The Queen of the Swamp, and other plain Americans

By Mary Hartwell Catherwood

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Title: The Queen of the Swamp, and other plain Americans

Author: Mary Hartwell Catherwood

Release date: August 17, 2024 [eBook #74271]

Language: English

Original publication: Boston: Houghton, Mifflin and Company, 1899

Credits: David E. Brown and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images generously made available by The Internet Archive)


*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE QUEEN OF THE SWAMP, AND OTHER PLAIN AMERICANS ***





By Mary Hartwell Catherwood.

  THE LADY OF FORT ST. JOHN. A Novel. 16mo, $1.25.

  OLD KASKASKIA. A Novel. 16mo, $1.25.

  THE CHASE OF ST. CASTIN, and Other Tales. 16mo, $1.25.

  THE SPIRIT OF AN ILLINOIS TOWN, and THE LITTLE RENAULT. Illustrated.
    16mo, $1.25.

  THE QUEEN OF THE SWAMP, and Other Plain Americans. 16mo, $1.25.

  HOUGHTON, MIFFLIN & CO.
  BOSTON AND NEW YORK.




  THE QUEEN OF THE
  SWAMP

  And Other Plain Americans

  BY
  MARY HARTWELL CATHERWOOD

  [Illustration]

  BOSTON AND NEW YORK
  HOUGHTON, MIFFLIN AND COMPANY
  The Riverside Press, Cambridge
  1900




  COPYRIGHT, 1899, BY MARY HARTWELL CATHERWOOD

  ALL RIGHTS RESERVED




TO THE MEMORY OF MY MOTHER




NOTE


Some of these stories were written more than a dozen years ago. They
have been gathered in from the Atlantic Monthly, Harper’s Bazar,
Outing, the Independent, the Delineator, the Chicago Tribune, the late
Chicago Graphic, and Lippincott’s Magazine, by courteous permission of
the editors; and revised year after year. Many of them embody phases
of American life which have entirely passed away, or are yet to be
found in secluded spots like eddies along the margin of the nation’s
progress. Their honest preservation of middle western experience
makes them, at least in the author’s eyes, seem worthy themselves of
preservation.

The Puritan and the Church of England took possession of the Atlantic
seaboard, north and south; and Jesuit and Recollet missionaries carried
the cross through Canada and down the Mississippi. But the pioneer
evangelist of the Middle West was the Methodist itinerant.




CONTENTS


  OHIO.

    THE QUEEN OF THE SWAMP              1
    THE STIRRING-OFF                   29
    SWEETNESS                          55
    SERENA                             77
    ROSE DAY                          106

  KENTUCKY.

    A KENTUCKY PRINCESS               129

  INDIANA.

    THE FAIRFIELD POET                155
    T’FÉRGORE                         175

  ILLINOIS.

    BEETRUS                           235
    THE BRIDE OF ARNE SANDSTROM       253
    THE BABE JEROME                   270
    THE CALHOUN FIDDLER               301
    A MAN FROM THE SPANISH WAR        320

  _The Babe Jerome_, _Rose Day_, _The Bride of Arne Sandstrom_, _The
  Fairfield Poet_, and _Beetrus_ are reprinted from “Harper’s Bazar,”
  and _The Queen of the Swamp_ from Harper’s “Christmas,” by permission
  of the publishers, Messrs Harper & Brothers.




OHIO




THE QUEEN OF THE SWAMP

TIME, 1846


On Christmas Day a large congregation poured from George’s Chapel into
the early dusk. Quarterly meeting, which for a week had drawn together,
not only the neighborhood, but people from Millersport, Basil, and
even Kirkersville, closed that afternoon. The presiding elder and his
assistants were wrapping up their throats and joking with each other,
for the occasion had been blessed with converts and a fairly liberal
collection.

These men must ride on around the circuit, risking health, and
accepting whatever fell to their lot, yet nothing checked their flow of
spirits. The only solemn person near the group was Mr. Warner, a local
preacher and exhorter, who habitually prayed with a war-whoop, and kept
the young people tittering at his pompous phrases. His father, an aged
apparition, tottering on a stick, was circulating genially to shake
every hand, known or unknown, and inquire, toothlessly, “Hi-ya! hi-ya!
how’s your consarn?” which being interpreted meant, “How are you, how
are you, how’s your concern?” (in religion).

Women clustered together near the red-hot stove, exclaiming to each
other, as their work-worn palms met, “Hoddy-do, Mis’ Waddell, does your
family keep well?” and “Law! Mis’ Davis, it’s good for sore eyes to see
you out to meetin’ once more!” “Yes, I been kept close all fall, but
I told him it wouldn’t do, we must come to big meetin’.” “It’s been a
good time. One o’ my boys,” the speaker pressing her neighbor’s hand,
“was gathered in, and I have my suspicions the other’s touched.” “Yes,
there’s more under conviction than’ll own to it.”

They made excuses to each other for neglecting neighborly duties in the
past, but promised, now such good sleighin’ had set in, to go more.
One had had whooping-cough in her family, another a teething baby, and
not a few had been very busy getting the butchering done and making
sausage. The men-folks were also constantly hauling with the teams.

Warm Christian feeling pervaded the whole separating assembly, even the
young girls greeting each other with unusual affection. The young men
drove their conveyances up to the door, exchanging merry remarks; there
were many fine horses, and some of the sleighs were painted, but the
general vehicle was a wagon-bed, stuffed with straw and comforters, and
running on two short sleds called “bobs.”

Theophilus Gill’s sleigh was of this pattern, and he intended to drive
the young folks to Macauley’s. His spirited team pranced so that he
stood up to control it, though at full height Theophilus Gill was but a
little fellow. He had, however, a strong black beard.

“How many goin’ in our load, Theoph?” inquired Philip Welchammer,
resting one foot on the forward runner.

“’Bout ten couple. Mart, he’s got to take his mother home, so he won’t
be along.”

“You feel like as if you could spare him?”

“I always ken. Now, don’t you go to cut me out if I try to engage her
company for Sunday night.”

“Oh, you and Mart fer it,” said Philip. “I ain’t fer cuttin’ neither of
ye out. But Persilla Thompson’s a pretty girl.”

“She’s the Queen of the Swamp,” said little Gill, with emphasis.

Priscilla at this moment stepped down from the chapel threshold into
the snow, to wait for her party. Philip brought her to the sled and
Gill insisted on placing her in a warm and sheltered place just behind
the driver’s bench, which he had specially prepared for her.

“Macauley’s is makin’ a big house-warmin’ this Chris’mas,” remarked
Priscilla’s little suitor to her. “They’s four tables full of old folks
to their turkey-roast, and the young folks all invited in the evenin’.
I reckon the old lady’s doin’ it for Mart. She’s bound for him to marry
that Miller girl, some says.”

Priscilla replied, with pleasant nonchalance, she reckoned so. She did
not look at Mart Macauley at all, but she saw him watching her while
he untied his bay filly, and held its head until his mother finished
talking with her dinner guests.

He had loved Priscilla Thompson when she was a little girl with black
plaits of hair hanging down her linsey back. In those days he gave her
a bead purse, and whipped all her tormentors. When she began to be a
big girl he shyly courted her, stopping his plough by the fence if he
saw her coming, and dropping in of a Sunday night to see her brother,
whom he despised, and who had since married and left him without
excuse for his visits. When she got a certificate and went into the
Kemmerer neighborhood to teach school, with her clothes neatly packed
in a large wicker basket, he had no peace of mind all summer. He had
himself been to Worthington to college, but in all his experience saw
no one to compare with her. Wherever he saw her, so modest and lovely
in manner, he cherished the ground her shoes rested on. The cold air
gave her a bright color, which the depth and length of her bonnet
could not conceal. She wore a wadded alpaca cloak and cloak cape, and
Martin’s memory showed him how trimly under these her delaine dress was
coat-sleeved to her arm and pointed at her waist.

Mrs. Macauley, climbing into her own sleigh, could take no exceptions
to Priscilla Thompson’s manner or appearance, though she would have
done so gladly for the benefit of her favorite son. Mrs. Macauley
disliked the Thompsons. Her husband before his death objected to them.
She thought little Theophilus Gill the best match in the neighborhood
for Priscilla Thompson. Her own large light-haired son was too dutiful
to marry without her consent. She was educating him to be a doctor;
the younger boys could work the farm under her direction. She expected
Martin to do his family credit by looking higher than the Thompsons.

Priscilla, on her part, held Mrs. Macauley in secret aversion. She
felt sorry for Martin’s younger brothers and sisters, who were all
obliged to stand in a row and take pills or tincture before breakfast.
Mrs. Macauley was too high-handed and all-prevailing. Priscilla’s
disposition was cheerful, but that Ohio region known as the Swamp could
not escape the tinge of the period, and at that date the extremely
feminine woman with a bias toward melancholy was the standard. Mrs.
Macauley was so mannish that Priscilla thought her fully entitled to
the tufts of beard in her moles.

The young people crowded merrily into Theophilus Gill’s sled. They
all knew how matters stood between the Macauleys and Thompsons.
The Thompsons, excepting Priscilla, who was a reticent girl, talked
about the Macauleys, and the Macauleys held their heads rather high,
excepting Mart; but he thought the world of his mother. The girls
suspected Priscilla was going to-night because her staying away would
make talk. Some of them believed Theophilus Gill would get her, and
others thought things might take a turn so that she would marry Mart
Macauley after all.

There was a day when she would have given half her life to go to
Macauley’s, but stayed away. That was when Martin broke his collar-bone
racing his bay filly. Nobody knew that she hid in her father’s field
corn-crib all that day. Yet it was not an occasion for extravagant
fears. Mrs. Macauley was the best nurse in Fairfield County, and soon
had her son mended to perfection.

A few flakes of snow fell on Gill’s load, and made it all the merrier.
No joke could fail to strike fire at once on the steel-clear air, and
many a time-honored one was repeated by the young men as their fathers
before them had repeated it, and enjoyed by the girls as their mothers
had enjoyed it.

Philip Welchammer was pitied for having his arm out of place, and Nora
Waddell, discovering it at that instant around her, told him tartly
there _is_ folks that their room’s better than their comp’ny. Upon this
he genially retorted that she never made no such fuss when they were
out sleigh-ridin’ alone; and Nora glowed in her red merino hood while
the laugh turned upon her.

Then a girl’s voice, to cover her confusion, started a thrilling old
revival hymn, and the load poured its bass and treble through the
lines. Darkness approached as near as the white world would allow.
The triumphant strain echoed among treetops and stirred emotion in
Priscilla.

  “There, there on eagles’ wings I soar,
  And sense and sin are felt no more.
  There heaven comes down our souls to greet,
  And glory crowns the Mercy Seat--
  And glo-ry crowns the Mer-cy Seat.”

The road was bounded by that distinctively American fence, the rail,
or stake-and-ridered, showing drifts of snow in its angles, and white
lines like illuminations along the top of every lichened rail. The sled
flew over corduroy spaces now deeply bedded. On each side the trees
rose out of frozen pools, from which they seemed to conduct a glazed
coating upward, for every twig glinted icily through the dusk. In
spring-time, when the Feeder and creek rose out of banks, acres of this
swamp lay under water, with moss scum and rotting leaves at the top and
bottom.

Priscilla found always in these woods a solemn beauty. Her wildest
dream was of living deep in their summer shade with an unnamed person,
and sitting on the doorstep at nightfall, her hand locked in his. The
amber lights, the cry of tree-frog and locust, the mysterious snap of
twigs, the reverberating bark of a dog, the ceaseless motion of water
under a foot-log, all gave her delight. One spring she worked in her
father’s sugar-camp. A bark shelter that they passed reminded her of
it, of collecting the sugar-water, watching the bubbling kettles, and
dropping the wax on snow, of stirring-off, which was such a festival,
and at the same time such a miracle, for you could feel the hardening
wax grain to sugar on your tongue.

Theophilus Gill turned his horses from the road, and drove through a
gap into the woods.

“What are you doin’ that for?” exclaimed John Davis, who loved a horse,
like every good Ohio man, but was always ready to sacrifice it to his
comfort or speed.

Theophilus explained there was a bad bit of road ahead, and the circuit
through the woods might be better.

If he dreaded cutting his team’s ankles, the danger was not lessened
by this choice of routes. For after some easy progress and much
winding among saplings and jarring against stumps, they descended to
a seldom-used bridge across the Feeder, standing like an island in a
frozen lake. Theophilus Gill drew up his horses. There was not room
in which to turn back, and the occupants of the sled rose with some
apprehension.

Nora Waddell said she would never go over that bridge. Theophilus
observed doubtfully he’d risk gettin’ the team across, but mebby some
of the boys had better walk over and lighten the load.

Everybody alighted except the driver, who cautiously, and reassuring
his snorting horses, moved across the ice and up the bridge. It shook
under their tread to such a degree that nearly all the party resolved
to trust the ice in preference, and pushed their tracks carefully upon
the snow-covered Feeder. Besides Nora Waddell, Philip Welchammer took
under his charge Mary Thompson, Priscilla’s flighty young sister, who
was barely fifteen and in short dresses, but so headstrong that she
would go into company whenever Priscilla did. Starts and exclamations
were finally blended into a general outcry, for the ice gave way,
and several figures disappeared to their very necks. Then the young
men who had landed were prompt in action, while some of the girls
showed courage and pioneer swiftness of resource. Philip and his two
companions were pulled out, and huddled, dripping, into the sled, all
available covering being piled upon them. Everybody scrambled in, and
Theophilus, restraining his horses, asked, in an excited shout, if they
were all in. Mary Thompson, through her chattering teeth, retorted, “Of
course all of us were in, and if he did not mean to kill us entirely,
he’d better whip up and get to some fireplace.”

Thus reproached, and by the Swamp Queen’s sister, the young man drove
with such zeal that his horses ran away, and were restrained from
tearing the vehicle to bits against logs and fences only by his utmost
strength and horsemanship.

Thus the party came like a whirlwind up the open lane to Macauley’s,
and were hurried into the three-story house, while Macauley’s boys led
the horses away to a barn of similar magnitude, where long rows of
stalls and shining flanks were discernible by lantern-light.

No less than three fireplaces had blazing logs piled to the very
chimney throats. Sarah Macauley conducted the girls upstairs to the
best room, from which opened a bedchamber where they laid off their
wraps. The young men found a similar haven on the other side of the
staircase. And it was pleasant to hear the logs snap while frost lay
so thick on the two upper porches which were let into the sides of the
house.

Macauleys were very well off indeed. The estate consisted of fifteen
thousand dollars cash, besides a couple of farms, and the largest
homestead in the township. Mr. Macauley had accumulated all this,
after breaking up twice during his career, paying security debts.
Nearly all the floors were carpeted in home-made stripe or hit-or-miss,
and the best beds reared backs as lofty and imposing as the backs of
elephants.

Numbers of young women, arrived before this party, were basking in the
best room, their hair and collars smoothed, and their eyes taking keen
neighborly notes while the hum of conversation went on. Miss Miller
from Millersport was there, and appeared a worthy rival for Priscilla
Thompson. She had pink cheeks, and pretty brown hair on a low, delicate
forehead, these charms being distractingly set in an all-wool blue
merino dress and ribbon headdress to match. Miss Miller possessed
two thousand dollars in her own right, and would come in for all her
father’s property when he died. Besides, she had attended select school
in Lancaster, and some said she was so fine she would cut a bean in two
rather than lift the whole of it on the point of her knife to her very
pretty mouth.

Mrs. Macauley lost not an instant in dosing her drenched guests with
hot whiskey and ginger stew. Other raiment was provided for them. When
all the young people had arrived and warmed themselves, they were to
descend to the dining-room, one of the largest apartments ever seen in
those days, supported by a row of posts across the centre, and floored
by oak as smooth as glass. The name of kitchen would have fitted it
as well, for here the family cooked. One of those new-fashioned iron
machines called stoves stood beside the fireplace, having a pipe to
carry its smoke into the chimney. But Mrs. Macauley often said it was
not half as much use to her as the Dutch ovens she always baked in,
over the coals.

A line of chairs waited around the sides of the dining-room. The
pantry, opening at one end, half revealed stacks of Christmas
provisions on shelves.

But there was to be no such godless amusement as dancing. The young
people would frolic and play plays with kissing penalties, which could
by no means corrupt them as much as joining hands and jumping to the
tune of a fiddle.

Groups were already descending to the dining-room, and Mary Thompson
struggled hard to hook one of Sarah Macauley’s dresses over her stouter
waist.

“Your sister didn’t come?” remarked Sarah politely, in the modulated
voice that her mother trained.

“Yes, she did,” exclaimed Mary. “She was along with the load. Why,
where is Persill?”

This inquiry at once became general. Priscilla was nowhere in the
house. The panic-stricken company could not remember seeing her since
crossing the Feeder. They all thought she returned to the sled with
them. John Davis was sure he helped her in.

Theophilus Gill, turning livid around the edges of his beard, said the
horses might have gone to Jericho for all of him, and he’d ’tended to
Persilla Thompson himself if he had known the rest of the boys wasn’t
goin’ to. Priscilla’s sister began to cry aloud, and such young ladies
as did not accompany her gazed at each other in pale apprehension.
But Mrs. Macauley came sternly to the front. She would not allow Mary
Thompson to proclaim that Priscilla was drowned, and Theoph Gill had
done it, and she forbade the party falling into a panic.

Her son Martin had his filly and sleigh ready, and while she snatched
blankets and brandy, she marshaled forth such young men to form a
separate search party as seemed suitable in her eyes. Mrs. Macauley
would not have Priscilla Thompson drowned in the Feeder, and left
strict orders on her own offspring against any such impression--which
the whole company obeyed. Then she got into the sleigh, and Mart
galloped his filly.

He made but one remark to his mother during this ride.

“If she’d come along with us as _I_ wanted her to, this wouldn’t have
happened, mother!”

His face showed ghastly through the dark, and his husky voice jarred
the breast of the woman who bore him.

The sleigh and the sled containing the young men both stopped at that
unused bridge standing in the midst of the Feeder. They all called
Priscilla’s name, the winter night’s stillness magnifying the sound.
And for reply they had a void of silence.

Mart was for dropping into the hole and searching under the ice, but
his mother sternly restrained him. She sent the young men down stream,
and she walked across the bridge with her son, separating from him
afterward that they might search the woods in different directions.

Down the Feeder, men’s voices raised melancholy echoes--“Persilla!
Hoo-o-o, Persil-la! Persilla Thompson!”

The solemn winter woods could not daunt Mrs. Macauley. She gave no
nervous start at twigs snapping under the snow-crust, but searched
large spaces with vigor. It did hurt her to hear Mart calling the
girl in such a tone, and to remember what he had said to his mother.
In those days people weighed their words, and every sentence meant
something. Martin’s slight reproach to Mrs. Macauley was the first he
had ever uttered.

Treading among naked saplings, with now and then a ghostly pawpaw leaf
rustling against her face, she came to the bark sugar-house, and met
Mart at its open side, carrying Priscilla in his arms. Priscilla was
too terrified and exhausted to speak aloud, having crept out of the
Feeder as far as this shelter. Icicles hung to her clothing, and she
had lost her bonnet and cloak cape. She clung around Mrs. Macauley’s
neck, crying like a baby, and very unlike the dignified young woman
that her small circle had always considered her. Perhaps this softness
had its effect on a nature bent on commanding and protecting.

In half an hour the young folks at Macauley’s knew that Mart’s mother
brought Priscilla home on her lap, wrapped in blankets, and dosed with
brandy every few rods. The searchers in the sled, arriving but little
later, said Priscilla must have been clear under the ice by the looks
of it where she crept out. But the Feeder was so shallow right there
that she could walk on the bottom.

All festivity remained suspended while the hostess, like some
mysterious medicine-woman, worked over her patient. A few groups in the
dining-room played “fist’ock,” and other very mild sitting diversions
which could be suspended in an instant, the players looking up with
concern to receive the latest bulletin from Priscilla.

But she recovered so rapidly that every spirit rose, as did the general
opinion of Mrs. Macauley’s skill. John Davis remarked staidly to Darius
Macauley that he believed Darius’s mother knew more about doctorin’
horses, even, than most of the horse doctors in the country, but
Darius replied with some grimness, she wasn’t settin’ up for that.

Finally Priscilla was able to come downstairs, holding to Mart’s arm,
and helped on the other side by his mother, and everybody said they
entered the dining-room like a bridal couple about to stand up, for she
was pale and handsome enough to be a bride, and he looked scared and
anxious enough to be a groom. Priscilla made the effort to come down,
not only because Mrs. Macauley considered her sufficiently restored to
do so, but also because she did not want to check the merriment of the
party.

They put her in a large chair against one of the central posts, and
Sarah Macauley, as soon as she could catch breath for surprise,
exclaimed, loud enough to be heard by all around her, though
fortunately not by the head of the family:--

“Why, mother! you’ve put that flowered silk dress on her that father
brought you from Philadelphia when he went over the mountains with a
drove of horses! You said you was goin’ to save that for the oldest
son’s wife.”

The guests near Sarah looked significantly at each other, and Miss
Miller, being among them, tossed her head and tittered.

“Anybody who was _anxious_ to marry into your family,” she remarked to
Sarah, “ought to fall sick and send for your mother, and give her all
the trouble in the world. That’s the surest way to get her consent.”

Miss Miller pursed her lips. She wanted to correct any impression
that she had favored Mart Macauley, and at the same time utter a few
strictures.

“Yes, mother’s a good nurse,” said Sarah innocently.

“She’ll nurse _you_,” whispered Darius, with a warning nudge, “when she
hears what you said about that flowered silk.”

“Don’t tell her,” begged his sister. “I’ll do your share of the milkin’
all the rest of the week, if you won’t.”

“Well,” assented Darius provisionally, “mebby I won’t.”

The flowered silk had been constructed for Mrs. Macauley when she was
much less matronly in shape than on this Christmas night, and by reason
of being put away so long had got into fashion again. It was so rich
and thick that it was famed through the neighborhood as being able to
stand by itself, but, having retired to lavender and camphor, was not
expected forth any more until the occasion of Mart Macauley’s infair
dinner.

Priscilla never looked so pretty as she did on this Christmas night.
She took no part in the plays, but they sold pawns over her head, and
the penalties she inflicted were considered brilliant.

“Heavy, heavy, what hangs over your head!” said John Davis, the seller,
holding Miss Miller’s real gold ring. Her father had tried that ring
with aquafortis before he allowed her to buy it of the peddler.

“Is it fine or superfine?” inquired Priscilla.

“Superfine,” said John, pulling his neckerchief with an air. “What must
be done to redeem it?”

“Let the owner make a charade.”

This sent Miss Miller, with assistants, giggling into the pantry. And
a grand charade they exhibited, for Miss Miller had picked up such
things among the Lancaster young people, and was not sorry to show her
knowledge. First the actors came in supporting each other and weeping
aloud. In their second act there were several dumb weddings, and in
their third the weddings were repeated with a change of partners. After
long guessing, everybody was struck with admiration to discover that
the word was Bal-ti-more.

Then John sold Martin’s big handkerchief over Priscilla’s head,
informing her it was fine only. And the possessor was bid to bow to the
wittiest, kneel to the prettiest, and kiss the one he loved best, which
Martin did, perambulating about the room in a long search, but coming
back to Priscilla in every instance, covering her with confusion, and
exciting the company to hilarity.

Mrs. Macauley having discreetly retired, they played “London Bridge is
swept away,” furnishing the music with their own voices. The figures
and changes made it very similar to the “Virginia Reel,” and Mrs.
Macauley would have thought it sounded like a dance had she not known
“London Bridge,” to be an innocent marching play.

Supper was served at ten o’clock, with plates and white-handled knives
and forks held upon the knee, this variety of refreshment being called
a lap supper. The Macauley genius for cookery shone resplendent. Such
cold meats and pickles and spiced breads, such coffee (made at a
neighboring house in a wash-boiler, by Mrs. Macauley, just before she
retired), such varieties of cake and pie, such metheglin and root beer,
flowed upon the guests as only Macauleys knew how to make and brew.

“You don’t seem to be havin’ as good a time as the rest,” observed
Philip Welchammer to Theophilus Gill, when the plates were being
collected, and his plate retained a pile of scarcely touched dainties.

“Oh, I’m gittin’ along, I’m gittin’ along,” said Theophilus.

“You ’pear kind o’ sober.”

“Well, ’twas a scare,” apologized Theophilus.

“But that’s all over now.”

“Yes, it’s all over,” assented the black-bearded lover, with a sigh.
And plucking up animation, he added, “Mart has kind o’ took the bit in
his teeth, hain’t he?”

“He has that. It’s a match now, if Persilla’s a mind to have him. The
old lady, she’s turned round and set herself that way too. I shouldn’t
be surprised if the’s an infair to this house by next Chris’mas.”

“No, neither would I,” said Theophilus, shaking his head, and making
a grimace as if the action hurt him. He had a stirring, money-making
disposition, while Mart Macauley’s tastes were those of a student, and
he thought himself as good a match. But there was no accounting for
the tricks of fate.

Philip laughed in a heartening and sympathetic fashion.

“I reckon the’ won’t be no chance for you next Sunday night, nor any
other Sunday night this year, now,” he said.

“Mebby not,” said Theophilus. “But if Mart Macauley gits her, he gits
the Queen of the Swamp, sure as you’re born. She’ll always be that,
come what will.”




THE STIRRING-OFF

TIME, 1850


Davis’s boys said to all the young men at singing-school, “Come over
to’r sugar-camp Saturday night; we’re goin’ to stir off.”

The young men, sitting on the fence to which horses were tied in dusky
rows, playfully imitated the preacher when he gave out appointments,
and replied they would be there, no preventing Providence, at early
candle-lighting.

Jane Davis, attended by her cousin, also circulated among the girls in
the school-house during that interval in singing-school called recess,
and invited them to the stirring-off.

The Davises, though by no means the richest, were the most hospitable
family in the Swamp. They came from Virginia. Their stable swarmed
with fine horses, each son and daughter owning a colt; and the steeds
of visiting neighbors often crowded the stalls until these looked like
a horse-fair.

The Davises entertained every day in the year. Their house was
unpretending even for those times, being of unpainted wood, with a
bedroom at each side of the porch, a sitting-room where guns and
powder-horns hung over the fireplace, a kitchen, and a loft. Yet
here sojourned relations from other counties, and even from over
the mountains. Here on Christmas and New Year’s days were made
great turkey-roasts. Out of it issued Jane Davis to the dances and
parties where she was a belle, and her brothers, ruddy, huge-limbed,
black-eyed, and dignified as any young men in Fairfield County.

They kept bees, and raised what were called noble turnips. Their
farm appeared to produce solely for the use of guests. In watermelon
season they kept what might be termed open field. Their cookery was
celebrated, and their cordiality as free as sunshine. No unwelcome
guest could alight at Davis’s. The head of the family, Uncle Davis was
a “general,” and this title carried as much social weight as that of
judge. About their premises hung an atmosphere of unending good times.
On Sunday afternoons late in November all the raw young men of the
neighborhood drew in a circle to Davis’s fireplace, scraping turnips
or apples. Now the steel knives moved in concert, and now they jarred;
the hollow wall of a turnip protested against the scrape, and Aunt
Davis passed the heaping pan again. Or cracked walnuts and hickory
nuts were the offerings. Then every youth sat with an overflowing
handkerchief on his lap, and the small blade of his knife busy with
the kernels,--backlog and forestick being bombarded with shells which
burned in blue and crimson.

So when the Davises were ready to stir off in their sugar-camp, it was
the most natural thing in the world for them to invite their neighbors
to come and eat the sugar, and for their neighbors to come and do so.

The camp threw its shine far among leafless trees. Three or four iron
kettles steamed on a pole over the fire. In a bark lodge near by, Aunt
Davis had put a lunch of pies and cakes before she went home, to be
handed around at the stirring-off. It was a clear starry night, the
withered sod crisp underfoot with the stiffness of ice. Any group
approaching silently could hear the tapped maples dripping a liquid
nocturne into trough or pan.

But scarcely any groups approached silently. They were heard chatting
in the open places, and their calls raised echoes.

John and Eck Davis had collected logs and chunks and spread robes and
blankets until the seating capacity of the camp was nearly equal to
that of George’s Chapel. Some of the girls took off their wraps and
hung them in the bark house. One couple carried away a bucket for more
sugar-water to cool a kettle, and other couples sauntered after them.
There were races on the spongy dead leaves, and sudden squalls of
remonstrance.

Jane Davis stood in the midst of her company, moving a long wooden
stirrer in the kettle about to sugar-off. Though her beauty was neither
brown nor white, nor, in fact, positive beauty of any kind, it cajoled
everybody. Her hair was folded close to her cheeks. There was innocent
audacity in the curving line of every motion she made. The young men
were so taken by the spell of her grace that she was accused of being
unrighteously engaged to three at once, and about to add her cousin Tom
Randall to the list.

Tom Randall was a Virginian, spending the winter in Ohio. He was
handsome, merry as Mercutio, and so easy in his manners that the Swamp
youths watched him with varying emotions. He brought his songs over the
mountains: one celebrated the swiftness of the electric telegraph in
flashing news from Baltimore to Wheeling; another was about a Quaker
courtship, and set all the Swamp girls to rattling the lady’s brisk
response,--

  “What care I for your rings or money,--
  Faddle-a-ding, a-ding, a-day;
  I want a man that will call me honey,--
  Faddle-a-ding, a-ding, a-day!”

Tom Randall sat close to the fire, hanging his delicate hands, which
had never done a day’s chopping, over his knees. He looked much of a
gentleman, Nora Waddell remarked aside to Philip Welchammer. To all
the girls he was a central figure, as Jane was a central figure to the
young men.

But Philip claimed that Virginians were no nearer perfection than
out-and-out Swamp fellows.

“I didn’t say he was a perfect gentleman,” said Nora, with cautious
moderation, “for I wouldn’t say so of any man.”

“He ain’t proud,” admitted Philip. “He’s free to talk with everybody.”

“Humph!” remarked Mary Thompson, sitting at the other side of Philip;
“he ought to be. Folks in Georger Chapel neighborhood is just as good
as anybody.”

“Well, anyhow, I know he ain’t a prettier dancer than Jane,” sighed
Nora, whose folks would not allow her to indulge in the godless motion
which the music of a fiddle inspires. While Jane stirred and chatted,
she was swaying and taking dance-steps, as if unable to refrain from
spinning away through the trees. In this great woods drawing-room,
where so many were gathered, it was impossible for her to hear any
comment that went on.

“Jane makes a good appearance on the floor,” responded Philip, who,
being male, could withstand the general denunciations of the preacher
and his mother’s praying at him in meeting. “I like to lead her out to
dance.”

“Uncle and Aunt Davis are just as easy with Jane as if they wasn’t
perfessors of religion,” sighed Nora Waddell.

“And their boys thinks so much of her,” added Mary Thompson. “John
can’t go anywhere unless she ties his neck-han’ketcher for him. I’ve
knowed him, when Jane was sick, to come and lean over her to get it
fixed.”

“If she’s to leave them,” said Philip, “I wonder how they’d do without
her?”

“She’s goin’ to marry Cousin Jimmy Thompson, that I know,” said Mary.

“She’s engaged to Dr. Miller in Lancaster,” insisted Nora. “I’ve saw
voluntines he’s sent her.”

“Dick Hanks thinks he’s goin’ to get her,” laughed Philip. “He told me
she’s as good as promised him. And Dick’s a good feller, if he wasn’t
such a coward.”

“I don’t believe Jane wants anybody,” said Nora Waddell. “She’s
light-minded, and likes to enjoy herself.”

Dick Hanks stood by Jane and insisted on helping her to move the
stirrer. His hair inclosed his head in the shape of a thatch, leaving
but narrow eaves of forehead above his eyebrows, though his expression
was open and amiable. He looked like one of Bewick’s cuts of an English
carter. The Hankses, however, were a rich family, and, in spite of
their eccentricities, a power in the county. Old Jimmy Hanks so dreaded
the grave that he had a marble vault hewed, watching its progress for
years, and getting himself ready to occupy it a few weeks after its
completion. Lest he should be buried alive, his will decreed that
the vault should be unlocked and the coffin examined at intervals.
The sight of a face floating in alcohol and spotted with drops from
the metal casket not proving grateful to his heirs, the key was soon
conveniently lost.

His son Dick, hearty in love and friendship and noble in brawn, so
feared the dark that he would not go into an unlighted room. When left
by himself at the parting of roads after a night’s frolic, he galloped
his horse through brush and mire, and it was told that he had more than
once reached home without a whole stitch to his back.

But in spite of the powers of darkness, Dick was anxious to take Jane
Davis under his protection. The fire and the noisy company kept him
from lifting his eyes to the treetops swaying slowly overhead, and the
lonesome stars. All through the woods winter-night sounds and sudden
twig cracklings could be heard. Dick, however, meant to take Jane Davis
home, whether he could persuade one of the Davis boys to go home with
him afterward or not.

In those days neighborhoods were intensely local. The people knew what
historians have not yet learned about the value of isolated bits of
human life. These young folks in the sugar-camp knew nothing of the
events and complications of the great world, but they all felt more or
less interested in the politics of Jane Davis’s entanglements.

Her brother kept dipping a long spoon into the kettle she stirred, and
dropping the liquid into a tin cup of cold sugar-water. As long as the
hot stuff twined about in ropy arms, it was syrup; but as soon as it
settled to the bottom in a clear mass, it was wax, and the change from
wax to the grain of sugar is a sudden one.

When Eck Davis announced, “It’s waxed,” the kettle was slung off in
haste, and everybody left the tree which had propped his back, or the
robe on which he had leaned, and the graining sugar was served in
saucers and handed around. It could be eaten with spoons or “worked”
into crackling ropes. Davis’s boys took off the syrup kettles and
covered them up in the bark lodge. They would be emptied into stone
jars when the more important business of entertaining company was
over. The fire now shone redder. Jane was cutting up pies and cakes in
the bark house, all this warm light focused on her lowered eyelids,
when more of her suitors arrived.

“I knowed the entire posse would be out,” said Philip Welchammer in
a laughing undertone to the girls sitting beside him. “Davises never
misses invitin’ anybody.”

“You’re too late, Jimmy Thompson,” called Jane’s elder brother before
he noticed the preacher was in the party. “Your sheer’s e’t.” When,
however, Dr. Miller from Lancaster also came forward, John stood up
stiffly and put on his company grandeur. He held the town-man in some
awe, and was bound to be constrained by the preacher.

Jimmy Thompson, having met Jane with awkward heartiness, said he would
make the young folks acquainted with Brother Gurley. They all knew
Brother Gurley; but Jimmy was a wild young man, and his audacity in
“brother”-ing the preacher was more delicious than home-made sugar.
He afterward explained that the preacher had been turned onto the
old folks for Sunday, and he asked him along to the frolic without
suspicionin’ he’d come, but the preacher, he took a-holt as if that was
the understandin’.

Jane met Brother Gurley and Dr. Miller with equal ease. A hush fell
upon the company, and they ate and watched her serve the newcomers and
appear to balance such formidable individuals in her hands. Affectation
was in that region the deadliest sin a girl could commit against her
own popularity, and Jane’s manner was always beautifully simple.

The preacher had a clean-shaven, large face, huge blue eyes, and
laughing white teeth, and a sprinkling of fine, indefinitely tinted
hair. His figure was vigorous, and well made to bear the hardships of a
Methodist circuit-rider. His presence had the grasp of good-fellowship
and power, and rather dwarfed Dr. Miller, whom all the girls thought
a very pretty man. Dr. Miller wore side-whiskers, and a Lancaster suit
of clothes finished by a fine round cloak hooked under his chin. When
he took off his hat to bow, two curls fell over his forehead. The woman
who would not take Dr. Miller if he wanted her must expect to have the
pick of creation, and maybe she would miss it after all. He talked to
Jane and ate maple sugar with the greatest of Lancaster ease, telling
her he had put up with his cousin in Millersport and borrowed a horse
to ride to camp. John Davis at once said the folks at home expected him
to put up with them over Sunday, and the other young men resented the
doctor’s prompt acceptance of Davis’s hospitality.

The preacher, holding his saucer of sugar in his left hand, was going
around and giving the right hand of fellowship to every young person
in camp. This was the proper and customary thing for him to do. A
preacher who went into company anywhere on the circuit without shaking
hands and pushing and strengthening his acquaintance would be a worse
stumbling-block than a backslider given up to superfluous clothing and
all kinds of sinful levity, or a new convert with artificials in her
bonnet. But there was a tingling quality in Brother Gurley’s grasp
which stirred the blood; and his heavy voice was as prevailing in its
ordinary tones as in the thunders of the pulpit.

“Did you bring your wife with you, Brother Gurley?” simpered Tabitha
Gill, a dwarfish, dark old maid, devout in church and esteemed for her
ability to make a good prayer.

Mary Thompson whispered behind her back, “Tabitha Gill’s always for
findin’ out whether a preacher’s married or not before anybody else
does.”

“Not this time,” replied Brother Gurley, warming Sister Gill’s heart
with a broad, class-meeting smile. “But I expect to bring her with me
when I come around again.”

“Do,” said Tabitha; “and stop at our house.”

“I’m obliged to you, Sister Gill,” replied the preacher. “You have a
fine community of young people here.”

“But they ain’t none of ’em converted. There’s a good deal of levity in
Georger Chapel neighborhood. Now, Jane, now,--Jane Davis,--she’s a girl
nobody can help likin’, but many’s the night that she’s danced away
in sinful amusement. I wish you’d do somethin’ for her soul, Brother
Gurley.”

“I’ll try,” responded the preacher heartily. He looked with a tender
and indulgent eye at Jane, who was dividing her company into two parts,
to play one innocent play before the camp broke up.

“Come away from here,” whispered Philip Welchammer to the girl beside
him, seceding from the preacher’s group and adding himself to Jane’s.
“Tabitha Gill will be haulin’ us all up to the mourners’ bench pretty
soon.”

They played “clap-out,” the girls sitting in their wraps all ready to
depart, and the young men turning up their collars and tying on their
comforters while waiting a summons. Jane was leader, and with much
tittering and secrecy each young lady imparted to Jane the name of the
youth she wished to have sit beside her. Dick Hanks was called first,
and he stood looking at the array from which he could take but one
choice, his lips dropping apart and his expression like that he used
to display under the dunce-cap at Gum College. During this interval of
silence the drip of sugar-water into troughs played a musical phrase or
two, and the stirring and whinnying of the horses could be heard where
they were tied to saplings. No rural Ohioan ever walked a quarter of a
mile if he had any kind of beast or conveyance to carry him.

Then Dick of course sat down by the wrong girl, and was clapped out,
and Dr. Miller was called. Dr. Miller made a pleasing impression by
hesitating all along the line, and when he sat down by Mary Thompson
her murmur of assent was a tribute to his sagacity. Cousin Tom Randall
was summoned, and sung two or three lines of the “Quaker’s Courtship”
before throwing himself on the mercy of Nora Waddell. He was clapped
out, and said he always expected it. West of the Alleghanies was no
place for him; they were even goin’ to clap him out up at uncle’s. Then
the preacher came smiling joyfully, and placed himself by Tabitha Gill,
where he was tittered over and allowed to remain; and one by one the
seats were filled, the less fortunate men making a second trial with
more success when their range was narrowed.

Everybody rose up to go home. But a great many “good-nights,” and
reproaches for social neglect, and promises of future devotion to each
other, had first to be exchanged. Then Jimmy Thompson, who had driven
in his buggy expressly to take Jane Davis home, and was wondering what
he should do with the preacher, saw with astonishment that Brother
Gurley had Jane upon his own arm and was tucking her shawl close to her
chin. Her black eyes sparkled within a scarlet hood. She turned about
with Brother Gurley, facing all the young associates of her life, and
said, “We want you all to come to our house after preachin’ to-morrow.
The presidin’ elder will be there.”

“I don’t care nothin’ about the presidin’ elder,” muttered Jimmy
Thompson.

“Goin’ to be a weddin’, you know,” explained John Davis, turning from
assisting his brother Eck to empty the syrup kettles, and beaming
warmly over such a general occasion. “The folks at meeting will all
be invited, but Jane said she wanted to ask the young people separate
to-night.”

“And next time I come around the circuit,” said Brother Gurley,
gathering Jane’s hand in his before the company, “I’ll bring my wife
with me.”

They walked away from the campfire, Jane turning her head once or twice
to call “Good-night, all,” as if she still clung to every companionable
hand. The party watched her an instant in silence. Perhaps some were
fanciful enough to see her walking away from the high estate of a
doctor’s wife in Lancaster, from the Hanks money, and Jimmy Thompson’s
thrift, into the constant change and unfailing hardships of Methodist
itinerancy. The dancing motion would disappear from her gait, and
she who had tittered irreverently at her good mother’s labors with
backsliders at the mourners’ bench would come to feel an interest in
such sinners herself.

“Dog’d if I thought Jane Davis would ever marry a preacher!” burst out
Jimmy Thompson, in sudden and hot disapproval.

“Don’t it beat all!” murmured Tabitha Gill. “And her an unconverted
woman in the error of her ways! Jane’s too young for a preacher’s wife.”

“Jane’s fooled us all,” owned Philip Welchammer heartily. To keep
intended nuptials a family secret until a day or a few hours before
the appointed time was as much a custom of the country as was prying
into and spying out such affairs. Surprising her friends by her wedding
was, therefore, adding to Jane’s social successes; but only Dr. Miller
could perceive her true reason for assembling her suitors at the last
moment. While discarding them all, her hospitable nature clung to
their friendship; she wished to tell them in a group the change she
contemplated, so that no one could accuse her of superior kindness to
another. Her very cruelties were intended mercies.

“That’s the way the pretty girls go,” sighed Cousin Tom Randall,
seizing hold of Jane’s younger brother: “the preachers get ’em. Come
on, Eck; I have to be helped home.”

“I don’t see when he courted her,” breathed Dick Hanks, closing his
lips after many efforts.

“Preachers is chain-lightnin’,” laughed Jimmy Thompson. “He’s been
around often enough, and always stoppin’ there.”

“To-morrow after preachin’,” said John impressively, as he came forward
after hastily covering the jars. “We’re goin’ to have a turkey-dinner,
and we want you all to be sure to come. And next time Brother Gurley
and Jane makes the circuit, we’ll have the infair at our house, too.”

“That’s just like Davises,” exclaimed one of the dispersing group in
the midst of their eager promises; “they wouldn’t be satisfied unless
they give the weddin’ and the infair both, and invited all quarterly
meetin’ to set down to the table. I thought there was doin’s over at
their house; but then they’re always bakin’ and fussin’.”

They could all picture a turkey-roast at Davis’s: the crisp, brown
turkeys rising from their own dripping, squares of pone as yellow as
buttercups, and biscuits calculated to melt whitely with honey from
glass dishes of sweet-smelling combs. There would be every kind of
vegetable grown in the Swamp, and game from the banks of the Feeder
and Reservoir, pies and cakes and coffee, and at least eight kinds of
preserves. Jane Davis and the preacher would stand up in front of the
fireplace, and after the ceremony there would be a constant rattle of
jokes from the presiding elder and his assistants. And over the whole
house would hang that happy atmosphere which makes one think of corn
ripening on a sunny hillside in still September weather. A dozen times
the long tables would be replenished and supplied with plates, all the
usual features of a turkey-roast at Davis’s being exaggerated by the
importance of the occasion; and Aunt Davis would now and then forget to
urge a guest, while she hurriedly wiped her eyes and replied to some
expression of neighborly sympathy, that they had to lose Jane sometime,
and it was a good thing for a girl to get a religious man. Then about
dusk the preachers and their congregation would start again to chapel,
and Jane, in Millersport clothes, would shine on the front seats as a
bride, certain of an ovation when the after-meeting handshaking came.
It would be a spite if she sat where tallow candles could drip on her
from one of the wooden chandeliers, but she would enjoy hearing her
bridegroom exhort, and he would feel like exhorting with all his might.

“Well, Doc,” said John Davis, turning from the deserted camp and
sinking fire to place himself by the bridle of the young man from
Lancaster.

“No,” answered Dr. Miller, “I’m obliged to you, John; but I’ll ride
back to Millersport to-night.”

“You don’t feel put out?” urged John, conscious of a pang because all
the good fellows who courted Jane could not become his brothers-in-law.

“No; oh, no,” protested Dr. Miller with chagrin. “She’d a right to suit
herself. I’ll be around some other day.”

“We’d take it hard if you didn’t,” said John.

“But just now,” concluded the doctor, “I feel what a body might
call--stirred-off.”

Dick Hanks was riding up close to Jimmy Thompson, while Jimmy
unblanketed his mare and prepared for a deliberate departure.

“John, now,” remarked Jimmy,--“he brothered the preacher right up,
didn’t he? They’ll be makin’ a class-leader o’ John yet, if they can
git him to quit racin’ horses.”

“Which way you goin’ home, Jimmy?” inquired Dick Hanks anxiously.

“The long way, round by Georger Chapel, where I can look at the
tombstones for company. Want to go along? We can talk over the
weddin’, and you’re only two mile from home at our woods’ gate.”

“I guess I’ll take the short cut through the brush,” said Dick.

Jimmy drove through the clearing and fence-gap, where John Davis was
waiting to lay up the rails again.

“What’s that?” said John, and they both paused to listen.

It was a sound of crashing and scampering, of smothered exclamation and
the rasping and tearing of garments. Dick Hanks was whipping his steed
through the woods, against trees, logs, and branches, as if George’s
Chapel graveyard, containing the ghastly vault of his father, and
George’s Chapel preacher, waving Jane Davis in one victorious hand,
were both in merciless pursuit of him.




SWEETNESS

TIME, 1855


Amber light in the dense Ohio woods receded slowly from the path which
a woman ascended. The earth was frozen, and glazed puddles stood in cow
tracks. But this woman loved to climb from the valley farms and her
day’s sewing, of chill December evenings, and feel that she approached
her heaven and left the world behind. The year had just passed its
shortest day. Neighborhood custom allowed her to leave her tasks early
in the evening, because she came to them with a lantern in the morning.
She hastened as you may have noticed a large-eyed anxious cow cantering
toward its nursling; but stopped to breathe, half ashamed of herself,
in sight of a log-house known through the Rocky Fork settlement as
Coon’s.

All the Coons had been queer little people, but this last daughter of
them exceeded her forefathers in squatty squareness of stature and
Japanese cast of feature. As she was quite thirty-five her friends
called her an old maid, according to the custom of that remote period.
Yet there was not a girl on all the windings of the Rocky Fork who had
more laughter in her eyes, or smoother cheeks, or darker polished hair.

“Sure’s my name is Wilda Coon,” said the small woman beneath her
breath, “yonder comes Lanson Bundle.”

The man she saw was yet far off, plodding across the valley toward
her hillside; and as he had taken that walk nearly every evening for
a dozen years, it should have ceased to surprise her. Yet as shadows
thickened among rock and naked trees, it was always a satisfaction to
turn and look back from that particular point and exclaim, “Yonder
comes Lanson Bundle!”

Wilda’s log-house had a clearing and some acres of trees around it,
standing like a German principality or an oasis in the midst of Alanson
Bundle’s great farm. The Bundles had vainly tried in times past to buy
out the Coons. But Alanson had other views. He had courted Wilda twelve
years, and he calculated in time to wear her out. She could not go on
forever raising patches of truck in the summer, and quilting and sewing
in the winter.

Alanson was not uncomfortable while he waited. His aunt kept house
for him at his homestead, where he had several barns, a milk-house,
a smoke-house and all modern conveniences around him. He felt his
value with everybody but Wilda. The youngest girls showed him no
discouragement. There was a sonorous pomp about his singing in meeting
which affected every rural nature, while his Adam’s apple, like a
sensitive lump of mercury, trembled up and down its inclosure. Some
folks thought Alanson Bundle ought to have been a preacher. He would
look so nice standing in a pulpit, with his hair sleeked up in a
straight roach, saying, “Hence we discover, my brethren.” But Wilda
Coon never had made any fuss over him. And for that reason he followed
her with abject service.

In that early year of the fifties a great many people about the Rocky
Fork had locks on their doors. But a tow latch-string hung out for
Wilda Coon, and with it she lifted the wooden latch of her dwelling.
At night, for security, she would draw the string inside, and slip a
wooden bar into staples across the thick board portal.

The tight-chinked cabin had the strangest interior on the Rocky Fork.
There was only one room, and the hollow of the roof rose up in a
cavernous arch without joists. Two wooden bars were, indeed, set high
across one corner, but they served as roosts for chickens who had
already taken to them for the night, and who stirred quavering as Wilda
shut the door and emptied a gourd.

Before the fire, yet not too near it, was a trundle-bed which could be
pushed anywhere on wheels.

She dropped her hood and shawl upon a chair and slipped toward the
trundle-bed, motioning back a great mastiff who kept guard at the
hearth. He sat down again and licked his lips; the glory of burning
logs in the fireplace was enough to content any dog, for that cabin
seemed to have the sunset imprisoned within it. Calico curtains on the
four-paned windows hid darkening woods outside.

“O Sweetness!” whispered Wilda, bending over the trundle-bed and
scarcely daring to touch the patchwork quilt. Her eyes were full of
kisses and fondling for her only baby, the helpless being who reversed
for her the maternal relations. It was a little old woman, whose apple
face had shriveled into puckers only around the corners of the eyes and
mouth. A dimity nightcap tied it in, almost covering white silk threads
of hair. This helpless mother, lying in the dead alive state we now
call paralysis, and the Rocky Forkers then called palsy, was the secret
delight of Wilda’s heart, and Alanson Bundle’s only rival. But she
concealed her fondness like a crime. The name of Sweetness was sacred
to that hollow cabin. Bounce could make no remark about it, and he was
the only safe auditor in an age when excess of loving was considered
weakness.

Wilda hung her supper kettles on the hooks of the crane, and made
biscuits, and raked out coals to bake them in a Dutch oven. Alanson
Bundle would not appear until the evening meal was over. He pottered
around in his woods or went across the ridge to look after cattle.

The log-house was exquisite with cleanness, even in that corner where
the fowls roosted. No cobwebs or dust marred the rich brown of its
upper depth. The floor and stone hearth were scoured white. Wilda’s
spinning-wheel stood beside one wall. Her own apartment was an oblong
space curtained with homespun which had been dyed a dull red. Some red
and gilt chairs, a pine table and a red and gilt cushioned settee on
rockers, furnished the house. The log wall between hearth and door held
gay trappings of tinware and pewter, all shining in the mighty blaze.

The table was spread and a perfume of coffee filled the place. Wilda
had turned the fried eggs and lifted them carefully to a platter before
she heard the usual sounds her mother made to call her.

Sweetness was wide awake and smiling like a baby. The Rocky Fork people
said she had her faculties but couldn’t make no use of them. Unabated
intelligence looked through her eyes and her face never distorted
itself, although she could not talk.

“Have you been lonesome to-day, Sweetness? No? Have you slept much?
Yes? That’s good. Did Speckle and Banty sit on Bounce’s back and
keep you company? They’ve gone to roost now. They’re going to wake
up about midnight and crow for Christmas, and wake you up--the bad
chickens.--Now supper’s ready. Folks round here thinks I starve you
because you never eat in the middle of the day. ’Tain’t no use for me
to say anything. But if you don’t want me to be clean disgraced, you
must eat hearty when you do eat.”

She fed the helpless being with long and patient use of a spoon. The
fire roared. Bounce rose up and yawned, stretching his limbs, to hint
that his own plate had been empty since morning. But Wilda never
hurried this important part of her day’s business. The food which she
must eat became overdone. She sat on the trundle-bed, giving her mother
with the spoon meat all the life and doings of that small world on the
Rocky Fork.

“Gutteridges were going to have a turkey-roast to-morrow. The presiding
elder was at their house. Yes, their sewing was done; she finished
Mandy’s black quilted petticoat to-day. Mandy and ’Lizabeth both had
new shawls that their father had paid six dollars apiece for, at the
woolen factory in Newark; stripes and crossbars. Ridenour’s little
boy was so he could sit up; the doctor thought the fever was broke.
The Bankses were all going to take dinner at granny’s. And some folks
said one of Harris’s girls was to be married to-morrow, but it might
be all talk. There wasn’t much chance of snow, but it was a cold night
outside. Didn’t Sweetness hear the wind across the roof? It was a good
thing our clapboards were on so tight.”

So this one-sided conversation went on until the little old woman was
quite filled. Then Wilda made her snug, as if attending an infant, and
fed Bounce, and sat down alone at the table.

Scarcely were the clean pewter and crockery in place again, and the
wheel set out where the table had been, and Wilda bundled ready to go
out, when a knock sounded on the door.

She opened it, and exclaimed as she always did,--

“Well, I declare! here’s Lanson. Come in, Lanson, and take a chair.”

“Gimme your milk bucket,” responded Alanson.

“I was just starting to milk, Lanson. Don’t you bother yourself with it
to-night.”

But he took her pail. And Wilda, smiling, laid off her wraps and made
the hearth very clean, and plumped up the settee cushions.

When Alanson handed the frothing pail into the door, without putting
foot over the threshold, he glanced at the fireplace.

“Want another log brought in to-night?”

“Law, Lanson! that one ain’t half burnt.”

“But it’ll settle down before another twenty-four hours. I ’low I’d
better fetch a few sticks.”

So he came in laden with sections of trees, and built them handily
upon the structure of the fire.

“Do you want ary bucket of water?” was his next inquiry.

“No, I’m obleeged to you, Lanson,” replied Wilda. “I fetched a big
gourdful from the spring as I come uphill. It saves steps.”

Alanson now unbelted and took off his butternut-colored wamus, and
Wilda hung it with his hat on a peg. He had a fine black blanket shawl
for meeting, but he was not so reckless as to scratch it through hill
underbrush every evening.

Feeling himself now ready for society, Alanson walked over to the
trundle-bed and greeted the invalid.

“Good even’, Mis’ Coon; it’s right wintry outdoors.”

She gave him an approving smile. He sat down in the settee and rocked
himself, while Wilda pulled a long thread from her spindle, stepped
back and gave the wheel a whirl. The trundle-bed, as usual, stood
between her and her besieger. A hum, rising and rising like some sweet
tune through the pines, filled the room. The great wheel blurred all
its spokes, and found them again, and slackened to a slow revolution,
as Wilda came back to the spindle.

“How’s your aunt to-day?” she inquired.

“Middling,” replied Alanson. Again the music of the spinning arose.
Alanson warmed his feet and hands, and felt comforted after his tramp
through the vast chill woods.

When the silent companionship which he enjoyed with Wilda had quite
filled its measure, he took from his pocket and unfolded a large
newspaper.

“I’ll light a candle,” said Wilda, with that eagerness for romance
which the simplest lives manifest.

“’Tisn’t needed,” said Alanson. What was a candle’s star to that
blazing sun in the fireplace? He turned his shoulder so the light fell
upon the “Saturday Evening Post,” and read a harrowing installment
about some Bride of the Wilderness. There was domestic bliss in this
snug cabin, the wind-song of the wheel, and the winter night with
its breath of Christmas. Alanson droned on in a high key, the mother
watching him as long as she was able to resist so many monotones. She
went to sleep before Wilda’s stint of spinning was done, and before
Alanson read with impressive voice, “To be con-tin-u-ed.”

That wary inspection of each other which people of that time called
courting had varied its routine so little for twelve years betwixt this
pair, that Alanson felt bound to make his usual remark as Wilda sat
down to knit.

“Well, folks is still talking about us getting married, Wilda.”

“Let them talk,” said Wilda, putting her hair behind her ear, and
smiling while she looked at Sweetness.

“I come here pretty regular. Don’t you think it’s about time we set the
day?”

Wilda answered, without moving her eyes from the trundle-bed, “Don’t
you think we better let well enough alone, Lanson?”

“Well, now, ’tisn’t well enough,” argued Alanson, and to the sylvan
mind there is accumulated force in an oft-used argument. “You’ve got
these woods lots and the house and a cow”--

“Yes, I’m well fixed,” murmured Wilda.

--“but you have to leave your mother and go out among the neighbors to
airn a living. How do you know sometime the house won’t burn down?”

“I am jub’ous about it often,” owned Wilda, biting the end of a
knitting-needle. But catching the yarn over her little finger she drove
it ahead with her work.

“Then eventually she might die.”

“I’ve thought of that,” sighed Wilda. “And I’ve thought what’d become
of her if I’s to be taken and her left. Then who’d let her pet rooster
and hen--that she’s just as tickled with as a child--roost in the
house, and clean after them without fretting her?”

Alanson glanced at Speckle and Banty sticking like balls to their
perch, and he volunteered some discreet possibilities.

“When folks begins to get used to such things before they’re too old
and sot in their ways, seems to me like chickens in the house would be
natteral enough--though not brought up to it.”

Whenever Alanson made this great concession, Wilda always fell back
upon her observations of marriage.

“But there’s Mary Jane Willey. She had fifteen hundred dollars in her
own right, and was well fixed with bedding and goods--six chairs and a
bread-trough and a cupboard. And all that didn’t satisfy her, but she
must have a man to speckalate with her money and lose it; and now he’s
took to drinking, her and her children are like to go on the county.”

Alanson interlaced his fingers across his chest and set his thumbs to
whirling.

“She ought to got a man like me,” he observed humorously.

Then the topic was usually diverted into the lives of other Rocky
Forkers until Alanson felt it was time to go home.

But to-night, after drawing out his silver watch by its steel
log-chain, he lingered uneasily instead of rising from the settee and
saying, “Well, I better be moseying towards home.”

The flashing of Wilda’s needles went on. She had a leather stall pinned
to her waist, in which she braced and steadied the most rampant needle
as he led the gallop around the stocking. Sweetness slept as a spirit
may sleep who has escaped the bounds of care, her sunken little mouth
and wrinkled eye-corners steadily smiling.

“Going to have any Christmas up here to-morrow?” inquired Alanson, with
a sheepish look at Wilda.

“I got a Christmas gift for her,” replied Wilda fondly. Alanson
understood the pronouns which always stood for mother.

“Well, now, it’s funny,” said he. “But I got something for her, too.”

“Why, Lanson! What ever put you up to do such a thing?” Wilda paused
with her needle held back in mid plunge.

“’Tisn’t much,” apologized Alanson, and he brought his wamus from the
peg to the hearth. Wilda had noticed it was laden when she hung it up,
but she always discreetly overlooked the apples he brought until he
made his offering.

There were no apples in the wamus pockets this time. Alanson took out
two packets, and opened one which he laid on Wilda’s knee. It was a
pound of red hearts.

“The other’s for her,” he said “and it’s all white ones.”

“Why, Lanson Bundle!” exclaimed Wilda.

But he had yet another paper, and it disclosed the yellow coats of
tropical fruit.

“What’s them?” breathed Wilda, bending over in admiration. “Why, Lanson
Bundle! If them ain’t lemons and oranges! Where in this world did you
get them?”

“I sent clean to Fredericktown for them,” confessed the suitor with an
apologetic grin. “I thought her being bedfast so steady all the time,
she’d like something out of the common.”

“You are _real_ clever,” spoke Wilda with trembling voice. “She’ll be
so tickled! I been making her two fine caps with hem-stitching around
the border;--but this does beat all!”

“I done something else,” Alanson ventured on, “that you’ll think is
simple;--I’ve never seen such a thing, but I’ve read about it. Coming
along through the pines I took my jack-knife out and cut a little one
off close to the ground; and it’s laying outside the door.”

“What for, Lanson?”

“A Christmas-tree.”

“What’s that?”

“Why, in a foreign place they call Germany, I’ve read they take an
evergreen and make it stand like it growed in the house, and hang gifts
on it, and if I don’t disremember, they fix candles into it and light
them.”

“I should think that would be pretty,” said Wilda in some excitement.
“Law, Lanson! If we could fix it at the foot of her trundle-bed!”

Alanson thought they could fix it, and he set vigorously about the
task. He ran out to the ash-hopper and brought in the keg which in
summer time caught the lye. The evergreen tree, beautifully straight,
and tasseled at the top, he fastened in the keg ingeniously, without
clamor of nails and pounding.

Then maid and bachelor trimmed the Christmas-tree for their old
sleeping child. A dexterous use of string hung all the hearts to the
boughs, as well as oranges and lemons. One cap was put on the top
tassel, and the other dropped from a branch by its ties. Wilda brought
out her candle box and recklessly cut the moulded tallow into short
tapers. This part of the decoration greatly taxed both Alanson and her.
But they finally pinned all the tapers in place, and concluded to light
the wicks for a trial.

Alanson carried a brand from point to point. Wilda was frightened at
the beauty of the thing and their unusual occupation. Her eyes and
cheeks were vivid. She had never been so wildly excited in her life
before. Thought and resolution, which had battled for years, bounded
forward with the bounding of her blood.

“Lanson Bundle!” she laughed, “what do you suppose folks would say if
they peeked in and seen us at this!”

“I ’low they’d want to have a Christmas-tree themselves,” responded the
bachelor. “You and me will have one next year at our own house, won’t
we, Wilda?”

“Well, I don’t know but we will. I don’t know as I can hold out much
longer. You’re a real good man, Lanson, and if I’ve got to get married,
there ain’t nobody I’d have as quick as you.”

At that admission Alanson laid the brand on the fire, wiped his lips
carefully with a red cotton handkerchief, and came expectantly round
the Christmas-tree. But with the recoil of a middle-aged girl from
dropping man a word of encouragement, Wilda flew behind the trundle-bed
and kept her lover warned by an uplifted palm.

“I haven’t made up my mind to no kissing yet, Lanson Bundle! I ain’t
used to kissing anybody but her.”

Alanson looked at the little mother in the trundle-bed, and she opened
her eyes, disturbed by such scampering. The pet chickens were roused
also, and Speckle crowed on his perch with a vigor which belongs only
to the midnight of Christmas eve.

“Look there, Sweetness,” Wilda whispered kneeling. “Do you see what
Lanson’s fixed for you? That’s a Christmas-tree.”

The mother’s eyes caught the Christmas-tree, and snapped with
astonishment and delight. The tapers were dripping tallow, but
firelight shone through the boughs, and all the wonderful hearts and
yellow fruit hung like a fairy picture. Her grateful look finally
sought Alanson, and he also knelt down, at the opposite side of the
trundle-bed, and with reverence which brought a rush of tears to
Wilda’s eyes, kissed Sweetness on the forehead.

Wilda furtively gathered her tears on her finger-tips, and hid them in
her linsey dress, but she said impressively to Alanson,--

“Now, that kiss will make you a better man all your life.”




SERENA

TIME, 1860


Serena Hedding drove through the gateway of her father’s farm, while
her little son held the creaking gate open. Her vehicle was a low
buggy, with room at the back for a sack of nubbins, which the scrawny
white horse would appreciate on his return trip. The driver was obliged
to cluck encouragement to him as he paused, with his head down, in the
gateway; and before he had taken ten steps forward, before Milton could
stick the pin back in the post-hole and scamper to his seat at her left
side, she lived her girlhood over. She saw her father holding that gate
open for camp-meeting or protracted-meeting folks to drive in to dinner
with him. She saw Milton Hedding ride through to court her, and the
scowl her father gave him; and the buggy which waited for her in the
woods one afternoon, herself getting into it, and Milton whipping up
his horse to carry her away forever.

The road wound, folding on itself, through dense woods. Nothing had
changed about the road. She noticed that the old log among the haw
saplings remained untouched. That log was a link binding her childhood
to her girlhood. She sat on it to baste up the hem of her ridiculously
long dress before going to school, her dinner-basket waiting near; and,
coming home in the evening, she there ripped the basting out, lest Aunt
Lindy should notice that her skirt did not flop against her heels, as
proper skirts had done in Aunt Lindy’s childhood. Seated on that log,
she and Milton had talked of the impossibility of their marriage, and
decided to run away.

It was so near sunset that the woods were in mellow twilight. She heard
the cows lowing away off, and a loaded wagon rumbling over the Feeder
bridge. The loamy incense of this ancestral land was so sweet that it
pained her. Soon the house would come in sight, and seem to strike her
on the face. If they had altered it any, she did not know it. Was her
father’s sick-bed downstairs, or did Aunt Lindy keep him above the
narrow staircase? The slippery-elm tree she used to wound for its juicy
strips started out at the roadside to give her a scarry welcome. Her
fingers brushed her cheeks, and drew the black sunbonnet farther over
them.

“What’s the matter, mother?” inquired her light-haired boy. “Are you
feared grandfather’s worse?”

“I hope he ain’t,” replied Serena. Then the house, on its rising
ground, appeared, crossed by trees. It had a yard in which lilac bushes
and tall hollyhocks bordered the path. The gate opened into an orchard,
and the orchard was guarded from the lane by bars, which Serena’s
little boy let down, and they drove in.

Her father’s barn was one of those immense structures which early Ohio
farmers built to indicate their wealth. It had always seemed bursting
with hay and grain, and the stamp of horses resounded from its basement
stables.

Serena looked piteously at the house. Vehicles of various kinds were
fastened all along the fence. Still, no solemn voice or sound of
singing reached her ear. It had long been the Jeffries custom to hold
services over their dead at the house. No feather-bed hung across
the garden palings; neither was the hideous cooling-board standing
up anywhere, like a wooden tombstone. But the whole neighborhood was
there. He must be very low indeed.

The youthful widow and her boy alighted, and tied their horse in a
humble corner near the woodpile. Nobody came out to receive them. That
was another bad sign. She was cramped by her long ride. If her suspense
had not been so great she must have felt a pang of shame at the shabby
appearance of her son and herself, on this first return from exile.

The house dog barked, waking suddenly from his meditations to learn who
they were and what they wanted. But he recollected that a great many
strangers had been coming and going recently, and considering his duty
done, trotted back, and stretched himself to snap flies.

Serena felt obliged to go around to the front of the house, though the
back doorstep showed the wear of her childish feet. But as she passed
the first rosebush, Milty trotting in the white path behind her, a
woman came from the back porch, holding a handkerchief over her cap,
the ribbons of which flew back on each side of her neck. The light
glared on her spectacles. She was as trim and quick as a young girl.
Her dress, cape, and apron were of the same material, and her waist was
fastened in front with a spiky row of pins.

“Serene Heddin’!” she exclaimed, with the spring in her voice which
Serena remembered comparing to the clip of a mouse-trap, “you’re not
goin’ into the front door to scare your father to death in his last
moments.”

“Oh, Aunt Lindy,” said the shabby widow, lifting her hands, “is he as
bad as that?”

“He’s been struck with death all the afternoon. You come in this way.”

“Can’t I see him?” asked Mrs. Hedding, climbing over the back doorstone
like a suddenly exhausted pilgrim, her face quivering under streams of
tears.

Through open doors she recognized in the parlor and sitting-room
groups of old neighbors, waiting in that hush with which they always
accompanied one another to the brink of death. A woman came from among
them, whispering,--

“Who’s this, Lindy?” and immediately informing herself: “Why, Sereny
Jeffr’s! Have you got here? Come right in to your pap. He’s pretty
nigh gone.”

“It won’t do no good, Sister McGafferty,” said Aunt Lindy. “He won’t
know her, and ’twill disturb him. She was postin’ in at the front door
when I caught her,” declared Aunt Lindy, as if speaking of a thief.

Sister McGafferty, a comfortable, large woman in blue spectacles,
the presiding elder’s wife, and therefore a person of authority,
still beckoned Serena in, and she passed Aunt Lindy, followed by her
barefooted boy. The round-posted bedstead was drawn out from the wall,
and under its sheet and many colored quilt lay the old farmer, his
mouth open, his eyes glazed, his narrow brows and knotty features
wearing a ghastly pallor. But behind the solemn terror of that face was
her father.

Aunt Lindy followed, and twitched her elbow, thereby creating a
faction in Serena Hedding’s favor among the spectators. They were all
well-to-do people, who noticed her dejected attitude toward the world,
and had always disapproved of her thriftless match. But they said
within themselves that Lindy Miller was going too far when she tried to
pull a daughter away from her dying father.

“Ain’t you ’shamed to disturb his last peaceful minutes!” Aunt Lindy
hissed with force.

But the returned culprit fastened such desperate interest on the
unseeing eyes of her father that Aunt Lindy’s interruption was as
remote to her as the gambols of loose horses in the pasture.

If there had now been time and opportunity, Serena could not argue
her case with him. He never had allowed that. She could not tell how
true and happy her marriage was, in spite of his disapproval and its
accompanying poverty. She had suffered, but her heart had ripened
so that she could discern and love the good in human nature across
its narrow bounds. Words or expressions did not occur to her; but a
thousand living thoughts swarmed in her mind. If he would look at her
again with reconciliation in his eyes, she could be satisfied, and bear
all her future trials like benedictions. Never a loving father, he was,
until her disobedience, a fairly kind one. He was a very religious man
of the old sort, believing seriousness to be the primary principle of
godliness, and levity a fermentation of the inward Satan. He always
paid his quarterage and contributed to foreign missions, while every
successive preacher on the circuit used his house as home. The deep
grooves making a triangle of his upper lip showed how constant and sad
his meditations had been. Yet this old farmer was in some matters timid
and self-distrustful, and so fond of peace and quiet as to yield his
rights for them.

“Father,” pleaded Serena Hedding, bending closer to him. “Father!”
Unconsciously she repeated the name like a cry. The hum of the
bee-hives against the garden palings could be heard. Did a ray dart
across his leaden brain from the afternoon his only child, in short
coats, poked a stick in the bee-hives, and, feeling the results of
her folly, wailed thus to him? Did he imagine himself again dropping
the rake and leaping the fence to run with her from her tormentors?
A flicker grew through the glazing of his eyes, and became a steady
light, a look, a tender gaze, a blessing. She clasped her hands, and
rocked before him in ecstasy. He knew her, and revealed, midway over
the silent chasm of death, how unalterably close and dear she was to
him. In that small eternity of time they were knitted together as
never before. His eyes began to glaze again, and she remembered Milty.
Pushing the child forward, she cried again, “My boy, father! See my
boy!”

The old man saw him. That rigid face was too set to smile, but with the
image of his child’s child on his eyes, the hope of future generations
of his blood, he passed away.

A little time was allowed for the wailing that rises around every
death-bed. The overtaxed young widow rocked her son against her,
while he gazed about him in awe. Aunt Lindy stood by the bedpost,
burying her face in her apron. Her son, Hod Miller, a huge creature,
very black-eyed, bright-complexioned, and having the appearance of
possessing no immortal soul, sat near the foot of the bed, with his
legs crossed and his shoulders hung forward, looking respectfully
concerned. There were no other near relatives except Jesse Jeffries and
his wife, who covered their faces while this elder brother lay in the
first dignity of death.

Then a quiet bustle began. Sister McGafferty took Serena Hedding out
of the parlor, and made her lie down on the sitting-room straw-tick
lounge, and smell camphor. Milty wandered out-of-doors, and was
grateful to a neighbor’s boy, forbidden the house and enjoined to
watch the horses, who told him, after an exchange of scrutiny, that
he dursn’t take a dare which ’ud reach the medder fence first. The men
took charge of the body. They closed the parlor doors, and, with basins
of water, clean linen, and the new store suit Aunt Lindy’s forethought
had ready in the house, performed those solemn rites to which all our
flesh must humbly come. One mounted a horse and rode to Millersport
for the undertaker. Little Jimmy Holmes, who was a middle-aged man,
but had a father known as Old or Big Jimmy, was informed by his wife
that he could go home now, and look after the milkin’ and feedin’; she
would stay here and tend to things. Into her capable hands Aunt Lindy
appeared to resign the house, while Little Jimmy and their son, Little
Jimmy’s Jimmy, drove into the pleasant dusk.

After inquiring about the date of the funeral, and detailing watchers
for the intervening nights, the other neighbors slowly dispersed in
squads. Lights appeared about the house, and the kitchen and cellar
yielded up their prepared good things.

Before they reached home the neighbors began to speculate about the
disposition of the property. They said Moses Jeffr’s had been a hard
worker, and his sister Lindy had been a hard worker, and she had kept
his house for more than twenty year: ’twouldn’t be no more than right
for him to leave her well off. She had been savin’ with what her man
left her, and Hod Miller had done a son’s part by the old man. Money
goes to them that lays up. Some said Mr. Jeffr’s had cut off Sereny
with a cent in his will. Sereny ought to knowed better than to done as
she did. It was a pity, specially as she was left a widow-woman, with
a little boy to raise. But when a person makes their bed, they got to
lie in it. How tickled Mr. Jeffr’s was when Sereny was a little girl
experiencin’ religion! He never thought then she would go and run off.
She had a good home, and he would have done well by her.

On the other hand, there was folks-talk among the Serena faction, whose
hearts melted toward the girl when she rocked before her father. They
said there never would have been any trouble between Moses Jeffr’s
and his daughter if Lindy Miller hadn’t managed things. Milt Heddin’
was a good feller, only he hadn’t the knack of gettin’ along. But he
could have worked the farm as well as Hod Miller. They wanted Sereny to
have her rights. It was a scandal and a shame if that big, able-bodied
feller, with land of his own, could turn her off the home place.

Serena wandered about the house, which strangers seemed to possess,
crying over familiar objects. She had large violet eyes, and was
once considered as pretty a girl as came to meeting, though her lips
were too prominent and full. She looked shabby and piteous. Sister
McGafferty combed her hair for her, while her trembling, work-worn
hands lay in her lap.

“They’ve borried a black bonnet and dress for you, Sister Sereny,” said
the elder’s wife, who had been around the circuit when this sorrowful
creature was a shy child.

“I might have worn a better dress and bonnet. But when word came, I
felt so bad I didn’t think of anything. They didn’t let me know until
he was near gone.”

Milty spent his time out-of-doors. He approved of the barn, and did not
approve of Aunt Lindy. His mother had said, “Aunt Lindy, this is my
boy.”

And Aunt Lindy had said, “He looks spindlin’, like the Heddin’s. I hope
you’re raisin’ him to obedience. Children set on their own way gives
their parents plenty of sorrow to sup.”

This spry great-aunt’s glasses detected him if he touched a
daguerreotype among the glaring, upright array on the sitting-room
table, or ventured too near the fine men and women pasted on the
fire-screen.

She took him to see his grandfather after the laying-out, turned back
the ghastly sheet, which was stretched between two chairs, removed
cloths from the dead man’s face, and warned the boy to prepare for
death. He never afterwards inhaled the pungent odor of camphor without
turning faint.

At table he and his mother huddled together, feeling scarcely welcome
to the abundant food. Little Jimmy Holmes’s wife, with a number of
helpers, kept the table burdened with every country luxury, but Aunt
Lindy saw that the best was reserved until the great final dinner on
the day of the funeral.

That day was considered a credit to Moses Jeffries. It was one of the
largest funerals ever known in those parts. The weather was pleasant,
and summer work so well advanced that everybody could feel the
pressure of neighborly duty. Carriages and fine horses nearly filled
the orchard space in front of the house; the yard was darkened with
standing men in their best black clothes. Not half the people could get
into the house, to say nothing of getting into the parlor. There Elder
McGafferty lifted his hands, praying and preaching over the old farmer,
who looked so unused to his collar and neck-cloth and brand-new suit
when they took off his coffin-lid.

A number of men wandered down by the barn; the hymn-singing came to
them faint and plaintive, in gusts of couplets, just as the preacher
lined the words.

One of them remarked that old Mr. Jeffr’s left things in pretty good
shape, and he s’posed Hod Miller wouldn’t alter them much. Another
thought that Serene Heddin’ would come in for a sheer, if not all. A
man may be put out with his children, but he’ll favor them when it
comes to such serious business as makin’ a will. Hod Miller had bought
and sold and made money on that farm, enough to pay for his work. He
oughtn’t to stand in Sereny’s light.

“What’s she been doin’ since her man died?” inquired the first speaker,
shaving off long whittlings from a piece of pine.

“Workin’ out, ’pears like I heard. She got a place near Lancaster,
where they’d let her keep her boy with her. It’s my opinion,” said the
second speaker, suddenly spitting a flood, and letting his spiky chin
work up and down with slow rumination, “that old Lindy kept her away
from her pap as long as she could, for fear there’d be a makin’ up.”

“Oh, sho! The old man was very set in his ways. He didn’t need
bully-raggin’ to make up his mind and keep it made up. Hod Miller might
marry the widder now, and that’d settle all claims.”

“I don’t believe she’d have him,” said the chewer, smiling slowly.
“Jesse Jeffr’s, he thinks Sereny’s all right. He claims he seen the
will.”

The whittler scoffed at such claims. Jesse Jeffries was held in light
esteem by his old neighbors. He sold his farm, and had such a hankering
for town life as to settle in Millersport, the Deep Cut of the Ohio
canal, and lose every cent of it in grocery-keeping. What Jesse
Jeffries said or did thereafter was of small importance. His record
slew him.

There was bustle at the front of the house. Both men squinted in the
sun, and watched a long black object with shining dots upon it coming
through the door, borne by stout young farmers. The men in the yard
raised their hats. After the coffin came Serena, on her Uncle Jesse’s
arm. He shuffled along uncomfortably, as if not used to showing such
attention to the women-folks. After them came Hod Miller and his
mother, and Jesse Jeffries’ wife with Serena’s boy. Sister McGafferty
considered this the proper order of procession, and had so managed
it. Streams of people gushed from all the outlets of the house; the
carriages filled and were arrayed in line; the long black serpent
trailed down through the woods; and the women remaining to prepare
dinner stood and counted, until they declared it beat everything. It
was a pleasant sensation to be at such a populous funeral.

When Jesse Jeffries foretold the contents of the will he did not speak
without authority, for it had been left in his hands. After a hearty
dinner, at which many tablefuls of neighbors assisted, he importantly
called the possible heirs together, and their factions sat by to listen.

Aunt Lindy was neither nervous nor bowed with grief. She had done her
duty, and knew what her deserts were. Her son Hod tipped back in his
chair, and twitched his shirt-collar. He wanted to have the thing over,
and was not without doubts of his succeeding to the estate. If it came
to him he meant to hold to it. His hands were as strong as a vise, and
typified his grip on property. Serena might try to break the will, but
if she lawed until Judgment Day he would not give her a cent he was not
obliged to give her. Women-folks were a sort of cattle he had no fancy
for.

Curious eyes watched Serena, and speculated on her emotions. She was
pale and quiet. Her son stood beside her.

The testator’s brother broke the seal, and began to read.

The testator, after stating his sanity and general ability to
execute such a document, giving the numbers of his various lands and
enumerating his parcels of property in the tedious and high-sounding
repetition prescribed by law, bequeathed it all to his beloved daughter
Serena Jeffries, and her heirs, the said Serena being enjoined to pay a
stated annuity to her aunt, the testator’s beloved sister, and to make
over to her certain chattels particularly named; also a legacy of five
hundred dollars to her cousin, Howard Miller.

Sister McGafferty poked the camphor bottle toward Serena, but it was
declined.

Still the poor girl could not believe this. Disinheritance had been so
long accepted as part of the penalty of her marriage that she scarcely
thought of it as injustice. But to have the homestead for her own was a
rise which made her dizzy.

After gazing on her with satisfaction through his glasses, Uncle
Jesse turned the paper over, and rapidly read a small codicil, which
nevertheless choked him. He knew nothing about this part of the will.
It destroyed Serena Hedding’s claims, on account of her disobedience,
and made Howard Miller unconditional heir.

So that settled the matter. Serena turned whiter. It was a shock, after
realizing one instant the possession of competence.

“I ’low Mozy must have put that on the day he took it away to have more
added, he said,” remarked Uncle Jesse huskily. His good wife, who was
all cap-rim and beak, with a thin neck and general air of scrawniness,
sat with her claws crossed in silent sympathy. Jesse and his wife did
not find Lindy a congenial sister.

“Well,” remarked Aunt Lindy, turning her head so the light fell in a
sheet of glare upon her spectacles, “I’m satisfied. That is, I will be
when I’ve said what I’m goin’ to say. I’m a plain speaker, and tell my
mind. Things has turned out right. Sereny Heddin’ left her pap, and we
stayed by him. She’s got her reward, and we’ve got our’n. I hope you
don’t take no exceptions to his will, Sereny?”

Sereny replied in a low voice that she did not take any.

“To show that I’m fair-minded and want to do right by you,” said Aunt
Lindy, raising her voice to the tone she used in speaking-meeting when
exhorting sinners, “I’ll give you your mother’s spinnin’-wheel that
stands in the smoke-house. You ought to have something to remember her
by.”

Little Jimmy Holmes’s wife nudged the woman next to her, and whispered,
with a curving mouth, “Just the idy! And all Sereny’s mother’s spoons,
and her quilts and coverlids she had wove! And the girl never having
any settin’-out in the first place!”

Serena climbed the staircase, to take off her borrowed mourning, and
put on her own shabby weeds for her ride back into the world. She
passed presses stacked with household linen. The precious things
of her childhood, seen and handled in this trying visit, seemed so
heart-breakingly precious because Hod Miller’s future wife would throw
them about as common. She would like to have the yellow, leather-bound
copy of “Alonzo and Melissa,” the novel of the house, always considered
unwholesome by the elders, and as surely read with sly zest by the
children. The coverlet with her mother’s name woven into it had
never been intended for anybody but the daughter of the house. It was
unendurable to go away from home this second time, and into perpetual
exile.

“Now I wisht they’d find a later will,” said Little Jimmy Holmes’s
wife, tying on her bonnet in the best bedroom. The persons who had
lingered to support the family through the ordeal of will-reading were
driving off, one after another. “Oh, but Aunt Lindy’ll carry things
before her! Is she anywhere near? I don’t want her to hear me.”

“Things don’t turn out that way except in novel-stories,” observed
another woman, with her mouth full of pins. “They don’t find wills hid
around in stockin’s or Bibles. I declare, I’m real sorry for Sereny. I
don’t see how old Mr. Jeffr’s can lay easy in his grave, turnin’ his
own child out to give place to a big, hearty feller, with money in his
own right.”

“I always thought so much of Serene,” said Little Jimmy Holmes’s wife.
“We was taken into full church membership on the same day; and we used
to run together and swap dinners at the Gum College. Aunt Lindy was so
hard on her. I’ve asked Serene to go home with me and stay as long as
she wanted to. But she has to take that horse and buggy back. And I
don’t think she could stand it, so near the old home.”

“Now what do you think?” said Jesse Jeffries’ wife, coming in, with her
black-mitted hands pressed together. “Things is willed to Sereny, after
all.”

The bedroom resounded with ejaculations.

“How do you make that out?” inquired Little Jimmy Holmes’s wife. “I’d
give all my yearlin’ calves to have it so.”

“There was another piece wrote on to the paper, that Jesse missed.
’Pears like Mozy cut her off, and then repented, and went right to
another lawyer and had it fixed, for it’s in two different handwrites.
Things stands just as they did in the first.”

“I’m sorry Lindy gets her yearly portion,” said Mrs. Holmes, in an
irreverent aside. “Let me get out of this crowd: I’m goin’ to hug
Serene.”

“I _thought_ ’twas a great pity,” exclaimed the woman with pins in her
mouth, bestowing them rapidly about her bonnet ribbons, “if Sereny
couldn’t have the homestead to bring up her boy in!”

“You said folks never found new wills!” observed a neighbor
triumphantly.

“Well,” retorted the woman, turning her face from side to side to get
her chin set properly in the bonnet ribbons, “they _didn’t_ find any.
Jesse Jeffr’s only fooled around and didn’t read all of the first one.
They might ’a’ knowed _Jesse Jeffr’s_ ’ud make a mess of it. _He_ don’t
know how to do a thing right.”

This opinion was shielded from the ear of Mrs. Jesse. She was busy
nodding her leghorn bonnet and exchanging parting civilities with
several old neighbors.

But Little Jimmy Holmes’s wife had flown upstairs, and interfered with
Jesse Jeffries and Sister McGafferty and a number of others. Serena lay
upon a bed, and the air reeked with camphor.

“She’s overcome like,” explained Uncle Jesse.

“Let me get to her,” said Mrs. Holmes. Having got to her, Mrs. Holmes
raised Serena’s head on her arm, and began to laugh.

“She’s comin’ out of it now,” observed Sister McGafferty. “All of you’d
better go downstairs except Sister Holmes and me. Let her be without
disturbin’ a while. We’ll have plenty of other chances to enjoy Sister
Heddin’s company.”

The neighbors and Jesse went submissively downstairs, but Little Jimmy
Holmes’s wife kept on laughing with some effort, as if she felt afraid
of ending in a sob.

“Oh, I’m so glad you’ll be in the neighborhood again, Serene!” she
said. “Things wouldn’t never been right in this world if they’d turned
out the other way. Don’t look at me like you’s thinkin’ of the dead.
But rouse up and feel better. There’s your Aunt Lindy and Hod standin’
at the gate: I can see ’em through the winder. They’re talkin’ mighty
serious, and she don’t look so well satisfied as she did. But you must
do well by her, Sereny. Give her the old spinnin’-wheel that stands in
the smoke-house!”




ROSE DAY

TIME, 1875


“I do believe this is rose day,” said Infant, standing on the top step
of the veranda in delight.

“I _know_ it’s soap-boiling day,” asserted her twin sister, who had
been baptized Marilla Victoria when she was baptized Infanta Isabella,
quite forty years before. These twins entered the world at a period
when flowery, daring names were the extreme of fashion, and previous to
a rebound to plain and strong Ann, Elizabeth, Mary, Hannah, Jane, and
their various combinations. Infant came very near being labeled Lovey
Lucilla, and she felt thankful for her escape, and even attached to her
diminutive.

Belle would never have suited her (she was not belle), while Infant
did not shame her (she was more or less an infant at any age). She was
slender, blue-eyed, and smooth-skinned, so smooth that wrinkles could
scarcely make their indentation. And it never ceased to be appropriate
for her to wear her hair in a braid down her back, tied with ribbons
the color of the dress she wore. Infant herself could not separate the
gray hair from the blond, nor did she care whether it was all blond or
all gray. She scampered over a fence and swung in the cherry-trees.
Her long tranced girlhood never ended; and the slow life of the farm,
simple as grass and wholesome as new milk, kept up the illusion that
time was eternity. In their neighborhood these twins had been the
Baldwin girls when they first toddled into meeting, when they went off
to be educated at an expensive school, when they came back to paint and
to play on a grand piano, when their parents died and they took charge
of the farm; and the Baldwin girls would probably be their title when
they should become contemporary with all living grandmothers.

Occasionally Infant received a shock from the growth of young children.
It was so astonishing to see a creature who was a baby but a short
time ago, shooting aloft, long-armed and long-legged, and announcing
itself in the teens. Such phenomena did not astonish Rilla, however.
She resented them. Though she had the same fair complexion and comely
make as her sister, a deadly drop of acid had been added to her nature.
Her shoulders were bent. She loved to hear people talked about, and
to lift the corners of her nose with scorn. She felt abused by much
that had happened to her on this planet, and yet too insignificant in
her own personality to take it out of the human race as she desired to
do. The freedom, ease, and scope of mature unmarried womanhood were in
no wise appreciated by her. These traits made Rilla an uncomfortable
house-mate, especially in winter, when the twins were snowed in with
their books and trim housekeeping. Still, Infant loved Rilla’s sourness
along with Rilla. There was strong diversion in being scolded, and she
always felt such a delicious warmth around her heart when she made it
up with Rilla and gave her a handsome present, or took double turns at
the cooking.

Rilla was very parsimonious, and felt bound to distort herself with
aged gowns and long-hoarded hats. But Infant felt unhappy in any color
except that tint of gray which has the thought of wine in it. On this
very rose day, though it was early in the morning, she wore a clinging
gray challie dress. And a good background it would be for all the roses
Infant could hang upon it.

Nothing made Rilla lift the corners of her nose higher than Infant’s
flower days. But as Rilla would be lifting her nose anyhow, and could
really scent no harm in these silent festivals, Infant continued to
observe them year after year, and to afford her sister that triumphant
sense of superiority which we all have upon beholding others’
absurdities.

There was crocus day, when the first flowers broke the sod and made
heavenly beauty in the dark spring. Infant decked herself with them,
and put them on the dinner-table. More abundantly satisfactory,
however, was lilac day. It took a critical eye to discern the exact
date. If the lilacs browned about the edges, then, alas! lilac day had
slipped past. They were not to be gathered too soon, either, if their
full soul of fragrance was to be enjoyed. On lilac day Infant walked
under burdens of lavender bloom. The walls, the pictures, breathed
lilacs. And at night she went to sleep crushing her face into a nest
of bunches, so that she had lilac dreams, and drew the sweetness into
herself, like an Eastern woman absorbing roses.

But the best day of all was rose day. Before it arrived she had
always ready a posy of poems from Keats, Wordsworth, Jean Ingelow, and
Whittier, and read them in the morning while the dew was on the world.
The Baldwin girls cultivated a great many roses. Rilla could hardly
miss from her rose-water and home-made attar and rose preserves the
heaps which Infant cut for her nonsense.

There was not a nicer day in the year than rose day, if Rilla would
only abstain from boiling soap on that date. The sisters had inherited
seventy-five thousand dollars apiece, but they made their own soap
every spring of refuse fats and the lye of wood-ashes. It could have
been made cold in the cellar, if that way had not been too easy for
Rilla. She held it a movable festival, like rose day, and no one
will ever gauge the degree of satisfaction she felt in haling her
flower-wreathed sister up to the vile-smelling caldron to keep the
stirrer going while she set about other duties. Rilla honored pioneer
custom and her grandmother’s memory by performing her soap incantations
in the oldest, mouldiest, most completely shattered garment she
possessed. This was a red wool delaine, so abased from its ruby tone
that the drippings of the lye gourd could find little remaining space
to burn or spot.

They boiled soap in a huge iron kettle in the chip yard. The blue wood
smoke would envelop Rilla and her tarnished tatters as she ladled and
tested, until she looked witch-like to passers along the road. Her
unhappy victim, the slim woman in gray, with a rope of roses wound
spirally around her from head to foot, a burden of roses on her bosom,
and roses studded thickly along the band of her hat, sat on the corded
wood as far as Rilla would allow from the soap, alternately inhaling
their odor and rejecting the alkali steam. If Infant had to stir the
soap, she would have a long-handled stirrer. The hot sun, beating on
the chip yard and her huge hat, smote also the roses, and amidst their
dying fragrance she had sad thoughts on the disappointments of life. So
there was nothing but the morning of rose day which Rilla did not spoil.

But this anniversary Infant felt a sudden uplifting of courage within
herself when her twin announced the soap orgy.

“_My_ soap-boiling will not come any more on rose day,” she put forth
strongly. “And I think I will pay Enos Robb’s wife to make up my share
of the fat and lye after this, Rilla.”

“I would,” said Rilla sarcastically, “particularly as Enos Robb and his
wife and children don’t batten on us already. Give them the piano and
the best parlor chairs and the solid coffee service while you are about
it.”

“Why, Rilla, I didn’t propose to give her my share of the soap. But
it would be cheaply got rid of that way. Yes,” exclaimed Infant, with
sudden recklessness, “I would rather _buy_ soap, and pay out money to
have this dirty stuff carted off, than ever smell it again while I
live. Let us make a new rule, and give our fat and ashes to the Robbs.
They have farmed for us ever since father died,” Infant pleaded, “and
whatever you say, Rilla, I know you have the greatest confidence in
them.”

“The poorhouse wagon is never going to call for me,” said Rilla
decidedly. “You can go and build a fire under the kettle, while I carry
some more water to pour on the ash-hopper. That lye is strong enough to
bear up a setting of eggs, but we may need some more a little weaker.”

“Rilla, I am as firm as the ash-hopper itself. You can’t shake me any
more than you could our brick smoke-house. I won’t help make any more
soap--especially on rose day,” added Infant to herself. “I don’t see
any sense in it.”

“But you can see sense in spoiling dozens of good roses to load
yourself up with like a mad Ophelia. You feel above all the
associations of wash day, though the Princess Nausicaa didn’t.”

“Oh, Rilla, I don’t feel above anything. I merely feel under that soap
kettle, and as if it would crush my soul out, as the shields crushed
Tarpeia, if I didn’t throw it off.”

“Well, I am going to make soap,” said Rilla, whitening with intense
disapproval of the liberty her twin proposed to grasp. “You are not a
minor, and if you were, I’m not your guardian. But if you propose to go
to yourself and leave me to myself, we both know what belongs to us,
and it is easily done.”

This time-worn hint, which in her girlhood used to startle and distress
Infant so much, made but the slightest impression on her hearing now,
as she leaned over the veranda railing to look at the roses. There
were such abundant stacks of them: she might cut and pile them into a
pyramid almost as tall as herself. Such smooth, sweet tea-roses, such
crimson velvet-petaled Jacqueminots, blush and white so fragrant you
would be willing to drown yourself in a sea of their scent; yellow
roses piercingly delightful, Prairie Queens creeping all over the front
of the house, old hundred-leaved varieties, having always in their
depths a reminder of grandmother’s chests and long, long past days.
There were eighteen distinct families of roses, each family a mighty
tribe, marshaled before Infant on lawn and dewy stretch of garden. It
was rose day. She would not let herself think of anything else.

Rilla would not come to the embowered dinner-table which Infant
prepared so carefully, and to which she called her sister exactly as
the clock struck twelve.

Rose day never interfered with Infant’s duties. Her conscience
acquitted her of shirking. Often in dead winter-time, when the snow
piled up, and Enos Robb’s family settled down to the enjoyment of colds
and rheumatism, she fed all the stock herself.

Rilla turned her back on Infant’s several approaches, and dipped lye
with a savagely noisy gourd to quench Infant’s voice. Slugs and ants
in the roses, and even mildew, were no drawback at all to rose day
compared to Rilla. Habits of endurance become proof armor to one’s
sensibilities in the course of life, however; so Infant wandered off
and absorbed the beauty of that day almost as completely as if she did
so with Rilla’s approval. There was tremulous heat over the meadows.
The huge and strictly tended garden was a world by itself. Beyond that
stretched their orchard, having a run of clear water winding through
it, all thickly tufted along the margins with mint.

Infant stepped upon the spongy lichens of the fence and rested her
arms on the top rail, while she looked along the narrow country
thoroughfare. The sweet green world was dear enough to be pressed in
her arms. Mingled mint and rose scents were satisfying. The noble
strength of their Norman colts pasturing in the stock meadow was
beautiful to the eye. Infant loved to hear the pounding of those tufted
feet, and to note the brilliant blackness or gray dappling of the young
creatures’ coats glistening in the sun. She did not expect anything
more unusual to happen on this rose day than her rebellion against
Rilla and the splendor of the weather.

But who should come suddenly riding along the road, as if he had an
appointment with Infant, and meant to keep it the moment she set her
foot on the rail, but the Honorable Truman Condit, who many years
before rode as instantaneously out of her sight! She knew him in
a flash, although his hair showed gray around the ears, and much
experience had added unspeakably to his personality. He was on a Condit
horse, evidently riding around to look at his old neighborhood. There
was a great tribe of the Condits, all well-to-do, high-headed people.
The Honorable Truman had been the local bright young man of his
generation. He went west, where, Infant heard, he became a Senator and
did tremendous things.

She was suddenly conscious that her rose-studded braid was not wound
up in a decent lump as she wore it before her class of young ladies in
Sunday-school. She felt contemptible and out of her place in the human
procession, although the Honorable Truman turned his horse straight
into the fence corner to shake hands with her.

“Pretty nearly the same Infant Baldwin,” he remarked. “But I do see
some lines on your face.”

“I suppose I’ve vegetated instead of lived all the time you have been
doing so much,” said Infant.

“Oh, I haven’t been doing so much.”

“We heard you had.”

“We means Rilla and you. And you didn’t marry?”

“No,” said Infant, feeling it a stinging indignity that he should
mention it, after that courtship so long ago buried. _He_ had married,
and raised a family out west. Rilla was probably right when she said
one woman was the same as another to a man.

“And how is Rilla? Is she as hard on you as she used to be?”

“Oh, Rilla was never hard on _me_. She is quite well, thank you. You’re
coming up to the house to make us a call and take tea, aren’t you?”

“I thought I would.”

Infant looked anxiously at the westering sun. She hoped Rilla would
have the cold soap cut into cakes and boxed, and herself bathed,
clothed, and in her right mind, before the Honorable Truman Condit rode
up to their door.

“I want to have a talk with you first, though,” he added. “And my way
is to go right to the point. Why did you never marry?”

“Come to that,” retorted Infant, a sparkle breaking through her face,
“why did _you marry_?”

“In the first place, because you wouldn’t have me, and in the second
place, because I found a very good wife where I went. I’ve been a
widower now several years, and the boys are settled. I’m loose from
business for almost the first time in my life, and back here to look
at the old neighborhood before spending some years abroad. Your never
marrying has revived certain things. Maybe you’ve forgotten.”

Among her other thoughts, Infant was conscious of recollecting how
often she had wished to go abroad if only some happy friend could go
along as a cushion betwixt Rilla and her. She unfastened with a furtive
hand the rose rope wound about her, but, unwilling to let so many
precious roses go, gathered it into loops on her arm.

“Did you ever know,” pursued the Honorable Truman, “that Rilla told me
you were going to marry one of the Pierson boys?”

“No!” Infant cried out so suddenly that the horse started.

“She did,” said the Honorable Truman.

“Why,” stammered Infant, “how could you believe it?”

“I was a hot-headed boy with more pride than sense. I wouldn’t say
anything to you about it.”

“I remember your quarreling with the Piersons.”

“Weren’t you engaged to one of them?”

“No; which one?”

“Abner.”

“I never was engaged to anybody except you,” she retorted, burning
hotly in the face, “and I did not admire that experience when you
dropped me and went off. And I don’t yet, though you do lay the blame
on poor Rilla.”

Plenty of time had Rilla for all the domestic countermarching she
wished to perform before that conference by the fence ended. Unusually
stirring were her tactics too, for all the Robbs were haled up from
the tenant-house--Mrs. Robb to cook a supper, and the young Robbs not
actually farming to run on errands.

It was six o’clock when Enos came riding his plough-horses to the great
barn. He had turned off early on purpose to intercept Miss Infant and
find out what changes were to be made. Infant hastened up the orchard,
while the Honorable Truman hastened to the same destination by the
road. She saw him leading his horse up the avenue, and felt impatient
at Enos Robb’s interruption.

“Sudden doin’s up to the house,” said Enos, wiping his forehead with
the back of his hand. “’Pears like Miss Rill’s made up her mind about
Brother Sanderson at last.”

“Is Brother Sanderson at the house?” inquired Infant.

“He is, for a fact, and the license and the preacher with him. Now
what I want to know, and what I ought to been consulted, Miss Infant,
seeing how long I been here, is this--what’s you and me going to do
afterward? Is it an interference?”

“Enos,” said Infant, with a gasp, “this is _almost_ as sudden to me as
it is to you. But considering Rilla’s firm character, do you think she
would let any new person interfere with her established plans?”

“No, I don’t,” replied Enos, grinning.

Rilla was standing before the dresser in her room arrayed in her
stiffest silk. She looked with composure upon her twin, who shut the
bedroom door, and hurried up to embrace her.

“It was the best boiling of soap I ever had,” said Rilla, warding the
fading roses away from her silk.

“Rilla dear, you might have told me what you meant to do this evening.
But I am so glad! I couldn’t bear the thoughts of leaving you before,
but now I can.”

“I saw Truman Condit come into the yard with you,” said Rilla. “He’s
grown fat. It must have agreed with him to go west.”

“This has been a great rose day,” said her twin, undoing all traces of
the day’s festival, and piling them carefully in a waste-basket where
they could make no litter. “Won’t you let me kiss you, Rilla?”

The acquiescent nip which Rilla gave Infant took up a world of
forgiveness which Rilla never felt.

“And do you think, dear,” Infant ventured, “we’ll ever wish we hadn’t?
We’ve lived so long with each other. Truman Condit and Brother
Sanderson are really strangers to our ways.”

“I think,” replied Rilla, with decision, “that Brother Sanderson will
never have a rose day while he lives on _my_ farm; and when I say it is
soap-boiling day it will _be_ soap-boiling day, and Brother Sanderson
will stir the soap.”




KENTUCKY




A KENTUCKY PRINCESS

TIME, 1857


The perfection of summer noon, when acres of corn tassels seemed in
a trance and the blueness of far-off hills suggested incense rising,
was not without its effect on Miss Sally Vandewater as she rode toward
General Poynton’s plantation. The turnpike, stretching its ash-colored
ribbon across the greenness of the country, rang like a causeway of
rock to the beat of horseshoes.

From this plantation or from that, as hill or sweep of woodland
revealed them, shone marble stones in family burial lots.

Occasionally Miss Sally met girls or young men on dashing horses, and
these merry people saluted her cordially in passing. But in all that
blue-grass region, where each member of every comfortable family had
his own gaited saddle-horse, there was not a finer animal than Miss
Sally’s Pacer. Cæsar and his fortune were aboard when she mounted.
Pacer was her entire capital in life, carrying her on visits among
good families whereby she subsisted, and furnishing colts for her
pin-money. The camel is not more to the Bedouin. Had Pacer failed Miss
Sally in any point, she must have fallen into the straits of a reduced
gentlewoman, instead of carrying a high head through all the best
houses of the county.

She rode at a steady hand gallop through the sultry day, though a young
colt whinnied behind her; increasing her speed past one pillared brick
house set far up an avenue. The woods about it were close trimmed and
free from underbrush, like all Kentucky woodland. Some evergreens made
gloom about its eaves, but not such gloom as the reputation of the
house itself. There lived a man who was said to have a chain stretched
across his cellar. He bought up slaves and handcuffed them in pairs
along this chain until he was ready to drive them to market, when a
band of musicians was employed to lead their march, cheerfully playing
“Yankee Doodle.” The house was worse than haunted. Both whites and
blacks hurried past its handsome gate with abhorrence--spot of mystery
and abomination on those pleasant corn lands.

Miss Sally was anxious to get out of her riding-skirt at Poynton’s, and
bully the black boy who would come to take her bridle. The wealthiest
slave-owner in Kentucky could not exact more deference. Everybody
humored her. In a country where hospitality was a social religion, her
little visits of a month or two were welcomed even when they crowded
dearer guests. And in spite of fine traits concealed under the haughty
airs of a nomad, well did she know how to crowd people distasteful to
her.

When she turned into Poynton’s avenue, the white pillared mansion
seemed to doze. The quarters stretched in a long row fieldward. Miss
Sally could not see the kitchen, standing by itself behind the great
house. No drowsiness had settled there. A stir of preparation was going
on, not only for the two o’clock dinner, but for the wedding yet a week
distant. Miss Sally had omitted one place in her rounds, and shortened
her visit at another, that she might be at Poynton’s in time to gather
every detail of the wedding.

A yellow boy skipped out to help her at the mounting-block. He would
have lounged to meet his master. Approvingly she saw him pull his hat
to her.

“Miss Sally, you sho’ly bake you’se’f to-day!”

“Yes, it’s hot, Peach. And if you’re concerned for me I hope you’ll
feel more concern about Pacer.” Miss Vandewater’s anxiety about her
property grew in the ratio of its approach to a crib.

“Sam’ll rub her down,” promised Peachy. “I’ll tell Sam to give her a
good feed.”

“You attend to it yourself,” commanded Miss Sally.

“I isn’t a stable-boy,” remonstrated Peachy. “I’se a house-boy.”

“House-boy or stable-boy, you mind what I tell you. In my father’s
time--and he owned fifty--our boys did whatever they were told to do.”

“Ya-as, m’m.”

“And the poor little colt,” said Miss Sally, making that infant’s
discomfort her own,--“I don’t want my colt kicked to death among a lot
of wild shod heels.”

“He go with his mammy. No ha’um evah happen to you’ colts on this
place, Miss Sally.”

“You see to it that none happens to it this time! All the family at
home?” she stopped to inquire, with her riding-skirt gathered in her
hand.

“Ya-as, m’m.”

“Has my trunk been carried up? I sent it this morning.”

“Ya-as, m’m.”

“Who’s here?” demanded Miss Vandewater, stiffening her figure.

Peachy followed her eye to the stable-yard, where stood a vehicle she
never beheld with calmness. It was the handsome and shining carriage of
Judge Poynton, from the county seat.

Peachy grinned. “Miss Judge come out this mawnin’ to spend the day.”

So sore does one’s pride become when chafed by poverty, that Miss Sally
hated that plump and opulent woman for naught but being plump and
opulent; though she would have given as her reason the airs of a woman
married above her wildest expectations.

“You can fetch my riding-skirt to my room, Nancy,” said Miss Sally to
the colored girl who admitted her, casting it across the stair-rail as
she ascended. “I reckon I go to the same room I always have.”

“Miss Ma’ky’s things is all spread out in that bedroom,” apologized
Nancy.

“You can soon move them out of the way.”

“But Miss Maria ’bleeged to have you’ trunk set in the back bedroom fo’
this week, Miss Sally.”

A solicitous hostess, trailing a muslin wrapper--for even Kentucky
hospitality may be overpowered by the languors of summer midday--met
the guest with outstretched hands. Miss Sally permitted her cheek to be
brushed, and at once put the lady into the apologetic attitude of an
overcrowded landlord.

“You ought to have sent me word if it was inconvenient to have me now,
Mrs. Poynton, and I wouldn’t have skipped the Moores as I did.”

“Miss Sally, it is not inconvenient to have you now!” the delinquent
pleaded. “It is never inconvenient. Only America’s things are so spread
out, and we are obliged to keep dressing-rooms for the wedding, and the
bridesmaids! I thought you would be less annoyed in that back room
than anywhere else. I am so glad you have come!”

“The judge’s wife is here?”

“But it is only for the day,” unconsciously conciliated Mrs. Poynton.
“She is not staying. Sue Bet Moore has been here, helping America to
try on. Her dresses are all done. But Sue Bet has gone.”

“I knew Sue Bet was to be one of the bridesmaids,” said Miss Sally. It
was not necessary to mention bridesmaids to a woman of her thorough
information.

“We have all been lying down; the day is so sultry. We shall not have
America’s things filling up the chambers much longer. I feel like
giving her all the rooms in the house--yes, the plantation itself! If
you can only make yourself comfortable a few days, we can change your
room after the wedding.”

“The back bedroom makes not the slightest difference in the world to
me, Mrs. Poynton”--

“O Miss Sally, I am so glad it makes no difference!”

--“but I am sorry I came at such an inconvenient time!”

Thus the duet went on, until Mrs. Poynton accepted as positive
beneficence Miss Sally Vandewater’s willingness to descend from the
back chamber, dine with the family, and sit down in the parlor.

Miss Sally had kept her sprightliness and her youthful shape. Her
muslin dress was cut low, and her shoulders were concealed by a bertha
of lace. Fine embroidered undersleeves made delicate frills about her
folded hands. The curling-iron had created two large spirals at each
temple, but the rest of her hair was pinned in a knot at the back of
her head.

America Poynton came into the parlor in her tight-fitting habit of
black velvet, and sat down with the guests, holding her riding-whip,
her gauntlets, and tall hat.

“Are you going to ride in this heat?” inquired her aunt, the judge’s
wife.

“We always ride Thursday afternoons, about four o’clock, if the weather
is fine,” America replied.

She looked no less cool and white in the heavy fabric than in a gold
dotted vaporous tissue which she had worn at dinner. Her black eyes
moved with languid interest from speaker to speaker as the visiting
chat ran on. America Poynton was called the proudest girl who ever
appeared in the county seat from surrounding plantations. The manners
of this tall beauty were considered too quiet by romping young people
who danced, drove, and flirted to the limit of their privileges; yet
she was sovereign among them, and ruled by a look while others expended
noisy effort. It was told of her that she often sat veiled in her room
to save her complexion from sun glare and wind, so matchless was it.
She had a robe of black curls in which she could wrap herself when
her maid let it down to brush. America was General Poynton’s only
child. She had inherited from her grandmother a plantation adjoining
her father’s, with more than a hundred slaves. When she went to
boarding-school in the county town, one of her servants led to her
every pleasant Friday evening a milk-white mule, saddled and bridled
with silk, fine leather, and silver.

Though above such pastime as flirtation, America had more offers than
any other girl in her set. Her low, slow voice never recounted these
conquests, but the victims published themselves, wondering whom America
Poynton would marry, since she was so hard to suit. When she accepted
Ross Carr, therefore, the astonishment was general. He was good enough
for some girls, but hardly good enough for America Poynton. He had also
been a wild youth, but people said he was settling down. The Carrs
ranked somewhat below the Poyntons, and Ross had no plantation of his
own. Yet when the community thought it over, they were willing to
accept him as America’s husband if he proved a credit to her.

“Miss Maria,” said Nancy, coming to the door with a face full of
meaning, “Miss Becky Inchbald’s done lighted down by the quarters, and
tied her horse.”

“What does she want?” inquired Mrs. Poynton, disturbed.

“Dunno, Miss Maria.”

“Why doesn’t she come to the house?”

“She hardly ever came to the house in her best days,” murmured the
judge’s wife.

“Perhaps she’s sick,” continued Mrs. Poynton. “Some of you run and see.”

“Peachy done been down to her, and she say she just waitin’ there in
the shade. Miss Becky got her baby ’long with her.”

The general’s wife heard this with rising dignity.

“Don’t annoy her,” she commanded. “Let the poor girl alone.”

“Law, Miss Maria, nobody won’t say nothin’ to Miss Becky. But all the
little niggehs has come out to look at her.”

“Go yourself and see if she needs anything.”

“I have heard,” remarked Miss Vandewater, through the silence which
followed, “that Becky Inchbald, for all she was so close-mouthed at
first, threatens now to carry her child to its father.”

Mrs. Poynton, with an instant’s pause on the subject, hoped he could
be found and made to do his duty. The judge’s wife heard with a mere
lifting of the eyebrows. She thought it scarcely a fit topic to mention
before America. But America’s plane was so much above Becky Inchbald
that she had never even disapproved of the girl.

Becky Inchbald’s people were not poor whites, for they owned land and
slaves; but their raw unfitness for encountering the old stock held
them on the verge of society. That Becky was uneducated was her own
fault. She had become the mother of a hapless baby and the scandal of
the neighborhood before America Poynton’s engagement was announced.

“She’s spiteful about that baby,” pursued Miss Sally. “There’ll be
trouble somewhere before sundown, if she’s started out with it.”

“I do not see that Inchbald’s affairs need disturb us,” suggested the
judge’s wife, making dimples at the finger roots of one hand as she
smoothed her polished hair.

“Some women are never disturbed about any of the sin in the world,”
said Miss Vandewater incisively, “until it comes into their houses and
takes their children by the throat.”

“That can never be said of you, Miss Sally,” the judge’s indolent wife
responded, smiling. Though she generally bore Miss Sally’s attacks as
a lady should, and felt indulgent sympathy for the migratory spinster,
she sometimes allowed herself to retort.

“Aunt and Miss Sally, kiss and make up,” said America, with the
deliberate accent that gave weight to all her words. But without
response one of the combatants sat glowering, while the other, waving
a lazy fan, indicated through the window Ross Carr cantering to
his appointment, man and steed moving like one, so perfect was his
horsemanship.

America’s mother, impatiently anxious to go on recounting to Miss Sally
the silver and linen bought for America’s new home, resigned herself
for a few moments. Ross Carr threw his bridle to the groom, who was
walking Miss Poynton’s saddled thoroughbred.

He entered the room. America gave him her hand with a light word, and
he stood holding his hat, talking to her elders.

It was the culminating moment of her betrothal, a dot of time
separating ease and care-free thoughts from what followed.

The young man chatted idly with four women, when another screamed out
behind him:--

“Here it is, Ross Carr! So you’ve got to take it, and no words betwixt
us--for I won’t take care of it any longer!”

“Why, Miss Becky!--why, Miss Becky!” Mrs. Poynton herself ran gasping
forward to interpose between such scandalous outcry and America’s
lover. “Come away with me, Miss Becky, and let me help you with your
baby--and don’t speak that way before the gentlemen!”

A shaker bonnet fell back from the girl’s hot and furious face. She
had narrow sunken temples like a hen’s. Her entire profile was chicken
beaked, yet a fluff of golden down made her comely. The wrathful rings
in her eyes sent out their fires toward Ross Carr.

“He thinks he’s a great gentleman, and he thinks he’s going to get a
great lady”--

“Becky Inchbald, sit down in that chair!” commanded America, standing
at the other side of the room. Her hat and gloves and whip lay on the
floor. The other women, even her mother, waited, sitting blanched.

Carr remained with his hand on the back of the chair, like a frozen
figure, while Becky Inchbald placed herself in it and stretched the
baby across her lap. Her first courage leaving her, she began to cry.

The men of the west do not cower when found out in their sins. Ross
Carr stood six feet and one inch high; a handsome, light-haired
Kentuckian, the man most abundant in vitality, and the best horseman
in Bourbon County. A culprit waiting to be shot, he looked his death
in the face, erect, but blighted through every outline. He had carried
this guilt a long time, trying to shape it for disclosure; while day
after day continued to separate him farther from the Ross Carr of the
past, and to make more incomprehensible the deeds which he inherited
from that miserable wretch.

When you or I stand, on our day of judgment, to be looked at through
the dark medium of our basest moments, may some eye among our
contemners discern the angel shape struggling in remorse and anguish
behind the bar.

“Is this your child?” America demanded of her lover, pointing to it for
his identification.

The baby, oppressed by the jaunt, under arm, or on lap, according to
its mother’s convenience in riding, was covered all over its visible
surface by that prickly rash which nurses call “heat.” It was gowned in
pink calico, and diffused a sour odor.

Ross Carr looked down at it with the slighting masculine eye, which
since Saturn has seen little to admire in extremely young offspring. He
controlled the muscles of his lips to reply.

“I reckon it is.”

“Answer me on your word as a man--is this your child?”

“Yes. It is.”

“He knows it’s his, and he’s got to take care of it and support
it--it’s his place to take care of it, not mine,” sobbed Becky, her
head wagging.

America directed her face to Becky. “Do you intend to turn it off
entirely?”

“Yes. I do! It’s his, and he ought to keep it!”

“But you are its mother!”

“I won’t be its mother!” exploded Becky, flinging the ill-kept and
wretched infant about on her knees with a vicious grip. “I’ll leave it
on a doorstep first!”

The child put up a piteous lip and uttered those cries by which bruised
infancy protests against tormentors whom it feels but does not know.

America stared at the girl; her alabaster face was suddenly drained of
horror at the wrong done a woman, and filled with passionate contempt.

“Then I’ll be its mother! Give it to me.”

She gathered it off Becky’s lap and laid its heat-blotched face
against her shoulder. The tiny creature discharged a mouthful of its
wretchedness there. America stanched the spot, and made a softer rest
for its cheek with her rose-scented handkerchief. Her unconscious
sweep of figure in taking the child and standing up publicly with it,
thrilled beholders like piercing music or the sight of great works
of art. The mother-spirit, which has brooded for centuries over this
world--the passion to foster and protect and train--shone white and
large in her face. She was that fair impersonation men call the Goddess
of Liberty, holding the outcast to her breast. She was Mother Mary,
with a reminder of the Heavenly Infant in her arms.

No one remonstrated or spoke a word to her as she moved from the room.

Becky Inchbald, pulling her shaker over her face, went out and mounted
her horse.

America was at the top of the stairs when she heard Ross Carr speak
hoarsely at the foot. She stood looking at him over the balustrade. The
baby was quiet.

“One word, America!--It’s all over--between us?”

He could hear his watch ticking; and outdoor sounds buzzed in his ears.

“No,” answered America. “It is not all over between us.”

Ross Carr dropped his groping hand on the stair newel, his next
sentence also coming in fragments.

“There won’t be any use--Shall I come here--for the ceremony--next
Thursday?”

“Thursday,” spoke the low, slow voice above him, “at two o’clock, was
the time we set.”

The culprit lifted his eyes to her and exclaimed:--

“America, tell me what you want me to do!”

“I want you,” she said, “to be a father to your child!” Her mouth
struggled. She flung out the rest in a wail--“and never speak to me of
this again!”

Not fit to prostrate himself before her virgin motherhood, the
tarnished man hid his face on his arm against the stair-rail. She
carried his child out of sight.

There was scarcely a negro on the plantation who did not know what
had happened when Ross Carr staggered out of the house and passed his
chafing horse and the groom as if he had forgotten his own property.

Baseless mountains which had been piling lucent peak over peak, now
seemed to sink in smoke to the effacement of the sun. Stretches of
forest and road, plantation and dimpled hill, from horizon to horizon,
ceased smiling; for the day’s heat was about to pass off in drenching
rain.

This cloudy interval before the thunder-burst was just the time for
stealing corn to roast at the quarters in the evening. So Peachy crept
on all fours down narrow avenues to avoid agitating the corntops,
such telltales are the tassel fingers. His sack already bulged; but
unexpectedly he came against a man stretched out in the dirt face
downward--Miss Ma’ky’s Mist’ Ross Carr!

Peachy backed away from the spectacle, the grinding of teeth and the
swelling of veins on a man’s neck! Not until many cornstalks screened
him had Peachy the courage to burst recklessly down a slim alley,
spilling his stolen ears, while corn leaves slashed his face with their
edged sabres. The superstitious African instinctively fled from anguish
so dumb and dreadful.

While the county was shocked by America Poynton’s adoption of Ross
Carr’s child, her beauty as a bride softened all critics. She went to
live with her husband on her plantation, and there the baby grew into
robust and happy boyhood. Reticence on the subject of Becky Inchbald
was diffused through her small world. At that date a small world held
all the acts of many lives.

Even Miss Sally Vandewater, swelling her visiting list with another
hospitable home, grew into complete harmony with the judge’s wife on
this delicate subject.

Becky Inchbald went on a long visit to Tennessee. News came back that
she had married there; and in the course of years that she had died.

So far as human knowledge goes, Ross Carr’s wife took no shrewish
revenge, though a woman of her nature must have suffered from the blot.
She always spoke of his son as “our eldest boy,” and he grew up among
brothers and sisters without noting that he was part alien, until some
neighbor dropped the fact in his ear. Personally he was much like his
father, whose sin matured its bitterest fruit when that child threw
himself on the ground to sob in secret agony because the beautiful and
tender woman he loved with such devotion was really not his mother.




INDIANA




THE FAIRFIELD POET

TIME, 1881


Tragedy, which is never far from the most prosperous lives, continually
trod upon the tenderest-hearted woman in Fairfield. She hated Fairfield
as a background to her existence, but there had fate nailed her for
life. It was the forlornest of Indiana railroad stations, looking
like a scar on the face of a beautifully wooded country, peopled
by the descendants of poor white Carolinians and Tennesseeans. The
male portion of the community sat on the railroad platform in yellow
jeans, sprawling their naked toes to the sun, whittling, and jetting
with the regularity of fountains upon the meerschaum-colored boards.
The women might have lived lives of primitive simplicity, dignified
by child-bearing and neighborly sympathy with one another; but they
stained their human kindness with trivial disagreements.

This one among them all felt the progress of the age tearing her
heartstrings out while her circumstances kept her at a standstill. I
do not say her life would have been more symmetrical or her experience
richer if she had lived in the whirl. She was a plain, ground-loving
woman who enjoyed the companionship of her fruit-trees and flowers,
and worked with her hands. Indeed, crowds annoyed her, and she was
undecided what toilets ought to be made for a large public. The striped
silk dresses of her prosperous days, the fringed crape shawls and
gimp-edged mantillas, agreed ill with bonnets of the passing season,
and she had more respect for what was rich and old than for new
inventions. But she was fiercely ambitious for her children, especially
her eldest son, and for him in spite of his misfortune. The younger boy
and girl were still leaping like colts upon their few remaining acres,
sound in limb and wind, with the hopes of a future sheathed in their
healthy present, when Willie was tall as a man, and far up in his teens.

His mother had a picture of him taken when he was going to school in
Cincinnati, under his uncle’s care. At that time his auburn curls were
unshorn, and he was beautiful.

A few days before cottons took their terrific rise during the civil
war, Mr. Harbison had stocked in thousands of yards. Those were
Fairfield’s best days, and he kept a general store, making money so
rapidly that the lazy people around him felt helplessly injured.
He began his fine brick house, building on a generous and artistic
plan, at the edge of Fairfield, where he could surround himself with
fruit-trees, and have fields for his cattle. Whether it is a more
distinct misery to build the temple of your home and see someone else
inhabit it, or to shelter yourself for years in a house you have not
the power of finishing, the latter fate was reserved for the Harbisons.
With a crash they came down from what had been Fairfield’s opulence
nearly to a level with Fairfield’s poverty. They kept the house and
grounds and a meadow, but under such weight of mortgages that it was
comparatively no grief at all to see the ornamental cornices lying
around the partly plastered parlors, balustrades and newel-post
standing on end beside the skeleton stairway, and to find the bathroom
useless except as a rubbish closet. The man who had employed half
of Fairfield was now obliged to become himself an employee, and the
general verdict of the world against those who fail was emphasized by
communistic envy.

But the habit of being a woman of consideration is not easily
forgotten. Mrs. Harbison still made the village respect her. She had
something to give to the poorest. She was the wife of a man who had
made a fortune before he lost it, and sat in the state Senate. More
than all, she had her children, the eldest of them a continual surprise
to her. He seemed born to stir her pride and tenderness to their
depths. He was tall, fair, and Roman-featured, shy as a girl toward
every one but his mother, and so ravenous in mind that he was partly
through college when his father’s reverses brought him home.

Then he was seized with a spotted fever, and approached the next world
so close that he left part of his faculties there, and was never the
same Willie he had been before. He could hear nothing, and seldom spoke
an audible word--Mrs. Harbison’s boy, who was made to take the world by
storm--and what had been the shyness of a country-bred youth became the
set-apart seclusion of a hoofed and goat-eared faun. Willie Harbison
was to be seen whirring as noiseless as a bat upon his bicycle across
the open ground at dusk. He was met coming from the woods, silent as
an Indian, and his eyes were on everything in earth or sky except the
human beings just before him.

Whatever were the faults of Fairfield, it loved and respected Willie
Harbison, and humored his self-withdrawal. And he loved Fairfield with
a partiality which saw mere picturesqueness in the row of whittling
men, and various forms of motherhood or sisterhood in the women. He
would dismount from his wheel to let the boys tilt with it at the old
warehouse. He loved the woods; he loved Wild-cat and Kitten creeks,
which ploughed rock-bedded channels through the woods; and what joy
in life he fished out of those waters only Willie himself knew. He
loved to watch from the mill, on a clear morning, that plume of steam
the south-bound train sent around the curve, to watch another plume
roll over the first, and finally to see the train stand suddenly on
the summit of the grade, sharp-cut against the sky. All common life
was pleasant to him. Who but his mother could be witness that a double
nature dwelt under his floury mill clothes?

Willie worked in the mill with his father, where the roar of grinding
and bolting and the whir of belts made silent liveliness around him.
This had been bitterness to his mother--her Willie should work with
his head alone; but she accepted it as the result of his physical
misfortune.

The parlors were Willie’s workshop, in which he sawed, hammered, and
glued, or put noiseless inventions together. A carpenter’s bench was
set before two uncased windows, and his father’s old store desk had
fallen to his unmercantile use. Its lock was never opened unless Willie
had something which he could force himself to show to his mother. That
ripe instant arriving, he sought her in her kitchen, her garden, or at
her spinning-wheel upstairs, and seized her by the hand. She went with
him to the parlors, they fastened the doors, Willie undid his desk, and
placed his paper in her fingers. The paper itself was sometimes brown,
sometimes the blue cap left from the store, sometimes gilt-edged note
having penciled landscapes along the margins, or the flowers he rhymed
of done in water-colors; for his hand was as skillful as his eye was
discerning. The poems were usually short, and sensitive in rhyme and
rhythm. Willie’s themes were the common sights and the common pathos or
humor of the situations in which he found the people around him: his
interpretation of the flicker’s feelings; his delight in certain thick
fleeces of grass; the panorama of sky and field as it marched across
his eye; the grotesque though heartily human family party made by old
man Persons and his wife, where half of their descendants, unable to
get into the small house, sat on the fence while the rest ate dinner.
Willie was deaf, but he had inward music. Every smooth and liquid
stanza was like wine to his mother. She compared his poems to Burns’s,
and could not find the “Mountain Daisy” a whit better than her poet’s
song about the woods in frost.

Even Mr. Harbison thought well of Willie’s performances. They were
smuggled to him by the mother, and carefully returned to their place
when the poet was out of the house. Mr. Harbison knew all that was
going on in the world. A dozen times a year he left the grinding of the
mill to meet his old chums at the capital, or to quicken the action of
his blood in Chicago. A couple of stimulating days tinctured and made
endurable his month of mill work. A man of luxurious tastes cannot lose
his tastes with his means. He was a judge of poets, and said Willie
might as well take to poetry as to anything, for business did not pay a
man of sound faculties in these days.

The hum of bees could be heard all around this unfinished brick house
growing mossy at the gables, and its shadow was long on the afternoon
sunshine. It was that alert and happy time of year when the earth’s sap
starts new from winter distillation.

You could hear the voices of children calling in play as they loitered
home from school; the days were so long that the cows would not come up
the pasture until nearly seven o’clock.

Willie trudged across lots to supper. Mrs. Harbison met him at the
north side of the house, having her garden knife and rake in her
hands. She put them on the stepless front-door sill, which had never
been and never would be pressed by the foot of an arriving guest. This
stone sill was high enough for a seat, and she sat down, tilting her
sunbonnet back, and smiling at Willie. He was floured from head to
foot. Little of his boyish beauty except its clear innocence remained
to him. His nose was large for his head, and on his head the auburn
curls were shorn to a thin crisping layer.

His young sister was putting supper on the table in the dining-room,
his brother was fisting with another boy on the railroad, and up
the cow lane came his father with the slow step and somewhat of the
ponderous white presence of the walking statue in “Don Giovanni.” But
closest knit of all this family, mother and son talked together in
silence, some birds in the mulberry-tree over their heads making the
only calling and replying that could be heard. Before Willie reached
her, he held up his hands and signed in the deaf-mute language:--

“The preacher has come back.”

Mrs. Harbison raised her hands and darted her fingers into various
shapes, saying thereby, “Did you see him?”

“No,” Willie replied as swiftly; “I only saw his coffin in the wagon,
and Nancy Ellen sitting beside it. She had to bring him the whole
twenty miles from where he died, in a wagon.”

“Because it wasn’t on a railroad?”

Willie nodded.

His mother wove on: “Poor Nancy Ellen! Her father wouldn’t let her have
the preacher for so long, and turned her off when she did marry him.
Now she’s a widow in her honeymoon, and old man Morton saying he told
her a preacher as old as himself wasn’t any match for her. Did you see
her father? How did he act?”

“He got into the wagon by the driver,” said Willie’s fingers.

“Well, that was something for him.”

“And they drove to his place.”

“I suppose he’ll let her come back and live at home now.”

“I wish you had seen Nancy Ellen.”

“I’m going to see her after the milking is done.”

“Seen her by the preacher,” insisted Willie’s passes. “She looked like
a captive coming in chains to Rome.”

“Yes, I’ll be bound she did. Every jolt of that twenty miles is stamped
in _her_ mind.”

“I wish,” flashed Willie, “I knew what the preacher sung to himself all
along the road.”

“What a notion! You’ll have to fix it up in poetry now, won’t you?”

Willie shook his head many times and reddened.

“You said the preacher used to sing home from meeting in the dark.”

“Yes, he did,” affirmed Mrs. Harbison. “And Nancy Ellen used to listen
for him to go by their place.”

Their talk paused, and Willie looked up at the birds in the mulberry.
Having afterward caught his mother’s eye, he wove out slowly:--

  “When in the tree above his head
    The sap goes tingling through the bark,
  She will remember it was dead,
    And hear him singing in the dark.”

“Oh, Willie, is that the first verse or the last? Have you written it
down?”

Willie smiled shyly, putting his head down toward one shoulder, without
making any reply. His mother urged, with eager fingers:--

“Print it in some place when you get it done. Nancy Ellen would be
pleased.”

“I’m not an obituary poet,” wove Willie.

“But that’s so good.” Mrs. Harbison moved her lips, repeating it to
herself. “And ain’t you ever going to publish anything you write? I’ve
heard of people getting money for it.”

Willie uttered a gentle sneer. He laughed at his mother in a way that
always made her laugh with him.

“But if you would let your father fix up your writings,” she continued,
repeating an old plea, “and send them to some publishing house, I know
they would put them in a book for you.”

The gate, weighted by a stone, slammed to behind his father coming to
the evening meal. But before his mother rose, Willie found time to make
dance before her eyes the characters indicating this promise:--

“Some day I’ll get on my bicycle and ride and ride until I come to a
publisher. If you miss me, you’ll know where I’ve gone. You can just
say to yourself, ‘He’s off having his poems published.’ Wait till then,
mother; that will be soon enough.”

“You’ll never do it,” said his mother, having no idea how near the time
was.

She gave her family their supper and helped to milk the cows. She
thought of Willie’s stanza when the milk first sang in the pail, and
kept repeating it until the rising froth drowned all sounds of the
lashing streams quite at her pail’s brim.

When the house was tidy and full of twilight stillness, Mrs. Harbison
put on a clean apron and took her sunbonnet to make her call of
condolence. It was likely they would want watchers at Morton’s, and she
was ready to do anything. She had helped bear the burden of life and
death so long in Fairfield that illness, a new baby, or the mysterious
breathless presence in any house was a peremptory invitation to her.

The boys were playing hide-and-seek around the warehouse, and as she
crossed the open lot she saw the usual line of wise men sitting on the
edge of the platform with their legs across the rail, as if they had
all agreed to make an offering of their feet to the Juggernaut of the
next passing train.

Willie darted like a bat or a night bird on his bicycle far up and far
down the smooth wagon road. Now he took a turn, and came spinning among
the boys, scattering them before him, and escaping as often as they
chased him. In one of these excursions he crossed his mother’s way.

The last red streaks and high sunset lights were not gone out of the
sky. She lifted up her hands and spelled, “Are you starting out to hunt
a publisher now?”

And Willie laughed and nodded and made her a sign of good-by.

The pleasant stillness of the evening fell around her like a blessing
as she went on. Fireflies were filling one field, as if a conflagration
under that particular ground sent up endless streams of sparks. She
smelled the budding elders, and was reminded of tile-like bits in her
past, fitted oddly together.

Morton lived but a few steps beyond the village. She had been talking
a mere moment with Nancy Ellen, and had not yet entered the room
where the preacher lay when another neighbor came in with excitement,
and said aloud, over the whispered talk of the mourning house, that
something was wrong down at the station.

“That express has run into something again,” proclaimed the neighbor,
“and looks, by the way folks run, as if it wasn’t a cow this time.
Enough cows and pigs has been killed by that railroad.”

“I haven’t seen the express,” said Mrs. Harbison, feeling her head full
of wheels. “It was all quiet when I was there a minute ago.”

“The express has stopped. Good reason! There’s something on the track,
I tell ye,” insisted the neighbor.

Willie’s mother was sure it could not be Willie. He was conscious of
his infirmity, and so cautious that she had long ceased to be anxious
about him. He knew the times of all the trains with nice exactness,
also. Yet she started from the house without speaking another word, and
ran until she reached the crowd.

The engine stood hissing; it confronted her with the glare of its eye,
a horrid and remorseless fate, ready to go its way with bell-clanging
and all cheerful noise, no matter who had been ground under its wheels.

The conductor was just stepping on board, for time and orders wait for
nothing. The engineer had already climbed back to his cab; he saw a
running woman kneel down on the platform and draw the boy up from the
boards to rest in her arms. Having seen that much, the engineer turned
away his head and wept out loud; and the train moved on, bearing pale
faces that looked backward as long as they could discern anything.

Mrs. Harbison had stumbled over Willie’s bent wheel first. When
she found him indeed laid in the midst of the crowd, she did not
believe it. He was not mangled. His bones were sound--she felt them
with a fiercely quick hand. There was no mark about him excepting a
dirty-looking spot on one temple.

“Willie,” she cried, shaking him. “Willie! Willie!”

“We’ll have to carry him home,” said her husband at her side, his voice
sounding far off as if it came strained through some dense medium.

She looked up, and could not understand it.

“He’s knocked senseless,” she claimed. “Why doesn’t somebody bring
water?”

“He never knowed what hurt him,” cautiously said one villager to
another. “The train was goin’ so fast, and he come up from among the
houses onto it so fast, that it was done in a flash.”

“And I don’t never want to see no better boy than Willie Harbison was,”
responded the other.

But only his mother--when she had him at home lying in that pomp of
death with which we all shall impress beholders--could have pronounced
the true oration over him. Through her dumb tragedy she wanted to make
deaf-mute signs to some intelligence that here lay one of Nature’s
poets, with a gift virgin and untarnished.

He had never hunted a public. His public was the woods and sky, and
his critic one fond woman. Not a line of unsatisfied ambition marked
his placid face. He had lived an humble, happy life, and sung for the
sake of expression, not for the sake of praise. He had, after all, only
gone to find the best publisher, and his mother could always hear him
“singing in the dark.”




T’FÉRGORE

A PASTORAL IN THREE PARTS

TIME, 1883


PART I

HE THREATENS TO ARRIVE

  “We will not endeavor to modify the motions of the elements, or
  fix the destiny of kingdoms. It is our business to consider what
  beings like us may perform: each laboring for his own happiness
  by promoting within his circle, however narrow, the happiness of
  others.”--_Rasselas._

“Come into the painting-room,” said Julian, “and let’s talk it over.”

“How excited you are!” I said.

“Well, after balancing one way and another for years, my mind’s made
up. We’re going.”

“To Europe?”

“Yes, to Europe.”

“Oh, what a beautiful prospect,” I said. And then leaning against his
elbow I heaved a great sigh.

“It must be a beautiful prospect if you groan like that over it.”

“The groan’s because I can’t go.”

Julian sat down and took me indulgently on his knee. Some women in
marriage have their pride gratified by a good match, by all the pomps
of life, or by unlimited allowances of spending money. But my portion
is to be loved and cherished and fondled like an infant. I like it
very much. Some part of me lingers in eternal babyhood. In the glass
I frequently see a juvenile face with dimples around the mouth, that
disowns its thirty years.

“You think,” said Julian, after kissing me in a way which would
scandalize some of the girls who made the best matches, “that we can’t
raise the money.”

Such a thought would have been justified by the fact that we seldom
could raise the money.

“But we can. And what’s the use of waiting around till we are old? I’m
in my thirties. And if I ever do anything now’s the time to do it. A
man can’t make a success of painting here in the west.”

I looked all around Julian’s studio. He had done many portraits, and
hated them. They made our living. But he believed he was wasting time.

I always loved to be in the studio, and sometimes sat there a whole
afternoon, with bits of sewing, behind a screen. A great many people
took the elevator to explore Julian’s work place. He had reputation
in his native city. And when they stumbled around the screen on me,
they might have taken me for a model. But most of the explorers were
country people, piloted by their town friends to see the sights. I only
looked odd to them. I know I looked odd, because Julian had me dress
in loose gowns and broad hats. Cheese cloth is only four cents a yard
and very wide, and with borders of velvet or lace it made sumptuous
cool toilets. I was slim; and a dull blue gown, belted just under my
arms and puffed at the shoulders, with an aureole of dull blue hat over
it, made me look nice in Julian’s eyes or I never should have had the
courage to face the street. When a person is slim and lithe, however,
her daring clothes have not the aggressive grossness of a fat woman’s
daring clothes.

Looking around the painting-room, I could not think Julian a failure.
He had made it so pretty with tiles and pottery and draping stuff, and
flowers painted in dull red or bronze vases, or in masses wasting their
petals, and landscapes, some blurred so you had to squint your eyes to
get the outlines. Looking at himself I always considered him a great
success. His mouth and chin were so refined. He was muscular and alert
in his carriage for a man of his profession, and his ideas were far
grander than mine.

“So I’m going to sell the little farm,” said Julian.

“Oh!” I exclaimed, “that’s all the property we’ve got.”

“Why, I thought you were perfectly willing. What does it amount to,
anyhow? Fifteen acres and a scrubby house and barn.”

“What will old Lena do?”

“Oh, she’ll continue her gardening. I’ve had an offer of two thousand
dollars for it. One thousand down, five hundred in one year, and the
balance in eighteen months. We can live a long time abroad on that. And
I shall get hold of something then. We’ll never come back here.”

I did not mind that at all. The prospect was dazzling. But I saw I
should have to tell him at once.

“You didn’t know your poor painter would take you to Europe, did you?
Think of Rome, think of Paris, think of being domesticated in some
ancient German city while I paint!”

“Oh, I think of it, Julian; but could you go without me?”

“Could I go without you?” said Julian, setting me off on the tip of his
knees. “Did I ever go to any place without you? Didn’t I manage that
jaunt up to Canada with you? Did I scour out to Colorado and leave you
at home? Do you _want_ me to go without you?”

“Oh, no!”

“Then what are you talking about?”

“I don’t know.”

“You certainly don’t know,” said Julian severely, “if you think I
would go off to Europe for even a limited time, to say nothing of an
indefinite time, without _you_. Why, you great baby, you’d cry your
eyes out! And if you got sick who would do you up in packs and give you
your medicine? You can’t get along away from me.”

“I know it, Julian.”

“And where would you stay!” continued Julian with increasing
indignation. “You wouldn’t want to keep up a house, and you wouldn’t
want to board. And what business would you have over here by yourself,
anyhow! You provoke me!”

“I believe I’m going to cry,” I said.

“I should think you would, for proposing such a thing. But don’t do it.”

“I _am_ going to cry,” I affirmed, and put my hands up to my face,
while I quivered all over. These mute fits of sobbing, relics of my
babyhood which I try so hard to outgrow, seize me unreasonably. They
take away every scrap of dignity. I never could get the best end of
a quarrel on account of this weakness; for who could sweep out of a
room with a stinging retort, when at the door she was sure to break
down, lay her cheek against the frame, and sob until every fibre in her
seemed melting!

The only good effect of my crying, besides the delicious languor it
left over me, was that it melted Julian also. I have known it to be a
very convenient solvent when he hardened himself into a male tyrant.
His face was sure to relax and his motherly arms to gather me in. Some
men will run from tears, and very disagreeable men they are. Julian
seems to like the soaking. It is tribute to him as a man, and certifies
to his grip on my individuality. He is convinced I am very fond of him,
and dependent on his gracious favor, when I creep to his knees to cry.

Julian wiped my tears and comforted me upon his shoulder, his face
assuming its usual superior expression.

When I got my breath and knew that I could talk becomingly between
little hiccoughs, I told him the message I had from T’férgore, and he
saw at once how it would prevent the European trip.

He whistled a minute, and we studied each other’s eyes.

“Well,” said Julian, “I suppose we owe everything to the old fellow,
and if he is really coming we’ll have to prepare for him.”

“Perhaps we better go out to the little farm,” I suggested.

“Yes, I think we better. We’ll have to economize, to gratify all his
fastidious tastes.”

“I wish he’d sent word to you, instead of to me,” I burst out. “It’s
your relation this time.”

“Yes, I wish he had,” said Julian, smiling.

“Are you glad or sorry, Julian?”

“Glad, of course. But why didn’t you tell me before?”

“How could I tell you what I didn’t know myself?”

“Oh, it’s his fault, evidently,” said Julian.

I began to wonder if Julian would not be a little jealous of T’férgore.
As I had never seen T’férgore myself, I did not know what his aptitude
might be at putting himself forward and eclipsing the master of the
house. But I was glad it was Julian’s relation this time.

We had had several of my kin living upon our hearthstone at various
times, and though Julian was always kind, I think he undervalued the
stock from which I sprung. He said I must have been changed in the
cradle, for refinement was my natural atmosphere. I did myself feel
a creeping of the flesh at brother Jack’s ways; but the dear boy had
been brought up away from me, and his manners were not his fault. He
had an affectionate and honorable nature, and soon quit spitting upon
our Brussels rugs and hard finished floors; his English, however, was
beyond all help. I loved Jack so dearly that it was a grief to me to
see him falling to pieces in his clothes, and slipping up and down
in shoes that were never buttoned. He frequently put his trousers on
wrong side foremost, and came to me to help him hunt the pockets.
With my own pin-money I bought him hats that must adorn his rosy face,
but after he slouched out in them once they looked disreputable. His
coat-sleeves hung over his dirty fists like a hackman’s. Whenever
he passed through his room he left it as if it had been struck by a
tornado. The earth adhered to Jack. Stray burrs and dumpings of gravel
appeared by the chair where he sat to put on his slippers. He had no
cattish horror of mud, and left the print of his foot on his napkin
under the table. When Jack was partially dressed, he shouted for me, to
the remotest corners, to come and button his sleeves and hand him his
tie.

The more fastidious our company, the louder would Jack bite his nails,
while he sprawled like a spread eagle on the sofa, until every pause
in conversation became vocal with that horrible cracking. He lost
everything portable which was not tied or buttoned about his person,
but he was always so good-natured about the losses it seemed stingy to
regret the money it cost to replace things.

As he had no inclination toward Art, and walked flat-footed over
canvases whenever he came into the studio, Julian got him employment.
Jack’s apprenticeship to buying and selling was to me a long period
of alternate hopes and despairs. He would begin well, and in fancy I
saw him a merchant prince; but eventually he fell out with everybody
and thought himself abused when his employer objected to his dribbling
small change along the streets, and losing keys. I did not know what to
do for Jack when the despair seasons came upon me. But in the end he
did very well for himself. He got tired of the city, and no cajoling of
mine could keep him from thrusting some shirts into a valise, grasping
a pair of heavy boots in his hand, and starting for the country, sowing
handkerchiefs and unmated socks in his wake. He went to work for a
middle-aged widow with considerable property, and she got the dear
boy’s consent to marry him: so there he is, a landed proprietor, with
a thrifty wife to button his sleeves and join knives with him in the
butter. Our bric-à-brac ways trouble him no more, and what he loses
in the furrow at planting time he may find again during harvest. And
when he comes to see us, his loving heart is as mellow as the apples he
brings.

Then there was Aunt Lizy. I suppose she was christened Eliza, but her
name was always pronounced Lizy with a plaintive lingering on the _i_.
We had her with us two years. She was a stepsister of my stepmother’s.
She looked like an Indian, and had seen more trouble than any other
woman with whom she ever measured experiences. Her breathing was all
done in sighs, and she tweaked her nose so much it was twisted at the
end, and all of a dark red color. She and I never could understand why
fortune hit her so hard, and we talked about it so much that I was kept
quite bilious.

Aunt Lizy felt too low to sit in the parlor unless dragged there by
entreaties, and spent a great deal of her time on the back stairs with
a sunbonnet drawn over her eyes. She did not want to go anywhere, and
the sound of the door-bell exorcised her as if she were a ghost. She
compared her lot to mine until I was ashamed of myself, wondering if I
had not stood in her sun.

I think Julian secretly regarded her as a trying disease that we had in
the house, and that must be doctored and endured. She was so much in
awe of him that I suffered anguish with her whenever he tried to show a
man’s bluff kindness to her.

Aunt Lizy finally died, and her face looked young and cheerful in
the coffin. We scraped some money together and bought a lot in the
cemetery, and her misused body rests there under roses, myrtle, and
verbenas. I take pains to keep her shade pleasant and her sod well
trimmed; and when the flowers look particularly thrifty, I feel as if
Aunt Lizy were learning how to laugh, at last.

Her daughter, who had been deserted by a husband as soon as she gave
him a child to support, came to the funeral, and remained to make an
unlimited visit and pick up such wearing apparel and other comforts as
we had given Aunt Lizy.

She took entire possession of the house, being as loud-voiced and
self-assertive as her mother was crushed and sensitive. But she owned
me before everybody as her cousin, and took notice of Julian, though
she preferred Irish society in the kitchen, and installed me as her
nurse, while she enjoyed it. The baby’s usual expression was that of
a young bird when it hears the parent return to the nest with a full
beak. I used to sit studying the interior of the poor child’s throat,
while its voice pierced my marrow. Julian made a sketch of the pimply
little face, but finished it up with a black cat’s body and a high
fence. It cried steadily during its stay, and had the croup and the
doctor and our sleep, until Julian said he must follow the excusable
example of its father and abandon it. He paid the fare of Aunt Lizy’s
daughter to relations in the far west, and loaded her with whatever she
fancied her mother’s. Yet she probably thought we shirked kinsmen’s
duty toward her, for we have since heard the whisper that we got all
that Aunt Lizy ought to have left her.

So I was glad that T’férgore and not one of my own stock now dictated a
postponement of the foreign trip.

Next day we drove out to the little farm and saw old Lena. Julian
declared she was worth driving the five miles to see, if it was only to
say “Good-day, Lena,” and watch her shriveled smiles. She always wore
a blue calico or blue woolen dress, low shoes, and scarlet stockings.
Her gait was a cheerful trot, but her tongue was lamest at the English
language of any tongue I have ever heard. She had a grandson named
Fritz, tallow-colored and blue-eyed, and covered with contagious
smiles. He never had forgotten the feeling of wooden shoes on his
feet, and clumped conscientiously in leather. Lena and Fritz rented
the little farm, and Fritz pushed the vegetables, fruit, and butter to
market in a hand-cart. Summer or winter, the road, a turnpike, was as
smooth and hard as a floor. Every inch of the fifteen acres was under
cultivation. Such weeds as were allowed to grow had some medicinal
property, or were good for feeding Lena’s birds. She had her cages hung
along the porch, the two canaries, the red-bird, and the mockingbird
trying to out-sing and out-chatter the wild things in the cherry-trees.

It was the last of May, and I snuffed delightful odors from the little
farm. Nasturtium vines were already running up strings at the window.
They produced little pods of which Lena made my favorite pickles. She
had one blazing bed of tulips in the garden, and her early vegetables
were showing green. Everything Lena tended grew like magic. Fritz had
raked every stick and bit of trash into the meadow, and the heap was
burning with a pale flicker in the sunlight, and raising smoke like
incense from the sod. Whenever I smell that smoke I think I must tell
my sensations to somebody who can put them in a poem: a homely poem
about last year’s pea-vines and strawberry and currant leaves, exhaling
the dew as they turned into blue vapor, and suggesting, though I cannot
tell why, the old home garden life when Adam and Eve were content to
lean down to the sweet ground and feel the loam with their fingers, or
take delight in the breath of fresh-cut grass.

The walk up to the porch was of uneven stones, each outlined by moss.
Lena arose between two gaping cellar doors at the side of the house,
and ambled down the walk to meet us.

“Wie befinden, Lena?” said Julian. “Suppose we put off that sale and
you take us to live on your prospective estate?”

“Was Lena going to buy it?” I exclaimed.

“Of course. She’s grown so wealthy off my land that she was going to
turn me away entirely.”

Lena laughed and shook her head and made gestures of good-will.

We went into the house, and Julian bargained with Lena to take us
home unto our estate. There was plenty of room for our furniture.
Lena had nothing but a spinning-wheel in one long slant-sided room
over the wing. Julian said he should leave the spinning-wheel alone,
hang his draperies and pictures there, set up his easels, and make it
a painting-room. The house had all sorts of tags and after-thoughts
built to the main part. Some boards in the floors arched downwards
like inverted rainbows. You mounted two steps to one room and descended
three to another. There were tall mantles and unexpected closets. The
staircase twisted in a way I fancied T’férgore would not like. I sat
down on the porch bench while Julian was giving Lena directions, and
tried to picture T’férgore coming up the walk toward the house. Was he
white or brown? Would he be churlish or full of the spirit of laughter?
Was he bringing trouble or gladness to Julian and me?


PART II

WE PREPARE FOR HIM

  “So many hours must I take my rest;
  So many hours must I contemplate;
  So many hours must I sport myself.”

  “Ah, what a life were this! how sweet--how lovely!
  Gives not the hawthorn bush a sweeter shade
  To shepherds looking on their silly sheep
  Than doth a rich embroidered canopy
  To kings that fear their subjects’ treachery?”

  “For trust not him that once hath broken faith.”

                                     _King Henry VI._

  “Against ill chances men are ever merry;
  But heaviness foreruns the good event.”

                                     _King Henry VI._

It took several weeks for us to get quite comfortably settled at
the little farm. We lazily decorated our residence, or suspended
labor upon it, just as we pleased. Then the delicious June days trod
upon each other’s heels. It seemed as if I had scarcely risen and
found the breakfast Lena always kept for me--of toast and jelly and
chocolate--before the evening star trembled in the west, and I was
following her and Fritz to the barnyard to take my cup of new milk with
the foam on. Even Midsummer Day, the longest and loveliest day in the
year, was gone while we talked about it.

At first our friends came down from the city, but as the heat increased
they took longer journeys. Julian painted zealously. He said after
T’férgore came he would be hindered a great deal. I lay in a hammock
and watched him, sometimes wondering at my new languor. I thought a
great deal about T’férgore, without talking of him to Julian. Julian
licensed me to be silly to a certain extent: beyond that limit I kept
my silliness to myself. It was nothing for me to twist Mr. Fergus
Dering’s name into T’férgore, because I had a talent for rechristening
people and objects. But how impatient Julian would have been with all
my speculations about T’férgore! I could not make an image of him in my
mind, yet he was always haunting me. I wondered if he would stay with
us always; sometimes his ideal head, with impalpable garments below
it, changing from expression to expression, laughed at me from the
clouds. What an individuality he must have to seize upon me so before
his coming! He was a gifted creature, according to Julian; and his
silent approach was weaving me in a network of fascination that I never
thought at first of resisting.

When I was roused to activity, we made haste to finish our arrangements
about the house and get T’férgore’s room ready. Julian himself hung
some draping stuff from the studio there. We spent money on a bath, and
a curious water jug and basin, and I could not feel contented without
giving the chamber a more delicate look with muslin and blue silesia.
We used to stand looking around this apartment with admiration. Julian
hung one of his flower pictures there, though he said T’férgore would
probably do nothing but make a face at it. And I never went into the
woods for a handful of wild flowers, without filling T’férgore’s vase
of Dresden china, when I got back.

Then Julian said we must have a horse and vehicle, for if he knew
anything about T’férgore that young gentleman would want to take the
air on wheels. We had, however, very little cash to spend on such a
turnout.

“We can dispense with style,” said Julian, “if a kind, serviceable rig
is to be bought cheap.”

So he kept a liveryman in town on the lookout for him, and one
afternoon he received a message and went to drive home our bargain.

Lena followed me to the gate to see the flourish Julian described there
before alighting.

“What made you get a cart?” I inquired.

“This,” said Julian, “is a sort of a dog-cart. The rage is all for
dog-carts just now, and we couldn’t have a phaeton, you know.”

“But they aren’t painted red.”

“This one is,” said Julian.

“And there is no place behind for the dogs,” I further objected.

“Oh, well, T’férgore won’t want to carry a dog,” said Julian. “It’s a
bargain on two wheels!”

Whatever is mine acquires peculiar merits in my eyes. A halo of
possession arches it, making it a little better than the same thing
owned by anybody else. I accepted the red cart and followed Julian into
the stable-yard, where, after Fritz helped him unhitch, he showed me
the points of the horse.

“Women always notice the ornamental part of a turnout first,” said
Julian. “Before you looked at the cart you ought to have taken in
Leander.”

“Is his name Leander?” I inquired.

“So I have been informed,” replied Julian.

“What makes him look as if he were crying?”

“His eyes need sponging,” said Julian. “This warm weather is severe on
a horse’s eyes.”

“I hope he has not parted with any near and dear friend.” “He looks as
if he could hardly stand up under some affliction.”

“Horses are dear now,” observed Julian with severity, “and you can’t
expect to get a thoroughbred for forty dollars. The liveryman said he
shipped a car-load to Louisville last week, some of them so weak they
had to lean against the sides of the car. This one is sound, and only
needs a little good care to bring him out.”

“Yes, his bones all look nice,” I assented. My heart began to warm
toward Leander.

“It’s a fine thing to own a noble animal like a horse, isn’t it,
Julian?--and to see him grazing around one’s homestead.”

Julian said he believed he would take Leander into the yard and let him
clip off some of the grass, before stabling him.

Fritz put the red cart under a shed, and helped Lena milk, while we
walked enamored after our purchase from one part of the lawn to another.

“What makes his hams look so sad, Julian?” I inquired with concern.

“Flanks, you mean,” said Julian.

“Yes. But aren’t horses usually cushiony there?”

“Pigs and prize cattle are,” said Julian contemptuously.

“But his hind legs run up so tall that when he lifts one he seems to be
coming in two, like Baron Munchausen’s horse when it got caught in the
city gates.”

“Sorry you don’t like him,” observed Julian, scratching a match on his
heel and lighting a cigar.

“I do like him, Julian. It would be strange if I didn’t like our own
horse! The way he is standing now doesn’t show his ribs so. Couldn’t we
induce him to keep that position generally?”

But Leander now drew all his feet nearer to a focus, and frightened me
by a convulsion.

“He’s just going to lie down,” explained Julian. “He wants to roll
in the grass. They say a horse that rolls clear over is worth fifty
dollars, anyhow. Watch him, now.”

We watched him in breathless suspense, Julian holding the lighted
cigar away from his lips. Leander, after several half revolutions,
brandished his heels triumphantly in the air and rolled clear over.

Julian and I shook hands.

“Gained ten dollars in value since I brought him home,” said Julian.

Whatever doubts I had harbored about an artist’s knowledge of horses
certainly vanished. And Leander, after standing up to shake himself,
lay down to try it again. But this time he brandished ineffectual heels
and contented himself with only a half turn.

“Do you suppose he has gone off any in his value, Julian?” I inquired
anxiously.

“Not at all,” said Julian, throwing out clouds of smoke. “You mustn’t
expect too much of a horse on a couple of mouthfuls of grass.”

We drove Leander a great deal during the July weather. The cart had
very easy springs, and I liked billowing along on them, though the
motion was a little jerky. Leander was a kind creature. He never
kicked, though he sometimes got his legs tangled in his tackling,
fighting flies; and notwithstanding his countenance continued watery,
he took a widow-like interest in us. I fed him lumps of sugar and
bunches of very sweet grass, which he swallowed in a resigned way.
Julian, with sleeves rolled up, zealously mixed chopped feed for
him, and Leander smeared this from sunken temple to sunken jaw, so
that often when I entered the stable I thought he was undergoing a
poulticing.

Leander objected to railway trains, so we knew he had spirit.

“There’s considerable go in him,” said Julian as we trotted between
fence-rows where elderberries were spreading and ripening. “Wait till I
get him fat once! You’ll be astonished to see how he comes out.”

“Do you think his eyes will quit weeping as his condition improves,
Julian?” I inquired.

“Naturally. We can get him glasses if they don’t,” said Julian. “What
an absurd baby you are in your demands! Beauty and muscle never go
together in a horse. Some of the best goers on the turf are a mere mass
of wires when you look at them from an æsthetic standpoint.”

It was really enough to have any kind of power, except our own,
trundling us along the pleasant roads. I grew to feel no solicitude
whatever about Leander’s ribs while he stood cooling them in the creek,
and Julian and I in the high cart watched the sunlight come down the
woods’ aisles, and long festoons of grapevine dipping and reflecting
their leaves in water. When we met anybody I tried complacently to
imagine we were an English farm-couple very well-to-do and what they
call smart in our turnout; or that we were Italian peasants, basking
in the sun as we jogged royally to some festa. But Julian became very
critical on the proportions of horses and vehicles to each other. He
ridiculed a combination of tall horse and low phaeton, the top of which
barely reached up to the horse’s back; or of pony and double-seated
carriage, looking like a tug drawing a steamer. In short, we were
satisfied with our own goods and chattels: and when Julian graciously
lent Lena the turnout to go to town in, and she filled the cart bed
with ripe tomatoes and the seat with her blue person and Fritz, its
perfect adaptation to her uses convinced me what a versatile and
valuable bargain ours was.

The time came for me to meet and bring home Jennie Purdy from the
Avenue station. She had been one of my special chums at school. I
always loved women; there seems to me something unwholesome and unsound
in the woman who proclaims that she hates and distrusts all of her own
sex. At school I was Jennie Purdy’s easily-moulded slave: she dictated
what I should wear and how I should conduct myself. I denied myself
many a game of croquet, when that pastime was fresh, to sit and fan
her while she slept off some slight indisposition. And in return she
petted and instructed me in all the niceties of etiquette. She was half
a dozen years my senior, and at that time enjoying a small fortune
of her own; but this was afterward lost, and she had many a struggle
before deciding upon and mastering the profession of medicine.

Jennie Purdy was one of the most fastidious creatures alive, an
epicure, and unsparing of herself as a student. Years did not age, but
rather ground her down to finer delicacy. I felt considerable pride in
her, and counted on having her at hand when T’férgore came. She did not
lack the eccentricities which always cluster around any woman living
outside of intimate family life. She professed to dislike men; but I,
knowing her warm heart, knew also her self-deception. All isolated
women fall into one of two errors about the opposite sex: they count
mankind a vast monster, to be avoided and suspected, or a vast angel
to be worshiped in secrecy and silence; whereas, men are only good,
comfortable souls, very much like ourselves, but made a little stouter
so they can hold us and spread out their shoulders for irrigation when
we want to cry.

Though Jennie Purdy held dark views of mankind, I suspected that under
the surface she was one of the worshiping ones. Still, I was not
prepared to have her tell me, an hour after our arrival at home, that
she was on the point of marriage.

We sat down in T’férgore’s room, where I had been showing her
the appointments, and I pulled a hassock to her side, eager for
particulars. She should be married from the little farm instead of a
boarding-house, if she could be content with such a wedding as we could
give. But I upbraided her for keeping her secret from me, almost as
seriously as she once upbraided me for daring to marry at all.

“You won’t want me to be married here,” said Jennie, with a snap.
“You’ll have too many prejudices.”

“But I always thought you were the person with prejudices, dear,” I
remonstrated, “and that Julian and I were too unconventional for you.”

“I am going to marry a divorced man,” disclosed Jennie.

I caught my breath and said “Oh!”

“There--I knew it!” observed Jennie.

“I didn’t say anything but ‘Oh.’ What made him get divorced?”

“You don’t know him,” said Jennie, “and so you can’t judge of the
circumstances.”

“But you might try me,” I pleaded. “Has he been divorced a long time?”

“About a month,” owned my old, fastidious chum, turning into another
woman before my very eyes. She never was pretty, but a certain noble
pride had given her a carriage I enthusiastically admired. Now she
sat before me a dupe of her own absurd fancies, half defiant and
half apologetic. The woman who had taught me that only most serious
incompatibility should separate a married pair was going to wed a man
who had been divorced one month!

“His wife was never a fit companion for him.”

“Oh, no,” I said.

“An ignorant, miserable creature, who entrapped him when he was a boy
and has kept him down in the world ever since.”

“It’s always the wife’s fault,” I said.

“People were continually asking him how he came to marry such a woman.”

“And he let the question pass without knocking down the questioner?”

“There never was anything fit to eat in the house, and his clothes were
never fit to wear.”

“Poor dear!” I observed. “Had his income anything to do with it?”

“She kept him from getting on,” expostulated my old chum.

“And he brought all his grievances to you for redress?”

“I expected to meet nothing but prejudiced opposition in you,” said
Jennie. “But of course I was bound to tell you. You cannot say anything
to alter my determination.”

My head whirled with this spectacle of a sane woman suddenly gone
mad over a worthless man. Shakespeare never touched the weakness of
womankind so closely as when he made Titania’s infatuation. The greater
the ass, the more Titania adores him.

“I hate such an irregular marriage!” I said, breathing quickly.

“Yes, I know you do,” retorted Jennie. “You’re the slave of society.
You wouldn’t have the courage to go against one of society’s whims.”

“I don’t want that kind of courage which tramples on decent marriage
customs. And you were the first to teach me the value of an
irreproachable standing before the world.”

“It’s easy for women like you, who know nothing of the miseries of
an unequal marriage, to take a high moral stand,” said my old chum,
turning whiter always as our talk sunk lower. I was afraid Julian would
hear us and come down from the painting-room overhead. He never liked
Jennie as heartily as I thought it his duty to like her. And he laughed
at the little barnacles of whims which an isolated life fastened on her.

All the time I was talking to her the fancied image of T’férgore was
before my eyes.

“How much more faithful will this man be to you,” I went on, “than he
was to the woman he left one month ago? He has somehow cast a glamour
over you. I know just how he looks--a great, whimpering, Falstaffian
baby of a thing, coarse to his last fibre!”

“Go on,” said Jennie.

“If he were not coarse would he ever allow a woman standing related to
him as wife to be slurred to his face? Would he be so ready to attach
his mildewed life to yours without a blemish?”

“I can’t hear you talk so,” said Jennie. “You’d better let me go away.
I cannot stay in the house.”

“You cannot go away,” I declared fiercely. “I understand now why
parents have locked their daughters up.”

“You are interfering with what does not concern you at all,” said
Jennie, trembling, “and not in the least altering my determination.
You cannot choose my fate for me. I have lived a lonely life year
after year. Nobody considered me. Why am I to stand on nice points
considering everybody? He thinks I can make him happy. I believe he
will treat me kindly.”

“You have every warrant for believing that,” I exclaimed, struggling to
calm myself in the fear that I was going to make a scene.

“I have,” said Jennie, with a kind of pride strange in her; “for he
provided for the family to the full extent of his means, before
separating from them.”

“So he had children? And deserted them?”

“Five,” replied Jennie in embarrassment.

“Five children! And he provided for them by taking their father from
them when they needed a father most!”

“They are all boys but the youngest,” said Jennie.

I knew now that I was going to make a scene, struggle against it as I
might.

“And is the smallest a little child yet?”

“Not an exceedingly little child,” said Jennie, picking at her dress
and not seeming to see the fingers at which she stared. “Two years old,
I believe.”

“Don’t you understand about family life? Don’t you see what a callous
wretch is the man who can abandon his own flesh and blood? How will you
ever close your eyes in sleep again if you help him in wronging that
little child--that little child!”

I stood up from my seat and groped toward her. The moment of my own
weakness and terror was coming.

Jennie took hold of me as she used to do at school.

“I have spoken out to you,” I said, hanging to her neck; “and now you
must take care of me.”

She saw that T’férgore was approaching the house; and her face filled
with tender solicitude is the last thing I can recall as I fainted.


PART III

THE AMBROSIAL YOUTH

  “His flesh is angel’s flesh, all alive.”

  “Honor to the house where they are simple to the verge of hardship,
  so that there the intellect is awake and reads the laws of the
  universe, the soul worships truth and love, honor and courtesy flow
  into all deeds.”
                                                              EMERSON.

September weather was over the world before I felt able to be carried
out-of-doors. I had been very ill, but at my worst I remember having
Jennie on my mind, and hanging to her hand while I pleaded over and
over the cause of the little child.

Now, though weak, I had reached a state of rapturous convalescence, and
reached it quite suddenly. Julian lifted me out to the shaded lawn,
where Jennie had wadded a rocking-chair with pillows. The leaves were
turning, but none had fallen. Lena’s birds hanging in a row along the
eaves of the porch kept it up at a great rate, the canary seeming to
recognize me and give me the name he had long since invented for me:
turning his head and calling through the bars, “Maë, Maë!”

Lena and Fritz came around the corner of the house and grinned.
Lena had saved the biggest pear on the dwarf tree for me, and Fritz
brought a nosegay of marigolds, strong enough to stifle many invalids.
“It’s quite like a Harvest Home,” said Julian. “We ought to strap a
corn-shock on Leander’s back and lead him in the procession.”

Then Jennie went into the house to bring out T’férgore. Jennie was not
only my doctor, but she had turned up her sleeves and showed Lena how
to cook the dishes I could eat. She had discharged two nurses, one
after the other, and relied on herself and Lena’s help, and Julian’s
solicitude.

“You never know what a woman is until you try her in a family crisis,”
said Julian, sitting down near me. “I wasn’t enamored of your Dr. Purdy
before, but I’ll say this of her now: she has the coolest head, the
readiest hand, and the largest fund of domestic skill of any woman I
ever saw.”

“I always told you that,” said I in a superior tone.

“She’s stayed by us to the neglect of her city practice, I’m afraid,”
said Julian.

“She is just getting into practice,” I assured him, “and before coming
out here announced her intention of leaving town for a change. It has
been a severe change, though.”

“But a man has been here importuning her about something.”

I took hold of the arms of my chair. “What kind of a man, Julian?”

“Oh, an ordinary person. Nothing striking about him. I thought he
looked very sulky the last time he went away.”

“Jennie was short with him, was she?”

“She saw him only a few minutes each time, after the first, and I
thought she was rather peremptory. There’s Doctor Theophilus again,
and he’s footed it from the Avenue station. The Reverend never was so
devoted to us as he has been since T’férgore’s arrival,” said Julian,
smiling drolly.

I had a nervous dread of Julian’s uncle; he was the most respectable
man who ever had the right to add Doctor of Divinity to his name.
Large, broad, and ponderous, his mere presence seemed to reprehend
the playful antics of life. I was afraid of his long upper lip, which
shut as close as a snuff-box lid. His white neckties awed me, and
the solidity of his choice words reproached me. Behind his back, and
in spite of Julian’s laughing remonstrance, I had rechristened Uncle
Doctor Theophilus, whose surname was Marvin, The Old Daguerreotype.
It is true he had not his case on, though the snap with which it
formerly shut had probably passed into his lips. I could even fancy
that when you got a side-light on him he retained the glare of the
old daguerreotype, and effaced himself in a sheet of glitter. His
expression seemed unalterably made up; and though he looked more
ancient than other men of his age, I knew he thought himself well
taken, and all his tints neat without being gaudy. He oppressed me so
that I frequently wanted to rub him out. I always trod on a stone and
turned my foot, or ran against a chair, when the Old Daguerreotype was
by. Or he threw me into a nervous trance, and I sat with parted lips,
glaring eyes, and aching neck, fancying that my own daguerreotype was
being taken. Aunt Doctor Theophilus used to be a worthy companion
picture to him, but death years ago effaced her lineaments and snapped
her case shut, to be opened no more.

I felt that I could hardly stand the Old Daguerreotype just at this
time, but said to Julian it was kind of him, taken in such a precise
attitude as he was, to dust himself walking out from the Avenue, on our
account.

“Oh, it isn’t the first time he has done it,” said Julian. “Something
about our rural domicile has seized upon Uncle Doctor. He didn’t go
out of town this year, and he’s taking whiffs of the country between
sermons.”

“Between poses,” I suggested softly. “I hope Jennie isn’t bothered
by his coming. She takes strong antipathies, and he does make one’s
backbone ache.”

“Oh, she stands it,” said Julian laughing, “affably, as if she were the
artist who had taken him.”

I turned around towards Jennie as Julian went to the gate to meet his
uncle. She was bringing T’férgore across the porch and smoothing down
the angel robes. She herself looked like a Madonna picture, pale and
somewhat saddened, but most womanly, most touching.

“Jennie,” I said, as she put T’férgore on my lap, standing before me to
do so, “you have taken care of me as only a woman can, and pulled me
through to paradise.”

“Well,” she replied quickly, “you took care of me first. I think I must
have been out of my senses. But having this little monster to handle
made things appear very different.”

T’férgore blinked lazily, and struck out with ineffectual fists. The
cherub-wings were perhaps hidden in folds of mull, but gazing on this
wonderful creature’s allurements, I was seized with a Saturn-like
desire to bite and devour every flower-tinted atom. I forgot that the
Old Daguerreotype was at the gate, and worried my prey, breaking into
a rhapsody of baby Romany.

In the midst of my Bess’ums and S’eetums, and Old Dol’ums, Uncle
Doctor appeared before me, and bent himself at T’férgore’s shrine,
with an expression nearly as idiotic as my own. He clucked, whistled,
and snapped his fingers, and for one moment I thought he was going
to dance. But his legs were taken too stiffly for that, and he only
limbered his entire length and cracked the glass in a way which damaged
him forever as my Old Daguerreotype.

Then he straightened himself up apologetically and shook hands with
Jennie, saying in his most ministerial tones, “And how are you to-day,
Dr. Jane?”

I must say that everything Uncle Doctor did on this occasion astonished
me. It was the first time I had been permitted to see a visitor, and
they should have prepared me for the unusual side-lights I should
now catch upon the Old Daguerreotype. He held professional women in
disdain, and I had heard him utter homilies against wives who tacked
all their maiden or acquired names before their husband’s cognomen. Yet
here he was parading Dr. Jane’s title, and almost capering before her
in his exuberant desire to win favor.

They sat down around me, and I noticed how unembarrassed Jennie was
by the Daguerreotype’s white tie and the clip of his lips and fearful
respectability.

“A little daughter in the house,” said Uncle Doctor Theophilus,
indicating with pomp the human atom in my lap, “is indeed a well-spring
of pleasure.”

“We counted on her brother Trotwood Copperfield, instead of his sister
Betsey Trotwood,” said Julian.

“It was a mere fancy,” I insisted, “and girls are just as good as boys
any day.”

“Better,” granted Julian.

“I’m quite as glad that T’férgore is a girl.”

“But it disarranges the name,” said Julian. “His name was Fergus
Dering, but I think we shall have to call her Ferguson.”

“Not at all,” I dissented indignantly.

“T’férgore!” mused Uncle Doctor Theophilus. “What kind of un-Christian
appellation have you stumbled upon there?”

“The name being Fergus,” explained Julian, “we call her--as Lena would
put it--T’férgore in short.”

We sat in silences of several minutes at a time, hearing an apple drop
in the orchard, the call of the katydids, or the restless stepping of
Leander in his stable. Already the smoky light of autumn was mellowing
distances.

“How remote this little spot appears to be from the centres of
traffic,” said Uncle Doctor Theophilus, with a pulpit gesture.

“It’s a good place for fever patients,” said Dr. Jane in a tone of
authority. “There’s health in the air of the house.”

“Yes, I should apprehend as much,” asserted Uncle Doctor Theophilus.

“You mean the intellectual atmosphere, of course,” said Julian, as a
whiff of the sauerkraut Lena did love came around the house. “Oh yes,
we are remote, but we have had great company here. Emerson has uttered
wisdom from your chair, Uncle Doctor, and near him sat Hawthorne, and
against that tree leaned Thoreau. We have even had what some fantastic
literary fellow calls the tone poets all around us, and no end of
painters and sketchers.”

“It’s nothing but a play of ours,” I explained. “Whenever I wished we
had such people for visitors, Julian piled chairs full of their books,
or their music, or stood up copies of their pictures. Then we talked
to them, and Julian read from them in reply, or I ran over the musical
score, or he hung a picture where it could speak for itself. In that
way he thinks we enjoyed just as close communion with them as their
nearest friends ever had; because their elusive souls would speak to us
more directly and coherently than if they were sitting opposite us in
the flesh.”

The Old Daguerreotype shook his head indulgently over such pastime. On
deliberation, however, he said the next time we had such a gathering he
would like to join it.

After supper, and while Uncle Doctor Theophilus and Julian were
trailing their feet through the grass, carrying their hands behind
them, and all but chewing the bovine cud in their ruminative gazing on
the bee-hives, the orchard, the stable, and meadow, Jennie put on her
hat and gloves to drive our relative back to the Avenue station. I knew
the drive would be good for her.

“You can come home the long way, through the creek--the water is always
low--after you have left him at his train,” I hinted.

“I guess I shall go the long way,” said Jennie. “It will be pleasanter
having someone to talk with.”

T’férgore and I exchanged a long stare; that is, I exchanged a long
stare with T’férgore for a series of self-absorbed blinks.

“I am so glad,” I then remarked to Jennie, “that you aren’t put out by
the old Dag--Doctor; when I say old, I mean, of course, reverend; for
he isn’t really elderly, you know.”

“He doesn’t put me out a bit,” answered Jennie. “He is very quieting to
me. I believe he is a sound man.”

“There is no man sounder,” I declared. “And he was just as good as
he could be to his wife. I think she actually died because there was
nothing more she could ask of life. I never saw such a self-satisfied
expression as she had--outside of a miniature. His position is
excellent and influential, too. A woman can’t help looking at that sort
of thing when she is once married.”

Jennie turned about to face me, smiling. “Now, don’t, my dear, don’t,”
she objected. “Let us not give our talk any such bias.”

“Oh, I won’t,” I exclaimed apprehensively. “I’m not throwing anybody
at you at all. I was just going to say that though he is such an
excellent man, and near to Julian and all that, he ossifies the working
of my joints: I feel in such awe of him.”

“I don’t,” said Jennie.

“Yes; I’ve noticed that.”

“I think his society is wholesome for me.”

“Yes; it seems to be mutual,” I could not help suggesting. “Either you
or T’férgore is limbering him up until I do believe in the course of
time his presence will become wholesome for _me_.”

Leander, drawing Jennie and the Old Daguerreotype in our red cart, went
briskly down the road, and Julian and T’férgore and I sat watching them.

“They will loiter through the woods,” mused I, “and watch the festoons
of grapevine, and get a sniff of sycamore leaves and pennyroyal mixed
with loam.”

“Yes,” said Julian. “Next week I shall take you and Ferguson off
through the woodsiest drive of them all.”

“Julian,” I remonstrated, “her name isn’t and it never will be
Ferguson.”

“Oh, well,” said Julian, “the bill is laid on the table then. Another
motion will be in order.”

“And they’ll see bunches of goldenrod in a thicket,” I continued,
returning to Leander’s load, “and the Old Daguerreotype will jump out
to get it for her, footing it lightsomely among the burrs.”

“You make quite a beau of our uncle,” said Julian, turning his cigar
over.

“Well, I should think anybody could see that’s what he wants to be
considered.”

“He has my consent,” said Julian.

“Mine, too,” said I, taking high grounds; “but I’m not so sure about
Jennie. She’s a woman who has been hard to suit. Nothing else stood in
the way of her marrying long ago.”

I looked keenly at Julian, but he evidently knew naught about the one
month divorced man with a wife and five children--the youngest two
years old. It was the only secret I had ever kept from him, and it
burned guiltily at the roots of my tongue. But the woman who reveals to
her lord and master some unlovely weakness of her own sex helps him to
a judgment-seat too dangerously lofty.

“She’s what you may really call superior,” admitted Julian, “but far
enough into the woods to be afraid of the crooked stick. And Uncle
Theoph. isn’t so bad.”

“No,” I granted generously: “he doesn’t make me half as miserable as
he used to. And I know he won’t mind getting bugs down his neck and
stumbling over old logs for yellow and chocolate colored pawpaw leaves
and branches of fire-red maple, if Jennie wants him to.”

“I wonder,” Julian ruminated, “if Aunt Marvin ever made him dance
around when they were young together and she had a ribbon headdress on
her hair, and he choked himself with a stock.”

“No,” said I, “she was his first wife.”

Julian reached over, at the risk of waking T’férgore, and laid his arm
across my shoulder.

“Besides, she never cried,” I added. “And a good husband is just like a
growing crop: he needs to be rained on.”

Julian uttered a little grunt of contempt, but it was the kind of
contempt which magnified the importance of his own sex and therefore
did no real harm to ours.

“Uncle Doctor Theophilus is lonely,” said Julian, “having once lived
the life of a family man.”

“And Jennie is lonely, too,” I admitted, “having never lived the life
of a family woman. Think how hard it is to stand outside of--say
the little farm--and see T’férgore come home, and our comfort and
satisfaction.”

“Man: his wife: his child:” ruminated Julian. “The family; the little
spot of our own ground. That’s the primitive and true life.”

We heard the creek frogs lifting up their voices.

“Next summer when T’férgore is big enough to be carried across the
field,” said I, “I will make a Kate Greenaway dress with a yoke, and
flare a hat of muslin for her, or better still, pucker her face into
a frilly cap, and set her down in the midst of the clover where there
aren’t any bees.”

“And put a crook in her hand,” said Julian. “For now we are her sheep.
We can’t stray across blue water until the shepherdess permits.”




ILLINOIS




BEETRUS

TIME, 1881


“Beetrus Jenkins!” called the owner of the name, sending her high clear
voice through the boxed space which served as post-office window.

“Yes, ’m,” responded the postmaster, with that joking freedom which
adds so much spice to the life of a general-storekeeper at a South
Illinois railroad station. “Three letters this time. He’s writing
nearly every day.”

“It wears on you to keep track of my correspondence, don’t it?”
affirmed the girl, taking her letters and rending them open with
impatient forefinger. They were all addressed, in the same mercantile
hand, to Miss Beatrice Jenkins, Wabash Station, Illinois. She compared
the dates of the postmarks, and opened the earliest, standing by the
door to read.

The smoke-dimmed interior of the store was hung with baskets,
dry-goods, bacon, ready-made clothing, and boots and shoes. A
skeleton flight of steps ascended across a background of wall to the
proprietor’s residence, and up this flight of steps went a neighbor’s
barefooted child with a coffee-pot to borrow some household necessity,
while Beetrus read her mail.

She was a spot of mellow color betwixt brilliant autumn tints outside
and the dim inclosure. The slim, long-fingered hands holding her
letters were nicely gloved. Her white hat was covered with plumes
just owning the salmon-pink tint of her small woolen shawl. Her dress
was neutral and unobtrusive. Not so, however, were her black eyes and
glowing cheeks, or the dark hair clustering to her ears. She was a very
pretty girl, and this the station-master always mentally admitted. He
came out of his post-office cubby with the mail-bag in his hand.

“So you’re going to clear out to-day, Bee?”

She glanced up, perceptibly starting and coloring.

“Goin’ by rail or by river?”

“Oh!” said Beetrus. “Yes, we’re going up the river. Our things are
packed on the White Dove. We’d have to go so far around and pay so much
freight the other way. But I don’t like to go on a freight boat, and
neither does ma, though the men are just as kind and clever as they can
be. We have to sit upon deck all night, too, among the machinery and
grease.”

“Yes, you will. It’s a twelve hours’ run betwixt this and New Harmony
against the current. The White Dove starts about three o’clock. Will
you be down any during the winter?”

“I guess not. Our man and his wife can tend to everything on the farm.
We never do run back and forth any after cold weather sets in.”

“And I suppose you’ll put the time in dancin’ and takin’ music lessons?”

“It isn’t so very lively in Harmony; but I’m going on with my
music--That isn’t the train?”

“Yes, it is,” responded the station-master, swinging the mail-bag as he
walked forth to keep appointment with the black and hissing locomotive
sliding to its brief pause.

Beetrus flew through the store, ran down the back steps, and sheltered
herself in woods which stretched away toward the Wabash. Swift as her
exit was, she scarcely escaped the eye of a young man who swung himself
off the train, sample case in hand. His face twinkled humorously, which
it could very well do, being a pleasant mustached face in spite of the
marks of dissipation it bore. His trim dress and brisk air bespoke the
prosperous commercial traveler.

He went indoors and swept a business-like glance around before the
train steamed away; therefore by the time the station-master had put up
the mail and served one or two customers, he had a satisfactory order
written out, and professed himself ready to mount the next train, for
which he would have to wait quite two hours.

“Oh, you know how to put the time in,” said the station-master, “as
long as we have any pretty girls left in the neighborhood.”

The drummer smiled out of the back door at a huddle of two or three
cabins and board huts, as if the capacity of such a place for producing
pretty girls was too contemptible a joke for him to meddle with. He
said he guessed he would go down to the landing and see if he couldn’t
get a skiff a while.

“Bee Jenkins will be down that way,” suggested the station-master. “She
was in here a minute ago.”

“Ran from me,” noted the drummer.

“I’d kind of advise her to, if she hadn’t,” said the station-keeper.

“What’s the objection to me?” laughed the drummer; “I’m only a good
gray sinner. They’ll have to dip me several times more before I’m as
black as you South Illinois Egyptians.”

“Old lady Jenkins will have a crow to pick with you, though, if she
happens to drop onto all these letters and walks.”

“You undertake too much,” said the drummer, shaking his head with
gentle persuasiveness. “The store and post-office and station and the
neighborhood will accumulate, and be too many for you.”

Beetrus saw him sauntering on her track. The blood was buzzing in her
head, and she hid herself upon a pile of steep high rocks, obeying some
wild impulse of which she felt ashamed. To follow him with her eyes
and be herself invisible was an impersonal rapture in which she could
indulge without giving it too great advantage. Yet, when he disappeared
near the river, she felt a stinging check in her heart, and a sense of
having inflicted loss and robbery upon herself.

To Beetrus he was the walking essence of the world, representing not
only its mighty business, but its advantages of culture and travel.
She never had been from home except to Evansville and New Harmony;
and he never stayed two nights in a place, and spoke with fatigue of
his exciting life. What operas he had seen!--for in Beetrus’s chaotic
imagination all theatrical performance was opera, and operas were the
distinct possessions of the worldly.

She resented with a mixture of awe and daring the greatness of his
relatives. He was a nephew of the head of his commercial house, and
his grandfather had been a congressman; while her background was the
pioneer’s cabin, the pecan woods, and Wabash rocks and hills.

Beetrus was the child of a shrewd though romance-soaked mother, who
had dowered her with something more than a mispronounced fine name and
biased imagination. It is strange to think how large a human mass,
moving this instant in grooves of practical action, is protesting with
secret scorn against all its conditions. Beetrus was full of a girl’s
unrests and eccentric impulses. She thought she knew exactly what she
wanted for her happiness.

She pressed her cheek against the rock lichens, taking a half-inverted
view of the autumn tangle, and glad in spite of herself for the
pleasant breath of life. It was worth while to be a part of such woods
and river vistas, and to smell all the ground’s odors. Some little
living thing ran along a log not far from her; and she could hear a
squirrel bark, a whish and a whisper of loosened leaves as they were
sent adrift, and then the dropping of a nut. Strong as the sunlight
was, she shivered upon the rocks, and then felt all her blood burn,
beat, and tremble.

The commercial traveler was walking back with a brisk step from the
river, and scanning every opening among the trees, as if on an eager
search. He saw Beetrus rising and tightening her pink shawl on her
shoulders, and halted with a jerk.

“Where have you been?” was his unceremonious exclamation.

“Up here, reading my letters and viewing the country.”

“You saw me go past, then, didn’t you?”

“Was it you?” said she, fitting her foot deftly to the steep descent.

“Let me lift you down. How pretty you look this morning!”

“Oh! don’t talk about pretty, Mr. Poundstone,” said Beetrus, dyed in
color, after he had stood her upon the moss, dazed as she always was by
his prevailing presence.

“You oughtn’t to have hid; I want to talk up a scheme with you right
off. It popped into my head since I got off the train.”

“What scheme?” said Beetrus, hugging her shawl and looking over her
shoulder to simulate complete indifference.

“You know well enough, or can guess. We mustn’t be parted, my dear
girl; I can’t run up to New Harmony every time I make a trip down this
way. Think of the long winter. Don’t you want to see me this winter?”

“Oh--yes,” she admitted, with a gasp.

“I want to see you. I want to have you entirely to myself, to look
forward to every time I come in off the road. Let’s get married.”

Beetrus visibly expanded and contracted with a great breath.

“Get on the train and go over to Evansville with me, and we’ll have the
minister tie the knot there. Then home. And a nice little private set
of rooms, all quiet and to ourselves, and no relations to bother us.”

“But ma’s fixed things to go up to New Harmony for the winter,”
whispered Beetrus, struggling with this vision. “And she wouldn’t
change her mind so suddenly--’specially as she doesn’t know you real
well.”

“It isn’t ma I want to marry,” argued Poundstone, using his winning
smile. “I’ll drop my relations, and you can surely do the same.”

“Drop ma!”

The girl was stung by a covert insult.

“Leave her a little while. Let her go up to New Harmony, you know.”

“And what do you mean about dropping your relations?” demanded Beetrus,
growing straighter and more self-assured, and burning more vividly in
the cheeks. “That they wouldn’t want to be acquainted with ma and me?
No, sir; I ain’t going to let her go up to New Harmony alone; and I
never would seriously have you unless she knew all about it and was
willing. She might have read your letters if she wanted to; she knows
about them. I never did anything in my life that ma told me not to do.”

“I thought five minutes’ talk on this subject would bring you to
reason,” remonstrated Poundstone.

“Then you didn’t calculate right.”

“So it seems.”

“I’m not the girl you took me for.”

“Do you want to break off with me entirely?” he exclaimed, with heat.

“Yes--come to that--I do!” cried Beetrus, flinging his letters at him,
two fluttering uncertain, but one moulded by the grip of her hand and
darting like a missile. “I believed in you, and see how you’ve treated
me!”

“My darling girl!”

“Don’t you come around in my sight any more. And go marry somebody that
won’t cause any _dropping_. I can stand it.”

“I believe you can,” he sneered.

“Yes, indeed; I can stand it. So good-by to you.”

Saying which, Beetrus turned and scudded off, through Spanish needles
and boggy spots, until his first half-uttered remonstrance had been for
some time changed into language of another sort.

It seemed long before Beetrus found a log on which she could draw
herself, face downward, with her arms stretched beyond her head.

The White Dove moved off from Wabash Landing two hours behind her
appointed time. She was a dirty little boat, carrying a miscellaneous
freight, but among the barrels on the after-deck some hard-favored and
much-whittled chairs had been placed for Beetrus and her mother.

The young girl herself stood by the rope which served for railing, and
saw her own heartache color all those fair distances. Downy swells
of remote banks and bold juts of rock were copied in the river, so
ruffleless did it seem to lie even when the strong current was moving.
A blue heron stood at the water edge meditating, with one foot planted
on sand and the other tucked up. It slightly spread its mighty wings,
shook them, and folded them again to place, without appearing to break
the trance of its downward stare.

While the White Dove churned along, shadows stretched upon the Wabash.
Now it was very late afternoon, and now it threatened to be evening,
with a hint that by and by it would be night, when you might expect the
woods to make deep black borders along the river, and the canopy of
stars to look smeared by the little steamer’s smokestack.

When Beetrus was pale and tired, she turned and leaned against her
mother--an ample, indulgent woman, who nevertheless had one bristling
mole upon the right side of her face. She broke the tacit silence in
which they had begun their journey by declaring, “Ma, I love you.”

“You don’t often put a body out telling them that,” responded Mrs.
Jenkins, uttering a gratified laugh.

“I keep up a dreadful loving, though,” said Beetrus, casting sidewise
at the river black eyes which swam in waters of their own.

“You’re my baby,” cooed her mother, patting the slim hand fondling her
neck. “There’s plenty of pretty young men in the world, but there’s
only one old mother.”

“I don’t care anything about the young men,” said Beetrus, with strong
scorn. “I was thinking a good while in the woods to-day, coming from
the post-office, and I’ve made up my mind never to get married.”

“You’ll turn around often enough before the time comes.”

“I never will,” emphasized Beetrus. “We’ll be two nice old ladies
together, ma, and neither of us will get married.”

“I won’t, for a sure thing,” laughed her mother. “But you’ll only be
middle-aged when I’m ready to totter.”

“Yes, that’s so,” said Beetrus sadly. “And then if one would die and
leave the other”--

“Now, now, don’t you fret, lovey. I’ve had consider’ble trouble
and experience, and if I don’t sigh round, you needn’t. Who’s that
nice-looking man that keeps looking back this way?”

Beetrus had been facing down river, with her mind completely closed to
any moving figures on deck. She glanced back over her shoulder.

“Why, it’s”--she exclaimed, swallowing her breath with a gasp--“it’s
Mr. Poundstone.”

“That correspondent of yours?” said Mrs. Jenkins, nodding her head, and
inspecting him sincerely with such thoroughness as intervening barrels
permitted.

Beetrus’s ears rang. She had, however, that instinctive western courage
which sometimes takes the place of disciplined self-control; so by no
other clue than the deepening fire of her cheeks and eyes did she give
Mr. Poundstone any knowledge of the disturbance he brought her when he
climbed a passage over impediments and placed himself in the party.

His manner was subdued, even becomingly humble and conciliatory.

“Ma, this is Mr. Poundstone,” said Beetrus, secretly triumphant in
being free from the subservience which yesterday would have made her
say, “Mr. Poundstone, this is my mother.”

She did not add to her unconsidered formula now, but allowed him to
lift his hat and bow over her mother’s hand.

“I’m glad to meet you, Mrs. Jenkins,” said he. “I want to make friends
with you, and get you to convince your daughter I’m not such a bad
fellow as I look.”

“You don’t look like a bad fellow,” she responded heartily.

“I didn’t know you were going up on the boat,” said Beetrus, regarding
with gentle indifference the brim of his hat, after he replaced it.

“You know I couldn’t go off on the train and leave matters in the shape
they are. I never sold a bill of goods in New Harmony in my life, but
I’m going to try to make a satisfactory trade for myself now, if the
house turns me off for it.”

Beetrus parted her lips smiling, and this time met him in the eyes.
Without formulating the fact, she knew there was sterling man under the
crust of acquired coarseness. The brutal plan he had formed concerning
her, and which he was now scarcely willing to acknowledge to himself,
began to withdraw from betwixt them like the mist which already wavered
on the hills.

“I believe it will be a clear day to-morrow,” the girl said, falling
back upon good commonplace.

“Do you believe it will be a clear day to-morrow, Mrs. Jenkins?”
inquired Poundstone.

“Well, it seems like it might be pretty,” responded the widow, turning
up her face to see the pinkness reflected from the west.

“Then I believe it will too,” said the commercial traveler, with a
devout air, which was unmoved by Beetrus’s laughing out,--

“A great deal prettier and clearer than to-day has been.”




THE BRIDE OF ARNE SANDSTROM

TIME, 1885


“Big Swede wedding over there this evening,” said one passer to another
by his side. “Peter Lund’s daughter.”

“Is she marrying a Swede?” inquired the second.

“Yes; fellow by the name of Arne Sandstrom.”

“I should think old Peter, well off as he is, would have looked higher
for a son-in-law--you or me, for instance,” observed the second youth,
with a laugh.

“The girl’s pretty as a pink, and has had every advantage. It is a pity
to see her thrown away; but old Peter has a lot of younger ones coming
on.”

“That makes it less an object. I thought she was his only. The Swedes
are clannish.”

“Peter Lund’s is headquarters for them, too. Here’s one now, hunting up
the wedding. I’ll bet she’s just arrived from the old country.”

So near the truth was this surmise that Elsa had been off the train
only twenty minutes, and in that time had repeated the name of Arne
Sandstrom interrogatively to every person she met. She was dazed by
long riding and partial fasting, and the dumb terror of finding no one
to receive her at the end of her great journey. The letter created
with much brain-work to announce her coming ought to have been in his
hands weeks ago. The innocent and friendless soul did not know she
had omitted all dates and exactness in her general care for spelling
and inky loops. So stepping off the train into the American town at
dusk, she saw stretches of summer prairie to the westward, perky
architecture, crossing railroad tracks, hurrying citizens, and lazy
loungers--even the new electric light on its spider-work iron tower
beginning to make a ghastly powerful star far above her head. She saw
baggage and piles of express matter, hotel runners, and other women,
starting toward their assured homes, tucked laughing and chatting under
their husbands’ arms; but she saw not one face or one kind hand ready
to bid her welcome, who had ventured thousands of miles alone--across
ocean, across continent--to marry her betrothed lover, Arne Sandstrom.

Hearing his name spoken, she stood still upon the sidewalk, shrinking
and timid, but directly in front of the young men, and inquired, using
hands and eyes as well as anxious inflection of voice, “Arne Sandstrom?”

“She wants to know where Arne Sandstrom is. Right over there--that big
house, which you see lighted up. She doesn’t understand. Arne Sandstrom
over there. Getting married! Yes, yes. Arne Sandstrom. Here, Jack, you
trot out a little Swedish, can’t you? You’ve been among them more than
I have.”

“Arne Sandstrom _derover_,” exclaimed the other, pointing to Peter
Lund’s house, with a fine assumption of handling the language well.
“Arne Sandstrom _jifta_ to-night, you know.”

“Yifta!” said Elsa, shrinking down in stature.

“She’s got hold of it. That’s all right. You’ll be in time for the
wedding.”

“She didn’t understand; she thought we were making fun of her,” said
one of the lads as they sauntered on.

“She did understand, and there she goes straight across the street.
Brush up in the languages, young man, and make yourself as useful to
the public as I am.”

When Elsa had entered the Lund premises, however, she did not ring the
bell, but wavered around the house, looking up at lighted windows, and
shifting her little bundle from one arm to the other. She had other
baggage at the station, but it seemed no longer worth while. There was
a western veranda, on the lowest step of which she sat down in quiet
stupor to collect herself for some determined movement.

Anguish and disappointment must be the natural lot in this world, only
she had not lived enough years to find it out before. Though summer
darkness had come, the after-glow was still so bright in the west
that it half quarreled with abundant lamplight. Elsa could hear the
front gate, the crunch of coming footsteps, and frequent peals of the
door-bell, as she sat drawn together, and the eternal minutes traveled
on.

Peter Lund’s house was full of joyful stir. China and silver tinkled in
the open dining-room, where several women were putting last touches to
the tables. Girls flew up and down the back stairway, calling to one
another in Swedish.

“One thing is sure, Yennie Yonsen,” called a voice in the home tongue,
“there will not be enough married women to take the bride from us
girls in the wedding dance; so now what will Arne Sandstrom do?”

Three of them conspired together by the western dining-room door,
bobbing their flaxen heads, all laughing and talking at once in their
light happiness, far above the unseen stranger on the step.

“Who told me Arne Sandstrom left a betrothed girl in Svadia?” said one,
lowering her voice to graver colloquy.

“Oh, well, she married, herself, of course,” replied another; “and any
man who could get Lena Lund would take her.”

“Lena’s so pretty.”

“Lena’s rich.”

“Lena can sing and play better than some Amerikanskä.”

“Lena has ten new dresses. Arne will not have to put his hand in his
pocket for many a day.”

“She is not spoiled therewith. I always liked her.”

“Ah, my mother said if this wedding was going to be in Svadia this St.
John’s Eve, what a night we would make of it!”

They ran away, while Elsa repeated to herself that this was the Eve of
St. John--night of arbors and rejoicing at home, night when the sun
scarcely went down, and everybody feasted and visited under green-leaf
tents. Of what use was St. John’s Eve, or any other portion of time, to
a girl put to shame and despair as she was? Why had Arne Sandstrom sent
her money to come over with if he meant to jilt her on her arrival? Or
had he picked another betrothed for her as well as himself? She would
not believe her Arne could be so evil; she would knock and ask for him.
He was so kind! he loved her. Yet not only the Amerikanns, but those
laughing girls, had said plainly this was Arne Sandstrom’s wedding; any
man would take Lena Lund who could get her; Lena was so pretty; Lena
was rich; Lena could sing and play better than some Amerikanskä; Lena
had ten new dresses, and she was not spoiled.

Elsa bruised her cheek against the edge of the second step above her.
She did not know where to go, and her money was all spent except the
little she had saved by going without food during part of her railway
journey, and she had saved that to buy some little ornament for her
new home with Arne. She might try to hire herself out, but how could
she ever write back home where such happy news was expected from her,
or how could she put unendurable anxiety upon those best friends by
not writing at all? Svadia was so pleasant, especially in the long
nightless summers. Good and kind they were to strangers there: her
mother always baked waffles and carried them with coffee to the morning
bedside of a guest. She could see her native meadows stretching away
in the blue northern air, and the iron whip, as her mother called the
scythe, beating up an appetite in those who wielded it, while she
herself, a careless little maid, came bearing the second breakfast to
the mowers.

A quavering but hearty voice, which might have come from the mouth of
her own grandmother if it had not belonged to Peter Lund’s mother, sung
out a Lapp-Finn nurse song by an upper window, and Elsa knew just what
syllables the dancing baby was made to emphasize.

    “Donsa lupon,
    Hopsom tup an,
    Lanti lira,
    Hopsom stira:
  Sprönti lupon, lupon,
  Hopsom tup an, tup an,
  Lanti lira, lira,
  Hopsom stira, stira.”

    Dance and jump,
    Hop like a rooster,
    Hop like the skatan.

Perhaps this very instant--for Elsa made no calculations in longitude
and time--vader’s mütter danced the baby under her home roof; and none
of her people knew how faint, how outcast, how bewildered the eldest
child felt sitting on steps in a strange Amerikanski town.

In Elsa’s box of clothing was the finest sheepskin blanket her mother
ever made, so white in fleece, and cured by buttering and scraping
until the skin yielded soft like chamois leather. It was lined with
scarlet flannel. She could see the storeroom of her father’s farmhouse
hung thickly with such fleeces, and hear her mother say she wished
Elsa could take more, since they had so little money to send with
her. But Arne Sandstrom had sent the money to pay her way, because he
loved her so. They were children together, and he was held as dear as
a son in her own family. Elsa’s mother never distrusted him. How could
it therefore be possible that Arne Sandstrom, after sending for his
betrothed, could be marrying a Swede Amerikanskä fleka the very evening
of her arrival?

In her intensely quiet fashion the poor girl was wiping away tears as
fast as they dripped down her cheeks, and now she lifted her head from
the step, coming to a decision.

She walked up on the veranda, her feet sounding heavy and uncertain,
and stood at the door ready to knock. Her piteous great eyes moved from
wall to wall of the ample dining-room, recognizing Svensk wooden spoons
and beautifully painted and polished Russian bowls in various sizes
on the side-board. Hard-baked Svensk bread, so loved by the white and
firm Scandinavian teeth, and all known home luxuries, with unheard-of
Amerikanski things, smiled at her from the glittering tables. This Lena
Lund would be called a mamzelle in Svadia; she was very much above a
poor yungfrau like Elsa. Any man might be glad to marry her. Still Elsa
would not believe Arne Sandstrom had forgotten his betrothed.

She could see him from where she stood, in an inner room with a
background of fine furniture. How beautiful he looked, all in
Amerikann clothes, and with soft dark gloves on his hands, like a very
rich man! His cheek was ruddy, his forehead white, and the very round
of his ear--how well Elsa remembered it! Arne Sandstrom was happy, and
laughing aloud with other people. She heard his voice while she stood
just without, so wretched her whole soul seemed numb.

In perfect silence she waited, and still saw him laugh and extend his
hand to have it shaken by one and another, until a figure came out of
the room where he was, to pass through the dining-room, and she knew in
an instant Otto Jutberg, who came to America with Arne. Elsa put her
foot across the threshold and said, to call his attention, “Otto.”

Otto approached the door and looked curiously at her. One rope of her
flaxen hair hung down on her breast, and she looked travel-worn.

“Otto Jutberg, I want to see Arne Sandstrom.”

“Arne is going to be married in a few minutes,” said Otto.

“I know he is. But I want to see Arne Sandstrom. Tell him to come here.”

“Who is it?” pressed Otto, coming nearer to her, and knitting his brows
inquiringly.

“Don’t you know me, Otto, when you have been to my father’s nearly
every St. John’s Eve of our lives?”

Elsa felt that she needed only one more drop to her cup, and that for
some voice to raise the derisive song with which her countrymen mocked
Scowneys, or inhabitants of a region the butt of all Svadia.

  “A Scowen, a Scowen”--

one bar was enough to rouse sudden rage in any Svensk.

But instead of “A Scowen, a Scowen,” rising around Elsa’s ears this
enchanted night, such a din of outcries was made by Otto Jutberg that
people ran to look into the dining-room, and then to swarm around her.

Arne Sandstrom leaped two chairs and seriously jarred one table, to
receive Elsa in his arms, when he kissed her openly.

“Bring me one of the chairs I kicked over,” he exclaimed, “and let me
set the tired darling in it. I have been looking for the letter which
would tell me when you intended to start. Yes, this is my Elsa,” he
announced, displaying her; “and how did she find her way in here alone?
Mrs. Lund, Elsa has come!”

“Yes, and she has been crying,” said the plump wife of Peter Lund,
pressing her hand. “It was enough to break any child’s heart to reach
such a journey’s end homesick and unwelcomed.”

At this Elsa leaned against the matron’s side, and shook with sudden
sobs, feeling her forehead and hair petted by a good mother’s palms.

Elsa was taken upstairs by both Mrs. Lund and Arne, who talked rapidly
across her. She was put into a beautiful room, and young girls came to
get acquainted with her. Arne asked her for that piece of metal which
would redeem her baggage, and he handed it over to Otto at the door.
Before she understood her position, or was quite able to lift her eyes
and look at all who wanted to talk to her, the box which had borne her
company from Svadia was brought in, and Arne told her the other wedding
would be put off half an hour while she got ready. Then he drove the
merry company out of the room, and stood with his back to the door to
keep at bay that moment all volunteering bride attendants.

“Can you be ready in half an hour, after your long journey, my
darling?” said he.

“I can soon wash off the dust and change my dress,” said Elsa. “But,
Arne, I do not know anything. Who is going to marry Lena Lund?”

“Arne Sandstrom. And you will be married at the same time.”

“I thought that was what you and Mrs. Lund said. But who is going to
marry me?”

“_Who!_ I am--Arne Sandstrom.”

“I will not do it,” said Elsa. “They never have two wives in Svadia.”

Arne Sandstrom gazed silently at her, puffed and exploded his cheeks,
and bent over, striking his knees with those delicately gloved hands
Elsa had first noted with such awe. He roared in the fervor of his
laughter. This American country had in no way abated Arne Sandstrom as
a Norseman.

“Oh, Elsa, my snowbird, if I should tell this on thee they would laugh
at thee from one end of town to the other. Lena Lund’s bridegroom is my
cousin Arne, that came over with Otto Jutberg and me.”

“That was Arne Peterssen,” affirmed Elsa.

“But there are so many Peterssens and Yonsens who take their names from
their fathers’ Christian names that Arne changed his to Sandstrom. It
is a very common thing to do here.”

Elsa laughed also. It was so simple and clear and Swedish she wondered
that news of Arne Sandstrom’s wedding had caused her even a misgiving.
She left her chair to swing Arne’s hands while they both finished
laughing.

“But you ought to be ready,” he cried, “and not keep the others
waiting. I got the papers for the wedding when Arne got his papers, so
there would be no mistake of names on the record, and so I could marry
you as soon as you came.”

Within the hour, therefore, Elsa was the bride of Arne Sandstrom,
arrayed in her dark blue wedding dress of wool, and not shaming by her
statue-like proportions and fairness the lighter prettiness and silken
raiment of Arne Sandstrom’s American Swedish bride. Happiness and love
were, after all, the natural lot in this world, thought Elsa, sitting
by her husband in her place of honor at the wedding supper, and tasting
the first course of such a feast--the Swedish soup of rice, prunes,
raisins, and molasses.




THE BABE JEROME

TIME, 1892


The civil engineer sat at breakfast with his sister. Their table was a
stationary one, on stakes driven into the ground, and they drank their
coffee from tin camp cups with hooked handles. But the cook served them
with broiled fish and game stew, brown pancakes and honey.

The tree overhead was still wet with dew. Lilian had a scarlet shawl
around her. She was a girl whose dark eyes and distinct eyebrows you
noticed at once, adding afterwards to her personality hair inclined to
cluster about the face, and a general elegance of figure which her camp
dress suggested instead of outlined.

“As I was bringing my birds in,” said the civil engineer, “I saw Jerome
and his gander sitting on the top rail of a fence, side by side.
Jerome had his neck stretched up, whispering to the sky, and the gander
had its neck stretched up, hissing its meditations. They were a divine
pair!”

“As divine as Minerva and her owl, I should think,” said Miss Brooks.
“He seems to me a tragic figure. How can you laugh at him?”

“How can you help laughing at him? But I do pity the old father.”

“And the blind aunt. Eric, I’m going across the river to see her. I
told Mr. Marsh I would, the next time he came to camp.”

“He’s coming now. There’s his boat on the river.”

Lilian watched the boat and the Wabash. The expanse of limpid water
was so shallow in places that its pebbles glittered in the sun, or a
sand-bar showed under the surface, while the current in its channel
ran deep and strong. Woods clothed its banks, and a gauze of blue
hung over its southern bend. Northward a bridge stood on mighty legs
of masonry, screening the work of the engineer among rapids beyond. A
flat-boat ferry was being poled diagonally across from the east shore
to the west, having for passengers a farmer and his horse.

The approaching skiff grounded also, and Jerome’s father stepped
slowly out and came across a stretch of gravel and sward to the camp.
Quantities of gray hair and beard, a stoop in his shoulders, and a
staff in his hand made him venerable, yet his arms were strong and his
eyes black and piercing. He was the richest man in his county, and the
man most indifferent to externals. Over his jeans garments he wore a
blue woolen cape edged with ancient gimp, evidently taken at random
from women’s clothing.

He saw with approval the camp appointments: the civil engineer’s
men breakfasting at their long table; the cook moving in and out
of a canvas kitchen; and the young lady’s tent, revealing a pink
net-screened bed, rugs, and stout book-shelves.

“You’re right well fixed over here,” he called out before the campers
could wish him good-morning.

The engineer said he always tried to make his camp comfortable.

“And this is as pretty a stretch,” continued the visitor, drawing
nearer, “as you’ll find between New Harmony and the Ohio. But ain’t it
lonesome for sis here by herself all day when you and the men’s out?”

“Our cook stays in camp,” said Lilian. “He has lived in our family
since I was a child. So I feel secure. The friend who was to have
been my companion here was detained at the last minute. But I made my
brother bring me, anyhow. Will you have some breakfast, Mr. Marsh?”

“No, I’m obliged: I’ve e’t. I come across to look after the Babe. He
forgits to have his breakfast sometimes. Seen him on this side--the
Babe Jerome?”

“He’s in the woods with his white gander,” said the engineer.

Mr. Marsh rested against the tree and braced himself with his staff.

“Billy’s never far off from Jerome. The Babe gets lonesome on the
river, like sis here, and that gander’s great company for him. But the
Babe likes to be lonesome. We still call him the Babe,” apologized the
old man, “though he’s twenty-five year old; scarlet fever done it. He
was the smartest boy on the river. I ’lowed to settle in Shawnytown,
and send him to college. His mother was a scholar. Now there’s nothing
to do but let him play his music. He’s a good babe. He never gives me
no uneasiness except forgittin’ his breakfast.”

“Do you think he would breakfast with us?” inquired Lilian.

“Call him,” suggested her brother. “As for me, I must be excused.
There’s a big day’s work to be done on that bar--time the men were in
the boats.”

Captain Eric caught up his broad hat, and flourished it in adieu. The
cook ran after him with a list of needed supplies. Lilian watched him
sitting with folded arms on his camp-chair in the stern of his boat,
until the rise and fall of oars and the song of the men drew off to
remoteness. She turned to speak to her visitor, and found Jerome
standing with him.

“Want to go back over?” his father inquired tenderly.

Jerome shook his head. His visible flesh had a porcelain quality, like
the unstained clearness of infancy. His hair glittered in the sun,
and he had a long golden mustache, parting in the centre and trailing
down his mouth corners below his chin. So strong and manly an ornament
sorted strangely with perplexed blue eyes, that, in spite of a puzzling
world, laughed with the delicious joy of life. Jerome’s head stood
upon a column of slender body. His clothes, to which a few burrs were
sticking, would have seemed too fine for his environment if they had
not so exactly suited him.

“Lost his hat again!” bantered the father. “That’s the fifth straw hat
I’ve bought him this summer.”

“If you will have some breakfast with me, Jerome,” said Lilian, “I will
go to your house and eat dinner with you.”

“That’s a bargain, ain’t it, Babe?”

The Babe Jerome looked from one to the other, and smiled, and sat down.
His gander, lifting and shaking both wings, quavered a remark and
waddled to his feet.

“How white Billy is!” said the young lady, after the cook had brought
fresh food and she had helped her guest.

“The’ ain’t a gray quill on Billy,” observed Mr. Marsh, his bearded
lips relaxing with contentment.

“And his eyes are blue--blue as the sky! His bill, with such funny
nostrils in it, is the purest coral. I didn’t know geese could be so
beautiful. You pretty fellow! Will he hiss me?”

“No!” spoke Jerome forcibly, startling her as she stretched a timorous
hand to brush Billy’s plumage. It had satin firmness. The gander
squatted on his webs and observed in his own language that the caress
was agreeable.

Jerome left off eating and leaned on his folded arms to smile. He was a
sylvan creature, strayed out of pastoral days into the hazy regions of
the Wabash.

He rowed the boat back, his father sitting in idle comfort on the other
bench, and Lilian facing the oarsman. She enjoyed the grace of his
torso, the veins swelling on his hands, the steady innocence of his
gaze, with the same kind of satisfaction given by a scent of sycamore
leaves, or the exquisite outline of an island. Billy swam after the
boat, the water curling away from his breast; and before it could be
beached he had left his web marks on the home sands.

The Marsh double cabin, with central chimney hospitable enough to
engulf thousands of swallows, stood on a low bluff. Another and more
imposing house was rising near it. The workmen’s noise mingled with
stable-yard cackle.

“How I love to hear chickens!” exclaimed Lilian. “They remind me of
some wonderfully good time I had when I was a child, though I can’t
recall it. You have all the cheerful racket on your side of the river.
And how sweet the building wood smells!”

“Some of that’s sweet pine,” explained Mr. Marsh. “The Babe, he carries
them chips, and sassafras bark, and spice-wood, and all kinds of woods
things, in his pockets.”

The Babe looked at Lilian, repeating slowly what he had told himself
many a lonely day, in forest or on river,--

“I--haven’t got--right sense.”

“Oh, don’t say that!” she begged.

The father’s mouth corners fell into leather grooves.

“But Babe’s got idees,” he maintained. “He takes to nice things. So did
his mother. I’d have built the new house long ago if she’d lived. And
I wouldn’t build it now if it wasn’t for the Babe. Betsey and me like
the cabin. We’ll miss the big fireplace, and them hooks in the jice
beams. I took Jerome and Betsey down to Shawnytown to stay one winter,
and I’d ’a’ died if I hadn’t come back here every two weeks.”

“This is a lovely spot,” said Lilian. “When you are really settled in
your new house, you will enjoy it more than ever.”

“I don’t know. It’s just as the Babe turns out to like it. The cabin’s
been his cradle. If the new one goes against him I’ll lock it up and
bring him back home. Come in,” invited the old man, climbing his
doorstep. “Here’s Betsey will be glad to see you.”

From the smoked and chinked interior groped a large woman so delicately
and completely white that the blanching appeared to extend through
her eyes, for the lids revealed them colorless. She wore a black net
cap and a dress and a cape of faded lawn. Her heelless soles made no
sound on the bare boards. The palms which she spread before her had the
texture of shriveled dogwood petals. The stirring of the lawn clothes
set free scarcely detected perfumes,--of apples, and mint, and the
old-fashioned roses which grow nowhere now except in remote and dewy
country gardens.

“It’s the young lady from the camp, Betsey, come to visit us to-day.”

“That sounds heartsome,” the blind sister responded. Lilian took one of
her fluttering hands; the other half unconsciously, with the swiftness
of custom, moved up the girl’s shoulder and passed over cheek and head.
Lilian noticed in what masses of wrinkles this handsome old face hung,
and wondered at the miracle of age; at the childish sweetness that
comes back to toothless talk. “I love to have the young around. It’s
been missly in the house since Babe’s mother died.”

“Well, take a cheer,” said Mr. Marsh, “and I’ll look into the kitchen
and tell Marthy Dempsey who’s for dinner. Marthy she keeps house
for us, and she’s a good cook; she used to work in a tavern down at
Shawnytown.”

Jerome lingered on the log step while his father performed the sacred
rite of seating a guest. Aunt Betsey groped toward him.

“But where’s the Babe?”

“The Babe’s as far in as he likes to come,” said his father. “The
Babe’s great for outdoors in summer time.”

“The dew’s off the garden,” spoke Jerome.

“He never disremembers my walk,” chuckled the blind woman. “As soon as
the jew is dry he fetches my bonnet.”

Miss Brooks herself tipped the sunbonnet at a satisfactory angle over
the black net cap, so that its crown sighted the heavens. Jerome helped
his aunt to the ground, and guided her around the house, his arm on
her waist. He glanced backward often, to draw Lilian along, and she
sauntered close, glad to be a part of all this innocent life.

Woods stood at the rear of the garden, and abrupt Indian mounds ruffled
their tufts of fern almost overhead. It was growing warm; scarcely a
trace of the humid morning remained, even under burdock leaves, which
Martha Dempsey prized for her butter. There was a rank hot smell of
marigolds in the sun, with a peppery addition of bouncing betties. The
sweet-williams were fragrant as honey and long spikes of red or white
hollyhocks swayed in the faintest of breezes. Aunt Betsey scented the
camomile bed and picked bits of sweet-mary and basil for Miss Brooks.
The sound of the workmen’s hammers on the house, the rippling of the
river, and the summer call of insects and birds filled the air, until
it seemed to tremble over green distances with this weight of pleasant
life.

There was a cherry-tree full of ripe black fruit. Martha Dempsey came
out bare-armed, but with a sunbonnet pinned shut below her nose, and,
with the unconscious arrogance of the country maid, ordered Jerome to
pick her some fruit for pies. He pulled down the lowest branches and
filled her tin pail. Then his aunt and Miss Brooks sat under the tree
and had their laps weighted with ruby globes on platters of burdock
leaves.

“I like cherries best of any fruit,” said Lilian, “and these rich
red ones most of all. They get a wicked clip on your tongue that is
delightful.”

Jerome considered her, and said with conviction, “You look like a
cherry.”

“Then these tart fire-drops ought to be my natural food.”

“This is Babe’s tree,” said Aunt Betsey. “He planted it, and it has
growed with his growth.”

It was quite dusk when Jerome landed Miss Brooks at the camp. Her
brother met her, and she exclaimed to him:--

“I have had a lovely day! And I persuaded Jerome to bring his violin
and play for us a while. His playing is wonderful, Eric.”

“So is Long John’s singing,” observed the captain with contempt.

From the men’s quarters came an unmelodious shout of--“Injun puddin’
and a punkin pie! O, Je-ru-sa-lam!” But this wavered and ceased when
Jerome took up his violin. His fingers floated along the strings, and
the score he played was never set down in any brain but his own.

The moon came up, and he played straight on, tilting his head back and
smiling at floating films in the sky. The cook drew near from his tent,
and the men, smoking, crept as near as they felt discipline would allow
to the captain’s quarters. Jerome, in the full beatitude of his one
unspoiled talent, knew no audience. With a final triumphant cry of the
strings, he got up and walked off without saying good-night.

“He can sling a bow!” commented one of the listeners. “They say around
here he plays the birds off the bushes.”

“He is like a girl,” said Miss Brooks to her brother. “I enjoy having
him about almost as unreservedly as if he were a girl.”

“Glad of it,” replied the captain. “He can pilot you through the woods.
It’s a pity the poor harmless fellow is daft. He might have been
something.”

Jerome came to camp every day, Billy attending him. Miss Brooks in her
bathing dress floated on the river, holding to his boat; and he kept a
maternal eye on her while she disported herself. He brought her Indian
hatchets, and arrow-heads, and a piece or two of pottery left by the
Shawnee tribe. The two explored creeks and islands to such extent that
Billy frequently left them in disgust. He snipped grass, and quavered
to himself, while Miss Brooks read or talked to Jerome.

She talked to Jerome as if he were a rational being. His delight
in the woods was even keener than hers, and his knowledge of wild
creatures much greater. He taught her skill in fishing. His joyful
father brought offerings of eggs and cream and Martha Dempsey’s peach
preserves.

“The Babe pretty nigh lives on this side of the river now. I ’low I
ought to help victual the camp.”

“We can’t do without him,” said the girl. “He makes all our good times.”

“The Babe seems to be growin’ older-like this summer,” mused his
father. “He ain’t to say manlier, but he’s different.”

“Do you think so?” said Miss Brooks, startled. Her color faded to
ivory. She was sitting in a hammock, and occasionally stretched out a
sandaled foot to propel it. The old man felt her beauty with a dumb
jealousy of all bright young creatures who had not been robbed, like
his boy, of their birthright.

Jerome came later in the afternoon, and found his daily companion
still in her hammock, but changed toward him.

He had just finished an æolian harp for her. It had required days to
properly season the wood, and other days to assort the colors and dry
the glue which held different layers together. The instrument was a
thing of beauty, with even little keys to wind the strings. He had
worked over it with all his faculties excited; and now when he stood
before her, holding it very tenderly on his arm, she scarcely looked at
it.

But Jerome knew what to do. He moved off with his harp and fixed it
in the low fork of a tree. Then he raised its bridges, and turned to
watch her face. The harp sighed, and began on a high key “The Last Rose
of Summer,” but after two or three bars, lost its score in a flood of
delicious organ harmonies. Now it rose to a cry in the zenith, and now
it returned to the “Last Rose,” and died to a whisper of melody. It was
the passionate revelation of a human heart.

Jerome smiled and nodded his head; for the girl’s chin and lips
trembled. She let her book slip down the hammock.

“Talks,” insisted Jerome, claiming her attention for the harp. “I made
it to talk to you.”

“But it’s so sorrowful,” said Lilian.

“It--isn’t--quite right,” explained Jerome. “Can’t carry its tune.”

“And you made it for me?”

“Yes. I been a month.”

“You do too much for me. I have been very selfish to take so much of
your time.”

Jerome put up his lip like a grieved child.

“Don’t do that!” said Miss Brooks sharply, blanching white.

“What must I do?”

“Sit down here, and let me read to you.”

He sat on the grass and she read austerely, the weird heart-cry of the
wind harp curving around her voice or whipping it with ravelings of
sweetness. She read while the sun slipped lower and lower, and dared
not look at the rapt face watching her. Then she shut the book and
said with careful modulation:--

“Thank you very much for the wind harp. I shall take it home with me,
and whenever it plays I shall think of you.”

His grieved lip instantly smiled. “If you fasten it in your window it
will play all the time!”

“There is one other thing I would love to have, and that is a feather
from Billy.”

Jerome stretched out an arm and drew his familiar toward him. Billy
twitched his short tail and curved a suspicious neck while his master
stretched one glistening pinion.

“Do you want his whole wing?” inquired Jerome, groping for a knife.

“Not for the world!” exclaimed Miss Brooks. “Only one of dear Billy’s
tiniest feathers, to put away and look at.”

Jerome plucked a quill and handed it to her.

“You may have him all, if you want him.”

“But what would you do without Billy?”

He repeated, “Do without?” several times, turning the suggestion in his
mind, and gazing at her.

A couple of hours later Miss Brooks said to her brother:--

“Eric, I believe I will go home at once.”

“Guess not,” responded the captain. “We shift camp next week. I want
you to stay until then. Aren’t you having a good time?”

“I’ve been bathing too much in the river, perhaps. Mr. Marsh says it’s
aguish. I shall have ague if I stay.”

“The doctor is coming,” said her brother.

“I must go home, Eric; indeed, I must!”

“You can’t wait until Jack arrives, I suppose?”

“Jack! Is Jack coming?”

“We were going to surprise you; one of the men rowed to the station
for him this afternoon.”

Miss Brooks’s face expressed lively anticipation.

“Jack is coming! Then I may run back with him to-morrow, without
waiting longer for Marie.”

“Don’t you want to give the poor fellow any taste of the camp?”
demanded her indignant brother.

The wind harp, rousing from silence, burst out again with the bars it
would never finish, and meandered into saddening minors.

“What machine is making that doleful sound?”

Lilian turned her tragic face away. Before Jack arrived she had taken
down Jerome’s offering, wrapped it carefully, and hid it in the heart
of her luggage. The spirit of the Wabash gave this large and engaging
young arrival its cold shoulder. Not a drop of rain had tarnished the
sunshine in a month; but he reached camp in a chill drizzle. The wind
became so sharp that evening fires were built. The river hissed against
its banks; and the cook reported a broken trot-line, and consequent
failure in the catch of fish.

“This is fine!” commented Jack, turning up his collar as he smoked with
the captain, and Lilian huddled to the fire. “Every letter has been
full of the pleasures of camp life; and now I experience them myself!”

“Give the camp a chance,” remonstrated Eric. “You couldn’t drag me
back to town! Six months in a year, thank heaven! I am a man! I live
outdoors, free from the trammels of a soft civilization!”

“We don’t mind the trammels of a soft civilization, do we, Jack?” said
the girl, snugly slipping her hand into her lover’s.

Jerome appeared at the other side of the campfire, looking through thin
smoke at her. He had his violin bag on his shoulder.

“Hello!” the civil engineer hailed him. “Pull up a chunk, and sit down,
Jerome.”

Lilian ran to her own tent for another camp-chair. But Jerome stood
still, outside the wilderness hearth, and looked at the stranger whose
every imposing line was illuminated by the fire, and who acknowledged
his presence with a nod.

“One of our neighbors from the Illinois side,” explained the captain.

“Isn’t the river rough to-night?” inquired Miss Brooks.

Jerome heard the tremor in her voice. He answered “Yes.”

“It was so good of you to come. I wanted to hear you play once more. We
may go home to-morrow.”

“Sit down, boy,” urged the captain; while Jack smoked peacefully.

“No,” said Jerome. “I’ll play out there.”

“Out where?”

“Out there; on the moving water.”

“But I want to talk to you!” exclaimed Lilian, following him a step,
relaxing under the eye of the man she was to marry. “I want to send
messages to your father and aunt--I may not see them again.”

“Singular chap,” observed Jack as Jerome walked on into darkness.

“Half witted,” explained Eric.

“He’s not half witted!” vehemently denied Lilian.

“Quarter witted, then,” amended her brother.

“He’s an unfortunate child, lost out of paradise, at the mercy of
careless, cruel wretches like us below. I never saw a woman with a
nature so spotless.”

“It occurs to me you’re partial to your Wabash angel,” observed Jack.

Jerome began to play. He was evidently in his boat plunging with the
current. One could imagine him pressing against his neck the instrument
which holds the saddest possibilities of sound. It wailed down river,
and ceased. After an interval it began again up river. Jerome had
rowed back against the current, and he went floating past the camp
once more, pouring through the violin the vagaries of a mind in double
darkness.

“If the trot-line wasn’t already broken, he’d break it,” remarked
Captain Eric, “raking back and forth.”

“Fine cheerful banshee for a night like this,” said Jack.

Lilian huddled by the end of a log, where she could hear the oozing sap
complain. Again the music died on the river, and again it began farther
up, with an orchestral support of lashing water and gathering weather.

“I can’t stand it!” she cried out, rising from her place. “I’m going to
my tent.”

“Why did you set Jerome on?” inquired her brother in surprise. “He
never knows when to quit. I’ll put a stop to it.”

So going close to the shore he shouted such a peremptory request as
virile man offers to weaklings. He patronized Jerome also, representing
that the water was too rough for a boy, and recommending the boy to go
home.

Yet hours afterwards when the campfire smouldered, and the trees were
wrestling, Lilian, sobbing and smothering her face with her pillow,
heard the violin once more, playing softly in imitation of the wind
harp.

Next morning the river was a valley of black and sulphurous vapors,
like a smoking volcanic fissure. The ague season had undoubtedly set
in. Captain Eric and a squad of his men rowed their departing guests
and the young lady’s luggage up river to the steamboat landing, and
from this the party walked to a station in the woods.

There was a bustle about tickets and checking. The station-master
hurried out of his small general store with the mail-bag on his arm,
for the train was already in sight.

Miss Brooks’s hair clung in damp rings to her face. She turned to
impress woods and water stretches upon her mind in one last glance,
and her lips went white. Behind her stood Jerome, the porcelain quality
of his face increased tenfold, the blueness of his eyes pierced by the
keen anguish of a man. She crossed the platform to him, took his head
between her hands, and rising on tiptoe kissed his forehead.

Immediately afterwards she was handed up the railway carriage steps,
and Jack was making a place for her and her traveling bag. The little
station slid away. She had forgotten to wave to Eric one of the hands
which trembled as she adjusted her belongings over and over.

“Don’t say a word to me,” she commanded, meeting her lover’s eyes. “I
didn’t know I was going to do it. I intend to marry you, Jack, because
I would rather have you for a husband than any other man in the world.
But he was my playmate. He brought back my childhood to me, and in
return I gave him a wound!”

Quite a year passed before she had further news of the Babe Jerome.
Her brother moved his camp two days after her departure, and stayed
out until November. The following summer Lilian and her husband came
face to face with Mr. Marsh in that magic White City which stood a
brief season beside Lake Michigan. The blue cape was not around his
shoulders, but some other incongruous garment marked him. Lilian
grasped his hand. He greeted the young pair. His hairy cheeks were
sunken, and the keenness of his eye appeared dulled.

“Are Jerome and his Aunt Betsey with you?”

“The Babe has gone off with the quick consumption that took his
mother,” said the old man, and Lilian became aware that her nails must
be cutting his hand. She gasped, but could not say a word.

“Yes; Betsey and me’s alone now,” he pursued. “I brung her up to the
World’s Fair to turn her mind off it.... He never done well in the new
house. I locked it up and carried him back to his log cradle. But the
Babe had to go. I took him to Floridy, and I took him to Colorado.... I
hadn’t orto repine at affliction. He was a good Babe.... He made a wind
harp, like, and put it in the winder, in the teeth of the air; and that
was all his interest, to listen while it played.”

Lilian found her husband supporting her, while water and sky and white
palaces and hurrying people swam giddily in a far-off circle. She said
“Thank you,” and clutched his arm.

“Sis here, she liked the Babe,” continued the old father, forced to
wipe his eyes on the corner of a red handkerchief which he drew half
way out of his side pocket. “And the Babe he liked her. I reelly
thought he was pinin’ sometimes for young folks; for he done well while
you was there.... Billy--you recollect Billy the gander? He takes it to
heart like a dog.... I’m glad I seen you. I was goin’ along feelin’
too bitter in my thoughts about the Babe.”

Silently parting company, the old man walked on amidst wonders which he
scarcely noticed, and the young pair turned aside from the crowds.

“Oh Jack!” said Lilian, when she could control her weeping, “I have
killed the Babe Jerome!”




THE CALHOUN FIDDLER

TIME, 1890


November frost lay on the ferns and mosses along the Calhoun bluffs,
and on that castellated mass of rock with round turrets which hangs
over the cove known as French Hollow. From a divide in wooded hills a
small stream came down unfrozen, quivering over pebbles and clean sand.
Crossing an alluvial plat of ground, it turned beside a cabin to meet
the broad and whispering Illinois.

In all Calhoun County, that long narrow ridge isolated between two
great rivers, there was not on height or in cove such another cabin.
It was fifty-two feet square and two stories high, with a Norman
projection of the eaves. The house, with its back to a road winding
at the foot of the bluffs, sat facing the historic Illinois--a river
now yellow and wrathful with floods, now spreading in blue or seashell
tints away to the opposite forest.

In the days of old Antoine Dejarnet, the builder of this log-house and
the first Frenchman who ever set foot in Calhoun County, hospitality
had overflowed the now silent place. Then there was dancing every
Sunday after mass, in the undivided lower story like a feudal hall;
and the family violin was coaxed to heavenly tunes by Antoine Dejarnet
himself.

But long before this November afternoon the French colony in Calhoun
County had dwindled to a remnant; the forty goats which used to climb
those heights or stand captive to half old Antoine’s many daughters
while the rest milked them, had not a single descendant; and the last
Dejarnet carried his name locally disfigured into De Zhirley.

Jeanne Sattory, following a road beside the stream, was coming down the
hollow. The mail-carrier cantered below her toward Kampsville, riding
a nervous pony, and having the letter pouch strapped behind him. Twice
a week he thus carried news through Calhoun County, where there are
neither railroads nor telegraph lines, neither banks nor thieves. But
such a courier feels his freedom and importance; he impudently kissed
his merry finger-tips to the pretty girl up the slope. She hid behind
a rock until he was out of sight. The mail-carrier had seen this girl
before, and desired to have a closer look at her. The usual type in
Calhoun County was the broad Dutch maid, whose stock had superseded the
French. But Jeanne Sattory felt a dread rising to terror of all men.
Her first recollection was of a stepfather who had made her take to
trees like a cat, every time he approached the dwelling. Her next was
of his son, who finished the small rites of her mother’s funeral by
taking the orphan’s ear in his grip, leading her to the limit of the
garden patch, and dismissing her, with the threat of a kick if she
ever came back there again. He kept her mother’s own household goods
and the few belongings left by her father, and nobody took it in hand
to interfere with him. She came back across the Illinois River to her
native county, but even yet shrank from old Henry Roundcounter, whose
family afforded her a home.

The Rencontres had held land under the first Dejarnet. As
Roundcounters, and farmers of their own small holding, they now kept
up hereditary interest in that last De Zhirley who, since his mother’s
death, had lived solitary in the great square cabin. Mrs. Roundcounter
baked bread for him; and once a week she went down the bluff to tidy
his bachelor hall, except when rheumatism detained her. This afternoon
Jeanne Sattory was sent reluctantly to the task.

The last De Zhirley was a ferryman; and it must be owned that voices
calling him from the other side of the river were often drowned in the
music of his fiddle. In clear summer nights he walked a sandy strip
in front of his cabin, hugging the fiddle beneath his chin and playing
tunes which had come down from his forefathers.

The ferryboat could now be seen at the farther bank of the Illinois.
Jeanne knew she might do her work before it could again cross the
current. The cabin door is always left unfastened in that primitive
county. She noticed a fresh coon skin nailed on the logs beside the
door, as with shrinking she entered this haunt of man.

The imposing old dancing-hall of the De Zhirleys gave her a welcome
from its ruddy fireplace hooded with a penthouse. Jeanne’s first care
was to push the embers together, heap on more of the wood which lay
ready, and clean the stone hearth. She then hung a pot on the crane,
and filled it with spring water. Before the water was scalding hot
there was time to sweep the floor and beat up a feather-bed which had
grown as hard as a mat on its corner bedstead.

An unrailed stairway mounted beside the front wall. Jeanne had heard
Mrs. Roundcounter tell how many little rooms were overhead, and what
stores of family goods were piled there, disregarded by a young man who
cared for no wife but his fiddle.

No attention could be given to the upper rooms. Amid all her services,
the girl was full of starts and panics, turning her head and widening
her eyes at any stir without. She mopped the broad boards worn by
foot-marks of dead dancers; she washed log imbedded windows and an
accumulation of yellow bowls and pewter; and drew the only easy chair
to the hearth. Something in a green bag hung on the wall farthest from
the fire, which Jeanne knew to be the De Zhirley fiddle. She touched it
carefully with a turkey-wing duster, recoiling from its faint ting as
if some charm had been ignorantly worked.

Dried meat and scarlet peppers, a gun and powderhorn hung on the richly
smoked hewn joists. She felt keen, quiet delight in the place, and
reluctance to leave it. The jollity of former times, perhaps, lingered,
making a fit atmosphere for girlhood.

But she was standing with her shawl over her head, casting back a
last look, when some hand blundered at the latch outside. She sprang
upstairs and put the first door between her and the intruder on the
lightning of impulse. Some person entered and seemed to pause and
listen suspiciously. Her heart labored like the beating of a steamer,
and she expected to hear feet following her up the stairs. But after
uncertain shuffling the comer dragged a chair, and, with a suggestion
of effort, sat down.

Jeanne knew it could not be young De Zhirley, whom she had just seen
through a window fighting the current in midriver. He had a loaded
wagon and a pair of restless mules on board; and he ran back and forth
outside the railing of his boat, now poling, now steering, and now
pulling with a wing-like oar. Jeanne could have been at the top of the
bluff before his return. And here she was, trapped in an upper room,
vaguely ashamed; unable to come down and face eyes which might insult
her, yet terrified by the prospect of indefinite hiding.

Daylight’s gradual fading out was of more interest to her than the
accumulation of De Zhirley things around her. She listened for the
crunch of the ferryboat prow on gravel; and voices and departing
wheels at last moved by the cabin, and the proper owner entered. She
stealthily unlatched her door and set it ajar, so the crack intersected
the hearth. There in the seat she had taken thought to set ready sagged
the drunken person of her stepbrother.

“You here, Billy Aarons?” said young De Zhirley, as he approached the
fire; and his voice had no joy in it. His blind eye was toward the
stair door, for the Calhoun fiddler was a one-eyed man. This defacement
scarcely marred the beauty of the athletic man thrown out by
firelight. Jeanne Sattory had, indeed, never seen him without pitying
people who were two-eyed. His misused skin yet held the milk and wine
flush of childhood, and his fleece of red-gold rings was a gift not to
be spoiled.

“Yes, I’m here, Theodore,” said the man in the chair thickly.

“Mother Roundcounter has been here too,” added De Zhirley, as he looked
about. “It makes a feller feel good to see his house clean and smell
new bread.”

He hung a teakettle on the crane, and thrust a fork through some bacon
to toast on the polished hearthstone. Then he drew his table toward the
fireplace, and Jeanne could see his appreciative touch on the yellow
ware she had washed.

“What do you want, Billy? Did you come in to take a bite with me?”

“No.” Aarons stirred from his doze. “I’m buyin’ cattle, Theodore.”

“No cattle to sell here.”

“I know it, Theodore. You’re a poor man by the side of me.”

Indifferent to this fact, De Zhirley turned his bacon and proceeded to
make coffee.

“You’re a poor man, Theodore,” repeated the heavy guest, “and I’ve got
all my father had.”

“And all his second wife had,” added young De Zhirley, with a one-eyed
glance of contempt, at which Aarons made a fist. “You go upstairs and
sleep off what’s the matter with you, after I give you some coffee.”

“That’s not what I come for. You’re a poor man, Theodore.”

“Well, don’t let that keep you awake; it don’t me.”

“You hain’t got no cattle, nor much land, nor even two eyes.”

“And what do _you_ want on my blind side, Billy?”

“But you’ve got a fiddle. Yes; you’ve got a fiddle.”

De Zhirley moved back and took his violin off the wall with a jealous
motion. It was his custom to play while his supper cooked; but as he
felt the bow with his thumb, and fitted the instrument to his neck, he
looked distrustfully at Aarons.

The first sweet long cry filled the cabin. The fiddler gradually
approached the hearth, playing as he came, and Aarons’s head, hands,
and feet responded to the magic.

De Zhirley’s back was toward Jeanne, but she saw joy in his whole
bearing, and herself felt the piercing rapture of sound.

“Let me see that fiddle,” demanded Aarons, when the young man finished
and put down his bow, and brought the coffee-pot to set on the coals.

De Zhirley turned a distrustful eye, but no precious violin toward his
guest.

“Let me see that fiddle, I say,” repeated Aarons, rising up.

“Behave yourself,” said the young man, standing a head above him, and
humoring him as a child might be humored by half granting his request.

The fellow handled its ancient body, and looked at Stradivari’s
inscription.

“What’s that there, Theodore?”

“That’s the maker’s name.”

“Seventeen hunderd and--what’s them figgers?”

“That’s the year it was made.”

“Then it’s a mighty poor old thing, ain’t it?”

The fiddler said nothing, but tried to recover his violin, to which the
tormentor hung with both hands.

“I can sell it for you, Theodore. It’s worth fifty dollars.”

De Zhirley’s face expressed impatience to regain his instrument.

“Yes, it’s worth a hunderd dollars. I’ve been talkin’ with a man,
Theodore; that’s why I come in. You give this fiddle to me, and I’ll
make some money for you. You’re a poor man, Theodore.”

“Let go of it,” exclaimed De Zhirley. “I don’t want to sell my fiddle.”

“It’s worth five hunderd dollars.”

“Let go of it! You don’t know what you’re doing. You ain’t fit to do
anything now. Let go,” cried De Zhirley, as he felt the greedy, drunken
hands crushing his treasure. “If you don’t let go, I’ll kill you!”

The two men struggled, and there was a crackling, twanging sound,
followed by Aarons’s curses. Then De Zhirley caught him by the neck,
dragged him to the cabin door, and kicked him far out into the dusk.

Jeanne hid her face. She heard her stepbrother battering at the
fastened door, and finally a stone dashed through the window, to
fall with splintered glass upon the floor. A storm of drunken curses
surrounded the house and died away in mutterings along the bluff road.
Through this clamor an awful silence made its void in the cabin.

De Zhirley had set his foot upon a chair, and was nursing the mangled
instrument on his knee, examining every part. His tense face denied
despair; but the broken neck hung down by its strings, the chest was
crushed, the back split, the bridge lay beside his foot. Jeanne watched
him, forgetting the darkness of the bluffs and her dreadful ambush.

When De Zhirley first came in she had decided to let herself down
from an upper window rather than face him. When he recommended her
stepbrother to a sleeping-room upstairs, she looked about in panic for
something which could be made an immediate rope or ladder. But when she
saw the violin’s destruction, it was to hang outside that tragedy in a
passion of sympathy. She had been the most solitary creature in Calhoun
County, but this supreme sharing of the young fiddler’s anguish broke
the shell of her dumbness; she felt her soul spreading out its crumpled
wings like a new butterfly.

He laid the violin on the chair, and with a sudden abandonment of all
restraint shook his fists above his head, wailing and sobbing:--

“Oh, my Lord, my Lord! What will I do now?”

It was the agony of an artist, of a lonely soul, of unspeakable
bereavement.

Jeanne wept in her shawl. She had thought her hunger for the unknown
best thing in the world a singular experience. She waited until his
tears and hers could be wiped off, and then opened the door and came
lightly downstairs.

De Zhirley huddled his violin again in his arms, as if dreading the
descent of more drunken men, and, in the embarrassment and anguish
of a man whose weakness has been spied upon, turned his face to the
hearth. Jeanne stopped at the foot of the stairs and drew her shawl
over her head. They continued in silence while the coffee bubbled up
and firelight flickered on the wall.

De Zhirley understood her errand into his cabin with the simplicity
of primitive manhood. He knew she always took to flight when her
stepbrother appeared. When he could speak without a sob, he said,
acknowledging all she had done for his comfort that afternoon:--

“I’m much obleeged.”

Jeanne, on her part, ignored the services.

“Is it bad hurt?” she murmured, with unconscious maternal pathos.

He offered to yield the wreck to her hands, and, drawn from her place,
she went and stooped on one knee to the firelight. De Zhirley dropped
on one knee beside her, and they tried to fit the mangled parts in
place again.

“It’s such a spite,” said Jeanne, and her trembling voice comforted
him as a mother comforts her child. He had instant anxiety to make the
calamity appear less to her than it really was.

“Mebby by patchin’ and glue I can put it together again--though I don’t
know whether it’ll sound the same. I’ve always thought so much of it,”
he apologized.

“I wish he had broke my neck instead of this fiddle’s,” said the girl
with passion.

“I’d like to see him try such a thing as that,” responded the fiddler
sternly. “I’d killed him as ’twas, if I hadn’t been bigger than him.”

“I must go back,” exclaimed Jeanne, stirring to rise from this
post-mortem. “They’ll think I’ve fell in the river.”

“I’ll go with you,” said De Zhirley. “It’s dark now, and that fellow
ain’t gone far.”

“No,” objected Jeanne, with sudden terror of what her neighborhood
called a beau. “I don’t want no one with me.”

De Zhirley took up his cap with gentle insistence like the courtliness
of a great seignior. He smiled at Jeanne, and she gave him back a look
of which she was unconscious.

“Your supper’s all ready,” she reminded him.

“I ain’t hungry like I was when I come in from the ferry. Won’t you set
down and take supper with me?” invited the young man sincerely.

The mere suggestion sent Jeanne Sattory to the door. Their hands
mingled upon the latch, and she slid hers away, loath to part from a
touch which she yet eluded.

De Zhirley made the door pause while he looked down at her and said,
with a shaking voice:--

“If it hadn’t been for you--there ain’t no tellin’.”

Jeanne had no reply to this acknowledgment of sympathy, but drew her
shawl together under her chin. Chin and mouth corners were tempting
even to a one-eyed man, but he continued with gentle courtesy:

“Spite of my fiddle’s gettin’ broke, I b’lieve this is the best day
this cabin ever seen.”

“What makes you say that?”

“’Cause it’s the first time you ever come to the house.”

“I’m obleeged for your politeness,” trembled Jeanne, turning scarlet;
and she lifted a laughing dark glance. “If you’ll be a little politer
and let me out, I won’t come no more.”

“Then I’ll go where you are,” declared the Calhoun fiddler. “I’ll
foller you from this time on.”

“You’ll have to walk on the other side of the road if you do,” said
Jeanne Sattory; and they stepped out and took the way up the bluff, two
figures indistinct in darkness, with a width of wagon-track between
them.




A MAN FROM THE SPANISH WAR

_A conversation in Egypt, which is an undefined region of Southern
Illinois_

TIME, 1898


Miss Lucy Mills waited with three early arrivals in her sitting-room.
The rest of the people would not gather for half an hour. Her wide
house, venerable for the region in which it stood, hugged by vines and
mossy roofed, was in perfect order; and sheaves of flowers exhaled
fragrance around an object placed in the centre of her parlor.
Neighbors no longer trod about on tiptoe, for everything was ready, and
the minister might arrive at any moment.

Miss Lucy sat a dignified spinster, whose sympathies ramified through
the entire human race. She was so homely that strangers turned to look
at her as at a beauty. Mr. Sammy Blade was in his thirties, but she
considered him a youth, having helped his mother to nurse him through
measles and whooping-cough. Mr. Sammy had a protruding pointed beard
and rolled his silly bald head on his shoulders when he talked. He had
studied medicine but, failing of practice, was turning his attention
to the peddling of fruit-trees. Coming home and hearing the news, he
hastened to appear at Miss Lucy’s house.

Mr. and Mrs. Plankson had returned to the neighborhood to visit. The
husband was a frisky gray little man, and his wife was a jimp woman in
stiff black silk with large lips and shifty eyes.

All three of Miss Lucy’s callers coughed and made the unconscious
grimaces of plain people who have not learned the art of expression.
They sat with their hands piled on their stomachs. Yet while they
longed to get at facts which only Miss Lucy knew, they approached these
facts roundabout, bringing newsy bits of their own, and avoiding by
common instinct the subject of war with Spain.

“Have you heard that Emeline Smith’s oldest girl has experienced
religion?” inquired Mr. Sammy solemnly, breaking the silence of the
down-sitting after greetings.

“No, I hadn’t heard it,” responded Miss Lucy, in the soft slow drawl
which her candid speech made its vehicle.

“Law me!” exclaimed Mrs. Plankson, “Emeline Smith was always a great
hand for revivals. If she had went less to meetings and had saw more to
do in her own house, her children would be better brung up.”

“Seem-me-like there is some spite-work against Emeline Smith amongst
the women,” observed Mr. Plankson. “I was a beau of Emeline’s onct. I
went to see her the other day, and she laughed, and waved the broom,
and acted so glad Jane can’t get over it.”

“You orto married her,” said Mrs. Plankson crisply. “You’d be richer
than you are. Her mother was the savin’est person I ever heard of. She
give a tea-party one time, and the milk floated in lumps on top the
cups. She said she didn’t see how it could be sour, when she had put
saleratus in it and boiled it twice! Them Smiths got their money from
a rich old aunt, that used to cut up squares of tissue paper to make
handkerchiefs. I seen her one time myself, when she was a-visiting the
Smiths, come to meeting with a wreath of live geranium leaves around
her bonnet, in winter, and them leaves all bit black with the cold!
We’ve heard she would set before the parlor fire in city hotels where
she boarded, with her dress turned up on her knees, showing her little
sticks of legs in narrow pantalets and white stockings, just to save
fire in her room--and young ladies obliged to receive young men, with
her a-setting there!”

Mr. Sammy coughed gently, for Mrs. Plankson had overlooked his
presence in her wrath against Emeline Smith’s relations.

To cover the situation her husband directly inquired, “What’s become of
them Ellison girls, seven sisters, that all dressed alike and carried
umberellas the same color? They used to walk into church in Indian
file. I never in my life seen them go two or three abreast.”

“They all live where they used to and look like they always did.
For they was born old-like. Carline,” said Miss Lucy, “took to herb
doctorin’. Along about the time that President Garfield was shot,
Carline got very dissatisfied. ‘I know just what would fetch that
bullet out,’ she used to say, ‘and the only thing that would fetch it
out.’”

“And what was that?” inquired Mr. Sammy, rounding his lips and
stretching his short neck forward.

“Spearmint tea!”

Mrs. Plankson beat her right palm softly on her left forearm and
leaned over, shaking. It would not have been decorous to cackle out
loud. The American flag and its Cuban little sister, draped together
around the wide doorway of the parlor, swayed in the air. She glanced
through the open portal, her oblique eyes slanting up to Miss Lucy’s
hanging lamp decorated with feathery asparagus.

“Carline told my niece,” Mrs. Plankson added to the Ellison subject,
“why she never got married.”

“Did she have a disappointment?” inquired Mr. Sammy, as one of the
younger generation, who fully sensed a woman’s loss in not obtaining a
companion like himself.

“No. ‘Do you know,’ says she to my niece, ‘why I never got married?’
‘No,’ says my niece, ‘I don’t.’--‘Tew skittish!’ says Carline.”

“I never seen such a neighborhood as this is for old maids!” exclaimed
Mr. Plankson.

Miss Lucy regarded him with a virgin’s pitying tolerance. Homely as
she was, she thought it would have been impossible for her to have
taken up with the likes of William Plankson in his best days.

“There has been too much marryin’ and givin’ in marriage in this
neighborhood,” she declared with her soft drawl.

“Seem-me-like you ain’t no good judge of that, Lucy,” bantered Mr.
Plankson.

“It’s Emeline Smith that’s the judge,” thrust in his wife.

Miss Lucy contemplated silently.

“I was thinkin’ of Jaw-awn and Sue Emma,” she said; and the other three
composed themselves to hear the facts concerning the man from the
Spanish war. With a rustle like that of a congregation settling to the
sermon after preliminaries, they moved their feet and hands and waited
on Miss Lucy.

“I was against the match, for Sue Emma had been married, and was
through with it. Her man died and left her with a farm and two
children; and a widow well fixed is a sight better off than a married
woman.”

Mrs. Plankson gave involuntary assent and then glanced with oblique
apprehension at her husband, whose will was made in her favor.

“But Sue Emma wasn’t of Yankee stock like the Ellison girls. She felt
pestered to get along by herself.”

“Seem-me-like a man always is needed on a farm,” put in Mr. Plankson.

“Sue Emma thought that-a-way. But I talked reel plain to her when she
took up with Jaw-awn. I hadn’t nothing against Jaw-awn, except he was
a man. He was without property, but he was mighty good to Sue Emma and
the children. Seem-like he thought as much of the children as he did of
her. And when they had been married a couple of years and the new baby
come, Jaw-awn would have been tickled to death if it hadn’t been for
losin’ it and Sue Emma. Now that woman might have been livin’ to-day
if she had let men alone. But Jaw-awn was a great hand for his folks.
I thought he would go crazy. Seem-like he could neither lay nor set
when he come home from buryin’ Sue Emma and the baby; but just wandered
around, Lolly Loo and the little boy holdin’ one onto each of his
hands.”

“Lolly Loo?” challenged Mrs. Plankson. “What-for name is that?”

“Laura Louise; but they called her Lolly Loo. Jaw-awn nacherly had to
have folks to do for. I believe he would have got along reel well with
the children, if he had been let alone; for he was a good manager.

“But Sue Emma’s father and mother moved right onto the place after
the funeral, and the first thing they done was to turn Jaw-awn out. I
suppose he had rights in law, but he didn’t make no stand for rights;
what he seemed to want was folks. He’d been an orphan-like, without
father or mother, and knocked around the world and got kind of homesick
clean through. Gettin’ Sue Emma and her children was the same to him
as comin’ into a fortune, and when he was throwed out of them he give
up.

“The children, they felt terrible, for they thought so much of Jaw-awn;
and cried and begged.

“‘Jaw-awn won’t be no trouble, grammaw,’ says Lolly Loo. ‘I can cook
enough for Jaw-awn to eat, if you let him stay.’

“But the old couple, they up and throwed him out. And when he stopped
here on his way to Springfield I could see the man was clean broke down.

“The very next thing, along come this excitement about war with Spain,
and I seen Jaw-awn’s name among the volunteers. I knowed he wouldn’t
ever get through the war. Sure enough, word come--. I telegraphed to
have him sent here. I knowed the children’s grandpaw and grandmaw
wouldn’t do it. And I sent them word, but they don’t want to excite the
children, so none of that family will come.

“I don’t say nothing about the expense: I have some means. But when I
think of them children that he was a father to--him being so wrapped
up in his folks--and them slippin’ to the bars like they do to see if
Jaw-awn is comin’ back and not even knowin’ that he lays a soldier in
his coffin in that parlor--without any folks to drop a tear on him--I
feel like as if things was wrong!”

Miss Lucy arose and entered the parlor. She rearranged the American and
Cuban flags which draped the plain casket, and touched the flowers and
a huge wreath bearing the initials G. A. R.

Her three guests followed her in silent awe. She had wiped her eyes and
was ready to add,--

“The minister has took for his text, ‘He setteth the solitary in
families.’ I hope everybody will turn out. The weather is nice. Some
will come because he is the first soldier buried here from the Spanish
war, and the Grand Army Post has took it up and will march and fire a
salute over his grave. I don’t know as the dead care anything about it,
but I’d kind of like to see Jaw-awn have as nice a funeral as if he had
folks.”


  ELECTROTYPED AND PRINTED
  BY H. O. HOUGHTON AND CO.
  ========================
     The Riverside Press
  ========================
  CAMBRIDGE, MASS., U. S. A.




TRANSCRIBER’S NOTES:


  Italicized text is surrounded by underscores: _italics_.

  Obvious typographical errors have been corrected.

  Inconsistencies in hyphenation have been standardized.

  Archaic or variant spelling has been retained.





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