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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Hoosier Mosaics, by Maurice Thompson
+
+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: Hoosier Mosaics
+
+Author: Maurice Thompson
+
+Release Date: May 18, 2011 [EBook #36148]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK HOOSIER MOSAICS ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by David Edwards, David E. Brown, and the Online
+Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This
+book was produced from scanned images of public domain
+material from the Google Print project.)
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Affectionately to my Father,
+ The Reverend GRIGG THOMPSON.
+
+
+
+
+ HOOSIER MOSAICS.
+
+ By MAURICE THOMPSON.
+
+
+ NEW YORK:
+ E. J. HALE & SON, PUBLISHERS,
+ MURRAY STREET.
+ 1875.
+
+
+ Entered according to Act of Congress, in the year 1875, by
+ E. J. HALE & SON,
+ In the office of the Librarian of Congress at Washington.
+
+
+
+
+CONTENTS.
+
+
+ PAGE.
+
+ _WAS SHE A BOY?_ _7_
+
+ TROUT'S LUCK, 29
+
+ _BIG MEDICINE_, _50_
+
+ _THE VENUS OF BALHINCH_, _76_
+
+ THE LEGEND OF POTATO CREEK, 92
+
+ _STEALING A CONDUCTOR_, _114_
+
+ HOIDEN, 127
+
+ THE PEDAGOGUE, 162
+
+ AN IDYL OF THE ROD, 188
+
+
+
+
+WAS SHE A BOY?
+
+
+No matter what business or what pleasure took me, I once, not long ago,
+went to Colfax. Whisper it not to each other that I was seeking a
+foreign appointment through the influence of my fellow Hoosier, the late
+Vice-President of the United States. O no, I didn't go to the Hon.
+Schuyler Colfax at all; but I went to Colfax, simply, which is a little
+dingy town, in Clinton County, that was formerly called Midway, because
+it is half way between Lafayette and Indianapolis. It was and is a place
+of some three hundred inhabitants, eking out an aguish subsistence,
+maintaining a swampy, malarious aspect, keeping up a bilious, nay, an
+atra-bilious color, the year round, by sucking like an attenuated leech
+at the junction, or, rather, the crossing of the I. C. & L., and the L.
+C. & S. W. railroads. It lay mouldering, like something lost and
+forgotten, slowly rotting in the swamp.
+
+I do not mean to attack the inhabitants of Colfax, for they were good
+people, and deserved a better fate than the eternal rattling the ague
+took them through from year's end to year's end. Why, they had had the
+ague so long that they had no respect for it at all. I've seen a woman
+in Colfax shaking with a chill, spanking a baby that had a chill, and
+scolding a husband who had a chill, all at once--and I had a dreadful
+ague on me at the same time! But, as I have said, they were good people,
+and I suppose they are still. They go quietly about the usual business
+of dead towns. They have "stores" in which they offer for sale calico,
+of the big-figured, orange and red sort, surprisingly cheap. They smoke
+those little Cuba sixes at a half cent apiece, and call them cigars;
+they hang round the dépôt, and trade jack-knives and lottery watches on
+the afternoons of lazy Sundays; they make harmless sport of the incoming
+and outgoing country folk; and, in a word, keep pretty busy at one thing
+or another, and above all--they shake.
+
+In Colfax the chief sources of exciting amusement are dog fights and an
+occasional row at Sheehan's saloon, a doggery of the regular
+old-fashioned, drink, gamble, rob and fight sort--a low place, known to
+all the hard bats in the State.
+
+As you pass through the town you will not fail to notice a big sign,
+outhanging from the front of the largest building on the principal
+street, which reads: "Union Hotel, 1865." From the muddy suburbs of the
+place, in every direction, stretch black muck swamps, for the most part
+heavily timbered with a variety of oaks, interspersed with sycamores,
+ash, and elms. In the damp, shady labyrinths of these boggy woods
+millions of lively, wide awake, tuneful mosquitoes are daily
+manufactured; and out from decaying logs and piles of fermenting leaves,
+from the green pools and sluggish ditch streams, creeps a noxious gas,
+known in that region as the "double refined, high pressure, forty hoss
+power quintessential of the ager!" So, at least, I was told by the
+landlord of the Union Hotel, and his skin had the color of one who knew.
+
+Notwithstanding what I have said, Colfax, in summer, is not wholly
+without attractions of a certain kind. It has some yellow dogs and some
+brindle ones; it has some cattle and some swine; it has some swallows
+and some spotted pigeons; it has cool, fresh smelling winds, and, after
+the water has sufficiently dried out, the woods are really glorious
+with wild roses, violets, turkey-pea blossoms, and wild pinks. But to
+my story.
+
+I was sitting on the long veranda of the Union Hotel, when a rough but
+kindly voice said to me:
+
+"Mornin', stranger; gi' me a light, will ye?"
+
+I looked up from the miserable dime novel at which I had been tugging
+for the last hour, and saw before me a corpulent man of, perhaps,
+forty-five years of age, who stood quite ready to thrust the charred end
+of a cigar stump into the bowl of my meerschaum. I gave him a match, and
+would fain have returned to Angelina St. Fortescue, the heroine of the
+novel, whom I had left standing on the extreme giddy verge of a sheer
+Alpine precipice, known, by actual triangulation, to be just seven
+thousand feet high, swearing she would leap off if Donald Gougerizeout,
+the robber, persisted further in his rough addresses; but my new friend,
+the corpulent smoker, seemed bent on a little bit of conversation.
+
+"Thankee, sir. Fine mornin', sir, a'n't it?"
+
+"Beautiful," I replied, raising my head, elevating my arms, and, by a
+kind of yawn, taking in a deep draught of the fresh spring weather,
+absorbing it, assimilating it, till, like a wave of retarded
+electricity, it set my nerves in tune for enjoying the bird songs, and
+filled my blood with the ecstasy of vigorous health and youth. I, no
+doubt, just then felt the burden of life much less than did the big
+yellow dog at my feet, who snapped lazily at the flies.
+
+"Yes, yes, this 'ere's a fine mornin'--julicious, sir, julicious,
+indeed; but le' me tell ye, sir, this 'ere wind's mighty deceitful--for
+a fact it is, sir, jist as full of ager as a acorn is of meat. It's
+blowin' right off'n ponds, and is loaded chock down with the miasm--for
+a fact it is, sir."
+
+While delivering this speech, the fat man sat down on the bench beside
+me there in the veranda. By this time I had my thumbs in the arm holes
+of my vest, and my chest expanded to its utmost--my lungs going like a
+steam bellows, which is a way I have in fine weather.
+
+"Monstrous set o' respiratory organs, them o' your'n," he said, eyeing
+my manoeuvres. Just then I discovered that he was a physician of the
+steam doctor sort, for, glancing down at my feet, I espied his well worn
+leather medicine bags. I immediately grew polite. Possibly I might ere
+long need some quinine, or mandrake, or a hot steam bath--anything for
+the ague!
+
+"Yes, I've got lungs like a porpoise," I replied, "but still the ague
+may get me. Much sickness about here, Doctor----a----a----what do they
+call your name?"
+
+"Benjamin Hurd--Doctor Hurd, they call me. I'm the only thorer bred
+botanic that's in these parts. I do poorty much all the practice about
+here. Yes, there's considerable of ager and phthisic and bilious fever.
+Keeps me busy most of my time. These nasty swamps, you know."
+
+After a time our conversation flagged, and the doctor having lit a fresh
+cigar, we smoked in silence. The wind was driving the dust along the
+street in heavy waves, and I sat watching a couple of lean, spotted
+calves making their way against the tide. They held their heads low and
+shut their eyes, now and then bawling vigorously. Some one up stairs was
+playing "Days of Absence" on a wretched wheezing accordeon.
+
+"There's a case of asthma, doctor," I said, intending to be witty. But
+my remark was not noticed. The doctor was in a brown study, from which
+my words had not startled him. Presently he said, as if talking to
+himself, and without taking the cigar from his mouth:
+
+"'Twas just a year ago to-night, the 28th day of May, 'at they took 'er
+away. And he'll die afore day to a dead certainty. Beats all the denied
+queer things I ever seed or heerd of."
+
+He was poking with the toe of his boot in the dust on the veranda floor,
+as he spoke, and stealing a glance at his face, I saw that it wore an
+abstracted, dreamy, perplexed look.
+
+"What was your remark, doctor?" I asked, more to arouse him than from
+any hope of being interested.
+
+"Hum!--ah, yes," he said, starting, and beginning a vigorous puffing.
+"Ah, yes, I was cogitatin' over this matter o' Berry Young's. Never have
+been able to 'count for that, no how. Think about it more an' more every
+day. What's your theory of it?"
+
+"Can't say, never having heard anything of it," I replied.
+
+"Well, I do say! Thought everybody had hearn of that, any how! It's a
+rale romance, a reg'lar mystery, sir. It's been talked about, and writ
+about in the papers so much 'at I s'posed 'at it was knowed of far and
+wide."
+
+"I've been in California for several years past," I replied, by way of
+excuse for my ignorance of even the vaguest outline of the affair,
+whatever it might be.
+
+"Well, you see, a leetle more'n a year ago a gal an' her father come
+here and stopped at this 'ere very hotel. The man must 'a' been som'res
+near sixty years old; but the gal was young, and jist the poortiest
+thing I ever seed in all my life. I couldn't describe how she looked at
+all; but everybody 'at saw her said she was the beautifulest creatur
+they ever laid eyes onto. Where these two folks come from nobody ever
+knowed, but they seemed like mighty nice sort of persons, and everybody
+liked 'em, 'specially the gal. Somehow, from the very start, a kind of
+mystery hung 'round 'em. They seemed always to have gobs o' money, and
+onct in awhile some little thing'd turn up to make folks kinder juberous
+somehow 'at they wasn't jist what they ginerally seemed to be. But that
+gal was fascinatin' as a snake, and as poorty as any picter. Her flesh
+looked like tinted wax mixed with moon-shine, and her eyes was as clear
+as a lime-stone spring--though they was dark as night. She was that full
+of restless animal life 'at she couldn't set still--she roamed round
+like a leopard in a cage, and she'd romp equal to a ten-year-old boy.
+Well, as mought be expected, sich a gal as that 'ere 'd 'tract attention
+in these parts, and I must say 'at the young fellows here did git
+'bominable sweet on her. 'Casionally two of 'em 'd git out in the swamps
+and have a awful fight on her 'count; but she 'peared to pay precious
+little 'tention to any of 'em till finally Berry Young stepped in and
+jist went for 'er like mad, and she took to 'm. Berry was r'ally the
+nicest and intelligentest young man in all this country. He writ poetry
+for the papers, sir--snatchin' good poetry, too--and had got to be
+talked of a right smart for his larnin', an' 'complishments. He was good
+lookin', too; powerful handsome, for a fact, sir. So they was to be
+married, Berry and the gal, an' the time it was sot, an' the day it
+come, an' all was ready, an' the young folks was on the floor, and the
+'squire was jist a commencin' to say the ceremony, when lo! and
+beholden, four big, awful, rough lookin' men rushed in with big pistols
+and mighty terrible bowie knives, and big papers and big seals, and said
+they was a sheriff and possum from Kaintucky. They jist jumped right
+onto the gal an' her father an' han'cuffed 'em, an' took 'em!"
+
+"Handcuffed them and took them!" I repeated, suddenly growing intensely
+interested. This was beating my dime novel, for sensation, all hollow.
+
+"Yes, sir, han'cuffed 'em an' took 'em, an' away they went, an' they've
+not been hearn of since to this day. But the mysteriousest thing about
+the whole business was that when the sheriff grabbed the gal he called
+her George, and said she wasn't no gal at all, but jist a terrible onery
+boy 'at had been stealin' an' counterfeitin' an' robbin' all round
+everywhere. What d'ye think of that?"
+
+"A remarkably strange affair, certainly," I replied; "and do you say
+that the father and the girl have not since been heard from?"
+
+"Never a breath. The thing got into all the newspapers and raised a
+awful rumpus, and it turned out that it wasn't no sheriff 'at come
+there; but some dark, mysterious kidnappin' transaction 'at nobody could
+account for. Detectives was put on their track an' follered 'em to Injun
+territory an' there lost 'em. Some big robberies was connected with the
+affair, but folks could never git head nor tail of the partic'lers."
+
+"And it wasn't a real sheriff's arrest, then?" said I.
+
+"No, sir, 'twas jist a mystery. Some kind of a dodge of a band of
+desperadoes to avoid the law some way. The papers tried to explain it,
+but I never could see any sense to it. 'Twas a clean, dead mystery. But
+I was goin' on to tell ye 'at Berry Young took it awful hard 'bout the
+gal, an' he's been sort o' sinkin' away ever sence, an' now he's jist
+ready to wink out. Yonder's where Berry lives, in that 'ere white
+cottage house with the vines round the winder. He's desp'rit sick--a
+sort o' consumption. I'm goin' to see 'im now; good mornin' to ye."
+
+Thus abruptly ending our interview, the doctor took up his medicine bag
+and went his way. He left me in a really excited state of mind; the
+story of itself was so strange, and the narrator had told it so solemnly
+and graphically. I suppose, too, that I must have been in just the
+proper state of mind for that rough outline, that cartoon of a most
+startling and mysterious affair, to become deeply impressed in my mind,
+perhaps, in the most fascinating and fantastic light possible. A thirst
+to know more of the story took strong hold on my mind, as if I had been
+reading a tantalizing romance and had found the leaves torn out just
+where the mystery was to be explained. I half closed my eyes to better
+keep in the lines and shades of the strange picture. Its influence lay
+upon me like a spell. I enjoyed it. It was a luxury.
+
+The wings of the morning wind fanned the heat into broken waves, rising
+and sinking, and flowing on, with murmur and flash and glimmer, to the
+cool green ways of the woods, and, like the wind, my fancy went out
+among golden fleece clouds and into shady places, following the thread
+of this new romance. I cannot give a sufficient reason why the story
+took so fast a hold on me. But it did grip my mind and master it. It
+appeared to me the most intensely strange affair I had ever heard of.
+
+While I sat there, lost in reflection, with my eyes bent on a very
+unpromising pig, that wallowed in the damp earth by the town pump, the
+landlord of the hotel came out and took a seat beside me. I gave him a
+pipe of my tobacco and forthwith began plying him with questions
+touching the affair of which the doctor had spoken. He confirmed the
+story, and added to its mystery by going minutely into its details. He
+gave the names of the father and daughter as Charles Afton and Ollie
+Afton.
+
+Ollie Afton! Certainly no name sounds sweeter! How is it that these
+gifted, mysteriously beautiful persons always have musical names!
+
+"Ah," said the landlord, "you'd ort to have seen that boy!"
+
+"Boy!" I echoed.
+
+"Well, gal or boy, one or t'other, the wonderfulest human bein' I ever
+see in all the days o' my life! Lips as red as ripe cur'n's, and for
+ever smilin'. Such smiles--oonkoo! they hurt a feller all over, they was
+so sweet. She was tall an' dark, an' had black hair that curled short
+all 'round her head. Her skin was wonderful clear and so was her eyes.
+But it was the way she looked at you that got you. Ah, sir, she had a
+power in them eyes, to be sure!"
+
+The pig got up from his muddy place by the pump, grunted, as if
+satisfied, and slowly strolled off; a country lad drove past, riding
+astride the hounds of a wagon; a pigeon lit on the comb of the roof of
+Sheehan's saloon, which was just across the street, and began pluming
+itself. Just then the landlord's little sharp-nosed, weasel-eyed boy
+came out and said, in a very subdued tone of voice:
+
+"Pap, mam says 'at if you don't kill 'er that 'ere chicken for dinner
+you kin go widout any fing to eat all she cares."
+
+The landlord's spouse was a red-headed woman, so he got up very suddenly
+and took himself into the house. But before he got out of hearing the
+little boy remarked:
+
+"Pap, I speaks for the gizzard of that 'ere chicken, d'ye hear, now?"
+
+I sat there till the dinner hour, watching the soft pink and white
+vapors that rolled round the verge of the horizon. I was thoroughly
+saturated with romance. Strange, that here, in this dingy little
+out-of-the-way village, should have transpired one of the most wonderful
+mysteries history may ever hold!
+
+At dinner the landlord talked volubly of the Afton affair, giving it as
+his opinion that the Aftons were persons tinged with negro blood, and
+had been kidnapped into slavery.
+
+"They was jist as white, an' whiter, too, than I am," he went on, "but
+them Southerners'd jist as soon sell one person as 'nother, anyhow."
+
+I noticed particularly that the little boy got his choice bit of the
+fowl. He turned his head one side and ate like a cat.
+
+When the meal was over I was again joined by Doctor Hurd on the
+verandah. He reported Berry Young still alive, but not able to live till
+midnight. I noticed that the doctor was nervous and kept his eyes fixed
+on Sheehan's saloon.
+
+"Stranger," said he, leaning over close to me, and speaking in a low,
+guarded way, "things is workin' dasted curious 'bout now--sure's gun's
+iron they jist is!"
+
+"Where--how--in what way, doctor?" I stammered, taken aback by his
+behavior.
+
+"Sumpum's up, as sure as Ned!" he replied, wagging his head.
+
+"Doctor," I said, petulantly, "if you would be a trifle more explicit I
+could probably guess, with some show of certainty, at what you mean!"
+
+"Can't ye hear? Are ye deaf? Did ye ever, in all yer born days, hear a
+voice like that ere 'un? Listen!"
+
+Sure enough, a voice of thrilling power, a rich, heavy, quavering alto,
+accompanied by some one thrumming on a guitar, trickled and gurgled, and
+poured through the open window of Sheehan's saloon. The song was a wild,
+drinking carol, full of rough, reckless wit, but I listened, entranced,
+till it was done.
+
+"There now, say, what d'ye think o' that? Ain't things a workin' round
+awful curious, as I said?"
+
+Delivering himself thus, the doctor got up and walked off.
+
+When I again had an opportunity to speak to the landlord, I asked him if
+Doctor Hurd was not thought to be slightly demented.
+
+"What! crazy, do you mean? No, sir; bright as a pin!"
+
+"Well," said I, "he's a very queer fellow any how. By the way, who was
+that singing just now over in the saloon there?"
+
+"Don't know, didn't hear 'em. Some of the boys, I s'pose. They have some
+lively swells over there sometimes. Awful hole."
+
+I resumed my dime novel, and nothing further transpired to aggravate or
+satisfy my curiosity concerning the strange story I had heard, till
+night came down and the bats began to wheel through the moonless
+blackness above the dingy town. At the coming on of dusk I flung away
+the book and took to my pipe. Some one touched me on the shoulder,
+rousing me from a deep reverie, if not a doze.
+
+"Ha, stranger, this you, eh? Berry Young's a dyin'; go over there wi'
+me, will ye?"
+
+It was the voice of Doctor Hurd.
+
+"What need for me have you?" I replied, rather stiffly, not much
+relishing this too obtrusive familiarity.
+
+"Well--I--I jist kinder wanted ye to go over. The poor boy's 'bout
+passin' away, an' things is a workin' so tarnation curious! Come 'long
+wi' me, friend, will ye?"
+
+Something in the fellow's voice touched me, and without another word I
+arose and followed him to the cottage. The night was intensely black. I
+think it was clear, but a heavy fog from the swamps had settled over
+everything, and through this dismal veil the voices of owls from far and
+near struck with hollow, sepulchral effect.
+
+"A heart is the trump!" sang out that alto voice from within the saloon
+as we passed.
+
+Doctor Hurd clutched my arm and muttered:
+
+"That's that voice ag'in! Strange--strange! Poor Berry Young!"
+
+We entered the cottage and found ourselves in a cosy little room, where,
+on a low bed, a pale, intelligent looking young man lay, evidently
+dying. He was very much emaciated, his eyes, wonderfully large and
+luminous, were sunken, and his breathing quick and difficult. A haggard,
+watching-worn woman sat by his bed. From her resemblance to him I took
+her to be his sister. She was evidently very unwell herself. We sat in
+silence by his bedside, watching his life flow into eternity, till the
+little clock on the mantel struck, sharp and clear, the hour of ten.
+
+The sound of the bell startled the sick man, and after some incoherent
+mumbling he said, quite distinctly:
+
+"Sister, if you ever again see Ollie Afton, tell him--tell her--tell,
+say I forgive him--say to her--him--I loved her all my life--tell
+him--ah! what was I saying? Don't cry, sis, please. What a sweet,
+faithful sister! Ah! it's almost over, dear----Ah, me!"
+
+For some minutes the sister's sobbing echoed strangely through the
+house. The dying man drew his head far down in the soft pillow. A breath
+of damp air stole through the room.
+
+All at once, right under the window by which the bed sat, arose a
+touching guitar prelude--a tangled mesh of melody--gusty, throbbing,
+wandering through the room and straying off into the night, tossing back
+its trembling echoes fainter and fainter, till, as it began to die, that
+same splendid alto voice caught the key and flooded the darkness with
+song. The sick man raised himself on his elbow, and his face flashed out
+the terrible smile of death. He listened eagerly. It was the song "Come
+Where my Love lies Dreaming," but who has heard it rendered as it was
+that night? Every chord of the voice was as sweet and witching as a wind
+harp's, and the low, humming undertone of the accompaniment was
+perfection. Tenderly but awfully sweet, the music at length faded into
+utter silence, and Berry Young sank limp and pallid upon his pillows.
+
+"It is Ollie," he hoarsely whispered. "Tell her--tell him--O say to her
+for me--ah! water, sis, it's all over!"
+
+The woman hastened, but before she could get the water to his lips he
+was dead. His last word was Ollie.
+
+The sister cast herself upon the dead man's bosom and sobbed wildly,
+piteously. Soon after this some neighbors came in, which gave me an
+opportunity to quietly take my leave.
+
+The night was so foggy and dark that, but for a bright stream of light
+from a window of Sheehan's saloon, it would have been hard for me to
+find my way back to the hotel. I did find it, however, and sat down upon
+the verandah. I had nearly fallen asleep, thinking over the strange
+occurrences of the past few hours, when the rumble of an approaching
+train of cars on the I. C. & L. from the east aroused me, and, at the
+same moment, a great noise began over in the saloon. High words, a few
+bitter oaths, a struggle as of persons fighting, a loud, sonorous crash
+like the crushing of a musical instrument, and then I saw the burly bar
+tender hurl some one out through the doorway just as the express train
+stopped close by.
+
+"All aboard!" cried the conductor, waving his lantern. At the same
+time, as the bar-tender stood in the light of his doorway, a brickbat,
+whizzing from the darkness, struck him full in the face, knocking him
+precipitately back at full length on to the floor of the saloon.
+
+"All aboard!" repeated the conductor.
+
+"All aboard!" jeeringly echoed a delicious alto voice; and I saw a
+slender man step up on the rear platform of the smoking car. A flash
+from the conductor's lantern lit up for a moment this fellow's face, and
+it was the most beautiful visage I have ever seen. Extremely youthful,
+dark, resplendent, glorious, set round with waves and ringlets of black
+hair--it was such a countenance as I have imagined a young Chaldean
+might have had who was destined to the high calling of astrology. It was
+a face to charm, to electrify the beholder with its indescribable,
+almost unearthly loveliness of features and expression.
+
+The engine whistled, the bell rang, and as the train moved on, that
+slender, almost fragile form and wonderful face disappeared in the
+darkness.
+
+As the roar and clash of the receding cars began to grow faint in the
+distance, a gurgling, grunting sound over in the saloon reminded me that
+the bar-tender might need some attention, so I stepped across the
+street and went in. He was just taking himself up from the floor, with
+his nose badly smashed, spurting blood over him pretty freely. He was in
+an ecstasy of fury and swore fearfully. I rendered him all the aid I
+could, getting the blood stopped, at length, and a plaster over the
+wound.
+
+"Who struck you?" I asked.
+
+"Who struck me? Who hit me with that 'ere brick, d'ye say? Who but that
+little baby-faced, hawk-eyed cuss 'at got off here yesterday! He's a
+thief and a dog!--he's chowzed me out'n my last cent! Where is he?--I'll
+kill 'im yet! where is he?"
+
+"Gone off on the train," I replied, "but who is he? what's his name?"
+
+"Blamed if I know. Gone, you say? Got every derned red o' my money!
+Every derned red!"
+
+"Don't you know anything at all about him?" I asked.
+
+"Yes."
+
+"What?"
+
+"I know 'at he's the derndest, alfiredest, snatchin'est, best
+poker-player 'at ever dealt a card!"
+
+"Is that all?"
+
+"That's enough, I'd say. If you'd been beat out'n two hundred an' odd
+dollars you'd think you know'd a right smart, wouldn't ye?"
+
+"Perhaps," said I. The question had a world of philosophy and logic in
+it.
+
+The shattered wreck of a magnificent guitar lay in the middle of the
+floor. I picked it up, and, engraved on a heavy silver plate set in the
+ebony neck, I read the name, Georgina Olive Afton.
+
+
+
+
+TROUT'S LUCK.
+
+
+As early as eight o'clock the grand entrance gateway to the Kokomo fair
+ground was thronged with vehicles of almost every kind; horsemen,
+pedestrians, dogs and dust were borne forward together in clouds that
+boiled and swayed and tumbled. Noise seemed to be the chief purpose of
+every one and the one certain result of every thing in the crowd.
+
+This had been advertised as the merriest day that might ever befall the
+quiet, honest folk of the rural regions circumjacent to Kokomo, and it
+is even hinted that aristocratic dames and business plethoric men of the
+town itself had caught somewhat of the excitement spread abroad by the
+announcement in the county papers, and by huge bills posted in
+conspicuous places, touching Le Papillon and his monster balloon, which
+balloon and which Le Papillon were pictured to the life, on the said
+posters, in the act of sailing over the sun, and under the picture, in
+remarkably distinct letters, "No humbug! go to the fair!"
+
+Dozier's minstrel troupe was dancing and singing attendance on this
+agricultural exhibition, too, and somebody's whirling pavilion, a
+shooting gallery, a monkey show, the glass works, and what not of
+tempting promises of entertainments, "amusing and instructive."
+
+Until eleven o'clock the entrance gateway to the fair ground was
+crowded. Farm wagons trundled in, drawn by sleek, well fed plough nags,
+and stowed full of smiling folk, old and young, male and female, from
+the out townships; buggies with youths and maidens, the sparkle of
+breastpins and flutter of ribbons; spring wagons full of students and
+hard bats from town; carriages brimming with laces, flounces, over
+skirts, fancy kid gloves, funny little hats and less bonnets, all
+fermented into languid ebullition by mild-eyed ladies; omnibuses that
+bore fleshy gentlemen, who wore linen dusters and silk hats and smoked
+fine cigars; and jammed in among all these were boys on skittish colts,
+old fellows on flea-bit gray mares, with now and then a reckless
+stripling on a mule. Occasionally a dog got kicked or run over, giving
+the assistance of his howls and yelps to the general din, and over all
+the dust hung heavily in a yellow cloud, shot through with the lightning
+of burnished trappings and echoing with the hoarse thunder of the
+trampling, shouting rumbling multitude. Indeed, that hot aguish autumn
+day let fall its sunshine on the heads and blew its feverish breath
+through the rifts of the greatest and liveliest mass of people ever
+assembled in Howard county.
+
+Inside the extensive enclosure the multitude divided itself into
+streams, ponds, eddies, refluent currents and noisy whirlpools of
+people. Some rare attraction was everywhere.
+
+Early in the day the eyes of certain of the rustic misses followed
+admiringly the forms of Jack Trout and Bill Powell, handsome young
+fellows dressed in homespun clothes, who, arm in arm, strolled leisurely
+across the grounds, looking sharply about for some proper place to begin
+the expenditure of what few dimes they had each been able to hoard up
+against this gala day. They had not long to hunt. On every hand the
+"hawkers hawked their wares."
+
+Rising and falling, tender-toned, deftly managed, a voice rang out
+across the crowd pleading with those who had long desired a good
+investment for their money, and begging them to be sure and not let slip
+this last golden opportunity.
+
+"Only a half a dollah! Come right along this way now! Here's the great
+golden scheme by which thousands have amassed untold fortunes! Here's
+your only and last chance to get two ounces of first class candy, with
+the probability of five dollars in gold coin, all for the small sum of
+half a dollah! And the cry is--still they come!"
+
+The speaker was such a man as one often observes in a first class
+railway car, with a stout valise beside him containing samples, dressed
+with remarkable care, and ever on the alert to make one's acquaintance.
+He stood on top of a small table or tripod, holding in his hand a green
+pasteboard package just taken from a box at his feet.
+
+"Only a half a dollah and a fortune in your grasp! Here's the gold! Roll
+right this way and run your pockets over!"
+
+Drifting round with the tide of impulsive pleasure seekers into which
+they happened to fall, Jack Trout and Bill Powell floated past a bevy of
+lasses, the prettiest of whom was Minny Hart, a girl whose healthy,
+vivid beauty was fast luring Jack on to the rock of matrimonial
+proposals.
+
+"Jimminy, but ain't she a little sweety!" exclaimed the latter, pinching
+Bill's arm as they passed, and glancing lovingly at Minny.
+
+"You're tellin' the truth and talkin' it smooth," replied Bill, bowing
+to the girls with the swagger peculiar to a rustic who imagines he has
+turned a fine period. And with fluttering hearts the boys passed on.
+
+"Roll on ye torrents! Only a half a dollah! Right this way if you want
+to become a bloated aristocrat in less than no time! Five dollahs in
+gold for only a half a dollah! And whose the next lucky man?"
+
+Blown by the fickle, gusty breath of luck, our two young friends were
+finally wafted to the feet of this oily vendor of prize packages, and
+they there lodged, becalmed in breathless interest, to await their turn,
+each full of faith in the yellow star of his fortune--a gold coin of the
+value of five dollars. They stood attentively watching the results of
+other men's investments, feeling their fingers tingle when now and then
+some lucky fellow drew the coveted prize. Five dollars is a mighty
+temptation to a poor country boy in Indiana. That sum will buy oceans of
+fun at a fair where almost any "sight" is to be seen for the "small sum
+of twenty-five cents!"
+
+Without stopping to take into consideration the possible, or rather, the
+probable result of such a venture, Bill Powell handed up his half
+dollar to the prize man, thus risking the major part of all the money he
+had, and stood trembling with excitement while the fellow broke open the
+chosen package. Was it significant of anything that a blue jay fluttered
+for a moment right over the crier's head just at the point of his
+detaching some glittering object from the contents of the box?
+
+"Here you are, my friend; luck's a fortune!" yelled the man, as he held
+the gold coin high above his head, shaking it in full view of all eyes
+in the multitude. "Here you are! which 'd you rather have, the gold or
+five and a half in greenbacks?"
+
+"Hand me in the rag chips--gold don't feel good to my fingers," answered
+Bill Powell, swaggering again and grasping the currency with a hand that
+shook with eagerness.
+
+Jack Trout stood by, clutching in his feverish palm a two-dollar bill.
+His face was pale, his lips set, his muscles rigid. He hesitated to
+trust in the star of his destiny. He stood eyeing the bridge of Lodi,
+the dykes of Arcole. Would he risk all on a bold venture? His right
+shoulder began to twitch convulsively.
+
+"Still it rolls, and who's the next lucky man? Don't all speak at once!
+Who wants five dollahs in gold and two ounces of delicious candy, all
+for the small sum of half a dollah?"
+
+Jack made a mighty effort and passed up his two dollar bill.
+
+"Bravely done; select your packages!" cried the vendor. Jack tremblingly
+pointed them out. Very carelessly and quietly the fellow opened them,
+and with a ludicrous grimace remarked--
+
+"Eight ounces of mighty sweet candy, but nary a prize! Better luck next
+time! Only a half a dollah! And who's the next lucky man?"
+
+A yell of laughter from the crowd greeted this occurrence, and Jack
+floated back on the recoiling waves of his chagrin till he was hidden in
+the dense concourse, and the uppermost thought in his mind found
+forcible expression in the three monosyllables: "Hang the luck!"
+
+It is quite probable that of all the unfortunate adventurers that day
+singed in the yellow fire of that expert gambler's gold, Jack recognized
+himself as the most terribly burned. Putting his hands into his empty
+pockets, he sauntered dolefully about, scarcely able to look straight
+into the face of such friends as he chanced to meet. He acted as if
+hunting for something lost on the ground. Poor fellow, it was a real
+relief to him when some one treated him to a glass of lemonade, and,
+indeed, so much were his feelings relieved by the cool potation, that
+when, soon after, he met Minny Hart, he was actually smiling.
+
+"O, Jack!" cried the pretty girl, "I'm so glad to see you just now, for
+I do want to go into the minstrel show _so bad_!" She shot a glance of
+coquettish tenderness right into Jack's heart. For a single moment he
+was blessed, but on feeling for his money and recalling the luckless
+result of his late venture, he felt a chill creep up his back, and a
+lump of the size of his fist jump up into his throat. Here was a bad
+affair for him. He stood for a single point of time staring into the
+face of his despair, then, acting on the only plan he could think of to
+escape from the predicament, he said:
+
+"Wait a bit, Minny, I've got to go jist down here a piece to see a
+feller. I'll be back d'rectly. You stay right here and when I come back
+I'll trot you in."
+
+So speaking, as if in a great hurry, and sweating cold drops, with a
+ghastly smile flickering on his face, the young man slipped away into
+the crowd.
+
+Minny failed to notice his confusion, and so called after him cheerily:
+"Well, hurry, Jack, for I'm most dead to see the show!"
+
+What could Trout do? He spun round and round in that vast flood of
+people like a fish with but one eye. He rushed here, he darted there,
+and ever and anon, as a lost man returns upon his starting point, he
+came in sight of sweet Minny Hart patiently waiting for his return. Then
+he would spring back into the crowd like a deer leaping back into a
+thicket at sight of a hunter. Penniless at the fair, with Minny Hart
+waiting for him to take her into the show! Few persons can realize how
+keenly he now felt the loss of his money. He ought, no doubt, to have
+told the lass at once just how financial matters stood; but nothing was
+more remote from his mind than doing anything of the kind. He was too
+vain.
+
+"Tell 'er I 'ain't got no money! No, sir-ee!" he muttered. "But what
+_am_ I to do? Bust the luck! Hang the luck! Rot the luck!"
+
+He hurried hither and thither, intent on nothing and taking no heed of
+the course he pursued. His cheeks were livid and his eyes had in them
+that painful, worried, wistful look so often seen in the eyes of men
+going home from ruin on Wall street.
+
+Meantime that sea of persons surged this way and that, flecked with a
+foam of ribbons and dancing bubbles of hats, now flowing slowly through
+the exhibition rooms a tide of critics, now breaking into groups and
+scattered throngs of babblers, anon uniting to roar round some novel
+engine suddenly set to work, or to break on the barrier of the trolling
+ring into a spray of cravats and a mist of flounces. Swimming round in
+this turbulent tide like a crazy flounder with but one fin, Jack finally
+found himself hard by the pavilion of the minstrels. He could hear
+somewhat of the side-splitting jokes, with the laughs that followed, the
+tinkle of banjo accompaniments and the mellow cadences of plantation
+songs, the rattle of castanets and the tattoo of the jig dancers' feet.
+A thirst like the thirst of fever took hold of him.
+
+"Come straight along gentlemen and ladies! This celebrated troupe is now
+performing and twenty-five cents pays the bill! Only a quawtah of a
+dollah!" bawled the fat crier from his lofty perch. "That's right, my
+young man, take the young lady in! She's sure to love you better; walk
+right along!"
+
+ "Her lip am sweet as sugah,
+ Her eye am bright as wine,
+ Dat yaller little boogah
+ Her name am Emiline!"
+
+sung by four fine voices, came bubbling from within. The music thrilled
+Jack to the bone, and he felt once more for his money. Not a cent. This
+was bad.
+
+"You're the lad for me," continued the fat man on the high seat; "take
+your nice little sweetheart right in and let her see the fun. Walk right
+in!"
+
+Jack looked to see who it was, and a pang shot through his heart and
+settled in the very marrow of his bones; for lo! arm in arm, Bill Powell
+and Minny Hart passed under the pavilion into the full glory of the
+show!
+
+ "O cut me up for fish bait
+ An' feed me to de swine,
+ Don't care where I goes to
+ So I has Emiline!"
+
+sang the minstrel chorus.
+
+"Dast him, he's got me!" muttered Jack as Bill and Minny disappeared
+within. He turned away, sick at heart, and this was far from the first
+throe of jealousy he had suffered on Bill's account. Indeed it had given
+him no little uneasiness lately to see how sweetly Minny sometimes
+smiled on young Powell.
+
+"Yes, sir," Jack continued to mutter to himself, "yes, sir, he's got me!
+He's about three lengths ahead o' me, as these hoss fellers says, an' I
+don't know but what I'm distanced. Blow the blasted luck!"
+
+Heartily tired of the fair, burning with rage, and jealousy, and
+despair, but still vaguely hoping against hope for some better luck from
+some visionary source, Jack strolled about, chewing the bitter cud of
+his feelings, his hands up to his elbows in his trowser pockets and his
+soul up to its ears in the flood of discontent. He puckered his mouth
+into whistling position, but it refused to whistle. He felt as if he had
+a corn cob crossways in his throat. The wind blew his new hat off and a
+mule kicked the top out of the crown.
+
+"Only a half a dollah! Who's the next lucky man?" cried the prize
+package fellow. "I'm now going to sell a new sort of packages, each of
+which, beside the usual amount of choice candy, contains a piece of
+jewelry of pure gold! Who takes the first chance for only a half a
+dollah?"
+
+"'Ere's your mule!" answered Bill Powell, as with Minny still clinging
+to his arm, he pushed through the crowd and handed up the money.
+
+"Bravely done!" shouted the crier; "see what a beautiful locket and
+chain! Luck's a fortune! And who's the next to invest? Come right along
+and don't be afraid of a little risk! Only a half a dollah!"
+
+Jack saw Bill put the glittering chain round Minny's neck and fasten the
+locket in her belt; saw the eyes of the sweet girl gleam proudly,
+gratefully; saw black spots dancing before his own eyes; saw Bill
+swagger and toss his head. He turned dizzily away, whispering savagely,
+"Dern 'im!"
+
+Just here let me say that such an expression is not a profane one. I
+once saw a preacher kick at a little dog that got in his way on the
+sidewalk. The minister's foot missed the little dog and hit an iron
+fence, and the little dog bit the minister's other leg and jumped
+through the fence. The minister performed a _pas de zephyr_ and very
+distinctly said "Dern 'im!" Wherefore I don't think it can be anything
+more than a mere puff of fretfulness.
+
+After this Jack was for some time standing near the entrance to the
+"glass-works," a place where transparent steam engines and wonderful
+fountains were on exhibition. He felt a grim delight in tantalizing
+himself with looking at the pictures of these things and wishing he had
+money enough to pay the entrance fee. He saw persons pass in eagerly
+and come out calm and satisfied--men with their wives and children,
+young men with girls on their arms, prominent among whom were Bill and
+Minny, and one dapper sportsman even bought a ticket for his setter,
+and, patting the brute on the head, took him in.
+
+"Onery nor a dog!" hissed Jack, shambling off, and once more taking a
+long deep dive under the surface of the crowd. A ground swell cast him
+again near the vender of prize packages.
+
+"Only a half a dollah!" he yelled; "come where fortune smiles, and cares
+and poverty take flight, for only a half a dollah!"
+
+"Jist fifty cents more'n I've got about my clothes!" replied Jack, and
+the bystanders, taking this for great wit, joined in a roar of laughter,
+while with a grim smile the desperate youth passed on till he found
+himself near the toe mark of a shooting gallery, where for five cents
+one might have two shots with an air gun. He stood there for a time
+watching a number of persons try their marksmanship. It was small joy to
+know that he was a fine off-hand shot, so long as he had not a nickel in
+his pocket, but still he stood there wishing he might try his hand.
+
+"Cl'ar the track here! Let this 'ere lady take a shoot!" cried a
+familiar voice; and a way was opened for Bill Powell and Minny Hart. The
+little maiden was placed at the toe mark and a gun given to her. She
+handled the weapon like one used to it. She raised it, shut one eye,
+took deliberate aim and fired.
+
+"Centre!" roared the marker, as to the sound of a bell the funny little
+puppet leaped up and grinned above the target. Every body standing near
+laughed and some of the boys cheered vociferously. Minny looked sweeter
+than ever. Jack Trout felt famished. He begged a chew of tobacco of a
+stranger, and, grinding the weed furiously, walked off to where the
+yellow pavilion with its painted air-boats was whirling its cargoes of
+happy boys and girls round and round for the "Small sum of ten cents." A
+long, lean, red-headed fellow in one of the boats was paying for a ride
+of limitless length by scraping on a miserable fiddle. To Jack this
+seemed small labor for so much fun. How he envied the fiddler as he flew
+round, trailing his tunes behind him!
+
+"Wo'erp there! Stop yer old merchine! We'll take a ride ef ye don't
+keer!"
+
+The pavilion was stopped, a boat lowered for Bill Powell and Minny Hart,
+who got in side by side, and the fiddler struck up the tune of
+"Black-eyed Susie." Jack watched that happy couple go round and round,
+till, by the increased velocity, their two faces melted into one, which
+was neither Bill's nor Minny's--it was Luck's!
+
+"He's got one outo me," muttered Jack; "I've got no money, can't fiddle
+for a ride, nor nothin', and I don't keer a ding what becomes o' me,
+nohow!"
+
+With these words Jack wended his way to a remote part of the fair
+ground, where, under gay awnings, the sutlers had spread their tempting
+variety of cakes, pies, fruits, nuts and loaves. Here were persons of
+all ages and sizes--men, women and children--eating at well supplied
+tables. The sight was a fascinating one, and, though seeing others eat
+did not in the least appease his own hunger, Jack stood for a long time
+watching the departure of pies and the steady lessening of huge pyramids
+of sweet cakes. He particularly noticed one little table that had on its
+centre a huge peach pie, which table was yet unoccupied. While he was
+actually thinking over the plan of eating the pie and trusting to his
+legs to bear him beyond the reach of a dun, Bill and Minny sat down by
+the table and proceeded to discuss the delicious, red-hearted heap of
+pastry. At this point Bill caught Jack's eye:
+
+"Come here, Jack," said he; "this pie's more'n we can eat, come and help
+us."
+
+"Yes, come along, Jack," put in Minny in her sweetest way; "I want to
+tell you what a lot of fun we've had, and more than that, I want to know
+why you didn't come back and take me into the show!"
+
+"I ain't hungry," muttered Jack, "and besides I've got to go see a
+feller."
+
+He turned away almost choking.
+
+"Bill's got me. 'Taint no use talkin', I'm played out for good. I'm a
+trumped Jack!"
+
+He smiled a sort of flinty smile at his poor wit, and shuffled aimlessly
+along through the densest clots of the crowd.
+
+And it so continued to happen, that wherever Jack happened to stop for
+any considerable length of time he was sure to see Bill and Minny
+enjoying some rare treat, or disappearing in or emerging from some place
+of amusement.
+
+At last, driven to desperation, he determined on trying to borrow a
+dollar from his father. He immediately set about to find the old
+gentleman; a task of no little difficulty in such a crowd. It was Jack's
+forlorn hope, and it had a gloomy outlook; for old 'Squire Trout was
+thought by competent judges to be the stingiest man in the county. But
+hoping for the best, Jack hunted him here, there and everywhere, till at
+length he met a friend who said he had seen the 'Squire in the act of
+leaving the fair ground for home just a few minutes before.
+
+Taking no heed of what folks might say, Jack, on receiving this
+intelligence, darted across the ground, out at the gate and down the
+road at a speed worthy of success; but alas! his hopes were doomed to
+wilt. At the first turn of the road he met a man who informed him that
+he had passed 'Squire Trout some three miles out on his way home, which
+home was full nine miles distant!
+
+Panting, crestfallen, defeated, done for, poor Jack slowly plodded back
+to the fair ground gate, little dreaming of the new trouble that awaited
+him there.
+
+"Ticket!" said a gruff voice as he was about to pass in. He recoiled,
+amazed at his own stupidity, as he recollected that he had not thought
+to get a check as he went out! He tried to explain, but it was no go.
+
+"You needn't try that game on me," said the gatekeeper. "So just plank
+down your money or stay outside."
+
+Then Jack got furious, but the gatekeeper remarked that he had
+frequently "hearn it thunder afore this!"
+
+Jack smiled like a corpse and turned away. Going a short distance down
+the road he climbed up and sat down on top of the fence of a late mown
+clover field. Then he took out his jack-knife and began to whittle a
+splinter plucked from a rail. His face was gloomy, his eyes lustreless.
+Finally he stretched himself, hungry, jealous, envious, hateful, on top
+of the fence with his head between the crossed stakes. His face thus
+upturned to heaven, he watched two crows drift over, high up in the
+torrid reaches of autumn air, hot as summer, even hotter, and allowed
+his lips free privilege to anathematize his luck. For a long time he lay
+thus, dimly conscious of the blue bird's song and the water-like ripple
+of the grass in the fence corners. "Minny, Minny Hart, Minny!" sang the
+meadow larks, and the burden of the grasshopper's ditty was----"Only a
+half a dollah!"
+
+All at once there arose from the fair ground a mighty chorus of yells,
+that went echoing off across the country to the bluffs of Wild-cat Creek
+and died far off in the woods toward Greentown. Jack did not raise his
+head, but lay there in a sort of morose stupor, knowing well that
+whatever the sport might be, he had no hand in it.
+
+"Let 'em rip!" he muttered, "Bill's got me!"
+
+Presently the wagons and other vehicles began to leave the ground, from
+one of which he caught the sound of a sweet, familiar voice. He looked
+just in time to get a glimpse of Mr. Hart's wagon, and in it, side by
+side, Bill Powell and Minny! A cloud of yellow dust soon hid them, and
+turning away his head, happening to glance upward, Jack saw, just
+disappearing in a thin white cloud, the golden disc of Le Papillon's
+balloon!
+
+He immediately descended from his perch and began plodding his way home,
+muttering as he did so----
+
+"Dast the luck! Ding the prize package feller! Doggone Bill Powell!
+Blame the old b'loon! Dern everybody!"
+
+It was long after nightfall when he reached his father's gate. Hungry,
+weak, foot-sore, collapsed, he leaned his chin on the top rail of the
+gate and stood there for a moment while the starlight fell around him,
+sifted through the dusky foliage of the old beech trees, and from the
+far dim caverns of the night a voice smote on his ear, crying out
+tenderly, mockingly, persuasively----
+
+"Only a half a dollah!"
+
+And Jack slipped to his room and went supperless to bed, often during
+the night muttering, through the interstices of his sleep----"Bill's got
+me!"
+
+
+
+
+BIG MEDICINE.
+
+
+The corner brick storehouse--in fact the only brick building in
+Jimtown--was to be sold at auction; and, consequently, by ten o'clock in
+the morning, a considerable body of men had collected near the somewhat
+dilapidated house, directly in front of which the auctioneer, a fat man
+from Indianapolis, mounted on an old goods box, began crying, partly
+through his tobacco-filled mouth and partly through his very unmusical
+nose, as follows:--
+
+"Come up, gentlemen, and examine the new, beautiful and commodious
+property I now offer for sale! Walk round the house, men, and view it
+from every side. Go into it, if you like, up stairs and down, and then
+give me a bid, somebody, to start with. It is a very desirable house,
+indeed, gentlemen."
+
+With this preliminary puff, the speaker paused and glanced slowly over
+his audience with the air of a practiced physiognomist. The crowd
+before him was, in many respects, an interesting one. Its most prominent
+individual, and the hero of this sketch, was Dave Cook, sometimes called
+Dr. Cook, but more commonly answering to the somewhat savage sounding
+sobriquet of Big Medicine--a man some thirty-five years of age, standing
+six feet six in his ponderous boots; broad, bony, muscular, a real
+giant, with a strongly marked Roman face, and brown, shaggy hair. He was
+dressed in a soiled and somewhat patched suit of butternut jeans, topped
+off with a wide rimmed wool hat, wonderfully battered, and lopped in
+every conceivable way. He wore a watch, the chain of which, depending
+from the waistband of his pants, was of iron, and would have weighed
+fully a pound avoirdupois. He stood quite still, near the auctioneer,
+smoking a clay pipe, his herculean arms folded on his breast, his feet
+far apart. As for the others of the crowd, they were, taken
+collectively, about such as one used always to see in the "dark corners"
+of Indiana, such as Boone county used to be before the building of any
+railroads through it, such as the particular locality of Jimtown was
+before the ditching law and the I. B. & W. Railway had lifted the fog
+and enlightened the miasmatic swamps and densely timbered bog lands of
+that region of elms, burr oaks, frogs and herons. Big Medicine seemed to
+be the only utterly complacent man in the assembly. All the others
+discovered evidences of much inward disturbance, muttering mysteriously
+to each other, and casting curious, inquiring glances at an individual,
+a stranger in the place, who, with a pair of queer green spectacles
+astride his nose, and his arms crossed behind him, was slowly sauntering
+about the building offered for sale, apparently examining it with some
+care. His general appearance was that of a well dressed gentleman, which
+of itself was enough to excite remark in Jimtown, especially when an
+auction was on hand, and everybody felt jolly.
+
+"Them specs sticks to that nose o' his'n like a squir'l to a knot!" said
+one.
+
+"His pantaloons is ruther inclined to be knock-kneed," put in an old,
+grimy sinner leaning on a single barrelled shot gun.
+
+"Got lard enough onto his hair to shorten a mess o' pie crust," added a
+liver colored boy.
+
+"Walks like he'd swallered a fence rail, too," chimed in a humpbacked
+fellow split almost to his chin.
+
+"Chaws mighty fine terbacker, you bet."
+
+"Them there boots o' his'n set goin' an' comin' like a grubbin' hoe onto
+a crooked han'le."
+
+"Well, take'm up one side and down t'other, he's a mod'rately onery
+lookin' feller."
+
+These remarks were reckoned smart by those who perpetrated them, and
+were by no means meant for real slurs on the individual at whom they
+were pointed. Indeed they were delivered in guarded undertones, so that
+he might not hear them; and he, meanwhile, utterly ignorant of affording
+any sport, continued his examination of the house, the while some happy
+frogs in a neighboring pond rolled out a rattling, jubilant chorus, and
+the summer wind poured through the leafy tops of the tall elms and
+athletic burr oaks with a swash and roar like a turbulent river.
+
+"What am I now offered for this magnificent property? Come, give me a
+bid! Speak up lively! What do I hear for the house?"
+
+The auctioneer, as he spoke, let his eyes wander up the walls of the
+old, dingy building, to where the blue birds and the peewees had built
+in the cracks and along the warped cornice and broken window frames, and
+just then it chanced that a woman's face appeared at one of those
+staring holes, which, with broken lattice and shattered glass, still
+might be called a window. The face was a plump, cheerful one, the more
+radiant from contrast with the dull wall around it--a face one could
+never forget, however, and would recall often, if for nothing but the
+fine fall of yellow hair that framed it in. It was a sweet, winning,
+intellectual face, full of the gentlest womanly charms.
+
+"Forty dollars for the house, 'oman and all!" cried Big Medicine, gazing
+up at the window in which, for the merest moment, the face appeared.
+
+The man with the green spectacles darted a quick glance at the speaker.
+
+"I am bid forty dollars, gentlemen, forty dollars, do all hear? Agoing
+for forty dollars! Who says fifty?" bawled the auctioneer.
+
+The crowd now swayed earnestly forward, closing in solid order around
+the goods box. Many whiskered, uncouth, but not unkindly faces were
+upturned to the window only in time to see the beautiful woman disappear
+quite hastily.
+
+"Hooray for the gal!" cried a lusty youth, whose pale blue eyes made no
+show of contrast with his faded hair and aguish complexion. "Dad, can't
+ye bid agin the doctor so as I kin claim 'er?"
+
+"Fifty dollars!" shouted the sunburnt man addressed as Dad.
+
+This made the crowd lively. Every man nudged his neighbor, and the
+aguish, blue-eyed boy grinned in a ghastly, self-satisfied way.
+
+"Agoing at fifty dollars! Fiddlesticks! The house is worth four
+thousand. No fooling here now! Agoing at only fifty dollars--going--"
+
+"Six hundred dollars," said he of the green glasses in a clear, pleasant
+voice.
+
+"Six hundred dollars!" echoed the auctioneer in a triumphant thunderous
+tone. "That sounds like business. Who says the other hundred?"
+
+"Hooray for hooray, and hooray for hooray's daddy!" shouted the
+tallow-faced lad.
+
+The frogs pitched their song an octave higher, the blue birds and
+peewees wheeled through the falling floods of yellow sunlight, and lower
+and sweeter rose the murmur of the tide of pulsating air as it lifted
+and swayed the fresh sprays of the oaks and elms. The well dressed
+stranger lighted a cigar, took off his green glasses and put them
+carefully in his pocket, then took a cool straight look at Big Medicine.
+
+The Roman face of the latter was just then a most interesting one. It
+was expressive of more than words could rightly convey. Six hundred
+dollars, cash down, was a big sum for the crazy old house, but he had
+made up his mind to buy it, and now he seemed likely to have to let it
+go or pay more than it was worth. The stem of his clay pipe settled back
+full three inches into his firmly-set mouth, so that there seemed
+imminent danger to the huge brown moustache that overhung the fiery
+bowl. He returned the stare of the stranger with interest, and said--
+
+"Six hundred an' ten dollars."
+
+"Agoing, a----," began the auctioneer.
+
+"Six twenty," said the stranger.
+
+"Ago----."
+
+"Six twenty-one!" growled Big Medicine.
+
+"Six twenty-five!" quickly added his antagonist.
+
+Big Medicine glanced heavenward, and for a moment allowed his eyes to
+follow the flight of a great blue heron that slowly winged its way, high
+up in the yellow summer reaches of splendor, toward the distant swamps
+where the white sycamores spread their fanciful arms above the dark
+green maples and dusky witch-hazel thickets. The auctioneer, a close
+observer, saw an ashy hue, a barely discernible shade, ripple across
+the great Roman face as Big Medicine said, in a jerking tone:
+
+"Six twenty-five and a half!"
+
+The stranger took his cigar from his mouth and smiled placidly. No more
+imperturbable countenance could be imagined.
+
+"Six twenty-six!" he said gently.
+
+"Take the ole house an' be derned to you!" cried Big Medicine, looking
+furiously at his antagonist. "Take the blamed ole shacke-merack an' all
+the cussed blue-birds an' peer-weers to boot, for all I keer!"
+
+Everybody laughed, and the auctioneer continued:
+
+"Agoing for six twenty-six! Who says seven hundred? Bid up lively!
+Agoing once, agoing twice--once, twice, three-e-e-e-e times! Sold to
+Abner Golding for six hundred and twenty-six dollars, and as cheap as
+dirt itself!"
+
+"Hooray for the man who hed the most money!" shouted the tallow-faced
+boy.
+
+The sale was at an end. The auctioneer came down from his box and wiped
+his face with a red handkerchief. The crowd, as if blown apart by a puff
+of wind, scattered this way and that, drifting into small, grotesque
+groups to converse together on whatever topic might happen to suggest
+itself. Big Medicine seemed inclined to be alone, but the irrepressible
+youth of the saffron skin ambled up to him and said, in a tone intended
+for comic:
+
+"Golly, doctor, but didn't that 'ere gal projuce a orful demand for the
+ole house! Didn't she set the ole trap off when she peeked out'n the
+winder!"
+
+Big Medicine looked down at the strapping boy, much as a lion might look
+at a field rat or a weasel, then he doubled his hand into an enormous
+fist and held it under the youth's nose, saying in a sort of growl as he
+did so:
+
+"You see this 'ere bundle o' bones, don't ye?"
+
+"Guess so," replied the youth.
+
+"Well, would you like a small mess of it?"
+
+"Not as anybody knows of."
+
+"Well, then, keep yer derned mouth shet!"
+
+Which, accordingly, the boy proceeded to do, ambling off as quickly as
+possible.
+
+About this time, the stranger, having put the green spectacles back upon
+his nose, walked in the direction of 'Squire Tadmore's office,
+accompanied by the young woman who had looked from the window. When Big
+Medicine saw them he picked up a stick and began furiously to whittle it
+with his jack-knife. His face wore a comically mingled look of chagrin,
+wonder, and something like a new and thrilling delight. He puffed out
+great volumes of smoke, making his pipe wheeze audibly under the vigor
+of his draughts. He was certainly excited.
+
+"Orful joke the boys 'll have on me arter this," he muttered to himself.
+"Wonder if the 'oman's the feller's wife? Monstrous poorty, shore's yer
+born!"
+
+He soon whittled up one stick. He immediately dived for another, this
+time getting hold of a walnut knot. A tough thing to whittle, but he
+attacked it as if it had been a bit of white pine. Soon after this
+'Squire Tadmore's little boy came running down from his father's office
+to where Big Medicine stood.
+
+"Mr. Big Medicine," cried he, all out of breath, "that 'ere man what
+bought the ole house wants to see you partic'ler!"
+
+"Mischief he does! Tell 'im to go to----; no, wait a bit. Guess I'll go
+tell 'im myself."
+
+And, so saying, he moved at a slashing pace down to the door of the
+'Squire's office. He thrust his great hirsute head inside the room, and
+glaring at the mild mannered stranger, said:
+
+"D'ye want to see me?"
+
+Mr. Golding got up from his seat and coming out took Big Medicine
+familiarly by the arm, meanwhile smiling in the most friendly way.
+
+"Come one side a little, I wish to speak with you privately,
+confidentially."
+
+Big Medicine went rather sulkily along. When they had gone some distance
+from the house Mr. Golding lifted his spectacles from his nose, and
+turning his calm, smiling eyes full upon those of Big Medicine, said,
+with a shrug of his finely cut shoulders:
+
+"I outbid you a little, my friend, but I'm blessed if I haven't got
+myself into a ridiculous scrape on account of it."
+
+"How so?" growled Big Medicine.
+
+"Why, when I come to count my funds I'm short a half dollar."
+
+"You're what?"
+
+"I lack just a half dollar of having enough money to pay for the house,
+and I thought I'd rather ask you to loan me the money than anybody else
+here."
+
+Big Medicine stood for a time in silence, whittling away, as if for dear
+life, on the curly knot. Dreamy gusts of perfumed heat swept by from
+adjacent clover and wheat fields, where the blooms hung thick; little
+whirlwinds played in the dust at their feet as little whirlwinds always
+do in summer; and far away, faint, and made tenderly musical by
+distance, were heard the notes of a country dinner-horn. Big Medicine's
+ample chest swelled, and swelled, and then he burst at the mouth with a
+mighty bass laugh, that went battling and echoing round the place. Mr.
+Golding laughed too, in his own quiet, gentlemanly way. They looked at
+each other and laughed, then looked off toward the swamps and laughed.
+Big Medicine put his hands in his pockets almost up to the elbows, and
+leaned back and laughed out of one corner of his mouth while holding his
+pipe in the other.
+
+"I say, mister," said he at length, "a'n't you railly got but six
+hundred and twenty-five an' a half?"
+
+"Just that much to a cent, and no more," replied Mr. Golding, with a
+comical smile and bow.
+
+Big Medicine took his pipe from his mouth, gave the walnut knot he had
+dropped a little kick and guffawed louder and longer than before. To
+have been off at a little distance watching them would have convinced
+any one that Mr. Golding was telling some rare anecdote, and that Big
+Medicine was convulsed with mirth, listening.
+
+"Well I'm derned if 'taint quare," cried the latter, wringing himself
+into all sorts of grotesque attitudes in the ecstasy of his amusement.
+"You outbid me half a dollar and then didn't have the half a dollar
+neither! Wha, wha, wha-ee!" and his cachinnations sounded like rolling
+of moderate thunder.
+
+At the end of this he took out a greasy wallet and paid Mr. Golding the
+required amount in silver coin. His chagrin had vanished before the
+stranger's quiet way of making friends.
+
+A week passed over Jimtown. A week of as rare June weather as ever
+lingered about the cool places of the woods, or glimmered over the sweet
+clover fields all red with a blush of bloom, where the field larks
+twittered and the buntings chirped, and where the laden bees rose
+heavily to seek their wild homes in the hollows of the forests. By this
+time it was generally known in Jimtown that Mr. Golding would soon
+receive a stock of goods with which to open a "store" in the old corner
+brick; but Big Medicine knew more than any of his neighbors, for he and
+Golding had formed a partnership to do business under the "name and
+style" of Cook & Golding.
+
+This Abner Golding had lately been a wealthy retail man in Cincinnati,
+and had lost everything by the sudden suspension of a bank wherein the
+bulk of his fortune was on deposit. His creditors had made a run on him
+and he had been able to save just the merest remnant of his goods, and a
+few hundred dollars in money. Thus he came to Jimtown to begin life and
+business anew.
+
+To Big Medicine the week had been a long one; why, it would not be easy
+to tell. No doubt there had come a turning point in his life. In those
+days, and in that particular region, to be a 'store keeper' was no small
+honor. But Big Medicine acted strangely. He wandered about, with his
+hands in his pockets, whistling plaintive tunes, and often he was seen
+standing out before the old corner brick, gazing up at one of the vacant
+windows where pieces of broken lattice were swaying in the wind. At such
+times he muttered softly to himself:
+
+"Ther's wher I fust seed the gal."
+
+Four big road wagons (loaded with boxes), three of them containing the
+merchandise and one the scanty household furniture of Mr. Golding and
+his daughter Carrie, came rumbling into Jimtown. Big Medicine was on
+hand, a perfect Hercules at unloading and unpacking. Mr. Golding was
+sadly pleasant; Carrie was roguishly observant, but womanly and quiet.
+
+The tallow-faced youth and two or three others stood by watching the
+proceedings. The former occasionally made a remark at which the others
+never failed to laugh.
+
+"Ef ye'll notice, now," said he, "it's a fac 'at whenever Big Medicine
+goes to make a big surge to lift a box, he fust takes a peep at the gal,
+an' that 'ere seems to kinder make 'im 'wax strong an' multiply,' as the
+preacher says, an' then over goes the box!"
+
+"Has a awful effect on his narves," some one replied.
+
+"I'm a thinkin'," added tallow-face, "'at ef Big Medicine happens to
+look at the gal about the time he goes to make a trade, it'll have sich
+a power on 'im 'at he'll sell a yard o' caliker for nigh onto forty
+dollars!"
+
+"Er a blanket overcoat for 'bout twelve an' a half cents!" put in
+another.
+
+"I'm kinder weakly," resumed tallow-face with a comical leer at Big
+Medicine; "wonder if 't wouldn't be kinder strengthnin' on me ef I'd
+kinder sidle up towards the gal myself?"
+
+"I'll sidle up to you!" growled Big Medicine; and making two strides of
+near ten feet each, he took the youth by his faded flaxen hair, and
+holding him clear of the ground, administered a half dozen or so of
+resounding kicks, then tossed him to one side, where he fell in a heap
+on the ground. When he got on his feet again he began to bristle up and
+show fight, but when Big Medicine reached for him he ambled off.
+
+In due time the goods were all placed on the shelves and Mr. Golding's
+household furniture arranged in the upper rooms where he purposed
+living, Carrie acting as housekeeper.
+
+On the first evening after all things had been put to rights, Mr.
+Golding said to Big Medicine:
+
+"I suppose we ought to advertise."
+
+"Do how?"
+
+"Advertise."
+
+"Sartinly," said Big Medicine, having not the faintest idea of what his
+partner meant.
+
+"Who can we get to paint our fence advertisements?"
+
+A gleam of intelligence shot from Big Medicine's eyes. He knew now what
+was wanted. He remembered once, on a visit to Crawfordsville, seeing
+these fence advertisements. He comprehended in a moment.
+
+"O, I know what ye mean, now," he said, with a grin, as if communing
+with himself on some novel suggestion. "I guess I kin 'tend to that my
+own self. The moon shines to-night, don't it?"
+
+"Yes; why?"
+
+"I'll do the paintin' to-night. A good ijee has jist struck me. You jist
+leave it all to me."
+
+So the thing was settled, and Big Medicine was gone all night.
+
+The next day was a sluice of rain. It poured incessantly from daylight
+till dark. Big Medicine sat on the counter in the corner brick and
+chuckled. His thoughts were evidently very pleasant ones. Mr. Golding
+was busy marking goods and Carrie was helping him. The great grey eyes
+of Big Medicine followed the winsome girl all the time. When night came,
+and she went up stairs, he said to Golding:
+
+"That gal o' your'n is a mighty smart little 'oman."
+
+"Yes, and she's all I have left," replied Mr. Golding in a sad tone.
+
+Big Medicine stroked his brown beard, whistled a few turns of a jig
+tune, and, jumping down from the counter, went out into the drizzly
+night. A few rods from the house he turned and looked up at the window.
+A little form was just vanishing from it.
+
+"Ther's wher I fust seed the gal," he murmured, then turned and went his
+way, occupied with strange, sweet imaginings. As a matter of the merest
+conjecture, it is interesting to dwell upon the probable turn taken by
+his thoughts as he slowly stalked through the darkness and rain that
+night; but I shall not trench on what, knowing all that I do, seems
+sanctified and hallowed. It would be breaking a sacred confidence. Who
+has stood and watched for a form at a window? Who has expressed, in
+language more refined, to the inner fountain of human sympathy, the idea
+conveyed in the rough fellow's remark? Who that has, let him recall the
+time and the place holy in his memory.
+
+"Ther's wher I fust seed the gal," said the man, and went away to his
+lonely bed to dream the old new dream. All night the rain fell, making
+rich music on the roof and pouring through his healthy slumber a sound
+like the flowing of strange rivers in a land of new delights--a land
+into which he had strayed hand in hand with some one, the merest touch
+of whose hand was rapture, the simplest utterance of whose voice was
+charming beyond expression. The old new dream. The dream of flesh that
+is divine--the vision of blood that is love's wine--the apocalypse that
+bewildered the eyes of the old singer when from a flower of foam in the
+sweet green sea rose the Cytherean Venus. We have all dreamed the dream
+and found it sweet.
+
+It is quite probable that no fence advertisements ever paid as well, or
+stirred up as big a "muss" as those painted by Big Medicine on the night
+mentioned heretofore. As an artist our Hoosier was not a genius, but he
+certainly understood how to manufacture a notoriety. If space permitted
+I would copy all those rude notices for your inspection; but I must be
+content with a few random specimens taken from memory, with an eye to
+brevity. They are characteristic of the man and in somewhat an index of
+the then state of society in and around Jimtown. On Deacon Jones's fence
+was scrawled the following: "Dern yer ole sole, ef yer want good Koffy
+go to Cook & Golding's nu stoar."
+
+John Butler, a nice old quaker, had the following daubed on his gate:
+"Yu thievin' duk-legged ya and na ole cuss, ef the sperit muves ye, go
+git a broad-brimmed straw hat at Cook & Golding's great stand at
+Jimtown." The side of William Smith's pig pen bore this: "Bill, ye
+ornery sucker, come traid with Cook & Golding at the ole corner brick in
+Jimtown." Old Peter Gurley found writing to the following effect on his
+new wagon bed: "Ef yoor dri or anything, you'll find a virtoous Kag of
+ri licker at Cook & Golding's." On a large plank nailed to a tree at
+Canaan's Cross Roads all passers by saw the following: "Git up an
+brindle! Here's yer ole and faithful mewl! Come in gals and git yer
+dofunny tricks and fixens, hats, caps, bonnets, parrysols, silk
+petty-coat-sleeves and other injucements too noomerous too menshen! Rip
+in--we're on it! Call at Cook & Golding's great corner brick!"
+
+These are fair specimens of what appeared everywhere. How one man could
+have done so much in one night remains a mystery. Some people swore,
+some threatened to prosecute, but finally everybody went to the corner
+brick to trade. Jimtown became famous on account of Big Medicine and the
+corner brick store.
+
+The sun rose through the morning gate beyond the quagmires east of
+Jimtown and set through the evening gate past the ponds and maple swamps
+to the west. The winds blew and there were days of calm. The weather ran
+through its mutations of heat and cold. The herons flew over, the blue
+birds twittered and went away and came again, and the peewees
+disappeared and returned. A whole year had rolled round and it was June
+again, with the air full of rumors about the building of a railroad
+through Jimtown.
+
+During this flow of time Big Medicine had feasted his eyes on the bright
+curls and brighter eyes of Carrie Golding, till his heart had become
+tender and happy as a child's. They rarely conversed more than for him
+to say, "Miss Carrie, look there," or for her to call out, "Please, Mr.
+Cook, hand me down this bolt of muslin." But Big Medicine was content.
+
+It was June the 8th, about ten o'clock in the morning, and Big Medicine
+was slowly making his way from his comfortable bachelor's cabin to the
+corner brick. A peculiar smile was on his face, his heart was fluttering
+strangely, and all on account of a little circumstance of the preceding
+day, now fresh in his memory. Great boy that he was, he was poring ever
+a single sweet smile Carrie Golding had given him!
+
+The mail hack stood at the post-office door, whence Mr. Golding was
+coming with a letter in his hand. Big Medicine stopped and looked up at
+the window. There stood Carrie. She was looking hopefully toward her
+father. Big Medicine smiled and murmured:
+
+"Ther's wher I fust seed the gal--bless her sweet soul!" There was a
+whole world of sincere happiness in the tones of his voice.
+
+Mr. Golding passed him hastily, his green spectacles on his nose, and a
+great excitement flashing from his face. Big Medicine gazed wonderingly
+after his partner till he saw him run up stairs to Carrie's room. Then
+he thought he heard Carrie cry out joyfully, but it may have been the
+wind.
+
+When an hour had passed Mr. Golding and Carrie came down dressed for
+travelling. How strangely, wondrously beautiful the girl now looked! Mr.
+Golding was as nervous as an old woman. He rubbed his thin white hands
+together rapidly and said:
+
+"Mr. Cook, I have glorious news this morning!"
+
+"And what mought it be?" asked Big Medicine, as a damp chilliness crept
+over him, and his face grew pinched and almost as white as his shirt
+bosom.
+
+"Krofton & Kelly, the bankers, have resumed payment, and I'll get all my
+money! It _is_ glorious news, is it not, my friend?"
+
+Big Medicine was silent. He tried to speak, but his mouth was dry and
+powerless. A mist drifted across his eyes. He hardly realized where he
+was or what was said, but he knew all.
+
+"I have concluded to give you this house and all my interest in this
+store. You must not refuse. I haven't time to make the transfer now, but
+I'll not neglect it. Carrie and I must hasten at once to Cincinnati. The
+hack is waiting; so good bye, my dear friend, God bless you!" Mr.
+Golding wrung his partner's cold, limp hand, without noticing how
+fearfully haggard that Roman face had suddenly grown.
+
+"Good bye, Mr. Cook," said Carrie in her sweet, sincere way. "I'm real
+sorry to leave you and the dear old house--but--but--good bye, Mr. Cook.
+Come to see us in Cincinnati. Good bye." She gave him her hand also.
+
+He smiled a wan, flickering smile, like the last flare of a fire whose
+fuel is exhausted. Carrie's woman's heart sank under that look, though
+she knew not wherefore.
+
+The hack passed round the curve of the road.
+
+They were gone!
+
+Big Medicine stood alone in the door of the corner brick. He looked back
+over his shoulders at the well filled shelves and muttered:
+
+"She ain't here, and what do I want of the derned old store?"
+
+The wind rustled the elm leaves and tossed the brown locks of the man
+over his great forehead; the blue birds sang on the roof; the dust rose
+in little columns along the street; and, high over head, in the yellow
+mist of the fine June weather, sailed a great blue heron, going to the
+lakes. Big Medicine felt like one deserted in the wilderness. He stood
+there a while, then closed and locked the door and went into the woods.
+A month passed before he returned. Jimtown wondered and wondered. But
+when he did return his neighbors could not get a word out of him. He was
+silent, moody, listless. Where had he been? Only hunting for Mr. Golding
+and Carrie. He found them, after a long search, in a splendid residence
+on the heights just out of Cincinnati. Mr. Golding greeted him
+cordially, but somehow Big Medicine felt as though he were shaking hands
+with some one over an insurmountable barrier. That was not the Mr.
+Golding he had known.
+
+"Carrie is out in the garden. She will be glad to see you. Go along the
+hall there. You will see the gate."
+
+Mr. Golding waved his hand after the manner of a very rich man, and a
+patronizing tone would creep into his voice. Somehow Big Medicine looked
+terribly uncouth.
+
+With a hesitating step and a heart full of unreal sensations, Big
+Medicine opened the little gate and strode into the flower garden.
+Suddenly a vision, such as his fancy had never pictured, burst on his
+dazzled eyes. Flowers and vines and statues and fountains; on every hand
+rich colors; perfumes so mixed and intensified that his senses almost
+gave way; long winding walks; fairy-like bowers and music. He paused and
+listened. A heavy voice, rich and manly, singing a ballad--some popular
+love song--to the sweet accompaniment of a violin, and blended through
+it all, like a silvery thread, the low sweet voice of Carrie Golding.
+The poor fellow held his breath till the song was done.
+
+Two steps forward and Big Medicine towered above the lovers.
+
+Carrie sprang to her feet with a startled cry; then, recognizing the
+intruder, she held out her little hand and welcomed him. Turning to her
+lover she said:
+
+"Henry, this is Mr. Cook, lately papa's partner in Indiana."
+
+The lover was a true gentleman, so he took the big hard hand of the
+visitor and said he was glad to see him.
+
+Big Medicine stood for a few moments holding a hand of each of the
+lovers. Presently a tremor took possession of his burly frame. He did
+not speak a word. His breast swelled and his face grew awfully white.
+He put Carrie's hand in that of her lover and turned away. As he did so
+a tear, a great bitter drop, rolled down his haggard cheek. A few long
+strides and Big Medicine was gone.
+
+Shrilly piped the blue birds, plaintively sang the peewees, sweetly
+through the elms and burr oaks by the corner brick blew the fresh summer
+wind, as, just at sunset, Big Medicine once more stood in front of the
+old building with his eyes fixed on the vacant, staring window.
+
+It was scarcely a minute that he stood there, but long enough for a
+tender outline of the circumstances of the past year to rise in his
+memory.
+
+A rustling at the broken lattice, a sudden thrill through the iron frame
+of the watching man, a glimpse of a sweet face--no, it was only a fancy.
+The house was still, and old and desolate. It stared at him like a
+death's head.
+
+Big Medicine raised his eyes toward heaven, which was now golden and
+flashing resplendently with sunset glories. High up, as if almost
+touching the calm sky, a great blue heron was toiling heavily westward.
+Taking the course chosen by the lone bird, Big Medicine went away, and
+the places that knew him once know him no more forever.
+
+
+
+
+THE VENUS OF BALHINCH.
+
+
+When I returned from Europe with a finished education, I found that my
+fortune also was finished in the most approved modern style, so I left
+New York and drifted westward in search of employment. At length I came
+to Indiana, and, having not even a cent left, and mustering but one
+presentable suit of clothes, I looked about me in a hungry, half
+desperate sort of way, till I pounced upon the school in Balhinch. Now
+Balhinch is not a town, nor a cross-road place, nor a post-office--it is
+simply a neighborhood in the southwestern corner of Union Township,
+Montgomery County--a neighborhood _sui generis_, stowed away in the
+breaks of Sugar Creek, containing as good, quiet, law-abiding folk as
+can be found anywhere outside of Switzerland. My school was a small one
+in numbers, but the pupils ranged from four to six feet three in
+altitude, and well proportioned. The most advanced class had thumbed
+along pretty well through the spelling book. I need not take up your
+time with the school, however, for it has nothing at all to do with my
+story, excepting merely to explain how I came to be in Balhinch, in the
+State of Indiana.
+
+My first sight of Susie Adair was on Sunday at the Methodist prayer
+meeting. I was sitting with my back to a window and facing the door of
+the log meeting house when she entered. It was July--a hot glary day,
+but a steady wind blew cool and sweet from the southwest, bringing in
+all sorts of woodland odors. The grasshoppers were chirruping in the
+little timothy field hard by, and over in a bit of woodland pasture a
+swarm of blue jays were worrying a crow, keeping up an incessant
+squeaking and chattering. The dumpy little class leader--the only little
+man in Balhinch--had just begun to give out the hymn
+
+ "Love is the sweetest bud that blows,
+ Its beauties never die,
+ On earth among the saints it grows
+ And ripens in the sky," &c.,
+
+when Susie came in. Ben Crane was sitting by me. He nudged me with his
+elbow and whispered:
+
+"How's that 'ere for poorty?"
+
+I made him no answer, but remained staring at the girl till long after
+she had taken her seat. Nature plays strange tricks. Susie, the daughter
+of farmer Adair, was as beautiful in the face as any angel could be, and
+her form was as perfect as that of the Cnidian Venus. Her motion when
+she walked was music, and as she sat in statuesque repose, the
+undulations of her queenly form were those of perfect ease, grace and
+strength. Her hands were small and taper, a little browned from
+exposure, as was also her face. Her hair was the real classic gold, and
+her grey eyes were riant with health and content. When her red lips
+parted to sing, they discovered small even teeth, as white as ivory. I
+can give you no idea of her. Physically she was perfection's self in the
+mould of a Venus of the grandest type. Her head, too, was an
+intellectual one (though feminine), in the best sense of the word. The
+first thought that flashed across my mind was embodied in the words--_A
+Venus_--and I still think of her as the best model I ever saw.
+
+"How's that for poorty?" repeated Crane.
+
+"Who is she!" I replied interrogatively.
+
+"She's my jewlarker," said he.
+
+"Your what?"
+
+"My sweetheart."
+
+"What is her name?"
+
+"Susie Adair."
+
+So I came to know her and admire her, and even before that little prayer
+meeting was over I loved her. Introductions were an unknown institution
+in Balhinch, but I was not long in finding a way to the personal
+acquaintance of Susie. I found her remarkably intelligent for one of her
+limited opportunities, very fond of reading, sprightly in conversation,
+womanly, modest, sweet tempered, and, indeed, altogether charming as
+well as superbly beautiful.
+
+As for me, I am an insignificant looking man, and then I was even more
+so than now. My hair is terribly stiff and red, you know, and my eyes
+are very pale blue, nearly white. My neck is very long and has a large
+Adam's apple. I am small and narrow chested, and have slender bow legs.
+My teeth are uneven and my nose is pug. I have a very fine thin voice,
+decidedly nasal, as you perceive. One thing, however, I am well
+educated, polite, and not a bad conversationalist.
+
+Susie was a most entertaining and perplexing study for me from the
+start. She treated me with decided consideration and kindness, seemed
+deeply interested in my accounts of my travels, asked me many questions
+about the old world and good society, sat for hours at a time listening
+to me as I read aloud. In fact I felt that I was impressing her deeply,
+but she would go with Ben Crane, that long, awkward, ignorant gawk. How
+could a young woman of such fine magnetic presence, and endowed with
+such genuine, instinctive purity of taste in everything else, bear the
+presence of a rough greenhorn like that? Finally I said to myself: she
+is kind and good; she cannot bear to slight Ben, though she cares
+nothing for him.
+
+What a strange state being in love is! It is like dreaming in the grass.
+One hears the flow of the wind--it is the breath of love--one smells the
+flowers, and it is the perfume of a young cheek, the sharp fragrance of
+blonde curls. What dreams I had in those days! I could scarcely endure
+my school to the end of the first three months. Then I gave it up, and
+collecting my wages purchased me some fine clothes--that is, fine for
+the time and the place. I recollect that suit now, and wonder how a man
+of my taste could have borne to wear it. A black coat, a scarlet vest
+and white pants, ending with calf boots and a very tall silk hat! If you
+should see me dressed that way now you would laugh till your ribs would
+hurt. I do not know how true it is, but, from a pretty good source, I
+heard that Ben Crane said I looked like a red-headed woodpecker. One
+thing I do know, I never saw a woodpecker with a freckled face. I have a
+freckled face.
+
+Ben soon recognized me as his rival and treated me with supreme
+impertinence, even going so far as to rub his fist under my nose and
+swear at me--a thing at which I felt profoundly indignant, and
+considering which I was surely justified in sticking a lucifer match
+into Ben's six valuable hay stacks one night thereafter. It was a great
+fire, and two hundred dollars loss to Ben. Let him keep his fist out
+from under my nose.
+
+But I must come to my story, cutting short these preliminaries. It is a
+story I never tire of telling, and a story which has elicited
+ejaculations from many.
+
+It was a ripe sweet day in the latter part of September--clear, but hazy
+and dreamful--a prelude to the Indian summer. I stood before the glass
+in my room at 'Squire Jones's, where I boarded, and very carefully
+arranged my bright blue neck-tie. Then I combed my hair. I never have
+got thoroughly familiar with my hair. I cannot, even now, comb it, while
+looking in a glass, without cringing for fear of burning my fingers. The
+long, wavy red locks flow through the comb like flames, and underneath
+is a gleam of live coals and red hot ashes. Ben Crane said he believed
+my head had set his hay stacks a-fire. Maybe it did. I wished that a
+stray flash from the same source would kindle the heart of Susie Adair
+and heat it until it lay under her Cytherean breasts a puddle of molten
+love. I put my silk hat carefully upon my head and wriggled my hands
+into a pair of kid gloves; then, walking-stick in hand, I set out to
+know my fate at the hands of Susie. My way was across a stubble field in
+which the young clover, sown in the spring, displayed itself in a
+variety of fantastic modes. Have you ever noticed how much grass is like
+water? Some one, Hawthorne, perhaps, has spoken of "a gush of violets,"
+and Swinburne, going into one of his musical frenzies, cries:
+
+ "Where tides of grass break into foam of flowers."
+
+I have seen pools of clover and streams of timothy; I have stood ankle
+deep in shoal blue grass and have watched for hours the liquid ripples
+of the red top. I have seen the field sparrows dive into the green waves
+of young wheat, and the black starlings wade about in the sink-foil of
+southern countries. Grass is a liquid that washes earth's face till it
+shines like that of a clean, healthy child. But clover prefers to stand
+in pools and eddies, in which oft and oft I have seen the breasts of
+meadow larks shine like gold, the while a few sweet notes, like rung
+silver, rose and trembled above the trefoil, all woven, in and out,
+through the swash of the wind's palpitant currents--a music of
+unspeakable influence. Swallows skim the surface of grass just as they
+do that of water. When the summer air agitates the smooth bosom of a
+broad green meadow field, you will see these little random arrows
+glancing along the emerald surface, cutting with barbed wings through
+the tossing, bloom-capped waves, thence ricochetting high into the
+bright air to whirl and fall again as swiftly as before. Many a time I
+have traced streams of grass to their fresh fountains, where jets of
+tender foliage and bubbles of tinted flowers welled up from dark, rich
+earth, and flowed away, with a velvet rustle and a ripple like blown
+floss, to break and recoil and eddy against the dark shadows of a
+distant grove. Such a fountain is a place of fragrance and joy. The bees
+go thither to get the sweetest honey, and find it a very Hybla. The
+butterflies float about it in a dreamful trance, while in the cool,
+damp shade of a dock leaf squats a great toad, like a slimy dragon
+guarding the gate of a paradise.
+
+As I slowly walked across that stubble field, now and then stepping into
+a tuft of clover, out from which a quail would start, whirling away in a
+convulsion of flight, I allowed dreams of bliss to steal rosily across
+my brain. I scarcely saw the great gold-sharded beetles that hummed and
+glanced in the mellow sun-light. I heard like one half asleep, as if far
+away, the sharp twitter of the blue bird and the tender piping of the
+meadow lark. Susie Adair was all my thought. I recollect that, just as I
+climbed the fence at the farther side of the clover field, I saw a white
+winged, red headed woodpecker pounce upon and carry off a starry
+opal-tinted butterfly, and I thought how sweet it would be if I could
+thus steal away into the free regions of space the object of my gentler
+passion. But then what wonderful big wings I should have needed, for my
+Venus of the hollow of the hill of Balhinch was no airy thing. Her tall,
+strong body and magnificent limbs equalled one hundred and forty pounds
+avoirdupois! My own weight was about one hundred and twenty.
+
+As I neared Susie's home I began, for the first time in my life, to
+suffer from palpitation. The shadow of a doubt floated in the autumn
+sun-light. I set my teeth together and resolved not to be faint hearted.
+I must go in boldly and plead my cause and win.
+
+When I reached the gate of the Adair farmhouse I had to look straight
+over the head of a very large, sanctimonious-faced bull-dog to get a
+view of the vine covered porch. This dog looked up at me and smiled
+ineffably; then he came to the gate and stood over against me, peeping
+between the slats. I hesitated. About this time Ben Crane came out of
+the house with a banjo in his hand. He had been playing for Susie. He
+was a natural musician.
+
+"'Feared o' the dog, Mr. Woodpecker?" said he. "Begone, Bull!" and he
+kicked the big-headed canine aside so that I could go in.
+
+I heard him thrumming on his banjo far down the road as Susie met me at
+the door. How wondrously beautiful she was!
+
+"Sit down Mr. ----, and, if you do not care, I'll bring the churn in and
+finish getting the butter while we talk."
+
+I was delighted--I was charmed--fascinated. Susie's father had gone to a
+distant village, and her mother, a gentle work-worn matron, was in the
+other room spinning flax, humming, meantime, snatches of camp meeting
+hymns. The sound of that spinning-wheel seemed to me strangely mournful
+and sad, but Susie's deep, clear gray eyes and cheerful voice were the
+very soul of joyousness, health and youth. She brought in a great
+fragrant cedar churn, made to hold six or eight gallons of cream, and
+forthwith began her labor. She stood as she worked, and the exercise
+throwing her entire body into gentle but well-defined motion, displayed
+all the riches of her contour. The sleeves of her calico gown were
+rolled up above the elbows, leaving her plump, muscular arms bare, and
+her skirt was pinned away from her really small feet and shapely ankles
+in such a way as to give one an idea, a suggestion, of supreme innocence
+and grace. Her long, crinkled gold hair was unbound, hanging far below
+her waist, and shining like silk. Her lips, carmine red, seemed to
+overflow with tender utterances.
+
+Ever since that day I have thought churning a kind of sacred, charmingly
+blessed work, which ought to be, if really it is not, the pastime of
+those delightful beings the ancients called deities. Cream is more
+fragrant, more delicious, more potent than nectar or ambrosia. A cedar
+churn is more delicately perfumed than any patera of the gods. And, I
+say it with reverence, I have seen, swaying lily-like above the churn, a
+beauty more perfect than that which bloomed full grown from the bright
+focus of the sea's ecstatic travail.
+
+What a talk Susie and I had that day! Slowly, stealthily I crept nearer
+and nearer to the subject burning in my heart. I watched Susie closely,
+for her face was an enigma to me. I never think of her and of that day
+without recalling Baudelaire's dream of a giantess. More happy than the
+poet, I really saw my colossal beauty stand full grown before me, but,
+like him, I wondered--
+
+ * * * "Si son coeur couve une sombre flamme
+ Aux humides brouillards qui nagent dans ses yeux."
+
+I could not tell, from any outward sign, what was going on in her heart.
+No sphinx could have been more utterly calm and mysterious. She had a
+most baffling way about her, too. When at last I had reached the point
+of a confession of my maddening love, she broke into one of my
+charmingest sentences to say--
+
+"Mr. ----, you'd better move farther away from the churn or I might
+spatter your clothes."
+
+This, somehow, disconcerted and bothered me. But Susie was so calm and
+sweet about it, her gray eyes beamed so mysteriously innocent of any
+impropriety, that I soon regained my lost eloquence.
+
+How sharply and indelibly cut in my memory, like intaglios in ivory, the
+surroundings of that scene, even to the minutest detail! For instance, I
+can see as plainly as then my new silk hat on the floor between my
+knees, containing a red handkerchief and a paper of chewing tobacco. I
+recall, also, that a slip-trod shoe lay careened to one side near the
+centre of the room. The bull-dog came to the door and peeped solemnly in
+a time or two. A string of dried pumpkin cuts hung by the fireplace, and
+under a small wooden table in one corner were piled a few balls of
+"carpet rags." I sat in a very low chair. A picture of George Washington
+hung above a small square window. The floor was ash boards uncarpeted. I
+heard some chickens clucking and cackling under the house.
+
+Finally, I recollect it as if it were but yesterday, I said:
+
+"I love you, Susie--I love you, and I have loved you ever since I first
+saw you!"
+
+How tame the words sound now! but then they came forth in a tremulous
+murmur that gave them character and power. Susie looked straight at me
+a moment, and I thought I saw a softer light gather in her eyes. Then
+she took away the churn dasher and lid and fetched a large bowl from a
+cupboard. What a fine golden pile of butter she fished up into the bowl!
+
+I drew my chair somewhat nearer, and watched her pat and roll and
+squeeze the plastic mass with the cherry ladle. A little gray kitten
+came and rubbed and purred round her. Again the bull-dog peeped in. A
+breeze gathered some force and began to ripple pleasantly through the
+room. Far away in the fields I heard the quails whistling to each other.
+An old cow strolled up the lane by the house and round the corner of the
+orchard, plaintively tinkling her bell. Steadily hummed Mrs. Adair's
+spinning wheel. I slipped my hat and my chair a little closer to Susie,
+and by a mighty effort directed my burning words straight to the point.
+I cannot repeat all I said. I would not if I could. Such things are
+sacred.
+
+"Susie, I love you, madly, blindly, dearly, truly! O, Susie! will you
+love me--will you be my wife?"
+
+Again she turned on me that strange, sweet, half smiling look. Her lips
+quivered. The flush on her cheeks almost died out.
+
+"Answer me, Susie, and say you will make me happy."
+
+She walked to the cupboard, put away the bowl of butter and the ladle,
+then came back and stood by the churn and me. How indescribably charming
+she looked! She smiled strangely and made a motion with her round strong
+arms. I answered the movement. I spread wide my arms and half rose to
+clasp her to my bosom. A whole life was centred in the emotion of that
+moment. Susie's arms missed me and lifted the churn. I sank back into my
+chair. How gracefully Susie swayed herself to her immense height, toying
+with the ponderous churn held far above her head. I saw a kitten fairly
+fly out of the room, its tail as level as a gun barrel; I saw the
+bull-dog's face hastily withdraw from the door; I saw the carpet balls,
+the pumpkin cuts and the print of Washington all through a perpendicular
+cataract of deliciously fragrant buttermilk! I saw my hat fill up to the
+brim, with my handkerchief afloat. I heaved an awful sigh and leaped to
+my feet. I saw old Mrs. Adair standing in the partition door, with her
+arms akimbo, and heard her say--
+
+"W'y, Susan Jane Samantha Ann! What 'pon airth hev ye done?"
+
+And the Venus replied:
+
+"I've been givin' this 'ere little woodpecker a good dose of
+buttermilk!"
+
+I seized my hat and shuffled out of the door, feeling the milk gush from
+the tops of my boots at each hasty step I made. I ran to the gate, went
+through and slammed it after me. As I did so I heard a report like the
+closing of a strong steel trap. It was the bull-dog's teeth shutting on
+a slat of the gate as he made a dive at me from behind. I smiled grimly,
+thinking how I'd taste served in buttermilk.
+
+On my way home I passed Ben Crane's house. He was sitting at a window
+playing his banjo, and singing in a stentorian voice:
+
+ "O! Woodpecker Jim,
+ Yer chance is mighty slim!
+ Jest draw yer red head into yer hole
+ And there die easy, dern your soul,
+ O! slim Woodpecker Jim!"
+
+I was so mad that I sweat great drops of pure buttermilk, but over in
+the fields the quails whistled just as clear and sweet as ever, and I
+heard the wind pouring through the stubble as it always does in autumn!
+
+
+
+
+THE LEGEND OF POTATO CREEK.
+
+
+Big yellow butterflies were wheeling about in the drowsy summer air, and
+hovering above the moist little sand bars of Potato Creek. A shady dell,
+wrapped in the hot lull of August, sent up the spires and domes of its
+walnut and poplar trees, clearly defined, and sheeny, while underneath
+the forest roof the hazel and wild rose bushes had wrung themselves into
+dusky mats. The late violets bloomed here and there, side by side with
+those waxlike yellow blossoms, called by the country folk "butter and
+eggs." Through this dell Potato Creek meandered fantastically, washing
+bare the roots of a few gnarled sycamores, and murmuring among the small
+bowlders that almost covered its bed. It was not a strikingly romantic
+or picturesque place--rather the contrary--much after the usual type of
+ragged little dells. "A scrubby little holler" the neighborhood folk
+called it.
+
+Perched on the topmost tangle of the dry, tough roots of an old upturned
+tree, sat little Rose Turpin, sixteen that very August day; pretty, nay
+beautiful, her school life just ended, her womanhood just beginning to
+clothe her face and form in that mysterious mantle of tenderness--the
+blossom, the flower that brings the rich sweet fruit of love. From her
+high perch she leaned over and gazed down into the clear water of the
+creek and smiled at the gambols of the minnows that glanced here and
+there, now in shadowy swarms and anon glancing singly, like sparks of
+dull fire, in the limpid current. Some small cray-fishes, too, delighted
+her with their retrograde and side-wise movements among the variegated
+pebbles at the bottom of the water. A small sketch book and a case of
+pencils lay beside her. So busy was she with her observations, that a
+fretful, peevish, but decidedly masculine voice near by startled her as
+if from a doze. She had imagined herself so utterly alone.
+
+"Wo-erp 'ere, now can't ye! Wo, I say! Turn yer ole head roun' this way
+now, blast yer ole picter! No foolin', now; wo-erp, I tell ye!"
+
+Rose was so frightened at first that she seemed about to rise in the air
+and fly away; but her quick glance in the direction of the sound
+discovered the speaker, who, a few rods further down the creek, stood
+holding the halter rein of a forlorn looking horse in one hand, and in
+the other a heavy woodman's axe.
+
+"Wo-erp, now! I hate like the nation to slatherate ye; but I said I'd do
+it if ye didn't get well by this August the fifteenth; an' shore 'nuff,
+here ye are with the fistleo gittin' wus and wus every day o' yer life.
+So now ye may expect ter git what I tole ye! Stan' still now, will ye,
+till I knock the life out'n ye!"
+
+By this time Rose had come to understand the features of the situation.
+The horse was sadly diseased with that scourge of the equine race,
+scrofulous shoulder or fistula, commonly called, among the country folk,
+fistleo, and because the animal could not get well the man was on the
+point of killing it by knocking it on the head with the axe.
+
+Of all dumb things a horse was Rose's favorite. She had always, since
+her very babyhood, loved horses.
+
+"Wo-wo-wo-erp, here! Ha'n't ye got no sense at all? Ding it, how d'ye
+'spect me to hit yer blamed ole head when ye keep it a waggin' 'round in
+that sort o' style? Wo-erp!"
+
+The fellow had tied the halter rein around a sapling about two feet from
+the ground, and was now preparing to deal the horse a blow with the axe
+between its eyes. The animal seemed unaware of any danger, but kept its
+head going from side to side, trying to fight certain bothersome
+gad-flies.
+
+"O, sir, stop; don't, don't; please, sir, don't!" cried the girl, her
+sweet voice breaking into silvery echo fragments in every nook of the
+little hollow.
+
+The man gazed all around, and, seeing no one, let fall the axe by his
+side. The birds, taking advantage of the silence, lifted a twittering
+chorus through the dense dark tops of the trees. The slimmest breath of
+air languidly caressed the leaves of the rose vines. The bubbling of the
+brook seemed to touch a mellower key, and the yellow butterflies settled
+all together on a little sand bar, their bright wings shut straight and
+sharp above their bodies. The man seemed intently listening. "Tw'an't
+mammy's voice, nohow," he muttered; "but I'd like to know who 'twas,
+though."
+
+He stood a moment longer, as if in doubt, then again raising his axe he
+continued:
+
+"Must 'a' been a jay bird squeaked. Wo-erp 'ere now! I'm not goin' to
+fool wi' ye all day, so hold yer head still!"
+
+That was a critical moment for the lean, miserable horse. It lowered its
+head and held it quite still. The axe was steadily poised in the air.
+The man's face wore a look of determination--grim, stone-like. He was,
+perhaps, twenty-five, tall and bony, with a countenance sallow almost to
+greenness, sunken pale blue eyes, sun burnt hair, thin flaxy beard, and
+irregular, half decayed teeth. Although his body and limbs were shrunken
+to the last degree of attenuation, still the big cords of his neck and
+wrists stood out taut, suggesting great strength. The blow would be a
+terrible one. The horse would die almost without a struggle.
+
+"O, O, O! Indeed, sir, you must not! Stop that, sir, instantly! You
+shall not do it, sir! O, sir!"
+
+And fluttering down from her perch, Rose flew to the spot where the
+tragedy was pending, and cast herself pale and trembling between the
+horse and its would-be executioner.
+
+The axe fell from the man's hands.
+
+His eyes became exactly circular.
+
+His under jaw dropped so that his mouth was open to its fullest gaping
+capacity. His shoulders fell till their points almost met in front of
+his sunken chest. He was a picture of overwhelming surprise.
+
+"An' what in thunder do you want of him? What good's he goin' to do you?
+'Cause, you see, he can't work nor be rid on nor nothin'."
+
+"O never mind, sir, just please give him to me and I'll take him and
+care for him. Poor horsey! Poor horsey! See, he loves me already!"
+
+The beast had thrust its nose against the maiden's hand.
+
+"Well, I don't know 'bout this. I'd as soon 'at you have 'im as not if I
+hadn't swore to kill 'im, an' I musn't lie to 'im. An' besides, I've had
+sich a pesky derned time wi' 'im 'at it looks kinder mean 'at I
+shouldn't have the satisfaction of bustin' his head for it. I'm goin' to
+knock 'im, an' ye jist mought as well stan' aside!"
+
+Just then the peculiarities of the man's character were written on his
+face. His nose denoted pugnacity, his lips sensuality, but not of a base
+sort, his eyes ignorance and rough kindness, his chin firmness, his jaw
+tenacity of purpose, and his complexion the ague. He had sworn to kill
+the horse, and kill him he would. You could see that in the very
+wrinkles of his neck. He evidently felt that it was a duty he owed to
+his conscience--a duty made doubly imperative by the horse's refusal to
+get well by the exact time prescribed.
+
+High up on the dead spire of a walnut tree a woodpecker began to beat a
+long, rattling tattoo. The horse very lazily and innocently winked his
+brown eyes, and putting forth his nose sniffed at the skirt of the
+girl's dress.
+
+"I'm glad--O I'm ever so glad you'll not kill him!" murmured the little
+lady when she saw the axe fall to the ground.
+
+The man stood a long moment, as if petrified or frozen into position,
+then somewhat recovering, he re-seized the axe, and flourishing it high
+in the air, cried in a voice that, cracked and shrill, rang petulantly
+through the woods:
+
+"I said I'd kill 'im if that garglin' oil didn't cure 'im, 'an I'm
+derned ef I don't, too!"
+
+"O, sir, if you please! The poor horse is not to blame!" exclaimed the
+excited girl.
+
+"'Taint no use o' beggin'; he's no 'count but to jist eat up corn, an'
+hay, an' paster an' the likes; and his blasted fistleo gits wus an' wus
+all the time. An't I spent more'n he's wo'th a tryin' to cure 'm, an'
+don't everybody laugh at me 'cause I've got sich a derned ole slummux of
+a hoss? Jist blame my picter if I'll stand it! So now you've hearn me
+toot my tin horn, an' ye may as well stan' out'n the way!"
+
+"But, sir, I'll take him off your hands, may I? Say, sir? O please let
+me take him!"
+
+While he stood with his axe raised, Rose was very diligently and
+nervously tugging at the knot that fastened the halter rein to the tree,
+and ere he was aware of her intent, she had untied it and was resolutely
+leading the poor old animal away.
+
+The man's eyes got longest the short way as he gazed at the retreating
+figure.
+
+"Well now, that's as cool as a cowcumber and twicet as juicy! Gal, ye'r'
+a brick! ye'r' a knot! Ye'r' a born pacer! Take 'im 'long for all I
+keer! Take 'im 'long!"
+
+He put down his axe, placed his hands against his sides and smiled, as
+he spoke, a big wrinkling smile that covered the whole of his sallow,
+skinny face and ran clear down to the neck band of his homespun shirt.
+
+"Pluck, no eend to it!" he muttered; "wonder who she is?
+Poorty--geeroody!"
+
+The wild birds sang a triumphant hymn, the breeze freshened till the
+whole woods rustled, and louder still rose the bubbling of the stream
+among its bowlders.
+
+"Well, I'll jist be dorged! The poortiest gal in all Injianny! An' she's
+tuck my ole hoss whether or no! She's a knot! Sort o' a cool proceedin',
+it 'pears to me, but she's orful welcome to the hoss! Howdsomever it's
+mighty much of a joke on me, 'r my name's not Zach Jones!"
+
+He laughed long and loud. The birds laughed, too, and still the wind
+freshened.
+
+The girl and the horse had quickly disappeared behind the hazel and
+papaw bushes. Zach Jones was alone with his axe and his reflections.
+
+"Yender's where she sot--right up yender on that ole clay root. She must
+'a' been a fishin', I reckon."
+
+Another admiring chuckle.
+
+He went to the spot and clambered up among the roots. There lay Rose's
+sketch book and pencil case. He took up the book and curiously turned
+the leaves, his eyes running with something like childish delight over
+the flowers and bits of landscape. He had never before seen a drawing.
+
+"Poorty as the gal 'erself, 'most," he said, "an' seein' 'at she's tuck
+my ole hoss, I spose I'll have to take these 'ere jimcracks o' her'n.
+I'll take 'em 'long anyhow, jist to 'member her by!"
+
+This argument seemed logical and conclusive, and with a quick glance
+over his shoulder he crammed book and pencil case into the capacious
+depths of the side pocket of his pants.
+
+"Now then it's about time for my chill, an' I'd better go home. Hang the
+luck; s'pose I'll allus have the ager!" This last sentence was uttered
+in a tone of comical half despair, and accompanied by a facial
+contortion possible to no one but a person thoroughly saturated with
+ague in its chronic form.
+
+After he left the dell, Zach had a hot walk across a clover field before
+he reached the dilapidated log house where he lived with his widowed
+mother. In a short time his chill set in, and it was a fearful one. His
+teeth chattered and his bony frame rattled like a bundle of dry sticks
+in a strong wind. After it had shaken him thus for about an hour, his
+brother Sammy, a lad of ten years, came in with a jug of buttermilk
+brought from a neighbor's.
+
+"Mammy, 'ere's yer buttermilk," said he, setting the jug on the floor.
+"Shakin' like forty--a'n't ye, Zach? he added, glancing with a sad,
+lugubrious smile at his brother; then, changing his tone and also his
+countenance, he continued, with a broader grin: "Bet ye a dollar ye
+can't guess what I seed over to 'Squire Martin's!"
+
+"No, nor I don't care a cuss; so put off an' don't come yawpin' round
+me!" replied Zach.
+
+"Yes ye do, too; an' I know ye do, for 'twas yer ole fistleo hoss. That
+'ere fine gal 'at stays over there is havin' a man wash 'im an' doctor
+'im." Sammy winked and hitched up his pants as he spoke.
+
+"Do say, Sammy, is that so, now?" cried the widow, holding up her hands.
+"How on 'arth come she by the hoss? Zach, I thought you'd killed that
+creater'!"
+
+"Mammy, ef you an' Sammy'll jist let me 'joy this 'ere ager in peace
+I'll be orful 'bleeged to ye," said Zach, making his chair creak and
+quiver with the ecstasy of his convulsion.
+
+But Sammy's tongue would go. He thought he had a "good 'un" on Zach, and
+nothing short of lightning could have killed him quick enough to prevent
+his telling it.
+
+"The gal says as how Zach gin 'er the ole hoss for to 'member 'im by!"
+he blurted out, shying briskly from Zach's foot, which otherwise would
+have landed him in the door yard.
+
+"Lookee here now, Zach, you jist try the likes o' that ag'in an' I'll
+give ye sich a broom-stickin' as ye a'n't had lately. Ye mought 'a'
+injured the child's insides!" and as she spoke the widow flourished the
+broom.
+
+So Zach dropped his head upon his chest and employed himself exclusively
+with his chill. When his mother was not looking at him, however, he
+would occasionally slip the sketch book partly out of his pocket and
+peep between its leaves. When his fever came on he got "flighty" and
+horrified the widow with talk about an angel on a clay root and a sweet
+little "hoss thief" from whom he had stolen the "picters!"
+
+I cannot exactly say how Zach got to going over to 'Squire Martin's so
+often after this. But his first visit was a compulsory one. His mother
+happening to discover his possession of the sketch book and pencil case,
+made him return them with his own hand to Rose. He at once became deeply
+interested in the progress of his former patient's convalescence; for,
+strange to say, the poor horse began almost immediately to get well, and
+in two months was sound, glossy and fat. Nor was he an ill-looking
+animal. On the contrary, when Rose sat on his back and stroked his mane,
+he arched his neck and pawed the ground like a thoroughbred.
+
+'Squire Martin was a good man, and seeing how Zach seemed to enjoy
+Rose's company, he one day took the girl aside and said to her:
+
+"You must be somewhat of a doctor, my dear, seeing how you've touched up
+the old hoss, and I propose for you to try your hand on another
+subject. There's poor Zach Jones, who's had the chills for six or eight
+years as constant as sunrise and sunset, and no medicine can't do him
+any good. Now I'll be bound if you'll try you can cure him sound and
+well. All you need to do in the world is to pet him up some'at as you
+have the ole hoss. Jist take a little interest in the feller an' he'll
+come out all right. All he wants is to forget he ever had the ager and
+take some light exercise and have some fun. Fun is the only medicine to
+cure the chills with. Quinine is no 'count but to make a racket in a
+feller's head, and calomel'll kill 'im, sure. Now I propose to let Zach
+have a hoss and saddle and you must go out a riding with 'im and try to
+divert his mind from his sorrows and aches and pains--now that's a good
+girl, Rosie."
+
+Rose, whose healthful, impulsive, generous nature would not allow her to
+refuse so well intended and withal so small a request, readily agreed to
+do all she could in the matter, and very soon thereafter she and Zach
+were the very best of friends, taking long rides together through
+woodlands and up and down the pleasant lanes of 'Squire Martin's broad
+estates. The young girl soon found the companionship of Zach, novel and
+most awkward as it was at first, agreeable and almost charming in its
+freshness and sincerity. As for Zach himself, he was the girl's slave
+from the start. He could not do too much for her in his earnest,
+respectful way. Women are always tyrants, and their tyranny seems to be
+inversely as their size and directly as the size of the man upon whom it
+is exerted. Rose was a very little chit of a maiden, and Zach was a
+great big bony frame of a fellow. The result, of course, was despotism.
+But, although Zach was a democrat, he seemed to like the oppression, and
+ran after big-winged butterflies, opened gates, pulled down and put up
+innumerable fences, climbed trees after empty bird nests, gathered
+flowers and ferns--did everything, in fact, required of him by his
+little queen. He became a daily visitor at the 'Squire's, and seemed to
+have entirely forgotten everything else or utterly submerged it in his
+unselfish devotion to the girl. The good 'Squire saw this with unbounded
+delight.
+
+So August quietly drifted by, and September hung its yellow banner on
+the corn and said farewell with a sigh that had in it a smack of winter.
+
+Rose's parents were wealthy and lived in Indianapolis, and now came the
+time for the girl's return to her city home. Meanwhile a remarkable
+change had taken place in the health and spirits of Zach Jones. The ague
+had departed, the sallowness was gone from his skin, somewhat of flesh
+had gathered on his cheeks, and in his eyes shone a cheerful light. He
+was straight and almost plump, and his hair and beard had assumed a
+gloss and liveliness they had never before known. He had thrown away
+quinine and calomel, and his sleep at night was soft and sweet, broken
+only by fair, happy dreams, that lingered long after he was awake. At
+home his mother had far less trouble with him, and Sammy never got a
+kick even if he did occasionally mention old fistleo in an equivocal
+way. The amount of provender it required to satisfy Zach's appetite now
+was a constant source of amazement to the widow.
+
+The evening preceding Rose's departure was a fine one. The woods were
+gold, the sky was turquoise. Instead of riding, as usual, the young
+people took a stroll in the 'Squire's immense orchard. The apples were
+ripe and ready to be gathered into the cellars; their mellow fragrance
+flavored the autumn air so delicately that Zach said it smelt sweeter
+than an oven full of sugar cakes.
+
+When the young folk returned from their walk the 'Squire was standing on
+the door step of his house. His quick eyes caught a glimpse of something
+unsatisfactory in the faces of the approaching couple--Zach,
+particularly, despite his evident effort to choke down something,
+discovered unmistakable signs of suffering. Rose was simply sober and
+thoughtful.
+
+"What now, Zach?" asked the 'Squire, "sick, eh?" "D'know; guess I'm in
+for a shake; wish to the Lord it'd shake my back bone clean out'n me!"
+was the reply, in a queer gurgling voice. A bunch of fall roses fell
+from his vest button-hole, but he did not pick it up. A hot flush, in
+the midst of a ghastly pallor, burned on the cheeks of the speaker. Rose
+tapped the ground with the toe of her kid boot, but did not speak.
+
+The man and the girl stood there close together awhile, and the 'Squire
+did not catch what they said as they shook hands and parted. When Zach
+had gone home the 'Squire told Rose that he wished she would stay a
+little longer, till the ague season was over, just on Zach's account.
+Rose quietly replied, "I have already stayed too long;" but her voice
+had an infinity of pity and sorrow in it that the 'Squire did not
+detect.
+
+Next morning Rose went home to the city and soon after made a brilliant
+_debut_ in society, for she was really a charming little thing. That
+winter was a festive one--a season of great social activity--and some of
+its most direct and prominent results were a few notable marriages in
+the spring, among which was that of Rose to a banker of P----, Kentucky,
+the happy union being consummated in May.
+
+On the very day of her wedding Rose received from her uncle the
+following note:
+
+ "DEAR NIECE:
+
+ "Come to see us, even if you won't stay but one day. Come right
+ off, if you're a Christian girl. Zach Jones is dying of
+ consumption and is begging to see you night and day. He says
+ he's got something on his mind he wants to say to you, and when
+ he says it he can die happy. The poor fellow is monstrous bad
+ off, and I think you ought to be sure and come. We're all well.
+ Your loving uncle,
+
+ "JARED MARTIN."
+
+Something in this homely letter so deeply affected Rose that she
+prevailed on her husband, a few days after their marriage, to take her
+to 'Squire Martin's.
+
+It was nearly sundown when the young wife, accompanied by the 'Squire,
+entered the room of the dying man. He lay on a low bed by an open
+window, through which, with hollow hungry eyes, he was gazing into the
+blue distance that is called the sky of May. Birds were singing in the
+trees all around the house, and a cool breath of violet-scented air
+rippled through the window. The widow Jones, worn out with watching by
+the sick bed, sat sleeping in her rude arm-chair; Sammy had gone after
+the cow--a gift from the 'Squire.
+
+The visitors entered softly, but Zach heard them and feebly turned his
+head. He put out a bloodless hand and clasped the warm fingers of Rose,
+pulling her into a seat by his couch. A wan smile flitted across his
+face as he fixed his eyes, burning like sparks in the gray ash of a
+spent fire, on hers, dewy with rising tears.
+
+"The same little Rose you use to wus," he said, in a low faltering
+voice, that had in it an unconquerable allegiance to the one dream of
+his manhood. His unnaturally bright eyes ran swiftly over her face and
+form, then closed, as if to fasten the vision within, that it might
+follow him to eternity.
+
+"The same little Rose you use to wus," he repeated, "only now you're
+picked off the vine an' nobody can't touch ye but the owner. I'm a
+poor, no 'count dyin' man, Rose, but you'll never----." His voice choked
+a little and he did not finish the sentence. Perhaps he thought it were
+better not finished.
+
+A few moments of utter silence followed, during which, faintly, far out
+in the field behind the house, was heard the childish voice of Sammy,
+singing an old hymn, two lines of which were most distinctly heard by
+those in the house.
+
+"Ah, yes--
+
+ "This world's a wilderness of woe,
+ This world it ain't my home,"
+
+chimed in the trembling voice of the sick man. Then, by an effort that
+evidently taxed his fading powers to the last degree, he fixed his eyes
+firmly on those of the young woman. Here was a martyr of the divine
+sort, true and unchangeable in the flame of the torture.
+
+"Rose, little Rose," he said, glancing uneasily at the 'Squire, "I've
+got something private like to say to you."
+
+The young woman trembled. Memory was at work.
+
+"'Squire, go out a minute, will ye?" continued Zach.
+
+The sick man's request was promptly obeyed, and Rose sat, drooping,
+alone beside the bed, while the widow snored away.
+
+Zach now more nervously clasped the hand of the young woman. A spot of
+faint sunshine glimmered on the pillow close by the man's head. The
+out-door sounds of the wind in the young grass, and the rustle of the
+new soft leaves of the trees, crept into the room gently, as if not to
+drown the low voice of the dying man.
+
+"It's been on my mind ever since we parted, Rose, and I ort 'a' said it
+then, but I choked an' couldn't; but I kin say it now and I will." He
+paused a moment and Rose looked pitifully at him. His chin was thrust
+out firmly and his lips had a determined set. He looked just as he did
+when about to knock the poor old horse on the head over in the dell that
+day. How vividly the tragic situation was recalled in Rose's mind!
+
+"Yes, I will say it now, so I will," he resumed. "Since things turned
+out jist as they have, Rose, I do wish I'd 'a' paid no 'tention to ye
+an' jist gone on and knocked that derned ole fistleoed hoss so dead 'at
+he'd 'a' never kicked--I do--I do, 'i hokey! I don't want to make ye
+feel bad, but I'm goin' away now, an' it 'pears to me like as if I'd go
+easy if I know'd you'd----." He turned away his face and drew just one
+little fluttering breath. When, after only a few minutes' absence, the
+'Squire came in, the widow still slept, the sweet air still rippled
+through the room, but Rose held a dead hand; Zach was at rest! The
+'Squire placed his hand on the bright hair of Rose and gazed mournfully
+down into the pinched, pallid face of the dead. How awfully calm a dead
+face is!
+
+The widow stirred in her chair, groaned, and awoke. For a moment she
+bent her eyes wonderingly, inquiringly on the young woman; then, rising,
+she clasped her in her great bony arms.
+
+"You are the Rose, the little Rose he's been goin' on so about. O,
+honey, I'm orful glad you've come. You ort jist to 'a' heerd him talk
+about ye when he got flighty like----but O--O--my! O Lor'! Zach--Zachy,
+dear! O, Miss, O, he's dead--he's dead!"
+
+"Dead, yes, dead!" echoed the 'Squire, his words dropping with the
+weight of lead.
+
+Across the fields of young green wheat ran waves of the spring wind,
+murmuring and sighing, while the dust of blossoms wheeled, and rose and
+fell in the last soft rays of the going sun. A big yellow butterfly
+flitted through the room.
+
+Presently Sammy entered. He came in like a gust of wind, making things
+rattle with his impetuous motion.
+
+"O, mammy! O, Zach! I's got s'thin' to tell ye, an' I'll bet a biscuit
+you can't guess what 't is!" he cried breathlessly.
+
+"O, Sammy, honey, O, dear!" groaned the widow.
+
+"S-s-h!" said the 'Squire solemnly.
+
+"Well, I jist wanted 'm to guess," replied Sammy, "for it's awful
+doggone cur'u's 'at----"
+
+"S-s-h!"
+
+"The fistleo is broke out on Zach's ole hoss ten times as wuss as ever!"
+
+"S-s-s-s-h!"
+
+"It's so, for I seed it. It's layin' down over in the hollow by 'tater
+creek, where the ole clay root is, an' its jist about to d----."
+
+"S-s-h!"
+
+The child caught a glimpse of the face and was struck mute. And darkness
+stole athwart the earth, but the morrow's sun drove it away. Never,
+however, did any sun or any season chase from the heart of little Rose
+the shadow that was the memory of the man who died in that cabin.
+
+
+
+
+STEALING A CONDUCTOR.
+
+
+He shambled into the bar-room of the hotel at Thorntown, a Boone County
+village, and, with a bow and a hearty "how-de do to you all," took the
+only vacant chair. He scratched a match and lighted his pipe. "Now we'll
+be bored with some sort of a long-winded story," whispered some to
+others of the loungers present. "Never knowed him to fail," said a lank
+fellow, almost loud enough for the subject to hear. "He's our travelled
+man," added a youth, who winked as if he were extremely intelligent and
+didn't mind letting folks know it.
+
+The man himself whiffed away carelessly at his pipe, now and then
+raising one eye higher than the other, to take a sort of side survey of
+the persons present. That eye was not long in settling upon me, and
+after a short, searching look, gleamed in a well pleased way. He was a
+stout formed man of about fifty years, dressed rather seedily, and
+wearing a plug hat of enormous height, the crown of which was battered
+into the last degree of grotesqueness. He got right up, and, dragging
+his chair behind him, came over and settled close down in front of me.
+
+"Stranger here, a'n't you?"
+
+"Yes, sir."
+
+"Your name's Fuller, a'n't it?"
+
+"No, sir."
+
+"Well, mebbe I'm mistaken, but you're just the picter o' Fuller. Never
+was a conductor on a railroad, was you?"
+
+"Never, sir."
+
+"Never was down in the swamps o' South-Eastern Georgy, was you?"
+
+"Never, sir."
+
+"Well, that beats four aces! I could 'a' bet on your bein' Fuller." He
+paused a moment, and then added in a very insinuating tone: "If you
+_are_ Fuller you needn't be afeard to say so, for I don't hold any
+grudge 'gin you about that little matter. Now, sure enough, a'n't your
+name Fuller, in fact?"
+
+I glared at the man a moment, hesitating about whether or not I should
+plant my fist in his eye. But something of almost child-like simplicity
+and sincerity beaming from his face restrained me. Surely the fellow did
+not wish to be as impudent as his words would imply.
+
+"Well, stranger, I see I've got to explain, but the story's not overly
+long," said he, hitching up a little closer to me and settling himself
+comfortably.
+
+I was about to get up and walk out of the room, when some one of the
+by-sitters filliped a little roll of paper to me. Unrolling it I read--
+
+"Let him go on, he'll give you a lively one. He's a brick."
+
+So, concluding that possibly I might be entertained, I lounged back in
+my seat.
+
+"You see," said he, "I thought you was Fuller, an' Fuller was the only
+conductor I ever stole."
+
+"Stole a conductor," whispered somebody, "that's a new one!"
+
+"I've stole a good many things in my time, but I'm here to bet that no
+other living Hoosier ever stole a railroad conductor, an' Fuller was the
+only one I ever stole. I stole him slicker 'n a eel. I had him 'fore he
+knowed it, and you jist better bet he was one clean beat conductor fore
+I was done wi' 'im.
+
+"I kin tell you the whole affair in a few minutes, and I da' say you'll
+laugh a good deal 'fore I'm through. You see I went down to Floridy for
+my health, and when I had about recivered I got onto a bum in
+Jacksonville and spent all my money and everything else but my very
+oldest suit o' clothes and my pistol, a Colt's repeater, ten inch
+barrel. None o' you can't tell how a feller feels in a predicament o'
+that sort. Somethin' got into my throat 'bout as big as a egg, and I
+felt kinder moist about the eyes when I had to stare the fact in the
+face that I was nigh onto, or possibly quite a thousand miles from home
+without ary a dime in my pocket. But if there's one thing I do have more
+'n another in my nater it's common sense grit. Well, what you s'pose I
+done? W'y I jest lit out for home afoot. Well, sir, the derndest swamps
+is them Floridy and Georgy swamps. It's ra'lly all one swamp--the
+Okeefenokee. I follered the railroad that goes up to Savanny, and it led
+me deeper and deeper into the outlying fringes of that terrible old bog.
+When I had travelled a considerable distance into Georgy, and had pretty
+well wore my feet off up to my ankle j'ints, and was about as close onto
+starvation as a 'tater failure in Ireland, and when my under lip had got
+to hanging down like the skirt o' a wore out saddle, and when every step
+seemed like it'd be my last, I jest got clean despairing like and
+concluded to pray a little. So I got down upon my knee j'ints and put
+up a most extra-ornary supplication. I felt every word o' it, too, in
+all the marrer of my bones. The place where I was a prayin' was a sort
+o' hummock spot in a mighty bad part o' the swamp. Some awful tall pines
+towered stupenjisly above me. Well, jest as I was finished, and was a
+saying amen, the lordy mercy what a yowl something did give right over
+me in a tree! I think I jumped as high as your head, stranger, and come
+down flat-footed onto a railroad cross tie. Whillikins, how I was
+scared! It was one o' them whooping owls they have down there. It was
+while I was a running from that 'ere owl a thinkin' it was a panther,
+that the thought struck me somewhere in the back o' the head that I
+might steal a ride to Savanny on the first train 'at might pass. 'I'll
+try it!' says I, and so I sot right down there in the swamp and calmly
+waited for a train. In about a hour here come one, like the de'il a
+braking hemp, jist more'n a roaring through the swamp. I forgot to tell
+you 'at it was after dark, but the moon was dimly a shining through the
+fog that covers everything there o' nights. Well, here come the train,
+and as she passed I made a lunge at the hind platform of the last car
+and some how or another got onto it and away I went. It was mighty much
+softer 'n walking, I tell you, and I was pleased as a monkey with a red
+cap on. My, how fast that train did go! I could hardly hold onto where I
+wus. You may jist bet I clung on though, and finally I got myself
+setting down on the steps and then I was all hunkey. But I didn't have
+much time to enjoy myself there, though, for all of a sudden the light
+of a lantern shined on me and then somebody touched me and said--
+
+ 'Ticket!'
+
+"Mebbe you don't know how onery a feller'll feel sometimes when he hears
+that 'ere word ticket--'specially when he a'n't got no ticket nor no
+money to pay his fare, and too, when he does want to ride a little of
+the derndest! That was my fix! I'd 'a' give a thousand dollars for a
+half dollar!
+
+ 'Ticket!'
+
+"He shook me a little this time and held his lantern down low, so's to
+see into my face. I know I must 'a' looked like the de'il.
+
+ 'Ticket here, quick!'
+
+ 'I've done paid,' said I.
+
+ 'Show your check then.'
+
+ 'Lost it,' says I.
+
+ 'Money, then, quick!'
+
+ 'Got none,' says I.
+
+ 'What the ---- did you git onto my train for without ticket or money?
+ How do you expect to travel without paying, you ---- lousy vagabond! You
+ can't steal from me; out with your ---- wallet and gi' me the money!
+ Hurry up!'
+
+ 'A'n't got no wallet nor no money,' says I.
+
+ 'Well, I'll dump you off right here, then,' said he, reaching for the
+ bell-rope to stop the train.
+
+ 'For the Lord's sake let me ride to Savanny!' says I.
+
+ 'A dam Northerner, I know from your voice!' said he, pulling the rope.
+ The train began to slack and soon stopped.
+
+ 'Get off!' said the conductor.
+
+ 'Please l'me ride!' says I.
+
+ 'Off with you!'
+
+ 'Jist a few miles here on the steps!'
+
+ 'Off, quick!'
+
+ 'Please----'
+
+ 'Here you go!' and as he said the words he tried to kick me off.
+
+"In a second I was like a Bengal tiger. I jumped up and gethered him and
+we went at it. I'm as good as ever fluttered, and pretty soon I give him
+one flat on the nose, and we both went off 'n the platform together. As
+I started off I happened to think of it, so I grabbed up and pulled the
+bell-rope to signal the engineer to drive on. 'Hoot-toot!' says the
+whistle, and away lick-to-split went the train, and slashy-to-splashy,
+rattle-o-bangle, kewoppyty-whop, bump, thud! down me and that 'ere
+conductor come onto a pile o' wore out cross ties in the side ditch, and
+there we laid a fightin'!
+
+"But you jest bet it didn't take me long to settle _him_. He soon began
+to sing out ''nuff! 'nuff! take 'm off!' and so I took him by the hair
+and dragged him off 'n the cross ties, shot him one or two more under
+the ear with my fist, and then dropped him. He crawled up and stood
+looking at me as if I was the awfulest thing in the world. I s'pect I
+did look scary, for I was terrible mad. His face was bruised up
+mightily, but he wasn't a bleeding much. He was mostly swelled.
+
+ 'Where's my train?' says he, in a sort o' blank, hollow way.
+
+ 'Don't ye hear it?' I answered him, 'It's gone on to Savanny!'
+
+ 'Gone! Who told 'm to go on? What'd they go leave me for?'
+
+ 'I pulled the bell rope,' says I.
+
+ '_You?_'
+
+ 'Yes, _me_!'
+
+ 'What in the world did you do _that_ for, man?'
+
+ ''Cause you wouldn't let me ride to Savanny!'
+
+ 'What'll I do! What'll I do!' he cried, beginning to waltz 'round like
+ one possessed.
+
+"I laughed--I couldn't help it--and at the same time I pulled out my old
+pistol.
+
+ 'Yah-hoo-a!' yelled another owl.
+
+ 'For the sake o' humanity don't kill me!' said the conductor.
+
+ 'I'm jest a going to shoot you a little bit for the fun o' the thing,'
+ says I.
+
+ 'Mercy, man!' he prayed.
+
+ 'Ticket!' says I.
+
+"He groaned the awfulest kind, and, by the moonlight, I saw 'at the big
+tears was running down his face. I felt sorry for him, but I kinder
+thought 'at after what he'd done he'd better pray a little, so I
+mentioned it to him.
+
+ 'I guess it mought be best if you'd pray a little,' says I, cocking the
+ pistol. My voice had a decided sepulchreal sound. The pistol clicked
+ very sharp.
+
+ 'O, kind sir,' says he, 'O, dear sir, I never did pray, I don't know how
+ to pray!'
+
+ 'Ticket or check!' says I, and he knowed I was talking kind o' sarcasm.
+ 'Pray quick!'
+
+"He got down and prayed like a Methodist preacher at his very best
+licks. He must 'a' prayed afore.
+
+"About the time his prayer was ended I heard a train coming in the
+distance. He jumped up and listened.
+
+ 'Glory! Heaven be praised!' says he, capering around like a mad monkey,
+ 'They've missed me and are backing down to hunt me! Where's my lantern?
+ Have you a match? Gi'me your handkerchief!'
+
+ 'Not so fast,' says I; 'you jest be moderate now, will you? I've no
+ notion o' you getting on that train any more. You jest walk along wi'
+ me, will you?'
+
+ 'Where?' says he.
+
+ 'Into the swamp,' says I; 'step off lively, too, d'you hear me?'
+
+ 'O mercy, mercy, man!' says he.
+
+ 'Ticket!' says I, and then he walked along wi' me into the swamp some
+ two or three hundred yards from the railroad.
+
+"I took him into a very thickety place, and made him back up agin a tree
+and put back his arms around it. Then I took one o' his suspenders and
+tied him hard and fast. Then I gagged him with my handkerchief. So far,
+so good.
+
+"Here come the train slowly backing down, the brakesman a swinging
+lanterns, and the passengers all swarming onto the platforms. Poorty
+soon they stopped right opposite us. The conductor began to struggle. I
+poked the pistol in his face and jammed the gag furder into his mouth.
+He saw I meant work and got quiet.
+
+"The passengers was swarming off 'n the train and I saw 'at I must git
+about poorty fast if I was to do anything. I soon hit on a plan. I jist
+stepped back a piece out o' sight o' the conductor and turned my coat,
+which was one o' these two-sided affairs, one side white, t'other brown.
+I turned the white side out. Then I flung away my greasy skull cap and
+took a soft hat out 'n my pocket and put it on. Then I watched my chance
+and mixed in with the passengers who was a hunting for the conductor.
+
+ 'Strange what's become o' him,' says I to a fat man, who was puffing
+ along.
+
+ 'Dim strange, dim strange,' says the big fellow, in a keen, wheezing
+ voice.
+
+"Well, you never saw jist sich hunting as was done for that conductor.
+Everybody slopped around in the swamp till their clothes was as wet and
+muddy as mine. I was monstrous active in the search. I hunted
+everywhere 'cepting where the conductor was. Finally he got the gag spit
+out and lordy how he did squeal for help. Everybody rushed to him and
+soon had him free.
+
+"It tickled me awful to hear that conductor explaining the matter. He
+told it something like this:
+
+ 'Devil of a great big ruffian on hind platform. Asked him for ticket.
+ Refused. Tried to put him off. Grabbed me. Smashed my nose. Flung me
+ off. Pulled the bell-rope, then lit out on me. Mauled ---- out o' me.
+ Had a pistol two feet long. Made me pray. Heard train a coming. Took me
+ to swamp. Tied me and sloped. Lord but I'm glad to see you all!'
+
+"We all went aboard o' the train and I rode to Savanny onmolested. The
+conductor didn't mistrust me. He asked me for my check and I told him
+'at I'd lost it a thrashing round in the bushes a hunting him. That was
+all right.
+
+"When we got to Savanny I couldn't help letting the conductor know me,
+so as I passed down the steps of the car I whispered savagely in his
+ear:
+
+ 'Ticket! dod blast you!'
+
+"He tried to grab me as I shambled off into the crowd, but I knowed the
+ropes. I heard him a shoutin'--
+
+ 'There he goes! Ketch him, dern him, ketch him!' But they didn't.
+
+"That conductor's name was Fuller, and I swear, stranger, 'at you look
+jest like him! Gi' me a match, will you, my pipe's out. Thanky. Hope I
+ha'n't bored you. Good bye all."
+
+He shambled out and I never saw him again.
+
+
+
+
+HOIDEN.
+
+
+The house was known as Rackenshack throughout the neighborhood for miles
+around. It was a frame structure, originally of sorry workmanship, at
+least thirty years old, and upon which not a cent's worth of repairing
+had been done since first erected, wherefore the name was peculiarly
+appropriate. It was not only old, rickety, paintless, half rotten and
+sadly sunken at one end, but the fencing around the place was broken,
+grown over with weeds, and slanted in as many ways as there were panels.
+The lawn or yard in front of the house had some old cherry trees,
+gnarled and decaying, growing in what had once been straight rows, but
+storms and more insidious vicissitudes had twisted and curled them about
+till they looked as though they had been thrown end foremost at the
+ground hap-hazard. Under and all round these trees young sprouts, from
+the scattered cherry seeds of many years of fruiting, had grown so thick
+that one could with difficulty get through them. A narrow, well-beaten
+path led from the gate, which lazily lolled on one hinge, up to the
+decayed and sunken porch, in front of which was the well, with its
+lop-eared windlass and dilapidated curb and shed.
+
+A country thoroughfare, one of the old State roads leading westward to a
+ferry on the Wabash river near the village of Attica and eastward to
+either Crawfordsville, Indianapolis or Lafayette. This road was in the
+direct line of emigration, and in the proper seasons long lines of
+covered wagons rolled past, the drivers, a jolly set, hallooing to each
+other and bandying sharp wit and rude sarcasm at the expense of
+Rackenshack. Poor old house, it leered at the passers, with its windows
+askew, and clattered its loose boards and battered shutters in utter and
+complacent defiance of all their jeers!
+
+Rackenshack belonged to Luke Plunkett and Betsy, his sister; the latter
+an old maid beyond all cavil, the former a bachelor of about thirty. The
+lands of the estate were pretty broad, comprising some two thousand
+acres of rich prairie and "river bottom" land, which had been kept in a
+much better state of improvement than the house had. In fact, Luke was
+considered a careful, industrious, frugal farmer. He had large, well
+regulated barns and stock sheds and stables--plenty of fine horses,
+cattle, hogs, sheep and mules, all well fed and cared for, and it was
+generally understood that he had a pretty round deposit in a bank.
+
+Perhaps 'Squire Rube Fink, sometimes called "the Rev. Major Fink" and
+sometimes "Talking Rube," gives the best description of Luke's
+condition, habits and surroundings, that I can offer. It is truthful and
+singularly graphic. He says:
+
+"Luke Plunkett's no fool if he does live at Rack-a-me-shack and 'spect
+the ole rotten tabernacle to fall down on him every time a rooster crows
+close by. That feller's long-headed, he is. To be sure, sartinly, his
+barn's a dern sight better 'n his house, but his head's level, for, d'ye
+see, that's the way to make money. A house don't never make no money for
+a feller--it's nothin' but dead capital to put money into a fine
+dwellin'. Luke's pilin' his money in the bank. He's been doin' a sharp
+thing in wheat and live stock at Cincinnati, and I guess he knows what
+he's about. He don't keer about what sort o' house he lives in. But I
+tell you that red haired sister o' his'n is lightning. She's what bosses
+the job all round that ole shanty; but she can't red-hair it over Luke
+in the farm matters. He has his own way. He's so quiet and peculiar; a
+still, say nothin', bull-dog sort o' man he is."
+
+Indeed, Luke was one of that quiet sort of men who, without ever once
+loudly asserting a right or disputing any word you say, invariably go
+ahead on their own judgment and carry their point in everything.
+Nevertheless, he was a man of fine, generous nature at bottom, a good
+brother and a worthy friend.
+
+But it was with Luke just as it is, more or less, with us all. He
+absorbed into his life the spirit of his surroundings. He grew somewhat
+to resemble Rackenshack in outward appearance. He became slovenly in his
+dress and let his hair and beard grow wild. His naturally handsome face
+gradually took on a sort of good humored ugliness, and his heavy
+shoulders slanted over like the uneven gables of his house. He became an
+inveterate chewer and smoker of tobacco. What time a quid of the weed
+was not in his mouth, the short thick stem of a dark, nicotine-coated
+briar-root pipe took its place there.
+
+Luke was an early riser; therefore it happens that our story properly
+begins on a fine June morning, just before sunrise. The birds seemed to
+suspect that a story was to date from that hour, for they were up
+earlier than usual and made a great rustle of wings and a sweet Babel of
+voices in the old cherry trees. There were the oriole, the cat bird, the
+yellow throat, the brown thrush and the red bird, all putting forth at
+once their charmingest efforts. The old cherry trees, knee deep in the
+foliage of their under growing seedlings, gleamed dusky green in the
+early light, as Luke, bareheaded, barefooted and in his "shirt sleeves,"
+as the phrase goes, issued from the front door of Rackenshack, and
+walked down the path across the yard to the gate at the road. Of late he
+had been in the habit of "taking a smoke" the first thing after getting
+up in the morning, and somehow the gate, though off one hinge and having
+doubtful tenure of the other, was his favorite thing to lean upon while
+watching the whiffs of blue smoke slowly float away.
+
+On this particular morning he seemed a little agitated; and, indeed, he
+was vexed more deeply than he had ever before been. Just the preceding
+evening he had learned that a corps of civil engineers were rapidly
+approaching his premises with a line of survey, and that the purpose was
+to locate and build a railway right through the middle of his farm. To
+Luke the very idea was outrageous. He felt that he could never stand
+such an imposition. His land was his own, and when he wanted it dug up
+and leveled down and a track laid across it he would do it himself. He
+did not want his farm cut in two, his fields disarranged and his fences
+moved, nor did he wish to see his live stock killed by locomotives. The
+truth is he was bitterly opposed to railroads, any how. They were
+innovations. They were enemies to liberty. They brought fashion, and
+spendthrift ways, and speculation, and all that along with them. Other
+folks might have railroads if they wanted them, but they must not bother
+him with them. He could take care of his affairs without any railroads.
+Besides, if he wanted one he could build it. He hung heavily upon the
+gate, thinking the matter over, and would not have bestowed a second
+glance at the carriage that came trundling past if he had not caught the
+starry flash of a pair of blue eyes and a rosy, roguish girl's face
+within. The beauty of that countenance struck the great rough fellow
+like a blow. He stared in a dazed, bewildered way. He took his pipe from
+his mouth and involuntarily tried to hide his great big bare feet behind
+the gate post. He felt a queer, dreamy thrill steal all over him. It
+was his first definite impression of feminine beauty. Instantly that
+round, happy, mischievous face, with its dimples and indescribable
+shining lines of half latent mirth, set itself in his heart forever.
+
+The carriage trundled on in the direction of the ferry. Luke followed it
+with his eyes till it disappeared round a turn in the road; then he put
+the pipe to his mouth again and began puffing vigorously, wagging his
+head in a way that indicated great confusion of mind. There are times
+when a glimpse of a face, the sudden half-mastering of a new, grand
+idea, a view of a rare landscape or even a cadence in some new tune,
+will start afresh the long dried up wells of a heart. Something like
+this had happened to Luke.
+
+"Sich a gal! sich a gal!" he murmured from the corner of his mouth
+opposite his pipe stem. "I don't guess I'm a dreamin' now, though I feel
+a right smart like it. I _hev_ dreamed of that 'ere face though, many of
+times. I've seed it in my sleep a thousand times, but I never s'posed
+'at I'd see it shore enough when I'd be awake! Sweetest dreams I ever
+had--sweetest face God ever made! I wonder who she is?" As if to
+supplement Luke's soliloquy at this point, a cardinal red bird flung
+out from the dusky depths of the oldest cherry tree an ecstatic carol,
+and a swallow, swooping down from the clear purple heights, almost
+touched the man's cheek with its shining wings, and the sun lifted its
+flaming face in the east and flooded the fields with gold.
+
+Luke turned slowly toward the old house. The breeze that came up with
+the sun poured through the orchard with a broad, joyous surge, while
+something like blowing of strange winds and streaming of soft sunlight
+made strangely happy the inner world of the smitten Hoosier. His big
+strong heart fluttered mysteriously. He actually took his pipe from his
+lips and broke into a snatch of merry song, that startled Betsy, his
+sister, from her morning nap.
+
+For the time the hated railroad survey was forgotten. The landscape at
+Rackenshack, as if by a turn of the great prisms of nature, suddenly
+took on rainbow hues. The fields flashed with jewels, and the woods, a
+wall of dusky emerald, were wrapped in a roseate mist, stirred into
+dreamy motion by the breeze. A light, grateful fragrance seemed to
+pervade all space, as if flung from the sun to soften and enhance the
+charm of his gift of light and heat. Such a hold did all this take upon
+Luke, and so utterly abstracted was he, that when breakfast was ready
+Betsy was obliged to remind him of the fact that he had neglected to
+wash his face and hands, and comb his hair and beard--things absolutely
+prerequisite to eating at her table.
+
+"Forgot it, sure's the world," said Luke; "don't know what ever
+possessed me."
+
+"Maybe you've forgot to turn the cows into the milk stalls, too?" said
+Betsy.
+
+"If I ha'n't I'm a gourd!" and Luke scratched his head distractedly.
+
+"What'd I tell you, Luke Plunkett? It's come at last, O lordy! You're as
+crazy as a June bug all along of smoking that old pipe! Rot the nasty,
+stinking old thing! It's a perfect shame, Luke, for a man to just smoke
+what little brains he's got clean out. You ought to be ashamed of
+yourself, so you ought!"
+
+While she was speaking Betsy got the big wooden washbowl for her
+brother, whereupon he proceeded to make his ablutions in a most
+energetic way, taking up great double handfuls of water and sousing his
+face therein with loud puffings, that enveloped his head in a cloud of
+spray.
+
+When a clean tow linen towel had served its purpose, Luke remarked:
+
+"Don't know but what I _am_ some'at crazy in good earnest, Betsy, since
+I come to think it all over. I'm r'ally onto it a right smart. What'd
+you think, Betsy, if I'd commence talkin' 'oman to ye?"
+
+"Luke, Luke! are you crazy? Is your mind clean gone out of your poor
+smoky head?"
+
+"That's not much of a answer to my question."
+
+"Well, what _do_ you mean, _anyhow_?"
+
+"I mean business, that's what!"
+
+"Luke!"
+
+"Yes'm."
+
+"Do try to act sensible now. What is it, Luke? What makes your eyes look
+so strange and dance about so? What do you mean by all this queer talk?"
+
+Luke finished combing, and, going to the table, sat down and was
+proceeding to discuss the fried chicken and coffee without further
+remark, but Betsy was not so easily balked. She, like most red haired
+women, wished her questions to be fully and immediately answered,
+wherefore some indications of a storm began to appear.
+
+Luke smiled a quiet little smile that had hard work getting out through
+his beard. Betsy trotted her foot under the table. Her hand trembled as
+she poured the coffee--trembled so violently that she scalded her left
+thumb. It was about time for Luke to speak or have trouble, so, in a
+very gentle voice, he said:
+
+"Well, I saw a gal--a gal an' her father, I reckon--go by this mornin'."
+
+"Well, what of it? S'pose there's plenty of girls and their fathers,
+ain't there?" snapped Betsy.
+
+Luke drew a chicken leg through his mouth, laid down the bone, leered
+comically at his sister from under his bushy eyebrows, and said:
+
+"But the gal was purty, Betsy--purty as a pictur', sweet as a peach,
+juicy an' temptin' as a ripe, red cored watermillion! You can't begin to
+guess how sweet an' nice she did look. My heart just flolloped and
+flopped about, an' it's at it yet!"
+
+"Luke Plunkett, you _are_ crazy! You're just as distracted as a blind
+dog in high rye. Drink a cup of hot coffee, Luke, and go lie down a bit,
+you'll feel better." The spinster was horrified beyond measure. She
+really thought her brother crazy.
+
+The man finished his meal in silence, smiling the while more grimly
+than before, after which he took his shot gun and a pan of salt and
+trudged off to a distant field to salt some cattle. He always carried
+his gun with him on such occasions, and not unfrequently brought back a
+brace of partridges or some young squirrels. As he strode along,
+thinking all the time of the girl in the carriage, he suddenly came upon
+a corps of engineers with transit, level, rod and chain, staking out,
+through the centre of a choice field, a line of survey for a railroad.
+In an instant he was like a roaring lion. He glared for a second or so
+at the intruders, then lowering his gun he charged them at a run,
+storming out as he did so:
+
+"What you doin' here, you onery cusses, you! Leave here! Get out!
+Scratch! Sift! Dern yer onery skins, I'll shoot every dog of ye! Git out
+'n here, I say--out, out!"
+
+The corps stampeded at once. The surveyor seized his transit, the
+leveller his level, the rod man his rod, the axe men and chain men their
+respective implements, and away they went, "lick-to-split, like a passel
+o' scart hogs," as Luke afterwards said, "as fast as they could ever
+wiggle along!"
+
+No wonder they ran, for Luke looked like a demon of destruction. It was
+a wild race for the line fence, a full half mile away. The leveler,
+being the hindmost man, rolled over this fence just as a heavy bowlder,
+hurled by Luke, struck the top rail. It was a close shave, a miss of a
+hair's breadth, a marvelous escape. Luke rushed up to the fence and
+glared over at his intended victims. Here he knew he must stop, for he
+doubted the legality of pursuing them beyond the confines of his own
+premises. Somewhat out of breath he leaned on the fence and proceeded to
+swear at the corps individually and collectively, shaking his fists at
+them excitedly, till the appearance of a new man on the scene made him
+start and stare as if looking at a ghost. He was a well dressed,
+gentlemanly appearing person of about the age of forty-five, pale and
+thoughtful--calm, gray eyed, commanding. Luke recognized him at once as
+the man he had seen in the carriage, and, indeed, the vehicle itself
+stood hard by, with a beautiful, laughing, roguish face looking out of
+one of the windows. The lion in the stalwart farmer was quelled in an
+instant. He felt his legs grow weak. He set his gun by the fence and
+touched his hat to the little lady.
+
+"Your name, I believe, is Luke Plunkett?" said the approaching
+gentleman.
+
+"Yes, sir," said Luke.
+
+"You own two thousand acres of land here?"
+
+"Yes, sir."
+
+"Your residence is called Rackenshack?"
+
+"Yes, sir." (Suppressed titter from the carriage.)
+
+"So I thought. Pull back, men (addressing the corps), pull back to where
+you dropped the line and bring it right along. Mr. Plunkett will not
+harm you now."
+
+The corps began to move. Luke fiercely seized his gun; but before he
+could lift it or utter a word, a ten-inch Colt's repeater was thrust
+into his face by the calm gentleman, and a steady hand held it there.
+
+"Mr. Plunkett," said the man, "I am the chief engineer of the ----
+Railroad. I am making a location. The laws of this State give me the
+right to go upon your land with my corps and have the survey made. I am
+not to be trifled with. If you offer to cock that gun I'll put six holes
+through you. What do you say, now?"
+
+The voice was that of a cold man of business. There was a coffin in
+every word. The muzzle of the pistol steadily covered Luke's left eye.
+The situation was rigid. Luke hesitated--his face ashy with anger and
+fear, his eyes alternating their glances between the muzzle of the
+pistol and that wonderful shining face at the carriage.
+
+"Shoot him, papa, shoot him! Shoot him!" Sweet as a silver bell rang out
+the girl's voice, more like a ripple of idle song than a murderous
+request, and then a clear, happy laugh went echoing off through the
+woods in which the carriage stood.
+
+Slowly, steadily, Luke let fall the breech of his gun upon the ground
+beside him. The engineer smiled grimly and lowered his pistol, while the
+corps, headed by the surveyor, took up its line of march to the point
+where work had been so suddenly left off.
+
+The young lady clapped her tiny white hands for joy.
+
+A big black woodpecker began to cackle in a tree hard by.
+
+Luke felt like a man in a dream.
+
+The whole adventure, so far, had been clothed in most unreal seeming.
+
+It can hardly be told how, by rapid transitions from one thing to
+another in his talk, the engineer drew Luke's mind away from the late
+difficulty and gradually aroused in him a kindly feeling. In less than
+ten minutes the two men were sitting side by side on a log, smoking
+cigars from the engineer's pouch and chatting calmly, amicably.
+
+Luke's eyes often rested steadily fixed in the direction of the
+carriage. Through the thin veil of tobacco smoke the face of the young
+girl seemed to the farmer angelic in its beauty. All around the sweets
+of summer rose and fell, and drifted like scarcely visible shining
+mists, fraught with the spice of leaf and perfume of blossom, agitated
+by swells of tricksy wind, going on and on to the mysterious goal of the
+season.
+
+The two men talked on until the corps had pushed the line of survey far
+past them into the cool, shady deeps of the woods, whence their voices
+came back fainter and fainter every moment. At length the engineer
+arose, and stretching out his hand to Luke, said:
+
+"Mr. Plunkett, I'm sure I'll be able to serve you some time; let us be
+friends. I shall be in this vicinity most of the time till the road is
+built. No doubt I can show a way to profit by the construction of a
+railroad across your land. If you are sharp it will make your fortune. I
+like your independent way, sir, and hope to know you better. Here is my
+card."
+
+Luke took the bit of pasteboard without saying a word. They shook hands
+and the engineer got into his carriage.
+
+"Here's my card, too, Mr. Plunkett," cried the girl. She said something
+more, but the horses were made to plunge rapidly away, and the words
+were lost; but the flash of a white jewelled hand caught Luke's eye as a
+delicately tinted card came fluttering towards him. He sprang and seized
+it. If a bag of diamonds had been flung at his feet he could not have
+been more excited. His hands trembled. All the incidents of the only
+fairy tale he had ever read came at once into his mind. He stood with
+his feet turned in, like some great awkward boy, a bashful, shame-faced
+look lurking about his mouth and eyes. He filled his pipe and lighted it
+from the stump of his cigar with nervous eagerness. A squirrel came down
+to the lowest limbs of a beech tree hard by and barked at him, but he
+did not notice it. He read the names on the cards:
+
+ "_Elliot Pearl, C. E._"
+ "_Hoiden Pearl._"
+
+The first printed in small capitals, the second written in a delicate,
+rather cramped feminine hand. He stood for a long time dreamily employed
+in turning these bits of paper over and over. His thoughts were so vague
+in outline and so dim in filling up that they cannot be reproduced. They
+slipped away on the summer air, like little puffs of perfume, and were
+lost, to be found by many and many a one in the ineffable places of
+dreamland. Finally, shaking himself as if to break the charm that held
+him in its meshes, he took up his gun and slowly made his way homeward.
+All along his walk he kept smiling to himself and talking aloud, but his
+words were such that it would be sacrilege to repeat them now. Let them
+hover about in the sunlight of summer, where he uttered them, as things
+too delicate to be pressed between the lids of a book.
+
+Betsy had trouble with Luke for some days after this. He lay about the
+house, saying little, eating little, giving little attention to the many
+tenants who worked his estate. He was in good health, was not in trouble
+(so he said to his sister), but he did not care to be bothered with
+business. He was tired and would rest awhile. "He smoked pretty near all
+the time," as Betsy declared. But not a hint fell from his lips as to
+what might be running in his mind.
+
+So the days slipped past till July hung golden mists on the horizon and
+filled the woods with that rare stillness and dusky slumbrousness that
+follows the maturing of the foliage and the coming on of fruit. The
+cherry trees at Rackenshack had grown ragged and dull, and the birds,
+excepting a few swallows wheeling about the old chimney tops, had all
+flown away to the woods and fields. The wheat had been cut and stacked,
+the corn had received its last ploughing. Still Luke hung about the
+house annoying Betsy with his pipe and his utter carelessness. That he
+was "distracted" Betsy did not for a moment doubt. She used every means
+her small stock of wit could invent to urge him out of his singular
+mood, but without avail. He took to the few old novels he could find
+about the house, but sometimes he would gaze blankly at a single
+paragraph for a whole hour.
+
+One morning as he lay on the porch, his head resting upon the back of a
+chair, reading, or pretending to read an odd volume of "The Scottish
+Chiefs," a little boy, 'Squire Brown's son, came to bring home a
+monkey-wrench his father had borrowed some time before. The boy was a
+bright, rattle-box, say-everything, pop-eyed sort of child, and was not
+long telling all the news of the neighborhood. Luke gave little
+attention to what he was saying, till at length he let fall something
+about a young lady--a fine, rich young lady, staying at Judge
+Barnett's--a young lady who could outrun him, out jump him, beat him
+playing marbles and ball, who could climb away up in the June apple
+tree, who could ride a colt bareback, who could beat Jim Barnett
+shooting at a mark, who could, in fact, do a half a hundred things to
+perfection that strict persons would think a young lady should never do
+at all, but which seemed to make a heroine of her in the narrator's
+boyish view.
+
+"What's the gal's name?" queried Luke in a slow, lazy way, but his eyes
+shot a gleam of hope.
+
+"Hoidy Pearl," replied the lad.
+
+Hoiden Pearl! That name had been woven into every sound that had reached
+Luke's ears for days and nights and nights together, and now, like a
+sweet tune nearly mastered, it took a deeper, tenderer meaning as the
+boy pronounced it in his childish way.
+
+"Hoidy Pearl is her name," the lad continued. "She's come to stay at the
+Judge's all summer till the new railroad's finished. Her father's the
+boss of the road. She's jest the funniest girl, o-o-e! And she likes me,
+too!"
+
+Luke raised himself to a sitting posture and looked at the boy so
+earnestly that he drew back a pace or two as if afraid.
+
+"Boy, you're not lyin', are ye?" said the man in a low, earnest tone.
+
+"No I'm not, neither," was the quick reply.
+
+Luke got up, flung aside his book and strolled off into the woods.
+Wandering there in the cool, silent places, he dreamed his dream. For
+hours he sat by a little spring stream in the dense shadow of a big
+cotton-wood tree. The birds congregated about him, and chirped and sang;
+the squirrels came out chattering and frisking from branch to branch;
+but he gave them no look of recognition--he saw them not, heard them
+not. The birds might have lit upon his head and the squirrels might have
+run in and out of his pockets with impunity. He smoked all the time,
+refilling and relighting his pipe whenever it burned out. He did not
+know how much he was smoking, nor that he was smoking at all. A bright
+face set in a mass of yellow curls, a wee white hand all spangled with
+jewels, a voice sweeter than any bird's, a name--Hoiden Pearl--these
+rang, and danced, and echoed, and shone in the recesses of his brain and
+heart to the exclusion of all else. He was trying to think, but he could
+not. He wanted to mature a plan, but not even an outline could find room
+in his head. It was full. Strange, indeed, it may seem, that a rough
+farmer of Luke's age should thus fall into the ways of the imaginative,
+sentimental stripling; but, after all, the fit must come on some time
+in life. No doubt it goes harder with some constitutions than with
+others. Luke may have been unwittingly strongly predisposed that way.
+Neither the exterior of a man nor his surroundings will do to judge him
+by. Nature is that mysterious in all her ways. Luke talked aloud,
+sometimes gesticulating in a quiet way.
+
+"I _must_ see the gal--I _will_ see the gal," he muttered at last. "It's
+no use talkin', I jist will see her!"
+
+Suddenly a light broke from his face. He smiled like one who has victory
+in his grasp--like an editor who has an idea, like a reviewer who has
+found some bad verse. He got up immediately, went back to the barn,
+hitched a horse to a small road wagon and drove to town. There he spent
+time and money with a merchant tailor and other vendors of clothing. He
+was very fastidious in his selection. Nothing but the finest would do
+him. A few days after this he brought home a trunk full of princely
+raiment--broad cloth and fine linen. Betsy was struck dumb with
+amazement when the trunk was opened. A dream of such costly things, such
+reckless extravagance, would have driven her mad. Silent, open-eyed,
+wondering, she came in and stood behind Luke while he was unpacking. He
+looked up presently and saw her. His face flushed violently, and in a
+half-whining, half-ashamed tone he muttered:
+
+"Now, Betsy, you jest git out'n here faster'n ye come in, for I'm not
+goin' to stan' no foolin' at all, now. These 'ere's my clothes and paid
+for out'n my money, an' I'm the jedge of what I need. I ha'n't had any
+good duds for a long time, and I'm tired o' lookin' like a scarecrow
+made out'n a salt bag. I've been thinkin' for a long time I'd git these
+'ere things, an' now I've got'm. You kin git you some if ye like, but I
+don't want ye a standin' round here gawpin' at me on 'count o' my
+clothes; so you go off an' mind yer own affairs. It's no great sight to
+see some shirts, an' coats, and pants, an' collars, an' vests, an' sich
+like, is it?"
+
+Before this speech was finished Betsy had backed out of the room and
+closed the door. As she did so she let go a sigh that came back to Luke
+like a Parthian arrow; but it happened just then that he was holding up
+in front of him a buff linen vest which kept the missile from his heart.
+
+He dressed himself with great care, and an hour later he slipped out of
+the house unseen, and took his way towards the rather pretentious
+residence of Judge Barnett, the gables of which, a mile away, gleamed
+between rows of Lombardy poplars. The Judge was one of those half
+cultivated men who, in every country neighborhood, pass for prodigies of
+learning and ability. He was the autocrat of the county in political and
+social affairs--one of those men who really know a great deal, but who
+arrogate more. He got his title from having been County Commissioner
+when the court house was building. Some said he made money out of the
+transaction, but our story is silent there.
+
+It would have been an interesting study for a philosopher to have
+watched Luke throughout the singular ramble he took that morning. It
+would have been such a manifest revelation of the state of the fellow's
+feelings. It would have minutely disclosed, and more eloquently than any
+verbal confession, the rise and fall, the ebb and flow, the alternating
+strength and weakness of his purpose, and the will behind it. Then, too,
+it would have let fall delightful hints of the unselfishness of his new
+and all-engrossing passion, and of the charming simplicity and sincerity
+of his great rugged nature at its inner core. At first he struck out
+boldly a direct line to Judge Barnett's residence, his face beaming
+with the light of settled happiness, but as he neared the pleasant
+grounds surrounding the house he began to discover some trepidation. His
+gait wavered, the expression of his face shifted with each step, and
+soon his course was indeterminate--a fitful sauntering from this place
+to that--a tricksy, uneven flight, like that of a lazy butterfly, if one
+may indulge the comparison--a meandering in and out among the trees of a
+small walnut grove--a strolling here and there, now along the verge of a
+well set old orchard, now down the low hedge behind the garden, and anon
+leaning over the board fence that inclosed the Judge's ample barn and
+stable lot; he gazed wistfully, half comically, in the direction of the
+upper windows of the farm house. It was one of those peculiarly yellow
+days of summer, when everything swims in a golden mist. The blue birds
+floated aimlessly about from stake to stake of the fences; the wind,
+felt only in jerky puffs, blew no particular way, and as idly and as
+eccentrically as any blue bird, and in full accord with the fitful will
+of the wind, Luke drifted through the sheen of summer all round Barnett
+Place. He lazed about, humming a tune, and, for a wonder, not
+smoking--half restless, half contented, looking for something, scarcely
+expecting anything. When once a great rough man does get into a childish
+way, he is a child of which ordinary children would be ashamed, and just
+then Luke, the big bashful fellow, was an instance strikingly in point.
+Occasionally he talked half aloud to himself. Once, while lounging on
+the orchard fence, gazing down between the long rows of russet and
+pippin trees, he said dreamily,
+
+"I _must_ see her. I can't go back 'ithout seein' her." It so chanced
+that just then a shower of blackbirds fell upon the orchard, covering
+the trees and the ground, flying over and over each other, twittering
+and whistling as only blackbirds can. Their wings smote together with a
+tender rustling sound like that of a spring wind in young foliage, or of
+a thousand lovers whispering together by moonlight. Luke watched them a
+long while, a doleful shade gathering in his face. "The little things
+loves each other," he muttered; "everything loves something; an' jest
+dern my lights ef I don't love the gal, an' I'm boun' to see her!"
+Seemingly nerved by sudden resolution, he climbed over the fence and
+started at a slashing pace across the orchard towards the house, scaring
+all the birds into an ecstasy of flight, so that they dashed themselves
+against the foliage of the apple trees, making it rustle and sway as if
+blown on by a strong wind. He did not keep on, however. His resolution
+seemed to burn out about midway the orchard. He began to drift around
+again, his pace becoming slower and slower. His shoulders drooped
+forward as if burdened with a great load, his eyes turned restlessly
+from side to aide.
+
+"I jest can't do it!" he murmured--"I jest can't do it, an' I mought as
+well go back!" There was a petulant ring to his voice--a nervous,
+worried tone, that had despair in it.
+
+Out of a June apple tree right over his head fell a sweet, silvery, half
+child's, half woman's voice, that thrilled him through every fibre to
+the marrow of his bones.
+
+"What's the matter, Goosey? What have you lost! What are you hunting
+for? Want a good apple?"
+
+Luke looked up just in time to catch squarely on his nose a fine, ripe
+June apple, and through a mist of juice and a sheeny curtain of leaves
+he saw the lovely face he had come to look for. A thump on the nose from
+an apple, no matter if it is ripe and soft, is a little embarrassing,
+and it only makes it more so when the racy wine of the fruit flies into
+one's eyes and all over one's new clothes. But there are moments of
+supreme bliss when such a mishap passes unnoticed. Luke felt as if the
+blow had been the touch of a magician conjuring up a scene that held him
+rapt and speechless.
+
+"O, my! I didn't go to hit you! Please excuse me, sir--do. I thought
+you'd catch it in your hands."
+
+She came lightly down from the tree, descending like a bird, easily,
+gracefully, as if she had been born to climb. She murmured many
+apologies, but the genius of fun danced in her saucy, almost impertinent
+eyes, belying her regretful words. Luke looked down at her dazed and
+speechless. She, however, was full of prattle--half childish, half
+womanly, half serious, half bantering--her eyes upturned to his, her
+voice a very bird's in melody. In the more innocent sense of the word
+she looked like her name, Hoiden. Nothing unchaste or indelicate about
+her appearance; just a sort of want of restraint; a freedom that
+amounted to an utter lack of responsibility to the ordinary claims and
+dictates of propriety. A close, trained, intelligent observer would have
+seen at once that she was wilful, spoiled, unbridled, but not bad, not
+in the least vicious; really innocent and full of good impulses. She was
+beautiful, too--wonderfully beautiful--just on the hither side of
+womanhood, plump, budding, bewitching. How she did it can never be
+known, but she soon had Luke racing with her all over the orchard. They
+climbed trees together, they scrambled for the same apple, they laughed,
+and shouted, and played till the horn at the farmhouse called the field
+hands to dinner. They parted then, as children part, promising to meet
+again the next day. The girl's cheeks were rosy with exercise, so were
+Luke's.
+
+How strange! Day after day that great, bearded, almost middle-aged,
+uncouth farmer went and played slave to that chit of a girl, doing
+whatever ridiculous or childish thing she proposed, caring for nothing,
+asking for nothing but to be with her, listen to her voice and feast his
+eyes upon her beauty. He gladly bore everything she heaped upon him, and
+to be called "Goosey" by her was to him inexpressibly charming.
+
+Betsy's womanly nature was not to be deceived. She soon comprehended
+all; but she dared not mention the subject to Luke. He was in no mood to
+be opposed. So he went on--and Betsy sighed.
+
+The summer softened into autumn. The maple leaves reddened. The long
+grass turned brown and lolled over. A softness and tenderness lurked in
+the deep blue sky, and the air had a sharp racy fragrance from ripe
+fruit and grain. Meantime the railroad had been pushed with amazing
+rapidity nearly to completion. Every day long construction trains went
+crashing-across Luke's farm. Passenger coaches were to be put on in a
+few days. Luke was the very picture of happiness. He seemed to grow
+younger every day. His worldly prospects, too, were flattering. A
+station had been located on his land, around which a town had already
+begun to spring up. The vast value of Luke's timber, walnut and oak, was
+just beginning to appear; indeed, immense wealth lay in his hands. But
+his happiness was of a deeper and purer sort than that generated by
+simple pecuniary prosperity. Hoiden Pearl was in the focus of all his
+thoughts; her face lighted his dreams, her voice made the music that
+charmed him into a wonderland of bliss. He said little about her, even
+to Betsy, but it needed no sharpness of sight to discover from his face
+what was going on in his heart. He had even forgotten his pipe. He had
+not smoked since that first day in the orchard. He had straightened up
+and looked a span taller.
+
+The girl did not seem to dream of any tender attachment on Luke's part.
+In fact he gave her no cause for it. He fed on his love inwardly and
+never thought of telling it. To be with her was enough. It satisfied all
+his wants. She was frank and free with him, but tyrannized over
+him--ordered him about like a servant, scolded him, flattered him,
+pouted at him, smiled on him, indeed kept him crazy with rapture all the
+time. Once only she became confidentially communicative. It was one day,
+sitting on an old mossy log in the Judge's woodland pasture, she told
+him the story of her past life. How thrillingly beautiful her face
+became as it sobered down with the history of early orphanage! Her
+father had died first; then her mother, who left her four years old in
+the care of Mr. Pearl, her paternal uncle, with whom she had ever since
+been, going from place to place, as the calls of his nomadic profession
+made it necessary, from survey to survey, from this State to that,
+seeing all sorts of people, and receiving her education in small,
+detached parcels. The story was a sad, unsatisfactory one, breathing
+neglect, yet full of a certain kind of sprightliness, and touched here
+and there with the fascination of true romance.
+
+It is hard to say when Luke would have awakened from his tender trance
+to the strong reality of love. He was too contented for
+self-questioning, and no act or word of Hoiden's invited him to consider
+what he was doing or whither he was drifting.
+
+It was well for Luke and the girl, too, that it was a sparsely settled
+neighborhood, for evil tongues might have made much of their constant
+companionship and childish behavior.
+
+As for the Judge, after it was all over he admitted that he felt some
+qualms of conscience about allowing such unlimited intimacy to go on,
+but he excused himself by saying that the girl, when confined to the
+house, was such an unmitigated nuisance that he was glad for some one to
+monopolize her company.
+
+"Why," said he, in his peculiar way, "she set the whole house by the
+ears. She made more clatter and racket than a four-horse Pennsylvania
+wagon coming down a rocky hill. She would go from garret to cellar like
+a whirlwind and twist things wrong side out as she went----she was a
+tart!"
+
+But at length, toward the middle of autumn the end came. Luke had
+business with some hog-buyers in Cincinnati, whither he was gone
+several days. Meantime the railroad was completed, and Mr. Pearl came to
+the Judge's early one morning and called for Hoiden. His business with
+his employers was ended, and he had just finished an arrangement that
+had long been on foot to go to one of the South American States and take
+charge of a vast engineering scheme there. The girl was delighted. Such
+a prospect of travel and adventure was enough to set one of her
+temperament wild with enthusiasm. She flew to packing her trunk, her
+face radiant with joy.
+
+Only an hour later Mr. Pearl and Hoiden stood at the new station on
+Luke's land, waiting for the east-going train. Mr. Pearl happened to
+think of a business message he wished to leave for Luke, so he went into
+the depôt building and wrote it. When Hoiden saw the letter was for Luke
+she begged leave to put in a few words of postscript, and she had her
+way.
+
+The train came and the man and girl were whirled away to New York, and
+thence they took ship for South America, never to return.
+
+Next day Luke came back, bringing with him a beautifully carved mahogany
+box mounted in silver. Betsy met him at the door, and, woman-like, told
+the story of Hoiden's departure almost at the first breath.
+
+"Gone all the way to South America," she added, after premising that she
+would never return.
+
+A peculiarly grim, grayish smile mantled the face of Luke. He swallowed
+a time or two before he could speak.
+
+"Come now, sis" (he always said "sis" when he felt somewhat at Betsy's
+mercy), "come now, sis, don't try to fool me. I'm goin' right over to
+see the gal now, an' I've got what'll tickle her awfully right here in
+this 'ere box."
+
+Out in the yard the blue jays and woodpeckers were quarrelling over the
+late apples heaped up by the cider mill. The sky was clear, but the
+sunlight, coming through a smoky atmosphere, was pale, like the smile of
+a sick man. The wind of autumn ran steadily through the shrubby weedy
+lawn with a sigh that had in it the very essence of sadness.
+
+"I tell you, Luke, I'm not trying to fool you; they've gone clean to
+South America to stay always," reiterated Betsy.
+
+Luke gazed for a moment steadily into his sister's eyes, as if looking
+for a sign. Slowly his stalwart body and muscular limbs relaxed and
+collapsed. The box fell to the floor with a crash, where it burst,
+letting roll out great hoops of gold and starry rings and pins--a gold
+watch and chain, a beautiful gold pen and pencil case, and trinkets and
+gew-gaw things almost innumerable. They must have cost the full profits
+of his business trip.
+
+Luke staggered into a chair. Betsy just then happened to think of the
+letter that had been left for her brother. This she fetched and handed
+to him. It was the note of business from Mr. Pearl. There was a
+postscript in a different hand:
+
+ "_Good-bye, Goosey!_
+ _Hoidy Pearl._"
+
+That was all. Luke is more morose and petulant than he used to be. He is
+decaying about apace with Rackenshack, and he smokes constantly. He is
+vastly wealthy and unmarried.
+
+Betsy is quiet and kind. Up stairs in her chest is hidden the mahogany
+coffer full of golden testimonials of her brother's days of happiness
+and the one dark hour of his despair!
+
+
+
+
+THE PEDAGOGUE.
+
+
+He was one of the farmer princes of Hoosierdom, a man of more than
+average education, a fluent talker and ready with a story. Knowing that
+I was looking up reminiscences of Hoosier life and specimens of Hoosier
+character, he volunteered one evening to give me the following, vouching
+for the truth of it. Here it is, as I "short-handed" it from his own
+lips. I omit quotation marks.
+
+The study of one's past life is not unlike the study of geology. If the
+presence of the remains of extinct species of animals and vegetables in
+the ancient rocks calls up in one's mind a host of speculative thoughts
+touching the progress of creation, so, as we cut with the pick of
+retrospection through the strata of bygone days, do the remains of
+departed things, constantly turning up, put one into his studying cap to
+puzzle over specimens fully as curious and interesting in their way as
+the _cephalaspis_.
+
+The first stratum of my intellectual formation contains most
+conspicuously the remains of dog-eared spelling books, a score or more
+of them by different names, among which the _Elementary_ of Webster is
+the best preserved and most clearly defined. It was finding an old,
+yellow, badly thumbed and dirt soiled copy of Webster's spelling book in
+the bottom of an old chest of odds and ends, on the fly-leaf of which
+book was written "T. Blodgett," that lately brightened my memory of the
+things I am about to tell you.
+
+The old time pedagogue is a thing of the past--_pars temporis acti_ is
+the Latin of it, may be, but I'm not sure--I'm rusty in the Latin now.
+When I quit school I could read it a good deal. But of the pedagogue.
+The twenty years since he ceased to flourish seem, on reflection, like
+an age--an _æon_, as the Greeks would say. I never did know much Greek.
+I got most of my education from pedagogues of the old sort. They kept
+pouring it on to me till it soaked in. That's the way I got it. I have
+had corns and bunions on my back for not being sufficiently porous to
+absorb the multiplication table rapidly enough to suit the whim of one
+of those learned tyrants. But the pedagogue became extinct and passed
+into the fossil state some twenty years ago, when free schools took
+good hold. He scampered away when he heard the whistle of the steam
+engine along iron highways and the cry of small boys on the streets of
+the towns hawking the daily papers. He could live nowhere within the
+pale of innovation. He was born an exemplar of rigidity. The very name
+of reform was hateful to him. We older fellows remember him well, but to
+the younger fry he is not even a fossil, he is a myth. Of course
+pedagogues differed slightly in the matter of particular disposition and
+real character, but in a _general way_ they had a close family
+resemblance.
+
+I purpose to write of one Blodgett--T. Blodgett, as it was written in
+the fly-leaf of Webster's Elementary--and he was an extraordinary
+specimen of the genus pedagogue. But before I introduce him, let me, by
+way of preface and prelude, give you a view of the salients of the
+history of the days when pole-ribbed school houses--log cabin school
+houses--flourished, with each a pedagogue for supreme, "unquestioned and
+unquestionable" despot.
+
+In those fine days boys from five to fifteen years of age wore tow linen
+pants held up by suspenders (often made of tow strings), and having at
+each side pockets that reached down to about the wearer's knees. These
+pockets held as much as a moderate sized bushel basket will now. The
+girls, big and little, wore mere tow linen slips, that hung loose from
+the shoulders. Democracy, pure and undefiled, flourished like a green
+buckeye tree. Society was in about the same condition as a boy is when
+his voice is changing. You know when a boy's voice is changing if you
+hear him in another room getting his lesson by saying it over aloud, you
+think there's about fourteen girls, two old men, and a dog barking in
+the room. Society was much the same. The elements of everything were in
+it, but not developed and separated yet. Women rode behind their
+husbands on the same horse, occasionally reaching round in the man's lap
+to feel if the baby was properly fixed. Sometimes the girls rode to
+singing school behind their sweethearts. At such times the horses always
+kicked up, and, of course, the girls had to hold on. The boys liked the
+holding on part. Young men went courting always on Saturday night. The
+girls wouldn't suffer any hugging before eleven o'clock--unless the old
+folk were remarkably early to bed. Candles were scarce in those days, so
+that billing and cooing was done by very dim fire-light. _O, le bon
+temps!_ I've forgot whether that's Latin or French.
+
+The pedagogue was the intellectual and moral centre of the neighborhood.
+He was of higher authority, even in the law, than the Justice of the
+Peace. He was consulted on all subjects, and, as a rule, his decisions
+were final, and went upon the people's record as law. His jurisdiction
+was unlimited, as to subject matter or amount, and, as to the person,
+was unquestioned. Of course his territory was bounded by the
+circumstances of each particular case.
+
+I just now recollect quite a number of pedagogues who in turn ruled me
+in my youthful days. Of one of them I never think without feeling a
+strange sadness steal over me. He was a young fellow whom to know was to
+love; pale, delicate, tender-hearted. He taught us two terms and we all
+thought him the best teacher in the world. He was so kind to us, so
+gentle and mild-voiced, so prone to pat us on our heads and encourage
+us. Some of the old people found fault with him because, as they
+alleged, he did not whip us enough, but we saw no force in the
+objection. Well, he took a cough and began to fail. He dismissed us one
+fine May evening and we saw him no more alive. We all followed him, in a
+solemn line, to his grave, and for a long time thereafter we never spoke
+of him except in a low, sad whisper. As for me, till long afterwards,
+the hushed wonder of his white face haunted my dreams. I have now in my
+possession a little bead money-purse he gave me.
+
+Blodgett came next, and here my story properly begins. Blodgett--who,
+having once seen him, could ever forget Blodgett? Not I. He was too
+marked a man to ever wholly fade from memory. He was, as I have said, a
+perfect type of his kind, and his kind was such as should not be sneered
+at. He was one of the humble pioneers of American letters. He was a
+character of which our national history must take account. He was one of
+the vital forces of our earlier national growth. He was in love with
+learning. He considered the matter of imparting knowledge a mere
+question of effort, in which the physical element preponderated. If he
+couldn't talk or read it into one he took a stick and mauled it into
+him. This mauling method, though somewhat distasteful to the subject,
+always had a charming result--red eyes, a few blubbers and a good
+lesson. The technical name of this method was "_Warming the Jacket_."
+It always seemed to me that the peewee birds sang very dolefully after I
+had had my jacket warmed. I recollect my floggings at school with so
+much aversion that I do think, if a teacher should whale one of my
+little ruddy-faced boys, I'd spread his (the teacher's) nose over his
+face as thin as a rabbit skin! I'd run both his eyes into one and chew
+his ears off close to his head, sir! Forgive my earnestness, but I can't
+stand flogging in schools. It's brutal.
+
+From the first day that Blodgett came circulating his school "articles"
+among us, we took to him by common consent as a wonderfully learned man.
+I think his strong, wise looking face, and reserved, pompous manners,
+had much to do with making this impression. We believed in him fully,
+and for a long time gave him unfaltering loyalty. As for me, I never
+have wholly withdrawn my allegiance. I look back, even now, and admire
+him. I sigh, thinking of the merry days when he flourished. I solemnly
+avow my faith in progress. I know the world advances every day, still I
+doubt if men and women are more worthy now than they were in the time of
+the pedagogues. I don't know but what, after all, I am somewhat of a
+fogy. Any how, I will not, for the sake of pleasing your literary
+_swallows_--your eclectics of to-day--turn in and berate my dear old
+Blodgett. In his day men could not and did not skim the surface of
+things like swallows on a mill pond. They _dived_, and got what they did
+get from the bottom, and by honest labor. Whenever one of your
+silk-winged swallows skims past me and whispers progress, I cannot help
+thinking of Heyne, Jean Paul and--Blodgett. Somehow genius and poverty
+are great cronies. It used to be more so than it is now. Blodgett was a
+genius, and, consequently, poor. He was virtuous, and, of course, happy.
+He was a Democrat and a Hard Shell Baptist, and he might never have
+swerved from the path of rectitude, even to the extent of a hair's
+breadth, if it had not been for the coming of a not over scrupulous
+rival into the neighboring village. But I must not hasten. A little more
+and I would have blurted out the whole nub of my story. Bear with me. I
+have nothing of the "lightning calculator" in me. I must take my time.
+
+It has been agreed that biography must include somewhat of physical
+portraiture. "What sort of looking man was Blodgett?" I will tell you as
+nearly as I can, but bear in mind it is a long time since I saw him,
+and, in the meanwhile, the world has been so washed, and combed, and
+trimmed, and pearl powdered, that one can scarcely be sure he recollects
+things rightly. The seedy dandy who teaches the free schools of to-day,
+is, no doubt, all right as things go; but then the way they go--that's
+it! As for finding some one of these dapper, umbrella-lugging,
+green-spectacled, cadaverous teachers to compare with our burly
+Blodgett, the thing is preposterous.
+
+Our pedagogue, when he first came among us, was, as nearly as I can
+judge, about forty, and a bachelor, tall, raw-boned, lean-faced, and
+muscular--a man of many words, and big ones, but not over prone to seek
+audience of the world. To me, a boy of twelve, he appeared somewhat
+awful, especially when plying the beech rod for the benefit of a future
+man, and I do still think that something harder than mere sternness
+slept or woke in and around the lines of his strong, flat jaws--that
+something sharper than acid shrewdness lurked in his light gray eyes,
+and that surely a more powerful expression than ordinary brute obstinacy
+lingered about his firm mouth and smoothly shaven chin.
+
+Blodgett had a mighty body and a mighty will, joined with a
+self-appreciation only bounded by his power to generate it. This, added
+to the deep deference with which he was approached by everybody, made
+him not a little arrogant and despotic--though, doubtless, he was less
+so than most men, under like circumstances, would have been. His years
+sat lightly on him. His step was youthful though slouching, his raven
+hair was bright and wavy, his skin had the tinge of vigorous health, and
+in truth he was not far from handsome. His voice was nasal, but
+pleasantly so.
+
+I cannot hope to give you more than a faint idea of the absolute power
+vested in Blodgett by the men, women and children of the school
+vicinage; suffice it to say that his view was a _sine qua non_ to every
+neighborhood opinion, his words the basis of neighborhood action in all
+matters of public interest. If he pronounced the parson's last sermon a
+failure, at once the entire church agreed in condemning it, not only as
+a failure but a consummate blunder. If he hinted that a certain new
+comer impressed him unfavorably, the nincompoop was summarily kicked out
+of society. In fact, in the pithy phraseology of these latter days, "it
+was dangerous to be safe" about where he lived.
+
+Thus, for a long time, Blodgett ruled with an iron hand his little
+world, with no one to dream of disputing his right or of doubting his
+capacity, till at length fate let fall a bit of romance into the strong
+but placid stream of his life, and tinged it all with rose color. He
+wrote some poetry, but it is obsolete--that is, it is not now in
+existence. While this streak of romance lasted he looked, for all the
+world, like a gilt-edged mathematical problem drawn on rawhide.
+
+It was a great event in our neighborhood when Miss Grace Holland, a
+yellow-haired, blue-eyed, very handsome and well educated young lady
+from Louisville, Kentucky, came to spend the summer with Parson Holland,
+our preacher, and the young woman's uncle. Kentucky girls are all sweet.
+My wife was a Kentucky girl. All the young men fell in love with Miss
+Holland right away, but it was of no use to them. Blodgett, in the
+language of your fast youngsters, "shied his castor into the ring," and
+what was there left for the others but to stand by and see the glory of
+the pedagogue during the season of his wooing? It would have done your
+eyes good to see the pedagogue "slick himself up" each Saturday evening
+preparatory to visiting the parson's. He went into the details of the
+toilette with an enthusiasm worthy a better result. Ordinarily he was
+ostentatiously pious and grave, but now his nature began to slip its
+bark and disclose an inner rind of real mirthfulness, which made him
+quite pleasant company for Miss Holland, who, though a mere girl, was
+sensible and old enough to enjoy the many marked peculiarities of the
+pedagogue.
+
+On Blodgett's side it was love--just the blindest, craziest kind of
+love, at first sight. As to Miss Holland, I cannot say. One never can
+precisely say as to a woman; guessing at a woman's feelings, in matters
+of love, is a little like wondering which makes the music, a boy's mouth
+or the jewsharp--a doubtful affair.
+
+Great events never come singly. When it rains it pours. If you have seen
+a bear, every stump is a bear. A few days after the advent of Miss
+Holland came a pop-eyed, nervous, witty little fellow with a hand press,
+and started a weekly paper in our village. A newspaper in town! It was
+startling.
+
+Blodgett from the first seemed not to relish the innovation, but public
+sentiment had set in too strongly in its favor for him to jeopardize his
+reputation by any serious denunciations. A real live paper in our midst
+was no small matter. Everybody subscribed, and so did Blodgett.
+
+It did, formerly, require a little brains to run a newspaper, and in
+those days an editor was looked upon as nearly or quite as learned and
+intelligent as a pedagogue; but everybody, however ignorant himself,
+could not fail to see that one represented progress, the other
+conservatism, and formerly most persons were Ultra-Conservatives. This,
+of course, gave the pedagogue a considerable advantage.
+
+Of course Blodgett and the editor soon became acquainted. The latter, a
+dapper Yankee, full of "get-up-and-snap," and alert to make way for his
+paper, measured the pedagogue at a glance, seeing at once that a big
+bulk of strong sense and a will like iron were enwrapped in the stalwart
+Hoosier's brain. One of two things must be done. Blodgett must be
+vanquished or his influence secured. He must be prevailed on to endorse
+the _Star_ (the new paper), or the _Star_ must attack and destroy him at
+once.
+
+Meantime the pedagogue grimly waited for an opportunity to demolish the
+editor. The big Hoosier had no thought of compromise or currying favor.
+He would sacrifice the little sleek, stuck-up, big-headed, pop-eyed,
+Roman-nosed Yankee between his thumb nails as he would a flea. Blodgett
+was a predestinarian of the old school, and was firmly imbedded in the
+belief that from all eternity it had been fore-ordained that he was to
+attend to just such fellows as the editor.
+
+Still, the little lady from Louisville took up so much of his time, and
+so distracted his mind, that no well laid plan of attack could be
+matured by the pedagogue. But when nations wish to fight it is easy to
+find a pretext for war. So with individuals. So with the editor and
+Blodgett. They soon came to open hostilities and raised the black flag.
+What an uproar it did make in the county!
+
+This war seemed to come about quite naturally. It had its beginning in a
+debating society, where Blodgett and the editor were leading
+antagonists. The question debated was, "Which has done more for the
+cause of human liberty, Napoleon or Wellington?"
+
+Two village men and two countrymen were the jury to decide which side
+offered the best argument. The jury was out all night and finally
+returned a split verdict, two of them standing for Blodgett and two for
+the editor. Of course it was town against country--the villagers for the
+editor, the country folk for the pedagogue.
+
+"Huzza for the little editor!" cried the town people.
+
+"'Rah for Blodgett!" bawled the lusty country folk.
+
+The matter quickly came to blows at certain parts of the room. Jim
+Dowder caught Phil Gates by the hair and snatched him over two seats.
+Sarah Jane Beaver hit Martha Ann Randall in the mouth with a reticule
+full of hazel nuts. Farmer Heath choked store-keeper Jones till his face
+was as blue as moderate-like indigo. Old Mrs. Baber pulled off Granny
+Logan's wig and threw it at 'Squire Hank. But Pete Develin wound the
+thing up with a most disgraceful feat. He seized a bucket half full of
+water and deliberately poured it right on top of the editor's head.
+
+This was the beginning of trouble and fun. Some lawsuits grew out of it
+and some hard fisticuffs. All the country-folk sided with Blodgett--the
+towns-folk with the editor. The _Star_ began to get dim, but the editor,
+shrewd dog, when he saw how things were turning, at once took up the
+question of Napoleon _vs._ Wellington in his journal, kindly and
+condescendingly offering his columns to Blodgett for the discussion.
+
+The pedagogue foolishly accepted the challenge, and thus laid the
+stones upon which he was to fall. So the antagonists sharpened their
+goose quills and went at it. In sporting circles the proverb runs: never
+bet on a man's own trick. Blodgett ought to have known better than to go
+to the editor's own ground to fight.
+
+I have always suspected that Miss Holland did much to shear our Samson
+of his strength. She certainly did, wittingly or unwittingly, occupy too
+much of his time and thought. Poor fellow! he would have given his life
+for her. He often looked at her, with his head turned a little one side,
+sadly, thoughtfully, as I have seen a terrier look at a rat hole, as
+though he half expected disappointment.
+
+The battle in the _Star_ began in very earnest. It was a harvest for the
+shrewd journalist. Everybody took the _Star_ while the discussion was
+going on. Everybody took sides, everybody got mad, and almost everybody
+fought more or less. Even Parson Holland and the village preacher had
+high words and ceased to recognize each other. As for the young lady
+from Louisville, she had little to say about the discussion, though
+Blodgett always read to her each one of his articles first in MS. and
+then in the _Star_ after it was printed.
+
+Well, finally, in the very height of the war of words, the editor, in
+one of his articles, indulged in Latin. As you are aware, when an editor
+gets right down to pan-rock Latin, it's a sure sign he's after somebody.
+This instance was no exception to the general rule. He was baiting for
+the pedagogue. The pedagogue swallowed hook and all.
+
+"_Nil de mortuis nisi bonum_," said the editor, "is my motto, which may
+be freely translated: 'If you can't say something good of the dead, keep
+your tarnal mouth shut about them!'"
+
+Blodgett started as he read this, and for a full minute thereafter gazed
+steadily and inquiringly on vacancy. At length his great bony right hand
+opened slowly, then quickly shut like a vice.
+
+"I have him! I have him!" he muttered in a murderous tone, "I'll crush
+him to impalpable dust!" He forthwith went for a small Latin lexicon and
+began busily searching its pages. It was Saturday evening, and so busily
+did he labor at what was on his mind, he came near forgetting his
+regular weekly visit to Miss Holland.
+
+He did not forget it, however. He went; without pointing out to her the
+exact spot so vulnerable to his logical arrows, he told her in a
+confidential and confident way that his next letter would certainly make
+an end of the editor. He told her that, at last, he had the shallow
+puppy where he could expose him thoroughly. Of course Miss Holland was
+curious to know more, but, with a grim smile, Blodgett shook his head,
+saying that to insure utter victory he must keep his own counsel.
+
+The next day, though the Sabbath, was spent by the pedagogue writing his
+crusher for the _Star_. He wrote it and re-wrote it, over and over
+again. He almost ruined a Latin grammar and the afore-mentioned lexicon.
+He worked till far in the night, revising and elaborating. His gray eyes
+burned like live coals--his jaws were set for victory.
+
+That week was one of intense excitement all over the county, for somehow
+it had come generally to be understood that the pedagogue's forthcoming
+essay was to completely defeat and disgrace the editor. Work, for the
+time, was mostly suspended. The school children did about as they
+pleased, so that they were careful not to break rudely in upon
+Blodgett's meditations.
+
+On the day of its issue the _Star_ was in great demand. For several
+hours the office was crowded with eager subscribers, hungry for a copy.
+The 'Squire and two constables had some trouble to keep down a genuine
+riot.
+
+The following is an exact copy of Blodgett's great essay:
+
+ MR. EDITOR--SIR: This, for two reasons, is my last article for
+ your journal. Firstly: My time and the exigencies of my
+ profession will not permit me to further pursue a discussion
+ which, on your part, has degenerated into the merest twaddle.
+ Secondly: It only needs, at my hands, an exposition of the
+ false and fraudulent claims you make to classical attainments,
+ to entirely annihilate your unsubstantial and wholly undeserved
+ popularity in this community, and to send you back to peddling
+ your bass wood hams and maple nutmegs. In order to put on a
+ false show of erudition, you lug into your last article a
+ familiar Latin sentence. Now, sir, if you had sensibly foregone
+ any attempt at translation, you might, possibly, have made some
+ one think you knew a shade more than a horse; but "whom the
+ gods would destroy they first make mad."
+
+ You say, "_De mortuis nil nisi bonum_" may be freely
+ translated, "If you can't say something good of the dead, keep
+ your tarnal mouth shut about them!" Shades of Horace and
+ Praxiteles! What would Pindar or Cæsar say? But I will not
+ jest at the expense of sound scholarship. In conclusion, I
+ simply submit the following _literal translation_ of the Latin
+ sentence in question: "_De_--of, _mortuis_--the dead,
+ _nil_--nothing, _nisi_--but, _bonum_--goods," so that the whole
+ quotation may be rendered as follows--"Nothing (is left) of the
+ dead but (their) goods." This is strictly according to the
+ dictionary. Here, so far as I am concerned, this discussion
+ ends.
+
+ Your ob't serv't,
+ T. BLODGETT.
+
+The country flared into flames of triumph. Blodgett's friends stormed
+the village and "_bully-ragged_" everybody who had stood out for the
+editor. The little Yankee, however, did not appear in the least
+disconcerted. His clear, blue, pop-eyes really seemed twinkling with
+half suppressed joy. Blodgett put a copy of the _Star_ into his pocket
+and stalked proudly, victoriously, out of town.
+
+After supper he dressed himself with scrupulous care and went over to
+see Miss Holland. Rumor said they were engaged to be married, and I
+believe they were.
+
+On this particular evening the young lady was enchantingly pretty,
+dressed in white muslin and blue ribbons, her bright yellow hair flowing
+full and free down upon her plump shoulders, her face radiant with
+health and high spirits. She met the pedagogue at the door with more
+than usual warmth of welcome. He kissed her hand. All that he said to
+her that evening will never be known. It is recorded, however, that,
+when he had finished reading his essay to her, she got up and took from
+her travelling trunk a "Book of Foreign Phrases," and examined it
+attentively for a time, after which she was somewhat uneasy and
+reticent. Blodgett observed this, but he was too dignified to ask an
+explanation.
+
+The "last day" of Blodgett's school was at hand. The "exhibition" came
+off on Saturday. Everybody went early. The pedagogue was in his glory.
+He did not know the end was so near. A little occurrence, toward
+evening, however, seemed to foreshadow it.
+
+Blodgett called upon the stage a bright eyed, ruddy faced lad, his
+favorite pupil, to translate Latin phrases. The boy, in his Sunday best,
+and sleekly combed, came forth and bowed to the audience, his eyes
+luminous with vivacity. The little fellow was evidently precocious--a
+rapid if not a very accurate thinker--one of those children who always
+have an answer ready, right or wrong.
+
+After several preliminary questions, very promptly and satisfactorily
+disposed of, Blodgett said:
+
+"Now, sir, translate _Monstrum horrendum informe ingens_."
+
+Quick as lightning the child replied:
+
+"The horrid monster informed the Indians!"
+
+Fury! The face of the pedagogue grew livid. He stretched forth his hand
+and took the boy by the back of the neck. The curtain fell, but the
+audience could not help hearing what a flogging the boy got. It was
+terrible.
+
+Even while this was going on a rumor rippled round the outskirts of the
+audience--for you must know that the "exhibition" was held under a bush
+arbor erected in front of the school house door--a rumor, I say, rippled
+round the outer fringe of the audience. Some one had arrived from the
+village and copies of the _Star_ were being freely distributed. Looks of
+blank amazement flashed into people's faces. The name of the editor and
+that of Prof. W----, of Wabash College, began to fly in sharp whispers
+from mouth to mouth. The crowd reeled and swayed. Men began to talk
+aloud. Finally everybody got on his feet and confusion and hubbub
+reigned supreme. The exhibition was broken up. Blodgett came out of the
+school house upon the stage when he heard the noise. He gazed around.
+Some one thrust a copy of the _Star_ into his hand.
+
+Poor Blodgett! We may all fall. The crowd resolved itself into an
+indignation meeting then and there, at which the following extract from
+the _Star_ was read, followed by resolutions dismissing and disgracing
+Blodgett:
+
+ "The following letter is rich reading for those who have so
+ long sworn by T. Blodgett. We offer no comment:
+
+ "EDITOR OF THE STAR--DEAR SIR: In answer to your letter
+ requesting me to decide between yourself and Mr. Blodgett as to
+ the correct English rendering of the Latin sentence '_De
+ mortuis nil nisi bonum_,' allow me to say that your free
+ translation is a good one, if not very literal or elegant. As
+ to Mr. Blodgett's, if the man is sincere, he is certainly crazy
+ or wofully illiterate; no doubt the latter.
+
+ "Very respectfully,
+ "W----,
+ "_Prof. Languages, Wabash College._"
+
+Blodgett walked away from the school house into the dusky June woods. He
+knew that it was useless to contend against the dictum of a college
+professor. His friends knew so too, so they turned to rend him. He was
+dethroned and discrowned forever. He was boarding at my father's then,
+and I can never forget the haggard, wistful look his face wore when he
+came in that evening. I have since learned that he went straight from
+the scene of his disgrace to Miss Holland, whom he found inclined to
+laugh at him. The next week he collected what was due him and left for
+parts unknown.
+
+I was over at parson Holland's, playing with his boys.
+
+The game was mumble peg.
+
+I had been rooting a peg out of the ground and my face was very dirty.
+We were under a cherry tree by a private hedge. Presently Miss Holland
+came out and began, girl-like, to pluck and eat the half ripe cherries.
+The wind rustled her white dress and lifted the gold floss of her
+wonderful hair. The birds chattered and sang all round us; the white
+clouds lingered overhead like puffs of steam vanishing against the
+splendid blue of the sky. The fragrance of leaf and fruit and bloom was
+heavy on the air. The girl in white, the quiet glory of the day, the
+murmur of the unsteady wind stream flowing among the dark leaves of the
+orchard and hedge, the charm of the temperature, and over all, the
+delicious sound of running water from the brook hard by, all
+harmonized, and in a tender childish mood I quit the game and lolled at
+full length on the ground, watching the fascinating face of the young
+lady as she drifted about the pleasant places of the orchard. Suddenly I
+saw her fix her eyes in a surprised way in a certain direction. I looked
+to see what had startled her, and there, half leaning over the hedge,
+stood Blodgett.
+
+His face was ghastly in its pallor, and deep furrows ran down his jaws.
+His gray eyes had in them a look of longing blended with a sort of stern
+despair. It was only for a moment that his powerful frame toppled above
+the hedge, but he is indelibly pictured in my memory just as he then
+appeared.
+
+"Good-bye, Miss Holland, good-bye."
+
+How dismally hollow his voice sounded! Ah! it was pitiful. I neither saw
+nor heard of him after that. Years have passed since then. Blodgett is,
+likely, in his grave, but I never think of him without a sigh.
+
+Yesterday I was in the old neighborhood, and, to my surprise, learned
+that the old log school house was still standing. So I set out alone to
+visit it. I found it rotten and shaky, serving as a sort of barn in
+which a farmer stows his oats, straw and corn fodder. The genius of
+learning has long since flown to finer quarters. The great old chimney
+had been torn down or had fallen, the broad boards of the roof, held on
+by weight poles, were deeply covered with moss and mould, and over the
+whole edifice hung a gloom--a mist of decay.
+
+I leaned upon a worm fence hard by and gazed through the long vacant
+side window, underneath which our writing shelf used to be, sorrowfully
+dallying with memory; not altogether sorrowfully either, for the glad
+faces of children that used to romp with me on the old play ground
+floated across my memory, clothed in the charming haze of distance, and
+encircled by the halo of tender affections. The wind sang as of old, and
+the bird songs had not changed a jot. Slowly my whole being crept back
+to the past. The wonders of our progress were all forgotten. And then
+from within the old school room came a well remembered voice, with a
+certain nasal twang, repeating slowly and sternly the words:
+
+"_Arma virumque cano_;" then there came a chime of silver tones--"School
+is out!--School is out!" And I started, to find that I was all alone by
+the rotting but blessed old throne and palace of the pedagogue.
+
+
+
+
+AN IDYL OF THE ROD.
+
+
+It was as pretty a country cottage as is to be found, even now, in all
+the Wabash Valley, situated on a prominent bluff, overlooking the broad
+stretches of bottom land, and giving a fine view of the wide winding
+river. The windows and doors of this cottage were draped in vines, among
+which the morning glory and the honeysuckle were the most luxuriant;
+while on each side of the gravelled walk, that led from the front
+portico to the dooryard gate, grew clusters of pinks, sweet-williams and
+larkspurs. The house was painted white, and had green window
+shutters--old fashioned, to be sure, but cosy, homelike and tasty
+withal. Everything pertaining to and surrounding the place had an air of
+methodical neatness, that betokened great care and scrupulous order on
+the part of the inmates.
+
+About the hour of six on a Monday morning, in the month of May, a fine,
+hearty, intelligent looking lad of twelve years walked slowly up the
+path which led from the old orchard to the house. He was dressed in
+loose trowsers of bottle green jeans, a jacket of the same, heavy boots
+and a well worn wool hat. The boy's shoulders stooped a little, and a
+slight hump discovered itself at the upper portion of his back. His face
+was strikingly handsome, being fair, bright, healthful, and marked with
+signs of great precocity of intellect, albeit it wore just now an
+indescribable, faintly visible shade, as of innocent perplexity, or,
+possibly, grief. His mind was evidently not at ease, but the varying
+shadows that chased each other across the mild depths of his clear,
+vivacious eyes would have stumped a physiognomist. Between a laugh and a
+cry, but more like a cry; between defiance and utter shame, but more
+like the latter; his cheeks and lips took on every shade of pallor and
+of flush. He shrugged his shoulders as he moved along, and cast rapid
+glances in every direction, as if afraid of being seen. "Whippoo-tee,
+tippoo-tee-tee-e!" sang a great cardinal red bird in the apple tree over
+his head. He flung a stone at the bird with terrible energy, but missed
+it.
+
+The mistress of the cottage was at this time in the kitchen preparing
+for the week's washing, for do not all good Hoosier housewives wash on
+Monday? She was a middle aged, stoutly built, healthy matron, sandy
+haired, slightly freckled, blue eyed and quick in her movements. Usually
+smiling and happy, it was painful to see how she struggled now to master
+the emotions of great grief and sadness that constantly arose in her
+bosom, like spectres that would not be driven away.
+
+A bright eyed, golden haired lass of sixteen was in the breakfast room
+washing the dishes and singing occasional snatches from a mournful
+ditty. It was sad, indeed, to see a cloud of sorrow on a face so fresh
+and sweet.
+
+Mr. Coulter, the head of the family, and owner of the cottage and its
+lands, stood near the centre of the sitting room with his hands crossed
+behind him, gazing fixedly and sadly on the picture of a sweet child
+holding a white kitten in its lap, which picture hung on the wall over
+against the broad fire-place. A look of sorrow betrayed itself even in
+the dark, stern visage of the man. He drew down his shaggy eyebrows and
+occasionally pulled his grizzled moustache into his mouth and chewed it
+fiercely. Evidently he was chafing under his grief.
+
+The cottage windows were wide open, as is the western custom in fine
+weather, and the fragrance of spice wood and sassafras floated in on the
+flood tide of pleasant air, while from the big old locust tree down by
+the fence fell the twittering prelude to a finch's song. A green line of
+willows and a thin, pendulous stratum of fog marked the way of the
+river, plainly visible from the west window, and through the white haze
+flocks of teal and wood ducks cut swiftly in their downward flight to
+the water. A golden flicker sang and hammered on the gate-post the while
+he eyed a sparrow-hawk that wheeled and screamed high over head. The dew
+was like little mirrors in the grass.
+
+The lad entered the kitchen and said to his mother, in a voice full of
+tenderness, though barely audible:
+
+"Mammy, where's pap?"
+
+"In the front room, Billy," replied the matron solemnly, quaveringly.
+
+Passing into the breakfast room, Billy looked at his sister and a flash
+of sympathetic sorrow played back and forth from the eyes of one to
+those of the other; then he went straight into the sitting room and
+handed something to Mr. Coulter. It was a moment of silence and
+suspense. Out in the orchard the cherry and apple blooms were falling
+like pink and white snow.
+
+The man looked down at his boy sadly, sorrowfully, regretfully. He drew
+his face into a stern frown. The lad looked up into his father's eyes
+timidly, ruefully, strangely. It was a living tableau no artist could
+reproduce. It was the moment before a crisis.
+
+"Billy," said the father gravely, "I took your mother and sister to
+church yesterday."
+
+"Yes, sir," said Billy.
+
+"And left you to see to things," continued the man.
+
+"Yes, sir," replied the boy, gazing through the window at the flicker as
+it hitched down the gate-post and finally dropped into the grass with a
+shrill chirp.
+
+"And you didn't water them pigs!"
+
+"O-o-o! Oh, sir! Geeroody! O me! ouch! lawsy! lawsy! mercy me!"
+
+The slender scion of an apple tree, in the hand of Mr. Coulter, rose and
+fell, cutting the air like a rapier, and up from the jacket of the lad,
+like incense from an altar, rose a cloud of dust mingled with the nap of
+jeans. Down in the young clover of the meadow the larks and sparrows
+sang cheerily; the gnats and flies danced up and down in the sunshine,
+the fresh soft young leaves of the vines rustled like satin, and all
+was merry indeed!
+
+Billy's eyes were turned upward to the face of his father in appealing
+agony; but still the switch, with a sharp hiss, cut the air, falling
+steadily and mercilessly on his shoulders.
+
+All along the green banks of the river the willows shook their shining
+fingers at the lifting fog, and the voices of children going by to the
+distant school smote the sweet May wind.
+
+"Whippee! Whippee-tippee-tee!" sang the cardinal bird.
+
+"O pap! ouch! O-o-o! I'll not forget to water the pigs no more!"
+
+"S'pect you won't, neither!" said the man.
+
+The wind, by a sudden puff, lifted into the room a shower of white bloom
+petals from a sweet apple tree, letting them fall gracefully upon the
+patchwork carpet, the while a ploughman whistled plaintively in a
+distant field.
+
+"Crackee! O pap! ouch! O-o-o! You're a killin' me!"
+
+"Shet your mouth 'r I'll split ye to the backbone in a second! Show ye
+how to run off fishin' with Ed Jones and neglect them pigs! Take every
+striffin of hide off'n ye!"
+
+How many delightful places in the woods, how many cool spots beside the
+murmuring river, would have been more pleasant to Billy than the place
+he just then occupied! He would have swapped hides with the very pigs he
+had forgot to water.
+
+"O, land! O, me! Geeroody me!" yelled the lad.
+
+"Them poor pigs!" rejoined the father.
+
+Still the dust rose and danced in the level jet of sunlight that fell
+athwart the room from the east window, and the hens out at the barn
+cackled and sang for joy over new laid eggs stowed away in cosy places.
+
+At one time during the falling of the rod the girl quit washing the
+dishes, and thrusting her head into the kitchen said, in a subdued tone:
+
+"My land! Mammy, ain't Bill a gittin' an awful one this load o' poles?"
+
+"You're moughty right!" responded the matron, solemnly.
+
+Along toward the last Mr. Coulter tip-toed at every stroke. The switch
+actually screamed through the air. Billy danced and bawled and made all
+manner of serio-comic faces and contortions.
+
+"Now go, sir," cried the man, finally tossing the frizzled stump of the
+switch out through the window. "Go now, and next time I'll be bound you
+water them pigs!"
+
+And, while the finch poured a cataract of melody from the locust tree,
+Billy went.
+
+Poor boy! that was a terrible thrashing, and to make it worse, it had
+been promised to him on the evening before, so that he had been dreading
+it and shivering over it all night!
+
+Now, as he walked through the breakfast room, his sister looked at him
+in a commiserating way, but on passing through the kitchen he could not
+catch the eye of his mother.
+
+Finally he stood in the free open air in front of the saddle closet. It
+was just then that a speckled rooster on the barn yard fence flapped his
+wings and crowed lustily. A turkey cock was strutting on the grass by
+the old cherry tree.
+
+Billy opened the door of the closet. "A boy's will is the wind's will,
+and the thoughts of youth are long, long thoughts." Billy peeped into
+the saddle closet and then cast a glance around him, as if to see if any
+one was near.
+
+At length, during a pleasant lull in the morning wind, and while the
+low, tenderly mellow flowing of the river was distinctly audible, and
+the song of the finch increased in volume, and the bleating of new born
+lambs in the meadow died in fluttering echoes under the barn, and while
+the fragrance of apple blooms grew fainter, and while the sun, now
+flaming just a little above the eastern horizon, launched a shower of
+yellow splendors over him from head to foot, he took from under his
+jacket behind a doubled sheep skin with the wool on, which, with an
+ineffable smile, he tossed into the closet. Then, as the yellow flicker
+rose rapidly from the grass, Billy walked off, whistling the air of that
+once popular ballad--
+
+ "O give me back my fifteen cents,
+ And give me back my money," &c.
+
+
+
+
+Transcriber's Notes:
+
+
+ Passages in italics or underlined are indicated by _italics_.
+
+ Inconsistencies in spelling and hyphenation have been retained from
+ the original.
+
+ Punctuation has been corrected without note.
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Hoosier Mosaics, by Maurice Thompson
+
+*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK HOOSIER MOSAICS ***
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+<pre>
+
+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Hoosier Mosaics, by Maurice Thompson
+
+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: Hoosier Mosaics
+
+Author: Maurice Thompson
+
+Release Date: May 18, 2011 [EBook #36148]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK HOOSIER MOSAICS ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by David Edwards, David E. Brown, and the Online
+Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This
+book was produced from scanned images of public domain
+material from the Google Print project.)
+
+
+
+
+
+
+</pre>
+
+
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_1" id="Page_1">[1]</a></span></p>
+
+<p class="center"><span class="big">Affectionately to my Father,</span></p>
+<p class="center"><span class="big">The Reverend GRIGG THOMPSON.</span></p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_2" id="Page_2">[2]</a></span></p>
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_3" id="Page_3">[3]</a></span></p>
+
+<p class="center"><span class="giant"><span class="smcap">Hoosier Mosaics.</span></span></p>
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<p class="center"><span class="big">By MAURICE THOMPSON.</span></p>
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<p class="center">NEW YORK:</p>
+<p class="center">E. J. HALE &amp; SON, PUBLISHERS,</p>
+<p class="center"><span class="smcap">Murray Street</span>.</p>
+<p class="center">1875.</p>
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+
+<p class="center">Entered according to Act of Congress, in the year 1875, by<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_4" id="Page_4">[4]</a></span><br/>
+E. J. HALE &amp; SON,<br/>
+In the office of the Librarian of Congress at Washington.</p>
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_5" id="Page_5">[5]</a></span></p>
+<p class="center"><span class="huge">CONTENTS.</span></p>
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+
+<table border="0" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="5" summary="table">
+
+<tr><td>&nbsp;</td><td align="right"><small>PAGE.</small></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td><span class="smcap"><span class="u">Was She a Boy</span>?</span></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_7">7</a></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td><span class="smcap">Trout's Luck</span>,</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_29">29</a></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td><span class="smcap"><span class="u">Big Medicine</span></span>,</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_50">50</a></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td><span class="smcap"><span class="u">The Venus of Balhinch</span></span>,</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_76">76</a></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td><span class="smcap">The Legend of Potato Creek</span>,&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_92">92</a></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td><span class="smcap"><span class="u">Stealing a Conductor</span></span>,</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_114">114</a></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td><span class="smcap">Hoiden</span>,</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_127">127</a></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td><span class="smcap">The Pedagogue</span>,</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_162">162</a></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td><span class="smcap">An Idyl of the Rod</span>,</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_188">188</a></td></tr></table>
+
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_6" id="Page_6">[6]</a></span></p>
+
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_7" id="Page_7">[7]</a></span></p>
+<p class="center"><span class="huge"><span class="smcap">Was She a Boy?</span></span></p>
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+
+
+<p>No matter what business or what pleasure took me, I once, not long ago,
+went to Colfax. Whisper it not to each other that I was seeking a
+foreign appointment through the influence of my fellow Hoosier, the late
+Vice-President of the United States. O no, I didn't go to the Hon.
+Schuyler Colfax at all; but I went to Colfax, simply, which is a little
+dingy town, in Clinton County, that was formerly called Midway, because
+it is half way between Lafayette and Indianapolis. It was and is a place
+of some three hundred inhabitants, eking out an aguish subsistence,
+maintaining a swampy, malarious aspect, keeping up a bilious, nay, an
+atra-bilious color, the year round, by sucking like an attenuated leech
+at the junction, or, rather, the crossing of the I. C. &amp; L., and the L.
+C. &amp; S. W. railroads. It lay mouldering, like something lost and
+forgotten, slowly rotting in the swamp.</p>
+
+<p>I do not mean to attack the inhabitants of <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_8" id="Page_8">[8]</a></span>Colfax, for they were good
+people, and deserved a better fate than the eternal rattling the ague
+took them through from year's end to year's end. Why, they had had the
+ague so long that they had no respect for it at all. I've seen a woman
+in Colfax shaking with a chill, spanking a baby that had a chill, and
+scolding a husband who had a chill, all at once&mdash;and I had a dreadful
+ague on me at the same time! But, as I have said, they were good people,
+and I suppose they are still. They go quietly about the usual business
+of dead towns. They have "stores" in which they offer for sale calico,
+of the big-figured, orange and red sort, surprisingly cheap. They smoke
+those little Cuba sixes at a half cent apiece, and call them cigars;
+they hang round the dépôt, and trade jack-knives and lottery watches on
+the afternoons of lazy Sundays; they make harmless sport of the incoming
+and outgoing country folk; and, in a word, keep pretty busy at one thing
+or another, and above all&mdash;they shake.</p>
+
+<p>In Colfax the chief sources of exciting amusement are dog fights and an
+occasional row at Sheehan's saloon, a doggery of the regular
+old-fashioned, drink, gamble, rob and fight sort&mdash;a low place, known to
+all the hard bats in the State.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_9" id="Page_9">[9]</a></span>As you pass through the town you will not fail to notice a big sign,
+outhanging from the front of the largest building on the principal
+street, which reads: "Union Hotel, 1865." From the muddy suburbs of the
+place, in every direction, stretch black muck swamps, for the most part
+heavily timbered with a variety of oaks, interspersed with sycamores,
+ash, and elms. In the damp, shady labyrinths of these boggy woods
+millions of lively, wide awake, tuneful mosquitoes are daily
+manufactured; and out from decaying logs and piles of fermenting leaves,
+from the green pools and sluggish ditch streams, creeps a noxious gas,
+known in that region as the "double refined, high pressure, forty hoss
+power quintessential of the ager!" So, at least, I was told by the
+landlord of the Union Hotel, and his skin had the color of one who knew.</p>
+
+<p>Notwithstanding what I have said, Colfax, in summer, is not wholly
+without attractions of a certain kind. It has some yellow dogs and some
+brindle ones; it has some cattle and some swine; it has some swallows
+and some spotted pigeons; it has cool, fresh smelling winds, and, after
+the water has sufficiently dried out, the woods are really glorious
+with<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_10" id="Page_10">[10]</a></span> wild roses, violets, turkey-pea blossoms, and wild pinks. But to
+my story.</p>
+
+<p>I was sitting on the long veranda of the Union Hotel, when a rough but
+kindly voice said to me:</p>
+
+<p>"Mornin', stranger; gi' me a light, will ye?"</p>
+
+<p>I looked up from the miserable dime novel at which I had been tugging
+for the last hour, and saw before me a corpulent man of, perhaps,
+forty-five years of age, who stood quite ready to thrust the charred end
+of a cigar stump into the bowl of my meerschaum. I gave him a match, and
+would fain have returned to Angelina St. Fortescue, the heroine of the
+novel, whom I had left standing on the extreme giddy verge of a sheer
+Alpine precipice, known, by actual triangulation, to be just seven
+thousand feet high, swearing she would leap off if Donald Gougerizeout,
+the robber, persisted further in his rough addresses; but my new friend,
+the corpulent smoker, seemed bent on a little bit of conversation.</p>
+
+<p>"Thankee, sir. Fine mornin', sir, a'n't it?"</p>
+
+<p>"Beautiful," I replied, raising my head, elevating my arms, and, by a
+kind of yawn, taking in a deep draught of the fresh spring weather,
+absorbing it, assimilating it, till, like a wave of retarded
+electricity, it set my nerves<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_11" id="Page_11">[11]</a></span> in tune for enjoying the bird songs, and
+filled my blood with the ecstasy of vigorous health and youth. I, no
+doubt, just then felt the burden of life much less than did the big
+yellow dog at my feet, who snapped lazily at the flies.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, yes, this 'ere's a fine mornin'&mdash;julicious, sir, julicious,
+indeed; but le' me tell ye, sir, this 'ere wind's mighty deceitful&mdash;for
+a fact it is, sir, jist as full of ager as a acorn is of meat. It's
+blowin' right off'n ponds, and is loaded chock down with the miasm&mdash;for
+a fact it is, sir."</p>
+
+<p>While delivering this speech, the fat man sat down on the bench beside
+me there in the veranda. By this time I had my thumbs in the arm holes
+of my vest, and my chest expanded to its utmost&mdash;my lungs going like a
+steam bellows, which is a way I have in fine weather.</p>
+
+<p>"Monstrous set o' respiratory organs, them o' your'n," he said, eyeing
+my man&oelig;uvres. Just then I discovered that he was a physician of the
+steam doctor sort, for, glancing down at my feet, I espied his well worn
+leather medicine bags. I immediately grew polite. Possibly I might ere
+long need some quinine, or mandrake, or a hot steam bath&mdash;anything for
+the ague!</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_12" id="Page_12">[12]</a></span>"Yes, I've got lungs like a porpoise," I replied, "but still the ague
+may get me. Much sickness about here, Doctor&mdash;&mdash;a&mdash;&mdash;a&mdash;&mdash;what do they
+call your name?"</p>
+
+<p>"Benjamin Hurd&mdash;Doctor Hurd, they call me. I'm the only thorer bred
+botanic that's in these parts. I do poorty much all the practice about
+here. Yes, there's considerable of ager and phthisic and bilious fever.
+Keeps me busy most of my time. These nasty swamps, you know."</p>
+
+<p>After a time our conversation flagged, and the doctor having lit a fresh
+cigar, we smoked in silence. The wind was driving the dust along the
+street in heavy waves, and I sat watching a couple of lean, spotted
+calves making their way against the tide. They held their heads low and
+shut their eyes, now and then bawling vigorously. Some one up stairs was
+playing "Days of Absence" on a wretched wheezing accordeon.</p>
+
+<p>"There's a case of asthma, doctor," I said, intending to be witty. But
+my remark was not noticed. The doctor was in a brown study, from which
+my words had not startled him. Presently he said, as if talking to
+himself, and without taking the cigar from his mouth:</p>
+
+<p>"'Twas just a year ago to-night, the 28th<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_13" id="Page_13">[13]</a></span> day of May, 'at they took 'er
+away. And he'll die afore day to a dead certainty. Beats all the denied
+queer things I ever seed or heerd of."</p>
+
+<p>He was poking with the toe of his boot in the dust on the veranda floor,
+as he spoke, and stealing a glance at his face, I saw that it wore an
+abstracted, dreamy, perplexed look.</p>
+
+<p>"What was your remark, doctor?" I asked, more to arouse him than from
+any hope of being interested.</p>
+
+<p>"Hum!&mdash;ah, yes," he said, starting, and beginning a vigorous puffing.
+"Ah, yes, I was cogitatin' over this matter o' Berry Young's. Never have
+been able to 'count for that, no how. Think about it more an' more every
+day. What's your theory of it?"</p>
+
+<p>"Can't say, never having heard anything of it," I replied.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, I do say! Thought everybody had hearn of that, any how! It's a
+rale romance, a reg'lar mystery, sir. It's been talked about, and writ
+about in the papers so much 'at I s'posed 'at it was knowed of far and
+wide."</p>
+
+<p>"I've been in California for several years past," I replied, by way of
+excuse for my ignorance of even the vaguest outline of the affair,
+whatever it might be.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_14" id="Page_14">[14]</a></span>"Well, you see, a leetle more'n a year ago a gal an' her father come
+here and stopped at this 'ere very hotel. The man must 'a' been som'res
+near sixty years old; but the gal was young, and jist the poortiest
+thing I ever seed in all my life. I couldn't describe how she looked at
+all; but everybody 'at saw her said she was the beautifulest creatur
+they ever laid eyes onto. Where these two folks come from nobody ever
+knowed, but they seemed like mighty nice sort of persons, and everybody
+liked 'em, 'specially the gal. Somehow, from the very start, a kind of
+mystery hung 'round 'em. They seemed always to have gobs o' money, and
+onct in awhile some little thing'd turn up to make folks kinder juberous
+somehow 'at they wasn't jist what they ginerally seemed to be. But that
+gal was fascinatin' as a snake, and as poorty as any picter. Her flesh
+looked like tinted wax mixed with moon-shine, and her eyes was as clear
+as a lime-stone spring&mdash;though they was dark as night. She was that full
+of restless animal life 'at she couldn't set still&mdash;she roamed round
+like a leopard in a cage, and she'd romp equal to a ten-year-old boy.
+Well, as mought be expected, sich a gal as that 'ere 'd 'tract attention
+in these parts, and I must say 'at the young<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_15" id="Page_15">[15]</a></span> fellows here did git
+'bominable sweet on her. 'Casionally two of 'em 'd git out in the swamps
+and have a awful fight on her 'count; but she 'peared to pay precious
+little 'tention to any of 'em till finally Berry Young stepped in and
+jist went for 'er like mad, and she took to 'm. Berry was r'ally the
+nicest and intelligentest young man in all this country. He writ poetry
+for the papers, sir&mdash;snatchin' good poetry, too&mdash;and had got to be
+talked of a right smart for his larnin', an' 'complishments. He was good
+lookin', too; powerful handsome, for a fact, sir. So they was to be
+married, Berry and the gal, an' the time it was sot, an' the day it
+come, an' all was ready, an' the young folks was on the floor, and the
+'squire was jist a commencin' to say the ceremony, when lo! and
+beholden, four big, awful, rough lookin' men rushed in with big pistols
+and mighty terrible bowie knives, and big papers and big seals, and said
+they was a sheriff and possum from Kaintucky. They jist jumped right
+onto the gal an' her father an' han'cuffed 'em, an' took 'em!"</p>
+
+<p>"Handcuffed them and took them!" I repeated, suddenly growing intensely
+interested. This was beating my dime novel, for sensation, all hollow.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_16" id="Page_16">[16]</a></span>"Yes, sir, han'cuffed 'em an' took 'em, an' away they went, an' they've
+not been hearn of since to this day. But the mysteriousest thing about
+the whole business was that when the sheriff grabbed the gal he called
+her George, and said she wasn't no gal at all, but jist a terrible onery
+boy 'at had been stealin' an' counterfeitin' an' robbin' all round
+everywhere. What d'ye think of that?"</p>
+
+<p>"A remarkably strange affair, certainly," I replied; "and do you say
+that the father and the girl have not since been heard from?"</p>
+
+<p>"Never a breath. The thing got into all the newspapers and raised a
+awful rumpus, and it turned out that it wasn't no sheriff 'at come
+there; but some dark, mysterious kidnappin' transaction 'at nobody could
+account for. Detectives was put on their track an' follered 'em to Injun
+territory an' there lost 'em. Some big robberies was connected with the
+affair, but folks could never git head nor tail of the partic'lers."</p>
+
+<p>"And it wasn't a real sheriff's arrest, then?" said I.</p>
+
+<p>"No, sir, 'twas jist a mystery. Some kind of a dodge of a band of
+desperadoes to avoid the law some way. The papers tried to explain it,
+but I never could see any sense to it. 'Twas<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_17" id="Page_17">[17]</a></span> a clean, dead mystery. But
+I was goin' on to tell ye 'at Berry Young took it awful hard 'bout the
+gal, an' he's been sort o' sinkin' away ever sence, an' now he's jist
+ready to wink out. Yonder's where Berry lives, in that 'ere white
+cottage house with the vines round the winder. He's desp'rit sick&mdash;a
+sort o' consumption. I'm goin' to see 'im now; good mornin' to ye."</p>
+
+<p>Thus abruptly ending our interview, the doctor took up his medicine bag
+and went his way. He left me in a really excited state of mind; the
+story of itself was so strange, and the narrator had told it so solemnly
+and graphically. I suppose, too, that I must have been in just the
+proper state of mind for that rough outline, that cartoon of a most
+startling and mysterious affair, to become deeply impressed in my mind,
+perhaps, in the most fascinating and fantastic light possible. A thirst
+to know more of the story took strong hold on my mind, as if I had been
+reading a tantalizing romance and had found the leaves torn out just
+where the mystery was to be explained. I half closed my eyes to better
+keep in the lines and shades of the strange picture. Its influence lay
+upon me like a spell. I enjoyed it. It was a luxury.</p>
+
+<p>The wings of the morning wind fanned the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_18" id="Page_18">[18]</a></span> heat into broken waves, rising
+and sinking, and flowing on, with murmur and flash and glimmer, to the
+cool green ways of the woods, and, like the wind, my fancy went out
+among golden fleece clouds and into shady places, following the thread
+of this new romance. I cannot give a sufficient reason why the story
+took so fast a hold on me. But it did grip my mind and master it. It
+appeared to me the most intensely strange affair I had ever heard of.</p>
+
+<p>While I sat there, lost in reflection, with my eyes bent on a very
+unpromising pig, that wallowed in the damp earth by the town pump, the
+landlord of the hotel came out and took a seat beside me. I gave him a
+pipe of my tobacco and forthwith began plying him with questions
+touching the affair of which the doctor had spoken. He confirmed the
+story, and added to its mystery by going minutely into its details. He
+gave the names of the father and daughter as Charles Afton and Ollie
+Afton.</p>
+
+<p>Ollie Afton! Certainly no name sounds sweeter! How is it that these
+gifted, mysteriously beautiful persons always have musical names!</p>
+
+<p>"Ah," said the landlord, "you'd ort to have seen that boy!"</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_19" id="Page_19">[19]</a></span>"Boy!" I echoed.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, gal or boy, one or t'other, the wonderfulest human bein' I ever
+see in all the days o' my life! Lips as red as ripe cur'n's, and for
+ever smilin'. Such smiles&mdash;oonkoo! they hurt a feller all over, they was
+so sweet. She was tall an' dark, an' had black hair that curled short
+all 'round her head. Her skin was wonderful clear and so was her eyes.
+But it was the way she looked at you that got you. Ah, sir, she had a
+power in them eyes, to be sure!"</p>
+
+<p>The pig got up from his muddy place by the pump, grunted, as if
+satisfied, and slowly strolled off; a country lad drove past, riding
+astride the hounds of a wagon; a pigeon lit on the comb of the roof of
+Sheehan's saloon, which was just across the street, and began pluming
+itself. Just then the landlord's little sharp-nosed, weasel-eyed boy
+came out and said, in a very subdued tone of voice:</p>
+
+<p>"Pap, mam says 'at if you don't kill 'er that 'ere chicken for dinner
+you kin go widout any fing to eat all she cares."</p>
+
+<p>The landlord's spouse was a red-headed woman, so he got up very suddenly
+and took himself into the house. But before he got out of hearing the
+little boy remarked:</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_20" id="Page_20">[20]</a></span>"Pap, I speaks for the gizzard of that 'ere chicken, d'ye hear, now?"</p>
+
+<p>I sat there till the dinner hour, watching the soft pink and white
+vapors that rolled round the verge of the horizon. I was thoroughly
+saturated with romance. Strange, that here, in this dingy little
+out-of-the-way village, should have transpired one of the most wonderful
+mysteries history may ever hold!</p>
+
+<p>At dinner the landlord talked volubly of the Afton affair, giving it as
+his opinion that the Aftons were persons tinged with negro blood, and
+had been kidnapped into slavery.</p>
+
+<p>"They was jist as white, an' whiter, too, than I am," he went on, "but
+them Southerners'd jist as soon sell one person as 'nother, anyhow."</p>
+
+<p>I noticed particularly that the little boy got his choice bit of the
+fowl. He turned his head one side and ate like a cat.</p>
+
+<p>When the meal was over I was again joined by Doctor Hurd on the
+verandah. He reported Berry Young still alive, but not able to live till
+midnight. I noticed that the doctor was nervous and kept his eyes fixed
+on Sheehan's saloon.</p>
+
+<p>"Stranger," said he, leaning over close to me, and speaking in a low,
+guarded way,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_21" id="Page_21">[21]</a></span> "things is workin' dasted curious 'bout now&mdash;sure's gun's
+iron they jist is!"</p>
+
+<p>"Where&mdash;how&mdash;in what way, doctor?" I stammered, taken aback by his
+behavior.</p>
+
+<p>"Sumpum's up, as sure as Ned!" he replied, wagging his head.</p>
+
+<p>"Doctor," I said, petulantly, "if you would be a trifle more explicit I
+could probably guess, with some show of certainty, at what you mean!"</p>
+
+<p>"Can't ye hear? Are ye deaf? Did ye ever, in all yer born days, hear a
+voice like that ere 'un? Listen!"</p>
+
+<p>Sure enough, a voice of thrilling power, a rich, heavy, quavering alto,
+accompanied by some one thrumming on a guitar, trickled and gurgled, and
+poured through the open window of Sheehan's saloon. The song was a wild,
+drinking carol, full of rough, reckless wit, but I listened, entranced,
+till it was done.</p>
+
+<p>"There now, say, what d'ye think o' that? Ain't things a workin' round
+awful curious, as I said?"</p>
+
+<p>Delivering himself thus, the doctor got up and walked off.</p>
+
+<p>When I again had an opportunity to speak to the landlord, I asked him if
+Doctor Hurd was not thought to be slightly demented.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_22" id="Page_22">[22]</a></span>"What! crazy, do you mean? No, sir; bright as a pin!"</p>
+
+<p>"Well," said I, "he's a very queer fellow any how. By the way, who was
+that singing just now over in the saloon there?"</p>
+
+<p>"Don't know, didn't hear 'em. Some of the boys, I s'pose. They have some
+lively swells over there sometimes. Awful hole."</p>
+
+<p>I resumed my dime novel, and nothing further transpired to aggravate or
+satisfy my curiosity concerning the strange story I had heard, till
+night came down and the bats began to wheel through the moonless
+blackness above the dingy town. At the coming on of dusk I flung away
+the book and took to my pipe. Some one touched me on the shoulder,
+rousing me from a deep reverie, if not a doze.</p>
+
+<p>"Ha, stranger, this you, eh? Berry Young's a dyin'; go over there wi'
+me, will ye?"</p>
+
+<p>It was the voice of Doctor Hurd.</p>
+
+<p>"What need for me have you?" I replied, rather stiffly, not much
+relishing this too obtrusive familiarity.</p>
+
+<p>"Well&mdash;I&mdash;I jist kinder wanted ye to go over. The poor boy's 'bout
+passin' away, an' things is a workin' so tarnation curious! Come 'long
+wi' me, friend, will ye?"</p>
+
+<p>Something in the fellow's voice touched me,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_23" id="Page_23">[23]</a></span> and without another word I
+arose and followed him to the cottage. The night was intensely black. I
+think it was clear, but a heavy fog from the swamps had settled over
+everything, and through this dismal veil the voices of owls from far and
+near struck with hollow, sepulchral effect.</p>
+
+<p>"A heart is the trump!" sang out that alto voice from within the saloon
+as we passed.</p>
+
+<p>Doctor Hurd clutched my arm and muttered:</p>
+
+<p>"That's that voice ag'in! Strange&mdash;strange! Poor Berry Young!"</p>
+
+<p>We entered the cottage and found ourselves in a cosy little room, where,
+on a low bed, a pale, intelligent looking young man lay, evidently
+dying. He was very much emaciated, his eyes, wonderfully large and
+luminous, were sunken, and his breathing quick and difficult. A haggard,
+watching-worn woman sat by his bed. From her resemblance to him I took
+her to be his sister. She was evidently very unwell herself. We sat in
+silence by his bedside, watching his life flow into eternity, till the
+little clock on the mantel struck, sharp and clear, the hour of ten.</p>
+
+<p>The sound of the bell startled the sick man, and after some incoherent
+mumbling he said, quite distinctly:</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_24" id="Page_24">[24]</a></span>"Sister, if you ever again see Ollie Afton, tell him&mdash;tell her&mdash;tell,
+say I forgive him&mdash;say to her&mdash;him&mdash;I loved her all my life&mdash;tell
+him&mdash;ah! what was I saying? Don't cry, sis, please. What a sweet,
+faithful sister! Ah! it's almost over, dear&mdash;&mdash;Ah, me!"</p>
+
+<p>For some minutes the sister's sobbing echoed strangely through the
+house. The dying man drew his head far down in the soft pillow. A breath
+of damp air stole through the room.</p>
+
+<p>All at once, right under the window by which the bed sat, arose a
+touching guitar prelude&mdash;a tangled mesh of melody&mdash;gusty, throbbing,
+wandering through the room and straying off into the night, tossing back
+its trembling echoes fainter and fainter, till, as it began to die, that
+same splendid alto voice caught the key and flooded the darkness with
+song. The sick man raised himself on his elbow, and his face flashed out
+the terrible smile of death. He listened eagerly. It was the song "Come
+Where my Love lies Dreaming," but who has heard it rendered as it was
+that night? Every chord of the voice was as sweet and witching as a wind
+harp's, and the low, humming undertone of the accompaniment was
+perfection. Tenderly but awfully sweet, the music at length faded into
+utter silence, and Berry Young sank limp and pallid upon his pillows.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_25" id="Page_25">[25]</a></span>"It is Ollie," he hoarsely whispered. "Tell her&mdash;tell him&mdash;O say to her
+for me&mdash;ah! water, sis, it's all over!"</p>
+
+<p>The woman hastened, but before she could get the water to his lips he
+was dead. His last word was Ollie.</p>
+
+<p>The sister cast herself upon the dead man's bosom and sobbed wildly,
+piteously. Soon after this some neighbors came in, which gave me an
+opportunity to quietly take my leave.</p>
+
+<p>The night was so foggy and dark that, but for a bright stream of light
+from a window of Sheehan's saloon, it would have been hard for me to
+find my way back to the hotel. I did find it, however, and sat down upon
+the verandah. I had nearly fallen asleep, thinking over the strange
+occurrences of the past few hours, when the rumble of an approaching
+train of cars on the I. C. &amp; L. from the east aroused me, and, at the
+same moment, a great noise began over in the saloon. High words, a few
+bitter oaths, a struggle as of persons fighting, a loud, sonorous crash
+like the crushing of a musical instrument, and then I saw the burly bar
+tender hurl some one out through the doorway just as the express train
+stopped close by.</p>
+
+<p>"All aboard!" cried the conductor, waving<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_26" id="Page_26">[26]</a></span> his lantern. At the same
+time, as the bar-tender stood in the light of his doorway, a brickbat,
+whizzing from the darkness, struck him full in the face, knocking him
+precipitately back at full length on to the floor of the saloon.</p>
+
+<p>"All aboard!" repeated the conductor.</p>
+
+<p>"All aboard!" jeeringly echoed a delicious alto voice; and I saw a
+slender man step up on the rear platform of the smoking car. A flash
+from the conductor's lantern lit up for a moment this fellow's face, and
+it was the most beautiful visage I have ever seen. Extremely youthful,
+dark, resplendent, glorious, set round with waves and ringlets of black
+hair&mdash;it was such a countenance as I have imagined a young Chaldean
+might have had who was destined to the high calling of astrology. It was
+a face to charm, to electrify the beholder with its indescribable,
+almost unearthly loveliness of features and expression.</p>
+
+<p>The engine whistled, the bell rang, and as the train moved on, that
+slender, almost fragile form and wonderful face disappeared in the
+darkness.</p>
+
+<p>As the roar and clash of the receding cars began to grow faint in the
+distance, a gurgling, grunting sound over in the saloon reminded me that
+the bar-tender might need some attention,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_27" id="Page_27">[27]</a></span> so I stepped across the
+street and went in. He was just taking himself up from the floor, with
+his nose badly smashed, spurting blood over him pretty freely. He was in
+an ecstasy of fury and swore fearfully. I rendered him all the aid I
+could, getting the blood stopped, at length, and a plaster over the
+wound.</p>
+
+<p>"Who struck you?" I asked.</p>
+
+<p>"Who struck me? Who hit me with that 'ere brick, d'ye say? Who but that
+little baby-faced, hawk-eyed cuss 'at got off here yesterday! He's a
+thief and a dog!&mdash;he's chowzed me out'n my last cent! Where is he?&mdash;I'll
+kill 'im yet! where is he?"</p>
+
+<p>"Gone off on the train," I replied, "but who is he? what's his name?"</p>
+
+<p>"Blamed if I know. Gone, you say? Got every derned red o' my money!
+Every derned red!"</p>
+
+<p>"Don't you know anything at all about him?" I asked.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes."</p>
+
+<p>"What?"</p>
+
+<p>"I know 'at he's the derndest, alfiredest, snatchin'est, best
+poker-player 'at ever dealt a card!"</p>
+
+<p>"Is that all?"</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_28" id="Page_28">[28]</a></span>"That's enough, I'd say. If you'd been beat out'n two hundred an' odd
+dollars you'd think you know'd a right smart, wouldn't ye?"</p>
+
+<p>"Perhaps," said I. The question had a world of philosophy and logic in
+it.</p>
+
+<p>The shattered wreck of a magnificent guitar lay in the middle of the
+floor. I picked it up, and, engraved on a heavy silver plate set in the
+ebony neck, I read the name, Georgina Olive Afton.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_29" id="Page_29">[29]</a></span></p>
+<p class="center"><span class="huge"><span class="smcap">Trout's Luck.</span></span></p>
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+
+
+<p>As early as eight o'clock the grand entrance gateway to the Kokomo fair
+ground was thronged with vehicles of almost every kind; horsemen,
+pedestrians, dogs and dust were borne forward together in clouds that
+boiled and swayed and tumbled. Noise seemed to be the chief purpose of
+every one and the one certain result of every thing in the crowd.</p>
+
+<p>This had been advertised as the merriest day that might ever befall the
+quiet, honest folk of the rural regions circumjacent to Kokomo, and it
+is even hinted that aristocratic dames and business plethoric men of the
+town itself had caught somewhat of the excitement spread abroad by the
+announcement in the county papers, and by huge bills posted in
+conspicuous places, touching Le Papillon and his monster balloon, which
+balloon and which Le Papillon were pictured to the life, on the said
+posters, in the act of sailing over the sun, and under the picture, in
+remarkably distinct letters, "No humbug! go to the fair!"</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_30" id="Page_30">[30]</a></span>Dozier's minstrel troupe was dancing and singing attendance on this
+agricultural exhibition, too, and somebody's whirling pavilion, a
+shooting gallery, a monkey show, the glass works, and what not of
+tempting promises of entertainments, "amusing and instructive."</p>
+
+<p>Until eleven o'clock the entrance gateway to the fair ground was
+crowded. Farm wagons trundled in, drawn by sleek, well fed plough nags,
+and stowed full of smiling folk, old and young, male and female, from
+the out townships; buggies with youths and maidens, the sparkle of
+breastpins and flutter of ribbons; spring wagons full of students and
+hard bats from town; carriages brimming with laces, flounces, over
+skirts, fancy kid gloves, funny little hats and less bonnets, all
+fermented into languid ebullition by mild-eyed ladies; omnibuses that
+bore fleshy gentlemen, who wore linen dusters and silk hats and smoked
+fine cigars; and jammed in among all these were boys on skittish colts,
+old fellows on flea-bit gray mares, with now and then a reckless
+stripling on a mule. Occasionally a dog got kicked or run over, giving
+the assistance of his howls and yelps to the general din, and over all
+the dust hung heavily in a yellow cloud, shot through with the lightning
+of burnished<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_31" id="Page_31">[31]</a></span> trappings and echoing with the hoarse thunder of the
+trampling, shouting rumbling multitude. Indeed, that hot aguish autumn
+day let fall its sunshine on the heads and blew its feverish breath
+through the rifts of the greatest and liveliest mass of people ever
+assembled in Howard county.</p>
+
+<p>Inside the extensive enclosure the multitude divided itself into
+streams, ponds, eddies, refluent currents and noisy whirlpools of
+people. Some rare attraction was everywhere.</p>
+
+<p>Early in the day the eyes of certain of the rustic misses followed
+admiringly the forms of Jack Trout and Bill Powell, handsome young
+fellows dressed in homespun clothes, who, arm in arm, strolled leisurely
+across the grounds, looking sharply about for some proper place to begin
+the expenditure of what few dimes they had each been able to hoard up
+against this gala day. They had not long to hunt. On every hand the
+"hawkers hawked their wares."</p>
+
+<p>Rising and falling, tender-toned, deftly managed, a voice rang out
+across the crowd pleading with those who had long desired a good
+investment for their money, and begging them to be sure and not let slip
+this last golden opportunity.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_32" id="Page_32">[32]</a></span>"Only a half a dollah! Come right along this way now! Here's the great
+golden scheme by which thousands have amassed untold fortunes! Here's
+your only and last chance to get two ounces of first class candy, with
+the probability of five dollars in gold coin, all for the small sum of
+half a dollah! And the cry is&mdash;still they come!"</p>
+
+<p>The speaker was such a man as one often observes in a first class
+railway car, with a stout valise beside him containing samples, dressed
+with remarkable care, and ever on the alert to make one's acquaintance.
+He stood on top of a small table or tripod, holding in his hand a green
+pasteboard package just taken from a box at his feet.</p>
+
+<p>"Only a half a dollah and a fortune in your grasp! Here's the gold! Roll
+right this way and run your pockets over!"</p>
+
+<p>Drifting round with the tide of impulsive pleasure seekers into which
+they happened to fall, Jack Trout and Bill Powell floated past a bevy of
+lasses, the prettiest of whom was Minny Hart, a girl whose healthy,
+vivid beauty was fast luring Jack on to the rock of matrimonial
+proposals.</p>
+
+<p>"Jimminy, but ain't she a little sweety!" exclaimed the latter, pinching
+Bill's arm as they passed, and glancing lovingly at Minny.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_33" id="Page_33">[33]</a></span>"You're tellin' the truth and talkin' it smooth," replied Bill, bowing
+to the girls with the swagger peculiar to a rustic who imagines he has
+turned a fine period. And with fluttering hearts the boys passed on.</p>
+
+<p>"Roll on ye torrents! Only a half a dollah! Right this way if you want
+to become a bloated aristocrat in less than no time! Five dollahs in
+gold for only a half a dollah! And whose the next lucky man?"</p>
+
+<p>Blown by the fickle, gusty breath of luck, our two young friends were
+finally wafted to the feet of this oily vendor of prize packages, and
+they there lodged, becalmed in breathless interest, to await their turn,
+each full of faith in the yellow star of his fortune&mdash;a gold coin of the
+value of five dollars. They stood attentively watching the results of
+other men's investments, feeling their fingers tingle when now and then
+some lucky fellow drew the coveted prize. Five dollars is a mighty
+temptation to a poor country boy in Indiana. That sum will buy oceans of
+fun at a fair where almost any "sight" is to be seen for the "small sum
+of twenty-five cents!"</p>
+
+<p>Without stopping to take into consideration the possible, or rather, the
+probable result of such a venture, Bill Powell handed up his<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_34" id="Page_34">[34]</a></span> half
+dollar to the prize man, thus risking the major part of all the money he
+had, and stood trembling with excitement while the fellow broke open the
+chosen package. Was it significant of anything that a blue jay fluttered
+for a moment right over the crier's head just at the point of his
+detaching some glittering object from the contents of the box?</p>
+
+<p>"Here you are, my friend; luck's a fortune!" yelled the man, as he held
+the gold coin high above his head, shaking it in full view of all eyes
+in the multitude. "Here you are! which 'd you rather have, the gold or
+five and a half in greenbacks?"</p>
+
+<p>"Hand me in the rag chips&mdash;gold don't feel good to my fingers," answered
+Bill Powell, swaggering again and grasping the currency with a hand that
+shook with eagerness.</p>
+
+<p>Jack Trout stood by, clutching in his feverish palm a two-dollar bill.
+His face was pale, his lips set, his muscles rigid. He hesitated to
+trust in the star of his destiny. He stood eyeing the bridge of Lodi,
+the dykes of Arcole. Would he risk all on a bold venture? His right
+shoulder began to twitch convulsively.</p>
+
+<p>"Still it rolls, and who's the next lucky man? Don't all speak at once!
+Who wants five dollahs in gold and two ounces of delicious<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_35" id="Page_35">[35]</a></span> candy, all
+for the small sum of half a dollah?"</p>
+
+<p>Jack made a mighty effort and passed up his two dollar bill.</p>
+
+<p>"Bravely done; select your packages!" cried the vendor. Jack tremblingly
+pointed them out. Very carelessly and quietly the fellow opened them,
+and with a ludicrous grimace remarked&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"Eight ounces of mighty sweet candy, but nary a prize! Better luck next
+time! Only a half a dollah! And who's the next lucky man?"</p>
+
+<p>A yell of laughter from the crowd greeted this occurrence, and Jack
+floated back on the recoiling waves of his chagrin till he was hidden in
+the dense concourse, and the uppermost thought in his mind found
+forcible expression in the three monosyllables: "Hang the luck!"</p>
+
+<p>It is quite probable that of all the unfortunate adventurers that day
+singed in the yellow fire of that expert gambler's gold, Jack recognized
+himself as the most terribly burned. Putting his hands into his empty
+pockets, he sauntered dolefully about, scarcely able to look straight
+into the face of such friends as he chanced to meet. He acted as if
+hunting for something lost on the ground. Poor fellow,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_36" id="Page_36">[36]</a></span> it was a real
+relief to him when some one treated him to a glass of lemonade, and,
+indeed, so much were his feelings relieved by the cool potation, that
+when, soon after, he met Minny Hart, he was actually smiling.</p>
+
+<p>"O, Jack!" cried the pretty girl, "I'm so glad to see you just now, for
+I do want to go into the minstrel show <i>so bad</i>!" She shot a glance of
+coquettish tenderness right into Jack's heart. For a single moment he
+was blessed, but on feeling for his money and recalling the luckless
+result of his late venture, he felt a chill creep up his back, and a
+lump of the size of his fist jump up into his throat. Here was a bad
+affair for him. He stood for a single point of time staring into the
+face of his despair, then, acting on the only plan he could think of to
+escape from the predicament, he said:</p>
+
+<p>"Wait a bit, Minny, I've got to go jist down here a piece to see a
+feller. I'll be back d'rectly. You stay right here and when I come back
+I'll trot you in."</p>
+
+<p>So speaking, as if in a great hurry, and sweating cold drops, with a
+ghastly smile flickering on his face, the young man slipped away into
+the crowd.</p>
+
+<p>Minny failed to notice his confusion, and so<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_37" id="Page_37">[37]</a></span> called after him cheerily:
+"Well, hurry, Jack, for I'm most dead to see the show!"</p>
+
+<p>What could Trout do? He spun round and round in that vast flood of
+people like a fish with but one eye. He rushed here, he darted there,
+and ever and anon, as a lost man returns upon his starting point, he
+came in sight of sweet Minny Hart patiently waiting for his return. Then
+he would spring back into the crowd like a deer leaping back into a
+thicket at sight of a hunter. Penniless at the fair, with Minny Hart
+waiting for him to take her into the show! Few persons can realize how
+keenly he now felt the loss of his money. He ought, no doubt, to have
+told the lass at once just how financial matters stood; but nothing was
+more remote from his mind than doing anything of the kind. He was too
+vain.</p>
+
+<p>"Tell 'er I 'ain't got no money! No, sir-ee!" he muttered. "But what
+<i>am</i> I to do? Bust the luck! Hang the luck! Rot the luck!"</p>
+
+<p>He hurried hither and thither, intent on nothing and taking no heed of
+the course he pursued. His cheeks were livid and his eyes had in them
+that painful, worried, wistful look so often seen in the eyes of men
+going home from ruin on Wall street.</p>
+
+<p>Meantime that sea of persons surged this<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_38" id="Page_38">[38]</a></span> way and that, flecked with a
+foam of ribbons and dancing bubbles of hats, now flowing slowly through
+the exhibition rooms a tide of critics, now breaking into groups and
+scattered throngs of babblers, anon uniting to roar round some novel
+engine suddenly set to work, or to break on the barrier of the trolling
+ring into a spray of cravats and a mist of flounces. Swimming round in
+this turbulent tide like a crazy flounder with but one fin, Jack finally
+found himself hard by the pavilion of the minstrels. He could hear
+somewhat of the side-splitting jokes, with the laughs that followed, the
+tinkle of banjo accompaniments and the mellow cadences of plantation
+songs, the rattle of castanets and the tattoo of the jig dancers' feet.
+A thirst like the thirst of fever took hold of him.</p>
+
+<p>"Come straight along gentlemen and ladies! This celebrated troupe is now
+performing and twenty-five cents pays the bill! Only a quawtah of a
+dollah!" bawled the fat crier from his lofty perch. "That's right, my
+young man, take the young lady in! She's sure to love you better; walk
+right along!"</p>
+
+<p>
+<span style="margin-left: 2em;">"Her lip am sweet as sugah,</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 3em;">Her eye am bright as wine,</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Dat yaller little boogah</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 3em;">Her name am Emiline!"</span><br />
+</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_39" id="Page_39">[39]</a></span>sung by four fine voices, came bubbling from within. The music thrilled
+Jack to the bone, and he felt once more for his money. Not a cent. This
+was bad.</p>
+
+<p>"You're the lad for me," continued the fat man on the high seat; "take
+your nice little sweetheart right in and let her see the fun. Walk right
+in!"</p>
+
+<p>Jack looked to see who it was, and a pang shot through his heart and
+settled in the very marrow of his bones; for lo! arm in arm, Bill Powell
+and Minny Hart passed under the pavilion into the full glory of the
+show!</p>
+
+<p>
+<span style="margin-left: 2em;">"O cut me up for fish bait</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 3em;">An' feed me to de swine,</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Don't care where I goes to</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 3em;">So I has Emiline!"</span><br />
+</p>
+
+<p>sang the minstrel chorus.</p>
+
+<p>"Dast him, he's got me!" muttered Jack as Bill and Minny disappeared
+within. He turned away, sick at heart, and this was far from the first
+throe of jealousy he had suffered on Bill's account. Indeed it had given
+him no little uneasiness lately to see how sweetly Minny sometimes
+smiled on young Powell.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, sir," Jack continued to mutter to himself, "yes, sir, he's got me!
+He's about<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_40" id="Page_40">[40]</a></span> three lengths ahead o' me, as these hoss fellers says, an' I
+don't know but what I'm distanced. Blow the blasted luck!"</p>
+
+<p>Heartily tired of the fair, burning with rage, and jealousy, and
+despair, but still vaguely hoping against hope for some better luck from
+some visionary source, Jack strolled about, chewing the bitter cud of
+his feelings, his hands up to his elbows in his trowser pockets and his
+soul up to its ears in the flood of discontent. He puckered his mouth
+into whistling position, but it refused to whistle. He felt as if he had
+a corn cob crossways in his throat. The wind blew his new hat off and a
+mule kicked the top out of the crown.</p>
+
+<p>"Only a half a dollah! Who's the next lucky man?" cried the prize
+package fellow. "I'm now going to sell a new sort of packages, each of
+which, beside the usual amount of choice candy, contains a piece of
+jewelry of pure gold! Who takes the first chance for only a half a
+dollah?"</p>
+
+<p>"'Ere's your mule!" answered Bill Powell, as with Minny still clinging
+to his arm, he pushed through the crowd and handed up the money.</p>
+
+<p>"Bravely done!" shouted the crier; "see what a beautiful locket and
+chain! Luck's a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_41" id="Page_41">[41]</a></span> fortune! And who's the next to invest? Come right along
+and don't be afraid of a little risk! Only a half a dollah!"</p>
+
+<p>Jack saw Bill put the glittering chain round Minny's neck and fasten the
+locket in her belt; saw the eyes of the sweet girl gleam proudly,
+gratefully; saw black spots dancing before his own eyes; saw Bill
+swagger and toss his head. He turned dizzily away, whispering savagely,
+"Dern 'im!"</p>
+
+<p>Just here let me say that such an expression is not a profane one. I
+once saw a preacher kick at a little dog that got in his way on the
+sidewalk. The minister's foot missed the little dog and hit an iron
+fence, and the little dog bit the minister's other leg and jumped
+through the fence. The minister performed a <i>pas de zephyr</i> and very
+distinctly said "Dern 'im!" Wherefore I don't think it can be anything
+more than a mere puff of fretfulness.</p>
+
+<p>After this Jack was for some time standing near the entrance to the
+"glass-works," a place where transparent steam engines and wonderful
+fountains were on exhibition. He felt a grim delight in tantalizing
+himself with looking at the pictures of these things and wishing he had
+money enough to pay the entrance fee. He saw persons pass in eagerly<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_42" id="Page_42">[42]</a></span>
+and come out calm and satisfied&mdash;men with their wives and children,
+young men with girls on their arms, prominent among whom were Bill and
+Minny, and one dapper sportsman even bought a ticket for his setter,
+and, patting the brute on the head, took him in.</p>
+
+<p>"Onery nor a dog!" hissed Jack, shambling off, and once more taking a
+long deep dive under the surface of the crowd. A ground swell cast him
+again near the vender of prize packages.</p>
+
+<p>"Only a half a dollah!" he yelled; "come where fortune smiles, and cares
+and poverty take flight, for only a half a dollah!"</p>
+
+<p>"Jist fifty cents more'n I've got about my clothes!" replied Jack, and
+the bystanders, taking this for great wit, joined in a roar of laughter,
+while with a grim smile the desperate youth passed on till he found
+himself near the toe mark of a shooting gallery, where for five cents
+one might have two shots with an air gun. He stood there for a time
+watching a number of persons try their marksmanship. It was small joy to
+know that he was a fine off-hand shot, so long as he had not a nickel in
+his pocket, but still he stood there wishing he might try his hand.</p>
+
+<p>"Cl'ar the track here! Let this 'ere lady<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_43" id="Page_43">[43]</a></span> take a shoot!" cried a
+familiar voice; and a way was opened for Bill Powell and Minny Hart. The
+little maiden was placed at the toe mark and a gun given to her. She
+handled the weapon like one used to it. She raised it, shut one eye,
+took deliberate aim and fired.</p>
+
+<p>"Centre!" roared the marker, as to the sound of a bell the funny little
+puppet leaped up and grinned above the target. Every body standing near
+laughed and some of the boys cheered vociferously. Minny looked sweeter
+than ever. Jack Trout felt famished. He begged a chew of tobacco of a
+stranger, and, grinding the weed furiously, walked off to where the
+yellow pavilion with its painted air-boats was whirling its cargoes of
+happy boys and girls round and round for the "Small sum of ten cents." A
+long, lean, red-headed fellow in one of the boats was paying for a ride
+of limitless length by scraping on a miserable fiddle. To Jack this
+seemed small labor for so much fun. How he envied the fiddler as he flew
+round, trailing his tunes behind him!</p>
+
+<p>"Wo'erp there! Stop yer old merchine! We'll take a ride ef ye don't
+keer!"</p>
+
+<p>The pavilion was stopped, a boat lowered for Bill Powell and Minny Hart,
+who got in side by side, and the fiddler struck up the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_44" id="Page_44">[44]</a></span> tune of
+"Black-eyed Susie." Jack watched that happy couple go round and round,
+till, by the increased velocity, their two faces melted into one, which
+was neither Bill's nor Minny's&mdash;it was Luck's!</p>
+
+<p>"He's got one outo me," muttered Jack; "I've got no money, can't fiddle
+for a ride, nor nothin', and I don't keer a ding what becomes o' me,
+nohow!"</p>
+
+<p>With these words Jack wended his way to a remote part of the fair
+ground, where, under gay awnings, the sutlers had spread their tempting
+variety of cakes, pies, fruits, nuts and loaves. Here were persons of
+all ages and sizes&mdash;men, women and children&mdash;eating at well supplied
+tables. The sight was a fascinating one, and, though seeing others eat
+did not in the least appease his own hunger, Jack stood for a long time
+watching the departure of pies and the steady lessening of huge pyramids
+of sweet cakes. He particularly noticed one little table that had on its
+centre a huge peach pie, which table was yet unoccupied. While he was
+actually thinking over the plan of eating the pie and trusting to his
+legs to bear him beyond the reach of a dun, Bill and Minny sat down by
+the table and proceeded to discuss the delicious, red-hearted heap of
+pastry. At this point Bill caught Jack's eye:</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_45" id="Page_45">[45]</a></span>"Come here, Jack," said he; "this pie's more'n we can eat, come and help
+us."</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, come along, Jack," put in Minny in her sweetest way; "I want to
+tell you what a lot of fun we've had, and more than that, I want to know
+why you didn't come back and take me into the show!"</p>
+
+<p>"I ain't hungry," muttered Jack, "and besides I've got to go see a
+feller."</p>
+
+<p>He turned away almost choking.</p>
+
+<p>"Bill's got me. 'Taint no use talkin', I'm played out for good. I'm a
+trumped Jack!"</p>
+
+<p>He smiled a sort of flinty smile at his poor wit, and shuffled aimlessly
+along through the densest clots of the crowd.</p>
+
+<p>And it so continued to happen, that wherever Jack happened to stop for
+any considerable length of time he was sure to see Bill and Minny
+enjoying some rare treat, or disappearing in or emerging from some place
+of amusement.</p>
+
+<p>At last, driven to desperation, he determined on trying to borrow a
+dollar from his father. He immediately set about to find the old
+gentleman; a task of no little difficulty in such a crowd. It was Jack's
+forlorn hope, and it had a gloomy outlook; for old 'Squire Trout was
+thought by competent judges to be the stingiest<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_46" id="Page_46">[46]</a></span> man in the county. But
+hoping for the best, Jack hunted him here, there and everywhere, till at
+length he met a friend who said he had seen the 'Squire in the act of
+leaving the fair ground for home just a few minutes before.</p>
+
+<p>Taking no heed of what folks might say, Jack, on receiving this
+intelligence, darted across the ground, out at the gate and down the
+road at a speed worthy of success; but alas! his hopes were doomed to
+wilt. At the first turn of the road he met a man who informed him that
+he had passed 'Squire Trout some three miles out on his way home, which
+home was full nine miles distant!</p>
+
+<p>Panting, crestfallen, defeated, done for, poor Jack slowly plodded back
+to the fair ground gate, little dreaming of the new trouble that awaited
+him there.</p>
+
+<p>"Ticket!" said a gruff voice as he was about to pass in. He recoiled,
+amazed at his own stupidity, as he recollected that he had not thought
+to get a check as he went out! He tried to explain, but it was no go.</p>
+
+<p>"You needn't try that game on me," said the gatekeeper. "So just plank
+down your money or stay outside."</p>
+
+<p>Then Jack got furious, but the gatekeeper<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_47" id="Page_47">[47]</a></span> remarked that he had
+frequently "hearn it thunder afore this!"</p>
+
+<p>Jack smiled like a corpse and turned away. Going a short distance down
+the road he climbed up and sat down on top of the fence of a late mown
+clover field. Then he took out his jack-knife and began to whittle a
+splinter plucked from a rail. His face was gloomy, his eyes lustreless.
+Finally he stretched himself, hungry, jealous, envious, hateful, on top
+of the fence with his head between the crossed stakes. His face thus
+upturned to heaven, he watched two crows drift over, high up in the
+torrid reaches of autumn air, hot as summer, even hotter, and allowed
+his lips free privilege to anathematize his luck. For a long time he lay
+thus, dimly conscious of the blue bird's song and the water-like ripple
+of the grass in the fence corners. "Minny, Minny Hart, Minny!" sang the
+meadow larks, and the burden of the grasshopper's ditty was&mdash;&mdash;"Only a
+half a dollah!"</p>
+
+<p>All at once there arose from the fair ground a mighty chorus of yells,
+that went echoing off across the country to the bluffs of Wild-cat Creek
+and died far off in the woods toward Greentown. Jack did not raise his
+head, but lay there in a sort of morose stupor, knowing<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_48" id="Page_48">[48]</a></span> well that
+whatever the sport might be, he had no hand in it.</p>
+
+<p>"Let 'em rip!" he muttered, "Bill's got me!"</p>
+
+<p>Presently the wagons and other vehicles began to leave the ground, from
+one of which he caught the sound of a sweet, familiar voice. He looked
+just in time to get a glimpse of Mr. Hart's wagon, and in it, side by
+side, Bill Powell and Minny! A cloud of yellow dust soon hid them, and
+turning away his head, happening to glance upward, Jack saw, just
+disappearing in a thin white cloud, the golden disc of Le Papillon's
+balloon!</p>
+
+<p>He immediately descended from his perch and began plodding his way home,
+muttering as he did so&mdash;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"Dast the luck! Ding the prize package feller! Doggone Bill Powell!
+Blame the old b'loon! Dern everybody!"</p>
+
+<p>It was long after nightfall when he reached his father's gate. Hungry,
+weak, foot-sore, collapsed, he leaned his chin on the top rail of the
+gate and stood there for a moment while the starlight fell around him,
+sifted through the dusky foliage of the old beech trees, and from the
+far dim caverns of the night a voice smote on his ear, crying out
+tenderly, mockingly, persuasively&mdash;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_49" id="Page_49">[49]</a></span>"Only a half a dollah!"</p>
+
+<p>And Jack slipped to his room and went supperless to bed, often during
+the night muttering, through the interstices of his sleep&mdash;&mdash;"Bill's got
+me!"</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_50" id="Page_50">[50]</a></span></p>
+<p class="center"><span class="huge"><span class="smcap">Big Medicine.</span></span></p>
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+
+
+<p>The corner brick storehouse&mdash;in fact the only brick building in
+Jimtown&mdash;was to be sold at auction; and, consequently, by ten o'clock in
+the morning, a considerable body of men had collected near the somewhat
+dilapidated house, directly in front of which the auctioneer, a fat man
+from Indianapolis, mounted on an old goods box, began crying, partly
+through his tobacco-filled mouth and partly through his very unmusical
+nose, as follows:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"Come up, gentlemen, and examine the new, beautiful and commodious
+property I now offer for sale! Walk round the house, men, and view it
+from every side. Go into it, if you like, up stairs and down, and then
+give me a bid, somebody, to start with. It is a very desirable house,
+indeed, gentlemen."</p>
+
+<p>With this preliminary puff, the speaker paused and glanced slowly over
+his audience with the air of a practiced physiognomist.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_51" id="Page_51">[51]</a></span> The crowd
+before him was, in many respects, an interesting one. Its most prominent
+individual, and the hero of this sketch, was Dave Cook, sometimes called
+Dr. Cook, but more commonly answering to the somewhat savage sounding
+sobriquet of Big Medicine&mdash;a man some thirty-five years of age, standing
+six feet six in his ponderous boots; broad, bony, muscular, a real
+giant, with a strongly marked Roman face, and brown, shaggy hair. He was
+dressed in a soiled and somewhat patched suit of butternut jeans, topped
+off with a wide rimmed wool hat, wonderfully battered, and lopped in
+every conceivable way. He wore a watch, the chain of which, depending
+from the waistband of his pants, was of iron, and would have weighed
+fully a pound avoirdupois. He stood quite still, near the auctioneer,
+smoking a clay pipe, his herculean arms folded on his breast, his feet
+far apart. As for the others of the crowd, they were, taken
+collectively, about such as one used always to see in the "dark corners"
+of Indiana, such as Boone county used to be before the building of any
+railroads through it, such as the particular locality of Jimtown was
+before the ditching law and the I. B. &amp; W. Railway had lifted the fog
+and enlightened the miasmatic swamps<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_52" id="Page_52">[52]</a></span> and densely timbered bog lands of
+that region of elms, burr oaks, frogs and herons. Big Medicine seemed to
+be the only utterly complacent man in the assembly. All the others
+discovered evidences of much inward disturbance, muttering mysteriously
+to each other, and casting curious, inquiring glances at an individual,
+a stranger in the place, who, with a pair of queer green spectacles
+astride his nose, and his arms crossed behind him, was slowly sauntering
+about the building offered for sale, apparently examining it with some
+care. His general appearance was that of a well dressed gentleman, which
+of itself was enough to excite remark in Jimtown, especially when an
+auction was on hand, and everybody felt jolly.</p>
+
+<p>"Them specs sticks to that nose o' his'n like a squir'l to a knot!" said
+one.</p>
+
+<p>"His pantaloons is ruther inclined to be knock-kneed," put in an old,
+grimy sinner leaning on a single barrelled shot gun.</p>
+
+<p>"Got lard enough onto his hair to shorten a mess o' pie crust," added a
+liver colored boy.</p>
+
+<p>"Walks like he'd swallered a fence rail, too," chimed in a humpbacked
+fellow split almost to his chin.</p>
+
+<p>"Chaws mighty fine terbacker, you bet."</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_53" id="Page_53">[53]</a></span>"Them there boots o' his'n set goin' an' comin' like a grubbin' hoe onto
+a crooked han'le."</p>
+
+<p>"Well, take'm up one side and down t'other, he's a mod'rately onery
+lookin' feller."</p>
+
+<p>These remarks were reckoned smart by those who perpetrated them, and
+were by no means meant for real slurs on the individual at whom they
+were pointed. Indeed they were delivered in guarded undertones, so that
+he might not hear them; and he, meanwhile, utterly ignorant of affording
+any sport, continued his examination of the house, the while some happy
+frogs in a neighboring pond rolled out a rattling, jubilant chorus, and
+the summer wind poured through the leafy tops of the tall elms and
+athletic burr oaks with a swash and roar like a turbulent river.</p>
+
+<p>"What am I now offered for this magnificent property? Come, give me a
+bid! Speak up lively! What do I hear for the house?"</p>
+
+<p>The auctioneer, as he spoke, let his eyes wander up the walls of the
+old, dingy building, to where the blue birds and the peewees had built
+in the cracks and along the warped cornice and broken window frames, and
+just then it chanced that a woman's face appeared at one of those
+staring holes, which, with broken<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_54" id="Page_54">[54]</a></span> lattice and shattered glass, still
+might be called a window. The face was a plump, cheerful one, the more
+radiant from contrast with the dull wall around it&mdash;a face one could
+never forget, however, and would recall often, if for nothing but the
+fine fall of yellow hair that framed it in. It was a sweet, winning,
+intellectual face, full of the gentlest womanly charms.</p>
+
+<p>"Forty dollars for the house, 'oman and all!" cried Big Medicine, gazing
+up at the window in which, for the merest moment, the face appeared.</p>
+
+<p>The man with the green spectacles darted a quick glance at the speaker.</p>
+
+<p>"I am bid forty dollars, gentlemen, forty dollars, do all hear? Agoing
+for forty dollars! Who says fifty?" bawled the auctioneer.</p>
+
+<p>The crowd now swayed earnestly forward, closing in solid order around
+the goods box. Many whiskered, uncouth, but not unkindly faces were
+upturned to the window only in time to see the beautiful woman disappear
+quite hastily.</p>
+
+<p>"Hooray for the gal!" cried a lusty youth, whose pale blue eyes made no
+show of contrast with his faded hair and aguish complexion. "Dad, can't
+ye bid agin the doctor so as I kin claim 'er?"</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_55" id="Page_55">[55]</a></span>"Fifty dollars!" shouted the sunburnt man addressed as Dad.</p>
+
+<p>This made the crowd lively. Every man nudged his neighbor, and the
+aguish, blue-eyed boy grinned in a ghastly, self-satisfied way.</p>
+
+<p>"Agoing at fifty dollars! Fiddlesticks! The house is worth four
+thousand. No fooling here now! Agoing at only fifty dollars&mdash;going&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Six hundred dollars," said he of the green glasses in a clear, pleasant
+voice.</p>
+
+<p>"Six hundred dollars!" echoed the auctioneer in a triumphant thunderous
+tone. "That sounds like business. Who says the other hundred?"</p>
+
+<p>"Hooray for hooray, and hooray for hooray's daddy!" shouted the
+tallow-faced lad.</p>
+
+<p>The frogs pitched their song an octave higher, the blue birds and
+peewees wheeled through the falling floods of yellow sunlight, and lower
+and sweeter rose the murmur of the tide of pulsating air as it lifted
+and swayed the fresh sprays of the oaks and elms. The well dressed
+stranger lighted a cigar, took off his green glasses and put them
+carefully in his pocket, then took a cool straight look at Big Medicine.</p>
+
+<p>The Roman face of the latter was just then<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_56" id="Page_56">[56]</a></span> a most interesting one. It
+was expressive of more than words could rightly convey. Six hundred
+dollars, cash down, was a big sum for the crazy old house, but he had
+made up his mind to buy it, and now he seemed likely to have to let it
+go or pay more than it was worth. The stem of his clay pipe settled back
+full three inches into his firmly-set mouth, so that there seemed
+imminent danger to the huge brown moustache that overhung the fiery
+bowl. He returned the stare of the stranger with interest, and said&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"Six hundred an' ten dollars."</p>
+
+<p>"Agoing, a&mdash;&mdash;," began the auctioneer.</p>
+
+<p>"Six twenty," said the stranger.</p>
+
+<p>"Ago&mdash;&mdash;."</p>
+
+<p>"Six twenty-one!" growled Big Medicine.</p>
+
+<p>"Six twenty-five!" quickly added his antagonist.</p>
+
+<p>Big Medicine glanced heavenward, and for a moment allowed his eyes to
+follow the flight of a great blue heron that slowly winged its way, high
+up in the yellow summer reaches of splendor, toward the distant swamps
+where the white sycamores spread their fanciful arms above the dark
+green maples and dusky witch-hazel thickets. The auctioneer, a close
+observer, saw an ashy hue, a barely discernible<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_57" id="Page_57">[57]</a></span> shade, ripple across
+the great Roman face as Big Medicine said, in a jerking tone:</p>
+
+<p>"Six twenty-five and a half!"</p>
+
+<p>The stranger took his cigar from his mouth and smiled placidly. No more
+imperturbable countenance could be imagined.</p>
+
+<p>"Six twenty-six!" he said gently.</p>
+
+<p>"Take the ole house an' be derned to you!" cried Big Medicine, looking
+furiously at his antagonist. "Take the blamed ole shacke-merack an' all
+the cussed blue-birds an' peer-weers to boot, for all I keer!"</p>
+
+<p>Everybody laughed, and the auctioneer continued:</p>
+
+<p>"Agoing for six twenty-six! Who says seven hundred? Bid up lively!
+Agoing once, agoing twice&mdash;once, twice, three-e-e-e-e times! Sold to
+Abner Golding for six hundred and twenty-six dollars, and as cheap as
+dirt itself!"</p>
+
+<p>"Hooray for the man who hed the most money!" shouted the tallow-faced
+boy.</p>
+
+<p>The sale was at an end. The auctioneer came down from his box and wiped
+his face with a red handkerchief. The crowd, as if blown apart by a puff
+of wind, scattered this way and that, drifting into small, grotesque
+groups to converse together on whatever topic<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_58" id="Page_58">[58]</a></span> might happen to suggest
+itself. Big Medicine seemed inclined to be alone, but the irrepressible
+youth of the saffron skin ambled up to him and said, in a tone intended
+for comic:</p>
+
+<p>"Golly, doctor, but didn't that 'ere gal projuce a orful demand for the
+ole house! Didn't she set the ole trap off when she peeked out'n the
+winder!"</p>
+
+<p>Big Medicine looked down at the strapping boy, much as a lion might look
+at a field rat or a weasel, then he doubled his hand into an enormous
+fist and held it under the youth's nose, saying in a sort of growl as he
+did so:</p>
+
+<p>"You see this 'ere bundle o' bones, don't ye?"</p>
+
+<p>"Guess so," replied the youth.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, would you like a small mess of it?"</p>
+
+<p>"Not as anybody knows of."</p>
+
+<p>"Well, then, keep yer derned mouth shet!"</p>
+
+<p>Which, accordingly, the boy proceeded to do, ambling off as quickly as
+possible.</p>
+
+<p>About this time, the stranger, having put the green spectacles back upon
+his nose, walked in the direction of 'Squire Tadmore's office,
+accompanied by the young woman who had looked from the window. When Big
+Medicine saw them he picked up a stick and began furiously to whittle it
+with his jack-knife.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_59" id="Page_59">[59]</a></span> His face wore a comically mingled look of chagrin,
+wonder, and something like a new and thrilling delight. He puffed out
+great volumes of smoke, making his pipe wheeze audibly under the vigor
+of his draughts. He was certainly excited.</p>
+
+<p>"Orful joke the boys 'll have on me arter this," he muttered to himself.
+"Wonder if the 'oman's the feller's wife? Monstrous poorty, shore's yer
+born!"</p>
+
+<p>He soon whittled up one stick. He immediately dived for another, this
+time getting hold of a walnut knot. A tough thing to whittle, but he
+attacked it as if it had been a bit of white pine. Soon after this
+'Squire Tadmore's little boy came running down from his father's office
+to where Big Medicine stood.</p>
+
+<p>"Mr. Big Medicine," cried he, all out of breath, "that 'ere man what
+bought the ole house wants to see you partic'ler!"</p>
+
+<p>"Mischief he does! Tell 'im to go to&mdash;&mdash;; no, wait a bit. Guess I'll go
+tell 'im myself."</p>
+
+<p>And, so saying, he moved at a slashing pace down to the door of the
+'Squire's office. He thrust his great hirsute head inside the room, and
+glaring at the mild mannered stranger, said:</p>
+
+<p>"D'ye want to see me?"</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_60" id="Page_60">[60]</a></span>Mr. Golding got up from his seat and coming out took Big Medicine
+familiarly by the arm, meanwhile smiling in the most friendly way.</p>
+
+<p>"Come one side a little, I wish to speak with you privately,
+confidentially."</p>
+
+<p>Big Medicine went rather sulkily along. When they had gone some distance
+from the house Mr. Golding lifted his spectacles from his nose, and
+turning his calm, smiling eyes full upon those of Big Medicine, said,
+with a shrug of his finely cut shoulders:</p>
+
+<p>"I outbid you a little, my friend, but I'm blessed if I haven't got
+myself into a ridiculous scrape on account of it."</p>
+
+<p>"How so?" growled Big Medicine.</p>
+
+<p>"Why, when I come to count my funds I'm short a half dollar."</p>
+
+<p>"You're what?"</p>
+
+<p>"I lack just a half dollar of having enough money to pay for the house,
+and I thought I'd rather ask you to loan me the money than anybody else
+here."</p>
+
+<p>Big Medicine stood for a time in silence, whittling away, as if for dear
+life, on the curly knot. Dreamy gusts of perfumed heat swept by from
+adjacent clover and wheat fields, where the blooms hung thick; little
+whirlwinds played in the dust at their feet as little whirlwinds always<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_61" id="Page_61">[61]</a></span>
+do in summer; and far away, faint, and made tenderly musical by
+distance, were heard the notes of a country dinner-horn. Big Medicine's
+ample chest swelled, and swelled, and then he burst at the mouth with a
+mighty bass laugh, that went battling and echoing round the place. Mr.
+Golding laughed too, in his own quiet, gentlemanly way. They looked at
+each other and laughed, then looked off toward the swamps and laughed.
+Big Medicine put his hands in his pockets almost up to the elbows, and
+leaned back and laughed out of one corner of his mouth while holding his
+pipe in the other.</p>
+
+<p>"I say, mister," said he at length, "a'n't you railly got but six
+hundred and twenty-five an' a half?"</p>
+
+<p>"Just that much to a cent, and no more," replied Mr. Golding, with a
+comical smile and bow.</p>
+
+<p>Big Medicine took his pipe from his mouth, gave the walnut knot he had
+dropped a little kick and guffawed louder and longer than before. To
+have been off at a little distance watching them would have convinced
+any one that Mr. Golding was telling some rare anecdote, and that Big
+Medicine was convulsed with mirth, listening.</p>
+
+<p>"Well I'm derned if 'taint quare," cried the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_62" id="Page_62">[62]</a></span> latter, wringing himself
+into all sorts of grotesque attitudes in the ecstasy of his amusement.
+"You outbid me half a dollar and then didn't have the half a dollar
+neither! Wha, wha, wha-ee!" and his cachinnations sounded like rolling
+of moderate thunder.</p>
+
+<p>At the end of this he took out a greasy wallet and paid Mr. Golding the
+required amount in silver coin. His chagrin had vanished before the
+stranger's quiet way of making friends.</p>
+
+<p>A week passed over Jimtown. A week of as rare June weather as ever
+lingered about the cool places of the woods, or glimmered over the sweet
+clover fields all red with a blush of bloom, where the field larks
+twittered and the buntings chirped, and where the laden bees rose
+heavily to seek their wild homes in the hollows of the forests. By this
+time it was generally known in Jimtown that Mr. Golding would soon
+receive a stock of goods with which to open a "store" in the old corner
+brick; but Big Medicine knew more than any of his neighbors, for he and
+Golding had formed a partnership to do business under the "name and
+style" of Cook &amp; Golding.</p>
+
+<p>This Abner Golding had lately been a wealthy retail man in Cincinnati,
+and had lost everything by the sudden suspension of a bank<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_63" id="Page_63">[63]</a></span> wherein the
+bulk of his fortune was on deposit. His creditors had made a run on him
+and he had been able to save just the merest remnant of his goods, and a
+few hundred dollars in money. Thus he came to Jimtown to begin life and
+business anew.</p>
+
+<p>To Big Medicine the week had been a long one; why, it would not be easy
+to tell. No doubt there had come a turning point in his life. In those
+days, and in that particular region, to be a 'store keeper' was no small
+honor. But Big Medicine acted strangely. He wandered about, with his
+hands in his pockets, whistling plaintive tunes, and often he was seen
+standing out before the old corner brick, gazing up at one of the vacant
+windows where pieces of broken lattice were swaying in the wind. At such
+times he muttered softly to himself:</p>
+
+<p>"Ther's wher I fust seed the gal."</p>
+
+<p>Four big road wagons (loaded with boxes), three of them containing the
+merchandise and one the scanty household furniture of Mr. Golding and
+his daughter Carrie, came rumbling into Jimtown. Big Medicine was on
+hand, a perfect Hercules at unloading and unpacking. Mr. Golding was
+sadly pleasant; Carrie was roguishly observant, but womanly and quiet.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_64" id="Page_64">[64]</a></span>The tallow-faced youth and two or three others stood by watching the
+proceedings. The former occasionally made a remark at which the others
+never failed to laugh.</p>
+
+<p>"Ef ye'll notice, now," said he, "it's a fac 'at whenever Big Medicine
+goes to make a big surge to lift a box, he fust takes a peep at the gal,
+an' that 'ere seems to kinder make 'im 'wax strong an' multiply,' as the
+preacher says, an' then over goes the box!"</p>
+
+<p>"Has a awful effect on his narves," some one replied.</p>
+
+<p>"I'm a thinkin'," added tallow-face, "'at ef Big Medicine happens to
+look at the gal about the time he goes to make a trade, it'll have sich
+a power on 'im 'at he'll sell a yard o' caliker for nigh onto forty
+dollars!"</p>
+
+<p>"Er a blanket overcoat for 'bout twelve an' a half cents!" put in
+another.</p>
+
+<p>"I'm kinder weakly," resumed tallow-face with a comical leer at Big
+Medicine; "wonder if 't wouldn't be kinder strengthnin' on me ef I'd
+kinder sidle up towards the gal myself?"</p>
+
+<p>"I'll sidle up to you!" growled Big Medicine; and making two strides of
+near ten feet each, he took the youth by his faded flaxen hair, and
+holding him clear of the ground, administered a half dozen or so of
+resounding<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_65" id="Page_65">[65]</a></span> kicks, then tossed him to one side, where he fell in a heap
+on the ground. When he got on his feet again he began to bristle up and
+show fight, but when Big Medicine reached for him he ambled off.</p>
+
+<p>In due time the goods were all placed on the shelves and Mr. Golding's
+household furniture arranged in the upper rooms where he purposed
+living, Carrie acting as housekeeper.</p>
+
+<p>On the first evening after all things had been put to rights, Mr.
+Golding said to Big Medicine:</p>
+
+<p>"I suppose we ought to advertise."</p>
+
+<p>"Do how?"</p>
+
+<p>"Advertise."</p>
+
+<p>"Sartinly," said Big Medicine, having not the faintest idea of what his
+partner meant.</p>
+
+<p>"Who can we get to paint our fence advertisements?"</p>
+
+<p>A gleam of intelligence shot from Big Medicine's eyes. He knew now what
+was wanted. He remembered once, on a visit to Crawfordsville, seeing
+these fence advertisements. He comprehended in a moment.</p>
+
+<p>"O, I know what ye mean, now," he said, with a grin, as if communing
+with himself on some novel suggestion. "I guess I kin 'tend to that my
+own self. The moon shines to-night, don't it?"</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_66" id="Page_66">[66]</a></span>"Yes; why?"</p>
+
+<p>"I'll do the paintin' to-night. A good ijee has jist struck me. You jist
+leave it all to me."</p>
+
+<p>So the thing was settled, and Big Medicine was gone all night.</p>
+
+<p>The next day was a sluice of rain. It poured incessantly from daylight
+till dark. Big Medicine sat on the counter in the corner brick and
+chuckled. His thoughts were evidently very pleasant ones. Mr. Golding
+was busy marking goods and Carrie was helping him. The great grey eyes
+of Big Medicine followed the winsome girl all the time. When night came,
+and she went up stairs, he said to Golding:</p>
+
+<p>"That gal o' your'n is a mighty smart little 'oman."</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, and she's all I have left," replied Mr. Golding in a sad tone.</p>
+
+<p>Big Medicine stroked his brown beard, whistled a few turns of a jig
+tune, and, jumping down from the counter, went out into the drizzly
+night. A few rods from the house he turned and looked up at the window.
+A little form was just vanishing from it.</p>
+
+<p>"Ther's wher I fust seed the gal," he murmured, then turned and went his
+way, occupied with strange, sweet imaginings. As a matter<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_67" id="Page_67">[67]</a></span> of the merest
+conjecture, it is interesting to dwell upon the probable turn taken by
+his thoughts as he slowly stalked through the darkness and rain that
+night; but I shall not trench on what, knowing all that I do, seems
+sanctified and hallowed. It would be breaking a sacred confidence. Who
+has stood and watched for a form at a window? Who has expressed, in
+language more refined, to the inner fountain of human sympathy, the idea
+conveyed in the rough fellow's remark? Who that has, let him recall the
+time and the place holy in his memory.</p>
+
+<p>"Ther's wher I fust seed the gal," said the man, and went away to his
+lonely bed to dream the old new dream. All night the rain fell, making
+rich music on the roof and pouring through his healthy slumber a sound
+like the flowing of strange rivers in a land of new delights&mdash;a land
+into which he had strayed hand in hand with some one, the merest touch
+of whose hand was rapture, the simplest utterance of whose voice was
+charming beyond expression. The old new dream. The dream of flesh that
+is divine&mdash;the vision of blood that is love's wine&mdash;the apocalypse that
+bewildered the eyes of the old singer when from a flower of foam in the
+sweet green sea rose<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_68" id="Page_68">[68]</a></span> the Cytherean Venus. We have all dreamed the dream
+and found it sweet.</p>
+
+<p>It is quite probable that no fence advertisements ever paid as well, or
+stirred up as big a "muss" as those painted by Big Medicine on the night
+mentioned heretofore. As an artist our Hoosier was not a genius, but he
+certainly understood how to manufacture a notoriety. If space permitted
+I would copy all those rude notices for your inspection; but I must be
+content with a few random specimens taken from memory, with an eye to
+brevity. They are characteristic of the man and in somewhat an index of
+the then state of society in and around Jimtown. On Deacon Jones's fence
+was scrawled the following: "Dern yer ole sole, ef yer want good Koffy
+go to Cook &amp; Golding's nu stoar."</p>
+
+<p>John Butler, a nice old quaker, had the following daubed on his gate:
+"Yu thievin' duk-legged ya and na ole cuss, ef the sperit muves ye, go
+git a broad-brimmed straw hat at Cook &amp; Golding's great stand at
+Jimtown." The side of William Smith's pig pen bore this: "Bill, ye
+ornery sucker, come traid with Cook &amp; Golding at the ole corner brick in
+Jimtown." Old Peter Gurley found writing to the following effect on his
+new wagon bed: "Ef<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_69" id="Page_69">[69]</a></span> yoor dri or anything, you'll find a virtoous Kag of
+ri licker at Cook &amp; Golding's." On a large plank nailed to a tree at
+Canaan's Cross Roads all passers by saw the following: "Git up an
+brindle! Here's yer ole and faithful mewl! Come in gals and git yer
+dofunny tricks and fixens, hats, caps, bonnets, parrysols, silk
+petty-coat-sleeves and other injucements too noomerous too menshen! Rip
+in&mdash;we're on it! Call at Cook &amp; Golding's great corner brick!"</p>
+
+<p>These are fair specimens of what appeared everywhere. How one man could
+have done so much in one night remains a mystery. Some people swore,
+some threatened to prosecute, but finally everybody went to the corner
+brick to trade. Jimtown became famous on account of Big Medicine and the
+corner brick store.</p>
+
+<p>The sun rose through the morning gate beyond the quagmires east of
+Jimtown and set through the evening gate past the ponds and maple swamps
+to the west. The winds blew and there were days of calm. The weather ran
+through its mutations of heat and cold. The herons flew over, the blue
+birds twittered and went away and came again, and the peewees
+disappeared and returned. A whole year had rolled round and it was June
+again, with<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_70" id="Page_70">[70]</a></span> the air full of rumors about the building of a railroad
+through Jimtown.</p>
+
+<p>During this flow of time Big Medicine had feasted his eyes on the bright
+curls and brighter eyes of Carrie Golding, till his heart had become
+tender and happy as a child's. They rarely conversed more than for him
+to say, "Miss Carrie, look there," or for her to call out, "Please, Mr.
+Cook, hand me down this bolt of muslin." But Big Medicine was content.</p>
+
+<p>It was June the 8th, about ten o'clock in the morning, and Big Medicine
+was slowly making his way from his comfortable bachelor's cabin to the
+corner brick. A peculiar smile was on his face, his heart was fluttering
+strangely, and all on account of a little circumstance of the preceding
+day, now fresh in his memory. Great boy that he was, he was poring ever
+a single sweet smile Carrie Golding had given him!</p>
+
+<p>The mail hack stood at the post-office door, whence Mr. Golding was
+coming with a letter in his hand. Big Medicine stopped and looked up at
+the window. There stood Carrie. She was looking hopefully toward her
+father. Big Medicine smiled and murmured:</p>
+
+<p>"Ther's wher I fust seed the gal&mdash;bless her sweet soul!" There was a
+whole world of sincere happiness in the tones of his voice.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_71" id="Page_71">[71]</a></span>Mr. Golding passed him hastily, his green spectacles on his nose, and a
+great excitement flashing from his face. Big Medicine gazed wonderingly
+after his partner till he saw him run up stairs to Carrie's room. Then
+he thought he heard Carrie cry out joyfully, but it may have been the
+wind.</p>
+
+<p>When an hour had passed Mr. Golding and Carrie came down dressed for
+travelling. How strangely, wondrously beautiful the girl now looked! Mr.
+Golding was as nervous as an old woman. He rubbed his thin white hands
+together rapidly and said:</p>
+
+<p>"Mr. Cook, I have glorious news this morning!"</p>
+
+<p>"And what mought it be?" asked Big Medicine, as a damp chilliness crept
+over him, and his face grew pinched and almost as white as his shirt
+bosom.</p>
+
+<p>"Krofton &amp; Kelly, the bankers, have resumed payment, and I'll get all my
+money! It <i>is</i> glorious news, is it not, my friend?"</p>
+
+<p>Big Medicine was silent. He tried to speak, but his mouth was dry and
+powerless. A mist drifted across his eyes. He hardly realized where he
+was or what was said, but he knew all.</p>
+
+<p>"I have concluded to give you this house and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_72" id="Page_72">[72]</a></span> all my interest in this
+store. You must not refuse. I haven't time to make the transfer now, but
+I'll not neglect it. Carrie and I must hasten at once to Cincinnati. The
+hack is waiting; so good bye, my dear friend, God bless you!" Mr.
+Golding wrung his partner's cold, limp hand, without noticing how
+fearfully haggard that Roman face had suddenly grown.</p>
+
+<p>"Good bye, Mr. Cook," said Carrie in her sweet, sincere way. "I'm real
+sorry to leave you and the dear old house&mdash;but&mdash;but&mdash;good bye, Mr. Cook.
+Come to see us in Cincinnati. Good bye." She gave him her hand also.</p>
+
+<p>He smiled a wan, flickering smile, like the last flare of a fire whose
+fuel is exhausted. Carrie's woman's heart sank under that look, though
+she knew not wherefore.</p>
+
+<p>The hack passed round the curve of the road.</p>
+
+<p>They were gone!</p>
+
+<p>Big Medicine stood alone in the door of the corner brick. He looked back
+over his shoulders at the well filled shelves and muttered:</p>
+
+<p>"She ain't here, and what do I want of the derned old store?"</p>
+
+<p>The wind rustled the elm leaves and tossed the brown locks of the man
+over his great forehead; the blue birds sang on the roof; the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_73" id="Page_73">[73]</a></span> dust rose
+in little columns along the street; and, high over head, in the yellow
+mist of the fine June weather, sailed a great blue heron, going to the
+lakes. Big Medicine felt like one deserted in the wilderness. He stood
+there a while, then closed and locked the door and went into the woods.
+A month passed before he returned. Jimtown wondered and wondered. But
+when he did return his neighbors could not get a word out of him. He was
+silent, moody, listless. Where had he been? Only hunting for Mr. Golding
+and Carrie. He found them, after a long search, in a splendid residence
+on the heights just out of Cincinnati. Mr. Golding greeted him
+cordially, but somehow Big Medicine felt as though he were shaking hands
+with some one over an insurmountable barrier. That was not the Mr.
+Golding he had known.</p>
+
+<p>"Carrie is out in the garden. She will be glad to see you. Go along the
+hall there. You will see the gate."</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Golding waved his hand after the manner of a very rich man, and a
+patronizing tone would creep into his voice. Somehow Big Medicine looked
+terribly uncouth.</p>
+
+<p>With a hesitating step and a heart full of unreal sensations, Big
+Medicine opened the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_74" id="Page_74">[74]</a></span> little gate and strode into the flower garden.
+Suddenly a vision, such as his fancy had never pictured, burst on his
+dazzled eyes. Flowers and vines and statues and fountains; on every hand
+rich colors; perfumes so mixed and intensified that his senses almost
+gave way; long winding walks; fairy-like bowers and music. He paused and
+listened. A heavy voice, rich and manly, singing a ballad&mdash;some popular
+love song&mdash;to the sweet accompaniment of a violin, and blended through
+it all, like a silvery thread, the low sweet voice of Carrie Golding.
+The poor fellow held his breath till the song was done.</p>
+
+<p>Two steps forward and Big Medicine towered above the lovers.</p>
+
+<p>Carrie sprang to her feet with a startled cry; then, recognizing the
+intruder, she held out her little hand and welcomed him. Turning to her
+lover she said:</p>
+
+<p>"Henry, this is Mr. Cook, lately papa's partner in Indiana."</p>
+
+<p>The lover was a true gentleman, so he took the big hard hand of the
+visitor and said he was glad to see him.</p>
+
+<p>Big Medicine stood for a few moments holding a hand of each of the
+lovers. Presently a tremor took possession of his burly frame. He did
+not speak a word. His breast swelled<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_75" id="Page_75">[75]</a></span> and his face grew awfully white.
+He put Carrie's hand in that of her lover and turned away. As he did so
+a tear, a great bitter drop, rolled down his haggard cheek. A few long
+strides and Big Medicine was gone.</p>
+
+<p>Shrilly piped the blue birds, plaintively sang the peewees, sweetly
+through the elms and burr oaks by the corner brick blew the fresh summer
+wind, as, just at sunset, Big Medicine once more stood in front of the
+old building with his eyes fixed on the vacant, staring window.</p>
+
+<p>It was scarcely a minute that he stood there, but long enough for a
+tender outline of the circumstances of the past year to rise in his
+memory.</p>
+
+<p>A rustling at the broken lattice, a sudden thrill through the iron frame
+of the watching man, a glimpse of a sweet face&mdash;no, it was only a fancy.
+The house was still, and old and desolate. It stared at him like a
+death's head.</p>
+
+<p>Big Medicine raised his eyes toward heaven, which was now golden and
+flashing resplendently with sunset glories. High up, as if almost
+touching the calm sky, a great blue heron was toiling heavily westward.
+Taking the course chosen by the lone bird, Big Medicine went away, and
+the places that knew him once know him no more forever.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_76" id="Page_76">[76]</a></span></p>
+<p class="center"><span class="huge"><span class="smcap">The Venus of Balhinch.</span></span></p>
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+
+
+<p>When I returned from Europe with a finished education, I found that my
+fortune also was finished in the most approved modern style, so I left
+New York and drifted westward in search of employment. At length I came
+to Indiana, and, having not even a cent left, and mustering but one
+presentable suit of clothes, I looked about me in a hungry, half
+desperate sort of way, till I pounced upon the school in Balhinch. Now
+Balhinch is not a town, nor a cross-road place, nor a post-office&mdash;it is
+simply a neighborhood in the southwestern corner of Union Township,
+Montgomery County&mdash;a neighborhood <i>sui generis</i>, stowed away in the
+breaks of Sugar Creek, containing as good, quiet, law-abiding folk as
+can be found anywhere outside of Switzerland. My school was a small one
+in numbers, but the pupils ranged from four to six feet three in
+altitude, and well proportioned. The most advanced class had thumbed
+along pretty well through<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_77" id="Page_77">[77]</a></span> the spelling book. I need not take up your
+time with the school, however, for it has nothing at all to do with my
+story, excepting merely to explain how I came to be in Balhinch, in the
+State of Indiana.</p>
+
+<p>My first sight of Susie Adair was on Sunday at the Methodist prayer
+meeting. I was sitting with my back to a window and facing the door of
+the log meeting house when she entered. It was July&mdash;a hot glary day,
+but a steady wind blew cool and sweet from the southwest, bringing in
+all sorts of woodland odors. The grasshoppers were chirruping in the
+little timothy field hard by, and over in a bit of woodland pasture a
+swarm of blue jays were worrying a crow, keeping up an incessant
+squeaking and chattering. The dumpy little class leader&mdash;the only little
+man in Balhinch&mdash;had just begun to give out the hymn</p>
+
+<p>
+<span style="margin-left: 2em;">"Love is the sweetest bud that blows,</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 3em;">Its beauties never die,</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2em;">On earth among the saints it grows</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 3em;">And ripens in the sky," &amp;c.,</span><br />
+</p>
+
+<p>when Susie came in. Ben Crane was sitting by me. He nudged me with his
+elbow and whispered:</p>
+
+<p>"How's that 'ere for poorty?"</p>
+
+<p>I made him no answer, but remained staring<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_78" id="Page_78">[78]</a></span> at the girl till long after
+she had taken her seat. Nature plays strange tricks. Susie, the daughter
+of farmer Adair, was as beautiful in the face as any angel could be, and
+her form was as perfect as that of the Cnidian Venus. Her motion when
+she walked was music, and as she sat in statuesque repose, the
+undulations of her queenly form were those of perfect ease, grace and
+strength. Her hands were small and taper, a little browned from
+exposure, as was also her face. Her hair was the real classic gold, and
+her grey eyes were riant with health and content. When her red lips
+parted to sing, they discovered small even teeth, as white as ivory. I
+can give you no idea of her. Physically she was perfection's self in the
+mould of a Venus of the grandest type. Her head, too, was an
+intellectual one (though feminine), in the best sense of the word. The
+first thought that flashed across my mind was embodied in the words&mdash;<i>A
+Venus</i>&mdash;and I still think of her as the best model I ever saw.</p>
+
+<p>"How's that for poorty?" repeated Crane.</p>
+
+<p>"Who is she!" I replied interrogatively.</p>
+
+<p>"She's my jewlarker," said he.</p>
+
+<p>"Your what?"</p>
+
+<p>"My sweetheart."</p>
+
+<p>"What is her name?"</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_79" id="Page_79">[79]</a></span>"Susie Adair."</p>
+
+<p>So I came to know her and admire her, and even before that little prayer
+meeting was over I loved her. Introductions were an unknown institution
+in Balhinch, but I was not long in finding a way to the personal
+acquaintance of Susie. I found her remarkably intelligent for one of her
+limited opportunities, very fond of reading, sprightly in conversation,
+womanly, modest, sweet tempered, and, indeed, altogether charming as
+well as superbly beautiful.</p>
+
+<p>As for me, I am an insignificant looking man, and then I was even more
+so than now. My hair is terribly stiff and red, you know, and my eyes
+are very pale blue, nearly white. My neck is very long and has a large
+Adam's apple. I am small and narrow chested, and have slender bow legs.
+My teeth are uneven and my nose is pug. I have a very fine thin voice,
+decidedly nasal, as you perceive. One thing, however, I am well
+educated, polite, and not a bad conversationalist.</p>
+
+<p>Susie was a most entertaining and perplexing study for me from the
+start. She treated me with decided consideration and kindness, seemed
+deeply interested in my accounts of my travels, asked me many questions
+about the old world and good society, sat for hours at a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_80" id="Page_80">[80]</a></span> time listening
+to me as I read aloud. In fact I felt that I was impressing her deeply,
+but she would go with Ben Crane, that long, awkward, ignorant gawk. How
+could a young woman of such fine magnetic presence, and endowed with
+such genuine, instinctive purity of taste in everything else, bear the
+presence of a rough greenhorn like that? Finally I said to myself: she
+is kind and good; she cannot bear to slight Ben, though she cares
+nothing for him.</p>
+
+<p>What a strange state being in love is! It is like dreaming in the grass.
+One hears the flow of the wind&mdash;it is the breath of love&mdash;one smells the
+flowers, and it is the perfume of a young cheek, the sharp fragrance of
+blonde curls. What dreams I had in those days! I could scarcely endure
+my school to the end of the first three months. Then I gave it up, and
+collecting my wages purchased me some fine clothes&mdash;that is, fine for
+the time and the place. I recollect that suit now, and wonder how a man
+of my taste could have borne to wear it. A black coat, a scarlet vest
+and white pants, ending with calf boots and a very tall silk hat! If you
+should see me dressed that way now you would laugh till your ribs would
+hurt. I do not know how true it is, but, from a pretty<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_81" id="Page_81">[81]</a></span> good source, I
+heard that Ben Crane said I looked like a red-headed woodpecker. One
+thing I do know, I never saw a woodpecker with a freckled face. I have a
+freckled face.</p>
+
+<p>Ben soon recognized me as his rival and treated me with supreme
+impertinence, even going so far as to rub his fist under my nose and
+swear at me&mdash;a thing at which I felt profoundly indignant, and
+considering which I was surely justified in sticking a lucifer match
+into Ben's six valuable hay stacks one night thereafter. It was a great
+fire, and two hundred dollars loss to Ben. Let him keep his fist out
+from under my nose.</p>
+
+<p>But I must come to my story, cutting short these preliminaries. It is a
+story I never tire of telling, and a story which has elicited
+ejaculations from many.</p>
+
+<p>It was a ripe sweet day in the latter part of September&mdash;clear, but hazy
+and dreamful&mdash;a prelude to the Indian summer. I stood before the glass
+in my room at 'Squire Jones's, where I boarded, and very carefully
+arranged my bright blue neck-tie. Then I combed my hair. I never have
+got thoroughly familiar with my hair. I cannot, even now, comb it, while
+looking in a glass, without cringing for fear of burning my fingers. The
+long, wavy red locks<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_82" id="Page_82">[82]</a></span> flow through the comb like flames, and underneath
+is a gleam of live coals and red hot ashes. Ben Crane said he believed
+my head had set his hay stacks a-fire. Maybe it did. I wished that a
+stray flash from the same source would kindle the heart of Susie Adair
+and heat it until it lay under her Cytherean breasts a puddle of molten
+love. I put my silk hat carefully upon my head and wriggled my hands
+into a pair of kid gloves; then, walking-stick in hand, I set out to
+know my fate at the hands of Susie. My way was across a stubble field in
+which the young clover, sown in the spring, displayed itself in a
+variety of fantastic modes. Have you ever noticed how much grass is like
+water? Some one, Hawthorne, perhaps, has spoken of "a gush of violets,"
+and Swinburne, going into one of his musical frenzies, cries:</p>
+
+<p>
+<span style="margin-left: 2em;">"Where tides of grass break into foam of flowers."</span><br />
+</p>
+
+<p>I have seen pools of clover and streams of timothy; I have stood ankle
+deep in shoal blue grass and have watched for hours the liquid ripples
+of the red top. I have seen the field sparrows dive into the green waves
+of young wheat, and the black starlings wade about in the sink-foil of
+southern countries.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_83" id="Page_83">[83]</a></span> Grass is a liquid that washes earth's face till it
+shines like that of a clean, healthy child. But clover prefers to stand
+in pools and eddies, in which oft and oft I have seen the breasts of
+meadow larks shine like gold, the while a few sweet notes, like rung
+silver, rose and trembled above the trefoil, all woven, in and out,
+through the swash of the wind's palpitant currents&mdash;a music of
+unspeakable influence. Swallows skim the surface of grass just as they
+do that of water. When the summer air agitates the smooth bosom of a
+broad green meadow field, you will see these little random arrows
+glancing along the emerald surface, cutting with barbed wings through
+the tossing, bloom-capped waves, thence ricochetting high into the
+bright air to whirl and fall again as swiftly as before. Many a time I
+have traced streams of grass to their fresh fountains, where jets of
+tender foliage and bubbles of tinted flowers welled up from dark, rich
+earth, and flowed away, with a velvet rustle and a ripple like blown
+floss, to break and recoil and eddy against the dark shadows of a
+distant grove. Such a fountain is a place of fragrance and joy. The bees
+go thither to get the sweetest honey, and find it a very Hybla. The
+butterflies float about it<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_84" id="Page_84">[84]</a></span> in a dreamful trance, while in the cool,
+damp shade of a dock leaf squats a great toad, like a slimy dragon
+guarding the gate of a paradise.</p>
+
+<p>As I slowly walked across that stubble field, now and then stepping into
+a tuft of clover, out from which a quail would start, whirling away in a
+convulsion of flight, I allowed dreams of bliss to steal rosily across
+my brain. I scarcely saw the great gold-sharded beetles that hummed and
+glanced in the mellow sun-light. I heard like one half asleep, as if far
+away, the sharp twitter of the blue bird and the tender piping of the
+meadow lark. Susie Adair was all my thought. I recollect that, just as I
+climbed the fence at the farther side of the clover field, I saw a white
+winged, red headed woodpecker pounce upon and carry off a starry
+opal-tinted butterfly, and I thought how sweet it would be if I could
+thus steal away into the free regions of space the object of my gentler
+passion. But then what wonderful big wings I should have needed, for my
+Venus of the hollow of the hill of Balhinch was no airy thing. Her tall,
+strong body and magnificent limbs equalled one hundred and forty pounds
+avoirdupois! My own weight was about one hundred and twenty.</p>
+
+<p>As I neared Susie's home I began, for the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_85" id="Page_85">[85]</a></span> first time in my life, to
+suffer from palpitation. The shadow of a doubt floated in the autumn
+sun-light. I set my teeth together and resolved not to be faint hearted.
+I must go in boldly and plead my cause and win.</p>
+
+<p>When I reached the gate of the Adair farmhouse I had to look straight
+over the head of a very large, sanctimonious-faced bull-dog to get a
+view of the vine covered porch. This dog looked up at me and smiled
+ineffably; then he came to the gate and stood over against me, peeping
+between the slats. I hesitated. About this time Ben Crane came out of
+the house with a banjo in his hand. He had been playing for Susie. He
+was a natural musician.</p>
+
+<p>"'Feared o' the dog, Mr. Woodpecker?" said he. "Begone, Bull!" and he
+kicked the big-headed canine aside so that I could go in.</p>
+
+<p>I heard him thrumming on his banjo far down the road as Susie met me at
+the door. How wondrously beautiful she was!</p>
+
+<p>"Sit down Mr. &mdash;&mdash;, and, if you do not care, I'll bring the churn in and
+finish getting the butter while we talk."</p>
+
+<p>I was delighted&mdash;I was charmed&mdash;fascinated. Susie's father had gone to a
+distant village, and her mother, a gentle work-worn matron,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_86" id="Page_86">[86]</a></span> was in the
+other room spinning flax, humming, meantime, snatches of camp meeting
+hymns. The sound of that spinning-wheel seemed to me strangely mournful
+and sad, but Susie's deep, clear gray eyes and cheerful voice were the
+very soul of joyousness, health and youth. She brought in a great
+fragrant cedar churn, made to hold six or eight gallons of cream, and
+forthwith began her labor. She stood as she worked, and the exercise
+throwing her entire body into gentle but well-defined motion, displayed
+all the riches of her contour. The sleeves of her calico gown were
+rolled up above the elbows, leaving her plump, muscular arms bare, and
+her skirt was pinned away from her really small feet and shapely ankles
+in such a way as to give one an idea, a suggestion, of supreme innocence
+and grace. Her long, crinkled gold hair was unbound, hanging far below
+her waist, and shining like silk. Her lips, carmine red, seemed to
+overflow with tender utterances.</p>
+
+<p>Ever since that day I have thought churning a kind of sacred, charmingly
+blessed work, which ought to be, if really it is not, the pastime of
+those delightful beings the ancients called deities. Cream is more
+fragrant, more delicious, more potent than nectar or ambrosia.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_87" id="Page_87">[87]</a></span> A cedar
+churn is more delicately perfumed than any patera of the gods. And, I
+say it with reverence, I have seen, swaying lily-like above the churn, a
+beauty more perfect than that which bloomed full grown from the bright
+focus of the sea's ecstatic travail.</p>
+
+<p>What a talk Susie and I had that day! Slowly, stealthily I crept nearer
+and nearer to the subject burning in my heart. I watched Susie closely,
+for her face was an enigma to me. I never think of her and of that day
+without recalling Baudelaire's dream of a giantess. More happy than the
+poet, I really saw my colossal beauty stand full grown before me, but,
+like him, I wondered&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>
+<span style="margin-left: 2em;">*&nbsp; *&nbsp; *&nbsp; "Si son c&oelig;ur couve une sombre flamme</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Aux humides brouillards qui nagent dans ses yeux."</span><br />
+</p>
+
+<p>I could not tell, from any outward sign, what was going on in her heart.
+No sphinx could have been more utterly calm and mysterious. She had a
+most baffling way about her, too. When at last I had reached the point
+of a confession of my maddening love, she broke into one of my
+charmingest sentences to say&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"Mr. &mdash;&mdash;, you'd better move farther away from the churn or I might
+spatter your clothes."</p>
+
+<p>This, somehow, disconcerted and bothered<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_88" id="Page_88">[88]</a></span> me. But Susie was so calm and
+sweet about it, her gray eyes beamed so mysteriously innocent of any
+impropriety, that I soon regained my lost eloquence.</p>
+
+<p>How sharply and indelibly cut in my memory, like intaglios in ivory, the
+surroundings of that scene, even to the minutest detail! For instance, I
+can see as plainly as then my new silk hat on the floor between my
+knees, containing a red handkerchief and a paper of chewing tobacco. I
+recall, also, that a slip-trod shoe lay careened to one side near the
+centre of the room. The bull-dog came to the door and peeped solemnly in
+a time or two. A string of dried pumpkin cuts hung by the fireplace, and
+under a small wooden table in one corner were piled a few balls of
+"carpet rags." I sat in a very low chair. A picture of George Washington
+hung above a small square window. The floor was ash boards uncarpeted. I
+heard some chickens clucking and cackling under the house.</p>
+
+<p>Finally, I recollect it as if it were but yesterday, I said:</p>
+
+<p>"I love you, Susie&mdash;I love you, and I have loved you ever since I first
+saw you!"</p>
+
+<p>How tame the words sound now! but then they came forth in a tremulous
+murmur that<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_89" id="Page_89">[89]</a></span> gave them character and power. Susie looked straight at me
+a moment, and I thought I saw a softer light gather in her eyes. Then
+she took away the churn dasher and lid and fetched a large bowl from a
+cupboard. What a fine golden pile of butter she fished up into the bowl!</p>
+
+<p>I drew my chair somewhat nearer, and watched her pat and roll and
+squeeze the plastic mass with the cherry ladle. A little gray kitten
+came and rubbed and purred round her. Again the bull-dog peeped in. A
+breeze gathered some force and began to ripple pleasantly through the
+room. Far away in the fields I heard the quails whistling to each other.
+An old cow strolled up the lane by the house and round the corner of the
+orchard, plaintively tinkling her bell. Steadily hummed Mrs. Adair's
+spinning wheel. I slipped my hat and my chair a little closer to Susie,
+and by a mighty effort directed my burning words straight to the point.
+I cannot repeat all I said. I would not if I could. Such things are
+sacred.</p>
+
+<p>"Susie, I love you, madly, blindly, dearly, truly! O, Susie! will you
+love me&mdash;will you be my wife?"</p>
+
+<p>Again she turned on me that strange, sweet,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_90" id="Page_90">[90]</a></span> half smiling look. Her lips
+quivered. The flush on her cheeks almost died out.</p>
+
+<p>"Answer me, Susie, and say you will make me happy."</p>
+
+<p>She walked to the cupboard, put away the bowl of butter and the ladle,
+then came back and stood by the churn and me. How indescribably charming
+she looked! She smiled strangely and made a motion with her round strong
+arms. I answered the movement. I spread wide my arms and half rose to
+clasp her to my bosom. A whole life was centred in the emotion of that
+moment. Susie's arms missed me and lifted the churn. I sank back into my
+chair. How gracefully Susie swayed herself to her immense height, toying
+with the ponderous churn held far above her head. I saw a kitten fairly
+fly out of the room, its tail as level as a gun barrel; I saw the
+bull-dog's face hastily withdraw from the door; I saw the carpet balls,
+the pumpkin cuts and the print of Washington all through a perpendicular
+cataract of deliciously fragrant buttermilk! I saw my hat fill up to the
+brim, with my handkerchief afloat. I heaved an awful sigh and leaped to
+my feet. I saw old Mrs. Adair standing in the partition door, with her
+arms akimbo, and heard her say&mdash;</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_91" id="Page_91">[91]</a></span>"W'y, Susan Jane Samantha Ann! What 'pon airth hev ye done?"</p>
+
+<p>And the Venus replied:</p>
+
+<p>"I've been givin' this 'ere little woodpecker a good dose of
+buttermilk!"</p>
+
+<p>I seized my hat and shuffled out of the door, feeling the milk gush from
+the tops of my boots at each hasty step I made. I ran to the gate, went
+through and slammed it after me. As I did so I heard a report like the
+closing of a strong steel trap. It was the bull-dog's teeth shutting on
+a slat of the gate as he made a dive at me from behind. I smiled grimly,
+thinking how I'd taste served in buttermilk.</p>
+
+<p>On my way home I passed Ben Crane's house. He was sitting at a window
+playing his banjo, and singing in a stentorian voice:</p>
+
+<p>
+<span style="margin-left: 4em;">"O! Woodpecker Jim,</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 4em;">Yer chance is mighty slim!</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Jest draw yer red head into yer hole</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2em;">And there die easy, dern your soul,</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 6em;">O! slim Woodpecker Jim!"</span><br />
+</p>
+
+<p>I was so mad that I sweat great drops of pure buttermilk, but over in
+the fields the quails whistled just as clear and sweet as ever, and I
+heard the wind pouring through the stubble as it always does in autumn!</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_92" id="Page_92">[92]</a></span></p>
+<p class="center"><span class="huge"><span class="smcap">The Legend of Potato Creek.</span></span></p>
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+
+
+<p>Big yellow butterflies were wheeling about in the drowsy summer air, and
+hovering above the moist little sand bars of Potato Creek. A shady dell,
+wrapped in the hot lull of August, sent up the spires and domes of its
+walnut and poplar trees, clearly defined, and sheeny, while underneath
+the forest roof the hazel and wild rose bushes had wrung themselves into
+dusky mats. The late violets bloomed here and there, side by side with
+those waxlike yellow blossoms, called by the country folk "butter and
+eggs." Through this dell Potato Creek meandered fantastically, washing
+bare the roots of a few gnarled sycamores, and murmuring among the small
+bowlders that almost covered its bed. It was not a strikingly romantic
+or picturesque place&mdash;rather the contrary&mdash;much after the usual type of
+ragged little dells. "A scrubby little holler" the neighborhood folk
+called it.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_93" id="Page_93">[93]</a></span>Perched on the topmost tangle of the dry, tough roots of an old upturned
+tree, sat little Rose Turpin, sixteen that very August day; pretty, nay
+beautiful, her school life just ended, her womanhood just beginning to
+clothe her face and form in that mysterious mantle of tenderness&mdash;the
+blossom, the flower that brings the rich sweet fruit of love. From her
+high perch she leaned over and gazed down into the clear water of the
+creek and smiled at the gambols of the minnows that glanced here and
+there, now in shadowy swarms and anon glancing singly, like sparks of
+dull fire, in the limpid current. Some small cray-fishes, too, delighted
+her with their retrograde and side-wise movements among the variegated
+pebbles at the bottom of the water. A small sketch book and a case of
+pencils lay beside her. So busy was she with her observations, that a
+fretful, peevish, but decidedly masculine voice near by startled her as
+if from a doze. She had imagined herself so utterly alone.</p>
+
+<p>"Wo-erp 'ere, now can't ye! Wo, I say! Turn yer ole head roun' this way
+now, blast yer ole picter! No foolin', now; wo-erp, I tell ye!"</p>
+
+<p>Rose was so frightened at first that she seemed about to rise in the air
+and fly away;<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_94" id="Page_94">[94]</a></span> but her quick glance in the direction of the sound
+discovered the speaker, who, a few rods further down the creek, stood
+holding the halter rein of a forlorn looking horse in one hand, and in
+the other a heavy woodman's axe.</p>
+
+<p>"Wo-erp, now! I hate like the nation to slatherate ye; but I said I'd do
+it if ye didn't get well by this August the fifteenth; an' shore 'nuff,
+here ye are with the fistleo gittin' wus and wus every day o' yer life.
+So now ye may expect ter git what I tole ye! Stan' still now, will ye,
+till I knock the life out'n ye!"</p>
+
+<p>By this time Rose had come to understand the features of the situation.
+The horse was sadly diseased with that scourge of the equine race,
+scrofulous shoulder or fistula, commonly called, among the country folk,
+fistleo, and because the animal could not get well the man was on the
+point of killing it by knocking it on the head with the axe.</p>
+
+<p>Of all dumb things a horse was Rose's favorite. She had always, since
+her very babyhood, loved horses.</p>
+
+<p>"Wo-wo-wo-erp, here! Ha'n't ye got no sense at all? Ding it, how d'ye
+'spect me to hit yer blamed ole head when ye keep it a waggin' 'round in
+that sort o' style? Wo-erp!"</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_95" id="Page_95">[95]</a></span>The fellow had tied the halter rein around a sapling about two feet from
+the ground, and was now preparing to deal the horse a blow with the axe
+between its eyes. The animal seemed unaware of any danger, but kept its
+head going from side to side, trying to fight certain bothersome
+gad-flies.</p>
+
+<p>"O, sir, stop; don't, don't; please, sir, don't!" cried the girl, her
+sweet voice breaking into silvery echo fragments in every nook of the
+little hollow.</p>
+
+<p>The man gazed all around, and, seeing no one, let fall the axe by his
+side. The birds, taking advantage of the silence, lifted a twittering
+chorus through the dense dark tops of the trees. The slimmest breath of
+air languidly caressed the leaves of the rose vines. The bubbling of the
+brook seemed to touch a mellower key, and the yellow butterflies settled
+all together on a little sand bar, their bright wings shut straight and
+sharp above their bodies. The man seemed intently listening. "Tw'an't
+mammy's voice, nohow," he muttered; "but I'd like to know who 'twas,
+though."</p>
+
+<p>He stood a moment longer, as if in doubt, then again raising his axe he
+continued:</p>
+
+<p>"Must 'a' been a jay bird squeaked. Wo-erp 'ere now! I'm not goin' to
+fool wi' ye all day, so hold yer head still!"</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_96" id="Page_96">[96]</a></span>That was a critical moment for the lean, miserable horse. It lowered its
+head and held it quite still. The axe was steadily poised in the air.
+The man's face wore a look of determination&mdash;grim, stone-like. He was,
+perhaps, twenty-five, tall and bony, with a countenance sallow almost to
+greenness, sunken pale blue eyes, sun burnt hair, thin flaxy beard, and
+irregular, half decayed teeth. Although his body and limbs were shrunken
+to the last degree of attenuation, still the big cords of his neck and
+wrists stood out taut, suggesting great strength. The blow would be a
+terrible one. The horse would die almost without a struggle.</p>
+
+<p>"O, O, O! Indeed, sir, you must not! Stop that, sir, instantly! You
+shall not do it, sir! O, sir!"</p>
+
+<p>And fluttering down from her perch, Rose flew to the spot where the
+tragedy was pending, and cast herself pale and trembling between the
+horse and its would-be executioner.</p>
+
+<p>The axe fell from the man's hands.</p>
+
+<p>His eyes became exactly circular.</p>
+
+<p>His under jaw dropped so that his mouth was open to its fullest gaping
+capacity. His shoulders fell till their points almost met in front of
+his sunken chest. He was a picture of overwhelming surprise.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_97" id="Page_97">[97]</a></span>"An' what in thunder do you want of him? What good's he goin' to do you?
+'Cause, you see, he can't work nor be rid on nor nothin'."</p>
+
+<p>"O never mind, sir, just please give him to me and I'll take him and
+care for him. Poor horsey! Poor horsey! See, he loves me already!"</p>
+
+<p>The beast had thrust its nose against the maiden's hand.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, I don't know 'bout this. I'd as soon 'at you have 'im as not if I
+hadn't swore to kill 'im, an' I musn't lie to 'im. An' besides, I've had
+sich a pesky derned time wi' 'im 'at it looks kinder mean 'at I
+shouldn't have the satisfaction of bustin' his head for it. I'm goin' to
+knock 'im, an' ye jist mought as well stan' aside!"</p>
+
+<p>Just then the peculiarities of the man's character were written on his
+face. His nose denoted pugnacity, his lips sensuality, but not of a base
+sort, his eyes ignorance and rough kindness, his chin firmness, his jaw
+tenacity of purpose, and his complexion the ague. He had sworn to kill
+the horse, and kill him he would. You could see that in the very
+wrinkles of his neck. He evidently felt that it was a duty he owed to
+his conscience&mdash;a duty made doubly imperative by the horse's refusal to
+get well by the exact time prescribed.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_98" id="Page_98">[98]</a></span>High up on the dead spire of a walnut tree a woodpecker began to beat a
+long, rattling tattoo. The horse very lazily and innocently winked his
+brown eyes, and putting forth his nose sniffed at the skirt of the
+girl's dress.</p>
+
+<p>"I'm glad&mdash;O I'm ever so glad you'll not kill him!" murmured the little
+lady when she saw the axe fall to the ground.</p>
+
+<p>The man stood a long moment, as if petrified or frozen into position,
+then somewhat recovering, he re-seized the axe, and flourishing it high
+in the air, cried in a voice that, cracked and shrill, rang petulantly
+through the woods:</p>
+
+<p>"I said I'd kill 'im if that garglin' oil didn't cure 'im, 'an I'm
+derned ef I don't, too!"</p>
+
+<p>"O, sir, if you please! The poor horse is not to blame!" exclaimed the
+excited girl.</p>
+
+<p>"'Taint no use o' beggin'; he's no 'count but to jist eat up corn, an'
+hay, an' paster an' the likes; and his blasted fistleo gits wus an' wus
+all the time. An't I spent more'n he's wo'th a tryin' to cure 'm, an'
+don't everybody laugh at me 'cause I've got sich a derned ole slummux of
+a hoss? Jist blame my picter if I'll stand it! So now you've hearn me
+toot my tin horn, an' ye may as well stan' out'n the way!"</p>
+
+<p>"But, sir, I'll take him off your hands, may I? Say, sir? O please let
+me take him!"</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_99" id="Page_99">[99]</a></span>While he stood with his axe raised, Rose was very diligently and
+nervously tugging at the knot that fastened the halter rein to the tree,
+and ere he was aware of her intent, she had untied it and was resolutely
+leading the poor old animal away.</p>
+
+<p>The man's eyes got longest the short way as he gazed at the retreating
+figure.</p>
+
+<p>"Well now, that's as cool as a cowcumber and twicet as juicy! Gal, ye'r'
+a brick! ye'r' a knot! Ye'r' a born pacer! Take 'im 'long for all I
+keer! Take 'im 'long!"</p>
+
+<p>He put down his axe, placed his hands against his sides and smiled, as
+he spoke, a big wrinkling smile that covered the whole of his sallow,
+skinny face and ran clear down to the neck band of his homespun shirt.</p>
+
+<p>"Pluck, no eend to it!" he muttered; "wonder who she is?
+Poorty&mdash;geeroody!"</p>
+
+<p>The wild birds sang a triumphant hymn, the breeze freshened till the
+whole woods rustled, and louder still rose the bubbling of the stream
+among its bowlders.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, I'll jist be dorged! The poortiest gal in all Injianny! An' she's
+tuck my ole hoss whether or no! She's a knot! Sort o' a cool proceedin',
+it 'pears to me, but she's orful welcome to the hoss! Howdsomever it's
+mighty<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_100" id="Page_100">[100]</a></span> much of a joke on me, 'r my name's not Zach Jones!"</p>
+
+<p>He laughed long and loud. The birds laughed, too, and still the wind
+freshened.</p>
+
+<p>The girl and the horse had quickly disappeared behind the hazel and
+papaw bushes. Zach Jones was alone with his axe and his reflections.</p>
+
+<p>"Yender's where she sot&mdash;right up yender on that ole clay root. She must
+'a' been a fishin', I reckon."</p>
+
+<p>Another admiring chuckle.</p>
+
+<p>He went to the spot and clambered up among the roots. There lay Rose's
+sketch book and pencil case. He took up the book and curiously turned
+the leaves, his eyes running with something like childish delight over
+the flowers and bits of landscape. He had never before seen a drawing.</p>
+
+<p>"Poorty as the gal 'erself, 'most," he said, "an' seein' 'at she's tuck
+my ole hoss, I spose I'll have to take these 'ere jimcracks o' her'n.
+I'll take 'em 'long anyhow, jist to 'member her by!"</p>
+
+<p>This argument seemed logical and conclusive, and with a quick glance
+over his shoulder he crammed book and pencil case into the capacious
+depths of the side pocket of his pants.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_101" id="Page_101">[101]</a></span>"Now then it's about time for my chill, an' I'd better go home. Hang the
+luck; s'pose I'll allus have the ager!" This last sentence was uttered
+in a tone of comical half despair, and accompanied by a facial
+contortion possible to no one but a person thoroughly saturated with
+ague in its chronic form.</p>
+
+<p>After he left the dell, Zach had a hot walk across a clover field before
+he reached the dilapidated log house where he lived with his widowed
+mother. In a short time his chill set in, and it was a fearful one. His
+teeth chattered and his bony frame rattled like a bundle of dry sticks
+in a strong wind. After it had shaken him thus for about an hour, his
+brother Sammy, a lad of ten years, came in with a jug of buttermilk
+brought from a neighbor's.</p>
+
+<p>"Mammy, 'ere's yer buttermilk," said he, setting the jug on the floor.
+"Shakin' like forty&mdash;a'n't ye, Zach? he added, glancing with a sad,
+lugubrious smile at his brother; then, changing his tone and also his
+countenance, he continued, with a broader grin: "Bet ye a dollar ye
+can't guess what I seed over to 'Squire Martin's!"</p>
+
+<p>"No, nor I don't care a cuss; so put off an' don't come yawpin' round
+me!" replied Zach.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes ye do, too; an' I know ye do, for 'twas<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_102" id="Page_102">[102]</a></span> yer ole fistleo hoss. That
+'ere fine gal 'at stays over there is havin' a man wash 'im an' doctor
+'im." Sammy winked and hitched up his pants as he spoke.</p>
+
+<p>"Do say, Sammy, is that so, now?" cried the widow, holding up her hands.
+"How on 'arth come she by the hoss? Zach, I thought you'd killed that
+creater'!"</p>
+
+<p>"Mammy, ef you an' Sammy'll jist let me 'joy this 'ere ager in peace
+I'll be orful 'bleeged to ye," said Zach, making his chair creak and
+quiver with the ecstasy of his convulsion.</p>
+
+<p>But Sammy's tongue would go. He thought he had a "good 'un" on Zach, and
+nothing short of lightning could have killed him quick enough to prevent
+his telling it.</p>
+
+<p>"The gal says as how Zach gin 'er the ole hoss for to 'member 'im by!"
+he blurted out, shying briskly from Zach's foot, which otherwise would
+have landed him in the door yard.</p>
+
+<p>"Lookee here now, Zach, you jist try the likes o' that ag'in an' I'll
+give ye sich a broom-stickin' as ye a'n't had lately. Ye mought 'a'
+injured the child's insides!" and as she spoke the widow flourished the
+broom.</p>
+
+<p>So Zach dropped his head upon his chest and employed himself exclusively
+with his chill. When his mother was not looking at him, however,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_103" id="Page_103">[103]</a></span> he
+would occasionally slip the sketch book partly out of his pocket and
+peep between its leaves. When his fever came on he got "flighty" and
+horrified the widow with talk about an angel on a clay root and a sweet
+little "hoss thief" from whom he had stolen the "picters!"</p>
+
+<p>I cannot exactly say how Zach got to going over to 'Squire Martin's so
+often after this. But his first visit was a compulsory one. His mother
+happening to discover his possession of the sketch book and pencil case,
+made him return them with his own hand to Rose. He at once became deeply
+interested in the progress of his former patient's convalescence; for,
+strange to say, the poor horse began almost immediately to get well, and
+in two months was sound, glossy and fat. Nor was he an ill-looking
+animal. On the contrary, when Rose sat on his back and stroked his mane,
+he arched his neck and pawed the ground like a thoroughbred.</p>
+
+<p>'Squire Martin was a good man, and seeing how Zach seemed to enjoy
+Rose's company, he one day took the girl aside and said to her:</p>
+
+<p>"You must be somewhat of a doctor, my dear, seeing how you've touched up
+the old hoss, and I propose for you to try your hand<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_104" id="Page_104">[104]</a></span> on another
+subject. There's poor Zach Jones, who's had the chills for six or eight
+years as constant as sunrise and sunset, and no medicine can't do him
+any good. Now I'll be bound if you'll try you can cure him sound and
+well. All you need to do in the world is to pet him up some'at as you
+have the ole hoss. Jist take a little interest in the feller an' he'll
+come out all right. All he wants is to forget he ever had the ager and
+take some light exercise and have some fun. Fun is the only medicine to
+cure the chills with. Quinine is no 'count but to make a racket in a
+feller's head, and calomel'll kill 'im, sure. Now I propose to let Zach
+have a hoss and saddle and you must go out a riding with 'im and try to
+divert his mind from his sorrows and aches and pains&mdash;now that's a good
+girl, Rosie."</p>
+
+<p>Rose, whose healthful, impulsive, generous nature would not allow her to
+refuse so well intended and withal so small a request, readily agreed to
+do all she could in the matter, and very soon thereafter she and Zach
+were the very best of friends, taking long rides together through
+woodlands and up and down the pleasant lanes of 'Squire Martin's broad
+estates. The young girl soon found the companionship of Zach, novel and
+most awkward as it was at<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_105" id="Page_105">[105]</a></span> first, agreeable and almost charming in its
+freshness and sincerity. As for Zach himself, he was the girl's slave
+from the start. He could not do too much for her in his earnest,
+respectful way. Women are always tyrants, and their tyranny seems to be
+inversely as their size and directly as the size of the man upon whom it
+is exerted. Rose was a very little chit of a maiden, and Zach was a
+great big bony frame of a fellow. The result, of course, was despotism.
+But, although Zach was a democrat, he seemed to like the oppression, and
+ran after big-winged butterflies, opened gates, pulled down and put up
+innumerable fences, climbed trees after empty bird nests, gathered
+flowers and ferns&mdash;did everything, in fact, required of him by his
+little queen. He became a daily visitor at the 'Squire's, and seemed to
+have entirely forgotten everything else or utterly submerged it in his
+unselfish devotion to the girl. The good 'Squire saw this with unbounded
+delight.</p>
+
+<p>So August quietly drifted by, and September hung its yellow banner on
+the corn and said farewell with a sigh that had in it a smack of winter.</p>
+
+<p>Rose's parents were wealthy and lived in Indianapolis, and now came the
+time for the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_106" id="Page_106">[106]</a></span> girl's return to her city home. Meanwhile a remarkable
+change had taken place in the health and spirits of Zach Jones. The ague
+had departed, the sallowness was gone from his skin, somewhat of flesh
+had gathered on his cheeks, and in his eyes shone a cheerful light. He
+was straight and almost plump, and his hair and beard had assumed a
+gloss and liveliness they had never before known. He had thrown away
+quinine and calomel, and his sleep at night was soft and sweet, broken
+only by fair, happy dreams, that lingered long after he was awake. At
+home his mother had far less trouble with him, and Sammy never got a
+kick even if he did occasionally mention old fistleo in an equivocal
+way. The amount of provender it required to satisfy Zach's appetite now
+was a constant source of amazement to the widow.</p>
+
+<p>The evening preceding Rose's departure was a fine one. The woods were
+gold, the sky was turquoise. Instead of riding, as usual, the young
+people took a stroll in the 'Squire's immense orchard. The apples were
+ripe and ready to be gathered into the cellars; their mellow fragrance
+flavored the autumn air so delicately that Zach said it smelt sweeter
+than an oven full of sugar cakes.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_107" id="Page_107">[107]</a></span>When the young folk returned from their walk the 'Squire was standing on
+the door step of his house. His quick eyes caught a glimpse of something
+unsatisfactory in the faces of the approaching couple&mdash;Zach,
+particularly, despite his evident effort to choke down something,
+discovered unmistakable signs of suffering. Rose was simply sober and
+thoughtful.</p>
+
+<p>"What now, Zach?" asked the 'Squire, "sick, eh?" "D'know; guess I'm in
+for a shake; wish to the Lord it'd shake my back bone clean out'n me!"
+was the reply, in a queer gurgling voice. A bunch of fall roses fell
+from his vest button-hole, but he did not pick it up. A hot flush, in
+the midst of a ghastly pallor, burned on the cheeks of the speaker. Rose
+tapped the ground with the toe of her kid boot, but did not speak.</p>
+
+<p>The man and the girl stood there close together awhile, and the 'Squire
+did not catch what they said as they shook hands and parted. When Zach
+had gone home the 'Squire told Rose that he wished she would stay a
+little longer, till the ague season was over, just on Zach's account.
+Rose quietly replied, "I have already stayed too long;" but her voice
+had an infinity of pity and sorrow in it that the 'Squire did not
+detect.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_108" id="Page_108">[108]</a></span>Next morning Rose went home to the city and soon after made a brilliant
+<i>debut</i> in society, for she was really a charming little thing. That
+winter was a festive one&mdash;a season of great social activity&mdash;and some of
+its most direct and prominent results were a few notable marriages in
+the spring, among which was that of Rose to a banker of P&mdash;&mdash;, Kentucky,
+the happy union being consummated in May.</p>
+
+<p>On the very day of her wedding Rose received from her uncle the
+following note:</p>
+
+<p class="blockquot">"<span class="smcap">Dear Niece</span>:</p>
+
+<p class="blockquot">"Come to see us, even if you won't stay but one day. Come right
+off, if you're a Christian girl. Zach Jones is dying of
+consumption and is begging to see you night and day. He says
+he's got something on his mind he wants to say to you, and when
+he says it he can die happy. The poor fellow is monstrous bad
+off, and I think you ought to be sure and come. We're all well.
+Your loving uncle,</p>
+
+<p class="bqright">"<span class="smcap">Jared Martin.</span>"</p>
+
+<p>Something in this homely letter so deeply affected Rose that she
+prevailed on her husband, a few days after their marriage, to take her
+to 'Squire Martin's.</p>
+
+<p>It was nearly sundown when the young<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_109" id="Page_109">[109]</a></span> wife, accompanied by the 'Squire,
+entered the room of the dying man. He lay on a low bed by an open
+window, through which, with hollow hungry eyes, he was gazing into the
+blue distance that is called the sky of May. Birds were singing in the
+trees all around the house, and a cool breath of violet-scented air
+rippled through the window. The widow Jones, worn out with watching by
+the sick bed, sat sleeping in her rude arm-chair; Sammy had gone after
+the cow&mdash;a gift from the 'Squire.</p>
+
+<p>The visitors entered softly, but Zach heard them and feebly turned his
+head. He put out a bloodless hand and clasped the warm fingers of Rose,
+pulling her into a seat by his couch. A wan smile flitted across his
+face as he fixed his eyes, burning like sparks in the gray ash of a
+spent fire, on hers, dewy with rising tears.</p>
+
+<p>"The same little Rose you use to wus," he said, in a low faltering
+voice, that had in it an unconquerable allegiance to the one dream of
+his manhood. His unnaturally bright eyes ran swiftly over her face and
+form, then closed, as if to fasten the vision within, that it might
+follow him to eternity.</p>
+
+<p>"The same little Rose you use to wus," he repeated, "only now you're
+picked off the vine<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_110" id="Page_110">[110]</a></span> an' nobody can't touch ye but the owner. I'm a
+poor, no 'count dyin' man, Rose, but you'll never&mdash;&mdash;." His voice choked
+a little and he did not finish the sentence. Perhaps he thought it were
+better not finished.</p>
+
+<p>A few moments of utter silence followed, during which, faintly, far out
+in the field behind the house, was heard the childish voice of Sammy,
+singing an old hymn, two lines of which were most distinctly heard by
+those in the house.</p>
+
+<p>"Ah, yes&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>
+<span style="margin-left: 2em;">"This world's a wilderness of woe,</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2em;">This world it ain't my home,"</span><br />
+</p>
+
+<p>chimed in the trembling voice of the sick man. Then, by an effort that
+evidently taxed his fading powers to the last degree, he fixed his eyes
+firmly on those of the young woman. Here was a martyr of the divine
+sort, true and unchangeable in the flame of the torture.</p>
+
+<p>"Rose, little Rose," he said, glancing uneasily at the 'Squire, "I've
+got something private like to say to you."</p>
+
+<p>The young woman trembled. Memory was at work.</p>
+
+<p>"'Squire, go out a minute, will ye?" continued Zach.</p>
+
+<p>The sick man's request was promptly obeyed,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_111" id="Page_111">[111]</a></span> and Rose sat, drooping,
+alone beside the bed, while the widow snored away.</p>
+
+<p>Zach now more nervously clasped the hand of the young woman. A spot of
+faint sunshine glimmered on the pillow close by the man's head. The
+out-door sounds of the wind in the young grass, and the rustle of the
+new soft leaves of the trees, crept into the room gently, as if not to
+drown the low voice of the dying man.</p>
+
+<p>"It's been on my mind ever since we parted, Rose, and I ort 'a' said it
+then, but I choked an' couldn't; but I kin say it now and I will." He
+paused a moment and Rose looked pitifully at him. His chin was thrust
+out firmly and his lips had a determined set. He looked just as he did
+when about to knock the poor old horse on the head over in the dell that
+day. How vividly the tragic situation was recalled in Rose's mind!</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, I will say it now, so I will," he resumed. "Since things turned
+out jist as they have, Rose, I do wish I'd 'a' paid no 'tention to ye
+an' jist gone on and knocked that derned ole fistleoed hoss so dead 'at
+he'd 'a' never kicked&mdash;I do&mdash;I do, 'i hokey! I don't want to make ye
+feel bad, but I'm goin' away now, an' it 'pears to me like as if I'd go
+easy if I know'd<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_112" id="Page_112">[112]</a></span> you'd&mdash;&mdash;." He turned away his face and drew just one
+little fluttering breath. When, after only a few minutes' absence, the
+'Squire came in, the widow still slept, the sweet air still rippled
+through the room, but Rose held a dead hand; Zach was at rest! The
+'Squire placed his hand on the bright hair of Rose and gazed mournfully
+down into the pinched, pallid face of the dead. How awfully calm a dead
+face is!</p>
+
+<p>The widow stirred in her chair, groaned, and awoke. For a moment she
+bent her eyes wonderingly, inquiringly on the young woman; then, rising,
+she clasped her in her great bony arms.</p>
+
+<p>"You are the Rose, the little Rose he's been goin' on so about. O,
+honey, I'm orful glad you've come. You ort jist to 'a' heerd him talk
+about ye when he got flighty like&mdash;&mdash;but O&mdash;O&mdash;my! O Lor'! Zach&mdash;Zachy,
+dear! O, Miss, O, he's dead&mdash;he's dead!"</p>
+
+<p>"Dead, yes, dead!" echoed the 'Squire, his words dropping with the
+weight of lead.</p>
+
+<p>Across the fields of young green wheat ran waves of the spring wind,
+murmuring and sighing, while the dust of blossoms wheeled, and rose and
+fell in the last soft rays of the going sun. A big yellow butterfly
+flitted through the room.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_113" id="Page_113">[113]</a></span>Presently Sammy entered. He came in like a gust of wind, making things
+rattle with his impetuous motion.</p>
+
+<p>"O, mammy! O, Zach! I's got s'thin' to tell ye, an' I'll bet a biscuit
+you can't guess what 't is!" he cried breathlessly.</p>
+
+<p>"O, Sammy, honey, O, dear!" groaned the widow.</p>
+
+<p>"S-s-h!" said the 'Squire solemnly.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, I jist wanted 'm to guess," replied Sammy, "for it's awful
+doggone cur'u's 'at&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"S-s-h!"</p>
+
+<p>"The fistleo is broke out on Zach's ole hoss ten times as wuss as ever!"</p>
+
+<p>"S-s-s-s-h!"</p>
+
+<p>"It's so, for I seed it. It's layin' down over in the hollow by 'tater
+creek, where the ole clay root is, an' its jist about to d&mdash;&mdash;."</p>
+
+<p>"S-s-h!"</p>
+
+<p>The child caught a glimpse of the face and was struck mute. And darkness
+stole athwart the earth, but the morrow's sun drove it away. Never,
+however, did any sun or any season chase from the heart of little Rose
+the shadow that was the memory of the man who died in that cabin.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_114" id="Page_114">[114]</a></span></p>
+<p class="center"><span class="huge"><span class="smcap">Stealing a Conductor.</span></span></p>
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+
+
+<p>He shambled into the bar-room of the hotel at Thorntown, a Boone County
+village, and, with a bow and a hearty "how-de do to you all," took the
+only vacant chair. He scratched a match and lighted his pipe. "Now we'll
+be bored with some sort of a long-winded story," whispered some to
+others of the loungers present. "Never knowed him to fail," said a lank
+fellow, almost loud enough for the subject to hear. "He's our travelled
+man," added a youth, who winked as if he were extremely intelligent and
+didn't mind letting folks know it.</p>
+
+<p>The man himself whiffed away carelessly at his pipe, now and then
+raising one eye higher than the other, to take a sort of side survey of
+the persons present. That eye was not long in settling upon me, and
+after a short, searching look, gleamed in a well pleased way. He was a
+stout formed man of about fifty years, dressed rather seedily, and
+wearing a plug hat<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_115" id="Page_115">[115]</a></span> of enormous height, the crown of which was battered
+into the last degree of grotesqueness. He got right up, and, dragging
+his chair behind him, came over and settled close down in front of me.</p>
+
+<p>"Stranger here, a'n't you?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, sir."</p>
+
+<p>"Your name's Fuller, a'n't it?"</p>
+
+<p>"No, sir."</p>
+
+<p>"Well, mebbe I'm mistaken, but you're just the picter o' Fuller. Never
+was a conductor on a railroad, was you?"</p>
+
+<p>"Never, sir."</p>
+
+<p>"Never was down in the swamps o' South-Eastern Georgy, was you?"</p>
+
+<p>"Never, sir."</p>
+
+<p>"Well, that beats four aces! I could 'a' bet on your bein' Fuller." He
+paused a moment, and then added in a very insinuating tone: "If you
+<i>are</i> Fuller you needn't be afeard to say so, for I don't hold any
+grudge 'gin you about that little matter. Now, sure enough, a'n't your
+name Fuller, in fact?"</p>
+
+<p>I glared at the man a moment, hesitating about whether or not I should
+plant my fist in his eye. But something of almost child-like simplicity
+and sincerity beaming from his face restrained me. Surely the fellow did
+not wish to be as impudent as his words would imply.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_116" id="Page_116">[116]</a></span>"Well, stranger, I see I've got to explain, but the story's not overly
+long," said he, hitching up a little closer to me and settling himself
+comfortably.</p>
+
+<p>I was about to get up and walk out of the room, when some one of the
+by-sitters filliped a little roll of paper to me. Unrolling it I read&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"Let him go on, he'll give you a lively one. He's a brick."</p>
+
+<p>So, concluding that possibly I might be entertained, I lounged back in
+my seat.</p>
+
+<p>"You see," said he, "I thought you was Fuller, an' Fuller was the only
+conductor I ever stole."</p>
+
+<p>"Stole a conductor," whispered somebody, "that's a new one!"</p>
+
+<p>"I've stole a good many things in my time, but I'm here to bet that no
+other living Hoosier ever stole a railroad conductor, an' Fuller was the
+only one I ever stole. I stole him slicker 'n a eel. I had him 'fore he
+knowed it, and you jist better bet he was one clean beat conductor fore
+I was done wi' 'im.</p>
+
+<p>"I kin tell you the whole affair in a few minutes, and I da' say you'll
+laugh a good deal 'fore I'm through. You see I went down to Floridy for
+my health, and when I had about<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_117" id="Page_117">[117]</a></span> recivered I got onto a bum in
+Jacksonville and spent all my money and everything else but my very
+oldest suit o' clothes and my pistol, a Colt's repeater, ten inch
+barrel. None o' you can't tell how a feller feels in a predicament o'
+that sort. Somethin' got into my throat 'bout as big as a egg, and I
+felt kinder moist about the eyes when I had to stare the fact in the
+face that I was nigh onto, or possibly quite a thousand miles from home
+without ary a dime in my pocket. But if there's one thing I do have more
+'n another in my nater it's common sense grit. Well, what you s'pose I
+done? W'y I jest lit out for home afoot. Well, sir, the derndest swamps
+is them Floridy and Georgy swamps. It's ra'lly all one swamp&mdash;the
+Okeefenokee. I follered the railroad that goes up to Savanny, and it led
+me deeper and deeper into the outlying fringes of that terrible old bog.
+When I had travelled a considerable distance into Georgy, and had pretty
+well wore my feet off up to my ankle j'ints, and was about as close onto
+starvation as a 'tater failure in Ireland, and when my under lip had got
+to hanging down like the skirt o' a wore out saddle, and when every step
+seemed like it'd be my last, I jest got clean despairing like and
+concluded to pray a little. So I got down<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_118" id="Page_118">[118]</a></span> upon my knee j'ints and put
+up a most extra-ornary supplication. I felt every word o' it, too, in
+all the marrer of my bones. The place where I was a prayin' was a sort
+o' hummock spot in a mighty bad part o' the swamp. Some awful tall pines
+towered stupenjisly above me. Well, jest as I was finished, and was a
+saying amen, the lordy mercy what a yowl something did give right over
+me in a tree! I think I jumped as high as your head, stranger, and come
+down flat-footed onto a railroad cross tie. Whillikins, how I was
+scared! It was one o' them whooping owls they have down there. It was
+while I was a running from that 'ere owl a thinkin' it was a panther,
+that the thought struck me somewhere in the back o' the head that I
+might steal a ride to Savanny on the first train 'at might pass. 'I'll
+try it!' says I, and so I sot right down there in the swamp and calmly
+waited for a train. In about a hour here come one, like the de'il a
+braking hemp, jist more'n a roaring through the swamp. I forgot to tell
+you 'at it was after dark, but the moon was dimly a shining through the
+fog that covers everything there o' nights. Well, here come the train,
+and as she passed I made a lunge at the hind platform of the last car
+and some how or another got onto it and away I<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_119" id="Page_119">[119]</a></span> went. It was mighty much
+softer 'n walking, I tell you, and I was pleased as a monkey with a red
+cap on. My, how fast that train did go! I could hardly hold onto where I
+wus. You may jist bet I clung on though, and finally I got myself
+setting down on the steps and then I was all hunkey. But I didn't have
+much time to enjoy myself there, though, for all of a sudden the light
+of a lantern shined on me and then somebody touched me and said&mdash;</p>
+
+<p class="blockquot">'Ticket!'</p>
+
+<p>"Mebbe you don't know how onery a feller'll feel sometimes when he hears
+that 'ere word ticket&mdash;'specially when he a'n't got no ticket nor no
+money to pay his fare, and too, when he does want to ride a little of
+the derndest! That was my fix! I'd 'a' give a thousand dollars for a
+half dollar!</p>
+
+<p class="blockquot">'Ticket!'</p>
+
+<p>"He shook me a little this time and held his lantern down low, so's to
+see into my face. I know I must 'a' looked like the de'il.</p>
+
+<p class="blockquot">'Ticket here, quick!'</p>
+
+<p class="blockquot">'I've done paid,' said I.</p>
+
+<p class="blockquot">'Show your check then.'</p>
+
+<p class="blockquot">'Lost it,' says I.</p>
+
+<p class="blockquot">'Money, then, quick!'</p>
+
+<p class="blockquot">'Got none,' says I.</p>
+
+<p class="blockquot"><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_120" id="Page_120">[120]</a></span>'What the &mdash;&mdash; did you git onto my train for without ticket or money?
+How do you expect to travel without paying, you &mdash;&mdash; lousy vagabond! You
+can't steal from me; out with your &mdash;&mdash; wallet and gi' me the money!
+Hurry up!'</p>
+
+<p class="blockquot">'A'n't got no wallet nor no money,' says I.</p>
+
+<p class="blockquot">'Well, I'll dump you off right here, then,' said he, reaching for the
+bell-rope to stop the train.</p>
+
+<p class="blockquot">'For the Lord's sake let me ride to Savanny!' says I.</p>
+
+<p class="blockquot">'A dam Northerner, I know from your voice!' said he, pulling the rope.
+The train began to slack and soon stopped.</p>
+
+<p class="blockquot">'Get off!' said the conductor.</p>
+
+<p class="blockquot">'Please l'me ride!' says I.</p>
+
+<p class="blockquot">'Off with you!'</p>
+
+<p class="blockquot">'Jist a few miles here on the steps!'</p>
+
+<p class="blockquot">'Off, quick!'</p>
+
+<p class="blockquot">'Please&mdash;&mdash;'</p>
+
+<p class="blockquot">'Here you go!' and as he said the words he tried to kick me off.</p>
+
+<p>"In a second I was like a Bengal tiger. I jumped up and gethered him and
+we went at it. I'm as good as ever fluttered, and pretty soon I give him
+one flat on the nose, and we both went off 'n the platform together. As
+I<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_121" id="Page_121">[121]</a></span> started off I happened to think of it, so I grabbed up and pulled the
+bell-rope to signal the engineer to drive on. 'Hoot-toot!' says the
+whistle, and away lick-to-split went the train, and slashy-to-splashy,
+rattle-o-bangle, kewoppyty-whop, bump, thud! down me and that 'ere
+conductor come onto a pile o' wore out cross ties in the side ditch, and
+there we laid a fightin'!</p>
+
+<p>"But you jest bet it didn't take me long to settle <i>him</i>. He soon began
+to sing out ''nuff! 'nuff! take 'm off!' and so I took him by the hair
+and dragged him off 'n the cross ties, shot him one or two more under
+the ear with my fist, and then dropped him. He crawled up and stood
+looking at me as if I was the awfulest thing in the world. I s'pect I
+did look scary, for I was terrible mad. His face was bruised up
+mightily, but he wasn't a bleeding much. He was mostly swelled.</p>
+
+<p class="blockquot">'Where's my train?' says he, in a sort o' blank, hollow way.</p>
+
+<p class="blockquot">'Don't ye hear it?' I answered him, 'It's gone on to Savanny!'</p>
+
+<p class="blockquot">'Gone! Who told 'm to go on? What'd they go leave me for?'</p>
+
+<p class="blockquot">'I pulled the bell rope,' says I.</p>
+
+<p class="blockquot">'<i>You?</i>'</p>
+
+<p class="blockquot"><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_122" id="Page_122">[122]</a></span>'Yes, <i>me</i>!'</p>
+
+<p class="blockquot">'What in the world did you do <i>that</i> for, man?'</p>
+
+<p class="blockquot">'&nbsp;'Cause you wouldn't let me ride to Savanny!'</p>
+
+<p class="blockquot">'What'll I do! What'll I do!' he cried, beginning to waltz 'round like
+one possessed.</p>
+
+<p>"I laughed&mdash;I couldn't help it&mdash;and at the same time I pulled out my old
+pistol.</p>
+
+<p class="blockquot">'Yah-hoo-a!' yelled another owl.</p>
+
+<p class="blockquot">'For the sake o' humanity don't kill me!' said the conductor.</p>
+
+<p class="blockquot">'I'm jest a going to shoot you a little bit for the fun o' the thing,'
+says I.</p>
+
+<p class="blockquot">'Mercy, man!' he prayed.</p>
+
+<p class="blockquot">'Ticket!' says I.</p>
+
+<p>"He groaned the awfulest kind, and, by the moonlight, I saw 'at the big
+tears was running down his face. I felt sorry for him, but I kinder
+thought 'at after what he'd done he'd better pray a little, so I
+mentioned it to him.</p>
+
+<p class="blockquot">'I guess it mought be best if you'd pray a little,' says I, cocking the
+pistol. My voice had a decided sepulchreal sound. The pistol clicked
+very sharp.</p>
+
+<p class="blockquot">'O, kind sir,' says he, 'O, dear sir, I never did pray, I don't know how
+to pray!'</p>
+
+<p class="blockquot">'Ticket or check!' says I, and he knowed I was talking kind o' sarcasm.
+'Pray quick!'</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_123" id="Page_123">[123]</a></span>"He got down and prayed like a Methodist preacher at his very best
+licks. He must 'a' prayed afore.</p>
+
+<p>"About the time his prayer was ended I heard a train coming in the
+distance. He jumped up and listened.</p>
+
+<p class="blockquot">'Glory! Heaven be praised!' says he, capering around like a mad monkey,
+'They've missed me and are backing down to hunt me! Where's my lantern?
+Have you a match? Gi'me your handkerchief!'</p>
+
+<p class="blockquot">'Not so fast,' says I; 'you jest be moderate now, will you? I've no
+notion o' you getting on that train any more. You jest walk along wi'
+me, will you?'</p>
+
+<p class="blockquot">'Where?' says he.</p>
+
+<p class="blockquot">'Into the swamp,' says I; 'step off lively, too, d'you hear me?'</p>
+
+<p class="blockquot">'O mercy, mercy, man!' says he.</p>
+
+<p class="blockquot">'Ticket!' says I, and then he walked along wi' me into the swamp some
+two or three hundred yards from the railroad.</p>
+
+<p>"I took him into a very thickety place, and made him back up agin a tree
+and put back his arms around it. Then I took one o' his suspenders and
+tied him hard and fast. Then I gagged him with my handkerchief. So far,
+so good.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_124" id="Page_124">[124]</a></span>"Here come the train slowly backing down, the brakesman a swinging
+lanterns, and the passengers all swarming onto the platforms. Poorty
+soon they stopped right opposite us. The conductor began to struggle. I
+poked the pistol in his face and jammed the gag furder into his mouth.
+He saw I meant work and got quiet.</p>
+
+<p>"The passengers was swarming off 'n the train and I saw 'at I must git
+about poorty fast if I was to do anything. I soon hit on a plan. I jist
+stepped back a piece out o' sight o' the conductor and turned my coat,
+which was one o' these two-sided affairs, one side white, t'other brown.
+I turned the white side out. Then I flung away my greasy skull cap and
+took a soft hat out 'n my pocket and put it on. Then I watched my chance
+and mixed in with the passengers who was a hunting for the conductor.</p>
+
+<p class="blockquot">'Strange what's become o' him,' says I to a fat man, who was puffing
+along.</p>
+
+<p class="blockquot">'Dim strange, dim strange,' says the big fellow, in a keen, wheezing
+voice.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, you never saw jist sich hunting as was done for that conductor.
+Everybody slopped around in the swamp till their clothes was as wet and
+muddy as mine. I was monstrous<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_125" id="Page_125">[125]</a></span> active in the search. I hunted
+everywhere 'cepting where the conductor was. Finally he got the gag spit
+out and lordy how he did squeal for help. Everybody rushed to him and
+soon had him free.</p>
+
+<p>"It tickled me awful to hear that conductor explaining the matter. He
+told it something like this:</p>
+
+<p class="blockquot">'Devil of a great big ruffian on hind platform. Asked him for ticket.
+Refused. Tried to put him off. Grabbed me. Smashed my nose. Flung me
+off. Pulled the bell-rope, then lit out on me. Mauled &mdash;&mdash; out o' me.
+Had a pistol two feet long. Made me pray. Heard train a coming. Took me
+to swamp. Tied me and sloped. Lord but I'm glad to see you all!'</p>
+
+<p>"We all went aboard o' the train and I rode to Savanny onmolested. The
+conductor didn't mistrust me. He asked me for my check and I told him
+'at I'd lost it a thrashing round in the bushes a hunting him. That was
+all right.</p>
+
+<p>"When we got to Savanny I couldn't help letting the conductor know me,
+so as I passed down the steps of the car I whispered savagely in his
+ear:</p>
+
+<p class="blockquot">'Ticket! dod blast you!'</p>
+
+<p>"He tried to grab me as I shambled off into<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_126" id="Page_126">[126]</a></span> the crowd, but I knowed the
+ropes. I heard him a shoutin'&mdash;</p>
+
+<p class="blockquot">'There he goes! Ketch him, dern him, ketch him!' But they didn't.</p>
+
+<p>"That conductor's name was Fuller, and I swear, stranger, 'at you look
+jest like him! Gi' me a match, will you, my pipe's out. Thanky. Hope I
+ha'n't bored you. Good bye all."</p>
+
+<p>He shambled out and I never saw him again.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_127" id="Page_127">[127]</a></span></p>
+<p class="center"><span class="huge"><span class="smcap">Hoiden.</span></span></p>
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+
+
+<p>The house was known as Rackenshack throughout the neighborhood for miles
+around. It was a frame structure, originally of sorry workmanship, at
+least thirty years old, and upon which not a cent's worth of repairing
+had been done since first erected, wherefore the name was peculiarly
+appropriate. It was not only old, rickety, paintless, half rotten and
+sadly sunken at one end, but the fencing around the place was broken,
+grown over with weeds, and slanted in as many ways as there were panels.
+The lawn or yard in front of the house had some old cherry trees,
+gnarled and decaying, growing in what had once been straight rows, but
+storms and more insidious vicissitudes had twisted and curled them about
+till they looked as though they had been thrown end foremost at the
+ground hap-hazard. Under and all round these trees young sprouts, from
+the scattered cherry seeds of many years of fruiting, had grown so thick
+that one could with difficulty get through them. A narrow,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_128" id="Page_128">[128]</a></span> well-beaten
+path led from the gate, which lazily lolled on one hinge, up to the
+decayed and sunken porch, in front of which was the well, with its
+lop-eared windlass and dilapidated curb and shed.</p>
+
+<p>A country thoroughfare, one of the old State roads leading westward to a
+ferry on the Wabash river near the village of Attica and eastward to
+either Crawfordsville, Indianapolis or Lafayette. This road was in the
+direct line of emigration, and in the proper seasons long lines of
+covered wagons rolled past, the drivers, a jolly set, hallooing to each
+other and bandying sharp wit and rude sarcasm at the expense of
+Rackenshack. Poor old house, it leered at the passers, with its windows
+askew, and clattered its loose boards and battered shutters in utter and
+complacent defiance of all their jeers!</p>
+
+<p>Rackenshack belonged to Luke Plunkett and Betsy, his sister; the latter
+an old maid beyond all cavil, the former a bachelor of about thirty. The
+lands of the estate were pretty broad, comprising some two thousand
+acres of rich prairie and "river bottom" land, which had been kept in a
+much better state of improvement than the house had. In fact, Luke was
+considered a careful, industrious, frugal farmer. He had large, well
+regulated barns<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_129" id="Page_129">[129]</a></span> and stock sheds and stables&mdash;plenty of fine horses,
+cattle, hogs, sheep and mules, all well fed and cared for, and it was
+generally understood that he had a pretty round deposit in a bank.</p>
+
+<p>Perhaps 'Squire Rube Fink, sometimes called "the Rev. Major Fink" and
+sometimes "Talking Rube," gives the best description of Luke's
+condition, habits and surroundings, that I can offer. It is truthful and
+singularly graphic. He says:</p>
+
+<p>"Luke Plunkett's no fool if he does live at Rack-a-me-shack and 'spect
+the ole rotten tabernacle to fall down on him every time a rooster crows
+close by. That feller's long-headed, he is. To be sure, sartinly, his
+barn's a dern sight better 'n his house, but his head's level, for, d'ye
+see, that's the way to make money. A house don't never make no money for
+a feller&mdash;it's nothin' but dead capital to put money into a fine
+dwellin'. Luke's pilin' his money in the bank. He's been doin' a sharp
+thing in wheat and live stock at Cincinnati, and I guess he knows what
+he's about. He don't keer about what sort o' house he lives in. But I
+tell you that red haired sister o' his'n is lightning. She's what bosses
+the job all round that ole shanty; but she can't red-hair it over Luke<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_130" id="Page_130">[130]</a></span>
+in the farm matters. He has his own way. He's so quiet and peculiar; a
+still, say nothin', bull-dog sort o' man he is."</p>
+
+<p>Indeed, Luke was one of that quiet sort of men who, without ever once
+loudly asserting a right or disputing any word you say, invariably go
+ahead on their own judgment and carry their point in everything.
+Nevertheless, he was a man of fine, generous nature at bottom, a good
+brother and a worthy friend.</p>
+
+<p>But it was with Luke just as it is, more or less, with us all. He
+absorbed into his life the spirit of his surroundings. He grew somewhat
+to resemble Rackenshack in outward appearance. He became slovenly in his
+dress and let his hair and beard grow wild. His naturally handsome face
+gradually took on a sort of good humored ugliness, and his heavy
+shoulders slanted over like the uneven gables of his house. He became an
+inveterate chewer and smoker of tobacco. What time a quid of the weed
+was not in his mouth, the short thick stem of a dark, nicotine-coated
+briar-root pipe took its place there.</p>
+
+<p>Luke was an early riser; therefore it happens that our story properly
+begins on a fine June morning, just before sunrise. The birds seemed to
+suspect that a story was to date<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_131" id="Page_131">[131]</a></span> from that hour, for they were up
+earlier than usual and made a great rustle of wings and a sweet Babel of
+voices in the old cherry trees. There were the oriole, the cat bird, the
+yellow throat, the brown thrush and the red bird, all putting forth at
+once their charmingest efforts. The old cherry trees, knee deep in the
+foliage of their under growing seedlings, gleamed dusky green in the
+early light, as Luke, bareheaded, barefooted and in his "shirt sleeves,"
+as the phrase goes, issued from the front door of Rackenshack, and
+walked down the path across the yard to the gate at the road. Of late he
+had been in the habit of "taking a smoke" the first thing after getting
+up in the morning, and somehow the gate, though off one hinge and having
+doubtful tenure of the other, was his favorite thing to lean upon while
+watching the whiffs of blue smoke slowly float away.</p>
+
+<p>On this particular morning he seemed a little agitated; and, indeed, he
+was vexed more deeply than he had ever before been. Just the preceding
+evening he had learned that a corps of civil engineers were rapidly
+approaching his premises with a line of survey, and that the purpose was
+to locate and build a railway right through the middle of his farm.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_132" id="Page_132">[132]</a></span> To
+Luke the very idea was outrageous. He felt that he could never stand
+such an imposition. His land was his own, and when he wanted it dug up
+and leveled down and a track laid across it he would do it himself. He
+did not want his farm cut in two, his fields disarranged and his fences
+moved, nor did he wish to see his live stock killed by locomotives. The
+truth is he was bitterly opposed to railroads, any how. They were
+innovations. They were enemies to liberty. They brought fashion, and
+spendthrift ways, and speculation, and all that along with them. Other
+folks might have railroads if they wanted them, but they must not bother
+him with them. He could take care of his affairs without any railroads.
+Besides, if he wanted one he could build it. He hung heavily upon the
+gate, thinking the matter over, and would not have bestowed a second
+glance at the carriage that came trundling past if he had not caught the
+starry flash of a pair of blue eyes and a rosy, roguish girl's face
+within. The beauty of that countenance struck the great rough fellow
+like a blow. He stared in a dazed, bewildered way. He took his pipe from
+his mouth and involuntarily tried to hide his great big bare feet behind
+the gate post. He felt a queer, dreamy thrill steal all over<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_133" id="Page_133">[133]</a></span> him. It
+was his first definite impression of feminine beauty. Instantly that
+round, happy, mischievous face, with its dimples and indescribable
+shining lines of half latent mirth, set itself in his heart forever.</p>
+
+<p>The carriage trundled on in the direction of the ferry. Luke followed it
+with his eyes till it disappeared round a turn in the road; then he put
+the pipe to his mouth again and began puffing vigorously, wagging his
+head in a way that indicated great confusion of mind. There are times
+when a glimpse of a face, the sudden half-mastering of a new, grand
+idea, a view of a rare landscape or even a cadence in some new tune,
+will start afresh the long dried up wells of a heart. Something like
+this had happened to Luke.</p>
+
+<p>"Sich a gal! sich a gal!" he murmured from the corner of his mouth
+opposite his pipe stem. "I don't guess I'm a dreamin' now, though I feel
+a right smart like it. I <i>hev</i> dreamed of that 'ere face though, many of
+times. I've seed it in my sleep a thousand times, but I never s'posed
+'at I'd see it shore enough when I'd be awake! Sweetest dreams I ever
+had&mdash;sweetest face God ever made! I wonder who she is?" As if to
+supplement Luke's soliloquy at this point, a cardinal red bird flung
+out<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_134" id="Page_134">[134]</a></span> from the dusky depths of the oldest cherry tree an ecstatic carol,
+and a swallow, swooping down from the clear purple heights, almost
+touched the man's cheek with its shining wings, and the sun lifted its
+flaming face in the east and flooded the fields with gold.</p>
+
+<p>Luke turned slowly toward the old house. The breeze that came up with
+the sun poured through the orchard with a broad, joyous surge, while
+something like blowing of strange winds and streaming of soft sunlight
+made strangely happy the inner world of the smitten Hoosier. His big
+strong heart fluttered mysteriously. He actually took his pipe from his
+lips and broke into a snatch of merry song, that startled Betsy, his
+sister, from her morning nap.</p>
+
+<p>For the time the hated railroad survey was forgotten. The landscape at
+Rackenshack, as if by a turn of the great prisms of nature, suddenly
+took on rainbow hues. The fields flashed with jewels, and the woods, a
+wall of dusky emerald, were wrapped in a roseate mist, stirred into
+dreamy motion by the breeze. A light, grateful fragrance seemed to
+pervade all space, as if flung from the sun to soften and enhance the
+charm of his gift of light and heat. Such a hold did all this take upon
+Luke, and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_135" id="Page_135">[135]</a></span> so utterly abstracted was he, that when breakfast was ready
+Betsy was obliged to remind him of the fact that he had neglected to
+wash his face and hands, and comb his hair and beard&mdash;things absolutely
+prerequisite to eating at her table.</p>
+
+<p>"Forgot it, sure's the world," said Luke; "don't know what ever
+possessed me."</p>
+
+<p>"Maybe you've forgot to turn the cows into the milk stalls, too?" said
+Betsy.</p>
+
+<p>"If I ha'n't I'm a gourd!" and Luke scratched his head distractedly.</p>
+
+<p>"What'd I tell you, Luke Plunkett? It's come at last, O lordy! You're as
+crazy as a June bug all along of smoking that old pipe! Rot the nasty,
+stinking old thing! It's a perfect shame, Luke, for a man to just smoke
+what little brains he's got clean out. You ought to be ashamed of
+yourself, so you ought!"</p>
+
+<p>While she was speaking Betsy got the big wooden washbowl for her
+brother, whereupon he proceeded to make his ablutions in a most
+energetic way, taking up great double handfuls of water and sousing his
+face therein with loud puffings, that enveloped his head in a cloud of
+spray.</p>
+
+<p>When a clean tow linen towel had served its purpose, Luke remarked:</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_136" id="Page_136">[136]</a></span>"Don't know but what I <i>am</i> some'at crazy in good earnest, Betsy, since
+I come to think it all over. I'm r'ally onto it a right smart. What'd
+you think, Betsy, if I'd commence talkin' 'oman to ye?"</p>
+
+<p>"Luke, Luke! are you crazy? Is your mind clean gone out of your poor
+smoky head?"</p>
+
+<p>"That's not much of a answer to my question."</p>
+
+<p>"Well, what <i>do</i> you mean, <i>anyhow</i>?"</p>
+
+<p>"I mean business, that's what!"</p>
+
+<p>"Luke!"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes'm."</p>
+
+<p>"Do try to act sensible now. What is it, Luke? What makes your eyes look
+so strange and dance about so? What do you mean by all this queer talk?"</p>
+
+<p>Luke finished combing, and, going to the table, sat down and was
+proceeding to discuss the fried chicken and coffee without further
+remark, but Betsy was not so easily balked. She, like most red haired
+women, wished her questions to be fully and immediately answered,
+wherefore some indications of a storm began to appear.</p>
+
+<p>Luke smiled a quiet little smile that had hard work getting out through
+his beard.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_137" id="Page_137">[137]</a></span> Betsy trotted her foot under the table. Her hand trembled as
+she poured the coffee&mdash;trembled so violently that she scalded her left
+thumb. It was about time for Luke to speak or have trouble, so, in a
+very gentle voice, he said:</p>
+
+<p>"Well, I saw a gal&mdash;a gal an' her father, I reckon&mdash;go by this mornin'."</p>
+
+<p>"Well, what of it? S'pose there's plenty of girls and their fathers,
+ain't there?" snapped Betsy.</p>
+
+<p>Luke drew a chicken leg through his mouth, laid down the bone, leered
+comically at his sister from under his bushy eyebrows, and said:</p>
+
+<p>"But the gal was purty, Betsy&mdash;purty as a pictur', sweet as a peach,
+juicy an' temptin' as a ripe, red cored watermillion! You can't begin to
+guess how sweet an' nice she did look. My heart just flolloped and
+flopped about, an' it's at it yet!"</p>
+
+<p>"Luke Plunkett, you <i>are</i> crazy! You're just as distracted as a blind
+dog in high rye. Drink a cup of hot coffee, Luke, and go lie down a bit,
+you'll feel better." The spinster was horrified beyond measure. She
+really thought her brother crazy.</p>
+
+<p>The man finished his meal in silence, smiling<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_138" id="Page_138">[138]</a></span> the while more grimly
+than before, after which he took his shot gun and a pan of salt and
+trudged off to a distant field to salt some cattle. He always carried
+his gun with him on such occasions, and not unfrequently brought back a
+brace of partridges or some young squirrels. As he strode along,
+thinking all the time of the girl in the carriage, he suddenly came upon
+a corps of engineers with transit, level, rod and chain, staking out,
+through the centre of a choice field, a line of survey for a railroad.
+In an instant he was like a roaring lion. He glared for a second or so
+at the intruders, then lowering his gun he charged them at a run,
+storming out as he did so:</p>
+
+<p>"What you doin' here, you onery cusses, you! Leave here! Get out!
+Scratch! Sift! Dern yer onery skins, I'll shoot every dog of ye! Git out
+'n here, I say&mdash;out, out!"</p>
+
+<p>The corps stampeded at once. The surveyor seized his transit, the
+leveller his level, the rod man his rod, the axe men and chain men their
+respective implements, and away they went, "lick-to-split, like a passel
+o' scart hogs," as Luke afterwards said, "as fast as they could ever
+wiggle along!"</p>
+
+<p>No wonder they ran, for Luke looked like a demon of destruction. It was
+a wild race for<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_139" id="Page_139">[139]</a></span> the line fence, a full half mile away. The leveler,
+being the hindmost man, rolled over this fence just as a heavy bowlder,
+hurled by Luke, struck the top rail. It was a close shave, a miss of a
+hair's breadth, a marvelous escape. Luke rushed up to the fence and
+glared over at his intended victims. Here he knew he must stop, for he
+doubted the legality of pursuing them beyond the confines of his own
+premises. Somewhat out of breath he leaned on the fence and proceeded to
+swear at the corps individually and collectively, shaking his fists at
+them excitedly, till the appearance of a new man on the scene made him
+start and stare as if looking at a ghost. He was a well dressed,
+gentlemanly appearing person of about the age of forty-five, pale and
+thoughtful&mdash;calm, gray eyed, commanding. Luke recognized him at once as
+the man he had seen in the carriage, and, indeed, the vehicle itself
+stood hard by, with a beautiful, laughing, roguish face looking out of
+one of the windows. The lion in the stalwart farmer was quelled in an
+instant. He felt his legs grow weak. He set his gun by the fence and
+touched his hat to the little lady.</p>
+
+<p>"Your name, I believe, is Luke Plunkett?" said the approaching
+gentleman.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_140" id="Page_140">[140]</a></span>"Yes, sir," said Luke.</p>
+
+<p>"You own two thousand acres of land here?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, sir."</p>
+
+<p>"Your residence is called Rackenshack?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, sir." (Suppressed titter from the carriage.)</p>
+
+<p>"So I thought. Pull back, men (addressing the corps), pull back to where
+you dropped the line and bring it right along. Mr. Plunkett will not
+harm you now."</p>
+
+<p>The corps began to move. Luke fiercely seized his gun; but before he
+could lift it or utter a word, a ten-inch Colt's repeater was thrust
+into his face by the calm gentleman, and a steady hand held it there.</p>
+
+<p>"Mr. Plunkett," said the man, "I am the chief engineer of the &mdash;&mdash;
+Railroad. I am making a location. The laws of this State give me the
+right to go upon your land with my corps and have the survey made. I am
+not to be trifled with. If you offer to cock that gun I'll put six holes
+through you. What do you say, now?"</p>
+
+<p>The voice was that of a cold man of business. There was a coffin in
+every word. The muzzle of the pistol steadily covered Luke's left eye.
+The situation was rigid. Luke hesitated&mdash;his face ashy with anger and
+fear, his<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_141" id="Page_141">[141]</a></span> eyes alternating their glances between the muzzle of the
+pistol and that wonderful shining face at the carriage.</p>
+
+<p>"Shoot him, papa, shoot him! Shoot him!" Sweet as a silver bell rang out
+the girl's voice, more like a ripple of idle song than a murderous
+request, and then a clear, happy laugh went echoing off through the
+woods in which the carriage stood.</p>
+
+<p>Slowly, steadily, Luke let fall the breech of his gun upon the ground
+beside him. The engineer smiled grimly and lowered his pistol, while the
+corps, headed by the surveyor, took up its line of march to the point
+where work had been so suddenly left off.</p>
+
+<p>The young lady clapped her tiny white hands for joy.</p>
+
+<p>A big black woodpecker began to cackle in a tree hard by.</p>
+
+<p>Luke felt like a man in a dream.</p>
+
+<p>The whole adventure, so far, had been clothed in most unreal seeming.</p>
+
+<p>It can hardly be told how, by rapid transitions from one thing to
+another in his talk, the engineer drew Luke's mind away from the late
+difficulty and gradually aroused in him a kindly feeling. In less than
+ten minutes the two men were sitting side by side on a log,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_142" id="Page_142">[142]</a></span> smoking
+cigars from the engineer's pouch and chatting calmly, amicably.</p>
+
+<p>Luke's eyes often rested steadily fixed in the direction of the
+carriage. Through the thin veil of tobacco smoke the face of the young
+girl seemed to the farmer angelic in its beauty. All around the sweets
+of summer rose and fell, and drifted like scarcely visible shining
+mists, fraught with the spice of leaf and perfume of blossom, agitated
+by swells of tricksy wind, going on and on to the mysterious goal of the
+season.</p>
+
+<p>The two men talked on until the corps had pushed the line of survey far
+past them into the cool, shady deeps of the woods, whence their voices
+came back fainter and fainter every moment. At length the engineer
+arose, and stretching out his hand to Luke, said:</p>
+
+<p>"Mr. Plunkett, I'm sure I'll be able to serve you some time; let us be
+friends. I shall be in this vicinity most of the time till the road is
+built. No doubt I can show a way to profit by the construction of a
+railroad across your land. If you are sharp it will make your fortune. I
+like your independent way, sir, and hope to know you better. Here is my
+card."</p>
+
+<p>Luke took the bit of pasteboard without saying a word. They shook hands
+and the engineer got into his carriage.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_143" id="Page_143">[143]</a></span>"Here's my card, too, Mr. Plunkett," cried the girl. She said something
+more, but the horses were made to plunge rapidly away, and the words
+were lost; but the flash of a white jewelled hand caught Luke's eye as a
+delicately tinted card came fluttering towards him. He sprang and seized
+it. If a bag of diamonds had been flung at his feet he could not have
+been more excited. His hands trembled. All the incidents of the only
+fairy tale he had ever read came at once into his mind. He stood with
+his feet turned in, like some great awkward boy, a bashful, shame-faced
+look lurking about his mouth and eyes. He filled his pipe and lighted it
+from the stump of his cigar with nervous eagerness. A squirrel came down
+to the lowest limbs of a beech tree hard by and barked at him, but he
+did not notice it. He read the names on the cards:</p>
+
+<p>
+<span style="margin-left: 2em;">"<i>Elliot Pearl, C. E.</i>"</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 3.5em;">"<i>Hoiden Pearl.</i>"</span><br />
+</p>
+
+<p>The first printed in small capitals, the second written in a delicate,
+rather cramped feminine hand. He stood for a long time dreamily employed
+in turning these bits of paper over and over. His thoughts were so vague
+in outline and so dim in filling up that they cannot be reproduced. They
+slipped away on the summer<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_144" id="Page_144">[144]</a></span> air, like little puffs of perfume, and were
+lost, to be found by many and many a one in the ineffable places of
+dreamland. Finally, shaking himself as if to break the charm that held
+him in its meshes, he took up his gun and slowly made his way homeward.
+All along his walk he kept smiling to himself and talking aloud, but his
+words were such that it would be sacrilege to repeat them now. Let them
+hover about in the sunlight of summer, where he uttered them, as things
+too delicate to be pressed between the lids of a book.</p>
+
+<p>Betsy had trouble with Luke for some days after this. He lay about the
+house, saying little, eating little, giving little attention to the many
+tenants who worked his estate. He was in good health, was not in trouble
+(so he said to his sister), but he did not care to be bothered with
+business. He was tired and would rest awhile. "He smoked pretty near all
+the time," as Betsy declared. But not a hint fell from his lips as to
+what might be running in his mind.</p>
+
+<p>So the days slipped past till July hung golden mists on the horizon and
+filled the woods with that rare stillness and dusky slumbrousness that
+follows the maturing of the foliage and the coming on of fruit. The
+cherry trees at Rackenshack had grown ragged and dull, and the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_145" id="Page_145">[145]</a></span> birds,
+excepting a few swallows wheeling about the old chimney tops, had all
+flown away to the woods and fields. The wheat had been cut and stacked,
+the corn had received its last ploughing. Still Luke hung about the
+house annoying Betsy with his pipe and his utter carelessness. That he
+was "distracted" Betsy did not for a moment doubt. She used every means
+her small stock of wit could invent to urge him out of his singular
+mood, but without avail. He took to the few old novels he could find
+about the house, but sometimes he would gaze blankly at a single
+paragraph for a whole hour.</p>
+
+<p>One morning as he lay on the porch, his head resting upon the back of a
+chair, reading, or pretending to read an odd volume of "The Scottish
+Chiefs," a little boy, 'Squire Brown's son, came to bring home a
+monkey-wrench his father had borrowed some time before. The boy was a
+bright, rattle-box, say-everything, pop-eyed sort of child, and was not
+long telling all the news of the neighborhood. Luke gave little
+attention to what he was saying, till at length he let fall something
+about a young lady&mdash;a fine, rich young lady, staying at Judge
+Barnett's&mdash;a young lady who could outrun him, out jump him, beat him
+playing marbles<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_146" id="Page_146">[146]</a></span> and ball, who could climb away up in the June apple
+tree, who could ride a colt bareback, who could beat Jim Barnett
+shooting at a mark, who could, in fact, do a half a hundred things to
+perfection that strict persons would think a young lady should never do
+at all, but which seemed to make a heroine of her in the narrator's
+boyish view.</p>
+
+<p>"What's the gal's name?" queried Luke in a slow, lazy way, but his eyes
+shot a gleam of hope.</p>
+
+<p>"Hoidy Pearl," replied the lad.</p>
+
+<p>Hoiden Pearl! That name had been woven into every sound that had reached
+Luke's ears for days and nights and nights together, and now, like a
+sweet tune nearly mastered, it took a deeper, tenderer meaning as the
+boy pronounced it in his childish way.</p>
+
+<p>"Hoidy Pearl is her name," the lad continued. "She's come to stay at the
+Judge's all summer till the new railroad's finished. Her father's the
+boss of the road. She's jest the funniest girl, o-o-e! And she likes me,
+too!"</p>
+
+<p>Luke raised himself to a sitting posture and looked at the boy so
+earnestly that he drew back a pace or two as if afraid.</p>
+
+<p>"Boy, you're not lyin', are ye?" said the man in a low, earnest tone.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_147" id="Page_147">[147]</a></span>"No I'm not, neither," was the quick reply.</p>
+
+<p>Luke got up, flung aside his book and strolled off into the woods.
+Wandering there in the cool, silent places, he dreamed his dream. For
+hours he sat by a little spring stream in the dense shadow of a big
+cotton-wood tree. The birds congregated about him, and chirped and sang;
+the squirrels came out chattering and frisking from branch to branch;
+but he gave them no look of recognition&mdash;he saw them not, heard them
+not. The birds might have lit upon his head and the squirrels might have
+run in and out of his pockets with impunity. He smoked all the time,
+refilling and relighting his pipe whenever it burned out. He did not
+know how much he was smoking, nor that he was smoking at all. A bright
+face set in a mass of yellow curls, a wee white hand all spangled with
+jewels, a voice sweeter than any bird's, a name&mdash;Hoiden Pearl&mdash;these
+rang, and danced, and echoed, and shone in the recesses of his brain and
+heart to the exclusion of all else. He was trying to think, but he could
+not. He wanted to mature a plan, but not even an outline could find room
+in his head. It was full. Strange, indeed, it may seem, that a rough
+farmer of Luke's age should thus fall into the ways of the imaginative,
+sentimental<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_148" id="Page_148">[148]</a></span> stripling; but, after all, the fit must come on some time
+in life. No doubt it goes harder with some constitutions than with
+others. Luke may have been unwittingly strongly predisposed that way.
+Neither the exterior of a man nor his surroundings will do to judge him
+by. Nature is that mysterious in all her ways. Luke talked aloud,
+sometimes gesticulating in a quiet way.</p>
+
+<p>"I <i>must</i> see the gal&mdash;I <i>will</i> see the gal," he muttered at last. "It's
+no use talkin', I jist will see her!"</p>
+
+<p>Suddenly a light broke from his face. He smiled like one who has victory
+in his grasp&mdash;like an editor who has an idea, like a reviewer who has
+found some bad verse. He got up immediately, went back to the barn,
+hitched a horse to a small road wagon and drove to town. There he spent
+time and money with a merchant tailor and other vendors of clothing. He
+was very fastidious in his selection. Nothing but the finest would do
+him. A few days after this he brought home a trunk full of princely
+raiment&mdash;broad cloth and fine linen. Betsy was struck dumb with
+amazement when the trunk was opened. A dream of such costly things, such
+reckless extravagance, would have driven her mad. Silent, open-eyed,
+wondering,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_149" id="Page_149">[149]</a></span> she came in and stood behind Luke while he was unpacking. He
+looked up presently and saw her. His face flushed violently, and in a
+half-whining, half-ashamed tone he muttered:</p>
+
+<p>"Now, Betsy, you jest git out'n here faster'n ye come in, for I'm not
+goin' to stan' no foolin' at all, now. These 'ere's my clothes and paid
+for out'n my money, an' I'm the jedge of what I need. I ha'n't had any
+good duds for a long time, and I'm tired o' lookin' like a scarecrow
+made out'n a salt bag. I've been thinkin' for a long time I'd git these
+'ere things, an' now I've got'm. You kin git you some if ye like, but I
+don't want ye a standin' round here gawpin' at me on 'count o' my
+clothes; so you go off an' mind yer own affairs. It's no great sight to
+see some shirts, an' coats, and pants, an' collars, an' vests, an' sich
+like, is it?"</p>
+
+<p>Before this speech was finished Betsy had backed out of the room and
+closed the door. As she did so she let go a sigh that came back to Luke
+like a Parthian arrow; but it happened just then that he was holding up
+in front of him a buff linen vest which kept the missile from his heart.</p>
+
+<p>He dressed himself with great care, and an hour later he slipped out of
+the house unseen, and took his way towards the rather pretentious<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_150" id="Page_150">[150]</a></span>
+residence of Judge Barnett, the gables of which, a mile away, gleamed
+between rows of Lombardy poplars. The Judge was one of those half
+cultivated men who, in every country neighborhood, pass for prodigies of
+learning and ability. He was the autocrat of the county in political and
+social affairs&mdash;one of those men who really know a great deal, but who
+arrogate more. He got his title from having been County Commissioner
+when the court house was building. Some said he made money out of the
+transaction, but our story is silent there.</p>
+
+<p>It would have been an interesting study for a philosopher to have
+watched Luke throughout the singular ramble he took that morning. It
+would have been such a manifest revelation of the state of the fellow's
+feelings. It would have minutely disclosed, and more eloquently than any
+verbal confession, the rise and fall, the ebb and flow, the alternating
+strength and weakness of his purpose, and the will behind it. Then, too,
+it would have let fall delightful hints of the unselfishness of his new
+and all-engrossing passion, and of the charming simplicity and sincerity
+of his great rugged nature at its inner core. At first he struck out
+boldly a direct line to Judge Barnett's residence, his<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_151" id="Page_151">[151]</a></span> face beaming
+with the light of settled happiness, but as he neared the pleasant
+grounds surrounding the house he began to discover some trepidation. His
+gait wavered, the expression of his face shifted with each step, and
+soon his course was indeterminate&mdash;a fitful sauntering from this place
+to that&mdash;a tricksy, uneven flight, like that of a lazy butterfly, if one
+may indulge the comparison&mdash;a meandering in and out among the trees of a
+small walnut grove&mdash;a strolling here and there, now along the verge of a
+well set old orchard, now down the low hedge behind the garden, and anon
+leaning over the board fence that inclosed the Judge's ample barn and
+stable lot; he gazed wistfully, half comically, in the direction of the
+upper windows of the farm house. It was one of those peculiarly yellow
+days of summer, when everything swims in a golden mist. The blue birds
+floated aimlessly about from stake to stake of the fences; the wind,
+felt only in jerky puffs, blew no particular way, and as idly and as
+eccentrically as any blue bird, and in full accord with the fitful will
+of the wind, Luke drifted through the sheen of summer all round Barnett
+Place. He lazed about, humming a tune, and, for a wonder, not
+smoking&mdash;half restless, half contented, looking<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_152" id="Page_152">[152]</a></span> for something, scarcely
+expecting anything. When once a great rough man does get into a childish
+way, he is a child of which ordinary children would be ashamed, and just
+then Luke, the big bashful fellow, was an instance strikingly in point.
+Occasionally he talked half aloud to himself. Once, while lounging on
+the orchard fence, gazing down between the long rows of russet and
+pippin trees, he said dreamily,</p>
+
+<p>"I <i>must</i> see her. I can't go back 'ithout seein' her." It so chanced
+that just then a shower of blackbirds fell upon the orchard, covering
+the trees and the ground, flying over and over each other, twittering
+and whistling as only blackbirds can. Their wings smote together with a
+tender rustling sound like that of a spring wind in young foliage, or of
+a thousand lovers whispering together by moonlight. Luke watched them a
+long while, a doleful shade gathering in his face. "The little things
+loves each other," he muttered; "everything loves something; an' jest
+dern my lights ef I don't love the gal, an' I'm boun' to see her!"
+Seemingly nerved by sudden resolution, he climbed over the fence and
+started at a slashing pace across the orchard towards the house, scaring
+all the birds into an ecstasy<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_153" id="Page_153">[153]</a></span> of flight, so that they dashed themselves
+against the foliage of the apple trees, making it rustle and sway as if
+blown on by a strong wind. He did not keep on, however. His resolution
+seemed to burn out about midway the orchard. He began to drift around
+again, his pace becoming slower and slower. His shoulders drooped
+forward as if burdened with a great load, his eyes turned restlessly
+from side to aide.</p>
+
+<p>"I jest can't do it!" he murmured&mdash;"I jest can't do it, an' I mought as
+well go back!" There was a petulant ring to his voice&mdash;a nervous,
+worried tone, that had despair in it.</p>
+
+<p>Out of a June apple tree right over his head fell a sweet, silvery, half
+child's, half woman's voice, that thrilled him through every fibre to
+the marrow of his bones.</p>
+
+<p>"What's the matter, Goosey? What have you lost! What are you hunting
+for? Want a good apple?"</p>
+
+<p>Luke looked up just in time to catch squarely on his nose a fine, ripe
+June apple, and through a mist of juice and a sheeny curtain of leaves
+he saw the lovely face he had come to look for. A thump on the nose from
+an apple, no matter if it is ripe and soft, is a little embarrassing,
+and it only makes it more so<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_154" id="Page_154">[154]</a></span> when the racy wine of the fruit flies into
+one's eyes and all over one's new clothes. But there are moments of
+supreme bliss when such a mishap passes unnoticed. Luke felt as if the
+blow had been the touch of a magician conjuring up a scene that held him
+rapt and speechless.</p>
+
+<p>"O, my! I didn't go to hit you! Please excuse me, sir&mdash;do. I thought
+you'd catch it in your hands."</p>
+
+<p>She came lightly down from the tree, descending like a bird, easily,
+gracefully, as if she had been born to climb. She murmured many
+apologies, but the genius of fun danced in her saucy, almost impertinent
+eyes, belying her regretful words. Luke looked down at her dazed and
+speechless. She, however, was full of prattle&mdash;half childish, half
+womanly, half serious, half bantering&mdash;her eyes upturned to his, her
+voice a very bird's in melody. In the more innocent sense of the word
+she looked like her name, Hoiden. Nothing unchaste or indelicate about
+her appearance; just a sort of want of restraint; a freedom that
+amounted to an utter lack of responsibility to the ordinary claims and
+dictates of propriety. A close, trained, intelligent observer would have
+seen at once that she was wilful, spoiled,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_155" id="Page_155">[155]</a></span> unbridled, but not bad, not
+in the least vicious; really innocent and full of good impulses. She was
+beautiful, too&mdash;wonderfully beautiful&mdash;just on the hither side of
+womanhood, plump, budding, bewitching. How she did it can never be
+known, but she soon had Luke racing with her all over the orchard. They
+climbed trees together, they scrambled for the same apple, they laughed,
+and shouted, and played till the horn at the farmhouse called the field
+hands to dinner. They parted then, as children part, promising to meet
+again the next day. The girl's cheeks were rosy with exercise, so were
+Luke's.</p>
+
+<p>How strange! Day after day that great, bearded, almost middle-aged,
+uncouth farmer went and played slave to that chit of a girl, doing
+whatever ridiculous or childish thing she proposed, caring for nothing,
+asking for nothing but to be with her, listen to her voice and feast his
+eyes upon her beauty. He gladly bore everything she heaped upon him, and
+to be called "Goosey" by her was to him inexpressibly charming.</p>
+
+<p>Betsy's womanly nature was not to be deceived. She soon comprehended
+all; but she dared not mention the subject to Luke. He was in no mood to
+be opposed. So he went on&mdash;and Betsy sighed.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_156" id="Page_156">[156]</a></span>The summer softened into autumn. The maple leaves reddened. The long
+grass turned brown and lolled over. A softness and tenderness lurked in
+the deep blue sky, and the air had a sharp racy fragrance from ripe
+fruit and grain. Meantime the railroad had been pushed with amazing
+rapidity nearly to completion. Every day long construction trains went
+crashing-across Luke's farm. Passenger coaches were to be put on in a
+few days. Luke was the very picture of happiness. He seemed to grow
+younger every day. His worldly prospects, too, were flattering. A
+station had been located on his land, around which a town had already
+begun to spring up. The vast value of Luke's timber, walnut and oak, was
+just beginning to appear; indeed, immense wealth lay in his hands. But
+his happiness was of a deeper and purer sort than that generated by
+simple pecuniary prosperity. Hoiden Pearl was in the focus of all his
+thoughts; her face lighted his dreams, her voice made the music that
+charmed him into a wonderland of bliss. He said little about her, even
+to Betsy, but it needed no sharpness of sight to discover from his face
+what was going on in his heart. He had even forgotten his pipe. He had
+not smoked since that first day in the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_157" id="Page_157">[157]</a></span> orchard. He had straightened up
+and looked a span taller.</p>
+
+<p>The girl did not seem to dream of any tender attachment on Luke's part.
+In fact he gave her no cause for it. He fed on his love inwardly and
+never thought of telling it. To be with her was enough. It satisfied all
+his wants. She was frank and free with him, but tyrannized over
+him&mdash;ordered him about like a servant, scolded him, flattered him,
+pouted at him, smiled on him, indeed kept him crazy with rapture all the
+time. Once only she became confidentially communicative. It was one day,
+sitting on an old mossy log in the Judge's woodland pasture, she told
+him the story of her past life. How thrillingly beautiful her face
+became as it sobered down with the history of early orphanage! Her
+father had died first; then her mother, who left her four years old in
+the care of Mr. Pearl, her paternal uncle, with whom she had ever since
+been, going from place to place, as the calls of his nomadic profession
+made it necessary, from survey to survey, from this State to that,
+seeing all sorts of people, and receiving her education in small,
+detached parcels. The story was a sad, unsatisfactory one, breathing
+neglect, yet full of a certain kind of sprightliness,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_158" id="Page_158">[158]</a></span> and touched here
+and there with the fascination of true romance.</p>
+
+<p>It is hard to say when Luke would have awakened from his tender trance
+to the strong reality of love. He was too contented for
+self-questioning, and no act or word of Hoiden's invited him to consider
+what he was doing or whither he was drifting.</p>
+
+<p>It was well for Luke and the girl, too, that it was a sparsely settled
+neighborhood, for evil tongues might have made much of their constant
+companionship and childish behavior.</p>
+
+<p>As for the Judge, after it was all over he admitted that he felt some
+qualms of conscience about allowing such unlimited intimacy to go on,
+but he excused himself by saying that the girl, when confined to the
+house, was such an unmitigated nuisance that he was glad for some one to
+monopolize her company.</p>
+
+<p>"Why," said he, in his peculiar way, "she set the whole house by the
+ears. She made more clatter and racket than a four-horse Pennsylvania
+wagon coming down a rocky hill. She would go from garret to cellar like
+a whirlwind and twist things wrong side out as she went&mdash;&mdash;she was a
+tart!"</p>
+
+<p>But at length, toward the middle of autumn the end came. Luke had
+business with some<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_159" id="Page_159">[159]</a></span> hog-buyers in Cincinnati, whither he was gone
+several days. Meantime the railroad was completed, and Mr. Pearl came to
+the Judge's early one morning and called for Hoiden. His business with
+his employers was ended, and he had just finished an arrangement that
+had long been on foot to go to one of the South American States and take
+charge of a vast engineering scheme there. The girl was delighted. Such
+a prospect of travel and adventure was enough to set one of her
+temperament wild with enthusiasm. She flew to packing her trunk, her
+face radiant with joy.</p>
+
+<p>Only an hour later Mr. Pearl and Hoiden stood at the new station on
+Luke's land, waiting for the east-going train. Mr. Pearl happened to
+think of a business message he wished to leave for Luke, so he went into
+the depôt building and wrote it. When Hoiden saw the letter was for Luke
+she begged leave to put in a few words of postscript, and she had her
+way.</p>
+
+<p>The train came and the man and girl were whirled away to New York, and
+thence they took ship for South America, never to return.</p>
+
+<p>Next day Luke came back, bringing with him a beautifully carved mahogany
+box mounted in silver. Betsy met him at the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_160" id="Page_160">[160]</a></span> door, and, woman-like, told
+the story of Hoiden's departure almost at the first breath.</p>
+
+<p>"Gone all the way to South America," she added, after premising that she
+would never return.</p>
+
+<p>A peculiarly grim, grayish smile mantled the face of Luke. He swallowed
+a time or two before he could speak.</p>
+
+<p>"Come now, sis" (he always said "sis" when he felt somewhat at Betsy's
+mercy), "come now, sis, don't try to fool me. I'm goin' right over to
+see the gal now, an' I've got what'll tickle her awfully right here in
+this 'ere box."</p>
+
+<p>Out in the yard the blue jays and woodpeckers were quarrelling over the
+late apples heaped up by the cider mill. The sky was clear, but the
+sunlight, coming through a smoky atmosphere, was pale, like the smile of
+a sick man. The wind of autumn ran steadily through the shrubby weedy
+lawn with a sigh that had in it the very essence of sadness.</p>
+
+<p>"I tell you, Luke, I'm not trying to fool you; they've gone clean to
+South America to stay always," reiterated Betsy.</p>
+
+<p>Luke gazed for a moment steadily into his sister's eyes, as if looking
+for a sign. Slowly his stalwart body and muscular limbs relaxed<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_161" id="Page_161">[161]</a></span> and
+collapsed. The box fell to the floor with a crash, where it burst,
+letting roll out great hoops of gold and starry rings and pins&mdash;a gold
+watch and chain, a beautiful gold pen and pencil case, and trinkets and
+gew-gaw things almost innumerable. They must have cost the full profits
+of his business trip.</p>
+
+<p>Luke staggered into a chair. Betsy just then happened to think of the
+letter that had been left for her brother. This she fetched and handed
+to him. It was the note of business from Mr. Pearl. There was a
+postscript in a different hand:</p>
+
+<p>
+<span style="margin-left: 2em;">"<i>Good-bye, Goosey!</i></span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 8em;"><i>Hoidy Pearl.</i>"</span><br />
+</p>
+
+<p>That was all. Luke is more morose and petulant than he used to be. He is
+decaying about apace with Rackenshack, and he smokes constantly. He is
+vastly wealthy and unmarried.</p>
+
+<p>Betsy is quiet and kind. Up stairs in her chest is hidden the mahogany
+coffer full of golden testimonials of her brother's days of happiness
+and the one dark hour of his despair!</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_162" id="Page_162">[162]</a></span></p>
+<p class="center"><span class="huge"><span class="smcap">The Pedagogue.</span></span></p>
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+
+
+<p>He was one of the farmer princes of Hoosierdom, a man of more than
+average education, a fluent talker and ready with a story. Knowing that
+I was looking up reminiscences of Hoosier life and specimens of Hoosier
+character, he volunteered one evening to give me the following, vouching
+for the truth of it. Here it is, as I "short-handed" it from his own
+lips. I omit quotation marks.</p>
+
+<p>The study of one's past life is not unlike the study of geology. If the
+presence of the remains of extinct species of animals and vegetables in
+the ancient rocks calls up in one's mind a host of speculative thoughts
+touching the progress of creation, so, as we cut with the pick of
+retrospection through the strata of bygone days, do the remains of
+departed things, constantly turning up, put one into his studying cap to
+puzzle over specimens fully as curious and interesting in their way as
+the <i>cephalaspis</i>.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_163" id="Page_163">[163]</a></span>The first stratum of my intellectual formation contains most
+conspicuously the remains of dog-eared spelling books, a score or more
+of them by different names, among which the <i>Elementary</i> of Webster is
+the best preserved and most clearly defined. It was finding an old,
+yellow, badly thumbed and dirt soiled copy of Webster's spelling book in
+the bottom of an old chest of odds and ends, on the fly-leaf of which
+book was written "T. Blodgett," that lately brightened my memory of the
+things I am about to tell you.</p>
+
+<p>The old time pedagogue is a thing of the past&mdash;<i>pars temporis acti</i> is
+the Latin of it, may be, but I'm not sure&mdash;I'm rusty in the Latin now.
+When I quit school I could read it a good deal. But of the pedagogue.
+The twenty years since he ceased to flourish seem, on reflection, like
+an age&mdash;an <i>æon</i>, as the Greeks would say. I never did know much Greek.
+I got most of my education from pedagogues of the old sort. They kept
+pouring it on to me till it soaked in. That's the way I got it. I have
+had corns and bunions on my back for not being sufficiently porous to
+absorb the multiplication table rapidly enough to suit the whim of one
+of those learned tyrants. But the pedagogue became extinct and passed
+into the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_164" id="Page_164">[164]</a></span> fossil state some twenty years ago, when free schools took
+good hold. He scampered away when he heard the whistle of the steam
+engine along iron highways and the cry of small boys on the streets of
+the towns hawking the daily papers. He could live nowhere within the
+pale of innovation. He was born an exemplar of rigidity. The very name
+of reform was hateful to him. We older fellows remember him well, but to
+the younger fry he is not even a fossil, he is a myth. Of course
+pedagogues differed slightly in the matter of particular disposition and
+real character, but in a <i>general way</i> they had a close family
+resemblance.</p>
+
+<p>I purpose to write of one Blodgett&mdash;T. Blodgett, as it was written in
+the fly-leaf of Webster's Elementary&mdash;and he was an extraordinary
+specimen of the genus pedagogue. But before I introduce him, let me, by
+way of preface and prelude, give you a view of the salients of the
+history of the days when pole-ribbed school houses&mdash;log cabin school
+houses&mdash;flourished, with each a pedagogue for supreme, "unquestioned and
+unquestionable" despot.</p>
+
+<p>In those fine days boys from five to fifteen years of age wore tow linen
+pants held up by suspenders (often made of tow strings), and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_165" id="Page_165">[165]</a></span> having at
+each side pockets that reached down to about the wearer's knees. These
+pockets held as much as a moderate sized bushel basket will now. The
+girls, big and little, wore mere tow linen slips, that hung loose from
+the shoulders. Democracy, pure and undefiled, flourished like a green
+buckeye tree. Society was in about the same condition as a boy is when
+his voice is changing. You know when a boy's voice is changing if you
+hear him in another room getting his lesson by saying it over aloud, you
+think there's about fourteen girls, two old men, and a dog barking in
+the room. Society was much the same. The elements of everything were in
+it, but not developed and separated yet. Women rode behind their
+husbands on the same horse, occasionally reaching round in the man's lap
+to feel if the baby was properly fixed. Sometimes the girls rode to
+singing school behind their sweethearts. At such times the horses always
+kicked up, and, of course, the girls had to hold on. The boys liked the
+holding on part. Young men went courting always on Saturday night. The
+girls wouldn't suffer any hugging before eleven o'clock&mdash;unless the old
+folk were remarkably early to bed. Candles were scarce in those days, so
+that billing and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_166" id="Page_166">[166]</a></span> cooing was done by very dim fire-light. <i>O, le bon
+temps!</i> I've forgot whether that's Latin or French.</p>
+
+<p>The pedagogue was the intellectual and moral centre of the neighborhood.
+He was of higher authority, even in the law, than the Justice of the
+Peace. He was consulted on all subjects, and, as a rule, his decisions
+were final, and went upon the people's record as law. His jurisdiction
+was unlimited, as to subject matter or amount, and, as to the person,
+was unquestioned. Of course his territory was bounded by the
+circumstances of each particular case.</p>
+
+<p>I just now recollect quite a number of pedagogues who in turn ruled me
+in my youthful days. Of one of them I never think without feeling a
+strange sadness steal over me. He was a young fellow whom to know was to
+love; pale, delicate, tender-hearted. He taught us two terms and we all
+thought him the best teacher in the world. He was so kind to us, so
+gentle and mild-voiced, so prone to pat us on our heads and encourage
+us. Some of the old people found fault with him because, as they
+alleged, he did not whip us enough, but we saw no force in the
+objection. Well, he took a cough and began to fail. He dismissed<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_167" id="Page_167">[167]</a></span> us one
+fine May evening and we saw him no more alive. We all followed him, in a
+solemn line, to his grave, and for a long time thereafter we never spoke
+of him except in a low, sad whisper. As for me, till long afterwards,
+the hushed wonder of his white face haunted my dreams. I have now in my
+possession a little bead money-purse he gave me.</p>
+
+<p>Blodgett came next, and here my story properly begins. Blodgett&mdash;who,
+having once seen him, could ever forget Blodgett? Not I. He was too
+marked a man to ever wholly fade from memory. He was, as I have said, a
+perfect type of his kind, and his kind was such as should not be sneered
+at. He was one of the humble pioneers of American letters. He was a
+character of which our national history must take account. He was one of
+the vital forces of our earlier national growth. He was in love with
+learning. He considered the matter of imparting knowledge a mere
+question of effort, in which the physical element preponderated. If he
+couldn't talk or read it into one he took a stick and mauled it into
+him. This mauling method, though somewhat distasteful to the subject,
+always had a charming result&mdash;red eyes, a few blubbers and a good
+lesson. The technical name of this method<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_168" id="Page_168">[168]</a></span> was "<i>Warming the Jacket</i>."
+It always seemed to me that the peewee birds sang very dolefully after I
+had had my jacket warmed. I recollect my floggings at school with so
+much aversion that I do think, if a teacher should whale one of my
+little ruddy-faced boys, I'd spread his (the teacher's) nose over his
+face as thin as a rabbit skin! I'd run both his eyes into one and chew
+his ears off close to his head, sir! Forgive my earnestness, but I can't
+stand flogging in schools. It's brutal.</p>
+
+<p>From the first day that Blodgett came circulating his school "articles"
+among us, we took to him by common consent as a wonderfully learned man.
+I think his strong, wise looking face, and reserved, pompous manners,
+had much to do with making this impression. We believed in him fully,
+and for a long time gave him unfaltering loyalty. As for me, I never
+have wholly withdrawn my allegiance. I look back, even now, and admire
+him. I sigh, thinking of the merry days when he flourished. I solemnly
+avow my faith in progress. I know the world advances every day, still I
+doubt if men and women are more worthy now than they were in the time of
+the pedagogues. I don't know but what, after all, I am somewhat of a
+fogy. Any how, I will not,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_169" id="Page_169">[169]</a></span> for the sake of pleasing your literary
+<i>swallows</i>&mdash;your eclectics of to-day&mdash;turn in and berate my dear old
+Blodgett. In his day men could not and did not skim the surface of
+things like swallows on a mill pond. They <i>dived</i>, and got what they did
+get from the bottom, and by honest labor. Whenever one of your
+silk-winged swallows skims past me and whispers progress, I cannot help
+thinking of Heyne, Jean Paul and&mdash;Blodgett. Somehow genius and poverty
+are great cronies. It used to be more so than it is now. Blodgett was a
+genius, and, consequently, poor. He was virtuous, and, of course, happy.
+He was a Democrat and a Hard Shell Baptist, and he might never have
+swerved from the path of rectitude, even to the extent of a hair's
+breadth, if it had not been for the coming of a not over scrupulous
+rival into the neighboring village. But I must not hasten. A little more
+and I would have blurted out the whole nub of my story. Bear with me. I
+have nothing of the "lightning calculator" in me. I must take my time.</p>
+
+<p>It has been agreed that biography must include somewhat of physical
+portraiture. "What sort of looking man was Blodgett?" I will tell you as
+nearly as I can, but bear in mind it is a long time since I saw him,
+and, in<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_170" id="Page_170">[170]</a></span> the meanwhile, the world has been so washed, and combed, and
+trimmed, and pearl powdered, that one can scarcely be sure he recollects
+things rightly. The seedy dandy who teaches the free schools of to-day,
+is, no doubt, all right as things go; but then the way they go&mdash;that's
+it! As for finding some one of these dapper, umbrella-lugging,
+green-spectacled, cadaverous teachers to compare with our burly
+Blodgett, the thing is preposterous.</p>
+
+<p>Our pedagogue, when he first came among us, was, as nearly as I can
+judge, about forty, and a bachelor, tall, raw-boned, lean-faced, and
+muscular&mdash;a man of many words, and big ones, but not over prone to seek
+audience of the world. To me, a boy of twelve, he appeared somewhat
+awful, especially when plying the beech rod for the benefit of a future
+man, and I do still think that something harder than mere sternness
+slept or woke in and around the lines of his strong, flat jaws&mdash;that
+something sharper than acid shrewdness lurked in his light gray eyes,
+and that surely a more powerful expression than ordinary brute obstinacy
+lingered about his firm mouth and smoothly shaven chin.</p>
+
+<p>Blodgett had a mighty body and a mighty will, joined with a
+self-appreciation only bounded<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_171" id="Page_171">[171]</a></span> by his power to generate it. This, added
+to the deep deference with which he was approached by everybody, made
+him not a little arrogant and despotic&mdash;though, doubtless, he was less
+so than most men, under like circumstances, would have been. His years
+sat lightly on him. His step was youthful though slouching, his raven
+hair was bright and wavy, his skin had the tinge of vigorous health, and
+in truth he was not far from handsome. His voice was nasal, but
+pleasantly so.</p>
+
+<p>I cannot hope to give you more than a faint idea of the absolute power
+vested in Blodgett by the men, women and children of the school
+vicinage; suffice it to say that his view was a <i>sine qua non</i> to every
+neighborhood opinion, his words the basis of neighborhood action in all
+matters of public interest. If he pronounced the parson's last sermon a
+failure, at once the entire church agreed in condemning it, not only as
+a failure but a consummate blunder. If he hinted that a certain new
+comer impressed him unfavorably, the nincompoop was summarily kicked out
+of society. In fact, in the pithy phraseology of these latter days, "it
+was dangerous to be safe" about where he lived.</p>
+
+<p>Thus, for a long time, Blodgett ruled with<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_172" id="Page_172">[172]</a></span> an iron hand his little
+world, with no one to dream of disputing his right or of doubting his
+capacity, till at length fate let fall a bit of romance into the strong
+but placid stream of his life, and tinged it all with rose color. He
+wrote some poetry, but it is obsolete&mdash;that is, it is not now in
+existence. While this streak of romance lasted he looked, for all the
+world, like a gilt-edged mathematical problem drawn on rawhide.</p>
+
+<p>It was a great event in our neighborhood when Miss Grace Holland, a
+yellow-haired, blue-eyed, very handsome and well educated young lady
+from Louisville, Kentucky, came to spend the summer with Parson Holland,
+our preacher, and the young woman's uncle. Kentucky girls are all sweet.
+My wife was a Kentucky girl. All the young men fell in love with Miss
+Holland right away, but it was of no use to them. Blodgett, in the
+language of your fast youngsters, "shied his castor into the ring," and
+what was there left for the others but to stand by and see the glory of
+the pedagogue during the season of his wooing? It would have done your
+eyes good to see the pedagogue "slick himself up" each Saturday evening
+preparatory to visiting the parson's. He went into the details of the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_173" id="Page_173">[173]</a></span>
+toilette with an enthusiasm worthy a better result. Ordinarily he was
+ostentatiously pious and grave, but now his nature began to slip its
+bark and disclose an inner rind of real mirthfulness, which made him
+quite pleasant company for Miss Holland, who, though a mere girl, was
+sensible and old enough to enjoy the many marked peculiarities of the
+pedagogue.</p>
+
+<p>On Blodgett's side it was love&mdash;just the blindest, craziest kind of
+love, at first sight. As to Miss Holland, I cannot say. One never can
+precisely say as to a woman; guessing at a woman's feelings, in matters
+of love, is a little like wondering which makes the music, a boy's mouth
+or the jewsharp&mdash;a doubtful affair.</p>
+
+<p>Great events never come singly. When it rains it pours. If you have seen
+a bear, every stump is a bear. A few days after the advent of Miss
+Holland came a pop-eyed, nervous, witty little fellow with a hand press,
+and started a weekly paper in our village. A newspaper in town! It was
+startling.</p>
+
+<p>Blodgett from the first seemed not to relish the innovation, but public
+sentiment had set in too strongly in its favor for him to jeopardize his
+reputation by any serious denunciations. A real live paper in our midst
+was no small<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_174" id="Page_174">[174]</a></span> matter. Everybody subscribed, and so did Blodgett.</p>
+
+<p>It did, formerly, require a little brains to run a newspaper, and in
+those days an editor was looked upon as nearly or quite as learned and
+intelligent as a pedagogue; but everybody, however ignorant himself,
+could not fail to see that one represented progress, the other
+conservatism, and formerly most persons were Ultra-Conservatives. This,
+of course, gave the pedagogue a considerable advantage.</p>
+
+<p>Of course Blodgett and the editor soon became acquainted. The latter, a
+dapper Yankee, full of "get-up-and-snap," and alert to make way for his
+paper, measured the pedagogue at a glance, seeing at once that a big
+bulk of strong sense and a will like iron were enwrapped in the stalwart
+Hoosier's brain. One of two things must be done. Blodgett must be
+vanquished or his influence secured. He must be prevailed on to endorse
+the <i>Star</i> (the new paper), or the <i>Star</i> must attack and destroy him at
+once.</p>
+
+<p>Meantime the pedagogue grimly waited for an opportunity to demolish the
+editor. The big Hoosier had no thought of compromise or currying favor.
+He would sacrifice the little sleek, stuck-up, big-headed, pop-eyed,
+Roman-nosed<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_175" id="Page_175">[175]</a></span> Yankee between his thumb nails as he would a flea. Blodgett
+was a predestinarian of the old school, and was firmly imbedded in the
+belief that from all eternity it had been fore-ordained that he was to
+attend to just such fellows as the editor.</p>
+
+<p>Still, the little lady from Louisville took up so much of his time, and
+so distracted his mind, that no well laid plan of attack could be
+matured by the pedagogue. But when nations wish to fight it is easy to
+find a pretext for war. So with individuals. So with the editor and
+Blodgett. They soon came to open hostilities and raised the black flag.
+What an uproar it did make in the county!</p>
+
+<p>This war seemed to come about quite naturally. It had its beginning in a
+debating society, where Blodgett and the editor were leading
+antagonists. The question debated was, "Which has done more for the
+cause of human liberty, Napoleon or Wellington?"</p>
+
+<p>Two village men and two countrymen were the jury to decide which side
+offered the best argument. The jury was out all night and finally
+returned a split verdict, two of them standing for Blodgett and two for
+the editor. Of course it was town against country&mdash;the villagers for the
+editor, the country folk for the pedagogue.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_176" id="Page_176">[176]</a></span>"Huzza for the little editor!" cried the town people.</p>
+
+<p>"'Rah for Blodgett!" bawled the lusty country folk.</p>
+
+<p>The matter quickly came to blows at certain parts of the room. Jim
+Dowder caught Phil Gates by the hair and snatched him over two seats.
+Sarah Jane Beaver hit Martha Ann Randall in the mouth with a reticule
+full of hazel nuts. Farmer Heath choked store-keeper Jones till his face
+was as blue as moderate-like indigo. Old Mrs. Baber pulled off Granny
+Logan's wig and threw it at 'Squire Hank. But Pete Develin wound the
+thing up with a most disgraceful feat. He seized a bucket half full of
+water and deliberately poured it right on top of the editor's head.</p>
+
+<p>This was the beginning of trouble and fun. Some lawsuits grew out of it
+and some hard fisticuffs. All the country-folk sided with Blodgett&mdash;the
+towns-folk with the editor. The <i>Star</i> began to get dim, but the editor,
+shrewd dog, when he saw how things were turning, at once took up the
+question of Napoleon <i>vs.</i> Wellington in his journal, kindly and
+condescendingly offering his columns to Blodgett for the discussion.</p>
+
+<p>The pedagogue foolishly accepted the challenge,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_177" id="Page_177">[177]</a></span> and thus laid the
+stones upon which he was to fall. So the antagonists sharpened their
+goose quills and went at it. In sporting circles the proverb runs: never
+bet on a man's own trick. Blodgett ought to have known better than to go
+to the editor's own ground to fight.</p>
+
+<p>I have always suspected that Miss Holland did much to shear our Samson
+of his strength. She certainly did, wittingly or unwittingly, occupy too
+much of his time and thought. Poor fellow! he would have given his life
+for her. He often looked at her, with his head turned a little one side,
+sadly, thoughtfully, as I have seen a terrier look at a rat hole, as
+though he half expected disappointment.</p>
+
+<p>The battle in the <i>Star</i> began in very earnest. It was a harvest for the
+shrewd journalist. Everybody took the <i>Star</i> while the discussion was
+going on. Everybody took sides, everybody got mad, and almost everybody
+fought more or less. Even Parson Holland and the village preacher had
+high words and ceased to recognize each other. As for the young lady
+from Louisville, she had little to say about the discussion, though
+Blodgett always read to her each one of his articles first in MS. and
+then in the <i>Star</i> after it was printed.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_178" id="Page_178">[178]</a></span>Well, finally, in the very height of the war of words, the editor, in
+one of his articles, indulged in Latin. As you are aware, when an editor
+gets right down to pan-rock Latin, it's a sure sign he's after somebody.
+This instance was no exception to the general rule. He was baiting for
+the pedagogue. The pedagogue swallowed hook and all.</p>
+
+<p>"<i>Nil de mortuis nisi bonum</i>," said the editor, "is my motto, which may
+be freely translated: 'If you can't say something good of the dead, keep
+your tarnal mouth shut about them!'"</p>
+
+<p>Blodgett started as he read this, and for a full minute thereafter gazed
+steadily and inquiringly on vacancy. At length his great bony right hand
+opened slowly, then quickly shut like a vice.</p>
+
+<p>"I have him! I have him!" he muttered in a murderous tone, "I'll crush
+him to impalpable dust!" He forthwith went for a small Latin lexicon and
+began busily searching its pages. It was Saturday evening, and so busily
+did he labor at what was on his mind, he came near forgetting his
+regular weekly visit to Miss Holland.</p>
+
+<p>He did not forget it, however. He went; without pointing out to her the
+exact spot so vulnerable to his logical arrows, he told her in<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_179" id="Page_179">[179]</a></span> a
+confidential and confident way that his next letter would certainly make
+an end of the editor. He told her that, at last, he had the shallow
+puppy where he could expose him thoroughly. Of course Miss Holland was
+curious to know more, but, with a grim smile, Blodgett shook his head,
+saying that to insure utter victory he must keep his own counsel.</p>
+
+<p>The next day, though the Sabbath, was spent by the pedagogue writing his
+crusher for the <i>Star</i>. He wrote it and re-wrote it, over and over
+again. He almost ruined a Latin grammar and the afore-mentioned lexicon.
+He worked till far in the night, revising and elaborating. His gray eyes
+burned like live coals&mdash;his jaws were set for victory.</p>
+
+<p>That week was one of intense excitement all over the county, for somehow
+it had come generally to be understood that the pedagogue's forthcoming
+essay was to completely defeat and disgrace the editor. Work, for the
+time, was mostly suspended. The school children did about as they
+pleased, so that they were careful not to break rudely in upon
+Blodgett's meditations.</p>
+
+<p>On the day of its issue the <i>Star</i> was in great demand. For several
+hours the office was crowded with eager subscribers, hungry for a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_180" id="Page_180">[180]</a></span> copy.
+The 'Squire and two constables had some trouble to keep down a genuine
+riot.</p>
+
+<p>The following is an exact copy of Blodgett's great essay:</p>
+
+<p class="blockquot"><span class="smcap">Mr. Editor</span>&mdash;<span class="smcap">Sir</span>: This, for two reasons, is my last article for
+your journal. Firstly: My time and the exigencies of my
+profession will not permit me to further pursue a discussion
+which, on your part, has degenerated into the merest twaddle.
+Secondly: It only needs, at my hands, an exposition of the
+false and fraudulent claims you make to classical attainments,
+to entirely annihilate your unsubstantial and wholly undeserved
+popularity in this community, and to send you back to peddling
+your bass wood hams and maple nutmegs. In order to put on a
+false show of erudition, you lug into your last article a
+familiar Latin sentence. Now, sir, if you had sensibly foregone
+any attempt at translation, you might, possibly, have made some
+one think you knew a shade more than a horse; but "whom the
+gods would destroy they first make mad."</p>
+
+<p class="blockquot">You say, "<i>De mortuis nil nisi bonum</i>" may be freely
+translated, "If you can't say something good of the dead, keep
+your tarnal mouth shut about them!" Shades of Horace and
+Praxiteles! What would Pindar or Cæsar say? But<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_181" id="Page_181">[181]</a></span> I will not
+jest at the expense of sound scholarship. In conclusion, I
+simply submit the following <i>literal translation</i> of the Latin
+sentence in question: "<i>De</i>&mdash;of, <i>mortuis</i>&mdash;the dead,
+<i>nil</i>&mdash;nothing, <i>nisi</i>&mdash;but, <i>bonum</i>&mdash;goods," so that the whole
+quotation may be rendered as follows&mdash;"Nothing (is left) of the
+dead but (their) goods." This is strictly according to the
+dictionary. Here, so far as I am concerned, this discussion
+ends.</p>
+
+<p class="bqright"><span style="margin-right: 2em;">Your ob't serv't,</span><br />
+<span class="smcap">T. Blodgett.</span><br />
+</p>
+
+<p>The country flared into flames of triumph. Blodgett's friends stormed
+the village and "<i>bully-ragged</i>" everybody who had stood out for the
+editor. The little Yankee, however, did not appear in the least
+disconcerted. His clear, blue, pop-eyes really seemed twinkling with
+half suppressed joy. Blodgett put a copy of the <i>Star</i> into his pocket
+and stalked proudly, victoriously, out of town.</p>
+
+<p>After supper he dressed himself with scrupulous care and went over to
+see Miss Holland. Rumor said they were engaged to be married, and I
+believe they were.</p>
+
+<p>On this particular evening the young lady was enchantingly pretty,
+dressed in white muslin and blue ribbons, her bright yellow hair flowing
+full and free down upon her<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_182" id="Page_182">[182]</a></span> plump shoulders, her face radiant with
+health and high spirits. She met the pedagogue at the door with more
+than usual warmth of welcome. He kissed her hand. All that he said to
+her that evening will never be known. It is recorded, however, that,
+when he had finished reading his essay to her, she got up and took from
+her travelling trunk a "Book of Foreign Phrases," and examined it
+attentively for a time, after which she was somewhat uneasy and
+reticent. Blodgett observed this, but he was too dignified to ask an
+explanation.</p>
+
+<p>The "last day" of Blodgett's school was at hand. The "exhibition" came
+off on Saturday. Everybody went early. The pedagogue was in his glory.
+He did not know the end was so near. A little occurrence, toward
+evening, however, seemed to foreshadow it.</p>
+
+<p>Blodgett called upon the stage a bright eyed, ruddy faced lad, his
+favorite pupil, to translate Latin phrases. The boy, in his Sunday best,
+and sleekly combed, came forth and bowed to the audience, his eyes
+luminous with vivacity. The little fellow was evidently precocious&mdash;a
+rapid if not a very accurate thinker&mdash;one of those children who always
+have an answer ready, right or wrong.</p>
+
+<p>After several preliminary questions, very<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_183" id="Page_183">[183]</a></span> promptly and satisfactorily
+disposed of, Blodgett said:</p>
+
+<p>"Now, sir, translate <i>Monstrum horrendum informe ingens</i>."</p>
+
+<p>Quick as lightning the child replied:</p>
+
+<p>"The horrid monster informed the Indians!"</p>
+
+<p>Fury! The face of the pedagogue grew livid. He stretched forth his hand
+and took the boy by the back of the neck. The curtain fell, but the
+audience could not help hearing what a flogging the boy got. It was
+terrible.</p>
+
+<p>Even while this was going on a rumor rippled round the outskirts of the
+audience&mdash;for you must know that the "exhibition" was held under a bush
+arbor erected in front of the school house door&mdash;a rumor, I say, rippled
+round the outer fringe of the audience. Some one had arrived from the
+village and copies of the <i>Star</i> were being freely distributed. Looks of
+blank amazement flashed into people's faces. The name of the editor and
+that of Prof. W&mdash;&mdash;, of Wabash College, began to fly in sharp whispers
+from mouth to mouth. The crowd reeled and swayed. Men began to talk
+aloud. Finally everybody got on his feet and confusion and hubbub
+reigned supreme. The exhibition was broken up. Blodgett came out of the
+school house upon the stage when he heard the noise.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_184" id="Page_184">[184]</a></span> He gazed around.
+Some one thrust a copy of the <i>Star</i> into his hand.</p>
+
+<p>Poor Blodgett! We may all fall. The crowd resolved itself into an
+indignation meeting then and there, at which the following extract from
+the <i>Star</i> was read, followed by resolutions dismissing and disgracing
+Blodgett:</p>
+
+<p class="blockquot">"The following letter is rich reading for those who have so
+long sworn by T. Blodgett. We offer no comment:</p>
+
+<p class="blockquot">"<span class="smcap">Editor of the Star</span>&mdash;<span class="smcap">Dear Sir</span>: In answer to your letter
+requesting me to decide between yourself and Mr. Blodgett as to
+the correct English rendering of the Latin sentence '<i>De
+mortuis nil nisi bonum</i>,' allow me to say that your free
+translation is a good one, if not very literal or elegant. As
+to Mr. Blodgett's, if the man is sincere, he is certainly crazy
+or wofully illiterate; no doubt the latter.</p>
+
+<p class="bqright"><span style="margin-right: 5em;">"Very respectfully,</span><br />
+<span style="margin-right: 3em;">"W&mdash;&mdash;,</span><br />
+"<i>Prof. Languages, Wabash College.</i>"</p>
+
+<p>Blodgett walked away from the school house into the dusky June woods. He
+knew that it was useless to contend against the dictum of a college
+professor. His friends knew so too, so they turned to rend him. He was
+dethroned and discrowned forever. He was boarding at<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_185" id="Page_185">[185]</a></span> my father's then,
+and I can never forget the haggard, wistful look his face wore when he
+came in that evening. I have since learned that he went straight from
+the scene of his disgrace to Miss Holland, whom he found inclined to
+laugh at him. The next week he collected what was due him and left for
+parts unknown.</p>
+
+<p>I was over at parson Holland's, playing with his boys.</p>
+
+<p>The game was mumble peg.</p>
+
+<p>I had been rooting a peg out of the ground and my face was very dirty.
+We were under a cherry tree by a private hedge. Presently Miss Holland
+came out and began, girl-like, to pluck and eat the half ripe cherries.
+The wind rustled her white dress and lifted the gold floss of her
+wonderful hair. The birds chattered and sang all round us; the white
+clouds lingered overhead like puffs of steam vanishing against the
+splendid blue of the sky. The fragrance of leaf and fruit and bloom was
+heavy on the air. The girl in white, the quiet glory of the day, the
+murmur of the unsteady wind stream flowing among the dark leaves of the
+orchard and hedge, the charm of the temperature, and over all, the
+delicious sound of running water from the brook hard by, all<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_186" id="Page_186">[186]</a></span>
+harmonized, and in a tender childish mood I quit the game and lolled at
+full length on the ground, watching the fascinating face of the young
+lady as she drifted about the pleasant places of the orchard. Suddenly I
+saw her fix her eyes in a surprised way in a certain direction. I looked
+to see what had startled her, and there, half leaning over the hedge,
+stood Blodgett.</p>
+
+<p>His face was ghastly in its pallor, and deep furrows ran down his jaws.
+His gray eyes had in them a look of longing blended with a sort of stern
+despair. It was only for a moment that his powerful frame toppled above
+the hedge, but he is indelibly pictured in my memory just as he then
+appeared.</p>
+
+<p>"Good-bye, Miss Holland, good-bye."</p>
+
+<p>How dismally hollow his voice sounded! Ah! it was pitiful. I neither saw
+nor heard of him after that. Years have passed since then. Blodgett is,
+likely, in his grave, but I never think of him without a sigh.</p>
+
+<p>Yesterday I was in the old neighborhood, and, to my surprise, learned
+that the old log school house was still standing. So I set out alone to
+visit it. I found it rotten and shaky, serving as a sort of barn in
+which a farmer stows his oats, straw and corn fodder. The genius<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_187" id="Page_187">[187]</a></span> of
+learning has long since flown to finer quarters. The great old chimney
+had been torn down or had fallen, the broad boards of the roof, held on
+by weight poles, were deeply covered with moss and mould, and over the
+whole edifice hung a gloom&mdash;a mist of decay.</p>
+
+<p>I leaned upon a worm fence hard by and gazed through the long vacant
+side window, underneath which our writing shelf used to be, sorrowfully
+dallying with memory; not altogether sorrowfully either, for the glad
+faces of children that used to romp with me on the old play ground
+floated across my memory, clothed in the charming haze of distance, and
+encircled by the halo of tender affections. The wind sang as of old, and
+the bird songs had not changed a jot. Slowly my whole being crept back
+to the past. The wonders of our progress were all forgotten. And then
+from within the old school room came a well remembered voice, with a
+certain nasal twang, repeating slowly and sternly the words:</p>
+
+<p>"<i>Arma virumque cano</i>;" then there came a chime of silver tones&mdash;"School
+is out!&mdash;School is out!" And I started, to find that I was all alone by
+the rotting but blessed old throne and palace of the pedagogue.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_188" id="Page_188">[188]</a></span></p>
+<p class="center"><span class="huge"><span class="smcap">An Idyl of the Rod.</span></span></p>
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+
+
+<p>It was as pretty a country cottage as is to be found, even now, in all
+the Wabash Valley, situated on a prominent bluff, overlooking the broad
+stretches of bottom land, and giving a fine view of the wide winding
+river. The windows and doors of this cottage were draped in vines, among
+which the morning glory and the honeysuckle were the most luxuriant;
+while on each side of the gravelled walk, that led from the front
+portico to the dooryard gate, grew clusters of pinks, sweet-williams and
+larkspurs. The house was painted white, and had green window
+shutters&mdash;old fashioned, to be sure, but cosy, homelike and tasty
+withal. Everything pertaining to and surrounding the place had an air of
+methodical neatness, that betokened great care and scrupulous order on
+the part of the inmates.</p>
+
+<p>About the hour of six on a Monday morning, in the month of May, a fine,
+hearty, intelligent looking lad of twelve years walked<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_189" id="Page_189">[189]</a></span> slowly up the
+path which led from the old orchard to the house. He was dressed in
+loose trowsers of bottle green jeans, a jacket of the same, heavy boots
+and a well worn wool hat. The boy's shoulders stooped a little, and a
+slight hump discovered itself at the upper portion of his back. His face
+was strikingly handsome, being fair, bright, healthful, and marked with
+signs of great precocity of intellect, albeit it wore just now an
+indescribable, faintly visible shade, as of innocent perplexity, or,
+possibly, grief. His mind was evidently not at ease, but the varying
+shadows that chased each other across the mild depths of his clear,
+vivacious eyes would have stumped a physiognomist. Between a laugh and a
+cry, but more like a cry; between defiance and utter shame, but more
+like the latter; his cheeks and lips took on every shade of pallor and
+of flush. He shrugged his shoulders as he moved along, and cast rapid
+glances in every direction, as if afraid of being seen. "Whippoo-tee,
+tippoo-tee-tee-e!" sang a great cardinal red bird in the apple tree over
+his head. He flung a stone at the bird with terrible energy, but missed
+it.</p>
+
+<p>The mistress of the cottage was at this time in the kitchen preparing
+for the week's washing,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_190" id="Page_190">[190]</a></span> for do not all good Hoosier housewives wash on
+Monday? She was a middle aged, stoutly built, healthy matron, sandy
+haired, slightly freckled, blue eyed and quick in her movements. Usually
+smiling and happy, it was painful to see how she struggled now to master
+the emotions of great grief and sadness that constantly arose in her
+bosom, like spectres that would not be driven away.</p>
+
+<p>A bright eyed, golden haired lass of sixteen was in the breakfast room
+washing the dishes and singing occasional snatches from a mournful
+ditty. It was sad, indeed, to see a cloud of sorrow on a face so fresh
+and sweet.</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Coulter, the head of the family, and owner of the cottage and its
+lands, stood near the centre of the sitting room with his hands crossed
+behind him, gazing fixedly and sadly on the picture of a sweet child
+holding a white kitten in its lap, which picture hung on the wall over
+against the broad fire-place. A look of sorrow betrayed itself even in
+the dark, stern visage of the man. He drew down his shaggy eyebrows and
+occasionally pulled his grizzled moustache into his mouth and chewed it
+fiercely. Evidently he was chafing under his grief.</p>
+
+<p>The cottage windows were wide open, as is<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_191" id="Page_191">[191]</a></span> the western custom in fine
+weather, and the fragrance of spice wood and sassafras floated in on the
+flood tide of pleasant air, while from the big old locust tree down by
+the fence fell the twittering prelude to a finch's song. A green line of
+willows and a thin, pendulous stratum of fog marked the way of the
+river, plainly visible from the west window, and through the white haze
+flocks of teal and wood ducks cut swiftly in their downward flight to
+the water. A golden flicker sang and hammered on the gate-post the while
+he eyed a sparrow-hawk that wheeled and screamed high over head. The dew
+was like little mirrors in the grass.</p>
+
+<p>The lad entered the kitchen and said to his mother, in a voice full of
+tenderness, though barely audible:</p>
+
+<p>"Mammy, where's pap?"</p>
+
+<p>"In the front room, Billy," replied the matron solemnly, quaveringly.</p>
+
+<p>Passing into the breakfast room, Billy looked at his sister and a flash
+of sympathetic sorrow played back and forth from the eyes of one to
+those of the other; then he went straight into the sitting room and
+handed something to Mr. Coulter. It was a moment of silence and
+suspense. Out in the orchard the cherry and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_192" id="Page_192">[192]</a></span> apple blooms were falling
+like pink and white snow.</p>
+
+<p>The man looked down at his boy sadly, sorrowfully, regretfully. He drew
+his face into a stern frown. The lad looked up into his father's eyes
+timidly, ruefully, strangely. It was a living tableau no artist could
+reproduce. It was the moment before a crisis.</p>
+
+<p>"Billy," said the father gravely, "I took your mother and sister to
+church yesterday."</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, sir," said Billy.</p>
+
+<p>"And left you to see to things," continued the man.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, sir," replied the boy, gazing through the window at the flicker as
+it hitched down the gate-post and finally dropped into the grass with a
+shrill chirp.</p>
+
+<p>"And you didn't water them pigs!"</p>
+
+<p>"O-o-o! Oh, sir! Geeroody! O me! ouch! lawsy! lawsy! mercy me!"</p>
+
+<p>The slender scion of an apple tree, in the hand of Mr. Coulter, rose and
+fell, cutting the air like a rapier, and up from the jacket of the lad,
+like incense from an altar, rose a cloud of dust mingled with the nap of
+jeans. Down in the young clover of the meadow the larks and sparrows
+sang cheerily; the gnats and flies danced up and down in the sunshine,
+the fresh<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_193" id="Page_193">[193]</a></span> soft young leaves of the vines rustled like satin, and all
+was merry indeed!</p>
+
+<p>Billy's eyes were turned upward to the face of his father in appealing
+agony; but still the switch, with a sharp hiss, cut the air, falling
+steadily and mercilessly on his shoulders.</p>
+
+<p>All along the green banks of the river the willows shook their shining
+fingers at the lifting fog, and the voices of children going by to the
+distant school smote the sweet May wind.</p>
+
+<p>"Whippee! Whippee-tippee-tee!" sang the cardinal bird.</p>
+
+<p>"O pap! ouch! O-o-o! I'll not forget to water the pigs no more!"</p>
+
+<p>"S'pect you won't, neither!" said the man.</p>
+
+<p>The wind, by a sudden puff, lifted into the room a shower of white bloom
+petals from a sweet apple tree, letting them fall gracefully upon the
+patchwork carpet, the while a ploughman whistled plaintively in a
+distant field.</p>
+
+<p>"Crackee! O pap! ouch! O-o-o! You're a killin' me!"</p>
+
+<p>"Shet your mouth 'r I'll split ye to the backbone in a second! Show ye
+how to run off fishin' with Ed Jones and neglect them pigs! Take every
+striffin of hide off'n ye!"</p>
+
+<p>How many delightful places in the woods, how many cool spots beside the
+murmuring<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_194" id="Page_194">[194]</a></span> river, would have been more pleasant to Billy than the place
+he just then occupied! He would have swapped hides with the very pigs he
+had forgot to water.</p>
+
+<p>"O, land! O, me! Geeroody me!" yelled the lad.</p>
+
+<p>"Them poor pigs!" rejoined the father.</p>
+
+<p>Still the dust rose and danced in the level jet of sunlight that fell
+athwart the room from the east window, and the hens out at the barn
+cackled and sang for joy over new laid eggs stowed away in cosy places.</p>
+
+<p>At one time during the falling of the rod the girl quit washing the
+dishes, and thrusting her head into the kitchen said, in a subdued tone:</p>
+
+<p>"My land! Mammy, ain't Bill a gittin' an awful one this load o' poles?"</p>
+
+<p>"You're moughty right!" responded the matron, solemnly.</p>
+
+<p>Along toward the last Mr. Coulter tip-toed at every stroke. The switch
+actually screamed through the air. Billy danced and bawled and made all
+manner of serio-comic faces and contortions.</p>
+
+<p>"Now go, sir," cried the man, finally tossing the frizzled stump of the
+switch out through the window. "Go now, and next time I'll be bound you
+water them pigs!"</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_195" id="Page_195">[195]</a></span>And, while the finch poured a cataract of melody from the locust tree,
+Billy went.</p>
+
+<p>Poor boy! that was a terrible thrashing, and to make it worse, it had
+been promised to him on the evening before, so that he had been dreading
+it and shivering over it all night!</p>
+
+<p>Now, as he walked through the breakfast room, his sister looked at him
+in a commiserating way, but on passing through the kitchen he could not
+catch the eye of his mother.</p>
+
+<p>Finally he stood in the free open air in front of the saddle closet. It
+was just then that a speckled rooster on the barn yard fence flapped his
+wings and crowed lustily. A turkey cock was strutting on the grass by
+the old cherry tree.</p>
+
+<p>Billy opened the door of the closet. "A boy's will is the wind's will,
+and the thoughts of youth are long, long thoughts." Billy peeped into
+the saddle closet and then cast a glance around him, as if to see if any
+one was near.</p>
+
+<p>At length, during a pleasant lull in the morning wind, and while the
+low, tenderly mellow flowing of the river was distinctly audible, and
+the song of the finch increased in volume, and the bleating of new born
+lambs in the meadow died in fluttering echoes under the barn, and while
+the fragrance of apple<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_196" id="Page_196">[196]</a></span> blooms grew fainter, and while the sun, now
+flaming just a little above the eastern horizon, launched a shower of
+yellow splendors over him from head to foot, he took from under his
+jacket behind a doubled sheep skin with the wool on, which, with an
+ineffable smile, he tossed into the closet. Then, as the yellow flicker
+rose rapidly from the grass, Billy walked off, whistling the air of that
+once popular ballad&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>
+<span style="margin-left: 2em;">"O give me back my fifteen cents,</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2em;">And give me back my money," &amp;c.</span><br />
+</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p class="center"><span class="huge">Transcriber's Notes:</span></p>
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+
+<p><span style="margin-left: 4em;">Inconsistencies in spelling and hyphenation have been retained from the original.</span><br />
+<br/>
+<span style="margin-left: 4em;">Punctuation has been corrected without note.</span></p>
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+<pre>
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Hoosier Mosaics, by Maurice Thompson
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+</pre>
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+</body>
+</html>
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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Hoosier Mosaics, by Maurice Thompson
+
+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: Hoosier Mosaics
+
+Author: Maurice Thompson
+
+Release Date: May 18, 2011 [EBook #36148]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK HOOSIER MOSAICS ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by David Edwards, David E. Brown, and the Online
+Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This
+book was produced from scanned images of public domain
+material from the Google Print project.)
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Affectionately to my Father,
+ The Reverend GRIGG THOMPSON.
+
+
+
+
+ HOOSIER MOSAICS.
+
+ By MAURICE THOMPSON.
+
+
+ NEW YORK:
+ E. J. HALE & SON, PUBLISHERS,
+ MURRAY STREET.
+ 1875.
+
+
+ Entered according to Act of Congress, in the year 1875, by
+ E. J. HALE & SON,
+ In the office of the Librarian of Congress at Washington.
+
+
+
+
+CONTENTS.
+
+
+ PAGE.
+
+ _WAS SHE A BOY?_ _7_
+
+ TROUT'S LUCK, 29
+
+ _BIG MEDICINE_, _50_
+
+ _THE VENUS OF BALHINCH_, _76_
+
+ THE LEGEND OF POTATO CREEK, 92
+
+ _STEALING A CONDUCTOR_, _114_
+
+ HOIDEN, 127
+
+ THE PEDAGOGUE, 162
+
+ AN IDYL OF THE ROD, 188
+
+
+
+
+WAS SHE A BOY?
+
+
+No matter what business or what pleasure took me, I once, not long ago,
+went to Colfax. Whisper it not to each other that I was seeking a
+foreign appointment through the influence of my fellow Hoosier, the late
+Vice-President of the United States. O no, I didn't go to the Hon.
+Schuyler Colfax at all; but I went to Colfax, simply, which is a little
+dingy town, in Clinton County, that was formerly called Midway, because
+it is half way between Lafayette and Indianapolis. It was and is a place
+of some three hundred inhabitants, eking out an aguish subsistence,
+maintaining a swampy, malarious aspect, keeping up a bilious, nay, an
+atra-bilious color, the year round, by sucking like an attenuated leech
+at the junction, or, rather, the crossing of the I. C. & L., and the L.
+C. & S. W. railroads. It lay mouldering, like something lost and
+forgotten, slowly rotting in the swamp.
+
+I do not mean to attack the inhabitants of Colfax, for they were good
+people, and deserved a better fate than the eternal rattling the ague
+took them through from year's end to year's end. Why, they had had the
+ague so long that they had no respect for it at all. I've seen a woman
+in Colfax shaking with a chill, spanking a baby that had a chill, and
+scolding a husband who had a chill, all at once--and I had a dreadful
+ague on me at the same time! But, as I have said, they were good people,
+and I suppose they are still. They go quietly about the usual business
+of dead towns. They have "stores" in which they offer for sale calico,
+of the big-figured, orange and red sort, surprisingly cheap. They smoke
+those little Cuba sixes at a half cent apiece, and call them cigars;
+they hang round the depot, and trade jack-knives and lottery watches on
+the afternoons of lazy Sundays; they make harmless sport of the incoming
+and outgoing country folk; and, in a word, keep pretty busy at one thing
+or another, and above all--they shake.
+
+In Colfax the chief sources of exciting amusement are dog fights and an
+occasional row at Sheehan's saloon, a doggery of the regular
+old-fashioned, drink, gamble, rob and fight sort--a low place, known to
+all the hard bats in the State.
+
+As you pass through the town you will not fail to notice a big sign,
+outhanging from the front of the largest building on the principal
+street, which reads: "Union Hotel, 1865." From the muddy suburbs of the
+place, in every direction, stretch black muck swamps, for the most part
+heavily timbered with a variety of oaks, interspersed with sycamores,
+ash, and elms. In the damp, shady labyrinths of these boggy woods
+millions of lively, wide awake, tuneful mosquitoes are daily
+manufactured; and out from decaying logs and piles of fermenting leaves,
+from the green pools and sluggish ditch streams, creeps a noxious gas,
+known in that region as the "double refined, high pressure, forty hoss
+power quintessential of the ager!" So, at least, I was told by the
+landlord of the Union Hotel, and his skin had the color of one who knew.
+
+Notwithstanding what I have said, Colfax, in summer, is not wholly
+without attractions of a certain kind. It has some yellow dogs and some
+brindle ones; it has some cattle and some swine; it has some swallows
+and some spotted pigeons; it has cool, fresh smelling winds, and, after
+the water has sufficiently dried out, the woods are really glorious
+with wild roses, violets, turkey-pea blossoms, and wild pinks. But to
+my story.
+
+I was sitting on the long veranda of the Union Hotel, when a rough but
+kindly voice said to me:
+
+"Mornin', stranger; gi' me a light, will ye?"
+
+I looked up from the miserable dime novel at which I had been tugging
+for the last hour, and saw before me a corpulent man of, perhaps,
+forty-five years of age, who stood quite ready to thrust the charred end
+of a cigar stump into the bowl of my meerschaum. I gave him a match, and
+would fain have returned to Angelina St. Fortescue, the heroine of the
+novel, whom I had left standing on the extreme giddy verge of a sheer
+Alpine precipice, known, by actual triangulation, to be just seven
+thousand feet high, swearing she would leap off if Donald Gougerizeout,
+the robber, persisted further in his rough addresses; but my new friend,
+the corpulent smoker, seemed bent on a little bit of conversation.
+
+"Thankee, sir. Fine mornin', sir, a'n't it?"
+
+"Beautiful," I replied, raising my head, elevating my arms, and, by a
+kind of yawn, taking in a deep draught of the fresh spring weather,
+absorbing it, assimilating it, till, like a wave of retarded
+electricity, it set my nerves in tune for enjoying the bird songs, and
+filled my blood with the ecstasy of vigorous health and youth. I, no
+doubt, just then felt the burden of life much less than did the big
+yellow dog at my feet, who snapped lazily at the flies.
+
+"Yes, yes, this 'ere's a fine mornin'--julicious, sir, julicious,
+indeed; but le' me tell ye, sir, this 'ere wind's mighty deceitful--for
+a fact it is, sir, jist as full of ager as a acorn is of meat. It's
+blowin' right off'n ponds, and is loaded chock down with the miasm--for
+a fact it is, sir."
+
+While delivering this speech, the fat man sat down on the bench beside
+me there in the veranda. By this time I had my thumbs in the arm holes
+of my vest, and my chest expanded to its utmost--my lungs going like a
+steam bellows, which is a way I have in fine weather.
+
+"Monstrous set o' respiratory organs, them o' your'n," he said, eyeing
+my manoeuvres. Just then I discovered that he was a physician of the
+steam doctor sort, for, glancing down at my feet, I espied his well worn
+leather medicine bags. I immediately grew polite. Possibly I might ere
+long need some quinine, or mandrake, or a hot steam bath--anything for
+the ague!
+
+"Yes, I've got lungs like a porpoise," I replied, "but still the ague
+may get me. Much sickness about here, Doctor----a----a----what do they
+call your name?"
+
+"Benjamin Hurd--Doctor Hurd, they call me. I'm the only thorer bred
+botanic that's in these parts. I do poorty much all the practice about
+here. Yes, there's considerable of ager and phthisic and bilious fever.
+Keeps me busy most of my time. These nasty swamps, you know."
+
+After a time our conversation flagged, and the doctor having lit a fresh
+cigar, we smoked in silence. The wind was driving the dust along the
+street in heavy waves, and I sat watching a couple of lean, spotted
+calves making their way against the tide. They held their heads low and
+shut their eyes, now and then bawling vigorously. Some one up stairs was
+playing "Days of Absence" on a wretched wheezing accordeon.
+
+"There's a case of asthma, doctor," I said, intending to be witty. But
+my remark was not noticed. The doctor was in a brown study, from which
+my words had not startled him. Presently he said, as if talking to
+himself, and without taking the cigar from his mouth:
+
+"'Twas just a year ago to-night, the 28th day of May, 'at they took 'er
+away. And he'll die afore day to a dead certainty. Beats all the denied
+queer things I ever seed or heerd of."
+
+He was poking with the toe of his boot in the dust on the veranda floor,
+as he spoke, and stealing a glance at his face, I saw that it wore an
+abstracted, dreamy, perplexed look.
+
+"What was your remark, doctor?" I asked, more to arouse him than from
+any hope of being interested.
+
+"Hum!--ah, yes," he said, starting, and beginning a vigorous puffing.
+"Ah, yes, I was cogitatin' over this matter o' Berry Young's. Never have
+been able to 'count for that, no how. Think about it more an' more every
+day. What's your theory of it?"
+
+"Can't say, never having heard anything of it," I replied.
+
+"Well, I do say! Thought everybody had hearn of that, any how! It's a
+rale romance, a reg'lar mystery, sir. It's been talked about, and writ
+about in the papers so much 'at I s'posed 'at it was knowed of far and
+wide."
+
+"I've been in California for several years past," I replied, by way of
+excuse for my ignorance of even the vaguest outline of the affair,
+whatever it might be.
+
+"Well, you see, a leetle more'n a year ago a gal an' her father come
+here and stopped at this 'ere very hotel. The man must 'a' been som'res
+near sixty years old; but the gal was young, and jist the poortiest
+thing I ever seed in all my life. I couldn't describe how she looked at
+all; but everybody 'at saw her said she was the beautifulest creatur
+they ever laid eyes onto. Where these two folks come from nobody ever
+knowed, but they seemed like mighty nice sort of persons, and everybody
+liked 'em, 'specially the gal. Somehow, from the very start, a kind of
+mystery hung 'round 'em. They seemed always to have gobs o' money, and
+onct in awhile some little thing'd turn up to make folks kinder juberous
+somehow 'at they wasn't jist what they ginerally seemed to be. But that
+gal was fascinatin' as a snake, and as poorty as any picter. Her flesh
+looked like tinted wax mixed with moon-shine, and her eyes was as clear
+as a lime-stone spring--though they was dark as night. She was that full
+of restless animal life 'at she couldn't set still--she roamed round
+like a leopard in a cage, and she'd romp equal to a ten-year-old boy.
+Well, as mought be expected, sich a gal as that 'ere 'd 'tract attention
+in these parts, and I must say 'at the young fellows here did git
+'bominable sweet on her. 'Casionally two of 'em 'd git out in the swamps
+and have a awful fight on her 'count; but she 'peared to pay precious
+little 'tention to any of 'em till finally Berry Young stepped in and
+jist went for 'er like mad, and she took to 'm. Berry was r'ally the
+nicest and intelligentest young man in all this country. He writ poetry
+for the papers, sir--snatchin' good poetry, too--and had got to be
+talked of a right smart for his larnin', an' 'complishments. He was good
+lookin', too; powerful handsome, for a fact, sir. So they was to be
+married, Berry and the gal, an' the time it was sot, an' the day it
+come, an' all was ready, an' the young folks was on the floor, and the
+'squire was jist a commencin' to say the ceremony, when lo! and
+beholden, four big, awful, rough lookin' men rushed in with big pistols
+and mighty terrible bowie knives, and big papers and big seals, and said
+they was a sheriff and possum from Kaintucky. They jist jumped right
+onto the gal an' her father an' han'cuffed 'em, an' took 'em!"
+
+"Handcuffed them and took them!" I repeated, suddenly growing intensely
+interested. This was beating my dime novel, for sensation, all hollow.
+
+"Yes, sir, han'cuffed 'em an' took 'em, an' away they went, an' they've
+not been hearn of since to this day. But the mysteriousest thing about
+the whole business was that when the sheriff grabbed the gal he called
+her George, and said she wasn't no gal at all, but jist a terrible onery
+boy 'at had been stealin' an' counterfeitin' an' robbin' all round
+everywhere. What d'ye think of that?"
+
+"A remarkably strange affair, certainly," I replied; "and do you say
+that the father and the girl have not since been heard from?"
+
+"Never a breath. The thing got into all the newspapers and raised a
+awful rumpus, and it turned out that it wasn't no sheriff 'at come
+there; but some dark, mysterious kidnappin' transaction 'at nobody could
+account for. Detectives was put on their track an' follered 'em to Injun
+territory an' there lost 'em. Some big robberies was connected with the
+affair, but folks could never git head nor tail of the partic'lers."
+
+"And it wasn't a real sheriff's arrest, then?" said I.
+
+"No, sir, 'twas jist a mystery. Some kind of a dodge of a band of
+desperadoes to avoid the law some way. The papers tried to explain it,
+but I never could see any sense to it. 'Twas a clean, dead mystery. But
+I was goin' on to tell ye 'at Berry Young took it awful hard 'bout the
+gal, an' he's been sort o' sinkin' away ever sence, an' now he's jist
+ready to wink out. Yonder's where Berry lives, in that 'ere white
+cottage house with the vines round the winder. He's desp'rit sick--a
+sort o' consumption. I'm goin' to see 'im now; good mornin' to ye."
+
+Thus abruptly ending our interview, the doctor took up his medicine bag
+and went his way. He left me in a really excited state of mind; the
+story of itself was so strange, and the narrator had told it so solemnly
+and graphically. I suppose, too, that I must have been in just the
+proper state of mind for that rough outline, that cartoon of a most
+startling and mysterious affair, to become deeply impressed in my mind,
+perhaps, in the most fascinating and fantastic light possible. A thirst
+to know more of the story took strong hold on my mind, as if I had been
+reading a tantalizing romance and had found the leaves torn out just
+where the mystery was to be explained. I half closed my eyes to better
+keep in the lines and shades of the strange picture. Its influence lay
+upon me like a spell. I enjoyed it. It was a luxury.
+
+The wings of the morning wind fanned the heat into broken waves, rising
+and sinking, and flowing on, with murmur and flash and glimmer, to the
+cool green ways of the woods, and, like the wind, my fancy went out
+among golden fleece clouds and into shady places, following the thread
+of this new romance. I cannot give a sufficient reason why the story
+took so fast a hold on me. But it did grip my mind and master it. It
+appeared to me the most intensely strange affair I had ever heard of.
+
+While I sat there, lost in reflection, with my eyes bent on a very
+unpromising pig, that wallowed in the damp earth by the town pump, the
+landlord of the hotel came out and took a seat beside me. I gave him a
+pipe of my tobacco and forthwith began plying him with questions
+touching the affair of which the doctor had spoken. He confirmed the
+story, and added to its mystery by going minutely into its details. He
+gave the names of the father and daughter as Charles Afton and Ollie
+Afton.
+
+Ollie Afton! Certainly no name sounds sweeter! How is it that these
+gifted, mysteriously beautiful persons always have musical names!
+
+"Ah," said the landlord, "you'd ort to have seen that boy!"
+
+"Boy!" I echoed.
+
+"Well, gal or boy, one or t'other, the wonderfulest human bein' I ever
+see in all the days o' my life! Lips as red as ripe cur'n's, and for
+ever smilin'. Such smiles--oonkoo! they hurt a feller all over, they was
+so sweet. She was tall an' dark, an' had black hair that curled short
+all 'round her head. Her skin was wonderful clear and so was her eyes.
+But it was the way she looked at you that got you. Ah, sir, she had a
+power in them eyes, to be sure!"
+
+The pig got up from his muddy place by the pump, grunted, as if
+satisfied, and slowly strolled off; a country lad drove past, riding
+astride the hounds of a wagon; a pigeon lit on the comb of the roof of
+Sheehan's saloon, which was just across the street, and began pluming
+itself. Just then the landlord's little sharp-nosed, weasel-eyed boy
+came out and said, in a very subdued tone of voice:
+
+"Pap, mam says 'at if you don't kill 'er that 'ere chicken for dinner
+you kin go widout any fing to eat all she cares."
+
+The landlord's spouse was a red-headed woman, so he got up very suddenly
+and took himself into the house. But before he got out of hearing the
+little boy remarked:
+
+"Pap, I speaks for the gizzard of that 'ere chicken, d'ye hear, now?"
+
+I sat there till the dinner hour, watching the soft pink and white
+vapors that rolled round the verge of the horizon. I was thoroughly
+saturated with romance. Strange, that here, in this dingy little
+out-of-the-way village, should have transpired one of the most wonderful
+mysteries history may ever hold!
+
+At dinner the landlord talked volubly of the Afton affair, giving it as
+his opinion that the Aftons were persons tinged with negro blood, and
+had been kidnapped into slavery.
+
+"They was jist as white, an' whiter, too, than I am," he went on, "but
+them Southerners'd jist as soon sell one person as 'nother, anyhow."
+
+I noticed particularly that the little boy got his choice bit of the
+fowl. He turned his head one side and ate like a cat.
+
+When the meal was over I was again joined by Doctor Hurd on the
+verandah. He reported Berry Young still alive, but not able to live till
+midnight. I noticed that the doctor was nervous and kept his eyes fixed
+on Sheehan's saloon.
+
+"Stranger," said he, leaning over close to me, and speaking in a low,
+guarded way, "things is workin' dasted curious 'bout now--sure's gun's
+iron they jist is!"
+
+"Where--how--in what way, doctor?" I stammered, taken aback by his
+behavior.
+
+"Sumpum's up, as sure as Ned!" he replied, wagging his head.
+
+"Doctor," I said, petulantly, "if you would be a trifle more explicit I
+could probably guess, with some show of certainty, at what you mean!"
+
+"Can't ye hear? Are ye deaf? Did ye ever, in all yer born days, hear a
+voice like that ere 'un? Listen!"
+
+Sure enough, a voice of thrilling power, a rich, heavy, quavering alto,
+accompanied by some one thrumming on a guitar, trickled and gurgled, and
+poured through the open window of Sheehan's saloon. The song was a wild,
+drinking carol, full of rough, reckless wit, but I listened, entranced,
+till it was done.
+
+"There now, say, what d'ye think o' that? Ain't things a workin' round
+awful curious, as I said?"
+
+Delivering himself thus, the doctor got up and walked off.
+
+When I again had an opportunity to speak to the landlord, I asked him if
+Doctor Hurd was not thought to be slightly demented.
+
+"What! crazy, do you mean? No, sir; bright as a pin!"
+
+"Well," said I, "he's a very queer fellow any how. By the way, who was
+that singing just now over in the saloon there?"
+
+"Don't know, didn't hear 'em. Some of the boys, I s'pose. They have some
+lively swells over there sometimes. Awful hole."
+
+I resumed my dime novel, and nothing further transpired to aggravate or
+satisfy my curiosity concerning the strange story I had heard, till
+night came down and the bats began to wheel through the moonless
+blackness above the dingy town. At the coming on of dusk I flung away
+the book and took to my pipe. Some one touched me on the shoulder,
+rousing me from a deep reverie, if not a doze.
+
+"Ha, stranger, this you, eh? Berry Young's a dyin'; go over there wi'
+me, will ye?"
+
+It was the voice of Doctor Hurd.
+
+"What need for me have you?" I replied, rather stiffly, not much
+relishing this too obtrusive familiarity.
+
+"Well--I--I jist kinder wanted ye to go over. The poor boy's 'bout
+passin' away, an' things is a workin' so tarnation curious! Come 'long
+wi' me, friend, will ye?"
+
+Something in the fellow's voice touched me, and without another word I
+arose and followed him to the cottage. The night was intensely black. I
+think it was clear, but a heavy fog from the swamps had settled over
+everything, and through this dismal veil the voices of owls from far and
+near struck with hollow, sepulchral effect.
+
+"A heart is the trump!" sang out that alto voice from within the saloon
+as we passed.
+
+Doctor Hurd clutched my arm and muttered:
+
+"That's that voice ag'in! Strange--strange! Poor Berry Young!"
+
+We entered the cottage and found ourselves in a cosy little room, where,
+on a low bed, a pale, intelligent looking young man lay, evidently
+dying. He was very much emaciated, his eyes, wonderfully large and
+luminous, were sunken, and his breathing quick and difficult. A haggard,
+watching-worn woman sat by his bed. From her resemblance to him I took
+her to be his sister. She was evidently very unwell herself. We sat in
+silence by his bedside, watching his life flow into eternity, till the
+little clock on the mantel struck, sharp and clear, the hour of ten.
+
+The sound of the bell startled the sick man, and after some incoherent
+mumbling he said, quite distinctly:
+
+"Sister, if you ever again see Ollie Afton, tell him--tell her--tell,
+say I forgive him--say to her--him--I loved her all my life--tell
+him--ah! what was I saying? Don't cry, sis, please. What a sweet,
+faithful sister! Ah! it's almost over, dear----Ah, me!"
+
+For some minutes the sister's sobbing echoed strangely through the
+house. The dying man drew his head far down in the soft pillow. A breath
+of damp air stole through the room.
+
+All at once, right under the window by which the bed sat, arose a
+touching guitar prelude--a tangled mesh of melody--gusty, throbbing,
+wandering through the room and straying off into the night, tossing back
+its trembling echoes fainter and fainter, till, as it began to die, that
+same splendid alto voice caught the key and flooded the darkness with
+song. The sick man raised himself on his elbow, and his face flashed out
+the terrible smile of death. He listened eagerly. It was the song "Come
+Where my Love lies Dreaming," but who has heard it rendered as it was
+that night? Every chord of the voice was as sweet and witching as a wind
+harp's, and the low, humming undertone of the accompaniment was
+perfection. Tenderly but awfully sweet, the music at length faded into
+utter silence, and Berry Young sank limp and pallid upon his pillows.
+
+"It is Ollie," he hoarsely whispered. "Tell her--tell him--O say to her
+for me--ah! water, sis, it's all over!"
+
+The woman hastened, but before she could get the water to his lips he
+was dead. His last word was Ollie.
+
+The sister cast herself upon the dead man's bosom and sobbed wildly,
+piteously. Soon after this some neighbors came in, which gave me an
+opportunity to quietly take my leave.
+
+The night was so foggy and dark that, but for a bright stream of light
+from a window of Sheehan's saloon, it would have been hard for me to
+find my way back to the hotel. I did find it, however, and sat down upon
+the verandah. I had nearly fallen asleep, thinking over the strange
+occurrences of the past few hours, when the rumble of an approaching
+train of cars on the I. C. & L. from the east aroused me, and, at the
+same moment, a great noise began over in the saloon. High words, a few
+bitter oaths, a struggle as of persons fighting, a loud, sonorous crash
+like the crushing of a musical instrument, and then I saw the burly bar
+tender hurl some one out through the doorway just as the express train
+stopped close by.
+
+"All aboard!" cried the conductor, waving his lantern. At the same
+time, as the bar-tender stood in the light of his doorway, a brickbat,
+whizzing from the darkness, struck him full in the face, knocking him
+precipitately back at full length on to the floor of the saloon.
+
+"All aboard!" repeated the conductor.
+
+"All aboard!" jeeringly echoed a delicious alto voice; and I saw a
+slender man step up on the rear platform of the smoking car. A flash
+from the conductor's lantern lit up for a moment this fellow's face, and
+it was the most beautiful visage I have ever seen. Extremely youthful,
+dark, resplendent, glorious, set round with waves and ringlets of black
+hair--it was such a countenance as I have imagined a young Chaldean
+might have had who was destined to the high calling of astrology. It was
+a face to charm, to electrify the beholder with its indescribable,
+almost unearthly loveliness of features and expression.
+
+The engine whistled, the bell rang, and as the train moved on, that
+slender, almost fragile form and wonderful face disappeared in the
+darkness.
+
+As the roar and clash of the receding cars began to grow faint in the
+distance, a gurgling, grunting sound over in the saloon reminded me that
+the bar-tender might need some attention, so I stepped across the
+street and went in. He was just taking himself up from the floor, with
+his nose badly smashed, spurting blood over him pretty freely. He was in
+an ecstasy of fury and swore fearfully. I rendered him all the aid I
+could, getting the blood stopped, at length, and a plaster over the
+wound.
+
+"Who struck you?" I asked.
+
+"Who struck me? Who hit me with that 'ere brick, d'ye say? Who but that
+little baby-faced, hawk-eyed cuss 'at got off here yesterday! He's a
+thief and a dog!--he's chowzed me out'n my last cent! Where is he?--I'll
+kill 'im yet! where is he?"
+
+"Gone off on the train," I replied, "but who is he? what's his name?"
+
+"Blamed if I know. Gone, you say? Got every derned red o' my money!
+Every derned red!"
+
+"Don't you know anything at all about him?" I asked.
+
+"Yes."
+
+"What?"
+
+"I know 'at he's the derndest, alfiredest, snatchin'est, best
+poker-player 'at ever dealt a card!"
+
+"Is that all?"
+
+"That's enough, I'd say. If you'd been beat out'n two hundred an' odd
+dollars you'd think you know'd a right smart, wouldn't ye?"
+
+"Perhaps," said I. The question had a world of philosophy and logic in
+it.
+
+The shattered wreck of a magnificent guitar lay in the middle of the
+floor. I picked it up, and, engraved on a heavy silver plate set in the
+ebony neck, I read the name, Georgina Olive Afton.
+
+
+
+
+TROUT'S LUCK.
+
+
+As early as eight o'clock the grand entrance gateway to the Kokomo fair
+ground was thronged with vehicles of almost every kind; horsemen,
+pedestrians, dogs and dust were borne forward together in clouds that
+boiled and swayed and tumbled. Noise seemed to be the chief purpose of
+every one and the one certain result of every thing in the crowd.
+
+This had been advertised as the merriest day that might ever befall the
+quiet, honest folk of the rural regions circumjacent to Kokomo, and it
+is even hinted that aristocratic dames and business plethoric men of the
+town itself had caught somewhat of the excitement spread abroad by the
+announcement in the county papers, and by huge bills posted in
+conspicuous places, touching Le Papillon and his monster balloon, which
+balloon and which Le Papillon were pictured to the life, on the said
+posters, in the act of sailing over the sun, and under the picture, in
+remarkably distinct letters, "No humbug! go to the fair!"
+
+Dozier's minstrel troupe was dancing and singing attendance on this
+agricultural exhibition, too, and somebody's whirling pavilion, a
+shooting gallery, a monkey show, the glass works, and what not of
+tempting promises of entertainments, "amusing and instructive."
+
+Until eleven o'clock the entrance gateway to the fair ground was
+crowded. Farm wagons trundled in, drawn by sleek, well fed plough nags,
+and stowed full of smiling folk, old and young, male and female, from
+the out townships; buggies with youths and maidens, the sparkle of
+breastpins and flutter of ribbons; spring wagons full of students and
+hard bats from town; carriages brimming with laces, flounces, over
+skirts, fancy kid gloves, funny little hats and less bonnets, all
+fermented into languid ebullition by mild-eyed ladies; omnibuses that
+bore fleshy gentlemen, who wore linen dusters and silk hats and smoked
+fine cigars; and jammed in among all these were boys on skittish colts,
+old fellows on flea-bit gray mares, with now and then a reckless
+stripling on a mule. Occasionally a dog got kicked or run over, giving
+the assistance of his howls and yelps to the general din, and over all
+the dust hung heavily in a yellow cloud, shot through with the lightning
+of burnished trappings and echoing with the hoarse thunder of the
+trampling, shouting rumbling multitude. Indeed, that hot aguish autumn
+day let fall its sunshine on the heads and blew its feverish breath
+through the rifts of the greatest and liveliest mass of people ever
+assembled in Howard county.
+
+Inside the extensive enclosure the multitude divided itself into
+streams, ponds, eddies, refluent currents and noisy whirlpools of
+people. Some rare attraction was everywhere.
+
+Early in the day the eyes of certain of the rustic misses followed
+admiringly the forms of Jack Trout and Bill Powell, handsome young
+fellows dressed in homespun clothes, who, arm in arm, strolled leisurely
+across the grounds, looking sharply about for some proper place to begin
+the expenditure of what few dimes they had each been able to hoard up
+against this gala day. They had not long to hunt. On every hand the
+"hawkers hawked their wares."
+
+Rising and falling, tender-toned, deftly managed, a voice rang out
+across the crowd pleading with those who had long desired a good
+investment for their money, and begging them to be sure and not let slip
+this last golden opportunity.
+
+"Only a half a dollah! Come right along this way now! Here's the great
+golden scheme by which thousands have amassed untold fortunes! Here's
+your only and last chance to get two ounces of first class candy, with
+the probability of five dollars in gold coin, all for the small sum of
+half a dollah! And the cry is--still they come!"
+
+The speaker was such a man as one often observes in a first class
+railway car, with a stout valise beside him containing samples, dressed
+with remarkable care, and ever on the alert to make one's acquaintance.
+He stood on top of a small table or tripod, holding in his hand a green
+pasteboard package just taken from a box at his feet.
+
+"Only a half a dollah and a fortune in your grasp! Here's the gold! Roll
+right this way and run your pockets over!"
+
+Drifting round with the tide of impulsive pleasure seekers into which
+they happened to fall, Jack Trout and Bill Powell floated past a bevy of
+lasses, the prettiest of whom was Minny Hart, a girl whose healthy,
+vivid beauty was fast luring Jack on to the rock of matrimonial
+proposals.
+
+"Jimminy, but ain't she a little sweety!" exclaimed the latter, pinching
+Bill's arm as they passed, and glancing lovingly at Minny.
+
+"You're tellin' the truth and talkin' it smooth," replied Bill, bowing
+to the girls with the swagger peculiar to a rustic who imagines he has
+turned a fine period. And with fluttering hearts the boys passed on.
+
+"Roll on ye torrents! Only a half a dollah! Right this way if you want
+to become a bloated aristocrat in less than no time! Five dollahs in
+gold for only a half a dollah! And whose the next lucky man?"
+
+Blown by the fickle, gusty breath of luck, our two young friends were
+finally wafted to the feet of this oily vendor of prize packages, and
+they there lodged, becalmed in breathless interest, to await their turn,
+each full of faith in the yellow star of his fortune--a gold coin of the
+value of five dollars. They stood attentively watching the results of
+other men's investments, feeling their fingers tingle when now and then
+some lucky fellow drew the coveted prize. Five dollars is a mighty
+temptation to a poor country boy in Indiana. That sum will buy oceans of
+fun at a fair where almost any "sight" is to be seen for the "small sum
+of twenty-five cents!"
+
+Without stopping to take into consideration the possible, or rather, the
+probable result of such a venture, Bill Powell handed up his half
+dollar to the prize man, thus risking the major part of all the money he
+had, and stood trembling with excitement while the fellow broke open the
+chosen package. Was it significant of anything that a blue jay fluttered
+for a moment right over the crier's head just at the point of his
+detaching some glittering object from the contents of the box?
+
+"Here you are, my friend; luck's a fortune!" yelled the man, as he held
+the gold coin high above his head, shaking it in full view of all eyes
+in the multitude. "Here you are! which 'd you rather have, the gold or
+five and a half in greenbacks?"
+
+"Hand me in the rag chips--gold don't feel good to my fingers," answered
+Bill Powell, swaggering again and grasping the currency with a hand that
+shook with eagerness.
+
+Jack Trout stood by, clutching in his feverish palm a two-dollar bill.
+His face was pale, his lips set, his muscles rigid. He hesitated to
+trust in the star of his destiny. He stood eyeing the bridge of Lodi,
+the dykes of Arcole. Would he risk all on a bold venture? His right
+shoulder began to twitch convulsively.
+
+"Still it rolls, and who's the next lucky man? Don't all speak at once!
+Who wants five dollahs in gold and two ounces of delicious candy, all
+for the small sum of half a dollah?"
+
+Jack made a mighty effort and passed up his two dollar bill.
+
+"Bravely done; select your packages!" cried the vendor. Jack tremblingly
+pointed them out. Very carelessly and quietly the fellow opened them,
+and with a ludicrous grimace remarked--
+
+"Eight ounces of mighty sweet candy, but nary a prize! Better luck next
+time! Only a half a dollah! And who's the next lucky man?"
+
+A yell of laughter from the crowd greeted this occurrence, and Jack
+floated back on the recoiling waves of his chagrin till he was hidden in
+the dense concourse, and the uppermost thought in his mind found
+forcible expression in the three monosyllables: "Hang the luck!"
+
+It is quite probable that of all the unfortunate adventurers that day
+singed in the yellow fire of that expert gambler's gold, Jack recognized
+himself as the most terribly burned. Putting his hands into his empty
+pockets, he sauntered dolefully about, scarcely able to look straight
+into the face of such friends as he chanced to meet. He acted as if
+hunting for something lost on the ground. Poor fellow, it was a real
+relief to him when some one treated him to a glass of lemonade, and,
+indeed, so much were his feelings relieved by the cool potation, that
+when, soon after, he met Minny Hart, he was actually smiling.
+
+"O, Jack!" cried the pretty girl, "I'm so glad to see you just now, for
+I do want to go into the minstrel show _so bad_!" She shot a glance of
+coquettish tenderness right into Jack's heart. For a single moment he
+was blessed, but on feeling for his money and recalling the luckless
+result of his late venture, he felt a chill creep up his back, and a
+lump of the size of his fist jump up into his throat. Here was a bad
+affair for him. He stood for a single point of time staring into the
+face of his despair, then, acting on the only plan he could think of to
+escape from the predicament, he said:
+
+"Wait a bit, Minny, I've got to go jist down here a piece to see a
+feller. I'll be back d'rectly. You stay right here and when I come back
+I'll trot you in."
+
+So speaking, as if in a great hurry, and sweating cold drops, with a
+ghastly smile flickering on his face, the young man slipped away into
+the crowd.
+
+Minny failed to notice his confusion, and so called after him cheerily:
+"Well, hurry, Jack, for I'm most dead to see the show!"
+
+What could Trout do? He spun round and round in that vast flood of
+people like a fish with but one eye. He rushed here, he darted there,
+and ever and anon, as a lost man returns upon his starting point, he
+came in sight of sweet Minny Hart patiently waiting for his return. Then
+he would spring back into the crowd like a deer leaping back into a
+thicket at sight of a hunter. Penniless at the fair, with Minny Hart
+waiting for him to take her into the show! Few persons can realize how
+keenly he now felt the loss of his money. He ought, no doubt, to have
+told the lass at once just how financial matters stood; but nothing was
+more remote from his mind than doing anything of the kind. He was too
+vain.
+
+"Tell 'er I 'ain't got no money! No, sir-ee!" he muttered. "But what
+_am_ I to do? Bust the luck! Hang the luck! Rot the luck!"
+
+He hurried hither and thither, intent on nothing and taking no heed of
+the course he pursued. His cheeks were livid and his eyes had in them
+that painful, worried, wistful look so often seen in the eyes of men
+going home from ruin on Wall street.
+
+Meantime that sea of persons surged this way and that, flecked with a
+foam of ribbons and dancing bubbles of hats, now flowing slowly through
+the exhibition rooms a tide of critics, now breaking into groups and
+scattered throngs of babblers, anon uniting to roar round some novel
+engine suddenly set to work, or to break on the barrier of the trolling
+ring into a spray of cravats and a mist of flounces. Swimming round in
+this turbulent tide like a crazy flounder with but one fin, Jack finally
+found himself hard by the pavilion of the minstrels. He could hear
+somewhat of the side-splitting jokes, with the laughs that followed, the
+tinkle of banjo accompaniments and the mellow cadences of plantation
+songs, the rattle of castanets and the tattoo of the jig dancers' feet.
+A thirst like the thirst of fever took hold of him.
+
+"Come straight along gentlemen and ladies! This celebrated troupe is now
+performing and twenty-five cents pays the bill! Only a quawtah of a
+dollah!" bawled the fat crier from his lofty perch. "That's right, my
+young man, take the young lady in! She's sure to love you better; walk
+right along!"
+
+ "Her lip am sweet as sugah,
+ Her eye am bright as wine,
+ Dat yaller little boogah
+ Her name am Emiline!"
+
+sung by four fine voices, came bubbling from within. The music thrilled
+Jack to the bone, and he felt once more for his money. Not a cent. This
+was bad.
+
+"You're the lad for me," continued the fat man on the high seat; "take
+your nice little sweetheart right in and let her see the fun. Walk right
+in!"
+
+Jack looked to see who it was, and a pang shot through his heart and
+settled in the very marrow of his bones; for lo! arm in arm, Bill Powell
+and Minny Hart passed under the pavilion into the full glory of the
+show!
+
+ "O cut me up for fish bait
+ An' feed me to de swine,
+ Don't care where I goes to
+ So I has Emiline!"
+
+sang the minstrel chorus.
+
+"Dast him, he's got me!" muttered Jack as Bill and Minny disappeared
+within. He turned away, sick at heart, and this was far from the first
+throe of jealousy he had suffered on Bill's account. Indeed it had given
+him no little uneasiness lately to see how sweetly Minny sometimes
+smiled on young Powell.
+
+"Yes, sir," Jack continued to mutter to himself, "yes, sir, he's got me!
+He's about three lengths ahead o' me, as these hoss fellers says, an' I
+don't know but what I'm distanced. Blow the blasted luck!"
+
+Heartily tired of the fair, burning with rage, and jealousy, and
+despair, but still vaguely hoping against hope for some better luck from
+some visionary source, Jack strolled about, chewing the bitter cud of
+his feelings, his hands up to his elbows in his trowser pockets and his
+soul up to its ears in the flood of discontent. He puckered his mouth
+into whistling position, but it refused to whistle. He felt as if he had
+a corn cob crossways in his throat. The wind blew his new hat off and a
+mule kicked the top out of the crown.
+
+"Only a half a dollah! Who's the next lucky man?" cried the prize
+package fellow. "I'm now going to sell a new sort of packages, each of
+which, beside the usual amount of choice candy, contains a piece of
+jewelry of pure gold! Who takes the first chance for only a half a
+dollah?"
+
+"'Ere's your mule!" answered Bill Powell, as with Minny still clinging
+to his arm, he pushed through the crowd and handed up the money.
+
+"Bravely done!" shouted the crier; "see what a beautiful locket and
+chain! Luck's a fortune! And who's the next to invest? Come right along
+and don't be afraid of a little risk! Only a half a dollah!"
+
+Jack saw Bill put the glittering chain round Minny's neck and fasten the
+locket in her belt; saw the eyes of the sweet girl gleam proudly,
+gratefully; saw black spots dancing before his own eyes; saw Bill
+swagger and toss his head. He turned dizzily away, whispering savagely,
+"Dern 'im!"
+
+Just here let me say that such an expression is not a profane one. I
+once saw a preacher kick at a little dog that got in his way on the
+sidewalk. The minister's foot missed the little dog and hit an iron
+fence, and the little dog bit the minister's other leg and jumped
+through the fence. The minister performed a _pas de zephyr_ and very
+distinctly said "Dern 'im!" Wherefore I don't think it can be anything
+more than a mere puff of fretfulness.
+
+After this Jack was for some time standing near the entrance to the
+"glass-works," a place where transparent steam engines and wonderful
+fountains were on exhibition. He felt a grim delight in tantalizing
+himself with looking at the pictures of these things and wishing he had
+money enough to pay the entrance fee. He saw persons pass in eagerly
+and come out calm and satisfied--men with their wives and children,
+young men with girls on their arms, prominent among whom were Bill and
+Minny, and one dapper sportsman even bought a ticket for his setter,
+and, patting the brute on the head, took him in.
+
+"Onery nor a dog!" hissed Jack, shambling off, and once more taking a
+long deep dive under the surface of the crowd. A ground swell cast him
+again near the vender of prize packages.
+
+"Only a half a dollah!" he yelled; "come where fortune smiles, and cares
+and poverty take flight, for only a half a dollah!"
+
+"Jist fifty cents more'n I've got about my clothes!" replied Jack, and
+the bystanders, taking this for great wit, joined in a roar of laughter,
+while with a grim smile the desperate youth passed on till he found
+himself near the toe mark of a shooting gallery, where for five cents
+one might have two shots with an air gun. He stood there for a time
+watching a number of persons try their marksmanship. It was small joy to
+know that he was a fine off-hand shot, so long as he had not a nickel in
+his pocket, but still he stood there wishing he might try his hand.
+
+"Cl'ar the track here! Let this 'ere lady take a shoot!" cried a
+familiar voice; and a way was opened for Bill Powell and Minny Hart. The
+little maiden was placed at the toe mark and a gun given to her. She
+handled the weapon like one used to it. She raised it, shut one eye,
+took deliberate aim and fired.
+
+"Centre!" roared the marker, as to the sound of a bell the funny little
+puppet leaped up and grinned above the target. Every body standing near
+laughed and some of the boys cheered vociferously. Minny looked sweeter
+than ever. Jack Trout felt famished. He begged a chew of tobacco of a
+stranger, and, grinding the weed furiously, walked off to where the
+yellow pavilion with its painted air-boats was whirling its cargoes of
+happy boys and girls round and round for the "Small sum of ten cents." A
+long, lean, red-headed fellow in one of the boats was paying for a ride
+of limitless length by scraping on a miserable fiddle. To Jack this
+seemed small labor for so much fun. How he envied the fiddler as he flew
+round, trailing his tunes behind him!
+
+"Wo'erp there! Stop yer old merchine! We'll take a ride ef ye don't
+keer!"
+
+The pavilion was stopped, a boat lowered for Bill Powell and Minny Hart,
+who got in side by side, and the fiddler struck up the tune of
+"Black-eyed Susie." Jack watched that happy couple go round and round,
+till, by the increased velocity, their two faces melted into one, which
+was neither Bill's nor Minny's--it was Luck's!
+
+"He's got one outo me," muttered Jack; "I've got no money, can't fiddle
+for a ride, nor nothin', and I don't keer a ding what becomes o' me,
+nohow!"
+
+With these words Jack wended his way to a remote part of the fair
+ground, where, under gay awnings, the sutlers had spread their tempting
+variety of cakes, pies, fruits, nuts and loaves. Here were persons of
+all ages and sizes--men, women and children--eating at well supplied
+tables. The sight was a fascinating one, and, though seeing others eat
+did not in the least appease his own hunger, Jack stood for a long time
+watching the departure of pies and the steady lessening of huge pyramids
+of sweet cakes. He particularly noticed one little table that had on its
+centre a huge peach pie, which table was yet unoccupied. While he was
+actually thinking over the plan of eating the pie and trusting to his
+legs to bear him beyond the reach of a dun, Bill and Minny sat down by
+the table and proceeded to discuss the delicious, red-hearted heap of
+pastry. At this point Bill caught Jack's eye:
+
+"Come here, Jack," said he; "this pie's more'n we can eat, come and help
+us."
+
+"Yes, come along, Jack," put in Minny in her sweetest way; "I want to
+tell you what a lot of fun we've had, and more than that, I want to know
+why you didn't come back and take me into the show!"
+
+"I ain't hungry," muttered Jack, "and besides I've got to go see a
+feller."
+
+He turned away almost choking.
+
+"Bill's got me. 'Taint no use talkin', I'm played out for good. I'm a
+trumped Jack!"
+
+He smiled a sort of flinty smile at his poor wit, and shuffled aimlessly
+along through the densest clots of the crowd.
+
+And it so continued to happen, that wherever Jack happened to stop for
+any considerable length of time he was sure to see Bill and Minny
+enjoying some rare treat, or disappearing in or emerging from some place
+of amusement.
+
+At last, driven to desperation, he determined on trying to borrow a
+dollar from his father. He immediately set about to find the old
+gentleman; a task of no little difficulty in such a crowd. It was Jack's
+forlorn hope, and it had a gloomy outlook; for old 'Squire Trout was
+thought by competent judges to be the stingiest man in the county. But
+hoping for the best, Jack hunted him here, there and everywhere, till at
+length he met a friend who said he had seen the 'Squire in the act of
+leaving the fair ground for home just a few minutes before.
+
+Taking no heed of what folks might say, Jack, on receiving this
+intelligence, darted across the ground, out at the gate and down the
+road at a speed worthy of success; but alas! his hopes were doomed to
+wilt. At the first turn of the road he met a man who informed him that
+he had passed 'Squire Trout some three miles out on his way home, which
+home was full nine miles distant!
+
+Panting, crestfallen, defeated, done for, poor Jack slowly plodded back
+to the fair ground gate, little dreaming of the new trouble that awaited
+him there.
+
+"Ticket!" said a gruff voice as he was about to pass in. He recoiled,
+amazed at his own stupidity, as he recollected that he had not thought
+to get a check as he went out! He tried to explain, but it was no go.
+
+"You needn't try that game on me," said the gatekeeper. "So just plank
+down your money or stay outside."
+
+Then Jack got furious, but the gatekeeper remarked that he had
+frequently "hearn it thunder afore this!"
+
+Jack smiled like a corpse and turned away. Going a short distance down
+the road he climbed up and sat down on top of the fence of a late mown
+clover field. Then he took out his jack-knife and began to whittle a
+splinter plucked from a rail. His face was gloomy, his eyes lustreless.
+Finally he stretched himself, hungry, jealous, envious, hateful, on top
+of the fence with his head between the crossed stakes. His face thus
+upturned to heaven, he watched two crows drift over, high up in the
+torrid reaches of autumn air, hot as summer, even hotter, and allowed
+his lips free privilege to anathematize his luck. For a long time he lay
+thus, dimly conscious of the blue bird's song and the water-like ripple
+of the grass in the fence corners. "Minny, Minny Hart, Minny!" sang the
+meadow larks, and the burden of the grasshopper's ditty was----"Only a
+half a dollah!"
+
+All at once there arose from the fair ground a mighty chorus of yells,
+that went echoing off across the country to the bluffs of Wild-cat Creek
+and died far off in the woods toward Greentown. Jack did not raise his
+head, but lay there in a sort of morose stupor, knowing well that
+whatever the sport might be, he had no hand in it.
+
+"Let 'em rip!" he muttered, "Bill's got me!"
+
+Presently the wagons and other vehicles began to leave the ground, from
+one of which he caught the sound of a sweet, familiar voice. He looked
+just in time to get a glimpse of Mr. Hart's wagon, and in it, side by
+side, Bill Powell and Minny! A cloud of yellow dust soon hid them, and
+turning away his head, happening to glance upward, Jack saw, just
+disappearing in a thin white cloud, the golden disc of Le Papillon's
+balloon!
+
+He immediately descended from his perch and began plodding his way home,
+muttering as he did so----
+
+"Dast the luck! Ding the prize package feller! Doggone Bill Powell!
+Blame the old b'loon! Dern everybody!"
+
+It was long after nightfall when he reached his father's gate. Hungry,
+weak, foot-sore, collapsed, he leaned his chin on the top rail of the
+gate and stood there for a moment while the starlight fell around him,
+sifted through the dusky foliage of the old beech trees, and from the
+far dim caverns of the night a voice smote on his ear, crying out
+tenderly, mockingly, persuasively----
+
+"Only a half a dollah!"
+
+And Jack slipped to his room and went supperless to bed, often during
+the night muttering, through the interstices of his sleep----"Bill's got
+me!"
+
+
+
+
+BIG MEDICINE.
+
+
+The corner brick storehouse--in fact the only brick building in
+Jimtown--was to be sold at auction; and, consequently, by ten o'clock in
+the morning, a considerable body of men had collected near the somewhat
+dilapidated house, directly in front of which the auctioneer, a fat man
+from Indianapolis, mounted on an old goods box, began crying, partly
+through his tobacco-filled mouth and partly through his very unmusical
+nose, as follows:--
+
+"Come up, gentlemen, and examine the new, beautiful and commodious
+property I now offer for sale! Walk round the house, men, and view it
+from every side. Go into it, if you like, up stairs and down, and then
+give me a bid, somebody, to start with. It is a very desirable house,
+indeed, gentlemen."
+
+With this preliminary puff, the speaker paused and glanced slowly over
+his audience with the air of a practiced physiognomist. The crowd
+before him was, in many respects, an interesting one. Its most prominent
+individual, and the hero of this sketch, was Dave Cook, sometimes called
+Dr. Cook, but more commonly answering to the somewhat savage sounding
+sobriquet of Big Medicine--a man some thirty-five years of age, standing
+six feet six in his ponderous boots; broad, bony, muscular, a real
+giant, with a strongly marked Roman face, and brown, shaggy hair. He was
+dressed in a soiled and somewhat patched suit of butternut jeans, topped
+off with a wide rimmed wool hat, wonderfully battered, and lopped in
+every conceivable way. He wore a watch, the chain of which, depending
+from the waistband of his pants, was of iron, and would have weighed
+fully a pound avoirdupois. He stood quite still, near the auctioneer,
+smoking a clay pipe, his herculean arms folded on his breast, his feet
+far apart. As for the others of the crowd, they were, taken
+collectively, about such as one used always to see in the "dark corners"
+of Indiana, such as Boone county used to be before the building of any
+railroads through it, such as the particular locality of Jimtown was
+before the ditching law and the I. B. & W. Railway had lifted the fog
+and enlightened the miasmatic swamps and densely timbered bog lands of
+that region of elms, burr oaks, frogs and herons. Big Medicine seemed to
+be the only utterly complacent man in the assembly. All the others
+discovered evidences of much inward disturbance, muttering mysteriously
+to each other, and casting curious, inquiring glances at an individual,
+a stranger in the place, who, with a pair of queer green spectacles
+astride his nose, and his arms crossed behind him, was slowly sauntering
+about the building offered for sale, apparently examining it with some
+care. His general appearance was that of a well dressed gentleman, which
+of itself was enough to excite remark in Jimtown, especially when an
+auction was on hand, and everybody felt jolly.
+
+"Them specs sticks to that nose o' his'n like a squir'l to a knot!" said
+one.
+
+"His pantaloons is ruther inclined to be knock-kneed," put in an old,
+grimy sinner leaning on a single barrelled shot gun.
+
+"Got lard enough onto his hair to shorten a mess o' pie crust," added a
+liver colored boy.
+
+"Walks like he'd swallered a fence rail, too," chimed in a humpbacked
+fellow split almost to his chin.
+
+"Chaws mighty fine terbacker, you bet."
+
+"Them there boots o' his'n set goin' an' comin' like a grubbin' hoe onto
+a crooked han'le."
+
+"Well, take'm up one side and down t'other, he's a mod'rately onery
+lookin' feller."
+
+These remarks were reckoned smart by those who perpetrated them, and
+were by no means meant for real slurs on the individual at whom they
+were pointed. Indeed they were delivered in guarded undertones, so that
+he might not hear them; and he, meanwhile, utterly ignorant of affording
+any sport, continued his examination of the house, the while some happy
+frogs in a neighboring pond rolled out a rattling, jubilant chorus, and
+the summer wind poured through the leafy tops of the tall elms and
+athletic burr oaks with a swash and roar like a turbulent river.
+
+"What am I now offered for this magnificent property? Come, give me a
+bid! Speak up lively! What do I hear for the house?"
+
+The auctioneer, as he spoke, let his eyes wander up the walls of the
+old, dingy building, to where the blue birds and the peewees had built
+in the cracks and along the warped cornice and broken window frames, and
+just then it chanced that a woman's face appeared at one of those
+staring holes, which, with broken lattice and shattered glass, still
+might be called a window. The face was a plump, cheerful one, the more
+radiant from contrast with the dull wall around it--a face one could
+never forget, however, and would recall often, if for nothing but the
+fine fall of yellow hair that framed it in. It was a sweet, winning,
+intellectual face, full of the gentlest womanly charms.
+
+"Forty dollars for the house, 'oman and all!" cried Big Medicine, gazing
+up at the window in which, for the merest moment, the face appeared.
+
+The man with the green spectacles darted a quick glance at the speaker.
+
+"I am bid forty dollars, gentlemen, forty dollars, do all hear? Agoing
+for forty dollars! Who says fifty?" bawled the auctioneer.
+
+The crowd now swayed earnestly forward, closing in solid order around
+the goods box. Many whiskered, uncouth, but not unkindly faces were
+upturned to the window only in time to see the beautiful woman disappear
+quite hastily.
+
+"Hooray for the gal!" cried a lusty youth, whose pale blue eyes made no
+show of contrast with his faded hair and aguish complexion. "Dad, can't
+ye bid agin the doctor so as I kin claim 'er?"
+
+"Fifty dollars!" shouted the sunburnt man addressed as Dad.
+
+This made the crowd lively. Every man nudged his neighbor, and the
+aguish, blue-eyed boy grinned in a ghastly, self-satisfied way.
+
+"Agoing at fifty dollars! Fiddlesticks! The house is worth four
+thousand. No fooling here now! Agoing at only fifty dollars--going--"
+
+"Six hundred dollars," said he of the green glasses in a clear, pleasant
+voice.
+
+"Six hundred dollars!" echoed the auctioneer in a triumphant thunderous
+tone. "That sounds like business. Who says the other hundred?"
+
+"Hooray for hooray, and hooray for hooray's daddy!" shouted the
+tallow-faced lad.
+
+The frogs pitched their song an octave higher, the blue birds and
+peewees wheeled through the falling floods of yellow sunlight, and lower
+and sweeter rose the murmur of the tide of pulsating air as it lifted
+and swayed the fresh sprays of the oaks and elms. The well dressed
+stranger lighted a cigar, took off his green glasses and put them
+carefully in his pocket, then took a cool straight look at Big Medicine.
+
+The Roman face of the latter was just then a most interesting one. It
+was expressive of more than words could rightly convey. Six hundred
+dollars, cash down, was a big sum for the crazy old house, but he had
+made up his mind to buy it, and now he seemed likely to have to let it
+go or pay more than it was worth. The stem of his clay pipe settled back
+full three inches into his firmly-set mouth, so that there seemed
+imminent danger to the huge brown moustache that overhung the fiery
+bowl. He returned the stare of the stranger with interest, and said--
+
+"Six hundred an' ten dollars."
+
+"Agoing, a----," began the auctioneer.
+
+"Six twenty," said the stranger.
+
+"Ago----."
+
+"Six twenty-one!" growled Big Medicine.
+
+"Six twenty-five!" quickly added his antagonist.
+
+Big Medicine glanced heavenward, and for a moment allowed his eyes to
+follow the flight of a great blue heron that slowly winged its way, high
+up in the yellow summer reaches of splendor, toward the distant swamps
+where the white sycamores spread their fanciful arms above the dark
+green maples and dusky witch-hazel thickets. The auctioneer, a close
+observer, saw an ashy hue, a barely discernible shade, ripple across
+the great Roman face as Big Medicine said, in a jerking tone:
+
+"Six twenty-five and a half!"
+
+The stranger took his cigar from his mouth and smiled placidly. No more
+imperturbable countenance could be imagined.
+
+"Six twenty-six!" he said gently.
+
+"Take the ole house an' be derned to you!" cried Big Medicine, looking
+furiously at his antagonist. "Take the blamed ole shacke-merack an' all
+the cussed blue-birds an' peer-weers to boot, for all I keer!"
+
+Everybody laughed, and the auctioneer continued:
+
+"Agoing for six twenty-six! Who says seven hundred? Bid up lively!
+Agoing once, agoing twice--once, twice, three-e-e-e-e times! Sold to
+Abner Golding for six hundred and twenty-six dollars, and as cheap as
+dirt itself!"
+
+"Hooray for the man who hed the most money!" shouted the tallow-faced
+boy.
+
+The sale was at an end. The auctioneer came down from his box and wiped
+his face with a red handkerchief. The crowd, as if blown apart by a puff
+of wind, scattered this way and that, drifting into small, grotesque
+groups to converse together on whatever topic might happen to suggest
+itself. Big Medicine seemed inclined to be alone, but the irrepressible
+youth of the saffron skin ambled up to him and said, in a tone intended
+for comic:
+
+"Golly, doctor, but didn't that 'ere gal projuce a orful demand for the
+ole house! Didn't she set the ole trap off when she peeked out'n the
+winder!"
+
+Big Medicine looked down at the strapping boy, much as a lion might look
+at a field rat or a weasel, then he doubled his hand into an enormous
+fist and held it under the youth's nose, saying in a sort of growl as he
+did so:
+
+"You see this 'ere bundle o' bones, don't ye?"
+
+"Guess so," replied the youth.
+
+"Well, would you like a small mess of it?"
+
+"Not as anybody knows of."
+
+"Well, then, keep yer derned mouth shet!"
+
+Which, accordingly, the boy proceeded to do, ambling off as quickly as
+possible.
+
+About this time, the stranger, having put the green spectacles back upon
+his nose, walked in the direction of 'Squire Tadmore's office,
+accompanied by the young woman who had looked from the window. When Big
+Medicine saw them he picked up a stick and began furiously to whittle it
+with his jack-knife. His face wore a comically mingled look of chagrin,
+wonder, and something like a new and thrilling delight. He puffed out
+great volumes of smoke, making his pipe wheeze audibly under the vigor
+of his draughts. He was certainly excited.
+
+"Orful joke the boys 'll have on me arter this," he muttered to himself.
+"Wonder if the 'oman's the feller's wife? Monstrous poorty, shore's yer
+born!"
+
+He soon whittled up one stick. He immediately dived for another, this
+time getting hold of a walnut knot. A tough thing to whittle, but he
+attacked it as if it had been a bit of white pine. Soon after this
+'Squire Tadmore's little boy came running down from his father's office
+to where Big Medicine stood.
+
+"Mr. Big Medicine," cried he, all out of breath, "that 'ere man what
+bought the ole house wants to see you partic'ler!"
+
+"Mischief he does! Tell 'im to go to----; no, wait a bit. Guess I'll go
+tell 'im myself."
+
+And, so saying, he moved at a slashing pace down to the door of the
+'Squire's office. He thrust his great hirsute head inside the room, and
+glaring at the mild mannered stranger, said:
+
+"D'ye want to see me?"
+
+Mr. Golding got up from his seat and coming out took Big Medicine
+familiarly by the arm, meanwhile smiling in the most friendly way.
+
+"Come one side a little, I wish to speak with you privately,
+confidentially."
+
+Big Medicine went rather sulkily along. When they had gone some distance
+from the house Mr. Golding lifted his spectacles from his nose, and
+turning his calm, smiling eyes full upon those of Big Medicine, said,
+with a shrug of his finely cut shoulders:
+
+"I outbid you a little, my friend, but I'm blessed if I haven't got
+myself into a ridiculous scrape on account of it."
+
+"How so?" growled Big Medicine.
+
+"Why, when I come to count my funds I'm short a half dollar."
+
+"You're what?"
+
+"I lack just a half dollar of having enough money to pay for the house,
+and I thought I'd rather ask you to loan me the money than anybody else
+here."
+
+Big Medicine stood for a time in silence, whittling away, as if for dear
+life, on the curly knot. Dreamy gusts of perfumed heat swept by from
+adjacent clover and wheat fields, where the blooms hung thick; little
+whirlwinds played in the dust at their feet as little whirlwinds always
+do in summer; and far away, faint, and made tenderly musical by
+distance, were heard the notes of a country dinner-horn. Big Medicine's
+ample chest swelled, and swelled, and then he burst at the mouth with a
+mighty bass laugh, that went battling and echoing round the place. Mr.
+Golding laughed too, in his own quiet, gentlemanly way. They looked at
+each other and laughed, then looked off toward the swamps and laughed.
+Big Medicine put his hands in his pockets almost up to the elbows, and
+leaned back and laughed out of one corner of his mouth while holding his
+pipe in the other.
+
+"I say, mister," said he at length, "a'n't you railly got but six
+hundred and twenty-five an' a half?"
+
+"Just that much to a cent, and no more," replied Mr. Golding, with a
+comical smile and bow.
+
+Big Medicine took his pipe from his mouth, gave the walnut knot he had
+dropped a little kick and guffawed louder and longer than before. To
+have been off at a little distance watching them would have convinced
+any one that Mr. Golding was telling some rare anecdote, and that Big
+Medicine was convulsed with mirth, listening.
+
+"Well I'm derned if 'taint quare," cried the latter, wringing himself
+into all sorts of grotesque attitudes in the ecstasy of his amusement.
+"You outbid me half a dollar and then didn't have the half a dollar
+neither! Wha, wha, wha-ee!" and his cachinnations sounded like rolling
+of moderate thunder.
+
+At the end of this he took out a greasy wallet and paid Mr. Golding the
+required amount in silver coin. His chagrin had vanished before the
+stranger's quiet way of making friends.
+
+A week passed over Jimtown. A week of as rare June weather as ever
+lingered about the cool places of the woods, or glimmered over the sweet
+clover fields all red with a blush of bloom, where the field larks
+twittered and the buntings chirped, and where the laden bees rose
+heavily to seek their wild homes in the hollows of the forests. By this
+time it was generally known in Jimtown that Mr. Golding would soon
+receive a stock of goods with which to open a "store" in the old corner
+brick; but Big Medicine knew more than any of his neighbors, for he and
+Golding had formed a partnership to do business under the "name and
+style" of Cook & Golding.
+
+This Abner Golding had lately been a wealthy retail man in Cincinnati,
+and had lost everything by the sudden suspension of a bank wherein the
+bulk of his fortune was on deposit. His creditors had made a run on him
+and he had been able to save just the merest remnant of his goods, and a
+few hundred dollars in money. Thus he came to Jimtown to begin life and
+business anew.
+
+To Big Medicine the week had been a long one; why, it would not be easy
+to tell. No doubt there had come a turning point in his life. In those
+days, and in that particular region, to be a 'store keeper' was no small
+honor. But Big Medicine acted strangely. He wandered about, with his
+hands in his pockets, whistling plaintive tunes, and often he was seen
+standing out before the old corner brick, gazing up at one of the vacant
+windows where pieces of broken lattice were swaying in the wind. At such
+times he muttered softly to himself:
+
+"Ther's wher I fust seed the gal."
+
+Four big road wagons (loaded with boxes), three of them containing the
+merchandise and one the scanty household furniture of Mr. Golding and
+his daughter Carrie, came rumbling into Jimtown. Big Medicine was on
+hand, a perfect Hercules at unloading and unpacking. Mr. Golding was
+sadly pleasant; Carrie was roguishly observant, but womanly and quiet.
+
+The tallow-faced youth and two or three others stood by watching the
+proceedings. The former occasionally made a remark at which the others
+never failed to laugh.
+
+"Ef ye'll notice, now," said he, "it's a fac 'at whenever Big Medicine
+goes to make a big surge to lift a box, he fust takes a peep at the gal,
+an' that 'ere seems to kinder make 'im 'wax strong an' multiply,' as the
+preacher says, an' then over goes the box!"
+
+"Has a awful effect on his narves," some one replied.
+
+"I'm a thinkin'," added tallow-face, "'at ef Big Medicine happens to
+look at the gal about the time he goes to make a trade, it'll have sich
+a power on 'im 'at he'll sell a yard o' caliker for nigh onto forty
+dollars!"
+
+"Er a blanket overcoat for 'bout twelve an' a half cents!" put in
+another.
+
+"I'm kinder weakly," resumed tallow-face with a comical leer at Big
+Medicine; "wonder if 't wouldn't be kinder strengthnin' on me ef I'd
+kinder sidle up towards the gal myself?"
+
+"I'll sidle up to you!" growled Big Medicine; and making two strides of
+near ten feet each, he took the youth by his faded flaxen hair, and
+holding him clear of the ground, administered a half dozen or so of
+resounding kicks, then tossed him to one side, where he fell in a heap
+on the ground. When he got on his feet again he began to bristle up and
+show fight, but when Big Medicine reached for him he ambled off.
+
+In due time the goods were all placed on the shelves and Mr. Golding's
+household furniture arranged in the upper rooms where he purposed
+living, Carrie acting as housekeeper.
+
+On the first evening after all things had been put to rights, Mr.
+Golding said to Big Medicine:
+
+"I suppose we ought to advertise."
+
+"Do how?"
+
+"Advertise."
+
+"Sartinly," said Big Medicine, having not the faintest idea of what his
+partner meant.
+
+"Who can we get to paint our fence advertisements?"
+
+A gleam of intelligence shot from Big Medicine's eyes. He knew now what
+was wanted. He remembered once, on a visit to Crawfordsville, seeing
+these fence advertisements. He comprehended in a moment.
+
+"O, I know what ye mean, now," he said, with a grin, as if communing
+with himself on some novel suggestion. "I guess I kin 'tend to that my
+own self. The moon shines to-night, don't it?"
+
+"Yes; why?"
+
+"I'll do the paintin' to-night. A good ijee has jist struck me. You jist
+leave it all to me."
+
+So the thing was settled, and Big Medicine was gone all night.
+
+The next day was a sluice of rain. It poured incessantly from daylight
+till dark. Big Medicine sat on the counter in the corner brick and
+chuckled. His thoughts were evidently very pleasant ones. Mr. Golding
+was busy marking goods and Carrie was helping him. The great grey eyes
+of Big Medicine followed the winsome girl all the time. When night came,
+and she went up stairs, he said to Golding:
+
+"That gal o' your'n is a mighty smart little 'oman."
+
+"Yes, and she's all I have left," replied Mr. Golding in a sad tone.
+
+Big Medicine stroked his brown beard, whistled a few turns of a jig
+tune, and, jumping down from the counter, went out into the drizzly
+night. A few rods from the house he turned and looked up at the window.
+A little form was just vanishing from it.
+
+"Ther's wher I fust seed the gal," he murmured, then turned and went his
+way, occupied with strange, sweet imaginings. As a matter of the merest
+conjecture, it is interesting to dwell upon the probable turn taken by
+his thoughts as he slowly stalked through the darkness and rain that
+night; but I shall not trench on what, knowing all that I do, seems
+sanctified and hallowed. It would be breaking a sacred confidence. Who
+has stood and watched for a form at a window? Who has expressed, in
+language more refined, to the inner fountain of human sympathy, the idea
+conveyed in the rough fellow's remark? Who that has, let him recall the
+time and the place holy in his memory.
+
+"Ther's wher I fust seed the gal," said the man, and went away to his
+lonely bed to dream the old new dream. All night the rain fell, making
+rich music on the roof and pouring through his healthy slumber a sound
+like the flowing of strange rivers in a land of new delights--a land
+into which he had strayed hand in hand with some one, the merest touch
+of whose hand was rapture, the simplest utterance of whose voice was
+charming beyond expression. The old new dream. The dream of flesh that
+is divine--the vision of blood that is love's wine--the apocalypse that
+bewildered the eyes of the old singer when from a flower of foam in the
+sweet green sea rose the Cytherean Venus. We have all dreamed the dream
+and found it sweet.
+
+It is quite probable that no fence advertisements ever paid as well, or
+stirred up as big a "muss" as those painted by Big Medicine on the night
+mentioned heretofore. As an artist our Hoosier was not a genius, but he
+certainly understood how to manufacture a notoriety. If space permitted
+I would copy all those rude notices for your inspection; but I must be
+content with a few random specimens taken from memory, with an eye to
+brevity. They are characteristic of the man and in somewhat an index of
+the then state of society in and around Jimtown. On Deacon Jones's fence
+was scrawled the following: "Dern yer ole sole, ef yer want good Koffy
+go to Cook & Golding's nu stoar."
+
+John Butler, a nice old quaker, had the following daubed on his gate:
+"Yu thievin' duk-legged ya and na ole cuss, ef the sperit muves ye, go
+git a broad-brimmed straw hat at Cook & Golding's great stand at
+Jimtown." The side of William Smith's pig pen bore this: "Bill, ye
+ornery sucker, come traid with Cook & Golding at the ole corner brick in
+Jimtown." Old Peter Gurley found writing to the following effect on his
+new wagon bed: "Ef yoor dri or anything, you'll find a virtoous Kag of
+ri licker at Cook & Golding's." On a large plank nailed to a tree at
+Canaan's Cross Roads all passers by saw the following: "Git up an
+brindle! Here's yer ole and faithful mewl! Come in gals and git yer
+dofunny tricks and fixens, hats, caps, bonnets, parrysols, silk
+petty-coat-sleeves and other injucements too noomerous too menshen! Rip
+in--we're on it! Call at Cook & Golding's great corner brick!"
+
+These are fair specimens of what appeared everywhere. How one man could
+have done so much in one night remains a mystery. Some people swore,
+some threatened to prosecute, but finally everybody went to the corner
+brick to trade. Jimtown became famous on account of Big Medicine and the
+corner brick store.
+
+The sun rose through the morning gate beyond the quagmires east of
+Jimtown and set through the evening gate past the ponds and maple swamps
+to the west. The winds blew and there were days of calm. The weather ran
+through its mutations of heat and cold. The herons flew over, the blue
+birds twittered and went away and came again, and the peewees
+disappeared and returned. A whole year had rolled round and it was June
+again, with the air full of rumors about the building of a railroad
+through Jimtown.
+
+During this flow of time Big Medicine had feasted his eyes on the bright
+curls and brighter eyes of Carrie Golding, till his heart had become
+tender and happy as a child's. They rarely conversed more than for him
+to say, "Miss Carrie, look there," or for her to call out, "Please, Mr.
+Cook, hand me down this bolt of muslin." But Big Medicine was content.
+
+It was June the 8th, about ten o'clock in the morning, and Big Medicine
+was slowly making his way from his comfortable bachelor's cabin to the
+corner brick. A peculiar smile was on his face, his heart was fluttering
+strangely, and all on account of a little circumstance of the preceding
+day, now fresh in his memory. Great boy that he was, he was poring ever
+a single sweet smile Carrie Golding had given him!
+
+The mail hack stood at the post-office door, whence Mr. Golding was
+coming with a letter in his hand. Big Medicine stopped and looked up at
+the window. There stood Carrie. She was looking hopefully toward her
+father. Big Medicine smiled and murmured:
+
+"Ther's wher I fust seed the gal--bless her sweet soul!" There was a
+whole world of sincere happiness in the tones of his voice.
+
+Mr. Golding passed him hastily, his green spectacles on his nose, and a
+great excitement flashing from his face. Big Medicine gazed wonderingly
+after his partner till he saw him run up stairs to Carrie's room. Then
+he thought he heard Carrie cry out joyfully, but it may have been the
+wind.
+
+When an hour had passed Mr. Golding and Carrie came down dressed for
+travelling. How strangely, wondrously beautiful the girl now looked! Mr.
+Golding was as nervous as an old woman. He rubbed his thin white hands
+together rapidly and said:
+
+"Mr. Cook, I have glorious news this morning!"
+
+"And what mought it be?" asked Big Medicine, as a damp chilliness crept
+over him, and his face grew pinched and almost as white as his shirt
+bosom.
+
+"Krofton & Kelly, the bankers, have resumed payment, and I'll get all my
+money! It _is_ glorious news, is it not, my friend?"
+
+Big Medicine was silent. He tried to speak, but his mouth was dry and
+powerless. A mist drifted across his eyes. He hardly realized where he
+was or what was said, but he knew all.
+
+"I have concluded to give you this house and all my interest in this
+store. You must not refuse. I haven't time to make the transfer now, but
+I'll not neglect it. Carrie and I must hasten at once to Cincinnati. The
+hack is waiting; so good bye, my dear friend, God bless you!" Mr.
+Golding wrung his partner's cold, limp hand, without noticing how
+fearfully haggard that Roman face had suddenly grown.
+
+"Good bye, Mr. Cook," said Carrie in her sweet, sincere way. "I'm real
+sorry to leave you and the dear old house--but--but--good bye, Mr. Cook.
+Come to see us in Cincinnati. Good bye." She gave him her hand also.
+
+He smiled a wan, flickering smile, like the last flare of a fire whose
+fuel is exhausted. Carrie's woman's heart sank under that look, though
+she knew not wherefore.
+
+The hack passed round the curve of the road.
+
+They were gone!
+
+Big Medicine stood alone in the door of the corner brick. He looked back
+over his shoulders at the well filled shelves and muttered:
+
+"She ain't here, and what do I want of the derned old store?"
+
+The wind rustled the elm leaves and tossed the brown locks of the man
+over his great forehead; the blue birds sang on the roof; the dust rose
+in little columns along the street; and, high over head, in the yellow
+mist of the fine June weather, sailed a great blue heron, going to the
+lakes. Big Medicine felt like one deserted in the wilderness. He stood
+there a while, then closed and locked the door and went into the woods.
+A month passed before he returned. Jimtown wondered and wondered. But
+when he did return his neighbors could not get a word out of him. He was
+silent, moody, listless. Where had he been? Only hunting for Mr. Golding
+and Carrie. He found them, after a long search, in a splendid residence
+on the heights just out of Cincinnati. Mr. Golding greeted him
+cordially, but somehow Big Medicine felt as though he were shaking hands
+with some one over an insurmountable barrier. That was not the Mr.
+Golding he had known.
+
+"Carrie is out in the garden. She will be glad to see you. Go along the
+hall there. You will see the gate."
+
+Mr. Golding waved his hand after the manner of a very rich man, and a
+patronizing tone would creep into his voice. Somehow Big Medicine looked
+terribly uncouth.
+
+With a hesitating step and a heart full of unreal sensations, Big
+Medicine opened the little gate and strode into the flower garden.
+Suddenly a vision, such as his fancy had never pictured, burst on his
+dazzled eyes. Flowers and vines and statues and fountains; on every hand
+rich colors; perfumes so mixed and intensified that his senses almost
+gave way; long winding walks; fairy-like bowers and music. He paused and
+listened. A heavy voice, rich and manly, singing a ballad--some popular
+love song--to the sweet accompaniment of a violin, and blended through
+it all, like a silvery thread, the low sweet voice of Carrie Golding.
+The poor fellow held his breath till the song was done.
+
+Two steps forward and Big Medicine towered above the lovers.
+
+Carrie sprang to her feet with a startled cry; then, recognizing the
+intruder, she held out her little hand and welcomed him. Turning to her
+lover she said:
+
+"Henry, this is Mr. Cook, lately papa's partner in Indiana."
+
+The lover was a true gentleman, so he took the big hard hand of the
+visitor and said he was glad to see him.
+
+Big Medicine stood for a few moments holding a hand of each of the
+lovers. Presently a tremor took possession of his burly frame. He did
+not speak a word. His breast swelled and his face grew awfully white.
+He put Carrie's hand in that of her lover and turned away. As he did so
+a tear, a great bitter drop, rolled down his haggard cheek. A few long
+strides and Big Medicine was gone.
+
+Shrilly piped the blue birds, plaintively sang the peewees, sweetly
+through the elms and burr oaks by the corner brick blew the fresh summer
+wind, as, just at sunset, Big Medicine once more stood in front of the
+old building with his eyes fixed on the vacant, staring window.
+
+It was scarcely a minute that he stood there, but long enough for a
+tender outline of the circumstances of the past year to rise in his
+memory.
+
+A rustling at the broken lattice, a sudden thrill through the iron frame
+of the watching man, a glimpse of a sweet face--no, it was only a fancy.
+The house was still, and old and desolate. It stared at him like a
+death's head.
+
+Big Medicine raised his eyes toward heaven, which was now golden and
+flashing resplendently with sunset glories. High up, as if almost
+touching the calm sky, a great blue heron was toiling heavily westward.
+Taking the course chosen by the lone bird, Big Medicine went away, and
+the places that knew him once know him no more forever.
+
+
+
+
+THE VENUS OF BALHINCH.
+
+
+When I returned from Europe with a finished education, I found that my
+fortune also was finished in the most approved modern style, so I left
+New York and drifted westward in search of employment. At length I came
+to Indiana, and, having not even a cent left, and mustering but one
+presentable suit of clothes, I looked about me in a hungry, half
+desperate sort of way, till I pounced upon the school in Balhinch. Now
+Balhinch is not a town, nor a cross-road place, nor a post-office--it is
+simply a neighborhood in the southwestern corner of Union Township,
+Montgomery County--a neighborhood _sui generis_, stowed away in the
+breaks of Sugar Creek, containing as good, quiet, law-abiding folk as
+can be found anywhere outside of Switzerland. My school was a small one
+in numbers, but the pupils ranged from four to six feet three in
+altitude, and well proportioned. The most advanced class had thumbed
+along pretty well through the spelling book. I need not take up your
+time with the school, however, for it has nothing at all to do with my
+story, excepting merely to explain how I came to be in Balhinch, in the
+State of Indiana.
+
+My first sight of Susie Adair was on Sunday at the Methodist prayer
+meeting. I was sitting with my back to a window and facing the door of
+the log meeting house when she entered. It was July--a hot glary day,
+but a steady wind blew cool and sweet from the southwest, bringing in
+all sorts of woodland odors. The grasshoppers were chirruping in the
+little timothy field hard by, and over in a bit of woodland pasture a
+swarm of blue jays were worrying a crow, keeping up an incessant
+squeaking and chattering. The dumpy little class leader--the only little
+man in Balhinch--had just begun to give out the hymn
+
+ "Love is the sweetest bud that blows,
+ Its beauties never die,
+ On earth among the saints it grows
+ And ripens in the sky," &c.,
+
+when Susie came in. Ben Crane was sitting by me. He nudged me with his
+elbow and whispered:
+
+"How's that 'ere for poorty?"
+
+I made him no answer, but remained staring at the girl till long after
+she had taken her seat. Nature plays strange tricks. Susie, the daughter
+of farmer Adair, was as beautiful in the face as any angel could be, and
+her form was as perfect as that of the Cnidian Venus. Her motion when
+she walked was music, and as she sat in statuesque repose, the
+undulations of her queenly form were those of perfect ease, grace and
+strength. Her hands were small and taper, a little browned from
+exposure, as was also her face. Her hair was the real classic gold, and
+her grey eyes were riant with health and content. When her red lips
+parted to sing, they discovered small even teeth, as white as ivory. I
+can give you no idea of her. Physically she was perfection's self in the
+mould of a Venus of the grandest type. Her head, too, was an
+intellectual one (though feminine), in the best sense of the word. The
+first thought that flashed across my mind was embodied in the words--_A
+Venus_--and I still think of her as the best model I ever saw.
+
+"How's that for poorty?" repeated Crane.
+
+"Who is she!" I replied interrogatively.
+
+"She's my jewlarker," said he.
+
+"Your what?"
+
+"My sweetheart."
+
+"What is her name?"
+
+"Susie Adair."
+
+So I came to know her and admire her, and even before that little prayer
+meeting was over I loved her. Introductions were an unknown institution
+in Balhinch, but I was not long in finding a way to the personal
+acquaintance of Susie. I found her remarkably intelligent for one of her
+limited opportunities, very fond of reading, sprightly in conversation,
+womanly, modest, sweet tempered, and, indeed, altogether charming as
+well as superbly beautiful.
+
+As for me, I am an insignificant looking man, and then I was even more
+so than now. My hair is terribly stiff and red, you know, and my eyes
+are very pale blue, nearly white. My neck is very long and has a large
+Adam's apple. I am small and narrow chested, and have slender bow legs.
+My teeth are uneven and my nose is pug. I have a very fine thin voice,
+decidedly nasal, as you perceive. One thing, however, I am well
+educated, polite, and not a bad conversationalist.
+
+Susie was a most entertaining and perplexing study for me from the
+start. She treated me with decided consideration and kindness, seemed
+deeply interested in my accounts of my travels, asked me many questions
+about the old world and good society, sat for hours at a time listening
+to me as I read aloud. In fact I felt that I was impressing her deeply,
+but she would go with Ben Crane, that long, awkward, ignorant gawk. How
+could a young woman of such fine magnetic presence, and endowed with
+such genuine, instinctive purity of taste in everything else, bear the
+presence of a rough greenhorn like that? Finally I said to myself: she
+is kind and good; she cannot bear to slight Ben, though she cares
+nothing for him.
+
+What a strange state being in love is! It is like dreaming in the grass.
+One hears the flow of the wind--it is the breath of love--one smells the
+flowers, and it is the perfume of a young cheek, the sharp fragrance of
+blonde curls. What dreams I had in those days! I could scarcely endure
+my school to the end of the first three months. Then I gave it up, and
+collecting my wages purchased me some fine clothes--that is, fine for
+the time and the place. I recollect that suit now, and wonder how a man
+of my taste could have borne to wear it. A black coat, a scarlet vest
+and white pants, ending with calf boots and a very tall silk hat! If you
+should see me dressed that way now you would laugh till your ribs would
+hurt. I do not know how true it is, but, from a pretty good source, I
+heard that Ben Crane said I looked like a red-headed woodpecker. One
+thing I do know, I never saw a woodpecker with a freckled face. I have a
+freckled face.
+
+Ben soon recognized me as his rival and treated me with supreme
+impertinence, even going so far as to rub his fist under my nose and
+swear at me--a thing at which I felt profoundly indignant, and
+considering which I was surely justified in sticking a lucifer match
+into Ben's six valuable hay stacks one night thereafter. It was a great
+fire, and two hundred dollars loss to Ben. Let him keep his fist out
+from under my nose.
+
+But I must come to my story, cutting short these preliminaries. It is a
+story I never tire of telling, and a story which has elicited
+ejaculations from many.
+
+It was a ripe sweet day in the latter part of September--clear, but hazy
+and dreamful--a prelude to the Indian summer. I stood before the glass
+in my room at 'Squire Jones's, where I boarded, and very carefully
+arranged my bright blue neck-tie. Then I combed my hair. I never have
+got thoroughly familiar with my hair. I cannot, even now, comb it, while
+looking in a glass, without cringing for fear of burning my fingers. The
+long, wavy red locks flow through the comb like flames, and underneath
+is a gleam of live coals and red hot ashes. Ben Crane said he believed
+my head had set his hay stacks a-fire. Maybe it did. I wished that a
+stray flash from the same source would kindle the heart of Susie Adair
+and heat it until it lay under her Cytherean breasts a puddle of molten
+love. I put my silk hat carefully upon my head and wriggled my hands
+into a pair of kid gloves; then, walking-stick in hand, I set out to
+know my fate at the hands of Susie. My way was across a stubble field in
+which the young clover, sown in the spring, displayed itself in a
+variety of fantastic modes. Have you ever noticed how much grass is like
+water? Some one, Hawthorne, perhaps, has spoken of "a gush of violets,"
+and Swinburne, going into one of his musical frenzies, cries:
+
+ "Where tides of grass break into foam of flowers."
+
+I have seen pools of clover and streams of timothy; I have stood ankle
+deep in shoal blue grass and have watched for hours the liquid ripples
+of the red top. I have seen the field sparrows dive into the green waves
+of young wheat, and the black starlings wade about in the sink-foil of
+southern countries. Grass is a liquid that washes earth's face till it
+shines like that of a clean, healthy child. But clover prefers to stand
+in pools and eddies, in which oft and oft I have seen the breasts of
+meadow larks shine like gold, the while a few sweet notes, like rung
+silver, rose and trembled above the trefoil, all woven, in and out,
+through the swash of the wind's palpitant currents--a music of
+unspeakable influence. Swallows skim the surface of grass just as they
+do that of water. When the summer air agitates the smooth bosom of a
+broad green meadow field, you will see these little random arrows
+glancing along the emerald surface, cutting with barbed wings through
+the tossing, bloom-capped waves, thence ricochetting high into the
+bright air to whirl and fall again as swiftly as before. Many a time I
+have traced streams of grass to their fresh fountains, where jets of
+tender foliage and bubbles of tinted flowers welled up from dark, rich
+earth, and flowed away, with a velvet rustle and a ripple like blown
+floss, to break and recoil and eddy against the dark shadows of a
+distant grove. Such a fountain is a place of fragrance and joy. The bees
+go thither to get the sweetest honey, and find it a very Hybla. The
+butterflies float about it in a dreamful trance, while in the cool,
+damp shade of a dock leaf squats a great toad, like a slimy dragon
+guarding the gate of a paradise.
+
+As I slowly walked across that stubble field, now and then stepping into
+a tuft of clover, out from which a quail would start, whirling away in a
+convulsion of flight, I allowed dreams of bliss to steal rosily across
+my brain. I scarcely saw the great gold-sharded beetles that hummed and
+glanced in the mellow sun-light. I heard like one half asleep, as if far
+away, the sharp twitter of the blue bird and the tender piping of the
+meadow lark. Susie Adair was all my thought. I recollect that, just as I
+climbed the fence at the farther side of the clover field, I saw a white
+winged, red headed woodpecker pounce upon and carry off a starry
+opal-tinted butterfly, and I thought how sweet it would be if I could
+thus steal away into the free regions of space the object of my gentler
+passion. But then what wonderful big wings I should have needed, for my
+Venus of the hollow of the hill of Balhinch was no airy thing. Her tall,
+strong body and magnificent limbs equalled one hundred and forty pounds
+avoirdupois! My own weight was about one hundred and twenty.
+
+As I neared Susie's home I began, for the first time in my life, to
+suffer from palpitation. The shadow of a doubt floated in the autumn
+sun-light. I set my teeth together and resolved not to be faint hearted.
+I must go in boldly and plead my cause and win.
+
+When I reached the gate of the Adair farmhouse I had to look straight
+over the head of a very large, sanctimonious-faced bull-dog to get a
+view of the vine covered porch. This dog looked up at me and smiled
+ineffably; then he came to the gate and stood over against me, peeping
+between the slats. I hesitated. About this time Ben Crane came out of
+the house with a banjo in his hand. He had been playing for Susie. He
+was a natural musician.
+
+"'Feared o' the dog, Mr. Woodpecker?" said he. "Begone, Bull!" and he
+kicked the big-headed canine aside so that I could go in.
+
+I heard him thrumming on his banjo far down the road as Susie met me at
+the door. How wondrously beautiful she was!
+
+"Sit down Mr. ----, and, if you do not care, I'll bring the churn in and
+finish getting the butter while we talk."
+
+I was delighted--I was charmed--fascinated. Susie's father had gone to a
+distant village, and her mother, a gentle work-worn matron, was in the
+other room spinning flax, humming, meantime, snatches of camp meeting
+hymns. The sound of that spinning-wheel seemed to me strangely mournful
+and sad, but Susie's deep, clear gray eyes and cheerful voice were the
+very soul of joyousness, health and youth. She brought in a great
+fragrant cedar churn, made to hold six or eight gallons of cream, and
+forthwith began her labor. She stood as she worked, and the exercise
+throwing her entire body into gentle but well-defined motion, displayed
+all the riches of her contour. The sleeves of her calico gown were
+rolled up above the elbows, leaving her plump, muscular arms bare, and
+her skirt was pinned away from her really small feet and shapely ankles
+in such a way as to give one an idea, a suggestion, of supreme innocence
+and grace. Her long, crinkled gold hair was unbound, hanging far below
+her waist, and shining like silk. Her lips, carmine red, seemed to
+overflow with tender utterances.
+
+Ever since that day I have thought churning a kind of sacred, charmingly
+blessed work, which ought to be, if really it is not, the pastime of
+those delightful beings the ancients called deities. Cream is more
+fragrant, more delicious, more potent than nectar or ambrosia. A cedar
+churn is more delicately perfumed than any patera of the gods. And, I
+say it with reverence, I have seen, swaying lily-like above the churn, a
+beauty more perfect than that which bloomed full grown from the bright
+focus of the sea's ecstatic travail.
+
+What a talk Susie and I had that day! Slowly, stealthily I crept nearer
+and nearer to the subject burning in my heart. I watched Susie closely,
+for her face was an enigma to me. I never think of her and of that day
+without recalling Baudelaire's dream of a giantess. More happy than the
+poet, I really saw my colossal beauty stand full grown before me, but,
+like him, I wondered--
+
+ * * * "Si son coeur couve une sombre flamme
+ Aux humides brouillards qui nagent dans ses yeux."
+
+I could not tell, from any outward sign, what was going on in her heart.
+No sphinx could have been more utterly calm and mysterious. She had a
+most baffling way about her, too. When at last I had reached the point
+of a confession of my maddening love, she broke into one of my
+charmingest sentences to say--
+
+"Mr. ----, you'd better move farther away from the churn or I might
+spatter your clothes."
+
+This, somehow, disconcerted and bothered me. But Susie was so calm and
+sweet about it, her gray eyes beamed so mysteriously innocent of any
+impropriety, that I soon regained my lost eloquence.
+
+How sharply and indelibly cut in my memory, like intaglios in ivory, the
+surroundings of that scene, even to the minutest detail! For instance, I
+can see as plainly as then my new silk hat on the floor between my
+knees, containing a red handkerchief and a paper of chewing tobacco. I
+recall, also, that a slip-trod shoe lay careened to one side near the
+centre of the room. The bull-dog came to the door and peeped solemnly in
+a time or two. A string of dried pumpkin cuts hung by the fireplace, and
+under a small wooden table in one corner were piled a few balls of
+"carpet rags." I sat in a very low chair. A picture of George Washington
+hung above a small square window. The floor was ash boards uncarpeted. I
+heard some chickens clucking and cackling under the house.
+
+Finally, I recollect it as if it were but yesterday, I said:
+
+"I love you, Susie--I love you, and I have loved you ever since I first
+saw you!"
+
+How tame the words sound now! but then they came forth in a tremulous
+murmur that gave them character and power. Susie looked straight at me
+a moment, and I thought I saw a softer light gather in her eyes. Then
+she took away the churn dasher and lid and fetched a large bowl from a
+cupboard. What a fine golden pile of butter she fished up into the bowl!
+
+I drew my chair somewhat nearer, and watched her pat and roll and
+squeeze the plastic mass with the cherry ladle. A little gray kitten
+came and rubbed and purred round her. Again the bull-dog peeped in. A
+breeze gathered some force and began to ripple pleasantly through the
+room. Far away in the fields I heard the quails whistling to each other.
+An old cow strolled up the lane by the house and round the corner of the
+orchard, plaintively tinkling her bell. Steadily hummed Mrs. Adair's
+spinning wheel. I slipped my hat and my chair a little closer to Susie,
+and by a mighty effort directed my burning words straight to the point.
+I cannot repeat all I said. I would not if I could. Such things are
+sacred.
+
+"Susie, I love you, madly, blindly, dearly, truly! O, Susie! will you
+love me--will you be my wife?"
+
+Again she turned on me that strange, sweet, half smiling look. Her lips
+quivered. The flush on her cheeks almost died out.
+
+"Answer me, Susie, and say you will make me happy."
+
+She walked to the cupboard, put away the bowl of butter and the ladle,
+then came back and stood by the churn and me. How indescribably charming
+she looked! She smiled strangely and made a motion with her round strong
+arms. I answered the movement. I spread wide my arms and half rose to
+clasp her to my bosom. A whole life was centred in the emotion of that
+moment. Susie's arms missed me and lifted the churn. I sank back into my
+chair. How gracefully Susie swayed herself to her immense height, toying
+with the ponderous churn held far above her head. I saw a kitten fairly
+fly out of the room, its tail as level as a gun barrel; I saw the
+bull-dog's face hastily withdraw from the door; I saw the carpet balls,
+the pumpkin cuts and the print of Washington all through a perpendicular
+cataract of deliciously fragrant buttermilk! I saw my hat fill up to the
+brim, with my handkerchief afloat. I heaved an awful sigh and leaped to
+my feet. I saw old Mrs. Adair standing in the partition door, with her
+arms akimbo, and heard her say--
+
+"W'y, Susan Jane Samantha Ann! What 'pon airth hev ye done?"
+
+And the Venus replied:
+
+"I've been givin' this 'ere little woodpecker a good dose of
+buttermilk!"
+
+I seized my hat and shuffled out of the door, feeling the milk gush from
+the tops of my boots at each hasty step I made. I ran to the gate, went
+through and slammed it after me. As I did so I heard a report like the
+closing of a strong steel trap. It was the bull-dog's teeth shutting on
+a slat of the gate as he made a dive at me from behind. I smiled grimly,
+thinking how I'd taste served in buttermilk.
+
+On my way home I passed Ben Crane's house. He was sitting at a window
+playing his banjo, and singing in a stentorian voice:
+
+ "O! Woodpecker Jim,
+ Yer chance is mighty slim!
+ Jest draw yer red head into yer hole
+ And there die easy, dern your soul,
+ O! slim Woodpecker Jim!"
+
+I was so mad that I sweat great drops of pure buttermilk, but over in
+the fields the quails whistled just as clear and sweet as ever, and I
+heard the wind pouring through the stubble as it always does in autumn!
+
+
+
+
+THE LEGEND OF POTATO CREEK.
+
+
+Big yellow butterflies were wheeling about in the drowsy summer air, and
+hovering above the moist little sand bars of Potato Creek. A shady dell,
+wrapped in the hot lull of August, sent up the spires and domes of its
+walnut and poplar trees, clearly defined, and sheeny, while underneath
+the forest roof the hazel and wild rose bushes had wrung themselves into
+dusky mats. The late violets bloomed here and there, side by side with
+those waxlike yellow blossoms, called by the country folk "butter and
+eggs." Through this dell Potato Creek meandered fantastically, washing
+bare the roots of a few gnarled sycamores, and murmuring among the small
+bowlders that almost covered its bed. It was not a strikingly romantic
+or picturesque place--rather the contrary--much after the usual type of
+ragged little dells. "A scrubby little holler" the neighborhood folk
+called it.
+
+Perched on the topmost tangle of the dry, tough roots of an old upturned
+tree, sat little Rose Turpin, sixteen that very August day; pretty, nay
+beautiful, her school life just ended, her womanhood just beginning to
+clothe her face and form in that mysterious mantle of tenderness--the
+blossom, the flower that brings the rich sweet fruit of love. From her
+high perch she leaned over and gazed down into the clear water of the
+creek and smiled at the gambols of the minnows that glanced here and
+there, now in shadowy swarms and anon glancing singly, like sparks of
+dull fire, in the limpid current. Some small cray-fishes, too, delighted
+her with their retrograde and side-wise movements among the variegated
+pebbles at the bottom of the water. A small sketch book and a case of
+pencils lay beside her. So busy was she with her observations, that a
+fretful, peevish, but decidedly masculine voice near by startled her as
+if from a doze. She had imagined herself so utterly alone.
+
+"Wo-erp 'ere, now can't ye! Wo, I say! Turn yer ole head roun' this way
+now, blast yer ole picter! No foolin', now; wo-erp, I tell ye!"
+
+Rose was so frightened at first that she seemed about to rise in the air
+and fly away; but her quick glance in the direction of the sound
+discovered the speaker, who, a few rods further down the creek, stood
+holding the halter rein of a forlorn looking horse in one hand, and in
+the other a heavy woodman's axe.
+
+"Wo-erp, now! I hate like the nation to slatherate ye; but I said I'd do
+it if ye didn't get well by this August the fifteenth; an' shore 'nuff,
+here ye are with the fistleo gittin' wus and wus every day o' yer life.
+So now ye may expect ter git what I tole ye! Stan' still now, will ye,
+till I knock the life out'n ye!"
+
+By this time Rose had come to understand the features of the situation.
+The horse was sadly diseased with that scourge of the equine race,
+scrofulous shoulder or fistula, commonly called, among the country folk,
+fistleo, and because the animal could not get well the man was on the
+point of killing it by knocking it on the head with the axe.
+
+Of all dumb things a horse was Rose's favorite. She had always, since
+her very babyhood, loved horses.
+
+"Wo-wo-wo-erp, here! Ha'n't ye got no sense at all? Ding it, how d'ye
+'spect me to hit yer blamed ole head when ye keep it a waggin' 'round in
+that sort o' style? Wo-erp!"
+
+The fellow had tied the halter rein around a sapling about two feet from
+the ground, and was now preparing to deal the horse a blow with the axe
+between its eyes. The animal seemed unaware of any danger, but kept its
+head going from side to side, trying to fight certain bothersome
+gad-flies.
+
+"O, sir, stop; don't, don't; please, sir, don't!" cried the girl, her
+sweet voice breaking into silvery echo fragments in every nook of the
+little hollow.
+
+The man gazed all around, and, seeing no one, let fall the axe by his
+side. The birds, taking advantage of the silence, lifted a twittering
+chorus through the dense dark tops of the trees. The slimmest breath of
+air languidly caressed the leaves of the rose vines. The bubbling of the
+brook seemed to touch a mellower key, and the yellow butterflies settled
+all together on a little sand bar, their bright wings shut straight and
+sharp above their bodies. The man seemed intently listening. "Tw'an't
+mammy's voice, nohow," he muttered; "but I'd like to know who 'twas,
+though."
+
+He stood a moment longer, as if in doubt, then again raising his axe he
+continued:
+
+"Must 'a' been a jay bird squeaked. Wo-erp 'ere now! I'm not goin' to
+fool wi' ye all day, so hold yer head still!"
+
+That was a critical moment for the lean, miserable horse. It lowered its
+head and held it quite still. The axe was steadily poised in the air.
+The man's face wore a look of determination--grim, stone-like. He was,
+perhaps, twenty-five, tall and bony, with a countenance sallow almost to
+greenness, sunken pale blue eyes, sun burnt hair, thin flaxy beard, and
+irregular, half decayed teeth. Although his body and limbs were shrunken
+to the last degree of attenuation, still the big cords of his neck and
+wrists stood out taut, suggesting great strength. The blow would be a
+terrible one. The horse would die almost without a struggle.
+
+"O, O, O! Indeed, sir, you must not! Stop that, sir, instantly! You
+shall not do it, sir! O, sir!"
+
+And fluttering down from her perch, Rose flew to the spot where the
+tragedy was pending, and cast herself pale and trembling between the
+horse and its would-be executioner.
+
+The axe fell from the man's hands.
+
+His eyes became exactly circular.
+
+His under jaw dropped so that his mouth was open to its fullest gaping
+capacity. His shoulders fell till their points almost met in front of
+his sunken chest. He was a picture of overwhelming surprise.
+
+"An' what in thunder do you want of him? What good's he goin' to do you?
+'Cause, you see, he can't work nor be rid on nor nothin'."
+
+"O never mind, sir, just please give him to me and I'll take him and
+care for him. Poor horsey! Poor horsey! See, he loves me already!"
+
+The beast had thrust its nose against the maiden's hand.
+
+"Well, I don't know 'bout this. I'd as soon 'at you have 'im as not if I
+hadn't swore to kill 'im, an' I musn't lie to 'im. An' besides, I've had
+sich a pesky derned time wi' 'im 'at it looks kinder mean 'at I
+shouldn't have the satisfaction of bustin' his head for it. I'm goin' to
+knock 'im, an' ye jist mought as well stan' aside!"
+
+Just then the peculiarities of the man's character were written on his
+face. His nose denoted pugnacity, his lips sensuality, but not of a base
+sort, his eyes ignorance and rough kindness, his chin firmness, his jaw
+tenacity of purpose, and his complexion the ague. He had sworn to kill
+the horse, and kill him he would. You could see that in the very
+wrinkles of his neck. He evidently felt that it was a duty he owed to
+his conscience--a duty made doubly imperative by the horse's refusal to
+get well by the exact time prescribed.
+
+High up on the dead spire of a walnut tree a woodpecker began to beat a
+long, rattling tattoo. The horse very lazily and innocently winked his
+brown eyes, and putting forth his nose sniffed at the skirt of the
+girl's dress.
+
+"I'm glad--O I'm ever so glad you'll not kill him!" murmured the little
+lady when she saw the axe fall to the ground.
+
+The man stood a long moment, as if petrified or frozen into position,
+then somewhat recovering, he re-seized the axe, and flourishing it high
+in the air, cried in a voice that, cracked and shrill, rang petulantly
+through the woods:
+
+"I said I'd kill 'im if that garglin' oil didn't cure 'im, 'an I'm
+derned ef I don't, too!"
+
+"O, sir, if you please! The poor horse is not to blame!" exclaimed the
+excited girl.
+
+"'Taint no use o' beggin'; he's no 'count but to jist eat up corn, an'
+hay, an' paster an' the likes; and his blasted fistleo gits wus an' wus
+all the time. An't I spent more'n he's wo'th a tryin' to cure 'm, an'
+don't everybody laugh at me 'cause I've got sich a derned ole slummux of
+a hoss? Jist blame my picter if I'll stand it! So now you've hearn me
+toot my tin horn, an' ye may as well stan' out'n the way!"
+
+"But, sir, I'll take him off your hands, may I? Say, sir? O please let
+me take him!"
+
+While he stood with his axe raised, Rose was very diligently and
+nervously tugging at the knot that fastened the halter rein to the tree,
+and ere he was aware of her intent, she had untied it and was resolutely
+leading the poor old animal away.
+
+The man's eyes got longest the short way as he gazed at the retreating
+figure.
+
+"Well now, that's as cool as a cowcumber and twicet as juicy! Gal, ye'r'
+a brick! ye'r' a knot! Ye'r' a born pacer! Take 'im 'long for all I
+keer! Take 'im 'long!"
+
+He put down his axe, placed his hands against his sides and smiled, as
+he spoke, a big wrinkling smile that covered the whole of his sallow,
+skinny face and ran clear down to the neck band of his homespun shirt.
+
+"Pluck, no eend to it!" he muttered; "wonder who she is?
+Poorty--geeroody!"
+
+The wild birds sang a triumphant hymn, the breeze freshened till the
+whole woods rustled, and louder still rose the bubbling of the stream
+among its bowlders.
+
+"Well, I'll jist be dorged! The poortiest gal in all Injianny! An' she's
+tuck my ole hoss whether or no! She's a knot! Sort o' a cool proceedin',
+it 'pears to me, but she's orful welcome to the hoss! Howdsomever it's
+mighty much of a joke on me, 'r my name's not Zach Jones!"
+
+He laughed long and loud. The birds laughed, too, and still the wind
+freshened.
+
+The girl and the horse had quickly disappeared behind the hazel and
+papaw bushes. Zach Jones was alone with his axe and his reflections.
+
+"Yender's where she sot--right up yender on that ole clay root. She must
+'a' been a fishin', I reckon."
+
+Another admiring chuckle.
+
+He went to the spot and clambered up among the roots. There lay Rose's
+sketch book and pencil case. He took up the book and curiously turned
+the leaves, his eyes running with something like childish delight over
+the flowers and bits of landscape. He had never before seen a drawing.
+
+"Poorty as the gal 'erself, 'most," he said, "an' seein' 'at she's tuck
+my ole hoss, I spose I'll have to take these 'ere jimcracks o' her'n.
+I'll take 'em 'long anyhow, jist to 'member her by!"
+
+This argument seemed logical and conclusive, and with a quick glance
+over his shoulder he crammed book and pencil case into the capacious
+depths of the side pocket of his pants.
+
+"Now then it's about time for my chill, an' I'd better go home. Hang the
+luck; s'pose I'll allus have the ager!" This last sentence was uttered
+in a tone of comical half despair, and accompanied by a facial
+contortion possible to no one but a person thoroughly saturated with
+ague in its chronic form.
+
+After he left the dell, Zach had a hot walk across a clover field before
+he reached the dilapidated log house where he lived with his widowed
+mother. In a short time his chill set in, and it was a fearful one. His
+teeth chattered and his bony frame rattled like a bundle of dry sticks
+in a strong wind. After it had shaken him thus for about an hour, his
+brother Sammy, a lad of ten years, came in with a jug of buttermilk
+brought from a neighbor's.
+
+"Mammy, 'ere's yer buttermilk," said he, setting the jug on the floor.
+"Shakin' like forty--a'n't ye, Zach? he added, glancing with a sad,
+lugubrious smile at his brother; then, changing his tone and also his
+countenance, he continued, with a broader grin: "Bet ye a dollar ye
+can't guess what I seed over to 'Squire Martin's!"
+
+"No, nor I don't care a cuss; so put off an' don't come yawpin' round
+me!" replied Zach.
+
+"Yes ye do, too; an' I know ye do, for 'twas yer ole fistleo hoss. That
+'ere fine gal 'at stays over there is havin' a man wash 'im an' doctor
+'im." Sammy winked and hitched up his pants as he spoke.
+
+"Do say, Sammy, is that so, now?" cried the widow, holding up her hands.
+"How on 'arth come she by the hoss? Zach, I thought you'd killed that
+creater'!"
+
+"Mammy, ef you an' Sammy'll jist let me 'joy this 'ere ager in peace
+I'll be orful 'bleeged to ye," said Zach, making his chair creak and
+quiver with the ecstasy of his convulsion.
+
+But Sammy's tongue would go. He thought he had a "good 'un" on Zach, and
+nothing short of lightning could have killed him quick enough to prevent
+his telling it.
+
+"The gal says as how Zach gin 'er the ole hoss for to 'member 'im by!"
+he blurted out, shying briskly from Zach's foot, which otherwise would
+have landed him in the door yard.
+
+"Lookee here now, Zach, you jist try the likes o' that ag'in an' I'll
+give ye sich a broom-stickin' as ye a'n't had lately. Ye mought 'a'
+injured the child's insides!" and as she spoke the widow flourished the
+broom.
+
+So Zach dropped his head upon his chest and employed himself exclusively
+with his chill. When his mother was not looking at him, however, he
+would occasionally slip the sketch book partly out of his pocket and
+peep between its leaves. When his fever came on he got "flighty" and
+horrified the widow with talk about an angel on a clay root and a sweet
+little "hoss thief" from whom he had stolen the "picters!"
+
+I cannot exactly say how Zach got to going over to 'Squire Martin's so
+often after this. But his first visit was a compulsory one. His mother
+happening to discover his possession of the sketch book and pencil case,
+made him return them with his own hand to Rose. He at once became deeply
+interested in the progress of his former patient's convalescence; for,
+strange to say, the poor horse began almost immediately to get well, and
+in two months was sound, glossy and fat. Nor was he an ill-looking
+animal. On the contrary, when Rose sat on his back and stroked his mane,
+he arched his neck and pawed the ground like a thoroughbred.
+
+'Squire Martin was a good man, and seeing how Zach seemed to enjoy
+Rose's company, he one day took the girl aside and said to her:
+
+"You must be somewhat of a doctor, my dear, seeing how you've touched up
+the old hoss, and I propose for you to try your hand on another
+subject. There's poor Zach Jones, who's had the chills for six or eight
+years as constant as sunrise and sunset, and no medicine can't do him
+any good. Now I'll be bound if you'll try you can cure him sound and
+well. All you need to do in the world is to pet him up some'at as you
+have the ole hoss. Jist take a little interest in the feller an' he'll
+come out all right. All he wants is to forget he ever had the ager and
+take some light exercise and have some fun. Fun is the only medicine to
+cure the chills with. Quinine is no 'count but to make a racket in a
+feller's head, and calomel'll kill 'im, sure. Now I propose to let Zach
+have a hoss and saddle and you must go out a riding with 'im and try to
+divert his mind from his sorrows and aches and pains--now that's a good
+girl, Rosie."
+
+Rose, whose healthful, impulsive, generous nature would not allow her to
+refuse so well intended and withal so small a request, readily agreed to
+do all she could in the matter, and very soon thereafter she and Zach
+were the very best of friends, taking long rides together through
+woodlands and up and down the pleasant lanes of 'Squire Martin's broad
+estates. The young girl soon found the companionship of Zach, novel and
+most awkward as it was at first, agreeable and almost charming in its
+freshness and sincerity. As for Zach himself, he was the girl's slave
+from the start. He could not do too much for her in his earnest,
+respectful way. Women are always tyrants, and their tyranny seems to be
+inversely as their size and directly as the size of the man upon whom it
+is exerted. Rose was a very little chit of a maiden, and Zach was a
+great big bony frame of a fellow. The result, of course, was despotism.
+But, although Zach was a democrat, he seemed to like the oppression, and
+ran after big-winged butterflies, opened gates, pulled down and put up
+innumerable fences, climbed trees after empty bird nests, gathered
+flowers and ferns--did everything, in fact, required of him by his
+little queen. He became a daily visitor at the 'Squire's, and seemed to
+have entirely forgotten everything else or utterly submerged it in his
+unselfish devotion to the girl. The good 'Squire saw this with unbounded
+delight.
+
+So August quietly drifted by, and September hung its yellow banner on
+the corn and said farewell with a sigh that had in it a smack of winter.
+
+Rose's parents were wealthy and lived in Indianapolis, and now came the
+time for the girl's return to her city home. Meanwhile a remarkable
+change had taken place in the health and spirits of Zach Jones. The ague
+had departed, the sallowness was gone from his skin, somewhat of flesh
+had gathered on his cheeks, and in his eyes shone a cheerful light. He
+was straight and almost plump, and his hair and beard had assumed a
+gloss and liveliness they had never before known. He had thrown away
+quinine and calomel, and his sleep at night was soft and sweet, broken
+only by fair, happy dreams, that lingered long after he was awake. At
+home his mother had far less trouble with him, and Sammy never got a
+kick even if he did occasionally mention old fistleo in an equivocal
+way. The amount of provender it required to satisfy Zach's appetite now
+was a constant source of amazement to the widow.
+
+The evening preceding Rose's departure was a fine one. The woods were
+gold, the sky was turquoise. Instead of riding, as usual, the young
+people took a stroll in the 'Squire's immense orchard. The apples were
+ripe and ready to be gathered into the cellars; their mellow fragrance
+flavored the autumn air so delicately that Zach said it smelt sweeter
+than an oven full of sugar cakes.
+
+When the young folk returned from their walk the 'Squire was standing on
+the door step of his house. His quick eyes caught a glimpse of something
+unsatisfactory in the faces of the approaching couple--Zach,
+particularly, despite his evident effort to choke down something,
+discovered unmistakable signs of suffering. Rose was simply sober and
+thoughtful.
+
+"What now, Zach?" asked the 'Squire, "sick, eh?" "D'know; guess I'm in
+for a shake; wish to the Lord it'd shake my back bone clean out'n me!"
+was the reply, in a queer gurgling voice. A bunch of fall roses fell
+from his vest button-hole, but he did not pick it up. A hot flush, in
+the midst of a ghastly pallor, burned on the cheeks of the speaker. Rose
+tapped the ground with the toe of her kid boot, but did not speak.
+
+The man and the girl stood there close together awhile, and the 'Squire
+did not catch what they said as they shook hands and parted. When Zach
+had gone home the 'Squire told Rose that he wished she would stay a
+little longer, till the ague season was over, just on Zach's account.
+Rose quietly replied, "I have already stayed too long;" but her voice
+had an infinity of pity and sorrow in it that the 'Squire did not
+detect.
+
+Next morning Rose went home to the city and soon after made a brilliant
+_debut_ in society, for she was really a charming little thing. That
+winter was a festive one--a season of great social activity--and some of
+its most direct and prominent results were a few notable marriages in
+the spring, among which was that of Rose to a banker of P----, Kentucky,
+the happy union being consummated in May.
+
+On the very day of her wedding Rose received from her uncle the
+following note:
+
+ "DEAR NIECE:
+
+ "Come to see us, even if you won't stay but one day. Come right
+ off, if you're a Christian girl. Zach Jones is dying of
+ consumption and is begging to see you night and day. He says
+ he's got something on his mind he wants to say to you, and when
+ he says it he can die happy. The poor fellow is monstrous bad
+ off, and I think you ought to be sure and come. We're all well.
+ Your loving uncle,
+
+ "JARED MARTIN."
+
+Something in this homely letter so deeply affected Rose that she
+prevailed on her husband, a few days after their marriage, to take her
+to 'Squire Martin's.
+
+It was nearly sundown when the young wife, accompanied by the 'Squire,
+entered the room of the dying man. He lay on a low bed by an open
+window, through which, with hollow hungry eyes, he was gazing into the
+blue distance that is called the sky of May. Birds were singing in the
+trees all around the house, and a cool breath of violet-scented air
+rippled through the window. The widow Jones, worn out with watching by
+the sick bed, sat sleeping in her rude arm-chair; Sammy had gone after
+the cow--a gift from the 'Squire.
+
+The visitors entered softly, but Zach heard them and feebly turned his
+head. He put out a bloodless hand and clasped the warm fingers of Rose,
+pulling her into a seat by his couch. A wan smile flitted across his
+face as he fixed his eyes, burning like sparks in the gray ash of a
+spent fire, on hers, dewy with rising tears.
+
+"The same little Rose you use to wus," he said, in a low faltering
+voice, that had in it an unconquerable allegiance to the one dream of
+his manhood. His unnaturally bright eyes ran swiftly over her face and
+form, then closed, as if to fasten the vision within, that it might
+follow him to eternity.
+
+"The same little Rose you use to wus," he repeated, "only now you're
+picked off the vine an' nobody can't touch ye but the owner. I'm a
+poor, no 'count dyin' man, Rose, but you'll never----." His voice choked
+a little and he did not finish the sentence. Perhaps he thought it were
+better not finished.
+
+A few moments of utter silence followed, during which, faintly, far out
+in the field behind the house, was heard the childish voice of Sammy,
+singing an old hymn, two lines of which were most distinctly heard by
+those in the house.
+
+"Ah, yes--
+
+ "This world's a wilderness of woe,
+ This world it ain't my home,"
+
+chimed in the trembling voice of the sick man. Then, by an effort that
+evidently taxed his fading powers to the last degree, he fixed his eyes
+firmly on those of the young woman. Here was a martyr of the divine
+sort, true and unchangeable in the flame of the torture.
+
+"Rose, little Rose," he said, glancing uneasily at the 'Squire, "I've
+got something private like to say to you."
+
+The young woman trembled. Memory was at work.
+
+"'Squire, go out a minute, will ye?" continued Zach.
+
+The sick man's request was promptly obeyed, and Rose sat, drooping,
+alone beside the bed, while the widow snored away.
+
+Zach now more nervously clasped the hand of the young woman. A spot of
+faint sunshine glimmered on the pillow close by the man's head. The
+out-door sounds of the wind in the young grass, and the rustle of the
+new soft leaves of the trees, crept into the room gently, as if not to
+drown the low voice of the dying man.
+
+"It's been on my mind ever since we parted, Rose, and I ort 'a' said it
+then, but I choked an' couldn't; but I kin say it now and I will." He
+paused a moment and Rose looked pitifully at him. His chin was thrust
+out firmly and his lips had a determined set. He looked just as he did
+when about to knock the poor old horse on the head over in the dell that
+day. How vividly the tragic situation was recalled in Rose's mind!
+
+"Yes, I will say it now, so I will," he resumed. "Since things turned
+out jist as they have, Rose, I do wish I'd 'a' paid no 'tention to ye
+an' jist gone on and knocked that derned ole fistleoed hoss so dead 'at
+he'd 'a' never kicked--I do--I do, 'i hokey! I don't want to make ye
+feel bad, but I'm goin' away now, an' it 'pears to me like as if I'd go
+easy if I know'd you'd----." He turned away his face and drew just one
+little fluttering breath. When, after only a few minutes' absence, the
+'Squire came in, the widow still slept, the sweet air still rippled
+through the room, but Rose held a dead hand; Zach was at rest! The
+'Squire placed his hand on the bright hair of Rose and gazed mournfully
+down into the pinched, pallid face of the dead. How awfully calm a dead
+face is!
+
+The widow stirred in her chair, groaned, and awoke. For a moment she
+bent her eyes wonderingly, inquiringly on the young woman; then, rising,
+she clasped her in her great bony arms.
+
+"You are the Rose, the little Rose he's been goin' on so about. O,
+honey, I'm orful glad you've come. You ort jist to 'a' heerd him talk
+about ye when he got flighty like----but O--O--my! O Lor'! Zach--Zachy,
+dear! O, Miss, O, he's dead--he's dead!"
+
+"Dead, yes, dead!" echoed the 'Squire, his words dropping with the
+weight of lead.
+
+Across the fields of young green wheat ran waves of the spring wind,
+murmuring and sighing, while the dust of blossoms wheeled, and rose and
+fell in the last soft rays of the going sun. A big yellow butterfly
+flitted through the room.
+
+Presently Sammy entered. He came in like a gust of wind, making things
+rattle with his impetuous motion.
+
+"O, mammy! O, Zach! I's got s'thin' to tell ye, an' I'll bet a biscuit
+you can't guess what 't is!" he cried breathlessly.
+
+"O, Sammy, honey, O, dear!" groaned the widow.
+
+"S-s-h!" said the 'Squire solemnly.
+
+"Well, I jist wanted 'm to guess," replied Sammy, "for it's awful
+doggone cur'u's 'at----"
+
+"S-s-h!"
+
+"The fistleo is broke out on Zach's ole hoss ten times as wuss as ever!"
+
+"S-s-s-s-h!"
+
+"It's so, for I seed it. It's layin' down over in the hollow by 'tater
+creek, where the ole clay root is, an' its jist about to d----."
+
+"S-s-h!"
+
+The child caught a glimpse of the face and was struck mute. And darkness
+stole athwart the earth, but the morrow's sun drove it away. Never,
+however, did any sun or any season chase from the heart of little Rose
+the shadow that was the memory of the man who died in that cabin.
+
+
+
+
+STEALING A CONDUCTOR.
+
+
+He shambled into the bar-room of the hotel at Thorntown, a Boone County
+village, and, with a bow and a hearty "how-de do to you all," took the
+only vacant chair. He scratched a match and lighted his pipe. "Now we'll
+be bored with some sort of a long-winded story," whispered some to
+others of the loungers present. "Never knowed him to fail," said a lank
+fellow, almost loud enough for the subject to hear. "He's our travelled
+man," added a youth, who winked as if he were extremely intelligent and
+didn't mind letting folks know it.
+
+The man himself whiffed away carelessly at his pipe, now and then
+raising one eye higher than the other, to take a sort of side survey of
+the persons present. That eye was not long in settling upon me, and
+after a short, searching look, gleamed in a well pleased way. He was a
+stout formed man of about fifty years, dressed rather seedily, and
+wearing a plug hat of enormous height, the crown of which was battered
+into the last degree of grotesqueness. He got right up, and, dragging
+his chair behind him, came over and settled close down in front of me.
+
+"Stranger here, a'n't you?"
+
+"Yes, sir."
+
+"Your name's Fuller, a'n't it?"
+
+"No, sir."
+
+"Well, mebbe I'm mistaken, but you're just the picter o' Fuller. Never
+was a conductor on a railroad, was you?"
+
+"Never, sir."
+
+"Never was down in the swamps o' South-Eastern Georgy, was you?"
+
+"Never, sir."
+
+"Well, that beats four aces! I could 'a' bet on your bein' Fuller." He
+paused a moment, and then added in a very insinuating tone: "If you
+_are_ Fuller you needn't be afeard to say so, for I don't hold any
+grudge 'gin you about that little matter. Now, sure enough, a'n't your
+name Fuller, in fact?"
+
+I glared at the man a moment, hesitating about whether or not I should
+plant my fist in his eye. But something of almost child-like simplicity
+and sincerity beaming from his face restrained me. Surely the fellow did
+not wish to be as impudent as his words would imply.
+
+"Well, stranger, I see I've got to explain, but the story's not overly
+long," said he, hitching up a little closer to me and settling himself
+comfortably.
+
+I was about to get up and walk out of the room, when some one of the
+by-sitters filliped a little roll of paper to me. Unrolling it I read--
+
+"Let him go on, he'll give you a lively one. He's a brick."
+
+So, concluding that possibly I might be entertained, I lounged back in
+my seat.
+
+"You see," said he, "I thought you was Fuller, an' Fuller was the only
+conductor I ever stole."
+
+"Stole a conductor," whispered somebody, "that's a new one!"
+
+"I've stole a good many things in my time, but I'm here to bet that no
+other living Hoosier ever stole a railroad conductor, an' Fuller was the
+only one I ever stole. I stole him slicker 'n a eel. I had him 'fore he
+knowed it, and you jist better bet he was one clean beat conductor fore
+I was done wi' 'im.
+
+"I kin tell you the whole affair in a few minutes, and I da' say you'll
+laugh a good deal 'fore I'm through. You see I went down to Floridy for
+my health, and when I had about recivered I got onto a bum in
+Jacksonville and spent all my money and everything else but my very
+oldest suit o' clothes and my pistol, a Colt's repeater, ten inch
+barrel. None o' you can't tell how a feller feels in a predicament o'
+that sort. Somethin' got into my throat 'bout as big as a egg, and I
+felt kinder moist about the eyes when I had to stare the fact in the
+face that I was nigh onto, or possibly quite a thousand miles from home
+without ary a dime in my pocket. But if there's one thing I do have more
+'n another in my nater it's common sense grit. Well, what you s'pose I
+done? W'y I jest lit out for home afoot. Well, sir, the derndest swamps
+is them Floridy and Georgy swamps. It's ra'lly all one swamp--the
+Okeefenokee. I follered the railroad that goes up to Savanny, and it led
+me deeper and deeper into the outlying fringes of that terrible old bog.
+When I had travelled a considerable distance into Georgy, and had pretty
+well wore my feet off up to my ankle j'ints, and was about as close onto
+starvation as a 'tater failure in Ireland, and when my under lip had got
+to hanging down like the skirt o' a wore out saddle, and when every step
+seemed like it'd be my last, I jest got clean despairing like and
+concluded to pray a little. So I got down upon my knee j'ints and put
+up a most extra-ornary supplication. I felt every word o' it, too, in
+all the marrer of my bones. The place where I was a prayin' was a sort
+o' hummock spot in a mighty bad part o' the swamp. Some awful tall pines
+towered stupenjisly above me. Well, jest as I was finished, and was a
+saying amen, the lordy mercy what a yowl something did give right over
+me in a tree! I think I jumped as high as your head, stranger, and come
+down flat-footed onto a railroad cross tie. Whillikins, how I was
+scared! It was one o' them whooping owls they have down there. It was
+while I was a running from that 'ere owl a thinkin' it was a panther,
+that the thought struck me somewhere in the back o' the head that I
+might steal a ride to Savanny on the first train 'at might pass. 'I'll
+try it!' says I, and so I sot right down there in the swamp and calmly
+waited for a train. In about a hour here come one, like the de'il a
+braking hemp, jist more'n a roaring through the swamp. I forgot to tell
+you 'at it was after dark, but the moon was dimly a shining through the
+fog that covers everything there o' nights. Well, here come the train,
+and as she passed I made a lunge at the hind platform of the last car
+and some how or another got onto it and away I went. It was mighty much
+softer 'n walking, I tell you, and I was pleased as a monkey with a red
+cap on. My, how fast that train did go! I could hardly hold onto where I
+wus. You may jist bet I clung on though, and finally I got myself
+setting down on the steps and then I was all hunkey. But I didn't have
+much time to enjoy myself there, though, for all of a sudden the light
+of a lantern shined on me and then somebody touched me and said--
+
+ 'Ticket!'
+
+"Mebbe you don't know how onery a feller'll feel sometimes when he hears
+that 'ere word ticket--'specially when he a'n't got no ticket nor no
+money to pay his fare, and too, when he does want to ride a little of
+the derndest! That was my fix! I'd 'a' give a thousand dollars for a
+half dollar!
+
+ 'Ticket!'
+
+"He shook me a little this time and held his lantern down low, so's to
+see into my face. I know I must 'a' looked like the de'il.
+
+ 'Ticket here, quick!'
+
+ 'I've done paid,' said I.
+
+ 'Show your check then.'
+
+ 'Lost it,' says I.
+
+ 'Money, then, quick!'
+
+ 'Got none,' says I.
+
+ 'What the ---- did you git onto my train for without ticket or money?
+ How do you expect to travel without paying, you ---- lousy vagabond! You
+ can't steal from me; out with your ---- wallet and gi' me the money!
+ Hurry up!'
+
+ 'A'n't got no wallet nor no money,' says I.
+
+ 'Well, I'll dump you off right here, then,' said he, reaching for the
+ bell-rope to stop the train.
+
+ 'For the Lord's sake let me ride to Savanny!' says I.
+
+ 'A dam Northerner, I know from your voice!' said he, pulling the rope.
+ The train began to slack and soon stopped.
+
+ 'Get off!' said the conductor.
+
+ 'Please l'me ride!' says I.
+
+ 'Off with you!'
+
+ 'Jist a few miles here on the steps!'
+
+ 'Off, quick!'
+
+ 'Please----'
+
+ 'Here you go!' and as he said the words he tried to kick me off.
+
+"In a second I was like a Bengal tiger. I jumped up and gethered him and
+we went at it. I'm as good as ever fluttered, and pretty soon I give him
+one flat on the nose, and we both went off 'n the platform together. As
+I started off I happened to think of it, so I grabbed up and pulled the
+bell-rope to signal the engineer to drive on. 'Hoot-toot!' says the
+whistle, and away lick-to-split went the train, and slashy-to-splashy,
+rattle-o-bangle, kewoppyty-whop, bump, thud! down me and that 'ere
+conductor come onto a pile o' wore out cross ties in the side ditch, and
+there we laid a fightin'!
+
+"But you jest bet it didn't take me long to settle _him_. He soon began
+to sing out ''nuff! 'nuff! take 'm off!' and so I took him by the hair
+and dragged him off 'n the cross ties, shot him one or two more under
+the ear with my fist, and then dropped him. He crawled up and stood
+looking at me as if I was the awfulest thing in the world. I s'pect I
+did look scary, for I was terrible mad. His face was bruised up
+mightily, but he wasn't a bleeding much. He was mostly swelled.
+
+ 'Where's my train?' says he, in a sort o' blank, hollow way.
+
+ 'Don't ye hear it?' I answered him, 'It's gone on to Savanny!'
+
+ 'Gone! Who told 'm to go on? What'd they go leave me for?'
+
+ 'I pulled the bell rope,' says I.
+
+ '_You?_'
+
+ 'Yes, _me_!'
+
+ 'What in the world did you do _that_ for, man?'
+
+ ''Cause you wouldn't let me ride to Savanny!'
+
+ 'What'll I do! What'll I do!' he cried, beginning to waltz 'round like
+ one possessed.
+
+"I laughed--I couldn't help it--and at the same time I pulled out my old
+pistol.
+
+ 'Yah-hoo-a!' yelled another owl.
+
+ 'For the sake o' humanity don't kill me!' said the conductor.
+
+ 'I'm jest a going to shoot you a little bit for the fun o' the thing,'
+ says I.
+
+ 'Mercy, man!' he prayed.
+
+ 'Ticket!' says I.
+
+"He groaned the awfulest kind, and, by the moonlight, I saw 'at the big
+tears was running down his face. I felt sorry for him, but I kinder
+thought 'at after what he'd done he'd better pray a little, so I
+mentioned it to him.
+
+ 'I guess it mought be best if you'd pray a little,' says I, cocking the
+ pistol. My voice had a decided sepulchreal sound. The pistol clicked
+ very sharp.
+
+ 'O, kind sir,' says he, 'O, dear sir, I never did pray, I don't know how
+ to pray!'
+
+ 'Ticket or check!' says I, and he knowed I was talking kind o' sarcasm.
+ 'Pray quick!'
+
+"He got down and prayed like a Methodist preacher at his very best
+licks. He must 'a' prayed afore.
+
+"About the time his prayer was ended I heard a train coming in the
+distance. He jumped up and listened.
+
+ 'Glory! Heaven be praised!' says he, capering around like a mad monkey,
+ 'They've missed me and are backing down to hunt me! Where's my lantern?
+ Have you a match? Gi'me your handkerchief!'
+
+ 'Not so fast,' says I; 'you jest be moderate now, will you? I've no
+ notion o' you getting on that train any more. You jest walk along wi'
+ me, will you?'
+
+ 'Where?' says he.
+
+ 'Into the swamp,' says I; 'step off lively, too, d'you hear me?'
+
+ 'O mercy, mercy, man!' says he.
+
+ 'Ticket!' says I, and then he walked along wi' me into the swamp some
+ two or three hundred yards from the railroad.
+
+"I took him into a very thickety place, and made him back up agin a tree
+and put back his arms around it. Then I took one o' his suspenders and
+tied him hard and fast. Then I gagged him with my handkerchief. So far,
+so good.
+
+"Here come the train slowly backing down, the brakesman a swinging
+lanterns, and the passengers all swarming onto the platforms. Poorty
+soon they stopped right opposite us. The conductor began to struggle. I
+poked the pistol in his face and jammed the gag furder into his mouth.
+He saw I meant work and got quiet.
+
+"The passengers was swarming off 'n the train and I saw 'at I must git
+about poorty fast if I was to do anything. I soon hit on a plan. I jist
+stepped back a piece out o' sight o' the conductor and turned my coat,
+which was one o' these two-sided affairs, one side white, t'other brown.
+I turned the white side out. Then I flung away my greasy skull cap and
+took a soft hat out 'n my pocket and put it on. Then I watched my chance
+and mixed in with the passengers who was a hunting for the conductor.
+
+ 'Strange what's become o' him,' says I to a fat man, who was puffing
+ along.
+
+ 'Dim strange, dim strange,' says the big fellow, in a keen, wheezing
+ voice.
+
+"Well, you never saw jist sich hunting as was done for that conductor.
+Everybody slopped around in the swamp till their clothes was as wet and
+muddy as mine. I was monstrous active in the search. I hunted
+everywhere 'cepting where the conductor was. Finally he got the gag spit
+out and lordy how he did squeal for help. Everybody rushed to him and
+soon had him free.
+
+"It tickled me awful to hear that conductor explaining the matter. He
+told it something like this:
+
+ 'Devil of a great big ruffian on hind platform. Asked him for ticket.
+ Refused. Tried to put him off. Grabbed me. Smashed my nose. Flung me
+ off. Pulled the bell-rope, then lit out on me. Mauled ---- out o' me.
+ Had a pistol two feet long. Made me pray. Heard train a coming. Took me
+ to swamp. Tied me and sloped. Lord but I'm glad to see you all!'
+
+"We all went aboard o' the train and I rode to Savanny onmolested. The
+conductor didn't mistrust me. He asked me for my check and I told him
+'at I'd lost it a thrashing round in the bushes a hunting him. That was
+all right.
+
+"When we got to Savanny I couldn't help letting the conductor know me,
+so as I passed down the steps of the car I whispered savagely in his
+ear:
+
+ 'Ticket! dod blast you!'
+
+"He tried to grab me as I shambled off into the crowd, but I knowed the
+ropes. I heard him a shoutin'--
+
+ 'There he goes! Ketch him, dern him, ketch him!' But they didn't.
+
+"That conductor's name was Fuller, and I swear, stranger, 'at you look
+jest like him! Gi' me a match, will you, my pipe's out. Thanky. Hope I
+ha'n't bored you. Good bye all."
+
+He shambled out and I never saw him again.
+
+
+
+
+HOIDEN.
+
+
+The house was known as Rackenshack throughout the neighborhood for miles
+around. It was a frame structure, originally of sorry workmanship, at
+least thirty years old, and upon which not a cent's worth of repairing
+had been done since first erected, wherefore the name was peculiarly
+appropriate. It was not only old, rickety, paintless, half rotten and
+sadly sunken at one end, but the fencing around the place was broken,
+grown over with weeds, and slanted in as many ways as there were panels.
+The lawn or yard in front of the house had some old cherry trees,
+gnarled and decaying, growing in what had once been straight rows, but
+storms and more insidious vicissitudes had twisted and curled them about
+till they looked as though they had been thrown end foremost at the
+ground hap-hazard. Under and all round these trees young sprouts, from
+the scattered cherry seeds of many years of fruiting, had grown so thick
+that one could with difficulty get through them. A narrow, well-beaten
+path led from the gate, which lazily lolled on one hinge, up to the
+decayed and sunken porch, in front of which was the well, with its
+lop-eared windlass and dilapidated curb and shed.
+
+A country thoroughfare, one of the old State roads leading westward to a
+ferry on the Wabash river near the village of Attica and eastward to
+either Crawfordsville, Indianapolis or Lafayette. This road was in the
+direct line of emigration, and in the proper seasons long lines of
+covered wagons rolled past, the drivers, a jolly set, hallooing to each
+other and bandying sharp wit and rude sarcasm at the expense of
+Rackenshack. Poor old house, it leered at the passers, with its windows
+askew, and clattered its loose boards and battered shutters in utter and
+complacent defiance of all their jeers!
+
+Rackenshack belonged to Luke Plunkett and Betsy, his sister; the latter
+an old maid beyond all cavil, the former a bachelor of about thirty. The
+lands of the estate were pretty broad, comprising some two thousand
+acres of rich prairie and "river bottom" land, which had been kept in a
+much better state of improvement than the house had. In fact, Luke was
+considered a careful, industrious, frugal farmer. He had large, well
+regulated barns and stock sheds and stables--plenty of fine horses,
+cattle, hogs, sheep and mules, all well fed and cared for, and it was
+generally understood that he had a pretty round deposit in a bank.
+
+Perhaps 'Squire Rube Fink, sometimes called "the Rev. Major Fink" and
+sometimes "Talking Rube," gives the best description of Luke's
+condition, habits and surroundings, that I can offer. It is truthful and
+singularly graphic. He says:
+
+"Luke Plunkett's no fool if he does live at Rack-a-me-shack and 'spect
+the ole rotten tabernacle to fall down on him every time a rooster crows
+close by. That feller's long-headed, he is. To be sure, sartinly, his
+barn's a dern sight better 'n his house, but his head's level, for, d'ye
+see, that's the way to make money. A house don't never make no money for
+a feller--it's nothin' but dead capital to put money into a fine
+dwellin'. Luke's pilin' his money in the bank. He's been doin' a sharp
+thing in wheat and live stock at Cincinnati, and I guess he knows what
+he's about. He don't keer about what sort o' house he lives in. But I
+tell you that red haired sister o' his'n is lightning. She's what bosses
+the job all round that ole shanty; but she can't red-hair it over Luke
+in the farm matters. He has his own way. He's so quiet and peculiar; a
+still, say nothin', bull-dog sort o' man he is."
+
+Indeed, Luke was one of that quiet sort of men who, without ever once
+loudly asserting a right or disputing any word you say, invariably go
+ahead on their own judgment and carry their point in everything.
+Nevertheless, he was a man of fine, generous nature at bottom, a good
+brother and a worthy friend.
+
+But it was with Luke just as it is, more or less, with us all. He
+absorbed into his life the spirit of his surroundings. He grew somewhat
+to resemble Rackenshack in outward appearance. He became slovenly in his
+dress and let his hair and beard grow wild. His naturally handsome face
+gradually took on a sort of good humored ugliness, and his heavy
+shoulders slanted over like the uneven gables of his house. He became an
+inveterate chewer and smoker of tobacco. What time a quid of the weed
+was not in his mouth, the short thick stem of a dark, nicotine-coated
+briar-root pipe took its place there.
+
+Luke was an early riser; therefore it happens that our story properly
+begins on a fine June morning, just before sunrise. The birds seemed to
+suspect that a story was to date from that hour, for they were up
+earlier than usual and made a great rustle of wings and a sweet Babel of
+voices in the old cherry trees. There were the oriole, the cat bird, the
+yellow throat, the brown thrush and the red bird, all putting forth at
+once their charmingest efforts. The old cherry trees, knee deep in the
+foliage of their under growing seedlings, gleamed dusky green in the
+early light, as Luke, bareheaded, barefooted and in his "shirt sleeves,"
+as the phrase goes, issued from the front door of Rackenshack, and
+walked down the path across the yard to the gate at the road. Of late he
+had been in the habit of "taking a smoke" the first thing after getting
+up in the morning, and somehow the gate, though off one hinge and having
+doubtful tenure of the other, was his favorite thing to lean upon while
+watching the whiffs of blue smoke slowly float away.
+
+On this particular morning he seemed a little agitated; and, indeed, he
+was vexed more deeply than he had ever before been. Just the preceding
+evening he had learned that a corps of civil engineers were rapidly
+approaching his premises with a line of survey, and that the purpose was
+to locate and build a railway right through the middle of his farm. To
+Luke the very idea was outrageous. He felt that he could never stand
+such an imposition. His land was his own, and when he wanted it dug up
+and leveled down and a track laid across it he would do it himself. He
+did not want his farm cut in two, his fields disarranged and his fences
+moved, nor did he wish to see his live stock killed by locomotives. The
+truth is he was bitterly opposed to railroads, any how. They were
+innovations. They were enemies to liberty. They brought fashion, and
+spendthrift ways, and speculation, and all that along with them. Other
+folks might have railroads if they wanted them, but they must not bother
+him with them. He could take care of his affairs without any railroads.
+Besides, if he wanted one he could build it. He hung heavily upon the
+gate, thinking the matter over, and would not have bestowed a second
+glance at the carriage that came trundling past if he had not caught the
+starry flash of a pair of blue eyes and a rosy, roguish girl's face
+within. The beauty of that countenance struck the great rough fellow
+like a blow. He stared in a dazed, bewildered way. He took his pipe from
+his mouth and involuntarily tried to hide his great big bare feet behind
+the gate post. He felt a queer, dreamy thrill steal all over him. It
+was his first definite impression of feminine beauty. Instantly that
+round, happy, mischievous face, with its dimples and indescribable
+shining lines of half latent mirth, set itself in his heart forever.
+
+The carriage trundled on in the direction of the ferry. Luke followed it
+with his eyes till it disappeared round a turn in the road; then he put
+the pipe to his mouth again and began puffing vigorously, wagging his
+head in a way that indicated great confusion of mind. There are times
+when a glimpse of a face, the sudden half-mastering of a new, grand
+idea, a view of a rare landscape or even a cadence in some new tune,
+will start afresh the long dried up wells of a heart. Something like
+this had happened to Luke.
+
+"Sich a gal! sich a gal!" he murmured from the corner of his mouth
+opposite his pipe stem. "I don't guess I'm a dreamin' now, though I feel
+a right smart like it. I _hev_ dreamed of that 'ere face though, many of
+times. I've seed it in my sleep a thousand times, but I never s'posed
+'at I'd see it shore enough when I'd be awake! Sweetest dreams I ever
+had--sweetest face God ever made! I wonder who she is?" As if to
+supplement Luke's soliloquy at this point, a cardinal red bird flung
+out from the dusky depths of the oldest cherry tree an ecstatic carol,
+and a swallow, swooping down from the clear purple heights, almost
+touched the man's cheek with its shining wings, and the sun lifted its
+flaming face in the east and flooded the fields with gold.
+
+Luke turned slowly toward the old house. The breeze that came up with
+the sun poured through the orchard with a broad, joyous surge, while
+something like blowing of strange winds and streaming of soft sunlight
+made strangely happy the inner world of the smitten Hoosier. His big
+strong heart fluttered mysteriously. He actually took his pipe from his
+lips and broke into a snatch of merry song, that startled Betsy, his
+sister, from her morning nap.
+
+For the time the hated railroad survey was forgotten. The landscape at
+Rackenshack, as if by a turn of the great prisms of nature, suddenly
+took on rainbow hues. The fields flashed with jewels, and the woods, a
+wall of dusky emerald, were wrapped in a roseate mist, stirred into
+dreamy motion by the breeze. A light, grateful fragrance seemed to
+pervade all space, as if flung from the sun to soften and enhance the
+charm of his gift of light and heat. Such a hold did all this take upon
+Luke, and so utterly abstracted was he, that when breakfast was ready
+Betsy was obliged to remind him of the fact that he had neglected to
+wash his face and hands, and comb his hair and beard--things absolutely
+prerequisite to eating at her table.
+
+"Forgot it, sure's the world," said Luke; "don't know what ever
+possessed me."
+
+"Maybe you've forgot to turn the cows into the milk stalls, too?" said
+Betsy.
+
+"If I ha'n't I'm a gourd!" and Luke scratched his head distractedly.
+
+"What'd I tell you, Luke Plunkett? It's come at last, O lordy! You're as
+crazy as a June bug all along of smoking that old pipe! Rot the nasty,
+stinking old thing! It's a perfect shame, Luke, for a man to just smoke
+what little brains he's got clean out. You ought to be ashamed of
+yourself, so you ought!"
+
+While she was speaking Betsy got the big wooden washbowl for her
+brother, whereupon he proceeded to make his ablutions in a most
+energetic way, taking up great double handfuls of water and sousing his
+face therein with loud puffings, that enveloped his head in a cloud of
+spray.
+
+When a clean tow linen towel had served its purpose, Luke remarked:
+
+"Don't know but what I _am_ some'at crazy in good earnest, Betsy, since
+I come to think it all over. I'm r'ally onto it a right smart. What'd
+you think, Betsy, if I'd commence talkin' 'oman to ye?"
+
+"Luke, Luke! are you crazy? Is your mind clean gone out of your poor
+smoky head?"
+
+"That's not much of a answer to my question."
+
+"Well, what _do_ you mean, _anyhow_?"
+
+"I mean business, that's what!"
+
+"Luke!"
+
+"Yes'm."
+
+"Do try to act sensible now. What is it, Luke? What makes your eyes look
+so strange and dance about so? What do you mean by all this queer talk?"
+
+Luke finished combing, and, going to the table, sat down and was
+proceeding to discuss the fried chicken and coffee without further
+remark, but Betsy was not so easily balked. She, like most red haired
+women, wished her questions to be fully and immediately answered,
+wherefore some indications of a storm began to appear.
+
+Luke smiled a quiet little smile that had hard work getting out through
+his beard. Betsy trotted her foot under the table. Her hand trembled as
+she poured the coffee--trembled so violently that she scalded her left
+thumb. It was about time for Luke to speak or have trouble, so, in a
+very gentle voice, he said:
+
+"Well, I saw a gal--a gal an' her father, I reckon--go by this mornin'."
+
+"Well, what of it? S'pose there's plenty of girls and their fathers,
+ain't there?" snapped Betsy.
+
+Luke drew a chicken leg through his mouth, laid down the bone, leered
+comically at his sister from under his bushy eyebrows, and said:
+
+"But the gal was purty, Betsy--purty as a pictur', sweet as a peach,
+juicy an' temptin' as a ripe, red cored watermillion! You can't begin to
+guess how sweet an' nice she did look. My heart just flolloped and
+flopped about, an' it's at it yet!"
+
+"Luke Plunkett, you _are_ crazy! You're just as distracted as a blind
+dog in high rye. Drink a cup of hot coffee, Luke, and go lie down a bit,
+you'll feel better." The spinster was horrified beyond measure. She
+really thought her brother crazy.
+
+The man finished his meal in silence, smiling the while more grimly
+than before, after which he took his shot gun and a pan of salt and
+trudged off to a distant field to salt some cattle. He always carried
+his gun with him on such occasions, and not unfrequently brought back a
+brace of partridges or some young squirrels. As he strode along,
+thinking all the time of the girl in the carriage, he suddenly came upon
+a corps of engineers with transit, level, rod and chain, staking out,
+through the centre of a choice field, a line of survey for a railroad.
+In an instant he was like a roaring lion. He glared for a second or so
+at the intruders, then lowering his gun he charged them at a run,
+storming out as he did so:
+
+"What you doin' here, you onery cusses, you! Leave here! Get out!
+Scratch! Sift! Dern yer onery skins, I'll shoot every dog of ye! Git out
+'n here, I say--out, out!"
+
+The corps stampeded at once. The surveyor seized his transit, the
+leveller his level, the rod man his rod, the axe men and chain men their
+respective implements, and away they went, "lick-to-split, like a passel
+o' scart hogs," as Luke afterwards said, "as fast as they could ever
+wiggle along!"
+
+No wonder they ran, for Luke looked like a demon of destruction. It was
+a wild race for the line fence, a full half mile away. The leveler,
+being the hindmost man, rolled over this fence just as a heavy bowlder,
+hurled by Luke, struck the top rail. It was a close shave, a miss of a
+hair's breadth, a marvelous escape. Luke rushed up to the fence and
+glared over at his intended victims. Here he knew he must stop, for he
+doubted the legality of pursuing them beyond the confines of his own
+premises. Somewhat out of breath he leaned on the fence and proceeded to
+swear at the corps individually and collectively, shaking his fists at
+them excitedly, till the appearance of a new man on the scene made him
+start and stare as if looking at a ghost. He was a well dressed,
+gentlemanly appearing person of about the age of forty-five, pale and
+thoughtful--calm, gray eyed, commanding. Luke recognized him at once as
+the man he had seen in the carriage, and, indeed, the vehicle itself
+stood hard by, with a beautiful, laughing, roguish face looking out of
+one of the windows. The lion in the stalwart farmer was quelled in an
+instant. He felt his legs grow weak. He set his gun by the fence and
+touched his hat to the little lady.
+
+"Your name, I believe, is Luke Plunkett?" said the approaching
+gentleman.
+
+"Yes, sir," said Luke.
+
+"You own two thousand acres of land here?"
+
+"Yes, sir."
+
+"Your residence is called Rackenshack?"
+
+"Yes, sir." (Suppressed titter from the carriage.)
+
+"So I thought. Pull back, men (addressing the corps), pull back to where
+you dropped the line and bring it right along. Mr. Plunkett will not
+harm you now."
+
+The corps began to move. Luke fiercely seized his gun; but before he
+could lift it or utter a word, a ten-inch Colt's repeater was thrust
+into his face by the calm gentleman, and a steady hand held it there.
+
+"Mr. Plunkett," said the man, "I am the chief engineer of the ----
+Railroad. I am making a location. The laws of this State give me the
+right to go upon your land with my corps and have the survey made. I am
+not to be trifled with. If you offer to cock that gun I'll put six holes
+through you. What do you say, now?"
+
+The voice was that of a cold man of business. There was a coffin in
+every word. The muzzle of the pistol steadily covered Luke's left eye.
+The situation was rigid. Luke hesitated--his face ashy with anger and
+fear, his eyes alternating their glances between the muzzle of the
+pistol and that wonderful shining face at the carriage.
+
+"Shoot him, papa, shoot him! Shoot him!" Sweet as a silver bell rang out
+the girl's voice, more like a ripple of idle song than a murderous
+request, and then a clear, happy laugh went echoing off through the
+woods in which the carriage stood.
+
+Slowly, steadily, Luke let fall the breech of his gun upon the ground
+beside him. The engineer smiled grimly and lowered his pistol, while the
+corps, headed by the surveyor, took up its line of march to the point
+where work had been so suddenly left off.
+
+The young lady clapped her tiny white hands for joy.
+
+A big black woodpecker began to cackle in a tree hard by.
+
+Luke felt like a man in a dream.
+
+The whole adventure, so far, had been clothed in most unreal seeming.
+
+It can hardly be told how, by rapid transitions from one thing to
+another in his talk, the engineer drew Luke's mind away from the late
+difficulty and gradually aroused in him a kindly feeling. In less than
+ten minutes the two men were sitting side by side on a log, smoking
+cigars from the engineer's pouch and chatting calmly, amicably.
+
+Luke's eyes often rested steadily fixed in the direction of the
+carriage. Through the thin veil of tobacco smoke the face of the young
+girl seemed to the farmer angelic in its beauty. All around the sweets
+of summer rose and fell, and drifted like scarcely visible shining
+mists, fraught with the spice of leaf and perfume of blossom, agitated
+by swells of tricksy wind, going on and on to the mysterious goal of the
+season.
+
+The two men talked on until the corps had pushed the line of survey far
+past them into the cool, shady deeps of the woods, whence their voices
+came back fainter and fainter every moment. At length the engineer
+arose, and stretching out his hand to Luke, said:
+
+"Mr. Plunkett, I'm sure I'll be able to serve you some time; let us be
+friends. I shall be in this vicinity most of the time till the road is
+built. No doubt I can show a way to profit by the construction of a
+railroad across your land. If you are sharp it will make your fortune. I
+like your independent way, sir, and hope to know you better. Here is my
+card."
+
+Luke took the bit of pasteboard without saying a word. They shook hands
+and the engineer got into his carriage.
+
+"Here's my card, too, Mr. Plunkett," cried the girl. She said something
+more, but the horses were made to plunge rapidly away, and the words
+were lost; but the flash of a white jewelled hand caught Luke's eye as a
+delicately tinted card came fluttering towards him. He sprang and seized
+it. If a bag of diamonds had been flung at his feet he could not have
+been more excited. His hands trembled. All the incidents of the only
+fairy tale he had ever read came at once into his mind. He stood with
+his feet turned in, like some great awkward boy, a bashful, shame-faced
+look lurking about his mouth and eyes. He filled his pipe and lighted it
+from the stump of his cigar with nervous eagerness. A squirrel came down
+to the lowest limbs of a beech tree hard by and barked at him, but he
+did not notice it. He read the names on the cards:
+
+ "_Elliot Pearl, C. E._"
+ "_Hoiden Pearl._"
+
+The first printed in small capitals, the second written in a delicate,
+rather cramped feminine hand. He stood for a long time dreamily employed
+in turning these bits of paper over and over. His thoughts were so vague
+in outline and so dim in filling up that they cannot be reproduced. They
+slipped away on the summer air, like little puffs of perfume, and were
+lost, to be found by many and many a one in the ineffable places of
+dreamland. Finally, shaking himself as if to break the charm that held
+him in its meshes, he took up his gun and slowly made his way homeward.
+All along his walk he kept smiling to himself and talking aloud, but his
+words were such that it would be sacrilege to repeat them now. Let them
+hover about in the sunlight of summer, where he uttered them, as things
+too delicate to be pressed between the lids of a book.
+
+Betsy had trouble with Luke for some days after this. He lay about the
+house, saying little, eating little, giving little attention to the many
+tenants who worked his estate. He was in good health, was not in trouble
+(so he said to his sister), but he did not care to be bothered with
+business. He was tired and would rest awhile. "He smoked pretty near all
+the time," as Betsy declared. But not a hint fell from his lips as to
+what might be running in his mind.
+
+So the days slipped past till July hung golden mists on the horizon and
+filled the woods with that rare stillness and dusky slumbrousness that
+follows the maturing of the foliage and the coming on of fruit. The
+cherry trees at Rackenshack had grown ragged and dull, and the birds,
+excepting a few swallows wheeling about the old chimney tops, had all
+flown away to the woods and fields. The wheat had been cut and stacked,
+the corn had received its last ploughing. Still Luke hung about the
+house annoying Betsy with his pipe and his utter carelessness. That he
+was "distracted" Betsy did not for a moment doubt. She used every means
+her small stock of wit could invent to urge him out of his singular
+mood, but without avail. He took to the few old novels he could find
+about the house, but sometimes he would gaze blankly at a single
+paragraph for a whole hour.
+
+One morning as he lay on the porch, his head resting upon the back of a
+chair, reading, or pretending to read an odd volume of "The Scottish
+Chiefs," a little boy, 'Squire Brown's son, came to bring home a
+monkey-wrench his father had borrowed some time before. The boy was a
+bright, rattle-box, say-everything, pop-eyed sort of child, and was not
+long telling all the news of the neighborhood. Luke gave little
+attention to what he was saying, till at length he let fall something
+about a young lady--a fine, rich young lady, staying at Judge
+Barnett's--a young lady who could outrun him, out jump him, beat him
+playing marbles and ball, who could climb away up in the June apple
+tree, who could ride a colt bareback, who could beat Jim Barnett
+shooting at a mark, who could, in fact, do a half a hundred things to
+perfection that strict persons would think a young lady should never do
+at all, but which seemed to make a heroine of her in the narrator's
+boyish view.
+
+"What's the gal's name?" queried Luke in a slow, lazy way, but his eyes
+shot a gleam of hope.
+
+"Hoidy Pearl," replied the lad.
+
+Hoiden Pearl! That name had been woven into every sound that had reached
+Luke's ears for days and nights and nights together, and now, like a
+sweet tune nearly mastered, it took a deeper, tenderer meaning as the
+boy pronounced it in his childish way.
+
+"Hoidy Pearl is her name," the lad continued. "She's come to stay at the
+Judge's all summer till the new railroad's finished. Her father's the
+boss of the road. She's jest the funniest girl, o-o-e! And she likes me,
+too!"
+
+Luke raised himself to a sitting posture and looked at the boy so
+earnestly that he drew back a pace or two as if afraid.
+
+"Boy, you're not lyin', are ye?" said the man in a low, earnest tone.
+
+"No I'm not, neither," was the quick reply.
+
+Luke got up, flung aside his book and strolled off into the woods.
+Wandering there in the cool, silent places, he dreamed his dream. For
+hours he sat by a little spring stream in the dense shadow of a big
+cotton-wood tree. The birds congregated about him, and chirped and sang;
+the squirrels came out chattering and frisking from branch to branch;
+but he gave them no look of recognition--he saw them not, heard them
+not. The birds might have lit upon his head and the squirrels might have
+run in and out of his pockets with impunity. He smoked all the time,
+refilling and relighting his pipe whenever it burned out. He did not
+know how much he was smoking, nor that he was smoking at all. A bright
+face set in a mass of yellow curls, a wee white hand all spangled with
+jewels, a voice sweeter than any bird's, a name--Hoiden Pearl--these
+rang, and danced, and echoed, and shone in the recesses of his brain and
+heart to the exclusion of all else. He was trying to think, but he could
+not. He wanted to mature a plan, but not even an outline could find room
+in his head. It was full. Strange, indeed, it may seem, that a rough
+farmer of Luke's age should thus fall into the ways of the imaginative,
+sentimental stripling; but, after all, the fit must come on some time
+in life. No doubt it goes harder with some constitutions than with
+others. Luke may have been unwittingly strongly predisposed that way.
+Neither the exterior of a man nor his surroundings will do to judge him
+by. Nature is that mysterious in all her ways. Luke talked aloud,
+sometimes gesticulating in a quiet way.
+
+"I _must_ see the gal--I _will_ see the gal," he muttered at last. "It's
+no use talkin', I jist will see her!"
+
+Suddenly a light broke from his face. He smiled like one who has victory
+in his grasp--like an editor who has an idea, like a reviewer who has
+found some bad verse. He got up immediately, went back to the barn,
+hitched a horse to a small road wagon and drove to town. There he spent
+time and money with a merchant tailor and other vendors of clothing. He
+was very fastidious in his selection. Nothing but the finest would do
+him. A few days after this he brought home a trunk full of princely
+raiment--broad cloth and fine linen. Betsy was struck dumb with
+amazement when the trunk was opened. A dream of such costly things, such
+reckless extravagance, would have driven her mad. Silent, open-eyed,
+wondering, she came in and stood behind Luke while he was unpacking. He
+looked up presently and saw her. His face flushed violently, and in a
+half-whining, half-ashamed tone he muttered:
+
+"Now, Betsy, you jest git out'n here faster'n ye come in, for I'm not
+goin' to stan' no foolin' at all, now. These 'ere's my clothes and paid
+for out'n my money, an' I'm the jedge of what I need. I ha'n't had any
+good duds for a long time, and I'm tired o' lookin' like a scarecrow
+made out'n a salt bag. I've been thinkin' for a long time I'd git these
+'ere things, an' now I've got'm. You kin git you some if ye like, but I
+don't want ye a standin' round here gawpin' at me on 'count o' my
+clothes; so you go off an' mind yer own affairs. It's no great sight to
+see some shirts, an' coats, and pants, an' collars, an' vests, an' sich
+like, is it?"
+
+Before this speech was finished Betsy had backed out of the room and
+closed the door. As she did so she let go a sigh that came back to Luke
+like a Parthian arrow; but it happened just then that he was holding up
+in front of him a buff linen vest which kept the missile from his heart.
+
+He dressed himself with great care, and an hour later he slipped out of
+the house unseen, and took his way towards the rather pretentious
+residence of Judge Barnett, the gables of which, a mile away, gleamed
+between rows of Lombardy poplars. The Judge was one of those half
+cultivated men who, in every country neighborhood, pass for prodigies of
+learning and ability. He was the autocrat of the county in political and
+social affairs--one of those men who really know a great deal, but who
+arrogate more. He got his title from having been County Commissioner
+when the court house was building. Some said he made money out of the
+transaction, but our story is silent there.
+
+It would have been an interesting study for a philosopher to have
+watched Luke throughout the singular ramble he took that morning. It
+would have been such a manifest revelation of the state of the fellow's
+feelings. It would have minutely disclosed, and more eloquently than any
+verbal confession, the rise and fall, the ebb and flow, the alternating
+strength and weakness of his purpose, and the will behind it. Then, too,
+it would have let fall delightful hints of the unselfishness of his new
+and all-engrossing passion, and of the charming simplicity and sincerity
+of his great rugged nature at its inner core. At first he struck out
+boldly a direct line to Judge Barnett's residence, his face beaming
+with the light of settled happiness, but as he neared the pleasant
+grounds surrounding the house he began to discover some trepidation. His
+gait wavered, the expression of his face shifted with each step, and
+soon his course was indeterminate--a fitful sauntering from this place
+to that--a tricksy, uneven flight, like that of a lazy butterfly, if one
+may indulge the comparison--a meandering in and out among the trees of a
+small walnut grove--a strolling here and there, now along the verge of a
+well set old orchard, now down the low hedge behind the garden, and anon
+leaning over the board fence that inclosed the Judge's ample barn and
+stable lot; he gazed wistfully, half comically, in the direction of the
+upper windows of the farm house. It was one of those peculiarly yellow
+days of summer, when everything swims in a golden mist. The blue birds
+floated aimlessly about from stake to stake of the fences; the wind,
+felt only in jerky puffs, blew no particular way, and as idly and as
+eccentrically as any blue bird, and in full accord with the fitful will
+of the wind, Luke drifted through the sheen of summer all round Barnett
+Place. He lazed about, humming a tune, and, for a wonder, not
+smoking--half restless, half contented, looking for something, scarcely
+expecting anything. When once a great rough man does get into a childish
+way, he is a child of which ordinary children would be ashamed, and just
+then Luke, the big bashful fellow, was an instance strikingly in point.
+Occasionally he talked half aloud to himself. Once, while lounging on
+the orchard fence, gazing down between the long rows of russet and
+pippin trees, he said dreamily,
+
+"I _must_ see her. I can't go back 'ithout seein' her." It so chanced
+that just then a shower of blackbirds fell upon the orchard, covering
+the trees and the ground, flying over and over each other, twittering
+and whistling as only blackbirds can. Their wings smote together with a
+tender rustling sound like that of a spring wind in young foliage, or of
+a thousand lovers whispering together by moonlight. Luke watched them a
+long while, a doleful shade gathering in his face. "The little things
+loves each other," he muttered; "everything loves something; an' jest
+dern my lights ef I don't love the gal, an' I'm boun' to see her!"
+Seemingly nerved by sudden resolution, he climbed over the fence and
+started at a slashing pace across the orchard towards the house, scaring
+all the birds into an ecstasy of flight, so that they dashed themselves
+against the foliage of the apple trees, making it rustle and sway as if
+blown on by a strong wind. He did not keep on, however. His resolution
+seemed to burn out about midway the orchard. He began to drift around
+again, his pace becoming slower and slower. His shoulders drooped
+forward as if burdened with a great load, his eyes turned restlessly
+from side to aide.
+
+"I jest can't do it!" he murmured--"I jest can't do it, an' I mought as
+well go back!" There was a petulant ring to his voice--a nervous,
+worried tone, that had despair in it.
+
+Out of a June apple tree right over his head fell a sweet, silvery, half
+child's, half woman's voice, that thrilled him through every fibre to
+the marrow of his bones.
+
+"What's the matter, Goosey? What have you lost! What are you hunting
+for? Want a good apple?"
+
+Luke looked up just in time to catch squarely on his nose a fine, ripe
+June apple, and through a mist of juice and a sheeny curtain of leaves
+he saw the lovely face he had come to look for. A thump on the nose from
+an apple, no matter if it is ripe and soft, is a little embarrassing,
+and it only makes it more so when the racy wine of the fruit flies into
+one's eyes and all over one's new clothes. But there are moments of
+supreme bliss when such a mishap passes unnoticed. Luke felt as if the
+blow had been the touch of a magician conjuring up a scene that held him
+rapt and speechless.
+
+"O, my! I didn't go to hit you! Please excuse me, sir--do. I thought
+you'd catch it in your hands."
+
+She came lightly down from the tree, descending like a bird, easily,
+gracefully, as if she had been born to climb. She murmured many
+apologies, but the genius of fun danced in her saucy, almost impertinent
+eyes, belying her regretful words. Luke looked down at her dazed and
+speechless. She, however, was full of prattle--half childish, half
+womanly, half serious, half bantering--her eyes upturned to his, her
+voice a very bird's in melody. In the more innocent sense of the word
+she looked like her name, Hoiden. Nothing unchaste or indelicate about
+her appearance; just a sort of want of restraint; a freedom that
+amounted to an utter lack of responsibility to the ordinary claims and
+dictates of propriety. A close, trained, intelligent observer would have
+seen at once that she was wilful, spoiled, unbridled, but not bad, not
+in the least vicious; really innocent and full of good impulses. She was
+beautiful, too--wonderfully beautiful--just on the hither side of
+womanhood, plump, budding, bewitching. How she did it can never be
+known, but she soon had Luke racing with her all over the orchard. They
+climbed trees together, they scrambled for the same apple, they laughed,
+and shouted, and played till the horn at the farmhouse called the field
+hands to dinner. They parted then, as children part, promising to meet
+again the next day. The girl's cheeks were rosy with exercise, so were
+Luke's.
+
+How strange! Day after day that great, bearded, almost middle-aged,
+uncouth farmer went and played slave to that chit of a girl, doing
+whatever ridiculous or childish thing she proposed, caring for nothing,
+asking for nothing but to be with her, listen to her voice and feast his
+eyes upon her beauty. He gladly bore everything she heaped upon him, and
+to be called "Goosey" by her was to him inexpressibly charming.
+
+Betsy's womanly nature was not to be deceived. She soon comprehended
+all; but she dared not mention the subject to Luke. He was in no mood to
+be opposed. So he went on--and Betsy sighed.
+
+The summer softened into autumn. The maple leaves reddened. The long
+grass turned brown and lolled over. A softness and tenderness lurked in
+the deep blue sky, and the air had a sharp racy fragrance from ripe
+fruit and grain. Meantime the railroad had been pushed with amazing
+rapidity nearly to completion. Every day long construction trains went
+crashing-across Luke's farm. Passenger coaches were to be put on in a
+few days. Luke was the very picture of happiness. He seemed to grow
+younger every day. His worldly prospects, too, were flattering. A
+station had been located on his land, around which a town had already
+begun to spring up. The vast value of Luke's timber, walnut and oak, was
+just beginning to appear; indeed, immense wealth lay in his hands. But
+his happiness was of a deeper and purer sort than that generated by
+simple pecuniary prosperity. Hoiden Pearl was in the focus of all his
+thoughts; her face lighted his dreams, her voice made the music that
+charmed him into a wonderland of bliss. He said little about her, even
+to Betsy, but it needed no sharpness of sight to discover from his face
+what was going on in his heart. He had even forgotten his pipe. He had
+not smoked since that first day in the orchard. He had straightened up
+and looked a span taller.
+
+The girl did not seem to dream of any tender attachment on Luke's part.
+In fact he gave her no cause for it. He fed on his love inwardly and
+never thought of telling it. To be with her was enough. It satisfied all
+his wants. She was frank and free with him, but tyrannized over
+him--ordered him about like a servant, scolded him, flattered him,
+pouted at him, smiled on him, indeed kept him crazy with rapture all the
+time. Once only she became confidentially communicative. It was one day,
+sitting on an old mossy log in the Judge's woodland pasture, she told
+him the story of her past life. How thrillingly beautiful her face
+became as it sobered down with the history of early orphanage! Her
+father had died first; then her mother, who left her four years old in
+the care of Mr. Pearl, her paternal uncle, with whom she had ever since
+been, going from place to place, as the calls of his nomadic profession
+made it necessary, from survey to survey, from this State to that,
+seeing all sorts of people, and receiving her education in small,
+detached parcels. The story was a sad, unsatisfactory one, breathing
+neglect, yet full of a certain kind of sprightliness, and touched here
+and there with the fascination of true romance.
+
+It is hard to say when Luke would have awakened from his tender trance
+to the strong reality of love. He was too contented for
+self-questioning, and no act or word of Hoiden's invited him to consider
+what he was doing or whither he was drifting.
+
+It was well for Luke and the girl, too, that it was a sparsely settled
+neighborhood, for evil tongues might have made much of their constant
+companionship and childish behavior.
+
+As for the Judge, after it was all over he admitted that he felt some
+qualms of conscience about allowing such unlimited intimacy to go on,
+but he excused himself by saying that the girl, when confined to the
+house, was such an unmitigated nuisance that he was glad for some one to
+monopolize her company.
+
+"Why," said he, in his peculiar way, "she set the whole house by the
+ears. She made more clatter and racket than a four-horse Pennsylvania
+wagon coming down a rocky hill. She would go from garret to cellar like
+a whirlwind and twist things wrong side out as she went----she was a
+tart!"
+
+But at length, toward the middle of autumn the end came. Luke had
+business with some hog-buyers in Cincinnati, whither he was gone
+several days. Meantime the railroad was completed, and Mr. Pearl came to
+the Judge's early one morning and called for Hoiden. His business with
+his employers was ended, and he had just finished an arrangement that
+had long been on foot to go to one of the South American States and take
+charge of a vast engineering scheme there. The girl was delighted. Such
+a prospect of travel and adventure was enough to set one of her
+temperament wild with enthusiasm. She flew to packing her trunk, her
+face radiant with joy.
+
+Only an hour later Mr. Pearl and Hoiden stood at the new station on
+Luke's land, waiting for the east-going train. Mr. Pearl happened to
+think of a business message he wished to leave for Luke, so he went into
+the depot building and wrote it. When Hoiden saw the letter was for Luke
+she begged leave to put in a few words of postscript, and she had her
+way.
+
+The train came and the man and girl were whirled away to New York, and
+thence they took ship for South America, never to return.
+
+Next day Luke came back, bringing with him a beautifully carved mahogany
+box mounted in silver. Betsy met him at the door, and, woman-like, told
+the story of Hoiden's departure almost at the first breath.
+
+"Gone all the way to South America," she added, after premising that she
+would never return.
+
+A peculiarly grim, grayish smile mantled the face of Luke. He swallowed
+a time or two before he could speak.
+
+"Come now, sis" (he always said "sis" when he felt somewhat at Betsy's
+mercy), "come now, sis, don't try to fool me. I'm goin' right over to
+see the gal now, an' I've got what'll tickle her awfully right here in
+this 'ere box."
+
+Out in the yard the blue jays and woodpeckers were quarrelling over the
+late apples heaped up by the cider mill. The sky was clear, but the
+sunlight, coming through a smoky atmosphere, was pale, like the smile of
+a sick man. The wind of autumn ran steadily through the shrubby weedy
+lawn with a sigh that had in it the very essence of sadness.
+
+"I tell you, Luke, I'm not trying to fool you; they've gone clean to
+South America to stay always," reiterated Betsy.
+
+Luke gazed for a moment steadily into his sister's eyes, as if looking
+for a sign. Slowly his stalwart body and muscular limbs relaxed and
+collapsed. The box fell to the floor with a crash, where it burst,
+letting roll out great hoops of gold and starry rings and pins--a gold
+watch and chain, a beautiful gold pen and pencil case, and trinkets and
+gew-gaw things almost innumerable. They must have cost the full profits
+of his business trip.
+
+Luke staggered into a chair. Betsy just then happened to think of the
+letter that had been left for her brother. This she fetched and handed
+to him. It was the note of business from Mr. Pearl. There was a
+postscript in a different hand:
+
+ "_Good-bye, Goosey!_
+ _Hoidy Pearl._"
+
+That was all. Luke is more morose and petulant than he used to be. He is
+decaying about apace with Rackenshack, and he smokes constantly. He is
+vastly wealthy and unmarried.
+
+Betsy is quiet and kind. Up stairs in her chest is hidden the mahogany
+coffer full of golden testimonials of her brother's days of happiness
+and the one dark hour of his despair!
+
+
+
+
+THE PEDAGOGUE.
+
+
+He was one of the farmer princes of Hoosierdom, a man of more than
+average education, a fluent talker and ready with a story. Knowing that
+I was looking up reminiscences of Hoosier life and specimens of Hoosier
+character, he volunteered one evening to give me the following, vouching
+for the truth of it. Here it is, as I "short-handed" it from his own
+lips. I omit quotation marks.
+
+The study of one's past life is not unlike the study of geology. If the
+presence of the remains of extinct species of animals and vegetables in
+the ancient rocks calls up in one's mind a host of speculative thoughts
+touching the progress of creation, so, as we cut with the pick of
+retrospection through the strata of bygone days, do the remains of
+departed things, constantly turning up, put one into his studying cap to
+puzzle over specimens fully as curious and interesting in their way as
+the _cephalaspis_.
+
+The first stratum of my intellectual formation contains most
+conspicuously the remains of dog-eared spelling books, a score or more
+of them by different names, among which the _Elementary_ of Webster is
+the best preserved and most clearly defined. It was finding an old,
+yellow, badly thumbed and dirt soiled copy of Webster's spelling book in
+the bottom of an old chest of odds and ends, on the fly-leaf of which
+book was written "T. Blodgett," that lately brightened my memory of the
+things I am about to tell you.
+
+The old time pedagogue is a thing of the past--_pars temporis acti_ is
+the Latin of it, may be, but I'm not sure--I'm rusty in the Latin now.
+When I quit school I could read it a good deal. But of the pedagogue.
+The twenty years since he ceased to flourish seem, on reflection, like
+an age--an _aeon_, as the Greeks would say. I never did know much Greek.
+I got most of my education from pedagogues of the old sort. They kept
+pouring it on to me till it soaked in. That's the way I got it. I have
+had corns and bunions on my back for not being sufficiently porous to
+absorb the multiplication table rapidly enough to suit the whim of one
+of those learned tyrants. But the pedagogue became extinct and passed
+into the fossil state some twenty years ago, when free schools took
+good hold. He scampered away when he heard the whistle of the steam
+engine along iron highways and the cry of small boys on the streets of
+the towns hawking the daily papers. He could live nowhere within the
+pale of innovation. He was born an exemplar of rigidity. The very name
+of reform was hateful to him. We older fellows remember him well, but to
+the younger fry he is not even a fossil, he is a myth. Of course
+pedagogues differed slightly in the matter of particular disposition and
+real character, but in a _general way_ they had a close family
+resemblance.
+
+I purpose to write of one Blodgett--T. Blodgett, as it was written in
+the fly-leaf of Webster's Elementary--and he was an extraordinary
+specimen of the genus pedagogue. But before I introduce him, let me, by
+way of preface and prelude, give you a view of the salients of the
+history of the days when pole-ribbed school houses--log cabin school
+houses--flourished, with each a pedagogue for supreme, "unquestioned and
+unquestionable" despot.
+
+In those fine days boys from five to fifteen years of age wore tow linen
+pants held up by suspenders (often made of tow strings), and having at
+each side pockets that reached down to about the wearer's knees. These
+pockets held as much as a moderate sized bushel basket will now. The
+girls, big and little, wore mere tow linen slips, that hung loose from
+the shoulders. Democracy, pure and undefiled, flourished like a green
+buckeye tree. Society was in about the same condition as a boy is when
+his voice is changing. You know when a boy's voice is changing if you
+hear him in another room getting his lesson by saying it over aloud, you
+think there's about fourteen girls, two old men, and a dog barking in
+the room. Society was much the same. The elements of everything were in
+it, but not developed and separated yet. Women rode behind their
+husbands on the same horse, occasionally reaching round in the man's lap
+to feel if the baby was properly fixed. Sometimes the girls rode to
+singing school behind their sweethearts. At such times the horses always
+kicked up, and, of course, the girls had to hold on. The boys liked the
+holding on part. Young men went courting always on Saturday night. The
+girls wouldn't suffer any hugging before eleven o'clock--unless the old
+folk were remarkably early to bed. Candles were scarce in those days, so
+that billing and cooing was done by very dim fire-light. _O, le bon
+temps!_ I've forgot whether that's Latin or French.
+
+The pedagogue was the intellectual and moral centre of the neighborhood.
+He was of higher authority, even in the law, than the Justice of the
+Peace. He was consulted on all subjects, and, as a rule, his decisions
+were final, and went upon the people's record as law. His jurisdiction
+was unlimited, as to subject matter or amount, and, as to the person,
+was unquestioned. Of course his territory was bounded by the
+circumstances of each particular case.
+
+I just now recollect quite a number of pedagogues who in turn ruled me
+in my youthful days. Of one of them I never think without feeling a
+strange sadness steal over me. He was a young fellow whom to know was to
+love; pale, delicate, tender-hearted. He taught us two terms and we all
+thought him the best teacher in the world. He was so kind to us, so
+gentle and mild-voiced, so prone to pat us on our heads and encourage
+us. Some of the old people found fault with him because, as they
+alleged, he did not whip us enough, but we saw no force in the
+objection. Well, he took a cough and began to fail. He dismissed us one
+fine May evening and we saw him no more alive. We all followed him, in a
+solemn line, to his grave, and for a long time thereafter we never spoke
+of him except in a low, sad whisper. As for me, till long afterwards,
+the hushed wonder of his white face haunted my dreams. I have now in my
+possession a little bead money-purse he gave me.
+
+Blodgett came next, and here my story properly begins. Blodgett--who,
+having once seen him, could ever forget Blodgett? Not I. He was too
+marked a man to ever wholly fade from memory. He was, as I have said, a
+perfect type of his kind, and his kind was such as should not be sneered
+at. He was one of the humble pioneers of American letters. He was a
+character of which our national history must take account. He was one of
+the vital forces of our earlier national growth. He was in love with
+learning. He considered the matter of imparting knowledge a mere
+question of effort, in which the physical element preponderated. If he
+couldn't talk or read it into one he took a stick and mauled it into
+him. This mauling method, though somewhat distasteful to the subject,
+always had a charming result--red eyes, a few blubbers and a good
+lesson. The technical name of this method was "_Warming the Jacket_."
+It always seemed to me that the peewee birds sang very dolefully after I
+had had my jacket warmed. I recollect my floggings at school with so
+much aversion that I do think, if a teacher should whale one of my
+little ruddy-faced boys, I'd spread his (the teacher's) nose over his
+face as thin as a rabbit skin! I'd run both his eyes into one and chew
+his ears off close to his head, sir! Forgive my earnestness, but I can't
+stand flogging in schools. It's brutal.
+
+From the first day that Blodgett came circulating his school "articles"
+among us, we took to him by common consent as a wonderfully learned man.
+I think his strong, wise looking face, and reserved, pompous manners,
+had much to do with making this impression. We believed in him fully,
+and for a long time gave him unfaltering loyalty. As for me, I never
+have wholly withdrawn my allegiance. I look back, even now, and admire
+him. I sigh, thinking of the merry days when he flourished. I solemnly
+avow my faith in progress. I know the world advances every day, still I
+doubt if men and women are more worthy now than they were in the time of
+the pedagogues. I don't know but what, after all, I am somewhat of a
+fogy. Any how, I will not, for the sake of pleasing your literary
+_swallows_--your eclectics of to-day--turn in and berate my dear old
+Blodgett. In his day men could not and did not skim the surface of
+things like swallows on a mill pond. They _dived_, and got what they did
+get from the bottom, and by honest labor. Whenever one of your
+silk-winged swallows skims past me and whispers progress, I cannot help
+thinking of Heyne, Jean Paul and--Blodgett. Somehow genius and poverty
+are great cronies. It used to be more so than it is now. Blodgett was a
+genius, and, consequently, poor. He was virtuous, and, of course, happy.
+He was a Democrat and a Hard Shell Baptist, and he might never have
+swerved from the path of rectitude, even to the extent of a hair's
+breadth, if it had not been for the coming of a not over scrupulous
+rival into the neighboring village. But I must not hasten. A little more
+and I would have blurted out the whole nub of my story. Bear with me. I
+have nothing of the "lightning calculator" in me. I must take my time.
+
+It has been agreed that biography must include somewhat of physical
+portraiture. "What sort of looking man was Blodgett?" I will tell you as
+nearly as I can, but bear in mind it is a long time since I saw him,
+and, in the meanwhile, the world has been so washed, and combed, and
+trimmed, and pearl powdered, that one can scarcely be sure he recollects
+things rightly. The seedy dandy who teaches the free schools of to-day,
+is, no doubt, all right as things go; but then the way they go--that's
+it! As for finding some one of these dapper, umbrella-lugging,
+green-spectacled, cadaverous teachers to compare with our burly
+Blodgett, the thing is preposterous.
+
+Our pedagogue, when he first came among us, was, as nearly as I can
+judge, about forty, and a bachelor, tall, raw-boned, lean-faced, and
+muscular--a man of many words, and big ones, but not over prone to seek
+audience of the world. To me, a boy of twelve, he appeared somewhat
+awful, especially when plying the beech rod for the benefit of a future
+man, and I do still think that something harder than mere sternness
+slept or woke in and around the lines of his strong, flat jaws--that
+something sharper than acid shrewdness lurked in his light gray eyes,
+and that surely a more powerful expression than ordinary brute obstinacy
+lingered about his firm mouth and smoothly shaven chin.
+
+Blodgett had a mighty body and a mighty will, joined with a
+self-appreciation only bounded by his power to generate it. This, added
+to the deep deference with which he was approached by everybody, made
+him not a little arrogant and despotic--though, doubtless, he was less
+so than most men, under like circumstances, would have been. His years
+sat lightly on him. His step was youthful though slouching, his raven
+hair was bright and wavy, his skin had the tinge of vigorous health, and
+in truth he was not far from handsome. His voice was nasal, but
+pleasantly so.
+
+I cannot hope to give you more than a faint idea of the absolute power
+vested in Blodgett by the men, women and children of the school
+vicinage; suffice it to say that his view was a _sine qua non_ to every
+neighborhood opinion, his words the basis of neighborhood action in all
+matters of public interest. If he pronounced the parson's last sermon a
+failure, at once the entire church agreed in condemning it, not only as
+a failure but a consummate blunder. If he hinted that a certain new
+comer impressed him unfavorably, the nincompoop was summarily kicked out
+of society. In fact, in the pithy phraseology of these latter days, "it
+was dangerous to be safe" about where he lived.
+
+Thus, for a long time, Blodgett ruled with an iron hand his little
+world, with no one to dream of disputing his right or of doubting his
+capacity, till at length fate let fall a bit of romance into the strong
+but placid stream of his life, and tinged it all with rose color. He
+wrote some poetry, but it is obsolete--that is, it is not now in
+existence. While this streak of romance lasted he looked, for all the
+world, like a gilt-edged mathematical problem drawn on rawhide.
+
+It was a great event in our neighborhood when Miss Grace Holland, a
+yellow-haired, blue-eyed, very handsome and well educated young lady
+from Louisville, Kentucky, came to spend the summer with Parson Holland,
+our preacher, and the young woman's uncle. Kentucky girls are all sweet.
+My wife was a Kentucky girl. All the young men fell in love with Miss
+Holland right away, but it was of no use to them. Blodgett, in the
+language of your fast youngsters, "shied his castor into the ring," and
+what was there left for the others but to stand by and see the glory of
+the pedagogue during the season of his wooing? It would have done your
+eyes good to see the pedagogue "slick himself up" each Saturday evening
+preparatory to visiting the parson's. He went into the details of the
+toilette with an enthusiasm worthy a better result. Ordinarily he was
+ostentatiously pious and grave, but now his nature began to slip its
+bark and disclose an inner rind of real mirthfulness, which made him
+quite pleasant company for Miss Holland, who, though a mere girl, was
+sensible and old enough to enjoy the many marked peculiarities of the
+pedagogue.
+
+On Blodgett's side it was love--just the blindest, craziest kind of
+love, at first sight. As to Miss Holland, I cannot say. One never can
+precisely say as to a woman; guessing at a woman's feelings, in matters
+of love, is a little like wondering which makes the music, a boy's mouth
+or the jewsharp--a doubtful affair.
+
+Great events never come singly. When it rains it pours. If you have seen
+a bear, every stump is a bear. A few days after the advent of Miss
+Holland came a pop-eyed, nervous, witty little fellow with a hand press,
+and started a weekly paper in our village. A newspaper in town! It was
+startling.
+
+Blodgett from the first seemed not to relish the innovation, but public
+sentiment had set in too strongly in its favor for him to jeopardize his
+reputation by any serious denunciations. A real live paper in our midst
+was no small matter. Everybody subscribed, and so did Blodgett.
+
+It did, formerly, require a little brains to run a newspaper, and in
+those days an editor was looked upon as nearly or quite as learned and
+intelligent as a pedagogue; but everybody, however ignorant himself,
+could not fail to see that one represented progress, the other
+conservatism, and formerly most persons were Ultra-Conservatives. This,
+of course, gave the pedagogue a considerable advantage.
+
+Of course Blodgett and the editor soon became acquainted. The latter, a
+dapper Yankee, full of "get-up-and-snap," and alert to make way for his
+paper, measured the pedagogue at a glance, seeing at once that a big
+bulk of strong sense and a will like iron were enwrapped in the stalwart
+Hoosier's brain. One of two things must be done. Blodgett must be
+vanquished or his influence secured. He must be prevailed on to endorse
+the _Star_ (the new paper), or the _Star_ must attack and destroy him at
+once.
+
+Meantime the pedagogue grimly waited for an opportunity to demolish the
+editor. The big Hoosier had no thought of compromise or currying favor.
+He would sacrifice the little sleek, stuck-up, big-headed, pop-eyed,
+Roman-nosed Yankee between his thumb nails as he would a flea. Blodgett
+was a predestinarian of the old school, and was firmly imbedded in the
+belief that from all eternity it had been fore-ordained that he was to
+attend to just such fellows as the editor.
+
+Still, the little lady from Louisville took up so much of his time, and
+so distracted his mind, that no well laid plan of attack could be
+matured by the pedagogue. But when nations wish to fight it is easy to
+find a pretext for war. So with individuals. So with the editor and
+Blodgett. They soon came to open hostilities and raised the black flag.
+What an uproar it did make in the county!
+
+This war seemed to come about quite naturally. It had its beginning in a
+debating society, where Blodgett and the editor were leading
+antagonists. The question debated was, "Which has done more for the
+cause of human liberty, Napoleon or Wellington?"
+
+Two village men and two countrymen were the jury to decide which side
+offered the best argument. The jury was out all night and finally
+returned a split verdict, two of them standing for Blodgett and two for
+the editor. Of course it was town against country--the villagers for the
+editor, the country folk for the pedagogue.
+
+"Huzza for the little editor!" cried the town people.
+
+"'Rah for Blodgett!" bawled the lusty country folk.
+
+The matter quickly came to blows at certain parts of the room. Jim
+Dowder caught Phil Gates by the hair and snatched him over two seats.
+Sarah Jane Beaver hit Martha Ann Randall in the mouth with a reticule
+full of hazel nuts. Farmer Heath choked store-keeper Jones till his face
+was as blue as moderate-like indigo. Old Mrs. Baber pulled off Granny
+Logan's wig and threw it at 'Squire Hank. But Pete Develin wound the
+thing up with a most disgraceful feat. He seized a bucket half full of
+water and deliberately poured it right on top of the editor's head.
+
+This was the beginning of trouble and fun. Some lawsuits grew out of it
+and some hard fisticuffs. All the country-folk sided with Blodgett--the
+towns-folk with the editor. The _Star_ began to get dim, but the editor,
+shrewd dog, when he saw how things were turning, at once took up the
+question of Napoleon _vs._ Wellington in his journal, kindly and
+condescendingly offering his columns to Blodgett for the discussion.
+
+The pedagogue foolishly accepted the challenge, and thus laid the
+stones upon which he was to fall. So the antagonists sharpened their
+goose quills and went at it. In sporting circles the proverb runs: never
+bet on a man's own trick. Blodgett ought to have known better than to go
+to the editor's own ground to fight.
+
+I have always suspected that Miss Holland did much to shear our Samson
+of his strength. She certainly did, wittingly or unwittingly, occupy too
+much of his time and thought. Poor fellow! he would have given his life
+for her. He often looked at her, with his head turned a little one side,
+sadly, thoughtfully, as I have seen a terrier look at a rat hole, as
+though he half expected disappointment.
+
+The battle in the _Star_ began in very earnest. It was a harvest for the
+shrewd journalist. Everybody took the _Star_ while the discussion was
+going on. Everybody took sides, everybody got mad, and almost everybody
+fought more or less. Even Parson Holland and the village preacher had
+high words and ceased to recognize each other. As for the young lady
+from Louisville, she had little to say about the discussion, though
+Blodgett always read to her each one of his articles first in MS. and
+then in the _Star_ after it was printed.
+
+Well, finally, in the very height of the war of words, the editor, in
+one of his articles, indulged in Latin. As you are aware, when an editor
+gets right down to pan-rock Latin, it's a sure sign he's after somebody.
+This instance was no exception to the general rule. He was baiting for
+the pedagogue. The pedagogue swallowed hook and all.
+
+"_Nil de mortuis nisi bonum_," said the editor, "is my motto, which may
+be freely translated: 'If you can't say something good of the dead, keep
+your tarnal mouth shut about them!'"
+
+Blodgett started as he read this, and for a full minute thereafter gazed
+steadily and inquiringly on vacancy. At length his great bony right hand
+opened slowly, then quickly shut like a vice.
+
+"I have him! I have him!" he muttered in a murderous tone, "I'll crush
+him to impalpable dust!" He forthwith went for a small Latin lexicon and
+began busily searching its pages. It was Saturday evening, and so busily
+did he labor at what was on his mind, he came near forgetting his
+regular weekly visit to Miss Holland.
+
+He did not forget it, however. He went; without pointing out to her the
+exact spot so vulnerable to his logical arrows, he told her in a
+confidential and confident way that his next letter would certainly make
+an end of the editor. He told her that, at last, he had the shallow
+puppy where he could expose him thoroughly. Of course Miss Holland was
+curious to know more, but, with a grim smile, Blodgett shook his head,
+saying that to insure utter victory he must keep his own counsel.
+
+The next day, though the Sabbath, was spent by the pedagogue writing his
+crusher for the _Star_. He wrote it and re-wrote it, over and over
+again. He almost ruined a Latin grammar and the afore-mentioned lexicon.
+He worked till far in the night, revising and elaborating. His gray eyes
+burned like live coals--his jaws were set for victory.
+
+That week was one of intense excitement all over the county, for somehow
+it had come generally to be understood that the pedagogue's forthcoming
+essay was to completely defeat and disgrace the editor. Work, for the
+time, was mostly suspended. The school children did about as they
+pleased, so that they were careful not to break rudely in upon
+Blodgett's meditations.
+
+On the day of its issue the _Star_ was in great demand. For several
+hours the office was crowded with eager subscribers, hungry for a copy.
+The 'Squire and two constables had some trouble to keep down a genuine
+riot.
+
+The following is an exact copy of Blodgett's great essay:
+
+ MR. EDITOR--SIR: This, for two reasons, is my last article for
+ your journal. Firstly: My time and the exigencies of my
+ profession will not permit me to further pursue a discussion
+ which, on your part, has degenerated into the merest twaddle.
+ Secondly: It only needs, at my hands, an exposition of the
+ false and fraudulent claims you make to classical attainments,
+ to entirely annihilate your unsubstantial and wholly undeserved
+ popularity in this community, and to send you back to peddling
+ your bass wood hams and maple nutmegs. In order to put on a
+ false show of erudition, you lug into your last article a
+ familiar Latin sentence. Now, sir, if you had sensibly foregone
+ any attempt at translation, you might, possibly, have made some
+ one think you knew a shade more than a horse; but "whom the
+ gods would destroy they first make mad."
+
+ You say, "_De mortuis nil nisi bonum_" may be freely
+ translated, "If you can't say something good of the dead, keep
+ your tarnal mouth shut about them!" Shades of Horace and
+ Praxiteles! What would Pindar or Caesar say? But I will not
+ jest at the expense of sound scholarship. In conclusion, I
+ simply submit the following _literal translation_ of the Latin
+ sentence in question: "_De_--of, _mortuis_--the dead,
+ _nil_--nothing, _nisi_--but, _bonum_--goods," so that the whole
+ quotation may be rendered as follows--"Nothing (is left) of the
+ dead but (their) goods." This is strictly according to the
+ dictionary. Here, so far as I am concerned, this discussion
+ ends.
+
+ Your ob't serv't,
+ T. BLODGETT.
+
+The country flared into flames of triumph. Blodgett's friends stormed
+the village and "_bully-ragged_" everybody who had stood out for the
+editor. The little Yankee, however, did not appear in the least
+disconcerted. His clear, blue, pop-eyes really seemed twinkling with
+half suppressed joy. Blodgett put a copy of the _Star_ into his pocket
+and stalked proudly, victoriously, out of town.
+
+After supper he dressed himself with scrupulous care and went over to
+see Miss Holland. Rumor said they were engaged to be married, and I
+believe they were.
+
+On this particular evening the young lady was enchantingly pretty,
+dressed in white muslin and blue ribbons, her bright yellow hair flowing
+full and free down upon her plump shoulders, her face radiant with
+health and high spirits. She met the pedagogue at the door with more
+than usual warmth of welcome. He kissed her hand. All that he said to
+her that evening will never be known. It is recorded, however, that,
+when he had finished reading his essay to her, she got up and took from
+her travelling trunk a "Book of Foreign Phrases," and examined it
+attentively for a time, after which she was somewhat uneasy and
+reticent. Blodgett observed this, but he was too dignified to ask an
+explanation.
+
+The "last day" of Blodgett's school was at hand. The "exhibition" came
+off on Saturday. Everybody went early. The pedagogue was in his glory.
+He did not know the end was so near. A little occurrence, toward
+evening, however, seemed to foreshadow it.
+
+Blodgett called upon the stage a bright eyed, ruddy faced lad, his
+favorite pupil, to translate Latin phrases. The boy, in his Sunday best,
+and sleekly combed, came forth and bowed to the audience, his eyes
+luminous with vivacity. The little fellow was evidently precocious--a
+rapid if not a very accurate thinker--one of those children who always
+have an answer ready, right or wrong.
+
+After several preliminary questions, very promptly and satisfactorily
+disposed of, Blodgett said:
+
+"Now, sir, translate _Monstrum horrendum informe ingens_."
+
+Quick as lightning the child replied:
+
+"The horrid monster informed the Indians!"
+
+Fury! The face of the pedagogue grew livid. He stretched forth his hand
+and took the boy by the back of the neck. The curtain fell, but the
+audience could not help hearing what a flogging the boy got. It was
+terrible.
+
+Even while this was going on a rumor rippled round the outskirts of the
+audience--for you must know that the "exhibition" was held under a bush
+arbor erected in front of the school house door--a rumor, I say, rippled
+round the outer fringe of the audience. Some one had arrived from the
+village and copies of the _Star_ were being freely distributed. Looks of
+blank amazement flashed into people's faces. The name of the editor and
+that of Prof. W----, of Wabash College, began to fly in sharp whispers
+from mouth to mouth. The crowd reeled and swayed. Men began to talk
+aloud. Finally everybody got on his feet and confusion and hubbub
+reigned supreme. The exhibition was broken up. Blodgett came out of the
+school house upon the stage when he heard the noise. He gazed around.
+Some one thrust a copy of the _Star_ into his hand.
+
+Poor Blodgett! We may all fall. The crowd resolved itself into an
+indignation meeting then and there, at which the following extract from
+the _Star_ was read, followed by resolutions dismissing and disgracing
+Blodgett:
+
+ "The following letter is rich reading for those who have so
+ long sworn by T. Blodgett. We offer no comment:
+
+ "EDITOR OF THE STAR--DEAR SIR: In answer to your letter
+ requesting me to decide between yourself and Mr. Blodgett as to
+ the correct English rendering of the Latin sentence '_De
+ mortuis nil nisi bonum_,' allow me to say that your free
+ translation is a good one, if not very literal or elegant. As
+ to Mr. Blodgett's, if the man is sincere, he is certainly crazy
+ or wofully illiterate; no doubt the latter.
+
+ "Very respectfully,
+ "W----,
+ "_Prof. Languages, Wabash College._"
+
+Blodgett walked away from the school house into the dusky June woods. He
+knew that it was useless to contend against the dictum of a college
+professor. His friends knew so too, so they turned to rend him. He was
+dethroned and discrowned forever. He was boarding at my father's then,
+and I can never forget the haggard, wistful look his face wore when he
+came in that evening. I have since learned that he went straight from
+the scene of his disgrace to Miss Holland, whom he found inclined to
+laugh at him. The next week he collected what was due him and left for
+parts unknown.
+
+I was over at parson Holland's, playing with his boys.
+
+The game was mumble peg.
+
+I had been rooting a peg out of the ground and my face was very dirty.
+We were under a cherry tree by a private hedge. Presently Miss Holland
+came out and began, girl-like, to pluck and eat the half ripe cherries.
+The wind rustled her white dress and lifted the gold floss of her
+wonderful hair. The birds chattered and sang all round us; the white
+clouds lingered overhead like puffs of steam vanishing against the
+splendid blue of the sky. The fragrance of leaf and fruit and bloom was
+heavy on the air. The girl in white, the quiet glory of the day, the
+murmur of the unsteady wind stream flowing among the dark leaves of the
+orchard and hedge, the charm of the temperature, and over all, the
+delicious sound of running water from the brook hard by, all
+harmonized, and in a tender childish mood I quit the game and lolled at
+full length on the ground, watching the fascinating face of the young
+lady as she drifted about the pleasant places of the orchard. Suddenly I
+saw her fix her eyes in a surprised way in a certain direction. I looked
+to see what had startled her, and there, half leaning over the hedge,
+stood Blodgett.
+
+His face was ghastly in its pallor, and deep furrows ran down his jaws.
+His gray eyes had in them a look of longing blended with a sort of stern
+despair. It was only for a moment that his powerful frame toppled above
+the hedge, but he is indelibly pictured in my memory just as he then
+appeared.
+
+"Good-bye, Miss Holland, good-bye."
+
+How dismally hollow his voice sounded! Ah! it was pitiful. I neither saw
+nor heard of him after that. Years have passed since then. Blodgett is,
+likely, in his grave, but I never think of him without a sigh.
+
+Yesterday I was in the old neighborhood, and, to my surprise, learned
+that the old log school house was still standing. So I set out alone to
+visit it. I found it rotten and shaky, serving as a sort of barn in
+which a farmer stows his oats, straw and corn fodder. The genius of
+learning has long since flown to finer quarters. The great old chimney
+had been torn down or had fallen, the broad boards of the roof, held on
+by weight poles, were deeply covered with moss and mould, and over the
+whole edifice hung a gloom--a mist of decay.
+
+I leaned upon a worm fence hard by and gazed through the long vacant
+side window, underneath which our writing shelf used to be, sorrowfully
+dallying with memory; not altogether sorrowfully either, for the glad
+faces of children that used to romp with me on the old play ground
+floated across my memory, clothed in the charming haze of distance, and
+encircled by the halo of tender affections. The wind sang as of old, and
+the bird songs had not changed a jot. Slowly my whole being crept back
+to the past. The wonders of our progress were all forgotten. And then
+from within the old school room came a well remembered voice, with a
+certain nasal twang, repeating slowly and sternly the words:
+
+"_Arma virumque cano_;" then there came a chime of silver tones--"School
+is out!--School is out!" And I started, to find that I was all alone by
+the rotting but blessed old throne and palace of the pedagogue.
+
+
+
+
+AN IDYL OF THE ROD.
+
+
+It was as pretty a country cottage as is to be found, even now, in all
+the Wabash Valley, situated on a prominent bluff, overlooking the broad
+stretches of bottom land, and giving a fine view of the wide winding
+river. The windows and doors of this cottage were draped in vines, among
+which the morning glory and the honeysuckle were the most luxuriant;
+while on each side of the gravelled walk, that led from the front
+portico to the dooryard gate, grew clusters of pinks, sweet-williams and
+larkspurs. The house was painted white, and had green window
+shutters--old fashioned, to be sure, but cosy, homelike and tasty
+withal. Everything pertaining to and surrounding the place had an air of
+methodical neatness, that betokened great care and scrupulous order on
+the part of the inmates.
+
+About the hour of six on a Monday morning, in the month of May, a fine,
+hearty, intelligent looking lad of twelve years walked slowly up the
+path which led from the old orchard to the house. He was dressed in
+loose trowsers of bottle green jeans, a jacket of the same, heavy boots
+and a well worn wool hat. The boy's shoulders stooped a little, and a
+slight hump discovered itself at the upper portion of his back. His face
+was strikingly handsome, being fair, bright, healthful, and marked with
+signs of great precocity of intellect, albeit it wore just now an
+indescribable, faintly visible shade, as of innocent perplexity, or,
+possibly, grief. His mind was evidently not at ease, but the varying
+shadows that chased each other across the mild depths of his clear,
+vivacious eyes would have stumped a physiognomist. Between a laugh and a
+cry, but more like a cry; between defiance and utter shame, but more
+like the latter; his cheeks and lips took on every shade of pallor and
+of flush. He shrugged his shoulders as he moved along, and cast rapid
+glances in every direction, as if afraid of being seen. "Whippoo-tee,
+tippoo-tee-tee-e!" sang a great cardinal red bird in the apple tree over
+his head. He flung a stone at the bird with terrible energy, but missed
+it.
+
+The mistress of the cottage was at this time in the kitchen preparing
+for the week's washing, for do not all good Hoosier housewives wash on
+Monday? She was a middle aged, stoutly built, healthy matron, sandy
+haired, slightly freckled, blue eyed and quick in her movements. Usually
+smiling and happy, it was painful to see how she struggled now to master
+the emotions of great grief and sadness that constantly arose in her
+bosom, like spectres that would not be driven away.
+
+A bright eyed, golden haired lass of sixteen was in the breakfast room
+washing the dishes and singing occasional snatches from a mournful
+ditty. It was sad, indeed, to see a cloud of sorrow on a face so fresh
+and sweet.
+
+Mr. Coulter, the head of the family, and owner of the cottage and its
+lands, stood near the centre of the sitting room with his hands crossed
+behind him, gazing fixedly and sadly on the picture of a sweet child
+holding a white kitten in its lap, which picture hung on the wall over
+against the broad fire-place. A look of sorrow betrayed itself even in
+the dark, stern visage of the man. He drew down his shaggy eyebrows and
+occasionally pulled his grizzled moustache into his mouth and chewed it
+fiercely. Evidently he was chafing under his grief.
+
+The cottage windows were wide open, as is the western custom in fine
+weather, and the fragrance of spice wood and sassafras floated in on the
+flood tide of pleasant air, while from the big old locust tree down by
+the fence fell the twittering prelude to a finch's song. A green line of
+willows and a thin, pendulous stratum of fog marked the way of the
+river, plainly visible from the west window, and through the white haze
+flocks of teal and wood ducks cut swiftly in their downward flight to
+the water. A golden flicker sang and hammered on the gate-post the while
+he eyed a sparrow-hawk that wheeled and screamed high over head. The dew
+was like little mirrors in the grass.
+
+The lad entered the kitchen and said to his mother, in a voice full of
+tenderness, though barely audible:
+
+"Mammy, where's pap?"
+
+"In the front room, Billy," replied the matron solemnly, quaveringly.
+
+Passing into the breakfast room, Billy looked at his sister and a flash
+of sympathetic sorrow played back and forth from the eyes of one to
+those of the other; then he went straight into the sitting room and
+handed something to Mr. Coulter. It was a moment of silence and
+suspense. Out in the orchard the cherry and apple blooms were falling
+like pink and white snow.
+
+The man looked down at his boy sadly, sorrowfully, regretfully. He drew
+his face into a stern frown. The lad looked up into his father's eyes
+timidly, ruefully, strangely. It was a living tableau no artist could
+reproduce. It was the moment before a crisis.
+
+"Billy," said the father gravely, "I took your mother and sister to
+church yesterday."
+
+"Yes, sir," said Billy.
+
+"And left you to see to things," continued the man.
+
+"Yes, sir," replied the boy, gazing through the window at the flicker as
+it hitched down the gate-post and finally dropped into the grass with a
+shrill chirp.
+
+"And you didn't water them pigs!"
+
+"O-o-o! Oh, sir! Geeroody! O me! ouch! lawsy! lawsy! mercy me!"
+
+The slender scion of an apple tree, in the hand of Mr. Coulter, rose and
+fell, cutting the air like a rapier, and up from the jacket of the lad,
+like incense from an altar, rose a cloud of dust mingled with the nap of
+jeans. Down in the young clover of the meadow the larks and sparrows
+sang cheerily; the gnats and flies danced up and down in the sunshine,
+the fresh soft young leaves of the vines rustled like satin, and all
+was merry indeed!
+
+Billy's eyes were turned upward to the face of his father in appealing
+agony; but still the switch, with a sharp hiss, cut the air, falling
+steadily and mercilessly on his shoulders.
+
+All along the green banks of the river the willows shook their shining
+fingers at the lifting fog, and the voices of children going by to the
+distant school smote the sweet May wind.
+
+"Whippee! Whippee-tippee-tee!" sang the cardinal bird.
+
+"O pap! ouch! O-o-o! I'll not forget to water the pigs no more!"
+
+"S'pect you won't, neither!" said the man.
+
+The wind, by a sudden puff, lifted into the room a shower of white bloom
+petals from a sweet apple tree, letting them fall gracefully upon the
+patchwork carpet, the while a ploughman whistled plaintively in a
+distant field.
+
+"Crackee! O pap! ouch! O-o-o! You're a killin' me!"
+
+"Shet your mouth 'r I'll split ye to the backbone in a second! Show ye
+how to run off fishin' with Ed Jones and neglect them pigs! Take every
+striffin of hide off'n ye!"
+
+How many delightful places in the woods, how many cool spots beside the
+murmuring river, would have been more pleasant to Billy than the place
+he just then occupied! He would have swapped hides with the very pigs he
+had forgot to water.
+
+"O, land! O, me! Geeroody me!" yelled the lad.
+
+"Them poor pigs!" rejoined the father.
+
+Still the dust rose and danced in the level jet of sunlight that fell
+athwart the room from the east window, and the hens out at the barn
+cackled and sang for joy over new laid eggs stowed away in cosy places.
+
+At one time during the falling of the rod the girl quit washing the
+dishes, and thrusting her head into the kitchen said, in a subdued tone:
+
+"My land! Mammy, ain't Bill a gittin' an awful one this load o' poles?"
+
+"You're moughty right!" responded the matron, solemnly.
+
+Along toward the last Mr. Coulter tip-toed at every stroke. The switch
+actually screamed through the air. Billy danced and bawled and made all
+manner of serio-comic faces and contortions.
+
+"Now go, sir," cried the man, finally tossing the frizzled stump of the
+switch out through the window. "Go now, and next time I'll be bound you
+water them pigs!"
+
+And, while the finch poured a cataract of melody from the locust tree,
+Billy went.
+
+Poor boy! that was a terrible thrashing, and to make it worse, it had
+been promised to him on the evening before, so that he had been dreading
+it and shivering over it all night!
+
+Now, as he walked through the breakfast room, his sister looked at him
+in a commiserating way, but on passing through the kitchen he could not
+catch the eye of his mother.
+
+Finally he stood in the free open air in front of the saddle closet. It
+was just then that a speckled rooster on the barn yard fence flapped his
+wings and crowed lustily. A turkey cock was strutting on the grass by
+the old cherry tree.
+
+Billy opened the door of the closet. "A boy's will is the wind's will,
+and the thoughts of youth are long, long thoughts." Billy peeped into
+the saddle closet and then cast a glance around him, as if to see if any
+one was near.
+
+At length, during a pleasant lull in the morning wind, and while the
+low, tenderly mellow flowing of the river was distinctly audible, and
+the song of the finch increased in volume, and the bleating of new born
+lambs in the meadow died in fluttering echoes under the barn, and while
+the fragrance of apple blooms grew fainter, and while the sun, now
+flaming just a little above the eastern horizon, launched a shower of
+yellow splendors over him from head to foot, he took from under his
+jacket behind a doubled sheep skin with the wool on, which, with an
+ineffable smile, he tossed into the closet. Then, as the yellow flicker
+rose rapidly from the grass, Billy walked off, whistling the air of that
+once popular ballad--
+
+ "O give me back my fifteen cents,
+ And give me back my money," &c.
+
+
+
+
+Transcriber's Notes:
+
+
+ Passages in italics or underlined are indicated by _italics_.
+
+ Inconsistencies in spelling and hyphenation have been retained from
+ the original.
+
+ Punctuation has been corrected without note.
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Hoosier Mosaics, by Maurice Thompson
+
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