From 5fac35e152cedc5d2ec3ae584367405523fa081a Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: nfenwick Date: Tue, 4 Feb 2025 06:41:02 -0800 Subject: Initial commit --- 63243-h/63243-h.htm | 8526 +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ 1 file changed, 8526 insertions(+) create mode 100644 63243-h/63243-h.htm (limited to '63243-h/63243-h.htm') diff --git a/63243-h/63243-h.htm b/63243-h/63243-h.htm new file mode 100644 index 0000000..ae19f03 --- /dev/null +++ b/63243-h/63243-h.htm @@ -0,0 +1,8526 @@ + + + + + + + The Project Gutenberg eBook of Hope Farm Notes, by Herbert W. Collingwood. + + + + + + + + + +
+
+Project Gutenberg's Hope Farm Notes, by Herbert Winslow Collingwood
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most
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+
+Title: Hope Farm Notes
+
+Author: Herbert Winslow Collingwood
+
+Release Date: September 19, 2020 [EBook #63243]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: UTF-8
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK HOPE FARM NOTES ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by The Online Distributed Proofreading Team at
+https://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images
+generously made available by The Internet Archive/American
+Libraries.)
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ + +

HOPE FARM NOTES

+ +

BY
+HERBERT W. COLLINGWOOD

+ +

REPRINTED FROM
+THE RURAL NEW YORKER

+ +
+ +
+ +

NEW YORK
+HARCOURT, BRACE AND COMPANY
+1921

+ +

COPYRIGHT, 1921, BY
+HARCOURT, BRACE AND COMPANY, INC.

+ +

THE QUINN & BODEN COMPANY
+RAHWAY, N. J.

+ +
+ +

To
+L. D. C. and A. F. C.
+who represent

+“The Hen with one Chicken
+and
+The Chicken.

+ +
+ +

Most of these notes were originally printed in the +Rural New-Yorker from week to week and covering +a period of about 20 years. Many readers of that magazine +have expressed the desire to have a collection of +them in permanent form. It has been no easy task +to make a selection, and I wish to acknowledge here +the great help which I have received from my daughter, +Ava F. Collingwood, in arranging this matter. It has +been thought best to arrange the notes in chronological +order. “A Hope Farm Sermon,” and “Grandmother” +were originally printed in 1902. The others follow +in the order of their original publication. The reader +must understand that the children alluded to represent +two distinct broods,—the second brood appearing just +after the sketch entitled “Transplanting the Young +Idea.” From the very first the object of these notes has +been to picture simply and truthfully the brighter, +cheerful side of Farm Life.

+ +
+ +
+ +

CONTENTS

+ +
+ + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + +
PAGE
The Sunny Side of the Barn1
A Hope Farm Sermon21
Grandmother26
Laughter and Religion33
A Day in Florida38
The Baseball Game45
Transplanting the Young Idea51
The Sleepless Man58
Lincoln’s Birthday63
Uncle Ed’s Philosophy69
A God-forsaken Place75
Louise82
Christmas Every Day88
“The Finest Lesson”94
“Columbus Day”107
The Commencement114
“Organization”122
The Face of Liberty130
Captain Randall’s Hour138
“Snow Bound”147
“Class”155
“I’ll Tell God”163
A Day’s Work171
Professor Gander’s Academy181
Colonel O’Brien and Sergeant Hill189
How the Other Half Lives198
The Indians Won206
Ike Sawyer’s Hotel214
Old-time Politics224
+ +
+ +
+ +

[1]

+ +

HOPE FARM NOTES

+ +

THE SUNNY SIDE OF THE BARN

+ +
+ +

As a boy on a little Yankee farm I had a “stent” set +out for me every day. During the Winter it was sawing +and splitting wood. Our barn stood so that somehow +on a Winter’s day one side of it faced the road, +and it always seemed to be warm and sunny. The other +was turned so it was always cold and frosty, with little +if any sun. The hens, the cow and the sheep always +made for the sunny side of the barn, which represented +the comfortable and the bright side of life. The old +gentleman who brought me up always put the woodpile +on the frosty side of the barn. He argued that if +the boy worked too much on the sunny side, he would +stop to look at the passers-by, feel something of the joy +of living, and stop his work to absorb a little of it. We +were brought up to believe that labor was a curse, put +upon us for our sins, a serious matter, a discipline and +never a joy. When the boy worked on the frosty side, +he must move fast in order to keep warm. He would not +stop to loaf in the sun, he could not throw stones or +practise baseball so long as he had to keep his mittens +on to keep his fingers warm. Thus the argument was +that the boy would accomplish more on the frosty side, +and realize that labor represented the primal curse which[2] +somehow seemed to rest particularly hard upon the +farmer. And so as a child I did my work and passed +much of my life on the frosty side of the barn, silent +and thoughtful, while the hens cackled and sang on the +sunny side. It seemed strange to me that people could +not see that the thing which made the hens lay would +surely make the boy work.

+ +

There will always be a dispute as to whether a boy +or a man does his best work under the spur of necessity, +or out of a full bag of the oats of life. And +they do it with greater or less cruelty as more or less +of their life has been spent on the frosty side. I never +yet saw a self-made man who did anything like a perfect +job on himself. They usually spoil their own sons by +giving them too easy a time, while work is a necessity +in building character. Work without play of some sort +is labor without soul, and that is one of the most cruel +and dangerous things in the world. I have noticed that +most men who pass their childhood on the frosty side +of the barn have what I call a squint-eyed view of +youth. They spend a large part of their time telling +how they had to work as a boy, and how much inferior +their own sons are since they do not have chores to +do. That man’s boys will pay no attention except when +his eye is upon them, and rightly so, I think. The +man looks across the table at mother, with a shake of +his head, for is not the Smith family responsible for +the fact that these boys do not equal their wonderful +sire? I have learned better than to expect much sympathy +from my boys for what happened 50 years ago.

+ +

The old gentleman would come now and then and[3] +look around the corner of the barn to see if I was +at work. The frosty side of the barn in youth has one +advantage. It forces the boy to think and reason out +the justice of life. Uncle Daniel had not read enough +of history to know that Guizot, the great French historian, +says that the only thing which those who represent +tyranny, injustice or evil are afraid of is the human +mind. What he means is that whenever you can get +the plain, common people to think clearly and with +their own brains, they will sooner or later wipe off the +slate of history and write freedom in big letters. On +the sunny side I think I should have talked and so +rid myself of my thought before it could print itself +upon my little brain, but there on the frosty side of +the barn I know that I said little, but reasoned it +out with the clear wisdom of childhood. If Uncle +Daniel had been a student of Shakespeare, he would +have gone straight to that famous passage in Julius +Cæsar which probably expresses the thought of 90 per +cent of the humans capable of thinking, who have ever +lived to maturity:

+ +
+
+
+
“Let me have men about me that are fat,
+
Sleek-headed men and such as sleep o’ nights;
+
Yond’ Cassius has a lean and hungry look;
+
He thinks too much; such men are dangerous.”
+
+
+
+ +

I was thinking out my problem, and I want to tell +you younger men that the questions which started at the +teeth of my saw on the frosty side of that old barn have +cut their way through the years, and chased and haunted +me all through life. The injustice of labor and social[4] +conditions—that is the foundation of the trouble in the +world. Upon it all helpful education should be based. +Youth’s ideals will always chase you like that, if you +give them half a chance, and you never can have better +mental companions. I was trying to reason out one of +two resolutions. Off in that dim future of manhood +when I should grow up, my time would come, and I +might have power over some other boy, or maybe a +man. I could put him on the frosty or on the +sunny side of the barn, as I saw fit. What would I +do to him to pay for my session on the frosty side? +Somehow I think it is natural for human beings to seek +reparation and promise themselves to take their misfortunes +out of someone else when their power comes. +I think I should have grown up with something of +that determination in mind had it not been for the poet +Longfellow.

+ +

Now you will smile, you successful farmers, you +dry old analyzers and solemn teachers and you budding +young hopes. What has poetry to do with farming +or agricultural education? What did the poet Longfellow +ever do for farming? Did he ever have a hen +in an egg-laying contest that laid 300 eggs in a year? +Did he ever raise a prize pumpkin, or a prize crop of +potatoes? Did he even originate the Longfellow variety +of flint corn? Do not men need solid pith rather than +flabby poetry in their thought? It is true that Longfellow +would have starved to death on a good farm. +Yet his poetry and the thought that went with it were +one of the things that made New England dominate this +country in thought. My childhood was passed at a[5] +time when we had no science to study. Bacteria were +swimming all about us in the air, the food and the +water. I had, no doubt, swallowed millions of them at +every mouthful, and we grew fat on them. We had +no books on science or bulletins, but every farmhouse +had its copy of Bryant, Whittier, Longfellow, Emerson +and Holmes. The best duck-raiser in our town was a +man who could recite Bryant’s poem, “To a Water +Fowl,” with his eyes shut. I think I could safely challenge +many famous poultrymen to recite even one verse +of that poem, yet who would say that he would not be +a better poultryman and a better man if he could carry +in his heart a few verses of that poem?

+ +
+
+
+
“There is a Power whose care
+
Teaches thy way along that pathless coast.”
+
+
+
...
+
+
+
“He who from zone to zone,
+
Guides through the boundless sky thy certain flight,
+
In the long way which I must tread alone,
+
Will lead my steps aright.”
+
+
+
+ +

I had recited Longfellow’s “Resignation” in school. +I gave it about as a parrot would, but on the frosty side +of the old barn one verse shoved itself into my little +brain:

+ +
+
+
+
“Let us be patient;
+
These severe afflictions
+
Not from the ground arise;
+
But oftentimes celestial benedictions
+
Assume this dark disguise.”
+
+
+
+ +

Just think of that, a “celestial benediction”—it +was a great thing for a boy to think about. I looked[6] +both words up in the dictionary and got, perhaps, half +of their meaning. In all our town there seemed to be +no one except our old minister to come around on the +frosty side of the barn with comfort or promise, but +this celestial benediction which the poet told about got +right to you. It might even live under that awful +pile of wood which I was to saw, and it would be worth +the job of sawing it if I could find such a thing under +the pile. I heard people speak of a “nigger in the +woodpile” in terms of reproach, but a celestial benediction +down under the wood was certainly entitled to all +respect. I did not fully understand it, or what it meant, +but it got into me and stayed there, where the multiplication +table or the rule of square root never would +remain. My belief is that if I had committed to memory +in place of that poem some excellent classroom lecture +at college I should have become a little anarchist, +and gone through life pushing such people as I could +reach toward the frosty side of the barn. As it was, +that poem, repeated over and over, made me vow as +a child that if I ever could influence or direct the lives +of farmers I would do my best to see that they lived and +did their work on the sunny side of the barn.

+ +

In my day children were brought up on “the Scriptures +and a stick,” both well applied, and yet all these +“lectures and lickings” never stuck in my life as did +the noble poetry we read in school, and the few pictures +which hung on the walls of the home. There is a curious +thing about some of these pictures. I am told of a +case where two boys in the Tennessee mountains volunteered +for the navy. Their mountain home was as far[7] +removed from the ocean as it well could be. They had +never seen even a large pond. For three generations +not one of their ancestors had ever seen the salt water. +Yet these boys would not listen to any call for the army, +but they demanded a place in the navy. The story +came to an officer in a nearby camp, and he became interested +and visited that home. Both father and mother +were puzzled over the action of their boys, and they +could not understand why Henry and William had demanded +the ocean. As the officer turned away he noticed +hanging on the wall in the living-room of that +house the crude picture of a ship under full sail and on +an impossible blue ocean. It had come into that family +years before, wrapped around a package of goods, and +mother had hung it on the wall. From their youth those +boys had grown up with that picture before them, and +it had decided their lives. It was stronger than the +influence of father and mother—they could not overcome +it. I speak of that in order that you men and +women with children of your own may understand how +the dreams, the poetry, the visions of youth may prove +stronger influences than any of the science, the wisdom, +or the fine examples you may put before your +little ones.

+ +

On the wall of our old living-room at home was a +chromo entitled “Joseph and His Brethren.” It was +an awful work of art. It showed a group of men putting +a boy down into a hole in the ground. It would have +made the head of an art department weep in misery, +and yet it affected me deeply. I used to stand and +study it, with the result that at least one chapter of the[8] +Bible gave me great joy, and that was the story of +Joseph and his brothers. That story helped to keep me +sweet and hopeful on the frosty side of the barn, for +I reasoned it all out as I worked. Here, I thought, was +a farm boy. He did rather more than his share of living +on the frosty side, and see what he came to. I +used to picture Joseph in mind as he came walking +over the desert carrying his father’s instructions about +the sheep and the management of the farm. His +brothers saw him coming, and they said among themselves, +“Behold, this dreamer cometh.” You see, even +in those days, practical men could not understand the +value of a dreamer, a poet or a thinker as the first aid to +practical agriculture. I have no doubt that Joseph the +dreamer often forgot to water the sheep. I have no +doubt but that they got away from him when he was +herding them, and so his brothers quickly got rid of +him, and they sent him off to the place where they +thought dreams never came true. And that is where +they made their mistake, and the same mistake is often +made in these days by other practical farmers, for +dreams that are based on faith and pure ambition always +come true. If Joseph had not been a dreamer, +carrying the ideals of his childhood into Egypt, we can +readily understand which side of the barn his brothers +would have gone to when they appeared before him +later. But Joseph was a man who remembered the +dreams and the hopes of his childhood kindly; he gave +those brothers the sunniest side of the barn, and by doing +so he made himself one of the great men in history.

+ +

You may surely take it from me that at some time in[9] +your life, if you prove worth the salt you have eaten, +your State or your country will call you up before the +judgment seat, and will say to you:

+ +

“I demand your life. In your youth you had ideals +of manhood and of service. I have trained you and +given you knowledge. I now demand your life as proof +that your old ideals were true.”

+ +

That comes to all men not only on the battlefield, but +in all the humble walks of life—the farm, the factory, +the shop, wherever men are put at labor, and it means a +life given to service, the use of power and knowledge, +in order that men less fortunate may live on the sunny +side of the barn.

+ +

We had something of an illustration of this when +America entered the great war. Many of us felt honestly +that our boys were not quite up to the standard. +We thought they were a little lazy, inefficient or +spoiled, because they did not think as we did about +labor and the necessity for work. We did not realize +what the trouble was, and so we generally charged it to +the influence of mother’s side of the family. We could +not understand that by education, training and example, +we had simply taught those boys only the material and +selfish side of life. They demanded unconsciously more +of its poetry and romance and thus the war swept +them away in a blaze of glory. We suddenly woke up +to find that under the inspiration of an unselfish desire, +our lazy and careless boys had become the finest soldiers +this world has ever seen. They were made so through +the power of poetry and imagination, for “making the +world safe for democracy” is only another name for[10] +making the great life offering in order that helpless +men and women may know the comfort and glory of +living on the “sunny side of the barn.”

+ +

I think I have lived long enough and under conditions +which fit me to know human nature better than +most men know books. Our present improved man +came from a savage. Originally man was a confirmed +dweller on the frosty side of the barn. As human +life has developed, the tendency has been for this +man to run for a warm place on the sunny side. In +order to get there, his natural tendency has been to +crowd some weaker brother back into the frost. We may +not like to admit it, but as we have crowded poetry +and imagination and love out of agricultural education, +we have lost track of the thought that there is one +great duty we owe to society for the great educational +machine she has given us. That one great life duty +is to try to carry some more unfortunate brother out of +the frost into the comfort of the sunny side of the barn. +We are too much in the habit of trying to leave this +practical betterment to the Legislature or to the Federal +Government, when it never can be done unless we do it +ourselves, as a part of human sacrifice. You must remember +that in spite of all our scientific work, the world +is still largely fed and clothed by the plain farmers, +whose stock in trade is largely human nature and instinct. +The shadow which undoubtedly lies over farming +today is due to the fact that too many of these +men and women feel that they are booked hopelessly to +spend their lives on the frosty side of the barn.

+ +

It is in large part a mental trouble, a feeling of deep[11] +resentment, such as in a very much smaller way came +to me as a little boy, for you will see how real and true +are the ideals of childhood. The great aim of all education +should be to find some way of putting poetry +and imagination into the hearts of the men and women +who are now on the frosty side of the barn. There is +more in this than any mere increase of food production, +or increase of land values. A great industrial revolution +is facing this nation. Such things have come before +again and again. They were always threatening, and +every time they appeared strong men and women feared +for the future of their country. Yet in times past these +dark storms have always broken themselves against a +solid wall of contented and prosperous freeholders. +They always disappear and turn into a gentle, reviving +rain when they strike the sunny side of the barn. That +is where the errors and mistakes of society are taken +apart and remade, better than ever before, by skilled +and happy workmen. It is on the frosty side of the +barn, in the unhappy shadows, where men tear down +and destroy without attempting to rebuild, for there can +be no human progress except that which is finally built +upon contentment and faith. Men and women must be +brought to the sunny side of the barn if this nation is to +remain the land of opportunity, and such men and +women as we have here must do the work.

+ +

If you ask me how this is to be done, I can only go +back to childhood once more for an illustration. I know +all the characters of the following little drama. We +will call the children John, Mary and Bert. John and +Mary were relatives of the old gentleman who owned[12] +the farm, and they came for a long visit. Bert was +the farm boy, put out to work on that farm for his +board and clothes, one of the thousands of war orphans +who represented a great legacy which the Civil War +had left to this country. John and Mary were bright +and petted and pampered. You know how such smart +city children can usually outshine and outbluff a farm +boy. The woman of the house, a thrifty New England +soul, decided that this was her chance to get the woodshed +filled with dry wood, and so she put the three children +at it. Before Bert knew what was going on, those +city children had it all “organized.” Bert was to +work on the frosty side of the barn where the woodpile +was, and he was to saw and split all the wood. John +played until Bert had split an armful, then John carried +it about two rods to the shed, where Mary took it +out of his arms and piled it inside. I have lived some +years since that time, and I have seen many enterprises +come and go, and if that arrangement is not typical of +thousands of cases which show the relation between the +farmer and middleman and handler, I have simply lived +and observed in vain, and Bert represented the +farmer.

+ +

And the distribution of the rewards received in exchange +for that combination was still more typical. +Now and then the woman would think the woodshed was +not filling very fast, so that some form of bribery to +labor was necessary. She would then come out with +half a pie, or a few cookies, to stimulate the work. +Strange to say, the distribution of this prize was always +given to the girl. She was doing that absolutely useless[13] +work of piling the wood, and yet the pie and the cookies +were handed to her for distribution. For a great many +centuries, it must be said that the farmer never had +much of a chance with the town man when it came to +receiving favors from the ladies, and in the distribution +of that pie John and Mary usually ate about seven-eighths +of it, and handed the balance to Bert, for even +then those city children had formed the idea that a +silent, unresisting farm boy was made to be the beast +of burden, fit for the frosty side of the barn.

+ +

And just as happens in other and larger forms of +business, there were, in that toy performance of a great +drama, forms of legislative bribery for middlemen and +farmers. Those children were told that if they would +hurry and get the woodshed filled up, they would receive +pleasure and a present. John and Mary, as middlemen, +might go to the circus, while the boy on the saw would +receive a fine present. This would be a book which +told how a splendid little boy sawed 15 cords of wood +in two weeks, and then asked his mother if he couldn’t +please go down the road and saw five cords more for a +poor widow woman during his play time. Ever since +the world began, that seems to have been the idea of +agricultural legislation. The real direct pleasure and +profit have gone to John and Mary, while to Bert has +gone the promise of an education which will teach him +how to work a little harder. Looking back over the +world’s history, the most astonishing thing to me is that +society has failed to see that the best investment of +public money and power is that made closest up to the +ground, the great mother of us all. Other interests have[14] +received it, largely because they have been able to organize +and make a stronger appeal to the imagination.

+ +

Of course in every drama of human life there has to +be a crisis where the actors come to blows, and it happened +so in this case. There came one day particularly +cold, and with a special run of hard and knotty wood +to be sawed. That gave John and Mary more time for +play, and put an extra job on Bert. I cannot tell just +how the battle started; it may have been caused by +Mary, for a thousand times in the history of the world +the relations between two boys and a girl have upset +all calculations and changed the course of history. Or +it may be that the spirit of injustice boiled up in +the heart of that boy on the saw, and swept away his +peaceful disposition. At any rate, when John found +fault because he did not work faster, Bert dropped his +saw and tackled the tormentor. If I am to tell the +truth, I am forced to admit that there was no science +at all about the battle which that boy put up for the +rights of farm labor. He should, I suppose, have imitated +some of the old heroes described by Homer and +Virgil, but as the rage of battle came over him, the most +effective fighter he could think of was the old ram, and +I regret to say that he lowered his head, and, without +regard for science, butted John in the stomach and +knocked him down. Then he sat on his enemy, took +hold of his hair with both hands, and proceeded to +pound his head on the frosty ground, while Mary danced +about, not caring to interfere, but evidently waiting to +bestow her favors upon the victor. And just as John +was getting ready to call “enough” the kitchen door[15] +opened and out came the woman of the house with the +old minister.

+ +

She certainly looked like a very stern picture of justice +as she peered over her spectacles at the boys on the +ground, and the three children were arraigned before +her. “What shall I do with these children? I shall +never get this job done. I have spent nearly five pies on +these children already, and see how little they have +piled, and here they are fighting over it. I think the +best thing I can do is to whip that lazy boy at the saw.”

+ +

I wish you could have seen the face of the old minister +as he rolled up his wrinkles and prepared to answer. +It was worth a good deal to see how he looked out of the +corner of his eye at the boy on the saw.

+ +

“My good friend,” said he, “this is not a case for +prayer or for punishment, or for investigation, or for +education. It is a case for an adjustment of labor and +pie. That boy on the saw has been doing practically all +of the work, and getting almost nothing of the reward. +He is discouraged, and I don’t blame him. You cannot +crowd more work out of him with a stick. Move him +out into the sun, give him the pie, and let him eat his +share and distribute the rest. Make the other boy split +and carry and pile all that wood, and put that girl at +washing windows. The closer you put the pie up to +the sawbuck, the more wood you will have cut.

+ +

Now tell me, you scientists and you wise men, if that +does not tell the whole story. It is the pie of life, or the +fair distribution of that pie, which leads men and +women to the sunny side of the barn. What we need +most of all in this country is some power like that of[16] +the old minister, who can drive that thought home to +human society, and it will not be driven home until our +leaders and our teachers have in their hearts more of +the poetry and the imagination which lead men and +women to attempt the impossible and work it out. You +will not agree with me when I say that in a majority of +the farm homes today there is greater need of the gentle, +humanizing influence of poetry and vision than of the +harder and sterner influence of science and sharp business +practice. As the years go on you will come to see +that I am right.

+ +

I know that is one of the hardest things on earth for +some of us to understand, for modern education has led +us away from the thought. In our grasp for knowledge +we have tried to substitute science entirely for sentiment, +forgetting that the really essential things of life +cannot stand close analysis, because they are held together +by faith. In reaching out after power we have +tried too hard to imitate the shrewd scheming of the +politician and the big interests. We have failed thus +far because we have neglected too many of our natural +weapons. Over 200 years ago Andrew Fletcher wrote:

+ +

“I knew a very wise man who believed that if a man +were permitted to make all the ballads, he need not care +who should make the laws of a nation.”

+ +

Andrew Fletcher’s wise man knew what he was talking +about. Very likely some of you older people can +remember the famous Hutchinson family in the days +before the Civil War. I have seen the New Hampshire +farmhouse where they were raised. It was just a group +of plain farmers who traveled about the country singing[17] +simple little songs about freedom. That plain farm +family did more to make the American people see the +sin of slavery than all the statesmen New England +could muster or all the laws she could make. There +was little science and less art about their singing, but +it was in the language of the common people and they +understood it.

+ +
+
+
+
“The ox bit his master;
+
How came that to pass?
+
The ox heard his master say
+
‘All flesh is grass!’”
+
+
+
+ +

There came a crisis in the Civil War when soldier +and statesman stood still wondering what to do next, +for they were powerless without the spirit of the people. +Then William Cullen Bryant wrote the great song in +which he poured out the burning thought of the people:

+ +
+
+
+
“We’re coming, Father Abraham,
+
Three hundred thousand more,
+
From Mississippi’s winding stream
+
And from New England’s shore.
+
We leave our plows and workshops,
+
Our wives and children dear,
+
With hearts too full for utterance,
+
But with a silent tear.
+
+
+
“We’re coming, we’re coming, the Union to restore;
+
We’re coming, Father Abraham, three hundred thousand more!”
+
+
+
+ +

Had it not been for such songs and the spirit they +aroused the Civil War never could have been won. We +now understand that during the great war the French[18] +army was at the point of mutiny, and was saved not +by stern discipline but by a renewal of its spiritual +power. I think it will be as hard as for a man to try +and lift himself by his boot straps to try to put farming +into its proper place through science and material prosperity +alone. We need poets to give us songs and playwrights +to put our story in such pictures that the world +must listen to it and understand. The one great thing +which impels us to work on and fight is the hope that +the property which we may leave behind us will be safe +and put to reasonable use. Some of us may leave cash +and lands; others can give the world only a family of +children, but at heart our struggle is to see that this +heritage may be made safe.

+ +

For most of us make a great mistake in locating +a storage place for the heritage which we hope to leave +to the future. We work and we toil; we struggle to +improve conditions; we strive to capitalize our worry +and our work into money and into land in order that +our children may carry on our work. Have you ever +stopped to think who holds the future of all this? Many +of you no doubt will say that the future of this great +nation lies in the banks and vaults of the cities where +money is piled up mountains high. We have all acted +upon that principle too long, digging wealth from the +soil and then sending it into the town for investment, +until we have come to think that our future lies there. +We are wrong; it is a mistake. The future of this land, +and all it means to us, lies in the hands of little children, +who are playing on the city streets or in the open +fields of the country, and it is not so much in their[19] +hands as in the pictures which are being printed on their +little minds and souls. And this future will be safer +with poetry and imagination than with the multiplication +table alone.

+ +

I know about this from my own start in life. I was +expected to be satisfied with work until I was 21, and +then have a suit of clothes and a yoke of oxen. One +trouble with the farmers of New England was that +they thought this a sufficient outfit for their boys. I +think I might have fallen in with that plan and contented +my life with it had it not been for a crude picture +which hung in the shop where we pegged shoes. It was +a poor color scheme, a perfect daub of art, in which +some amateur artist had tried to express a thought +which was too large for his soul. A bare oak tree, with +most of its branches gone, was framed against the Winter +sky. It was evening; a few stars had appeared, and +the sky was full of color. The artist had tried to arrange +the stars and the sky colors so that they represented +a crude American flag, with the oak tree serving +as the staff. His great unexpressed thought was that +at the close of the Civil War God had painted His +promise of freedom on the sky in the coloring of that +flag. As a child, that crude picture became a part of +my life. I have never been able to forget the glory of +it, as I have forgotten the meanness, the poverty, the +narrow blindness of our daily lives, so that all through +the long and stormy years, wherever I have walked, I +have seen that flag upon the sky, and I have waited +hopefully for the coming of the sunrise of that day +when, through the work of real education, when with the[20] +help of such men and such women as are here today, +every hopeless man, every lonely woman, every melancholy +child upon a sad and desolate hill farm, may feel +the thrill of opportunity, and the joy and the glory of +living upon the sunny side of the barn.

+ +
+ +
+ +

[21]

+ +

A HOPE FARM SERMON

+ +
+ +

No use talking, the best part of a vacation is getting +home. We were all sorry to leave Cape Cod. To tell +you the truth duty seemed to be stuck full of thorns a +foot long as we looked back at it from the easy bed of a +loafer on his vacation. No wonder the poor little Bud +cried when our good host kissed her good-bye. We +looked at her with much the same expression as that on +the face of the woman who missed an important train +by half a minute and listened to the forcible remark +of a man who was also left! We got over that, however. +The harness was put on our shoulders so gently +that we hardly felt it, and here we are again with a soft +pad of gentle and happy memories to put where the rub +comes hardest. Everything was all O. K. at home. +Grandmother was in good spirits, the Chunk reported +good sales, and the weather had been fair for farm work. +The boys had the corn all cleaned up and the weeds +mostly cut. The strawberries have been transplanted; +the alfalfa clipped off; the squashes have grown into a +perfect tangle of vines, the sweet potatoes look well, +and there is no blight in the late white ones! The children +found nine new little pigs and 30 new chickens +waiting them. Yes! Yes! It was a happy homecoming. +I climbed the hill on Sunday and looked off +over the old familiar valley. There were the same +glorious old hills with the shadows chasing along them,[22] +the little streams stealing down through their fringes +of grass and bushes, the cultivated fields, and the homes +of neighbors peeping out through the orchards! Surely +home is a goodly place after all. Other places are good +to come away from, but home is the place to go to!

+ +

Now, I know that many of my readers are in trouble. +I am, and every mail brings news from people who are +carrying crosses and facing hard duties with more or +less bravery. There are women left alone on the farm, +striving to drag a heavy heart through life. Men have +seen wife and child pass away. Others have seen hopes +and ambitions crushed out. This season has been hard +for many. I will quote from a letter just at hand from +central New York, where flood and storm have scarred +the hillsides and ruined crops:

+ +

“One neighbor hung himself; one says he shall have +an auction and go to the old ladies’ home; another had +the blues until he cried.”

+ +

Now, in spite of all the talk we have of the Nation’s +great prosperity, I know that there are thousands of +sad hearts in country homes, sad because they have seen +the cherished things of life and the work of self-denying +years swept out of their grasp by a power which they +could neither master nor comprehend. The picture of +a strong man dropping his head upon the table and crying +like a child is the saddest vision that can rise before +our eyes. Farm life has its tragic side, and the sadness +of it would crush us down at times if we would +permit it to do so. No wonder men and women grow +despondent when with each year comes a little more +of the living blight which slowly destroys hope and[23] +faith in one’s physical ability to master the secret of +happiness. I do not blame men and women who give +way to despondency under pressure of griefs which +have staggered me. I only regret that they cannot +realize that for most of the afflicted of middle years +the only true help is a moral one.

+ +

I feel like repeating that last sentence, though it +may come like the application of a liniment I knew as +a boy. The old man who brought me up invented a certain +“lotion.” Whenever I cut or burned my flesh that +lotion bottle was hauled out, a hen’s feather inserted +and a liberal allowance smeared over the wound. It +was like rubbing liquid fire on the flesh, but it did pull +the smart out and carry it far away. I used to imagine +that the “lotion” gathered the pain all into a lump +and pulled it out by the roots with one quick twitch. +One of the most helpful books I have ever read is a little +volume entitled “Deafness and Cheerfulness.” I read +it over and over, and I wish that every deaf man or +friend of a deaf man could have it. I find in this little +book the following message which I commend to all +who feel their courage giving way:

+ +

“The noblest dealing with misfortune is in manly +silence to bear it; the next to the meanest is in feebleness +to weep over it; the wholly unpardonable is to +ask others to weep also.”

+ +

With the first and third of these propositions I fully +agree. It is not always a sign of weakness for a man +to get off into solitude somewhere and find relief in +tears. When the tear glands are completely dried up +the man loses an element of character which all the[24] +iron in his will cannot replace. But “manly silence” +is the “noblest dealing with misfortune”—and also +the hardest. It is human to cry out and complain at +the pain of what we call injustice, but if the child is +human should not the grown man be something more? +What are years and the burning balm of experience +given us for if not to enable us to rise up nearer to +divine strength? As I look about me it occurs that most +of us who have reached middle life or beyond have +grown unconsciously away from childhood and youthful +strength. We somehow feel that people ought to regard +us as others did 25 years ago. The fat man of +45 is no longer the young sprout of 20, though he may +think so. If I am not mistaken, one great trouble with +many of us is the fact that we crave and beg for the +things that go with youth when in reality we are grown-up +men and women! It is our duty now to face life +and its problems, not with the careless hope of youth, +but with the sober and abiding faith that should come +with mature years. Run over a child’s ambitions and, +after his short grief, his spirits rise again for the next +opportunity. The man’s hopes are shaken by repeated +defeat, and hope of physical victory finds itself caged +at every turn by former defeat. We may grieve or +despond over this and play the child; or we may act +the man, raise our hopes and ideals above the range +of former defeat, and find comfort and courage in doing +the things which shame infirmity and affliction. I +know some of you will say that this complacent man +may moralize—but give him a touch of trouble, and how +he would whine! I hope not! Trouble has taken many[25] +a mouthful out of us but, if I thought any honest friend +really meant that, it would be the greatest trouble of +all. I repeat that the greatest comfort to the despondent +must be a moral one, yet the riding of some harmless +hobby helps one to walk with fortitude. Let a man say +to himself that he will study and work to breed the +finest pigs or raise the finest strawberries or master +some science or public question, and he will find strength +and comfort in his work! I’ll promise not to attempt +any more preaching for a good while if you will let me +end this little sermon with a quotation from Whittier:

+ +
+
+
+
“Soon or late to all our dwellings come the specters of the mind;
+
Doubts and fears and dread forebodings, in the darkness undefined.
+
Round us throng the grim projections of the heart and of the brain,
+
And our pride of strength is weakness, and the cunning hand is vain.
+
In the dark we cry like children; and no answer from on high
+
Breaks the crystal spheres of silence, and no white wings downward fly.
+
But the heavenly help we pray for, comes to faith and not to sight,
+
And our prayers themselves drive backward all the spirits of the night.”
+
+
+
+ +
+ +
+ +

[26]

+ +

GRANDMOTHER

+ +
+ +

The last celebration of Thanksgiving was about the most +startling that any of the Hope Farmers remember. I +have passed this holiday under quite varied conditions. +“Boy” on a New England farm and in a boarding-house, +cattle herder on a Colorado ranch, sawyer in a +lumber camp, teacher in a country school district, hired +man and book agent on a Michigan farm, “elocutionist” +in a dramatic company, “professor of modern languages” +(with a slim grip on English alone) in a young +ladies’ seminary, printer’s devil in a Southern newspaper +office, ditcher in a swamp, and other capacities +too numerous to mention. A man may perhaps lay +claim to a bit of helpful philosophy if he can find some +fun in all such days and carry along in his mental pocket +“much to be thankful for.” He is sure to come to a +time in life when these “treasures of memory” will be +very useful. I would not refer to family matters that +might well be marked “private” and locked away +with the skeleton in the closet if I did not know that +the plain, simple matters of family record are things +that all the world have in common.

+ +

A pirate or a man trying to hide himself might have +seen virtues in the dull, misty fog that settled upon the +city the night before Thanksgiving. Grandmother had +been slowly failing through the day. The night brought +her greater pain than ever. All through these long[27] +months we had been able to keep from her the real +nature of her disease. I took it upon myself to keep the +children happy. If we grown-ups found it hard to be +thankful we would see that the little folks put out +enough thanks for the whole family. I took them down +to the market to pick out a turkey! We had a great +time, and finally found a turkey fat enough. The +market man gave each of the children a handful of +nuts—and they now want Mother to give him all her +trade. They went home fairly radiant with happiness. +Was it not better for them to go to sleep with the +pleasant side of the day in their hearts rather than the +shadow which the rest of us could feel near us?

+ +

The morning came dark and dismal. It didn’t seem +like Thanksgiving as the Bud and I went after the doctor. +The clerks and professional people seemed to be +taking a holiday, but the drivers, the diggers and heavy +workmen were at their jobs as usual. The streets were +filled with children dressed up in ridiculous costumes, +wearing masks or with faces blackened. These urchins +went about begging money from passers-by. Our little +folks were rather shocked at this way of celebrating +Thanksgiving. Where this ridiculous mummery came +from or how it crept into a Thanksgiving celebration is +more than I can say. It may be as close as a city child +can come to thanking Nature for a bountiful harvest! +Charlie and his family came in from the farm, and +Jack came from his school. Grandmother made a +desperate struggle and was finally able to sit up so +that her children and grandchildren might be about her. +As the children grew restless in the house I took them[28] +out and we walked along the river. My mind was busy +with other matters relating to other days, but the little +folks, happily, saw only the great bright side of the +future. Their past was too small to cast any shadow. +We went as far as Grant’s Tomb and passed through +the room where the great general’s remains are lying. +As we passed in, the Graft and Scion saw the men take +off their hats and they did the same.

+ +

“Why do they make you take off your hat?” asked +the Graft, when we came out.

+ +

I tried to explain to him that this was one of the +things that people should not be made to do. They +should do it because they wanted to show their respect +or reverence. I doubt if I made him understand it, +for when a boy is hungry and other boys are playing +football in a nearby vacant lot even the gentlest sermon +loses its point. Our dinner was such a success +that we did not have chairs enough to go around. The +children had to sit on boxes and baskets. A taste of +everything from turkey down went in to Grandmother, +but she could eat little. The plates came back again +and again until the Hope Farm man was obliged to +say:

+ +

“Well, Mother, I shall have to turn this turkey over +after all.”

+ +

He had not only to turn it over but scrape many of +the bones clean. The farm folks finally went home +and Jack too was obliged to go. Happily the little folks +were tired out and they were asleep early. About two +o’clock Mother woke me. She did not do it before, +because it might have alarmed Grandmother, who did[29] +not, I think, clearly understand her true condition. +There was apparently no pain or struggle at the end. +We noticed that her face lighted up with a strange, +puzzled look, of surprise and wonder—and well it might +when one is called upon to lay down the troubles and +toil of such a life as hers in the dim, mysterious country +which one must die to enter.

+ +

Perhaps the hardest part of it all was to tell the +children about it. They must have known that some +strange thing was happening. They woke up early and +saw the undertaker passing through the room. Then +Mother got them together and told them that poor +Grandmother had suffered so long that God pitied her +and had taken her to Him. The little folks sat with +thoughtful faces for a while and then one of them said +with wide-open eyes:

+ +

“Is Grandmother dead then?”

+ +

And so the body of poor Grandmother passed away +from us while her spirit and memory passed deeper +than ever into the lives of the Hope Farm folks. Life +with her had ceased to be comfortable. It was merely +a steady, hopeless struggle against pain and depression. +Mother was able to go through these long months calmly +and hopefully because she knows that her mother had +every service that love could render. It is with that +thought in mind that I feel like saying a solemn word +to those whom I have never met, yet who seem to be as +close as personal friends can be. Do not for an instant +begrudge the money, the time or toil which you may +spend upon those of your loved ones who need your help. +That is a part of the cross which you must carry cheerfully[30] +or reject. Do not let those whom you serve see +that it is a cross, but glorify it from day to day. It +is not merely a part of hard, cold duty, but the vital +force in the development of character. It may be that +I am now talking to someone who is putting personal +comfort above the self-denial which goes with the sacred +trust which God has put into our lives. Where will the +flag of “comfort” lead them when the discomforting +days come? A conscience is a troublesome thing at best, +but one that has been gently and truly developed through +self-sacrifice is a better companion than the barbed finger +of trouble thrust into the very soul at last by the relentless +hand of fate!

+ +

A novelist could weave a startling romance out of the +plain life record of this typical American woman. She +was born in Massachusetts—coming from the best stock +this country has ever produced. This is not the narrow-eyed, +cent-shaving Yankee, but the children from the +hillside farms who went to the valleys and at the little +water-powers laid the foundations of New England’s +manufacturing. These sturdy people saw clearly into +the future, and as they harnessed and trained the power +of the valley streams they cultivated and restrained +their own powers until the man as well as the machine +became a tremendous force. Honorable misfortune befell +this manufacturing family, but could not crush it. +In those days the boys, under such circumstances, +dropped all their own ambitions and took the first job +that presented itself, without a murmur and with joy +that they could do it. The girls did the same, though +there were few openings for women then outside of[31] +housework and the schoolroom. Grandmother had a +taste for music, and became a music teacher. She +finally secured a position as teacher in a little town in +Mississippi, and in about the year that the Hope Farm +man was born she went into what was then a strange +country for the daughter of a Massachusetts Abolitionist! +What a journey that must have been, before the +Civil War, for a young woman such as Grandmother +was then. The South was in a blaze of excitement, yet +this quiet, gentle Northern girl won the love and respect +of all. There she met the man who was to be her husband—a +young lawyer, able and ambitious, but weighted +down by family cares, political convictions and ill +health. He was a Union man whose family had made +their slaves free and who opposed secession to the last. +Grandmother was married and went to the South just +before the storm broke. What a life that was in the +dreary little town during those years of fighting! Her +husband was at one time drafted into the Confederate +service and sent to the front only to have a surgeon +declare him too feeble and sick for even that desperate +service. He cobbled shoes, leached the soil in old smokehouses +for salt, and “lived” as best he could. Once +he took Grandmother through the lines with a bale of +cotton which he sold to pay passage money to the North. +After the war he was State Senator and Judge under +the patched-up government which followed. Carpetbaggers +and rascals from the North lined their pockets +with gold and brought shame upon their party and torture +and death to the ignorant black men who followed +them. In the midst of this carnival of shame and thieving[32] +Grandmother’s husband never touched a dishonest +dollar and did his best to give character to a despised +and degraded race. Of course he failed, for the race +did not have strength enough to see that what he tried +to offer them was better than the hatred of their old +masters and the dollars which the carpet-baggers held +out. It was not all lost, for when he was buried I am +told that around his grave there was a thick fringe of +white people and back—at a respectful distance—acres +of black, shining faces which betrayed the crude, awkward +stirring of manhood in hearts untrained yet appreciating +true service to country.

+ +

I speak of these things to make my point clear that +Grandmother was a woman capable of supporting her +husband through these trials and still capable of holding +the love of those who opposed him. In the face of +an opposition so frightful that few of us can realize it +this quiet, unflinching woman kept steadily on, respected +and trusted by all. She took up her burdens without +complaint, hid her troubles in her heart, and walked +bravely on in her quiet, humble way, until at last she +found a safe haven with her children. A true and sincere +Christian woman she lived and acted out her faith +and did her life’s duty with dignity and cheerfulness. +The little folks as they sit beneath the tree at Hope +Farm and talk of Grandmother will have only blessed +memories of her.

+ +
+ +
+ +

[33]

+ +

LAUGHTER AND RELIGION

+ +
+ +

I have learned to have deep sympathy for the man who +cannot laugh. He may have great learning or power or +skill or wealth, but if fate has denied him a keen sense +of humor he is like a McIntosh apple with the glorious +flavor left out. Most of the deaf are denied what we +may call “the healing balm of tears.” Unless there +chance to be some volcanic eruption of the heart they +must go in dry-eyed sorrow through their years. Yet, +if they are able to laugh it is probable that the deaf +see more of the ludicrous side of life than do those who +have full hearing. It comes to be amusing to notice +how men and women strive and worry over the poor non-essential +things of conversation, and waste time and +strength trying to make others understand simple things +which the deaf man comes to know at a glance. Those +who are so unfortunate that they are forced to hear all +the litter and waste-basket stuff of conversation may +wonder why the inability to hear may act as a torture +to the tender heart. They do not know how closely +sound is related to the emotions. They cannot understand +without losing many of the finer things of life. +Yet, as between the tearless man and the unfortunate +soul who is denied the joy of laughter, the latter is more +deserving of sympathy. One may be nearer insanity +but the other is nearer the gallows.

+ +

One great reason why the negro race has come through[34] +its troubles with reasonable success is because fate has +given the black man the blessed privilege of laughter. +Many a time when other races would have gone out to +rob and kill the black man has been able to sing or +laugh his troubles away. So, as between the man who +cannot weep or lash himself into a rage and he who cannot +laugh, the latter is a far more dangerous citizen and +far more to be pitied.

+ +

I suppose I ought to be an authority on this subject, +as some years ago I was in the business of trying to +inoculate some very serious and sad-minded people with +the germ of laughter. We had some specimens so +tough and so hard-boiled that it was a difficult matter +to start them. I was stranded in a farm neighborhood +in a Western State working as hired man through a very +dull winter. Back among the hills, off the main roads +when prices are low and crops are poor, you strike a +gloom and social stagnation which the modern town man +can hardly realize. I did my work by day and at night +went about to churches and schoolhouses “speaking +pieces.” We called those gloomy and discouraged people +together and tried to make them laugh.

+ +

I remember one such entertainment held in a country +schoolhouse far back in the mud of a January thaw. +The dimly lighted room was crowded with sad-faced, discouraged +men and women to whom life had become a +tragedy through dwelling constantly upon their own +troubles. At intervals during my entertainment two +sad-faced women and a couple of men who would have +made a success as undertakers at any funeral sang doleful +songs about beautiful women who died young or[35] +children who proved early in life that they were too +good for this world. During one of these intervals +a farmer led me outdoors for a conference. Your modern +artist can command a salary which enables him to +ignore criticism, but in that neighborhood the financial +manager was the boss.

+ +

“See here now,” said the farmer, “we hired you to +come here and make us laugh. Why don’t you do it? +I’ve got my hired man in there. He’s all ready to go on +a spree and he will do it if you don’t make him laugh. +We have paid you $2.50 to come here and speak. That +means $1.25 an hour or $12.50 for a 10-hour day. No +other man in this neighborhood gets such wages. It’s +big money, now go back and earn it. Make that man +laugh! It’s a moral obligation for you to do it.”

+ +

There was the hired man, a great hulk of humanity +feeling that he would be a hero, the champion of the +neighborhood, if he could hold humor at bay. When I +went back into the schoolroom the teacher stood up by +the stove and said it was the unanimous request of the +audience that I should read or recite the “Raven,” by +Edgar Allan Poe. That was not exactly in my line, but +who is large enough to resist such an appeal? Years +before I had heard a great actor in Boston recite the +poem, and with the noble courage of youth I started the +best imitation I could muster. No one, not even the +author, ever considered the “Raven” as a humorous +poem, but it struck the hired man that way. I had +cracked jokes in and out of dialect. I had “made +faces” and played the clown generally without affecting +the hired man. Yet, at the third repetition of[36] +“Quoth the Raven—Nevermore!” the hired man exploded +with a roar that shook the building, and the rest +of the entertainment was one long laugh for him. The +rest of the audience joined with him, and long after the +meeting closed and the lanterns twinkled down the dark +and muddy roads, you could hear roars of laughter from +the farmers, as they journeyed home. Just what there +was about the “Raven” to explode that man I have +never known. It changed his life. It broke a spring +somewhere inside of him and his jokes and roars of +laughter changed the whole social life of that neighborhood. +The minister told me in the Spring that his +people had received a great spiritual uplifting during +the Winter. He gave no credit whatever to Poe and the +hired man.

+ +

That same Winter I went to a church for another +entertainment. I sat in the pulpit beside the minister +and every time I stopped for breath he would lean over +and whisper:

+ +

Make them laugh! Give them something humorous! +Make them laugh!

+ +

He saw that laughter was religion at such a time. It +was a gloomy night. The people were sad and discouraged. +Their religion was a torment to them at the +time. Nothing but laughter could cure them, and I +did my best with discouraging results. I will confess +that I lost faith for once in my life and quit trying. +There was one intelligent and prosperous farmer in the +front pew. He seemed to be a leader and I directed +my efforts straight to him. It came to be the one desire +of my life to make that solemn-faced man laugh, and he[37] +would not do it. It seemed to me as if he sat there +with his solemn face a little bent forward, like some +wise old horse listening to the chatter of a young colt. +I could not stir him and I confess that I quit ingloriously +and “took up the collection.”

+ +

But, when we all went out on the church steps while +lanterns were being lighted and the boys brought up the +horses I saw my solemn-faced friend talking with another +farmer.

+ +

“John,” said the farmer as he snapped down the +globe of his lantern, “how did you like the show?”

+ +

“Well, Henry, it was good all the way through. I am +so sore around my ribs that I’m going home to rub +liniment on my sides.”

+ +

“How’s that?”

+ +

“Why, Henry, that young feller was so funny that +I never come so nigh to laughing in the House of God +as I done tonight. When I get home out of sight of the +elder, I am going to stand right up on my hind-legs and +holler.”

+ +
+ +
+ +

[38]

+ +

A DAY IN FLORIDA

+ +
+ +

A man told me last week that Florida was too dull for +him. He would rust out. There was “more life and +human nature on Broadway, New York, in 15 minutes +than in a week of Florida.” So I thought I would see +how much “real human nature” the sun could observe +as Putnam County revolved beneath his eye.

+ +

As I came outdoors the sun was bright with hardly +a cloud in the sky. The mercury stood at about 65 +degrees. Most of the bloom had fallen from the orange +trees and the young fruit had begun to form, while the +new leaves showed their light green against the darker +old leaves. On the tree by the gate, there were peaches +as large as walnuts. A drove of half-wild hogs from the +woods went slowly along the village street, with one +eye open for food and the other watching for a possible +hole in a fence through which they might crawl into a +grove or garden. For while no one seems to think it +worth while to bolt or even shut a house door at night +except for warmth, there must be barbed wire around +every growing thing that a hog could fancy. Two red +hens with their broods of chickens ran about under the +orange trees. In front of the house I found a group of +“redheads and towheads” gathered around a fisherman +who carried a fertilizer sack. He had caught three +young alligators and the children were buying them. +They finally got the three for a dollar, and they intend[39] +taking the hideous things back to New Jersey to “raise” +them. You may yet see an improved breed of Hope +Farm alligator. Finally the school bell rang and the +older children scattered while the little ones played on. +I have said that the child crop is a vanishing product +in this locality. I understand there are but four white +children of school age—not enough to maintain a school! +There is a broken and abandoned schoolhouse here, but +it has not been occupied for some years. There is a +school for colored children. Our people opened a school +here, but in this locality the State actually does more +for educating colored children than for whites. Think +over what that means and see if Broadway can match +the “human nature” which comes out of such a situation. +Our own children are rosy as flowers. They +ought to be, for they have played out in the sun every +day since December 1. They would have gone barefoot +nine days out of ten, but for sand burrs and hookworms—for +that dread disease gets into the system +through the feet. Florida is surely a Winter paradise +for children and elderly people. As these children pen +up their alligators and separate for school and play, an +old man walks with firm and active steps down the +shaded street to the store. He is 89 years old and is still +planting a garden—very likely for the seventieth time! +On the platform of the store he will meet a group of +men who will sit for hours discussing the weather or +looking off through the pines toward the blue lake. On +Broadway, people are rushing to and fro with set, +anxious faces, tearing their hearts out in the fierce +struggle for food, clothing, amusement and shelter.[40] +There is quite as much “human nature” about these +slow and gentle dreamers, basking in the Florida sun. +In this little place where our folks have wintered there +are nine different men who live alone. There are perhaps +30 voters in this district, and strange as it may +seem they are about evenly divided between the two +great parties. That is because a number of old soldiers +have moved in here. They draw their pensions, work +their gardens or groves and live in peace in this carefree +land. “Human nature?” Ask these old soldiers +with “warfare over,” as the sun goes down and they +look out over the lake, why they ever came to Florida, +and if they are disappointed. If you started a contest +with a prize for the man who can take the longest time +to travel a mile, I could enter several citizens. Yet +it was in Florida that the world’s record for speed with a +motor car was recently made. While some of our neighbors +might consume two hours in going a mile, it was in +Florida that Oldfield drove a car one mile in 27⅓ +seconds. This contest in speed is a very good illustration +of the contrary character of Florida climate and +conditions. Many people fail here because they try to +fit Broadway “human nature” to this balmy gentle +land. You cannot use the same brand!

+ +

The forenoon wore off lazily. Across the road a man +was working a mule on a cultivator—tearing up the +surface of an old orange grove. The only auto in the +town went by over the pine-paved road, the very cough +of the exhaust pipe sounding like a lung rapidly healing +in the soft air. Charlie went by followed by a big +colored man. They carry spades and axes for Charlie[41] +is sexton, and this is one of the rare occasions when a +grave is to be dug, for some old resident is being brought +home to be buried.

+ +

Mother and I had planned to take the train at noon +and go south for a few miles to do some shopping and +look up a “colony” or land boom scheme. So we got +ready and went to the station in ample time. And +there we waited, as everyone else does in this land of +tomorrow. An hour crawled by, and still there was +nothing in sight up the track except the distant pines +and the heat rising from the sands. No one quarrels +with fate in Florida—what is the use? Under similar +circumstances in New Jersey I should have been held in +some way responsible for the delay, but here it did not +matter—if the train did not come, another day would +do. We waited about 100 long minutes and then the +good lady announced that she was going home, as there +would not be time to get around, and home she went, +good-natured and smiling as the Florida sun.

+ +

Let me add that the next day we waited nearly two +hours again and then went home once more, but who +cares whether he goes today or some future “tomorrow”?

+ +

Having been cut out of our trip I became interested +in the funeral. A little group of wagons was drawn up +under the pines waiting for the train. I have said that +an old resident was coming “home”—to be buried by +the side of husband and relatives—in the rough little +cemetery behind the pines. At last, a puff of thick +smoke up the track showed where the dawdling train +was showing the true speed of a hearse. Down the grade[42] +it came, halting with many a wheeze and groan in +front of the little station where the fated box was taken +off. Our little funeral procession was quickly made up. +Uncle Ed drove old Frank ahead with the minister and +the Hope Farm Man as passengers. Then came the +dead in a farm wagon, and half a dozen one-horse teams +straggling on behind. Your funeral on Broadway with +its gilded hearse, black horses and nodding plumes +might be far more inspiring. Who can say, however, that +there was less of “human nature” in this little weatherbeaten +string crawling over the Florida sand? I was +thinking as we went how this dead woman had seen +what seemed like the death of hope in this land. For +right where we were passing, on these dead fields, she +had seen orange groves in full fruitage, and had seen +them all wiped out in a day of frost!

+ +

You would have said that Charlie stood leaning on +his spade beside two great heaps of snow. The soil was +pure white sand, and as they threw it from the grave it +had drifted in over the sides until no dark color showed. +On Broadway there would have been an imposing +procession, the organ pouring out tones that seemed to +carry a message far beyond the comprehension of the +living. Here in this lonely little clearing, my friend +the minister led the way, the little group of mourners +followed, and Charlie and Uncle Ed with a few neighbors +carried the dead. I wish I could have had you +there with me—you who say that life and human nature +crowd into the “lively” places. I wish I could paint +the picture as I saw it.

+ +

The minister and the station agent’s wife began to[43] +sing. One of the men who helped carry the coffin laid +down his load and joined the singers. They wanted me +to make a quartette, but I am no musician and I could +not have made a sound. It was better for me to stand +in the background against a tree, by the side of the +colored man who leaned on his shining spade and bowed +his gray head. For does not the color line fade out at +the grave? I wish you could have seen it, the trio of +singers, the sad group under the pines, the earth piled +up like snowdrifts, the pine tops quivering and moaning, +and the Florida sun streaming over all. I felt the pine +tree against which I leaned tremble as the wind blew +through it. In a tree over us a gray squirrel turned his +ear as if to listen. For gathered around those piles of +glistening sand were men and women who carried all +the world holds of “human nature”—tragedy, despair, +hope, sorrow and peace. Not 100 feet from where I +stood was a row of six little white stones where six old +army comrades were buried. I studied their names, +six men of the army and navy from New York, Maine, +New Hampshire, South Carolina, Vermont and Ohio. +There they lie in the sand, sleeping “the sleep that +knows no waking.” And this woman wanted to be +brought back to this lonely place that she might rest +with her people. “Human nature?” I made a dull +companion as old Frank toiled back with us to the +village.

+ +

Our folks had left the house and I followed them +along the shady path to the lake. The younger people +had been in bathing. They were sitting on the lake +shore, the children were shouting and playing as they[44] +ran about the beach. I am glad they were not at the +funeral. As Mother and I walked slowly back, the little +ones came trailing on, waving branches of palm and +singing. And there over the fence was our famous +gallon-and-a-half cow—easily the most energetic citizen +in the place.

+ +

Night comes quickly in Florida and brings a chill +with it. The sun seems to tumble directly into the west +and to leave little warmth behind. Before we ended +our slow walk home, darkness had fallen and Uncle Ed +had started a grateful fire of logs. As if to demonstrate +the Florida axiom that there are only two absolutely sure +things—death and taxes—we found the county assessor +before the fire. He had reached us on his rounds and +was ready to tell us how much we owed the State. You +will see therefore that the human life in Florida is +much the same as anywhere else only “more so” for +here there is no artifice or straining after effect. Men +and women are naturally human—as they were meant +to be.

+ +
+ +
+ +

[45]

+ +

THE BASEBALL GAME

+ +
+ +

Two strikes, three balls!

+ +

A silence so intense that you could feel it fell upon +60,000 people who saw the umpire put up his hand to +announce the second strike. It was the crisis of the first +baseball game for the world’s championship between +New York and Philadelphia. The great stands were +black with people, and thousands more were perched +upon the rocks which rose above the level in which the +ball grounds are laid out. The boy and I sat on the +bleachers. It was the only place we could get; we sat +there three hours before the game began—and we were +among the last to get in. Of course you will say we +should have been at home picking apples—but without +discussing that I will admit that we were packed away +in that “bleacher” crowd.

+ +

There were some 25,000 of us crowded on those +wooden benches with our feet hanging down. Here +and there in this black mass of hats a spot of lighter +color showed where a woman had crowded in with the +rest. There may have been 100 women in this crowd. +The “stands” where the reserved seats are placed were +bright with women’s gay colors. Our seats were not +reserved, but well “deserved” after our struggle for +them.

+ +

I enjoyed the crowd as much as the game. Many of[46] +you have no doubt read that description in “Ben Hur” +of the motley crowd which surged out to the Crucifixion. +Gibbon describes the masses of humans who attended the +Roman games. The world as known at that time gathered +at these spectacles, yet I doubt if those old-time +hordes could produce the variety of blood or color which +showed within 1,000 feet of where we sat. Within four +feet sat two colored men showing traces of two distinct +African races. The young man on my right was certainly +an Irishman. The fat man, who was wide +enough to fill two seats, was a German. In front an +Italian, behind a Swede, off there a Frenchman, a Spaniard +and even a Chinaman. There was an Arab whose +father ate dates in the desert. The son looked forward +to this date as an oasis in the desert of hard work. +Here were Indians, Japanese, Mexicans, Russians, +Turks—the entire world had poured the blood of its +races into that vast crowd. I do not believe the great +Coliseum at Rome ever held a larger company. Yet this +crowd was different. In the savage hordes of centuries +ago the air was filled with a babel of sound—each race +shrieking in its own language. This vast army of +“fans” thought and spoke in the common languages of +English and baseball. For there is a true language of +baseball. Nothing can be popular unless it acquires a +language of its own. It was an orderly crowd too. +Somehow these waiting men seemed to feel that they had +come to the hush and dignity of a great occasion. You +may laugh at us—you poor unfortunate people who do +not know a home run from a fly catch, but you have +missed a lot of the thrill and joy of life. We feel sorry[47] +for you. To the true baseball crank this game represented +the climax of the year, for here were the best 18 +players in the world ready for the supreme struggle. +So these thousands sat silent and watchful. As you +know, when stirred by passion 60,000 people can give +vent to the most hideous and awesome sound. Yet when +stilled by the thought of what is to come the silence of +this great army is most profound. Now, of course, you +and I may say—what a pity that all these people and +all the energy and money they represent could not be +used for some more useful purpose. I could name half a +dozen things which this country needs. If it were possible +to gather 60,000 people in behalf of any of these +things with the claws of elemental savagery barely covered +with thin cotton gloves no Legislature in the land +would dare refuse the demanded law. That is true, but +it is also true that human nature has not yet evolved +from the point where at the last analysis the physical +power and what it stands for appeals first to the young +and strong. You cannot get away from that, and it +must be considered in all our regrets about the “younger +generation.” We can have anything we want in legislation +and reform whenever we can work up a spirit and +a demand for it which is akin to this baseball feeling! +For in this silent, orderly crowd there was nothing but +cotton over the claws. There was a dignified-looking citizen +not far from us who looked like a fair representative +of the “City of Brotherly Love.” You would choose +him as one of a thousand to take charge of a Sunday +school. Yet when a Philadelphia player raced home +with the first run there came a hoarse cry that might[48] +have startled even a listless Cæsar 2,000 years ago. +There was our Philadelphia friend on one foot waving +his hat and shrieking defiance and taunts at the crowd +of New York “fans.” Why, the germ of that man’s +mind was back in the centuries, clad in hairy flesh and +skins shouting a war cry at what were then its enemies! +And when New York tied the score the entire bleachers +seemed to rise like a great black wave of humanity with +shrieks and cries and waving hats. For the moment +these were hardly human beings—as we like to consider +the race. They were crazy barbarians lapsed for +the moment back to elemental motives. And as I came +back to find myself standing up with the rest I was not +sure but that the brief trip back to barbarism had after +all been a profitable one!

+ +

But we left the umpire standing with his hand up +calling two strikes! It was the fifth inning, with the +score one to one. There were two out and New York +had worked a man around to third base. One more +pitched ball would tell the story. Consider the mix-up of +the races in this “American game.” The man on third +base straining like a greyhound to get home was an +Indian. The man at bat was of French blood, while +the next batter was an Irishman with a Jew close behind +him. The catcher was an Englishman and the pitcher +a pure Indian. This Indian stood there like a silent +representative of fate with the ball in his hand, eyeing +that Frenchman, who shook his bat defiantly. I presume +neither of them thought for the instant how 200 +years ago it would have been tomahawk against musket +in place of ball and bat. Yet the race traits were[49] +evident—the light and airy nerve of the Gaul and the +crafty silence of the red man! Oh, how that ball did go +in! “Ball!” shouted the umpire and the batter took his +base. Then it seemed as if bedlam had broken loose. +Men and women shouted and cheered and laughed and +cried, for they thought that the Indian was “rattled” at +last. But his ancestors went through too much fire for +that. He stood in the center as cool as a cake of ice. +The play for the man on first was to run to second +when the ball was pitched, and run he did. I noticed +that the catcher jumped six feet to the right as that +Indian threw the ball. It went like lightning right into +the catcher’s hands. The second baseman had run up +behind the pitcher and took the throw from the catcher. +Of course the runner on third tried to run in on this +throw, but back came the ball ahead of him and he was +out! Then in an instant the mighty crowd saw that +New York had been ambushed. It was a great trick, +and played so accurately and quickly and with such +daring that even the Philadelphia “fans” were mind-paralyzed +and forgot to cheer. The silence which followed +the Indian to the players’ bench was the most +eloquent tribute of the day. And it happened, as every +“sport” already knows, that New York finally won +two to one. The needed runs were made on mighty hits +by an Indian and an Irishman, and the great crowd +filed out and home to talk it over. I wish I could tell my +children how some Cape Cod Yankee had a hand in it, +but too many of these are occupied in telling what they +or their ancestors used to do. I think the game was +invented and developed by Yankees, and that they have[50] +made the most money out of it. Probably Cape Cod is +willing to rest content with this and let the others +handle the ball. I am ready to admit we ought to have +been home picking apples, but we saw the game, and +the apple harvest will go better to pay for it.

+ +
+ +
+ +

[51]

+ +

TRANSPLANTING THE YOUNG IDEA

+ +
+ +

Of all the planting that a farmer finds it necessary to +do there is nothing quite equal to transplanting home-grown +plants in the garden of education. Some homes +might be called hotbeds, others are very cold frames, +and there are grades running all between. Children +grow up away from childhood and show that they are +ready for transplanting—with evidences around the +head to be compared with those on a tomato plant. +You cut off their roots, and try to trim their heads +and plant them in the hard field of practical life or in +the sheltered garden of education. It is a large undertaking, +for here is the best crop of your farm put out +at a hazard. You may not have grown or trimmed it +right, and the soil in which you plant it may not prove +congenial, or some wild old strain from a remote ancestor +may “come back” when it should “stay out.” +You cannot tell about these things except by experiment, +therefore there is nothing quite equal to this sort of +transplanting. That is the way Mother and I felt as we +took the two older children off to college. My experience +has taught me both the power and the weakness of +an education. He who can grasp the true spirit of it +acquires a trained mind, and that means mastery. He +who simply “goes to college” and drifts along with +the crowd without real mental training is worse off than +if he never had entered. He cannot live up to his reputation[52] +as a college man, and when a man must go +through life always dragging behind his reputation he is +only a tin can tied to the tail of what was once his ambition. +I can imagine an intelligent parrot going +through college, and perhaps passing the examinations, +but all his life he would be a parrot, unable to apply +what he had learned to practical things. I made up +my mind long ago to give each one of the children +opportunity. That means a chance to study through a +good college. Each and every one must pay back to me +later the money which this costs. My backing continues +just as long as they show desire, through their +labor, to think and work out the real worth of education. +Should they become mentally and morally lazy +and assume that “going to college” is like having the +measles or raising a beard—out they come at once, for +if I know anything at all it is the fact that the so-called +student who goes through college just because his +parents think it is the thing to do makes about as poor +a drone as the human hive can produce.

+ +

Where should the children go? The case of the girl +was quickly settled by her mother. Years ago this good +lady had her own dreams of a college education and +knew just where she wanted to go. Denied the privilege +of going herself, she nominated her daughter as +her substitute. That settled it—there was no primary +or referendum or special election. There seemed to me +something of poetic realization in this setting of the +only bud into the long-desired and long impossible tree +of knowledge. As for the boy—the case was different. +I would like to send at least one child back to my old[53] +college, and I think a couple of the smaller ones will +go later. I know better than to try to crowd boys into +associations which are not congenial. If your boy has +intelligence enough to justify his going to college let +him use his intelligence to decide something of what he +wants. I advised the boy to select one of the smaller +colleges of high reputation and keep away from the +great universities. He made what I call a good choice—an +institution of high character, lonely location and +with one great statesman graduate who stands up in history +like a great lighthouse, to show the glory of public +life and the dangerous rock of his own private habits.

+ +

Well, Mother and I traveled close to 900 miles up +and down through New England on this trip of planning +in the garden of education. I could write a book +on the memories and anticipations which filled the minds +of this Hope Farm quartette. As the train rushed up +the country, winding through villages and climbing hills, +we took on groups of bright-faced boys on their way to +college. Before we reached the end of our journey +the train was crowded with them. There was one sour-faced +old fellow on the train who viewed those boys with +no benevolent eye.

+ +

“A lazy, careless lot. I’d put them all at work!”

+ +

The old man was wrong—he was sour. Even the +evidence of hope and faith in the future which those +bright-eyed boys brought could not sweeten him. Here +were the thinkers and dreamers and workers of the future. +Underneath their fun and careless hope they +carried the prayers of their mothers and the poorly expressed +dreams of fathers who saw in those boys the[54] +one chance to carry on a life work. While the old man +scowled on I found myself quoting from “Snow Bound,” +Whittier’s picture of the college boy who taught the +winter school:

+ +
+
+
+
“Large-brained, clear-eyed, of such as he
+
Shall Freedom’s young apostles be.”
+
+
+
+ +

The responsibility of acting as “young apostles” +would have wearied these boys, but unconsciously they +were absorbing part of the spirit which will fit them +for the work. Finally the train stopped and poured +us out into a dusty road. There were not teams enough +to carry 10 per cent of the crowd, and the rest of us +cheerfully took up our burdens, crossed the river and +mounted a steep and dusty hill. It took me back 30 +years and more, to my first three-mile dusty walk to +college. At the hilltop, as the glory of the college +campus stood revealed in the shimmering light of the +setting sun, it must have seemed to the freshmen that +they had surely been “walking up Zion’s hill.” To me +it was like old times patched up and painted with perhaps +a few ornaments added. Two boys went by bending +under the weight of mattresses. When I first hit +college I bought a bedtick, carried it to the barn and +stuffed it with straw. It was all the same, only there +was the difference which the years naturally bring in +comfort and convenience. But finally the darkness came +and the moon seemed to climb up over the college buildings, +flooding the campus with long bright splinters of +light. As we walked back under the trees there came +back to me the one, unchangeable, holy thing of college[55] +life—the undying, gentle, kindly spirit of the +college which a man must carry as long as he lives.

+ +

We got up before five o’clock and traveled far down +the Connecticut Valley to plant the family flower. +Those of you who have read “The Princess” and have +fairly active imaginations may realize how the Hope +Farm man felt at this institution. Here men did not +even reach a back seat. There was absolutely nothing for +me to do except stand about, hat in hand, and pay the +bills. At the railroad station three good-looking girls +of the Y. W. C. A. met us and told us just where to go. +At the college another girl took a suitcase and walked +off with it to show my daughter’s room. The express +business and the trunks were all handled by a fine-looking +woman who gave points on good-nature to any +express agent I ever saw. The sale of furniture, the +bureau of information, the handling of money—the complete +organization was conducted by women and girls. +It was all well done, in a thoroughly business-like manner +and with rare courtesy. True, the girls who conducted +the information bureau stopped now and then +to eat popcorn or candy. College boys of equal rank +would probably have smoked cigarettes. There was +just one other man in the hall, who, like me, had brought +his daughter there to plant her in the garden of education. +I caught his eye, and knew that our thoughts +were twins. I fully expected at any time to see “two +stalwart daughters of the plow” approaching to do their +duty.

+ +

The spirit of this college seemed excellent. It may +be a debatable question with some as to whether a school[56] +taught, organized and conducted entirely by women is +more desirable than one taught by men or where co-education +is permitted. There is no debate in our family, +since the ruling spirit, whose instincts are usually right, +has decided the question. It seemed to me that the +training at this school is sure to give these girls responsibility +and dignity. My two girls went into a store to +buy furniture for the room, and I stayed outside until +the time came for my part of the deal—paying for it. +Across the campus and up the street came a beautiful +woman walking slowly and thoughtfully on. Tall and +shapely, but for her years she might have represented +Tennyson’s Princess. Every movement of her body gave +the impression of power. Her face seemed like a mask +of patient suffering with an electric light of knowledge +and faith behind it. I remember years ago to have +seen another such woman walking across the village +green in a country town. A rough man a stranger to +me, took off his hat and said:

+ +

“Some woman—that!”

+ +

Yes, indeed—“some woman!” It is possible that +some of these “daughters of the plow” had an eye on +the Hope Farm man for watching ladies walking across +the campus, but had they arrested me I should have +told them the story of Billy Hendricks. Billy was +apprentice in a printer’s shop in England. The boss +offered a prize and a raise in wages to the apprentice +who could set up a certain advertisement in the best +form. Billy needed the money. He went to the foreman +and asked:

+ +

[57]

+ +

“How can I make this ‘ad’ so it will show true +proportions?”

+ +

“Look at me!” said the foreman.

+ +

There he stood, big and broad-shouldered, a true +figure of a man, and as Billy studied him he found +the words of that “ad” shaping themselves in his +mind. The others were mechanical. Billy had vision +and won. Some of us who must admit that we have +neither beauty nor shape are glad to have before our +children an example of what the coming woman ought +to be.

+ +
+ +
+ +

[58]

+ +

THE SLEEPLESS MAN

+ +
+ +

Some of our people are telling us about the best or the +most satisfying meal they ever ate. This question of +food seems to depend on habit, hunger and personal +taste. I saw a man once in a lumber camp eat plate +after plate of a stew made of meat, potatoes and carrots—cooked +in a big iron kettle over an open fire. At +home, this man would have growled at turkey or terrapin, +but here he was pushing back his plate again and +again asking the cook to put more carrots in. “Why,” +he said, “I thought carrots were made for horses to +eat. I didn’t know human beings ate them!” He +never had been a real human before—not until hunger +caught him and pulled him right up to that iron pot. +At his club in the city he could not have eaten three +mouthfuls of that stew.

+ +

It is different with sleep. The man with no appetite +can get on after a fashion, but if he cannot sleep he is a +pitiable object. I met one once—a rich man who had +worked too hard—starved himself for sleep in order +to get hold of rather more than his share of money and +power. He had passed the limit of nerves and was +denied the power of sleeping. A few snatches of rest +were all he could get, but through the long still nights +he lay awake, thinking, thinking with the constant terror +that this would end in a disordered mind.

+ +

We sat before this man’s fire late at night, and he[59] +told me all about it. To you sleep seems like a very +common and simple thing. The night finds you tired and +you shut your eyes and before you know it you are sailing +off into a peaceful, unknown country. Here was a +man who could not sleep. He must remain chained to +the cares and terrors of his daily life, and the bitterness +of it was that all the money he had slaved so hard +to obtain could not buy him what comes to you and me +with the mere closing of the eyes. It seemed to me the +most despairing mockery for this man to repeat Sir +Philip Sidney’s “Ode to Sleep”:

+ +
+
+
+
“Come sleep; O Sleep! the certain hour of peace,
+
The baiting-place of wit, the balm of woe,
+
The poor man’s wealth, the prisoner’s release,
+
The indifferent judge between the high and low;
+
With shield of proof, shield me from out the prease
+
Of those fierce darts Despair at me doth throw;
+
O make in me these civil wars to cease
+
I will good tribute pay, if thou do so.
+
Make thou of me smooth pillows, sweetest bed,
+
A chamber deaf to noise and blind to light,
+
A rosy garland and a weary head.”
+
+
+
+ +

“That’s it,” said my friend, “A weary head, a +weary head. Mine is weary, but sleep will not come.” +He sat looking at the fire for a long time, and then +he turned suddenly with a sort of haunted look in his +eyes.

+ +

“I wish you would tell me about the best sleep you +ever had. Men may tell of their best meal, but I want +to know about rest—the best sleep.”

+ +

It was a strange request, but as I sat there, my mind +went back to a hillside near the New England coast +where the valley slopes away to a salt marsh with a[60] +sluggish stream running through it. A low, weatherbeaten +farmhouse crouches at the foot of the wind-swept +hill. It is a lonely place. Few come that way +in daylight, and at night there are no household lights +to be seen.

+ +

It had rained through the night, and the morning +brought a thick heavy fog. It was too wet to hoe corn, +and Uncle Charles said we could all go gunning. He +was an old soldier, a sharpshooter, and a famous shot. +So we tramped off along the marsh following the creek +until it reached the ocean. What a glorious day that +was for a boy! I carried an old army musket that +kicked my shoulder black and blue. We tramped along +the shore and through the wet marsh, hunting for sandpipers +and other sea fowl. Now and then a flock of +birds would seem to be lost in the fog, and Uncle Charles +would whistle them to where we lay in ambush. It +all comes back,—clear and distinct,—the cries of the +sea fowl and dull roar of the ocean as it pounded upon +the beach. Late in the afternoon we tramped home wet +and tired, but with a long string of birds. The ocean +roared on behind us louder than ever as the wind arose.

+ +

It was not good New England thrift to eat those +birds—the guests at the Parker House in Boston would +pay good money for them. While we had been hunting, +Aunt Eleanor and the girls in the lonely farmhouse +had been busy with a “New England Dinner.” There +was a big plate of salt codfish, first boiled and then +fried crisp with little cubes of browned salt pork mixed +with it. There were boiled potatoes which split open +in a rich dry flour, boiled onions and carrots and great[61] +slices of brown bread and butter. Then the odor from +the oven betrayed the crowning act of all—a monstrous +pan-dowdy, or apple grunt! Ever eat a genuine pan-dowdy +in a New England kitchen as a wet dreary night +is coming on after a tiresome day? No? I am both +sorry and glad for you. You have missed one of the +greatest joys of life, but you have much to look forward +to. When Uncle Charles began to cut that pan-dowdy, +we boys realized that we could not do it full +justice, so we went out and ran around the house half +a dozen times to make more room for the top of the +feast.

+ +

After supper the dishes were washed, the house +cleaned up, and we washed out our guns. The old +musket had kicked my shoulder so that I could hardly +raise the arm, but no human being could have made me +admit it. We got Uncle Charles to tell us about the +time he shot at the officer at Port Hudson during the +war, and about the humpbacked man who carried the +powder from Plymouth to Boston during the Revolution. +Then through the gloom and fog came two young +men to call on the girls. In those days it seemed to +me very poor taste for one to listen to the conversation +of girls rather than war stories. True, the war stories +were time-worn, but the girl conversation was older yet. +Soon the little melodeon was talking up and a quartette +was singing the old songs of half a century ago. It +may have been the day’s tramping, the old musket, the +last plate of pan-dowdy or the tap of the rain on the +windows, but sitting there by the warm kitchen stove, I +felt a delicious drowsiness stealing over me.

+ +

[62]

+ +

Bed is the place for sleep, and we boys climbed the +stairs past the great center chimney, and quickly tumbled +into bed. In the room below that quartette had +started an old favorite:

+ +
+
+
+
“Along the aisles of the dim old forest
+
I strayed in the dewy dawn
+
And heard far away in their silent branches
+
The echoes of the morn.
+
+
+
“They stirred my heart with their low, sweet voices,
+
Like chimes from a holier land,
+
As though far away in those haunted arches
+
Were happy—an angel band.”
+
+
+
+ +

There was one great booming bass voice which had +unconsciously fallen into the key of the dull roar which +the distant ocean was making. The rain was gently +tapping on the roof, and all the joys and pleasant memories +of youth were whispering happy things in our ears +as we sailed off on the most beautiful voyage to dreamland.

+ +

I told this as best I could before the fire while my +weary friend listened, leaning back in his easy-chair +with his hand shading his face. And when I stopped +sleep had come to him at last—sweet and blessed sleep. +There are very few of us who would stand for a +photograph taken while we were asleep, but this man’s +face was free from care. An orator might not think +it a high tribute to his powers that he sent his audience +to sleep, but I am not an orator, and I would like to be +able to give my friends what they consider the blessed +things of life! And Peace, blissful Peace, had put her +healing hand upon my poor friend’s head.

+ +
+ +
+ +

[63]

+ +

LINCOLN’S BIRTHDAY

+ +
+ +

It brought the worst storm we have had this Winter. +This season will pass on into history as about the roughest +we have had in 20 years. There came a whirl of +snow which filled the air and sifted in through every +crack and hole. We let the storm alone, and got away +from it. Merrill sorted out seed corn at the barn. +Philip had some inside painting to do, the women folks +kept at their household work, and the children got out +into the storm. They came in now and then to stand by +the fire—with faces the color of their hair. As for +me, I cannot say that I hurt myself with hard labor. +We piled the logs in the open fireplace and started a +roaring fire. With a pile of books on one side and a +pen and paper at the other, my big chair gave a very +good foundation for a Lincoln celebration. I presume +we all have our personal habits of reading. Some people +read only one kind of books, and stick to the one +in hand until it is finished. My plan is different. +Right now I am reading Dante, “Rural Credits,” +“Manufacture of Chemical Manure,” Whittier’s Poems +and Lowell’s essay on Abraham Lincoln. A poor jumble +of stuff for a human head you will say, but I turn from +one to another, so that instead of a mixed-up jumble I +try to have these different thoughts in layers through +the mind. In this way one may get a blend which is +better than a hash. It may seem absurd to think of[64] +putting poetry into rural credits or fertilizers, but unless +you can do something of the sort you can never get +very far with them.

+ +

That was the great secret of Lincoln’s power. As +judged by knowledge or training or what we call “education,” +there were many abler men in the country at +his time, but Lincoln knew how to appeal to the imagination +of the plain, common people. Read his speeches +and papers and see how he framed a fact with a mental +picture which the common people could understand. +There were some wonderful pictures at the World’s +Fair in Chicago. Some were called masterpieces of +fabulous value. People stood before them and went on +with something of awe in their heart—not quite grasping +the artist’s meaning. One less pretentious picture +was named “The Breaking of Home Ties,” and day +by day a great throng stood before it, silent and wet-eyed. +It was a very simple home scene, picturing a +boy leaving his country home. Men studied it, walked +away and then turned and slowly came back that they +might see it once more. As long as they live people +will remember that picture, because the poetry of it appealed +to them as the higher art could not do. I think +Lincoln held the imagination of the plain people much +as that picture did. He was one who had suffered and +had been brought up with plain and simple family habits +which were fixed.

+ +

The children have come running in to warm their +hands. They are lined up in front of the big fire, rosy-faced +and covered with snow. They stand looking at +me as I write. Dinner is nearly ready, and there is no[65] +question about their readiness for it. Here comes +Mother to look out at the storm, and she forgets to remember +that this group of snowbirds by my fire have +forgotten to stamp the snow off their feet. There will +be a puddle of water when they move off—but it will +soon dry up. As I watch them all it seems a good time +to pick up Lowell’s essay on Lincoln:

+ +

He is so eminently our representative man, that, +when he speaks, it seems as if the people were listening +to their own thinking aloud.... He has always addressed +the intelligence of men. Never their prejudices, +their passion or their ignorance.

+ +

Now I think that intelligence and power to speak as +people think can only come out of good family relations. +Do I mean to say that the family group is superior to +the college, the school or the other great institutions for +training human thought? I do, wherever the family +group is bound together as it should be by love, good +will, ambition and something of sacrifice!

+ +

This nation and every other is ruled by the family +spirit. All public government is based on self-government, +and the family is the training school for all. +What could the college or the school do with a great +crowd or mob of students who have never known the +restraints of good family life? Ask any teacher to tell +you the difference between children reared in a clean, +careful family and those reared where the family relations +are much like a cross-cut saw. Line up the adults +you know, make a fair estimate of their character and +see whether you can select those who in their childhood +had a fair chance in family life. There are, of course,[66] +exceptions to all rules, but generally the boy or girl will +carry through life the habits and the human policies +which are given him in the family. As a rule these will +be carried into the new family which the boy or girl +may start, and thus be handed on like those qualities +which are transmitted through blood lines. No use talking—the +family unit is the most important element in +human society. A nation’s fame rests upon the nation’s +family.

+ +

I think a man may fairly be judged by the way he +treats his parents, his children and his wife. I do +not care how he gets out and shows himself off as a +great man and a good citizen. He might get an overwhelming +vote for Congress or Governor, but God will +judge him more by the votes of father, mother, son, +daughter, wife! To me there can be nothing more +beautiful than the best relation between a man of middle +years and his aged parents. Perhaps the latter are +feeble and not well-to-do. When they can sit in their +son’s home happy and comfortable, knowing that the +entire family has been taught to put them first of all +in family regard, you have struck about the finest test +of a man’s character that good citizenship can offer. +When the children chase their father about and, out +of their own thought, run to anticipate his wants, you +can make up your mind that in that family are being +trained men and women who can go out and absorb +education and financial power which will be used for the +true benefit of humanity. Most of us can never hope to +be great men or to handle large public affairs, but we +can make our family a training school for good citizenship.[67] +I have no thought that in this group of bright-eyed +youngsters lined up by my fire we are to have +any great statesmen or authors or merchant princes or +big folk generally. On the whole I hope not, as it would +seem to me that the great man has a rather lonely life. +I do expect, however, that these children will always +remember Hope Farm, and that in future years when +the world may turn a very cold side to them they will +remember this stormy day and will feel the warmth of +this kindly fire.

+ +

I have wandered away from what I wanted to say +about Lincoln and his power over the people. It was +this family feeling which made him strong, and if you +want your boy or girl to be really worth while you +must give them and their mother the best family surroundings +you can possibly secure. The man who taps +the spring or the well and sends the water running +through his house does far more for his country than +he who runs for Congress and taps the public pocket-book.

+ +

But here comes Mother again, with “Come now, +dinner’s ready. Don’t let it get cold!” Get cold? The +children are already at the table! I wish you could +come right along with me. I would put two sausage +cakes on your plate and fill it up with mealy potatoes +and yellow turnips. Then you would have rice in another +dish. There is a dish of thick, brown gravy and +nothing would suit me better than to have you call for +an egg—fried or boiled. The Reds are laying well now. +There are two kinds of bread and plenty of butter, and +we will take a family vote as to whether we shall take[68] +peaches, strawberries, Kieffer pears, cherries or raspberries +off the pantry shelves. I vote for Crosby +peaches, but you will have a free choice and all you can +eat. Surely the table makes a very strong family tie. +Come on!

+ +
+ +
+ +

[69]

+ +

UNCLE ED’S PHILOSOPHY

+ +
+ +

Uncle Ed had his home in Florida, but spent the Summer +working at Hope Farm. At the time I speak of +we were hoeing corn at the top of our hill. We had +just planted the apple orchard, and we both realized +the long and weary years of toilsome waiting before +there could be any fruit. It was a hot day, and at the +end of the row we stopped to rest under the big cherry +tree where the stone wall is broad and thick. It was +a clear day, and far off across the rolling country to the +East we could see the sparkle of the sun on some gilded-top +building in New York. It gave one a curious feeling +to stand in that shady retreat on $50 land in a +lonely neighborhood, practically untouched by modern +development, and glance across to the millions and the +might crowded at the mouth of the Hudson. Most of us +feel a sort of pride on viewing the evidence of wealth +and power, even though we have no share in it, or even +when we know it means blood money taken from our +own lives. I felt something of this as I pointed it out +to Uncle Ed, and told him how probably the overflow +of that great city would some day make an acre of our +orchard worth more than a farm in Florida.

+ +

This did not seem to impress him greatly. He ran +his eye over the glowing prospect and then slowly filled +his pipe for a smoke. I am no friend of tobacco, but I +confess that sometimes I enjoy seeing a man like Uncle[70] +Ed slowly fill his pipe. I feel that some sort of homely +philosophy is sure to be smoked out.

+ +

“The trouble with you folks up in this country,” +said Uncle Ed, “is that you work too hard. You get so +that there is nothing in you but work and save. And for +what? How many of you ever get the benefit of your +own work? Down where I live we don’t exist for the +mere sake of working. I have known the time when +I got up determined to do a good day’s work cultivating. +I got the horse all harnessed, only to find that my neighbor +on the south had borrowed the cultivator, and I +couldn’t do that. Then I thought I’d hoe, but the boys +lost the hoe in the brush and couldn’t find it. Then +there was the woodpile to be cut up, but my neighbor on +the north had borrowed the ax.

+ +

“Now up in this country if fate challenged a man +like that he would start picking up stones and making +a stone wall. Here is one now that we are resting +against. I’ll bet some old owner of this farm piled up +this heap of stones because he was determined that the +boys never should play or go fishing. It is now the +most useless thing you have on your farm. If, instead +of picking up stones and building this useless wall, that +old-timer had quit when fate gave him the sign, taken +a day off and let the boys go fishing or play ball, this +farm would be worth far more than it is today. Down +in my country when the cultivator and the hoe and the +ax all get away from us we accept it as a voice from +some higher authority, and we drop everything and go +fishing. After that I notice things straighten out and +work goes right. You fellows work too hard, and don’t[71] +know it. But this won’t buy the woman a dress—we +must hoe this corn out.”

+ +

The rows ran to the south, and as we hoed on I could +see, far away, that bright sparkle on the gilding of +the big city. And I answered with the old familiar +argument:

+ +

“You have just told in a few words why there are +more savings of the poor and middle-class people in +that big city yonder than there are in the entire State +of Florida.” That was 16 years ago and the statement +was probably true at the time. Florida has gained since +then.

+ +

“Up in this country we believe that the Lord gives +every man of decent mind and reasonable body a chance +to provide for himself and family before he is 45. If +he doesn’t do it by that time, he isn’t likely to do it at +all. We think that there are three ways of getting +money. You can earn it through labor, steal it, or have +it given to you. For most of us there is only one way—that +is to dig it out by the hardest work, and then practice +self-denial in order to hold it. Up in this country +the men who quit and go fishing when conditions turn +against them, spend their declining years without any +bait. That money off there where you see that sparkle +was produced by men who did not go fishing when conditions +turned against them.”

+ +

As I look back upon it now that seems pretty cheap +talk, but it was the way we looked at it in those days.

+ +

“I know,” said Uncle Ed, “but how much better +off are they when you sum it all up? I claim that the +man who goes fishing gets something that the man who[72] +built that stone wall never knew. Who piled up all +that money in the big city? Some of mine is there. +The interest I have paid on my mortgage has come into +one of these big buildings for investment. The profit +on many a box of oranges I shipped before the freeze +never got away from New York. It stuck there and you +can’t get it out. And that’s just what I mean. You +fellows work your fingers stiff and make a little money, +and then you put it into some bank or big company or +into stocks or bonds. In the end it all gets away from +you and runs down hill to that big city. The hired man +took $25 to the county fair. Ten dollars of it went +for beer and rum. The local saloonkeeper passed the +$10 on to the wholesaler, he to the brewer and he sent +part of it to Germany and the rest to Wall Street. The +other $15 mostly went in chance games or petty gambling. +He lost $5 betting that he could find the little +red ball under the hat. The man who won his $5 lost +it that night playing poker. The gambler who won it +lost it a few nights later in a gambling house. The +gambling house man bought bogus oil and mining stocks +and lost it that way. The oil stock man had sense +enough to salt it down in respectable securities, and +there it is now under that bright sparkle in the big city. +You and the rest of you do pretty much the same. This +man who built your stone wall did it. The money he +made was not invested here. If it had been you never +could have bought this farm. It is off there under +that bright sparkle—and the boys and girls run after it. +You fellows work too hard!

+ +

I undertook to come back with that text about the[73] +man who provideth not for his family—but I never was +good at remembering texts. That is probably because +I do not study them as I ought to. But at any rate I +undertook to argue that it is a man’s first duty to provide +for his family and also for his own “rainy day.” “The +night cometh, when no man can work.

+ +

“Down where I live,” said Uncle Ed, “we don’t +have such rainy days as you do up here. Life is simple +and straight and old people are cared for. We want +them to live with us—we are not waiting for them to +pass off and leave their money. Off in that big city +where your money is turning over and over, thousands +of human lives get under it and are crushed out of all +shape. Down there under that sparkle only the poor +know what neighbors are. Many a man lives his life in +some tenement or apartment house never knowing or +caring what goes on in the room on the other side of the +wall. There may be joy or sorrow, death or life, virtue +or crime. He doesn’t know and he doesn’t care, because +this never-ending grind of work has changed sympathy +into selfishness. And in the end that is what all those +dollars which you folks dump into the big city come to. +If the habit is so strong that you’ve got to work and try +to catch up with the man who has a little more than you +have, why not invest your money at home and in the +farm? Those fellows off under that sparkle will come +chasing after your money if you invest it here, and you +would be boss instead of servant! Am I right?

+ +

That was 16 years ago, and many things have happened +since then. Uncle Ed has passed away—after +many troubles and misfortunes. The world has been[74] +shaken up by the war and by great discoveries, so that +we hardly know it. Yet there is a brighter sparkle +than ever on the gilded roofs of the big city—greater +wealth and more blinding poverty crouching beneath it. +The hill where we hoed corn is now covered with big +apple trees. Where then Bob and Jerry toiled slowly +along with half a ton of fruit the truck now flashes down +the hard, smooth road with two tons. But sitting on the +old stone wall of a Sunday afternoon in late August +I look across the valley and wonder how much there +really is in Uncle Ed’s philosophy after all. What do +you think?

+ +
+ +
+ +

[75]

+ +

A GOD-FORSAKEN PLACE

+ +
+ +

James and William Hardy were twins—born and bred +on a New Hampshire farm. The family dated far back +to pioneer times, when John Hardy and Henry Graham, +with their young wives, went into the wilderness as +the advance guard of civilization. It came to be a common +understanding that a Hardy should always marry +a Graham, and through four generations at least this +family law had been observed until there had been developed +one of those fine, purebred New England +families which represent just about the highest type of +the American. As the father of these twins married +a Graham girl you had a right to expect them to be as +much alike as two peas in the family pod—both in +appearance and in character. Here you surely might +expect one of those cases where the twins are always +being mixed up, when not even their mother could be +sure which was Jim and which was Bill. In truth, +however, the boys were distinctly different from the +day they were born—different in size, in appearance +and in character.

+ +

These twins innocently brought to the surface a sad +spot of family history which both the Grahams and the +Hardys hoped had been buried too far down ever to +show itself. Far back in the French and Indian war +a band of raiders from Canada burst out of the forest +and carried off a dozen prisoners. Among them was[76] +the pride of the Graham family—a beautiful girl of 16. +The settlers, hiding in their blockhouse, could only +look on and see their relatives start on the long march to +Canada. The next year some of these prisoners were +ransomed, and came back to say that the girl had married +a young Frenchman. She was happy, and sent +word to her parents that she preferred to stay with +her husband. Years went by, until one night there +came to Henry Graham’s house a Canadian ranger and +a young girl. It was their granddaughter and her +father. The mother had died and had begged her husband +to take her daughter back to the old folks as her +offering of love. The father delivered his message, +bade his daughter farewell and silently vanished into +the forest. They never saw him again, but they realized +that he had given full measure of devotion to his +dead wife. The girl grew up to be a beautiful creature +much like her mother, only darker, and at times there +was a bright glitter in her eyes. She married a Hardy +and settled down as a farmer’s wife. She was dutiful +and kind, but sometimes her husband would see her +standing at the door—looking off into the Northern +forests with a look which made him shake his head. +Years went by, and this spot on the family history had +been forgotten until these twins uncovered it! Their +mother knew in her heart that the spirit of the restless +Frenchman was watching her from the cradle through +the black shiny eyes of her strange baby. James, the +light-haired, steady, purebred infant, slept calmly or +acted just as a good Hardy should, but the wild spirit +of the forest had jumped three generations right into[77] +the cradle, where this black-haired little changeling +stared at her!

+ +

There never were two children more unlike than +these twins. Jim was solid, sound, a little slow, but +absolutely trustworthy—“a born Hardy” as they said. +Bill was bright, quick, restless, full of plans and visions. +He did not like to work, and had no respect for the +family skeleton. This was a mortgage, which for many +years had sunk its claws into the rocky little farm. +The truth was that this farm never should have been +cleared and settled. It was rocky and sandy; farther +out of date than the old mill rotting unused by the old +mill pond. The mortgage hung like a wolf at the back +door, demanding its due, which came out of the little +farm like blood money. Jim Hardy, like his father +and grandfather, grew up to regard that mortgage as a +fixed and sacred institution. It was a family heirloom +or tradition—something like the old musket which an +older Hardy carried at Bunker Hill, or like grandmother’s +old spinning-wheel. As for the poor, rocky +farm, Jim and his father would stay and grind themselves +away in a hopeless struggle just because the +Hardys who went before them had done so. It was +different with Bill. He had no use for the mortgage +or for the rocky pastures, for the dash of French blood +had put rubber, or yeast, into the covering of the stern +New England thought. His father never could understand +him and one day, when Bill was 17, the blood +of the “changeling” burst into open mutiny. The +father knew of only one way to act. He ordered the +boy around behind the barn and took the horsewhip to[78] +him. As a Hardy, Bill was expected to stand and take +his punishment without a murmur. As the descendant +of a wild forest ranger he could only resent the blows. +What he did was to catch his father’s arms and hold +them like a vice. Neither spoke a word. They just +looked at each other. The older man struggled, but he +was powerless—he knew that his son was the master. +He dropped the whip from his hand and bowed his head. +The boy released him, broke the whip in two, and threw +it away. The father walked to the house, a dazed and +broken man. Bill watched him and then walked out to +the back lot where Jim, the steady and faithful, was +building a fence.

+ +

“Good-bye, Jim,” he said. “I’m off. It had to +come. I’m different, and yet the same, as you will see. +You stay here and look after father and mother. I will +help some day.” It was the Hardy in both the boys +which made it impossible for them to come any closer in +feeling. Bill walked on over the pasture hill; at the +top he paused to wave his hand. Then he was gone.

+ +

Bill was clean and sound at heart, and the French +blood had given him a quick active brain. Instead of +striking for the wilderness he headed for New York +and he prospered. The old French ancestor drove him +on with tireless energy, and the long line of clean farm +breeding kept him true to his purpose to go back some +day and show the old folks that he was still a Hardy. +Years passed, until one day there came to Bill an uncontrollable +longing to go home. Just a few brief, unresponsive +letters had passed between him and Jim, but +the time came when Bill longed with a great longing to[79] +see the old farm once more. And so, the next day, a +well-dressed, prosperous man walked into the old yard +and looked about him. There was Jim, the same old +Jim, walking in from the barn with the night’s milk. +Father was cutting wood at the wood pile and mother +stood at the kitchen door—just the same home picture +which Bill knew so well. Bill did great things during +his short stay. He paid that mortgage, ordered a new +barn built and left capital for Jim to improve the farm. +He did everything that a Hardy ought to do—and +more—and yet he could not satisfy himself. It all +seemed so small and narrow. He had hoped to find +great music in the wind among the pines, but it filled +him with a great loneliness, which he could not overcome. +He had hoped to find peace and rest, but these +were for the untried farm boy—not for the restless and +worried business man. It broke out of him at night on +the second day, when he and Jim were on the pasture +hill looking for the sheep. The loneliness of the early +Fall day fairly entered his heart.

+ +

Jim,” he said, “old fellow, I don’t see how you +live in such a God-forsaken place!”

+ +

“Why, Bill,” said Jim, “New York must be like +Paradise to beat the old homestead.”

+ +

“Better a week on Broadway than a lifetime on these +lonely hills.”

+ +

“I’d like to try it and see!” said Jim.

+ +

So Jim Hardy, the plain farmer, went to New +York to visit Brother Bill. He had everything he could +call for. Bill lived in a beautiful apartment, and he +gave Jim a white card to see and do what he wanted.[80] +Bill was too busy to go around much, but Jim made his +way. For a couple of days it was fine—then somehow +Jim, just like Bill at the old farm, began to grow lonesome +and oppressed. Right through the wall of Bill’s +apartment house was a family with one child. The janitor +told him the child was sick, so Jim knocked at the +door to sympathize with the neighbors. They froze him +with a few words and got rid of him. He saw a man +on the street and stopped to converse with him. “Get +out!” said the stranger. “You can’t bunco me.” Day +after day Jim Hardy, the farmer, saw the fierce, selfish +struggle for life in the big city. The great buildings, +the theaters, Broadway at night—they were all splendid, +but behind and under them lay the meanness, the selfish +spirit, the lack of neighborly feeling, which galled the +farmer to the heart. On the third night Bill took his +brother to a great reception. Just as they walked into +the brilliant room Jim glanced from the window and +saw a policeman throw a weak and sickly man out of a +public room where he was trying to get warm.

+ +

“What did I tell you, Jim?” said Bill. “Isn’t this +worth a year on your old hills?” And Jim could only +think of one thing to say:

+ +

Bill, old fellow, I don’t see how you can live in such +a God-forsaken place!

+ +

What do you make of it? One brother thinks God +has forsaken the country, while the other says He has +forsaken the city! To me they prove that God is everywhere. +Some may not find Him, since they look for +Him only in things which are agreeable to them, and +those are rarely the places in which to look. I think,[81] +too, that, like Jim and Bill, all children come into the +world with natural tendencies and inclinations which, if +worthy, should be encouraged rather than repressed. +Both Jim and Bill are needed in American life.

+ +
+ +
+ +

[82]

+ +

LOUISE

+ +
+ +

How is Louise now?

+ +

She seems a little better!

+ +

That message came over the ’phone on Friday evening, +just as the members of the Hope Farm family were +separating for the night. Early in the year we had a +letter from a woman in the West who came back to +the paper after 15 years’ absence. As a girl she +lived in New York State. Father took the paper and +she remembered the talks about the Bud, Scion and +Graft. “What has become of those children?” she +asked. “Since I left home I have lost track of them. +Now that I have a home and children of my own I +would like to know what they came to.”

+ +

These were the names given to the four children of +our first brood. We had one little girl of our own +whom I called the Bud. Her mother did not want her +brought up alone, so we took in a small boy—a little +fellow of an uncertain age. We did not adopt him, but +he was treated just like our own child, and “grew up” +in our home. I called him the Seedling! A noted +botanist argued with me to prove that these names should +have been transposed—but I let them go, for we tried to +graft good things upon the Seedling. Then came two +other little ones—Mother’s niece and nephew, needing +home and protection. We took them in, and I called[83] +them Graft and Scion. These names may not have betrayed +any great knowledge of botany, but they seemed +to fit the children, although as the little ones grew up +we were glad to let those names drop.

+ +

This quartette of little ones grew and thrived. It was +at times rather hard sledding for the Hope Farmers in +those early years, but youth greases the runners with +hope, and kids never know the true taste of tough mutton. +They grew on through sickness, the wilfulness of +childhood, powers of heredity and all the things which +confront common children. For they always seemed to +me just kids of very common clay, though Mother +would at times come back from places where other children +“behaved” and say: “You must understand that +we have some very superior youngsters!” Of course I +realized that the “Bud” would most likely be pretty +much what her parents were, and it was a long-time +hope that she would throw out our many undesirable +qualities and concentrate upon the few good ones. Now +comes our friend asking what has become of them—and +I will try to answer for all! The Bud is a senior +at one of the great Women’s Colleges; the Graft is with +an engineering party running a new railroad through +the Arizona wilderness; the Seedling is a captain in the +Salvation Army—the Scion! ah! That is why I am +writing this!

+ +

Louise grew up a small, rather delicate young woman, +ambitious, clear-brained and with a quick, active mind. +There came a time when greater family responsibilities +came upon us all. Her father died, and her mother +became hopelessly ill, and four younger brothers and[84] +sisters came to us to form what we call our second brood. +Even as a young girl Louise began to realize the stern +responsibilities of life for those little ones. When she +finished high school her ambition to be of service to this +family group became fixed. She wanted to become self-supporting +and to have a hand in helping with these +younger children. Teaching is the great resource of +educated women who are naturally fitted for the work, +and Louise saw in the schoolroom her best chance for +useful service. I think this was one of the rare cases +where women are willing to work and prepare themselves +for true unselfish service. Louise was timid +and naturally nervous—not strong or with great dominating +power. I do not think any of us understood +how much it really meant to her to face direct responsibility +and force her way through.

+ +

Mother and I have always felt that if any of our +children show real, self-sacrificing desire for an education +we will practise any form of needed self-denial that +the child may be college-trained. For an education +worked out in that way will become a glory and an +honor to all who have to do with it. So we felt it no +burden, but rather a privilege, to send Louise to the +Normal School. How well and faithfully she worked +no one can ever realize. I often think that most reputations +for bravery in this world are not fairly earned. +Some strong, well-bred, naturally optimistic character, +with health and heritage from a long line of dominating +ancestors pushes and smashes his way through obstacles +and acquires a great reputation for courage. I +think such are far less deserving than women like[85] +Louise, small and delicate and nervous, who conquer +natural timidity and force themselves to endure the +battle. It is even harder to win confidence in yourself—to +conquer the inside forces—than to fight the outside +ones.

+ +

Louise did this. She did it well, without boasting or +great complaint and without flinching. At times she +was depressed, for the task seemed too much for her, +but she rose above it and won. She won honors at her +school, and long before she expected it, on her own +little, honest record in the schoolroom, she was employed +to teach at a good salary. It was to be only +four miles from home—amid the best surroundings—and +there was no happier woman on earth than was +Louise when she wrote us the first news about it. It +came just before Christmas. There are many women +who could not see any cause for Christmas joy in the +thought of long years of monotonous and wearying service, +but Louise saw in this something of the joy of +achievement, for through honest, trained labor, the outcome +of her own patience and determination, she was to +become self-supporting and a genuine help to the children. +I presume no one but a conscientious and ambitious +woman can realize what that means. I know +women who would look upon such power of self-support +simply as selfish freedom. Louise saw in it the power +of greater service. We have tried our best to train our +children for that view of a life work.

+ +

You may therefore imagine that the holidays at Hope +Farm seemed like holy days indeed. They were all +there except the Seedling and the Graft, and they sent[86] +messages which left no regret, no sadness to creep in +out of the past. Somehow I hope all you older people +may know before you pass on something of what +Mother and I did about our two broods as the old year +passed on.

+ +

Yet there it comes again—the old question. I came +home a little later than usual on Friday night. The +night was wet and foggy, and Mother met me at the +train. One of the little boys who usually comes for +me had gone to meet Louise. Her first week of school +was over, and she was coming home—a teacher! As +we drove into the yard the family ran out to meet us—“Something +has happened—they want you on the +’phone at once!” Ah! but these country tragedies may +flash upon us without warning. Halfway home Louise +had been stricken desperately ill, and she now lay at +the parsonage—three miles away—helpless. Just as +quickly as fingers could put the harness on our fastest +horse, Mother and “Cherry-top” were driving off into +the fog and rain. We waited until they reached the +parsonage and then we kept the ’phone busy. The poor +girl, riding home after her first fine week in the schoolroom, +had been stricken with an internal hemorrhage—and +it was doubtful if she could rally! At nine o’clock +came the message: “She seems to be better.” The +little boys were coming home—and they soon appeared, +white and troubled. Mother was to stay all night and +she sent a hopeful message about coming in the morning +with Louise. We went to bed to get strength and nerve +for any emergency. In the early morning Mother +walked into my room and turned up the light. We[87] +looked at each other for a moment. Then there were +six words:

+ +

How is Louise?

+ +

She is gone!

+ +

We said nothing more, but we were both thinking the +same thing!

+ +

The first break in our big family has come. How +is Louise now?

+ +

There was no way of saving her. Human skill and +human love had failed. She was dead!

+ +

It was a beautiful service. There were only our +own family and perhaps a dozen friends. We all +wanted it so. We do not like the wild grief and public +curiosity so often displayed at large funerals. There +was just a great bank of flowers, a white casket and a +simple service over this brave and loyal girl. I do not +say “poor” girl, nor do I dwell upon the sadness of it. +I thought that all out as Mother and I sat at the head +of the casket. She died gloriously—like a soldier at his +duty. She died when life was young. She had just +won her little battle in the great world of affairs. She +died in the joy of victory and in the faith that all +things are possible. The wine of life was full. She +never knew the sting of defeat, the shame and meanness +of false friendships and ambitions, which has come +to those of us who linger on the way. And so at the end +of it all I ask the old question once more:

+ +

“How is Louise now?”

+ +

“She is better! Thank God! She is better!”

+ +
+ +
+ +

[88]

+ +

CHRISTMAS EVERY DAY

+ +
+ +

It is well enough to keep the Christmas tree standing +until Spring cleaning at least. There may be those +who open the closet door once a year and let the Christmas +spirit out—somewhat like the family skeleton, to +food and water—and then lock it up again. That does +not suit me, for I would like to keep the door open so +that Christmas may be with us every day in the year. +The celebration just closed is about the best our family +and community ever had, and it will do us permanent +good.

+ +

On Wednesday evening the children had their celebration +at the church. It was a cold clear night, with good +sleighing, so we hitched the two big grays to the bob +sled and filled the box with straw, and the children cuddled +down into this nest and pulled blankets over them. +The Hope Farm man drove, with Mother on the seat +beside him to direct the job and tell him when and +where to turn out. Tom and Broker seemed to feel that +they were, in their way, playing the part of reindeer, +for they trotted off in great shape—a little clumsy on +their feet, perhaps, but with strength enough to pull +down a house. Broker is inclined to be lazy, and Tom +did most of the pulling unless we stirred his partner up +with the stick. Through the clear starlight we went +crunching and jingling on over the hills and through[89] +the narrow level valleys, for our country has a badly +wrinkled face.

+ +

Part of the way lies through the woods, and then +a stretch along the banks of a little river. There was +just enough wind to make a little humming in the +trees. Now and then a rabbit jumped out of the +shadow and went hopping off across the snow. There +was no danger—it was Christmas, and we do not carry +firearms. I think I can tell you much about a person’s +character and circumstances if you will tell me what +comes into mind on a lonely road, when the wind is +playing its wild tunes among the trees.

+ +
+
+
+
“Over the chimney the night wind sang,
+
Chanting a melody no one knew.”
+
+
+
+ +

To some this melody brings sad memories or fear of +trouble, but the happy group in our big sled heard nothing +of these in the sound. As Tom and Broker pulled +their load on beneath the trees I think each one of us +heard in the wind’s singing something of the song which +the angels sang when the shepherds listened long years +ago. This may be but a fancy of mine, yet I think our +little group came nearer to understanding what Christmas +means—on that lonely road—than we had before.

+ +

You know how pleasant it is to come trotting along +a country road on a cold starry night and see the lights +of the church burst into view far ahead. Our church is +an old stone structure, full of years and honorable history. +It was here, at least part of it, during the Revolution, +and at one time Hessian prisoners were confined +in it. There were no prisoners except those of hope[90] +inside the church that night. The boys and I made Tom +and Broker comfortable and then we went inside to find +a big Christmas tree and a crowd of happy children. +Surely Christmas is children’s day, and they owned the +church that night. Mother marshaled her big primary +class for one chorus, and it seemed as if the entire end +of the church was made of children. A couple of our +Cherry-tops lent a little color to it. The Hope Farm man +was escorted up to a front seat, where he was expected +to look the part of prominent citizen. They ran him +into the programme too for a Christmas story, so he +got up and told the company about “Pete Shivershee’s +Miracle”—a little Christmas memory of life in a lumber +camp many years ago. Finally the simple presents +were distributed, the sleepy little ones aroused, good +wishes spoken and we all piled in once more for the +home trip. Broker takes life as it comes, but Tom +was chilly and disposed to be a trifle gay over the +prospect of barn and cornstalks once more. He proceeded +to pull the entire load, Broker trotting on with +dangling traces! It was a sleepy and happy crowd that +finally turned off the road into Hope Farm. “We had +a big time!

+ +

In two of the villages near us the people organized +community Christmas trees. These trees were placed in +the public square or some prominent spot, the electric +wires were connected, and colored bulbs hung all over +to take the place of candles. These were lighted on +Christmas Eve and kept going all through the holiday +week. It was a great success, for it brought people +together, made a better community spirit, and helped us[91] +all. In addition to this community tree arrangements +were made to have singers go about the town singing +the old Christmas carols. This revival of the old English +custom was a beautiful thing and a great success.

+ +

Shortly after three on Christmas morning our folks +were awakened by music. I think the Cherry-tops +thought it was Santa Claus, as it probably was. Out in +front of our house a motor car carrying six young men +had turned in from the road. There in the frosty +morning they were singing:

+ +
+
+
+
“O come, all ye faithful,
+
Joyful and triumphant,
+
O come ye! O come ye
+
To Bethlehem.
+
Come and behold Him
+
Born the King of angels,
+
O come let us adore Him,
+
O come let us adore Him,
+
O come let us adore Him,
+
Christ the Lord.”
+
+
+
+ +

They were beautiful singers and our folks will never +forget that Christmas morning.

+ +
+
+
+
“Silent night! Holy night,
+
All is calm. All is light.
+
’Round young Virgin mother and child
+
Holy infant so tender and mild,
+
Sleep in heavenly peace.”
+
+
+
+ +

Finally the car started off, moving slowly down the +road with the music creeping back to us through the +clear air:

+ +
+
+
+
“Hark, the Herald angels sing.”
+
+
+
+ +

[92]

+ +

Our folks heard them at the next neighbor’s, far +down the road. I have no doubt many a weary and +troubled soul waking in the night at the sound went +back to happier dreams of a better tomorrow. It was +a beautiful thing to do, and never before did Christmas +morning come to us so happily as this year.

+ +

I thought of these things all day, and the conviction +has grown upon me that what we people who live in +the country need more than anything else is something +of this spirit which binds people together and holds +them. We need it in our work, our play and in our +battles. It is another name for patriotism, which means +the unselfish love of country. The Duke of Wellington +said the battle of Waterloo was won on the playgrounds +of England, where boys were trained in manly sports. +He told only half of it, for the spirit which turned +that play into war came from the singers who in English +villages sang Christmas carols or English folk +songs. In like manner the wonderful national spirit +which the German nation has shown has been developed +largely through the singing societies which have expressed +German feeling in song. In 1792 a band of +Frenchmen marched from the south of France to Paris +dragging cannon through a cloud of dust and singing the +Marseillaise hymn, and even to this day the loyal spirit +of France traces down from those dusty singers. Do +I mean to say that farmers can come together and sing +their troubles away? No, for some of the troubles have +grown so strong and penetrated so deep that they must +be pulled out by the roots. What I do say is that before +we can hope to remove these troubles and make our[93] +conditions what they should be we must feel toward our +friends and neighbors the sentiments which are expressed +in these beautiful old songs. The time has +gone by when we can hope to obtain what we should +have from society as individuals playing a cold, selfish +game of personal interest. We have tried that for +many years and steadily lost out on it. The only +hope for us now is in a true community spirit of loyalty +and sacrifice, instead of the effort to get all we can for +ourselves. That is why I say that there should be something +of Christmas in every day of the year, and why +I give these holiday memories.

+ +
+ +
+ +

[94]

+ +

“THE FINEST LESSON”

+ +
+ +

It is the privilege of youth and old age to make comparisons. +One has little or nothing of experience to +use as a yardstick—the other has everything life can +offer him. One compares with imagination, the other +with fact, and youth, having a wider pasture for +thought, usually finds pleasanter places for feeding. +My children have spent nearly every Christmas thus +far before this open fire, while I have ranged far and +wide, from Florida to the Great Lakes, and from Cape +Cod to Colorado. As we sit in silence before our fire +the boys can imagine themselves in some hunter’s camp, +or with the soldiers in France, while the girls can drop +themselves down from the wings of fancy in Cuba or +Brazil. I might try that, but stern fact drags me down +to other days, and old-time companions come creeping +out of the past to say “Merry Christmas” and stand +here, a little sorrowful that they cannot give the children +something of their story. So I must be their spokesman, +it seems, and the children give me a chance when +after dreaming a while they come and ask me to tell +about the real Christmas. “What was the finest +Christmas lesson you ever had?” They do not put it +in quite these words, but that is the sense of it. So +there comes to me a great desire to live up to the highest +test of story-telling—that is, so to interest your audience +that they will forget to eat their apples.

+ +

[95]

+ +

The room seems full of the shadowy forms of men and +women who have stepped out of the past to bring back +a Christmas memory. Which of these old life teachers +ever gave me the best lesson? They were all good—even +that big fellow who tried to kick me out of a lumber +camp—and failed—or that slimy little fraud who beat +me out of a week’s wages! I think, however, that those +two women over by the window lead all the rest. One +is an old woman—evidently a cripple; the other +younger—you cannot see her face in the dim light, but +she stands by the older woman’s chair. Yes, they represent +the best Christmas lesson I have had. So come up +to the fire, forget the wind roaring outside, and listen to +it. I was a hired man that Winter in a Western State. +Some of the farmers who read this will remember me—not +for any great skill I showed at farm work, but because +I spent my spare time (that meant nights) going +around “speaking pieces.” I am greatly afraid that as +an agriculturist I did better work at keeping air hot +than I ever did at heating plowshares through labor.

+ +

You see, it was this way. I was a freshman at an +agricultural college, at a time when these institutions +were struggling hard to live. The average freshman +thinks he is the salt of the earth, forgetting that he is +salt which has not gained its savor through losing its +freshness. A man gets very little salt in his character +until he goes out and assaults the world! At any rate, +I had no money salted down and no fresh supplies coming +in. I had to get out during the Winter and earn +the price of another term at college. I tried canvassing +for a book. We will draw the curtain down over[96] +that act. Some men tell me of making small fortunes as +book agents. From my experience I judge these men +to be supermen or superior prevaricators, to put it +mildly. I worked the job for all I was worth in spite +of all obstacles, such as the wrath of farmers who had +been cheated through signing papers, the laughter of +pretty girls and the teeth of dogs, and sold four books +in two weeks! At last I struck a farmer who offered +me a job digging a ditch. I made him a present of my +“sample copy” and went to work.

+ +

A dollar makes an interrogation point with a barb +on it. About all a farm produced in Winter, those +days, was enough to eat and drink and something to +sell for the taxes. The farmer I worked for had a +red colt that was to settle with the tax man, but just +before the taxes were due the colt ran away and broke +his neck. I cannot say that my labor was worth much, +but education is not one of the few things which come to +us without money or price. Then I suddenly made the +discovery that I was “a talented young elocutionist.” +At least that is what the local paper stated, and do we +not know that all we see in print must be true? I suppose +I could tell you of one Christmas long ago that I +spent as “supe” in a big theater and what befell us behind +the scenes. At any rate, I could “speak pieces,” +and I had a long string of them in mind. So what was +a rather poor mimic in a city became a “talented elocutionist” +far back over muddy roads. You want to +remember that this was a long time before the bicycle +had grown away from the clumsy “velocipede.” There +were few, if any “good roads.” No one dreamed of[97] +gasoline engines or automobiles. During an open Winter +the mud was 10 to 20 inches deep, and every mile +of travel was to be multiplied by the number of inches +of mud. Amid such surroundings it is not so hard +to be known as a “talented elocutionist” when your +voice is strong, your tongue limber, your memory good, +and you have had a chance to see and hear some of the +great actors from behind the scenes.

+ +

I made what they called “a big hit” at night, with +audiences all the way from four or five up to 200. When +life was dull and blue a neighbor would come with his +family to our farmhouse and I would sit by the kitchen +fire and entertain them. Once a farmer had a little +trouble with his mother-in-law, who seemed to hold the +mortgage. On his invitation I dropped in one night and +a few of my “funny pieces” made this good lady laugh +so that she forgave her son-in-law. Then I was called +into the chamber of a very sick man to recite several +“religious pieces.” I shall not soon forget that scene. +The poor sick man lying there with eyes closed, the +entire family and some of the neighbors grouped around +like a company of mourners, and the “talented elocutionist” +standing by the head of the bed in the gray +light of the dying day. Yes, sir, the man recovered! +They have a famous saying here in New York. “It’s +a great life if you don’t weaken!” I found it so that +Winter, and as life was young and full ambition had not +been severely wounded, I did not weaken.

+ +

But all this, of course, was mere practice for larger +occasions. Whenever I could work up a crowd I would +go about to schoolhouses and churches, entertain as best[98] +I could and then “pass the hat”! What evenings they +were! They were usually in old-fashioned schoolhouses +with the big iron stove in the center of the room. +Such houses were rarely used at night, and there would +be no light except as some of the audience brought +lamps or candles. The room was usually crowded and +the stove red-hot. In most cases the meeting would be +opened with prayer and some local politician might +make a speech. Then the “talented elocutionist” would +stand up near the stove. He never was an “impressive +figure” at his best. In those old days the best he +could afford was a pair of thick cowhide boots, a second-hand +coat which came from a long, thin man, and trousers +evidently made originally for a fat man. Still, +the light was dim and the speaker remembered hearing +James E. Murdock say that if you could only put yourself +into the spirit of your talk the audience would follow +you there and forget how you looked. I had seen +a great actor play the part of Fagin in “Oliver Twist,” +and at these entertainments I tried giving an imitation +of him, until a big husky farmer tried to whip me. I +had a job to explain to my friends that he was trying to +punch Fagin—not me. The audiences knew no middle +ground. They wanted some burlesque or some tragedy of +their own lives which would tear at their heartstrings. +Now and then as I recited in those hot, dim schoolhouses +the keen humor of the thing would come to me, +or like a flash the poverty and pathos of my own struggle +would sweep over me with overwhelming force. +Then I could feel that audience moving with me and +for a brief moment I got out of the ditch of life and[99] +knew the supreme joy of the complete mastery of +one who can separate the human imagination from +the flesh and compel it to walk with him where he +wills.

+ +

These moments were all too brief. Back we came +finally to the dim, stifling room, and the rather ignoble +and commonplace job of trying to measure the value of +a thrill by a voluntary contribution. I have had many +a high hope and many a dream of a new suit of clothes +blackballed on “passing the hat.” At first, when a man +got up and said: “Gents, this show is worth a dollar, +and I will pass the hat,” I took him at his word and expected +a hat full of bills. Yet even when I shook out +the lining I could find nothing larger than a dime. +During that Winter I made a fine collection of buttons. +It may be that most men want to keep the left hand +from knowing what the right hand is up to, but evidently +you must have one hand or the other under public observation +if you expect much out of the owner. I have +learned to have no quarrel with human nature, and I +imagine after all that the hire fitted the value of the +laborer’s efforts fairly well.

+ +

Christmas came to us in that valley with the same +beautiful message which was carried to all. It was a +cold Christmas, and as we went about our chores before +day and at night the stars were brilliant. The +crinkle of the ice and snow and the hum of the wind +over the fences and through the trees came to me like the +murmur of a faraway song. It touched us all. We +saw each other in something of a new light of glory. +The woman of the house, I think, regarded me as a sort[100] +of awkward hired man. Now she seemed to see a boy, +far from home, struggling with rather feeble hands +against the flood which swept him away from the ambition +to earn an education. I am sure that it came to +her that the Christmas spirit must be capitalized to help +me on my way. So she organized a big gathering for +Christmas Eve at which I was to “speak” and accept a +donation. It was to be over in the next district, and +that good woman took the sleigh and drove all over that +county drumming up an “audience.” I am sure that +there never was a “star” before or since who had such +an advance or advertising agent as I did on that occasion. +She was a good trainer, too. The day before +Christmas I husked corn in the cold barn, and this +delicate woman ran through the snow with two hot +biscuits and a piece of meat. There I worked through +the day husking corn with my hands while I “rehearsed” +a few new ones with my brain and sent my +heart way back to New England, where I knew the folks +were thinking of me.

+ +

In these times there would have been a fleet of automobiles +moored near the farmhouse, but in those days +no engine had yet coughed out the gasoline in its throat. +We came in sleighs and big farm “pungs.” Standing +by the barn in the clear moonlight you could see the +lanterns gleaming along the road, and hear the tinkle of +the sleighbells and the songs which the young people +were singing. Far down the road came a big farm sled +loaded with young people who were singing “Seeing +Nellie Home.” Sweet and clear came their fresh young +voices through the crisp, frosty air:—

+ +

[101]

+ +
+
+
+
“Her little hand was resting
+
On my arm as light as foam
+
When from Aunt Dinah’s quilting party,
+
I was seeing Nellie home.
+
+
+
“I was seeing Nellie. I was seeing Nellie.
+
I was seeing Nellie home,
+
’Twas from Aunt Dinah’s quilting party,
+
I was seeing Nellie home.”
+
+
+
+ +

The old farmer on the front seat sat nodding his head +to the music, and his wife beside him took her hand out +of the muff and slid it under his arm. These were the +fine old days of simple pleasures, when the country +entertained itself and was satisfied. The other night +my young folks took me off to a moving picture theater +where we saw a great actress portraying human emotion +in a way to make you shudder. My mind went +back to my own feeble efforts as a star performer, and +I was forced to admit that the usual Sunday school +entertainment could have but a small chance in competition +with this powerful exhibition. The thing to do is to +carry this strong attraction to the country and not force +our young people to travel to the city after it.

+ +

Each sleigh brought not only its load of human +freight, but a big basket of food, for there was to be a +feast of the body with food as well as of the spirit with +oratory. As the guest of honor I rode over with one of +the school trustees, and he proved a good local historian.

+ +

“This farm we visit tonight is owned by the Widder +Fairchild. A nice woman, but homely enough to stop +a clock. Her father left her the farm, and she got to be +quite an old maid. We all thought she had settled down[102] +for such when she up and married the hired man, a nice +man, but no farmer, and no property except a cough +and an old aunt mighty nigh bed-ridden. Then the husband +died and left the old lady on her hands. She +might have sent the old thing to the poorhouse—ain’t +no kin of hers—but just because her husband promised +to keep her, Mrs. Fairchild has kept the old lady on. +There the two women live on one of the best farms in +the county.”

+ +

“It’s the best because the Lord has blessed it.” That +came from the wife on the back seat. She had tried to +get in a word before.

+ +

“No, no! Farms are made good by hard work and +judgment. The minister went and talked to her about +it, but all he got out of her was ‘And Ruth said, Entreat +me not to leave thee or to return from following +after thee: for whither thou goest I will go.’”

+ +

“But, Henry, ain’t you ’shamed to call her homely?”

+ +

“No, because it’s the truth. It wouldn’t be about +you, now, but I told the minister that once. He has to +be diplomatic and he hemmed and hawed and finally +said, ‘She has a strong face.’ He’s right! Mighty +strong!”

+ +

If you ever acted in the capacity of donatee at such a +party you know the feeling. The big house was filled. +Out in the kitchen the women sorted out the food +and arranged it for supper. In the front room, beside +a little table, sat “the hired man’s old aunt,” a beautiful +old lady with white hair and a sweet, patient face. On +the table stood a few house plants in pots. One geranium +had opened a flower.

+ +

[103]

+ +

“The only one in the neighborhood for Christmas,” +said the old lady. “You don’t know how proud I am +of it. It has been such a joy to me to see it slowly +grow, and, oh, think of what it means to have it come at +Christmas!”

+ +

But the donatee has little time for small talk. He +always earns his donation, and whatever happened to it +later, I earned it that night. They finally stopped me +for supper. The minister alluded to it as “the bounteous +repast which we are now asked to enjoy.” My +friend the trustee stood by the door and shouted:

+ +

“Hoe in—help yourself!”

+ +

It was getting on toward Christmas Day when I stood +up in the corner to end the entertainment. I had intended +to end with Irwin Russell’s “Christmas Night +in the Quarters,” with negro dialect, but as I was about +to start my eye fell upon a group by that little table. +The “old aunt” sat looking at me, and by her side +stood the “homely” woman, her hand resting upon the +older woman’s shoulder. I wonder if you have ever +had a vision come to you at Christmas—or any other +time! A great, mysterious, beautiful vision, in which +you look forward into the years and are given to see +some great thing which is hidden from most men until +too late. It came to me as I watched those women that +the finest test of character, the noblest part of the Christmas +spirit, was not the glory of caring for helpless childhood, +but the higher sacrifice of love and duty for the +aged.

+ +

And so, almost before I knew it, I found myself reciting +Will Carleton’s poem, “Over the Hill to the[104] +Poorhouse!” What a sentiment to bring into a happy +Christmas party—by the donatee at that—one who had +been hired “to make them laugh”!

+ +

I knew it all, yet my mind jumped across the long +miles and I thought of my own mother growing old and +waiting in silence that I might have opportunity!

+ +
+
+
+
“Over the hill to the poorhouse
+
I’m trudging my weary way.
+
I a woman of sixty,
+
Only a trifle gray,
+
I who am smart and chipper.
+
For all the years I’ve told,
+
As many another woman
+
Only one-half as old.
+
+
+
“Over the hill to the poorhouse!
+
I can’t quite make it clear;
+
Over the hill to the poorhouse,
+
It seems so horrid queer!
+
Many’s the journey I’ve taken,
+
Traveling to and fro,
+
But over the hill to the poorhouse
+
I never once thought I’d go!”
+
+
+
+ +

It was a great 10 minutes. It is worth a good many +years to have 600 ticks of the clock pass by like that. +Could all of us have lived, for 10 years with that 10-minute +feeling—what a neighborhood that would have +been. I was looking at those two women by the table. +I saw their hands come together. It is true that the +trustee had not done great injustice to her appearance, +but as she stood there by “the hired man’s old aunt” +there came upon her face a beauty such as God alone +can bring upon the face of those who are beloved by +Him. A light from within illuminated her life story,[105] +and I could read it on her face. A love that endures +after death—until life! And when I stopped I was +done. The power had all gone from me. Not so with +my manager, the trustee. He could sense a psychological +moment even if he could not spell it, and he got his +hat into action before the rich spirit of that crowd could +get to the poorhouse. I saw him coming with the hat +full—there were surely several bills there. Say, did +you ever spend money before you got your fingers on it? +I never have since that night. I know better. As I saw +that money I figured on several Christmas presents, a +new coat and at least one term at college. The trustee +cleared his throat for a few remarks and I stood there +pleasantly expectant, anticipating a few compliments—and +the money.

+ +

“Now, friends, we thank you one and all for your +generous gift, and we thank our talented young friend +here for the great assistance he has given us. He will +rejoice when he learns the full amount, for, my dear +friends, this money belongs to the Sunday school!”

+ +

And he proceeded forthwith to gather up the money +and stuff it into his pockets, leaving me with my mouth +half open, and my hand half extended.

+ +

What could you do? There was a roar of protest +from several farmers who demanded their money back, +though they never got it. Happily the humor of it +struck me. The first thing that came into my mind was +an old song I had often heard:

+ +

Thou art so near and yet so far!

+ +

There is nothing like being a good sport, and so I +bowed and smiled and took my medicine, although I am[106] +sure the party would have ended in a fight if I had said +the word. But the “old aunt” looked at me for a moment +and then cut off that geranium bloom, tied two +leaves on it and handed it to me without a word. And +the woman with the shining face took my hand in both +hers and said: “Do not get discouraged. I know you +will win out.”

+ +

I rode home with a farmer who, with his two big +sons, roared profanely at what they called the “injustice +of that miser.” They vowed to get up another donation, +which they did later. They offered to go and +“lick the trustee” and take the money from him. I +think they were a little disappointed when I told them +that he needed it more than I did.

+ +

“Why, from the way you talk, anybody’d think you +had fallen heir to a big thing!”

+ +

I had. That little flower in my pocket carried a +Christmas spirit and a Christmas lesson that the whole +world could not buy. The thing paying the largest +dividend, the finest companion that ever walked with +one along the roadway of life—unselfish love, and sacrifice.

+ +
+ +
+ +

[107]

+ +

“COLUMBUS DAY”

+ +
+ +

I would like to know where you are tonight, and what +you have been doing all through this “Liberty Day.” +With us the day has been cloudy and wet, and just as +the sun went down Nature took the liberty of sending a +cold, penetrating rain. So here I am before my big fire +with a copy of Washington Irving’s “Life of Christopher +Columbus.” That seems the proper way to end +Columbus Day, for in trying to tell the children about +him I found that I did not really know much more than +they do about the great discoverer. So here I am back +some 400 years in history wondering if any of these +pompous and bigoted ways of seeking for new worlds or +new methods can be applied to modern life in New +Jersey.

+ +

My back aches, for I have been digging potatoes all +day—and I thought I had graduated from that job some +years ago. Perhaps you will say that we should have +been out selling Liberty bonds or parading. Personally, +I am a poor salesman, and we all subscribed for our +bonds some days ago. There are eight bondholders in +this family. The influenza has left us without labor +except for the children while the school is closed. There +are still over 100 barrels of apples to pick, potatoes to +dig, plowing and seeding to be done, and a dozen other +jobs all pressing. So I decided to celebrate Liberty Day +by digging those Bible School potatoes. We planted a[108] +patch of potatoes between rows of young peach trees +and promised the crop to the Bible Teachers’ Training +School. Last year we tried this, and I put in a few of +the latest scientific touches which the experts told us +about. The plant lice came in a swarm and ruined the +patch. We had a few potatoes about the size of marbles. +This year we avoided scientific advice, and just planted +potatoes in the old-fashioned way. They were not cultivated +in the best possible manner, but they made a +good crop. So when Liberty Day dawned with a thick, +gray mist over the land I decided to get those potatoes +out instead of going on the march or singing “The Star +Spangled Banner.” From what I read of Columbus I +imagine he would have chosen the parade and left the +digging to others. The world has taken on new ideas +about labor since then.

+ +

So, after breakfast, Cherry-top and I took our forks +and started digging. The soil was damp and the air +full of mist and meanness which made me sneeze and +cough as we worked on. Happily, out on our hills we +are not fined $20 for sneezing outside of a handkerchief, +as is the case in New York. If anyone has discovered +any poetry or philosophy in the job of digging potatoes +he may have the floor. I call it about the most menial +job on the farm, and therefore fine discipline for “Liberty +Day.” While we were working Philip and the +larger boy went by with the team to seed rye. They +have thrashed out enough grain by hand, and this is not +only ideal weather, but about the last limit for seeding. +The land was plowed some two weeks ago, a big crop +of ragweed and grass being turned under. If we only[109] +had the labor this ground would have been disked twice +and then harrowed. As it is, we can only work it once +with the spring-tooth. Then Philip goes ahead seeding +in the rye by hand, while the boy follows with the Acme +harrow to cover the grain. It is rough seeding and +would not answer for wheat, but rye is tough and enduring, +and it will imitate Columbus and discover a +new world in that decaying mass of ragweed. So I +watch the seed sowers travel slowly along the hillside as +I dig, and wonder what was doing on this farm 427 +years ago, and what will be doing here 100 years hence! +Such reflections were the most cheerful mental accompaniment +I could find for digging potatoes. They are +impractical, while digging is the most practical thing on +earth!

+ +

As we dug on a man and woman came up the lane. +They came after apples, having engaged them before. +The boy went down to attend to them, while I kept on +digging. Then the boy came back with two more apple +customers. The trouble with us is that we have more +customers than apples this year, but these were old +patrons, and they were served. The boy finally came +back with $41.80 as a result of his trading, and we went +at our job with new vigor. As we dug along we noticed +a curious thing about those potatoes. Here and there +was a vine large and strong, and still perfectly green. +The great majority of the hills were dead, but those +green ones were as vigorous as they were in June. The +variety was Green Mountain, and we soon found that +on the average these big green vines were producing +twice as much as the dead hills. Some of these living[110] +vines carried three or four big potatoes. Others had a +dozen, with seven or eight of market size, while others +had about 16 tubers, mostly small. Just why these +vines should act in this way I do not know. There are +so many possible reasons that I should have to guess +at it, as Columbus did when, as his ship sailed on and +on into the west, the compass began to vary. The boy +and I decided that here was where we might discover a +good strain of Green Mountain on Columbus Day. So +we have selected 15 of the best hills. They will be +planted, hill by hill, next year and still further selection +made. We discarded the hills with only a few big +potatoes and also those with many small ones, and +selected those with a good number of medium-sized +tubers. It may come to nothing, but we will try it. +Experience and careful figures show that an ordinary +crop of potatoes in this country does not pay. The +same is true of a flock of ordinary poultry, or a drove +of scrub pigs. There is no profit except in well-bred, +selected stock. That’s what we think we have in pigs +and poultry—perhaps we may get something of the +same thing in potatoes.

+ +

But there is one sure thing about digging potatoes—you +work up a great appetite. At noon there came a +most welcome parade up the lane. It was not a woman +suffrage procession, but Mother, Aunt Eleanor, Rose +and the little girls bringing the picnic dinner in baskets +and pails. The boy had built a fire up above the Spring +and piled stones up around it. By the time I had +washed my hands and face in the brook Mother had a +frying pan over this fire with slices of bacon sizzling and[111] +giving up their fat. When this bacon was brown the +slices were taken out and the fat kept on bubbling and +dancing. Then Aunt Eleanor cut up slices of Baldwin +apples and dropped them into this fat. They tell me +Ben Davis is best for this fried-apple performance, but +I found no fault with Baldwin as it jumped out of that +fat. The chemist will no doubt explain how the bacon +fat combined with the acid of the apple, etc., etc., etc. +Let him talk; it does him good—but have another fried +apple! Men may come and men may go, but they will +seldom find more appetizing food or a more perfect balanced +ration than the Hope Farmers discovered around +that fire. There were bread and butter, fried bacon, +fried apple, pot cheese and several of our choice Red +hen’s eggs boiled hard and chopped fine with a little +onion. Of course, eggs are worth good and great money +just now, but nothing is too good for an occasion like +this. And so, on that cheerless day, sitting around our +fire, we all concluded that Columbus did a great thing +when he discovered America.

+ +

But our job was not to be ended by eating fried +apples and bacon, pleasant as that occupation is, and +when I put out my hand I was obliged to admit that the +first faint evidence of rain was beginning. The larger +boy went back to his rye seeding, and very soon Tom and +Broker could be seen on the lower farm pounding back +and forth over the field like gray giants hauling up +the guns. All hands went to picking up potatoes. +Mother picked two bushels and then had to go back to +her housework. Little Rose claimed that she picked up +20 potatoes. Her chief job was to hold on to her throat[112] +and ask if it was not time to eat one more of those +sweet throat tablets I had in my pocket. The rain +slowly developed from mist to good-sized drops. I know +what it means to get wet, and in any other cause I +would have left the job, but we were there to finish those +potatoes, and we stayed by it until they were all picked +up. The last barrel or two came up out of the mud, and +our hands and feet were surely plastered with common +clay—but we finished our job. Then came the boys +with Broker and the fruit wagon to carry the crop to +the barn. One of these boys had on a rubber coat—the +other a sack over his shoulders. They went on up +the hill to get a load of apples and on their way back +brought down the Bible potatoes, where they will dry +out and be ready for delivery. When we got to the +barn there was another party after apples.

+ +

We finished it all at last, dried off before the fire and +found ourselves none the worse for the day. In the +present condition of my back I would not from choice +go to a dance tonight, but that will limber out in time. +The fire roars away, the rain taps at the window, and +we are safe and warm. We have had our supper, and +I suppose I could tell where Aunt Eleanor has hidden +a pan of those famous ginger cookies. I will make it a +one to five chance that I can also find a pan of baked +apples. I think I will not reveal the secret publicly +at this time. The Food Administrator might accuse her +of using too much ginger or sweetening! School has +been closed on account of the influenza, but the children +are still working their “examples,” and I give them a +few original sums to work out. Little Rose listens[113] +to all this, and finally proposes this one of her own:

+ +

“If a woman paid three cents at a hospital for a +baby, how much would a horse cost?”

+ +

Personally, I will give that up, and go back to the +“Life of Columbus.” The most interesting thing to +me is the account of the council of wise men to whom +Columbus tried to explain his theories. They told him +that since the old philosophers and wise men had not +discovered any new world, it was great presumption for +an ordinary man to claim that there remained any great +discovery for him to make. Seems to me I have heard +that same argument ever since I was able to read and +understand. Perhaps it is well that all who come, like +Columbus, with a theory and vision of new worlds must +fight and endure and suffer before the slow and prejudiced +public will give them a chance. But here comes +a message for me to come upstairs and see a strange +thing. Little Rose cannot have her own way, and she +has gone into a passion altogether too big for her little +frame. She will not even let me come near her, and +back I come a little sadly to my book and my fire. They +are not quite so satisfying as before. But who comes +here? It is Mother carrying a very pink and repentant +morsel of humanity—little Rose. She hunts up my electric +hearing device and with the ear piece at my ear I +hear a trembly little voice saying:

+ +

I’s awful sorry!

+ +

And that is a fine ending for Liberty Day. Perhaps, +like Columbus on that fateful night at the end of his +voyage, this little one sees the first faint light of a new +world! Who knows?

+ +
+ +
+ +

[114]

+ +

THE COMMENCEMENT

+ +
+ +

You could hardly have crowded another human into +the great hall. From the gowned and decorated dignitaries +on the stage to the great orchestra in the upper +gallery every square foot of floor space was packed, as +the president of the great woman’s college arose to open +the commencement exercises. This followed one of the +most impressive scenes I have ever witnessed. The +great audience had been waiting long beyond the appointed +time for starting, when suddenly the orchestra +started a slow and stately march and we all rose. A +dignified woman in cap and gown, with soft gray hair, +marched slowly up the aisle, and following her came +long lines of “sweet girl graduates,” as Tennyson puts +it. The woman walked to the steps which led to the +stage, and standing there reviewed the long lines of girls +as they filed silently in and occupied the seats reserved +for them. In their black gowns and white bands they +seemed, as they were, a trained and steadfast army. As +they seated themselves and rose again it seemed like the +swelling of a great ocean tide. And following them +came men and women who had gained distinction in education +or public life. They, too, were in cap and gown, +with bands of red, purple, white, green or brown, to +designate their college or their studies. The bright sunshine +flooded in at the open windows. Outside, the +beautiful green college campus stretched away in gently[115] +rolling mounds and little valleys. I noticed a robin +perched on a tree with his head on one side, calmly +viewing the great professor who with the bright red +band across his breast was delivering the address. Very +likely this wise bird was saying, “You should not be +too proud of that dash of red on your gown. There are +others! Your red badge is man made. It will not +appear on your children, and it may even be taken from +you. The red on my breast is a finger-print of Nature, +and cannot be removed.”

+ +

I know that there are those who would call this impressive +service mere pomp and vain parade, yet, to the +plain man and woman sitting in the front row of the +balcony, it all seemed a noble part of a great proceeding, +and a great pride for them. Just where the balcony +curved around like a horseshoe this gray-haired couple +sat—just like hundreds of other men and women who, in +other places, with strange thought in mind, were watching +their boys and girls pass out of training into the race +of life. The Hope Farm man is supposed to be a +farmer, and “as the husband so the wife is.” He +worked out as hired man for some years and otherwise +qualified for the position, while Mother probably never +saw a working farm before she was married. But at +any rate there they were—like the hundreds of other +plain men and women, while down below them the best +work of their lives was coming to fruition. For the +daughter was part of that army in cap and gown and +was about to receive her certificate of education!

+ +

To me one of the most interesting characters in the +universe is “the hen with one chicken”! These women[116] +with one child of their own! Having added just one +volume to the book of life it is their duty and privilege +to regard it as a masterpiece. When you come to +think of it, what a day, what a moment, that must have +been for a woman like Mother. Here was her only +child, a girl who, from the cradle, had never given her +a moment’s uneasiness or a single lapse of confidence, +now standing up big and straight and fine to take her +college degree. It had been the dream of Mother’s girlhood +to go through this same great college, but that +had been denied her. Yet the years had swung around +in their relentless march and here was her daughter, +big, trained, fine and unspoiled, making noble use of the +opportunity which failed to knock at her mother’s door! +Many of you women who read this will know that there +can be no prouder moment in a woman’s life. Is it +any wonder that there was a very suspicious moisture +on Mother’s glasses as the minister read the 25th chapter +of St. Matthew?

+ +

And I was afraid and went and hid thy talent in +the earth.

+ +

Would you not, as she did, have sung with all your +power when that great audience rose like a mighty wave +to sing “The Star Spangled Banner”? The members +of the orchestra stood up to play the tune. As you +know, a group of musicians will usually show a large +proportion of European faces, but all these markings of +foreign blood faded away as they played, and there came +upon each countenance the light of what we call +Americanism.

+ +

But what about “father” at such a time and place?[117] +Where does he come in? At a woman’s college he stays +out—he is a mere incident, and properly so. If he is +wise he will accept the situation. For this big girl +marching in line has his shoulders and head; she walks +as he does, and people are kind enough to remark, “How +much your daughter looks like you!” Now this is no +fly in the ointment of Mother’s pride and joy, unless +you refer to it too much. Far better take a back seat +and let the good lady take full pride in her daughter. +I confess that when those 200 girls sat together at the +front of the room, all in cap and gown, and most of +them with their hair arranged alike, I could not be sure +of my own girl until her name was called! My mind +was back in the years busy with many memories. More +than a full generation ago at an agricultural college I +walked up to receive my “certificate.” I remember +that I had on some clothes which had been discarded +by two other men. I played the part of tailor to clean +and press them into service. There were no be-gowned +and decorated dignitaries on the platform—just a few +farmers, several of them right out of the harvest field. +I remember how two of these tired men fell asleep +through our class “orations.” I had in my pocket just +enough money to get me to a farm where I had agreed +to cut corn. And this proud and happy lady beside me! +At just about the same time she was graduating from a +normal college at the South. She was then a mere +slip of a pretty girl, not out of her ’teens, with a plain +white dress and a bright ribbon, and no “graduation +present” but the bare price of a ticket home. And +within a few weeks she was off, giving the acid test to[118] +her certificate of education by teaching school in Texas! +What a world it all is anyway! The years had ironed +out the rather poor scientific farmer and the smart +girl teacher into the parents of this young woman who, +as we fondly hope, has adopted the good qualities of +both sides of the house and cast out the poor ones. A +great world, certainly a good world, and probably a wise +one!

+ +

The orator of the day made an impressive speech. He +made a powerful comparison between Crœsus, the rich +Persian king, and Leonidas, the Greek hero. Then he +compared the life of the Emperor Tiberius with that +of Jesus. It was a powerful plea for a life of service—for +making full use of training and culture. I saw +my old friend the robin on his perch outside regarding +the orator critically. I take him to be one of these exponents +of a “practical” education. Very likely he +was saying:

+ +

“Very fine! Very fine! ‘Words, my lord, words.’ +But if I had a daughter I would want more of housekeeping +and practical homemaking in her education. +With all your culture and literature you cannot build a +house as my daughter can. You cannot tell when it is +time to go South, as we can, nor can you defend yourself +against enemies as we are able to do. All very fine, +no doubt, for human beings, but if birds were educated +with any such ideas the race would be extinct in three +generations. Reading, writing and housekeeping are +the only things that women need to know.”

+ +

I have heard human robins talk in just exactly that +way, and for many years the world listened to them and[119] +believed what they said. Their talk was about like the +song of the robin, only not 10 per cent as musical. +They were opposed to the “educated” woman, and most +of all to the woman’s college. There are still some of +these pessimists left. I thought of one in particular +as one by one those girls stood up to receive their +diplomas—and the robin flew away in disgust. Woman +can never again be set aside as a slave or underling or +inferior partner of man. She has a right to the best +there is in life. Some of those who read this will say, +“What will become of farming if our country women +get the idea that they are entitled to education and culture, +as others are?” Farming will be better off than +ever before, because when our women get this idea firmly +in mind we shall all proceed to demand the things which +will enable us to give opportunity to every country girl.

+ +

Of all the wonderful changes in the past 25 years, +few have been so remarkable as the growth of opportunity +for women. The full ballot is now to be given +them, and the war opened many a door of industry. +Those doors cannot be shut. They have lost their hinges. +A new element is coming into business and political +life. I do not think we need new development of science +or mechanical skill half as much as we need vision, +poetry and the finer imagination. It must be said that +while man alone has done wonders in developing material +power he has failed to combine it with spiritual +power. That is what we need today more than anything +else, and I think the finely educated women are +to bring it. I was thinking about this all through that +great day. Suppose my daughter and the 200 other[120] +graduates had all been trained as lawyers, doctors, business +women, etc.; would they really benefit the world +more than they will now do with broad, strong culture +and with minds stored with the best that literature can +give them? I doubt it. No matter what they may do +hereafter, their lives and their influence will be strong +for this sort of training. I can hardly think of any +better missionary to go into a country neighborhood to +live than one of these hopeful, trained and useful young +women. Mother selected the college for her daughter +before that young person was out of her cradle. I +thought some more practical training would be better, +but I never had a chance to argue. I now conclude that +Mother was right. She knew what she was doing, and +evidently sized up the spirit of her own flesh and blood. +If you ask me what I think is the finest thing about a +college education I can quickly tell you. It is having a +son or daughter go through a great college with credit +and come out wholly unspoiled by the process. It seems +to me that most people use the college as a trading place +in life. They bring away from it knowledge and culture, +but they leave behind too much of youth, too much +of the plain home life, too much of the simple, homely, +kindly things which the world needs and longs for. So +that we may all pardon Mother her pride and satisfaction +as she looks down upon this big girl in cap and +gown and knows that her daughter has mastered the +course at a great college and still remains her daughter, +with a sane and fine understanding of her relations to +the home and to society.

+ +

Ideals are what count. One of the most beautiful[121] +ceremonies of this commencement was the placing of +the laurel chain. The senior class, dressed in white, +marched to the grave where lies the founder of the +college, carrying a great chain or wreath of laurel. +While the students sang, these seniors draped the laurel +around the little fence which enclosed the grave. It +was as if the youngest daughter of the college had come +to pay reverence to the founder. A beautiful ceremony, +and after it was over I went back and copied the inscription +on one side of the little monument. I have +seen nothing finer as a message to educated youth.

+ +

There is nothing in the universe that I fear but +that I shall not know all my duty or shall fail to do it.

+ +
+ +
+ +

[122]

+ +

“ORGANIZATION”

+ +
+ +

The other day a city man came to the farm after apples. +He loaded up his car and, rendered good-natured by +eating three mellow Baldwins, he proceeded to tell us +where farmers were behind the times. It is a pleasure +for many city men to do this and the average farmer +good-naturedly listens, always glad to have his customers +enjoy themselves. This man said he wondered why +farmers have never organized properly so as to defend +and control their business. It is quite easy for a man +of large affairs to see what could be done if all the +farmers could get together in a great business organization.

+ +

“The trouble with you folks is that you don’t know +how to do team work,” said my city friend. “Suppose +there are twelve million farmers in the country. Suppose +they all joined and organized and pledged by all +they hold sacred to each put up $5.00 every month as a +working fund. Suppose they hired the greatest organizing +brain in the country and instructed its owner and +carrier to go to it. It would simply mean world control +by the most patient and deserving class on earth. +Why don’t you do it?”

+ +

That’s the way your city business man talks, and he +cannot understand why our farmers do not promptly +carry out the plan. Of course that word “suppose” +takes the bottom out of most facts, but it is hard for[123] +the business man to realize why farmers have not been +able to do full team work. This man said that large +business enterprises in the city were controlled by +boards of directors. There might be men on the board +who personally hated each other with all the intensity +of business hatred. Yet when it came to a matter of +business policy for the company they all got together +and put the proposition through. He said it was different +with a farmer, who if he had trouble with his neighbor +over a line fence would not under any circumstances +vote for him even if he stood for a sound business +proposition.

+ +

That is the way many of these city men feel. It is +largely a matter of ignorance through not understanding +country conditions. Those of us who spend our lives +among the hills can readily understand why it is hard +for a farmer to surrender a large share of his individuality +and put it into the contribution box of society. +Many of us, I fear, would dodge or cheat the contribution +box in church unless we felt we were under the watchful +eye of our wives. Possibly we shall contribute more +freely to society now that our wives and daughters have +the privilege of voting. When a man has lived his life +among brick and stone with ancestors who have been +constantly warned to “keep off the grass” he comes to +be incapable of understanding what is probably the +greatest problem of American society. That is the +effort to keep our country people contented and feeling +that they are getting a fair share of life, so that they +will continue cheerfully to feed and clothe the world. +You cannot convince a man unless you can understand[124] +his language or read his thought. One of the worst misfortunes +of the present day is the fact that city and +country have grown apart, so that they have no common +language.

+ +

Those of us who live close to Nature realize that in +order to know the truth we must find

+ +
+
+
+
“Tongues in trees, Books in running Brooks,
+
Sermons in stones, and good in everything.”
+
+
+
+ +

The trouble with the city man is that he has been +denied the blessed privilege of studying that way. +Therefore, if you would make him know why in the +past it has been so difficult for farmers to organize +thoroughly you must go to the primary motives of life +and not to the high school.

+ +

When our first brood of children were small, I +thought it well to give them an early lesson in organization. +There were four children, and as Spring came +upon us there was a great desire to start a garden. So +we proceeded in the most orderly manner to organize the +Hope Farm Garden Association. We had a constitution +and full set of rules and by-laws. These stated the +full duties of all the officers, but somehow we forgot to +provide for the plain laborers. The largest boy was +President and the smaller boy was Vice-President. My +little girl was Secretary, and the other girl Treasurer. +It was an ideal arrangement, for each one held an important +office, and all were directors. I had a piece of +land plowed and harrowed. I bought seeds and tools +and the Association voted to start the garden at once. +They started under directions of the President and I[125] +went up the hill to work in the orchard. It proved +to be a case where the controlling director should have +remained on the job. Halfway up the hill I glanced +back and saw the Hope Farm Garden Association headed +for the rocks. The President and Vice-President were +fighting and the Treasurer and Secretary were crying. +No one was working except the black hen, and she was +industriously eating up the seeds.

+ +

I came back to save the Association if possible and +the Secretary ran to meet me with the minutes of the +meeting on her cheeks. Her hands had been in the soil +and she had succeeded in transferring a portion of it +to her face. Through this deposit the tears had forced +their way in a track as crooked as the course of the +Delaware River, in its effort to carve the outline of +a human face on the western coast of New Jersey. +The poor little Secretary came up the lane with the +old industrial cry which has come down to us out of the +ages, tearing apart the efforts of men to combine and +improve their condition.

+ +

Oh! Father, don’t the President have to work?

+ +

The minutes of the meeting clearly revealed the trouble. +It seemed that the President of the Association +made the broad claim that his duty consisted simply in +being President. There was nothing in the constitution +about his working. Of course, a dignified President +could not perform manual labor. The Secretary +followed with the claim that her duty was to write in +a book; how could she do that if she worked? Then +came the Treasurer proving by the by-laws that her duty +was to hold the money; if she tried to work at the same[126] +time she might lose the cash. So naturally she could not +work. Thus it happened that there was no laborer left +except the Vice-President. He had resigned and the +President was trying to accept his resignation in italics.

+ +

These were the same children who had settled a debate +on the previous Sunday afternoon. The question +was whether they would rather have the minister read +his sermon or talk off-hand. The vote was 3 to 1 in +favor of having him read it. The prevailing argument +was that when the minister read his sermon he knew +when he got through. The one negative vote was passed +on the hope that when he talked off-hand he might +be a little off-head, forget one or two pages and thus +get through sooner. You may learn from that one +reason why it has been so hard in the past for certain +farmers to organize.

+ +

And one reason why there has grown up an industrial +advantage in the town and city may perhaps be +learned from another sermon in stones. Some years ago +we had two boys on the farm. Largely in order to +keep them busy their mother made a bargain with +them to wash windows. They were to be paid so much +for each window properly cleaned. Of course their +mother supposed that the work would be done in the +good old-fashioned way of scrubbing the glass by hand +with a wet cloth. The object was more to keep them +busy than to have any skilled work performed. One +boy was a patient plodding character who did not object +seriously to hand labor. He took a cloth and a pail of +hot water and slowly and carefully rubbed off the glass +in the old-fashioned way. The other boy never did like[127] +to work and after some thought he went to the neighbor’s +and borrowed a small hand-pump with a hose and fine +nozzle. He filled this with hot water with the soap dissolved +in it and sprayed his windows with the hot mixture. +He got them just as clean as the other boy did, +but he did three windows while his companion was doing +one. Then there arose an argument as to whether this +boy with the pump should be paid the same price per +window as the other boy who did the work by hand. +These boys both went to the Sunday school and the +boy with the pump was able to refer to the parable of +the man who hired the workmen at different hours +during the day. When they came to settle up the men +who had worked all day grumbled because they got no +more than the men who had worked half a day. The +answer of the boss applied to this window washing. +“Did I not agree with thee for a penny?”

+ +

Now in a way the city man with his advantage in +labor is not unlike the boy with the pump. The city +workman has been able to take advantage of many industrial +developments of much machinery which has +not yet reached the country. Some day there will be +an adjustment and then the countryman will have his +inning.

+ +

Some years ago I spent the night with a farmer far +back in a country neighborhood. After supper he described +in great detail a plan he had evolved for organizing +all American farmers in one great and powerful +body. His plan was complete and he had worked out +every detail except one which he did not seem to think +essential. I looked out of the window through the dark[128] +night and saw a light far down the road. Some neighbor +was at home. I thought it a good time for action.

+ +

“There,” I said, “is a chance to start this big +scheme of yours. Down the road I see the light from +your neighbor’s window. Put on your hat, take the +hired man and your boys and we will go right down +there and organize the first chapter of this organization. +No time like the present.”

+ +

The farmer’s face clouded. “Why, I haven’t spoken, +to that man for three years. He would not keep up the +line fence and I had to go to law and make him do it.”

+ +

I looked out of the window once more and saw another +light to the north of us dimly visible in the darkness. +“Well, then let us go to this other neighbor. I saw +several men there as I came by.”

+ +

“That man! I wouldn’t trust him with fifty cents, +and he would be sure to elect himself Treasurer.”

+ +

“Well, far across the pasture I see still another light. +Shall we go there?”

+ +

“No, that man doesn’t know enough to go in the +house when it rains.”

+ +

The farmer’s wife looked up from her sewing as if to +speak, but the man answered for her.

+ +

“Oh, the women meet at the sewing circle and church, +and while they talk about each other they keep together +and do things for the neighborhood, but somehow the +men folks don’t get on.”

+ +

Yet here was a man who planned to bring all the +farmers of the country together and yet could not +organize his own neighborhood, because men were kept +apart by little prejudices and fancied wrongs. The[129] +women combined because they knew enough to realize +that these petty things were non-essential, while the +great community things could only be remembered by +forgetting the meanness of every-day life.

+ +

Your city men will smile at this sermon in stones, +and say that those farmers never can forget their differences +and organize. Yet city life is worse yet. +Many a man lives for years within a foot of his neighbor, +yet never knows him. There may be only a brick +wall between the two families, yet they might as well +be 10 miles apart, so far as any community feeling is +concerned. If dwellers on any block in the city could +combine as a renting or buying association they would +quickly settle the High Cost of Living burden, but while +their interests are all in common they are unable to play +the part of real neighbors. Farmers are coming to it +largely through their women and children and the great +National Farm Organization is by no means impossible +for the future.

+ +
+ +
+ +

[130]

+ +

THE FACE OF LIBERTY

+ +
+ +

I suppose every person of middle age wears a mask. +It is his face, and as the years go by it settles into an +expression of the man’s chief aim in life, if he can be +said to have one. That is why a shrewd observer can +usually tell much of a man’s character by looking keenly +in his face and observing him under excitement. One +of the most observing dairymen I know of says he can +tell the quality of a cow by looking at her face. I notice +that the expert hen men who select birds for the poultry +contest spend considerable time looking at the hen’s +eye and face! There she seems to show whether she is +a bad egg or a good one! Lady Macbeth put it well +when she said to her terrified husband:

+ +
+
+
+
“Your face, my thane, is as a book
+
Where men may read strange matters.”
+
+
+
+ +

We all go about wearing a mask, and those who care +how they look may well ask how the mask is made.

+ +

I once roomed with a young man who used to get +before a mirror and practise a smile and a laugh. He +was a commercial traveler, and thought it paid him to +laugh at the jokes and smile as he talked. So he trained +the muscles of his face and throat into a machine-made +twist and noise which represented his stock in trade! +He wore a mask. I have heard people say that the face +powders and massage and tricks of rolling the eyes about[131] +gave them a mask of beauty. Not long ago I talked +with a great business man who had simply given his life +up to the accumulation of property. He had succeeded, +but this success had stamped his face with a mask as +hard and flinty as steel. This man sat and told me that a +good share of his money had been made by his ability to +read character in the face. When he found a man showing +indecision or fear in his features this man knew he +could handle him as he saw fit. He claimed that thought +or sentiment had little to do with it; it was simply what +a man did or did not do which made the mask of life. +As for this theory that character or sentiment “light a +candle behind the face and illuminate it,” he said that +was simply “poetic nonsense.” “If a woman wanted to +be thought beautiful after she got to be forty she must +rub the beauty in from the outside.”

+ +

This seemed to me a mighty cynical theory, for the +most beautiful women I know of are over fifty and never +use anything but soap and water to “rub the beauty +in.” They wear a mask which seems like concentrated +sunshine, and it comes from within. Yet my friend +sat there and spoke with all the conviction of a man who +has only to write his name on a piece of paper to bring +a million dollars to support his word. And he had come +to think that is about the only support worth having. +I asked him if he had ever read Hawthorne’s story +of “The Old Stone Face.” No, he had never heard of +it before—had no time for fiction or dreaming. So I +told him the story briefly; of the boy who grew up +among the hills, within sight of the “old stone face.” +This was a great rock on the side of a high mountain.[132] +The wind and the storm had slowly eaten it away until, +when viewed from a certain angle, it bore a rude resemblance +to a human face. It was a stern, gloomy, +thoughtful face, and it seemed to this boy to have been +carved out of the rock by the very hand of God to show +the world an ideal of power and majesty on the human +countenance. To most of the neighbors it was merely +“the old man of the mountain”—merely a common +rock with an accidental shape. But this boy grew up to +manhood believing in his heart that God had put on the +lonely mountain his ideal of the mask of noble human +character. And the boy went through life thinking that +if he could only find a human being with a face like +that on the mountain he would find a great man—one +carrying in his life a great message to mankind. And +so, whenever he heard of any great statesman or poet or +preacher appearing anywhere within reach this man +traveled to see him in the hope of finding the mask of +the “stone face” upon the celebrity. He was always +disappointed. These great men all showed on their faces +the marks of dissipation or pride or some weakness of +character, along with their power. He would come +back and look up at the face on the mountain—always +showing the same calm dignity and strength whether +the happy June sunshine played over it, or whether the +January storm bit at its rude features. So this man +lived his simple life and died—disappointed because he +had never been able to find God’s ideal character worked +out in a human face! One by one men who were considered +great came to the valley, only to disappoint him, +but finally, after long years of waiting and searching,[133] +the neighbors suddenly found that their friend, who had +carried the ideal so long in his heart, also carried on his +face the nobility and grandeur of the figure on the mountain. +Search for the ideal in others had brought it home +to his own life.

+ +

To my surprise, the rich and strong man who, I +supposed, had no poetry or sentiment in his heart, +listened attentively and nodded his head.

+ +

“I have seen that stone face in the White Mountains. +Your story of course is a mere fancy. There +might have been some idle dreamer to whom that happened. +I will not deny it, because I know of a case +which is somewhat in the same line. I confess that I +would not believe it had I not seen it myself.”

+ +

So he told his story, and I give it as nearly as possible +in his own words:

+ +

“It must have been fifteen years ago that I was returning +from a business trip to Europe. On the boat I +met a college man from my city, an expert in modern +languages. We were much together on the trip, and +one day we went down into the steerage to look over the +immigrants. My friend figured that this group of +strange human beings talked with him in fifteen different +languages or dialects. One family in particular +interested me. They were from the south of Poland; +a man and woman of perhaps thirty-five, with two little +boys. They were of the dull, heavy, ox-like type—mere +beasts of burden in their own country. The woman +seemed to me just about the plainest, homeliest creature +I had ever seen. Low forehead, flat features, small eyes +and great mouth, with huge hands and feet, she seemed,[134] +beside the dainty women of our own party, like some +inferior animal. I offered her a good-sized bill—they +looked as if they needed it—but the woman just pulled +her two black-eyed boys closer to her and refused to +take it.

+ +

“They passed out of my mind, until one fine, sunny +morning old Sandy Hook seemed to rise up out of the +water, and we headed straight for New York Harbor. +I stood with my college friend in front, looking down +upon the steerage passengers as they crowded forward +to get their first view of America. Strangely enough +that little Polish family that had interested me stood +right below us, and my friend could hear what they +were saying. The ship crawled up the harbor, past +Staten Island, and then came to the Statue of Liberty. +Most of us have become so familiar with this bronze +beauty that we do not even glance at it. I think her +strong, fine face and uplifted torch mean little more than +old-time habit to many Americans. Not so with that +flat-faced, plain Polish woman. As we came even with +the ‘bronze goddess’ this woman tore off the little shawl +she had tied around her head, reached out her hand +and talked excitedly to her husband. My college friend +listened to the conversation and laughed.

+ +

“‘What is she saying?’ I asked.

+ +

“‘Why, the poor, homely thing is telling her husband +that it would be the pride and joy of her life if +she could only be as beautiful as that statue—if her +face were only like that.’

+ +

“‘That is the limit. What is he saying?’

+ +

“‘Just like every other husband. He is telling her[135] +that to him she is handsomer than the old goddess, and +for good measure he tells her that under freedom in +America she will come to look like “Miss Liberty.”’

+ +

“In all my life I had never heard anything so ridiculous, +and I laughed aloud. The little family below us +looked up at the sound and saw we were laughing at +them. A great shadow fell over their day dream and +they were silent until we docked, though I noticed +that they stood hand in hand all the way. The story +seemed so good that I told it everywhere, and it was +called the standard joke of the season.

+ +

“It faded out of mind and I never thought of it +again until about ten years later one of the foremen in +the factory died suddenly. I asked the manager who +should be put in his place.

+ +

“‘Well,’ he said, ‘there is a man out in the shop +just fitted for it. I can’t pronounce his name, but I +will bring him in.’

+ +

“He did; a great black-haired man who looked me +right in the eye as I like to have people do.

+ +

“‘How long have you been in this country?’ I +asked.

+ +

“‘Ten years. You may not remember, but I came +in the ship with you; in the steerage, with my wife +and two boys.’

+ +

“It flashed into my mind at once; this was what +America had done for the man. I smiled as I thought +of the flat-faced woman who wanted to look like the +Goddess of Liberty, and the man whose faith in America +was such that he told her this dream could come true.

+ +

“The man more than made good. It is wonderful[136] +how things happen in this country. Those two black-eyed +boys were at school with my boy and played on +the football team with him. They were all three to go +to college together.

+ +

“Then you know how, before we entered the war, +the women organized to do Red Cross work? One day +my wife came home and told me how a Polish woman +had made the most wonderful talk before her society. +Before we knew it America had entered the war, and +we were all at it. You couldn’t keep my boy here. He +volunteered the first week after war was declared, and +these two black-haired boys belonging to my foreman +volunteered with him, and they all went over the sea +to fight for America.

+ +

“I had not seen their mother, and I was curious to +see what she looked like after American competence +and success had been rubbed in. We had a big +parade in our town during one of the Liberty Loan +drives, and there was one division of women who carried +service flags. I stood in the window of my club watching +the parade, and as it happened within six feet of +me on the sidewalk stood John, my foreman. I did +not laugh this time, nor was he shamed into silence for +what he thought of his wife.

+ +

“Oh, how that war did stir up and level the elements +of American society! There passed before us +in parade, side by side, my wife with a service flag +of one star and John’s wife with two stars in her +flag! And as they passed they turned and looked at +us. My wife told me later that they had been talking +as they marched. My wife had asked her comrade if[137] +she did not feel dreadfully to think of her two great +boys far away in France. And the woman with the +flat, homely face had answered:

+ +

“‘No, I feel glorified to think that I, the poor immigrant +woman, can offer my boys in part payment for +what America has done for me and my people.’

+ +

“And it was just then that I saw her face. I give +you my word that at that moment it was the most beautiful +face I ever saw. There was a calm beauty and +dignity, a light of joy upon it which made me forget +the flat nose, the narrow forehead and the great mouth. +They passed on, and John, the foreman, looked up at +me. We were both thinking the same thing, master and +man though we were. I couldn’t reach him with my +hand, but I did say:

+ +

“‘John, she has had her life wish. She has come +to look like the Goddess of Liberty. It was a miracle.’

+ +

“And John answered in his slow, thoughtful way:

+ +

“‘No, not a miracle—always she has had that great +spirit in her heart; always that great love in her soul. +She has kept that love and spirit pure all through these +hard years, and now at the great sacrifice it shone out +through her face. Said I not right that my wife would +come to be the most beautiful woman on earth?’”

+ +

My friend told the story in a matter-of-fact way, and +then fell into a silence. I did not ask him how he reconciled +this experience with his statement that beauty is +rubbed in from the outside. It wasn’t worth while; we +both knew better. The face of mature years is a mask. +It is the candle behind it that gives it character and +beauty.

+ +
+ +
+ +

[138]

+ +

CAPTAIN RANDALL’S HOUR

+ +
+ +

Uncle Isaac Randall was the last Grand Army man +in our town. All the other old comrades had passed on. +As a boy I used to try to imagine what “the last Grand +Army man” would be like. Poets and artists have +tried to picture him, but when he actually appears you +know how far the real must travel to reach the ideal. +For poet and artist would have us look upon some calm, +dignified man, carried by the wings of great achievement +far above the mean and petty things of life which +surround us like a thick fog in a narrow valley. For +that, I fear, is what most of us find life to be unless the +memory of some great sacrifice or some great devotion +can lift our heads up into the perpetual sunshine. Those +who knew Uncle Isaac saw little of the hero about him. +He was just a little, thin, nervous man, very deaf, irritable +and disappointed. No one can play the part of +a deaf man with any approach to success unless he be a +genuine philosopher, and Uncle Isaac was unfitted by +nature for that. Sometimes in Summer, when the sun +went down, you would see the old man standing in the +barn looking off to the crimson West, over the purpling +hills where the shadows came creeping up from the valley. +A man with some poetry and philosophy would +have seen in the darkening notch where the hills gave +way, to let the road pass through, an approach to the +beautiful gate through which wife and children and old[139] +comrades had passed on, to wait for him beyond the +hills. But Uncle Isaac was cursed with that curiosity +which is the torture of the deaf—he saw the hired man +up on the hill talking to the neighbor’s boy, and his +burning desire was to know what they were talking +about as they stood in the twilight.

+ +

The Great War came, and Uncle Isaac’s two grandsons +volunteered. Before they shipped overseas they +came back to the farm—very trim and natty in their +brown uniforms. It irritated the old man to think that +these boys—hardly more than babies—hardly to be +trusted to milk a kicking cow—should be sent to fight +America’s battles. And those little rifles! They were +not much better than popguns, compared with his old +army musket. The old man took the gun down from +the nail where it had hung for years. He had kept it +polished, and the lock with its percussion cap was still +working. He would show these young sniffs what real +warfare meant. So they went out in the pasture—the +old soldier carrying his musket, carefully loaded with a +round bullet—pushed in with the iron ramrod. In +order to show these boy soldiers what real warfare +might be, the old man sighted the musket over the fence +and aimed at a board about 300 yards away. The bullet +went at least five feet wide, while the old musket +kicked back so hard that Uncle Isaac winced with the +pain. Then one of the boys quietly raised his “popgun” +and aimed at a bush at least half a mile away across the +valley. In a fraction of a minute he fired half a dozen +bullets which tore up the ground all around that bush. +Then the boys hung one of their brown uniforms on the[140] +fence across the pasture, and put Grandpa’s old blue +coat beside it. You could hardly distinguish the brown +coat against the background, while the blue coat stood +out like a target. It was hard for the old man to +realize that both he and his musket belonged to a vanished +past. The boys looked at the gun and at Grandpa +marching home—trying to throw his old shoulders back +into military form—and smiled knowingly at each other +as youth has ever done in the pride of its power. They +could not see—who of us ever can see?—the spiritual +forces of patriotism which walked beside the old man, +waiting for the time to show their power.

+ +

The weeks went by, and day by day Grandpa read +his paper with growing indignation. You remember +how for months the army in France seemed to stand +still before that great “Hindenburg line” which +stretched out like an iron wall in front of Germany. It +seemed to Uncle Isaac as if his boys and the rest of +the army were cowards—afraid to march up to the line +and fight. One day he threw down his paper and expressed +himself fully, as only an old soldier can.

+ +

“I told you those boys never would fight. At the +Battle of the Wilderness Lee had a line of defense +twice as strong as this Hindenburg ever had. Did General +Grant sit still and wait for something to happen? +Not much!

+ +

“‘Forward by the left flank!’

+ +

“That was the order, and we went forward. Don’t +you know what he said at Fort Donelson? ‘I propose +to move on your works at once.’ If General Grant was +in France that’s what he’d say, and within an hour[141] +you’d see old Hindenburg coming out to surrender! +My regiment fought all day against a regiment from +North Carolina. I’ll tell you what! Let me have my +old regiment and that North Carolina regiment alongside +and I’ll guarantee that we will break right through +that Hindenburg line, march right across the Rhine, +hog-tie the Kaiser and bring him back with us.”

+ +

“But, father,” said his daughter gently, “don’t you +remember what Harry writes? They don’t fight that +way now. The cannon must open a way first. Harry +says they fire shells so large and powerful that when +they strike the ground they make a hole so large you +could put the barn into it. Suppose one of these big +shells struck in the middle of your regiment?”

+ +

“I don’t care,” said Uncle Isaac. “We’d start, anyway! +We’d move on those breastworks and take our +chances!

+ +

And mother wrote about it to her boys in the army +over in France. The young fellows laughed at the +thought of those old white-haired men, with their antiquated +weapons, lined up before the death-dealing power +of Germany. It seemed such a foolish thing to youth. +The letter finally came to the grey-haired colonel of +the regiment—an elderly man who had in some way +held his army place in the ocean of youth which surrounded +him. His eyes were moist as he read it, for he +knew that if that group of wasted, white-haired men had +lined up in front of the army they would not have been +alone. Down the aisles of history would have come a +throng of old heroes—the spirit of the past would have +stood with them. They would have stilled the laughter,[142] +and if these old veterans had started forward the whole +great army would have thrown off restraint, broken +orders and followed them through the “Hindenburg +line.”

+ +

But Uncle Isaac, at home, humiliated and sad, went +about the farm with something like a prayer in his old +heart.

+ +

“Why can’t I do something to help? Don’t make me +know my fighting days are over. What can I do?”

+ +

And Uncle Isaac finally had his chance. Perhaps +you remember how at one time during the war things +seemed dark enough. Our boys were swarming across +the ocean, and submarines were watching for them. +Food was scarce. Frost and storm had turned against +us. Money was flowing out like water. Spies and +German sympathizers were poisoning the public mind, +and the Liberty Loan campaign was lagging. Uncle +Isaac, reading it all day by day in his paper, felt like +a man in prison galled to the soul by his inability to +help. There came a big patriotic meeting at the county +town. It was a factory town with many European +laborers. They were restless and uneasy, opposed to the +draft, tired of the war and not yet in full sympathy +with America. Uncle Isaac determined to go to this +meeting, though his daughter did all she could to dissuade +him. There was no stopping him when he once +made up his mind, so his daughter let him have his way, +but she sent old John Zabriski along with him. Old +John was a German Pole who came to this country +as a young man out of the German army. He had lived +on Uncle Isaac’s farm for years, and just as a cabbage[143] +or a tomato plant seems the stronger and better for +transplanting, so this transplanted European in the soil +of this country had grown into the noblest type of +American. So the daughter, standing in the farmhouse +door with eyes that were a little dimmed, watched these +two old men drive away to the meeting.

+ +

They had the speaker’s stand in front of the court +house. The street was packed with a great crowd. +Right in front was a group of sullen, defiant foreigners +who had evidently come for trouble. The sheriff was +afraid of them, and inside the court house out of sight, +but ready for instant service, was a squad of soldiers. +A young man who was running for the Legislature +caught sight of Uncle Isaac and led him through the +court house to the speaker’s platform, and John went, +too, as bodyguard. The old veteran sat there in his +blue coat and hat with the gold braid, unable to hear a +word, but full of the spirit which had come down to him +from the old days.

+ +

Something was wrong. Even Uncle Isaac could see +that, and John Zabriski beside him looked grave and +anxious. That solid group of rough men in front began +to sway back and forth like the movement of water +when the high wind blows over it, and a sullen murmur, +growing louder, came from the crowd. A small, effeminate-looking +man was making a speech. Very likely +his ancestors came originally to this country two centuries ago, +but somewhere back in the years this man’s +forebears had made a fortune. Instead of serving as +a tool to spur the family on to finer things it had been +spread out like a soft cushion to carry them through life[144] +without a bruise or bump. And these rough men, whose +life had been all bruise and turmoil, knew that this +soft little American was here talking platitudes when he +should have been over in France. Perhaps you have +never heard the angry murmur of a sullen crowd grow +into a roar of rage, until the crowd becomes like a wild +beast. The sheriff had heard this, and he was frankly +frightened. He started a messenger back into the court +house to notify the soldiers, but old John Zabriski +stopped him.

+ +

“Wait,” he said, “do not that. You lose those +men by fighting. We gain them.”

+ +

Then, before anyone could stop him, old John stepped +up in front and barked out strange words which seemed +like a command. Then a curious thing happened. The +angry murmur stilled. The crowd stopped its movement, +and then every man stood at attention! Almost +every man there had in former years served in one of +the European armies, and what old John had barked at +them was the old army command which had been drilled +into them years before. And through force of habit +which had become instinct, that order, for the moment, +changed that mob into an army of attentive soldiers. +The bandmaster was a man of imagination, and as +quickly as his men could catch up their instruments they +began playing “The Star Spangled Banner.” Poor old +Uncle Isaac heard nothing of this. He could only guess +what it was all about until John Zabriski laboriously +wrote on a piece of paper:

+ +

“Dey blay der Shtar Banner!”

+ +

Then there came into Uncle Isaac’s sad life the great,[145] +glorious joy of power and opportunity. He walked +down to the front of the stage, took off his gold-braided +hat and bowed his white head before them all. And old +John Zabriski, the transplanted European, came and +stood at his side. A young woman, dressed all in white, +caught up a flag and came and stood beside the two old +men. Then a wounded soldier with one empty sleeve +pinned to his breast followed her. And there in that +sunlit street a great, holy silence fell over that vast +crowd. For there before them on that platform stood +the glory, the pride, the precious legacy of American +history. The last Grand Army man, the European +peasant made over into an American, and the young +people who represented the promise and hope shining in +the legacy which men like Uncle Isaac and John Zabriski +have given them.

+ +

When the band stopped playing a mighty cheer went +up from that great crowd, and one by one the men of +that sullen group in front took off their hats and joined +in the cheering. They made Uncle Isaac get up again +and again to salute, and no less a person than Judge +Bradley shook both hands and said:

+ +

“We all thank you, Captain Randall. You have +saved this great meeting and made this town solidly +patriotic.” It was a proud old soldier who marched +into the farmhouse kitchen that night, and in answer to +his daughter’s questioning eyes he said:

+ +

“Annie, I want you to write those boys all about it. +Tell ’em they are not doing it all. Tell ’em Judge +Bradley called me cap’n and said I saved the meeting. +I only wish General Grant could have been there!”

+ +

[146]

+ +

All of which goes to show that those of you who have +come to white hair should not feel that you are out of the +game yet. Material things may go by us, but the spirit +of the good old days is still the last resort!

+ +
+ +
+ +

[147]

+ +

“SNOW BOUND”

+ +
+ +

This is the one night of the year for reading “Snow +Bound.” Every man with New England blood in +his veins should read Whittier’s poem at least once a +year. That becomes as much of a habit as eating baked +beans and fishballs. For two days now the storm has +roared over our hills and shut us in. It must have +been on just such a night as this that Emerson wrote:

+ +
+
+
+
“The sled and traveler stopped; the courier’s feet
+
Delayed; all friends shut out, the housemates sit
+
Around the radiant fireplace enclosed
+
In a tumultuous privacy of storm.”
+
+
+
+ +

Of course, Emerson lived at a time when the telephone +and the electric light and the steam-heated house +were dreams too obscure even for his great mind to comprehend. +So, in spite of this fearful storm, the strong +arm of the electric current still reaches our house, and +while the telephone is slow, we can get our message +through, after a fashion. But we are shut in. The car +and the truck are useless tonight. The horses stamp +contentedly in the barn—not troubling about the head-high +drifts which are piled along the roadway. A bad +night for a fire or for a hurry call for the doctor; but +why worry about that as we sit here before the fire?

+ +

I got my copy of “Snow Bound” in 1872, and I +have read the poem at least once each year since, and I[148] +have carried it all over the country with me. It is a +little shabby now, but somehow that is the way I like to +see old friends:

+ +
+
+
+
“Shut in from all the world without
+
We sat the clean winged hearth about,
+
Content to let the north wind roar
+
In baffled rage at pane and door,
+
While the red logs before us beat
+
The frost-line back with tropic heat.
+
+
+
...
+
+
+
“Between the andiron’s straddling feet
+
The mug of cider simmered low,
+
The apples sputtered in a row
+
And close at hand the basket stood
+
With nuts from brown October’s wood.
+
+
+
...
+
+
+
“What matter how the night behaved?
+
What matter how the north wind raved?
+
Blow high, blow low, not all its snow
+
Could quench our hearth fire’s ruddy glow.”
+
+
+
...
+
+
+
+ +

There is no finer picture of the old-time Northern +farm home, and we Yankees are bound to think that +with all her faults New England did in those days set +the world an example of what a farm home ought to be. +So I lay aside the book and look about me to see how +close New Jersey can come on this fearful night to +matching this old-time picture.

+ +

Here we are before the fire. Great logs of apple +wood are blazing up into the black chimney. In Whittier’s +day the open fire produced all the light, but here +we have our electric light blazing, and I think as I sit +here how miles away the great engines are working to +send the current far up among the lonely hills to our[149] +home. For supper we had a thick tomato soup, a big +dish of cornmeal mush—the grain ground in our little +grinder—pot cheese, entire wheat bread and butter, +baked apples and all the milk we could drink. Just run +that over and see if it does not furnish as fine a balanced +ration and as good a lot of vitamines as any $2 dinner +in New York—and nearly 80 per cent of it was produced +on this farm. Now the girls have washed the +dishes and planned breakfast, and here we are. Mother +sits in the first choice of seats before the fire. That is +where she belongs. She is mending a pair of stockings, +and as her fingers fly, no doubt she is thinking of those +warmer days back in Mississippi. My daughter has +just put a new record into her Victrola. The music +comes softly to us—“Juanita.”

+ +
+
+
+
“Soft o’er the fountain
+
Lingering falls the Southern moon.”
+
+
+
+ +

I wonder what Whittier’s folks would have said to +that! Two of the little girls are looking over some +music, trying to get the air in “I dreamt that I dwelt +in marble halls!” There is no “frost line” in this +house for the fire to drive back, for there is a good hot-water +radiator in the corner. The pipe from the spring +seems to have frozen, but the faithful old windmill, +standing over the well at the barn, has stretched out +its arms to catch this roaring gale and make it carry +the water up to the tank. Thomas and three of the boys +are playing parchesi, while the rest of the company +give them all advice about playing from time to time. +I have a big chair by the corner of the fireplace—where[150] +grandfather is supposed to sit—and little Rose is curled +up on my lap eating an apple. I wish you were here. +We could easily make room for you right in front of +the fire, and we would surely call on you for a new +story.

+ +

The wind is howling on the outside. As we sit here +in comfort there comes an eager, pitiful face at the +window pleading to be taken in. No, it is not the old +story of the wayward child coming back to the lights of +home. The nearest we can come to that at Hope Farm +is the black cat with the dash of white at her face and +throat. She and her tribe are expected to stay at the +barn and catch rats, but there she is out in the cold +looking in at the window. Mother is as stern as a +Spartan mother when it comes to cats in the house. She +will not have them there. But, after all, they are Hope +Farm folks, and the little girls plead so hard that the +good lady looks the other way when the baby opens the +door. In comes the black cat and, though they were +not invited, three of her brothers and sisters run in +with her! So now I shall sit with little Rose on my +lap, while on her lap is a cushion on which the white-faced +kitty purrs contentedly. In the original “Snow +Bound” the mug of cider simmered between the andirons. +No hot drinks for us. A little of that cold +pasteurized apple juice goes well. We see no use in +cooking apples before the fire. There is that big basket +of Baldwins by the table. Help yourself—we like them +cold. Cherry-top was ahead in the game, but Thomas +has just taken his leading “man” and sent him back +to the starting point. The boy is a good sport. He takes[151] +a big bite out of a fresh Baldwin and goes after them +again. The nearest we can come to “nuts from brown +October’s wood” is a big bag of roasted peanuts. We +have all been eating them and throwing the hulls at the +fire. They have accumulated so that Mother’s idea of +neatness compels her to get up and brush them all into +the blaze. I did not tell you that we are starting up +our little Florida farm again. Jack will grow a crop +of sugar cane and peanuts.

+ +

And so, here in New Jersey, as well as in old-time +New England, we care not how the wind blows or how +the storm roars. This is home, and we are satisfied +with it—all of us, from the white-faced kitty up to the +Hope Farm man. We have all worked to make this +home. It is a co-operative affair. None of us could +be called rich or great, yet nothing could ever buy what +we see in our big fire. Every now and then Mother +looks up from her work and glances across the room at +me with a smile. I know what she has in mind. Some +of us rise to the power of animals in our ability to +communicate thought without words. Life has been +very much of a fight with us, but it seems worth while +as we look at this big room full of eager young people, +content and happy with the simple things of life. As +little Rose snuggles up closer to me and pulls the kitty +with her I begin to think of some of the complaining +fault-finding people I know. I do know some star performers +at the job of pitying themselves and magnifying +their own troubles. On a night like this I will +wager an apple that they are pouring out the gloom +and trouble like a man tipping over a barrel of cold[152] +water. It’s their rheumatism or their debts or the +Administration or the Republican party, or something +else that they hold responsible for their troubles. I wish +I could have some of those fellows here tonight, and +also some of you folks who know the joy of looking +on the bright side. We would do our best to rub some of +the gloom out of them. I will guarantee that any one of +us could, if we wanted to, tell the truth about our own +troubles so that these gloomy individuals would look +like “pikers” in their poor little self-pity! I would +like to read extracts from two new books to them. One +is “A Labrador Doctor,” by W. T. Grenfell; the other, +“The Great Hunger,” by John Bojer.

+ +

I have just been reading these books, and I shall read +them over again. Dr. Grenfell has given his life to +service in the far North among the fishermen of Labrador. +A man of his ability could easily have gained +fame and wealth by practising his profession in some +great city. He went where he was most needed—into +the cold, lonely places where humanity hungers and suffers +for help. It has always seemed to me just about +the noblest thing in life for a man of great natural +ability to gain what science and education can give him +and carry that great gift out to those who need it most. +Grenfell did that, and this modest story of his life +is wonderful to anyone who can get the message. I +have always thought that the greatest teachers and +preachers and wise men generally are not so much +needed in the big cities as in the lonely country places. +The city owes all it has in men and money to the country, +but it will seldom acknowledge the gift. The city[153] +itself is able to offer as a gift knowledge, science and +training. Yet those who receive this gift desire for the +most part to remain in the city, when they should carry +their gift out into the lonely and hard places where the +city must finally go for strength. The storm seems hard +tonight, but it is a mere zephyr to the Winters which +Dr. Grenfell’s people endure. I wish I could tell you +some of the wonderful things which have happened in +that lonely land. At one place the doctor found a girl +dying of typhoid. There was no way of saving her, +and as soon as she was buried it was necessary to burn +the rude bunk and the straw in which she lay. They +carried it to the top of a hill and built a fire. For several +days one of the fishing boats had been lost at sea +in the fog, and had been given up for lost with all on +board. The despairing men in that boat—far out at +sea—saw the light when that hideous bed was burned +and were able to get to land! Some of you self-pitying +people ought to read how Dr. Grenfell organized a +little orphans’ home to care for the little waifs of this +lonely place. In one case a little girl of four, while her +father was away hunting, crawled out into the snow, +so that both legs were badly frozen. Gangrene set in +halfway to the knee, and the father actually chopped +both legs off to save her life! Think of such a child +in the frozen North. I think of her as little Rose +hugs the kitty close. Dr. Grenfell took this child, +operated on her, obtained artificial legs, and now she +can run about like other children. I wish I could tell +you more about this book. At one time two men came +together after medicine. One took a bottle of cough[154] +mixture, the other a strong turpentine liniment for a +sprained knee. By mistake they mixed up the medicine. +One rubbed the cough medicine on his knee, the +other drank the liniment. If I had some fellow who +thinks the Lord has put a special curse on him before +our fire tonight I would tell him what others have endured. +The chances are we could make him contribute +something to the cause before we were done with him.

+ +

The other book I mentioned, “The Great Hunger,” +is a story of Norwegian life and, as I think, very powerful. +A boy born to poverty and disgrace grew up with +a great hunger in his heart—he knew not what it was. +He felt that power and material wealth would bring him +the happiness he sought. He gained education, power, +wealth and love, yet still the great hunger tortured him. +Poverty, sickness, the deepest sorrow fell upon him, +and at last the great hunger was satisfied by doing a +needed service for the man who had done him the most +hideous wrong! I wish I could tell you more about it. +It is a powerful book; but it is time for little Rose to +go to bed. Off she goes with a hug for all, and the +children follow her one by one. I am not going to +put more logs on that fire. Let it die down. The end +of the day has come. Let the storm howl through the +night like a pack of wolves at the door. They cannot +get at us. Even if they did they can never destroy the +memory of this night.

+ +
+ +
+ +

[155]

+ +

“CLASS”

+ +
+ +

The other day the papers announced the death of the ex-Empress +Eugénie. She lingered along, feeble and half-blind, +until she was nearly 95 years old. She has been +called “the Queen of Sorrows,” for few other women +have lived a sadder life. Very few of this generation +knew or cared anything about her. I presume most of +our young people skipped the details of her life as given +in the papers. Yet when I was a boy, shortly before +the war between France and Germany, the women of +the world regarded this sad empress as the great model +of beauty and fashion. I suppose it would be hard for +women in these days to realize how this beautiful +empress dictated to people in every land how they +should arrange their hair and wear their dresses. At +that time most women wore their hair in short nets +bunched just below the neck, and it was the age of +“hoopskirts”—most of them, as it seemed, four to five +feet wide. Just how this woman managed to put her +ideas of fashion into the imagination of her sisters I +never could understand. From the big city to the little +backwoods hamlet women were studying to see what +“Ugeeny” advised them to wear. I have often wondered +if in her last days the poor, blind, feeble woman +remembered those days of power.

+ +

Her death brings to mind an incident that had long +been forgotten. I had been sent to one of the neighbors[156] +to borrow some milk, since our cow was dry. In +those days, any caller—even a little boy—was like a +pond in which one went fishing for compliments. The +woman of the house, an immense, fat creature, with +the shape of a barrel, a short, thick neck and a round +moon face, had arrayed herself in glad clothes of the +latest style—several years, I imagine, behind Paris. +She wore an immense hoopskirt, which gave her the appearance +of walking inside of a hogshead. Her hair +was parted in the middle and brought down beside her +wide face to be caught in a net just below her ears. I +know so little and care so much less about style in +clothes that I can remember in detail only two costumes +that I have ever seen women wear. This outfit is +one of them.

+ +

“This is just what Ugeeny is wearing,” said the fat +lady as she poured out the milk. “You can tell your +aunt that you have seen one lady dressed just like +Paris.”

+ +

It did not strike me as very impressive, but I was +glad to have the experience.

+ +

“You can tell her, too, that a very fine gentleman +came here today and said I looked enough like Ugeeny to +be her half-sister—dressed as I am now. He has been +in Paris, too.”

+ +

“It was a book agent,” put in her husband, “and sold +her a book on the strength of that yarn. Say, Mary, +you don’t look any more like Ugeeny than old Spot +does—and you don’t need to.”

+ +

“The trouble with you, John Drake, is that you have +no idea of beauty.”

+ +

[157]

+ +

“I know it. I may not have any soul, but I’ve got +a stomach, and I know that you can make the best +doughnuts and Indian pudding ever made in Bristol +County. That’s more than Ugeeny ever did, or ever can +do. You are worth three of her for practical value to the +world, and I think you a handsome woman—but you +can’t look like her, because you haven’t got the shape, +and I’m glad of it.”

+ +

But where was there ever a woman who could be +satisfied with such evident truth, and who did not reach +out after the impossible? She turned to old Grandpa, +who sat back in the corner, away from the light.

+ +

“Now, Grandpa, you seen a lot of the world. What +do you say? Don’t I look like Ugeeny?”

+ +

Old Grandpa nodded his white head and looked at +her critically.

+ +

“You’re in her class, Mary—that’s what I’ll say—you’re +in her class!”

+ +

“You’re in her class,” repeated Grandpa. “The +people in this world are divided into two classes—strung +together like beads on different strings. Some +strings are like character, others like looks or shape or +thinking or maybe meanness. You can’t get out of your +class—for the Lord organized it and teaches it. You +look at me; I’m in the class with some of the finest men +that ever lived on earth!”

+ +

“Now, Mary, see what you’ve done,” said John +Drake. “You’ve got Grandpa started on that class +business. He’s worse than Ugeeny.”

+ +

But Grandpa went right ahead. “Ain’t I in the class +with the old and new prophets? Here I have for years[158] +been telling what is coming to the world. Folks won’t +always be down as they are now. My wife killed herself +carrying water and fuel to get up vittles and keep +the house clean. Some day or ’nuther every farmhouse +will have water and heat and light right inside. +There’ll be power to do all this heavy work. In those +days farmers will be kings.”

+ +

The old man’s face lighted up as he talked.

+ +

“You don’t believe me now, but it will all come. +I’m out ahead of the crowd. So was Wendell Phillips +and William Lloyd Garrison and Charles Sumner on +the slavery question. Folks hooted at them, laughed +them down and did all they could to stop their ideas. +But you can’t stop one of these ideas when there’s a man +back of it. Those men lived to see what the world called +fool notions made into wisdom. They just had visions +which don’t come to common men. That’s what I’ve got +now, and what I ask is, Ain’t I in their class?

+ +

“If I was in your place I wouldn’t mind, Grandpa,” +said Mary, as she shook out that great hoopskirt. +“That’s not good talk for boys; it makes them discontented!”

+ +

“But that’s why they’ve got to be if the world is +going ahead,” put in Grandpa. “What’s the matter +with farming today, I’ll ask? Education has all gone +to other things. Farmers think the common schools are +plenty good enough for farmers, while the colleges are +all for lawyers and such like. You mark what I say—some +day or ’nuther there will be farm colleges as big as +any, where farming will be taught just like lawing or +doctoring. Then people will see that farming is agriculture,[159] +and the difference between the two will change +the world. This Ugeeny doesn’t amount to much as a +woman, and I don’t believe this Prince Imperial will +ever rule France, but Ugeeny has put women like Mary +in her class. These clothes look foolish to me, but every +woman who follows Ugeeny in dress gets into her class, +and it’s like a schoolgirl passing from one grade to another, +for some day they’ll pass out of that hoopskirt +and that bob net for their hair and rise up to better +things, and it will be Ugeeny that started them. She +may be only a painted doll, but she has given the women +ideas of beauty and something better than common. +Sometime or ’nuther you will see the result of her idle +life. That’s why I say Mary’s in Ugeeny’s class. She’s +got the vision of beauty and something far ahead of you, +John. You are smart and strong, but Mary’s getting +class. That hoopskirt and that net are not prisons—they +help to set her free.”

+ +

“Well, Grandpa,” said John, good-naturedly, “I +suppose, according to you, I ought to put on a swallow-tailed +coat every time I milk.”

+ +

“No; not when you milk, John, but if you shaved +every day and put on your best clothes once a day for +supper, you would get in the upper class, and carry +your boys with you. But I ask this boy here, ain’t I in +their class?”

+ +

I was sure of it, but just then we heard the horn sounding +far down the road. I knew that Uncle Daniel had +grown tired of waiting for the milk, so he blew the horn +to remind me that I was still in the class of errand boys.

+ +

In August of that year I went up on Black Mount[160] +after huckleberries, and ran upon Grandpa once more. +He sat on a rock resting, while Mary and three children +were picking near by. The hill was thick with a tangle +of berry vines and briars, with snakes and woodchucks +as sole inhabitants. Old Grandpa sat on the rock and +waved his stick about.

+ +

“In my younger days this hill was a cornfield. I +have seen it all in wheat. Farmers let education and +money get away, and, of course, the best boys chased +out after them. But it won’t always be so. Some day or +’nuther this field will come back. It won’t pay in these +coming days to raise huckleberries in this way. They +will be raised in gardens like strawberries and raspberries. +This hill will have to produce something that +is worth more—peaches or apples.”

+ +

“But how can they make peaches grow on this sour +hill, Grandpa?” asked one of the boys. “There’s a +seedling now—10 years old and not four feet high!”

+ +

“They will bring in lime for the soil as they will +coal in place of wood. I don’t know how it will be done, +but some day or ’nuther they will use yeast in the soil +as they do in bread to make it come up, and they’ll harness +the lightning to ’lectrify it. You wait till these +farm colleges give us knowledge. And farmers, too. +They won’t always stand back and fight each other and +backbite and try to get each other’s hide. Some day or +’nuther grown-up men and women are going to see what +life ought to be. They will come together to live, instead +of standing apart to die. I may not see it, and +people laugh at me for saying what I know must come +true. But didn’t they laugh at Columbus? Didn’t they[161] +try to kill Galileo? Wasn’t Morse voted a fool? +Hasn’t it always been so with the men and women who +looked far over the valley and saw the light ahead? +And, tell me this: Ain’t I in their class?

+ +

That was 50 years and more ago. I had forgotten it, +and yet when I read the headlines announcing the death +of Empress Eugénie I had to put the paper down, for +there rose before me a picture of that sunny Summer +day on the New England hills. On the rock in that +lonely pasture sat old Grandpa pointing with his stick +far across the rolling valley, far to the shadow on the +distant hills, where he knew the immortals were awaiting +him—as one who had kept his soul clean and his faith +undimmed. I wish I could look across the valley to the +distant hills with the sublime hope with which he asked +his old question:

+ +

Ain’t I in their class?

+ +

A year or two ago I went back to the old town. Ah, +but if Grandpa could see it now! The old house with +its “beau” windows and new roof seemed to be dressed +with as much taste as Eugénie would be if she were still +Empress of France. There were power and light and +heat all through it. Two boys and a girl were home +from an agricultural college—one of the boys being +manager of the local selling organization. Black Mount +was a forest of McIntosh and Baldwin apple trees, the +old swamp was drained and lay a thick mat of clover. +Grandpa’s vision had come true—all but one thing. +Education and power had brought material things, +which would have seemed to be miracles to John and +Mary. Yet farmers were not “kings,” after all, as[162] +Grandpa said they would be, for there was still discontent +and talk of injustice. But, after all, that is what +Grandpa said—“That’s what they’ve got to be, if the +world is going ahead.”

+ +

Perhaps, after all, a “divine discontent” is the +noblest legacy of the ages.

+ +

But in the churchyard back in one corner I came +upon Grandpa’s grave. It was not very well cared for. +It had not been trimmed. A bird had made her nest and +reared her brood right by the side of the headstone. It +was a lonely place. As I stood there a cow in the adjoining +pasture put her head over the stone wall and +tried to gnaw the grass on that neglected grave. And +this was what they had carved on the stone:

+ +

The Lord giveth and the Lord taketh away!

+ +

If I could have my way I would put up another +stone with this inscription:

+ +

Grandpa.

+ +

He has entered their class.

+ +
+ +
+ +

[163]

+ +

“I’LL TELL GOD”

+ +
+ +

Just at this time many people seem to be concerned +about what they call “the unseen world.” That means +the state of existence after death. Many of our readers +have written asking what I think or know about this. +Most of those who write me seem to be living in lonely +places or under rather hard conditions. They have all +lost wife or husband, parent, child, or some dear friend. +Now like most other reasoning people, I have tried to +imagine what really happens to a human being after +what we call death, and I have had some curious experiences +which you might or might not credit. When I was +a boy, I was thrown much into the society of avowed +spiritualists. I knew several so-called “mediums” and +attended many “séances.” The evident clumsy and +vulgar “fakes” about most of those things disgusted +me, yet I must admit that some of these “mediums” did +possess a strange and peculiar power which I have never +been able to understand.

+ +

Most of these sincere “mediums” seemed to be people +who had suffered greatly and had carried through +life some great affliction or trouble over which they constantly +brooded. I have come to believe that the blind +and deaf and all seriously afflicted see and understand +things which most others do not. An afflicted person is +forced to develop extraordinary power in order to make +up for the loss of the missing limb or organ or faculty. +The blind man must learn to see with his fingers and[164] +his ears. The deaf man must hear with his eyes or +develop a sort of quick judgment or instinct of decision. +The man plunged into grief or despondency at the loss +of fortune, friends or health must rise out of it through +some extraordinary development of faith and hope and +will-power. Someone has said that the blind or deaf +man is “half dead,” and in his efforts to do anything +like a full man’s work in the world, he must borrow +power from the great “unseen world.” For +example, I will ask you this question: Take a woman +like Helen Keller, without sight or speech or hearing. +Take a man who is totally deaf and also blind—how +would they know physically when they are dead? I +think I can understand why it is that real advancement +in true religion and Christian thought has for the most +part been made by some “man of sorrows,” or people +who through great affliction have been forced to go to +the “unseen world” for help!

+ +

Years ago, in a Western State, there lived a farmer. +I do not know whether he is living now or not. Perhaps +he will read this. Perhaps he has gone into the silent +country to learn what influence the little child had with +the Ruler of the universe. This man was deaf. +Through long years, his hearing had slowly failed and +its going left a dark discouragement upon him. He +owned his farm and was moderately well-to-do. A hard +worker and honest man, he went about his work +mechanically, through habit, with a great hunger in his +heart. He did not know what it was; a longing for +human sympathy and love. His wife was a good woman +but all her childhood had been starved of sympathy and[165] +poetry and she could not understand. She made her +husband comfortable and loved him in her strange, inexpressive +way, but it is hard, after all, to get over the +feeling that the afflicted are abnormal and strange. +They had no children, their one little girl had died in +babyhood. Sometimes at night you would see the deaf +man standing in the barnyard at the gate, looking off +over the hills to the west where the clouds were glorious +in the sunset. And his practical wife would see him +standing there with the empty milk pail on his arm. +She could not understand the vision and glory, the message +from the unseen world which filled her husband’s +soul at such times. So she would go out to the barnyard, +shake her dreaming husband by the arm and +shout in his ear:

+ +

Wake up and get that milking done.

+ +

She meant well, and her husband never complained. +She meant to save his money, but he knew in such +moments that money never could pay his passage off +through the purple sunset to the “unseen land.”

+ +

Some day, I think I will tell some of the “adventures +in the silence,” which fall to the daily life of the +deaf man. One Saturday afternoon this man and his +wife drove to town together. While his wife was doing +her shopping the man walked about to meet some of his +old friends. As he stood on the street, a sharp-faced +woman came out of the store followed by a little child. +It was a little black-haired thing with great brown +eyes which carried the look of some hunted wild animal. +A poor thin little thing with a shabby dress and tattered +shoes. As she passed, the child glanced up at the farmer[166] +and saw something in his face that gave her confidence, +for she smiled at him and held out her little hand. +The woman turned sharply and the frightened child +stumbled over a little stone.

+ +

“You awkward little brat,” shrilled the woman, “take +that,” and with her heavy hand she slapped the thin +little face. Then something like the love of a lioness for +her cub suddenly started in that farmer’s heart. Many +fool jokes have been made about “love at first sight,” +but it is really nothing short of a divine message when +two lives are suddenly welded together forever. Under +excitement, the deaf are rarely dignified, but they are +strangely and forcibly emphatic. The woman quailed +before the roar of that farmer and the little girl ran +to him and held his hand for protection. A crowd gathered +and Lawyer Brown came running down from his +office.

+ +

“I want this child,” said the farmer. “You know +me; get her for me.”

+ +

It was not very hard to do. The woman had married +a man with this little girl. The man had run away +and left her (I do not much blame him), and this +“brat” had been left on her hands.

+ +

“Take her, and welcome,” said the sharp-faced +woman. “A good riddance to bad rubbish.”

+ +

So Lawyer Brown fixed it up legally and the deaf +man walked off to where his wagon stood, with the +little girl hanging tight to his big finger.

+ +

When the woman came with her load of packages, she +found her husband sitting on the wagon seat with the +little girl sitting on his lap. She had found that she[167] +could not make him hear, so she just sat there looking +into his face, and they both understood. But the good +woman did not understand.

+ +

“What do you mean by picking up a child like you +would a stray kitten? Put her down and leave her +here.”

+ +

But that was as far as she got. Her husband looked +at her with a fierce glare, and there was a sound in +his throat which she did not like. I can tell you that +when these good-natured and long-suffering men finally +assert themselves, there is a great clumsy force about it +that cannot be resisted. And when they got home and +the little child sat up at the table between them, something +of mother-love stirred in the woman’s heart. She +actually tried to kiss the little thing, but the child trembled +and ran to the farmer and climbed on his knee. +The woman paused at her work to watch them as they +sat before the fire, and something that was like the beginning +of jealous rage came into her heart, for it came +to her that this little one had seen at once something in +her husband’s life and soul that she had not been able to +understand.

+ +

There was something more than beautiful in the +strange intimacy which sprang up between the deaf +farmer and the little girl. In some way she made herself +understood and she followed him about day by day +at his work or on his lonely walk of a Sunday afternoon. +You would see her riding on the wagon beside +him, standing near as he milked, or holding his finger +as he came down the lane at sunset. On a sunny Sunday +afternoon, you might come upon them sitting at the top[168] +of a high hill with the old dog beside them, looking +off across the pleasant country. And as the shadows +grew longer, they would come home, the farmer carrying +the little one, and the old dog walking ahead. I cannot +tell you the peace and renewed hope which the little waif +brought to that farmer’s heart through the gentle yet +mighty force of love. And the farmer’s wife would look +out of the window and see them coming. She could not +walk with her husband through lonely places and make +him understand, because she had never learned how. +Yet the little one was drawing the older people closer +together and was showing them more of the greatest +mystery and the greatest meaning of life. But there +came a Sunday when the little one could not walk over +the hills. The day was bright and fair, the farmer stood +looking at the cool shadows of the blue pines sadly and +the old dog put his head on one side and regarded his +master curiously. They could both hear the voice of the +hills calling them away. And the voices came to the +little one, hot and weary with fever, tossing on her little +bed upstairs. The doctor shook his head when they +called him in. The child was done with earthly +things,—surely called off into the Country Unseen just +as love and home had come to her. The farmer went +up into the sick-room where his wife sat by the little +sufferer. This man had never regarded his wife as a +handsome woman, but he was startled at her face as she +bent over the child. For at last in the face of death and +sacrifice, love had really come to that woman’s lonely +heart, and the joy of it illuminated her face like a lamp +within.

+ +

[169]

+ +

The farmer was left alone with the child. She knew +him and beckoned him to come near and moved her +lips to speak. The man lay on the bed beside her and +put his ear close to the little mouth, but try as he would, +he could not hear her message. I suppose there can be +no sadder picture in the book of time than this denial +by fate of the right to hear the last message of love from +one passing off into the long journey from which there +comes no report. Hopeless and bitter with disappointment, +the man found pencil and paper and a large book +and gave them to the child. Sitting up in bed with a +last painful effort the little one painfully wrote or +printed a single sentence and gave it to him with her +little face aflame with love. He hid the note in his +pocket as his wife and the doctor came in—for the message +from the unseen world seemed to him too sacred for +other human eyes.

+ +

The woman watched her husband closely and wondered +why he felt so cheerful as the days passed by. +The little one was no longer with him, yet he went about +his work with cheerfulness and often with a smile. She +could not understand, but now and then she would see +him take from his pocket an envelope, open it and read +what seemed to be a letter. He would sometimes sit +before the fire at night, silent and thoughtful. As she +went about her work, she would see him take out this +mysterious letter and read it over and over, as one would +read a message from a friend very dear of old and +happy days. And she wondered what it could be +that brought the happy, beautiful smile to his face, and +then there came the time when one evening in June the[170] +sun seemed to pass behind the western hill with royal +splendor. It seemed as if there had never been such +gorgeous coloring as the western sky put on that night, +and the practical wife looked from her back-door and +saw her husband standing in the barnyard gate like one +in a glorious vision. The cows stood in the lane, the +empty milk pail hung on a post, yet the farmer stood +gazing off to the west unheeding the call to his work. +And as the woman waited she saw her dreaming husband +take that mysterious letter from his pocket and +read it once more. She could see the look of joy which +spread over his face as he read it. And this plain, +practical woman, moved by some sudden impulse, +walked down to the gate and put her hand gently on her +husband’s shoulder. He started out of his dream and +looked guiltily at the empty milk pail, but she only +smiled and pointed to the paper he had in his hand. +He hesitated shyly for a moment, and then he passed it +to her. It was just the scrawl which the little child +had written after her failure to make him hear. It was +the last message from one who stood on the threshold +of the unseen country, and was permitted to look within. +And this was what the woman read, written in straggling +childish letters:

+ +

I’ll tell God how good you are.

+ +

And the shy, unresponsive man and woman, starved +of love and sympathy through all these years, standing +in the lonely silence of that golden sunset knew that +God’s blessing had fallen upon them out of the unseen +country through the influence of that little child.

+ +
+ +
+ +

[171]

+ +

A DAY’S WORK

+ +
+ +

“Well, boys, I’m going to quit and call it a day!” +As the Hope Farm man spoke he got up from his knees +in the strawberry patch and proceeded to straighten out +his back. It was half past four on Saturday, September +4. Our week’s work was done—all but the chores. Our +folks had picked and packed and shipped four big +truckloads of produce, with a surplus of nearly 100 +bushels of apples and 60 baskets of tomatoes ahead for +next week. This in addition to regular farm work—and +one day off fishing for the boys. It does not seem +possible that September has come upon us! I do not +know how she even got here—yet the big hand on the +clock’s calendar points to that date. When the foolish +finger of “daylight saving” appears on the clock we +can discount it, but there is no discounting the mark on +the calendar. That is like the finger of fate. Yet it +seems out of date. We have not finished picking +Gravenstein apples. In former years Labor Day found +us clearing up the McIntosh. This year we have not +even touched them! Last year the Mammoth sweet corn +was about cleaned out in August. Now we are beginning +to pick. The season and the calendar are fighting +this year. Now if they will both turn in and hold Jack +Frost up for a couple of weeks later than usual we will +forgive the season.

+ +

This morning I took this strawberry job from choice—surely[172] +no one else wanted it. Thomas had not come +back from his night on the market. Philip cleaned up +the chores, while the rest went to picking apples +and tomatoes. My daughter goes across the lawn +with 100 or more chickens at her heels. They are +black Jersey Giants and R. I. Reds going to breakfast. +Out on the cool back porch Mother is playing the part +of family “Red.” That is, she is canning tomatoes. +This porch is screened in, and there is an oil stove to +put heat into the canning outfit. The lady is peeling a +basket of big red fruit; her hands and arms are well +smeared with the blood—not of martyrs, but of tomatoes! +This job of mine would make one of those model gardeners +too disgusted for comment. We set out the +strawberry plants in April, in rows three feet apart, the +plants two feet in the row. The soil is strong, and we +wanted to push it hard. So in part of the patch we +planted early peas between the rows, and in the rest +early potatoes. The theory of this plan is sound enough. +You get a big crop of peas and potatoes, and take them +out in time for the berry plants to run out and cover the +patch. In practice this does not always work. While +the pea and potato vines stood up straight we kept the +patch clean. Then came a time when these vines fell +down and refused to get up. Then came the constant +rains and the crab grass, and weeds came from all over +to seek shelter under these vines. Before we could interfere +the patch was a mass of this foul stuff, and the +long rains kept it growing. The richness of the soil +delayed ripening of the potatoes, and by the time we got +them out the strawberry plants seemed lost in the tangle.[173] +Here I am cleaning up this mess. Most of the work +must be done with the fingers—a hoe would tear up too +many runners. You have to get down on your knees and +pull. As I crawl across the patch I leave a pile of +weeds behind me like a windrow. I hold up my fingers +and it seems surprising that they are not worn down at +least half an inch. If I had kept those peas and potatoes +out of here the berries would be far better, and I +would not have this crawling job. I am not to be alone +here after all. That big black chicken leaves his crowd +on the lawn and comes over here to scratch beside me. +The Jersey Giants are very tame and enterprising. This +one stays right at my elbow for hours—the only member +of my family to take this job from choice. He will +have all the worms I can dig out!

+ +

There is a rattle and a sputter on the driveway and +the truck comes snorting into the barnyard. At the +same time Tom and Broker, the big grays, come down +the hill with a load of apples. Tom scents the gasoline +and pricks back his ears with a snort. You can see him +turn his head as if talking to sober old Broker:

+ +

“That fellow thinks he’s smart, but what fearful +breath he has! For years we went on the road like honest +horses and did all the marketing on the farm. Why +does this man keep such a great awkward thing around? +It may have speed, but I’ll bet it eats him out of house +and home!”

+ +

“Well, now,” said old Broker, “every horse to his +job. Working right on this farm is good enough for +me. Let that truck do the road work, says I. No place +like home for an honest horse like me.”

+ +

[174]

+ +

“Not much. I like a little life now and then. I +want to get out on the road among horses and see what is +going on. That great, lazy, smelling thing has got us +farm-bound where nobody sees us or knows what we are +doing. And look at the gasoline that thing eats up, and +its keep—my stars!”

+ +

“Well, you have something of an appetite yourself. +A gallon of oats costs something, too. I’ll bet this man +can’t feed and shoe and harness you for less than $200 +a year! Let’s be glad this thing takes some of the work +off our shoulders!”

+ +

“But I saw this man’s bill for repairs”—but there +came a jerk on the lines and “Get up!” and Tom put +his mighty shoulders into the collar and pulled the load +up to the shed, while the truck with a snort that sounded +like a sneer moved on into the barn—just as if a repair +bill for $273 was a very small matter.

+ +

Thomas was tired—as you might expect after a night +on the market. The load sold for $106.95. It was a +mixture of corn, apples and tomatoes. That looks right +at first thought, but one year ago the corresponding load +of about the same class of goods brought $143. That +is about the way they have gone this season. Our prices +are certainly lower, and every item of cost is higher. +There can be no question about that, yet our friends who +buy food are paying as much as they ever did. But +for the truck we would be worse off than we are now. +We never could handle our crop with the horses. It is +more and more necessary to get the goods right into +market promptly and with no stop. While the truck +has become a necessity, let no man think that it works[175] +for nothing. Old Tom is right in saying that I have +a bill for $273 for refitting the truck this year and putting +it in shape for the season. That item alone will +add quite a few cents to the cost of carrying each package. +Some of the smaller farmers on well-traveled +roads are selling at roadside markets. This is a hard +life, and includes Sunday work, and I understand that +for some reason people are not buying such goods as +they did. The retail trade is rarely satisfactory when +one produces a fairly large crop. I think the plan for +the future will mean a combination of farmers to open +a store in the market town and retail and deliver their +own goods co-operatively.

+ +

My back feels as if there were three hard knots in +it. I must straighten them out by a change of occupation. +I am going up on the hill to look at the apple +picking for a time. Little Rose, barefooted and bareheaded, +dressed in a pair of overalls, trots along with +me. She eats two tomatoes on the way up, and then I +find her a couple of mellow McIntosh. The dirt on the +tomatoes has been transferred to her little face, and I +think some of it follows the apple into her mouth. Oh, +well, these scientists will probably find vitamines in dirt +before they are done. We are picking Gravensteins today—big rosy +fellows—some of the trees running 15 +bushels or more. I planted a block of these trees as +an experiment. Now I wish I had more of them. +The last lot brought $5.25 per barrel. I do not care +much for them for eating, but as baking apples they sell +well. This year any big apple brings a fair price. For +instance, that despised Wolf River has been our best[176] +seller. The boys own several trees of Twenty Ounce, +which are bringing about $20 per tree this year. Cherry-top +is going to Paterson this afternoon to put some of +his apple money into a bicycle. I have told in past +years how I gave my boys a few bearing apple trees +and how they have bought others. These trees have +given surprising returns. The larger boy is just starting +for college, and his trees will go a long way toward +paying expenses. The objection to giving such trees or +selling at a low price is that the boy finds the income +very “easy money.” It would be better for him to plant +the young tree and stay by it till it comes in bearing. +The only chemical I know of for extracting character +out of money is warm sweat. I’d like to spend the +day on the hills—here in the sunshine with the apples +blushing on the trees and the grapes purpling on the +walls and the clouds drifting over us. But that would +never clean up those strawberries, and so little Rose and +I go down on a load of apples—big Tom and Broker +creeping down the steep hillside as if they realized that +here was a job which the truck could not copy.

+ +

I got at those weeds once more. Philip had carried +several bushels to the geese, and these wise birds make +much of them. The big sow, too, stands chewing a big +red root as a boy would chew candy. Nearby on a +grassy corner little Missy has been tied out. She is a +very proud little cow, for just inside the barn her yellow +daughter lies in the straw—pretending to chew her small +cud. We shall have to call this young lady Sippi to +complete her mother’s name. Missy has given us a taste +of real cream already. But here is a pull at my shoulder,[177] +and little Rose, her face washed and hair brushed, +comes to lead me in to dinner. There will be 14 of us +today. I wish you could make it 15. The food is all +on the table, so we can see what there is to start with. +Have some of this soft hash. That means a hash baked +in a deep dish, with considerable liquid in it. You +may think we live on hash, but a busy Saturday is +a good time for working up the odds and ends. Then +you can have boiled potatoes, boiled beets, sweet corn, tomatoes, +bread and butter, baked apples and all the milk +you want. We are all hearty eaters, and I figure that +if I took my family to the restaurant in the city where +I sometimes have my dinner, the bill would be about as +follows:

+ + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + +
Hash$4.20
Potatoes1.40
Beets1.40
Sweet corn3.60
Tomatoes1.40
Milk.90
Bread and butter1.40
Baked apples2.30
$16.60
+ +

That is a very low estimate of what this dinner would +cost us. Now what would a farmer get at wholesale +for what we have eaten? Not quite $1.30 at the full +limit. Last week I ordered a baked apple and was +charged 30 cents for it! But no matter what this +dinner would cost elsewhere, it is free here, and I hope +you will have another baked apple. Try another glass +of milk. Our folks have a way of pouring some of that +thick cream in when they drink it.

+ +

[178]

+ +

That dinner provided heart and substance to all of +us. I am back at those berries, and Philip has come +to help me. Our folks have stopped picking apples for +the day and will cut sweet corn fodder—where the ears +have been picked off. That will have to be our “hay” +this winter. The women folks and a couple of the boys +have started for town to do a little shopping. Philip and +I have a pile of weeds here as large as a henhouse, and +the strawberry plants as they come out of the tangle look +better than I expected. A car has just rolled in with a +family after apples. One well-groomed young man is +viewing me appraisingly over his glasses. He is talking +to the soft, fluffy young woman at his side. “Is that +the Hope Farm man? A rather tough-looking citizen! +Why does he do that very common work? He ought +to hire that job done and get up out of that dirt!”

+ +

This young man will never know what it will mean +next Spring when the vines are full of big red berries +to know that he saved them and with his own labor +turned them from failure to success. He probably never +will know any such feeling—and that is his misfortune. +This weed-pulling gets to be mechanical. It doesn’t +require much thought and I have a chance to consider +many things as we work. A short distance away is that +patch of annual sweet clover. The plant we have been +measuring is now 60 inches tall and still growing. The +plants are seeding at different dates—some of them +earlier than others. What a wonder this clover will be +for those of us who have the vision to make use of it.

+ +

But my day’s work is over—I’m going to adjourn. +I am quite sure that I could have picked 50 bushels of[179] +Gravenstein apples from those low trees instead of +working here, but this seemed to be my job for the day. +What now? I’m going to make an application of hot +water and get this soil off my hands and arms, shave, +put on some clean clothes and take my book out on the +front porch until the girls come home. What book? +Well, I found in an old bookstore a copy of James G. +Blaine’s “Twenty Years of Congress.” As I had just +read Champ Clark’s book I wanted to read Blaine’s. +I can well remember when about 40 per cent of the +people of this country considered James G. Blaine a +hero. The trouble was that about 60 per cent thought +otherwise. His book is a sound and serious discussion +of the legislation which covered the Civil War and 20 +years after. As I worked here today I have been thinking +of what Blaine says of Senator Matt Carpenter. +This man was a brilliant student, but suddenly went +blind. For three years he sat in darkness. Yet this +affliction proved a great blessing, for he forced himself +to review and analyze and prove what he had read, so +that when sight came back to him his reasoning powers +were remarkable. This book contains the best statement +I have ever read of the reasons for trying to impeach +President Andrew Johnson, and how and why the +effort failed. What’s that got to do with farming? +Well, I think the political events which clustered around +that incident came about as near to smashing the Constitution +and wrecking the Government as anything that +has yet happened. But here comes Cherry-top on his +new wheel. He actually got home ahead of the car. +I must hurry, or our folks will not find that literary[180] +reception committee waiting for them. Better come +along with me. I have some other books that will make +you think, and I’ll guarantee that thinking will do you +more good right now than a day’s work.

+ +
+ +
+ +

[181]

+ +

PROFESSOR GANDER’S ACADEMY

+ +
+ +

Our Thanksgiving turkey this year will be a goose—or +rather a pair of geese. As you read this they will be +browning and sizzling in the oven, with plenty of “sage +and onion” to stuff in the desired quality. They will +come to the table flanked by half a dozen vegetables and +backed by several big pumpkin pies. I shall resign the +position of carver, remembering my old experience with +the roast duck and the minister. The duck got away +from my knife, and slid all over the table, ending +by upsetting the gravy in front of the minister’s plate. +After the usual objections Mother will apply the carving +knife to the geese, secretly proud of her skill as an +anatomist. She can do everything with a roasted goose +except provide white meat. Since Nature decided not +to implant that delicacy in the breast of a goose, man +cannot supply it. Therefore the lady must content +herself with brown meat. I’ll guarantee that most +blind men eating the white breast of a turkey and then +the brown breast of a goose would call for more of the +latter. It is something like this rather foolish preference +for white-shelled eggs. Like “the Colonel’s lady +and Judy O’Grady,” they are sisters under the shell! +Anyway, a goose, well stuffed and roasted, is a thank-offering +well suited to the Hope Farm table.

+ +

No doubt as we pour the thick brown gravy over +Mother’s generous slices Mr. Gander will lead his[182] +family across the lawn and find something to be thankful +for. I have learned, this Summer, to have great +respect for Gander and his wife, the gray goose. Nature +may have left the white meat out of the goose in +order to prepare a finer delicacy, but she put an extra +quantity of gray matter into the goose brain. It seems +to me that Mr. Gander and his able assistant are about +the most successful teachers of youth I have ever known. +To many a learned educator I would say, “Go to the +goose, thou wise man, and learn how to train the young +for a successful life.” Take this young bird, whose +meat is rapidly disappearing from the Thanksgiving +altar. Mother has scraped the bones nearly clean. +What little remains will be boiled out as soup. This +bird has lived what I may call an eminently successful +life. He ends his career in the highest place possible +to be conceived of in the philosophy of a goose. He +was trained and educated from the start, and as I look +at Gander and goose on the lawn I cannot think of +any human teachers who have had any greater success +in training their charges into just what a man or woman +ought to be.

+ +

In the Spring the gray goose selected a place in the +old barn and laid 21 eggs. We rather expected more, +but the goose was master of ceremonies. She came back +to the same place each day, and finally we found her +there hissing like the steam escaping from a broken pipe. +It was her signal that she was ready to serve as incubator. +So we put 13 eggs under her and eight more +under a big Red hen. This big hen was a great failure +as a layer, but as nurse and incubator she had proved a[183] +wonder. She had raised three broods of chicks with +great success. Surely she ought to be a better guide +and teacher of youth than a young goose with her first +brood! If you were selecting teachers for your children +would you not choose those who have had experience? +In due time, and on the same day, the goose +walked out with 10 goslings, while the Red hen sat on +her nest and compelled five to stay under her. The two +broods kept apart. The hen was evidently disappointed +with the way the goose handled children, and she punished +her brood whenever they tried to mingle with +their own brothers and sisters. They all lived, but after +about eight weeks I noticed a strange thing. The hen’s +brood, though eating the same food, would average at +least 30 per cent lighter than the goslings which ran +with the goose. There was no question about it—the +hen’s charges were inferior in size and weight and in +“common sense,” or the art of looking out for themselves.

+ +

There being no chance for an argument about it, I +concluded that it was very largely a matter of education, +and we began to study the methods of teaching +employed by Mr. and Mrs. Gander and Mrs. Red Hen. +The first thing we noticed was the influence of the male +side of the family. Roger Red, the big rooster, paid +no attention to his wife’s family. All he did was to +mount the fence and crow, or go gallivanting off after +worms or seeds. If one of the goslings got in his way +he kicked it to one side and gave not even a suggestion +to his busy wife. He was like one of those men who will +not even wheel the baby carriage, but make the wife[184] +carry the child. On the other hand, Mr. Gander was +a true head of the family. He kept right with the +goose, brooded part of the flock at night, fought off rats +and even a weasel, and was ready to battle with a hawk +or a cat. In time of danger the rooster ran for shelter, +but the gander stepped right out in front of his brood +with his wing extended like a prizefighter’s arm, and +that great bill open to nip a piece of flesh out of the +enemy. He taught his children to graze on weeds +and grass. When anyone forgot to feed them the +gander wasted no time in complaint. He led his family +right into the garden, where they picked up their share. +He led the goslings through the wet grass and into the +brook, where they cleaned out all the watercress and +weeds. On the other hand, the hen hung around the +barnyard and cried if breakfast did not come on time. +She would not let her children wade through the wet +grass or get into the water, and she did not know that a +young goose can eat grass like a calf. The hen worried +herself insane when her family followed the natural instincts +of geese and headed for the brook.

+ +

Now, Mrs. Hen is not the first teacher who has failed +to understand the first law of education—to train a child +properly you must understand his natural instincts +and tendencies and build upon them. For many generations +the hen has feared water, and has been taught +that all feathered young must be kept away from it. I +have no doubt that a race of swimming hens could be +developed, provided the fear of water could be taken +from the mind of the hen. For the hen must swim with +her mind before she can swim with her feet! I have[185] +seen many cut-and-dried teachers as much afraid of the +truth as this big Red hen was afraid of water. At any +rate, we learned why one set of goslings was far superior +to the other. One set had the benefit of father’s example +and influence. Their teacher knew from long +experience just what a young goose ought to know. The +teacher knew that because she had been a goose herself, +and could remember her youth. The hen’s brood +knew nothing of their father’s example—no more than +some little humans who only seem to know there is a +man in the world who claims to be the detached head of +the family. The hen’s goslings were brought up in one +of these beheaded families. Their teacher ranked as a +successful educator, but as she had never been a young +goose herself she could not teach her children what they +ought to know. It was not unlike trying to make a +blacksmith out of a poet, or a drygoods salesman out of +a natural farmer. These feathered children were fed +and warmed and defended, but they could not make +perfect geese because they were not trained to work out +a goose job.

+ +

The result was clearly evident. The young geese +under the hen were undersized and fell into the hen +character. After centuries of domestication or slavery +the average hen loses the independence of the wild bird. +Now and then a nobler specimen will feel some dormant +brain cell thrill within her, remember the freedom of +centuries ago and fly into the trees, but for the most +part the modern hen is a selfish, fawning, tricky creature. +She drives her family away as soon as the children +become tiresome, and there is little or no real[186] +community life among hens. When their usual food is +not forthcoming all but a few adventurous spirits stand +slouching about waiting for help. Thus the goslings +were taught to fawn upon man for their food and reject +their brothers and sisters in the other brood. It was an +unnatural life for a goose, and these little ones could +not thrive under such training. On the other hand, Mr. +Gander’s pupils were taught by an expert on goose +training. They were taught to swim, to bathe in the wet +grass, to eat grass or hay, to get out and find their own +breakfast if man did not do his duty. As a result they +grew up with strong independence of character. While +the others might fawn and beg for food, the gander’s +class were taught to scorn such subservient behavior. +And they were taught family life and co-operation. +While the hens separate and lead their selfish, separate +lives, the geese live in a group. There they go now in +a solid bunch across the lawn. Throw a stick into a flock +of hens or let a dog run at them, and they will scatter +in all directions. Try the same with a flock of young +geese, and they will line up in solid array “all for each +and each for all.” I do not know of anything finer in +the education of geese or children than this thorough +idea of co-operation. In the future those groups which +are taught like the geese will rule the nation. Those +which are taught to fear strange things or live the selfish +life of a hen will always serve. In other words, the +future of this country depends on its teachers and their +wisdom? You are right!

+ +

But the real, final test of a goose’s education is made +with the carving-knife. Judging from the empty plates[187] +I think this one will pass a good examination. If I am +not mistaken this was one of the hen’s goslings. When +we saw that their teacher was a failure we put them into +Mr. Gander’s class. He looked them over and knocked +them down with his wing a few times. Then he put his +wise head to one side as if to say:

+ +

“I’ll do my best with them. They have been spoiled, +and I must take some of the conceit out of them first. +If the law forbidding corporal punishment holds in +New Jersey I will resign the task, because no goose +can ever live a successful life unless those foolish hen +ideas are whipped out of him. And another thing: I +won’t have that Red hen bothering around me. The +influence of a foolish mother is the worst thing a teacher +has to contend with. I’ll try to make geese out of them, +but keep that hen away!”

+ +

The Red hen put up a great cry for a time. She ran +out and called for her “darling children” to leave +those low companions. The goose took those “darling +children” right by the tail feathers and pulled them +back. The gander waddled up to the hen and took one +nip which sent her squawking to the barnyard, where the +big rooster was challenging the world.

+ +

“I’ve been insulted!” she screamed, “and my dear +children have been stolen from me. If you have the +courage of a mouse you will defend your wife!”

+ +

“Where is he?” roared the rooster, and he started +on a run for the orchard. There was the goose with all +her children at school, and right in front was the gander +with his great beak open and that right wing all unslung +for a blow. The rooster got within about six feet of[188] +him and then halted. He didn’t like the looks of that +sharp beak.

+ +

“Good-morning, Mr. Gander! I saw you over in the +next field, and I came to ask how the worms are running +over there!”

+ +

As he went back the rooster, after the manner of husbands +generally, sought to pacify his wife.

+ +

“After all, your children are in a good school, and +you will now have more time for your neglected household +duties. Nursing those children has been a hard +strain on you. Now for a little recreation!”

+ +

From my own experience I can testify that Professor +Gander is right. No one can train a child properly if +the mother is foolish naturally, and seeks to interfere +with the child’s education. Those who undertake to +“take a child” into their family may well take heed +from Professor Gander. It were far better that such +a child never saw his mother again. She may easily +ruin the life which she brought into the world.

+ +

But at any rate, this bird on the table was well educated +to live the perfect life of a goose. Have another +slice! I know you can eat another helping of this +dressing. Pass back your plate. Of course I know +Mother would like to hold that other goose back for a +later meal, but that is not the true Thanksgiving spirit. +Pass back for another slice and I will use my influence +with the housekeeper to carve the second goose. Its +education has been finished.

+ +
+ +
+ +

[189]

+ +

COLONEL O’BRIEN AND SERGEANT HILL

+ +
+ +

I imagine that most of us, at one time or another, expect +to set the world on fire. So we start what we consider +a nice little blaze and stand back to see it spread. +For we think the world is as dry as a stack of hay in a +drought—only needing our little flare of flame to start +it going. We find the world more like a soggy swamp. +It does not flare up—our little blaze strikes the wet +spots, and not having heat enough to dry out the water +it comes to an end. Missionaries who have been among +the savage tribes of Africa say that the most wonderful +thing to the average savage is the simple act of striking +a match. These men and their ancestors have for centuries +obtained fire only after long and patient rubbing +of two sticks together. Often many hours of this +laborious friction were needed before they could obtain +even a glow at the end of a stick, and then nurse it into +flame. Here at one scratch this “magic stick” produced +the effect of hours of hard toil! One savage stole +a box of matches and undertook to “show off” before +his friends. He could start the little flame of the match +well enough, but he tried to make a fire out of big logs +or damp sticks, direct from the match. Of course, the +little match flame could only spread to things of its +own size. You cannot jump flame from a glimmer to a +giant log unless the latter is full of oil or gunpowder.

+ +

Two things have brought that to mind recently. My[190] +young friend, Henry Barkman, came the other day with +an oration which he was to deliver before some political +society. When a man is well satisfied with his own +literary production, he goes about shedding the evidence +of his admiration. When you come to be as old as +I am, you will recognize the signs. I knew Henry +felt that he had produced a world-beater—one of those +great bursts of mental flame which every now and then +set the world on fire. Yet no honest person, except perhaps +his mother or sister or sweetheart, would imagine +that society would stumble or even pause for an instant +at its delivery. Henry would deliver it with a loud +voice and many gestures, and then wait for the world to +blaze up. When there was no blaze he would feel that +he had been casting pearls before swine, when in truth +he had thrown his match into a soggy pile of large +sticks, where it sputtered for a moment and then flickered +out. Youth cannot understand how long years of +drudgery are required to split and splinter those big +sticks and dry them out with the fire of faith before the +match can start the blaze, and then in after years the +man who throws in the match gets the credit which +belongs to the patient workers, who have been silently +splitting and drying the wood. I tried to tell Henry +that when Lincoln delivered his speech at Gettysburg +few people realized that it was to become a classic. A +new generation with the power to look back through the +mellowing haze of the years was needed to give it a full +place in the American mind. Henry could not see it. +When did youth ever know the back-looking vision of +age? It is a wise thing that youth must ever look ahead.

+ +

[191]

+ +

I had all these things in mind as we came to the +last lap of our journey to Starkville, Miss. That pleasant +town lies west of the Mobile & Ohio Railroad—on +a side road of its own. When I went there 37 years +ago the track wound on through what seemed like a +wilderness, with here and there a negro cabin. Now it +seemed like one continuous stretch of farm villages or +blue grass pastures. In former years the streets of +Starkville were just ribbons of mud or dust, as the +seasons determined. I knew a man who came to town in +November and bought an empty wagon. He could not +haul it home until the following April, so deep was the +mud. Now the main street was as smooth and solid +as Broadway, and firm stone roads branched out into +the country in all directions. The streets were thickly +lined with cars. Here, as in Kentucky, I saw men +riding on genuine saddle horses, which shuffled quickly +along like a rocking-chair on four animated legs. It +seemed like a moving-picture show taken from some +old fairy tale, and it is no wonder that the years fell +away and I went back in memory to those old days.

+ +

It was in 1883 that I was graduated at an agricultural +college and went down to “reform and uplift +the South.” Since then I have heard the motive or +spirit of such a wildcat enterprise variously called +“cheek,” “gall,” “nerve,” “assurance” or “foolishness,” +with various strong adjectives pinned to the latter! +Yet, looking back upon it now, I feel that while +perhaps all these terms were appropriate, they do not +cover the essential thing. I had a smattering of such +science as could be taught in those days. I had a great[192] +abiding faith in the power of education to lift men up +and set them free. A few years before I had given up +the thought of ever being anything except an ordinary +workman, because I had had no training which fitted +me to do anything well. It seemed to me that the agricultural +college had given me almost the miraculous +help which came to the man with the darkened mind. +Who could blame youth for feeling that the great joy +and power of education could actually remove mountains +of depression and trouble? I had been told that +the chief assets of Mississippi were “soil, climate, character +and the determination of a proud and well-bred +race to train their hands to labor!” That was surely +in line with my stock of material assets, and so I came +to set the South on fire with ambition and vision.

+ +

Well do I remember the day I walked into the little +brick building where The Southern Live Stock Journal +was printed. Colonel O’Brien and Sergeant Hill looked +me over. Colonel O’Brien was tall and straight—every +inch a soldier. Sergeant Hill was short and fat. You +would not think it, but he was with Forrest when they +captured Fort Pillow. Sergeant Hill’s remark was:

+ +

“Another one of them literary cranks, I’ll bet.”

+ +

Colonel O’Brien was more practical.

+ +

“Come out and feed the press and then fold these +papers.”

+ +

And almost before I knew it my job of uplifting +the South was on. I suppose you might call me a “useful +citizen.” I fed the press, set type, swept the office, +did the mailing, acted as fighting editor, tried to sing in +the church choir, taught “elocution,” pitched baseball[193] +on the town nine and filled columns of the paper with +soul-stirring editorials. At least, they stirred me if they +had no effect upon any other reader. Those were the +days when living was a joy. Some days there would be +a little run of subscriptions and perhaps a big advertisement +would come. Now and then some ball club +would come to town and our boys would send them home +in defeat and disgrace. These occasions were bright +spots on the calendar, but they were as nothing in the +bright lexicon of youth to the great editorials I ground +out at that battered and shaky table in the corner. +Among other things I broke a labor strike in that town, +alone and unassisted. It was the talk of the town, but +to me it seemed a very poor thing beside the great editorial +on “The South’s Future,” which I wrote on that +stormy day in Christmas week.

+ +

It comes back to me now as I write this. In those +days everybody “knocked off” during Christmas week +and we printed no paper. Yet we all seemed to come to +the shop a few hours each day as part of our “holiday.” +It was cold and wet, with mud nearly to your hips. +Colonel O’Brien had started a fire in the fireplace, and +he and Sergeant Hill stood before it smoking their +pipes and telling war stories. Colonel O’Brien was telling +how he heard the soldiers around their fires at night +saying it was “a rich man’s war and a poor man’s +fight.” Sergeant Hill told about the Indian who went +after the molasses and glue to make into printer’s rollers, +and how in consequence the Yankees captured the +printing outfit. I must tell you that story some day. +And while these two old vets kept down on the ground[194] +in thought I was up on the heights developing a glorious +future for the “Sunny South.” And at the last flourish +of the pen I cleared my throat and read it to these old +soldiers. And, honestly, I did not get the humor of it. +These two men had given all they had of youth, ambition, +money and hope to their section. They must walk +softly all their remaining days amid the ruins and the +melancholy of defeat. And here was I without the +least conception of what life must have meant to the +Southern people, with the enthusiasm of a boy, pouring +out dreams of a future which seemed even beyond the +vision of an Isaiah. Great is youth and glorious are its +prophetic visions. At any rate, the old soldiers let their +pipes go out as they listened.

+ +

“Fine,” said Sergeant Hill. “Splendid. I reckon +you’ll have us all in Heaven 40 years hence?”

+ +

“Fine,” said Colonel O’Brien. “Fine. I hope I’ll +be here to see it; but today I saw that paper collector +from New Orleans in town. We can’t pay his bill. +He’ll have to leave on the night train. Better shut up +the office.” And they tramped out into the mud, and I +knew that as they plowed up the street they were looking +at each other as men do when they feel a pity for +some weak-minded lunatic who has stepped out in front +of the crowd with a thought or an act that is called +unorthodox. And I locked the door and sat before the +fire polishing that editorial. Collectors might pound +on the door, paper and ink might run short—what were +these poor material things to one whose winged thoughts +were to save the country? Surely, I had it all planned +out that night, and went home, rising far up above the[195] +fog and rain, and bumping my head against the stars! +Do I not know just how Henry Barkman felt about +his great oration? Heaven give him the philosophy to +endure with patience the day which finally came to me +when I had to realize that I was not an uplifter, after +all! And yet cursed be he who would, with a sneer, +deny to youth the glorious foolishness with which he

+ +
+
+
+
“Longs to clutch the golden keys;
+
To mold the mighty state’s decrees
+
And shape the whisper of the throne!”
+
+
+
+ +

And now, 37 years after, there is nothing left of all +these dreams. Colonel O’Brien and Sergeant Hill have +answered the last call.

+ +
+
+
+
“They know at last whose cause was right
+
In God the Father’s sight!”
+
+
+
+ +

Old Sol, the black man who turned the press, has +passed on with them. Years ago The Southern Live +Stock Journal was absorbed by a stronger publication. +It is doubtful if in all the town or country you could +find an old copy of the paper. Those great editorials +which I climbed into the clouds to write were evidently +too thin and light for this world. They have all sailed +away far from the mind of man. The little building +where we started the candle flame which was to burn +up all the prejudice and depression in the South seems +to be occupied as a negro hotel or boarding house. The +little shop where (with Sol on the crank of the press and +I feeding in the papers) we turned out what we felt +to be a mental feast, is now a kitchen where cow peas,[196] +bacon and greens and corn bread form a more substantial +food than we ever served up in printer’s ink. It +was no longer a molder of public opinion.

+ +

To what base uses we may return, Horatio.

+ +

And yet the sky was blue, the day was fair—the +vision had come true. I wished that Colonel O’Brien +and Sergeant Hill might stand in front of the old building +and look about them. No longer a sea of mud, but +smooth, firm pavements. The sidewalks were lined +with cars. Beautiful trees shaded the streets, until the +town seemed like a New England Village with six generations +behind it. Outside, stretching away in every +direction, was the thick, beautiful carpet of blue grass +and clover. Here and there was a young man in the +uniform of the American Union. In the vaults of the +banks were great bundles of Liberty bonds. And a +gray-haired man on the street corner told me this:

+ +

You will find that the very States which sixty years +ago tried to break up the Union will, in the future, +prove to be the very ones which must hold it together.

+ +

Yet let me tell Henry Barkman and the millions who +felt as he did about his oration, that no one in all that +town remembered my former editorials or the great +work of the Journal. My literary work has been blown +away as completely as the clouds among which it was +composed. At the end of the great college commencement +exercises a man came on the stage with a great +bunch of flowers and bowed in my direction. I am not +much in the habit of having verbal bouquets fired at me, +but I will confess that I thought: “Here is where my[197] +soul-inspiring editorial work is appreciated. All things +come round to him who will but wait.”

+ +

But this orator, like the rest of them, never dreamed +that I ever tried to “uplift the South.” He said I +entered into the young life of the town and was remembered +with affection because I played baseball with skill +and taught that community how to pitch a curved ball!

+ +

And let me say to the Henry Barkmans who read this +that the lesson of all this is the truest thing I know. +Many a man has gone out into life like a knight on a +crusade, armed with what he thinks are glorious +weapons. In after years people cannot remember what +his weapons were, but he got into their hearts with some +simple, common thing which seemed foolish beside his +great deeds. Nobody remembered my brain children, +though they were embalmed in ink and cradled in a +printing press. But I put a twist on a baseball, overcame +the force of gravity and made the ball dodge +around a corner, and my memory remains green for 40 +years! Not one of my old subscribers spoke of the +paper, but seven of the old baseball club, gray or bald, +near-sighted or rheumatic, yet still with the old flame of +youth, got together.

+ +

I think you older people will get my point. For the +benefit of Henry Barkman and his friends perhaps I +can do no better than to quote the following:

+ +

God hath chosen the foolish things of the world to +confound the wise; and God hath chosen the weak things +of the world to confound the things that are mighty.

+ +
+ +
+ +

[198]

+ +

HOW THE OTHER HALF LIVES

+ +
+ +

Then I began to think that it is very true which is +commonly said, that the one-half of the world knoweth +not how the other half liveth.

+ +

That was written by François Rabelais over 500 years +ago. It is so true that it has entered the language as a +proverb, or “old saying.” We hear it again and again +in all classes of society. It is true that the great majority +of us has no idea of the life or the life ambitions +of the great world outside of our own little valley of +thought. I suppose this failure to understand the +“other half” is one of the things which do most to +keep people apart and prevent anything like fair co-operation. +It is the basis of most of the bitter intolerance +which has ever been used by the “ruling classes” to +keep the great mass of the people in subjection. Years +ago some old lord or baron would build a strong castle +on a hill and make the farmers for miles around believe +that he “protected” them. Therefore, they built +his castle free, gave their sons for his soldiers, and toiled +on the land that he might live in idleness. And what +did he “protect” them from? Why, from another +group of farmers a few miles away, who, in like manner, +were supporting another idle gang of cutthroats in another +strong castle. These two groups of farmers did +not need to be “protected” from each other. They +had the same needs, the same wrongs and the same desires.[199] +Left to understand each other and to work together, +they would have had no trouble, but would have +led happier and far more prosperous lives. As it was +they did not understand “how the other half liveth,” +and thus they fought when they should have fraternized.

+ +

I find much of the same feeling between city people +and farmers—consumers and producers. They do not +understand how “the other half liveth,” and they find +fault when they should from every point of economy +work together. Your city man thinks the farmer has a +soft job, and that with present high prices he is making +a barrel of money. Either that or he is a slow-thinking +drudge—a sort of inferior being, who doesn’t know any +better than to carry the load which others strap on his +back. He is “the backbone of the country” all right +in a political campaign—but the backbone is merely +a mechanical contrivance if you detach it from the +brain. And the average farmer regards the city worker +or commuter as a grafter—getting far more than he +earns, and putting in short, easy days. It isn’t all graft +and ease by a long way. Many of these city workers +must travel miles to their jobs, and some of them put +in longer hours than the average farmer. Many of them +save little or nothing, and the wolf is always prowling +around the door. Between these two classes it is a case +of not knowing “how the other half liveth,” and this +failure to understand has created a form of intolerance +which separates two classes about as the old barons separated +the groups of farmers years ago.

+ +

And something of the same lack of tolerant understanding[200] +has separated classes of farmers. The grain +farmers, live-stock men, dairymen, gardeners and fruit +growers all think at times that they have the hardest +lot. The labor question, the markets or the weather all +seem to turn against them. For instance, the dairymen +usually think their lot is harder than that of others. +They must work day after day in all sorts of weather +and under hard conditions. I know about this, for I +have worked on a dairy farm where conditions were very +hard. Yet I also know that at this season the average +dairyman has a good job compared with the life of the +market gardener or fruit grower. On our own farm +it has rained each day and night for many days. Get +into a sweet corn or tomato field and pick the crop in a +pouring rain, or pick early apples while the foliage is +like a great sponge. Then sort out and pack, load the +truck and travel through the rain to market, stand out +in the rain and sell the load out to peddlers and dealers, +and then hurry back home for another round of the +same work. The fruit and vegetables are nearly as perishable +as milk, and must be rushed promptly away. +The dairyman knows beforehand what his milk will +bring. The price may not be what he thinks is right, +but he knows for weeks or months in advance what he +can surely expect. We never know when we start what +our stuff will bring. We must take what we can get +for perishable fruit. We know what we have already +spent, and what each load must bring in order to get +our money back. Thus far corn is about equal in price +to last year, tomatoes are lower, apples are at least 30 +per cent lower, and so on. The dairyman has his troubles,[201] +but let him follow this job for a month and he +would realize that “there are others.” In much the +same way I can show that the potato men, the hay and +grain farmers, the sheep men and all the rest, have +their troubles—and hard ones at that. If farmers could +only understand these things better, and realize that +there are thorns and tacks in every so-called “soft job,” +there would be greater tolerance in the world, and that +is the only thing that can ever lead to true co-operation +and fair treatment.

+ +

Pretty much the same thing is true of business. We +ran upon a strange incident the other day. The city of +Paterson, N. J., is a good market town. Work is well +paid and the workmen are free spenders. It is a city of +many breeds and races of men. On the market you will +probably hear more languages and dialects than were +used on the Tower of Babel. A large share of farm +produce is distributed by peddlers—most of them of +foreign blood. They are shrewd and tireless workers. +I never can see when they sleep. Night after night they +come on the market to buy produce, and day after day—through +heat and cold, rain or shine—you see them driving +their horses up and down the streets and lanes—always +good-natured, always with a smile. Well, we +sold Spot, our black cow, to one of these men—an +Italian. Thomas had done business with him for some +years. We had sold him many goods—he had always +paid for them. He made part payment for the cow by +giving about the most remarkable looking check I ever +saw. It was on a first-class bank made out in a +straggling hand, and signed by two names. We had[202] +passed several like it before through our bank, so +I deposited it, as usual. In a few days it came +back unpaid.

+ +

Thomas and I went to Paterson that night to see what +was wrong. I wish some of you whose lives have been +spent entirely in the country could see how this “other +half liveth.” This man lived on a side street. The +lower part of his house had been fitted as a little store. +In the small backyard were several milk goats, a small +flock of chickens and a shed, in which were two horses. +Under a small, rude shelter of boards was old Spot, +chewing away at green cornstalks. The man was a big, +pleasant-faced Italian. You would mark him for an +honest man on his appearance. There was a brood of +children—eight or nine, I should say—and a pleasant-faced +little wife, who carried the latest arrival around +at her work. When confronted with the protested check, +this man merely smiled and waved his hands. He could +not read it! Two small boys—the oldest perhaps 12 +years of age—seemed to be the only members of the +family who could read and write English. They read +the protest paper to their father and made him understand. +He only smiled and spread out his hands as +people do who talk with their shoulders. These two +little boys had made out the check and signed it for +their parents. They either did not figure out their +bank balance, or figured it wrong. There was no attempt +at dishonesty, and the check would finally be honored. +That seemed to be all there was to it. These little boys, +through the public school, represented all that these older +people know of the great business life of America.

+ +

[203]

+ +

I know a good many Americans whose pedigrees run +back close to Plymouth Rock. If some of them had +let that check go in this way I should have loaded old +Spot right on the truck and carried her home. Thomas +knew this man and his reputation, and his way of doing +business. He will pay, and in a few days of peddling he +will pad out his bank account and then the check will +go through. So we shook hands with him and came +home. But that is the way “the other half liveth.” +This man and woman came to a strange land too late +in life to acquire a business education. They can work +and plan, but must depend upon those little boys to +do business which requires bookkeeping or banking. All +the boys know about American business is what they +learn at the public schools. I wish you could have +seen the way that check was made out—yet any old +piece of paper may be worth more than a gold-plated +certificate if there is genuine character back of it. I +am told that in most mill towns the banks carry a good +many accounts just like this one; in fact, a good proportion +of the business is conducted in about that way. +It is said that some of the smaller manufacturers do not +keep any set of books which enable them to figure their +income tax! There are some men who could not buy +a cow or a cat from us on credit, while others could +have what credit they need right on their face and reputation.

+ +

There is another thing about this trade that will +interest dairymen. We found old Spot giving about 18 +quarts of milk per day, on a feed of green cornstalks and +a little grain. This milk will sell for 18 cents, at least.[204] +The cow can live in that little shed until the middle +of December, or about 120 days. In that time she will +give 1,500 quarts or more, which, at 18 cents, means +$270, and she can then be sold for at least $90 for +beef! That makes $360 gross income for one cow in +four months. Her feed will be mostly refuse tops and +stalks from vegetables and a small amount of grain. +She will be well cared for, carded and brushed every +day, and made comfortable. Thus not half the cows +know “how the other half liveth.” Someone will take +these figures, multiply them by 25, and show what tremendous +incomes our dairymen are making. The fact +is this man can keep just one cow at a profit. If he +kept two the extra cost of food would about eat up +his profits. So we went whirling home through the +dusk, thinking that we had had a glimpse at a little of +the life of the other half, and it made me feel something +more of charity for my fellow men. When you come to +think of what the American public school means to that +family, you realize the immense responsibility that goes +with education. We can hardly be too careful about +what our schools teach and how they teach it. I wonder +how many of us, if we were transplanted to some +foreign land, would be willing to turn our business over +to our children and let them conduct it as they learned +to do it from the schools! I think we would all be more +tolerant and reasonable if we would let our children +bring to us more of the spirit of youth and more of +hope of the future. The rain had stopped, the sky had +cleared, the wind had dried the grass, and on the lawn +in front of the house our great army of children were[205] +dancing and playing as if there were no such thing as +tomato rot, wet corn and low prices. I think that these +handicaps would have seemed much lighter if we could +have gone out and danced with the kids. I wonder +where, along the road, we gave up doing that.

+ +
+ +
+ +

[206]

+ +

THE INDIANS WON

+ +
+ +

Thanksgiving is a time for physical feasting and mental +fasting. By the latter I mean trying to think out +some of the problems of life which come as a sort of +shade when we remember all our mercies. A bunch of +these problems came up to me through a cloud of memories +as I sat with my feet on the concrete and my collar +turned up.

+ +

It was a gray, raw, miserable day—good Indian +weather as it turned out. It seemed as if the sun had +covered its face with a blanket in one of those fits of +depression when the impulse is to hide the face from +human eyes. Some 12,000 people were grouped—piled +up tier above tier—around a great field marked out +with long white stripes. It was a cold crowd, for all +had their feet on a concrete floor. At one side a devoted +little band of college boys screamed and sang their +songs, but for the most part this great crowd sat cold-eyed +and impartial. At one side of the field there was +a dash of bright color where a group of stolid Indians +sat wrapped in big red blankets. Just across from these +was another group of men with green blankets. Between +them in the center of the field was a tangled mass +of 22 husky boys in red or green, all fighting for the +possession of a football.

+ +

Ah, a football game! What is this so-called farmer +doing, wasting part of the price of a barrel of apples[207] +when he ought to be at work? Of course it is my privilege +to say, “That’s my business if I want to,” but I +will answer by saying that I was renewing my youth +and studying human nature. You can’t improve on +either operation for a man of my age. Up some 250 +miles nearer the Canadian line the boy had been one +of the 1,000 yelling young maniacs who sent these +green-clad boys down to meet the Indians. He could +not come, but he wrote me, “Be sure to see the game; +it will be a peach.” As a peach grower, I am interested +in all new varieties, and this certainly turned out to be +one. It must be said that these green-clad boys came +down out of their hills with a haughty spirit, wearing +pride as conspicuously as they will wear their first high +hat. They had not lost a game, but had trampled over +two of the greatest colleges in the country. They represented +the section where the purest-bred white Americans +are to be found. One more victory and no one +could deny their boast that they could stand any other +football team on its head. So they came marching out +on the field, very airy, very confident, and fully convinced +of the great superiority of the white man!

+ +

I know very little about football. When I played it +was more like a game of tag than a human battering +ram. Here, however, was a round of the great human +game which would make anyone thoughtful. Here were +representatives of two races about to grapple. The great +majority of the white thousands who watched them +were unconcerned—for a New York audience is composed +of so many races and tongues that it has little +sentiment. All around me, however, there seemed standing[208] +up hundreds of swarthy, dark men whose eyes glittered +as they watched the game. You could not realize +how many there were with Indian and Negro blood +until such a test of the white and red races was presented. +Then you began to realize what a race question +really means when the so-called inferior race gets a +chance to test its real manhood on terms of equality.

+ +

It would have made a theme for a great historian as +these young men lined up for the game. The whites +trotted out confident and proud. Why not? The “betting” +favored them, their record was superior, as their +race was supposed to be. The Indians slouched to their +places and shambled through their motions, silent and +without great show of confidence. It came to me as not +at all unlikely that a few centuries before the ancestors +of these boys had faced each other under very different +circumstances. Francis Parkman, the historian, tells of +a famous battle in the upper Connecticut Valley. The +white settlers had built a stockade as protection against +roving bands of French and Indians. One day this fort +was attacked by such a band, which had come down +the valley capturing prisoners and booty. It was a savage +fight, but the white men held their own, and finally a +Frenchman came forward with a white flag for a parley. +He actually offered to buy a supply of corn, as they +were out of food, and then to retreat. In that gray mist, +with my feet on the concrete, I could shut my eyes and +see the ancestors of these football players. Stern white +men, gun in hand, peering over the stockade, and silent +red men creeping noiselessly out of the forest to pile up +their booty in sight—as price for the corn. The frost[209] +on the leaves told them that Winter with all its cold +and peril was approaching. Here were the necessities +of life—a tremendous bargain. Yet back in the shadow +of the woods were the captives—men, women and +children—and the white settlers held out for them. +For at that time, if not now, New England knew the +value of a man to the nation. He was far above the +dollar, even though the women and children would be +a care and a danger.

+ +

In a way, something of the spirit of those grim old +fighters lay in the hearts of these green-clad boys who +had come down from these historic old hills. At that +instant, at least, they, too, knew the value of a man. It +was expressed by their little band of singers and cheerers +led by the writhing “cheer leaders”—the glory and +fame of the good old college on the hill. You could not +have bought one of these boys for $1,000,000.

+ +

On the other hand, these shambling and big-boned +Indians seemed to have something of the same spirit in +their hearts. Silent and impassive, they seemed for the +moment to have cast off their college training and gone +back to the free, wild life, only carrying the discipline +which authority and college training had given them. +I wonder if any of these red men thought as they lined +up on that field that it was the lack of just this stern +discipline which lost them this country and nearly +wiped out their race? Men fitted to play this game of +football never would have given away Manhattan Island, +or permitted a handful of white men to drive them from +the coast. Over 1,000 men, each with the burning drop +of Indian or Negro blood in his veins, were hoping and[210] +praying that in this modern battle the red men would +humble the pride of Manhattan, as their ancestors had +lost the island. Out of the gray mist there seemed to +stride ghosts of stout Dutchmen and thin Yankees and +silent, noiseless Indians to watch this fairer combat.

+ +

At the signal the ball was kicked far down the field +by a white man whose ancestors may have come with +Hendrik Hudson. It was caught by a red man, whose +ancestors may have been kings or chiefs while the white +man’s were European peasants. Back he came running +with the ball to form the basement of a pile of 10 struggling +fighters, and the game was on. You must get +someone else to describe the game. I do not understand +it well enough. The two groups of players lined up +against each other, and one side tried to batter the other +down, or send a man through with the ball. Again and +again came this fierce shock, and a strange and unexpected +thing was happening. The Indians had no band +of singers or cheer leaders, no pretty girls were urging +them on, no pride of superior dominating race, but +silently and resolutely they were smashing the white +men back. It was hard. These boys in green died well. +There was one light man who took the ball and ran +through the Indians as his ancestors may have run the +gauntlet, but they pulled him down. Inch by inch the +white men were battered back over the line. The air +seemed full of red blankets, for those substitutes at the +side lines were back into the centuries coming home +from a season on the warpath. Yet the green singers +yelled on and shouted their defiance. Then the white men +made a great rally and forced the Indians back, grimly[211] +battling over the other line. At the end of the first +half the score stood 10 to 7, in favor of the white men. +“It’s all over,” said a man who sat next to me. “They +will come back and trample all over the Indians, for +white men always have the endurance.” A man nearby +with a touch of bronze in his skin glared at us with a +look in his eyes that was not quite good to see. Back +came the players, at it again. There was great trampling, +but of the unexpected kind. These slouching and +shambling Indians suddenly turned into human tigers, +and the plain truth is that they both outwitted and +walked right over the green-clad whites. There was no +stopping them. All the cheering and singing and sentiment +and “race-superiority” went for nothing. For +here was where pride and a haughty spirit ran up +against destruction, and great was the fall thereof. Yet +I was proud of the way these white boys met their fate. +They had been too confident, and had lost what is called +the “psychological drop” on the enemy. The Indians +had them at the stake with a hot fire burning, for no one +knows what a victory right there would have meant for +the good old college far away among the hills. Yet, +face to face with fate, cruel, silent and relentless, those +boys never faltered, but fought on. I liked them better +in defeat than in their airy confidence before the game. +When it was all over they got up out of the mud of defeat +and gave their college war cry. There may have +been a few cracked and corner-clipped notes in it, but +it was fine spirit and good losing. Nearby the Indians +waved their blankets and gave another college yell. And +the 1,000 or more men with that burning drop of blood[212] +in their veins went home with shining faces and gleaming +eyes, with better dreams for the future of their race. +For they had made the white man’s burden of superiority +a hard burden to carry.

+ +

My football days are over. No use for me to tell +what great things I did 30 years ago. This age demands +a “show me,” and I cannot give it. If I had +my way I would introduce football, baseball, basketball, +pushball and all other clean and organized games +into every country town. I would organize leagues and +contests and get country children to play. Do you ever +stop to think that work, long and continuous, for ourselves +and our children, has not taught us how to organize +or use our forces together as we should? It is +true. Organized play will do more to bring our children +together for co-operative work than anything I can +think of. It will give discipline, which is what we +need. Two of these green-clad boys stood an Indian +on his head and whirled him around like a top. It +was part of the game. He got up good-naturedly and +took his place in the line. Imagine what his grandfather +would have done! One white boy was running +with the ball and two Indians butted him, while another +got him by the legs. The boy simply held on to the ball. +It was discipline and training in self-control. Step on +a city man’s foot in a crowded car and he would want to +fight. Our country people need such discipline and +spirit before they can compete with organized business. +If I could have my way I would have our country children +drilled in just such loyalty to the home town or district +as these college boys displayed on the field. Tell[213] +me, if you will, how it can be gained now in any way +except through organized and loyal play for our children. +You know very well what I mean. Work is +an essential of life, and it must be made the foundation +of character. Organized and clean play is another +essential, as I see it now, and I think its development +and firm direction is to be one of the greatest forces in +building up life in the country.

+ +
+ +
+ +

[214]

+ +

IKE SAWYER’S HOTEL

+ +
+ +

It was last year, as I recall it, at about this season, one +of the children asked me a strange question:

+ +

What was the thankfullest day you ever saw?

+ +

Now I have seen somewhere around 20,000 days +come and go, and every one of them has brought a dozen +things to be thankful for. I sometimes think as the +hands crawl around the clock at Hope Farm that the +day they are recording right now is about the best of all. +I have passed Thanksgiving Day in the mud, in the +snow, in a swamp, on a mountain, in a crowded city, +on a lonely farm—under about all the conditions you +can mention. I have given hearty thanks over baked +beans, salt pork, bread and cheese, turkey and all the +rest, but before the fire tonight somehow they all burn +away except that experience in Ike Sawyer’s Hotel.

+ +

They were stuck in the mud—with a broken axle—in +a swamp in Northern Michigan. No one had +dreamed of an auto in those days. You forded the +swamp and stream in the primitive old way. It was +a rich, middle-aged lumberman and his young wife. +How this tough, hard pine knot of a man ever selected +this soft-handed and selfish girl I cannot see. She had +come with him into the woods on one of his business +trips, and the silence by day and the whispering of +the pines at night had filled her with terror. The +rough, sturdy man suddenly saw that, unlike his first[215] +wife, this girl was not a helper and a partner, but a +toy—a hothouse flower who could not live his life or +help fight his battles. He had a great business deal on +hand which required all his energies, but this girl could +not understand or help him. She had begged and cried +to go back to “civilization,” and they were on their way. +And in this lonely place the axle of the carriage had +snapped and left them in the mud.

+ +

It had been one of those gray, melancholy days +which seem to fit best into the idea of a New England +Thanksgiving. Now twilight was coming on and there +were dark shadows in the swamp. The woman had +climbed out of the mud and stood on a log by the roadside. +She had been crying in her disappointment, for +she had expected to reach the railroad that night, and +spend Thanksgiving in the distant city—far from this +lonely wilderness. Her husband was bargaining with +an old farmer who finally agreed to haul the broken +carriage back to the blacksmith shop for repairs.

+ +

“I’ve got entertainment for beast,” he said, “but +not for man—so I can’t put you up. Quarter of a mile +down the road Ike Sawyer runs a sorter hotel.”

+ +

He hauled the carriage out of the mud and started +back along the road. There was nothing for us to do +but hunt for the hotel. You may have seen some strong, +capable man come to a crisis in his life where it suddenly +flashes upon him that the woman of his choice is +after all made of common clay, with little of that spirit +or courage which we somehow think should belong to +the thoroughbred. It was a very doleful, unhappy little +woman and a sad and silent big man who walked[216] +through the mud and up the little sand hill in search +of the hotel. They had nothing to be thankful for, and, +yet did they but know it, they were to find the most +precious thing in life in this lonely wilderness.

+ +

Around a turn in the road we came in sight of a +long, rambling building, weatherbeaten and out of repair. +Over the door was a faded sign, “Farmers’ +Rest.” On the little porch just under this sign sat a +white-haired woman in a wheel-chair. In front of the +house a little man with a bald head and a pair of great +spectacles perched at the end of his nose was chasing a +big Plymouth Rock rooster about the yard. The old +people had not noticed us, and we stopped in the road to +watch them. The old man finally cornered the rooster +by the garden fence and carried him flapping and +squawking to the old lady. She examined him carefully, +and evidently approved the choice, for the old +man, still holding the rooster, pushed the wheel-chair +into the house and then, picking up his ax, started for +the chopping block just as we turned in from the road. +We startled him so that he dropped the rooster. The +gray bird did not stop to welcome us, but darted off +into the shadows. He mounted the roost in the henhouse +from which the old man easily pulled him a little +later.

+ +

You may have seen old pictures of country hotel-keepers +bowing and scraping as their guests arrive. Ike +Sawyer could not play the part. He just peered at us +over his spectacles and rubbed his hands together.

+ +

“Walk right in,” he said. “Me and Annie can put +you up.” Then he led the way into the rambling old[217] +house. It was dark now, and the old man lighted a +lamp so that we could look about us. The old woman +did not rise from her chair, but she smiled up a welcome.

+ +

“Ain’t walked for 10 years,” explained her husband. +“I play feet and she plays hands, and between us we +make out fine.”

+ +

The old man bustled about and started a fire in the +big fireplace. The young woman had entered the poor +old building with an angry snarl of discontent on her +face. It was all so mean and hateful to be obliged to +stay in this lonely, dreadful place. As the fire blazed +up and filled the room with warm light, I noticed that +the snarl faded out and she sat watching the old lady +with wondering eyes. She went to her room for a moment, +but soon came back to sit by the fire and watch +the sweet-faced old lady “play hands.” On the other +side of the fireplace, silent and strong, her husband sat +watching his wife with eyes half closed under his +thick, bushy eyebrows.

+ +

I have seen the cook in a quick lunch counter stand +in his little box and toss food together, and I have seen +a chef earning nearly as much as the President daintily +working in his great kitchen, but nothing will ever seem +to equal the way that meal was prepared when Annie +played hands and Ike played feet. Ike pushed a little +table up in front of his wife, and at her call brought +flour and milk and all that she needed for making biscuits. +He stood beside her chair as the thin fingers did +their work. Now and then he laid his hand upon her +shoulder, and once he touched her beautiful head. As[218] +though forgetting her guests Annie would smile back at +him—a beautiful smile which brought a strange look to +the face of the young woman who sat watching them. +At first it seemed like an amused sneer. Then there +came a puzzled, curious look—the first faint glimmering +of the thought that this old man and woman +out of their trouble, out of their loneliness, had found +and preserved that most precious of all earth’s blessings—love!

+ +

When a fellow has eaten more than 60,000 meals, as +I have in my time, it must be a very good performance +in that line to stand out like a bump or a peg in memory. +Through all my days I can never forget that +supper in the fire-lighted room where Ike played feet +and Annie played hands and brains. Ike started a roaring +fire in the kitchen stove. Then he brought in a +basket of potatoes and Annie selected the best ones for +baking. He came with a fragrant brown ham, and cut +slices, under her eye, she measuring with her thin finger +to make sure they were not too thick. She cut the bread +herself, selected the eggs for frying, mixed the gravy +and seemed to know by the sputter in the pan when the +ham was done. Ike pushed her chair over to the table +so she could spread the cloth and arrange the service. +Then at a word he pushed her chair to the window +where half a dozen plants were blooming. She cut two +little nosegays and put them beside the plates of her +guests. Ike brought in the ham and eggs, the great, +mealy baked potatoes, the brown biscuits and the apple +pie. In her city home a servant would have approached +the lady and gently announced:

+ +

[219]

+ +

“Dinner is served!”

+ +

Ike Sawyer, when Annie nodded approval, simply +invited:

+ +

Sit by and eat!

+ +

It was all so simple and human that it seemed a perfectly +natural thing to do when the discontented and +peevish young woman picked up the little nosegay at +her husband’s plate and pinned it on his coat. She even +patted his shoulder just as Ike had done with Annie. +We were all ready to begin, when Ike, standing by +Annie’s chair, took off his great spectacles and held up +his hand.

+ +

“I don’t know who you be or whether you’re church +folks or not, but me an’ Annie always makes every +day a season for Thanksgivin’.”

+ +

Then in the deep silence with only the popping of the +fire and the dim noises of the night, as accompaniment, +the old man bowed his head and made his prayer. He +prayed that the “stranger within our gates” might find +peace and strength and go on his way thankful for all +the blessings of life. Under those great bushy eyebrows +the eyes of the strong, rich man glowed with a +strange light. The young wife glanced at him, and the +sneer faded away from her face. Then Ike became the +landlord once more and he bustled about, tempting us to +eat a little more of this or another piece of that, and +at every word of praise falling back upon his stock explanation:

+ +

“It’s her—Annie plays hands and I play feet. +Everybody knows hands have more skill than +feet.”

+ +

[220]

+ +

After supper the big man and his wife stood at the +window looking out into the wet, dismal night. After +a little hesitation he put his arm gently around her. +She did not throw it away as she did when he tried to +comfort her in the swamp, but rather pulled it closer. +After Ike had cleared up his dishes and caught and +dressed the gray rooster we all sat before the fire and +talked. With a few shrewd questions the lumberman +drew out Ike’s story. Years before he and Annie had +owned a good farm in New York. There they heard +of the wonderful new town that was to be built in +Northern Michigan. A city was to arise there, the railroad +was coming, and fortune was to float on golden +wings over the favored place. It is strange how people +like Ike and Annie cannot see how much they need +home and old friends and old scenes to make life satisfying. +They are not made of the stuff used in building +pioneers, but they cannot realize it and they listen to +plausible dreams and go chasing after the impossible. +So Ike and Annie sold the farm and came to start the +great city. It never started. The railroad headed 20 +miles west. Out among the scrub oaks you could find +some of the rotting stakes marked “Broadway,” “Clay +St.,” or “Lake Avenue.” The swamp and forest refused +to be civilized. Ike built his hotel in anticipation +of the human wave which would wash prosperity his +way. It never came, and only a rough, rambling house +remained as the weatherbeaten gravestone of Sawdust +City. Of all the pioneers there were only Ike and +Annie—last of them all—celebrating their happy +Thanksgiving!

+ +

[221]

+ +

“Why don’t you sell out and move to some town?” +said the practical lumberman.

+ +

“Well, sir—it would be too far from home! Me +and Annie know this place—every corner of it. Every +crick of a timber at night brings a memory. We are +just part of the place. And the little girl is buried off +there by the brook. We couldn’t go away from that, +could we?”

+ +

“But isn’t it so awful lonesome?”

+ +

It was the young woman who asked, and it was Annie +who softly answered her.

+ +

“No, for we have great company. I have Ike and +he has me. All these long years have tried us out. We +know each other, and we are satisfied. Each Thanksgiving +finds us happier than before, because we know +that our last years are to be our best years.”

+ +

The rich man looked over to Ike and Annie with +something of hopeless envy printed on his face. His +wife nodded her head gently and then sat gazing into +the fire until Ike gave us clearly to understand that 10 +o’clock was the hour for retiring at the “Farmers’ +Rest.”

+ +

We stayed for our Thanksgiving dinner, and the gray +rooster, stuffed with chestnuts and bread-crumbs, might +well have stood up in the platter to crow at the praises +heaped upon him. The forenoon was gloomy and dull, +but just as we came to the table the sun broke through +the clouds. A long splinter of sunshine broke through +the window—falling upon Annie’s snow-white hair. +Ike hurried to move her chair out of the sun, but the +rich man asked Ike to leave her there, for I think something[222] +in that sunny picture took him back to childhood—where +most men go on Thanksgiving Day.

+ +

And shortly after dinner the farmer came up the +road with the carriage. The axle had been mended and +the horses rested. We all shook hands with Ike and +Annie. I was to go my way and the other guests were +to pass out of our little world.

+ +

Annie held the young girl’s hand for a moment.

+ +

“My dear, I hope you will soon be back in the city +among your friends, where you will not be so lonely. +It must be hard for you here.”

+ +

The girl hesitated a moment and then put her hand +on her husband’s shoulder.

+ +

“John, would it mean very much to you if we went +right back to the camp so you could finish your business?”

+ +

“Yes, it would—but I am afraid——”

+ +

“Then we will not go home yet, but we will go back +until you are through. I have had a beautiful Thanksgiving. +I would rather stay in the woods.”

+ +

And so they turned in their tracks and went back +through the swamp. The night before she said she +should always hate the place where the accident had +made Ike Sawyer’s hotel a necessity. Now as she passed +it she smiled and gave her husband a pinch—a trick +she must have learned from Annie. And so they went +on through the sunny afternoon of the “thankfullest day +of their lives.” They were thinking of the working +force at the “Farmers’ Rest”—the feet and the hands!

+ +

And the thought in their minds framed itself over +and over into words:

+ +

[223]

+ +

Out of their poverty, out of their trouble and loneliness, +this man and woman have found each other, and +thus have found the most beautiful and precious thing +in life—love!

+ +
+ +
+ +

[224]

+ +

OLD-TIME POLITICS

+ +
+ +

“What is the matter with this political campaign?”

+ +

An old man who can remember public events far +back of the Civil War and beyond asked that question +the other day. He said this campaign reminded him +more of a Sunday school convention. Nobody was +fighting, and very few such epithets as “liar” or +“thief” or “rascal” were being used. In these days +no one seems to care who is to be elected. We are all +too busy trying to pay our bills. The old man bewailed +the loss of power and interest in this generation. He +thought this quiet indifference meant that as a nation +we have lost our political vigor. Having been through +some of those old-time battles, I cannot fully agree with +him. It is true that few people seem interested, yet they +will vote this year, and I think the quiet and thoughtful +study most of them are making will prove as effective as +the big noise and excitement we used to have. We are +merely doing things differently now. Whether the great +excitement of those old political days made us better +citizens is a question which has long puzzled me. I +know that in those nervous and high-strung days we +did many foolish things as a part of “politics.” On +the other hand, I wish sometimes that our people could +get as thoroughly worked up over the tribute we are +paying to the profiteers as we did in those old days over +the tariff and the slavery issue.

+ +

I can well remember taking part in the campaign between[225] +Garfield and Hancock. The Democrats felt that +they had been robbed of the Presidency in ’76, but as +they failed to renominate Tilden the Republicans called +them quitters. I had dropped out of college for awhile +to work as hired man for a farmer in a Western State, +and we certainly had a great time. This farmer was +an old soldier; he was a good talker and thought well +of his own exploits. When you found that combination +40 years ago you struck a red-hot partisan. The man’s +wife was a Democrat, because her father had been. +She was one of those small, black-eyed women who acquire +the habit of dominating things in the schoolroom +and then concentrate the habit when they take +a school of one pupil in the home. Her brother lived on +the next farm. He had turned Republican because he +wanted to be elected county clerk. It was fully worth +the price of admission to sit by the fire some stormy +night and hear this woman put those two Republicans +on the broiler of her tongue. They were big men, fully +capable of holding their own in any ordinary argument, +but this small woman cowed them as she formerly +did her A B C pupils. It was enough to make any +young man very thoughtful about marrying a successful +teacher to see this small woman point a finger at her +big husband and say:

+ +

“Now John Crandall, don’t you dare to say it isn’t +the truth!”

+ +

And John didn’t dare, though from his political religion +it might be a base fabrication. One day, after a +particularly hard thrust, John and I were digging potatoes, +and he unburdened his mind a little:

+ +

[226]

+ +

“I’ll tell you one thing: any man who marries a +good school-marm takes his life in his hands—his political +life, anyway!” and he pushed his fork into the +ground as though he was spearing a Democrat! “And +yet,” he added, as he threw out a fine hill of +potatoes, “sometimes I kinder think it’s worth the +risk.”

+ +

My great regret is that this lady did not live to celebrate +the Nineteenth Amendment! With the ballot in +her hand she would have stirred excitement even into +this dull campaign!

+ +

We worked all day, and went around arguing most +of the night during that hot campaign. The names we +had for the Democrats would not bear repeating here. +The other side went around with pieces of chalk, making +the figures “321” on every fence and building or +on stones. That represented the sum of money which +General Garfield was said to have stolen. The Republicans +marched around in processions carrying a pair of +overalls tied to a pole, representing one of the Democratic +candidates. Oh, it was a “campaign of education” +without doubt! And then Maine voted! John +and his brother-in-law had been playing Maine as their +trump card.

+ +

“Wait till you hear from the old Pine Tree State. +As Maine goes, so goes the Union!”

+ +

John felt so sure of it that even his wife was a little +fearful. The day after the Maine election John and I +were seeding wheat on a hill back from the road. There +were no telephones in those days, and news traveled +slowly—we were eight miles from town. In the late[227] +afternoon we heard a noise from the distant road. +There was Peleg Leonard driving his old white horse +up the road at full speed and roaring out an old campaign +song:

+ +
+
+
+
“Wait for the wagon! Wait for the wagon!
+
Democratic wagon, and we’ll all take a ride!”
+
+
+
+ +

The demand for prohibition in those days was confined +to a few “wild-eyed fanatics,” and Peleg was not +one of them, especially on those rare occasions when the +Democrats got a chance to yell. We saw him stop in +front of the house and wave his arms as he told the news +to Sarah.

+ +

“Looks sorter bad. Can it be that Maine has gone +back on us?” said John as he saw the celebrator go on +his way.

+ +

We usually had a cold supper on such days, but now +we saw the smoke pouring from the kitchen chimney, +and the horn blew half an hour earlier than usual. John +and I put up the horses, washed our faces at the pump +and walked into the kitchen as only two dejected Republicans +can travel. You see, it wasn’t so bad for the +Democrats. They were used to being defeated, and +had made no great claims. I was young then, and +youth is intensely partisan. Since that day I have voted +on four different party tickets, and glory in the fact that +I am not “hide-bound.”

+ +

Sarah had on her best black silk and the white apron +with lace edges. She had cooked some hot biscuit and +dished up some of her famous plum preserve and actually +skimmed a pan of milk to serve thick cream.

+ +

[228]

+ +

Maine is gone Democratic!” she cried. “Hurrah +for Hancock! Bread and water’s good enough for Republicans +in this hour of triumph, but I know the fat of +the land will taste like gall to both of you. Sit right +down and feast, because the country’s safe!”

+ +

Physically that supper was perfect. There never +were finer hot biscuits or better plum preserve or finer +cold chicken! Spiritually it was the saddest and most +depressing meal on record. We made a full meal. I +can go back into the years and see that big farmer gnawing +half a chicken under command of his wife. You +remember “King Robert of Sicily” in Longfellow’s +poem:

+ +
+
+
+
“The world he loved so much
+
Had turned to dust and ashes at his touch.”
+
+
+
+ +

And so with poor John. That fine chicken tasted +exactly like crow as Sarah sat by and “rubbed it in.” +Oh, politics, where are the charms we formerly saw in +thy face?

+ +

John and I surely dawdled over our chores that night. +We had no great desire to go in and hear the news. +Finally Sarah came to the door and called us.

+ +

“Say,” said John to me as we started for the house, +“you go to college. Have you ever studied logic or +what they call psychology?”

+ +

“While I am no expert at either subject, I know +what they mean.”

+ +

“Well, now, suppose your wife got after you like +that, how would you use those studies to keep her quiet? +What’s the use of an education if it don’t help you +keep peace in the family?”

+ +

[229]

+ +

So I unwisely told John that he ought to tell his wife +that a woman by law obtained her citizenship from her +husband. That citizenship was the essence of politics; +therefore the wife should by law belong to her husband’s +party. I am older now in years, and I know better than +to give any man arguments in a debate with his wife. +The Maine election, however, had made us desperate. +So John marched in with a very confident step and +elaborated my arguments. He was quite impressive +when he assured her that the law declared that a woman +acquired her political principles from her husband. It +did not work, however.

+ +

“Don’t you tell me! I didn’t marry any principles +at all when I married you. How is a man going to give +any principles to his wife when he never had any to +give? My father was a Democrat, and I take my politics +from him. He was the best man that ever lived, +and you know it. I inherit my politics, I do—I didn’t +marry them!”

+ +

The truth is that Sarah’s father was an old war Democrat +who came near being tarred and feathered by his +neighbors, but one of the saving graces of modern civilization +is the fact that a woman’s father is always an +immortal—never needing any defense—his virtues being +self-evident, while her husband is a de-mortal who +can hardly hope to become a good citizen except through +long years of patient service! His only hope lies in +the future when he has a daughter of his own.

+ +

And Henry Wilkins, Sarah’s brother, was running for +county clerk. We held a caucus at the blacksmith shop, +where John and I and two farmers were elected delegates[230] +to the county convention. We all went to the +county seat one Saturday afternoon to nominate a ticket. +The last we heard from Sarah was:

+ +

“Now, Henry, if you get nominated on that renegade +ticket, I know one man that won’t vote for you +and that’s John Crandall. I won’t let him vote if he +has to stay in bed all day!”

+ +

Contrary to what some of the “antis” say woman +has always exercised political power.

+ +

When we got to town we found the “drug-store +ring” in control. This was a little group of politicians +led by Jacob Spaulding. It was the “Tammany +Hall” of Oak County. This ring had decided to nominate +an undertaker from the west side of the county for +clerk. Most of the farmers were all ready to quit when +Jake Spaulding said the word, for he usually handed out +the little political jobs. I was young and inexperienced +in politics and ready for a fight. It hurt me to +see that great crowd of farmers ready to give up the +fight when a big, fat brute like Jake Spaulding and a +few of his creatures shook their heads. So I called our +delegates together and proposed that we go right in +where Jake was and “talk turkey” to him. Strange, +but John Crandall was the only outspoken supporter +I had. John was bossed at home until he was like a +lamb, but get him out among men and the pent-up +feelings in the lamb expanded that innocent animal into +a lion. So we had our way, and about 25 of us marched +down the street to the courthouse, where in the sheriff’s +room the county committee was making up the ticket.

+ +

You would have thought the destinies of the nation[231] +were at stake as we filed into that room. Half of our +delegates were ready to quit when Jake Spaulding +glared at us over his spectacles.

+ +

“What do you want?”

+ +

Dr. Walker was our spokesman, and Jake Spaulding +had a mortgage on his house. You could see that +mortgage peeking out from behind every sentence of the +doctor’s speech. In effect he asked those politicians if +they wouldn’t please nominate Henry Wilkins for +county clerk. It didn’t take Jake long to put us where +we belonged.

+ +

“No; the delegates to this convention are going to +nominate Hiram Green. Nothing doing here. Just +fall in and work for the grand old Republican party! +And now, boys, good day; we’re busy.”

+ +

Several of our delegates started for the door. They +were well-disciplined soldiers. I was not, and I did +what most of them thought a very foolish thing. Before +I well knew it I was up in front making a speech to +Jake Spaulding. At that time no one had ever heard +of the 35-cent dollar. The word “profiteer” was not +in the language; but I think I did make it clear that +these farmers were there to nominate Henry Wilkins or +“bust” the convention. As I look back upon it now I +think it was the most bold and palpable “bluff” ever +attempted at a country convention. And John Crandall +stood beside me and pounded his big hands together +until the rest of the delegates forgot their fear and +joined in. When I finished there was nothing to do for +us but to file out of the courthouse.

+ +

Then they turned on me in sorrow and anger. Everyone[232] +would now be a marked man. They never could get +any office from Jake Spaulding. Even Henry, the candidate, +felt I had injured his chances, for if he kept +quiet perhaps he might make a deal to get to be deputy +clerk. But John Crandall stood by me.

+ +

“Good,” he said; “I’m a fighter. Get right up in +convention and give ’em another. I’m going to vote for +Henry till the last man is out.”

+ +

But these faint hearts did not know what was going +on inside the sheriff’s room. When our delegation +marched out the county committee sat and looked at +each other.

+ +

“Boys,” said Jake Spaulding, “it looks like they +mean business. We can’t let that spread. I guess we’ll +have to take Henry on!”

+ +

There was a big crowd in the courthouse, and the +convention went off like a well-oiled machine. They +nominated sheriff and probate judge and then the chairman +asked:

+ +

“Any nominations for county clerk?”

+ +

I had my throat all cleared and stood up with: +“Mr. Chairman,”—but no one paid much attention +to me. The chairman turned to the platform and +said:

+ +

“I recognize Judge Spaulding,” and there was the +big, fat boss on his feet.

+ +

“Mr. Chairman,” he said, “today our glorious country +lives or dies! The grand old Republican party is on +trial. Every patriot is needed in this great crisis. Ho! +Israel, every man to his tent! I therefore take great +pleasure in nominating that splendid farmer, that incomparable[233] +patriot, that popular citizen, Henry Wilkins +of Adams township. I ask you in the name of our +glorious citizenship to put him through with bells +on!”

+ +

I stood there all through the speech too dazed to sit, +until John Crandall pulled me down. Then I realized +that for once a bluff had worked. And after the convention +I met Jake Spaulding in front of the courthouse. +“Young feller,” he said, “if you decide to settle down +in this county, let me know. I’ll have a little job for +you.”

+ +

We all rode home in the candidate’s wagon. Sarah +was waiting for us at the gate.

+ +

“Well, how did you come out?”

+ +

“Nominated by acclamation,” said Henry. “John +and the young feller here did it. They made Jake +Spaulding come up!”

+ +

“John?”

+ +

If some actress could put into a single word the +scorn and surprise which Sarah packed into her husband’s +name her fortune would be made. And John +and I stood there like a couple of truant schoolboys +waiting for the verdict.

+ +

“That’s what I said. John was fine. Only for +him I’d have been defeated.” And Henry drove on.

+ +

“Now you two lazy Republicans, get out and milk +those cows.”

+ +

We went, but when we got back the kitchen stove +was roaring, and Sarah was just taking out a pan of +biscuits. There were ham and eggs on the stove.

+ +

“Now you sit right down and eat. If I’ve got to[234] +be sister to a county clerk I want to know all about it. +Now, John, you tell me just how it happened.”

+ +

Ah, but those were the happy days of politics. Do +you wonder that we old-timers consider the present +campaign about like dishwater—in more ways than one?

+ + + + + + + + +
+
+
+
+
+
+End of Project Gutenberg's Hope Farm Notes, by Herbert Winslow Collingwood
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