurglin’ along was the
-creek be which I expected I’d be found in the
-mornin’ layin’ dead, no mark on me nowhere.</p>
-
-<p>“I’d made up me mind, tho’, that I was goin’
-to come out of it whole ef I could. I wasn’t no
-fool to set down an’ be tuk off without raisin’ a
-rumpus about it. No, sir. I kept a sharp eye in
-every direction ez I walked to an’ fro, down the
-holler on one side, up on the other, back agin,
-an’ never stoppin’. It come one o’clock, an’ I
-give number eight an’ all’s well. I hear the report
-go ’long the posts; then everything was
-quiet. It come two o’clock an’ I give all’s well
-agin. Hardly was everything still ’hen I hear a
-rustlin’ noise, right out in the fiel’ beyant the
-creek, not twenty feet away, an’ yit me eyes had
-ben coverin’ that petickler spot fer an hour an’
-not a hate hed I seen. But there it was, a standin’
-hazy-like in the dark, the awfullest thing I ever
-laid eyes on.”</p>
-
-<p>The veteran had arisen from the pile of wheels
-and was glaring at the company, “What does I
-do? Does I set down an’ be tuk off like the
-other fellys? No. I ups an’ fires an’ hits it
-right atween the eyes.”</p>
-
-<p>He resumed his seat and began refilling his
-pipe. An expectant silence reigned in the shop.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_62" id="Page_62">[62]</a></span>
-The Blacksmith waited until he saw the veteran
-light a match and fall to smoking.</p>
-
-<p>“Go on,” he cried, making a threatening movement
-with his scissors.</p>
-
-<p>“They ain’t no more to tell,” said the G. A. R.
-Man nonchalantly. “Wasn’t that awfuller then
-a dozen hoop-snakes?”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, what was the thing ye shot?” asked the
-Loafer, slipping off the anvil and facing the pile
-of wheels.</p>
-
-<p>The old soldier’s clay pipe fell from his hand
-and crashed into a hundred pieces on the floor.
-He opened wide his mouth in vain effort to speak,
-but the words failed to come.</p>
-
-<p>“What was it?” shouted the Loafer.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, I’ll swan ef I know,” replied the veteran
-meekly.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_63" id="Page_63">[63]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2 id="CHAPTER_VI">CHAPTER VI.<br />
-<span class="smaller"><i>The Wrestling Match.</i></span></h2>
-
-<p>The village had awakened from its long winter
-of sleep. It had shaken off its lethargy and
-stepped forth into the light and sunshine to
-take up life in the free air until the months
-should speed around and the harsh winds and the
-snows drive it back again to a close kitchen and
-a stifling stove. The antiquated saw-mill down
-by the creek buzzed away with a vim that plainly
-told that the stream was swollen with the melted
-snows of the winter just passed. The big grist-mill
-bumped and thumped in deep melodious
-tones, as though it were making an effort to drown
-the rasping, discordant music of its small but
-noisy neighbor. From the field beyond the line
-of houses came the melancholy “haw, gee, haw,
-gee-up” of the man at the plow and the triumphant
-calls of the chickens, as they discovered
-each luscious worm in the newly-turned furrow.
-A few robins flitted among the still leafless
-branches of the trees, and down in the meadows<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_64" id="Page_64">[64]</a></span>
-beyond the bridge an occasional venturesome lark
-or snipe whistled merrily.</p>
-
-<p>The double doors of the store were wide open.
-Had all the other signs of spring been missing,
-this fact alone would have indicated to the knowing
-that if the snows had not melted and the
-birds not come back, it was high time they did.
-Those doors never stood open until the Patriarch
-felt it in his bones that the winter was gone and
-he could with safety leave the side of the stove
-within and migrate to the long bench without, to
-bask in the sunshine. This morning the old man
-arose from his accustomed chair with a look of
-wonderment on his face. He swung one leg to
-and fro for a moment, then rapped on his knee
-gently with the heavy knob of his cane. He
-tapped his head mysteriously with his forefinger
-and gazed in silence out of the window, taking in
-the outward signs.</p>
-
-<p>“Boys,” he said at length, “it’s time we was
-gittin’ out agin. Spring has come.”</p>
-
-<p>With that he hobbled toward the door.</p>
-
-<p>“Good, Gran’pap,” said the Chronic Loafer,
-rolling off the counter and following.</p>
-
-<p>Then the Storekeeper opened both doors.</p>
-
-<p>The old oak bench that had stood neglected
-through the long winter, exposed to wind and
-warping rain, gave a joyous creak as it felt again
-on its broad, knife-hacked back the weight of the
-Patriarch and his friends. It kicked up its one<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_65" id="Page_65">[65]</a></span>
-short, hickory leg with such vehemence as to
-cause the Storekeeper to throw out his hands, as
-though the world had dropped from under him
-and he was grasping at a cloud for support.</p>
-
-<p>“Mighty souls!” he cried, when he had recovered
-his equilibrium and composure.</p>
-
-<p>“My, oh, my!” murmured the old man, his
-face beaming with contentment as he sat basking
-in the sun. “Don’t the old bench feel good agin?
-Why, me an’ this oak board hes ben buddies fer
-nigh onter sixty years.”</p>
-
-<p>The season seemed to have imposed new life
-into the Chronic Loafer as it had nature. He suddenly
-tossed off his coat, with one leap cleared the
-steps and began dancing up and down in the road.</p>
-
-<p>“It jest makes a felly feel like wrastlin’,
-Gran’pap,” he shouted, waving his arms defiantly
-at the bench. “Come on.”</p>
-
-<p>The Patriarch stroked his long beard and smiled
-amusedly at this unexpected exhibition of energy.
-The Miller’s nose curled contemptuously skyward,
-and he fell to beating the flour out of his coat to
-show his indifference to the challenge. The Tinsmith
-puffed more vigorously at his pipe, so that
-the great clouds of smoke that swept upward from
-the clay bowl, enveloped the Storekeeper and
-caused him to sneeze violently.</p>
-
-<p>At this indisposition on the part of the four to
-take up the gauntlet he had thrown down, the
-Loafer became still more defiant.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_66" id="Page_66">[66]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“Hedgins!” he sneered. “You uns is all
-afraid, eh?”</p>
-
-<p>“Nawthin’ to be afraid of,” snapped the Miller.
-“Simple because spring’s come, ez it’s ben comin’
-ever since I can remember, I hain’t a-goin’ to waller
-’round in a muddy road.”</p>
-
-<p>The School Teacher laid his left hand upon his
-heart, and fixing a solemn gaze on the roof of the
-porch, recited: “In the spring the young man’s
-fancy lightly turns to thoughts of love.”</p>
-
-<p>“There ye go agin,” cried the Loafer, “quotin’
-that ole Fifth Reader o’ yourn.”</p>
-
-<p>“That,” said the pedagogue, “is Tennyson.”</p>
-
-<p>“I thot it was familar,” exclaimed the Storekeeper.
-A smile crept into his usually vacant
-face, and he slapped the Teacher on the knee.
-“You mean ole Seth Tennyson that runs the
-Shingletown creamery. He’s a cute un.”</p>
-
-<p>The reply was a withering, pitying glance.</p>
-
-<p>“It sounds a heap more like Seth’s brother Bill,”
-ventured the Miller.</p>
-
-<p>“Don’t git argyin’ on that,” said the Loafer.
-“There’s nawthin’ particular new or good in it
-any way. The main pint is I bantered ye an’
-you uns ’s all dead skeert.”</p>
-
-<p>“Come, come,” said the Patriarch, beating his
-stick on the floor to call the boaster to order.
-“Ef I was five year younger I’d take your banter;
-I’d druv yer head inter the mud tell you’d
-be afraid of showin’ up at the store fer a year, fer<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_67" id="Page_67">[67]</a></span>
-fear some un’d shovel ye inter the road. That’s
-what I’d do. I hates blowin’, I do&mdash;I hates
-blowin’. Fur be it from me to blow, particular
-ez I was somethin’ of a wrastler ’hen I was a
-young un.”</p>
-
-<p>“I bet I could ’a’ th’owed you in less time ’an
-it takes me to set down,” the Loafer said, as he
-seated himself on the steps and got out his pipe.</p>
-
-<p>“Th’owed me, would you? Well, I’d ’a’ liked
-to hev seen you a-th’owin’ me.” He shook his
-stick at the braggart. “Why, don’t you know
-that ’hen I was young I was the best wrastler in
-the walley; didn’t you ever hear o’ the great
-wrastlin’ me and Simon Cruller done up to
-Swampy Holler school-house?”</p>
-
-<p>“Did Noar act as empire?” asked the Loafer.</p>
-
-<p>“What does you mean be talkin’ of Noar an’
-sech like ’hen I’m tellin’ of wrastlin’? Tryin’ to
-change the subject I s’pose, eh?” cried the
-Patriarch, reddening with anger. “Don’t you
-know&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>“Tut-tut, Gran’pap,” said the Storekeeper,
-gently taking the raised cane in his hand and
-forcing it back into an upright position, one end
-resting on the floor, while on the other were piled
-the old man’s two fat hands. “Don’t mind him.
-Go on with your story.”</p>
-
-<p>The Patriarch’s wrath passed as quickly as it
-had come. He speedily wandered back into his
-youth, and soon was so deep in the history of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_68" id="Page_68">[68]</a></span>
-Simon Cruller, of Simon Cruller’s family and of
-Becky Stump as to be completely oblivious to his
-tormentor’s presence.</p>
-
-<p>“Me an’ Sime Cruller was buddies,” he began
-at length. “That was tell we both kind o’ set
-our minds on gittin’ Becky Stump. You uns
-never seen her, eh? Well, mebbe you never seen
-her grave-stun. It stands be the alderberry bushes
-in the buryin’-groun’, an’ ef you hain’t seen it ye
-otter, fer then ye might git an idee what sort o’ a
-woman she was. Pretty? Why, she was a model,
-she was&mdash;a perfect model. Hair? You uns don’t
-often see sech hair nowadays ez Becky Stump hed&mdash;soft
-an’ black like. Eyes? Why, they sparkled
-jest like new buggy paint. An’ mighty souls, but
-she could plough! She wasn’t none of your
-modern girls ez is too proud to plough. Many a
-day I set over on the porch at our placet an’
-looked down acrosst the walley an’ seen her a-steppin’
-th’oo the fiel’, an’ I thot how I’d like to hev
-one han’le while she’d hev the other, an’ we’d
-go trampin’ along life’s furrow together.”</p>
-
-<p>“Now Gran’pap, I ’low you’ve ben readin’&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>“Can’t you keep still a piece?” roared the
-Miller.</p>
-
-<p>The Loafer returned to his pipe and silence.</p>
-
-<p>“The whole thing come to a pint at a spellin’
-bee up to Swampy Holler school,” continued the
-Patriarch, unmindful of the interruption. “Becky
-Stump was there an’ looked onusual pretty, fer it<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_69" id="Page_69">[69]</a></span>
-was cold outside an’ the win’ hed made her face
-all red on the drive over from home. Sime was
-there, too, togged out in store clothes, his hair all
-plastered down with bear ile, an’ with a fine silk
-tie aroun’ his collar that ’ud ’a’ ketched the girls
-real hard hed I not hed a prettier one.</p>
-
-<p>“Ez luck ’ud hev it, me an’ Sime Cruller was
-on opposite sides. It wasn’t long afore I seen
-he was tryin’ to show off with his spellin’. It’s
-strange, but it’s a failin’ with men that ez soon ez
-they gits their minds set on a particular girl they
-wants to show off before her. Why most of ’em
-taller up their boots, put on their Sunday clothes
-an’ go walkin’ by their girl’s house twicet a day
-fer no reason at all but jest to be seen lookin’
-togged up an’ han’som. Men allus seems to want
-the weemen to know they is better spellers, or
-better somethin’ else ’an some other feller. They
-ain’t no reason fer it. No common-sense woman
-is goin’ to merry no man simple because he can
-spell or wrastle better or husk more corn than
-anybody else. An’ yit men’ll insist on showin’
-off in them wery things ’henever they gits a
-chancet.</p>
-
-<p>“It didn’t take me five minutes to see that Sime
-Cruller was tryin’ to show off afore Becky Stump;
-was tryin’ to prove to her that he was a smarter
-lad than me. An’ it didn’t take me that long to
-concide I’d hev none of it. I seen him every
-time he spelled a hard un, look triumphant like at<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_70" id="Page_70">[70]</a></span>
-her, settin’ ez she was down be the stove; then
-he’d grin at me. I seen it all, an’ I spelled ez I
-never spelled afore, an’ a mighty fine speller I was,
-too, ’hen I was young. Mebbe I didn’t set all
-over Sime Cruller. Mebbe I didn’t spile his
-showin’ off. I don’t jest exactly remember what
-the word was, but it must ’a’ ben a long un with a
-heap of syllables, fer he missed it an’ set down
-lookin’ ez mad ez a bull ’hen he steps inter a
-bees’ nes’. Three others missed it, an’ it come to
-me. Why do you know them letters jest rolled
-off my tongue ez easy. You otter ’a’ seen the look
-Becky Stump give me an’ the look Sime give me.
-Huh!</p>
-
-<p>“When intermission come, Sime he gits off in
-one corner an’ begins blowin’ to a lot of the boys.
-I heard him talkin’ loud ’bout me, so I steps
-over. He sayd it was all a mistake; that he could
-beat me at anything&mdash;spellin’, wrastlin’ or fishin’.
-He was showin’ off agin, fer he talked loud like
-Becky Stump could hear. I makes up me mind
-I wouldn’t stand his blowin’.</p>
-
-<p>“‘See here, Sime Cruller!’ I sais, sais I, ‘you
-uns is nawthin’ but a blow-horn,’ I sais. ‘You
-claims you can wrastle. Why, I can th’ow you
-in less time than it takes to tell it, an’ if you steps
-outside I’ll prove me words.’</p>
-
-<p>“That kinder took Sime Cruller down, fer
-wrastlin’ was his speciality an’ he’d th’owed every
-felly in the walley ’ceptin’ me, an’ him an’ me<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_71" id="Page_71">[71]</a></span>
-hed never clinched, fer I wasn’t considered much
-at a fight. But me dander was up an’ I wasn’t
-in fer lettin’ him show off.</p>
-
-<p>“‘You th’ow me!’ he sais. Then he begin to
-laugh like he’d die at the wery idee.</p>
-
-<p>“With that we went outside, follered by the
-rest of the boys. They was a quarter-moon overhead,
-an’ the girls put two candles in the school-house
-winders, so, with the snow, we could see
-pretty well.</p>
-
-<p>“At it we went. Boys, you otter ’a’ ben there!
-You otter ’a’ seen it! That was wrastlin’! ’Hen
-Sime an’ me clinched I ketched him ’round the
-waist with my right arm an’ got a hold of the strap
-of his right boot with the forefinger of me left hand.
-He gits his left arm ’round my neck an’ down my
-back somehow, an’ with his right hand tears the buttons
-off me coat an’ grabs me in the armhole of
-me waistcoat. Over we goes, like two dogs, snarlin’,
-an’ snappin’, while the boys in a ring around us
-cheered, an’ the girls crowdin’ the school-house
-porch trembled an’ screamed with fright. We
-twisted, we turned, we rolled over an’ over tell we
-looked like livin’ snowballs. Sime got off the
-boot I’d a holt on, an’ give me a sudden turn that
-almost sent me on me back. But I was quick.
-Mighty souls, but I was quick! I ups with me
-foot an’ lands me heel right on his chist, an’ he
-went flyin’ ten feet inter a snow-bank, kerryin’ me
-coat-sleeve with him. He was lookin’ up at the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_72" id="Page_72">[72]</a></span>
-moon ’hen I run up to him, an’ I’d hed him down,
-but he turned over, an’ they wasn’t nawthin’ fer
-me to do but to set on his back. I ’low I must ’a’
-set there fer half an hour, restin’ an’ gittin’ me
-wind. Anyway, I was so long I almost forgot I
-was wrastlin’, fer he give me a sudden turn, an’
-’fore I knowd it he hed the waist holt an’ hed
-almost th’owed me.</p>
-
-<p>“But I was quick. Mighty souls, but I was
-quick! I keeps me feet an’ gits one hand inter
-his waistcoat pocket an’ hung to him. ’Henever
-you wrastles, git your man be the boot strap or
-the pocket, an’ you has the best holt they is. Ef
-I hedn’t done that I might not ’a’ ben here to-day.
-But I done it, an’ fer a full hour me an’
-Sime Cruller rolled ’round, even matched. Time
-an’ agin I got sight o’ Becky Stump standin’ on
-the porch, her hands gripped together, her face
-pale, her eyes almost poppin’ outen her head, she
-was watchin’ us so hard, an’ the wery sight of her
-urged me on to inhuman efforts. It seemed to
-hev the same ’fect on Sime. Me heart beat so
-hard it made me buttons rattle. Still I kep’ at it.
-Sime was so hot it was fer me jest like wrastlin’
-with a stove, an’ still we kep’ at it. Then all of a
-sudden&mdash;it was two hours after we hed fust
-clinched&mdash;everything seemed to swim&mdash;I couldn’t
-feel no earth beneath&mdash;I only knowd I was still
-holdin’ onto Sime&mdash;then I knowd nawthin’.</p>
-
-<p>“‘Hen I come to, I was layin’ be the school-house<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_73" id="Page_73">[73]</a></span>
-stove, an’ Becky Stump was leanin’ over
-me rubbin’ a snowball acrosst me forehead. The
-other folks was standin’ back like, fer they seemed
-to think that after sech an exhibition it was all
-settled an’ they didn’t want to disturb us.</p>
-
-<p>“‘Becky,’ I whispers, ‘did I win?’</p>
-
-<p>“‘You did,’ she sais. ‘You both fainted at
-oncet, but you fainted on top.’</p>
-
-<p>“‘An’ now I s’pose you’ll hev me,’ I sais, fer it
-seemed like they was somethin’ in her eyes that
-kinder urged me on.</p>
-
-<p>“She was quiet a piece; an’ then she leans down
-an’ answers, ‘Do you think I wants to merry a
-fien’?’”</p>
-
-<p>The Patriarch ceased his narration and fell to
-stroking his beard and humming softly.</p>
-
-<p>“Well?” cried the Loafer.</p>
-
-<p>“Well?” retorted the old man.</p>
-
-<p>“Did she ever merry?”</p>
-
-<p>The Patriarch shook his head.</p>
-
-<p>“Go look at the grave-stun,” he said, “an’ on
-it you’ll see wrote: ‘Here lies Becky Stump.
-Her peaceful soul’s at rest!’”</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_74" id="Page_74">[74]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2 id="CHAPTER_VII">CHAPTER VII.<br />
-<span class="smaller"><i>The Tramp’s Romance.</i></span></h2>
-
-<p>“Was you ever dissypinted in love?” inquired
-the Chronic Loafer of the Tramp.</p>
-
-<p>A light summer shower had driven the traveller
-to the shelter of the store porch for a few hours,
-and he was stretched easily along the floor with
-his back resting against a pillar. In reply to the
-question he brought the butt of his heavy hickory
-stick down on the loose boards with such vigor
-as to raise a small cloud of dust from the cracks,
-and cried, “Wull, have I!”</p>
-
-<p>“Come tell us about it, ole feller,” said the
-Tinsmith.</p>
-
-<p>“Not muchy.”</p>
-
-<p>“We ain’t surprised at your hevin’ ben dissypinted,”
-said the Loafer, “but it’s your persumption
-catches me. What’s her name?”</p>
-
-<p>“I called her Emily Kate,” answered the
-Tramp, wiping one of his eyes with his sleeve.
-“She’ll allus be Emily Kate to me, though to
-other folks she ain’t nothin’.”</p>
-
-<p>“A truly remarkable state of affairs,” said the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_75" id="Page_75">[75]</a></span>
-Teacher. “I presume that the young woman
-must have been a mere chimera, a hallucination.”</p>
-
-<p>“Mebbe she was; mebbe she wasn’t,” the
-traveller replied. “I never knowd her well
-enough to git acquainted with all her qualities.
-In fact I’ve allus kept Emily Kate pretty much
-to meself an’ have never said nothin’ ’bout her to
-nobody. But youse gentlemens asts so many
-questions, I s’pose yez might ez well know the
-hull thing. ’Bout three year ago I was workin’
-th’oo this valley toward the Sussykehanner River,
-an’ one fine day&mdash;it was one o’ them days when
-you feels like settin’ down an’ jest doin’ nothin’&mdash;I
-come th’oo this very town an’ went up the
-main road ’bout two mile tell I reached Shale
-Hill. I never knowd why I done it&mdash;it must ’a’
-ben fate&mdash;but I switched off onter the by-road
-there ’stead o’ stickin’ to the pike. I walked on
-’bout a mile an’ didn’t meet no one or see no
-houses tell I come to a farm wit’ a peach orchard
-sout’ o’ the barn.</p>
-
-<p>“They was a nice grassy place under an apple
-tree on the other side the road, an’ ez it was one o’
-them warm, lazy, summer days I made up me min’
-to rest, an’ lay down there. Ye kin laugh at folks
-who allus talks weather, but I tell ye it does a
-powerful sight wit’ a man. I know ef that had ’a’
-ben a rainy day I’d never had that fairy-core, ez
-the French calls it, that hit me then an’ come
-near spoilin’ me life.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_76" id="Page_76">[76]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“I was layin’ there watchin’ the clouds overhead,
-an’ listenin’ to the plover whistlin’ out in
-the fiel’s, an’ to the tree-frawg bellerin’ up in the
-locus’, when all of a sudden I see a blue gleam in
-an apple tree in the orchard ’crosst the way. I
-watched it an’ pretty soon made out that it was a
-woman. She was settin’ there quiet an’ still,
-like she was readin’, an’ down below I see the top
-of a chicking coop an’ hear the ole hen cluckin’.
-I couldn’t see much fer the leaves an’ didn’t git
-sight o’ her face, but I made out the outlines o’
-that blue caliker dress an’ jest kind o’ drank ’em
-in.</p>
-
-<p>“It was the day done it all. ’Fore I knowd it
-I begin to imagine the face that must ’a’ fit that
-form. I pictured her like the girls that rides the
-mowin’ machines in the agricult’ral advertisemen’
-chromos&mdash;yeller hair an’ all. I wanted to try an’
-git sight o’ her face but didn’t dast, fer she’d ’a’
-seen me an’ that ’ud a spoilt my chancet. So I
-lay there dreamin’ like, an’ ’fore I knowd it I
-could think o’ nothin’ but that girl in the tree,
-who I figured must ’a’ ben a heap better-lookin’
-than a circus lady.</p>
-
-<p>“It come sundown, an’ ez I had to hustle to
-git supper I dragged meself together an’ moved on.
-I went up the valley fer three days an’ got ’bout
-thirty mile nearer the river. But I didn’t have
-no peace. The hull time I was thinkin’ o’ nothin’
-but the girl in the blue caliker dress. I never felt<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_77" id="Page_77">[77]</a></span>
-so queer before, an’ didn’t know jest what to do.
-Last I decided I’d hev to go back an’ hev another
-look at her, so I turned ’round an’ kivered me
-tracks.</p>
-
-<p>“‘Bout one day later, in the afternoon, I reached
-the orchard. Hanged ef she wasn’t there an’ settin’
-in a tree closer to the road! I didn’t dast
-go near her, fer I knows how ’fraid the weemen is
-of us men. But I slid inter me ole placet, an’ lay
-there watchin’ her blue dress wavin’ in the breeze.
-Then when I seen ez how she’d changed trees, I
-begin to think mebbe she’d seen me an’ moved
-up a tree nearer the road kinder so ez we’d be
-closer.”</p>
-
-<p>The Tramp’s voice broke and he paused.</p>
-
-<p>“Now quit yer blubberin’, Trampy,” cried the
-Loafer, “an’ git to the end o’ this here yarn.”</p>
-
-<p>The vagrant rubbed his sleeve across his eyes
-and continued,</p>
-
-<p>“Wull, ez I lay there watchin’ her so still an’
-quiet, I begin to think. I wondered what her
-name must be, an’ ’lowed it orter be a pretty one.
-I kind o’ thought, bein’ ez I didn’t know it, I
-might give her one&mdash;the prettiest I could git up.
-I racked me brain an’ final’ sot on Emily Kate&mdash;that
-sounded high-toned. Then I begin to wonder
-who’d be so fort’nit ez ter git Emily, an’ cussed
-meself for bein’ sich a bum. I kind o’ thought I
-might reform, but last I ’lowed ef she’d take me
-without me havin’ to reform, it ’ud be a sight<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_78" id="Page_78">[78]</a></span>
-pleasanter all ’round. I see how she’d moved
-up a tree an’ kind o’ wondered ef she’d notice
-me. The more I thought on it, the worse I got.
-I begin to think mebbe ef I cleaned up I wouldn’t
-be so bad&mdash;in fact a heap better ’an lots o’ folks
-I knows. By the time it come sunset I had concided
-to resk it, an’ was thinkin’ o’ crawlin’ over
-the fence an’ interducin’ meself. But me heart
-failed me. I put it off tell the next day an’ slid
-over the fiel’s to a barn an’ spent the night.</p>
-
-<p>“I didn’t eat no breakfas’. I couldn’t. When
-it come sun up I went down to the spring an’
-washed up. Then I cut fer the orchard, tendin’
-to wait tell she come. I didn’t expect she’d be
-there so airly sence she’d likely do up the breakfas’
-dishes.</p>
-
-<p>“I climbed the fence inter the road. Then
-what a sight I seen! I near yelled. A great big
-feller had his arm ’round her wais’. She was layin’
-all limp like, wit’ her head pitched for’a’d so I
-couldn’t see it, an’ her feet was draggin’ th’oo
-the timothy, fer the man was pullin’ her ’long
-down the orchard. First I was fer runnin’ to her
-resky, but I thought mebbe I’d better wait tell
-I see what come of it.</p>
-
-<p>“The big feller, he pulled her, all limp, down
-to the other side, an’ leaned her up agin a tree,
-an’ hit her a punch wit’ his fis’. The blue caliker
-sunbonnet drooped. Then he jumped the fence
-an’ started away over the meddy.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_79" id="Page_79">[79]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“Me heart was a-thumpin’ awful. I waited
-tell he was out o’ sight. Then I slipped down to
-where Emily Kate lay half dead agin the tree. I
-seen a chicking coop there an’ hear the ole hen
-cluckin’. I stepped up an’ raised the girl’s head.
-She had a straw face an’ was keepin’ hawks away
-from them chickings. My Emily Kate was a
-scare&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>The Tramp’s voice grew husky and he faltered.</p>
-
-<p>“See here, you ole fool,” cried the Loafer, “it’s
-quit rainin’ this ten minutes an’ you’ve kep’ me
-from splittin’ to-morrer’s wood with yer bloomin’
-story.”</p>
-
-<p>The wanderer picked up his bandana and
-stick, arose and replied,</p>
-
-<p>“Youse gentlemen ’sisted that I tell ye ’bout
-it. I tol’ ye. Now I must be movin’.”</p>
-
-<p>A moment later he disappeared around the
-bend in the road just beyond the mill.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_80" id="Page_80">[80]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2 id="CHAPTER_VIII">CHAPTER VIII.<br />
-<span class="smaller"><i>Ambition&mdash;An Argument.</i></span></h2>
-
-<p>“I know that I travels slow,” said the Chronic
-Loafer, “but ’hen a felly travels fast, it keeps him
-so busy watchin’ the horses, he sees mighty leetle
-o’ the country an’ gits awful jolted besides. It’s
-a heap sight better to go slow, stoppin’ at a
-stream to fish trout, or in the woods to take a
-bang at a coon, or at the store fer a leetle discussion&mdash;it’s
-a heap sight easier.”</p>
-
-<p>He was sitting at the end of the porch, his back
-against the pillar; one leg stretched along the
-floor, the bare foot resting on its heel and wiggling
-to and fro in unison with his words; the
-other leg hanging down and swinging backward
-and forward like a pendulum.</p>
-
-<p>The Patriarch had the end of the bench nearest
-him. Next sat the Miller meditatively chewing
-his forefinger. Then there was the Tinsmith
-smoking thoughtfully, and beside him, a stranger.
-This last person was a young man. His jaunty<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_81" id="Page_81">[81]</a></span>
-golf cap, fresh pink shirt, spotless duck trousers
-and canvas shoes marked him as a barbarian. In
-fact he had swooped down from the mountains
-to the north but a few days before on a bicycle,
-taken board at the Shoemaker’s, fixed a short
-briar pipe between his teeth and seated himself
-on the bench. At first he had been coldly received.
-The Store was suspicious. It closed its
-mouth and waited until it could find out something
-of the character of the newcomer. He volunteered
-no explanation, but sat and smoked.
-The Store grew desperate. At length it could
-stand the suspense no longer and nudged the
-stranger and inquired if he might not be a detective?
-The stranger laughed, said no, and busied
-himself with the making of smoke rings. Three
-days passed. Then the Store allowed maybe he
-might not be a drummer? No, he was not a
-drummer. The mystery was deepening. There
-were two things he was not. Now the Store
-smoked and smoked, and watched the mountains
-many days, until it had drawn an inspiration
-therefrom. It winked at the young man and
-guessed he had run away from his wife. But the
-stranger answered that he had never married.</p>
-
-<p>Knowing that he was not a detective, a drummer,
-or a fugitive from some domestic hearthstone,
-the Store felt that it had learned something
-of his history and could afford to melt just a little.
-So now it was talking before him.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_82" id="Page_82">[82]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>As the Loafer finished speaking, the stranger
-drew forth a leather case, carefully tucked his pipe
-away in it and returned it to his pocket. Then
-he remarked calmly, “I cannot agree with you.
-What would the world be to-day if all men held
-such ideas as you?”</p>
-
-<p>The Patriarch, the Miller and the Tinsmith
-pricked up their ears and gazed at the speaker.
-At last the truth would be out.</p>
-
-<p>The Loafer saw his opportunity.</p>
-
-<p>“What do you do fer a livin’?” he asked.</p>
-
-<p>“I’m a college man,” was the bland reply.</p>
-
-<p>Drawing his pendulum leg up on the porch, the
-Loafer clasped both knees in his arms. “Well,”
-he drawled, “I ’low ef you is a kawledge man,
-they ain’t nawthin’ young enough to be a kawledge
-boy, is they?”</p>
-
-<p>The Patriarch dropped his cane, clasped his
-hands to his fat sides, leaned back so that his
-head rested against the wall, and gagged. The
-Tinsmith and the Storekeeper laughed so loud
-that the School Teacher tossed aside the county
-paper and came running to the door to inquire
-what the joke was.</p>
-
-<p>“I’m blessed ef I know,” said the Miller, he being
-the only one of the party who had retained
-his powers of speech. He laid a hand on the
-student’s knee and asked, “Did you make a
-joke?”</p>
-
-<p>But the young man had dived into his pocket<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_83" id="Page_83">[83]</a></span>
-and got out his pipe again, and was busy filling it
-and lighting it and smoking it, by this act asserting
-his manhood. He now joined good-naturedly in
-the laughter.</p>
-
-<p>“How much does a kawledge man git a week?”
-asked the Loafer. “It must pay pretty well,
-jedgin’ from your clothes.”</p>
-
-<p>“He gets nothing,” was the reply. “I am
-studying, preparing myself for my work in life.”</p>
-
-<p>“My, oh, my!” murmured the Patriarch.
-“Preparin’&mdash;preparin’? Why, ’hen I was your
-age I was prepared long ago. I was in full,
-complete charge o’ me father’s saw-mill.”</p>
-
-<p>The student was nettled, not at the reflection
-on his own intellectual attainments which this remark
-seemed to contain, but he felt that in this
-company he was the representative of modern
-ideas, of education and enlightenment. The
-Middle Ages were attacking the Nineteenth Century,
-and it was his duty to combat the forces
-of Ignorance. So he removed his briar from
-his mouth and sent a ring of smoke floating
-away on the listless air. He watched it intently
-as it passed out from the shelter of the porch into
-the great world, and grew broader and bigger and
-finally disappeared altogether. There was something
-very impressive in the young man’s act.
-His voice had fallen an octave when he turned to
-address the Patriarch.</p>
-
-<p>“Had I chosen a saw-mill as my career, I think<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_84" id="Page_84">[84]</a></span>
-I too should have long since been prepared for
-it. But to fit oneself for work in the world as a
-lawyer, a doctor, a minister, requires preparation.
-It takes years of study.”</p>
-
-<p>“How many?” asked the Loafer, turning
-around and eyeing the student over his knees.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, I’ll be twenty-four when I get through
-studying and become a lawyer.”</p>
-
-<p>“Then what’ll ye do?”</p>
-
-<p>“I’ll work at my profession and make money.”</p>
-
-<p>“How long’ll ye do that?”</p>
-
-<p>“Why, I don’t know particularly&mdash;till I have a
-fair fortune, I suppose.”</p>
-
-<p>“How old’ll ye be then?”</p>
-
-<p>“Around sixty, I guess.”</p>
-
-<p>“Then what’ll ye do?”</p>
-
-<p>“What does every man do eventually? Die.”</p>
-
-<p>“Then ye’ve spent all them years learnin’ to
-die, eh? Does a felly go off any easier ef his
-head is crammed full of algebray or physical
-g’ography? Mighty souls! Why my pap
-couldn’t ’a’ tol’ ye, ef ye dewided an apple in two
-halves an’ et one how many was left, yit ’hen his
-time come he jest emptied out his ole pipe, leaned
-back in his rocker, stretched his feet toward the
-fire an’ went.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, what are you tryin’ to prove anyway?”
-asked the Teacher, who had seated himself on an
-egg-crate. His furrowed brow, one closed eye and
-forefinger resting on his chin, showed that he was<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_85" id="Page_85">[85]</a></span>
-struggling hard to catch the thread of the
-discussion.</p>
-
-<p>“I was jest sayin’ that the best life, the sensiblest
-life, was the slow easy-goin’ one, ’hen this
-young man conterdicted me,” said the Loafer.</p>
-
-<p>His air was very condescending and it angered
-the student. The inquisition just ended had left
-him in a rather equivocal position, he could see by
-the way the Patriarch and the Tinsmith nodded
-their heads.</p>
-
-<p>“You misunderstood me,” he said. “You have
-shown, I see, that from a purely selfish standpoint,
-ambition is senseless. In the end the man who
-works hard is no better off than the man who
-loafs. But remember there is another call&mdash;duty.”</p>
-
-<p>“That’s the idee,” cried the Teacher. “The
-sense of duty moves the world to&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>“Hol’ on!” the Loafer exclaimed. “Hol’ on!
-Duty to who?”</p>
-
-<p>“Why, duty to society,” the student, answered.
-“Every man is endowed with certain faculties,
-and it is his duty to use those faculties to the
-best of his ability for the advancement of himself
-and his fellow-man.”</p>
-
-<p>“Certainly&mdash;certainly,” said the pedagogue.
-“It’s the old parable of the talents all over agin.”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, they is some argyment in that,” said the
-Loafer. “Yit they ain’t. Pap allus used to say
-that too many fellys was speckilatin’ in their talents,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_86" id="Page_86">[86]</a></span>
-an’ ’hen their employer called an accountin’ they
-was only able to pass in a lot o’ counterfeit coin.”</p>
-
-<p>“But suppose all men sat down and folded
-their hands and lived as you would have them.
-What would happen?” asked the college man.</p>
-
-<p>“D’ye see yon pastur’ down there?” The
-Loafer pointed his thumb over his shoulder, indicating
-the meadow below the bridge, where half
-a score of cattle were grazing.</p>
-
-<p>The student nodded. The bony forefinger was
-pointed at him now.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, now s’posin’ ye was a hog an’&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>“I object to such a supposition,” was the angry
-retort.</p>
-
-<p>“Well then s’posin’, jest fer argyment&mdash;ye
-know ye can s’pose anything ’hen ye argy&mdash;s’posin’
-ye was a cow. Yon fiel’ ’ll pastur’ ten head o’
-cattle comf’table all summer, ’lowin’ they is easy-goin’
-an’ without no ambition. Now you uns gits
-the high-flyin’ idee ye must dewelop your heaven-given
-faculties fer the benefit o’ your sufferin’
-fellys. The main talent a cow has is that o’
-eatin’; so ye dewelop it be grazin’ night an’ day.
-’Hen the other cows is friskin’ up an’ down the
-meadow or splashin’ ’round the creek, you are
-nibblin’ off the choice grass an’ digestin’ all the
-turnip tops ye can reach th’oo the holes in the
-fence. Mebbe you’ll git to be a slicker animal,
-but fer the life o’ me, I can’t see how you’re benefitin’
-the rest o’ the cattle.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_87" id="Page_87">[87]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“See here,” interrupted the Miller, “you are
-the onsenselessest argyer I ever set eyes on. Ye
-starts but on edycation an’ lands up on cattle-raisin’.”</p>
-
-<p>“No&mdash;no, you misunderstand him,” said the
-student. “His method of argument is all right,
-but it seems that the figure is bad. It doesn’t
-quite apply. Every man who leads an industrious,
-upright life, every man who in so doing prospers
-and raises himself, does an incalculable service
-to the community in which he lives. His example
-inspires others.”</p>
-
-<p>“I jedge, then,” replied the Loafer, “that this
-here petickler cow we’ve ben speakin’ of, in eatin’
-night an’ day an’ fattenin’ itself, is elewatin’ the
-rest o’ the cattle be its example. They’ll be encouraged
-to quit sloshin’ ’round the creek an’
-friskin’ ’bout the pastur’ an’ ’ll be after grass night
-an’ day, an’ the grass’ll git skeercer an’ they’ll
-take to buttin’ one another, an’ your efforts at
-elewatin’ ’em ends in turnin’ a peaceful pastur’
-inter a battle-fiel’.”</p>
-
-<p>The student sent three rings of smoke whirling
-from his mouth in rapid succession, but he made
-no reply.</p>
-
-<p>“Did ye ever hear o’ Zebulon Pole?” asked
-the Loafer.</p>
-
-<p>“I never did. But what has he to do with
-this matter?”</p>
-
-<p>“Zebulon Pole was a livin’ answer to it, he was.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_88" id="Page_88">[88]</a></span>
-He used to have a shanty up in Buzzard Walley
-near me an’ Pap, an’ was young an’ full o’ all
-them noble idees. No&mdash;he wasn’t allus full of
-’em. They hed ben a time ’hen he was easy-goin’
-an’ happy, askin’ nawthin’ better o’ his Maker
-than a trout stream, a hook an’ a line, an’ a place
-to borry a shot-gun. All o’ a sudden he bloomed
-out full o’ ambition an’ high notions. He hed a
-call. He was wastin’ his life loafin’ ’long the
-creeks or settin’ day after day on a lawg, whistlin’
-fer wild turkeys. The world needed Zebulon
-Pole, an’ he answered by comin’ out ez candidate
-fer superwisor. He was elected. From that day
-the citizens o’ our township hed no peace. They’d
-allus ben used to goin’ out on the roads in the
-spring, stickin’ their shovels in the groun’, leanin’
-on ’em an’ gittin’ paid a dollar a day fer it. The
-new superwisor was ambitious, an’ the good ole
-system o’ makin’ roads seemed a thing o’ the
-past. So the boys put their heads together an’
-concided that a man o’ Pole’s parts was too good
-fer his place an’ should hev a higher an’ nobler
-job. They made him a school-director, an’ leaned
-on their shovels oncet more an’ drawed a dollar a
-day fer it ez usual.</p>
-
-<p>“Zebulon hed never gone beyant the Third
-Reader in school or th’oo fractions, an’ yit ’hen
-he become a school-director, he seen the hand o’
-a higher power instead o’ the wotes o’ citizens
-who wasn’t agin improvin’ the roads, but was<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_89" id="Page_89">[89]</a></span>
-agin hevin’ it done ’hen they was workin’ out
-their road tax. He was called to the service o’
-his felly-man. He was sacrificin’ his own happiness,
-givin’ up his fishin’ an’ huntin’ that he might
-dewote his life to helpin’ others. He hedn’t ben
-school-director a month tell he concided it was an
-honor, a great honor, yit the sphwere was too
-narrer fer a man o’ his talents. Zebulon Pole
-was learnin’. He’d found out they was better an’
-higher things in this worl’ then a mountain stream
-full o’ trout, a soft bed o’ moss on the bank, a
-half cloudy day, a pipe an’ a hook an’ line. He’d
-found out they was nobler things, so he come out
-ez candidate fer county commissioner, ’lowin’
-that after that he’d be Gov’nor, an’ then Presydent.
-But the woters remembered how they’d over-exerted
-themselves in his days ez superwisor;
-they minded how in his first week ez school-director,
-he’d changed the spellin’ book an’ cost ’em
-twenty-five cents a head fer every blessed child in
-the district. They jest snowed him under. He
-was plain Zeb Pole agin. He’d tasted the sweets
-o’ power an’ lost his appytite fer fishin’. His
-hopes o’ bein’ Presydent was gone. They was
-nawthin’ left fer him to look for’a’d to but dyin’.”</p>
-
-<p>The student shook his head gravely.</p>
-
-<p>“There is some argument in what you have
-been saying,” he said slowly. “I admit that.
-But you know your ideas are not new. You
-simply carry one back to the Stoics of Greece.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_90" id="Page_90">[90]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>The Loafer was puzzled. “What did you say
-they was?” he asked.</p>
-
-<p>“The Stoics of Greece. You remind me of the
-Stoics of Greece.”</p>
-
-<p>“Is that a complyment or a name?” The
-Loafer leaned sharply forward and thrust his long
-chin toward the speaker ominously.</p>
-
-<p>“Why, a compliment,” was the reply. “The
-Stoics were a great school of philosophers. They
-taught simplicity in life. Diogenes was a Stoic.”</p>
-
-<p>“Who?” asked the Patriarch, bending over and
-fixing his hand to his ear.</p>
-
-<p>“Diogenes.”</p>
-
-<p>“D’ogenes&mdash;D’ogenes,” said the old man. He
-paused; then added, “D’ogenes&mdash;yes, I’ve heard
-the name but I can’t exactly place him.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, you certainly never met him,” said the
-collegian. “He lived a couple of thousand years
-ago in Athens. His idea was to get as close as
-possible to nature, so he lived in a tub.”</p>
-
-<p>“Didn’t they hev no suylums in them days?”
-asked the Loafer.</p>
-
-<p>“Diogenes wasn’t crazy,” cried the student.
-“He was a great philosopher. They tell one
-story of how he went walking around Athens carrying
-a lantern in broad daylight. When asked
-what he was doing, he said he was looking for an
-honest man.”</p>
-
-<p>“What was the lantern fer?” the Miller inquired.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_91" id="Page_91">[91]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“Why, he was looking for an honest man,”
-shouted the collegian.</p>
-
-<p>“I s’pose it never struck him to go to the store
-fer one,” drawled the Loafer.</p>
-
-<p>“You miss the point&mdash;the whole of you. Diogenes
-was a man who spurned the material things
-of this world. He tried to forget the body in the
-development of the mind and soul, so he lived in
-a tub, and&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>“See here, young felly,” interrupted the Loafer,
-“fer an argyer you beat the band. First off ye
-conterdicted me fer sayin’ a man should take his
-time. Now ye come ’round my way, only worse.
-I never sayd a man should keep house in a tub.
-Why, his missus ’ud never give him no peace.
-No, sir; don’t ye git no fool idees like that in
-your head.”</p>
-
-<p>“But that is the truest philosophy&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>“I know. Zebulon Pole got that wery idee
-after he was defeated fer county commissioner.
-He moped ’round the walley fer a year an’ final
-one day come to me an’ sayd he was goin’ to
-dewote the rest o’ his life to religious medytation.
-‘It’s less trouble to git to heaven then the
-White House,’ he sayd, ‘fer a good deed is easier
-to do then an opposin’ candidate.’ It happened
-that at this time they hed ben a woman preacher
-holdin’ bush-meetin’s in our walley an’ he was a
-reg’lar attendant. She pounded away at wanity.
-All was wanity, she sayd. They wasn’t nawthin’<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_92" id="Page_92">[92]</a></span>
-in this world wuth livin’ fer. Fine houses, fine
-clothes, slick buggies, fast horses, low-cut waist-coats&mdash;all
-them things was extrys which was no
-more needed fer man’s sperritual comfort then
-napkins fer his bodily nourishment. It didn’t take
-long fer them idees to spread in our walley, an’
-Pole was one o’ the first to catch ’em. I mind
-comin’ home from fishin’ one day, I seen him a-settin’
-on a fence chewin’ a straw an’ watchin’ the
-clouds scootin’ ’long overhead.</p>
-
-<p>“‘Ho, Zeb!’ I sais, shakin’ a nice string o’
-trout under his nose. ‘Why ain’t ye out?
-They’s bitin’ good.’</p>
-
-<p>“He looks at me outen the corner o’ his eye
-wery solemn.</p>
-
-<p>“‘Fishin’?’ he sais.</p>
-
-<p>“‘Yes, fishin’,’ I yells, kind o’ s’prised.
-‘They’s bitin’ good.’</p>
-
-<p>“‘All them things is wanity,’ sais he, straightenin’
-up an’ pintin’ a finger o’ scorn at me.
-‘Wanity o’ wanities. Let me warn ye, man.
-I’ve give up all them worldly pleasures. I’m set
-on higher things.’</p>
-
-<p>“‘Six-rail fences,’ I answers, ‘all day long&mdash;chewin’
-a straw&mdash;watchin’ clouds&mdash;wery elewatin’.’</p>
-
-<p>“He give me a sad look.</p>
-
-<p>“‘What are ye doin’ now?’ sais I, not intendin’
-to be put down even ef he hed ben school
-director.</p>
-
-<p>“‘I’m a lily,’ he sais. ‘I’m followin’ the words<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_93" id="Page_93">[93]</a></span>
-o’ that dear sister who has cast her lot among us.
-Henceforth I no longer considers the morrer. I
-toil not, nuther spin.’</p>
-
-<p>“‘See here, Zeb,’ sais I. ‘You ain’t a bit my
-idee of a lily.’</p>
-
-<p>“‘I don’t ast the approval o’ the world,’ sais
-he.</p>
-
-<p>“‘An’ ye wouldn’t git it ef ye did,’ sais I.
-‘But still I s’pose ye might do pretty well in
-this new ockypation ef it wasn’t fer one thing.’</p>
-
-<p>“‘What’s that?’ he asts.</p>
-
-<p>“‘Lilies don’t use tobacker,’ I answers.</p>
-
-<p>“That kind o’ jolted him. His eyes opened
-wide, an’ I seen a few tears.</p>
-
-<p>“‘I never thot o’ that,’ sais he.</p>
-
-<p>“‘Oh, it’s unimportant,’ sais I. ‘You’ll make
-a fair lily. It’ll come hard fer ye first off, after
-your last suit of clothes is wore out. Let’s hope
-that happens in summer so ye’ll break in fer
-winter easier. You’ll git used to not eatin’,’ I
-sais. ‘Eatin’ is wanity. An’ ez fer tobacker&mdash;I
-never seen a lily smokin’. But still, Zeb, ’hen ye
-runs out o’ cut an’ dried, they is allus a placet ye
-can git a leetle ’hen ye takes a rest from bloomin’
-in the fiels.’</p>
-
-<p>“That wery night Zebulon ’cepted my inwite
-an’ come over to our placet an’ got a handful o’
-cut an’ dried. He borryed a loaf o’ bread an’ a
-can’le beside. I didn’t begrudge it a bit. Nuther
-did Pap. But this lily business begin spreadin’,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_94" id="Page_94">[94]</a></span>
-an’ all o’ Hen Jossel’s folks tuk to toilin’ not
-nuther spinin’, ’long o’ Herman Brewbocker’s
-family an’ Widdy Spade an’ half a dozen others.
-They was dependin’ on us fer flour, matches, tobacker
-an’ sech wanities, an’ it come a leetle hard.
-We stood it a month but things got goin’ from
-bad to worse. They wasn’t a day passed ’thout
-a lily or two droppin’ in at our placet an’ ’lowin’
-mebbe we mightn’t like to loan a piece o’ ham, a
-tin o’ zulicks or a bit o’ oil. It worrit Pap terrible.</p>
-
-<p>“One night I come home from store an’ found
-all the doors locked. The shutters was tight
-closed an’ they was no sign o’ life ’cept a leetle
-bit o’ smoke dancin’ up an’ down on the chimbley
-top. I give a loud knock. They was no answer.
-I knocked agin an’ yelled. The garret winder
-slid up an’ out come the bawrel o’ a gun, then
-Pap’s head.</p>
-
-<p>“‘Hello!’ sais he. ‘Is you a friend or a lily
-o’ the walley?’</p>
-
-<p>“‘Pap,’ I sais, ‘it’s your own lovin’ son,’ sais I.
-‘Don’t leave me out here unprotected, the prey
-to the next lily that comes along lookin’ where-withal
-he shall borrer.’</p>
-
-<p>“The ole man opened the door an’ let me in.
-Then he locked it agin an’ barred it. He picked
-up his musket wery solemn like an’ run the rammer
-down the bawrel to show it was loaded half way
-to the muzzle.</p>
-
-<p>“‘They was ten lilies here, one after the other,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_95" id="Page_95">[95]</a></span>
-to-day,’ he sais. ‘They’ve left us the bed, the
-dough tray, three chairs, a table, an’ a few odds
-an’ ends. ’Hen I seen the last foot o’ our sausage
-disappearin’ down the road under Widdy Spade’s
-arm I made a wow. The next lily that blooms
-about this clearin’ gits its blossoms blowed off.’</p>
-
-<p>“It didn’t take long fer the news o’ Pap’s wow
-to fly from one eend of Buzzard Walley to the
-other. Zeb Pole got a job in the saw-mill. Hen
-Jossel went back to bark-peelin’ an’ cuttin’ ties.
-Widdy Spade planted her garden.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well,” exclaimed the Miller, as the Loafer
-closed his account of the idiosyncracies of Zebulon
-Pole, “I can’t see any way why your pap was
-raisin’ sech fool things ez lilies. They’s only
-good to look at.”</p>
-
-<p>“I understand that all right,” said the student.
-“What I want to know is, what have you demonstrated
-by all this talk?”</p>
-
-<p>“I ain’t demonstratened nawthin’,” replied the
-Loafer. “You conterdicted me because I sayd
-a man should travel slow an’ take things easy in
-this world, an’ I proved that them ez travels fast
-is fools, gainin’ nawthin’ in the eend fer themselves
-or other folks. Then ye switches right
-’round an’ adwises livin’ in a tub. I showed ye
-what that led to.”</p>
-
-<p>“Then are we all to commit suicide?”</p>
-
-<p>“No. Travel comf’table th’oo this world.
-Travel slow but allus keep movin’. Ye can see<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_96" id="Page_96">[96]</a></span>
-the country ez ye go, stoppin’ now an’ then to
-fish trout, or take a bang at a coon, or at the store
-to discuss a leetle. Don’t live too fast&mdash;don’t live
-too slow&mdash;live mejum.”</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_97" id="Page_97">[97]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2 id="CHAPTER_IX">CHAPTER IX.<br />
-<span class="smaller"><i>Bumbletree’s Bass-Horn.</i></span></h2>
-
-<p>From the thick limbs of the maples came the
-discordant chatter of the cricket, the katydid and
-the tree-frog; from the creek beyond the mill the
-hoarse bellow of the bull-frog; from the darkening
-sky the shrill call of the night-hawk; and out of
-the woods across the flats the plaintive cry of the
-whippoorwill and the hoot of the owl. It was the
-evening chorus, but the loungers on the store
-porch did not hear it, for to them it was a part of
-the night’s stillness. But when, wafted across the
-meadows from the hills beyond, the notes of a
-horn sounded faint and clear, the Chronic Loafer,
-who for a long time had been smoking his pipe in
-silence, cried, “What’s that?”</p>
-
-<p>“Slatter up the Dingdang,” said the Storekeeper.
-He was sitting on the steps.</p>
-
-<p>“No, it ain’t; it’s Nellie Grey,” said the School
-Teacher in a voice that brooked no contradiction.
-Then in a deep bass he began singing,</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_98" id="Page_98">[98]</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="poem">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="verse">“Oh, me little Nellie Grey, they have taken her away,</div>
-<div class="verse">An’ I’ll never see me darlin’ any more,</div>
-<div class="verse">I’m a-settin’ be the river with&mdash;&mdash;”</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>“You’re a-settin’ on my porch,” cried the Storekeeper,
-for he was nettled at having had his
-knowledge of music questioned. “Sam Butter
-can’t blow that tune, an’ he has ben out every night
-a-practisin’ ‘Slatter up the Dingdang!’”</p>
-
-<p>The music on the hill ceased, leaving no tangible
-ground on which the debate could be continued.
-The Chronic Loafer had too long been
-the butt of the pedagogue’s cutting sarcasm to
-miss this opportunity of scoring him.</p>
-
-<p>“Ef that ain’t a good un,” he roared. “Why,
-you uns doesn’t know nawthin’ ’bout tunes,
-Teacher. Jim Clock he was een last night an’
-hear Sam a-blowin’ that wery piece. He sayd it
-was ‘Slatter up the Dingdang,’ an’ I conjure that
-Jim knows, fer he is ’bout the best bass-horn
-player they is.”</p>
-
-<p>The Storekeeper feared that this support from
-the Loafer might somewhat prejudice his own
-case in the minds of the others, so he ventured,
-“Not the best they is.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, the best they is in Pennsylwany,” said
-the Loafer.</p>
-
-<p>“There are some ignoramuses don’t know
-nothin’,” exclaimed the Teacher. It was dark,
-but by the light of the lantern that hung in the
-window the men could see that he was gazing<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_99" id="Page_99">[99]</a></span>
-meaningly at his adversary. “But I know some
-that knows less than nothin’. The best horn-blower
-they is! Why, where’s your Rubensteins,
-your Paddyrewskies, your Pattis?”</p>
-
-<p>He stopped, for he saw that the mention of
-these names had had the desired effect on his
-audience, as there was a wise wagging of
-heads.</p>
-
-<p>But the Loafer was irrepressible. “Why,” he
-retorted, “Patti ain’t a horn-player. He’s a
-singer. I was readin’ a piece in the paper ’bout
-him jest last week. An’ ez fer ole Rube Stein, he
-never played nawthin’ but checkers.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, can’t a man both sing an’ play the
-horn?” the Teacher snapped.</p>
-
-<p>“Perfessor, I agree with ye, I agree with ye entirely.”
-The Tinsmith had been silent hitherto,
-on the end of the bench. Now he leaned into
-view, resting an elbow on his knee and supporting
-his head with his hand. “Jim Clock don’t
-know no more ’bout blowin’ a bass-horn then my
-ole friend, Borax Bumbletree. Borax he knowd
-jest that leetle he was fired outen the Kishikoquillas
-In’epen’en’ Ban’. He come of a musical
-fam’ly, too. His mother an’ pap use to play the
-prettiest kind o’ duets on the melodium an’ ’cordine.
-His sister Amandy Lucy an’ his brother
-Hiram could sing like nightingales an’ b’longed
-to the choir at Happy Grove Church. It seems
-like Borax was left out in the distributin’ o’ music<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_100" id="Page_100">[100]</a></span>
-in that fam’ly, an’ consequent it went hard with
-him. ’Henever strangers was at the house it was
-allus, ‘Mr. Bumbletree, do play the melodium,’ or,
-‘Now, Amanda Lucy, sing one o’ your beautiful
-pieces,’ an’ all that. Poor Borax, he jest set an’
-moped.</p>
-
-<p>“Final he ’lowed he’d give the fam’ly a s’prise
-an’ learn the bass-horn, cal’latin’ to make up be
-hard hustlin’ what he’d missed be natur’&mdash;the
-knowledge of the dif’rence ’tween a sharp an’ a
-flat, a note an’ a bar, a treble an’ a soprany, an’
-all them things. He begin be j’inin’ the In’pen’en’
-Ban’. Fer six weeks he practised hard, an’ at
-last he did git to playin’ a couple o’ pieces. But
-the other fellys in the ban’ was continual’ complainin’
-that Borax didn’t keep no kind o’ time;
-an’ not only that, but he drownded ’em all out,
-fer he could make a heap o’ noise. They sayd
-they wouldn’t play with him no more tell he
-learned to blow time. Borax was clean discouraged,
-but he didn’t give up. He practised six
-weeks more an’ tried it with the ban’ boys agin.
-They sayd now that he didn’t know pitch an’ ruined
-their pieces a-bellerin’ way down in <em>A</em> ’hen they
-was blowin’ up in high <em>C</em>. He was pretty well cut
-up, but ’lowed he’d quit.</p>
-
-<p>“I think he meant what he sayd an’ ’ud ’a’ kep’
-his promise ef it hedn’t ’a’ ben that a woman interfered
-with his good intentions. She was Pet
-Parsley&mdash;Widdy Parsley, who lived with her<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_101" id="Page_101">[101]</a></span>
-mother back in Buzzard Walley. Borax hed a
-shine fer her afore she merried, an’ after she become
-a widdy he was wus ’an ever. One night
-at a ban’ festival, ’hen she was standin’ sellin’ at
-the ice-crim counter, he was a-jollyin’ her. Now
-he noticed that young Bill Hooker, who’d tuk his
-place in the ban’, was makin’ eyes at her over the
-top o’ his bass-horn while he was playin’. That
-near drove Bumbletree mad, fer him an’ Bill hed
-ben runnin’ neck an’ neck, an’ he knowd they was
-approachin’ the string.</p>
-
-<p>“‘Don’t Mr. Hooker play gran’?’ sais Pet kind
-o’ timid like.</p>
-
-<p>“‘Well, I don’t know,’ answers Borax, ‘I’ve
-heerd better.’</p>
-
-<p>“‘Oh, hev ye,’ sais she, kind o’ perkin’ up her
-nose. ’I ’low you’re jealous. Can you play at
-all?’</p>
-
-<p>“‘Well, can I?’ sais Borax. ‘Why, I can
-blow all ’round him.’</p>
-
-<p>“‘I’d like to hear you,’ sais Pet. ‘Won’t you
-come an’ blow fer me sometim’?’</p>
-
-<p>“‘I will,’ he answers, wery determined.</p>
-
-<p>“He went home that night bound to git time
-an’ pitch together. He started to practise ’round
-the house but his fam’ly objected. The missus
-’lowed she could never play the ’cordine with sech
-a bellerin’ goin’ on. Amandy Lucy went so fur
-ez to say it ’ud ruin her voice. But that didn’t
-stop Borax. He sayd he’d practise ’way from<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_102" id="Page_102">[102]</a></span>
-the house. Every night after the feedin’ was
-done he use to take his horn, his music marks an’
-a lantern, an’ go out on the hill ahint the barn.
-There, settin’ on a lawg, with the lantern hangin’
-on a saplin’, he’d blow away. Many a night that
-summer ez I set over at our placet on the next
-ridge, I’d hear Borax a boom-boom-boomin’ to
-git the time. The big tones ’ud go echoin’ way
-over in the mo’ntain. Oncet in a while he’d hit
-it good, an’ I tell you uns it sounded pretty to
-hear them notes a-rollin’ deep acrosst the gut,
-a-sighin’ th’oo the trees an’ a-dyin’ way off in the
-woods.</p>
-
-<p>“Then he tuk up pitch. He blowed pitch fer
-a week an’ then tried pitch an’ time together. I
-thot he was doin’ pretty well. Still them ban’
-boys wasn’t satisfied. They sayd he didn’t go up
-an’ down right, an’ that they couldn’t hev him
-a-blowin’ ’way at pitch an’ time an’ never makin’
-no new notes. He ’lowed to me that they was a
-heap to learn ’bout blowin’ a bass-horn, but he
-was goin’ to git it ef it ’ud only be of uset in the
-next worl’.</p>
-
-<p>“At nights I could see his light a-twinklin’ in
-the woods acrosst the gut an’ hear him tryin’ to
-blow time an’ pitch an’ ups an’ downs all at
-oncet. He’d git his wind fixed to blow <em>A</em>, an’
-out ’ud come a <em>C</em>; or he’d try fer a <em>D</em> an’ land an
-<em>E</em>. He ’lowed to me oncet that sometim’ he thot<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_103" id="Page_103">[103]</a></span>
-mebbe it was willed that he was never to git a
-tune. But he kep’ at it.</p>
-
-<p>“Now Bill Hooker hed ben to Horrisburg
-that summer an’ got him a brown cady hat. That
-was a new kind o’ headgear ’round Kishikoquillas
-an’ it cot on wonderful well. All the boys
-’lowed they’d git ’em, but tell they had a chancet
-o’ buyin’ one they got to depend on Bill fer the
-loan o’ hisn ’hen they was goin’ out shinin’. So
-Hooker wasn’t s’prised one night ’hen Borax
-Bumbletree drove up to his placet an’ ’lowed
-mebbe Hooker mightn’t like to loan him his cady,
-ez he was goin’ callin’. Bill allus was obligin’ an’
-thot no harm ’hen he watched Borax a-drivin’
-away with his cady settin’ way up on top o’ his
-head. Bumbletree hitched his buckboard to
-a saplin’ on the edge o’ Pet Parsley’s clearin’.
-Then he got his horn out from in under the seat,
-fixed himself on a stump ’bout fifty feet from the
-house, put up his music marks so the moonlight
-shone on ’em, an’ begin to play. He started the
-serynade with ‘Soft th’oo the Eventide,’ that
-bein’ sentymental an’ his most famil’ar piece.
-He put his whole heart into the work an’ was
-soon blowin’ time an’ pitch an’ ups an’ downs all
-at oncet. The lamp that hed ben settin’ in the
-windy went out&mdash;that was all to show he’d ben
-heard. He blowed ‘Pull fer the Shore, Sailor.’
-No sign o’ life in the house. He blowed ‘The
-Star Spangled Banner.’ Still no sign. He then<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_104" id="Page_104">[104]</a></span>
-begin all over agin with ‘Soft th’oo the Eventide.’
-Be this time the whole chicken-house hed
-j’ined in, an’ the cows was takin’ a hand too. He
-was desp’rit, dissypinted fearful an’ all used up.
-So he went home.</p>
-
-<p>“You take a reg’lar thief. He knows they’s
-only one eend to thievin’&mdash;jail. An’ he’ll keep on
-stealin’ tell he gits there. Take a reg’lar murderer.
-He knows they’s only one eend to murder&mdash;the
-galluses; yit he’ll continyer murderin’ tell
-he gits there. So it is with a reg’lar man. He
-knows they’s only one result o’ bein’ in lawv&mdash;to
-be merried or git the mitten. An’ yit he’ll keep
-right on tell he gits one or the other. So it was
-with Borax Bumbletree. He hed no reason to
-think he’d git anything but the mitten, yit he
-went right up to Pet Parsley’s next night to take
-his punishment. He tol’ me that day that he
-guesst his serynade hed spoiled all the chancet he
-ever had, but he wanted it over.</p>
-
-<p>“So he was kind o’ sheepish an’ hang-dog ’hen
-he’d sayd good evenin’ to the widdy an’ set down
-melancholy like, on the wood-box. They was
-quiet a piecet.</p>
-
-<p>“Then he sayd, ‘I hear ye hed some music up
-here last night.’</p>
-
-<p>“He was jest fishin’.</p>
-
-<p>“‘Did I!’ sais she, flarin’ up. ‘Well, I guesst
-I did. An’ the chickens was so stirred up they
-kep’ on all night an’ not a wink o’ sleep did we<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_105" id="Page_105">[105]</a></span>
-git in this house. I never heerd sech bass-horn
-blowin’.’</p>
-
-<p>“Borax jest hung his head an’ shuffled his
-feet.</p>
-
-<p>“The widdy spoke up agin. ‘Does you ever
-see Bill Hooker?’</p>
-
-<p>“‘Oncet in a long while,’ Borax answers.</p>
-
-<p>“‘Well, you tell him,’ she sais, ‘that next time
-he comes up here to serynade me to send notice
-so I can git over the other side the mo’ntain.’</p>
-
-<p>“Borax Bumbletree gasped an’ almost fell offen
-the wood-box.</p>
-
-<p>“‘How’d you know it was Bill Hooker?’ he
-asts quick.</p>
-
-<p>“‘Well, didn’t I see that new fandangled hat o’
-hisn&mdash;that cady I’ve heerd so much about. Why,
-I’d ’a’ knowd him a mile.’</p>
-
-<p>“Now Borax wasn’t ez slow on everything ez
-he was on music. He was right smart, he was.
-He seen the way the wind blowed.</p>
-
-<p>“Gittin’ offen the wood-box he went over to
-the settee alongside o’ her.</p>
-
-<p>“‘Pet,’ he sais, ‘I allus told you Bill Hooker
-couldn’t blow the bass-horn.’</p>
-
-<p>“‘I otter ’a’ knowd you could blow a heap
-sight better,’ she sais quiet like, but meanin’ business.</p>
-
-<p>“‘That I can,’ sais he. ‘An’ after we’re merried&mdash;not
-tell after, mind ye&mdash;I’ll blow sech music
-fer ye ez ye never dreamed of.’”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_106" id="Page_106">[106]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“My sights, but he was innercent!” the Loafer
-cried.</p>
-
-<p>“What do you know ’bout it?” snapped the
-Tinsmith.</p>
-
-<p>“Why, him thinkin’ she’d give him a chancet
-to blow.”</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_107" id="Page_107">[107]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2 id="CHAPTER_X">CHAPTER X.<br />
-<span class="smaller"><i>Little Si Berrybush.</i></span></h2>
-
-<p>The Chronic Loafer held in his hand a single
-sheet of a Philadelphia paper nine days old. The
-other pages had long since left the store in
-service as wrappings. This treasure he had rescued
-from such ignominious use and now was
-poring over it letter by letter. The center of
-the page was within three inches of the end of
-his nose. His brow was furrowed and his lips
-moved. At intervals he lifted his right hand
-and with the forefinger beat time to his reading.
-He was comfortably fixed on an egg-crate close
-by the stove. The paper hid him from the view
-of his companions. They could not see the earnest
-workings of his features but they could hear a
-steady, sonorous mumble and were curious. They
-knew better than to interrupt him in his arduous
-task, however, and awaited with commendable
-patience the time when he should choose to come
-forth from his seclusion and tell them all about it.</p>
-
-<p>They had not long to wait. Suddenly he<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_108" id="Page_108">[108]</a></span>
-jerked his head forward three times, viciously
-butting the paper, simultaneously emitting a
-burring sound not unlike that of an angry bull
-when he tears up the sod with his horns. The
-curtain fell to show him calm again but with a
-puzzled expression on his countenance.</p>
-
-<p>“Teacher,” he said, “what does <em>h-a-b-e-a-s</em>
-spell?”</p>
-
-<p>“Hab-by-ace,” replied the pedagogue promptly.
-He threw out his chest and fixed his thumbs in
-their favorite resting-place, the arm-holes of his
-waistcoat. His attitude was that of a man who
-was full to the neck with general information
-and only needed uncorking.</p>
-
-<p>“Habbyace,” said the Loafer. “Habbyace&mdash;habbyace&mdash;that’s
-a new un on me.”</p>
-
-<p>“Doubtless it is,” the other retorted, “if you
-have never studied Latin. It means <em>have</em>.”</p>
-
-<p>“Have&mdash;have,” muttered the Loafer, more
-puzzled than ever. “Then what’s <em>c-o-r-p-u-s</em>
-spell?”</p>
-
-<p>“Corpuse,” replied the pedagogue, “being the
-Latin for body.”</p>
-
-<p>“Then I’m stumped.” The Loafer crumpled
-up his paper in one hand and shook the other at
-the assembled company. “Them ceety lawyers
-certainly beat the band.”</p>
-
-<p>“What’s all the trouble now?” inquired the
-Tinsmith.</p>
-
-<p>The Loafer unfolded the sheet again and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_109" id="Page_109">[109]</a></span>
-smoothed it out on his knees. Then he leaned
-over it and eyed it intently.</p>
-
-<p>“I was jest readin’ a piece about a man called
-Jawhn O’Brien,” he said slowly. “He was ’rested
-fer killin’ his wife an’ two young uns. It sais the
-evydence is dead agin him an’ he is sure to hang.
-He has hired J. Montgomery Cole to defend him.
-The first thing the lawyer does is to go inter court
-an’ ast fer a habbyace corpuse. Mighty souls!
-The idee! How’s that to defend a man&mdash;jest to
-ast fer his dead body.”</p>
-
-<p>The Patriarch shook his head solemnly. “Terrible&mdash;terrible,”
-he said. “Sech men ought
-never git diplomys.”</p>
-
-<p>“Yit, Gran’pap,” suggested the Tinsmith,
-“don’t ye think after all it’s best they is some sech
-lawyers? Why, ef it wasn’t fer the dumb lawyers
-they’d never be no murderers brought to jestice.”</p>
-
-<p>“True&mdash;true,” said the old man. “Now it
-used to be that ’hen a man committed murder
-he was tried, an’ ef the evydence was agin him,
-he was hung. Nowadays a felly commits murder
-an’ a year is spent hevin’ him indickted. After
-he’s indickted a year is ockypied with these
-habbyace corpuse proceedin’s. They settles who
-gits the body in caset he’s hung an’ then they finds
-what they calls a ‘flaw in the indicktment.’ They
-indickts him agin. Next comes the question of a
-‘change in vendue.’ It takes a year to argy that
-pint an’ after it the trial begins. Ef he’s found<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_110" id="Page_110">[110]</a></span>
-innercent it means he’s ben livin’ th’ee years doin’
-nawthin’ at the county’s expense. Ef he’s found
-guilty his lawyer takes what they calls an ‘exception,’
-meanin’ he objects to him bein’ hung.
-It takes a year to&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>“But, Gran’pap,” interrupted the Loafer,
-“ye must remember that the principle o’ the
-law is that because a man commits murder is no
-sign he’s guilty.”</p>
-
-<p>“I know&mdash;I know,” the Patriarch said. “Ye
-can’t catch me on law. I thot o’ stedyin’ it
-oncet. But ez I was sayin’&mdash;where was it I left
-off?”</p>
-
-<p>“What’s a ‘change o’ vendue,’ Gran’pap?”
-inquired the Miller.</p>
-
-<p>The old man glared at the speaker.</p>
-
-<p>“That wasn’t the pint where I left off,” he
-snapped.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, but what is it, Gran’pap?” the Tinsmith
-asked.</p>
-
-<p>But the Patriarch had forgotten all about the
-defects of the law. He had leaned forward, resting
-his hands on his cane and his head on his
-hands, and was studying the floor intently.</p>
-
-<p>“Buttonporgie stood six feet two in his stockin’s,”
-he said half aloud, after a long silence.
-“That there was the way to do ’em. Now ef
-Si Berrybush hed ben livin’ to-day, he’d be fussin’
-with indicktments an’ changes of vendues an’
-all them things an’&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_111" id="Page_111">[111]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“Who air you talkin’ to now?” exclaimed the
-Loafer.</p>
-
-<p>The old man looked up. “Oh!” he said. “I
-forgot. Sure, I forgot. Ye never heard o’
-Tom Buttonporgie did ye, or Si Berrybush?”</p>
-
-<p>None of the company had heard of the pair,
-so the Patriarch consented to enlighten them.</p>
-
-<p>“I got the main pints o’ the story from Tom
-himself,” he began. “He used to tell it ’hen he
-stayed at my pap’s place ’hen I was a bit of a
-boy. He allus told it the same way, too, which
-was evydence of it bein’ true. I wish all you uns
-could ’a’ heard him. Mighty, but it was a treat!
-Why, he was never in our house two minutes till
-us children was runnin’ ’round him callin’ to him
-to tell us how he done Si Berrybush. But he’d
-never give us a word till he’d opened his pedler’s
-pack an’ sold somethin’ to Ma an’ the girls.
-Next it was his supper an’ a pipe. Then I’d
-climb on his one knee an’ my sister Solly on the
-other. Ed an’ May ’ud git on the wood-box an’
-Pap an’ Ma on the settee. It took th’ee pipes to
-wind Tom up. Then he’d go beautiful. The
-words ’ud role out like music an’ you’d fergit the
-kitchen an’ the folks around. You’d be out in
-the woods with him, steppin’ along with him
-hour after hour ez he was carryin’ Si Berrybush
-to freedom. You’d see the things ez he saw, an’
-you’d feel the things ez he felt. Now ye was
-low down an’ discouraged. Everything was<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_112" id="Page_112">[112]</a></span>
-dark ez ye stumbled on an’ on, achin’ in every
-limb, expectin’ each minute ’ud be your last.
-Now ye was hopin’. They was a chance fer ye
-yit. The light broke. The load was gone. Si
-Berrybush was gone, an’ ye was back in the ole
-kitchen agin, with Pap an’ Ma sound asleep on
-the settee.</p>
-
-<p>“Ez I was sayin’, Tom Buttonporgie stood six
-feet two in his stockin’s an’ was a most powerful
-man, fer walkin’ day after day, luggin’ a great pack
-on his back, hed give him the muscles of an ox. He
-used to come to this walley oncet every summer
-so he knowd well o’ Si Berrybush, who was the
-desperatest man ever seen in these parts. Si’s ockypation
-was robbin’. He made his headquarters
-in the mo’ntain acrosst the river. His hand was
-agin everybody an’ everybody knowd it, yit he
-never was catched. Oncet a pedler was found
-dead in the bushes with a bullet hole in his head
-an’ his pack turned inside out. They sayd Berrybush
-did it, so he went down to the Sheriff’s an’
-give himself up. They was no evydence an’ he
-walked home agin. A couple o’ times things like
-that happened an’ yit they was never an ioty o’
-proof. He’d ’a’ died a nat’ral death, I guess, ef
-he hedn’t forgot himself one night in the willage
-an’ shot Joe Hyde. They was too many fellys
-handy who hed grudges agin him to let him git
-away, an’ they clapped him in jail, tried him an’
-sentenced him to be hung.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_113" id="Page_113">[113]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“Now, about this time, Tom Buttonporgie come
-over the mo’ntain inter the walley. Late in the
-afternoon he reached Ben Clock’s place near Eden,
-an’ ez they knowd him well they ast him to spend
-the night. After supper the family hed a game
-o’ cards an’ about nine o’clock Tom tuk up his
-pack an’ started fer the barn where he was to
-sleep, fer the house was full. Clock lighted the
-way with a lantern an’ saw him comfortable fixed.
-The pack was stowed away in a corner o’ the
-barn-floor, while the pedler was settled nice ez ye
-please on a horse-blanket in the hay-mow.</p>
-
-<p>“Tom Buttonporgie slept sound an’ hard.
-Everything in this world was pleasant fer him.
-Things was goin’ his way. It’s strange that it
-should be so, boys, but yit it is true that sleep
-comes easiest an’ quickest to them ez hes nawthin’
-but good things to forget in it. So from the time
-he laid his head down on the hay till a kick awoke
-him, Tom knowd nawthin’. He opened his eyes
-with a jerk an’ set up an’ rubbed ’em. The airly
-mornin’ light was jest creepin’ inter the barn, but
-he could make out only a small, dark figure a few
-feet away.</p>
-
-<p>“‘Good morning, Mr. Clock,’ sais he wery pleasant,
-tho’ he was a leetle put out at the rough way
-he’d ben woke.</p>
-
-<p>“‘Good mornin’, Tom,’ sais the figure wery
-cheerful. ‘You’ve mistook me, fer my name is
-Berrybush.’</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_114" id="Page_114">[114]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“‘Hen the pedler hear that he made a grab fer
-his pistol. He’d laid it in the hay close to him,
-but now it was gone. He started to rise but he
-felt a steel bawrel pressed agin his head. Buttonporgie
-was big an’ full o’ grit, but he knowd that
-ye can’t argy with lead. So he set down.</p>
-
-<p>“‘Well,’ sais he, ‘I guess you’ve got me, Mr.
-Berrybush.’</p>
-
-<p>“‘I think I hev,’ the murderer answers, ‘an’ I’ve
-got ye good,’ he sais. ‘I intend to keep ye, too,
-fer I’m right fresh out o’ jail an’ soon the whole
-country’ll be lookin’ fer me. Excuse the familiarity,’
-he goes on polite like, ‘but we’ll be Tom
-an’ Si fer some hours to come, fer you’re to carry
-me outen these parts in your pack.’</p>
-
-<p>“That idee made Buttonporgie gasp. He tried
-to git up but bumped agin the pistol.</p>
-
-<p>“Si Berrybush laughed an’ went on in that
-pleasant way o’ his: ‘I notice the plan ain’t
-takin’ well with ye, Tom, but you’ll see how nice
-it works. While you slept,’ he sais, ‘I fixed the
-pack. The goods is all stowed away here in the
-hay an’ I find I fit the leather box to a T. I git
-in it; you put it on your back an’ go th’ee mile
-an hour. Nawthin’s easier.’</p>
-
-<p>“Then he laughed like he’d die.</p>
-
-<p>“Be this time they was quite some light in the
-barn an’ the pedler was able to see who he hed
-to deal with. The first sight was encouragin’,
-fer he was but a bit of a man, not more than five<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_115" id="Page_115">[115]</a></span>
-feet th’ee. He’d a wery small body set on crooked
-spindle legs. His face was pleasant enough, fer
-they was nawthin’ in his leetle, black eyes an’
-heavy, red beard to mark him ez a desperaydo.
-The only real onlikely thing about him was the
-pedler’s pistol.</p>
-
-<p>“Tom kind o’ cheers up now an’ sais, sais he,
-‘Si, you’ve mistook the whole thing. Don’t ye see
-I’ll turn ye over to the first men we meet?’</p>
-
-<p>“At that Si th’owed back his head an’ laughed.</p>
-
-<p>“‘Will ye?’ he sais. ‘Well I guess ye would,
-only this pistol’ll be stickin’ th’oo a hole in the
-back o’ the pack. Ef you go to carry out sech an
-idee two bullets’ll end the both of us, an’ that’s
-a sight better than hangin’. So come on,’ he sais.
-‘We must be movin’.’</p>
-
-<p>“Tom wasn’t in fer undertakin’ sech a job
-without objectin’.</p>
-
-<p>“‘See here, Si!’ he sais. ‘I appeals to you ez
-a gentleman,’ he sais. ‘I’ve allus heard you was
-a gentleman in spite o’ your faults&mdash;I appeal to
-you to tell me what good it would do you to kill
-yourself an’ me too. You hain’t no particular
-spite agin me,’ Tom goes on, ‘an’ I hain’t no
-particular spite agin you. I’m willin’ fer you to
-stay in this barn an’ me git out, or fer you to git
-out an’ me stay, both of us keepin’ quiet.’</p>
-
-<p>“Si’s eyes kind o’ twinkled an’ he pulled his
-beard like he was thinkin’ wery hard.</p>
-
-<p>“‘Shake me, Tom!’ he sais at last, ‘ef I don’t<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_116" id="Page_116">[116]</a></span>
-like a man o’ your sperrit. Ef I wasn’t in sech a
-bad hole I’d be tempted to accept your offer.
-But onfortunate fer both of us,’ he sais, ‘this
-whole walley will be overrun with searchin’ parties
-in a few hours. They’ve got a chancet to hang
-Si Berrybush an’ they ain’t goin’ to lose it ef they
-can help it.’</p>
-
-<p>“Buttonporgie was a nice man an’ a smart man
-at his business, but they was some things that it
-was a leetle hard to git into his head.</p>
-
-<p>“‘See here!’ he sais, not satisfied. ‘I can’t
-see what good it ’ud do you to shoot me ef I was
-to call one o’ them searchin’ parties to take a
-look in my pack. You’d hev to hang anyway.
-Why couldn’t ye jest shoot yourself?’</p>
-
-<p>“‘You’re wastin’ walable time,’ Si answers.
-‘I’ll kill myself sooner than be catched. Ez long
-ez you know that you’ll be killed ef I am catched,
-you won’t bother callin’ folks to see what you are
-carryin’. An’, Tom,’ he went on, ‘I might jest ez
-well tell you now that ’hen we git well out o’
-harm’s way, I’m goin’ to shoot ye anyhow. I
-don’t want to leave no one ’round to blab.’</p>
-
-<p>“Si Berrybush smiled the innercentest smile
-you uns ever see, an’ the pedler chewed a straw
-a spell.</p>
-
-<p>“Then he looks up an’ sais, ‘You must take
-me for a dummy?’</p>
-
-<p>“‘Why?’ Si asts.</p>
-
-<p>“‘Do you think I’ll lug you thirty or forty<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_117" id="Page_117">[117]</a></span>
-mile jest so you can shoot me?’ answers Buttonporgie.
-‘I might ez well call it up now!’ he sais.</p>
-
-<p>“Si cocked his pistol careless-like an’ pinted
-it at the other man’s head ez tho’ it was his
-finger an’ he was jest makin’ a good argyment
-on religion.</p>
-
-<p>“‘You are a dummy,’ he sais, laughin’. ‘Now
-don’t you s’pose that ez long ez you think there’s
-hope, a chancet o’ your comin’ out alive, you’ll
-carry me. Of course ye will,’ he sais. ‘Not
-till there’s not an ioty of a possibility o’ your
-doin’ me, will you let me finish you.’”</p>
-
-<p>“Mighty souls, but that Si was an argyer, now
-wasn’t he!” the Miller interrupted.</p>
-
-<p>“He’d ’a’ looked like small potatys ’long side
-o’ my Missus. I mind the time ’hen jest fer fun
-I&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>The Patriarch tapped the Loafer gently on the
-knee with his cane.</p>
-
-<p>“My dear man,” he said gently, “never interrupt
-a good story. It ain’t polite. There is
-some peculiarly minded folks ez is never happy
-’less they is doin’ all the talkin’. Now where did
-I leave off?”</p>
-
-<p>“Where there was hope&mdash;some hope,” the
-Miller answered.</p>
-
-<p>“Hope&mdash;oh, yes&mdash;hope,” the old man continued.
-“Mighty! Why I’ve knowd a sensible hen to
-set four weeks on a chiny egg, jest in hope that she
-might be mistaken. Si Berrybush knowd human<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_118" id="Page_118">[118]</a></span>
-natur’ well, fer it didn’t need but a wiggle or two
-o’ the pistol to bring Buttonporgie to takin’ his
-view o’ the sensibleness o’ hopin’. The pedler
-looked kind o’ sheepish an’ ’lowed he guesst Si
-was right. Si sayd he guesst he was, an’ climbed
-into the pack, an’ most mighty snug he fit it.
-Then Buttonporgie knelt down, put his arms
-th’oo the straps an’ lifted the load high on his
-back. Si closed down the flap. A second later
-Tom felt the muzzle o’ the pistol pressin’ him
-gentle like atween the shoulders.</p>
-
-<p>“‘Now we’re off,’ sais Si, ‘over the mo’ntains
-th’oo Windy Gap. Step light, ole hoss,’ he
-sais, ‘fer the gun’s cocked an’ too much joltin’ll
-send it off.’”</p>
-
-<p>“Mighty souls!” interrupted the Loafer.
-“An’ how fur did he hev to carry him, Gran’pap?
-A mile?”</p>
-
-<p>“A mile!” exclaimed the Patriarch. “Pshaw!
-Does you uns think a mile ’ud ’a’ put Si Berrybush
-outen the way o’ the sheriff’s posse. Why, the
-whole county was alive that mornin’. It was
-hardly sun-up ’hen Tom Buttonporgie stepped
-outen Clock’s barn an’ went ploddin’ up the big
-road with his pack, yit at the eend o’ the first
-mile he met th’ee men on horseback, an’ they
-pulled up an’ told him all about Berrybush an’
-warned him to keep out a sharp eye. Tom felt
-the pistol bawrel kind o’ nosin’ ’round his
-shoulders, so he laughed wery pleasant an’ ’lowed<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_119" id="Page_119">[119]</a></span>
-it was all right; he was obliged fer the warnin’
-but there was no help fer Si Berrybush ef he ever
-come within the length o’ his arm. On he went
-agin. Ez the last o’ the horses’ hoofs died away
-down the road he hear a gentle chucklin’ coming
-from his pack.</p>
-
-<p>“‘Wery good,’ sais Si, ‘most a mighty good.’</p>
-
-<p>“The pedler was a religious man yit he swore.
-At that he could feel his pack palpitatin’, fer his
-load was laughin’ an’ laughin’ to beat all. Tom
-swore some more, but he kept up his walkin’.</p>
-
-<p>“Si ’lowed it wasn’t nice fer Tom to carry on so.</p>
-
-<p>“‘It makes me feel bad,’ he sayd, talkin’ th’oo
-a slit in the top o’ the pack. ‘It makes me feel
-bad, Tom, to hear you behavin’ like that. I
-don’t mind killin’ a good man, fer I knows he’ll
-git his reward in the next world. But shootin’ a
-felly after he’s used sech language hurts me,’ he
-sayd.</p>
-
-<p>“With that he rubbed the nose o’ the pistol
-between Tom’s shoulder-blades. The pedler jest
-bubbled.</p>
-
-<p>“‘Keep on hopin’, Tom,’ he heard the woice at
-his back. ‘Mebbe somethin’ll happen ’twixt now
-an’ to-morrow mornin’ that’ll let you free o’ your
-pack!’</p>
-
-<p>“The sun come out hot, an’ the road was
-dusty. The load was heavy an’ they was a good
-many long hills. Time an’ agin Tom ’ud slow
-down. ‘Git up, ole hoss,’ he’d hear come from<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_120" id="Page_120">[120]</a></span>
-behind him. Then they’d be that pistol jabbin’
-him. He’d make a face an’ pick up his gait.
-Time an’ agin he met parties ez was out huntin’
-the murderer. Sometim’s he’d hurry by them;
-others he stopped an’ talked to, askin’ all about
-Si Berrybush an’ his escape, thankin’ ’em fer
-their adwice an’ ’lowin’ over an’ over agin he’d
-give his last cent jest to have the leetle man in
-his grasp.</p>
-
-<p>“Be noon he’d covered nine mile an’ reached
-the foot o’ the mo’ntain.</p>
-
-<p>“‘Now see here, Si,’ he sais, sais he, ‘you ain’t
-goin’ to kill your horse be overwork, are ye?
-S’posn I drop down in the road!’</p>
-
-<p>“‘Nobody’s sorrier than I am fer your trouble,
-Tom,’ come the answer. ‘It’s really pitiful. But
-I’ll risk your givin’ out&mdash;I’ll risk it.’</p>
-
-<p>“Then there was the pistol agin.</p>
-
-<p>“At the last house in the walley Tom stopped
-an’ got a loaf o’ bread be special permission. The
-woman wanted to hev a look at his pack, but he
-sayd no; what he had in it wasn’t worth lookin’ at.
-He was carryin’ low-down, mean, mis’able stock
-that wasn’t fit to show to no lady. Besides&mdash;the
-pistol was jabbin’ him&mdash;he hed to hurry on to git
-over the mo’ntain be sunset. An’ on he went.</p>
-
-<p>“Si begin laughin’ so hard it set the pack
-joltin’ up an’ down on Tom’s back an’ almost upset
-him.</p>
-
-<p>“‘That was a mean undercut you give me,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_121" id="Page_121">[121]</a></span>
-Thomas,’ sais the murderer. ‘A gentleman should
-never abuse a gentleman behind his back!’ he
-sais. ‘Now s’posn you pass that bread in here.’</p>
-
-<p>“‘But I got it fer meself,’ Tom wentures.</p>
-
-<p>“‘Did ye?’ answers Berrybush, pressin’ on the
-butt of the gun jest a leetle. ‘Well, s’posn ye pass
-it in anyway an’ dewote the rest o’ the afternoon
-to hopin’. Mebbe you’ll git it after all.’</p>
-
-<p>“Tom passed it.</p>
-
-<p>“The road was steep an’ the way was rough in
-the mo’ntain. Strong ez he was an’ light ez was
-the murderer, the work begin to go heavy with
-him. But the pistol was allus at his back proddin’
-him on. Oncet he stepped inter a chuckhole an
-pitched for’a’d, his hands jest savin’ him from
-strikin’ his face to the ground. He thot that all
-was up with him, fer the pack was jerked up on
-his head, wrenchin’ his shoulders most dreadful.
-He closed his eyes expectin’ to hear the crack o’
-the gun an’ then go plungin’ on agin fer ever an’
-ever.</p>
-
-<p>“Nawthin’ happened. He climbed to his feet
-kind o’ dissypinted, fer instead o’ his journey
-bein’ ended he hed to go limpin’ ahead. Si was
-a-cursin’ him dreadful. Tom walked like an
-ellyphant, he sayd, an’ was joltin’ his bones all
-out o’ j’int. Next time he stumbled the gun ’ud
-be cocked dead sure.</p>
-
-<p>“The sun was settin’ ’hen they reached the
-edge o’ the woods on yon side the mo’ntain. The<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_122" id="Page_122">[122]</a></span>
-murderer pushed up the lid o’ the pack an’ looked
-out over Tom’s shoulder. He pinted acrosst the
-walley twenty mile to where they could see the
-hills agin. There, he sayd, he’d be th’oo with
-his mule.</p>
-
-<p>“Th’oo with him! Tom knowd what that
-meant. He knowd now Si Berrybush ’ud keep
-his word; that he’d never git out o’ that pack
-an’ leave a man alive an’ runnin’ round to tell
-where he could be found. He was almost willin’
-to call the game up right there an’ lay down his
-load an’ his life together, but still there was hope.
-It was precious leetle, to be sure, but still some.
-Ez Si sayd, they was no tellin’ what might happen
-agin they got to the end o’ that twenty mile.</p>
-
-<p>“Berrybush pulled in his head an’ let the flap
-down over it. ‘Git up’, he sais, ‘git up, ole Tom.’
-An’ with that he give him a prod.</p>
-
-<p>“On Buttonporgie went, down the slope inter
-the walley, each step takin’ him nearer an’ nearer
-the hills. The sun set an’ the darkness come to
-add to his troubles. The lights went out in the
-houses ’long the way an’ they wasn’t no sound
-to cheer him up, not a sound but the steady
-breathin’ in his pack an’ the rattle o’ the
-gravel under his own shufflin’ feet. It was
-awful travellin’ that way, straight on an’ on
-to the hills where he was to die, feelin’ allus
-on his back the weight o’ the man who was to
-kill him.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_123" id="Page_123">[123]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“Final he couldn’t stand the silence no more.
-‘Si,’ he cried, ‘Si, won’t ye talk to me!’</p>
-
-<p>“They wasn’t no answer. He only heard a
-heavy breathin’ in the pack.</p>
-
-<p>“The moon come up an’ lighted the road an’
-the dogs begin to bay at it. That might ’a’
-cheered him up some had he ’a’ heard ’em, but he
-didn’t hear nawthin’ now. Tom Buttonporgie
-was dazed like. He kept on a-walkin’ an’ a-walkin’,
-but the straps no longer cut his shoulders
-an’ he forgot the load on his back. The road
-with the moonlight pourin’ over it seemed like a
-broad white pavement crosst the walley, smooz
-ez marble. They was no chuckholes now to
-stumble in, no thank-ye-ma’ams to jump over, no
-ruts to twist his ankles. It was all smooz&mdash;smooz
-ez marble it was. On he went, faster an’ faster.
-He wanted to git to the eend o’ the white road
-now an’ lay down his pack an’ sleep. He was
-walkin’ mechanical.</p>
-
-<p>“All o’ a sudden a queer sound woke him from
-his doze an’ he stopped short. It all come back
-agin. He was in the road an’ the road was
-rough, an’ the straps was cuttin’ dreadful, an’ his
-legs felt like they was givin’ way under him.
-The pack was on his back an’ awful heavy too.
-He reached up his hand an’ felt it. But a queer
-sound was comin’ from it&mdash;most a mighty queer.
-Tom didn’t dast breathe. He stood still listenin’.
-Then it come louder&mdash;a soft purrin’, gentle ez a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_124" id="Page_124">[124]</a></span>
-cat’s. An’ the peddler laughed. Natur’ hed
-tackled Si Berrybush an’ walloped him. He was
-snorin’.</p>
-
-<p>“There was an oneasy movement in the pack.
-Tom’s heart fell. He stepped on wery cautious.
-Now agin come the sound, louder an’ louder.</p>
-
-<p>“The road took a sudden turn ’round a thick
-clump o’ woods an’ crossed a stream on a rickety
-timber bridge. There Buttonporgie stopped.
-An’ ez he leaned agin the rail an’ looked down
-into the water there below him, gleamin’ along
-in the moonlight, everything kind o’ passed away
-from his mind. He only knowd that he was
-wery hot, an’ the pool looked so cool an’ inwitin’.
-He only knowd that he was wery tired,
-an’ the pool looked so soft an’ nice, ez ef it
-was jest intended for limbs achin’ like ez his.
-He’d miles yit to go afore he reached the
-hills. Si was sleepin’. Si wouldn’t mind. Si
-wouldn’t know. They’d be movin’ agin afore Si
-woke up. So he climbed over the rail an’ stepped
-off. The wotter closed over his head an’ he went
-down an’ down, the great weight on his back
-draggin’ him. But that wasn’t what he wanted.
-He was jest goin’ to lay there in the cool stream
-an’ look up at the stars an’ rest. His feet struck
-the bottom an’ he tore his arms free o’ the straps
-that held the awful weight to him. In a second
-he was on the surface an’ swimmin’, fer he was
-wide awake.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_125" id="Page_125">[125]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“He used to say that ez he stood there on the
-bank lookin’ at that quiet pool it seemed ez tho’
-it was all a dream; that he’d never met the murderer
-an’ carried him thirty mile on his back, or
-felt the prod of his pistol every time his steps
-lagged. But ef it was a dream, he thot, then
-what was that he seen that rose to the surface
-an’ went bobbin’ away on the current? It was
-Si Berrybush’s ole cloth cap.”</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_126" id="Page_126">[126]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2 id="CHAPTER_XI">CHAPTER XI.<br />
-<span class="smaller"><i>Cupid and a Mule.</i></span></h2>
-
-<p>The wind went shrieking through the bare attic
-above and singing among the boxes and barrels
-in the cellar below. The big show window
-in front groaned in a deep bass; the little window
-in the rear accompanied it in a high treble. The
-lamp, with its vague, flickering flame, cast a gloomy
-glare over the store, and lighted up the faces of
-the little group of men, seated on box, counter,
-keg and chair, huddled about the great center of
-heat.</p>
-
-<p>The Chronic Loafer raised himself from his
-favorite pile of calicoes and turned up his coat
-collar.</p>
-
-<p>“Shet that stove door an’ put on the draught,”
-he cried. “What’s the uset o’ freezin’!”</p>
-
-<p>“Cold Chrisermas to morrer,” said the Storekeeper,
-as he banged the door shut and turned on
-the draught in obedience to the demand.</p>
-
-<p>“Turn up the lamp,” growled the Miller. “It’s
-ez dark an’ gloomy ez a barn here.”</p>
-
-<p>“They ain’t no uset o’ wastin’ ile,” the Storekeeper<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_127" id="Page_127">[127]</a></span>
-muttered as he complied with the second
-request.</p>
-
-<p>The great egg stove roared right merrily as the
-flames darted up out of its heart, until its large
-body grew red-hot and sent forth genial rays of
-heat and light&mdash;the veritable sun of the narrow
-village universe.</p>
-
-<p>“Listen to the wind! Ain’t it howlin’?” said
-the Loafer.</p>
-
-<p>“Col’est Chrisermas Eve in years,” the Tinsmith
-responded.</p>
-
-<p>The Loafer pushed himself off the counter onto
-an empty crate that stood below him. He leaned
-forward and almost embraced the stove in his
-effort to toast his hands.</p>
-
-<p>“This, I’ve heard tell,” he said, “is the one night
-in all the year ’hen the cattle talks jest like men.”</p>
-
-<p>“Some sais it’s Holly E’en,” ventured the
-Miller.</p>
-
-<p>“No, it ain’t. It’s Chrisermas,” the Loafer replied
-emphatically. He leaned back, placed his
-thumbs in the arm-holes of his waistcoat and glared
-about the circle in defiance.</p>
-
-<p>The brief silence that followed was broken by
-the School Teacher.</p>
-
-<p>“Superstition! Mere superstition!”</p>
-
-<p>“That’s what I sais,” cried the Storekeeper.
-He was leaning over the counter munching a
-candy lion. “What ’ud a mule talk about ’hen
-he only had a chancet oncet a year?”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_128" id="Page_128">[128]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>A thin, meaning smile crept over the Loafer’s
-face and he bent forward, thrusting his long chin
-in the direction of the venturesome merchant.</p>
-
-<p>“In my time,” he drawled, “I’ve met some
-mules pullin’ plows that hed they ben able to
-talk ’ud ’a’ sayd sensibler things then some ez is
-engaged in easier an’ more money-makin’ ockypations.”</p>
-
-<p>The Store was usually loath to accord recognition
-to the Loafer, but this was the season of
-good-will to all, and it lifted up its voice in one
-mighty guffaw. Even the Teacher joined in, and
-the G. A. R. Man slapped his knee and cried,
-“Good shot!”</p>
-
-<p>The victim hid his burning face in the recesses
-of the sugar barrel, and under pretense of hunting
-for the scoop finished the candy toy.</p>
-
-<p>“My father-in-law was a superstitious man and
-always believed in them fool things,” said the
-pedagogue. “I never give them any credit myself,
-for they say that education is as great an
-enemy to superstition as light is to darkness. In
-other words, learnin’ illumines a man’s mind and
-drives out all them black, unholy beliefs that are
-bred in ignorance.”</p>
-
-<p>He paused to give effect to his words, but the
-Loafer seized the opportunity, thus unintentionally
-offered, to remark, “Then it ’ud seem like most
-men’s brains is like cellars. They is allus some hole
-or corner in a cellar that ye can’t light lest ye put<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_129" id="Page_129">[129]</a></span>
-a special lantern in it, an’ ye hev trouble keepin’
-that burnin’.”</p>
-
-<p>“But the brain’s perfectly round,” interposed
-the Miller, shaking his head sagely.</p>
-
-<p>The Teacher sighed. “It’s no use talking to
-you men in figures&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>“Go on. Let’s hev figgers,” cried the Storekeeper,
-eagerly.</p>
-
-<p>The pedagogue leaned back on two legs of his
-chair and pillowed his head on a cheese box that
-stood on the counter. After having carefully extinguished
-the flame in his cigar, blown out the
-smoke and placed the stump in his pocket, he
-began:</p>
-
-<p>“While I give no credit to the current superstitions,
-I cherish a peculiar affection for this old
-belief that the cattle talk on Christmas Eve. I
-feel that to it I owe part of my happiness in life,
-and I’ve had a good deal of it, too, in spite of the
-hardships I had to endure as a boy. You know
-my parents died when I was but seventeen year
-old and left me practically penniless and a charge
-on the township. So I was bound over to Abraham
-Buttenberger, who had a fine farm up near
-West Eden. But for one thing life with him
-would have gone hard with me, for he was a
-crotchety old fellow, a bit stingy, and inclined to
-get the greatest possible amount of work out of
-a husky lad that was gettin’ no pay but his keep.
-The one thing I mentioned was Abraham’s dotter<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_130" id="Page_130">[130]</a></span>
-Kate. I have seen many weemen in my day,
-and I can honestly say that I have looked on few
-such pictures as she was when I first knew her.
-She was sixteen then&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t know ’bout that,” the Loafer interrupted.
-“Did you uns ever see my Missus ’hen
-she was sixteen an’&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>“She was sixteen then,” repeated the Teacher,
-ignoring the remark; “she was sixteen and extremely
-good lookin’. But most of you have
-seen her since and it’s no use for me to dwell on
-that point. As the years went by I got to set a
-heap of store by Kate and she set a heap of store
-by me. But we kept it to ourselves till we was
-twenty. Then we agreed to be married. Our
-agreement didn’t do any good, for Abraham set
-his foot down on the scheme. He wasn’t goin’
-to have no hirelin’ of his a-merryin’ his dotter. I
-explained to him how his days was drawin’ to an
-end; how a time was a-comin’ when the place
-wouldn’t do him any more good and no more
-harm ’ud come to him whether his farm-hand was
-runnin’ it or not; how his dotter would need
-lookin’ after and all that. His answer was to
-drive me away with a horse-whip.</p>
-
-<p>“That was in November. For seven weeks I
-never laid eyes on the girl, for the old man
-watched her like a hawk. But he tired of that,
-and one night let her go to literary society meetin’
-at Kishikoquillas school. I saw her there and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_131" id="Page_131">[131]</a></span>
-wanted her to elope right on the spot. She said
-no. It was too sudden. Besides, she wanted her
-things, for she knew her father would keep them
-just for spite if she run away without them. So
-we fixed it up that next night&mdash;that was Christmas
-Eve&mdash;she was to meet me at their barn, and
-we would take one of the horses and a sleigh and
-skip.</p>
-
-<p>“Now, as I said, Abraham was a superstitious
-man and continual readin’ the almanac and perusin’
-charms. He believed in that old sayin’ about
-the cattle talkin’ on Christmas Eve. Many a night
-he’d argued the point with me. I always said if
-he thot it was true, why didn’t he go listen to it.
-He declared he would, but he never did&mdash;leastways
-he put it off to a most onexpected time. If
-there was any place the cattle was likely to talk,
-I used to tell him, it was right in that big, spooky
-barn of his; and if there was any place where one
-could hear them perfect, it was right there. The
-stables was in the basement and the mows was
-overhead. The hay was stored above the horses
-and mules. A hole about ten feet across and
-twenty feet deep run from the top of the mow
-into that particular stable. I explained to him
-how he could lay at the top of the hay, put his
-head down into the hole and hear everything that
-passed. But that Christmas Eve I’d forgot all
-about our argument. I’d other things to think
-of.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_132" id="Page_132">[132]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“I reached the barn at midnight. Kate was
-there, standin’ by the gate waitin’. Everything
-was clear. The old man, she said, had gone to
-bed and didn’t have any suspicions. So we got
-the sleigh ready and went into the horse stable
-to harness up. It was clear moonlight outside
-but inside it was dark as pitch and fearful ghostly.
-There were all kinds of noises&mdash;hay rattlin’, rats
-skippin’ around, chains clinkin’; and every now
-and then a hen roostin’ up in the racks would
-begin to cluck and scare Kate awful. Grave-yards
-is bad at night but they ain’t a circumstance
-to a big barn.</p>
-
-<p>“I picked out the white John mule, for I knew
-he was a good traveler, and gettin’ the harness,
-I went into his stall and began to fix it on him.
-Then I couldn’t find any bridles. I whispered
-to Kate. She said they was over in the cow
-stable, and went to get one. It seemed to me
-she was gone an awful long time. I could hear
-her trampin’ around, but as she didn’t appear to
-be havin’ much success I called, not very loud,
-‘What’s wrong?’</p>
-
-<p>“‘Nothin’,’ she answered, ‘I’ll have them in a
-minute.’</p>
-
-<p>“It seemed like I heard a suspicious noise
-come down the hayhole from the mow above. I
-listened, but I didn’t hear any more sounds, so
-guessed it was a rat.</p>
-
-<p>“Then I called louder to Kate, for I was mad at<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_133" id="Page_133">[133]</a></span>
-Abraham for all the trouble he’d given us, ‘The
-old man is a mean customer if there ever was
-one!’</p>
-
-<p>“She tramped around in the straw for a spell.
-Then her answer came from the cow stable, ‘That’s
-what I say.’</p>
-
-<p>“‘A nice way he treats his own dotter,’ I went
-on, just talkin’ for company. ‘He thinks he’ll take
-his farm with him when he dies. What a shame
-in a man of his age!’</p>
-
-<p>“Again I heard a rattle of hay up above and
-whispered, ‘Ssh!’ But the girl didn’t catch it and
-said particularly loud and spiteful, ‘He has treated
-me powerful mean.’</p>
-
-<p>“I put my hand to my ear and listened, but all
-was quiet, so I thinks to myself, ‘It’s a chicken.’</p>
-
-<p>“‘Don’t you think kickin’ is too good for a man
-like that, John?’ Kate asks.</p>
-
-<p>“‘Well, I’d like to have it to do,’ I answers.
-‘Oh! just you wait till I get a chance, and if
-I don’t&mdash;&mdash;’</p>
-
-<p>“There was an awful scream in the mow&mdash;an
-unearthly scream. A great, black thing came
-tumblin’ out of the hayhole into the stable, lettin’
-out fearful groans all the time. I couldn’t see it
-very plain and didn’t stop to investigate. I
-bumped into Kate as she was pilin’ into the kitchen.
-We set down a minute to get our breath.
-Then I put my head out of the door. For a piece
-all was quiet. Then a faint call come from the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_134" id="Page_134">[134]</a></span>
-barn. She thot maybe it was a tramp had fallen
-down the hayhole. I wanted to go alone and see,
-but Kate wouldn’t hear of it. She insisted on
-goin’ with me and takin’ a gun and a lantern.</p>
-
-<p>“I opened the stable door, peeped in and said,
-‘Who’s there?’</p>
-
-<p>“The answer was a moan and, ‘Is that you,
-John? Help!’</p>
-
-<p>“There Abraham Buttenberger lay on a little
-pile of hay at the back of the stable, writhin’ and
-moanin’.</p>
-
-<p>“‘I always knew it,’ he groaned. ‘I always
-told you they talked on Christmas Eve. But why
-did you ever get me to try and hear them? See
-what you’ve led me to. Look at me layin’ here
-with a broken leg and see what you’ve done. It
-was the white John mule&mdash;I know his voice.
-T’other was the brindle cow.’</p>
-
-<p>“‘Look out for the mule! Look out!’ he
-cried, as we carried him out of the stable and put
-him on a wheelbarrow.</p>
-
-<p>“That’s the way he took on. When we’d
-got him into the house I went up to town for a
-doctor. I attended him that night. The next
-day after he’d had breakfast, he set up in bed and
-says to me: ‘John, I’ve heard people laugh about
-the sayin’ that the cattle talk on Christmas Eve.
-I’ve heard you make fun of the idee. But you’d
-never laugh at it again if you heard what I did
-last night; if you’d had a mule heapin’ coals of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_135" id="Page_135">[135]</a></span>
-fire on your head. And that cow! Oh, it’s awful
-to have the very animals on the farm down on
-you like that.’</p>
-
-<p>“‘What did they say?’ says I.</p>
-
-<p>“‘Say!’ he answers. ‘What didn’t they say?
-I’ll never have no peace behind that John mule
-again.’</p>
-
-<p>“The old man was quiet a spell. Then he
-says, ‘John, you can have my dotter, my only
-dotter.’</p>
-
-<p>“And he begin to moan.</p>
-
-<p>“Missus and I were married at home that
-Christmas just fifteen years ago. We never explained
-it to Abraham. There was no particular
-use in it. We couldn’t ’a’ convinced him anyway.
-Why, do you know he was so set on makin’
-up all around that he insisted that the brindle
-cow and the white mule know all about it. The
-ceremony was performed in the kitchen and them
-two knowin’ beasts was hitched to the window so
-they could look in. He was bound to appease
-’em.”</p>
-
-<p>The Teacher chuckled softly as he finished his
-narration.</p>
-
-<p>The Storekeeper bit the legs off a candy ostrich.
-“It do beat all!” he exclaimed.</p>
-
-<p>“I knowd it,” the Loafer cried triumphantly.
-“I allus knowd it. I thank you, Teacher, fer
-backin’ me up with this petickler instance of it.
-The cattle do talk on Chrisermas Eve.”</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_136" id="Page_136">[136]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2 id="CHAPTER_XII">CHAPTER XII.<br />
-<span class="smaller"><i>The Haunted Store.</i></span></h2>
-
-<p>The Chronic Loafer cautiously opened the
-door and peered out into the black night. A
-blinding flash of lightning zigzagged across the
-heavens and descended to earth in a nearby wheat
-field, disclosing to his view the clear outlines of a
-great oak whose limbs were thrashing wildly in
-the wind. There was a sound of splintering
-wood, a crash of thunder overhead, then darkness
-again. The door swung shut with a startled
-bang. The rain beat violently against the windows.</p>
-
-<p>“The ole tree’s hit agin,” the Loafer cried.
-“Did ye see that flash? Mighty souls, what a
-night! I wisht I’d gone home ’fore it begin to
-come down so heavy. I hevn’t no umbrelly, an’
-the Missus’ll never hear me callin’ in sech a
-storm.”</p>
-
-<p>The store was a gloomy place, lighted as it was
-by a solitary oil lamp which cast weird shadows
-in the recesses of the dusty ceiling and over the
-shelves, laden with their motley collection of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_137" id="Page_137">[137]</a></span>
-crockery and glassware, boxes and cans. There
-was no fire in the stove, for it was late in the
-spring, so the atmosphere was damp and chilly.</p>
-
-<p>The G. A. R. Man joined the Loafer at the
-door.</p>
-
-<p>“Bad, ain’t it?” he said. “I guesst I don’t go
-home be way o’ the Meth’dis’ buryin’-ground to-night.”</p>
-
-<p>The other laughed and cried, “My sights!
-’Fraid o’ the buryin’-ground!”</p>
-
-<p>The pair sauntered back to their places about
-the cheerless stove. The Storekeeper leaned his
-chair against the counter, fixed his feet firmly on
-the rungs and clasped both knees tightly with his
-hands.</p>
-
-<p>“You can laugh an’ say they ain’t no sech
-things ez spooks,” he said, “but I notice that
-you uns an’ most other folks ’hen ye walks be
-the buryin’-ground at night, cuts th’oo the fields
-ez fur ’way from it ez ye can git.”</p>
-
-<p>The Loafer reddened. For a moment he beat
-his feet slowly against the side of the counter on
-which he had seated himself between the Miller
-and the Tinsmith. Then he retorted hotly, “I
-hain’t sayd they was no sech things ez spooks.”</p>
-
-<p>“Mebbe they is an’ mebbe they ain’t,” ventured
-the Miller in a low tone. “But ef they ain’t,
-why hesn’t Abe Scissors ben able to git a tenant
-fer that leetle place o’ his back on the ridge?
-They sais it hes a ha’nt, an’ tho’ I’ve never seen<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_138" id="Page_138">[138]</a></span>
-it, I knows folks that sais they hes, an’ I’ve no reasons
-to doubt their words.”</p>
-
-<p>The G. A. R. Man nodded his head in assent.
-“I don’t b’lieve in them ghosts meself, but ’hen
-it comes to goin’ home be way o’ the Meth’dis’
-buryin’-ground at night I allus goes the back road,
-even ef it is furder.”</p>
-
-<p>There was silence. Outside the rain beat furiously
-against the windows; in the garret overhead
-the wind whistled mournfully; from the
-cellar below came the faint clatter of loose boards
-as the rats scampered to and fro.</p>
-
-<p>The Storekeeper reached behind him and turned
-the wick of the lamp up a little higher.</p>
-
-<p>The Miller slipped from his place on the counter
-and seated himself on the box beside the veteran.
-He filled and lighted his clay pipe, and began:
-“My gran’pap used to tell how night after night
-he heard the churn splashin’ down in his spring-house;
-an’ how he stepped out once to find out
-what done it. He seen the sperrit of his first wife
-churnin’ an’ churnin’, an’ she told him how lest
-some un ’ud break the spell she’d hev to&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>The Chronic Loafer had glided off the counter
-and was rolling a keg close to the speaker. He
-fixed himself comfortably on it; then cried,
-“Turn up that there light. This dark hurts a
-felly’s eyes.”</p>
-
-<p>The Tinsmith glanced furtively behind him
-into the blackness beneath the counter. He pushed<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_139" id="Page_139">[139]</a></span>
-himself from his perch, intending to join the little
-knot about the stove. Hardly had he reached
-the floor and taken one step when he halted.</p>
-
-<p>“Ssh! What’s that?”</p>
-
-<p>The Miller dropped his pipe. The Storekeeper
-paled and nervously grasped the back of his chair.
-The Chronic Loafer arose to his feet, his upraised
-arms trembling visibly. The G. A. R. Man, with
-eyes and mouth wide open, sat up rigidly upon
-his keg.</p>
-
-<p>From the cellar beneath, low, but so distinct as
-to be heard above the patter of the rain and the
-rattle of the windows, came the sound of footsteps.
-It lasted but a moment, and then seemed
-to die away in the distance.</p>
-
-<p>The Chronic Loafer broke the silence. “Sights!
-I’m goin’. The Missus’ll be gittin’ worrit.”</p>
-
-<p>He hurried to the door, but as he opened it
-there was a blinding flash of lightning, a crash of
-thunder, and the whole building trembled. A
-gust of wind drove the rain against the windows
-with redoubled vigor. He slammed the door
-shut and returned to his keg.</p>
-
-<p>“Wha&mdash;what’s that?” exclaimed the G. A. R.
-Man.</p>
-
-<p>The Storekeeper shook his head mournfully.
-“It’s the ha’nt that give my pap so much trouble.”</p>
-
-<p>“A ha’nt!” cried the Loafer and the Miller,
-their teeth chattering.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes,” replied the Storekeeper, leaning his<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_140" id="Page_140">[140]</a></span>
-chair back on two legs. “That’s what Pap use to
-say it was. He seen it. I never did, but ef you
-uns draws up closer I’ll tell ye what he sayd
-about it.”</p>
-
-<p>Nothing loath to get as near as possible to
-each other the men, seated on chairs, kegs and
-boxes, formed a little circle about the Storekeeper,
-who began his story in a voice hardly above a
-whisper.</p>
-
-<p>“My pap, you uns knows, run this here store
-an’ done a pretty lively trade tell the year ’fore
-he died. He bo’t it off o’ ole Ed Harmon, who’d
-kep’ it a long while. You uns may remember
-Ed, or mebbe ye don’t. He was a mean man
-ef they ever was one; never hesytatin’ to give
-short measure in sellin’ butter an’ takin’ long in
-buyin’; allus buyin’ eggs be the baker’s dozen
-an’ sellin’ ’em the reg’lar way; usin’ a caliker
-stick an inch short of the yard. It don’t take
-many years o’ that kind o’ tradin’ to hurt a man’s
-repytation in these parts, an’ consequent ’hen he
-died he’d the name o’ bein’ ’bout the dishonestest
-felly in the county, ef you uns reck’lect.”</p>
-
-<p>“That I do,” the Miller interposed. “An’
-the sugar he sold was that wet ye could ’a’
-squeezed a tin o’ wotter outen every pound.”</p>
-
-<p>“My sights!” cried the Loafer.</p>
-
-<p>“Sure,” continued the Storekeeper, “an’ ’cordin’
-to Pap, who hed the name fer tellin’ the
-truth, them was his footsteps we heard jest now.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_141" id="Page_141">[141]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“Sam Hill!” muttered the G. A. R. Man.
-“His body’s in the Meth’dis’ buryin’-ground.”</p>
-
-<p>The Chronic Loafer cast an anxious glance toward
-the entrance to the store-room, from which a
-stairway wound down into the cellar. The Tinsmith
-shifted his chair closer into the circle.
-There was a roll of thunder along the mountains,
-a flash of lightning that seemed to find the earth
-somewhere among the distant ridges, but the
-rain was still pouring down in torrents.</p>
-
-<p>“True. That’s what Pap sayd,” the Storekeeper
-continued in a low, awed tone. “He told
-me all about it afore he died, an’ I guesst he told
-me right, fer we’ve heard his footsteps an’ my
-sugar hes ben wet lately.”</p>
-
-<p>“So my Missus hes ben complainin’&mdash;still&mdash;but&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>The Storekeeper was slightly ruffled by this interruption
-and glared for a moment at its author,
-the Loafer. Then he resumed his narrative.</p>
-
-<p>“It tuk Pap considerable time to build up his
-trade, but he give square measure, an’ by an’ by the
-folks begin comin’ here ’stead o’ goin’ to Kishikoquillas.
-Then the trouble started. One day he
-found a chip stuck in the scales he used fer buyin’
-meat on, so it wouldn’t weigh more’n fifty pounds.
-He licked me, that he did, tho’ I never done it.
-Next day he found another stick there, an’ he was
-that mad he licked me agin. Then I went away
-fer a week, an’ every mornin’ reg’lar he found<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_142" id="Page_142">[142]</a></span>
-that chip. He begin to feel queer ’bout it ’hen
-he seen I wasn’t responsible. So every day he
-pulled the chip out, tell final it stopped. He thot
-it was rats.</p>
-
-<p>“Things run ’long all right fer a year, an’ then
-folks begin to complain that the sugar was damp,
-an’ blamed Pap fer wettin’ it to make it weigh.
-He sayd he didn’t, an’ he didn’t, fer he wasn’t no
-man to tell nawthin’ but the truth, let alone to
-treat his sugar dishonest. But the customers begin
-to drop off buyin’ an’ he to be afraid o’ losin’ his
-trade. What was more, he seen that sugar he got
-in the bawrel ez dry ez a chip one night was
-damp next mornin’. ’Hen he declared it wasn’t
-his fault, folks wouldn’t believe him, an’ they was
-no denyin’ it, them goods was soakin’. So he concided
-he’d find out jest what was wrong. He
-found out an’ never hed no more peace. What
-happened I tell you exactly ez he told me, an’ I
-ain’t hed no cause to disbelieve what he sayd, fer
-he wasn’t a man to waste words.</p>
-
-<p>“One night, jest after he’d got in a bawrel o’
-granilated, he went to the cellar an’ made ’rangements
-to discover the trouble. He hed his ole
-shot-gun along an’ hung an ile lantern to a joist
-in the middle. Then he set down on a pile o’ sacks
-in a corner to watch. He wasn’t a bit skeered at
-first, fer the lantern was burnin’ cheery. An hour
-went by, an’ he begin to git weary; they was no
-signs of anything wrong. Then another, an’ he<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_143" id="Page_143">[143]</a></span>
-begin to doze off. How long he slep’ he didn’t
-know, but a foot-fall woke him, an’ he set up on
-the pile o’ sacks an’ looked. The lantern was
-flickerin’ low, fer the ile hed most burned out, so
-they was only a dim light in the placet. His
-heart stopped beatin’, an’ his breath wouldn’t
-come. Fer a moment they was dead silence.
-The lantern seemed like it was a-goin’ to go
-out.</p>
-
-<p>“Over from the other end of the cellar come a
-faint sound like the splashin’ of wotter, drippin’,
-drippin’, drippin’. Pap raised hisself on his
-knees, all a-tremblin’. They was another spell o’
-quiet; then the same sound of a foot-fall; then
-’nother an’ ’nother; an’ every time it made his
-heart thump like ’twould break an’ jarred him all
-over. Out o’ the dark, into the light o’ the lantern,
-come the figur’ of an ole man, walkin’ slow,
-step be step, ’crosst the cellar toward the sugar
-bawrel. Pap rubbed his eyes in surprise, fer the
-felly was Ed Harmon, who for eight year had
-ben layin’ in the Meth’dis’ buryin’-ground, never
-missed. He wore that ole shiny black coat o’
-hisn, his broken, patched boots, an’ gray cap;
-’bout his neck was wound a blue woolen comforter,
-an’ in his hand he kerried a bucket o’
-wotter. He’d wrapped a piece o’ paper ’round
-the han’le to keep it from cuttin’ his fingers.
-His face was all white like it used to be, ’cept his
-nose, which was red from his drinkin’ too much<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_144" id="Page_144">[144]</a></span>
-hard cider. He walked all doubled up, fer the
-bucket seemed to blow him consid’able.</p>
-
-<p>“Pap laid quiet at first, he was so scared, tremblin’
-all over, with his teeth chatterin’ to beat all.
-Sudden Ed stopped right under the lantern an’
-set the bucket down, the wotter splashin’ over the
-side an’ goin’ up in a fog ’hen it struck the floor.
-Then he straightened up like to stretch his back,
-an’ raised his hands to his mouth an’ begin to
-blow on ’em. Pap didn’t hear no sound but he
-seen the lamp flickerin’; an’ at the sight o’ Ed
-standin’ there so nat’ral his courage come back.</p>
-
-<p>“After the ghos’ hed stopped a minute his face
-twisted like he was groanin’, an’ he picked up the
-bucket an’ started on toward the sugar bawrel.
-’Hen Pap seen that, he clean forgot it was a sperrit,
-it looked so lifelike. He jumped up an’ run
-out yellin’, ‘Here you, Ed Harmon, don’t you
-dast put that wotter on my sugar!’</p>
-
-<p>“The ghos’ stopped, turned ’round an’ looked
-at Pap. Pap stopped an’ looked at the ghos’.
-The appyrition set the bucket down easy an’
-blowed on his hands. That kind o’ cooled the
-ole man.</p>
-
-<p>“‘You uns ain’t ben treatin’ me right,’ sais
-Pap, polite like, ‘dampin’ my sugar an’ sp’ilin’ my
-trade.’</p>
-
-<p>“Ed didn’t say nawthin’, but jest looked at
-him quiet like an’ give his comforter another lap
-’round the neck.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_145" id="Page_145">[145]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“‘Now, see here,’ sais Pap, a leetle louder.
-‘I’ve found you out, Ed Harmon, an’ I’ll make it
-pretty hot fer you ’round these parts ef you don’t
-let up.’</p>
-
-<p>“The sperrit turned proud like, blowed on its
-hands, leaned over an’ picked up the bucket, an’
-started trampin’ toward the bawrel agin. Pap
-clean forgot hisself. He give a run an’ a kick at
-the pail, for he’d no desires to hurt the ole man,
-but ’tended jest to spill the wotter. He near
-dropped dead on the spot, fer his feet went right
-inter it ’thout his feelin’ it; the ole thing broke
-in a dozen pieces, the staves fallin’ in a heap on
-the floor; the wotter ’rose up in a fog like, an’
-fer an instant he could see nawthin’. It cleared
-away an’ he noticed one o’ the hoops rollin’ off
-inter the dark. He made a run fer it an’ grabbed
-at it, but his hand went right up th’oo it. He
-th’owed his arm out, thinkin’ to ketch it that ’ay.
-Ez he looked up he seen the ole hoop revolvin’
-there in the air above him. He give a wild jump
-at it. His hand struck the lantern an’ knocked
-it off the nail. They was a loud crash ez the glass
-broke. What happened after that he didn’t know.
-I found him sleepin’ on the pile o’ sacks next
-mornin’.”</p>
-
-<p>“Sights!” cried the Chronic Loafer. He drew
-his chair closer into the circle, which by this time
-had reached the smallest possible circumference.</p>
-
-<p>The Tinsmith glanced surreptitiously over his<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_146" id="Page_146">[146]</a></span>
-shoulder toward the dark corner where lay the
-entrance to the store-room.</p>
-
-<p>“It do beat all,” he said.</p>
-
-<p>From the mountains there came the low reverberation
-of thunder. The storm had passed the
-valley and now the rain was falling lightly and the
-breeze was dying.</p>
-
-<p>“Was the sugar wet next day?” asked the
-Miller, nervously biting the end off the stem of
-his clay pipe.</p>
-
-<p>“Ssh! Listen!” whispered the Loafer.</p>
-
-<p>There was no sound save the gentle patter of
-the rain and the swish of the wind in the maples
-outside the door.</p>
-
-<p>“It wasn’t,” the Storekeeper answered. “But
-the trouble began a week later.”</p>
-
-<p>“It’s a strange story,” said the Tinsmith, “an’
-ef any one but your Pap hed told it I’d hev my
-suspitchions. But his sugar was damp.”</p>
-
-<p>There was a long silence.</p>
-
-<p>From the cellar came again the weird sound,
-low but distinct.</p>
-
-<p>The G. A. R. Man arose and seized the lamp
-from the counter.</p>
-
-<p>“They ain’t no sech things ez ghos’,” he cried.
-“This is all foolershness. Ef you fellys comes
-we’ll find out what that is.”</p>
-
-<p>He shuffled slowly toward the dark end of the
-store. For a moment his companions hesitated.
-Then the Storekeeper joined the leader of the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_147" id="Page_147">[147]</a></span>
-hazardous enterprise and one by one the others
-followed. They tiptoed through the door; they
-wound their way among the boxes and barrels
-that filled the store-room, and reached the head of
-the stairway that led to the cellar. Here the
-G. A. R. Man halted. The lamp in his hand
-vibrated to and fro, throwing grotesque shadows
-on the white ceiling and walls. The men clustered
-about him and gazed timidly into the darkness
-beneath. He placed one foot on the step,
-then stopped.</p>
-
-<p>“They ain’t no sech things ez ghos’,” he said.</p>
-
-<p>“Course th-th-they ain’t,” chattered the Miller,
-who was holding the Storekeeper by the arm.</p>
-
-<p>“It’s r-r-rats,” the Tinsmith ventured.</p>
-
-<p>“Or a l-l-loose b-b-board,” suggested the veteran.</p>
-
-<p>“Foolershness,” whispered the Loafer, “‘v-v-v-vestig-g-gatin’
-ghosts ’hen they ain’t no sech
-things. The Missus is settin’ up fer me an’ I’ll
-hev to be goin’.”</p>
-
-<p>“Pap allus was superstitchous,” exclaimed the
-Storekeeper, as he made his way back through
-the maze of boxes and barrels to the store in the
-wake of the Loafer. The others were hurrying
-along in the rear.</p>
-
-<p>The rain had ceased. Overhead the black
-clouds, visible in the bright starlight, were scurrying
-away towards the hills. The G. A. R. Man
-and the Loafer were parting at the latter’s gate at
-the end of the village.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_148" id="Page_148">[148]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“Hev you ben gittin’ any sugar o’ him lately?”
-asked the veteran, pointing his thumb over his
-shoulder in the direction whence they had come.</p>
-
-<p>“I hev,” replied the Loafer. “An’ I guess ole
-Ed Harmon is still at it.”</p>
-
-<p>“What do ye think it was?”</p>
-
-<p>“It might ’a’ ben a rat. It might ’a’ ben a
-loose board. It might ’a’ ben a hundred things
-like that. I ain’t superstitchous&mdash;not a bit superstitchous.”
-The speaker paused. “But jest the
-same I ain’t fer investigatin’ ghosts,” he added.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_149" id="Page_149">[149]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2 id="CHAPTER_XIII">CHAPTER XIII.<br />
-<span class="smaller"><i>Rivals.</i></span></h2>
-
-<p>“What was the question fer debate?” asked
-the School Teacher.</p>
-
-<p>“Resawlved that the Negro is more worthy o’
-government support than the Indian,” replied the
-Miller.</p>
-
-<p>“And the decision?”</p>
-
-<p>“One jedge voted fer the affirmative an’ one
-fer the negative.”</p>
-
-<p>“And the third?”</p>
-
-<p>“That’s where the trouble come. Ye see,
-Theophilus Bones was the third jedge, an’ he got
-up an’ sayd that after hearin’ an’ weighin’ all the
-argyments o’ the debaters he hed to concide that
-neither the Negro nor the Indian was worthy.”</p>
-
-<p>“Deadlocked!” cried the pedagogue, bringing
-his chair down on all four legs with a crash, waving
-his arms and snapping his fingers. “Deadlocked,
-sure. What did ye do?”</p>
-
-<p>“See here,” interrupted the Chronic Loafer
-from his perch on a sugar barrel, “I can’t see
-that it makes any diff’rence what they done.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_150" id="Page_150">[150]</a></span>
-S’posin’ the Airy View Liter’ry Society is deadlocked.
-How’s the poor Injun goin’ to suffer any
-more by it?”</p>
-
-<p>“But did you uns ever see sech dum jedges?”
-asked the Miller appealingly. “I was on the
-negative.”</p>
-
-<p>“The point is this,” said the Teacher, shaking
-his cigar at the occupant of the barrel. “Here is
-a modern liter’ry society, whose main purpose is
-trainin’ its members in the art of debate. An
-important question is put before this same society
-for formal discussion, and yet these self-same
-trained debaters makes their points so badly that
-one o’ the jedges can’t decide on the merits o’
-the question.”</p>
-
-<p>“It ain’t so bad at all,” the Tinsmith exclaimed.
-“I once heard Aleck Bolum on that wery question.
-He argyed both affirmative an’ negative.
-All three o’ the jedges was deadlocked. None of
-’em could concide.”</p>
-
-<p>“Bolum must ’a’ ben a wonderful talker,” the
-Loafer said.</p>
-
-<p>“Wonderful? Well, I guesst he was. Why,
-it was his debatin’ broke up the Kishikoquillas
-Liter’ry Society. An’ that was a flourishin’ organization,
-too. Me an’ my old frien’ Perry
-Muthersbaugh started it together. After he
-went west Andrew Magill tuk a holt of it. He
-run it tell Aleck Bolum stepped in. Then it was
-a tug-o-war.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_151" id="Page_151">[151]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“Bolum was a livin’ Roberts-rules-of-order. He
-was a walkin’ encyclopedy of information. He
-knowd it an’ never lost no opportunity of showin’
-it. Kishikoquillas school-house was his principal
-place fer exhibitin’. From the time Andrew
-Magill’s gavel fell on Friday night tell a motion
-was made to adjourn, Aleck was on his feet. Ef
-he wasn’t gittin’ off a select readin’ or a recytation
-or debatin’, he was risin’ to pints of order,
-appealin’ from the decision o’ the chair, callin’ fer
-divisions or movin’ we proceed to new business.
-Ye couldn’t git any fresh wood put in the stove
-’thout hevin’ him move the ’pointment of a committee
-to do it. Ef a lamp burned low he’d want
-to hev it referred to the committee on lights.
-He even tried to git the recordin’ seckertary impeached
-because she kep’ the minutes in lead-pencil.”</p>
-
-<p>“What fer a lookin’ felly was this Aleck
-Bolum?” asked the Chronic Loafer.</p>
-
-<p>“He was a thin, leetle man, with a clean-shaved,
-hatchet face, an’ a bald spot on the top o’ his
-head over which he plastered a few skein o’
-lemon-colored hair.”</p>
-
-<p>“An’ he wore a Prince Al-bert coat?” inquired
-the Loafer anxiously.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, a shiny black un. An’ he’d stand up
-an’ th’ow out his chist.”</p>
-
-<p>“Why, that’s where half the trouble come,”
-interrupted the Loafer. “Don’t you know that ef<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_152" id="Page_152">[152]</a></span>
-ye put a Prince Al-bert coat on a clothes-horse,
-it’ll stan’ right up an’ begin argyin’ with ye?”</p>
-
-<p>“My dear felly,” replied the Tinsmith, “Aleck
-Bolum ’ud ’a’ argyed in his grave clothes. They
-wasn’t no stoppin’ him. We thot mebbe we could
-quiet him be givin’ him an office, so we ’lected him
-correspondin’ seckertary, cal’latin’ he’d hev nawthin’
-to do an’ ’ud be satisfied with the honor.
-We’d complete misjedged him. He got up a debate
-be correspondence with a liter’ry society out
-in Kansas an’ tuk up half our evenin’s readin’
-reports on it.</p>
-
-<p>“So Aleck Bolum didn’t give Andrew Magill
-much chancet, even tho’ he was president. It
-went hard with Andrew, too, fer he liked to fill
-in all the cracks in the meetin’ hisself, an’ objected
-to havin’ Aleck bobbin’ up with pints of
-order every time he opened his mouth. But fer
-my part I allus preferred Bolum to Magill. Bolum
-wasn’t musical. Magill was. ’Henever one
-o’ the reg’lar men on the progrim ’ud fail to be
-on hand an’ he could head Aleck off, Andrew ’ud
-git up an’ say, ‘Mister So-an’-so, who hed the
-ess’y fer the evenin’, bein’ absent, the chair has
-consented to fill in the interval be singin’ a solo.’
-Or the chair ’ud sing a duet with the seckertary;
-or the chair ’ud sing an anthem ’sisted be the society
-quartette. Then he’d stand up with his
-music marks an’ start away on twenty verses about
-Mother or Alice.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_153" id="Page_153">[153]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“Things kept gittin’ worse an’ worse. They
-final come to a head one night ’hen Aleck Bolum
-rose to a pint of order durin’ one of Andrew’s
-highest notes. Magill hed to stop singin’ an’ ast
-him to state his pint. Then Aleck moved the
-solo be the president be taken up under onfinished
-business. Andrew jest choked.</p>
-
-<p>“‘Hen the president got th’oo chokin’, we tuk
-up the debate. Everything was subdued like.
-Andrew set on the platform wery quiet an’ solemn.
-The debaters didn’t put no heart in their
-work fer they was busy keepin’ one eye on him an’
-the other on Bolum. Every one was kind o’
-nervous an’ hushed&mdash;that is, every one ’cept Aleck.
-He argyed that the pen was mightier then the
-sword in the reg’lar debate. ’Hen the argyment
-was th’owed open to all he got up agin an’ proved
-that the sword was mightier then the pen.</p>
-
-<p>“We got th’oo with the debate an’ nawthin’
-hed happened. Then Andrew Magill rose to
-give out the progrim fer the next meetin’. He
-looked solemn like at his paper a minute; then
-gazed ’round the room. Ye could ’a’ heard a pin
-drop.</p>
-
-<p>“‘Several o’ our members,’ sais he, ‘complains
-that they ain’t hed no opportunity to be heard
-afore this society. This progrim is got up especial
-to satisfy these gentlemen.’</p>
-
-<p>“An’ the progrim fer the follyin’ Friday, which
-he read out, run like this: ‘Readin’ o’ the Scriptur’<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_154" id="Page_154">[154]</a></span>
-be the president; roll call; select readin’, Mr.
-Aleck Bolum; recytation, Mr. Aleck Bolum; extemporaneous
-oration, Mr. Aleck Bolum; ess’y,
-The True Patriot, Mr. Aleck Bolum; debate, Resawlved
-that works o’ natur’ is more beautiful then
-works o’ art&mdash;affirmative, Mr. Aleck Bolum; negative,
-Mr. Aleck Bolum.’</p>
-
-<p>“Andrew finished an’ set down in his chair.
-They wasn’t even a whisper fer every eye in the
-room was turned on the correspondin’ seckertary.
-He arose deliberate like, cleared his th’oat,
-th’owed open his coat so his red tie showed better,
-put the thumb o’ his left hand in his waistcoat
-pocket, raised the other hand, pintin’ his forefinger
-at the president. We was ready fer somethin’
-hot.</p>
-
-<p>“‘Mr. Chairman,’ he sayd, never crackin’ a
-smile. ‘I desires right here to express my approval
-o’ this new plan o’ yours o’ hevin’ the
-same man debate both sides o’ the question. It’s
-an excellent idee. Under the ole rule, where the
-debater was allowed to speak only on one side,
-we developed lopsided speakers. An’ I want to
-say right here an’ now an’ to everybody in this
-room that I, fer my part, ’ll do my best to make
-next week’s meetin’ beneficial to us all.’</p>
-
-<p>“‘Hen Andrew Magill seen how he’d played
-right into Aleck Bolum’s hand, thots failed to express
-his indignation. He adjourned the meetin’,
-blowed out the lamps, put on his overcoat an’ hat<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_155" id="Page_155">[155]</a></span>
-an’ walked outen the school-house an’ down the
-road, jest all bubblin’ over. But Andrew wasn’t
-easy beaten. He’d no idee o’ settin’ all evenin’
-listenin’ to Aleck Bolum’s ess’ys an’ select readin’s.
-He slipped ’round ’mong the members on the quiet
-an’ explained how he’d an invite from the Happy
-Grove Social Singin’ Club, to bring the whole society
-up there the follyin’ Friday. He explained
-what a good un it ’ud be on Aleck ’hen he got to
-the school-house with his progrim all prepared an’
-found fer an aud’ence&mdash;Mr. Aleck Bolum. An’
-ez he offered to kerry three sled loads o’ members
-to the grove hisself, everybody agreed. It really
-begin to look ez ef Aleck was goin’ to be
-squelched.</p>
-
-<p>“The snow was two feet deep, an’ the sleighin’
-was fine. It tuk jest ’bout an hour an’ a half to
-cover the twelve mile ’tween Kishikoquillas an’
-Happy Grove. We’d a splendid time, too. Andrew
-was in high sperrits. He pictured Aleck arunnin’
-the liter’ry meetin’ all hisself, an’ give an
-imytation o’ the debate on the question whether
-works o’ natur’ was more beautiful then works of
-art. It was killin’. I mind now how Andrew hed
-jest started in showin’ us Bolum’s recytation, ’hen
-we reached the clearin’ where the school-house
-stood.</p>
-
-<p>“The place was dark, absolute dark, an’ the
-door was locked. They wasn’t a soul in sight.
-Magill got out his watch. It sayd eight-fifteen<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_156" id="Page_156">[156]</a></span>
-an’ the singin’ school was set fer eight. It looked
-pecul’ar. We guesst we’d better wait. So one
-o’ the boys climbed th’oo a winder an’ unlocked
-the door, an’ we all went in. A few can’les was
-found an’ lit. Then we set down to watch fer the
-arrival o’ the Happy Grove Social Singin’ Club.
-They wasn’t any fire, an’ the place was cold an’
-disygreeable. Some wanted to go home, but
-Andrew sayd no. We was the club’s guests.
-Some of ’em ’ud be ’long any minute. It
-wouldn’t be right fer them to find us gone. So
-we kep’ settin’, an’ wonderin’, an’ guessin’.</p>
-
-<p>“At the end of an hour we hear sleigh-bells
-down the road. Then they was a stampin’ o’
-boots outside on the portico.</p>
-
-<p>“‘Here they is at last,’ sais Andrew, gittin’ up
-on the platform an’ rappin’ fer order.</p>
-
-<p>“The door opened. In steps Aleck Bolum.
-The whole society give a groan.</p>
-
-<p>“‘What’s the trouble?’ sais he, walkin’ to the
-middle o’ the room. ‘I don’t hear no singin’.’</p>
-
-<p>“The society jest hung their heads an’ looked
-sheepish.</p>
-
-<p>“‘Where’s the Happy Grove Social Singin
-Club?’ sais he pleasant like. ‘I sees only our
-own members.’</p>
-
-<p>“No one sayd nawthin’.</p>
-
-<p>“Aleck unwound his comforter, unbottoned his
-coat, th’owed out his chist an’ cried, ‘Mr. Chairman,
-hev I the floor?’</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_157" id="Page_157">[157]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“Magill kind o’ mumbled.</p>
-
-<p>“‘Then,’ sais Bolum, ‘Mebbe I can th’ow some
-light on the hushed voices I see gethered ’round
-me here to-night. Firstly, I’d like to say that
-we’d a most excellent meetin’ at Kishikoquillas
-this evenin’. After we adjourned I thot I’d run
-up here an’ see how you was makin’ out, fer I hed
-pecul’ar interest in this getherin’. Th’oo some
-mistake I was not properly notified that our
-members was comin’ here, but I learned of it. I
-wanted to see the Kishikoquillas Liter’ry Society
-do itself proud to-night at music ez well ez literature.
-So in my capacity ez correspondin’ seckertary
-I got up a musical progrim yeste’day an’
-forwarded it to the president of the Happy Grove
-Social Singin’ Club, explainin’ how our organization
-’ud entertain his organization to-night with
-melody, instrumental an’ vocal.’</p>
-
-<p>“Bolum stopped an’ drawed a paper out o’ his
-pocket.</p>
-
-<p>“‘Will the seckertary please read the progrim?’
-he sayd.</p>
-
-<p>“Josiah Weller tuk the paper. He looked
-at it. Then he piked one eye on the president.</p>
-
-<p>“‘Ye may read the progrim, Mr. Seckertary,’
-sais Andrew, wery dignified.</p>
-
-<p>“An’ Josiah read like this, ‘The Kishikoquillas
-Liter’ry Society will be pleased to render fer the
-entertainment o’ the Happy Grove Social Singin’<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_158" id="Page_158">[158]</a></span>
-Club the follyin’ selections: bass-horn solo, The
-Star Spangled Banner, Mr. Andrew Magill.’</p>
-
-<p>“The chairman’s gavel come down on the table,
-an’ he rose an’ said, ‘I feels flattered be Mr. Bolum
-puttin’ me on the progrim, but he otter ’a’ notified
-me, so I could ’a’ brung me horn.’</p>
-
-<p>“‘Go on, Mr. Seckertary,’ sais Aleck, wery
-cool.</p>
-
-<p>“Josiah continyerd, ‘Vocal solo, I see Mother’s
-Face at the Window, Mr. Andrew Magill.’</p>
-
-<p>“The Chairman looked wery pleased.</p>
-
-<p>“‘Go on, Mr. Seckertary,’ sayd Aleck.</p>
-
-<p>“‘An ole time jig, jewsharp an’ harmonica
-mixed, Mr. Andrew Magill; vocal solo, Meet Me
-Alice at the Golden Gate, Mr. Andrew Magill;
-anthem, Angel Voices, Mr. Andrew Magill, ’sisted
-be the society.’</p>
-
-<p>“Josiah Weller didn’t git no furder. They was
-a low roar went over the room. Some felly in
-the rear ’lowed we otter put him in the pond.
-But they wasn’t no one to put. Aleck Bolum
-hed dissypeared. We got to the door in time to
-hear his sleigh-bells jinglin’ way off th’oo the
-woods. Seemed like we could ’most hear him
-chucklin’, too.”</p>
-
-<p>“But what hed become o’ the Happy Grove
-Social Singin’ Club?” asked the Miller. “Why
-wasn’t they there?”</p>
-
-<p>“I guesst you never heard Andrew Magill sing,
-did ye?” replied the Tinsmith.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_159" id="Page_159">[159]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2 id="CHAPTER_XIV">CHAPTER XIV.<br />
-<span class="smaller"><i>Buddies.</i></span></h2>
-
-<p>The Patriarch sat on the store porch. An old
-cob pipe, the smoke oozing lazily from its mouth,
-protruded from the recesses of his white beard.
-His eyes were fixed on the mountains over whose
-sides the black, sharp shadows of the clouds were
-wandering. His mood was so pensive as to
-awaken the curiosity of the Storekeeper, who had
-been watching the old man sitting upright on the
-bench, his gaze fastened on the distant hills.</p>
-
-<p>“What are ye thinkin’ of, Gran’pap?” the
-young man asked.</p>
-
-<p>“I was thinkin’ o’ Hen Wheedle. I hain’t thot
-o’ him fer a year, so I sais to meself to-day, I sais,
-‘You otter think o’ Hen Wheedle!’ An’ I set
-right down, an’ a mighty good time I’ve hed a
-medytatin’ over him.”</p>
-
-<p>The Miller laid the county paper over his knees
-and smoothed it out. Then he looked at the
-Patriarch.</p>
-
-<p>“My souls!” he cried. “Why, Hen’s ben over
-the mo’ntain nigh onto forty year.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_160" id="Page_160">[160]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“That’s jest the pint,” was the rejoinder.
-“‘Hen folks is gone ye otter think on ’em.”</p>
-
-<p>To the old man there was nothing beyond the
-mountains but infinite space. To him the world
-was bounded by the green range before him and
-the range back by the river. The two sprang out
-of the blue at a point some nine miles to the
-north, went their own ways some fifteen miles to
-the south, joined, and made the valley and the
-world. To go over the mountain to him meant
-voluntary annihilation. He would step off into
-space beyond and become nothingness. In the
-seventy-five years of his life he had known men to
-return, but it was as though they had arisen from
-the dead.</p>
-
-<p>“You uns knowd Hen Wheedle?” he inquired.</p>
-
-<p>“He was afore my time but I’ve heard o’ him,”
-replied the Miller.</p>
-
-<p>The Chronic Loafer looked up from the steps,
-where he had been sitting, whittling a piece of
-soft white pine.</p>
-
-<p>“I s’posn you’ve heard o’ Bill Siler?” he asked,
-in a pleasant, alluring tone.</p>
-
-<p>“Bill Siler,” repeated the Miller. He laid his
-forefinger against his forehead and thought a
-minute. “I think I hev. His name’s wery famil’ar.
-But why did ye ast?”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, jest because I’ve noticed that most everybody
-was afore your time an’ you’ve heard o’ ’em.
-I never knowd Bill Siler. His name was jest<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_161" id="Page_161">[161]</a></span>
-ginirated in my head, an’ I thot ye might tell
-me who he was.”</p>
-
-<p>“You thot ye’d ketch me, heigh,” cried the
-other. “Ye thot ye’d be smart an’&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>“Boys, boys,” the Patriarch shook his stick at
-his companions. “Don’t quarrel&mdash;don’t. Mebbe
-some day one o’ ye’ll go over the mo’ntain an’
-then every mean word ye ever sayd’ll come back.
-Mean words is like them wooden balls on a ’lastic
-string that they sells the children at the county
-fair. The harder they is an’ the wiolenter ye
-th’ow ’em the quicker they bounces home to ye
-an’ the more they hurt. I otter know. Hen
-Wheedle otter know. Why every time he thinks
-o’ me his conscience must jest roll around inside
-o’ him.” The light in the old man’s pipe had
-gone out. He applied a sulphur match to it and
-sneezed violently. “But I’ve forgot the wrong
-Hen done me. He must ’a’ suffered innardly fer
-it. Ef he ever returns I’ll put this right hand in
-hisn an’ say, ’Hen, you done wrong, but you’ve
-suffered innardly an’ I fergive ye.’ They’s a heap
-o’ difference ’tween plain, ord’nary sufferin’ inside
-o’ ye, an’ sufferin’ innardly. Fer the first ye takes
-bitters, stops smokin’ an’ in a day you’re all right.
-But ’hen the conscience gits out o’ order all the
-bitters in the world an’ all the stoppin’ smokin’
-in creation’ll give ye no ease. That’s what I sais,
-an’ I otter know, fer I can jest see how Hen
-Wheedle feels.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_162" id="Page_162">[162]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>No sulphurous fume was blazing around the
-Patriarch’s nose, but he sneezed again and choked
-himself with a piece of canton-flannel that served
-him as a handkerchief.</p>
-
-<p>“Hen an’ me was raised on joinin’ farms. From
-the time we was big enough to gether eggs we
-was buddies. At school the boy that licked me
-had to lick both; the boy that was licked be one
-was licked be both. It was a reg’lar caset o’
-David an’ Joshuay all over agin.</p>
-
-<p>“They’s only one thing in the world’ll separate
-buddies like me an’ him was. A crow-bar won’t
-do it; a gun won’t; nothin’ won’t but a combination
-o’ yeller hair an’ dreamy blue eyes an’ pink
-cheeks. Melissy Flower hed ’em all. But what
-she done she didn’t do intentional. I didn’t want
-her without Hen hevin’ her; he didn’t want her
-without me hevin’ her&mdash;so they was a hitch. We
-used to go over to her house together allus, an’
-we’d sing duets to her melodium playin’. He
-sung tenor an’ I bass. At the eend of each piece
-she distributed her praise jest equal. ’Hen we
-wasn’t hevin’ music we’d be on the settee, all
-three, first him, then her, then me. Ef Hen was
-so fortnit ez to catch the sparkle o’ her eyes,
-she’d turn her head my way an’ give me a chancet
-too.</p>
-
-<p>“Now things went on this way tell one night
-we was comin’ home from her house together.
-We reached the covered bridge where the road<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_163" id="Page_163">[163]</a></span>
-dewided, one fork goin’ to his placet an’ one to
-mine. How clear I remembers it!</p>
-
-<p>“‘Henry,’ I sais, lookin’ right inter his eyes&mdash;it
-was moonlight an’ I could almost read his thots,
-’Henry, it seems to me like you’ve ben thinkin’
-more ’an usual o’ Melissy lately.’</p>
-
-<p>“‘I was thinkin’ the same of you,’ sais he.</p>
-
-<p>“‘You’re right,’ I answers. ‘But I won’t treat
-no buddy o’ mine mean.’</p>
-
-<p>“‘An’ the same with me,’ sais he.</p>
-
-<p>“We was quiet a piece. Then I sais, ’Henry,
-ef ever I finds I can’t stand it no longer I’ll tell
-you.’</p>
-
-<p>“‘An’ ef ever I gits the same way I’ll tell you,’
-sais he.</p>
-
-<p>“We shook hands an’ went home.</p>
-
-<p>“I s’pose things ’ud ’a’ gone on ez they was fer
-a good many year hed not a young town felly
-from up the walley come drivin’ down in slick
-clothes an’ in a slick buggy. You uns hev all
-heard the old sayin’ that it ain’t the clothes that
-makes the man. Ye never heard the proverb that
-it ain’t the paint that makes the house, did ye?
-I guess ye didn’t, yit it’s jest ’bout ez sensible.
-It ain’t the paint that makes the house, but it’s
-the paint that keeps the boards from rottin’ an’
-the hull thing from fallin’ to pieces out o’ pure
-bein’ ashamed o’ itself. Solerman was the wisest
-man that ever lived, yit the Bible sais that he
-allus run to fine raiment. He hed a thousand<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_164" id="Page_164">[164]</a></span>
-an’ odd wives an’ knowd well enough that he
-wouldn’t hev no peace with ’em ef he run ’round
-in his bare feet an’ overalls. ’Hen the Queen o’
-Sheby called on him ye can bet your bottom dollar
-she didn’t find him settin’ on the throne with
-a hickory shirt ’thout no collar, an’ his second-best
-pants held up be binder-twine galluses.”</p>
-
-<p>The old man had been talking very fast and
-was out of breath. He paused to gather the
-threads of his story.</p>
-
-<p>The School Teacher seized the opportunity to
-remark: “An’ yet Solerman in all his glory was
-restless an’ unhappy.”</p>
-
-<p>“He knowd too much,” drawled the Loafer,
-looking up from his stick. “An’ Gran’pap, with
-all of his wisdom, with all the good uns he sayd,
-Solerman never knowd what it was to light his
-ole pipe an’ set plumb down on the wood-pile an’
-play with the dog. Why, he’d sp’iled his gown.”</p>
-
-<p>“Boys,” resumed the Patriarch, “slick clothes
-an’ a slick hoss an’ a slick buggy goes ten times
-furder with a woman then a slick brain. She can
-see a man’s clothes; she can see his hoss; she can
-see his buggy. But it takes her fifty year to git
-her eyes adjusted so she can see his mind. That’s
-why I got worrit ’hen this here Perry felly got to
-drivin’ down to wisit Melissy. He come oncet; he
-come agin, an’ I begin thinkin’ more o’ him then I
-did o’ the girl. Sometimes it seemed like I was goin’
-mad yit I couldn’t do nawthin’ on Hen’s account.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_165" id="Page_165">[165]</a></span>
-Many an afternoon I set here on this wery porch
-rewolvin’ it over an’ over: ‘Ef I don’t git her I’ll
-die; ef I git her Hen’ll die; ef Perry gits her both
-on us’ll die.’ It was a hard puzzle. A couple o’
-times I was near solvin’ it be leavin’ the main part
-o’ the sufferin’ to the other fellys, but then I
-minded how Hen looked at me that night ez we
-parted at the fork o’ the road, an’ I sais, ‘I’ll treat
-no buddy o’ mine mean. Git behind me, Satan,
-an’ make yerself comf’table tell I need ye.’</p>
-
-<p>“But one afternoon ’hen I was feelin’ petickler
-low in sperrits, oneasy, onrastless, I seen Perry
-drivin’ th’oo, his hoss curried tell his coat was
-smooth ez silk, his buggy shinin’ like it ’ud blind
-me, an’ him settin’ inside in a full new suit o’ clothes.
-I knowd she couldn’t stand all that wery long.
-So after supper I went right over to Wheedle’s to
-git Hen, ’lowin’ we’d go down to Flower’s an’ let
-Melissy settle the business be choosin’. He
-wasn’t een. His ma sayd he’d jest left, but she
-s’posed he’d be right hum agin. So I fixed meself
-on the pump trough an’ waited. My, but
-them hours did drag! The sun set an’ it got dark.
-I could look down the hill to Flower’s placet an’
-see a light twinklin’ in the best room where I
-knowd she was with Perry. I pictured her at the
-melodium twiddlin’ her fingers soft-like over the
-keys while he leaned over her singin’, ‘Thine eyes
-so blue an’ tender.’ Boys, it was terrible&mdash;terrible.
-The lamp was allus a-twinklin’ to me to hurry up.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_166" id="Page_166">[166]</a></span>
-Then final it seemed to git tired an’ went out. It
-was only eight o’clock. Now I pictured ’em settin’
-in the dark. I wanted to leave right there
-an’ run down the hill, but I sais, ‘No; I’ll treat
-no buddy o’ mine mean.’</p>
-
-<p>“By an’ by the moon come up an’ the chickens
-in the barn quit cluckin’ at the rats. I begin to
-git dozy an’ leaned my head agin the pump.
-’Hen I come to me senses the roosters was crowin’
-an’ the light was creepin’ over the ridges yander.
-I went home. Ez I come ’round the corner o’
-the house, there I see Hen Wheedle sound
-asleep on the back stoop.</p>
-
-<p>“‘Hen,’ sais I, ‘what hev you ben doin’?’</p>
-
-<p>“‘Waitin’ fer you,’ he answers, ez he gits up
-an’ rubs his eyes. ‘I come over last night to git
-you an’ go over to Flower’s. Perry’s there.’</p>
-
-<p>“I told him how I’d waited all night fer him, an’
-he jest groaned. He had ’em wery bad. I mind
-oncet readin’ in the weemen’s column in the paper
-how spilt milk could be sopped up with a sponge.
-It seemed jest ez tho’ that was what we was doin’
-’hen we went over to Flower’s that mornin’. It
-was wery early an’ we’d a long time to wait ’fore
-Melissy come down to git breakfast. Then Hen
-an’ me stepped inter the kitchen.</p>
-
-<p>“I thot she’d faint.</p>
-
-<p>“‘Why, you’re airly,’ she sais.</p>
-
-<p>“‘We’ve come airly a purpose, Melissy,’ sais I.
-‘We wants you to choose atween us.’</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_167" id="Page_167">[167]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“That girl must ’a’ thot a heap o’ one o’ we
-two&mdash;which un I don’t know, but one sure, fer
-she kind o’ fell agin the table, graspin’ it fer
-support. She raised her apron over her face an’
-gasped like.</p>
-
-<p>“‘Take whichever one ye want,’ sais Hen kind
-o’ soft.</p>
-
-<p>“She didn’t answer.</p>
-
-<p>“‘Don’t keep us een suspenders,’ sais I.</p>
-
-<p>“Then the apron fell from her face, showin’ it
-all a rosy red, an’ she tells us, ‘Boys, I’m awful
-sorry, but you’re late. I tuk Perry last night.’</p>
-
-<p>“Hen an’ me turned on our heels an’ walked
-out. We didn’t say nawthin’ tell we come to the
-fork in the road.</p>
-
-<p>“Hen stopped an’ wentured, ‘We’ve ben
-fools.’</p>
-
-<p>“‘We hev,’ I sais.</p>
-
-<p>“‘Them town fellys doesn’t last long,’ sais he
-after a spell. ‘She’s like to be a widdy.’</p>
-
-<p>“‘In which caset,’ sais I, our agreement stands.
-We notify each other ’fore we ast her.’</p>
-
-<p>“‘It does,’ he answers, quiet an’ wery solemn.
-‘We’ve allus ben buddies, you an’ me, an’ we allus
-will be.’</p>
-
-<p>“Melissy Flower become a widdy ez Hen
-’lowed an’ a mighty nice un, too. Perry was
-hardly cold tell me an’ Wheedle was over singin’
-duets with her. The ole trouble come on agin fer
-me worse than ever, but this time I made up me<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_168" id="Page_168">[168]</a></span>
-mind I wouldn’t be fooled. ’Hen I could stand it
-no longer, I walks one night over to Wheedle’s to
-notify him. He wasn’t there. I’d ’a’ gone on to
-Flower’s but I minded our agreement an’ was true.
-It was a temptation, but I’d never treat no buddy o’
-mine mean. I was true. It come twelve o’clock
-an’ they was no sign o’ him, so I went back home
-feelin’ a leetle heavy here.” The old man laid
-his hand across the watch-pocket of his waistcoat.
-“Next day they was a postal in the mail fer me.
-It was from Hen, an’ it run like this: ‘I’m on me
-way to Flower’s to ast her. I drop this in the box
-to notify you ez I promised.’</p>
-
-<p>“That’s the way he give me notice. While I
-was waitin’ to notify him right, he was astin’ her.
-He done wrong. His conscience was agin him,
-fer ’hen I went over to his placet to give him an
-idee what I thot, I found him an’ she hed gone&mdash;gone
-over the mo’ntain yander.”</p>
-
-<p>The Patriarch arose and shook his stick angrily
-at the distant hills. He shook it until his strength
-had given out and his anger had ebbed away.</p>
-
-<p>“That was forty year ago,” he said after a long
-silence, “but ef ever Hen Wheedle comes back
-I’ll lay this here right hand in hisn an’ say, ’Hen,
-you done wrong, but you’ve suffered innardly.
-I fergive ye.’”</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_169" id="Page_169">[169]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2 id="CHAPTER_XV">CHAPTER XV.<br />
-<span class="smaller"><i>Joe Varner’s Belling.</i></span></h2>
-
-<p>The wind rattled the windows and made creepy,
-unpleasant noises in the trees outside. At long
-intervals it ventured down the chimney with
-sudden spurts and playfully blew the smoke out
-into the room, causing momentary discomfort
-to the eyes of all three of us. Then as quickly
-it would retire, giving a triumphant whistle as
-though it enjoyed the joke hugely. The soot
-would come tumbling down and envelop the
-flames in a cloud of black dust. A crackle, a
-splutter, and the logs blazed up as cheerily as
-ever.</p>
-
-<p>I stretched my feet toward the fire and buried
-myself deeper in my great arm-chair. Flash, the
-setter, curled at my side, poking his nose between
-his fore-paws, fixed his earnest eyes on a tiny
-tongue of flame that was eating its way along a
-gnarled bit of hickory. Facing us, rocking slowly
-to and fro on two legs of his frail wooden chair,
-was Theophilus Winter, the lawyer and our companion
-on many a day’s hunt. This was to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_170" id="Page_170">[170]</a></span>
-Theophilus the acme of comfort, for he had a good
-cigar for an inspiration and the best of audiences,
-an intelligent dog and a tired man.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, as I was saying before that last gust interrupted
-us, I am not a superstitious man, but as
-long as no harm can come of it I prefer to plant
-my garden in the right sign. While I am not in
-the least superstitious I must confess some timidity
-on this one point&mdash;that is, as to passing the
-small log house that stands just at the foot of the
-ridge on the road to Kishikoquillas on the night
-of the twenty-ninth of December, or indeed
-almost any time after sunset. Not that I am
-afraid&mdash;far from it&mdash;but strange tales have been
-abroad for the last thirty years regarding the doings
-there after nightfall. They say that the
-sound of fiddles can be heard, the clanging of
-cow-bells and occasionally the dull report of a
-gun. This, the young folks declare, is the ghosts
-belling Joe Varner.</p>
-
-<p>“Perhaps you have seen the house of which I
-have spoken. It stands in a little clearing, about
-fifty feet from the roadside. The great stone chimney
-is now almost completely demolished. The
-plaster daubing has fallen from the chinks between
-the logs, revealing to the passer-by the barren interior.
-The glass has been removed from the
-shattered windows to let the light into some more
-respectable dwelling. The weeds and briars grow
-rank over all. The place presented a far different<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_171" id="Page_171">[171]</a></span>
-picture thirty years ago. Then all was scrupulously
-clean. Not a stone on the chimney top
-was out of place, not an iota of daubing had
-fallen away, nor was the smallest spot left unwhitewashed.
-Everywhere was the evidence of
-industry and thrift.</p>
-
-<p>“For twenty years Joe Varner had lived his
-lonely life there, with no other companion than a
-mongrel dog. He was a strange man, tall and
-gaunt in appearance, taciturn and surly in manner,
-doing his bad deeds in public and his good
-ones in private, for his pride would not allow him
-to parade the latter before his neighbors. Yet
-with it all he was at heart a kindly old fellow who
-had simply been spoiled by his way of living.
-And why he had chosen this way was a puzzle to
-all our people. He was not a native of our
-county, but had simply appeared one day, bought
-this secluded plot, built his house and settled
-here. Twice, leaving no one behind him, he went
-away, remained a week and then as quietly returned
-to resume his lonely life. On each occasion
-his return was marked by a fit of melancholy
-which attracted the attention but repelled the
-curiosity of his nearest neighbors. That he had
-visited his old home in a distant county was all
-they could ever learn.</p>
-
-<p>“Just thirty years ago this coming December,
-Varner left for the third time. A week passed,
-and he did not return. Two weeks went by, and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_172" id="Page_172">[172]</a></span>
-he was still absent. Strange rumors were abroad
-as to the cause of this unaccountable delay. When
-the third week had reached its end he came home,
-bringing with him a wizened little woman, with
-a hard face and of a most slovenly appearance.
-This person he introduced laconically, but with a
-very evident touch of pride, as his wife.</p>
-
-<p>“Just who the woman was or where from no
-one knew and none dared ask, but the news of
-her arrival spread quickly. Here was an opportunity
-not to be lost&mdash;to bell old Joe and his
-mysterious bride. Never before had the valley
-made such preparations for a serenade. Full fifty
-men and boys met at my father’s barn on the
-night following the old man’s home-coming, and
-armed with old guns, fiddles, sleigh bells and
-horns we set out for the scene of our operations.
-It was a good two mile walk to the house on the
-ridge, and we reached it just as the full moon was
-climbing over the tree tops and peeping into the
-clearing. There was no sign of life anywhere save
-a few dim rays of light that shone through a
-crevice in the shutters.</p>
-
-<p>“Silently we stationed ourselves about the
-cabin. At each corner we placed a horse-fiddle,
-an unmusical instrument made by drawing the
-edge of a board, coated with resin, over the corner
-of a large box. The signal was given, and forthwith
-arose the greatest din that had ever been
-heard in our county. The banging of the muskets,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_173" id="Page_173">[173]</a></span>
-the bells, the horns, with the melancholy wail of
-the horse-fiddles rising above them all, made an
-indescribable tumult. But the result was not as
-we had expected. We believed that Joe and his
-wife would come to the door, bow their acknowledgments
-and invite us in to a feast of cake and
-cider, as is the custom. Instead the light died
-suddenly. No sound was heard within.</p>
-
-<p>“We kept to our work bravely. A half hour
-passed. Cries of ‘Bring out the bride’ arose
-above the din, giving evidence that lusty lungs
-were coming to the aid of wearied limbs. ‘Bring
-her out. Fetch out Mrs. Varner, Joe!’ we called
-again and again.</p>
-
-<p>“It was of no avail. An hour passed and not
-a sign of life had come from the interior of the
-cabin. The noise began to weaken in volume, the
-owners of the guns grew chary of wasting their
-powder, and at last, much to our chagrin, we were
-compelled to retire to the woods for a consultation.</p>
-
-<p>“A thin stream of smoke pouring from the
-mouth of the chimney suggested a plan resorted
-to only on the most desperate occasions&mdash;that
-of smoking out the newly wedded pair. It was
-the work of but a few minutes to obtain a board
-suitable for the purpose and for one of the young
-men to climb to the roof with it. He made his
-way noiselessly to the peak, laid his burden across
-the top of the chimney, then crouched low to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_174" id="Page_174">[174]</a></span>
-await the outcome. The smoke ceased to escape.
-Another half hour passed and still no sign from
-the house. Anxious looks appeared on the faces
-of the serenaders. The man on the roof removed
-the cover and a dense volume of smoke arose,
-showing that the fire had done well the work we
-required. From beneath the doorway, too, a few
-thin wreaths were circling vaguely out.</p>
-
-<p>“A chill of dread passed over us. It seemed
-that something out of the ordinary must have
-happened within. At first we were inclined to
-the belief that the fact that the smoke had not
-driven out the occupants of the house proved that
-it was empty. But we remembered the light that
-we had seen burning on our approach. It augured
-evil.</p>
-
-<p>“Four stalwart fellows, holding between them
-a large log, attacked the door. One blow&mdash;it
-cracked. No sound inside. Another blow and
-the heavy oak fell back on its hinges. The smoke,
-released from its prison, poured out in dense
-clouds, driving the excited bellers from the doorway.
-One man dashed through it and across the
-single apartment, which passed as living-room and
-kitchen, and in another instant the window was
-up, the shutters open and the wind was whistling
-through, driving before it the heavy veil that had
-hidden the interior from our view. The moonlight
-streamed in.</p>
-
-<p>“There, sitting in a great wooden rocking-chair,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_175" id="Page_175">[175]</a></span>
-his feet resting almost in the fire, his head fallen
-low upon his breast, his stern, hard features calmly
-set as if in sleep, sat he whom we had come to bell&mdash;dead.
-On the spotless table by his side stood
-a candlestick from which the candle had burned
-away, only a bit of charred taper remaining to tell
-us that in all likelihood Joe had died before we
-reached his home and that the last spark of the
-unattended light had fluttered out, just as we began
-the hideous turmoil outside. Clutched in the old
-man’s right hand was the explanation of his lonely
-life as well as of the grewsome ending of the great
-belling.”</p>
-
-<p>Theophilus Winter ceased his narration. He
-drew out his pocketbook and after fumbling a
-moment in its recesses, took from it a bit of paper.
-It was yellow with age and soiled, and the writing
-on it had almost faded out, but I could read:
-“Deer Joe&mdash;you and me was never ment for one
-another. i knowed that 40 years ago and thats
-wi i run way with si tompson, you was good to
-take me back them too other times i left, this last
-time i thought i was gettin to old an you was so
-fergivin i had better spend my las days with you.
-i cant stand the quiet country livin an am gone
-back to harrisburg. they aint no one with me.
-fergive me. i gess youll be better off without
-your old wife&mdash;sarah.”</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_176" id="Page_176">[176]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2 id="CHAPTER_XVI">CHAPTER XVI.<br />
-<span class="smaller"><i>The Sentimental Tramp.</i></span></h2>
-
-<p>“Anything new ben happenin’ to you uns,
-Trampy?” asked the Chronic Loafer. “We ain’t
-seen ye ’bout these parts sence corn-plantin’ a
-year.”</p>
-
-<p>“Nothin’ unusu’l,” replied the Tramp, laying
-on the porch his stick and the bandana handkerchief
-that contained his wardrobe. He seated
-himself on the step. “Nothin’ unusu’l. I wintered
-in Philadelphy an’ started fer these parts in
-May.”</p>
-
-<p>“Seems like you’re lookin’ mighty glum,” said
-the Storekeeper. He had ceased his whittling
-and was examining every detail of the wanderer’s
-dress and physiognomy. “Might s’pose ye was in
-love agin.”</p>
-
-<p>The traveller sighed.</p>
-
-<p>“You air the sentimentalist tramp I ever seen,”
-the Miller cried. “Every time ye comes th’oo
-these parts, it’s a new un. Does ye think the
-weemen is so almighty blind ez to git struck on a
-hoodoo like you?”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_177" id="Page_177">[177]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“I keeps me passions an’ me shortcomin’s to
-meself,” replied the wanderer after he had lighted
-his corncob pipe. “I’ve had a heap o’ hard luck.
-I wouldn’t min’ gittin’ in love or in jail fer murder
-sep’rate, but both at oncet is too much even
-fer a man like me.”</p>
-
-<p>“Hedgins!” the Loafer exclaimed, edging
-toward the end of the bench furthest from the
-vagrant. “In jail fer murder!”</p>
-
-<p>A faint smile flitted across the face of the
-Tramp. Then he began his story:</p>
-
-<p>“In jail fer murder an’ in love wit’ the Sher’ff’s
-dotter&mdash;that’s exactly what happened to me.
-It’s onjust; it ain’t right, it ain’t, even fer a man
-o’ my shortcomin’s. Let’s see. This is hay harvest,
-ain’t it. Well, it was jest about corn-plantin’
-it all come about. I’d been workin’ me way easy
-up along the Sussykehanner, an’ one night put up
-wit’ an ole feller named Noah Punk, who lived in
-a lawg house at the foot o’ the big mo’ntain this
-side o’ Pillersville. They was no one there but
-him an’ his woman. She was a bad-tempered
-creetur’ an’ made things hum ’round that ranch
-when me an’ the ole man was playin’ kyards after
-supper. They put me to bed in the garret,
-an’ next day I set out agin. Punk he sayd he’d
-walk up the road a piece wit’ me, an’ he did. We
-parted at a crossroads two mile from his house.
-That was the last I ever seen of him. I’d never
-thot no more of him nuther ef it hedn’t been that<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_178" id="Page_178">[178]</a></span>
-two days later, when I was joggin’ easy like into
-Jimstontown, I was ’rested&mdash;’rested, mind ye, fer
-the murder o’ Noah Punk. I never knowd jest
-what it was all ’bout tell I was comf’table fixed
-in the kyounty jail. An’ then I didn’t keer, fer
-I’d met the Sher’ff’s dotter.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, but she was a star! Jest ez plump ez ye
-make ’em, wit’ a dimple, an’ yaller shiny hair, an’
-jest ez red ez a ripe rambo apple. When she
-brought me up me supper the fust night, I ast her
-what I was up fer, an’ she tol’ me.</p>
-
-<p>“It seems like no one ever seen Noah Punk
-after him an’ me left the house. He never come
-back, an’ when they hunted fer him they found
-nothin’ but one o’ his ole shoes, all covered wit’
-blood, be the canal where him an’ me parted.
-They ’rested me bekase I was last seen wit’ him.
-Then the Sher’ff wanted to hang some un.</p>
-
-<p>“When I heard that I was kind o’ tired, an’ fer
-a time jest held me head down, never sayin’
-nothin’. Then I looks up an’ seen Em’ly standin’
-there so sorrerful.</p>
-
-<p>“‘How long’ll it be tell they hangs me?’ I ast.</p>
-
-<p>“‘They’ll try you next month,’ she sais. ‘Then
-I’d ’low another month tell&mdash;&mdash;’ She bust plum
-inter tears.</p>
-
-<p>“‘Two months, Em’ly,’ sais I, I sais, ‘an’ you
-feeds the prisoners. They’ll be the bless’dest two
-months o’ me life.’</p>
-
-<p>“‘Deed, an’ that’s jest how I felt. Them words<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_179" id="Page_179">[179]</a></span>
-was true ef I ever sayd a true word. The bless’dest
-two months o’ my life.</p>
-
-<p>“But them days did fly! I never thot no more
-o’ Noah Punk or o’ hangin’. It was all of
-Em’ly. They was four other prisoners in the jail,
-an’ I never played no kyards wit’ them, but jest
-sot a-thinkin’ o’ her. She use ter bring us our
-meals three times a day. Quick ez I’d finish
-eatin’ I’d set waitin’ fer her to come agin. Jail
-was a happy place fer me. I never wanted to
-leave it.</p>
-
-<p>“You uns otter ’a’ seen me in them days. I
-wasn’t sich a bum ez I am now. The Sher’ff give
-me a shave an’ a new suit. Puttin’ all in all, I
-was a pretty slick lookin’ individu’l&mdash;no red hair
-an’ whiskers shootin’ out in all directions, makin’
-me look like an’ ile lamp, ez I hear one feller put
-it. Me coat didn’t hang like curtains, an’ me
-pants was all made o’ the same piece o’ goods. I
-was a dude, I was, in spite o’ me present shortcomin’s
-in that respect. Sometim’s I think mebbe
-Em’ly thot so too, fer she use to allus give me a
-bigger potaty than the other fellers. They guyed
-me a heap about it.</p>
-
-<p>“A month went by, an’ I was gittin’ wus an’
-wus, when they tuk me out an’ tried me fer killin’
-Noah Punk. They was a smart little chap they
-called the ’strict ’torney what done all the work
-agin me. He showed the jury Punk’s bloody
-shoe an’ my clothes. A doctor sayd the spots on<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_180" id="Page_180">[180]</a></span>
-my clothes was huming blood. They was, but it
-was mine, an’ it got there be my leanin’ agin a
-nail. Missus Punk told how I slep’ at the house.
-Another feller sayd how he’d seen me an’ Punk
-walkin’ along the canal. I ’lowed I didn’t kill
-Punk an’ that jedgin’ from what I seen o’ Missus
-Punk, he’d ’a’ thanked me ef I had. Missus Punk
-an’ the ’strict ’torney got riled at that, an’ the
-jedge come down so hard I didn’t dast say another
-word. Then the jury found I was guilty,
-an’ the jedge ’lowed they’d hang me that day four
-weeks. But I didn’t keer, fer it was one month
-more in jail to be fed be Em’ly.</p>
-
-<p>“That night she brought me a bigger potaty
-’an ever. When I seen it I sais, sais I, ‘Em’ly,
-will you be sorry when I’m goin’?’</p>
-
-<p>“‘’Deed an’ I will, Tom,’ sais she.</p>
-
-<p>“‘Then I’ll be glad to go,’ sais I. An’ ’bout
-half that potaty went down inter me lungs, I
-choked so bad.”</p>
-
-<p>The Chronic Loafer observed, “It do seem
-like Em’ly were jest a leetle gone, Trampy.”</p>
-
-<p>“Mebbe she was. I don’t know. But that
-very night the other pris’ners onloosed all the
-locks wit’ a penknife. They wanted me to go.
-I ’lowed I’d stay. I never let on what was wrong,
-but sayd I was an innercent man an’ wouldn’t
-run. They give me the laugh, an’ that was the
-last I ever seen of ’em.</p>
-
-<p>“The day o’ the hangin’ come. I’d ben gittin’<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_181" id="Page_181">[181]</a></span>
-wus an’ wus ’bout the Sher’ff’s dotter. I didn’t
-keer much ’bout goin’, but I hated to leave the
-ole jail. I’d a heap sight ruther ’a’ gone, tho’,
-wit’ flyin’ colors an’ hed her sorry then to ’a’ ben
-kicked out to trampin’. Em’ly didn’t give me
-breakfas’ that mornin’. Instead, the Sher’ff
-served me chicken an’ eggs an’ a lot of other
-things they only gives a tramp ’fore they hangs
-’im. He togged me out in a nice fittin’ black suit
-and tuk me out ter go. Mighty, but they was a
-crowd to see me off! The jail-yard was filled
-with prom’nent citizens; the housetops an’ trees
-around the wall was jest black wit’ men an’ boys.
-I braced right up an’ never feazed a bit when I
-seen the rope. The Sher’ff sayd I could make a
-speech, so I gits up an’ sais, easy like,’Me frien’s,’
-I sais, ‘I haven’t no regrets in leavin’ this ’ere
-world, fer I hain’t been onduly conf’table. It’s
-the jail I’ll miss, an’ the Sher’ff’s pretty dotter.
-I’ve&mdash;&mdash;’</p>
-
-<p>“Jest then the Sher’ff yelled, ‘Hold on!’</p>
-
-<p>“I turned an’ seen him readin’ a letter. It had
-come from Noah Punk out in Kansas. He sayd
-he wrote bekase he seen be the papers they was
-hangin’ a man fer killin’ him. He wanted to explain
-that he was still livin’ an’ hed only run away
-from Mrs. Punk. The blood on his shoes come
-from his steppin’ on a piece of glass. He’d tuk
-off his boots an’ gone west on a freight.</p>
-
-<p>“When the crowd hear that they give the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_182" id="Page_182">[182]</a></span>
-Sher’ff a groan. The Sher’ff he got mad, an’ tuk
-all me new duds, give me me ole ones an’ turned
-me looset.</p>
-
-<p>“I was a common ord’nary tramp an’ I was
-clean discouratched. I knowd I’d never have
-Em’ly feed me agin ’less I got back in that jail,
-so I set right down on the steps. The Sher’ff
-jest wouldn’t ’rest me but druv me off wit’ a club.
-I busted two o’ his winders next day. Still he
-wouldn’t ’rest me. I broke three more winders
-an’ he nabbed me. I was nigh tickled to death
-wit’ me luck. But then I hain’t no luck. That
-there man treated me jest the way a farmer does
-a cat that eats chickens. He put me on a train,
-tuk me out to Altony an’ turned me looset.”</p>
-
-<p>The Tramp sighed and puffed vigorously on his
-pipe.</p>
-
-<p>“An’ now what air ye doin’?” asked the Storekeeper.</p>
-
-<p>“What else ’ud a man do?” replied the traveller.
-“I’m hustlin’ jest ez fast ez I kin to git
-back to that jail. An’ I’m goin’ ter git in it.
-I’ll never eat another potaty onless it comes from
-the hand o’ the Sher’ff’s dotter.”</p>
-
-<p>“Does you know what I wisht?” inquired the
-Chronic Loafer earnestly.</p>
-
-<p>“What?”</p>
-
-<p>“I wisht Noah Punk hedn’t wrote that letter.”</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_183" id="Page_183">[183]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2 id="CHAPTER_XVII">CHAPTER XVII.<br />
-<span class="smaller"><i>Hiram Gum, the Fiddler.</i></span></h2>
-
-<p>The last red rays of the evening sun disappeared
-below the mountains and the gray twilight settled
-over the valley. The mill ceased its rumbling.
-The mower that all day long had been clicking
-merrily in the meadow behind the store stood
-silent in the swaths, and the horses that had drawn
-it were playfully dipping their noses in the cool
-waters of the creek. The birds&mdash;the plover, the
-lark and the snipe that had whistled since daybreak
-over the fields and the robins and sparrows
-that had chirped overhead in the trees&mdash;had long
-since made themselves comfortable for the impending
-night. By and by the woods beyond
-the flats assumed a formless blackness and from
-their dark midst came the lonely call of the whippoorwill.
-The horses splashed out of the creek
-and clattered through the village to the white
-barn at the end of the street. The Miller padlocked
-the heavy door of the mill and bid good
-night to his helper, who trudged away over the
-bridge swinging his dinner pail. Then he beat<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_184" id="Page_184">[184]</a></span>
-the flour out of his cap on the hitching-post and
-lounged up to the store. He threw himself along
-the floor, and after propping his back against a
-pillar, lighted his pipe.</p>
-
-<p>“‘Hen it comes to fiddlin’,” the Chronic Loafer
-was saying, “they is few men can beat Sam Washin’ton.
-Why I’ve knowd him to set down at a
-party at seven at night an’ fiddle till six next
-mornin’ an’ play a different tune every time.”</p>
-
-<p>“Did you ever hear o’ Hiram Gum?” asked the
-Patriarch.</p>
-
-<p>“Hiram Gum!” cried the G. A. R. Man. “My
-father used often to speak o’ him, but he was
-afore my time. Drowned in the canal.”</p>
-
-<p>“Wonderful, wonderful, I’ve heard tell,” exclaimed
-the Miller. “I can jest remember seein’
-him oncet ’hen I was a wee bit o’ a boy&mdash;a leetle
-man with long hair an’ big eyes an’ a withered
-arm.”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, yes,” the old man murmured, beating
-his stick upon the porch. “An’ a wonderful
-fiddler was Hiram Gum. They was few ’round
-these parts could han’le a bow with that man.”</p>
-
-<p>“But Sam Washin’ton’s the best fiddler they
-is,” the Loafer interposed emphatically.</p>
-
-<p>“My dear man, Hiram Gum was more’n an
-earthly fiddler,” the Patriarch retorted. “He hed
-charms. He knowd words.”</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t b’lieve in them charms furder then they
-’fect snakes an’ bees.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_185" id="Page_185">[185]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“But Hiram Gum was more’n an ord’nary
-man, an’ I otter know, fer I remember him well.
-He was leetle, ez the Miller sayd, an’ hed long
-black hair an’ a red beard that waved all around
-his neck, an’ big black eyes, an’ cheeks that shined
-like they was scoured. Then his left arm was all
-withered an’ wasn’t no use exceptin’ that he could
-crook it up like an’ work the long fingers on the
-fiddle-strings. No one knowd how old Hiram
-was, no more’n they knowd where he come from
-’hen he settled up the walley sixty years ago, fer
-he never sayd. No one ever dast ask him ’bout
-sech things, fer he’d jest look black an’ say nawthin’,
-an’ give you sech a glance with them big
-eyes that you felt all creepy. Aside from that he
-was allus a pleasant, cheery kind of a man, an’
-talked entertainin’, fer he’d traveled a heap.</p>
-
-<p>“Hiram settled in a little lawg house that stood
-on South Ridge near where Silver’s peach orchard
-is now. Peter Billings’s farm joined his lot, an’
-it wasn’t long ’fore the leetle man tuk to strollin’
-over to see his neighbors of an evenin’. By
-an’ by he seemed to take a considerable shine
-fer Peter’s dotter Susan. First no one thot nawthin’
-of it, fer it hairdly seemed likely that ez
-pretty a girl ez she would care much about sech
-a dried-up leetle speciment ez Hiram Gum. Besides,
-fer a long time she’d ben keepin’ company
-with young Jawhn McCullagh, whose father owned
-’bout the best piece o’ farmin’ land up the walley.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_186" id="Page_186">[186]</a></span>
-He was a big, fine-lookin’ felly, a bit o’ a boaster,
-an’ with a likin’ fer his own way.</p>
-
-<p>“So no one ever dreamt anything ’ud come o’
-Hiram Gum loafin’ over at Billings’s. But, boys,
-’hen you’ve lived ez long ez I hev, an’ seen ez
-much o’ the worl’ ez I hev, you’ll come to the
-conclusion that they is a heap o’ truth in the old
-sayin’ that matches is made in Heaven. But it
-do seem sometim’s like they wasn’t much time or
-thot spent in the makin’. Fust thing we heard
-that Hi hed ben drove off the Billings’s place an’
-Susan was kep’ locked in her room fer a week.
-An’ sech a change ez come over that man. It
-was airly in the spring ’hen it happened. He’d
-allus met a man with a hearty ‘howde’ before, but
-after that he never spoke ’hen he passed. From
-one o’ the pleasantest o’ men he become one o’
-the blackest. From comin’ to store every day,
-he got to comin’ only ’hen he needed things.
-The rest o’ the time he spent mopin’ up in his
-placet on the hill. Susan changed too. She
-lost color an’ got solemn like. Many a time I
-seen her leanin’ over the gate, lookin’ away up
-the ridge to where Hiram’s placet lay.</p>
-
-<p>“Then come the Lander’s big party. It was
-the last o’ the season fer the hot weather was
-near ’hen they wasn’t no time fer swingin’ corners,
-let alone the overheatin’ that ’ud come by it, so
-everybody in the walley was there. Young an’
-old danced that night. They was three sets in<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_187" id="Page_187">[187]</a></span>
-the settin’-room an’ two in the kitchen; they was
-two in the entry an’ one on the porch. Save fer
-layin’ off at ten o’clock fer sweet-cake an’ cider
-we done wery leetle restin’. They was mighty
-few wanted to rest much ’hen Hiram Gum played.
-He’d no sooner tuk his placet in the corner then
-every inch o’ the floor was covered with sets.
-Bow yer corners! an’ we was off.”</p>
-
-<p>The old man beat his stick on the porch and
-waved his body to and fro.</p>
-
-<p>“My, but that was fiddlin’! It jest went
-th’oo a man like one o’ them ’lectric shockin’
-machines. Yer feet was started an’ away ye
-went; ole Hiram settin’ there with his withered
-arm crooked up to hold the fiddle, the long,
-crooked fingers flyin’ over the strings, the bow
-goin’ so fast ye could hairdly see it, his big black
-eyes lookin’ down inter the instermen’, his long
-hair an’ beard wavin’ ez he swung to an’ fro.
-Now yer own! Oh, them was dancin’ days ’hen
-Hi Gum played!</p>
-
-<p>“They never was a more inweterate hat-passer
-then Hiram, fer be his playin’ he made his livin’,
-an’ never a note ’ud he make tell they was fifty
-cents in his ole white beaver. Then he’d play
-that out an’ ’round he’d come agin. That night
-he didn’t ast a cent, but jest sat there glum an’
-never oncet stopped the music.</p>
-
-<p>“Susan was a wonderful dancer&mdash;jest ez quick
-ez a flash, untirin’, an’ so light on her feet that ye<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_188" id="Page_188">[188]</a></span>
-felt like ye was holtin’ to a fairy ’hen ye swung
-corners with her. She was on the floor continual’.
-I done one set with her an’ noticed how she could
-scarce keep her eyes offen Hi. She only danced
-one set with McCullagh an’ lay kind o’ limp like
-in swingin’ corners an’ didn’t say nawthin’, so
-’hen they finished he left the house. I seen him
-go out o’ the door with a black look in his
-face.</p>
-
-<p>“Most all hed gone ’hen I left Lander’s airly in
-the mornin’. We lived over the river, an’ ez they
-wasn’t no bridge we use to cross in a couple o’
-ole boats that was kep’ tied along the bank jest
-below the canal lock. I went down over the flat
-an’ th’oo the woods tell I come to the canal,
-where I crossed the lock an’ walked along the
-towpath, whistlin’ all the time fer company. It
-was a clear night. The moon was shinin’ bright
-th’oo the trees. The canal was on one side o’ me,
-an’ th’oo the open places in the bushes on the
-other I could see the river gleamin’ along. I got
-to the bend jest a couple of hundred yards above
-where the boats lay an’ was jest steppin’ out inter
-the clearin’ there ’hen sudden I heard a loud voice.
-I stopped. Then it come louder, an’ I recognized
-Jawhn McCullagh’s rough talk. I went cautious
-tell I was out o’ the woods. There, jest ahead, I
-seen him, near the path, facin’ ole Hiram Gum,
-who, with his fiddle under his arm, was standin’
-with his back to the canal, lookin’ quiet at the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_189" id="Page_189">[189]</a></span>
-big felly. I dropped to the ground an’ watched,
-scarce breathin’ I was so excited.</p>
-
-<p>“Jawhn raised a heavy stick, an’ shook it, an’
-stepped slow-like toward the leetle fiddler, crowdin’
-him nearer the bank.</p>
-
-<p>“‘Hiram Gum!’ he sayd, ‘I’ve hed ’nough o’
-you. Git out o’ this country an’ never come back,
-or you’ll never fiddle agin!’</p>
-
-<p>“Hiram lowered his fiddle an’ answered, ‘You
-can’t skeer me, Jawhn McCullagh, fer Susan
-doesn’t keer fer you!’</p>
-
-<p>“‘You sha’n’t run off with her!’ the other
-yelled, shakin’ his stick.</p>
-
-<p>“I could see his face workin’ ez he swung his club
-up an’ down, an’ step be step kep’ edgin’ the leetle
-felly nearer the wotter. I jest lay tremblin’, I was
-that frightened, fer I was but a lad in them days.
-I knowd I otter run out an’ stop it, but ’fore I
-got me couritch up I hear the soft notes o’ the
-fiddle. There was ole Hiram with his withered
-hand holdin’ the instermen’, his long fingers flyin’
-over the strings, the bow slidin’ slow like up an’
-down.</p>
-
-<p>“‘Swing yer corners, Jawhn!’ he cried, fixin’
-them black eyes on the big feller.</p>
-
-<p>“Then the notes come quick an’ short.
-Jawhn’s stick dropped, an’ his arm fell limp like.
-He passed one hand confused over his forehead.
-He bowed. The notes come faster. In another
-minute he was swingin’ corners with his arms graspin’<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_190" id="Page_190">[190]</a></span>
-the air. The dead sticks cracked under his feet
-ez he flung around. An’ ez ole Hi called the figgers
-he followed him, yellin’ ’em louder an’ kickin’ like
-mad. It was the wildest dancin’ ever I seen. He
-bowed an’ twisted, back’ard an’ for’a’d, an’ chassayed
-an’ chained, his feet movin’ faster an’ faster
-ez the notes come quicker an’ quicker an’ the bow
-slid to an’ fro like lightnin’. Ole Hiram kep’
-movin’ ’round cautious like, never takin’ his eyes
-off the dancer tell he was on the river side
-an’ Jawhn skippin’ ’round on the beaten towpath.</p>
-
-<p>“Them was awful minutes fer me. I could do
-nawthin’, fer the playin’ kind o’ spelled me. ’Hen
-I seen the fiddler begin to move toward the
-canal an’ the mad dancin’ felly backin’ nearer
-an’ nearer the bank, I tried to git up but I
-kicked out with both feet an’ fell sprawlin’ on the
-groun’.</p>
-
-<p>“‘Back to your corner, Jawhn!’ the ole man
-called.</p>
-
-<p>“‘Corners next!’ yelled the dancer, kickin’ up
-his heels an’ th’owin’ out his arms like he was
-grabbin’ somethin’. Then come an awful cry.
-They was a splash. He’d gone over the bank.</p>
-
-<p>“I jumped out, fer the music hed stopped, an’
-started toward the spot. But ’fore I got there
-Hiram hed th’owed away his fiddle an’ run to the
-canal, an’ was down on his knees starin’ inter
-the wotter. A head come above the surface.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_191" id="Page_191">[191]</a></span>
-Then an arm reached wildly out. The ole man
-bent over an’ grasped the hand. But it wasn’t no
-uset, fer he’d nawthin’ to support himself with.
-He took holt o’ the bank with his withered fingers,
-but the arm give ’way an’ he toppled over. Fer
-a minute all was still. I leaned over the wotter
-an’ waited. They was a ripple toward the middle,
-an’ two heads come up. I seen Hiram Gum’s
-long black hair an’ beard an’ his drawn face ez he
-looked at the sky overhead. Then they disappeared
-agin. The surface of the canal become
-quiet an’ still like nawthin’ hed ben happenin’.
-Then I turned an’ run.</p>
-
-<p>“I flew along the towpath, acrosst the clearin’,
-inter the woods agin, an’ down toward the river
-where the boats lay hid among the willer bushes.
-An’ ez I went crashin’ th’oo the branches I hear
-a girl’s voice callin’.</p>
-
-<p>“‘Hiram,’ she sais, ‘why was you fiddlin’? I
-thot you was never comin’.’</p>
-
-<p>“Another second an’ I was th’oo the willers an’
-on the bank. There, settin’ in a boat, her hands
-on the oars ready to pull away, was Susan Billings.”</p>
-
-<p>The Patriarch beat his cane softly on the floor
-and hummed a snatch of a tune.</p>
-
-<p>There came a short, quick puffing as the Loafer
-drew on his pipe, until the bright coals shone in
-the darkness.</p>
-
-<p>“But Sam Washin’ton&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_192" id="Page_192">[192]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>The old man arose slowly.</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t keer ’bout Sam Washin’ton. I must
-be goin’ home. I’ll git the rhuem’tism on sech a
-night sure, fer I’ve no horse-chestnut in me
-pocket.”</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_193" id="Page_193">[193]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2 id="CHAPTER_XVIII">CHAPTER XVIII.<br />
-<span class="smaller"><i>The “Good Un.”</i></span></h2>
-
-<p>An air of gloom pervaded the store. Outside
-the rain came pattering down. It ran in torrents
-off the porch roof and across the entrance made
-a formidable moat, which had been temporarily
-bridged by an empty soapbox. It gathered on
-the limbs of the leafless trees and poured in steady
-streams upon the backs of the three forlorn horses,
-that, shivering under water-logged blankets, stood
-patiently, with hanging heads, at the hitching rail.
-Within everything was dry, to be sure, but the
-firewood, which was damp and would not burn,
-so the big egg stove sent forth no cheerful rays of
-heat and light. Out from its heart came the
-sound of sizzle and splutter as some isolated flame
-attacked a piece of wet hickory. It seemed to
-have conveyed its ill-humor to the little group
-around it.</p>
-
-<p>The Tinsmith arose from the nail keg upon
-which he had been seated, walked disconsolately
-to the door and gazed through the begrimed glass<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_194" id="Page_194">[194]</a></span>
-at the dreary village street. He stood there a
-moment, and then lounged back to the stove.</p>
-
-<p>As he rubbed his hands on the pipe in vain effort
-to absorb a little heat, he grumbled, “This
-here rain’s upset all my calkerlations. I was goin’
-to bile to-morrow, but you uns doesn’t catch me
-makin’ cider sech a day ez this. My weemen sayd
-they’d hev the schnitz done up to-day an’ we
-could start the kittles airly in the mornin’. Now
-all this time is loss.”</p>
-
-<p>“Seems like ye’re bilin’ kind o’ late,” said the
-Storekeeper, resting both elbows on the counter
-and clasping his chin in his hands. “Luther Jimson
-was tellin’ me the other day how all the folks
-up the walley hes made.”</p>
-
-<p>The storm had kept the Patriarch at home, so
-the Chronic Loafer had the old man’s chair. He
-leaned back on two legs of it; then twisted his
-long body to one side so his head rested comfortably
-against his favorite pile of calicoes.</p>
-
-<p>“Speakin’ o’ apple butter,” he said, “reminds
-me of a good un I hed on my Missus last week.”</p>
-
-<p>“It allser remin’s me,” interposed the Tinsmith,
-“that I met Abe Scissors up to preachin’ a Sunday,
-an’ he was wond’rin’ when you was goin’ to
-return his copper kittle.”</p>
-
-<p>“Abe Scissors needn’t git worrit ’bout his kittle.
-I’ve a good un on him ez well ez on the Missus.
-His copper kittle&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>The Farmer, who had almost been hidden by<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_195" id="Page_195">[195]</a></span>
-the stove, at this juncture leaned forward in his
-chair and interrupted, “But Abe Scissors hain’t
-got no kittle. That there&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>“Let him tell his good one,” cried the School
-Teacher. “He’s been tryin’ it every night this
-week. Let us get done with it.”</p>
-
-<p>The Farmer grunted discontentedly but threw
-himself back in silence. With marked attention,
-however, he followed the Loafer’s narration.</p>
-
-<p>“The Missus made up her mind she’d bile apple-butter
-this year, bespite all my objections, an’ two
-weeks ago this comin’ Saturday she done it. They
-ain’t no trees on our lot, so I got Jawhn Longnecker
-to give me six burshel o’ Pippins an’ York
-Imper’als mixed, on condition I helped with his
-thrashin’ next month. I give Hiram Thompson
-that there red shote I’d ben fattenin’ fer a bawrel
-o’ cider. She’d cal’lated to put up ’bout fourteen
-gallon o’ butter. I sayd it was all foolershness,
-fer I could buy it a heap sight cheaper an’ was
-gittin’ tired o’ Pennsylwany salve any way. Fer
-all year round, zulicks is ’bout the best thing to go
-with bread.”</p>
-
-<p>“Mentionin’ zulicks,” interrupted the Storekeeper,
-“remin’s me that yesterday I got in a
-bawrel o’ the very finest. It’s none o’ yer common
-cookin’ m’lasses but was made special fer table
-use.”</p>
-
-<p>“I’ll bring a tin down an’ hev it filled,” continued
-the Loafer, “fer there’s nawthin’ better’n<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_196" id="Page_196">[196]</a></span>
-plain bread an’ zulicks. But the Missus don’t see
-things my way allus, an’ they was nawthin’ but
-fer me to borry the Storekeeper’s horse an’ wagon
-an’ drive over to Abe Scissors’s an’ git the loan o’
-his copper kittle an’ stirrer.”</p>
-
-<p>“But Abe Scissors hain’t got no copper kittle,”
-cried the Farmer vehemently.</p>
-
-<p>“He sayd it was his copper kittle an’ I didn’t
-ast no questions,” the Loafer replied. “My pap
-allus used to say that ’bout one half the dissypintments
-an’ onhappinesses in this worl’ was due to
-questionin’, an’ I ’low he was right. So I didn’t
-catechize Abe Scissors. He ’lowed I could hev
-the kittle jest ez long ez I didn’t burn it, fer he
-claimed he’d give twenty-five dollar fer it at a sale
-last spring. Hevin’ made satisfactory ’rangements
-fer the apples, the cider, the kittle an’ the stirrer,
-they was nawthin’ left to do but bile. Two weeks
-ago to-morrer we done it.</p>
-
-<p>“The Missus inwited several o’ her weemen
-frien’s in the day before to help schnitz, an’ I tell
-you uns, what with talkin’ ’bout how many pared
-apples was needed with so much cider biled down
-to so much, an’ how much sugar an’ cinn’mon
-otter be used fer so many crocks o’ butter, them
-folks hed a great time. ’Hen they finished they
-was a washtub full o’ the finest schnitzed apples
-ye ever seen.”</p>
-
-<p>“Borryed my washtub-still,” exclaimed the
-Tinsmith.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_197" id="Page_197">[197]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“A gentleman is knowd be the way he lends,
-my pap use to say,” drawled the Loafer, gazing
-absently at the ceiling.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, ef your father was anything like his son
-he knowd the truth o’ that sayin’,” snapped the
-Tinsmith.</p>
-
-<p>“He use to argy,” continued the Loafer, ignoring
-this remark, “that them ez hesn’t the mawral
-courage to refuse to lend ’hen they don’t want to,
-is allus weak enough to bemoan their good deeds
-in public. But it ain’t no use discussin’ them
-pints. I got everything I needed, an’ on the
-next mornin’ the Missus was up airly an’ at six
-o’clock hed the fire goin’ in the back yard, with the
-kittle rigged over it an’ hed begin to bile down
-that bawrel o’ cider.</p>
-
-<p>“Bilin’ down ain’t bad fer they hain’t nawthin’
-to do. It’s ’hen ye begins puttin’ in the schnitz
-an’ hes to stir ketches ye. I didn’t ’low I’d stir.
-Missus, ’hen the cider was all biled down to a kittle
-full, sayd I hev ter, but I claimed I’d worked
-enough gittin’ the things. Besides I’d a ’pointment
-to see Sam Shores, the stage-driver, ’hen he
-come th’oo here that afternoon. The Missus an’
-her weemen frien’s grumbled, but begin dumpin’
-the schnitz in with the bilin’ cider an’ to do their
-own stirrin’. I come over here an’ was waitin’ fer
-the stage. After an’ hour I concided I’d run over
-to the house an’ git a drink o’ cider. I went in
-the back way, an’ there I seen Ike Lauterbach’s<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_198" id="Page_198">[198]</a></span>
-wife a-standin’ stirrin’. The rest o’ the weemen
-was in the kitchen.</p>
-
-<p>“‘Hen Mrs. Lauterbach seen me she sais pleasant
-like, ‘I’m so glad you’ve come. Your wife
-an’ the rest o’ the ladies hes made a batch o’
-cookies. Now you jest stir here a minute an’ I’ll
-go git some fer ye.’</p>
-
-<p>“I was kind o’ afraid to take holt on that there
-stirrer, so sayd I’d git ’em meself. But she ’sisted
-she’d be right out, an’ foolish I tuk the han’le. I
-regret it the minute I done it. I stirred an’
-stirred, an’ Mrs. Lauterbach didn’t come. Then
-I hear the weemen in the house laughin’ like
-they’d die.</p>
-
-<p>“The Missus she puts her head out an’ sais,
-‘Jest you keep on stirrin’. Don’t you dast stop
-fer the butter’ll stick to the kittle an’ burn it ef
-ye does.’</p>
-
-<p>“Down went the windy. I was jest that hoppin’
-mad I’d a notion to quit right there an’ leave
-the ole thing burn, but then I was afraid Abe
-Scissors might kerry on ef I did. So I stirred,
-an’ stirred, an’ stirred. I tell ye I don’t know
-any work ez mean ez that. Stop movin’ the stick
-an’ the kittle burns. Ef any o’ you uns ever done
-it you’ll know it ain’t no man’s work.”</p>
-
-<p>“The weemen allus does it with us,” said the
-Miller in a superior tone.</p>
-
-<p>“I cal’lated they was to do it with us, but I
-mistook,” the Loafer continued. “I stirred, an’<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_199" id="Page_199">[199]</a></span>
-stirred, an’ stirred. The fire got hotter an’ hotter
-an’ hotter, an’ ez it got warmer the han’le o’ the
-stirrer seemed to git shorter, an’ me face begin to
-blister. I kep’ at it fer an’ hour an’ a half, tell
-me legs was near givin’ way under me, me fingers
-was stiff an’ achin’, me arms felt like they’d drop
-off from pushin’ an’ twistin’ that long stick. The
-apples was all dissolved but the butter was thin
-yit, an’ I knowd it meant th’ee hours afore we
-could take the kittle offen the fire.</p>
-
-<p>“Then I yelled fer help. One o’ the weemen
-come out. I was that mad I most swore, but she
-jest laughed an’ poked some more wood on the
-fire an’ sayd ef I didn’t push the stick livelier the
-kittle’d burn. The fire blazed up hotter an’ hotter,
-an’ it seemed like me clothes ’ud begin to
-smoke at any minute. Me arms an’ legs was
-achin’ more’n more. Me back was ’most broke
-from me tryin’ to lean ’way from the heat. Me
-neck was ’most twisted off be me ’temptin’ to keep
-the blaze from blindin’ me. It come four o’clock
-an’ I yelled fer help agin.</p>
-
-<p>“The Missus stuck her head outen the windy
-an’ called, ‘Don’t you let that kittle burn!’</p>
-
-<p>“I was desp’rate, but I kep’ stirrin’ an’ stirrin’.
-It come sundown an’ begin to git darker an’ darker,
-an’ the butter got thicker an’ thicker, but I knowd
-be the feel that they was a couple o’ hours yit. I
-begin to think o’ lettin’ the ole thing drop an’
-Abe Scissors’ kittle burn, fer I held he didn’t hev<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_200" id="Page_200">[200]</a></span>
-no business to lend it to me ’hen he knowd well
-enough it ’ud spoil ef I ever quit stirrin’. Oncet
-I was fer lettin’ go an’ slippin’ over here to the
-store, fer I heard several o’ the fellys drive up an’
-hitch an’ the door bang shet. But ’hen I tried to
-drop the stick I jest couldn’t. Me fingers seemed
-to think it wasn’t right an’ held to the pole, an’
-me arms kep’ on pushin’ an’ pushin’ tho’ every
-motion give me an ache. I jest didn’t dast, so
-kep’ stirrin’ an’ stirrin’ an’ stirrin’, an’ thinkin’ an’
-thinkin’ an’ thinkin’, an’ wond’rin’ who was over
-here an’ what was doin’. An’ ez I kep’ pushin’
-an’ pushin’, an’ thinkin’ an’ thinkin’, I clean forgot
-meself an’ all about the apple-butter.</p>
-
-<p>“I come to with a jump fer some un hed me be
-the beard. ’Hen I looked up I seen the Missus
-an’ her weemen frien’s standin’ ’round me gestickelatin’.
-The Missus was wavin’ what was left
-o’ the stirrer. It was jest ’bout half ez long ez
-’hen I begin with it, fer the cross piece that runs
-down into the butter an’ ’bout half the han’le
-was burned off. Seems I’d got the ole thing
-clean outen the kittle an’ hed ben stirrin’ it
-’round the fire.”</p>
-
-<p>“Reflex action,” suggested the Teacher.</p>
-
-<p>“The butter was fairly smokin’. An’ the kittle!
-Well, say, ef that there wasn’t jest ez black on the
-inside ez ef if was iron ’stead o’ copper. An’ the
-weemen! Mebbe it was reflect actin’ they done,
-ez the teacher sais, but whatever it was it skeered<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_201" id="Page_201">[201]</a></span>
-me considerable. But final I seen how funny it
-was, how the joke was on the Missus who’d loss
-all her apple-butter, ’stead o’ on me, an’ how I’d
-got square with Abe Scissors fer lendin’ me his
-copper kittle ’hen he knowd it ’ud burn ef I ever
-stopped stirrin’. An’ I jest laughed.”</p>
-
-<p>The Loafer straightened up in his chair and
-began to rock violently to and fro and to chuckle.</p>
-
-<p>The Farmer arose and walked around the stove.</p>
-
-<p>“What fer a kittle was that?” he asked in a
-low, pleasant tone. “Was they a big S stamped
-on the inside next the rim?”</p>
-
-<p>“That’s the one exact. He! he!” cried the
-Loafer, with great hilarity. “S fer Scissors
-an’&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>“S stands fer Silver too,” yelled the Farmer.
-“My name’s Silver. I lent that kittle to Abe
-Scissors four weeks ago.”</p>
-
-<p>The Loafer gathered himself together and
-arose from the muddy pool at the foot of the
-store steps. He gazed ruefully for a moment at
-the closed door, and seemed undecided whether
-or not to return to the place from which he had
-been so unceremoniously ejected. Then the
-sound of much laughing came to his ears, and he
-exclaimed, “Well, ef that ain’t a good un!”</p>
-
-<p>And he ambled off home to the Missus.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_202" id="Page_202">[202]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2 id="CHAPTER_XIX">CHAPTER XIX.<br />
-<span class="smaller"><i>Breaking the Ice.</i></span></h2>
-
-<p>When William Larker irrevocably made up
-his mind to take Mary Kuchenbach to the great
-county picnic at Blue Bottle Springs he did not
-tell his father, as was his custom in most matters.
-To a straight-laced Dunkard like Herman Larker,
-the very thought of attendance on such a carousal,
-with its round dancing and square dancing, would
-have seemed impiety. Henry Kuchenbach was
-likewise a member of that strict sect, but he was
-not quite so narrow in his ideas as his more pious
-neighbor. Yet to him, also, the suggestion of
-his daughter being a participant in such frivolity
-would have met with scant approval.</p>
-
-<p>But William was longing to dance. For many
-years he had fondly cherished the belief that he
-was possessed of much inborn ability in that art&mdash;a
-genius compelled to remain dormant, by the
-narrowness of his family’s views. Many a rainy
-afternoon had he given vent to his desire by
-swinging corners and <em>deux-et-deux-ing</em> about his
-father’s barn-floor, with no other partner than a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_203" id="Page_203">[203]</a></span>
-sheaf of wheat and no other music than that produced
-by his own capacious lips.</p>
-
-<p>So one beautiful July day, when, attired in his
-best, he stepped into his buggy, tapped his sleek
-mare with the whip and started at a brisk pace
-toward the Kuchenbach farm, his stern father
-believed that he was going to the great bush-meeting,
-twelve miles up the turnpike and was
-devoutly thankful to see his son growing in piety.
-William’s best was a black frock coat, with short
-tails, trousers of the same material reaching just
-below his shoe-tops, a huge derby, once black but
-now green from long exposure to the elements,
-and a new pair of shoes well tallowed. As he
-drove up to the gate of the neighboring farm
-Mary was waiting for him, looking very buxom
-and rosy and neat in her plain black dress, the
-sombreness of which was relieved by a white kerchief
-at the neck and the gray poke bonnet of
-her sect. As she took the vacant place beside
-him in the buggy and the vehicle rattled away,
-Henry Kuchenbach called after them, “Don’t
-fergit to bring back some o’ the good things the
-brethren sais.” And good Mrs. Kuchenbach
-threw up her hands and exclaimed, “Ain’t them
-a lovely pair?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yais,” said her husband grimly, “an’ fer six
-year they’ve ben keepin’ comp’ny an’ he ain’t yit
-spoke his mind.”</p>
-
-<p>The buggy sped along the road, the rattle of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_204" id="Page_204">[204]</a></span>
-its wheels, the clatter of the mare’s hoofs and
-the shrill calls of the killdeer skimming over the
-meadows, being the sole sounds to break the
-silence of the country.</p>
-
-<p>A mile was gone over. Then the girl said falteringly,
-“Beel, a’n’t it wrong?”</p>
-
-<p>In response William gave his horse a vicious
-cut with the whip and replied, “It don’t seem jest
-right to fool ’em, but you’ll fergit all about it
-’hen we git dancin’.”</p>
-
-<p>There was silence between them&mdash;a silence
-broken only at rare intervals when one or the
-other ventured some commonplace remark which
-would be rewarded with a laconic “Yais” or “Ye
-don’t say.”</p>
-
-<p>Up hill and down rattled the buggy, following
-the crooked road across the valley, over three low
-wooded ridges, then up the broad meadows that
-border the river, until at length the grove in which
-lies Blue Bottle Spring was reached. The festivities
-had already begun. The outskirts of the
-wood were filled with vehicles of every description&mdash;buggies,
-buckboards, spring-wagons, omnibuses
-and ancient phaetons. The horses had
-been unhitched and tied to trees and fences, and
-were munching at their midday meal, gnawing
-the bark from the limbs, snatching at the leaves
-or kicking at the flies while their masters gave
-themselves up to the pursuit of pleasure. Having
-seen his mare comfortably settled at a small<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_205" id="Page_205">[205]</a></span>
-chestnut, William Larker took his lunch basket
-on one arm and his companion on the other and
-proceeded eagerly to the inner part of the grove,
-whence came the sounds of the fiddle and cornet.
-They passed through the outer circle of elderly
-women, who were unpacking baskets and tastefully
-arranging their contents on table-cloths
-spread on the ground&mdash;jars of pickles, cans of
-fruit, bags of sandwiches, bottles of cold tea,
-layer cakes of wondrous size and construction,
-and the scores of other dainties necessary to pass
-a pleasant day with nature. They went through
-a second circle of venders of peanuts, lemonade
-and ice-cream, about whose stands were gathered
-many elderly men discussing the topics of the
-day and exchanging greetings.</p>
-
-<p>The young Dunkards had now arrived at the
-center of interest, the platform, and joined the
-crowd that was eagerly watching the course of
-the dance. An orchestra of three pieces, a bass-viol,
-a violin and a cornet, operated by three men
-in shirt sleeves, sent forth wheezy strains to the
-time of which men and women, young and old,
-gaily swung corners and partners, galloped forward
-and back, made ladies’ chains, winding in
-and out, then back and bowing, until William
-Larker and his companion fairly grew dizzy.</p>
-
-<p>The crowd of dancers was a heterogeneous one.
-There were young men from the neighboring
-county town, gorgeous in blazers of variegated<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_206" id="Page_206">[206]</a></span>
-colors, and young farmers whose movements were
-not the less agile for the reason that they wore
-heavy sombre clothing and high-crowned, broad-brimmed
-felt hats. There were three particularly
-forward youths in bicycle attire, and three gay
-young men from a not far distant city, whose
-shining silk hats and dancing pumps made them
-centers of admiration and envy. The women,
-likewise, went to both extremes. Gaily flowered,
-airy calico, cashmere and gingham bobbed about
-among glistening, frigid satins and silks.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, ain’t it grand?” cried Mary Kuchenbach,
-clasping her hands.</p>
-
-<p>“That’s good dancin’, I tell ye,” replied her
-companion with enthusiasm.</p>
-
-<p>She had seated herself on a stump, and he was
-leaning against a tree at her side, both with eyes
-fixed on the platform.</p>
-
-<p>Now in seemingly inextricable chaos; now in
-perfectly orderly form, six sets bowing and scraping;
-now winding into a dazzling mass of silk,
-calico, high hats, felt hats, flower-covered bonnets
-and blazers, then out again went the dancers.</p>
-
-<p>“Good dancin’, I should say!” William exclaimed.
-“Jest look at them th’ee ceety fellys,
-with them shiny hats, a-swingin’ corners. Now,
-a’n’t they cuttin’ it? Next comes ‘a-la-man-all.’
-Watch ’em&mdash;them two in the fur set&mdash;the way
-they th’ow their feet&mdash;the gal in pink with the
-felly in short pants an’ a stripped coat. Now<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_207" id="Page_207">[207]</a></span>
-back! Thet there is dancin’, I tell ye, Mary!
-‘Gents dozy-dough’ next. Thet ’ere felly don’t
-call figgers loud ’nough. There they goes&mdash;bad
-in the rear set&mdash;thet’s better. See them ceety
-fellys agin, swingin’ partners. Grand chain!
-Good all ’round&mdash;no&mdash;there’s a break. See thet
-girl in blue sating&mdash;she turned too soon. Thet’s
-better. T’other way&mdash;bow yer corners&mdash;now yer
-own. What! so soon? Why, they otter kep’ it
-up.”</p>
-
-<p>The music had stopped. The dancers, panting
-from their exertions, mopping and fanning, left
-the platform and scattered among the audience.</p>
-
-<p>William Larker’s eyes were aglow. His companion,
-seated upon the stump, gazed curiously,
-timidly, at the gay crowd about her, while he
-stood frigidly beside her mentally picturing the
-pleasure to come. He was to dance to real music
-with a flesh-and-blood partner after all those years
-of secret practise with a wheat sheaf in the seclusion
-of his father’s barn. He was to put his arms
-around Mary Kuchenbach. His feet could hardly
-keep still when a purely imaginary air floated
-through his brain and he fancied himself “dozy-doughing”
-and “goin’-a-visitin’” with the rosy
-girl at his side.</p>
-
-<p>The man with the bass-viol was rubbing resin
-on his bow, the violinist was tuning up and the
-cornetist giving the stops of his instrument the
-usual preliminary exercise when the floor-master<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_208" id="Page_208">[208]</a></span>
-announced the next dance. One after another
-the couples sifted from the crowd and clambered
-on to the platform.</p>
-
-<p>“Two more pair,” cried the conductor.</p>
-
-<p>“Come ’long, Mary. Now’s our chancet,”
-whispered the young Dunkard to his companion.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, Beel, really I can’t. I never danced in
-puberlick afore.”</p>
-
-<p>“But you kin. It ain’t hard. All ye’ll hev to
-do is to keep yer feet a-movin’ an’ mind the felly
-thet’s callin’ figgers.”</p>
-
-<p>The girl hesitated.</p>
-
-<p>“One more couple,” roared the floor-master.</p>
-
-<p>William was getting excited.</p>
-
-<p>“You can dance with the best of ’em. Come
-’long.”</p>
-
-<p>“Really now, Beel, jest a minute.”</p>
-
-<p>The twang of the fiddle commenced and the
-cracked, quavering notes of the horn arose above
-the buzz of conversation.</p>
-
-<p>“Bow yer corners&mdash;now yer own,” cried the
-leader.</p>
-
-<p>And the young man sat down on the stump in
-disgust.</p>
-
-<p>“We’ll hev to git in the next,” he said. “Why,
-it’s eesy. You see this here’s only a plain
-quadreel. Ye otter see one thet ain’t plain&mdash;one
-o’ them where they hes sech figgers ez ‘first lady
-on the war-dance,’ like they done at the big weddin’
-up in Raccoon Walley th’ee year ago. These<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_209" id="Page_209">[209]</a></span>
-is plain. I never danced ’em afore meself, but
-I’ve seen ’em do it an’ I’ve ben practisin’. All
-ye’ll hev to do is to mind me.”</p>
-
-<p>So the following dance found them on the platform
-among the first. The girl was trembling,
-blushing and self-conscious; the young man self-conscious
-but triumphant and composed.</p>
-
-<p>“Bow yer partners,” cried the floor-master when
-the orchestra had started its scraping.</p>
-
-<p>Down went the gray poke bonnet. Down
-went the great derby, and a smile of joy overspread
-the broad face beneath it.</p>
-
-<p>“Swing yer partners!”</p>
-
-<p>The great arms went around the plump form,
-lifting it from its feet; their owner spun about,
-carefully replaced his burden on the floor, bowed,
-smiled and whispered, “Ain’t it grand?”</p>
-
-<p>“Corners!”</p>
-
-<p>The young woman in blue satin gave a slight
-scream that was metamorphosed into a giggle, as
-she felt herself swung through space in the arms of
-the muscular person toward whom she had careened.
-Her partner, one of the city men with
-silk hats, grinned and whispered in her ear,
-“Oatcake.”</p>
-
-<p>“Leads for’a’d an’ back!”</p>
-
-<p>William Larker seized his partner’s plump hand
-and bounded forward, bowing and twisting, his free
-arm gesticulating in unison with his legs and feet.
-He was in the thick of the dance now; in it with his<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_210" id="Page_210">[210]</a></span>
-whole heart. Whenever there was any “dozy-doughing”
-to be done, William did it. If a couple
-went “visitin’,” he was with them. When “ladies
-in the center” was called, he was there. In every
-grand chain he turned the wrong way. He
-gripped the women’s hands until they groaned inwardly.
-He tramped on and crushed the patent
-leather pumps of a young city man, and in response
-to a muttered something smiled his unconcern,
-bolted back to his corner, swung his
-partner and murmured, “Ain’t it grand?” The
-young women giggled and winked at their acquaintances
-in the next set; the forward youth
-in a bicycle suit talked about roadsweepers, and
-the city man said again, “Oatcake.”</p>
-
-<p>But the young Dunkard was unconscious of it
-all to the end&mdash;the end that came most suddenly
-and broke up the dancing.</p>
-
-<p>“Swing yer partners!” bawled the floor-master.</p>
-
-<p>William Larker obeyed. A ragged bit of the
-sole of his shoe caught in a crack and over he
-went, off the high platform, with his partner
-clasped tight in his arms.</p>
-
-<p>When he recovered his senses he found himself
-lying by the spring, the center of all eyes. His
-first glance fell upon Mary, who was seated at his
-side, weeping heartily, despite the efforts of a large
-crowd of sympathizing women to allay her fears.</p>
-
-<p>Next his eyes met those of the young woman
-in blue satin, and he saw her laugh and turn and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_211" id="Page_211">[211]</a></span>
-speak to the crowd. He thought that he noticed
-a silk hat and heard the word “Oatcake.” And
-then and there he resolved to return to and never
-again depart from the quiet ways of his fathers.</p>
-
-<p>William and Mary drove back in the early
-evening. They had crossed the last ridge and
-were looking out over the broad valley toward the
-dark mountain at whose foot lay their homes,
-when the first word was spoken.</p>
-
-<p>“Beel,” said the girl with a sidelong glance,
-“ain’t dancin’ dangerous?”</p>
-
-<p>The young man cut the mare with the whip
-and flushed.</p>
-
-<p>“Yais, kind o’,” he replied. “But I’m sorry I
-drug you off o’ the platform like thet.”</p>
-
-<p>She covered her mouth with her hand. William
-just saw the corner of one of her eyes as she
-looked up at him from under the gray bonnet.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, I didn’t min’ thet,” she said. “It was
-jes’ lovely tell we hit.”</p>
-
-<p>The mare swerved to one side, toward the fence.
-The driver seized the rein he had dropped and
-pulled her back into the beaten track. Then the
-whip fell from his hands, and he stopped and
-clambered down into the road and recovered it.
-But when he regained his place in the buggy he
-wrapped his reins twice around the whip, and the
-intelligent beast trotted home unguided.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_212" id="Page_212">[212]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2 id="CHAPTER_XX">CHAPTER XX.<br />
-<span class="smaller"><i>Two Stay-at-Homes.</i></span></h2>
-
-<p>“If wantin’ to was doin’ an’ they weren’t no
-weemen, I’d ’a’ ben in Sandyago long ago,”
-said the G. A. R. Man. He rolled a nail-keg close
-to the stove, seated himself upon it, dipped a
-handful of crushed tobacco leaves from his coat
-pocket into his pipe and lighted the odorous weed
-with a sulphur match. Then he wagged his beard
-at the assembled company and repeated, “Yes,
-sir, I’d ben in Sandyago long ago.”</p>
-
-<p>“Weemen ain’t much on fightin’ away from
-home,” observed the Chronic Loafer, biting a
-cubic inch out of a plug of Agriculturist’s Charm
-which he had borrowed from the man who was sitting
-next him on the counter. The charm had
-passed half way around the circle and the remaining
-cubic inch of it had been restored to its owner,
-when the veteran, not catching the full intent of
-the remark, replied: “Yas. They’s a heap o’
-truth in that there. Weemen is sot agin furrin
-wars. Leastways my weemen is. Now&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_213" id="Page_213">[213]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“Do they prefer the domestic kind?” asked the
-School Teacher.</p>
-
-<p>“Not at all&mdash;not at all,” said the old soldier.
-“Ye see, my missus passed th’oo sech terrible
-times back in ’60, ’hen I was bangin’ away at the
-rebels down in the Wilterness, that ’hen this here
-Spaynish war broke out she sais to me, sais she,
-‘Ye jest sha’n’t go.’</p>
-
-<p>“‘Marthy,’ sais I, ‘I’m a weteran. The Governor
-o’ Pennsylwany hes call fer ten thousand
-men, an’ he don’t name me, but he means me jest
-the same. Be every moral an’ jest right, I bein’ a
-weteran am included in that ten thousand.’</p>
-
-<p>“With that I puts on me blues, an’ gits down
-me musket, an’ kisses the little ones all ’round, an’
-starts fer the door. Well, sir, you uns never seen
-sech a time ez was raised ’hen they see I was off
-to fight the Spaynyards. Mary Alice, the eldest,
-jest th’owed her arms ’round my neck an’ bust out
-with tears. The seven others begin to cry, ‘Pap,
-Pap, you’ll git shooted.’</p>
-
-<p>“‘Children,’ I sais, sais I, ‘your pap’s a weteran
-an’ a experienced soldier. Duty calls an’ he
-obeys.’</p>
-
-<p>“The missus didn’t see things that way. She
-jest gits me be the collar an’ sets me down in an
-arm-chair, draws me boots, walks off with them an’
-me musket an’ hides ’em. She weren’t goin’ to
-hev no foolin’ ’round the shanty, she sayd.</p>
-
-<p>“Marthy seemed to think that that there settled<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_214" id="Page_214">[214]</a></span>
-it, but she didn’t know me, fer all the evenin’,
-ez I set there be the fire so meek-like, I was
-a-thinkin’. Scenes wasn’t to my likin’, so I concided
-I’d jest let on like I hed give up all idee
-o’ fightin’ Spaynyards, wait tell the family was
-asleep an’ then vanish.</p>
-
-<p>“At midnight I sets up in bed. The moon was
-shinin’ th’oo the winder, jest half-lightin’ the room,
-so I could move ’round without trippin’ over the
-furnitur’. The missus was a-snorin’ gentle like, an’
-overhead in the attic I could hear a soft snifflin’
-jest ez a thrasher engine goes ’hen the men has
-shet down fer dinner. It was the childern asleep.
-I climbs out over the footboard an’ looks ’round
-fer me boots. There they was, stickin’ out under
-the missus’s pillow. Knowin’ I couldn’t git ’em
-without wakin’ her, I concided to vanish barefoot.
-But they was one thing agin this, an’ that
-was that the door was locked an’ some un hed
-took the key. I tried the winder, but that hed ben
-nailed shet. Then I gits mad&mdash;that there kind o’
-quiet-like mad ’hen ye boils up inside an’ hes to
-keep yer mouth shet. It’s the meanest kind o’
-mad, too. It seemed like they was a smile playin’
-’round the missus’s face, an’ that made me sourer
-than ever, an’ kind o’ spurred me on.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, sirs, ez I stood there in the middle o’
-the room thinkin’ what I’d do next an’ wonderin’
-whether I hedn’t better jest slip back to bed, me
-eye ketched sight o’ an ole comf’table that filled<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_215" id="Page_215">[215]</a></span>
-a hole in the wall where the daubin’ hed fell out
-from atween the lawgs. That put me in mind o’ a
-scheme that I wasn’t long in kerryin’ out, fer the
-hole was pretty good sized an’ I’m a small man
-an’ wiry. In less’n no time the comf’table was
-outen that hole an’ I was in it. I stayed in it,
-too, fer jest ez me head an’ arms an’ shoulders got
-out o’ doors I felt a sharp prickin’ in me side. I
-pushed back an’ a great big splinter jagged me.
-I tried to go on for’a’d, an’ it jagged me agin so
-bad I ’most yelled. So I stayed right there&mdash;one-half
-outen the house an’ the other half een.
-Seemed like time begin to move awful slow then,
-an’ it ’peared a whole day ’fore the moon went
-from the top o’ the old lone pine tree into Grandaddy’s
-chestnut, which is jest twenty feet. Then
-me feet an’ legs was bakin’ over the stove, an’
-the cold Apryl winds was a-whistlin’ down me
-neck.</p>
-
-<p>“I took to countin’ jest to pass time, an’ I ’low
-I must ’a’ counted fifteen million afore I heard
-footsteps up the road. A man come outen the
-woods an’ inter the moonlit clearin’, where I could
-see he was ole Hen Bingle. I whistled. He
-stopped an’ looked. I whistled agin an’ called
-soft like to him. He sneaked up to the gate an’
-looked agin.</p>
-
-<p>“‘Hen, help,’ I whispers.</p>
-
-<p>“‘Who in the heck is you a-growin’ outen the
-side o’ that shanty?’ he calls, kind o’ hoarse an’<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_216" id="Page_216">[216]</a></span>
-scared. With that he pints a musket at me wery
-threatenin’.</p>
-
-<p>“‘Hen Bingle!’ sais I. ‘Don’t you dast
-shoot. It’s me an’ I want you to pull me out.
-I’m goin’ to war.’</p>
-
-<p>“Then it dawned on him what was up, an’ he
-come over an’ looks at me. I seen he hed on his
-blues, too, an’ I knowd ez he hed give his woman
-the sneak an’ was off to fight Spaynyards. He
-wanted to laugh, but I told him it were no time
-fer sech foolin’, but jest to break off that splinter
-an’ pull me loose.</p>
-
-<p>“Now, Hen’s an obligin’, patriotic kind o’ a
-feller, an’ tho’, ez he sayd, he hedn’t much time
-to waste, ez his woman was likely to wake up any
-minute an’ find him gone, he reached up an’ broke
-off the splinter. But I fit the hole so tight I
-couldn’t budge, an’ he sayd he’d pull me out. So
-he gits up on the wall o’ the well which was jest
-below me, an’ grabs me be both hands an’ drawed.
-I’d moved about an inch, ’hen he kicked out wild
-like an’ hung to me like a ton o’ hay, an’ gasped
-an’ groaned. I thought that yank hed disj’inted
-me all over, an’ yells, ‘Let go!’</p>
-
-<p>“‘Don’t you dast let go!’ he sayd, lookin’ up
-at me kind o’ agonizin’.</p>
-
-<p>“Then I see that neither me nor Hen Bingle
-was ever goin’ to fight Spaynyards, fer he’d
-stepped off the wall an’ was hangin’ down inter
-the well.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_217" id="Page_217">[217]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“Splinters! Why, I’d ’a’ ruther hed a splinter
-stickin’ in every inch o’ my body then ole Hen
-Bingle’s two hundred pound a-drawin’ me from
-my nat’ral height o’ five feet six inter a man o’
-six feet five. That’s what it seemed like. He
-ast how deep me well was, an’ ’hen I answered
-forty foot with fifteen foot o’ wotter at the bottom,
-he sayd he’d never speak to me agin if I let
-go my holt on him. I sayd I guesst he wouldn’t,
-an’ he let out a whoop that brought the missus
-an’ the little ones a-tumblin’ outen the house.</p>
-
-<p>“Marthy stared at us a minute. Then she sais,
-‘Where was you a-goin’?’</p>
-
-<p>“‘To fight Spaynyards,’ sais I, sheepish like.</p>
-
-<p>“‘An’ you, Hen Bingle?’ she asts.</p>
-
-<p>“‘Same,’ gasps Hen.</p>
-
-<p>“‘Does your wife know you’re out?’ sais the
-missus, stern ez a jedge.</p>
-
-<p>“‘No,’ sais Hen.</p>
-
-<p>“‘Then I’ve a mind to go over to your placet
-an’ git her,’ sais Marthy.</p>
-
-<p>“‘It’s two miled,’ Hen groaned, ‘an’ I’ll be
-drownded agin you git back. Lemme up now
-an’ I’ll go home an’ stay there.’</p>
-
-<p>“Marthy turns around quiet like, walks inter
-the house an’ comes out with the family Bible.</p>
-
-<p>“‘Hen Bingle,’ she sais solemn-like, holdin’ the
-book to his mouth, ‘does you promise to tell the
-whole truth an’ nothin’ but the truth, an’ not to
-go to war?’</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_218" id="Page_218">[218]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“Hen didn’t waste no time in kissin’ that book
-so loud I could hear an echo of it over along the
-ridge. I kissed it pretty loud meself, to be sure.
-The missus lifted Hen outen the well an’ he snuck
-off home. His woman never knowd nawthin’
-about the trouble tell she met my missus two
-weeks later, at protracted meetin’ over to Pine
-Swamp church. Ez fer me, but fer that splinter
-I’d be in Sandyago now.”</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_219" id="Page_219">[219]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2 id="CHAPTER_XXI">CHAPTER XXI.<br />
-<span class="smaller"><i>Eben Huckin’s Conversion.</i></span></h2>
-
-<p>Eben Huckin’s father had been a United
-Presbyterian and his mother a Methodist. Eben
-belonged to neither church, a fact which he
-ascribed to his having been drawn toward both
-denominations by forces so exactly equal that he
-had never become affiliated with either. Yet he
-prided himself on being a man of profound religious
-convictions. How could it be otherwise
-with one whose forefathers had for generations
-sung psalms and slept through two-hour sermons
-on the hard, uncomfortable benches of the bluest
-of blue-stocking Presbyterianism or prostrated
-themselves at the mourners’ bench on every opportunity?
-The austerity of these ancestors afforded
-him a reason for habitually absenting himself
-from Sunday services in either of the two
-temples where his parents had so long and faithfully
-worshiped. The church-folk in the valley
-were getting entirely too liberal. He was a conservative.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_220" id="Page_220">[220]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“‘Hen the United Presbyter’ans hes to hev an
-organ to sing by an’ the Methydists gits to hevin’
-necktie parties an’ dancin’, it’s time for a blue-stockin’
-like me to set at home o’ Sundays an’
-dewote himself to readin’ Lamentations,” he was
-wont to explain to his cronies at the store.</p>
-
-<p>Holding as he did such puritanical ideas, it is
-not to be wondered that he viewed with bitter
-hostility the coming of an Episcopal clergyman
-to West Salem. He had offered no objection
-when Samuel Marsden, who owned nearly all the
-land surrounding the village, married a woman
-from the city, but when that young autocrat turned
-the United Presbyterians out of the building
-where they had worshiped for a century and had
-an Episcopal minister come from down the river
-to hold weekly services there, the blood of all the
-Huckins boiled and Eben felt called upon to
-protest.</p>
-
-<p>At first these protests took the form of long
-discourses, delivered on the store porch and touching
-on the evil of introducing “ceety notions an’
-new-fandangled idees” into the spiritual life of the
-community. They continued in this strain until
-one fine April day when the sun was shining with
-sufficient warmth to allow Eben and his cronies
-to move from the darkness within the store to
-the old hacked bench without, where they could
-bask in the cheering rays.</p>
-
-<p>The green shoots on the tall maple by the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_221" id="Page_221">[221]</a></span>
-hitching rail, the shouts of the boys fishing in the
-creek below the rumbling mill, the faint “gee
-haw” of the man who was plowing in the meadow
-across the stream, the contented clucking of a trio
-of mother hens, wandering up and down the village
-street with a score of piping children in their
-wake&mdash;these and a hundred other things told that
-spring was at hand. After their long winter of
-imprisonment the shoemaker, the squire and the
-blacksmith would have been contented to enjoy
-themselves in silence, but Eben was in one of his
-talkative moods. That very morning his niece
-had announced her intention of forsaking the
-church in which her fathers had worshiped, and
-becoming an Episcopalian. His cup of woe was
-overflowing. He had been able to view with
-complacence such defections in other families.
-They had afforded him splendid illustrations with
-which to enliven his discourses on the weakness
-of the generality of mankind. He had set the
-Huckins above the generality. It had seemed to
-him impossible that one could err who boasted
-the blood of men who had gone to church with
-the Bible in one hand and a gun in the other.
-He had always laid particular stress on that point.
-He was a firm believer in heredity and had long
-contended that the descendants of those who first
-settled the valley were blessed with strong characters.
-Yet one of the blood had become an
-Episcopalian! And he had met the rector!</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_222" id="Page_222">[222]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“The first I knowd of it was this mornin’ at
-breakfast,” said Eben, adjusting his steel-rimmed
-spectacles that he might look over their tops so
-sternly as to check any hilarity on the part of his
-auditors. “Mary sais to me, ‘Uncle, I wish you’d
-spruce up a leetle this afternoon ez the rector’s
-comin’.’</p>
-
-<p>“‘Mary,’ sais I, thinkin’ I’d cod her jest a
-leetle, ‘a miller runs a mill, a tinner works in tin,
-a farmer farms, but what in the name of common
-sense does a rector do?’</p>
-
-<p>“‘I mean the preacher,’ she answers.</p>
-
-<p>“‘Mary,’ I sais, ‘ef the parson heard you a callin’
-him sech new-fandangled names, he’d hev you
-up before the session.’</p>
-
-<p>“She was quiet a piece, for she seen I was in a
-wery sewere turn o’ mind. I didn’t pay no more
-attention tell I was jest about gittin’ up from the
-table ’hen she spoke up agin.</p>
-
-<p>“‘Uncle,’ she sais, ‘I hope you won’t mind, but
-that’s what we Piscopaleens calls preachers&mdash;rectors.
-Mr. Dawson is a rector.’</p>
-
-<p>“Well, sirs, I was so took back, I jest set down
-an’ gasped. I thot I was goin’ to hev a stroke.
-Here was one o’ my blood, my own brother’s
-dotter, raised on the milk o’ Presbyter’anism, fergittin’
-the precepts o’ her youth, strayin’ out o’
-the straight an’ narrow way an’ takin’ up with the
-new-fandangled idees o’ the Piscopaleens. An’
-why? Because she liked the singin’! ’Hen I<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_223" id="Page_223">[223]</a></span>
-heard that I rose in my wrath an’ started down
-here to cool off. On reachin’ the apple tree be
-the bend in the road, I set down on the grassy
-bank to rest a leetle an’ look ’round. Pretty soon
-I see a man comin’ over the medder, an’ ez he got
-close I knowd be the cut o’ his coat an’ the flatness
-o’ his black slouch that it was the preacher
-hisself. ’Hen he reached the creek he give a
-run an’ jump an’ went flyin’ over it in the most
-ondignifiedest way I ever seen. ‘It seems like
-he thinks he’s an angel a’ready an’ is spreadin’ his
-wings,’ I sais to meself. Then he puts both hands
-on the top o’ the six-rail fence an’ waults over it
-like a circus performer, landin’ almost at me feet.</p>
-
-<p>“‘Hello,’ he sais.</p>
-
-<p>“‘Hello,’ sais I, never liftin’ me eyes offen the
-wheat field acrosst the road.</p>
-
-<p>“‘Fine day,’ sais he.</p>
-
-<p>“‘I was jest tryin’ to make up me mind whether
-it was or not,’ sais I.</p>
-
-<p>“I thot that ’ud settle him, but I mistook me
-man. He were the thickest headedest, forwardest
-felly I ever laid eyes on. He jest laughed. Now
-I admits that ’hen he laughed he ’peared a tol’able
-pleasant enough sort o’ a leetle person, but I
-wasn’t in no frame o’ mind fer jollyin’.</p>
-
-<p>“‘I was jest on me way up to your placet to
-see ye,’ he sais.</p>
-
-<p>“‘Was ye?’ I answers. ‘Well&mdash;I heard ye was
-comin’. I’m jest on me way to store.’</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_224" id="Page_224">[224]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“It almost seemed I could see that gentle hint
-comin’ outen his one ear after it hed gone in
-the other.</p>
-
-<p>“‘So ye waited here fer me,’ sais he. ‘How
-nice of ye! We’ll jest stroll down to the willage
-together.’</p>
-
-<p>“‘Well,’ sais I, ‘I’ve changed me mind. I’m
-goin’ to stay where I am.’</p>
-
-<p>“‘Ye couldn’t a picked a nicer placet,’ he
-sais.</p>
-
-<p>“An’ with that he set right down be me side.
-Mad? Why, I was jest bubblin’. An’ I hed a
-right to be, fixed ez I was with a Piscopaleen
-preacher stickin’ to me closer then a burdock burr
-to a setter dog’s tail. I didn’t say a word, but
-jest set there with me eyes on the mo’ntain like
-he wasn’t about.</p>
-
-<p>“By an’ by he speaks. ‘Mr. Huckin, that’s a
-nice mule you hev runnin’ ’round the pasture adjoinin’
-our church.’</p>
-
-<p>“‘So,’ sais I.</p>
-
-<p>“‘An’ mebbe you wouldn’t mind pasturin’ him
-in some other field a Sunday,’ he went on. ‘Ye
-mind a few weeks ago I sent you a message askin’
-that you keep your cattle out o’ that field on the
-Sabbath because they disturbs our service. Ye
-mind it, don’t ye?’</p>
-
-<p>“‘Dimly,’ I answers.</p>
-
-<p>“‘Well,’ he went on, ‘I guesst it must ’a’ ben
-pretty dim, fer last week ye forgot to take ’em<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_225" id="Page_225">[225]</a></span>
-out an’ added that nice mule to the flock. I like
-that beast mighty well, but I objects to his puttin’
-his head in the chancery winder durin’ the most
-solemn part of our service, like he done the other
-day.’</p>
-
-<p>“‘Hen I pictured that ole mule attendin’ the
-’Piscopaleen preachin’ I wanted to laugh all over,
-but I didn’t dast fer it ’ud ’a’ give him an openin’.
-I jest turned an’ looked at the preacher ez stern
-ez I could.</p>
-
-<p>“‘Perhaps,’ I sais, ‘these new-fandangled, ceetyfied
-goin’s on o’ yourn amused him.’</p>
-
-<p>“He didn’t smile then&mdash;not a bit of it. He was
-riled&mdash;bad riled, an’ pinted his finger at me an’
-cried, ‘See here, you old hardshell.’ That was
-the wery name he called me. ‘See here,’ he sais.
-‘Since I’ve ben a missionary in this community
-I’ve tried to conduct meself in a proper an’ humble
-sperrit, but ef I hev to carry my missionary
-efforts on among the mules, I’ll do it with a gun.’</p>
-
-<p>“‘Hen I heard that I stood right up an’ glared
-at him. I didn’t mind his shootin’. It wasn’t
-that what stirred me up. It wasn’t that what
-made me shake me stick in the air like I was
-scotchin’ a chestnut tree. No, sirs.</p>
-
-<p>“‘Mission’ry!’ I sais. ‘Then all we is heathen,’
-I sais. ‘Parson, folks hev ben singin’ sams in this
-walley fer a hundred an’ fifty year. The folks
-in this walley hes ben contributin’ to the support
-o’ mission’ries in furrin lan’s fer the last<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_226" id="Page_226">[226]</a></span>
-cent’ry. There are more camp-meetin’s, an’ bush-meetin’s,
-an’ protracted meetin’s, an’ revivals an’
-love-feasts in this walley in a year than they are
-years in your life. Yit you calls yourself a mission’ry.
-You complains about my cattle disturbin’
-your meetin’s. Ef they enjoy listenin’ to
-your mission’ry efforts in behalf o’ we heathen, I
-don’t think I otter stop it. You might do ’em
-some good.’</p>
-
-<p>“With that I turned an’ walked down the road.
-I never looked ’round tell I come to the edge o’
-the peach orchard. Then I peeked back over me
-shoulder. There was the preacher, still standin’
-be the apple tree lookin’ after me. He was smilin’.
-Mighty souls! Smilin’! I could ’a’ choked
-him.”</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>An oak tree, upturned, its roots stretched forth
-appealingly in the air, its branches washing helplessly
-to and fro in the stream, a broken scow lying
-high upon the beach, bottom up, a great crevasse
-in the side of the canal through which could be
-seen an imprisoned and deserted canal-boat, told
-of the spring flood. The Juniata had fallen
-again to its natural courses, but it was still turbulent
-and the current was running strongly. It
-was fast growing dark. Heavy clouds were rolling
-along the mountains from the west whence
-sounded the low grumbling of the coming storm.</p>
-
-<p>Eben Huckin, standing by his boat, looked<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_227" id="Page_227">[227]</a></span>
-anxiously up the river, and then across to where
-the village had been lost in the fast gathering
-blackness. By a hard pull to the opposite bank
-and a run up half a mile of level road he might
-make the shelter of the mill before the clouds
-broke. But this meant tremendous exertion and
-Eben, with the rust of sixty years in his joints,
-preferred a drenching. So he tucked his basket
-in the locker in the stern and fixed his oars as deliberately
-as though the sun were smiling overhead.
-Then he began to push out into the stream.</p>
-
-<p>The rattle of gravel flying before fast falling
-feet and a crashing of laurel bushes along the towpath
-caused him to pause.</p>
-
-<p>“Hold on there!” came a voice. “Take me
-over.”</p>
-
-<p>A moment later a man emerged from among
-the trees and came tumbling down the bank. It
-was Dawson. He stopped short and hesitated
-when he saw Eben, and was about to turn back
-when the old man said brusquely, “Git in.”</p>
-
-<p>Impelled by a flash of lightning on the mountain
-side and a crash of thunder overhead, the rector
-scrambled into the stern of the boat. Eben
-gave it a shove and climbed in after him. The
-river had seized the clumsy craft and had swept it
-far out from the bank before the old man could
-fix his oars and get it under control. Then with
-steady strokes he bore away for the other side.</p>
-
-<p>As Dawson sat watching the coming storm and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_228" id="Page_228">[228]</a></span>
-felt the boat moving along through the water, carrying
-him nearer and nearer to the lights of the village,
-he forgot the incident of the mule and the quarrel
-of the previous day and remembered only that his
-enemy was taking him from the dark, forbidding
-mountains behind, where the very trees were
-thrashing their limbs and straining to and fro as
-though they would break from their imprisonment
-and run for shelter too.</p>
-
-<p>“I can never thank you enough for rowing me
-over, Mr. Huckin,” he said.</p>
-
-<p>There was no reply save a vicious creak of the
-row-locks. The old man paused at the end of the
-stroke but kept his eyes fixed on the sky overhead.
-It seemed as if he was about to answer and
-then thought better of it, for, ignoring his companion
-completely, he leaned sharply forward,
-caught the water with the blades and sent a
-shower splashing over the stern. Dawson was wet
-through. He was a young man with a temper,
-and while he could enjoy an intellectual combat
-with the rough old fellow before him, he had no
-mind to be under dog in a physical encounter.</p>
-
-<p>“See here, Eben Huckin,” he said quietly,
-but in a voice of determination. “Just handle
-those oars a little more properly or I’ll take command
-of this craft.”</p>
-
-<p>There was another loud rattle of the row-locks,
-and the rector involuntarily closed his eyes and
-ducked, thinking to catch the oncoming wave on<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_229" id="Page_229">[229]</a></span>
-the top of his broad hat. The expected deluge
-did not materialize, and he looked up in surprise
-to see Eben leaning over the side of the boat
-grasping wildly at an oar which was now far out
-of his reach and floating rapidly away.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, my Gawd!” cried the old man, throwing
-himself into the bottom of the boat. “We’re
-loss, Parson, we’re loss!”</p>
-
-<p>He covered his face with his hands and swung
-despairingly to and fro, crying, “We’re loss&mdash;we’re
-loss!”</p>
-
-<p>The boat had turned around and was being
-swept along stern foremost by the swift current.
-Dawson saw this, but the peril of their position
-was not yet clear to him.</p>
-
-<p>“Pardon me,” he said quietly, “but I don’t
-understand just what has happened.”</p>
-
-<p>“Happened!” cried Eben. “Happened? Why,
-your talkin’ done it. I was listenin’ to you, an’
-an oar got caught in some brushwood an’ twisted
-outen my hand. I jumped fer it, lettin’ go o’ the
-other. Now they’re both gone.”</p>
-
-<p>“But as far as I can see the only difference is
-we’re going in another direction and a great deal
-faster,” said the rector calmly.</p>
-
-<p>“We’re just goin’ right fer the canal dam,”
-groaned the old man. “It’s only four mile
-straight away, an’ ’hen the river’s like this here,
-it’s a reg’lar Niagry.”</p>
-
-<p>“Hum!” Dawson glanced to his left anxiously.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_230" id="Page_230">[230]</a></span>
-The mountains were now lost in the
-darkness. He looked to the right to see the
-lights of the village already far up the river.</p>
-
-<p>“Eben,” he asked, “is there no way we can
-steer her into the shore?”</p>
-
-<p>“All the rudders in the worl’, ef we had ’em,
-wouldn’t git us outen this current.”</p>
-
-<p>“Is there no island we are likely to run into?”</p>
-
-<p>“Nawthin’ but Bass Rock, an’ ez it’s only ten
-feet square we mowt ez well hope&mdash;no, no, it
-ain’t no uset.”</p>
-
-<p>“We might swim.”</p>
-
-<p>“I can’t swim.”</p>
-
-<p>“I can&mdash;a little. If you could we would get
-out.”</p>
-
-<p>Then the clouds broke and the rain came down
-in torrents. They were enveloped in blackness
-and could no longer see one another.</p>
-
-<p>To Dawson, sitting in the stern, his hands
-grasping the sides of the boat, his head bowed
-against the storm, it seemed as though they had
-suddenly been carried out on a great sea. Land
-was near, but it might as well have been a thousand
-miles away. A plunge over the side and a
-few strong strokes might take him to safety. But
-he could not desert the old man&mdash;not till he felt
-the craft sinking beneath him and the water closing
-over his head. The boat swung up and down in
-monotonous cadence, and he felt himself being
-carried helplessly on and on.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_231" id="Page_231">[231]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>There was a flash of lightning, a deafening
-crash overhead, and all was dark again. It was
-but for an instant, and yet he saw clearly, hardly
-a stone’s throw away, a small house on the river
-bank. A thin wreath of smoke was fighting its
-way out of the chimney against the rain. In one
-window there was a light, and in that light a man
-was standing, complacently smoking a pipe and
-peering out through the narrow panes and over
-the river, watching the play of the lightning along
-the Tuscaroras.</p>
-
-<p>Huckin half rose to his feet.</p>
-
-<p>“It’s ole Hen Andrews,” he cried. “I wonder
-ef he seen us.”</p>
-
-<p>Thereupon he shouted lustily for help. He
-continued his unavailing cries for some minutes,
-and then sank back to his seat.</p>
-
-<p>“Parson,” he said, as if by a sudden thought,
-“Parson, kin you pray?”</p>
-
-<p>“I’ve been praying all along, Eben,” was the
-quiet reply.</p>
-
-<p>“Mebbe it’ll do some good,” Eben rejoined,
-“I hain’t never ben much on it meself&mdash;not ez
-much ez I otter ’a’ ben, but my pap he was
-powerful in prayer.”</p>
-
-<p>He was silent a moment, and added regretfully,
-“Oh, don’t I wish he was here now!”</p>
-
-<p>“You are not afraid to die, are you?” asked
-Dawson.</p>
-
-<p>“Most any other way, I’m not,” was the answer.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_232" id="Page_232">[232]</a></span>
-“But I don’t like drownin’, an’ I don’t
-make no bones about it. Our family hes allus
-gone be apoplexy, an’ I had an idee I’d go that
-way, too. All this here comes so sudden. Oh,
-Parson, it’s sech an onrastless, oncertain way o’
-goin’, a-washin’ roun’ like this fer hours. Ef it
-’ud stop after we was gone, I wouldn’t min’ so
-much, but to keep on a-washin’ an’ bobbin’ roun’
-this ole river&mdash;Parson, Parson, pray agin.”</p>
-
-<p>The old man leaned forward and clasped his
-companion’s hand.</p>
-
-<p>“Pray agin, Parson, pray agin!” he cried.</p>
-
-<p>A flash of lightning lit up the river. Just
-ahead Dawson saw a broad rock. As they were
-going they would sweep by it. He sprang forward
-over the seats until he reached the bow.
-Then he leaped into the water, still keeping a
-fast hold with one hand on the side of the boat.
-A few strong strokes and the clumsy craft turned
-her head. The swimmer’s feet touched the shelving
-stone, and he reached out blindly till he felt
-a jagged bit of rock. The stern of the boat swung
-around and it tugged hard to release itself from
-the firm grasp that had checked its wild career.</p>
-
-<p>Eben Huckin tumbled into the water. Dawson
-seized him and dragged him from the river,
-while the boat, now free, went whirling away
-down stream.</p>
-
-<p>For a long time the two men lay in silence,
-face downward, on the stone. Then the storm<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_233" id="Page_233">[233]</a></span>
-went by and the moon came climbing up the
-other side of the mountain, and by its light they
-could make out the narrow confines of their
-refuge. It was hardly ten feet in length and
-breadth, and was divided down the middle by a
-crevice. They could see the river whirling on
-all sides. To their right, over the stretch of
-water, rose the Tuscaroras; to their other hand
-they looked into the blackness of the woods which
-extended from the bank to the ridges miles away.</p>
-
-<p>“Parson, do ye hear that rumblin’, that rumblin’
-jest like the mill in busy times, ’hen all the
-wheels is goin’?” Huckin was sitting up watching
-Dawson wring the water from his felt hat.
-The rector strained his ears.</p>
-
-<p>“That’s the dam, Parson. It’s jest a piece below
-here, an’ mighty near we come to hearin’
-that soun’ most onpleasant loud. Who’d ’a’ thot
-we’d ever hit this here bit o’ rock?”</p>
-
-<p>“Why, Eben, I rather had an idea all along
-that we might do so,” Dawson laughed. “I was
-watching for it. I had no intention of letting
-myself get drowned when you heathen in the valley
-needed a missionary so badly.”</p>
-
-<p>“True, Parson, true,” said the old man fervently.
-“It ’ud ’a’ ben a hard blow fer the walley
-to hed you tuk jest at this time.”</p>
-
-<p>The rector smiled faintly. He gazed inquiringly
-at his companion. The moon shining full
-on Eben’s countenance gave him a saintly appearance,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_234" id="Page_234">[234]</a></span>
-for the rougher features had disappeared
-in the half-light, and the long white hair and
-beard, so unkempt in the full glare of day, now
-framed a benevolent, serious face. Dawson was
-satisfied.</p>
-
-<p>For a long time nothing passed between the
-two. Then Eben nudged the rector gently and
-whispered, “D’ye believe in sperrits?”</p>
-
-<p>“Why, of course not,” was the reply.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, I’m glad you don’t.”</p>
-
-<p>“Why did you ask?”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, I thot ef ye did you’d like to know this
-here rock is sayd to have a ha’nt.”</p>
-
-<p>“To be haunted!” exclaimed Dawson, edging
-a little closer.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, be Bill Springle’s ghos’. I never put
-much stock in the story meself, but that’s what
-folks sais. I know them ez claims to hev seen it.
-I knows one man ez refused to sleep here all
-night fer a five-dollar bill.”</p>
-
-<p>“Goodness me!” said the rector. “I had no
-idea the people hereabouts were so superstitious.”</p>
-
-<p>“It ain’t jest superstition, Parson. It’s mostly
-seein’ an’ believin’. Bill Springle’s ben dead these
-thirty year, an’ in that time, they sais, many folks
-hes seen him.”</p>
-
-<p>“Eben, the spirits of the dead have better
-things to do than to spend their nights sitting on
-cold, damp rocks.”</p>
-
-<p>“I know, Parson, I know; but the case o’<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_235" id="Page_235">[235]</a></span>
-Springle was onusual. He lived back along the
-other mo’ntain an’ one night killed a pedler fer
-his money. The sheriff’s posse chased him clean
-acrosst the walley to the river, an’ here they loss
-sight o’ him. Fer a whole week they beat up an’
-down the bank an’ then give up the chase. A year
-after they foun’ all that was left o’ Bill Springle
-wedged right in that crack ahint me.”</p>
-
-<p>Dawson arose to his knees and peered over the
-prostrate body of his companion into the interesting
-crevice. Then he fell back to his old place,
-giving vent, as he did so, to a little laugh.</p>
-
-<p>“He’d starved to death,” Eben continued, “an’
-they sais that sometimes on stormy nights he kin
-be seen settin’ here. I never put much faith in
-the story meself, ez&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>“I’m glad you don’t, Eben,” the rector interrupted.
-“But suppose we talk of something more
-cheerful.”</p>
-
-<p>A long silence followed.</p>
-
-<p>“Parson,” the old man at length said, “why
-don’t ye sleep?”</p>
-
-<p>“On this narrow rock? I’d roll into the river.”</p>
-
-<p>“I’ll watch ye. D’ye see that lone pine tree
-standin’ out o’ that charcoal clearin’ on top o’ the
-mo’ntain?” Huckin indicated the spot with his
-hand, and Dawson nodded. “Well, ’hen the
-moon gits over that tree I’ll wake ye up. Then
-I’ll sleep.”</p>
-
-<p>The rector replied by rolling over on his back<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_236" id="Page_236">[236]</a></span>
-and watching the stars until his eyes closed. Soon
-the old man heard a soft, contented purring and
-he knew that for a time he was alone&mdash;at least till
-Bill Springle joined him. For a long while he
-sat in deep thought with his eyes fixed on the
-whirling waters below him. Suddenly he leaned
-over and peered into the face of the man sleeping
-at his side.</p>
-
-<p>“Parson,” he said softly, “I guesst ye needn’t
-mind no more about that mule.”</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_237" id="Page_237">[237]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2 id="CHAPTER_XXII">CHAPTER XXII.<br />
-<span class="smaller"><i>A Piece in the Paper.</i></span></h2>
-
-<p>The Chronic Loafer arose from the bench and
-stepped to the edge of the porch. He rested his
-left hand on the pillar, thrust his right hand into
-his pocket and gazed searchingly at the mountains.</p>
-
-<p>“What’s keepin’ you so quiet to-day?” asked
-the Teacher, lifting his eyes from the county
-paper. “One might suppose from the way you
-was watchin’ those mountains, you was expectin’
-them to come over here so you could go fishin’.”</p>
-
-<p>The Loafer turned and looked down on the
-pedagogue. There was pity in his eyes and disdain
-lurking about the corners of his mouth.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, you don’t feel hurt, do you?” snapped
-the Teacher.</p>
-
-<p>“I guess you never fished,” was the reply.</p>
-
-<p>“To tell the truth I prefer more active pursuits.”
-The learned man said this with the air
-of one who was in the front rank in the great
-battle of life. “I prefer doin’ things to loungin’<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_238" id="Page_238">[238]</a></span>
-along a creek tryin’ to catch a few small trout
-that never did me any harm.”</p>
-
-<p>“I thot you’d never fished much,” said the
-Loafer, letting himself down on the steps and
-getting out his pipe. “Ef you hed you’d know
-that half the pleasure of it is gittin’ to the stream.
-You figure on how nice it’ll be ’hen you’re away
-from the dusty road, in the woods, lyin’ in the
-grass ’longside of a cool, gurglin’ pool, with the
-trout squabblin’ among themselves to git at your
-bait. You arrive there, an’ first thing you set on
-a rattlesnake. That makes you oneasy fer the
-rest o’ the day. Then you find you’ve left your
-bait-can at home an’ stirs up some yeller-jackets,
-ez you are huntin’ under rocks fer worms. You
-lays down your extry hooks where you can find
-’em quick, an’ then ’hen you need ’em you discovers
-they’re in your foot. No, sir, ef I was
-wantin’ to go fishin’ in them mo’ntains, an’ I
-hed the power, I’d tell ’em to git back five mile
-so I’d hev furder to walk to reach the run.”</p>
-
-<p>“I hain’t got nawthin’ agin your idees o’ fishin’,”
-said the Patriarch from his place on the
-bench between the Tinsmith and the G. A. R.
-Man, “but what you say about expectin’ is ridic’lous.
-You was sayin’ a bit ago that you was
-goin’ to hev chicken an’ waffles fer supper to-night.
-You’ve put in a fine day expectin’ it.
-But ef you goes home an’ sets down to sausage
-an’ zulicks, I can see things flyin’ ’round your<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_239" id="Page_239">[239]</a></span>
-shanty most amazin’. All the joys o’ expectation
-’ll be wiped outen your mind by dissypintment.”</p>
-
-<p>“But you are talkin’ o’ great expectations,
-Gran’pap,” said the Loafer. “They result in
-great dissypintments. I’ve been speakin’ o’ the
-leetle things o’ life. Now there’s the old soldier.”
-He pointed to the veteran. “He was eight year
-expectin’ to git a pension. He talked o’ nawthin’
-else. Ef he’d only git it he’d be happy.
-Well, he got it, an’ he lost the pleasure o’ lookin’
-for’a’d to it. Is he satisfied? No. He’s jest
-put in wouchers claimin’ that th’ee new diseases
-hev cropped out on him an’ that he laid the
-foundations fer ’em in the Wilderness thirty year
-ago. He wants a raise. He’s happy agin, fer
-he is expectin’.”</p>
-
-<p>The G. A. R. Man arose.</p>
-
-<p>“I’m goin’ home,” he said, “an’ I guess I
-might ez well stop in at your place an’ tell your
-missus to never mind the chicken an’ waffles ez
-you’ve hed enough fun jest expectin’ ’em.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, that would be a good idee,” the Loafer
-drawled. “But you’d better jest yell it to her
-over the fence. You know she’s ben expectin’
-chicken an’ waffles, too.”</p>
-
-<p>The veteran dropped back to his place on the
-bench.</p>
-
-<p>The Patriarch nudged him and said pleasantly,
-“Why don’t you go on?”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_240" id="Page_240">[240]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“I guesst I’d better wait fer the stage an’ git
-the news,” was the growling reply.</p>
-
-<p>“You hain’t answered my first question yet,”
-said the Teacher to the Loafer. “You was standin’
-there half an hour lookin’ at them mountains
-as though they was made of chicken an’ waffles.
-You were thinkin’ of somethin’.”</p>
-
-<p>“True,” the Loafer replied. “I was thinkin’
-o’ Reginal’ Deeverox an’ Lord Desmon.”</p>
-
-<p>“Mighty souls!” the Patriarch cried. “Reginal’
-Deeverox an’ Lord Desmon! You are the
-greatest man fer makin’ acquaintances I ever seen.”</p>
-
-<p>“Deeverox was that new segare drummer that
-come th’oo here yesterday, wasn’t he?” the Tinsmith
-inquired.</p>
-
-<p>“No,” the Loafer responded. “He was never a
-segare drummer ez fur ez I know. He was the
-real hair to the Earldom of Desmon.”</p>
-
-<p>“Desmon! An’ where in all nations is Desmon?”
-the Patriarch exclaimed.</p>
-
-<p>“Englan’,” was the calm reply.</p>
-
-<p>“Then I s’pose you was fussin’ ’round Englan’
-last week, ’hen we thot ye was wisitin’ your ma’s
-folks in Buzzard Walley,” cried the Tinsmith.
-“Now what air you givin’ us?”</p>
-
-<p>“‘Hen I told you uns I was wisitin’ Mother’s
-folks, I sayd what was true.” The Loafer was
-undisturbed by the storm he had raised and spoke
-very slowly, emphasizing his words by a shake of
-his pipe. “You see it was this ’ay. The man I<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_241" id="Page_241">[241]</a></span>
-was speakin’ of was called Lord Desmon, tho’ his
-reg’lar name was Earl o’ Desmon. His pap’s
-name was Lord Desmon, too, an’ so was his gran’pap’s.
-Before his gran’pap died, his pap’s older
-brother, that is the uncle o’ the man I’m referrin’
-to, merried a beautiful maid who was workin’
-about the placet. The old man cast him off an’
-he went to South Ameriky, leavin’ a son who
-went be the name o’ Reginal’ Deeverox. Be
-rights this Deeverox should ’a’ hed the property,
-bein’ the hair o’ the oldest son. He didn’t know
-it tho’, an’ his uncle didn’t take the trouble to
-hunt him up ’hen the gran’pap died, but jest
-settled down on the farm himself.”</p>
-
-<p>“What in the name o’ common sense is an
-earl?” asked the Miller. “What does he do?”</p>
-
-<p>“Nawthin’,” the Loafer explained. “In Englan’
-an earl is a descendant o’ them ez first
-cleared the land. He usually hes a good bit o’
-property an’ farms it on the half.”</p>
-
-<p>“What gits me is jest how many o’ them Lord
-Desmons they was,” the Tinsmith interposed.</p>
-
-<p>“There was the original gran’pap&mdash;he’s one.
-Then there was his son that merried the maid an’
-ought to ’a’ ben earl&mdash;he is two. Next there was
-his brother who got the property&mdash;he is th’ee.
-His son makes four, an’ Reginal’ Deeverox, whose
-right name was Lord Desmon, is five.”</p>
-
-<p>“That there name Lord seemed to run in the
-family,” said the Miller. “I don’t wonder they<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_242" id="Page_242">[242]</a></span>
-got mixed. Why didn’t they hev a Joe or a
-Jawhn?”</p>
-
-<p>“Was these here some o’ your pap’s friends?”
-asked the Patriarch.</p>
-
-<p>“I only wished he hed ’a’ knowd them,” the
-Loafer answered. “I don’t think he did tho’.
-Mebbe he was acquainted with Alice Fairfax, but
-I never heard him speak o’ her an’ <cite>The Home an’
-Fireplace</cite> never mentioned him ez bein’ at her
-castel. I guessed ef Pap hed ’a’ been there he
-would ’a’ told me, fer he wasn’t much on keepin’
-things secret.”</p>
-
-<p>The Patriarch brought his stick down on the
-floor with a vigorous bang.</p>
-
-<p>“See here,” he cried, “what has got into you
-anyway? Ef you knows anything about this here
-Lord Desmon, Reginal’ Deeverox, Alice Fairfax
-business, out with it, I sais. ’Hen you hears a
-piece o’ news ye jest set an’ smiles all over it to
-yourself like ez tho’ you was tormentin’ us. Ez
-ef we cared! Let anybody else hev a bit o’ news
-tho’ an’ you don’t give ’em no rest tell you’ve
-wormed it out of ’em&mdash;not tell you’ve wormed it
-all out of ’em.”</p>
-
-<p>“Now see here,” was the spirited answer, “it
-ain’t jest that I should be accused this ’ay. <cite>The
-Home an’ Fireplace</cite> magazine was layin’ ’round
-the counter a whole week afore I even looked at
-it. I s’posed you’d all ben readin’ it. That’s
-why I thot ye might help me out.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_243" id="Page_243">[243]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“Shucks! So all this here is nothin’ but somethin’
-you’ve been readin’ in the paper,” the
-Teacher sneered.</p>
-
-<p>“Exact. An’ ef you’d read the same piecet I
-guess you’d ben worrit, too.”</p>
-
-<p>“Reginal’ Deeverox&mdash;Deeverox.” The Patriarch
-was thinking hard and talking to himself.
-“I don’t mind that piecet, an’ I read most o’ that
-paper,” he said, looking up. “What page was it
-on?”</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t mind the number,” the Loafer answered,
-“but it begins on a page that hes a pictur
-o’ the house o’ Miss Annie Milliken in Tootlesbury,
-Massachusetts, an’ a long letter from
-her sayin’ how she hed been bed-rid fer thirty
-year tell a kind friend recommended Dr. Tarball’s
-Indian Wegetable Pacific.”</p>
-
-<p>“Now I do recklect somethin’ about that caset,”
-the Tinsmith interposed. “It was a fight over a
-bit o’ property an’ a girl.”</p>
-
-<p>“Exact,” said the Loafer.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, how d’ye know it’s so?” the Miller
-asked. “Because it’s in the paper is no sign it’s
-true.”</p>
-
-<p>“See here,” was the sharp reply, “do you s’pose
-’hen they is so much in this world that’s true the
-editor o’ <cite>The Home an’ Fireplace</cite> ’ud go to the
-trouble o’ makin’ up lies to print? Why, it
-wouldn’t pay.”</p>
-
-<p>The Miller was about to argue against this<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_244" id="Page_244">[244]</a></span>
-proposition, but the Patriarch leaned over and
-laid a hand on his knee, checking him.</p>
-
-<p>“Jest wait tell we find out who got the property,”
-the old man said.</p>
-
-<p>“An’ the girl,” cried the Tinsmith.</p>
-
-<p>“That’s jest what I’ve ben tryin’ to find out,”
-said the Loafer. Forthwith he plunged into the
-history of Reginald Devereux and Lord Desmond.
-“You see I found the paper on the counter
-yesterday ez I was waitin’ for the mail. I remember
-now ’most everything that was in that
-piecet, an’ most a mighty puzzlin’ piecet it was,
-too. It begin at a placet called Fairfax Castel,
-which was the home o’ Alice Fairfax, who the
-paper sayd was most tremendous good-lookin’,
-bein’ tall an’ willowy, with gold-colored hair an’
-what it called <em>p-a-t-r-i-c-i-a-n</em> cast o’ features. She
-was twenty year old an’ hed an income o’ ten
-thousand pound a year.”</p>
-
-<p>“Pound o’ what?” inquired the Patriarch.</p>
-
-<p>“The paper didn’t tell. It jest sayd pound.”</p>
-
-<p>“That’s the way with them editors,” cried the
-old man. “They allus forgits important points.
-They expects a man to know everything.”</p>
-
-<p>“I guess that them must ’a’ ben pound o’ somethin’
-they raised on the place,” the Tinsmith suggested.</p>
-
-<p>“That’s jest the way I looked at it,” the Loafer
-continued. “It didn’t make no difference, anyhow,
-ez long ez she hed somethin’ to live on.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_245" id="Page_245">[245]</a></span>
-This here Lord Desmon hed a placet near hers
-an’ used to ride over every day regular an’ set up
-with her. He was tall an’ hed keen black eyes.
-Wherever he went he tuk with him a hound he
-called <em>M-e-p-h-i-s-t-o</em> or somethin’ like that.”</p>
-
-<p>“Now ye mind that he hed no real claim on
-the Desmon placet an’ he knowd it. Before his
-pap died he hed called him to his bedside an’
-sayd to him, ‘Beware of a man with an eagle
-tattooed on his right arm. He’s the real hair.’
-So Lord re’lized that he was livin’ on a farm that
-belonged to the son o’ his pap’s brother. He
-knowd that afore his uncle died he’d sent word
-home that his son an’ hair could be told be the
-eagle. Of course the warnin’ made Lord kind o’
-oneasy at first, but ez the years went by an’ he
-heard nawthin’ o’ his cousin he concided that the
-ole man hed jest ben th’owin’ a scare inter him.
-Meantime he’d ben doin’ wery well with Alice
-Fairfax, an’ things was all goin’ his way. Then
-a strange artist come th’oo the walley. He was
-paintin’&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>The Patriarch interrupted with a hilarious
-chuckle.</p>
-
-<p>“Now, boys, look out,” he cried. “They never
-yit was a painter that wasn’t catchin’ with the
-weemen. Ye mind Bill Spiegelsole’s widdy an’
-how she’d fixed it up to merry Joe Dumple? She
-hired a regular painter to come out from town
-to put a new coat on the house, an’ he made himself<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_246" id="Page_246">[246]</a></span>
-so all-fired handy ’round the placet mendin’
-stove-pipes, puttin’ in glass an’ slickin’ up the
-furnitur’ she took him afore Joe got there.”</p>
-
-<p>“This here artist wasn’t one o’ that kind,” the
-Loafer said. “He made them regular hand-paintin’s
-they hangs in parlors, an’ done a leetle in the
-way o’ portrates. He put up at the tavern an’
-then started out fer a stroll th’oo the Fairfax
-placet. He hed jest entered the park, the paper
-sayd, ’hen&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>“The what?” asked the Miller.</p>
-
-<p>“The park. Don’t ye know, one o’ them places
-fixed up special fer walkin’ in, with benches, an’
-brick pavements, a fountain, an’ flower-beds an’ a
-crowket set. Hain’t ye never seen the one at
-Horrisburg?”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, one o’ them!” the Miller said. “Well, I
-guesst those must ’a’ ben pound o’ gold Alice
-Fairfax got a year.”</p>
-
-<p>The Loafer resumed the narrative.</p>
-
-<p>“Ez the artist walked along th’oo the park he
-heard a scream, follered be a beautiful girl who
-run down the road pursued be a ferocious dog.
-The paper sayd the great hound was in the act o’
-leapin’ at her to catch her be the neck ’hen the
-stranger run for’a’d an’ grabbin’ the brute be the
-th’oat throttled the life outen him. The anymal’s
-fiery breath, the paper sayd, was blowin’ in the
-artist’s face ’hen his hands closed on the furry
-neck. It was a mighty close shave, I should<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_247" id="Page_247">[247]</a></span>
-jedge. A minute later Lord Desmon run up all
-out o’ wind. The dead beast was his <em>M-e-p-h-i-s-t-o</em>.
-He thot a heap o’ the hound, an’ the paper sayd
-that ’hen he looked on the still quiverin’ body of
-his dead companion he swore to be <em>a-v-e-n-g-e-d</em>.
-An’ ez he looked up at the stranger that young
-man knowd Lord hed it in fer him.</p>
-
-<p>“Alice Fairfax couldn’t thank the artist enough,
-an’ nawthin’ ’ud do but he must come up to her
-house an’ meet her pap. ’Hen the ole man hear
-the story he wouldn’t hev it any other way but
-that the stranger must stop with them. The paper
-sayd that he quickly pushed a button&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>“He done what?” cried the Patriarch.</p>
-
-<p>“He pushed a button an’&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>“Pushed a button! Well, mighty souls!” the
-G. A. R. Man exclaimed. “What a fool thing to do.”</p>
-
-<p>“He pushed a button an’ one o’ the hands
-appeared. This felly’s name was Butler an’ he
-was employed jest a purpose to do chores ’round
-the house. The ole man give him orders to hev
-Reginal’ Deeverox’s&mdash;that was the artist’s name&mdash;trunk
-brought up from the tavern an’ put in the
-spare room.”</p>
-
-<p>“I ain’t got it clear yit,” the Miller interposed.
-“Ef ole man Fairfax pushed one o’ his own waistcoat
-buttons how in the name o’ all the prophets
-’ud Butler feel it?”</p>
-
-<p>“Don’t ye s’pose he might ’a’ pushed one o’
-Butler’s waistcoat buttons?” replied the Loafer.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_248" id="Page_248">[248]</a></span>
-“That’s a pint o’ no importance. The main thing
-is that Deeverox put up at Fairfax’s an’ from that
-day things went wrong with Lord.</p>
-
-<p>“Reginal’ was a wonderful good-lookin’ chap
-He was six-foot tall an’ wery soople. He’d long,
-curly hair that flowed over his shoulders like a
-golden shower, ez the editor put it. His bearings
-was free an’ noble. Now Lord was no slouch
-either, an’ with his money he was pretty hard fer
-a poor painter to beat, yit&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>“Joe Dumple hed th’ee hundred a year an’ a
-fifty-acre farm,” the Patriarch cried, “but choosin’
-between him an’ the painter, Bill Spiegelsole’s
-widdy tuk&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>“I’ve told ye afore that this here Deeverox was
-a portrate painter, an’ ye can’t settle this question
-be referrin’ to the Spiegelsoles any way. Ez I
-was sayin’, Reginal’ hed no money but he hed a
-brilliant mind. His face was like an open book,
-the paper sayd&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>“That’s rather pecul’ar.” It was the veteran
-who broke into the story this time. “There’s
-Jerry Sprout, who lives beyant Sloshers Mills, he
-hes a head jest the shape of a fam’ly Bible, but ye
-can shoot me ef I can see how a man could hev a
-face like an&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>“Open book,” the Loafer said. “Well, you hev
-no ’magination. But ef ye don’t believe what
-I’m tellin’, you can go git the paper an’ read it
-yourself.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_249" id="Page_249">[249]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“Come, come; no argyin’.” The Patriarch
-was in his soothing mood. “What become o’
-Lord?”</p>
-
-<p>“Lord hated Reginal’ with a bitter hatred, the
-paper sayd, because of the death of <em>M-e-p-h-i-s-t-o</em>,
-an’ now, ez Alice Fairfax begin to look not onkindly
-on the handsome stranger, his cup was more
-embittered an’ he wowed revenge. Things kept
-gittin’ hotter an’ hotter ’round the castel. Ole
-man Fairfax was tickled to death with Reginal’
-an’ ’sisted on him stayin’ all summer. Lord
-come over regular every day, spyin’ ’round an’
-settin’ up with Alice ’hen he’d git a chancet.
-Time an’ agin, the paper sayd, he asted her to
-be his own, but she spurned him. The last time
-he asted her was at a huntin’ party they hed at
-the castel. Everybody in the county was there&mdash;Lord
-Mussex, Duke Dumford, Earl Minnows,
-Lady Montezgewy an’ a lot of others&mdash;all over
-to hunt.”</p>
-
-<p>“Hunt what?” asked the Miller.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, I s’pose they would be likely to drive
-five or six mile over to Fairfax’s to hunt eggs&mdash;wouldn’t
-they?” roared the Loafer. “Hunt
-what? Mighty souls! What would they hunt?
-Foxes, of course. The whole party started off
-after the hounds, Alice Fairfax an’ Lord Desmon
-leadin’ with&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>“Hol’ on!” cried the Patriarch. “Did you
-say weemen an’ all, a-huntin’ foxes? That<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_250" id="Page_250">[250]</a></span>
-Englan’ must be a strange placet. Why, it ain’t
-safe to trust a woman with a gun. Oh, what a
-pictur! S’pose we was to go huntin’ that ’ay
-with our weemen.” The old man leaned back
-and shook. “Pictur it! Jest pictur it! Why,
-they ’ud be blowed afore they got to the top o’
-the first ridge.”</p>
-
-<p>“An’ we’d hev to spend most of our time
-lettin’ the bars up an’ down so they could git
-th’oo the fences,” the Tinsmith said.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, the weemen over there was along&mdash;least
-that’s what the article sayd,” the Loafer continued.
-“They got track o’ a fox an’ final
-catched him in a lonely bit o’ woods. They give
-his tail to Lady Montezgewy, who&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>“She couldn’t ’a’ made much of a hat outen
-jest the tail,” said the G. A. R. Man.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, the article doesn’t explain much about
-that. It sais while these things is occurrin’ we
-will take the reader to another part o’ the fiel’
-where Lord Desmon kneels at the feet of Alice
-Fairfax. The paper sais she sais, ‘I loves another.’
-‘What,’ sais he, the paper sais, springin’
-to his feet an’ makin’ a movement ez tho’ graspin’
-an unseen foe. ‘What,’ he sais, ‘that low
-painter varlet!’ Jest then, the paper sais, the
-bushes was pushed aside an’ forth jumped Reginal’
-Deeverox. ‘You here, Miss Fairfax?’ he sais, the
-paper sais. ‘I’ve hunted fer ye fur an’ near.’ In
-his eagerness to reach her side a twig cot his coat-sleeve<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_251" id="Page_251">[251]</a></span>
-an’ tore it wide open. The paper sais ez
-Lord Desmon looked upon the splendid figure of
-his rival he seen there on his arm&mdash;What? the
-paper sais. An eagle!”</p>
-
-<p>“Now, watch for a good ole wrastle,” cried the
-Patriarch.</p>
-
-<p>“You’re wrong, Gran’pap,” said the Loafer.
-“They didn’t dast fight afore a lady. Instead
-Lord jest ground his teeth. The paper sayd he
-knowd that the lost hair o’ the broad acres o’ the
-Desmons hed come to claim his own.”</p>
-
-<p>The Miller’s clay pipe fell to the floor and
-shattered into a hundred pieces.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, I’ll swan!” he exclaimed. “Why, this
-here artist was one o’ them Desmon boys ye
-was speakin’ of first off, wasn’t he?”</p>
-
-<p>“What happened next?” inquired the Teacher.</p>
-
-<p>“The article didn’t tell,” the Loafer replied.
-“It cut right off there an’ carried the reader back
-to Fairfax Castel. It was evenin’ an’ they was
-hevin’ a hunt ball.”</p>
-
-<p>“A hunt what?” The Patriarch leaned forward
-with his hand to his ear.</p>
-
-<p>“A hunt ball&mdash;a dance,” the pedagogue explained.
-“Over there after huntin’ they always
-have a dance.”</p>
-
-<p>“Mighty souls! but them English does enjoy
-themselves,” the old man murmured. “Goes
-huntin’ all day&mdash;takes the weemen along leavin’
-no one behind to look after the place&mdash;then hes<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_252" id="Page_252">[252]</a></span>
-a dance after they gits back. Now ’hen I hunted
-foxes I was allus so low down tired an’ scratched
-up be the briars agin I got home, I was satisfied
-to draw me boots, rub some linnyment on me
-shins an’ go to bed. But go on. I guesst the
-paper’s right.”</p>
-
-<p>“That night, walkin’ up an’ down the terrace,
-Reginal’ Deeverox told Alice Fairfax the secret
-o’ his life, the article sayd, how he was Lord
-Desmon an’ how the other Lord Desmon was
-livin’ on stolen property. He ast her to hev him,
-an’ ez she didn’t say nawthin’ he jest clasped her
-to his boosum, the paper sayd. All this time
-Lord hed ben watchin’ from behind a statute.
-’Hen the girl run away to tell her pap about it,
-Lord stepped out an’ faced Reginal’.</p>
-
-<p>“He sayd, ‘One of us must die.’ With that
-he catched Deeverox be the th’oat an’ tried to
-push him off the terrace. They was a clean drop
-o’ fifty foot there, with runnin’ water at the bottom.
-Reginal’ was quick an’ grabbed his foe
-’round the waist. Back’ard an’ for’a’d they
-writhed, the paper sayd, twistin’ an’ cursin’. Now
-they was on the edge o’ the precipice, an’ Alice
-Fairfax, runnin’ to meet her loved one, ez the
-article explained, seen dimly outlined in the glare
-o’ the castel lights the black figures o’ the cousins
-ez they fought o’er the terrace of death. She was
-spelled. Sudden the one Desmon hurled the
-other Desmon from him. They was an awful cry<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_253" id="Page_253">[253]</a></span>
-ez the black thing toppled over the edge, the
-paper sayd.”</p>
-
-<p>The Loafer put his hand in his coat-pocket and
-brought it forth full of crushed tobacco leaves,
-with which he filled his pipe. Then he lighted a
-match and began smoking.</p>
-
-<p>“Well?” cried the men on the bench in unison.</p>
-
-<p>“Well?” repeated the Loafer.</p>
-
-<p>“Which Desmon was it?” asked the Tinsmith.</p>
-
-<p>“That’s jest where I’m stumped,” was the reply.
-“That’s jest what’s ben puzzlin’ me, too.
-Ye see that page hed ben tore out an’&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>“Mighty souls!” gasped the Patriarch.</p>
-
-<p>“Did ye look fer it?” asked the Miller, rising
-and moving toward the door.</p>
-
-<p>“Well of course I looked. D’ye s’pose I ain’t
-ez anxious ez you to know which Desmon was
-kilt?”</p>
-
-<p>“What does you mean be gittin’ us anxious,”
-yelled the old man. “Why don’t ye keep your
-troubles to yourself ’stead o’ unloadin’ em on
-other folks?”</p>
-
-<p>“Don’t blame me that ’ay,” said the Loafer. “I
-done the best I could. I looked all over the
-store fer that page. I didn’t git no sleep last
-night jest from thinkin’ what become of it. Now
-I mind that last Soturday I seen a felly from
-Raccoon Walley carry it off wrapped ’round a
-pound o’ sugar. I done the best I could fer ye.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_254" id="Page_254">[254]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>The Teacher arose and walked to the end of
-the porch. Here he wheeled about and faced the
-company, stretching his legs wide apart, throwing
-out his chest and snapping his suspenders with his
-thumbs.</p>
-
-<p>“You should never begin a story if you can’t
-tell it to the end,” he said. “I might as well teach
-my scholars how to add only half down a column
-of figures.”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes,” said the Patriarch, “I would like to
-know most a mighty well which o’ them Desmon
-boys was kilt. But I’m too ole to chase a pound
-o’ sugar nine mile to Raccoon Walley to find out.
-They are terrible things, these struggles caused be
-onrastless human passions. This here petickler
-story is all the more terrible because them boys
-was cousins. While we do all feel a bit put out
-at not knowin’ which of ’em licked, we’ve at least
-learned somethin’ ’bout how they lives in Englan’.
-An’ it should teach us a lesson o’ thankfulness
-that we was born an’ raised in a walley
-where folks is sensible&mdash;that is most of ’em.”</p>
-
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-<hr class="full" />
-<p>***END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE CHRONIC LOAFER***</p>
-<p>******* This file should be named 54572-h.htm or 54572-h.zip *******</p>
-<p>This and all associated files of various formats will be found in:<br />
-<a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/dirs/5/4/5/7/54572">http://www.gutenberg.org/5/4/5/7/54572</a></p>
-<p>
-Updated editions will replace the previous one--the old editions will
-be renamed.</p>
-
-<p>Creating the works from print editions not protected by U.S. copyright
-law means that no one owns a United States copyright in these works,
-so the Foundation (and you!) can copy and distribute it in the United
-States without permission and without paying copyright
-royalties. Special rules, set forth in the General Terms of Use part
-of this license, apply to copying and distributing Project
-Gutenberg-tm electronic works to protect the PROJECT GUTENBERG-tm
-concept and trademark. Project Gutenberg is a registered trademark,
-and may not be used if you charge for the eBooks, unless you receive
-specific permission. If you do not charge anything for copies of this
-eBook, complying with the rules is very easy. You may use this eBook
-for nearly any purpose such as creation of derivative works, reports,
-performances and research. They may be modified and printed and given
-away--you may do practically ANYTHING in the United States with eBooks
-not protected by U.S. copyright law. Redistribution is subject to the
-trademark license, especially commercial redistribution.
-</p>
-
-<h2>START: FULL LICENSE<br />
-<br />
-THE FULL PROJECT GUTENBERG LICENSE<br />
-PLEASE READ THIS BEFORE YOU DISTRIBUTE OR USE THIS WORK</h2>
-
-<p>To protect the Project Gutenberg-tm mission of promoting the free
-distribution of electronic works, by using or distributing this work
-(or any other work associated in any way with the phrase "Project
-Gutenberg"), you agree to comply with all the terms of the Full
-Project Gutenberg-tm License available with this file or online at
-www.gutenberg.org/license.</p>
-
-<h3>Section 1. General Terms of Use and Redistributing Project
-Gutenberg-tm electronic works</h3>
-
-<p>1.A. By reading or using any part of this Project Gutenberg-tm
-electronic work, you indicate that you have read, understand, agree to
-and accept all the terms of this license and intellectual property
-(trademark/copyright) agreement. If you do not agree to abide by all
-the terms of this agreement, you must cease using and return or
-destroy all copies of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works in your
-possession. If you paid a fee for obtaining a copy of or access to a
-Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work and you do not agree to be bound
-by the terms of this agreement, you may obtain a refund from the
-person or entity to whom you paid the fee as set forth in paragraph
-1.E.8.</p>
-
-<p>1.B. "Project Gutenberg" is a registered trademark. It may only be
-used on or associated in any way with an electronic work by people who
-agree to be bound by the terms of this agreement. There are a few
-things that you can do with most Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works
-even without complying with the full terms of this agreement. See
-paragraph 1.C below. There are a lot of things you can do with Project
-Gutenberg-tm electronic works if you follow the terms of this
-agreement and help preserve free future access to Project Gutenberg-tm
-electronic works. See paragraph 1.E below.</p>
-
-<p>1.C. The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation ("the
-Foundation" or PGLAF), owns a compilation copyright in the collection
-of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works. Nearly all the individual
-works in the collection are in the public domain in the United
-States. If an individual work is unprotected by copyright law in the
-United States and you are located in the United States, we do not
-claim a right to prevent you from copying, distributing, performing,
-displaying or creating derivative works based on the work as long as
-all references to Project Gutenberg are removed. Of course, we hope
-that you will support the Project Gutenberg-tm mission of promoting
-free access to electronic works by freely sharing Project Gutenberg-tm
-works in compliance with the terms of this agreement for keeping the
-Project Gutenberg-tm name associated with the work. You can easily
-comply with the terms of this agreement by keeping this work in the
-same format with its attached full Project Gutenberg-tm License when
-you share it without charge with others.</p>
-
-<p>1.D. The copyright laws of the place where you are located also govern
-what you can do with this work. Copyright laws in most countries are
-in a constant state of change. If you are outside the United States,
-check the laws of your country in addition to the terms of this
-agreement before downloading, copying, displaying, performing,
-distributing or creating derivative works based on this work or any
-other Project Gutenberg-tm work. The Foundation makes no
-representations concerning the copyright status of any work in any
-country outside the United States.</p>
-
-<p>1.E. Unless you have removed all references to Project Gutenberg:</p>
-
-<p>1.E.1. The following sentence, with active links to, or other
-immediate access to, the full Project Gutenberg-tm License must appear
-prominently whenever any copy of a Project Gutenberg-tm work (any work
-on which the phrase "Project Gutenberg" appears, or with which the
-phrase "Project Gutenberg" is associated) is accessed, displayed,
-performed, viewed, copied or distributed:</p>
-
-<blockquote><p>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 <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org">www.gutenberg.org</a>. 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.</p></blockquote>
-
-<p>1.E.2. If an individual Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work is
-derived from texts not protected by U.S. copyright law (does not
-contain a notice indicating that it is posted with permission of the
-copyright holder), the work can be copied and distributed to anyone in
-the United States without paying any fees or charges. If you are
-redistributing or providing access to a work with the phrase "Project
-Gutenberg" associated with or appearing on the work, you must comply
-either with the requirements of paragraphs 1.E.1 through 1.E.7 or
-obtain permission for the use of the work and the Project Gutenberg-tm
-trademark as set forth in paragraphs 1.E.8 or 1.E.9.</p>
-
-<p>1.E.3. If an individual Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work is posted
-with the permission of the copyright holder, your use and distribution
-must comply with both paragraphs 1.E.1 through 1.E.7 and any
-additional terms imposed by the copyright holder. Additional terms
-will be linked to the Project Gutenberg-tm License for all works
-posted with the permission of the copyright holder found at the
-beginning of this work.</p>
-
-<p>1.E.4. Do not unlink or detach or remove the full Project Gutenberg-tm
-License terms from this work, or any files containing a part of this
-work or any other work associated with Project Gutenberg-tm.</p>
-
-<p>1.E.5. Do not copy, display, perform, distribute or redistribute this
-electronic work, or any part of this electronic work, without
-prominently displaying the sentence set forth in paragraph 1.E.1 with
-active links or immediate access to the full terms of the Project
-Gutenberg-tm License.</p>
-
-<p>1.E.6. You may convert to and distribute this work in any binary,
-compressed, marked up, nonproprietary or proprietary form, including
-any word processing or hypertext form. However, if you provide access
-to or distribute copies of a Project Gutenberg-tm work in a format
-other than "Plain Vanilla ASCII" or other format used in the official
-version posted on the official Project Gutenberg-tm web site
-(www.gutenberg.org), you must, at no additional cost, fee or expense
-to the user, provide a copy, a means of exporting a copy, or a means
-of obtaining a copy upon request, of the work in its original "Plain
-Vanilla ASCII" or other form. Any alternate format must include the
-full Project Gutenberg-tm License as specified in paragraph 1.E.1.</p>
-
-<p>1.E.7. Do not charge a fee for access to, viewing, displaying,
-performing, copying or distributing any Project Gutenberg-tm works
-unless you comply with paragraph 1.E.8 or 1.E.9.</p>
-
-<p>1.E.8. You may charge a reasonable fee for copies of or providing
-access to or distributing Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works
-provided that</p>
-
-<ul>
-<li>You pay a royalty fee of 20% of the gross profits you derive from
- the use of Project Gutenberg-tm works calculated using the method
- you already use to calculate your applicable taxes. The fee is owed
- to the owner of the Project Gutenberg-tm trademark, but he has
- agreed to donate royalties under this paragraph to the Project
- Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation. Royalty payments must be paid
- within 60 days following each date on which you prepare (or are
- legally required to prepare) your periodic tax returns. Royalty
- payments should be clearly marked as such and sent to the Project
- Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation at the address specified in
- Section 4, "Information about donations to the Project Gutenberg
- Literary Archive Foundation."</li>
-
-<li>You provide a full refund of any money paid by a user who notifies
- you in writing (or by e-mail) within 30 days of receipt that s/he
- does not agree to the terms of the full Project Gutenberg-tm
- License. You must require such a user to return or destroy all
- copies of the works possessed in a physical medium and discontinue
- all use of and all access to other copies of Project Gutenberg-tm
- works.</li>
-
-<li>You provide, in accordance with paragraph 1.F.3, a full refund of
- any money paid for a work or a replacement copy, if a defect in the
- electronic work is discovered and reported to you within 90 days of
- receipt of the work.</li>
-
-<li>You comply with all other terms of this agreement for free
- distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm works.</li>
-</ul>
-
-<p>1.E.9. If you wish to charge a fee or distribute a Project
-Gutenberg-tm electronic work or group of works on different terms than
-are set forth in this agreement, you must obtain permission in writing
-from both the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation and The
-Project Gutenberg Trademark LLC, the owner of the Project Gutenberg-tm
-trademark. Contact the Foundation as set forth in Section 3 below.</p>
-
-<p>1.F.</p>
-
-<p>1.F.1. Project Gutenberg volunteers and employees expend considerable
-effort to identify, do copyright research on, transcribe and proofread
-works not protected by U.S. copyright law in creating the Project
-Gutenberg-tm collection. Despite these efforts, Project Gutenberg-tm
-electronic works, and the medium on which they may be stored, may
-contain "Defects," such as, but not limited to, incomplete, inaccurate
-or corrupt data, transcription errors, a copyright or other
-intellectual property infringement, a defective or damaged disk or
-other medium, a computer virus, or computer codes that damage or
-cannot be read by your equipment.</p>
-
-<p>1.F.2. LIMITED WARRANTY, DISCLAIMER OF DAMAGES - Except for the "Right
-of Replacement or Refund" described in paragraph 1.F.3, the Project
-Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation, the owner of the Project
-Gutenberg-tm trademark, and any other party distributing a Project
-Gutenberg-tm electronic work under this agreement, disclaim all
-liability to you for damages, costs and expenses, including legal
-fees. YOU AGREE THAT YOU HAVE NO REMEDIES FOR NEGLIGENCE, STRICT
-LIABILITY, BREACH OF WARRANTY OR BREACH OF CONTRACT EXCEPT THOSE
-PROVIDED IN PARAGRAPH 1.F.3. YOU AGREE THAT THE FOUNDATION, THE
-TRADEMARK OWNER, AND ANY DISTRIBUTOR UNDER THIS AGREEMENT WILL NOT BE
-LIABLE TO YOU FOR ACTUAL, DIRECT, INDIRECT, CONSEQUENTIAL, PUNITIVE OR
-INCIDENTAL DAMAGES EVEN IF YOU GIVE NOTICE OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH
-DAMAGE.</p>
-
-<p>1.F.3. LIMITED RIGHT OF REPLACEMENT OR REFUND - If you discover a
-defect in this electronic work within 90 days of receiving it, you can
-receive a refund of the money (if any) you paid for it by sending a
-written explanation to the person you received the work from. If you
-received the work on a physical medium, you must return the medium
-with your written explanation. The person or entity that provided you
-with the defective work may elect to provide a replacement copy in
-lieu of a refund. If you received the work electronically, the person
-or entity providing it to you may choose to give you a second
-opportunity to receive the work electronically in lieu of a refund. If
-the second copy is also defective, you may demand a refund in writing
-without further opportunities to fix the problem.</p>
-
-<p>1.F.4. Except for the limited right of replacement or refund set forth
-in paragraph 1.F.3, this work is provided to you 'AS-IS', WITH NO
-OTHER WARRANTIES OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT
-LIMITED TO WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY OR FITNESS FOR ANY PURPOSE.</p>
-
-<p>1.F.5. Some states do not allow disclaimers of certain implied
-warranties or the exclusion or limitation of certain types of
-damages. If any disclaimer or limitation set forth in this agreement
-violates the law of the state applicable to this agreement, the
-agreement shall be interpreted to make the maximum disclaimer or
-limitation permitted by the applicable state law. The invalidity or
-unenforceability of any provision of this agreement shall not void the
-remaining provisions.</p>
-
-<p>1.F.6. INDEMNITY - You agree to indemnify and hold the Foundation, the
-trademark owner, any agent or employee of the Foundation, anyone
-providing copies of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works in
-accordance with this agreement, and any volunteers associated with the
-production, promotion and distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm
-electronic works, harmless from all liability, costs and expenses,
-including legal fees, that arise directly or indirectly from any of
-the following which you do or cause to occur: (a) distribution of this
-or any Project Gutenberg-tm work, (b) alteration, modification, or
-additions or deletions to any Project Gutenberg-tm work, and (c) any
-Defect you cause. </p>
-
-<h3>Section 2. Information about the Mission of Project Gutenberg-tm</h3>
-
-<p>Project Gutenberg-tm is synonymous with the free distribution of
-electronic works in formats readable by the widest variety of
-computers including obsolete, old, middle-aged and new computers. It
-exists because of the efforts of hundreds of volunteers and donations
-from people in all walks of life.</p>
-
-<p>Volunteers and financial support to provide volunteers with the
-assistance they need are critical to reaching Project Gutenberg-tm's
-goals and ensuring that the Project Gutenberg-tm collection will
-remain freely available for generations to come. In 2001, the Project
-Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation was created to provide a secure
-and permanent future for Project Gutenberg-tm and future
-generations. To learn more about the Project Gutenberg Literary
-Archive Foundation and how your efforts and donations can help, see
-Sections 3 and 4 and the Foundation information page at
-www.gutenberg.org.</p>
-
-<h3>Section 3. Information about the Project Gutenberg
-Literary Archive Foundation</h3>
-
-<p>The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation is a non profit
-501(c)(3) educational corporation organized under the laws of the
-state of Mississippi and granted tax exempt status by the Internal
-Revenue Service. The Foundation's EIN or federal tax identification
-number is 64-6221541. Contributions to the Project Gutenberg Literary
-Archive Foundation are tax deductible to the full extent permitted by
-U.S. federal laws and your state's laws.</p>
-
-<p>The Foundation's principal office is in Fairbanks, Alaska, with the
-mailing address: PO Box 750175, Fairbanks, AK 99775, but its
-volunteers and employees are scattered throughout numerous
-locations. Its business office is located at 809 North 1500 West, Salt
-Lake City, UT 84116, (801) 596-1887. Email contact links and up to
-date contact information can be found at the Foundation's web site and
-official page at www.gutenberg.org/contact</p>
-
-<p>For additional contact information:</p>
-
-<p> Dr. Gregory B. Newby<br />
- Chief Executive and Director<br />
- gbnewby@pglaf.org</p>
-
-<h3>Section 4. Information about Donations to the Project Gutenberg
-Literary Archive Foundation</h3>
-
-<p>Project Gutenberg-tm depends upon and cannot survive without wide
-spread public support and donations to carry out its mission of
-increasing the number of public domain and licensed works that can be
-freely distributed in machine readable form accessible by the widest
-array of equipment including outdated equipment. Many small donations
-($1 to $5,000) are particularly important to maintaining tax exempt
-status with the IRS.</p>
-
-<p>The Foundation is committed to complying with the laws regulating
-charities and charitable donations in all 50 states of the United
-States. Compliance requirements are not uniform and it takes a
-considerable effort, much paperwork and many fees to meet and keep up
-with these requirements. We do not solicit donations in locations
-where we have not received written confirmation of compliance. To SEND
-DONATIONS or determine the status of compliance for any particular
-state visit <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/donate">www.gutenberg.org/donate</a>.</p>
-
-<p>While we cannot and do not solicit contributions from states where we
-have not met the solicitation requirements, we know of no prohibition
-against accepting unsolicited donations from donors in such states who
-approach us with offers to donate.</p>
-
-<p>International donations are gratefully accepted, but we cannot make
-any statements concerning tax treatment of donations received from
-outside the United States. U.S. laws alone swamp our small staff.</p>
-
-<p>Please check the Project Gutenberg Web pages for current donation
-methods and addresses. Donations are accepted in a number of other
-ways including checks, online payments and credit card donations. To
-donate, please visit: www.gutenberg.org/donate</p>
-
-<h3>Section 5. General Information About Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works.</h3>
-
-<p>Professor Michael S. Hart was the originator of the Project
-Gutenberg-tm concept of a library of electronic works that could be
-freely shared with anyone. For forty years, he produced and
-distributed Project Gutenberg-tm eBooks with only a loose network of
-volunteer support.</p>
-
-<p>Project Gutenberg-tm eBooks are often created from several printed
-editions, all of which are confirmed as not protected by copyright in
-the U.S. unless a copyright notice is included. Thus, we do not
-necessarily keep eBooks in compliance with any particular paper
-edition.</p>
-
-<p>Most people start at our Web site which has the main PG search
-facility: www.gutenberg.org</p>
-
-<p>This Web site includes information about Project Gutenberg-tm,
-including how to make donations to the Project Gutenberg Literary
-Archive Foundation, how to help produce our new eBooks, and how to
-subscribe to our email newsletter to hear about new eBooks.</p>
-
-</body>
-</html>
-
diff --git a/old/54572-h/images/cover.jpg b/old/54572-h/images/cover.jpg
deleted file mode 100644
index fbdcada..0000000
--- a/old/54572-h/images/cover.jpg
+++ /dev/null
Binary files differ
diff --git a/old/54572-h/images/cum-facent-clamant.jpg b/old/54572-h/images/cum-facent-clamant.jpg
deleted file mode 100644
index 81b4b1a..0000000
--- a/old/54572-h/images/cum-facent-clamant.jpg
+++ /dev/null
Binary files differ