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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Una Of The Hill Country, by
+Charles Egbert Craddock (AKA Mary Noailles Murfree)
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: Una Of The Hill Country
+ 1911
+
+Author: Charles Egbert Craddock (AKA Mary Noailles Murfree)
+
+Release Date: November 19, 2007 [EBook #23550]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK UNA OF THE HILL COUNTRY ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by David Widger
+
+
+
+
+
+
+UNA OF THE HILL COUNTRY
+
+By Charles Egbert Craddock
+
+1911
+
+
+The old sawmill on Headlong Creek at the water-gap of Chilhowee Mountain
+was silent and still one day, its habit of industry suggested only in
+the ample expanse of sawdust spread thickly over a level open space in
+the woods hard by, to serve as footing for the "bran dance" that had
+been so long heralded and that was destined to end so strangely.
+
+A barbecue had added its attractions, unrivalled in the estimation
+of the rustic epicure, but even while the shoats, with the delectable
+flavor imparted by underground roasting and browned to a turn, were
+under discussion by the elder men and the sun-bonneted matrons on a
+shady slope near the mill, where tablecloths had been spread beside a
+crystal spring, the dance went ceaselessly on, as if the flying figures
+were insensible of fatigue, impervious to hunger, immune from heat.
+
+Indeed the youths and maidens of the contiguous coves and ridges had
+rarely so eligible an opportunity, for it is one of the accepted tenets
+of the rural religionist that dancing in itself is a deadly sin, and
+all the pulpits of the countryside had joined in fulminations against
+it Nothing less than a political necessity had compassed this joyous
+occasion. It was said to have been devised by the "machine" to draw
+together the largest possible crowd, that certain candidates might
+present their views on burning questions of more than local importance,
+in order to secure vigorous and concerted action at the polls in the
+luke-warm rural districts when these measures should go before the
+people, in the person of their advocates, at the approaching primary
+elections. However, even the wisdom of a political boss is not
+infallible, and despite the succulent graces of the barbecue numbers
+of the ascetic and jeans-clad elder worthies, though fed to repletion,
+collogued unhappily together among the ox-teams and canvas-hooded wagons
+on the slope, commenting sourly on the frivolity of the dance. These
+might be relied on to cast no ballots in the interest of its promoters,
+with whose views they were to be favored between the close of the feast
+and the final dance before sunset.
+
+The trees waved full-foliaged branches above the circle of sawdust and
+dappled the sunny expanse with flickering shade, and as they swayed
+apart in the wind they gave evanescent glimpses of tiers on tiers of the
+faint blue mountains of the Great Smoky Range in the distance, seeming
+ethereal, luminous, seen from between the dark, steep, wooded slopes of
+the narrow watergap hard by, through which Headlong Creek plunged and
+roared. The principal musician, perched with his fellows on a hastily
+erected stand, was burly, red-faced, and of a jovial aspect. He had a
+brace of fiddlers, one on each side, but with his own violin under
+his double-chin he alone "called the figures" of the old-fashioned
+contradances. Now and again, with a wide, melodious, sonorous voice, he
+burst into a snatch of song:
+
+ "Shanghai chicken he grew so tall,
+ In a few days--few days,
+ Cannot hear him crow at all-----"
+
+Sometimes he would intersperse jocund personal remarks in his
+Terpsichorean commands: "Gents, forward to the centre--back--swing: the
+lady ye love the best." Then in alternation, "Ladies, forward to the
+centre--back----" and as the mountain damsels teetered in expectation
+of the usual supplement of this mandate he called out in apparent
+expostulation, "_Don't_ swing him, Miss--he don't wuth a turn."
+
+Suddenly the tune changed and with great gusto he chanted forth:
+
+ "When fust I did a-courtin' go,
+ Says she 'Now, _don't_ be foolish, Joe,'"
+
+the _tempo rubato_ giving fresh impetus to the kaleidoscopic whirl of
+the dancers. The young men were of indomitable endurance and manifested
+a crude agility as they sprang about clumsily in time to the scraping
+of the fiddles, while their partners shuffled bouncingly or sidled
+mincingly according to their individual persuasion of the most apt
+expression of elegance. Considered from a critical point of view the
+dance was singularly devoid of grace--only one couple illustrating the
+exception to the rule. The youth it was who was obviously beautiful, of
+a type as old as the fabled Endymion.
+
+His long brown hair hung in heavy curls to the collar of his butternut
+jeans coat; his eyes were blue and large and finely set; his face was
+fair and bespoke none of the midday toil at the plow-handles that
+had tanned the complexion of his compeers, for Brent Kayle had little
+affinity for labor of any sort. He danced with a light firm step, every
+muscle supplely responsive to the strongly marked pulse of the music,
+and he had a lithe, erect carriage which imparted a certain picturesque
+effect to his presence, despite his much creased boots, drawn over his
+trousers to the knee, and his big black hat which he wore on the back of
+his head. The face of his partner had a more subtle appeal, and so light
+and willowy was her figure as she danced that it suggested a degree of
+slenderness that bordered on attenuation. Her unbonneted hair of a rich
+blonde hue had a golden lustre in the sun; her complexion was of an
+exquisite whiteness and with a delicate flush; the chiseling of her
+features was peculiarly fine, in clear, sharp lines--she was called
+"hatchet-faced" by her undiscriminating friends. She wore a coarse,
+flimsy, pink muslin dress which showed a repetitious pattern of vague
+green leaves, and as she flitted, lissome and swaying, through the
+throng, with the wind a-flutter in her full draperies, she might have
+suggested to a spectator the semblance of a pink flower--of the humbler
+varieties, perhaps, but still a wild rose is a rose.
+
+Even the longest dance must have an end; even the stanchest mountain
+fiddler will reach at last his limit of endurance and must needs be
+refreshed and fed. There was a sudden significant flourish of frisky
+bowing, now up and again down, enlisting every resonant capacity of
+horsehair and catgut; the violins quavered to a final long-drawn scrape
+and silence descended. Dullness ensued; the flavor of the day seemed to
+pall; the dancers scattered and were presently following the crowd that
+began to slowly gather about the vacated stand of the musicians, from
+which elevation the speakers of the occasion were about to address their
+fellow-citizens. One of the disaffected old farmers, gruff and averse,
+could not refrain from administering a rebuke to Brent Kayle as crossing
+the expanse of saw-dust on his way to join the audience he encountered
+the youth in company with Valeria Clee, his recent partner.
+
+"Ai-yi, Brent," the old man said, "the last time I seen you uns I
+remember well ez ye war a-settin' on the mourner's bench." For there
+had been a great religious revival the previous year and many had been
+pricked in conscience. "Ye ain't so tuk up now in contemplatin' the
+goodness o' God an' yer sins agin same," he pursued caustically.
+
+Brent retorted with obvious acrimony. "I don't see no 'casion ter doubt
+the goodness o' God--I never war so ongrateful nohow as that comes to."
+He resented being thus publicly reproached, as if he were individually
+responsible for the iniquity of the bran dance--the scape-goat for the
+sins of all this merry company. Many of the whilom dancers had pressed
+forward, crowding up behind the old mountaineer and facing the flushed
+Brent and the flowerlike Valeria, the faint green leaves of her muslin
+dress fluttering about her as her skirts swayed in the wind.
+
+"Ye ain't so powerful afeard of the devil _now_ ez ye uster was on the
+mourner's bench," the old man argued.
+
+"I never war so mighty afeard of the devil," the goaded Brent broke
+forth angrily, for the crowd was laughing in great relish of his
+predicament--they, who had shared all the enormity of "shaking a foot"
+on this festive day. Brent flinched from the obvious injustice of their
+ridicule. He felt an eager impulse for reprisal. "I know ez sech dancin'
+ez I hev done ain't no sin," he blustered. "I ain't afeared o' the devil
+fur sech ez that. I wouldn't be skeered a mite ef he war ter--ter--ter
+speak right out now agin it, an' I'll be bound ez all o' you uns would.
+I--I--look yander--_look!_"
+
+He had thrown himself into a posture of amazed intentness and was
+pointing upward at the overhanging boughs of a tree above their heads.
+A squirrel was poised thereon, gazing down motionless. Then, suddenly--a
+frightful thing happened. The creature seemed to speak. A strange
+falsetto voice, such as might befit so eerie a chance, sounded on
+the air--loud, distinct, heard far up the slope, and electrifying the
+assemblage near at hand that was gathering about the stand and awaiting
+the political candidates.
+
+"Quit yer foolin'--quit yer fooling" the strange voice iterated. "I'll
+larn ye ter be afeared o' the devil. Long legs now is special grace."
+
+So wild a cry broke from the startled group below the tree that the
+squirrel, with a sudden, alert, about-face movement, turned and swiftly
+ran along the bough and up the bole. It paused once and looked back
+to cry out again in distinct iteration, "Quit yer foolin'! Quit yer
+foolin'!"
+
+But none had stayed to listen. A general frantic rout ensued. The
+possibility of ventriloquism was unknown to their limited experience.
+All had heard the voice and those who had distinguished the words and
+their seeming source needed no argument. In either case the result was
+the same. Within ten minutes the grounds of the famous barbecue and bran
+dance were deserted. The cumbrous wagons, all too slow, were wending
+with such speed as their drivers could coerce the ox-teams to make along
+the woodland road homeward, while happier wights on horseback galloped
+past, leaving clouds of dust in the rear and a grewsome premonition of
+being hindmost in a flight that to the simple minds of the mountaineers
+had a pursuer of direful reality.
+
+The state of a candidate is rarely enviable until the event is cast and
+the postulant is merged into the elect, but on the day signalized by
+the barbecue, the bran dance, and the rout the unfortunate aspirants
+for public favor felt that they had experienced the extremest spite
+of fate; for although they realized in their superior education and
+sophistication that the panic-stricken rural crowd had been tricked by
+some clever ventriloquist, the political orators were left with only the
+winds and waters and wilderness on which to waste their eloquence, and
+the wisdom of their exclusive method of saving the country.
+
+*****
+
+Brent Kayle's talent for eluding the common doom of man to eat his bread
+in the sweat of his face was peculiarly marked. He was the eldest of
+seven sons, ranging in age from eleven to twenty years, including one
+pair of twins. The parents had been greatly pitied for the exorbitant
+exactions of rearing this large family during its immaturity, but now,
+the labor of farm, barnyard and woodpile, distributed among so many
+stalwart fellows of the same home and interest was light and the result
+ample. Perhaps none of them realized how little of this abundance was
+compassed by Brent's exertions--how many days he spent dawdling on the
+river bank idly experimenting with the echoes--how often, even when he
+affected to work, he left the plow in the furrow while he followed till
+sunset the flight of successive birds through the adjacent pastures,
+imitating as he went the fresh mid-air cry, whistling in so vibrant
+a bird-voice, so signally clear and dulcet, yet so keen despite its
+sweetness, that his brothers at the plow-handles sought in vain to
+distinguish between the calls of the earth-ling and the winged voyager
+of the empyreal air. None of them had ever heard of ventriloquism, so
+limited had been their education and experience, so sequestered was
+their home amidst the wilderness of the mountains. Only very gradually
+to Brent himself came the consciousness of his unique gift, as from
+imitation he progressed to causing a silent bird to seem to sing. The
+strangeness of the experience frightened him at first, but with each
+experiment he had grown more confident, more skilled, until at length he
+found that he could throw a singularly articulate voice into the jaws
+of the old plow-horse, while his brothers, accustomed to his queer vocal
+tricks, were convulsed with laughter at the bizarre quadrupedal views
+of life thus elicited. This development of proficiency, however,
+was recent, and until the incident at the bran dance it had not been
+exercised beyond the limits of their secluded home. It had revealed new
+possibilities to the young ventriloquist and he looked at once agitated,
+excited, and triumphant when late that afternoon he appeared suddenly at
+the rail fence about the door-yard of Valeria Clee's home on one of the
+spurs of Chilhowee Mountain. It was no such home as his--lacking all the
+evidence of rude comfort and coarse plenty that reigned there--and in
+its tumbledown disrepair it had an aspect of dispirited helplessness.
+Here Valeria, an orphan from her infancy, dwelt with her father's
+parents, who always of small means had become yearly a more precarious
+support. The ancient grandmother was sunken in many infirmities, and the
+household tasks had all fallen to the lot of Valeria. Latterly a stroke
+of paralysis had given old man Clee an awful annotation on the chapter
+of age and poverty upon which he was entering, and his little farm was
+fast growing up in brambles.
+
+"But 't ain't no differ, gran Mad," Valeria often sought to reassure
+him. "I'll work some way out."
+
+And when he would irritably flout the possibility that she could do
+aught to materially avert disaster she was wont to protest: "You jes'
+watch _me. I'll_ find out some way. I be ez knowin' ez any old _owel_."
+
+Despite her slender physique and her recurrent heavy tasks the drear
+doom of poverty with its multiform menace had cast no shadow on her
+ethereal face, and her pensive dark gray eyes were full of serene
+light as she met the visitor at the bars. A glimmer of mirth began to
+scintillate beneath her long brown lashes, and she spoke first. "The
+folks in the mountings air mighty nigh skeered out'n thar boots by yer
+foolishness, Brent"--she sought to conserve a mien of reproof. "They
+'low ez it war a manifestation of the Evil One."
+
+Brent laughed delightedly. "Warn't it prime?" he said. "But I never
+expected ter work sech a scatteration of the crowd Thar skeer plumb
+terrified _me_. I jes' set out with the nimblest, an' run from the devil
+myself."
+
+"Won't them candidates fur office be mighty mad if they find out what it
+war sure enough?" she queried anxiously. "They gin the crowd a barbecue
+an' bran dance, an' arter all, the folks got quit of hevin' ter hear
+them speak an' jaw about thar old politics an' sech."
+
+"Them candidates air hoppin' mad fur true," he admitted. "I been down
+yander at Gilfillan's store in the Cove an' I hearn the loafers thar
+talkin' powerful 'bout the strange happening. An' them candidates war
+thar gittin' ready ter start out fur town in thar buggy. An' that thar
+gay one--though now he seems ez sober ez that sour one--he said 't
+warn't no devil. 'Twar jes' a ventriloquisk from somewhar--that's
+jes' what that town man called it. But _I_ never said nuthin'. I kep'
+powerful quiet."
+
+Brent Kayle was as vain a man as ever stood in shoe leather--even in the
+midst of his absorption in his disclosure he could not refrain from a
+pause to reflect on the signal success of his prank and laugh and plume
+himself.
+
+"But old Gilfillan he loves ter believe ez the devil air hotfoot arter
+other folks with a pitchfork, an' he axed how then did sech a man happen
+ter be in the mountings 'thout none knowin' of it. An' that candidate,
+the gay one, he say he reckon the feller kem from that circus what is
+goin' fer show in Shaftesville termorrer--mebbe he hearn 'bout the
+bran dance an' wanted ter hev some fun out'n the country folks. That
+candidate say he hed hearn dozens o' ventriloquisks in shows in the big
+towns--though this war about the bes' one he could remember. He said he
+hed no doubt this feller is paid good money in the show, fur jes' sech
+fool tricks with his voice--_good money!_"
+
+Valeria had listened in motionless amazement But he had now paused,
+almost choking with his rush of emotion, his excitement, his sense of
+triumph, and straight ensued a certain reluctance, a dull negation, a
+prophetic recoil from responsibility that clogged his resolve. His eyes
+roved uncertainly about the familiar domestic scene, darkening now,
+duskily purple beneath the luminous pearly and roseate tints of the
+twilight sky. The old woman was a-drowse on the porch of the rickety
+little log-cabin beneath the gourd vines, the paralytic grandfather came
+hirpling unsteadily through the doorway on his supporting crutch, his
+pipe shaking in his shaking hand, while he muttered and mumbled to
+himself--who knows what?--whether of terror of the future, or regret
+for the past, or doubt and despair of to-day. The place was obviously
+so meagre, so poverty-bitten, so eloquent of the hard struggle for mere
+existence. If it had been necessary for Brent Kayle to put his hand to
+the plow in its behalf the words would never have been spoken--but "good
+money" for this idle trade, these facile pranks!
+
+"Vallie," he said impulsively, "I'm going ter try it--ef ye'll go with
+me. Ef ye war along I'd feel heartened ter stand up an' face the crowd
+in a strange place. I always loved ye better than any of the other
+gals--shucks!--whenst _ye_ war about I never knowed ez they war alive."
+
+Perhaps it was the after-glow of the sunset in the sky, but a crimson
+flush sprang into her delicate cheek; her eyes were evasive, quickly
+glancing here and there with an affectation of indifference, and she had
+no mind to talk of love, she declared.
+
+But she should think of her gran'dad and gran'mam, he persisted. How
+had she the heart to deprive them of his willing aid? He declared he had
+intended to ask her to marry him anyhow, for she had always seemed
+to like him--she could not deny this--but now was the auspicious
+time--to-morrow--while the circus was in Shaftesville, and "good money"
+was to be had to provide for the wants of her old grandparents.
+
+Though Valeria had flouted the talk of love she seemed his partisan
+when she confided the matter to the two old people and their consent
+was accorded rather for her sake than their own. They felt a revivifying
+impetus in the thought that after their death Valeria would have a good
+husband to care for her, for to them the chief grief of their loosening
+hold on life was her inheritance of their helplessness and poverty.
+
+The courthouse in Shaftesville seemed a very imposing edifice to people
+unaccustomed to the giddy heights of a second story.
+
+When the two staring young rustics left the desk of the county court
+clerk and repaired to the dwelling of the minister of the Methodist
+Church near by, with the marriage license just procured safely stowed
+away in Brent's capacious hat, their anxieties were roused for a moment
+lest some delay ensue, as they discovered that the minister was on the
+point of sitting down to his dinner. He courteously deferred the meal,
+however, and as the bride apologetically remarked after the ceremony
+that they might have awaited his convenience were it not for the circus,
+he imagined that the youthful couple had designed to utilize a round of
+the menagerie as a wedding tour. The same thought was in the minds of
+the metropolitan managers of the organization when presently the two
+young wildings from the mountain fastness were ushered into their
+presence, having secured an audience by dint of extreme persistence,
+aided by a mien of mysterious importance.
+
+They found two men standing just within the great empty tent, for the
+crowd had not as yet begun to gather. The most authoritative, who was
+tall and portly, had the manner of swiftly disposing of the incident by
+asking in a peremptory voice what he could do for them. The other, lean
+and languid, looked up from a newspaper, in which he had been scanning
+a flaming circus advertisement, as he stood smoking a cigar. He said
+nothing, but concentrated an intent speculative gaze on the face of
+Valeria, who had pulled off her faint green sunbonnet and in a flush of
+eager hopefulness fanned with the slats.
+
+"Ventriloquist!" the portly man repeated with a note of surprise,
+as Brent made known his gifts and his desire for an engagement. "Oh,
+well--ventriloquism is a chestnut."
+
+Then with a qualm of pity, perhaps, for the blank despair that settled
+down on the two young faces he explained: "Nothing goes in the circus
+business but novelty. The public is tired out with ventriloquism. No
+mystery about it now--kind of thing, too, that a clever amateur can
+compass."
+
+Brent, hurled from the giddy heights of imminent achievement to the
+depths of nullity, could not at once relinquish the glowing prospects
+that had allured him. He offered to give a sample of his powers. He
+would like to bark a few, he said; you couldn't tell him from a sure
+enough dog; he could imitate the different breeds--hound-dog, bull-pup,
+terrier--but the manager was definitely shaking his head.
+
+Suddenly his partner spoke. "The girl might take a turn!"
+
+"In the show?" the portly man said in surprise.
+
+"The Company's Una weighs two hundred pounds and has a face as broad as
+a barn-door. She shows she is afraid of the lion when she stands beside
+him in the street parade, and--curse him--he is so clever that he
+knows it, no matter how he is doped. It incites him to growl at her
+all through the pageant, and that simply queers the sweet peace of the
+idea."
+
+"And you think this untrained girl could take her place!"
+
+"Why not? She couldn't do worse--and she _could_ look the part. See," he
+continued, in as business-like way as if Valeria were merely a bale of
+goods or deaf, "ethereal figure, poetic type of beauty, fine expression
+of candor and serene courage. She has a look of open-eyed innocence--I
+don't mean _ignorance_." He made a subtle distinction in the untutored
+aspect of the two countenances before him.
+
+"Would you be afraid of the lion, child?" the stout man asked Valeria.
+"He is chained--and drugged, too--in the pageant."
+
+It was difficult for the astonished Valeria to find her voice. "A lion?"
+she murmured. "I never seen a lion."
+
+"No? Honest?" they both cried in amazement that such a thing could be.
+The portly man's rollicking laughter rang out through the thin walls of
+canvas to such effect that some savage caged beast within reach of the
+elastic buoyant sound was roused to anger and supplemented it with a
+rancorous snarl.
+
+Valeria listened apprehensively, with dilated eyes. She thought of the
+lion, the ferocious creature that she had never seen. She thought of the
+massive strong woman who knew and feared him. Then she remembered the
+desolate old grandparents and their hopeless, helpless poverty. "I'll
+resk the lion," she said with a tremulous bated voice.
+
+"That's a brave girl," cried the manager.
+
+"I hev read 'bout Daniel's lions an' him in the den," she explained. "An'
+Daniel hed consid'ble trust an' warn't afeard--an' mebbe I won't be
+afeard nuther."
+
+"Daniel's Lions? Daniel's Lions?" the portly manager repeated
+attentively. "I don't know the show--perhaps in some combination now."
+For if he had ever heard of that signal leonine incident recorded in
+Scripture he had forgotten it. "Yes, yes," as Valeria eagerly appealed
+to him in behalf of Brent, "we must try to give Hubby some little stunt
+to do in the performance--but _you_ are the ticket--a sure winner."
+
+Of course the public knew, if it chose to reflect, that though
+apparently free the lion was muzzled with a strong steel ring, and every
+ponderous paw was chained down securely to the exhibition car; it may
+even have suspected that the savage proclivities of the great beast were
+dulled by drags. But there is always the imminent chance of some failure
+of precaution, and the multitude must needs thrill to the spectacle of
+intrepidity and danger. Naught could exceed the enthusiasm that greeted
+this slim, graceful Una a few days later in the streets of a distant
+city, as clad in long draperies of fleecy white she reclined against
+a splendid leonine specimen, her shining golden hair hanging on her
+shoulders, or mingling with his tawny mane as now and again she let her
+soft cheek rest on his head, her luminous dark gray eyes smiling down
+at the cheering crowds. This speedily became the favorite feature of the
+pageant, and the billboards flamed with her portrait, leaning against
+the lion, hundreds of miles in advance of her triumphal progress.
+
+All this unexpected success presently awoke Brent's emulation--so far he
+had not even "barked a few." A liberal advance on his wife's salary had
+quieted him for a time, but when the wonders of this new life began
+to grow stale--the steam-cars, the great cities, the vast country the
+Company traversed--he became importunate for the opportunity of display.
+He "barked a few" so cleverly at a concert after the performance
+one evening that the manager gave him a chance to throw the very
+considerable volume of sound he could command into the jaws of one of
+the lions. "Let Emperor speak to the people," he said. Forthwith he
+wrote a bit of rodomontade which he bade Brent memorize and had the
+satisfaction soon to hear from the lion-trainer, to whom was intrusted
+all that pertained to the exhibition of these kings of beasts, that the
+rehearsal was altogether satisfactory.
+
+An immense audience was assembled in the great tent. The soaring dome
+of white canvas reflected the electric light with a moony lustre. The
+display of the three rings was in full swing. That magic atmosphere
+of the circus, the sense of simple festivity, the crises of thrilling
+expectancy, the revelation of successive wonders, the diffusive delight
+of a multitude not difficult to entertain--all were in evidence.
+Suddenly a ponderous cage was rolled in; the band was playing liltingly;
+the largest of the lions within the bars, a tawny monster, roused up and
+with head depressed and switching tail paced back and forth within
+the restricted limits of the cage, while the others looked out with
+motionless curiosity at the tiers of people. Presently with a long
+supple stride the gigantic, blond Norwegian trainer came lightly across
+the arena--a Hercules, with broad bare chest and arms, arrayed in
+spangled blue satin and white tights that forbade all suspicion of
+protective armor. At a single bound he sprang into the cage, while
+Brent, garbed in carnation and white, stood unheralded and unremarked
+close by outside among the armed attendants. There seemed no need of
+precaution, however, so lightly the trainer frolicked with the savage
+creatures. He performed wonderful acrobatic feats with them in which one
+hardly knew which most to admire, the agility and intrepidity of the
+man or the supple strength and curious intelligence of the beasts. He
+wrestled with them; he leaped and rolled among them; he put his head
+into their terrible full-fanged jaws--but before springing forth he
+fired his pistols loaded with blank cartridges full in their faces;
+for the instant the coercion of his eye was pretermitted every one
+treacherously bounded toward him, seeking to seize him before he could
+reach the door. Then Emperor, as was his wont, flung himself in baffled
+fury against the bars and stood erect and shook them in his wrath.
+
+All at once, to the astonishment of the people, he spoke, voicing a
+plaintive panegyric on liberty and protesting his willingness to barter
+all the luxury of his captivity for one free hour on the desert sands.
+
+Surprise, absolute, unqualified, reigned for one moment. But a
+circus-going crowd is uncannily quick. The audience perceived a certain
+involuntary element of the entertainment. A storm of cat-calls ensued,
+hisses, roars of laughter. For the place was the city of Glaston, the
+Company being once more in East Tennessee, and the lion spoke the old
+familiar mountain dialect so easily recognizable in this locality. Even
+a _lapsus linguae_, "you uns." was unmistakable amidst the high-flown
+periods. Although the ventriloquism was appreciated, the incongruity
+of this countrified jargon, held in great contempt by the townfolks,
+discounted Emperor's majesty and he was in ludicrous eclipse.
+
+Behind the screening canvas the portly manager raged; "How dare you make
+that fine lion talk like a 'hill-Billy' such as yourself--as if he were
+fresh caught in the Great Smoky Mountains!" he stormed at the indignant
+ventriloquist. The other partners in the management interfered in
+Brent's behalf; they feared that the proud mountaineer, resenting the
+contemptuous designation "hill-Billy" might withdraw from the Company,
+taking his wife with him, and the loss of Valeria from the pageant would
+be well nigh irreparable, for her ethereal and fragile beauty as Una
+with her lion had a perennial charm for the public. The management
+therefore assumed the responsibility for the linguistic disaster, having
+confided the rehearsal to a foreigner, for the Norwegian lion-trainer
+naively explained that to him it seemed that all Americans talked alike.
+
+A course in elocution was recommended to Brent by the managers, and he
+fell in with this plan delightedly, but after two or three elementary
+bouts with the vowel sounds, long and short, consonants, sonant and
+surd, he concluded that mere articulation could be made as laborious as
+sawing wood, and he discovered that it was incompatible with his
+dignity to be a pupil in an art in which he had professed proficiency.
+Thereafter his accomplishment rusted--to the relief of the
+management--although he required that Valeria should be described in the
+advertisements as the wife of "the _celebrated ventriloquist_, Mr. Brent
+Kayle," thus seeking by faked notoriety to secure the sweets of fame,
+without the labor of achievement.
+
+Valeria had welcomed the pacific settlement of the difficulty, because
+her "good money" earned in the show so brightened and beautified the
+evening of life for the venerable grandparents at home. For their sake
+she had conquered her dread of the lion in the pageant. Indeed she had
+found other lions in her path that she feared more--the glitter and
+gauds of her tinsel world, the enervating love of ease, the influence of
+sordid surroundings and ignoble ideals. But not one could withstand the
+simple goodness of the unsophisticated girl. They retreated before the
+power of her fireside traditions of right thinking and true living which
+she had learned in her humble mountain home.
+
+It had come to be a dwelling of comfortable aspect, cared for in the
+absence of the young couple by a thrifty hired housekeeper, a widowed
+cousin, and here they spent the off-seasons when the circus company went
+into winter quarters. Repairs had been instituted, several rooms were
+added, and a wide veranda replaced the rickety little porch and gave
+upon a noble prospect of mountain and valley and river. Here on sunshiny
+noons in the good Saint Martin's summer the old gran'dad loved to sit,
+blithe and hearty, chirping away the soft unseasonable December days.
+Sometimes in the plenitude of content he would give Valeria a meaning
+glance and mutter "Oh, leetle _Owel!_ Oh, leetle _Owel!_" and then break
+into laughter that must needs pause to let him wipe his eyes.
+
+"Yes, Vallie 'pears ter hev right good sense an' makes out toler'ble
+well, considerin'," her husband would affably remark, "though of course
+it war _me_ ez interduced her ter the managers, an' she gits her main
+chance in the show through my bein' a celebrated ventriloquisk."
+
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Una Of The Hill Country, by
+Charles Egbert Craddock (AKA Mary Noailles Murfree)
+
+*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK UNA OF THE HILL COUNTRY ***
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