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authorRoger Frank <rfrank@pglaf.org>2025-10-14 18:46:00 -0700
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+ <head>
+ <meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html;charset=us-ascii" />
+ <meta http-equiv="Content-Style-Type" content="text/css" />
+ <title>
+ The Project Gutenberg eBook of Polly, by Thomas Nelson Page.
+ </title>
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+
+
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+ margin-left: auto;
+ margin-right: auto;
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+
+
+
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+
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+
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+
+.caption {font-weight: bold; font-size: 90%;}
+
+/* Images */
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+ margin: auto;
+ text-align: center;
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+
+/* Footnotes */
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+
+<pre>
+
+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Polly, by Thomas Nelson Page
+
+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: Polly
+ A Christmas Recollection
+
+Author: Thomas Nelson Page
+
+Illustrator: A. Castaigne
+
+Release Date: December 31, 2013 [EBook #44547]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK POLLY ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Charlene Taylor, Emmy and the Online Distributed
+Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This file was
+produced from images generously made available by The
+Internet Archive/American Libraries.)
+
+
+
+
+
+
+</pre>
+
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 561px;">
+<img src="images/cover.jpg" width="561" height="800" alt="cover" />
+</div>
+<hr class="chap" />
+
+
+
+
+<div class='maintitle'>POLLY</div>
+
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+
+<div class='center'>IN UNIFORM STYLE<br />&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;</div>
+
+
+
+
+
+<div class="center">
+<table border="0" cellpadding="4" cellspacing="0" summary="Book titles">
+<tr><td align="left">MARSE CHAN. A Tale of Old Virginia. Illustrated by W. T. Smedley.</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">MEH LADY. A Story of the War. Illustrated by C. S. Reinhart.</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">POLLY. A Christmas Recollection. Illustrated by A. Castaigne.</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">UNC' EDINBURG. A Plantation Echo. Illustrated by B. West Clinedinst.</td></tr>
+</table></div>
+
+
+<div class='center'>
+<i>Each, small quarto, $1.00</i><br />
+</div>
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 441px;"><a id="frontis"></a>
+<img src="images/frontis.jpg" width="441" height="600" alt="young man and young woman on horses" />
+<div class="caption">"<i>The young man found it necessary to lean over and
+throw a steadying arm around her.</i>"</div>
+</div>
+
+
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+
+<h1>POLLY
+<img src="images/title-1.png" width="319" height="37" alt="five leaves" />
+</h1>
+
+<div class='center'><br />A CHRISTMAS RECOLLECTION<br />
+
+<br />
+BY THOMAS NELSON PAGE<br />
+<br />
+ILLUSTRATED BY A. CASTAIGNE<br /><br /><br /><br />
+</div>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 95px;">
+<img src="images/title-2.png" width="95" height="55" alt="two leaves" />
+</div>
+
+<div class='center'><br /><br /><br />
+CHARLES SCRIBNER'S SONS<br />
+NEW YORK, 1897 <img src="images/title-3.png" width="122" height="31" alt="three leaves" />
+</div>
+
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+
+
+<div class='copyright'>
+Copyright, 1894, by<br />
+Charles Scribner's Sons<br />
+<br /><br /><br />
+<small>TROW DIRECTORY</small><br />
+<small>PRINTING AND BOOKBINDING COMPAN</small>Y<br />
+<small>NEW YORK</small><br />
+</div>
+
+
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+
+<h2>LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS</h2>
+
+
+
+
+<div class="center">
+<table border="0" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="0" summary="table">
+<tr><td align="left">"<i>The young man found it necessary to lean over and throw a steadying arm around her.</i>"</td>
+<td align="right"><a href="#frontis">Frontispiece.</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left"><i>Vignette heading.</i></td>
+<td align="right"><a href="#Page_1">Page 1.</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">"<i>Drinkwater Torm fell sprawling on the floor.</i>"</td>
+<td align="right"><a href="#Page_10">Page 10.</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">"<i>'I will!' he said, throwing up his head.</i>"</td>
+<td align="right"><a href="#Page_22">Page 22.</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">"<i>There he was standing on the bridge just before her.</i>"</td>
+<td align="right"><a href="#Page_30">Page 30.</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">"<i>He made Torm, Charity, and a half-dozen younger house-servants dress him.</i>"</td>
+<td align="right"><a href="#Page_38">Page 38.</a></td></tr>
+</table></div>
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_1" id="Page_1">[1]</a></span></p>
+
+
+
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 500px;">
+<img src="images/image001.jpg" width="500" height="348" alt="man walking" />
+</div>
+
+
+<div class='drop-cap'>IT was Christmas Eve. I remember it just as if it
+was yesterday. The Colonel had been pretending
+not to notice it, but when Drinkwater Torm<a name="FNanchor_A_1" id="FNanchor_A_1"></a><a href="#Footnote_A_1" class="fnanchor">[A]</a>
+knocked over both the great candlesticks, and in his
+attempt to pick them up lurched over himself and fell
+sprawling on the floor, he yelled at him. Torm pulled
+himself together, and began an explanation, in which
+the point was that he had not "teched a drap in Gord
+knows how long," but the Colonel cut him short.</div>
+
+<p>"Get out of the room, you drunken vagabond!"
+he roared.</p>
+
+<p>Torm was deeply offended. He made a low, grand
+bow, and with as much dignity as his unsteady condition<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_2" id="Page_2">[2]</a></span>
+would admit, marched very statelily from the
+room, and passing out through the dining-room, where
+he stopped to abstract only one more drink from the
+long, heavy, cut-glass decanter on the sideboard, meandered
+to his house in the back-yard, where he proceeded
+to talk religion to Charity, his wife, as he always
+did when he was particularly drunk. He was expounding
+the vision of the golden candlestick, and the bowl
+and seven lamps and two olive-trees, when he fell
+asleep.</p>
+
+<p>The roarer, as has been said, was the Colonel; the
+meanderer was Drinkwater Torm. The Colonel gave
+him the name, "because," he said, "if he were to drink
+water once he would die."</p>
+
+<p>As Drinkwater closed the door, the Colonel continued,
+fiercely:</p>
+
+<p>"Damme, Polly, I will! I'll sell him to-morrow
+morning; and if I can't sell him I'll give him away."</p>
+
+<p>Polly, with troubled great dark eyes, was wheedling
+him vigorously.</p>
+
+<p>"No; I tell you, I'll sell him.&mdash;'Misery in his
+back!' the mischief! he's a drunken, trifling, good-for-nothing
+nigger! and I have sworn to sell him a
+thousand&mdash;yes, ten thousand times; and now I'll have
+to do it to keep my word."</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_3" id="Page_3">[3]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>This was true. The Colonel swore this a dozen
+times a day&mdash;every time Torm got drunk, and as that
+had occurred very frequently for many years before
+Polly was born, he was not outside of the limit.
+Polly, however, was the only one this threat ever
+troubled. The Colonel knew he could no more have
+gotten on without Torm than his old open-faced watch,
+which looked for all the world like a model of himself,
+could have run without the mainspring. From tying
+his shoes and getting his shaving-water to making his
+juleps and lighting his candles, which was all he had to
+do, Drinkwater Torm was necessary to him. (I think
+he used to make the threat just to prove to himself that
+Torm did not own him; if so, he failed in his purpose&mdash;Torm
+did own him.) Torm knew it as well as he,
+or better; and while Charity, for private and wifely
+reasons, occasionally held the threat over him when
+his expoundings passed even her endurance, she knew
+it also.</p>
+
+<p>Thus, Polly was the only one it deceived or frightened.
+It always deceived her, and she never rested
+until she had obtained Torm's reprieve "for just one
+more time." So on this occasion, before she got
+down from the Colonel's knees, she had given him
+in bargain "just one more squeeze," and received in<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_4" id="Page_4">[4]</a></span>
+return Torm's conditional pardon, "only till next
+time."</p>
+
+<p>Everybody in the county knew the Colonel, and
+everybody knew Drinkwater Torm, and everybody
+who had been to the Colonel's for several years past
+(and that was nearly everybody in the county, for the
+Colonel kept open house) knew Polly. She had been
+placed in her chair by the Colonel's side at the club
+dinner on her first birthday after her arrival, and had
+been afterward placed on the table and allowed to
+crawl around among and in the dishes to entertain the
+gentlemen, which she did to the applause of every one,
+and of herself most of all; and from that time she had
+exercised in her kingdom the functions of both Vashti
+and Esther, and whatever Polly ordered was done. If
+the old inlaid piano in the parlor had been robbed of
+strings, it was all right, for Polly had taken them.
+Bob had cut them out for her, without a word of protest
+from anyone but Charity. The Colonel would
+have given her his heartstrings if Polly had required
+them.</p>
+
+<p>She had owned him body and soul from the second
+he first laid eyes on her, when, on the instant he entered
+the room, she had stretched out her little chubby
+hands to him, and on his taking her had, after a few<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_5" id="Page_5">[5]</a></span>
+infantile caresses, curled up and, with her finger in her
+mouth, gone to sleep in his arms like a little white
+kitten.</p>
+
+<p>Bob used to wonder in a vague, boyish way where
+the child got her beauty, for the Colonel weighed two
+hundred and fifty pounds, and was as ugly as a red
+head and thirty or forty years of Torm's mint-juleps
+piled on a somewhat reckless college career could
+make him; but one day, when the Colonel was away
+from home, Charity showed him a daguerreotype of a
+lady, which she got out of the top drawer of the
+Colonel's big secretary with the brass lions on it, and
+it looked exactly like Polly. It had the same great
+big dark eyes and the same soft white look, though
+Polly was stouter; for she was a great tomboy, and
+used to run wild over the place with Bob, climbing
+cherry-trees, fishing in the creek, and looking as blooming
+as a rose, with her hair all tangled over her
+pretty head, until she grew quite large, and the
+Colonel got her a tutor. He thought of sending her
+to a boarding-school, but the night he broached the
+subject he raised such a storm, and Polly was in such
+a tempest of tears, that he gave up the matter at once.
+It was well he did so, for Polly and Charity cried all
+night and Torm was so overcome that even next<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_6" id="Page_6">[6]</a></span>
+morning he could not bring the Colonel his shaving-water,
+and he had to shave with cold water for the
+first time in twenty years. He therefore employed a
+tutor. Most people said the child ought to have had
+a governess, and one or two single ladies of forgotten
+age in the neighborhood delicately hinted that they
+would gladly teach her; but the Colonel swore that
+he would have no women around him, and he would
+be eternally condemned if any should interfere with
+Polly; so he engaged Mr. Cranmer, and invited Bob
+to come over and go to school to him also, which he
+did; for his mother, who had up to that time taught
+him herself, was very poor, and was unable to send
+him to school, her husband, who was the Colonel's
+fourth cousin, having died largely indebted, and all
+of his property, except a small farm adjoining the
+Colonel's, and a few negroes, having gone into the
+General Court.</p>
+
+<p>Bob had always been a great favorite with the
+Colonel, and ever since he was a small boy he had
+been used to coming over and staying with him.</p>
+
+<p>He could gaff a chicken as well as Drinkwater
+Torm, which was a great accomplishment in the
+Colonel's eyes; for he had the best game-chickens in
+the county, and used to fight them, too, matching<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_7" id="Page_7">[7]</a></span>
+them against those of one or two of his neighbors who
+were similarly inclined, until Polly grew up and made
+him stop. He could tame a colt quicker than anybody
+on the plantation. Moreover he could shoot
+more partridges in a day than the Colonel, and could
+beat him shooting with a pistol as well, though the
+Colonel laid the fault of the former on his being so fat,
+and that of the latter on his spectacles. They used to
+practice with the Colonel's old pistols that hung in
+their holsters over the tester of his bed, and about
+which Drinkwater used to tell so many lies; for although
+they were kept loaded, and their brass-mounted
+butts peeping out of their leathern covers used to look
+ferocious enough to give some apparent ground for
+Torm's story of how "he and the Colonel had shot
+Judge Cabell spang through the heart," the Colonel
+always said that Cabell behaved very handsomely, and
+that the matter was arranged on the field without a
+shot. Even at that time some people said that Bob's
+mother was trying to catch the Colonel, and that if the
+Colonel did not look out she would yet be the mistress
+of his big plantation. And all agreed that the
+boy would come in for something handsome at the
+Colonel's death; for Bob was his cousin and his nearest
+male relative, if Polly <i>was</i> his niece, and he would<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_8" id="Page_8">[8]</a></span>
+hardly leave her all his property, especially as she was
+so much like her mother, with whom, as everybody
+knew, the Colonel had been desperately in love, but
+who had treated him badly, and, notwithstanding his
+big plantation and many negroes, had run away with
+his younger brother, and both of them had died in the
+South of yellow fever, leaving of all their children only
+this little Polly; and the Colonel had taken Drinkwater
+and Charity, and had travelled in his carriage all
+the way to Mississippi, to get and bring Polly back.</p>
+
+<p>It was Christmas Eve when they reached home, and
+the Colonel had sent Drinkwater on a day ahead to
+have the fires made and the house aired for the baby;
+and when the carriage drove up that night you would
+have thought a queen was coming, sure enough.</p>
+
+<p>Every hand on the plantation was up at the great
+house waiting for them, and every room in the house
+had a fire in it. (Torm had told the overseer so many
+lies that he had had the men cutting wood all day, although
+the regular supply was already cut.) And
+when Charity stepped out of the carriage, with the
+baby all bundled up in her arms, making a great show
+about keeping it wrapped up, and walked up the steps
+as slowly as if it were made of gold, you could have
+heard a pin drop; even the Colonel fell back, and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_9" id="Page_9">[9]</a></span>
+spoke in a whisper. The great chamber was given
+up to the baby, the Colonel going to the wing room,
+where he always stayed after that. He spoke of sitting
+up all night to watch the child, but Charity assured
+him that she was not going to take her eyes off
+of her during the night, and with a promise to come in
+every hour and look after them, the Colonel went to
+his room, where he snored until nine o'clock the next
+morning.</p>
+
+<p>But I was telling what people said about Bob's
+mother.</p>
+
+<p>When the report reached the Colonel about the
+widow's designs, he took Polly on his knees and told
+her all about it, and then both laughed until the tears
+ran down the Colonel's face and dropped on his big
+flowered vest and on Polly's little blue frock; and he
+sent the widow next day a fine short-horned heifer to
+show his contempt of the gossip.</p>
+
+<p>And now Bob was the better shot of the two; and
+they taught Polly to shoot also, and to load and unload
+the pistols, at which the Colonel was as proud as if one
+of his young stags had whipped an old rooster.</p>
+
+<p>But they never could induce her to shoot at anything
+except a mark. She was the tenderest-hearted
+little thing in the world.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_10" id="Page_10">[10]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>If her taste had been consulted she would have selected
+a crossbow, for it did not make such a noise,
+and she could shoot it without shutting her eyes; besides
+that, she could shoot it in the house, which, indeed,
+she did, until she had shot the eyes out of nearly
+all the bewigged gentlemen and bare-necked, long-fingered
+ladies on the walls. Once she came very near
+shooting Torm's eye out also; but this was an accident,
+though Drinkwater declared it was not, and tried to
+make out that Bob had put her up to it. "Dat's
+de mischievouses' boy Gord uver made," he said, complainingly,
+to Charity. Fortunately, his eye got well,
+and it gave him an excuse for staying half drunk for
+nearly a week; and afterward, like a dog that has once
+been lame in his hind-leg, whenever he saw Polly, and
+did not forget it, he squinted up that eye and tried to
+look miserable. Polly was quite a large girl then, and
+was carrying the keys (except when she lost them),
+though she could not have been more than twelve
+years old; for it was just after this that the birthday
+came when the Colonel gave her her first real silk
+dress. It was blue silk, and came from Richmond,
+and it was hard to tell which was the proudest, Polly,
+or Charity, or Drinkwater, or the Colonel. Torm got
+drunk before the dinner was over, "drinking de<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_11" id="Page_11">[11]</a></span>
+healthsh to de young mistis in de sky-blue robes what
+stands befo' de throne, you know," he explained to
+Charity, after the Colonel had ordered him from the
+dining-room, with promises of prompt sale on the
+morrow.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 436px;">
+<img src="images/facing010.jpg" width="436" height="600" alt="Corlonel and with child on lap, man sprawled on floor in front of fire" />
+<div class="caption">"<i>Drinkwater Torm fell sprawling on the floor.</i>"</div>
+</div>
+
+<p>Bob was there, and it was the last time Polly ever
+sucked her thumb. She had almost gotten out of the
+habit anyhow, and it was in a moment of forgetfulness
+that she let Bob see her do it. He was a great tease,
+and when she was smaller had often worried her about
+it until she would fly at him and try to bite him with
+her little white teeth. On this occasion, however, she
+stood everything until he said that about a girl who
+wore a blue silk dress sucking her thumb; then she
+boxed his jaws. The fire flew from his eyes, but hers
+were even more sparkling. He paused for a minute,
+and then caught her in his arms and kissed her violently.
+She never sucked her thumb after that.</p>
+
+<p>This happened out in front of her mammy's house,
+within which Torm was delivering a powerful exhortation
+on temperance; and, strange to say, Charity took
+Bob's side, while Torm espoused Polly's, and afterward
+said she ought to have "tooken a stick and knocked
+Marse Bob's head spang off." This, fortunately, Polly
+did not do (and when Bob went to the university afterward<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_12" id="Page_12">[12]</a></span>
+he was said to have the best head in his class).
+She just turned around and ran into the house, with
+her face very red. But she never slapped Bob after
+that. Not long after this he went off to college; for
+Mr. Cranmer, the tutor, said he already knew more
+than most college graduates did, and that it would be
+a shame for him not to have a university education.
+When the question of ways and means was mooted,
+the Colonel, who was always ready to lend money if
+he had it, and to borrow it if he did not, swore he
+would give him all the money he wanted; but, to his
+astonishment, Bob refused to accept it, and although
+the Colonel abused him for it, and asked Polly if she
+did not think he was a fool (which Polly did, for she
+was always ready to take and spend all the money he
+or any one else gave her), yet he did not like him the
+less for it, and he finally persuaded Bob to take it as a
+loan, and Bob gave him his bond.</p>
+
+<p>The day before he left home he was over at the
+Colonel's, where they had a great dinner for him, and
+Polly presided in her newest silk dress (she had three
+then); and when Bob said good-by she slipped something
+into his hand, and ran away to her room, and
+when he looked at it, it was her ten-dollar gold piece,
+and he took it.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_13" id="Page_13">[13]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>He was at college not quite three years, for his
+mother was taken sick, and he had to come home and
+nurse her; but he had stood first in most of his classes,
+and not lower than third in any; and he had thrashed
+the carpenter on Vinegar Hill, who was the bully of
+the town. So that although he did not take his degree,
+he had gotten the start which enabled him to
+complete his studies during the time he was taking
+care of his mother, which he did until her death, so
+that as soon as he was admitted to the bar he made his
+mark. It was his splendid defence of the man who
+shot the deputy-sheriff at the court-house on election
+day that brought him out as the Democratic candidate
+for the Constitutional Convention, where he made such
+a reputation as a speaker that the <i>Enquirer</i> declared him
+the rising man of the State; and even the <i>Whig</i> admitted
+that perhaps the Loco-foco party might find a
+leader to redeem it. Polly was just fifteen when she
+began to take an interest in politics; and although she
+read the papers diligently, especially the <i>Enquirer</i>,
+which her uncle never failed to abuse, yet she never
+could exactly satisfy herself which side was right; for
+the Colonel was a stanch Whig, while most people
+must have been Democrats, as Bob was elected by a
+big majority. She wanted to be on the Colonel's side,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_14" id="Page_14">[14]</a></span>
+and made him explain everything to her, which he did
+to his own entire satisfaction, and to hers too, she tried
+to think; but when Bob came over to tea, which he
+very frequently did, and the Colonel and he got into a
+discussion, her uncle always seemed to her to get the
+worst of the argument; at any rate, he generally got
+very hot. This, however, might have been because
+Bob was so cool, while the Colonel was so hot-tempered.</p>
+
+<p>Bob had grown up very handsome. His mouth
+was strong and firm, and his eyes were splendid. He
+was about six feet, and his shoulders were as broad as
+the Colonel's. She did not see him now as often as
+she did when he was a boy, but it was because he was
+kept so busy by his practice. (He used to get cases
+in three or four counties now, and big ones at that.)
+She knew, however, that she was just as good a friend
+of his as ever; indeed, she took the trouble to tell herself
+so. A compliment to him used to give her the
+greatest happiness, and would bring deeper roses into
+her cheeks. He was the greatest favorite with everybody.
+Torm thought that there was no one in the
+world like him. He had long ago forgiven him his
+many pranks, and said "he was the grettest gent'man
+in the county skusin him [Torm] and the Colonel,"<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_15" id="Page_15">[15]</a></span>
+and that "he al'ays handled heself to be raisin'," by
+which Torm made indirect reference to regular donations
+made to him by the aforesaid "gent'man," and
+particularly to an especially large benefaction then
+lately conferred. It happened one evening at the
+Colonel's, after dinner, when several guests, including
+Bob, were commenting on the perfections of various
+ladies who were visiting in the neighborhood that summer.
+The praises were, to Torm's mind, somewhat
+too liberally bestowed, and he had attempted to console
+himself by several visits to the pantry; but when
+all the list was disposed of, and Polly's name had not
+been mentioned, endurance could stand it no longer,
+and he suddenly broke in with his judgment that they
+"didn't none on 'em hol' a candle to his young mistis,
+whar wuz de ve'y pink an' flow'r on 'em all."</p>
+
+<p>The Colonel, immensely pleased, ordered him out,
+with a promise of immediate sale on the morrow. But
+that evening, as he got on his horse, Bob slipped into
+his hand a five-dollar gold piece, and he told Polly
+that if the Colonel really intended to sell Torm, just to
+send him over to his house; he wanted the benefit of
+his judgment.</p>
+
+<p>Polly, of course, did not understand his allusion,
+though the Colonel had told her of Torm's speech; but<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_16" id="Page_16">[16]</a></span>
+Bob had a rose on his coat when he came out of the
+window, and the long pin in Polly's bodice was not
+fastened very securely, for it slipped, and she lost all
+her other roses, and he had to stoop and pick them up
+for her. Perhaps, though, Bob was simply referring to
+his having saved some money, for shortly afterward he
+came over one morning, and, to the Colonel's disgust,
+paid him down in full the amount of his bond. He
+attempted a somewhat formal speech of thanks, but
+broke down in it so lamentably that two juleps were
+ordered out by the Colonel to reinstate easy relations
+between them&mdash;an effect which apparently was not
+immediately produced&mdash;and the Colonel confided to
+Polly next day that since the fellow had been taken
+up so by those Loco-focos he was not altogether as he
+used to be.</p>
+
+<p>"Why, he don't even drink his juleps clear," the old
+man asserted, as if he were charging him with, at the
+least, misprision of treason. "However," he added,
+softening as the excuse presented itself to his mind,
+"that may be because his mother was always so opposed
+to it. You know mint never would grow there,"
+he pursued to Polly, who had heard him make the
+same observation, with the same astonishment, a hundred
+times. "Strangest thing I ever knew. But he's<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_17" id="Page_17">[17]</a></span>
+a confoundedly clever fellow, though, Polly," he continued,
+with a sudden reviving of the old-time affection.
+"Damme! I like him." And, as Polly's face turned
+a sweet carmine, added: "Oh, I forgot, Polly; didn't
+mean to swear; damme! if I did. It just slipped out.
+Now I haven't sworn before for a week; you know I
+haven't; yes, of course, I mean except <i>then</i>." For
+Polly, with softly fading color, was reading him the
+severest of lectures on his besetting sin, and citing an
+ebullition over Torm's failing of the day before.
+"Come and sit down on your uncle's knee and kiss
+him once as a token of forgiveness. Just one more
+squeeze," as the fair girlish arms were twined about his
+neck, and the sweetest of faces was pressed against his
+own rough cheek. "Polly, do you remember," asked
+the old man, holding her off from him and gazing at
+the girlish face fondly&mdash;"do you remember how, when
+you were a little scrap, you used to climb up on my
+knee and squeeze me, 'just once more,' to save that
+rascal Drinkwater, and how you used to say you were
+'going to marry Bob' and me when you were grown
+up?"</p>
+
+<p>Polly's memory, apparently, was not very good.
+That evening, however, it seemed much better, when,
+dressed all in soft white, and with cheeks reflecting<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_18" id="Page_18">[18]</a></span>
+the faint tints of the sunset clouds, she was strolling
+through the old flower-garden with a tall young fellow
+whose hat sat on his head with a jaunty air, and who
+was so very careful to hold aside the long branches of
+the rose-bushes. They had somehow gotten to recalling
+each in turn some incident of the old boy-and-girl
+days. Bob knew the main facts as well as she,
+but Polly remembered the little details and circumstances
+of each incident best, except those about the
+time they were playing "knucks" together. Then,
+singularly, Bob recollected most. He was positive
+that when she cried because he shot so hard, he had
+kissed her to make it well. Curiously, Polly's recollection
+failed again, and was only distinct about very
+modern matters. She remembered with remarkable
+suddenness that it was tea-time.</p>
+
+<p>They were away down at the end of the garden,
+and her lapse of memory had a singular effect on
+Bob; for he turned quite pale, and insisted that she
+did remember it; and then said something about having
+wanted to see the Colonel, and having waited,
+and did so strangely that if that rose-bush had not
+caught her dress, he might have done something else.
+But the rose-bush caught her dress, and Polly, who
+looked really scared at it or at something, ran away<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_19" id="Page_19">[19]</a></span>
+just as the Colonel's voice was heard calling them to
+tea.</p>
+
+<p>Bob was very silent at the table, and when he left,
+the Colonel was quite anxious about him. He asked
+Polly it she had not noticed his depression. Polly
+had not.</p>
+
+<p>"That's just the way with you women," said the
+Colonel, testily. "A man might die under your very
+eyes, and you would not notice it. <i>I</i> noticed it, and I
+tell you the fellow's sick. I say he's sick!" he reiterated,
+with a little habit he had acquired since he
+had begun to grow slightly deaf. "I shall advise him
+to go away and have a little fling somewhere. He
+works too hard, sticks too close at home. He never
+goes anywhere except here, and he don't come here as
+he used to do. He ought to get married. Advise
+him to get married. Why don't he set up to Sally
+Brent or Malviny Pegram? He's a likely fellow, and
+they'd both take him&mdash;fools if they didn't;&mdash;I say they
+are fools if they didn't. What say?"</p>
+
+<p>"I didn't say anything," said Polly, quietly going to
+the piano.</p>
+
+<p>Her music often soothed the Colonel to sleep.</p>
+
+<p>The next morning but one Bob rode over, and instead
+of hooking his horse to the fence as he usually<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_20" id="Page_20">[20]</a></span>
+did, he rode on around toward the stables. He greeted
+Torm, who was in the backyard, and after extracting
+some preliminary observations from him respecting the
+"misery in his back," he elicited the further facts that
+Miss Polly was going down the road to dine at the
+Pegrams', of which he had some intimation before, and
+that the Colonel was down on the river farm, but would
+be back about two o'clock. He rode on.</p>
+
+<p>At two o'clock promptly Bob returned. The
+Colonel had not yet gotten home. He, however, dismounted,
+and, tying his horse, went in. He must
+have been tired of sitting down, for he now walked up
+and down the portico without once taking a seat.</p>
+
+<p>"Marse Bob'll walk heself to death," observed
+Charity to Torm, from her door.</p>
+
+<p>Presently the Colonel came in, bluff, warm, and
+hearty. He ordered dinner from the front gate as he
+dismounted, and juleps from the middle of the walk,
+greeted Bob with a cheeriness which that gentleman in
+vain tried to imitate, and was plumped down in his
+great split-bottomed chair, wiping his red head with
+his still redder bandana handkerchief, and abusing the
+weather, the crops, the newspapers, and his overseer
+before Bob could get breath to make a single remark.
+When he did, he pitched in on the weather.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_21" id="Page_21">[21]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>That is a safe topic at all times. It was astonishing
+how much comfort Bob got out of it this afternoon.
+He talked about it until dinner began to come in
+across the yard, the blue china dishes gleaming in the
+hands of Ph&oelig;be and her numerous corps of ebon and
+mahogany assistants, and Torm brought out the juleps,
+with the mint looking as if it were growing in the
+great silver cans, with frosted work all over the sides.</p>
+
+<p>Dinner was rather a failure, so far as Bob was concerned.
+Perhaps he missed something that usually
+graced the table; perhaps only his body was there,
+while he himself was down at Miss Malviny Pegram's;
+perhaps he had gone back and was unfastening an impertinent
+rose-bush from a filmy white dress in the
+summer twilight; perhaps&mdash;; but anyhow he was so
+silent and abstracted that the Colonel rallied him good-humoredly,
+which did not help matters.</p>
+
+<p>They had adjourned to the porch, and had been
+there for some time, when Bob broached the subject of
+his visit.</p>
+
+<p>"Colonel," he said, suddenly, and wholly irrelevant
+to everything that had gone before, "there is a matter
+I want to speak to you about&mdash;a&mdash;ah&mdash;we&mdash;a little
+matter of great importance to&mdash;ah&mdash;myself." He was
+getting very red and confused, and the Colonel instantly<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_22" id="Page_22">[22]</a></span>
+divining the matter, and secretly flattering himself,
+and determining to crow over Polly, said, to help
+him out:</p>
+
+<p>"Aha, you rogue, I knew it. Come up to the
+scratch, sir. So you are caught at last. Ah, you sly
+fox! It's the very thing you ought to do. Why, I
+know half a dozen girls who'd jump at you. I knew
+it. I said so the other night. Polly&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>Bob was utterly off his feet by this time. "I want
+to ask your consent to marry Polly," he blurted out
+desperately; "I love her."</p>
+
+<p>"The devil you do!" exclaimed the Colonel. He
+could say no more; he simply sat still, in speechless,
+helpless, blank amazement. To him Polly was still a
+little girl climbing his knees, and an emperor might
+not aspire to her.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 445px;">
+<img src="images/facing022.jpg" width="445" height="600" alt="man in rocking chair tlkaing to young man standing" />
+<div class="caption"><i>"'I will!' he said, throwing up his head."</i></div>
+</div>
+
+<p>"Yes, sir, I do," said Bob, calm enough now&mdash;growing
+cool as the Colonel became excited. "I love her,
+and I want her.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, sir, you can't have her!" roared the Colonel,
+pulling himself up from his seat in the violence of his
+refusal. He looked like a tawny lion whose lair had
+been invaded.</p>
+
+<p>Bob's face paled, and a look came on it that the
+Colonel recalled afterward, and which he did not remember<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_23" id="Page_23">[23]</a></span>
+ever to have seen on it before, except once,
+when, years ago, some one shot one of his dogs&mdash;a
+look made up of anger and of dogged resolution. "I
+will!" he said, throwing up his head and looking the
+Colonel straight in the eyes, his voice perfectly calm,
+but his eyes blazing, the mouth drawn close, and the
+lines of his face as if they had been carved in granite.</p>
+
+<p>"I'll be &mdash;&mdash; if you shall!" stormed the Colonel:
+"the King of England should not have her!" and,
+turning, he stamped into the house and slammed the
+door behind him.</p>
+
+<p>Bob walked slowly down the steps and around to
+the stables, where he ordered his horse. He rode home
+across the fields without a word, except, as he jumped
+his horse over the line fence, "I will have her," he repeated,
+between his fast-set teeth.</p>
+
+<p>That evening Polly came home all unsuspecting
+anything of the kind; the Colonel waited until she had
+taken off her things and come down in her fresh muslin
+dress. She surpassed in loveliness the rose-buds that
+lay on her bosom, and the impertinence that could
+dare aspire to her broke over the old man in a fresh
+wave. He had nursed his wrath all the evening.</p>
+
+<p>"Polly!" he blurted out, suddenly rising with a jerk
+from his arm-chair, and unconsciously striking an attitude<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_24" id="Page_24">[24]</a></span>
+before the astonished girl, "do you want to marry
+Bob?"</p>
+
+<p>"Why, no," cried Polly, utterly shaken out of her
+composure by the suddenness and vehemence of the
+attack.</p>
+
+<p>"I <i>knew it</i>!" declared the Colonel, triumphantly.
+"It was a piece of cursed impertinence!" and he
+worked himself up to such a pitch of fury, and grew
+so red in the face, that poor Polly, who had to steer
+between two dangers, was compelled to employ all her
+arts to soothe the old man and keep him out of a fit of
+apoplexy. She learned the truth, however, and she
+learned something which, until that time, she had never
+known; and though, as she kissed her uncle "good-night,"
+she made no answer to his final shot of, "Well,
+I'm glad we are not going to have any nonsense about
+the fellow; I have made up my mind, and we'll treat
+his impudence as it deserves," she locked her door carefully
+when she was within her own room, and the next
+morning she said she had a headache.</p>
+
+<p>Bob did not come that day.</p>
+
+<p>If the Colonel had not been so hot-headed&mdash;that is,
+if he had not been a man&mdash;things would doubtless
+have straightened themselves out in some of those
+mysterious ways in which the hardest knots into which<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_25" id="Page_25">[25]</a></span>
+two young peoples' affairs contrive to get untangle
+themselves; but being a man, he must needs, man-like,
+undertake to manage according to his own plan, which
+is always the wrong one.</p>
+
+<p>When, therefore, he announced to Polly at the
+breakfast-table that morning that she would have no
+further annoyance from that fellow's impertinence; for
+he had written him a note apologizing for leaving him
+abruptly in his own house the day before, but forbidding
+him, in both their names, to continue his addresses,
+or, indeed, to put his foot on the place again;
+he fully expected to see Polly's face brighten, and to
+receive her approbation and thanks. What, then, was
+his disappointment to see her face grow distinctly
+white. All she said was, "Oh, uncle!"</p>
+
+<p>It was unfortunate that the day was Sunday, and
+that the Colonel went with her to church (which she
+insisted on attending, notwithstanding her headache),
+and was by when she met Bob. They came on each
+other suddenly. Bob took off his hat and stood like
+a soldier on review, erect, expectant, and a little pale.
+The Colonel, who had almost forgotten his "impertinence,"
+and was about to shake hands with him as
+usual, suddenly remembered it, and drawing himself
+up, stepped to the other side of Polly, and handed her<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_26" id="Page_26">[26]</a></span>
+by the younger gentleman as if he were protecting her
+from a mob. Polly, who had been looking anxiously
+everywhere but in the right place, meaning to give Bob
+a smile which would set things straight, caught his eye
+only at that second, and felt rather than saw the change
+in his attitude and manner. She tried to throw him
+the smile, but it died in her eyes, and even after her
+back was turned she was sensible of his defiance. She
+went into church, and dropped down on her knees in
+the far end of her pew, with her little heart needing all
+the consolations of her religion.</p>
+
+<p>The man she prayed hardest for did not come into
+church that day.</p>
+
+<p>Things went very badly after that, and the knots got
+tighter and tighter. An attempt which Bob made to
+loosen them failed disastrously, and the Colonel, who
+was the best-hearted man in the world, but whose prejudices
+were made of wrought iron, took it into his
+head that Bob had insulted him, and Polly's indirect
+efforts at pacification aroused him to such an extent
+that for the first time in his life he was almost hard
+with her. He conceived the absurd idea that she
+was sacrificing herself for Bob on account of her
+friendship for him, and that it was his duty to protect
+her against herself, which, man-like, he proceeded<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_27" id="Page_27">[27]</a></span>
+to do in his own fashion, to poor Polly's great distress.</p>
+
+<p>She was devoted to her uncle, and knew the strength
+of his affection for her. On the other hand, Bob and
+she had been friends so long. She never could remember
+the time when she did not have Bob. But he
+had never said a word of love to her in his life. To
+be sure, on that evening in the garden she had known
+it just as well as if he had fallen on his knees at her
+feet. She knew his silence was just because he had
+owed her uncle the money; and oh! if she just hadn't
+gotten frightened; and oh! if her uncle just hadn't
+done it; and oh! she was so unhappy! The poor
+little thing, in her own dainty, white-curtained room,
+where were the books and things he had given her, and
+the letters he had written her, used to&mdash;but that is a
+secret. Anyhow, it was not because he was gone.
+She knew that was not the reason&mdash;indeed, she very
+often said so to herself; it was because he had been
+treated so unjustly, and suffered so, and she had done
+it all. And she used to introduce many new petitions
+into her prayers, in which, if there was not any name
+expressed, she felt that it would be understood, and the
+blessings would reach him just the same.</p>
+
+<p>The summer had gone, and the Indian summer had<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_28" id="Page_28">[28]</a></span>
+come in its place, hazy, dreamy, and sad. It always
+made Polly melancholy, and this year, although the
+weather was perfect, she was affected, she said, by the
+heat, and did not go out of doors much. So presently
+her cheeks were not as blooming as they had been, and
+even her great dark eyes lost some of their lustre; at
+least, Charity thought so, and said so too, not only to
+Polly, but to her master, whom she scared half to death;
+and who, notwithstanding that Dr. Stopper was coming
+over every other day to see a patient on the plantation,
+and that the next day was the time for his regular visit,
+put a boy on a horse that night and sent him with a
+note urging him to come the next morning to breakfast.</p>
+
+<p>The doctor came, and spent the day: examined
+Polly's lungs and heart, prescribed out-door exercise,
+and left something less than a bushel-basketful of medicines
+for her to take.</p>
+
+<p>Polly was, at the time of his visit, in a very excited
+state, for the Colonel had, with a view of soothing her,
+the night before delivered a violent philippic against
+marriage in general, and in particular against marriage
+with "impudent young puppies who did not know
+their places;" and he had proposed an extensive tour,
+embracing all the United States and Canada, and intended<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_29" id="Page_29">[29]</a></span>
+to cover the entire winter and spring following.
+Polly, who had stood as much as she could stand,
+finally rebelled, and had with flashing eyes and mantling
+cheeks espoused Bob's cause with a courage and
+dash which had almost routed the old Colonel. "Not
+that he was anything to her except a friend," she was
+most careful to explain; but she was tired of hearing
+her "friend" assailed, and she thought that it was the
+highest compliment a man could pay a woman, etc.,
+etc., for all of which she did a great deal of blushing
+in her own room afterwards.</p>
+
+<p>Thus it happened, that she was both excited and
+penitent the next day, and thinking to make some
+atonement, and at the same time to take the prescribed
+exercise, which would excuse her from taking the
+medicines, she filled a little basket with goodies to take
+old Aunt Betty at the Far Quarters; and thus it happened,
+that, as she was coming back along the path
+which ran down the meadow on the other side of the
+creek which was the dividing line between the two
+plantations, and was almost at the foot-bridge that
+Somebody had made for her so carefully with logs cut
+out of his own woods, and the long shadows of the
+willows made it gloomy, and everything was so still
+that she had grown very lonely and unhappy&mdash;thus it<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_30" id="Page_30">[30]</a></span>
+happened, that just as she was thinking how kind he
+had been about making the bridge and hand-rail so
+strong, and about everything, and how cruel he must
+think her, and how she would never see him any more
+as she used to do, she turned the clump of willows to
+step up on the log, and there he was standing on the
+bridge just before her, looking down into her eyes!
+She tried to get by him&mdash;she remembered that afterwards;
+but he was so mean. It was always a little
+confused in her memory, and she could never recall
+exactly how it was. She was sure, however, that it
+was because he was so pale that she said it, and that
+she did not begin to cry until afterwards, and that
+it was because he would not listen to her explanation;
+and that she didn't let him do it, she could not
+help it, and she did not know her head was on his
+shoulder.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 429px;">
+<img src="images/facing030.jpg" width="429" height="600" alt="Man on bridge" />
+<div class="caption"><i>"There he was standing on the bridge just before her."</i></div>
+</div>
+
+<p>Anyhow, when she got home that evening her improvement
+was so apparent that the Colonel called
+Charity in to note it, and declared that Virginia country
+doctors were the finest in the world, and that
+Stopper was the greatest doctor in the State. The
+change was wonderful, indeed; and the old gilt mirror,
+with its gauze-covered frame, would never have known
+for the sad-eyed Polly of the day before the bright,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_31" id="Page_31">[31]</a></span>
+happy maiden that stood before it now and smiled
+at the beaming face which dimpled at its own content.</p>
+
+<p>Old Betty's was a protracted pleurisy, and the good
+things Polly carried her daily did not tend to shorten
+the sickness. Ever afterwards she "blessed the Lord
+for dat chile" whenever Polly's name was mentioned.
+She would doubtless have included Bob in her benison
+had she known how sympathetic he was during this
+period.</p>
+
+<p>But although he was inspecting that bridge every
+afternoon regularly, notwithstanding Polly's oft-reiterated
+wish and express orders as regularly declared, no
+one knew a word of all this. And it was a bow drawn
+at a venture when, on the evening that Polly had tried
+to carry out her engagement to bring her uncle around,
+the old man had said, "Why, hoity-toity! the young
+rascal's cause seems to be thriving." She had been so
+confident of her success that she was not prepared for
+failure, and it struck her like a fresh blow; and though
+she did not cry until she got into her own room, when
+she got there she threw herself on the bed and cried
+herself to sleep. "It was so cruel in him," she said to
+herself, "to desire me never to speak to him again!
+And, oh! if he should really catch him on the place<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_32" id="Page_32">[32]</a></span>
+and shoot him!" The pronouns in our language were
+probably invented by young women.</p>
+
+<p>The headache Polly had the next morning was not
+invented. Poor little thing! her last hope was gone.
+She determined to bid Bob good-by, and never see
+him again. She had made up her mind to this on her
+knees, so she knew she was right. The pain it cost
+her satisfied her that she was.</p>
+
+<p>She was firmly resolved when she set out that afternoon
+to see old Betty, who was in everybody's judgment
+except her own quite convalescent, and whom
+Dr. Stopper pronounced entirely well. She wavered a
+little in her resolution when, descending the path along
+the willows, which were leafless now, she caught sight
+of a tall figure loitering easily up the meadow, and she
+abandoned&mdash;that is, she forgot it altogether when, having
+doubtfully suggested it, she was suddenly enfolded
+in a pair of strong arms, and two gray eyes, lighting a
+handsome face strong with the self-confidence which
+women love, looked down into hers.</p>
+
+<p>Then he proposed it!</p>
+
+<p>Her heart almost stood still at his boldness. But he
+was so strong, so firm, so reasonable, so self-reliant, and
+yet so gentle, she could not but listen to him. Still
+she refused&mdash;and she never did consent; she forbade<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_33" id="Page_33">[33]</a></span>
+him ever to think of it again. Then she begged him
+never to come there again, and told him of her uncle's
+threats, and of her fears for him; and then, when he
+laughed at them, she begged him never, never, under
+any circumstances, to take any notice of what her uncle
+might do or say, but rather to stand still and be shot
+dead; and then, when Bob promised this, she burst
+into tears, and he had to hold her and comfort her like
+a little girl.</p>
+
+<p>It was pretty bad after that, and but for Polly's out-door
+exercise she would undoubtedly have succumbed.
+It seemed as if something had come between her and
+her uncle. She no longer went about singing like a
+bird. She suffered under the sense of being misunderstood,
+and it was so lonely! He too was oppressed
+by it. Even Torm shared in it, and his expositions
+assumed a cast terrific in the last degree.</p>
+
+<p>It was now December.</p>
+
+<p>One evening it culminated. The weather had been
+too bad for Polly to go out, and she was sick. Finally
+Stopper was sent for. Polly, who, to use Charity's expression,
+was "pestered till she was fractious," rebelled
+flatly, and refused to keep her bed or to take the medicines
+prescribed. Charity backed her. Torm got
+drunk. The Colonel was in a fume, and declared his<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_34" id="Page_34">[34]</a></span>
+intention to sell Torm next morning, as usual, and to
+take Charity and Polly and go to Europe. This was
+well enough; but to Polly's consternation, when she
+came to breakfast next morning, she found that the
+old man's plans had ripened into a scheme to set out
+on the very next day for Louisiana and New Orleans,
+where he proposed to spend the winter looking after
+some plantations she had, and showing her something
+of the world. Polly remonstrated, rebelled, cajoled.
+It was all in vain. Stopper had seriously frightened
+the old man about her health, and he was adamant.
+Preparations were set on foot; the brown hair trunks,
+with their lines of staring brass tacks, were raked out
+and dusted; the Colonel got into a fever, ordered up all
+the negroes in the yard, and gave instructions from the
+front door, like a major-general reviewing his troops;
+got Torm, Charity, and all the others into a wild flutter;
+attempted to superintend Polly's matters; made her
+promises of fabulous gifts; became reminiscent, and
+told marvelous stories of his old days, which Torm
+corroborated; and so excited Polly and the plantation
+generally, that from old Betty, who came from the Far
+Quarters for the purpose of taking it in, down to the
+blackest little dot on the place, there was not one who
+did not get into a wild whirl, and talk as if they were<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_35" id="Page_35">[35]</a></span>
+all going to New Orleans the next morning, with Joe
+Rattler on the boot.</p>
+
+<p>Polly had, after a stout resistance, surrendered to her
+fate, and packed her modest trunk with very mingled
+feelings. Under other circumstances she would have
+enjoyed the trip immensely; but she felt now as if it
+were parting from Bob forever. Her heart was in her
+throat all day, and even the excitement of packing
+could not drive away the feeling. She knew she
+would never see him again. She tried to work out
+what the end would be. Would he die, or would he
+marry Malviny Pegram? Every one said she would
+just suit him, and she'd certainly marry him if he
+asked her.</p>
+
+<p>The sun was shining over the western woods. Bob
+rode down that way in the afternoon, even when it
+was raining; he had told her so. He would think it
+cruel of her to go away thus, and never even let him
+know. She would at least go and tell him good-by.
+So she did.</p>
+
+<p>Bob's face paled suddenly when she told him all,
+and that look which she had not seen often before settled
+on it. Then he took her hand and began to explain
+everything to her. He told her that he had
+loved her all her life; showed her how she had inspired<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_36" id="Page_36">[36]</a></span>
+him to work for and win every success that he had
+achieved; how it had been her work even more than
+his. Then he laid before her the life plans he had
+formed, and proved how they were all for her, and for
+her only. He made it all so clear, and his voice was
+so confident, and his face so earnest, as he pleaded and
+proved it step by step, that she felt, as she leaned
+against him and he clasped her closely, that he was
+right, and that she could not part from him.</p>
+
+<p>That evening Polly was unusually silent; but the
+Colonel thought she had never been so sweet. She
+petted him until he swore that no man on earth was
+worthy of her, and that none should ever have her.</p>
+
+<p>After tea she went to his room to look over his
+clothes (her especial work), and would let no one, not
+even her mammy, help her; and when the Colonel insisted
+on coming in to tell her some more concerning
+the glories of New Orleans in his day, she finally put
+him out and locked the door on him.</p>
+
+<p>She was very strange all the evening. As they were
+to start the next morning, the Colonel was for retiring
+early; but Polly would not go; she loitered around,
+hung about the old fellow, petted him, sat on his knee
+and kissed him, until he was forced to insist on her
+going to bed. Then she said good-night, and astonished<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_37" id="Page_37">[37]</a></span>
+the Colonel by throwing herself into his arms
+and bursting out crying.</p>
+
+<p>The old man soothed her with caresses and baby
+talk, such as he used to comfort her with when she was
+a little girl, and when she became calm he handed her
+to her door as if she had been a duchess.</p>
+
+<p>The house was soon quiet, except that once the
+Colonel heard Polly walking in her room, and mentally
+determined to chide her for sitting up so late. He,
+however, drifted off from the subject when he heard
+some of his young mules galloping around the yard,
+and he made a sleepy resolve to sell them all, or to dismiss
+his overseer next day for letting them out of the
+lot. Before he had quite determined which he should
+do, he dropped off to sleep again.</p>
+
+<p>It was possibly about this time that a young man
+lifted into her saddle a dark-habited little figure, whose
+face shone very white in the starlight, and whose tremulous
+voice would have suggested a refusal had it not
+been drowned in the deep, earnest tone of her lover.
+Although she declared that she could not think of
+doing it, she had on her hat and furs and riding-habit
+when Bob came. She did, indeed, really beg him to
+go away; but a few minutes later a pair of horses cantered
+down the avenue toward the lawn gate, which<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_38" id="Page_38">[38]</a></span>
+shut with a bang that so frightened the little lady on
+the bay mare that the young man found it necessary
+to lean over and throw a steadying arm around her.</p>
+
+<p>For the first time in her life Polly saw the sun rise
+in North Carolina, and a few hours later a gentle-voiced
+young clergyman, whose sweet-faced wife was
+wholly carried away by Polly's beauty, received under
+protest Bob's only gold piece, a coin which he twisted
+from his watch-chain with the promise to quadruple it
+if he would preserve it until he could redeem it.</p>
+
+<p>When Charity told the Colonel next morning that
+Polly was gone, the old man for the first time in fifty
+years turned perfectly white. Then he fell into a consuming
+rage, and swore until Charity would not have
+been much surprised to see the devil appear in visible
+shape and claim him on the spot. He cursed Bob,
+cursed himself, cursed Torm, Charity, and the entire
+female sex individually and collectively, and then,
+seized by a new idea, he ordered his horse, that he
+might pursue the runaways, threatened an immediate
+sale of his whole plantation, and the instantaneous
+death of Bob, and did in fact get down his great brass-mounted
+pistols, and lay them by him as he made
+Torm, Charity, and a half-dozen younger house-servants
+dress him.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 442px;">
+<img src="images/facing038.jpg" width="442" height="600" alt="Colonel being dressed" />
+<div class="caption"><i>"He made Torm, Charity, and a half-dozen younger house-servants
+dress him."</i></div>
+</div>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_39" id="Page_39">[39]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Dressing and shaving occupied him about an hour&mdash;he
+always averred that a gentleman could not dress
+like a gentleman in less time&mdash;and, still breathing out
+threatenings and slaughter, he marched out of his room,
+making Torm and Charity follow him, each with a
+pistol. Something prompted him to stop and inspect
+them in the hall. Taking first one and then the other,
+he examined them curiously.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, I'll be&mdash;&mdash;!" he said, dryly, and flung both
+of them crashing through the window. Turning, he
+ordered waffles and hoe-cakes for breakfast, and called
+for the books to have prayers.</p>
+
+<p>Polly had utilized the knowledge she had gained as
+a girl, and had unloaded both pistols the night before,
+and rammed the balls down again without powder, so
+as to render them harmless.</p>
+
+<p>By breakfast time Torm was in a state of such
+advanced intoxication that he was unable to walk
+through the back yard gate, and the Colonel was forced
+to content himself with sending by Charity a message
+that he would get rid of him early the next morning.
+He straitly enjoined Charity to tell him, and she as
+solemnly promised to do so. "Yes, suh, <i>I</i> gwi' tell
+him," she replied, with a faint tone of being wounded
+at his distrust; and she did.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_40" id="Page_40">[40]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>She needed an outlet.</p>
+
+<p>Things got worse. The Colonel called up the overseer
+and gave new orders, as if he proposed to change
+everything. He forbade any mention of Polly's name,
+and vowed that he would send for Mr. Steep, his
+lawyer, and change his will to spite all creation. This
+humor, instead of wearing off, seemed to grow worse
+as the time stretched on, and Torm actually grew sober
+in the shadow that had fallen on the plantation. The
+Colonel had Polly's room nailed up and shut himself
+up in the house.</p>
+
+<p>The negroes discussed the condition of affairs in
+awed undertones, and watched him furtively whenever
+he passed. Various opinions by turns prevailed. Aunt
+Betty, who was regarded with veneration, owing partly
+to the interest the lost Polly had taken in her illness, and
+partly to her great age (to which she annually added
+three years) prophesied that he was going to die "in
+torments," just like some old uncle of his whom no one
+else had ever heard of until now, but who was raked
+up by her to serve as a special example. The chief resemblance
+seemed to be a certain "rankness in cussin'."</p>
+
+<p>Things were certainly going badly, and day by day
+they grew worse. The Colonel became more and
+more morose.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_41" id="Page_41">[41]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"He don' even quoil no mo'," Torm complained
+pathetically to Charity. "He jes set still and study.
+I 'feard he gwine 'stracted."</p>
+
+<p>It was, indeed, lamentable. It was accepted on the
+plantation that Miss Polly had gone for good&mdash;some
+said down to Louisiana&mdash;and would never come back
+any more. The prevailing impression was that, if she
+did, the Colonel would certainly kill Bob. Torm had
+not a doubt of it.</p>
+
+<p>Thus matters stood three days before Christmas.
+The whole plantation was plunged in gloom. It
+would be the first time since Miss Polly was a baby
+that they had not had "a big Christmas."</p>
+
+<p>Torm's lugubrious countenance one morning seemed
+to shock the Colonel out of his lethargy. He asked
+how many days there would be before Christmas, and
+learning that there were but three, he ordered preparations
+to be made for a great feast and a big time generally.
+He had the wood-pile replenished as usual,
+got up his presents, and superintended the Christmas
+operations himself, as Polly used to do. But it was
+sad work, and when Torm and Charity retired Christmas
+Eve night, although Torm had imbibed plentifully,
+and the tables were all spread for the great
+dinner for the servants next day, there was no peace in<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_42" id="Page_42">[42]</a></span>
+Torm's discourse; it was all of wrath and judgment to
+come.</p>
+
+<p>He had just gone to sleep when there was a knock
+at the door.</p>
+
+<p>"Who dat out dyah?" called Charity. "You
+niggers better go 'long to bed."</p>
+
+<p>The knock was repeated.</p>
+
+<p>"Who dat out dyah, I say?" queried Charity,
+testily. "Whyn't you go 'long 'way from dat do'?
+Torm, Torm, dee's somebody at de do'," she said, as
+the knocking was renewed.</p>
+
+<p>Torm was hard to wake, but at length he got up
+and moved slowly to the door, grumbling to himself
+all the time.</p>
+
+<p>When finally he undid the latch, Charity, who was
+in bed, heard him exclaim, "Well, name o' Gord!
+good Gord A'mighty!" and burst into a wild explosion
+of laughter.</p>
+
+<p>In a second she too was outside of the door, and
+had Polly in her arms, laughing, jumping, hugging,
+and kissing her while Torm executed a series of caracoles
+around them.</p>
+
+<p>"Whar Marse Bob?" asked both negroes, finally,
+in a breath.</p>
+
+<p>"Hello, Torm! How are you, Mam' Charity?"<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_43" id="Page_43">[43]</a></span>
+called that gentleman, cheerily, coming up from where
+he had been fastening the horses; and Charity, suddenly
+mindful of her peculiar appearance and of the
+frosty air, "scuttled" into the house, conveying her
+young mistress with her.</p>
+
+<p>Presently she came out dressed, and invited Bob in
+too. She insisted on giving them something to eat;
+but they had been to supper, and Polly was much too
+excited hearing about her uncle to eat anything. She
+cried a little at Charity's description of him, which she
+tried to keep Bob from seeing, but he saw it, and had
+to&mdash;however, when they got ready to go home, Polly
+insisted on going to the yard and up on the porch, and
+when there, she actually kissed the window-blind of
+the room whence issued a muffled snore suggestive at
+least of some degree of forgetfulness. She wanted Bob
+to kiss it too, but that gentleman apparently found
+something else more to his taste, and her entreaty was
+drowned in another sound.</p>
+
+<p>Before they remounted their horses Polly carried
+Bob to the greenhouse, where she groped around in
+the darkness for something, to Bob's complete mystification.
+"Doesn't it smell sweet in here?" she asked.</p>
+
+<p>"I don't smell anything but that mint bed you've
+been walking on," he laughed.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_44" id="Page_44">[44]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>As they rode off, leaving Torm and Charity standing
+in the road, the last thing Polly said was, "Now
+be sure you tell him&mdash;nine o'clock."</p>
+
+<p>"Umm! I know he gwi' sell me den sho 'nough,"
+said Torm, in a tone of conviction, as the horses cantered
+away in the frosty night.</p>
+
+<p>Once or twice, as they galloped along, Bob made
+some allusion to the mint bed on which Polly had
+stepped, to which she made no reply. But as he
+helped her down at her own door, he asked, "What
+in the world have you got there?"</p>
+
+<p>"Mint," said she, with a little low, pleased laugh.</p>
+
+<p>By light next morning it was known all over the
+plantation that Miss Polly had returned. The rejoicing,
+however, was clouded by the fear that nothing
+would come of it.</p>
+
+<p>In Charity's house it was decided that Torm should
+break the news. Torm was doubtful on the point as
+the time drew near, but Charity's mind never wavered.
+Finally he went in with his master's shaving-water,
+having first tried to establish his courage by sundry
+pulls at a black bottle. He essayed three times to deliver
+the message, but each time his courage failed, and
+he hastened out under pretence of the water having gotten
+cold. The last time he attracted Charity's attention.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_45" id="Page_45">[45]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"Name o' Gord, Torm, you gwine to scawl hawgs'?"
+she asked, sarcastically.</p>
+
+<p>The next time he entered the Colonel was in a
+fume of impatience, so he had to fix the water. He
+set down the can, and bustled about with hypocritical
+industry. The Colonel, at last, was almost through;
+Torm retreated to the door. As his master finished,
+he put his hand on the knob, and turning it, said,
+"Miss Polly come home larse night; sh' say she
+breakfast at nine o'clock."</p>
+
+<p>Slapbang! came the shaving-can, smashing against
+the door, just as he dodged out, and the roar of the
+Colonel followed him across the hall.</p>
+
+<p>When finally their master appeared on the portico,
+Torm and Charity were watching in some doubt
+whether he would not carry out on the spot his long-threatened
+purpose. He strode up and down the long
+porch, evidently in great excitement.</p>
+
+<p>"He's turrible dis mornin'," said Torm; "he th'owed
+de whole kittle o' b'ilin' water at me."</p>
+
+<p>"Pity he didn' scawl you to death," said his wife,
+sympathizingly. She thought Torm's awkwardness
+had destroyed Polly's last chance. Torm resorted to
+his black bottle, and proceeded to talk about the lake
+of brimstone and fire.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_46" id="Page_46">[46]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Up and down the portico strode the old Colonel.
+His horse was at the rack, where he was always
+brought before breakfast. (For twenty years he had
+probably never missed a morning.) Finally he walked
+down, and looked at the saddle; of course, it was all
+wrong. He fixed it, and, mounting, rode off in the
+opposite direction to that whence his invitation had
+come. Charity, looking out of her door, inserted into
+her diatribe against "all wuthless, drunken, fool niggers"
+a pathetic parenthesis to the effect that "Ef
+Marster meet Marse Bob dis mornin', de don' be a
+hide nor hyah left o'nyah one on 'em; an' dat lamb
+over dyah maybe got oystchers waitin' for him too."</p>
+
+<p>Torm was so much impressed that he left Charity
+and went out of doors.</p>
+
+<p>The Colonel rode down the plantation, his great gray
+horse quivering with life in the bright winter sunlight.
+He gave him the rein, and he turned down a cross-road
+which led out of the plantation into the main high-way.
+Mechanically he opened the gate and rode out.
+Before he knew where he was he was through the
+wood, and his horse had stopped at the next gate.
+It was the gate of Bob's place. The house stood out
+bright and plain among the yard trees; lines of blue
+smoke curled up almost straight from the chimneys;<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_47" id="Page_47">[47]</a></span>
+and he could see two or three negroes running backward
+and forward between the kitchen and the house.
+The sunlight glistened on something in the hand of
+one of them, and sent a ray of dazzling light all the
+way to the old man. He knew it was a plate or a
+dish. He took out his watch and glanced at it; it
+was five minutes to nine o'clock. He started to turn
+around to go home. As he did so, the memory of all
+the past swept over him, and of the wrong that had
+been done him. He would go in and show them his
+contempt for them by riding in and straight out again;
+and he actually unlatched the gate and went in. As
+he rode across the field he recalled all that Polly had
+been to him from the time when she had first stretched
+out her arms to him; all the little ways by which she
+had brought back his youth, and had made his house
+home, and his heart soft again. Every scene came before
+him as if to mock him. He felt once more the
+touch of her little hand; heard again the sound of her
+voice as it used to ring through the old house and
+about the grounds; saw her and Bob as children romping
+about his feet, and he gave a great gulp as he
+thought how desolate the house was now. He sat up
+in his saddle stiffer than ever. D&mdash;&mdash; him! he would
+enter his very house, and there to his face and hers<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_48" id="Page_48">[48]</a></span>
+denounce him for his baseness; he pushed his horse to
+a trot. Up to the yard gate he rode, and, dismounting,
+hitched his horse to the fence, and slamming the
+gate fiercely behind him, stalked up the walk with
+his heavy whip clutched fast in his hand. Up the
+walk and up the steps, without a pause, his face
+set as grim as rock, and purple with suppressed emotion;
+for a deluge of memories was overwhelming
+him.</p>
+
+<p>The door was shut; they had locked it on him; but
+he would burst it in, and&mdash;Ah! what was that?</p>
+
+<p>The door flew suddenly open; there was a cry, a
+spring, a vision of something swam before his eyes, and
+two arms were clasped about his neck, while he was
+being smothered with kisses from the sweetest mouth
+in the world, and a face made up of light and laughter,
+yet tearful, too, like a dew-bathed flower, was pressed
+to his, and before the Colonel knew it he had, amid
+laughter and sobs and caresses, been borne into the
+house, and pressed down at the daintiest little breakfast-table
+eyes ever saw, set for three persons, and
+loaded with steaming dishes, and with a great fresh
+julep by the side of his plate, and Torm standing
+behind his chair, whilst Bob was helping him to
+"oystchers," and Polly, with dimpling face, was attempting<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_49" id="Page_49">[49]</a></span>
+the exploit of pouring out his coffee without
+moving her arm from around his neck.</p>
+
+<p>The first thing he said after he recovered his breath
+was, "Where did you get this mint?"</p>
+
+<p>Polly broke into a peal of rippling, delicious
+laughter, and tightened the arm about his neck.</p>
+
+<p>"Just one more squeeze," said the Colonel; and as
+she gave it he said, with the light of it all breaking on
+him, "Damme if I don't sell you! or, if I can't sell
+you, I'll give you away&mdash;that is, if he'll come over
+and live with us."</p>
+
+<p>That evening, after the great dinner, at which Polly
+had sat in her old place at the head of the table, and
+Bob at the foot, because the Colonel insisted on sitting
+where Polly could give him one more squeeze, the
+whole plantation was ablaze with "Christmas," and
+Drinkwater Torm, steadying himself against the sideboard,
+delivered a discourse on peace on earth and
+good-will to men so powerful and so eloquent that the
+Colonel, delighted, rose and drank his health, and said,
+"Damme if I ever sell him again!"</p>
+
+<div class="footnotes"><h3>FOOTNOTE:</h3>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+
+<p><a name="Footnote_A_1" id="Footnote_A_1"></a><a href="#FNanchor_A_1">[A]</a> This spelling is used because he was called "Torm" until it became his
+name.</p></div></div>
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+<pre>
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Polly, by Thomas Nelson Page
+
+*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK POLLY ***
+
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+</pre>
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+</body>
+</html>
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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Polly, by Thomas Nelson Page
+
+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: Polly
+ A Christmas Recollection
+
+Author: Thomas Nelson Page
+
+Illustrator: A. Castaigne
+
+Release Date: December 31, 2013 [EBook #44547]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK POLLY ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Charlene Taylor, Emmy and the Online Distributed
+Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This file was
+produced from images generously made available by The
+Internet Archive/American Libraries.)
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+POLLY
+
+
+
+
+IN UNIFORM STYLE
+
+
+ MARSE CHAN. A Tale of Old Virginia. Illustrated by W.
+ T. Smedley.
+
+ MEH LADY. A Story of the War. Illustrated by C. S.
+ Reinhart.
+
+ POLLY. A Christmas Recollection. Illustrated by A.
+ Castaigne.
+
+ UNC' EDINBURG. A Plantation Echo. Illustrated by B.
+ West Clinedinst.
+
+ _Each, small quarto, $1.00_
+
+[Illustration: "_The young man found it necessary to lean over and
+throw a steadying arm around her._"]
+
+
+
+
+POLLY [Illustration]
+
+A CHRISTMAS RECOLLECTION
+
+ BY THOMAS NELSON PAGE
+
+ ILLUSTRATED BY A. CASTAIGNE
+
+[Illustration]
+
+ CHARLES SCRIBNER'S SONS
+ NEW YORK, 1897 [Illustration]
+
+
+
+
+ Copyright, 1894, by
+ Charles Scribner's Sons
+
+ TROW DIRECTORY
+ PRINTING AND BOOKBINDING COMPANY
+ NEW YORK
+
+
+
+
+LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS
+
+
+ "_The young man found it necessary to lean over and throw
+ a steadying arm around her._" Frontispiece.
+
+ _Vignette heading._ Page 1.
+
+ "_Drinkwater Torm fell sprawling on the floor._" Page 10.
+
+ "_'I will!' he said, throwing up his head._" Page 22.
+
+ "_There he was standing on the bridge just before her._" Page 30.
+
+ "_He made Torm, Charity, and a half-dozen younger
+ house-servants dress him._" Page 38.
+
+
+
+
+[Illustration]
+
+
+IT was Christmas Eve. I remember it just as if it was yesterday. The
+Colonel had been pretending not to notice it, but when Drinkwater
+Torm[A] knocked over both the great candlesticks, and in his attempt to
+pick them up lurched over himself and fell sprawling on the floor, he
+yelled at him. Torm pulled himself together, and began an explanation,
+in which the point was that he had not "teched a drap in Gord knows how
+long," but the Colonel cut him short.
+
+"Get out of the room, you drunken vagabond!" he roared.
+
+Torm was deeply offended. He made a low, grand bow, and with as much
+dignity as his unsteady condition would admit, marched very statelily
+from the room, and passing out through the dining-room, where he
+stopped to abstract only one more drink from the long, heavy, cut-glass
+decanter on the sideboard, meandered to his house in the back-yard,
+where he proceeded to talk religion to Charity, his wife, as he always
+did when he was particularly drunk. He was expounding the vision of the
+golden candlestick, and the bowl and seven lamps and two olive-trees,
+when he fell asleep.
+
+The roarer, as has been said, was the Colonel; the meanderer was
+Drinkwater Torm. The Colonel gave him the name, "because," he said, "if
+he were to drink water once he would die."
+
+As Drinkwater closed the door, the Colonel continued, fiercely:
+
+"Damme, Polly, I will! I'll sell him to-morrow morning; and if I can't
+sell him I'll give him away."
+
+Polly, with troubled great dark eyes, was wheedling him vigorously.
+
+"No; I tell you, I'll sell him.--'Misery in his back!' the mischief!
+he's a drunken, trifling, good-for-nothing nigger! and I have sworn to
+sell him a thousand--yes, ten thousand times; and now I'll have to do
+it to keep my word."
+
+This was true. The Colonel swore this a dozen times a day--every time
+Torm got drunk, and as that had occurred very frequently for many
+years before Polly was born, he was not outside of the limit. Polly,
+however, was the only one this threat ever troubled. The Colonel knew
+he could no more have gotten on without Torm than his old open-faced
+watch, which looked for all the world like a model of himself, could
+have run without the mainspring. From tying his shoes and getting his
+shaving-water to making his juleps and lighting his candles, which was
+all he had to do, Drinkwater Torm was necessary to him. (I think he
+used to make the threat just to prove to himself that Torm did not own
+him; if so, he failed in his purpose--Torm did own him.) Torm knew it
+as well as he, or better; and while Charity, for private and wifely
+reasons, occasionally held the threat over him when his expoundings
+passed even her endurance, she knew it also.
+
+Thus, Polly was the only one it deceived or frightened. It always
+deceived her, and she never rested until she had obtained Torm's
+reprieve "for just one more time." So on this occasion, before she got
+down from the Colonel's knees, she had given him in bargain "just one
+more squeeze," and received in return Torm's conditional pardon, "only
+till next time."
+
+Everybody in the county knew the Colonel, and everybody knew Drinkwater
+Torm, and everybody who had been to the Colonel's for several years
+past (and that was nearly everybody in the county, for the Colonel
+kept open house) knew Polly. She had been placed in her chair by the
+Colonel's side at the club dinner on her first birthday after her
+arrival, and had been afterward placed on the table and allowed to
+crawl around among and in the dishes to entertain the gentlemen, which
+she did to the applause of every one, and of herself most of all;
+and from that time she had exercised in her kingdom the functions of
+both Vashti and Esther, and whatever Polly ordered was done. If the
+old inlaid piano in the parlor had been robbed of strings, it was all
+right, for Polly had taken them. Bob had cut them out for her, without
+a word of protest from anyone but Charity. The Colonel would have given
+her his heartstrings if Polly had required them.
+
+She had owned him body and soul from the second he first laid eyes on
+her, when, on the instant he entered the room, she had stretched out
+her little chubby hands to him, and on his taking her had, after a few
+infantile caresses, curled up and, with her finger in her mouth, gone
+to sleep in his arms like a little white kitten.
+
+Bob used to wonder in a vague, boyish way where the child got her
+beauty, for the Colonel weighed two hundred and fifty pounds, and
+was as ugly as a red head and thirty or forty years of Torm's
+mint-juleps piled on a somewhat reckless college career could make
+him; but one day, when the Colonel was away from home, Charity showed
+him a daguerreotype of a lady, which she got out of the top drawer
+of the Colonel's big secretary with the brass lions on it, and it
+looked exactly like Polly. It had the same great big dark eyes and
+the same soft white look, though Polly was stouter; for she was a
+great tomboy, and used to run wild over the place with Bob, climbing
+cherry-trees, fishing in the creek, and looking as blooming as a
+rose, with her hair all tangled over her pretty head, until she grew
+quite large, and the Colonel got her a tutor. He thought of sending
+her to a boarding-school, but the night he broached the subject he
+raised such a storm, and Polly was in such a tempest of tears, that
+he gave up the matter at once. It was well he did so, for Polly and
+Charity cried all night and Torm was so overcome that even next
+morning he could not bring the Colonel his shaving-water, and he
+had to shave with cold water for the first time in twenty years. He
+therefore employed a tutor. Most people said the child ought to have
+had a governess, and one or two single ladies of forgotten age in
+the neighborhood delicately hinted that they would gladly teach her;
+but the Colonel swore that he would have no women around him, and he
+would be eternally condemned if any should interfere with Polly; so he
+engaged Mr. Cranmer, and invited Bob to come over and go to school to
+him also, which he did; for his mother, who had up to that time taught
+him herself, was very poor, and was unable to send him to school, her
+husband, who was the Colonel's fourth cousin, having died largely
+indebted, and all of his property, except a small farm adjoining the
+Colonel's, and a few negroes, having gone into the General Court.
+
+Bob had always been a great favorite with the Colonel, and ever since
+he was a small boy he had been used to coming over and staying with him.
+
+He could gaff a chicken as well as Drinkwater Torm, which was a great
+accomplishment in the Colonel's eyes; for he had the best game-chickens
+in the county, and used to fight them, too, matching them against
+those of one or two of his neighbors who were similarly inclined, until
+Polly grew up and made him stop. He could tame a colt quicker than
+anybody on the plantation. Moreover he could shoot more partridges in
+a day than the Colonel, and could beat him shooting with a pistol as
+well, though the Colonel laid the fault of the former on his being so
+fat, and that of the latter on his spectacles. They used to practice
+with the Colonel's old pistols that hung in their holsters over the
+tester of his bed, and about which Drinkwater used to tell so many
+lies; for although they were kept loaded, and their brass-mounted butts
+peeping out of their leathern covers used to look ferocious enough to
+give some apparent ground for Torm's story of how "he and the Colonel
+had shot Judge Cabell spang through the heart," the Colonel always said
+that Cabell behaved very handsomely, and that the matter was arranged
+on the field without a shot. Even at that time some people said that
+Bob's mother was trying to catch the Colonel, and that if the Colonel
+did not look out she would yet be the mistress of his big plantation.
+And all agreed that the boy would come in for something handsome at the
+Colonel's death; for Bob was his cousin and his nearest male relative,
+if Polly _was_ his niece, and he would hardly leave her all his
+property, especially as she was so much like her mother, with whom, as
+everybody knew, the Colonel had been desperately in love, but who had
+treated him badly, and, notwithstanding his big plantation and many
+negroes, had run away with his younger brother, and both of them had
+died in the South of yellow fever, leaving of all their children only
+this little Polly; and the Colonel had taken Drinkwater and Charity,
+and had travelled in his carriage all the way to Mississippi, to get
+and bring Polly back.
+
+It was Christmas Eve when they reached home, and the Colonel had sent
+Drinkwater on a day ahead to have the fires made and the house aired
+for the baby; and when the carriage drove up that night you would have
+thought a queen was coming, sure enough.
+
+Every hand on the plantation was up at the great house waiting for
+them, and every room in the house had a fire in it. (Torm had told the
+overseer so many lies that he had had the men cutting wood all day,
+although the regular supply was already cut.) And when Charity stepped
+out of the carriage, with the baby all bundled up in her arms, making
+a great show about keeping it wrapped up, and walked up the steps as
+slowly as if it were made of gold, you could have heard a pin drop;
+even the Colonel fell back, and spoke in a whisper. The great chamber
+was given up to the baby, the Colonel going to the wing room, where he
+always stayed after that. He spoke of sitting up all night to watch
+the child, but Charity assured him that she was not going to take her
+eyes off of her during the night, and with a promise to come in every
+hour and look after them, the Colonel went to his room, where he snored
+until nine o'clock the next morning.
+
+But I was telling what people said about Bob's mother.
+
+When the report reached the Colonel about the widow's designs, he took
+Polly on his knees and told her all about it, and then both laughed
+until the tears ran down the Colonel's face and dropped on his big
+flowered vest and on Polly's little blue frock; and he sent the widow
+next day a fine short-horned heifer to show his contempt of the gossip.
+
+And now Bob was the better shot of the two; and they taught Polly to
+shoot also, and to load and unload the pistols, at which the Colonel
+was as proud as if one of his young stags had whipped an old rooster.
+
+But they never could induce her to shoot at anything except a mark. She
+was the tenderest-hearted little thing in the world.
+
+If her taste had been consulted she would have selected a crossbow, for
+it did not make such a noise, and she could shoot it without shutting
+her eyes; besides that, she could shoot it in the house, which, indeed,
+she did, until she had shot the eyes out of nearly all the bewigged
+gentlemen and bare-necked, long-fingered ladies on the walls. Once she
+came very near shooting Torm's eye out also; but this was an accident,
+though Drinkwater declared it was not, and tried to make out that Bob
+had put her up to it. "Dat's de mischievouses' boy Gord uver made,"
+he said, complainingly, to Charity. Fortunately, his eye got well,
+and it gave him an excuse for staying half drunk for nearly a week;
+and afterward, like a dog that has once been lame in his hind-leg,
+whenever he saw Polly, and did not forget it, he squinted up that eye
+and tried to look miserable. Polly was quite a large girl then, and was
+carrying the keys (except when she lost them), though she could not
+have been more than twelve years old; for it was just after this that
+the birthday came when the Colonel gave her her first real silk dress.
+It was blue silk, and came from Richmond, and it was hard to tell which
+was the proudest, Polly, or Charity, or Drinkwater, or the Colonel.
+Torm got drunk before the dinner was over, "drinking de healthsh to
+de young mistis in de sky-blue robes what stands befo' de throne, you
+know," he explained to Charity, after the Colonel had ordered him from
+the dining-room, with promises of prompt sale on the morrow.
+
+[Illustration: "_Drinkwater Torm fell sprawling on the floor._"]
+
+Bob was there, and it was the last time Polly ever sucked her thumb.
+She had almost gotten out of the habit anyhow, and it was in a moment
+of forgetfulness that she let Bob see her do it. He was a great tease,
+and when she was smaller had often worried her about it until she would
+fly at him and try to bite him with her little white teeth. On this
+occasion, however, she stood everything until he said that about a
+girl who wore a blue silk dress sucking her thumb; then she boxed his
+jaws. The fire flew from his eyes, but hers were even more sparkling.
+He paused for a minute, and then caught her in his arms and kissed her
+violently. She never sucked her thumb after that.
+
+This happened out in front of her mammy's house, within which Torm was
+delivering a powerful exhortation on temperance; and, strange to say,
+Charity took Bob's side, while Torm espoused Polly's, and afterward
+said she ought to have "tooken a stick and knocked Marse Bob's head
+spang off." This, fortunately, Polly did not do (and when Bob went to
+the university afterward he was said to have the best head in his
+class). She just turned around and ran into the house, with her face
+very red. But she never slapped Bob after that. Not long after this he
+went off to college; for Mr. Cranmer, the tutor, said he already knew
+more than most college graduates did, and that it would be a shame for
+him not to have a university education. When the question of ways and
+means was mooted, the Colonel, who was always ready to lend money if he
+had it, and to borrow it if he did not, swore he would give him all the
+money he wanted; but, to his astonishment, Bob refused to accept it,
+and although the Colonel abused him for it, and asked Polly if she did
+not think he was a fool (which Polly did, for she was always ready to
+take and spend all the money he or any one else gave her), yet he did
+not like him the less for it, and he finally persuaded Bob to take it
+as a loan, and Bob gave him his bond.
+
+The day before he left home he was over at the Colonel's, where they
+had a great dinner for him, and Polly presided in her newest silk dress
+(she had three then); and when Bob said good-by she slipped something
+into his hand, and ran away to her room, and when he looked at it, it
+was her ten-dollar gold piece, and he took it.
+
+He was at college not quite three years, for his mother was taken sick,
+and he had to come home and nurse her; but he had stood first in most
+of his classes, and not lower than third in any; and he had thrashed
+the carpenter on Vinegar Hill, who was the bully of the town. So that
+although he did not take his degree, he had gotten the start which
+enabled him to complete his studies during the time he was taking care
+of his mother, which he did until her death, so that as soon as he was
+admitted to the bar he made his mark. It was his splendid defence of
+the man who shot the deputy-sheriff at the court-house on election day
+that brought him out as the Democratic candidate for the Constitutional
+Convention, where he made such a reputation as a speaker that the
+_Enquirer_ declared him the rising man of the State; and even the
+_Whig_ admitted that perhaps the Loco-foco party might find a leader to
+redeem it. Polly was just fifteen when she began to take an interest
+in politics; and although she read the papers diligently, especially
+the _Enquirer_, which her uncle never failed to abuse, yet she never
+could exactly satisfy herself which side was right; for the Colonel was
+a stanch Whig, while most people must have been Democrats, as Bob was
+elected by a big majority. She wanted to be on the Colonel's side,
+and made him explain everything to her, which he did to his own entire
+satisfaction, and to hers too, she tried to think; but when Bob came
+over to tea, which he very frequently did, and the Colonel and he got
+into a discussion, her uncle always seemed to her to get the worst of
+the argument; at any rate, he generally got very hot. This, however,
+might have been because Bob was so cool, while the Colonel was so
+hot-tempered.
+
+Bob had grown up very handsome. His mouth was strong and firm, and
+his eyes were splendid. He was about six feet, and his shoulders were
+as broad as the Colonel's. She did not see him now as often as she
+did when he was a boy, but it was because he was kept so busy by his
+practice. (He used to get cases in three or four counties now, and big
+ones at that.) She knew, however, that she was just as good a friend
+of his as ever; indeed, she took the trouble to tell herself so. A
+compliment to him used to give her the greatest happiness, and would
+bring deeper roses into her cheeks. He was the greatest favorite with
+everybody. Torm thought that there was no one in the world like him.
+He had long ago forgiven him his many pranks, and said "he was the
+grettest gent'man in the county skusin him [Torm] and the Colonel,"
+and that "he al'ays handled heself to be raisin'," by which Torm made
+indirect reference to regular donations made to him by the aforesaid
+"gent'man," and particularly to an especially large benefaction then
+lately conferred. It happened one evening at the Colonel's, after
+dinner, when several guests, including Bob, were commenting on the
+perfections of various ladies who were visiting in the neighborhood
+that summer. The praises were, to Torm's mind, somewhat too liberally
+bestowed, and he had attempted to console himself by several visits to
+the pantry; but when all the list was disposed of, and Polly's name had
+not been mentioned, endurance could stand it no longer, and he suddenly
+broke in with his judgment that they "didn't none on 'em hol' a candle
+to his young mistis, whar wuz de ve'y pink an' flow'r on 'em all."
+
+The Colonel, immensely pleased, ordered him out, with a promise of
+immediate sale on the morrow. But that evening, as he got on his horse,
+Bob slipped into his hand a five-dollar gold piece, and he told Polly
+that if the Colonel really intended to sell Torm, just to send him over
+to his house; he wanted the benefit of his judgment.
+
+Polly, of course, did not understand his allusion, though the Colonel
+had told her of Torm's speech; but Bob had a rose on his coat when
+he came out of the window, and the long pin in Polly's bodice was not
+fastened very securely, for it slipped, and she lost all her other
+roses, and he had to stoop and pick them up for her. Perhaps, though,
+Bob was simply referring to his having saved some money, for shortly
+afterward he came over one morning, and, to the Colonel's disgust, paid
+him down in full the amount of his bond. He attempted a somewhat formal
+speech of thanks, but broke down in it so lamentably that two juleps
+were ordered out by the Colonel to reinstate easy relations between
+them--an effect which apparently was not immediately produced--and the
+Colonel confided to Polly next day that since the fellow had been taken
+up so by those Loco-focos he was not altogether as he used to be.
+
+"Why, he don't even drink his juleps clear," the old man asserted, as
+if he were charging him with, at the least, misprision of treason.
+"However," he added, softening as the excuse presented itself to his
+mind, "that may be because his mother was always so opposed to it. You
+know mint never would grow there," he pursued to Polly, who had heard
+him make the same observation, with the same astonishment, a hundred
+times. "Strangest thing I ever knew. But he's a confoundedly clever
+fellow, though, Polly," he continued, with a sudden reviving of the
+old-time affection. "Damme! I like him." And, as Polly's face turned
+a sweet carmine, added: "Oh, I forgot, Polly; didn't mean to swear;
+damme! if I did. It just slipped out. Now I haven't sworn before for
+a week; you know I haven't; yes, of course, I mean except _then_."
+For Polly, with softly fading color, was reading him the severest of
+lectures on his besetting sin, and citing an ebullition over Torm's
+failing of the day before. "Come and sit down on your uncle's knee and
+kiss him once as a token of forgiveness. Just one more squeeze," as the
+fair girlish arms were twined about his neck, and the sweetest of faces
+was pressed against his own rough cheek. "Polly, do you remember,"
+asked the old man, holding her off from him and gazing at the girlish
+face fondly--"do you remember how, when you were a little scrap, you
+used to climb up on my knee and squeeze me, 'just once more,' to save
+that rascal Drinkwater, and how you used to say you were 'going to
+marry Bob' and me when you were grown up?"
+
+Polly's memory, apparently, was not very good. That evening, however,
+it seemed much better, when, dressed all in soft white, and with cheeks
+reflecting the faint tints of the sunset clouds, she was strolling
+through the old flower-garden with a tall young fellow whose hat sat
+on his head with a jaunty air, and who was so very careful to hold
+aside the long branches of the rose-bushes. They had somehow gotten
+to recalling each in turn some incident of the old boy-and-girl days.
+Bob knew the main facts as well as she, but Polly remembered the
+little details and circumstances of each incident best, except those
+about the time they were playing "knucks" together. Then, singularly,
+Bob recollected most. He was positive that when she cried because he
+shot so hard, he had kissed her to make it well. Curiously, Polly's
+recollection failed again, and was only distinct about very modern
+matters. She remembered with remarkable suddenness that it was tea-time.
+
+They were away down at the end of the garden, and her lapse of memory
+had a singular effect on Bob; for he turned quite pale, and insisted
+that she did remember it; and then said something about having wanted
+to see the Colonel, and having waited, and did so strangely that if
+that rose-bush had not caught her dress, he might have done something
+else. But the rose-bush caught her dress, and Polly, who looked really
+scared at it or at something, ran away just as the Colonel's voice was
+heard calling them to tea.
+
+Bob was very silent at the table, and when he left, the Colonel was
+quite anxious about him. He asked Polly it she had not noticed his
+depression. Polly had not.
+
+"That's just the way with you women," said the Colonel, testily. "A
+man might die under your very eyes, and you would not notice it. _I_
+noticed it, and I tell you the fellow's sick. I say he's sick!" he
+reiterated, with a little habit he had acquired since he had begun to
+grow slightly deaf. "I shall advise him to go away and have a little
+fling somewhere. He works too hard, sticks too close at home. He never
+goes anywhere except here, and he don't come here as he used to do. He
+ought to get married. Advise him to get married. Why don't he set up to
+Sally Brent or Malviny Pegram? He's a likely fellow, and they'd both
+take him--fools if they didn't;--I say they are fools if they didn't.
+What say?"
+
+"I didn't say anything," said Polly, quietly going to the piano.
+
+Her music often soothed the Colonel to sleep.
+
+The next morning but one Bob rode over, and instead of hooking his
+horse to the fence as he usually did, he rode on around toward the
+stables. He greeted Torm, who was in the backyard, and after extracting
+some preliminary observations from him respecting the "misery in his
+back," he elicited the further facts that Miss Polly was going down the
+road to dine at the Pegrams', of which he had some intimation before,
+and that the Colonel was down on the river farm, but would be back
+about two o'clock. He rode on.
+
+At two o'clock promptly Bob returned. The Colonel had not yet gotten
+home. He, however, dismounted, and, tying his horse, went in. He must
+have been tired of sitting down, for he now walked up and down the
+portico without once taking a seat.
+
+"Marse Bob'll walk heself to death," observed Charity to Torm, from her
+door.
+
+Presently the Colonel came in, bluff, warm, and hearty. He ordered
+dinner from the front gate as he dismounted, and juleps from the middle
+of the walk, greeted Bob with a cheeriness which that gentleman in vain
+tried to imitate, and was plumped down in his great split-bottomed
+chair, wiping his red head with his still redder bandana handkerchief,
+and abusing the weather, the crops, the newspapers, and his overseer
+before Bob could get breath to make a single remark. When he did, he
+pitched in on the weather.
+
+That is a safe topic at all times. It was astonishing how much comfort
+Bob got out of it this afternoon. He talked about it until dinner began
+to come in across the yard, the blue china dishes gleaming in the hands
+of Phoebe and her numerous corps of ebon and mahogany assistants,
+and Torm brought out the juleps, with the mint looking as if it were
+growing in the great silver cans, with frosted work all over the sides.
+
+Dinner was rather a failure, so far as Bob was concerned. Perhaps he
+missed something that usually graced the table; perhaps only his body
+was there, while he himself was down at Miss Malviny Pegram's; perhaps
+he had gone back and was unfastening an impertinent rose-bush from a
+filmy white dress in the summer twilight; perhaps--; but anyhow he was
+so silent and abstracted that the Colonel rallied him good-humoredly,
+which did not help matters.
+
+They had adjourned to the porch, and had been there for some time, when
+Bob broached the subject of his visit.
+
+"Colonel," he said, suddenly, and wholly irrelevant to everything
+that had gone before, "there is a matter I want to speak to you
+about--a--ah--we--a little matter of great importance to--ah--myself."
+He was getting very red and confused, and the Colonel instantly
+divining the matter, and secretly flattering himself, and determining
+to crow over Polly, said, to help him out:
+
+"Aha, you rogue, I knew it. Come up to the scratch, sir. So you are
+caught at last. Ah, you sly fox! It's the very thing you ought to do.
+Why, I know half a dozen girls who'd jump at you. I knew it. I said so
+the other night. Polly--"
+
+Bob was utterly off his feet by this time. "I want to ask your consent
+to marry Polly," he blurted out desperately; "I love her."
+
+"The devil you do!" exclaimed the Colonel. He could say no more; he
+simply sat still, in speechless, helpless, blank amazement. To him
+Polly was still a little girl climbing his knees, and an emperor might
+not aspire to her.
+
+[Illustration: _"'I will!' he said, throwing up his head."_]
+
+"Yes, sir, I do," said Bob, calm enough now--growing cool as the
+Colonel became excited. "I love her, and I want her.
+
+"Well, sir, you can't have her!" roared the Colonel, pulling himself up
+from his seat in the violence of his refusal. He looked like a tawny
+lion whose lair had been invaded.
+
+Bob's face paled, and a look came on it that the Colonel recalled
+afterward, and which he did not remember ever to have seen on it
+before, except once, when, years ago, some one shot one of his dogs--a
+look made up of anger and of dogged resolution. "I will!" he said,
+throwing up his head and looking the Colonel straight in the eyes, his
+voice perfectly calm, but his eyes blazing, the mouth drawn close, and
+the lines of his face as if they had been carved in granite.
+
+"I'll be ---- if you shall!" stormed the Colonel: "the King of England
+should not have her!" and, turning, he stamped into the house and
+slammed the door behind him.
+
+Bob walked slowly down the steps and around to the stables, where he
+ordered his horse. He rode home across the fields without a word,
+except, as he jumped his horse over the line fence, "I will have her,"
+he repeated, between his fast-set teeth.
+
+That evening Polly came home all unsuspecting anything of the kind;
+the Colonel waited until she had taken off her things and come down in
+her fresh muslin dress. She surpassed in loveliness the rose-buds that
+lay on her bosom, and the impertinence that could dare aspire to her
+broke over the old man in a fresh wave. He had nursed his wrath all the
+evening.
+
+"Polly!" he blurted out, suddenly rising with a jerk from his
+arm-chair, and unconsciously striking an attitude before the
+astonished girl, "do you want to marry Bob?"
+
+"Why, no," cried Polly, utterly shaken out of her composure by the
+suddenness and vehemence of the attack.
+
+"I _knew it_!" declared the Colonel, triumphantly. "It was a piece of
+cursed impertinence!" and he worked himself up to such a pitch of fury,
+and grew so red in the face, that poor Polly, who had to steer between
+two dangers, was compelled to employ all her arts to soothe the old man
+and keep him out of a fit of apoplexy. She learned the truth, however,
+and she learned something which, until that time, she had never known;
+and though, as she kissed her uncle "good-night," she made no answer
+to his final shot of, "Well, I'm glad we are not going to have any
+nonsense about the fellow; I have made up my mind, and we'll treat his
+impudence as it deserves," she locked her door carefully when she was
+within her own room, and the next morning she said she had a headache.
+
+Bob did not come that day.
+
+If the Colonel had not been so hot-headed--that is, if he had not been
+a man--things would doubtless have straightened themselves out in some
+of those mysterious ways in which the hardest knots into which two
+young peoples' affairs contrive to get untangle themselves; but being a
+man, he must needs, man-like, undertake to manage according to his own
+plan, which is always the wrong one.
+
+When, therefore, he announced to Polly at the breakfast-table that
+morning that she would have no further annoyance from that fellow's
+impertinence; for he had written him a note apologizing for leaving him
+abruptly in his own house the day before, but forbidding him, in both
+their names, to continue his addresses, or, indeed, to put his foot on
+the place again; he fully expected to see Polly's face brighten, and to
+receive her approbation and thanks. What, then, was his disappointment
+to see her face grow distinctly white. All she said was, "Oh, uncle!"
+
+It was unfortunate that the day was Sunday, and that the Colonel went
+with her to church (which she insisted on attending, notwithstanding
+her headache), and was by when she met Bob. They came on each other
+suddenly. Bob took off his hat and stood like a soldier on review,
+erect, expectant, and a little pale. The Colonel, who had almost
+forgotten his "impertinence," and was about to shake hands with him as
+usual, suddenly remembered it, and drawing himself up, stepped to the
+other side of Polly, and handed her by the younger gentleman as if he
+were protecting her from a mob. Polly, who had been looking anxiously
+everywhere but in the right place, meaning to give Bob a smile which
+would set things straight, caught his eye only at that second, and felt
+rather than saw the change in his attitude and manner. She tried to
+throw him the smile, but it died in her eyes, and even after her back
+was turned she was sensible of his defiance. She went into church, and
+dropped down on her knees in the far end of her pew, with her little
+heart needing all the consolations of her religion.
+
+The man she prayed hardest for did not come into church that day.
+
+Things went very badly after that, and the knots got tighter and
+tighter. An attempt which Bob made to loosen them failed disastrously,
+and the Colonel, who was the best-hearted man in the world, but whose
+prejudices were made of wrought iron, took it into his head that Bob
+had insulted him, and Polly's indirect efforts at pacification aroused
+him to such an extent that for the first time in his life he was almost
+hard with her. He conceived the absurd idea that she was sacrificing
+herself for Bob on account of her friendship for him, and that it was
+his duty to protect her against herself, which, man-like, he proceeded
+to do in his own fashion, to poor Polly's great distress.
+
+She was devoted to her uncle, and knew the strength of his affection
+for her. On the other hand, Bob and she had been friends so long. She
+never could remember the time when she did not have Bob. But he had
+never said a word of love to her in his life. To be sure, on that
+evening in the garden she had known it just as well as if he had fallen
+on his knees at her feet. She knew his silence was just because he had
+owed her uncle the money; and oh! if she just hadn't gotten frightened;
+and oh! if her uncle just hadn't done it; and oh! she was so unhappy!
+The poor little thing, in her own dainty, white-curtained room, where
+were the books and things he had given her, and the letters he had
+written her, used to--but that is a secret. Anyhow, it was not because
+he was gone. She knew that was not the reason--indeed, she very often
+said so to herself; it was because he had been treated so unjustly,
+and suffered so, and she had done it all. And she used to introduce
+many new petitions into her prayers, in which, if there was not any
+name expressed, she felt that it would be understood, and the blessings
+would reach him just the same.
+
+The summer had gone, and the Indian summer had come in its place,
+hazy, dreamy, and sad. It always made Polly melancholy, and this year,
+although the weather was perfect, she was affected, she said, by the
+heat, and did not go out of doors much. So presently her cheeks were
+not as blooming as they had been, and even her great dark eyes lost
+some of their lustre; at least, Charity thought so, and said so too,
+not only to Polly, but to her master, whom she scared half to death;
+and who, notwithstanding that Dr. Stopper was coming over every other
+day to see a patient on the plantation, and that the next day was the
+time for his regular visit, put a boy on a horse that night and sent
+him with a note urging him to come the next morning to breakfast.
+
+The doctor came, and spent the day: examined Polly's lungs and
+heart, prescribed out-door exercise, and left something less than a
+bushel-basketful of medicines for her to take.
+
+Polly was, at the time of his visit, in a very excited state, for the
+Colonel had, with a view of soothing her, the night before delivered
+a violent philippic against marriage in general, and in particular
+against marriage with "impudent young puppies who did not know their
+places;" and he had proposed an extensive tour, embracing all the
+United States and Canada, and intended to cover the entire winter and
+spring following. Polly, who had stood as much as she could stand,
+finally rebelled, and had with flashing eyes and mantling cheeks
+espoused Bob's cause with a courage and dash which had almost routed
+the old Colonel. "Not that he was anything to her except a friend," she
+was most careful to explain; but she was tired of hearing her "friend"
+assailed, and she thought that it was the highest compliment a man
+could pay a woman, etc., etc., for all of which she did a great deal of
+blushing in her own room afterwards.
+
+Thus it happened, that she was both excited and penitent the next day,
+and thinking to make some atonement, and at the same time to take the
+prescribed exercise, which would excuse her from taking the medicines,
+she filled a little basket with goodies to take old Aunt Betty at the
+Far Quarters; and thus it happened, that, as she was coming back along
+the path which ran down the meadow on the other side of the creek which
+was the dividing line between the two plantations, and was almost at
+the foot-bridge that Somebody had made for her so carefully with logs
+cut out of his own woods, and the long shadows of the willows made it
+gloomy, and everything was so still that she had grown very lonely and
+unhappy--thus it happened, that just as she was thinking how kind he
+had been about making the bridge and hand-rail so strong, and about
+everything, and how cruel he must think her, and how she would never
+see him any more as she used to do, she turned the clump of willows
+to step up on the log, and there he was standing on the bridge just
+before her, looking down into her eyes! She tried to get by him--she
+remembered that afterwards; but he was so mean. It was always a little
+confused in her memory, and she could never recall exactly how it was.
+She was sure, however, that it was because he was so pale that she said
+it, and that she did not begin to cry until afterwards, and that it was
+because he would not listen to her explanation; and that she didn't let
+him do it, she could not help it, and she did not know her head was on
+his shoulder.
+
+[Illustration: _"There he was standing on the bridge just before her."_]
+
+Anyhow, when she got home that evening her improvement was so apparent
+that the Colonel called Charity in to note it, and declared that
+Virginia country doctors were the finest in the world, and that Stopper
+was the greatest doctor in the State. The change was wonderful, indeed;
+and the old gilt mirror, with its gauze-covered frame, would never have
+known for the sad-eyed Polly of the day before the bright, happy
+maiden that stood before it now and smiled at the beaming face which
+dimpled at its own content.
+
+Old Betty's was a protracted pleurisy, and the good things Polly
+carried her daily did not tend to shorten the sickness. Ever afterwards
+she "blessed the Lord for dat chile" whenever Polly's name was
+mentioned. She would doubtless have included Bob in her benison had she
+known how sympathetic he was during this period.
+
+But although he was inspecting that bridge every afternoon regularly,
+notwithstanding Polly's oft-reiterated wish and express orders as
+regularly declared, no one knew a word of all this. And it was a bow
+drawn at a venture when, on the evening that Polly had tried to carry
+out her engagement to bring her uncle around, the old man had said,
+"Why, hoity-toity! the young rascal's cause seems to be thriving."
+She had been so confident of her success that she was not prepared
+for failure, and it struck her like a fresh blow; and though she did
+not cry until she got into her own room, when she got there she threw
+herself on the bed and cried herself to sleep. "It was so cruel in
+him," she said to herself, "to desire me never to speak to him again!
+And, oh! if he should really catch him on the place and shoot him!"
+The pronouns in our language were probably invented by young women.
+
+The headache Polly had the next morning was not invented. Poor little
+thing! her last hope was gone. She determined to bid Bob good-by, and
+never see him again. She had made up her mind to this on her knees, so
+she knew she was right. The pain it cost her satisfied her that she was.
+
+She was firmly resolved when she set out that afternoon to see
+old Betty, who was in everybody's judgment except her own quite
+convalescent, and whom Dr. Stopper pronounced entirely well. She
+wavered a little in her resolution when, descending the path along the
+willows, which were leafless now, she caught sight of a tall figure
+loitering easily up the meadow, and she abandoned--that is, she forgot
+it altogether when, having doubtfully suggested it, she was suddenly
+enfolded in a pair of strong arms, and two gray eyes, lighting a
+handsome face strong with the self-confidence which women love, looked
+down into hers.
+
+Then he proposed it!
+
+Her heart almost stood still at his boldness. But he was so strong,
+so firm, so reasonable, so self-reliant, and yet so gentle, she could
+not but listen to him. Still she refused--and she never did consent;
+she forbade him ever to think of it again. Then she begged him never
+to come there again, and told him of her uncle's threats, and of her
+fears for him; and then, when he laughed at them, she begged him never,
+never, under any circumstances, to take any notice of what her uncle
+might do or say, but rather to stand still and be shot dead; and then,
+when Bob promised this, she burst into tears, and he had to hold her
+and comfort her like a little girl.
+
+It was pretty bad after that, and but for Polly's out-door exercise
+she would undoubtedly have succumbed. It seemed as if something had
+come between her and her uncle. She no longer went about singing like a
+bird. She suffered under the sense of being misunderstood, and it was
+so lonely! He too was oppressed by it. Even Torm shared in it, and his
+expositions assumed a cast terrific in the last degree.
+
+It was now December.
+
+One evening it culminated. The weather had been too bad for Polly to
+go out, and she was sick. Finally Stopper was sent for. Polly, who,
+to use Charity's expression, was "pestered till she was fractious,"
+rebelled flatly, and refused to keep her bed or to take the medicines
+prescribed. Charity backed her. Torm got drunk. The Colonel was in
+a fume, and declared his intention to sell Torm next morning, as
+usual, and to take Charity and Polly and go to Europe. This was well
+enough; but to Polly's consternation, when she came to breakfast next
+morning, she found that the old man's plans had ripened into a scheme
+to set out on the very next day for Louisiana and New Orleans, where he
+proposed to spend the winter looking after some plantations she had,
+and showing her something of the world. Polly remonstrated, rebelled,
+cajoled. It was all in vain. Stopper had seriously frightened the old
+man about her health, and he was adamant. Preparations were set on
+foot; the brown hair trunks, with their lines of staring brass tacks,
+were raked out and dusted; the Colonel got into a fever, ordered up all
+the negroes in the yard, and gave instructions from the front door,
+like a major-general reviewing his troops; got Torm, Charity, and
+all the others into a wild flutter; attempted to superintend Polly's
+matters; made her promises of fabulous gifts; became reminiscent, and
+told marvelous stories of his old days, which Torm corroborated; and so
+excited Polly and the plantation generally, that from old Betty, who
+came from the Far Quarters for the purpose of taking it in, down to the
+blackest little dot on the place, there was not one who did not get
+into a wild whirl, and talk as if they were all going to New Orleans
+the next morning, with Joe Rattler on the boot.
+
+Polly had, after a stout resistance, surrendered to her fate, and
+packed her modest trunk with very mingled feelings. Under other
+circumstances she would have enjoyed the trip immensely; but she felt
+now as if it were parting from Bob forever. Her heart was in her throat
+all day, and even the excitement of packing could not drive away the
+feeling. She knew she would never see him again. She tried to work out
+what the end would be. Would he die, or would he marry Malviny Pegram?
+Every one said she would just suit him, and she'd certainly marry him
+if he asked her.
+
+The sun was shining over the western woods. Bob rode down that way in
+the afternoon, even when it was raining; he had told her so. He would
+think it cruel of her to go away thus, and never even let him know. She
+would at least go and tell him good-by. So she did.
+
+Bob's face paled suddenly when she told him all, and that look which
+she had not seen often before settled on it. Then he took her hand and
+began to explain everything to her. He told her that he had loved her
+all her life; showed her how she had inspired him to work for and
+win every success that he had achieved; how it had been her work even
+more than his. Then he laid before her the life plans he had formed,
+and proved how they were all for her, and for her only. He made it all
+so clear, and his voice was so confident, and his face so earnest, as
+he pleaded and proved it step by step, that she felt, as she leaned
+against him and he clasped her closely, that he was right, and that she
+could not part from him.
+
+That evening Polly was unusually silent; but the Colonel thought she
+had never been so sweet. She petted him until he swore that no man on
+earth was worthy of her, and that none should ever have her.
+
+After tea she went to his room to look over his clothes (her especial
+work), and would let no one, not even her mammy, help her; and when
+the Colonel insisted on coming in to tell her some more concerning the
+glories of New Orleans in his day, she finally put him out and locked
+the door on him.
+
+She was very strange all the evening. As they were to start the next
+morning, the Colonel was for retiring early; but Polly would not go;
+she loitered around, hung about the old fellow, petted him, sat on his
+knee and kissed him, until he was forced to insist on her going to
+bed. Then she said good-night, and astonished the Colonel by throwing
+herself into his arms and bursting out crying.
+
+The old man soothed her with caresses and baby talk, such as he used to
+comfort her with when she was a little girl, and when she became calm
+he handed her to her door as if she had been a duchess.
+
+The house was soon quiet, except that once the Colonel heard Polly
+walking in her room, and mentally determined to chide her for sitting
+up so late. He, however, drifted off from the subject when he heard
+some of his young mules galloping around the yard, and he made a sleepy
+resolve to sell them all, or to dismiss his overseer next day for
+letting them out of the lot. Before he had quite determined which he
+should do, he dropped off to sleep again.
+
+It was possibly about this time that a young man lifted into her saddle
+a dark-habited little figure, whose face shone very white in the
+starlight, and whose tremulous voice would have suggested a refusal had
+it not been drowned in the deep, earnest tone of her lover. Although
+she declared that she could not think of doing it, she had on her hat
+and furs and riding-habit when Bob came. She did, indeed, really beg
+him to go away; but a few minutes later a pair of horses cantered
+down the avenue toward the lawn gate, which shut with a bang that so
+frightened the little lady on the bay mare that the young man found it
+necessary to lean over and throw a steadying arm around her.
+
+For the first time in her life Polly saw the sun rise in North
+Carolina, and a few hours later a gentle-voiced young clergyman, whose
+sweet-faced wife was wholly carried away by Polly's beauty, received
+under protest Bob's only gold piece, a coin which he twisted from his
+watch-chain with the promise to quadruple it if he would preserve it
+until he could redeem it.
+
+When Charity told the Colonel next morning that Polly was gone, the
+old man for the first time in fifty years turned perfectly white. Then
+he fell into a consuming rage, and swore until Charity would not have
+been much surprised to see the devil appear in visible shape and claim
+him on the spot. He cursed Bob, cursed himself, cursed Torm, Charity,
+and the entire female sex individually and collectively, and then,
+seized by a new idea, he ordered his horse, that he might pursue the
+runaways, threatened an immediate sale of his whole plantation, and
+the instantaneous death of Bob, and did in fact get down his great
+brass-mounted pistols, and lay them by him as he made Torm, Charity,
+and a half-dozen younger house-servants dress him.
+
+[Illustration: _"He made Torm, Charity, and a half-dozen younger
+house-servants dress him."_]
+
+Dressing and shaving occupied him about an hour--he always averred
+that a gentleman could not dress like a gentleman in less time--and,
+still breathing out threatenings and slaughter, he marched out of his
+room, making Torm and Charity follow him, each with a pistol. Something
+prompted him to stop and inspect them in the hall. Taking first one and
+then the other, he examined them curiously.
+
+"Well, I'll be----!" he said, dryly, and flung both of them crashing
+through the window. Turning, he ordered waffles and hoe-cakes for
+breakfast, and called for the books to have prayers.
+
+Polly had utilized the knowledge she had gained as a girl, and had
+unloaded both pistols the night before, and rammed the balls down again
+without powder, so as to render them harmless.
+
+By breakfast time Torm was in a state of such advanced intoxication
+that he was unable to walk through the back yard gate, and the Colonel
+was forced to content himself with sending by Charity a message that
+he would get rid of him early the next morning. He straitly enjoined
+Charity to tell him, and she as solemnly promised to do so. "Yes, suh,
+_I_ gwi' tell him," she replied, with a faint tone of being wounded at
+his distrust; and she did.
+
+She needed an outlet.
+
+Things got worse. The Colonel called up the overseer and gave new
+orders, as if he proposed to change everything. He forbade any mention
+of Polly's name, and vowed that he would send for Mr. Steep, his
+lawyer, and change his will to spite all creation. This humor, instead
+of wearing off, seemed to grow worse as the time stretched on, and Torm
+actually grew sober in the shadow that had fallen on the plantation.
+The Colonel had Polly's room nailed up and shut himself up in the house.
+
+The negroes discussed the condition of affairs in awed undertones, and
+watched him furtively whenever he passed. Various opinions by turns
+prevailed. Aunt Betty, who was regarded with veneration, owing partly
+to the interest the lost Polly had taken in her illness, and partly
+to her great age (to which she annually added three years) prophesied
+that he was going to die "in torments," just like some old uncle of his
+whom no one else had ever heard of until now, but who was raked up by
+her to serve as a special example. The chief resemblance seemed to be a
+certain "rankness in cussin'."
+
+Things were certainly going badly, and day by day they grew worse. The
+Colonel became more and more morose.
+
+"He don' even quoil no mo'," Torm complained pathetically to Charity.
+"He jes set still and study. I 'feard he gwine 'stracted."
+
+It was, indeed, lamentable. It was accepted on the plantation that Miss
+Polly had gone for good--some said down to Louisiana--and would never
+come back any more. The prevailing impression was that, if she did, the
+Colonel would certainly kill Bob. Torm had not a doubt of it.
+
+Thus matters stood three days before Christmas. The whole plantation
+was plunged in gloom. It would be the first time since Miss Polly was a
+baby that they had not had "a big Christmas."
+
+Torm's lugubrious countenance one morning seemed to shock the
+Colonel out of his lethargy. He asked how many days there would be
+before Christmas, and learning that there were but three, he ordered
+preparations to be made for a great feast and a big time generally.
+He had the wood-pile replenished as usual, got up his presents, and
+superintended the Christmas operations himself, as Polly used to do.
+But it was sad work, and when Torm and Charity retired Christmas Eve
+night, although Torm had imbibed plentifully, and the tables were all
+spread for the great dinner for the servants next day, there was no
+peace in Torm's discourse; it was all of wrath and judgment to come.
+
+He had just gone to sleep when there was a knock at the door.
+
+"Who dat out dyah?" called Charity. "You niggers better go 'long to
+bed."
+
+The knock was repeated.
+
+"Who dat out dyah, I say?" queried Charity, testily. "Whyn't you go
+'long 'way from dat do'? Torm, Torm, dee's somebody at de do'," she
+said, as the knocking was renewed.
+
+Torm was hard to wake, but at length he got up and moved slowly to the
+door, grumbling to himself all the time.
+
+When finally he undid the latch, Charity, who was in bed, heard him
+exclaim, "Well, name o' Gord! good Gord A'mighty!" and burst into a
+wild explosion of laughter.
+
+In a second she too was outside of the door, and had Polly in her arms,
+laughing, jumping, hugging, and kissing her while Torm executed a
+series of caracoles around them.
+
+"Whar Marse Bob?" asked both negroes, finally, in a breath.
+
+"Hello, Torm! How are you, Mam' Charity?" called that gentleman,
+cheerily, coming up from where he had been fastening the horses; and
+Charity, suddenly mindful of her peculiar appearance and of the frosty
+air, "scuttled" into the house, conveying her young mistress with her.
+
+Presently she came out dressed, and invited Bob in too. She insisted
+on giving them something to eat; but they had been to supper, and
+Polly was much too excited hearing about her uncle to eat anything.
+She cried a little at Charity's description of him, which she tried to
+keep Bob from seeing, but he saw it, and had to--however, when they
+got ready to go home, Polly insisted on going to the yard and up on
+the porch, and when there, she actually kissed the window-blind of the
+room whence issued a muffled snore suggestive at least of some degree
+of forgetfulness. She wanted Bob to kiss it too, but that gentleman
+apparently found something else more to his taste, and her entreaty was
+drowned in another sound.
+
+Before they remounted their horses Polly carried Bob to the greenhouse,
+where she groped around in the darkness for something, to Bob's
+complete mystification. "Doesn't it smell sweet in here?" she asked.
+
+"I don't smell anything but that mint bed you've been walking on," he
+laughed.
+
+As they rode off, leaving Torm and Charity standing in the road, the
+last thing Polly said was, "Now be sure you tell him--nine o'clock."
+
+"Umm! I know he gwi' sell me den sho 'nough," said Torm, in a tone of
+conviction, as the horses cantered away in the frosty night.
+
+Once or twice, as they galloped along, Bob made some allusion to the
+mint bed on which Polly had stepped, to which she made no reply. But as
+he helped her down at her own door, he asked, "What in the world have
+you got there?"
+
+"Mint," said she, with a little low, pleased laugh.
+
+By light next morning it was known all over the plantation that Miss
+Polly had returned. The rejoicing, however, was clouded by the fear
+that nothing would come of it.
+
+In Charity's house it was decided that Torm should break the news. Torm
+was doubtful on the point as the time drew near, but Charity's mind
+never wavered. Finally he went in with his master's shaving-water,
+having first tried to establish his courage by sundry pulls at a black
+bottle. He essayed three times to deliver the message, but each time
+his courage failed, and he hastened out under pretence of the water
+having gotten cold. The last time he attracted Charity's attention.
+
+"Name o' Gord, Torm, you gwine to scawl hawgs'?" she asked,
+sarcastically.
+
+The next time he entered the Colonel was in a fume of impatience, so
+he had to fix the water. He set down the can, and bustled about with
+hypocritical industry. The Colonel, at last, was almost through; Torm
+retreated to the door. As his master finished, he put his hand on the
+knob, and turning it, said, "Miss Polly come home larse night; sh' say
+she breakfast at nine o'clock."
+
+Slapbang! came the shaving-can, smashing against the door, just as he
+dodged out, and the roar of the Colonel followed him across the hall.
+
+When finally their master appeared on the portico, Torm and Charity
+were watching in some doubt whether he would not carry out on the spot
+his long-threatened purpose. He strode up and down the long porch,
+evidently in great excitement.
+
+"He's turrible dis mornin'," said Torm; "he th'owed de whole kittle o'
+b'ilin' water at me."
+
+"Pity he didn' scawl you to death," said his wife, sympathizingly. She
+thought Torm's awkwardness had destroyed Polly's last chance. Torm
+resorted to his black bottle, and proceeded to talk about the lake of
+brimstone and fire.
+
+Up and down the portico strode the old Colonel. His horse was at the
+rack, where he was always brought before breakfast. (For twenty years
+he had probably never missed a morning.) Finally he walked down,
+and looked at the saddle; of course, it was all wrong. He fixed it,
+and, mounting, rode off in the opposite direction to that whence his
+invitation had come. Charity, looking out of her door, inserted into
+her diatribe against "all wuthless, drunken, fool niggers" a pathetic
+parenthesis to the effect that "Ef Marster meet Marse Bob dis mornin',
+de don' be a hide nor hyah left o'nyah one on 'em; an' dat lamb over
+dyah maybe got oystchers waitin' for him too."
+
+Torm was so much impressed that he left Charity and went out of doors.
+
+The Colonel rode down the plantation, his great gray horse quivering
+with life in the bright winter sunlight. He gave him the rein, and he
+turned down a cross-road which led out of the plantation into the main
+high-way. Mechanically he opened the gate and rode out. Before he knew
+where he was he was through the wood, and his horse had stopped at the
+next gate. It was the gate of Bob's place. The house stood out bright
+and plain among the yard trees; lines of blue smoke curled up almost
+straight from the chimneys; and he could see two or three negroes
+running backward and forward between the kitchen and the house. The
+sunlight glistened on something in the hand of one of them, and sent
+a ray of dazzling light all the way to the old man. He knew it was a
+plate or a dish. He took out his watch and glanced at it; it was five
+minutes to nine o'clock. He started to turn around to go home. As he
+did so, the memory of all the past swept over him, and of the wrong
+that had been done him. He would go in and show them his contempt for
+them by riding in and straight out again; and he actually unlatched
+the gate and went in. As he rode across the field he recalled all that
+Polly had been to him from the time when she had first stretched out
+her arms to him; all the little ways by which she had brought back his
+youth, and had made his house home, and his heart soft again. Every
+scene came before him as if to mock him. He felt once more the touch
+of her little hand; heard again the sound of her voice as it used to
+ring through the old house and about the grounds; saw her and Bob as
+children romping about his feet, and he gave a great gulp as he thought
+how desolate the house was now. He sat up in his saddle stiffer than
+ever. D---- him! he would enter his very house, and there to his face
+and hers denounce him for his baseness; he pushed his horse to a trot.
+Up to the yard gate he rode, and, dismounting, hitched his horse to the
+fence, and slamming the gate fiercely behind him, stalked up the walk
+with his heavy whip clutched fast in his hand. Up the walk and up the
+steps, without a pause, his face set as grim as rock, and purple with
+suppressed emotion; for a deluge of memories was overwhelming him.
+
+The door was shut; they had locked it on him; but he would burst it in,
+and--Ah! what was that?
+
+The door flew suddenly open; there was a cry, a spring, a vision of
+something swam before his eyes, and two arms were clasped about his
+neck, while he was being smothered with kisses from the sweetest
+mouth in the world, and a face made up of light and laughter, yet
+tearful, too, like a dew-bathed flower, was pressed to his, and before
+the Colonel knew it he had, amid laughter and sobs and caresses,
+been borne into the house, and pressed down at the daintiest little
+breakfast-table eyes ever saw, set for three persons, and loaded with
+steaming dishes, and with a great fresh julep by the side of his plate,
+and Torm standing behind his chair, whilst Bob was helping him to
+"oystchers," and Polly, with dimpling face, was attempting the exploit
+of pouring out his coffee without moving her arm from around his neck.
+
+The first thing he said after he recovered his breath was, "Where did
+you get this mint?"
+
+Polly broke into a peal of rippling, delicious laughter, and tightened
+the arm about his neck.
+
+"Just one more squeeze," said the Colonel; and as she gave it he said,
+with the light of it all breaking on him, "Damme if I don't sell you!
+or, if I can't sell you, I'll give you away--that is, if he'll come
+over and live with us."
+
+That evening, after the great dinner, at which Polly had sat in her
+old place at the head of the table, and Bob at the foot, because
+the Colonel insisted on sitting where Polly could give him one more
+squeeze, the whole plantation was ablaze with "Christmas," and
+Drinkwater Torm, steadying himself against the sideboard, delivered a
+discourse on peace on earth and good-will to men so powerful and so
+eloquent that the Colonel, delighted, rose and drank his health, and
+said, "Damme if I ever sell him again!"
+
+FOOTNOTE:
+
+[A] This spelling is used because he was called "Torm" until it became
+his name.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Polly, by Thomas Nelson Page
+
+*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK POLLY ***
+
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