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+This eBook, including all associated images, markup, improvements,
+metadata, and any other content or labor, has been confirmed to be
+in the PUBLIC DOMAIN IN THE UNITED STATES.
+
+Procedures for determining public domain status are described in
+the "Copyright How-To" at https://www.gutenberg.org.
+
+No investigation has been made concerning possible copyrights in
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+status under the laws that apply to them.
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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #64770 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/64770)
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-The Project Gutenberg eBook of The Chronicles of Aunt Minervy Ann, by Joel
-Chandler Harris
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and
-most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms
-of the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at
-www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you
-will have to check the laws of the country where you are located before
-using this eBook.
-
-Title: The Chronicles of Aunt Minervy Ann
-
-Author: Joel Chandler Harris
-
-Illustrator: A. B. Frost
-
-Release Date: March 09, 2021 [eBook #64770]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-Produced by: David Edwards and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at
- https://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images
- generously made available by The Internet Archive)
-
-*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE CHRONICLES OF AUNT MINERVY
-ANN ***
-Transcriber’s Note: This book contains outdated racial stereotypes and
-words that are now considered highly offensive.
-
-
-
-
-THE CHRONICLES OF AUNT MINERVY ANN
-
-[Illustration: “I ain’t fergot dat ar ’possum.”]
-
-
-
-
- THE CHRONICLES OF
- AUNT MINERVY ANN
-
- BY
- JOEL CHANDLER HARRIS
-
- ILLUSTRATED BY
- A. B. FROST
-
- CHARLES SCRIBNER’S SONS
- NEW YORK 1899
-
- COPYRIGHT, 1899, BY
- CHARLES SCRIBNER’S SONS
-
- TROW DIRECTORY
- PRINTING AND BOOKBINDING COMPANY
- NEW YORK
-
-
-
-
-CONTENTS
-
-
- PAGE
-
- I. An Evening with the Ku-Klux 1
-
- II. “When Jess went a-fiddlin’” 34
-
- III. How Aunt Minervy Ann Ran Away and Ran Back Again 70
-
- IV. How She Joined the Georgia Legislature 97
-
- V. How She Went Into Business 119
-
- VI. How She and Major Perdue Frailed Out the Gossett Boys 139
-
- VII. Major Perdue’s Bargain 157
-
- VIII. The Case of Mary Ellen 182
-
-
-
-
-LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS
-
- “I ain’t fergot dat ar ’possum” _Frontispiece_
-
- FACING PAGE
-
- “Well, he can’t lead _me_” 6
-
- He wore a blue army overcoat and a stove-pipe hat 8
-
- “Sholy you-all ain’t gwine put dat in de paper, is you?” 10
-
- Inquired what day the paper came out 14
-
- “I was on the lookout,” the Major explained 18
-
- In the third he placed only powder 26
-
- We administered to his hurts the best we could 30
-
- “I’d a heap rather you’d pull your shot-gun on me than your pen” 32
-
- The Committee of Public Comfort 72
-
- Buying cotton on his own account 76
-
- “Miss Vallie!” 78
-
- “I saw him fling his hand to his shoulder and hold it there” 80
-
- “Dat ar grape jelly on de right han’ side” 82
-
- “‘Conant!’ here and ‘Conant’ dar” 84
-
- “Drapt down on de groun’ dar an’ holler an’ cry” 90
-
- “Oh, my shoulder!” 122
-
- “Marse Tumlin never did pass a nigger on de road” 124
-
- “We made twelve pies ef we made one” 126
-
- “I gi’ Miss Vallie de money” 128
-
- “Ef here ain’t ol’ Minervy Ann wid pies!” 130
-
- “You see dat nigger ’oman?” 132
-
- “An’ he sot dar, suh, wid his haid ’twix’ his han’s fer I dunner
- how long” 134
-
- “You’ll settle dis wid me” 136
-
- “Dat money ain’t gwine ter las’ when you buy dat kin’ er doin’s” 160
-
- Trimmin’ up de Ol’ Mules 162
-
- “She wuz cryin’—settin’ dar cryin’” 164
-
- “Here come a nigger boy leadin’ a bob-tail hoss” 166
-
- “He been axin’ me lots ’bout Miss Vallie” 172
-
- “Marse Tumlin ’low he’ll take anything what he can chaw, sop,
- er drink” 176
-
- “I hatter stop an’ pass de time er day” 178
-
- “Hunt up an’ down fer dat ar Tom Perryman” 180
-
-
-
-
-THE CHRONICLES OF AUNT MINERVY ANN
-
-
-
-
-I
-
-AN EVENING WITH THE KU-KLUX
-
-
-The happiest, the most vivid, and certainly the most critical period of
-a man’s life is combined in the years that stretch between sixteen and
-twenty-two. His responsibilities do not sit heavily on him, he has hardly
-begun to realize them, and yet he has begun to see and feel, to observe
-and absorb; he is for once and for the last time an interested, and yet
-an irresponsible, spectator of the passing show.
-
-This period I had passed very pleasantly, if not profitably, at
-Halcyondale in Middle Georgia, directly after the great war, and the town
-and the people there had a place apart, in my mind. When, therefore, some
-ten years after leaving there, I received a cordial invitation to attend
-the county fair, which had been organized by some of the enterprising
-spirits of the town and county, among whom were Paul Conant and his
-father-in-law, Major Tumlin Perdue, it was natural that the fact should
-revive old memories.
-
-The most persistent of these memories were those which clustered around
-Major Perdue, his daughter Vallie, and his brother-in-law, Colonel
-Bolivar Blasengame, and Aunt Minervy Ann Perdue. Curiously enough, my
-recollection of this negro woman was the most persistent of all. Her
-individuality seemed to stand out more vitally than the rest. She was
-what is called “a character,” and something more besides. The truth is,
-I should have missed a good deal if I had never known Aunt Minervy Ann
-Perdue, who, as she described herself, was “Affikin fum ’way back yander
-’fo’ de flood, an’ fum de word go”—a fact which seriously interferes with
-the somewhat complacent theory that Ham, son of Noah, was the original
-negro.
-
-It is a fact that Aunt Minervy Ann’s great-grandmother, who lived to be
-a hundred and twenty years old, had an eagle tattooed on her breast, the
-mark of royalty. The brother of this princess, Qua, who died in Augusta
-at the age of one hundred years, had two eagles tattooed on his breast.
-This, taken in connection with his name, which means The Eagle, shows
-that he was either the ruler of his tribe or the heir apparent. The
-prince and princess were very small, compared with the average African,
-but the records kept by a member of the Clopton family show that during
-the Revolution Qua performed some wonderful feats, and went through some
-strange adventures in behalf of liberty. He was in his element when war
-was at its hottest—and it has never been hotter in any age or time, or
-in any part of the world, savage or civilized, than it was then in the
-section of Georgia now comprised in the counties of Burke, Columbia,
-Richmond, and Elbert.
-
-However, that has nothing to do with Aunt Minervy Ann Perdue; but her
-relationship to Qua and to the royal family of his tribe, remote though
-it was, accounted for the most prominent traits of her character,
-and many contradictory elements of her strong and sharply defined
-individuality. She had a bad temper, and was both fierce and fearless
-when it was aroused; but it was accompanied by a heart as tender and
-a devotion as unselfish as any mortal ever possessed or displayed.
-Her temper was more widely advertised than her tenderness, and her
-independence more clearly in evidence than her unselfish devotion, except
-to those who knew her well or intimately.
-
-And so it happened that Aunt Minervy Ann, after freedom gave her the
-privilege of showing her extraordinary qualities of self-sacrifice,
-walked about in the midst of the suspicion and distrust of her own race,
-and was followed by the misapprehensions and misconceptions of many of
-the whites. She knew the situation and laughed at it, and if she wasn’t
-proud of it her attitude belied her.
-
-It was at the moment of transition from the old conditions to the new
-that I had known Aunt Minervy Ann and the persons in whom she was so
-profoundly interested, and she and they, as I have said, had a place
-apart in my memory and experience. I also remembered Hamp, Aunt Minervy
-Ann’s husband, and the queer contrast between the two. It was mainly
-on account of Hamp, perhaps, that Aunt Minervy Ann was led to take
-such a friendly interest in the somewhat lonely youth who was editor,
-compositor, and pressman of Halcyondale’s ambitious weekly newspaper in
-the days following the collapse of the confederacy.
-
-When a slave, Hamp had belonged to an estate which was in the hands of
-the Court of Ordinary (or, as it was then called, the Inferior Court), to
-be administered in the interest of minor heirs. This was not a fortunate
-thing for the negroes, of which there were above one hundred and fifty.
-Men, women, and children were hired out, some far and some near. They
-came back home at Christmastime, enjoyed a week’s frolic, and were
-then hired out again, perhaps to new employers. But whether to new or
-old, it is certain that hired hands in those days did not receive the
-consideration that men gave to their own negroes.
-
-This experience told heavily on Hamp’s mind. It made him reserved,
-suspicious, and antagonistic. He had few pleasant memories to fall back
-on, and these were of the days of his early youth, when he used to trot
-around holding to his old master’s coat-tails—the kind old master who had
-finally been sent to the insane asylum. Hamp never got over the idea (he
-had heard some of the older negroes talking about it) that his old master
-had been judged to be crazy simply because he was unusually kind to his
-negroes, especially the little ones. Hamp’s after-experience seemed to
-prove this, for he received small share of kindness, as well as scrimped
-rations, from the majority of those who hired him.
-
-It was a very good thing for Hamp that he married Aunt Minervy Ann,
-otherwise he would have become a wanderer and a vagabond when freedom
-came. It was a fate he didn’t miss a hair’s breadth; he “broke loose,”
-as he described it, and went off, but finally came back and tried in vain
-to persuade Aunt Minervy Ann to leave Major Perdue. He finally settled
-down, but acquired no very friendly feelings toward the white race.
-
-He joined the secret political societies, strangely called “Union
-Leagues,” and aided in disseminating the belief that the whites were
-only awaiting a favorable opportunity to re-enslave his race. He was
-only repeating what the carpet-baggers had told him. Perhaps he believed
-the statement, perhaps not. At any rate, he repeated it fervently and
-frequently, and soon came to be the recognized leader of the negroes in
-the county of which Halcyondale was the capital. That is to say, the
-leader of all except one. At church one Sunday night some of the brethren
-congratulated Aunt Minervy Ann on the fact that Hamp was now the leader
-of the colored people in that region.
-
-“What colored people?” snapped Aunt Minervy Ann.
-
-“We-all,” responded a deacon, emphatically.
-
-“Well, he can’t lead _me_, I’ll tell you dat right now!” exclaimed Aunt
-Minervy Ann.
-
-[Illustration: “Well, he can’t lead _me_.”]
-
-Anyhow, when the time came to elect members of the Legislature (the
-constitutional convention had already been held), Hamp was chosen to be
-the candidate of the negro Republicans. A white man wanted to run, but
-the negroes said they preferred their own color, and they had their way.
-They had their way at the polls, too, for, as nearly all the whites who
-would have voted had served in the Confederate army, they were at that
-time disfranchised.
-
-So Hamp was elected overwhelmingly, “worl’ widout een’,” as he put it,
-and the effect it had on him was a perfect illustration of one aspect of
-human nature. Before and during the election (which lasted three days)
-Hamp had been going around puffed up with importance. He wore a blue army
-overcoat and a stove-pipe hat, and went about smoking a big cigar. When
-the election was over, and he was declared the choice of the county, he
-collapsed. His dignity all disappeared. His air of self-importance and
-confidence deserted him. His responsibilities seemed to weigh him down.
-
-He had once “rolled” in the little printing-office where the machinery
-consisted of a No. 2 Washington hand-press, a wooden imposing-stone,
-three stands for the cases, a rickety table for “wetting down” the paper,
-and a tub in which to wash the forms. This office chanced to be my
-headquarters, and the day after the election I was somewhat surprised
-to see Hamp saunter in. So was Major Tumlin Perdue, who was reading the
-exchanges.
-
-“He’s come to demand a retraction,” remarked the Major, “and you’ll have
-to set him right. He’s no longer plain Hamp; he’s the Hon. Hamp—what’s
-your other name?” turning to the negro.
-
-“Hamp Tumlin my fergiven name, suh. I thought ’Nervy Ann tol’ you dat.”
-
-“Why, who named you after me?” inquired the Major, somewhat angrily.
-
-“Me an’ ’Nervy Ann fix it up, suh. She say it’s about de purtiest name in
-town.”
-
-The Major melted a little, but his bristles rose again, as it were.
-
-“Look here, Hamp!” he exclaimed in a tone that nobody ever forgot or
-misinterpreted; “don’t you go and stick Perdue onto it. I won’t stand
-that!”
-
-“No, suh!” responded Hamp. “I started ter do it, but ’Nervy Ann say
-she ain’t gwine ter have de Perdue name bandied about up dar whar de
-Legislature’s at.”
-
-[Illustration: He wore a blue army overcoat and a stove-pipe hat.]
-
-Again the Major thawed, and though he looked long at Hamp it was with
-friendly eyes. He seemed to be studying the negro—“sizing him up,” as
-the saying is. For a newly elected member of the Legislature, Hamp
-seemed to take a great deal of interest in the old duties he once
-performed about the office. He went first to the box in which the
-“roller” was kept, and felt of its surface carefully.
-
-“You’ll hatter have a bran new roller ’fo’ de mont’s out,” he said, “an’
-I won’t be here to he’p you make it.”
-
-Then he went to the roller-frame, turned the handle, and looked at the
-wooden cylinders. “Dey don’t look atter it like I use ter, suh; an’ dish
-yer frame monst’us shackly.”
-
-From there he passed to the forms where the advertisements remained
-standing. He passed his thumb over the type and looked at it critically.
-“Dey er mighty skeer’d dey’ll git all de ink off,” was his comment. Do
-what he would, Hamp couldn’t hide his embarrassment.
-
-Meanwhile, Major Perdue scratched off a few lines in pencil. “I wish
-you’d get this in Tuesday’s paper,” he said. Then he read: “The Hon.
-Hampton Tumlin, recently elected a member of the Legislature, paid us a
-pop-call last Saturday. We are always pleased to meet our distinguished
-fellow-townsman and representative. We trust Hon. Hampton Tumlin will
-call again when the Ku-Klux are in.”
-
-“Why, certainly,” said I, humoring the joke.
-
-“Sholy you-all ain’t gwine put dat in de paper, is you?” inquired Hamp,
-in amazement.
-
-“Of course,” replied the Major; “why not?”
-
-“Kaze, ef you does, I’m a ruint nigger. Ef ’Nervy Ann hear talk ’bout
-my name an’ entitlements bein’ in de paper, she’ll quit me sho. Uh-uh!
-I’m gwine ’way fum here!” With that Hamp bowed and disappeared. The
-Major chuckled over his little joke, but soon returned to his newspaper.
-For a quarter of an hour there was absolute quiet in the room, and, as
-it seemed, in the entire building, which was a brick structure of two
-stories, the stairway being in the centre. The hallway was, perhaps,
-seventy-five feet long, and on each side, at regular intervals, there
-were four rooms, making eight in all, and, with one exception, variously
-occupied as lawyers’ offices or sleeping apartments, the exception being
-the printing-office in which Major Perdue and I were sitting. This was at
-the extreme rear of the hallway.
-
-[Illustration: “Sholy you-all ain’t gwine put dat in de paper, is you?”]
-
-I had frequently been struck by the acoustic properties of this hallway.
-A conversation carried on in ordinary tones in the printing-office could
-hardly be heard in the adjoining room. Transferred to the front rooms,
-however, or even to the sidewalk facing the entrance to the stairway,
-the lightest tone was magnified in volume. A German professor of music,
-who for a time occupied the apartment opposite the printing-office,
-was so harassed by the thunderous sounds of laughter and conversation
-rolling back upon him that he tried to remedy the matter by nailing two
-thicknesses of bagging along the floor from the stairway to the rear
-window. This was, indeed, something of a help, but when the German left,
-being of an economical turn of mind, he took his bagging away with him,
-and once more the hallway was torn and rent, as you may say, with the
-lightest whisper.
-
-Thus it happened that, while the Major and I were sitting enjoying an
-extraordinary season of calm, suddenly there came a thundering sound
-from the stairway. A troop of horse could hardly have made a greater
-uproar, and yet I knew that fewer than half a dozen people were ascending
-the steps. Some one stumbled and caught himself, and the multiplied
-and magnified reverberations were as loud as if the roof had caved in,
-carrying the better part of the structure with it. Some one laughed at
-the misstep, and the sound came to our ears with the deafening effect
-of an explosion. The party filed with a dull roar into one of the front
-rooms, the office of a harum-scarum young lawyer who had more empty
-bottles behind his door than he had ever had briefs on his desk.
-
-“Well, the great Gemini!” exclaimed Major Perdue, “how do you manage to
-stand that sort of thing?”
-
-I shrugged my shoulders and laughed, and was about to begin anew a very
-old tirade against caves and halls of thunder, when the Major raised a
-warning hand. Some one was saying——
-
-“He hangs out right on ol’ Major Perdue’s lot. He’s got a wife there.”
-
-“By jing!” exclaimed another voice; “is that so? Well, I don’t wanter git
-mixed up wi’ the Major. He may be wobbly on his legs, but I don’t wanter
-be the one to run up ag’in ’im.”
-
-The Major pursed up his lips and looked at the ceiling, his attitude
-being one of rapt attention.
-
-“Shucks!” cried another; “by the time the ol’ cock gits his bellyful of
-dram, thunder wouldn’t roust ’im.”
-
-A shrewd, foxy, almost sinister expression came over the Major’s rosy
-face as he glanced at me. His left hand went to his goatee, an invariable
-signal of deep feeling, such as anger, grief, or serious trouble. Another
-voice broke in here, a voice that we both knew to be that of Larry
-Pulliam, a big Kentuckian who had refugeed to Halcyondale during the war.
-
-“Blast it all!” exclaimed Larry Pulliam, “I hope the Major will come out.
-Me an’ him hain’t never butted heads yit, an’ it’s gittin’ high time. Ef
-he comes out, you fellers jest go ahead with your rat-killin’. _I_’ll
-’ten’ to him.”
-
-“Why, you’d make two of him, Pulliam,” said the young lawyer.
-
-“Oh, I’ll not hurt ’im; that is, not _much_—jest enough to let ’im know
-I’m livin’ in the same village,” replied Mr. Pulliam. The voice of the
-town bull could not have had a more terrifying sound.
-
-Glancing at the Major, I saw that he had entirely recovered his
-equanimity. More than that, a smile of sweet satisfaction and contentment
-settled on his rosy face, and stayed there.
-
-“I wouldn’t take a hundred dollars for that last remark,” whispered the
-Major. “That chap’s been a-raisin’ his hackle at me ever since he’s
-been here, and every time I try to get him to make a flutter he’s off
-and gone. Of course it wouldn’t do for me to push a row on him just dry
-so. But now——” The Major laughed softly, rubbed his hands together, and
-seemed to be as happy as a child with a new toy.
-
-“My son,” said he after awhile, “ain’t there some way of finding
-out who the other fellows are? Ain’t you got some word you want Seab
-Griffin”—this was the young lawyer—“to spell for you?”
-
-Spelling was the Major’s weakness. He was a well-educated man, and could
-write vigorous English, but only a few days before he had asked me how
-many _f_’s there are in _graphic_.
-
-“Let’s see,” he went on, rubbing the top of his head. “Do you spell
-_Byzantium_ with two _y_’s, or with two _i_’s, or with one _y_ and one
-_i_? It’ll make Seab feel right good to be asked that before company, and
-he certainly needs to feel good if he’s going with that crowd.”
-
-So, with a manuscript copy in my hand, I went hurriedly down the hall and
-put the important question. Mr. Griffin was all politeness, but not quite
-sure of the facts in the case. But he searched in his books of reference,
-including the Geographical Gazette, until finally he was able to give me
-the information I was supposed to stand in need of.
-
-While he was searching, Mr. Pulliam turned to me and inquired what day
-the paper came out. When told that the date was Tuesday, he smiled and
-nodded his head mysteriously.
-
-“That’s good,” he declared; “you’ll be in time to ketch the news.”
-
-[Illustration: Inquired what day the paper came out.]
-
-“What news?” I inquired.
-
-“Well, ef you don’t hear about it before to-morrer night, jest inquire of
-Major Perdue. He’ll tell you all about it.”
-
-Mr. Pulliam’s tone was so supercilious that I was afraid the Major would
-lose his temper and come raging down the hallway. But he did nothing
-of the kind. When I returned he was fairly beaming, and seemed to be
-perfectly happy. The Major took down the names in his note-book—I have
-forgotten all except those of Buck Sanford and Larry Pulliam; they were
-all from the country except Larry Pulliam and the young lawyer.
-
-After my visit to the room, the men spoke in lower tones, but every word
-came back to us as distinctly as before.
-
-“The feed of the horses won’t cost us a cent,” remarked young Sanford.
-“Tom Gresham said he’d ’ten’ to that. They’re in the stable right now.
-And we’re to have supper in Tom’s back room, have a little game of ante,
-and along about twelve or one we’ll sa’nter down and yank that darned
-nigger from betwixt his blankets, ef he’s got any, and leave him to cool
-off at the cross-roads. Won’t you go ’long, Seab, and see it well done?”
-
-“I’ll go and see if the supper’s well done, and I’ll take a shy at your
-ante,” replied Mr. Griffin. “But when it comes to the balance of the
-programme—well, I’m a lawyer, you know, and you couldn’t expect me to
-witness the affair. I might have to take your cases and prove an alibi,
-you know, and I couldn’t conscientiously do that if I was on hand at the
-time.”
-
-“The Ku-Klux don’t have to have alibis,” suggested Larry Pulliam.
-
-“Perhaps not, still—” Apparently Mr. Griffin disposed of the matter with
-a gesture.
-
-When all the details of their plan had been carefully arranged, the
-amateur Ku-Klux went filing out, the noise they made dying away like the
-echoes of a storm.
-
-Major Perdue leaned his head against the back of his chair, closed his
-eyes, and sat there so quietly that I thought he was asleep. But this was
-a mistake. Suddenly he began to laugh, and he laughed until the tears ran
-down his face. It was laughter that was contagious, and presently I found
-myself joining in without knowing why. This started the Major afresh, and
-we both laughed until exhaustion came to our aid.
-
-“O Lord!” cried the Major, panting, “I haven’t had as much fun since the
-war, and a long time before. That blamed Pulliam is going to walk into a
-trap of his own setting. Now you jest watch how he goes out ag’in.”
-
-“But I’ll not be there,” I suggested.
-
-“Oh, yes!” exclaimed the Major, “you can’t afford to miss it. It’ll be
-the finest piece of news your paper ever had. You’ll go to supper with
-me—” He paused. “No, I’ll go home, send Valentine to her Aunt Emmy’s, get
-Blasengame to come around, and we’ll have supper about nine. That’ll fix
-it. Some of them chaps might have an eye on my house, and I don’t want
-’em to see anybody but me go in there. Now, if you don’t come at nine,
-I’ll send Blasengame after you.”
-
-“I shall be glad to come, Major. I was simply fishing for an invitation.”
-
-“_That_ fish is always on your hook, and you know it,” the Major insisted.
-
-As it was arranged, so it fell out. At nine, I lifted and dropped the
-knocker on the Major’s front door. It opened so promptly that I was
-somewhat taken by surprise, but in a moment the hand of my host was on my
-arm, and he pulled me inside unceremoniously.
-
-“I was on the lookout,” the Major explained. “Minervy Ann has fixed to
-have waffles, and she’s crazy about havin’ ’em just right. If she waits
-too long to make ’em, the batter’ll spoil; and if she puts ’em on before
-everybody’s ready, they won’t be good. That’s what she says. Here he is,
-you old Hessian!” the Major cried, as Minervy Ann peeped in from the
-dining-room. “Now slap that supper together and let’s get at it.”
-
-“I’m mighty glad you come, suh,” said Aunt Minervy Ann, with a courtesy
-and a smile, and then she disappeared. In an incredibly short time
-supper was announced, and though Aunt Minervy has since informed me
-confidentially that the Perdues were having a hard time of it at that
-period, I’ll do her the justice to say that the supper she furnished
-forth was as good as any to be had in that town—waffles, beat biscuit,
-fried chicken, buttermilk, and coffee that could not be surpassed.
-
-“How about the biscuit, Minervy Ann?” inquired Colonel Blasengame, who
-was the Major’s brother-in-law, and therefore one of the family.
-
-“I turned de dough on de block twelve times, an’ hit it a hundred an
-forty-sev’m licks,” replied Aunt Minervy Ann.
-
-“I’m afeard you hit it one lick too many,” said Colonel Blasengame,
-winking at me.
-
-[Illustration: “I was on the lookout,” the Major explained.]
-
-“Well, suh, I been hittin’ dat away a mighty long time,” Aunt Minervy
-Ann explained, “and I ain’t never hear no complaints.”
-
-“Oh, I’m not complainin’, Minervy Ann.” Colonel Blasengame waved his
-hand. “I’m mighty glad you did hit the dough a lick too many. If you
-hadn’t, the biscuit would ’a’ melted in my mouth, and I believe I’d
-rather chew on ’em to get the taste.”
-
-“He des runnin’ on, suh,” said Aunt Minervy Ann to me. “Marse Bolivar
-know mighty well dat he got ter go ’way fum de Nunited State fer ter git
-any better biscuits dan what I kin bake.”
-
-Then there was a long pause, which was broken by an attempt on the part
-of Major Perdue to give Aunt Minervy Ann an inkling of the events likely
-to happen during the night. She seemed to be both hard of hearing and
-dull of understanding when the subject was broached; or she may have
-suspected the Major was joking or trying to “run a rig” on her. Her
-questions and comments, however, were very characteristic.
-
-“I dunner what dey want wid Hamp,” she said. “Ef dey know’d how no-count
-he is, dey’d let ’im ’lone. What dey want wid ’im?”
-
-“Well, two or three of the country boys and maybe some of the town chaps
-are going to call on him between midnight and day. They want to take him
-out to the cross-roads. Hadn’t you better fix ’em up a little snack? Hamp
-won’t want anything, but the boys will feel a little hungry after the job
-is over.”
-
-“Nobody ain’t never tell me dat de Legislatur’ wuz like de Free Masons,
-whar dey have ter ride a billy goat an’ go down in a dry well wid de
-chains a-clankin’. I done tol’ Hamp dat he better not fool wid white
-folks’ doin’s.”
-
-“Only the colored members have to be initiated,” explained the Major,
-solemnly.
-
-“What does dey do wid um?” inquired Aunt Minervy Ann.
-
-“Well,” replied the Major, “they take ’em out to the nearest cross-roads,
-put ropes around their necks, run the ropes over limbs, and pull away as
-if they were drawing water from a well.”
-
-“What dey do dat fer?” asked Aunt Minervy Ann, apparently still oblivious
-to the meaning of it all.
-
-“They want to see which’ll break first, the ropes or the necks,” the
-Major explained.
-
-“Ef dey takes Hamp out,” remarked Aunt Minervy Ann, tentatively—feeling
-her way, as it were—“what time will he come back?”
-
-“You’ve heard about the Resurrection Morn, haven’t you, Minervy Ann?”
-There was a pious twang in the Major’s voice as he pronounced the words.
-
-“I hear de preacher say sump’n ’bout it,” replied Aunt Minervy Ann.
-
-“Well,” said the Major, “along about that time Hamp will return. I hope
-his record is good enough to give him wings.”
-
-“Shuh! Marse Tumlin! you-all des fool’in’ me. I don’t keer—Hamp ain’t
-gwine wid um. I tell you dat right now.”
-
-“Oh, he may not want to go,” persisted the Major, “but he’ll go all the
-same if they get their hands on him.”
-
-“My life er me!” exclaimed Aunt Minervy Ann, bristling up, “does you-all
-’speck I’m gwine ter let um take Hamp out dat away? De fus’ man come ter
-my door, less’n it’s one er you-all, I’m gwine ter fling a pan er hot
-embers in his face ef de Lord’ll gi’ me de strenk. An’ ef dat don’t do no
-good, I’ll scald um wid b’ilin’ water. You hear dat, don’t you?”
-
-“Minervy Ann,” said the Major, sweetly, “have you ever heard of the
-Ku-Klux?”
-
-“Yasser, I is!” she exclaimed with startling emphasis. She stopped
-still and gazed hard at the Major. In response, he merely shrugged his
-shoulders and raised his right hand with a swift gesture that told the
-whole story.
-
-“Name er God! Marse Tumlin, is you an’ Marse Bolivar and dish yer young
-genterman gwine ter set down here flat-footed and let dem Kukluckers
-scarify Hamp?”
-
-“Why should _we_ do anything? You’ve got everything arranged. You’re
-going to singe ’em with hot embers, and you’re going to take their hides
-off with scalding water. What more do you want?” The Major spoke with an
-air of benign resignation.
-
-Aunt Minervy Ann shook her head vigorously. “Ef dey er de Kukluckers,
-fire won’t do um no harm. Dey totes der haids in der han’s.”
-
-“Their heads in their hands?” cried Colonel Blasengame, excitedly.
-
-“Dat what dey say, suh,” replied Aunt Minervy Ann.
-
-Colonel Blasengame looked at his watch. “Tumlin, I’ll have to ask you
-to excuse me to-night,” he said. “I—well, the fact is, I have a mighty
-important engagement up town. I’m obliged to fill it.” He turned to Aunt
-Minervy Ann: “Did I understand you to say the Ku-Klux carry their heads
-in their hands?”
-
-“Dat what folks tell me. I hear my own color sesso,” replied Aunt Minervy
-Ann.
-
-“I’d be glad to stay with you, Tumlin,” the Colonel declared; “but—well,
-under the circumstances, I think I’d better fill that engagement. Justice
-to my family demands it.”
-
-“Well,” responded Major Perdue, “if you are going, I reckon we’d just as
-well go, too.”
-
-“Huh!” exclaimed Aunt Minervy Ann, “ef gwine’s de word, dey can’t nobody
-beat me gittin’ way fum here. Dey may beat me comin’ back, I ain’t
-’sputin’ dat; but dey can’t beat me gwine ’way. I’m ol’, but I got mighty
-nigh ez much go in me ez a quarter-hoss.”
-
-Colonel Blasengame leaned back in his chair and studied the ceiling. “It
-seems to me, Tumlin, we might compromise on this. Suppose we get Hamp to
-come in here. Minervy Ann can stay out there in the kitchen and throw a
-rock against the back door when the Ku-Klux come.”
-
-Aunt Minervy Ann fairly gasped. “_Who? Me?_ I’ll die fust. I’ll t’ar dat
-do’ down; I’ll holler twel ev’ybody in de neighborhood come a-runnin’. Ef
-you don’t b’lieve me, you des try me. I’ll paw up dat back-yard.”
-
-Major Perdue went to the back door and called Hamp, but there was no
-answer. He called him a second time, with the same result.
-
-“Well,” said the Major, “they’ve stolen a march on us. They’ve come and
-carried him off while we were talking.”
-
-“No, suh, dey ain’t, needer. I know right whar he is, an’ I’m gwine
-atter ’im. He’s right ’cross de street dar, colloguin’ wid dat ol’ Ceely
-Ensign. Dat’s right whar he is.”
-
-“Old! Why, Celia is young,” remarked the Major. “They say she’s the best
-cook in town.”
-
-Aunt Minervy Ann whipped out of the room and was gone some little time.
-When she returned, she had Hamp with her, and I noticed that both were
-laboring under excitement which they strove in vain to suppress.
-
-“Here I is, suh,” said Hamp. “’Nervy Ann say you call me.”
-
-“How is Celia to-night?” Colonel Blasengame inquired, suavely.
-
-This inquiry, so suddenly and unexpectedly put, seemed to disconcert
-Hamp. He shuffled his feet and put his hand to his face. I noticed a
-blue welt over his eye, which was not there when he visited me in the
-afternoon.
-
-“Well, suh, I ’speck she’s tolerbul.”
-
-“_Is she? Is she? Ah-h-h!_” cried Aunt Minervy Ann.
-
-“She must be pretty well,” said the Major. “I see she’s hit you a clip
-over the left eye.”
-
-“Dat’s some er ’Nervy Ann’s doin’s, suh,” replied Hamp, somewhat
-disconsolately.
-
-“Den what you git in de way fer?” snapped Aunt Minervy Ann.
-
-“Marse Tumlin, dat ar ’oman ain’t done nothin’ in de roun’ worl’. She say
-she want me to buy some hime books fer de church when I went to Atlanty,
-an’ I went over dar atter de money.”
-
-“_I himed ’er an’ I churched ’er!_” exclaimed Aunt Minervy Ann.
-
-“Here de money right here,” said Hamp, pulling a small roll of
-shinplasters out of his pocket; “an’ whiles we settin’ dar countin’ de
-money, ’Nervy Ann come in dar an’ frail dat ’oman out.”
-
-“Ain’t you hear dat nigger holler, Marse Tumlin?” inquired Minervy Ann.
-She was in high good-humor now. “Look like ter me dey could a-heerd ’er
-blate in de nex’ county ef dey’d been a-lis’nin’. ’Twuz same ez a picnic,
-suh, an’ I’m gwine ’cross dar ’fo’ long an’ pay my party call.”
-
-Then she began to laugh, and pretty soon went through the whole episode
-for our edification, dwelling with unction on that part where the
-unfortunate victim of her jealousy had called her “Miss ’Nervy.” The more
-she laughed the more serious Hamp became.
-
-At the proper time he was told of the visitation that was to be made by
-the Ku-Klux, and this information seemed to perplex and worry him no
-little. But his face lit up with genuine thankfulness when the programme
-for the occasion was announced to him. He and Minervy Ann were to remain
-in the house and not show their heads until the Major or the Colonel or
-their guest came to the back door and drummed on it lightly with the
-fingers.
-
-[Illustration: In the third he placed only powder.]
-
-Then the arms—three shot-guns—were brought out, and I noticed with some
-degree of surprise, that as the Major and the Colonel began to handle
-these, their spirits rose perceptibly. The Major hummed a tune and the
-Colonel whistled softly as they oiled the locks and tried the triggers.
-The Major, in coming home, had purchased four pounds of mustard-seed
-shot, and with this he proceeded to load two of the guns. In the third
-he placed only powder. This harmless weapon was intended for me, while
-the others were to be handled by Major Perdue and Colonel Blasengame. I
-learned afterward that the arrangement was made solely for my benefit.
-The Major and the Colonel were afraid that a young hand might become
-excited and fire too high at close range, in which event mustard-seed
-shot would be as dangerous as the larger variety.
-
-At twelve o’clock I noticed that both Hamp and Aunt Minervy were growing
-restless.
-
-“You hear dat clock, don’t you, Marse Tumlin?” said Minervy as the chimes
-died away. “Ef you don’t min’, de Kukluckers’ll be a-stickin’ der haids
-in de back do’.”
-
-But the Major and the Colonel were playing a rubber of seven-up (or
-high-low-Jack) and paid no attention. It was a quarter after twelve when
-the game was concluded and the players pushed their chairs back from the
-table.
-
-“Ef you don’t fin’ um in de yard waitin’ fer you, I’ll be fooled
-might’ly,” remarked Aunt Minervy Ann.
-
-“Go and see if they’re out there,” said the Major.
-
-“_Me_, Marse Tumlin? _Me?_ I wouldn’t go out dat do’ not for ham.”
-
-The Major took out his watch. “They’ll eat and drink until twelve or a
-little after, and then they’ll get ready to start. Then they’ll have
-another drink all ’round, and finally they’ll take another. It’ll be a
-quarter to one or after when they get in the grove in the far end of the
-lot. But we’ll go out now and see how the land lays. By the time they get
-here, our eyes will be used to the darkness.”
-
-The light was carried to a front room, and we groped our way out at the
-back door the best we could. The night was dark, but the stars were
-shining. I noticed that the belt and sword of Orion had drifted above
-the tree-tops in the east, following the Pleiades. In a little while the
-darkness seemed to grow less dense, and I could make out the outlines of
-trees twenty feet away.
-
-Behind one of these trees, near the outhouse in which Hamp and Aunt
-Minervy lived, I was to take my stand, while the Major and the Colonel
-were to go farther into the wood-lot so as to greet the would-be Ku-Klux
-as they made their retreat, of which Major Perdue had not the slightest
-doubt.
-
-“You stand here,” said the Major in a whisper. “We’ll go to the far-end
-of the lot where they’re likely to come in. They’ll pass us all right
-enough, but as soon as you see one of ’em, up with the gun an’ lam
-aloose, an’ before they can get away give ’em the other barrel. Then
-you’ll hear from us.”
-
-Major Perdue and Colonel Blasengame disappeared in the darkness, leaving
-me, as it were, on the inner picket line. I found the situation somewhat
-ticklish, as the saying is. There was not the slightest danger, and I
-knew it, but if you ever have occasion to stand out in the dark, waiting
-for something to happen, you’ll find there’s a certain degree of suspense
-attached to it. And the loneliness and silence of the night will take a
-shape almost tangible. The stirring of the half-dead leaves, the chirping
-of a belated cricket, simply emphasized the loneliness and made the
-silence more profound. At intervals, all nature seemed to heave a deep
-sigh, and address itself to slumber again.
-
-In the house I heard the muffled sound of the clock chime one, but
-whether it was striking the half-hour or the hour I could not tell.
-Then I heard the stealthy tread of feet. Someone stumbled over a stick
-of timber, and the noise was followed by a smothered exclamation and a
-confused murmur of voices. As the story-writers say, I knew that the
-hour had come. I could hear whisperings, and then I saw a tall shadow
-steal from behind Aunt Minervy’s house, and heard it rap gently on the
-door. I raised the gun, pulled the hammer back, and let drive. A stream
-of fire shot from the gun, accompanied by a report that tore the silence
-to atoms. I heard a sharp exclamation of surprise, then the noise of
-running feet, and off went the other barrel. In a moment the Major and
-the Colonel opened on the fugitives. I heard a loud cry of pain from one,
-and, in the midst of it all, the mustard-seed shot rattled on the plank
-fence like hominy-snow on a tin roof.
-
-The next instant I heard someone running back in my direction, as if
-for dear life. He knew the place apparently, for he tried to go through
-the orchard, but just before he reached the orchard fence, he uttered a
-half-strangled cry of terror, and then I heard him fall as heavily as if
-he had dropped from the top of the house.
-
-It was impossible to imagine what had happened, and it was not until we
-had investigated the matter that the cause of the trouble was discovered.
-A wire clothes-line, stretched across the yard, had caught the would-be
-Ku-Klux under the chin, his legs flew from under him, and he had a fall,
-from the effects of which he was long in recovering. He was a young man
-about town, very well connected, who had gone into the affair in a spirit
-of mischief. We carried him into the house, and administered to his hurts
-the best we could; Aunt Minervy Ann, be it said to her credit, being more
-active in this direction than any of us.
-
-[Illustration: We administered to his hurts the best we could.]
-
-On the Tuesday following, the county paper contained the news in a form
-that remains to this day unique. It is hardly necessary to say that it
-was from the pen of Major Tumlin Perdue.
-
-“Last Saturday afternoon our local editor was informed by a prominent
-citizen that if he would apply to Major Perdue he would be put in
-possession of a very interesting piece of news. Acting upon this hint,
-ye local yesterday went to Major Perdue, who, being in high good-humor,
-wrote out the following with his own hand:
-
-“‘Late Saturday night, while engaged with a party of friends in searching
-for a stray dog on my premises, I was surprised to see four or five
-men climb over my back fence and proceed toward my residence. As my
-most intimate friends do not visit me by climbing over my back fence, I
-immediately deployed my party in such a manner as to make the best of
-a threatening situation. The skirmish opened at my kitchen-door, with
-two rounds from a howitzer. This demoralized the enemy, who promptly
-retreated the way they came. One of them, the leader of the attacking
-party, carried away with him two loads of mustard-seed shot, delivered in
-the general neighborhood and region of the coat-tails, which, being on
-a level with the horizon, afforded as fair a target as could be had in
-the dark. I understand on good authority that Mr. Larry Pulliam, one of
-our leading and deservedly popular citizens, has had as much as a quart
-of mustard-seed shot picked from his carcass. Though hit in a vulnerable
-spot, the wound is not mortal.—T. PERDUE.’”
-
-I did my best to have Mr. Pulliam’s name suppressed, but the Major would
-not have it so.
-
-“No, sir,” he insisted; “the man has insulted me behind my back, and he’s
-got to cut wood or put down the axe.”
-
-Naturally this free and easy card created quite a sensation in
-Halcyondale and the country round about. People knew what it would mean
-if Major Perdue’s name had been used in such an off-hand manner by Mr.
-Pulliam, and they naturally supposed that a fracas would be the outcome.
-Public expectation was on tiptoe, and yet the whole town seemed to take
-the Major’s card humorously. Some of the older citizens laughed until
-they could hardly sit up, and even Mr. Pulliam’s friends caught the
-infection. Indeed, it is said that Mr. Pulliam, himself, after the first
-shock of surprise was over, paid the Major’s audacious humor the tribute
-of a hearty laugh. When Mr. Pulliam appeared in public, among the first
-men he saw was Major Perdue. This was natural, for the Major made it a
-point to be on hand. He was not a ruffler, but he thought it was his duty
-to give Mr. Pulliam a fair opportunity to wreak vengeance on him. If the
-boys about town imagined that a row was to be the result of this first
-meeting, they were mistaken. Mr. Pulliam looked at the Major and then
-began to laugh.
-
-[Illustration: “I’d a heap rather you’d pull your shot-gun on me than
-your pen.”]
-
-“Major Perdue,” he said, “I’d a heap rather you’d pull your shot-gun on
-me than your pen.”
-
-And that ended the matter.
-
-
-
-
-II
-
-“WHEN JESS WENT A-FIDDLIN’”
-
-
-The foregoing recital is unquestionably a long and tame preface to the
-statement that, after thinking the matter over I concluded to accept the
-official invitation to the fair—“The Middle Georgia Exposition” it was
-called—if nothing occurred to prevent. With this conclusion I dismissed
-the matter from my mind for the time being, and would probably have
-thought of it no more until the moment arrived to make a final decision,
-if the matter had not been called somewhat sharply to my attention.
-
-Sitting on the veranda one day, ruminating over other people’s troubles,
-I heard an unfamiliar voice calling, “You-all got any bitin’ dogs here?”
-The voice failed to match the serenity of the suburban scene. Its tone
-was pitched a trifle too high for the surroundings.
-
-But before I could make any reply the gate was flung open, and the
-new-comer, who was no other than Aunt Minervy Ann, flirted in and began
-to climb the terraces. My recognition of her was not immediate, partly
-because it had been long since I saw her and partly because she wore her
-Sunday toggery, in which, following the oriental tastes of her race, the
-reds and yellows were emphasized with startling effect. She began to talk
-by the time she was half-way between the house and gate, and it was owing
-to this special and particular volubility that I was able to recognize
-her.
-
-“Huh!” she exclaimed, “hit’s des like clim’in’ up sta’rs. Folks what
-live here bleeze ter b’long ter de Sons er Tempunce.” There was a
-relish about this reference to the difficulties of three terraces that
-at once identified Aunt Minervy Ann. More than that, one of the most
-conspicuous features of the country town where she lived was a large
-brick building, covering half a block, across the top of which stretched
-a sign—“Temperance Hall”—in letters that could be read half a mile away.
-
-Aunt Minervy Ann received a greeting that seemed to please her, whereupon
-she explained that an excursion had come to Atlanta from her town, and
-she had seized the opportunity to pay me a visit. “I tol’ um,” said she,
-“dat dey could stay up in town dar an’ hang ’roun’ de kyar-shed ef dey
-wanter, but here’s what wuz gwine ter come out an’ see whar you live at,
-an’ fin’ out fer Marse Tumlin ef you comin’ down ter de fa’r.”
-
-She was informed that, though she was welcome, she would get small
-pleasure from her visit. The cook had failed to make her appearance,
-and the lady of the house was at that moment in the kitchen and in a
-very fretful state of mind, not because she had to cook, but because she
-had about reached the point where she could place no dependence in the
-sisterhood of colored cooks.
-
-“Is she in de kitchen now?” Aunt Minervy’s tone was a curious mixture of
-amusement and indignation. “I started not ter come, but I had a call, I
-sho’ did; sump’n tol’ me dat you mought need me out here.” With that, she
-went into the house, slamming the screen-door after her, and untying her
-bonnet as she went.
-
-Now, the lady of the house had heard of Aunt Minervy Ann, but had never
-met her, and I was afraid that the characteristics of my old-time friend
-would be misunderstood and misinterpreted. The lady in question knew
-nothing of the negro race until long after emancipation, and she had
-not been able to form a very favorable opinion of its representatives.
-Therefore, I hastened after Aunt Minervy Ann, hoping to tone down by
-explanation whatever bad impression she might create. She paused at the
-screen-door that barred the entrance to the kitchen, and, for an instant,
-surveyed the scene within. Then she cried out:
-
-“You des ez well ter come out’n dat kitchen! You ain’t got no mo’ bizness
-in dar dan a new-born baby.”
-
-Aunt Minervy Ann’s voice was so loud and absolute that the lady gazed at
-her in mute astonishment. “You des es well ter come out!” she insisted.
-
-“Are you crazy?” the lady asked, in all seriousness.
-
-“I’m des ez crazy now ez I ever been; an’ I tell you you des ez well ter
-come out’n dar.”
-
-“Who are you anyhow?”
-
-“I’m Minervy Ann Perdue, at home an’ abroad, an’ in dish yer great town
-whar you can’t git niggers ter cook fer you.”
-
-“Well, if you want me to come out of the kitchen, you will have to come
-in and do the cooking.”
-
-“Dat ’zackly what I’m gwine ter do!” exclaimed Aunt Minervy Ann. She went
-into the kitchen, demanded an apron, and took entire charge. “I’m mighty
-glad I come ’fo’ you got started,” she said, “’kaze you got ’nuff fier
-in dis stove fer ter barbecue a hoss; an’ you got it so hot in here dat
-it’s a wonder you ain’t bust a blood-vessel.”
-
-She removed all the vessels from the range, and opened the door of the
-furnace so that the fire might die down. And when it was nearly out—as
-I was told afterward—she replaced the vessels and proceeded to cook a
-dinner which, in all its characteristics, marked a red letter day in the
-household.
-
-“She’s the best cook in the country,” said the lady, “and she’s not very
-polite.”
-
-“Not very hypocritical, you mean; well if she was a hypocrite, she
-wouldn’t be Aunt Minervy Ann.”
-
-The cook failed to come in the afternoon, and so Aunt Minervy Ann felt
-it her duty to remain over night. “Hamp’ll vow I done run away wid
-somebody,” she said, laughing, “but I don’t keer what he think.”
-
-After supper, which was as good as the dinner had been, Aunt Minervy Ann
-came out on the veranda and sat on the steps. After some conversation,
-she placed the lady of the house on the witness-stand.
-
-“Mistiss, wharbouts in Georgy wuz you born at?”
-
-“I wasn’t born in Georgia; I was born in Lansingburgh, New York.”
-
-“I know’d it!” Aunt Minervy turned to me and nodded her head with energy.
-“I know’d it right pine blank!”
-
-“You knew what?” the presiding genius of the household inquired with some
-curiosity.
-
-“I know’d ’m dat you wuz a Northron lady.”
-
-“I don’t see how you knew it,” I remarked.
-
-“Well, suh, she talk like we-all do, an’ she got mighty much de same
-ways. But when I went out dar dis mornin’ an’ holler at ’er in de
-kitchen, I know’d by de way she turn ’roun’ on me dat she ain’t been
-brung up wid niggers. Ef she’d ’a’ been a Southron lady, she’d ’a’
-laughed an’ said, ‘Come in here an’ cook dis dinner yo’se’f, you ole
-vilyun,’ er she’d ’a’ come out an’ crackt me over de head with dat i’on
-spoon what she had in her han’.”
-
-I could perceive a vast amount of acuteness in the observation, but I
-said nothing, and, after a considerable pause, Aunt Minervy Ann remarked:
-
-“Dey er lots er mighty good folks up dar”—indicating the North—“some
-I’ve seed wid my own eyes an’ de yuthers I’ve heern talk un. Mighty fine
-folks, an’ dey say dey mighty sorry fer de niggers. But I’ll tell um
-all anywhar, any day, dat I’d lots druther dey’d be good ter me dan ter
-be sorry fer me. You know dat ar white lady what Marse Tom Chippendale
-married? Her pa come down here ter he’p de niggers, an’ he done it de
-best he kin, but Marse Tom’s wife can’t b’ar de sight un um. She won’t
-let um go in her kitchen, she won’t let um go in her house, an’ she don’t
-want um nowhars ’roun’. She’s mighty sorry fer ’m, but she don’t like um.
-I don’t blame ’er much myse’f, bekaze it look like dat de niggers what
-been growin’ up sence freedom is des tryin’ der han’ fer ter see how no
-’count dey kin be. Dey’ll git better—dey er bleeze ter git better, ’kaze
-dey can’t git no wuss.”
-
-Here came another pause, which continued until Aunt Minervy Ann, turning
-her head toward me, asked if I knew the lady that Jesse Towers married;
-and before I had time to reply with certainty, she went on:
-
-“No, suh, you des can’t know ’er. She ain’t come dar twel sev’mty, an’
-I mos’ know you ain’t see ’er dat time you went down home de las’ time,
-’kaze she wa’n’t gwine out dat year. Well, she wuz a Northron lady. I
-come mighty nigh tellin’ you ’bout ’er when you wuz livin’ dar, but fus’
-one thing an’ den anudder jumped in de way; er maybe ’Twuz too new ter be
-goshup’d ’roun’ right den. But de way she come ter be dar an’ de way it
-all turn out beats any er dem tales what de ol’ folks use ter tell we
-childun. I may not know all de ins an’ outs, but what I does know I knows
-mighty well, ’kaze de young ’oman tol’ me herse’f right out ’er own mouf.
-
-“Fus’ an’ fo’mus’, dar wuz ol’ Gabe Towers. He wuz dar whence you wuz
-dar, an’ long time ’fo’ dat. You know’d him, sho’, ’kaze he wuz one er
-dem kinder men what sticks out fum de res’ like a waggin’ tongue. Not dat
-he wuz any better’n anybody else, but he had dem kinder ways what make
-folks talk ’bout ’im an’ ’pen’ on ’im. I dunner ’zackly what de ways wuz,
-but I knows dat whatsomever ol’ Gabe Towers say an’ do, folks ’d nod der
-head an’ say an’ do de same. An’ me ’long er de res’. He had dem kinder
-ways ’bout ’im, an’ ’twa’n’t no use talkin’.”
-
-In these few words, Aunt Minervy conjured up in my mind the memory of one
-of the most remarkable men I had ever known. He was tall, with iron-gray
-hair. His eyes were black and brilliant, his nose slightly curved, and
-his chin firm without heaviness. To this day Gabriel Towers stands out
-in my admiration foremost among all the men I have ever known. He might
-have been a great statesman; he would have been great in anything to
-which he turned his hand. But he contented himself with instructing
-smaller men, who were merely politicians, and with sowing and reaping on
-his plantation. More than one senator went to him for ideas with which to
-make a reputation.
-
-His will seemed to dominate everybody with whom he came in contact, not
-violently, but serenely and surely, and as a matter of course. Whether
-this was due to his age—he was sixty-eight when I knew him, having been
-born in the closing year of the eighteenth century—or to his moral power,
-or to his personal magnetism, it is hardly worth while to inquire. Major
-Perdue said that the secret of his influence was common-sense, and this
-is perhaps as good an explanation as any. The immortality of Socrates
-and Plato should be enough to convince us that common-sense is almost as
-inspiring as the gift of prophecy. To interpret Aunt Minervy Ann in this
-way is merely to give a correct report of what occurred on the veranda,
-for explanation of this kind was necessary to give the lady of the house
-something like a familiar interest in the recital.
-
-“Yes, suh,” Aunt Minervy Ann went on, “he had dem kinder ways ’bout ’im,
-an’ whatsomever he say you can’t shoo it off like you would a hen on de
-gyarden fence. Dar ’twuz an’ dar it stayed.
-
-“Well, de time come when ol’ Marse Gabe had a gran’son, an’ he name ’im
-Jesse in ’cordance wid de Bible. Jesse grow’d an’ grow’d twel he got ter
-be a right smart chunk uv a boy, but he wa’n’t no mo’ like de Towerses
-dan he wuz like de Chippendales, which he wa’n’t no kin to. He tuck atter
-his ma, an’ who his ma tuck atter I’ll never tell you, ’kaze Bill Henry
-Towers married ’er way off yander somers. She wuz purty but puny, yit
-puny ez she wuz she could play de peanner by de hour, an’ play it mo’
-samer de man what make it.
-
-“Well, suh, Jesse tuck atter his ma in looks, but ’stidder playin’ de
-peanner, he l’arnt how ter play de fiddle, an’ by de time he wuz twelve
-year ol’, he could make it talk. Hit’s de fatal trufe, suh; he could make
-it talk. You hear folks playin’ de fiddle, an’ you know what dey doin’;
-you kin hear de strings a-plunkin’ an’ you kin hear de bow raspin’ on
-um on ’count de rozzum, but when Jesse Towers swiped de bow cross his
-fiddle, ’twa’n’t no fiddle—’twuz human; I ain’t tellin’ you no lie, suh,
-’twuz human. Dat chile could make yo’ heart ache; he could fetch yo’ sins
-up befo’ you. Don’t tell me! many an’ many a night when I hear Jesse
-Towers playin’, I could shet my eyes an’ hear my childun cryin’, dem
-what been dead an’ buried long time ago. Don’t make no diffunce ’bout de
-chune, reel, jig, er promenade, de human cryin’ wuz behime all un um.
-
-“Bimeby, Jesse got so dat he didn’t keer nothin’ ’tall ’bout books. It
-uz fiddle, fiddle, all day long, an’ half de night ef dey’d let ’im. Den
-folks ’gun ter talk. No need ter tell you what all dey say. De worl’
-over, fum what I kin hear, dey got de idee dat a fiddle is a free pass
-ter whar ole Scratch live at. Well, suh, Jesse got so he’d run away fum
-school an’ go off in de woods an’ play his fiddle. Hamp use ter come ’pon
-’im when he haulin’ wood, an’ he say dat fiddle ain’t soun’ no mo’ like
-de fiddles what you hear in common dan a flute soun’ like a bass drum.
-
-“Now you know yo’se’f, suh, dat dis kinder doin’s ain’t gwine ter suit
-Marse Gabe Towers. Time he hear un it, he put his foot down on fiddler,
-an’ fiddle, an’ fiddlin’. Ez you may say, he sot down on de fiddle an’
-smash it. Dis happen when Jesse wuz sixteen year ol’, an’ by dat time he
-wuz mo’ in love wid de fiddle dan what he wuz wid his gran’daddy. An’ so
-dar ’twuz. He ain’t look like it, but Jesse wuz about ez high strung ez
-his fiddle wuz, an’ when his gran’daddy laid de law down, he sol’ out his
-pony an’ buggy an’ made his disappearance fum dem parts.
-
-“Well, suh, ’twa’n’t so mighty often you’d hear sassy talk ’bout Marse
-Gabe Towers, but you could hear it den. Folks is allers onreasonable wid
-dem dey like de bes’; you know dat yo’se’f, suh. Marse Gabe ain’t make
-no ’lowance fer Jesse, an’ folks ain’t make none fer Marse Gabe. Marse
-Tumlin wuz dat riled wid de man dat dey come mighty nigh havin’ a fallin’
-out. Dey had a splutter ’bout de time when sump’n n’er had happen, an’
-atter dey wrangle a little, Marse Tumlin sot de date by sayin’ dat ’twuz
-‘a year ’fo’ de day when Jess went a-fiddlin’.’ Dat sayin’ kindled de
-fier, suh, an’ it spread fur an’ wide. Marse Tom Chippendale say dat
-folks what never is hear tell er de Towerses went ’roun’ talkin’ ’bout
-‘de time when Jess went a-fiddlin’.’”
-
-Aunt Minervy Ann chuckled over this, probably because she regarded it as
-a sort of victory for Major Tumlin Perdue. She went on:
-
-“Yes, suh, ’twuz a by-word wid de childun. No matter what happen, er when
-it happen, er ef ’tain’t happen, ’twuz ’fo’ er atter ‘de day when Jess
-went a-fiddlin’.’ Hit look like dat Marse Gabe sorter drapt a notch or
-two in folks’ min’s. Yit he helt his head dez ez high. He bleeze ter hol’
-it high, ’kaze he had in ’im de blood uv bofe de Tumlins an’ de Perdues;
-I dunner how much, but ’nuff fer ter keep his head up.
-
-“I ain’t no almanac, suh, but I never is ter fergit de year when Jess
-went a-fiddlin. ’Twuz sixty, ’kaze de nex’ year de war ’gun ter bile,
-an’ ’twa’n’t long ’fo’ it biled over. Yes, suh! dar wuz de war come on
-an Jess done gone. Dey banged aloose, dey did, dem on der side, an’ we
-on our’n, an’ dey kep’ on a bangin’ twel we-all can’t bang no mo’. An’
-den de war hushed up, an’ freedom come, an’ still nobody ain’t hear tell
-er Jesse. Den you come down dar, suh, an’ stay what time you did; still
-nobody ain’t hear tell er Jesse. He mought er writ ter his ma, but ef he
-did, she kep’ it mighty close. Marse Gabe ain’t los’ no flesh ’bout it,
-an’ ef he los’ any sleep on account er Jess, he ain’t never brag ’bout it.
-
-“Well, suh, it went on dis away twel, ten year atter Jess went
-a-fiddlin’, his wife come home. Yes, suh! His wife! Well! I wuz stan’in’
-right in de hall talkin’ wid Miss Fanny—dat’s Jesse’s ma—when she come,
-an’ when de news broke on me you could ’a’ knockt me down wid a permeter
-fan. De house-gal show’d ’er in de parler, an’ den come atter Miss
-Fanny. Miss Fanny she went in dar, an’ I stayed outside talkin’ wid de
-house-gal. De gal say, ‘Aunt Minervy Ann, dey sho’ is sump’n n’er de
-matter wid dat white lady. She white ez any er de dead, an’ she can’t git
-’er breff good.’ ’Bout dat time, I hear somebody cry out in de parler,
-an’ den I hear sump’n fall. De house-gal cotch holt er me an’ ’gun ter
-whimper. I shuck ’er off, I did, an’ went right straight in de parler,
-an’ dar wuz Miss Fanny layin’ face fo’mus’ on a sofy wid a letter in ’er
-han’ an’ de white lady sprawled out on de flo’.
-
-“Well, suh, you can’t skeer me wid trouble ’kaze I done see too much; so
-I shuck Miss Fanny by de arm an’ ax ’er what de matter, an’ she cry out,
-‘Jesse’s dead an’ his wife come home.’ She uz plum heart-broke, suh, an’
-I ’speck I wuz blubberin’ some myse’f when Marse Gabe walkt in, but I wuz
-tryin’ ter work wid de white lady on de flo’. ’Twix’ Marse Gabe an’ Miss
-Fanny, ’twuz sho’ly a tryin’ time. When one er dem hard an’ uppity men
-lose der grip on deyse’f, dey turn loose ever’thing, an’ dat wuz de way
-wid Marse Gabe. When dat de case, sump’n n’er got ter be done, an’ it got
-ter be done mighty quick.”
-
-Aunt Minervy Ann paused here and rubbed her hands together
-contemplatively, as if trying to restore the scene more completely to her
-memory.
-
-“You know how loud I kin talk, suh, when I’m min’ ter. Well, I talk loud
-den an’ dar. I ’low, ‘What you-all doin’? Is you gwine ter let Marse
-Jesse’s wife lay here an’ die des ’kaze he dead? Ef you is, I’ll des go
-whar I b’longs at!’ Dis kinder fotch um ’roun’, an’ ’twa’n’t no time ’fo’
-we had de white lady in de bed whar Jesse use ter sleep at, an’ soon’s we
-got ’er cuddled down in it, she come ’roun’. But she wuz in a mighty bad
-fix. She wanter git up an’ go off, an’ ’twuz all I could do fer ter keep
-’er in bed. She done like she wuz plum distracted. Dey wa’n’t skacely a
-minnit fer long hours, an’ dey wuz mighty long uns, suh, dat she wa’n’t
-moanin’ an’ sayin’ dat she wa’n’t gwine ter stay, an’ she hope de Lord’d
-fergive ’er. I tell you, suh, ’twuz tarryfyin’. I shuck nex’ day des like
-folks do when dey er honin’ atter dram.
-
-“You may ax me how come I ter stay dar,” Aunt Minervy Ann suggested with
-a laugh. “Well, suh, ’twa’n’t none er my doin’s. I ’speck dey mus’ be
-sump’n wrong ’bout me, ’kaze no matter how rough I talk ner how ugly I
-look, sick folks an’ childun alters takes up wid me. When I go whar dey
-is, it’s mighty hard fer ter git ’way fum um. So, when I say ter Jesse’s
-wife, ‘Keep still, honey, an’ I’ll go home an’ not pester you,’ she sot
-up in bed an’ say ef I gwine she gwine too. I say, ‘Nummine ’bout me,
-honey, you lay down dar an’ don’t talk too much.’ She ’low, ‘Le’ me talk
-ter you an’ tell you all ’bout it.’ But I shuck my head an’ say dat ef
-she don’t hush up an’ keep still I’m gwine right home.
-
-“I had ter do ’er des like she wuz a baby, suh. She wa’n’t so mighty
-purty, but she had purty ways, ’stracted ez she wuz, an’ de biggest black
-eyes you mos’ ever seed, an’ black curly ha’r cut short kinder, like our
-folks use ter w’ar der’n. Den de house-gal fotched some tea an’ toas’,
-an’ dis holp ’er up mightly, an’ atter dat I sont ter Marse Gabe fer some
-dram, an’ de gal fotched de decanter fum de side-bode. Bein’, ez you may
-say, de nurse, I tuck an’ tas’e er de dram fer ter make sho’ dat nobody
-ain’t put nothin’ in it. An’, sho’ ’nuff, dey ain’t.”
-
-Aunt Minervy Ann paused and smacked her lips. “Atter she got de vittles
-an’ de dram, she sorter drap off ter sleep, but ’twuz a mighty flighty
-kinder sleep. She’d wake wid a jump des ’zackly like babies does, an’ den
-she’d moan an’ worry twel she dozed off ag’in. I nodded, suh, bekaze you
-can’t set me down in a cheer, night er day, but what I’ll nod, but in
-betwix’ an’ betweens I kin hear Marse Gabe Towers walkin’ up an’ down in
-de liberry; walk, walk; walk, walk, up an’ down. I ’speck ef I’d ’a’ been
-one er de nervious an’ flighty kin’ dey’d ’a’ had to tote me out er dat
-house de nex’ day; but me! I des kep’ on a-noddin’.
-
-“Bimeby, I hear sump’n come swishin’ ’long, an’ in walkt Miss Fanny. I
-tell you now, suh, ef I’d a met ’er comin’ down de road, I’d ’a’ made
-a break fer de bushes, she look so much like you know sperrets oughter
-look—an’ Marse Jesse’s wife wuz layin’ dar wid ’er eyes wide open. She
-sorter swunk back in de bed when she see Miss Fanny, an’ cry out, ‘Oh,
-I’m mighty sorry fer ter trouble you; I’m gwine ’way in de mornin’.’
-Miss Fanny went ter de bed an’ knelt down ’side it, an’ ’low, ‘No, you
-ain’t gwine no whar but right in dis house. Yo’ place is here, wid his
-mudder an’ his gran’fadder.’ Wid dat, Marse Jesse’s wife put her face in
-de piller an’ moan an’ cry, twel I hatter ax Miss Fanny fer ter please,
-ma’m, go git some res’.
-
-“Well, suh, I stayed dar dat night an’ part er de nex’ day, an’ by dat
-time all un um wuz kinder quieted down, but dey wuz mighty res’less in
-de min’, ’speshually Marse Jesse’s wife, which her name wuz Miss Sadie.
-It seem like dat Marse Jesse wuz livin’ at a town up dar in de fur
-North whar dey wuz a big lake, an’ he went out wid one er dem ’scursion
-parties, an’ a storm come up an’ shuck de boat ter pieces. Dat what
-make I say what I does. I don’t min’ gwine on ’scursions on de groun’,
-but when it come ter water—well, suh, I ain’t gwine ter trus’ myse’f
-on water twel I kin walk on it an’ not wet my foots. Marse Jesse wuz
-de Captain uv a music-ban’ up dar, an’ de papers fum dar had some long
-pieces ’bout ’im, an’ de paper at home had a piece ’bout ’im. It say he
-wuz one er de mos’ renounced music-makers what yever had been, an’ dat
-when it come ter dat kinder doin’s he wuz a puffick prodigal. I ’member
-de words, suh, bekaze I made Hamp read de piece out loud mo’ dan once.
-
-“Miss Sadie, she got mo’ calmer atter while, an’ ’twa’n’t long ’fo’ Marse
-Gabe an’ Miss Fanny wuz bofe mighty tuck up wid ’er. Dey much’d ’er up
-an’ made a heap un ’er, an’ she fa’rly hung on dem. I done tol’ you she
-ain’t purty, but dey wuz sump’n ’bout ’er better dan purtiness. It mought
-er been ’er eyes, en den ag’in mought er been de way er de gal; but
-whatsomever ’twuz, hit made you think ’bout ’er at odd times durin’ de
-day, an’ des ’fo’ you go ter sleep at night.
-
-“Eve’ything went swimmin’ along des ez natchul ez a duck floatin’ on de
-mill-pon’. Dey wa’n’t skacely a day but what I seed Miss Sadie. Ef I
-ain’t go ter Marse Gabe’s house she’d be sho’ ter come ter mine. Dat uz
-atter Hamp wuz ’lected ter de legislatur, suh. He ’low dat a member er de
-ingener’l ensembly ain’t got no bizness livin’ in a kitchen, but I say
-he ain’t a whit better den dan he wuz befo’. So be, I done been cross ’im
-so much dat I tell ’im ter git de house an’ I’d live in it ef ’twa’n’t
-too fur fum Miss Vallie an’ Marse Tumlin. Well, he had it built on de
-outskyirts, not a big jump fum Miss Vallie an’ betwix’ de town an’ Marse
-Gabe Towers’s. When you come down ter de fa’r, you mus’ come see me. Me
-an’ Hamp’ll treat you right; we sholy will.
-
-“Well, suh, in dem days dey wa’n’t so many niggers willin’ ter do an’ be
-done by, an’ on account er dat, ef Miss Vallie wa’n’t hollin’ fer ’Nervy
-Ann, Miss Fanny er Miss Sadie wuz, an’ when I wa’n’t at one place, you
-might know I’d be at de yuther one. It went on dis away, an’ went on twel
-one day got so much like an’er dat you can’t tell Monday fum Friday.
-An’ it went on an’ went on twel bimeby I wuz bleeze ter say sump’n ter
-Hamp. You take notice, suh, an’ when you see de sun shinin’ nice an’ warm
-an’ de win’ blowin’ so saft an’ cool dat you wanter go in a-washin’ in
-it—when you see dis an’ feel dat away, _Watch out! Watch out_, I tell
-you! Dat des de time when de harrycane gwine ter come up out’n de middle
-er de swamp an’ t’ar things ter tatters. Same way when folks gitting on
-so nice dat dey don’t know dey er gittin’ on.
-
-“De fus’ news I know’d Miss Sadie wuz bringin’ little bundles ter my
-house ’twix’ sundown an’ dark. She’d ’low, ‘Aunt Minervy Ann, I’ll des
-put dis in de cornder here; I may want it some time.’ Nex’ day it’d be
-de same doin’s over ag’in. ‘Aunt Minervy Ann, please take keer er dis; I
-may want it some time.’ Well, it went on dis away fum day ter day, but
-I ain’t pay no ’tention. Ef any ’spicion cross my min’ it wuz dat maybe
-Miss Sadie puttin’ dem things dar fer ter ’sprise me Chris’mus by tellin’
-me dey wuz fer me. But one day she come ter my house, an’ sot down an’
-put her han’s over her face like she got de headache er sump’n.
-
-“Wellum”—Aunt Minervy Ann, with real tact, now began to address herself
-to the lady of the house—“Wellum, she sot dar so long dat bimeby I ax ’er
-what de matter is. She ain’t say nothin’; she ain’t make no motion. I
-’low ter myse’f dat she don’t wanter be pestered, so I let ’er ’lone an’
-went on ’bout my business. But, bless you! de nex’ time I look at ’er she
-wuz settin’ des dat away wid ’er han’s over her face. She sot so still
-dat it sorter make me feel quare, an’ I went, I did, an’ cotch holt er
-her han’s sorter playful-like. Wellum, de way dey felt made me flinch.
-All I could say wuz, ‘Lord ’a’ mercy!’ She tuck her han’s down, she did,
-an’ look at me an’ smile kinder faint-like. She ’low, ‘Wuz my han’s
-col’, Aunt Minervy Ann?’ I look at ’er an’ grunt, ‘Huh! dey won’t be no
-colder when youer dead.’ She ain’t say nothin’, an’ terreckly I ’low,
-‘What de name er goodness is de matter wid you, Miss Sadie?’ She say,
-‘Nothin’ much. I’m gwine ter stay here ter-night, an’ ter-morrer mornin’
-I’m gwine ’way.’ I ax ’er, ‘How come dat? What is dey done to you?’ She
-say, ‘Nothin’ ’tall.’ I ’low, ‘Does Marse Gabe an’ Miss Fanny know you
-gwine?’ She say, ‘No; I can’t tell um.’
-
-“Wellum, I flopt down on a cheer; yessum, I sho’ did. My min’ wuz gwine
-like a whirligig an’ my head wuz swimmin’. I des sot dar an’ look at
-’er. Bimeby she up an’ say, pickin’ all de time at her frock, ‘I know’d
-sump’n wuz gwine ter happen. Dat de reason I been bringin’ dem bundles
-here. In dem ar bundles you’ll fin’ all de things I fotch here. I ain’t
-got nothin’ dey give me ’cep’n dish yer black dress I got on. I’d ’a’
-fotch my ol’ trunk, but I dunner what dey done wid it. Hamp’ll hatter buy
-me one an’ pay for it hisse’f, ’kaze I ain’t got a cent er money.’ Dem
-de ve’y words she say. I ’low, ‘Sump’n must ’a’ happen den.’ She nodded,
-an’ bimeby she say, ‘Mr. Towers comin’ home ter-night. Dey done got a
-telegraph fum ’im.’
-
-“I stood up in de flo’, I did, an’ ax ’er, ‘Which Mr. Towers?’ She say,
-‘Mr. Jesse Towers.’ I ’low, ‘He done dead.’ She say, ‘No, he ain’t; ef he
-wuz he done come ter life; dey done got a telegraph fum ’im, I tell you.’
-‘Is _dat_ de reason you gwine ’way?’ I des holla’d it at ’er. She draw’d
-a long breff an’ say, ‘Yes, dat’s de reason.’
-
-“I tell you right now, ma’m, I didn’t know ef I wuz stannin’ on my head
-er floatin’ in de a’r. I wuz plum outdone. But dar she sot des es cool ez
-a curcumber wid de dew on it. I went out de do’, I did, an’ walk ’roun’
-de house once ter de right an’ twice ter de lef’ bekaze de ol’ folks use
-ter tell me dat ef you wuz bewitched, dat ’ud take de spell away. I ain’t
-tellin’ you no lie, ma’m—fer de longes’ kinder minnit I didn’t no mo’
-b’lieve dat Miss Sadie wuz settin’ dar in my house tellin’ me dat kinder
-rigamarole, dan I b’lieve I’m flyin’ right now. Dat bein’ de case, I
-bleeze ter fall back on bewitchments, an’ so I walk ’roun’ de house. But
-when I went back in, dar she wuz, settin’ in a cheer an’ lookin’ up at de
-rafters.
-
-“Wellum, I went in an’ drapt down in a cheer an’ lookt at ’er. Bimeby,
-I say, ‘Miss Sadie, does you mean ter set dar an’ tell me youer gwine
-’way ’kaze yo’ husban’ comin’ home?’ She flung her arms behime ’er
-head, she did, an’ say, ‘I ain’t none er his wife; I des been playin’
-off!’ De way she look an’ de way she say it wuz ’nuff fer me. I wuz
-pairlized; yessum, I wuz dumfounder’d. Ef anybody had des but totch me
-wid de tip er der finger, I’d ’a’ fell off’n dat cheer an’ never stirred
-atter I hit de flo’. Ever’thing ’bout de house lookt quare. Miss Vallie
-had a lookin’-glass one time wid de pictur’ uv a church at de bottom.
-When de glass got broke, she gimme de pictur’, an’ I sot it up on de
-mantel-shelf. I never know’d ’fo’ dat night dat de steeple er der church
-wuz crooked. But dar ’twuz. Mo’ dan dat I cotch myse’f feelin’ er my
-fingers fer ter see ef ’twuz me an’ ef I wuz dar.
-
-“Talk ’bout _dreams_! dey wa’n’t no dream could beat dat, I don’t keer
-how twisted it mought be. An’ den, ma’m, she sot back dar an’ tol’ me de
-whole tale ’bout how she come ter be dar. I’ll never tell it like she
-did; dey ain’t nobody in de wide worl’ kin do dat. But it seem like she
-an’ Marse Jesse wuz stayin’ in de same neighborhoods, er stayin’ at de
-same place, he a-fiddlin’ an’ she a-knockin’ on de peanner er de harp, I
-fergit which. Anyhow, dey seed a heap er one an’er. Bofe un um had come
-dar fum way off yan’, an’ ain’t got nobody but deyse’f fer ter ’pen’ on,
-an’ dat kinder flung um togedder. I ’speck dey must er swapt talk ’bout
-love an’ marryin’—you know yo’se’f, ma’m, dat dat’s de way young folks
-is. Howsomever dat may be, Marse Jesse, des ter tease ’er, sot down one
-day an’ writ a long letter ter his wife. Tooby sho’ he ain’t got no wife,
-but he des make out he got one, an’ dat letter he lef’ layin’ ’roun’ whar
-Miss Sadie kin see it. ’Twa’n’t in no envelyup, ner nothin’, an’ you know
-mighty well, ma’m, dat when a ’oman, young er ol’, see dat kinder letter
-layin’ ’roun’ she’d die ef she don’t read it. Fum de way Miss Sadie talk,
-dat letter must ’a’ stirred up a coolness ’twix’ um, kaze de mornin’ when
-he wuz gwine on dat ’scursion, Marse Jesse pass by de place whar she wuz
-settin’ at an’ flung de letter in her lap an’ say, ‘What’s in dar wuz fer
-you.’
-
-“Wellum, wid dat he wuz gone, an’ de fus’ news Miss Sadie know’d de
-papers wuz full er de names er dem what got drownded in de boat, an’
-Marse Jesse head de roll, ’kaze he wuz de mos’ pop’lous music-maker in
-de whole settlement. Den dar wuz de gal an’ de letter. I wish I could
-tell dis part like she tol’ me settin’ dar in my house. You’ll never git
-it straight in yo’ head less’n you’d ’a’ been dar an’ hear de way she
-tol’ it. Nigger ez I is, I know mighty well dat a white ’oman ain’t got
-no business parmin’ ’erse’f off ez a man’s wife. But de way she tol’ it
-tuck all de rough aidges off’n it. She wuz dar in dat big town, wuss’n
-a wilderness, ez you may say, by ’erse’f, nobody ’penin’ on ’er an’
-nobody ter ’pen’ on, tired down an’ plum wo’ out, an’ wid all dem kinder
-longin’s what you know yo’se’f, ma’am, all wimmen bleeze ter have, ef dey
-er white er ef dey er black.
-
-“Yit she ain’t never tol’ nobody dat she wuz Marse Jesse’s wife. She des
-han’ de letter what she’d kep’ ter Miss Fanny, an’ fell down on de flo’
-in a dead faint, an’ she say dat ef it hadn’t but ’a’ been fer me, she’d
-a got out er de bed dat fust night an’ went ’way fum dar; an’ I know
-dat’s so, too, bekaze she wuz ranklin’ fer ter git up fum dar. But at de
-time I put all dat down ter de credit er de deleeriums, an’ made ’er stay
-in bed.
-
-“Wellum, ef I know’d all de books in de worl’ by heart, I couldn’t tell
-you how I felt atter she done tol’ me dat tale. She sot back dar des ez
-calm ez a baby. Bimeby she say, ‘I’m glad I tol’ you; I feel better dan
-I felt in a mighty long time.’ It look like, ma’am, dat a load done been
-lift fum ’er min’. Now I know’d pine blank dat sump’n gotter be done,
-’kaze de train’d be in at midnight, an’ den when Marse Jesse come dey’d
-be a tarrifyin’ time at Gabe Towers’s. Atter while I up an’ ax ’er,
-‘Miss Sadie, did you reely love Marse Jesse?’ She say, ‘Yes, I did’—des
-so. I ax ’er, ‘Does you love ’im now?’ She say, ‘Yes, I does—an’ I love
-dem ar people up dar at de house; dat de reason I’m gwine ’way.’ She talk
-right out; she done come to de p’int whar she ain’t got nothin’ ter hide.
-
-“I say, ‘Well, Miss Sadie, dem folks up at de house, dey loves you.’
-She sorter flincht at dis. I ’low, ‘Dey been mighty good ter you. What
-you done, you done done, an’ dat can’t be holp, but what you ain’t gone
-an’ done, dat kin be holp; an’ what you oughter do, dat oughtn’t ter be
-holp.’ I see ’er clinch ’er han’s an’ den I riz fum de cheer.” Suiting
-the action to the word, Aunt Minervy Ann rose from the step where she had
-been sitting, and moved toward the lady of the house.
-
-“I riz, I did, an’ tuck my stan’ befo’ ’er. I ’low, ‘You say you love
-Marse Jesse, an’ you say you love his folks. Well, den ef you got any
-blood in you, ef you got any heart in yo’ body, ef you got any feelin’
-fer anybody in de roun’ worl’ ’cep’n’ yo’ naked se’f, you’ll go up dar
-ter dat house an’ tell Gabe Towers dat you want ter see ’im, an’ you’ll
-tell Fanny Towers dat you want ter see her, an’ you’ll stan’ up befo’ um
-an’ tell um de tale you tol’ ter me, word fer word. Ef you’ll do dat, an’
-you hatter come back here, _come! come!_ Bless God! _come!_ an’ me an’
-Hamp’ll rake an’ scrape up ’nuff money fer ter kyar you whar you gwine.
-An’ don’t you be a’skeer’d er Gabe Towers. Me an’ Marse Tumlin ain’t
-a-skeer’d un ’im. I’m gwine wid you, an’ ef he say one word out de way,
-you des come ter de do’ an’ call me, an’ ef I don’t preach his funer’l,
-it’ll be bekaze de Lord’ll strike me dumb!’ _An’ she went!_”
-
-Aunt Minervy paused. She had wrought the miracle of summoning to life one
-of the crises through which she had passed with others. It was not the
-words she used. There was nothing in them to stir the heart or quicken
-the pulse. Her power lay in the tones of her voice, whereby she was able
-to recall the passion of a moment that had long spent itself; in the
-fluent and responsive attitudes; in gesticulation that told far more than
-her words did. The light from the vestibule lamp shone full upon her and
-upon the lady whom she unconsciously selected to play the part of the
-young woman whose story she was telling. The illusion was perfect. We
-were in Aunt Minervy Ann’s house, Miss Sadie was sitting helpless and
-hopeless before her—the whole scene was vivid and complete. She paused;
-her arm, which had been outstretched and rigid for an instant, slowly
-fell to her side, and—the illusion was gone; but while it lasted, it was
-as real as any sudden and extraordinary experience can be.
-
-Aunt Minervy Ann resumed her seat, with a chuckle, apparently ashamed
-that she had been betrayed into such a display of energy and emotion,
-saying, “Yessum, she sho’ went.”
-
-“I don’t wonder at it,” remarked the lady of the house, with a long-drawn
-sigh of relief.
-
-Aunt Minervy Ann laughed again, rather sheepishly, and then, after
-rubbing her hands together, took up the thread of the narrative, this
-time directing her words to me: “All de way ter de house, suh, she ain’t
-say two words. She had holt er my han’, but she ain’t walk like she uz
-weak. She went along ez peart ez I did. When we got dar, some er de
-niggers wuz out in de flower gyarden an’ out in de big grove callin’ ’er;
-an’ dey call so loud dat I hatter put um down. ‘Hush up!’ I say, ‘an’ go
-on ’bout yo’ business! Can’t yo’ Miss Sadie take a walk widout a whole
-passel er you niggers a-hollerin’ yo’ heads off?’ One un um make answer,
-‘Miss Fanny huntin’ fer ’er.’ She sorter grip my han’ at dat, but I say,
-‘She de one you wanter see—her an’ Gabe Towers.’
-
-“We went up on de po’ch, an’ dar wuz Miss Fanny an’ likewise Marse Gabe.
-I know’d what dey wanted; dey wanted ter talk wid ’er ’bout Marse Jesse.
-She clum de steps fus’ an’ I clum atter her. She cotch ’er breff hard
-when she fus’ hit de steps, an’ den it come over me like a flash how deep
-an’ big her trouble wuz, an’ I tell you right now, ef dat had ’a’ been
-Miss Vallie gwine up dar, I b’lieve I’d ’a’ flew at ol’ Gabe Towers an’
-to’ ’im lim’ fum lim’ ’fo’ anybody could ’a’ pull me off. Hit’s de trufe!
-You may laugh, but I sho’ would ’a’ done it. I had it in me. Miss Fanny
-seed sump’n wuz wrong, de minnit de light fell on de gal’s face. She say,
-‘Why, Sadie, darlin’, what de matter wid you?’—des so—an’ made ez ef ter
-put ’er arms ’roun’ ’er; but Miss Sadie swunk back. Miss Fanny sorter
-swell up. She say, ‘Oh, ef I’ve hurt yo’ feelin’s ter-day—_ter-day_ uv
-all de days—please, please fergi’ me!’ Well, suh, I dunner whar all dis
-gwine ter lead ter, an’ I put in, ‘She des wanter have a talk wid you an’
-Marse Gabe, Miss Fanny; an’ ef ter-day is one er de days her feelin’s
-oughtn’ter be hurted, take keer dat you don’t do it. Kyar ’er in de
-parler dar, Miss Fanny.’ I ’speck you’ll think I wuz takin’ a mighty
-heap on myse’f, fer a nigger ’oman,” remarked Aunt Minervy Ann, smoothing
-the wrinkles out of her lap, “but I wuz des ez much at home in dat house
-ez I wuz in my own, an’ des ez free wid um ez I wuz wid my own folks.
-Miss Fanny look skeer’d, an’ Marse Gabe foller’d atter, rubbin’ a little
-mole he had on de top er his head. When he wus worried er aggervated, he
-allers rub dat mole.
-
-“Well, suh, dey went in, dey did, an’ I shot de do’ an’ tuck up my stan’
-close by, ready fer to go in when Miss Sadie call me. I had myse’f keyed
-up ter de p’int whar I’d ’a’ tol’ Marse Gabe sump’n ’bout his own fambly
-connection; you know dey ain’t nobody but what got i’on rust on some er
-der cloze. But dey stayed in dar an’ stayed, twel I ’gun ter git oneasy.
-All kinder quare idees run th’oo my head. Atter while some un pull de
-do’ open, an’ hol’ it dat away, an’ I hear Marse Gabe say, wid a trimble
-an’ ketch in his th’oat, ‘Don’t talk so, chil’. Ef you done wrong, you
-ain’t hurt nobody but yo’se’f, an’ it oughtn’ter hurt you. You been a
-mighty big blessin’ ter me, an’ ter Fanny here, an’ I wouldn’t ’a’ missed
-knowin’ you, not fer nothin’. Wid dat, he come out cle’rin up his th’oat
-an’ blowin’ his nose twel it soun’ like a dinner-horn. His eye fell on
-me, an’ he ’low, ‘Look like you er allers on han’ when dey’s trouble.’ I
-made answer, ‘Well, Marse Gabe, dey might be wusser ones ’roun’ dan me.’
-He look at me right hard an’ say, ‘Dey ain’t no better, Minervy Ann.’
-Well, suh, little mo’ an’ I’d ’a’ broke down, it come so sudden. I had
-ter gulp hard an’ quick, I tell you. He say, ‘Minervy Ann, go back dar
-an’ tell de house-gal ter wake up de carriage-driver ef he’s ’sleep, an’
-tell ’im to go meet Jesse at de train. An’ he mus’ tell Jesse dat we’d
-’a’ all come, but his ma ain’t feelin’ so well.’ I say, ‘I’ll go wake
-’im up myse’f, suh.’ I look in de parler an’ say, ‘Miss Sadie, does you
-need me right now?’ She ’low, ‘No, not right now; I’ll stay twel—twel Mr.
-Towers come.’ Miss Fanny wuz settin’ dar holdin’ Miss Sadie’s han’.
-
-“I’ll never tell you how dey patcht it up in dar, but I made a long
-guess. Fus’ an’ fo’mus’, dey wuz right down fon’ er Miss Sadie, an’ den
-ef she run off time Marse Jesse put his foot in de town dey’d be a big
-scandal; an’ so dey fix it up dat ef she wuz bleeze ter go, ’twuz better
-to go a mont’ er two atter Marse Jesse come back. Folks may like you
-mighty well, but dey allers got one eye on der own consarns. Dat de way I
-put it down.
-
-“Well, suh, de wuss job wuz lef’ fer de las’, ’kaze dar wuz Marse Jesse.
-Sump’n tol’ me dat he oughter know what been gwine on ’fo’ he got in de
-house, ’kaze den he won’t be aggervated inter sayin’ an’ doin’ sump’n he
-oughtn’ter. So when de carriage wuz ready, I got in an’ went down ter
-de depot; an’ when Marse Jesse got off de train, I wuz de fus’ one he
-laid eyes on. I’d ’a’ never know’d ’im in de worl’, but he know’d me.
-He holler out, ‘Ef dar ain’t Aunt Minervy Ann! Bless yo’ ol’ soul! how
-you come on anyhow?’ He come mighty nigh huggin’ me, he wuz so glad ter
-see me. He wuz big ez a skinned hoss an’ strong ez a mule. He say, ‘Ef I
-had you in my min’ once, Aunt Minervy Ann, I had you in dar ten thousan’
-times.’
-
-“Whiles de carriage rollin’ ’long an’ grindin’ de san’ I try ter gi’ ’im
-a kinder inkling er what been gwine on, but ’twuz all a joke wid ’im. I
-wuz fear’d I mought go at ’im de wrong way, but I can’t do no better.
-I say, ‘Marse Jesse, yo’ wife been waitin’ here fer you a long time.’
-He laugh an’ ’low, ‘Oh, yes! did she bring de childun?’ I say, ‘Shucks,
-Marse Jesse! Dey’s a lady in deep trouble at Marse Gabe’s house, an’ I
-don’t want you ter go dar jokin’. She’s a monst’us fine lady, too.’ Dis
-kinder steady ’im, an’ he say, ‘All right, Aunt Minervy Ann; I’ll behave
-myse’f des like a Sunday-school scholar. I won’t say bad words an’ I
-won’t talk loud.’ He had his fiddle-case in his lap, an’ he drummed on it
-like he keepin’ time ter some chune in his min’.
-
-“Well, suh, we got dar in de due time, an’ ’twuz a great meetin’ ’twixt
-Marse Jesse an’ his folks. Dey des swarmed on ’im, ez you may say, an’
-while dis gwine on, I went in de parler whar Miss Sadie wuz. She wuz
-pale, tooby sha’, but she had done firm’d ’erse’f. She wuz standin’ by de
-fier-place, lookin’ down, but she lookt up when she hear de do’ open, an’
-den she say, ‘I’m mighty glad it’s you, Aunt Minervy Ann; I want you ter
-stay in here.’ I ’low, ‘I’ll stay, honey, ef you say stay.’ Den she tuck
-’er stand by me an’ cotch holt er my arm wid bofe ’er han’s an’ kinder
-leant ag’in me.
-
-“Bimeby, here come Marse Jesse. Trouble wuz in his eye when he open de
-do’, but when he saw de gal, his face lit up des like when you strike a
-match in a closet. He say, ‘Why, Miss Sadie! You dunner how glad I is ter
-see you. I been huntin’ all over de country fer you.’ He make ez ef ter
-shake han’s, but she draw’d back. Dis cut ’im. He say: ‘What de matter?
-Who you in mournin’ fer?’ She ’low, ‘Fer myse’f.’ Wid dat she wuz gwine
-on ter tel ’im ’bout what she had done, but he wouldn’t have it dat
-way. He say, ‘When I come back ter life, atter I wuz drownded, I ’gun
-ter hunt fer you des ez soon’s I got out’n de hospittle. I wuz huntin’
-fer you ter tell you dat I love you. I’d ’a’ tol’ you dat den, an’ I
-tell you dat now.’ She grip my arm mighty hard at dat. Marse Jesse went
-on mightly. He tell ’er dat she ain’t done nobody no harm, dat she wuz
-welcome ter his name ef he’d ’a’ been dead, an’ mo’ welcome now dat he
-wuz livin’. She try ter put in a word here an’ dar, but he won’t have it.
-Stan’in’ up dar he wuz ol’ Gabe Towers over ag’in; ’twuz de fus’ time I
-know’d he faver’d ’im.
-
-“He tol’ ’er ’bout how he wrenched a do’ off’n one er de rooms in de
-boat, an’ how he floated on dat twel he got so col’ an’ num’ dat he can’t
-hol’ on no longer, an’ how he turn loose an’ don’t know nothin’ twel
-he wake up in some yuther town; an’ how, atter he git well, he had de
-plooisy an’ lay dar a mont’ er two, an’ den he ’gun ter hunt fer her. He
-went ’way up dar ter Hampsher whar she come fum, but she ain’t dar, an’
-den he come home; an’ won’t she be good ’nuff ter set down an’ listen at
-’im?
-
-“Well, suh, dey wuz mo’ in Marse Jesse dan I had any idee. He wuz a rank
-talker, sho’. I see ’er face warmin’ up, an’ I say, ‘Miss Sadie, I ’speck
-I better be gwine.’ Marse Jesse say, ‘You ain’t in my way, Aunt Minervy
-Ann; I done foun’ my sweetheart, an’ I ain’t gwine ter lose ’er no mo’,
-you kin des bet on dat.’ She ain’t say nothin’ an’ I know’d purty well
-dat eve’ything wuz all skew vee.”
-
-“I hope they married,” remarked the lady of the house, after waiting
-a moment for Aunt Minervy Ann to resume. There was just a shade of
-suspicion in her tone.
-
-“Oh, dey married, all right ’nuff,” said Aunt Minervy Ann, laughing.
-
-“Didn’t it create a good deal of talk?” the lady asked, suspicion still
-in her voice.
-
-“Talk? No, ma’m! De man what dey git de license fum wuz Miss Fanny’s
-br’er, Gus Featherstone, an’ de man what married um wuz Marse Gabe’s
-bro’er, John Towers. Dey wa’n’t nobody ter do no talkin’. De nex’ mornin’
-me an Miss Sadie an’ Marse Jesse got in de carriage an’ drove out ter
-John Towers’s place whar he runnin’ a church, an’ ’twuz all done an’ over
-wid mos’ quick ez a nigger kin swaller a dram.”
-
-“What do you think of it?” I asked the lady of the house.
-
-“Why, it is almost like a story in a book.”
-
-“Does dey put dat kinder doin’s in books?” asked Aunt Minervy Ann, with
-some solicitude.
-
-“Certainly,” replied the lady.
-
-“Wid all de turmile, an’ trouble, an’ tribulation—an’ all de worry an’
-aggervation? Well, Hamp wanted me ter l’arn how ter read, but I thank my
-stars dat I can’t read no books. Dey’s ’nuff er all dat right whar we
-live at widout huntin’ it up in books.”
-
-After this just observation, it was time to put out the lights.
-
-
-
-
-III
-
-HOW AUNT MINERVY ANN RAN AWAY AND RAN BACK AGAIN
-
-
-In the matter of attending the fair at Halcyondale, Aunt Minervy Ann’s
-hospitable wishes jumped with my own desires, and it was not difficult
-to give her a hard and fast promise in the matter; nor did it take the
-edge off my desires to entertain a suspicion, verified long afterward,
-that Aunt Minervy Ann’s anxiety was based on a hope, expressed by Major
-Perdue, that the fair would be properly handled in the Atlanta papers.
-
-The directors of the fair were represented at the little railway station,
-at Halcyondale, by a committee, and into the hands of this committee
-fell every man, woman, and child that stepped from the passing trains.
-It mattered little what the business of these incoming travellers was;
-whether they came to visit the fair or to attend to their own private
-affairs. They were seized, bag and baggage, by the committee and borne
-triumphantly to the hotel, or to a boarding-place, or to some private
-house. The members of the committee had a duty to perform, and they
-performed it with an energy and a thoroughness that was amazing if not
-altogether satisfactory. As I remember, this vigorous body was called the
-Committee on Public Comfort, and most heroically did it live up to its
-name and its duties.
-
-These things I learned by observation and not by experience, for before
-the train on which I was a passenger had cleared the suburbs of Atlanta,
-I caught a glimpse of Major Tumlin Perdue, who had long been a prominent
-citizen of Halcyondale. He had changed but little during the ten years.
-His hair was whiter, and he was a trifle thinner, but his complexion
-was still rosy and his manners as buoyant as ever. I doubted whether
-he would know me again, though he had been very friendly with me in
-the old days, seeming to know by instinct just when and how to drop a
-word of encouragement and appreciation, and so I forbore to renew the
-acquaintance. The Major could be boisterous enough in those times when
-in the humor, but when at his best he had more ways like those of a
-woman (and a noble and tender-hearted woman at that) than any man I had
-ever known. He had a woman’s tact, intuition, and sympathy; and these
-qualities were so exquisitely developed in him that they lifted him high
-in the estimation of a young man who was living away from his mother, and
-who was somewhat lonely on that account.
-
-Presently, the Major came along the aisle for a drink of water. As he
-was in the act of drinking, his eyes met mine, and he recognized me
-instantly. He swallowed the water with a gulp.
-
-“Why, bless my soul!” he exclaimed, greeting me with the simple
-cordiality that springs from an affectionate nature. “Why, I wouldn’t
-take ten dollars for this! I was thinking about you this very day. Don’t
-you remember the night we went out to ku-klux the Ku-klux, and the chap
-that mighty nigh broke his neck running into a wire clothes-line? I saw
-him to-day. He would hardly speak to me,” the Major went on, laughing
-heartily. “He’s never got over that night’s business. I thought about
-you, and I started to hunt you up; but you know how it is in Atlanta.
-Folks ain’t got time to eat, much less to tell you where anybody lives. A
-man that’s too busy is bound to worry, and worry will kill him every bit
-and grain as quick as John Barleycorn. Business is bound to be the ruin
-of this country, and if you don’t live to see it, your children will.”
-
-[Illustration: The Committee of Public Comfort.]
-
-Thus the Major talked, blending wisdom with impracticable ideas in the
-most delightful way. He seemed to be highly pleased when he found that I
-was to spend a week at Halcyondale, attending the fair and renewing old
-friendships.
-
-“Then you belong to me!” he exclaimed. “It’s no use,” he went on, shaking
-his head when I would have protested against imposing on his good-nature;
-“you needn’t say a word. The tavern is stuffed full of people, and even
-if it wasn’t, you’d go to my house. If you ain’t been ruined by living in
-Atlanta, it’ll seem like home to you. Dang it all! I’ll _make_ it seem
-like home to you anyhow.”
-
-Now, the affectation of hospitality is one of the commonest hypocrisies
-in life, and, to a thoughtful man, one of the most sinister; but the
-Major’s hospitality was genuine. It was brought over from the times
-before the war, and had stood the test of age and long usage, and, most
-trying of all, the test of poverty. “If you were welcome when I was well
-off, how much more welcome you’ll be now that I am poor!” This was not
-said by the Major, but by one of his contemporaries. The phrase fitted a
-whole generation of noble men and women, and I thank Heaven that it was
-true at one time even if it is not true now.
-
-When the train, with much clinking and clanking and hissing, came to a
-standstill at Halcyondale, the Major hustled me off on the side opposite
-the station, and so I escaped the ordeal of resisting the efforts of
-the Committee on Public Comfort to convey me to a lodging not of my own
-selection. The Major’s buggy was in waiting, with a negro driver, who got
-out to make room for me. He bowed very politely, calling me by name.
-
-“You remember Hamp, I reckon,” said the Major. “He was a member of the
-Legislature when you lived here.”
-
-Certainly I remembered Hamp, who was Aunt Minervy Ann’s husband. I
-inquired about her, and Hamp, who had swung up to the trunk-rack as the
-buggy moved off, replied that she was at home and as well as she could be.
-
-“Yes,” said the Major, “she’s at my house. You may _see_ somebody else
-besides Minervy Ann, but you won’t _hear_ anybody else. She owns the
-whole place and the people on it. I had a Boston man to dinner some time
-ago, one of Conant’s friends—you remember Paul Conant, don’t you?—and
-I stirred Minervy Ann up just to see what the man would say. We had a
-terrible quarrel, and the man never did know it was all in fun. He said
-they never would have such a lack of discipline among the servants in
-Boston. I told him I would give him any reasonable amount if he would go
-out and discipline Minervy Ann, just to show me how it was done. It would
-have been better than a circus. You heard her, didn’t you, Hamp?”
-
-Hamp chuckled good-naturedly. “Yasser, I did, an’ it make col’ chills run
-over me ter hear how Minervy Ann went on. She cert’n’y did try herse’f
-dat day.”
-
-The Major smiled a little proudly as I thought, slapped the horse—a
-bob-tailed black—with the left rein, and we went skimming along the
-level, sandy street at a three-minute gait. In a short while we were at
-the Major’s house, where I received a warm welcome from his daughter,
-whom I had known when she was a school-girl. She was now Mrs. Paul
-Conant, and even more beautiful as a matron than she had been as a girl.
-I had also known her husband, who had begun his business career in the
-town a year or two before I left, and even at that time he was one of the
-most prominent and promising young business men in the town.
-
-He had served in the army the last year of the war, and the service
-did him a world of good, physically and mentally. His faculties were
-broadened and enlarged. Contact with all sorts and conditions of men
-gave him ample knowledge of his kind, and yet he kept in touch with the
-finer issues of life. He was ripened and not hardened.
-
-The surrender had no such crushing effects on him as it had on older men.
-It left him youth, and where youth is there must be hope and energy.
-He returned home, remained a few weeks, sold a couple of horses he had
-picked up in the track of Sherman’s army, and then went into the office
-of a cotton factor in Savannah, giving his services for the knowledge and
-experience he desired to gain. In a very short time he learned all the
-secrets of sampling and grading the great staple. He might have remained
-in the office at a salary, for his aptness had made him useful, but he
-preferred to return to Halcyondale, where he engaged in buying cotton
-on his own account. There was just enough risk in this to stimulate his
-energies, and not enough to lead to serious speculation.
-
-To this business he added others as his capital grew, and he was soon the
-most prosperous man in the town. He had formed the stock company under
-whose auspices the county fair was held, and was president of the board
-of directors.
-
-[Illustration: Buying cotton on his own account.]
-
-Aunt Minervy Ann was very much in evidence, for she acted as cook, nurse,
-and house-girl. The first glimpse I had of her, she had a bucket of
-water in her right hand and Conant’s baby—a bouncing boy—on her left arm.
-Just then Major Perdue hustled me off to my room, thus postponing, as I
-thought, the greeting I had for Aunt Minervy Ann. But presently I heard
-her coming upstairs talking to herself.
-
-“Ef dey gwine ter have folks puttin’ up wid um, dey better tell me in de
-due time, so I can fix up fer um. Dey ain’t been no fresh water in deze
-rooms sence dat baby wuz born’d.”
-
-She went on to the end of the hall and looked in each of the rooms.
-Then, with an exclamation I failed to catch, she knocked at my door,
-which was promptly opened. As she saw me a broad smile flashed over her
-good-natured face.
-
-“I ’low’d ’twuz you,” she said, “an’ I’m mighty glad you come.” She
-started to pour the water from can to pitcher, when suddenly she stayed
-her hand. With the exclamation, “Well, ef dis don’t bang my time!” she
-went to the head of the stairs and cried out: “Miss Vallie! Miss Vallie!
-you don’t want no town folks stuck in dish yer back room, does you?”
-
-“Why, certainly not!” cried the lady. “What could father have been
-thinking of?”
-
-“Shoo! he like all de men folks,” responded Aunt Minervy Ann.
-
-With that she seized my valise with one hand, and, carrying the can of
-water in the other, escorted me to one of the front rooms. It was an
-improvement on the back room only because it had more windows to admit
-the air and light. I put in a word for the Major, which I hoped would be
-carried to the ears of the daughter.
-
-“The Major gave me that room because he wanted to treat me as if I were
-one of the home folks. Now you’ve brought me here, and I’ll feel as
-uncomfortable as if I were company, sure enough.”
-
-“Dey’s sump’n in dat, I ’speck,” replied Aunt Minervy Ann, laughing;
-“but, lawsy, massy! you done been in dis house too much ter talk
-dat-a-way. When kin folks come home, we allus gin um de bes’ dey is fer
-de fus’ week er so. Atter dat dey kin rustle ’roun’ fer deyse’f.”
-
-It is hardly necessary to say that Aunt Minervy Ann took very good care
-that I should want for none of those little attentions that sharpen the
-appreciation of a guest; and, in her case, obtrusiveness was not a fault,
-for her intentions shone clearly and unmistakably through it all.
-
-[Illustration: “Miss Vallie!”]
-
-Major Perdue had the art of entertainment at his fingers’ ends, which,
-though it is very simple, not one man in a hundred learns. It is the
-knack of leaving the guest to his own devices without seeming to do so.
-Most fortunate in his gifts is the host who knows how to temper his
-attentions!
-
-In his efforts to get the fair under way, Paul Conant found it impossible
-to come to dinner, but sent his apologies.
-
-“You’ll think it is a mighty small concern when you see it,” said the
-Major, “but it takes all that Paul can do to keep it from getting into a
-tangle. He has to be here, there, and everywhere, and there hasn’t been
-a minute for a week or more but what forty people were hollering at him
-at once, and forty more pulling and hauling him about. If he wasn’t a
-steam-engine, he couldn’t hold out half an hour.”
-
-“Well, he’ll soon straighten matters out,” said I, “and then they’ll stay
-so.”
-
-“That’s so,” remarked the Major; “but when that’s done, he’ll have to
-rush around from post to pillar to keep ’em straight.”
-
-“Did he seem to be greatly worried?” Valentine asked.
-
-“No-o-o-o,” replied the Major, slowly and hesitatingly, “but I’m afear’d
-his shoulder has begun to trouble him again.” He leaned back in his
-chair and looked at the ceiling, apparently lost in thought.
-
-“Why should you think that, father?”
-
-“Once or twice, whilst he was rustling about I saw him fling his hand to
-his shoulder and hold it there, and I’m mightily afear’d it’s hurting
-him.” The Major drew a deep sigh as he spoke, and silence fell on all.
-It was brief, but it was long enough for one to know that an unpleasant
-subject had been touched on—that there was something more behind it all
-than a pain in Conant’s shoulder. Aunt Minervy Ann, who was equal to
-every emergency, created a diversion with the baby, and the Major soon
-pulled himself together.
-
-Paul Conant came home to supper, and in the sitting-room, before the meal
-was announced, I observed that the Major was as solicitous about him as a
-mother is of her baby. His eyes were constantly on his son-in-law, and if
-the latter showed any sign of worry, or frowned as if in pain, a shadow
-would pass over the Major’s genial face.
-
-[Illustration: “I saw him fling his hand to his shoulder and hold it
-there.”]
-
-This intense solicitude was something out of the usual order, and I
-wondered what was behind it. But the next day it was forgotten, nor
-was it remembered until Aunt Minervy Ann reminded me of it. I had
-been faithful in my attendance on the fair, had listened patiently
-to the speeches, and had then tried to refresh my benumbed faculties
-with such fare as could be found on the grounds—barbecue, pickles, and
-ginger-cakes. But the occasion had been too much for me, and so, about
-two o’clock in the afternoon, I decided to return to my quarters at Major
-Perdue’s home and rest my weary limbs. The very thought of the quiet and
-cool house was refreshing, and so, without waiting for a conveyance, I
-set out on foot, going through the woods in preference to the public
-highway, thereby cutting the distance short by nearly a mile.
-
-A great many others had taken advantage of the short-cut through the
-woods, so that I had no lack of company. Among them I noticed Aunt
-Minervy and her husband, Hamp, the latter carrying the Conant baby,
-which, having had enough of the pomps and vanities of this life for the
-time being, was now fast asleep. I soon came up with the trio, and we
-went along home together.
-
-“You toughed it out mighty well, suh,” remarked Aunt Minervy Ann, after
-some talk about the various attractions of the fair. “Up dar in Atlanty
-deze kinder doin’s would be laughed at, I ’speck, but hit’s de bes’
-we-all kin do. Me an’ Miss Vallie had some truck dar, speshually dat
-ar grape jelly on de right han’ side. Ef dat jelly don’t git de blue
-ribbon er sump’n better, hit’ll be bakaze dem ar jedgment men ain’t got
-no sense—I don’t keer who dey is. Ain’t you see dat ar quilt hangin’ up
-dar wid a pattern in it like a well-whorl, only de middle er de whorl
-was shape like de mornin’ star? Dat ar quilt is older dan what you is,
-suh—lots older. Me an’ Mistiss made dat quilt long ’fo’ Miss Vallie wuz
-born, an’ dish yer baby’ll tell you she ain’t no chicken. Ef dey’s any
-purtier quilt on dat hill dey had it hid ter-day; dey ain’t brung it out
-whar folks kin look at it. I dunno much, but I knows dat much.”
-
-We reached the house after awhile, and I lost no time in stretching
-myself out on a lounge that sat invitingly in the hall behind the
-stairway. It was not the coolest place in the world; but, really, when
-one is fagged out, it is unnecessary to try to find all the comforts
-of life in one spot. Sleep fell on me unawares, and when I awoke, Aunt
-Minervy Ann was sitting near the head of the lounge fanning me. Such
-courtesy was surprising, as well as pleasing, but I chid her for taking
-so much trouble, for I had slept nearly two hours. But she made light of
-it, saying she had nothing else to do, the baby being in his cradle and
-sleeping like a log.
-
-[Illustration: “Dat ar grape jelly on de right han’ side.”]
-
-Then, to enjoy a smoke, I drew a rocking-chair into the back porch, and
-proceeded to fill my pipe with what I regarded as a very good brand of
-tobacco, offering some to Aunt Minervy Ann. She soon found her pipe—clay
-bowl and reed stem—cleaned it out carefully and filled it from my pouch.
-
-“It look mighty pale, suh,” she remarked. “I ’speck dey steam it ’fo’ dey
-mash it up.” She seated herself on the top step, lit her pipe, took a few
-whiffs, and then shook her head. “’Tain’t nigh rank ’nuff for me, suh.
-Hit tas’e like you er dreamin’ ’bout smokin’ an’ know all de time ’tain’t
-nothin’ but a dream.” She knocked the tobacco out, and then refilled the
-pipe with the crumbs and cutting from the end of a plug. This she smoked
-with an air of supreme satisfaction.
-
-“I ’speck you got de idee dat I better be seein’ ’bout supper, stidder
-settin’ up here lookin’ biggity. But ’tain’t no use, suh. Marse Tumlin
-and Miss Vallie never is ter come home dis day less’n dey bring Marse
-Paul wid um. I done hear um sesso. An’ I know mighty well, deyer gwine
-ter come back late, bekaze Paul Conant’s one er dem kinder folks what go
-twel dey can’t go, an’ when dey git down dey make motions like dey gwine.
-Dey puts me in mind uv a lizard’s tail, suh. Knock it off, an’ it’ll hop
-’bout an’ work an’ wiggle plum twel de sun go down.”
-
-I suggested that the illustration was somewhat inapt (though not in
-those words), for the reason that Paul Conant’s energy was not expended
-blindly. But I found that Aunt Minervy knew what she was saying.
-
-“I ain’t talkin’ ’bout his own business, suh, bekaze dey ain’t nobody
-beat ’im at dat. No, suh; I’m talkin’ ’bout dem ar doin’s out dar at de
-fair groun’s. He’s a-workin’ at dat lots harder dan he has ter work fer
-hisse’f. Maybe you tuck notice uv de way dem yuther folks done out dar,
-suh. Dey stood ’round wid dey mouf open, an’ de ribbon pinned on der
-coats, an’ when sump’n had ter be done, dey’d call out fer Conant. It
-’uz ‘Conant!’ here an’ ‘Conant!’ dar, an’ ef Conant wuz out er hearin’
-de whole shebang had ter stop right still an’ wait twel Conant kin be
-dragged up. I watched um p’intedly, suh, an’ it’s des like I tell you.”
-
-Aunt Minervy Ann’s characterization of the directors was so acute and so
-unexpected that I laughed—not at what she said, but at the vivid picture
-of a lot of helpless men standing about, full of dignity, and yet waiting
-for young Conant to tell them what to do.
-
-[Illustration: “‘Conant!’ here and ‘Conant!’ dar.”]
-
-“You may laugh, suh,” Aunt Minervy Ann went on with a little frown,
-“but I’m tellin’ you de Lord’s trufe. I kep’ my eyes on um, an’ ’twuz
-dat-a-way fum soon dis mornin’ ’twel I got mad an’ come home. You kin
-ax Hamp, suh, an’ he’ll tell you de same. I reckon you heer’d Marse
-Tumlin las’ night at de table ax Marse Paul ef his shoulder hurted ’im.
-I know you did, suh, bekaze I tuck notice how you looked, an’ I tried
-ter shake de baby up so he’d cry, but dat wuz one er de times, suh, when
-he wouldn’t be shuck up. Any udder time dat chil’ would er laid back an’
-blated twel you’d hafter put yo’ fingers in yo’ years. I wuz mad wid ’im,
-suh, but I wuz bleedz ter laugh. Chillun mighty funny. When you don’t
-want um ter cry, dey’ll holler der heads off, an’ when you want um ter
-cry, dey’ll laugh in yo’ face. I bet you dey’s a blue place on dat baby’s
-arm whar I pinched ’im, but he didn’t no mo’ min’ it dan nothin’.”
-
-“Well,” said I, “there was something peculiar in the way all of you
-looked and acted when the Major asked about Mr. Conant’s shoulder. It was
-a very simple question.”
-
-“Ah, Lord!” exclaimed Aunt Minervy Ann, raising her right hand on high,
-“dey better ax ’bout dat shoulder. Yesser! ev’y day an’ ev’y night, an’
-in betwixt times.”
-
-“Is Mr. Conant troubled with rheumatism?” I inquired.
-
-“Rheumatiz! bless yo’ soul, honey! Ef ’twuz rheumatiz dey wouldn’t be no
-Paul Conant ’round dis house, ner no Conant baby.”
-
-Here is something decidedly interesting, I thought, but held my peace,
-knowing that whatever it was would be more quickly disclosed if there
-were any disclosure to make.
-
-“Ain’t you never hear ’bout it, suh? Well dat bangs me! An’ you right up
-dar in Atlanty, too! No, suh; you must er been in Savanny, bekaze ’twuz
-de town talk in Atlanty. Anyhow, wharsomever you wuz er might er been,
-dey ain’t no rheumatiz de matter wid Marse Paul Conant’s shoulder-blade.
-I know dat much, an’ I know it mighty well, bekaze I wuz right here in
-dis house, an’ nowhars else ’cep’n ’roun’ de lot an’ up town an’ back.
-
-“Well, den, suh, ef you ain’t never hear ’bout dat, I most know you ain’t
-never hear tell er how I run’d off, and how I run’d back, bekaze nobody
-ain’t never talk ’bout dat—leas’ways, not as I knows un.”
-
-I declared to Aunt Minervy Ann that I never heard a whisper of it. She
-leaned back against the railing of the steps and drew a long whiff from
-her pipe.
-
-“’Tain’t no use ter tell you, suh, how times wuz right atter de war.
-You wuz right in um, an’ ef you don’t know, it’s bekaze you didn’t look
-’roun’ an’ see um. I hear um say, suh, dat niggers wuz po’ when dey come
-free. Dey wuz, suh; dey wuz rank pizen po’; but dey never wuz in dis
-worl’ a nigger ez po’ ez some er our white folks wuz. You may shake yo’
-haid, suh, but I’m givin’ you de straight gov’nment trufe. Niggers is use
-ter bein’ po’, an’ dey never wuz dat po’ dat dey can’t scuffle ’roun’ an’
-make out somehow. Dey er been po’ so long dey er usen ter it. But white
-folks what been rich! I hope de Lord’ll call me home ’fo’ I see again
-what I done saw in dem days. I know in reason, suh, dat I seed mo’ er de
-trouble dan what you did, kaze you couldn’t go in at de back gates like
-me; an’ what trouble folks does have dey allers keep it somers betwix’ de
-bedroom an’ de back gate.
-
-“De Perdues wa’n’t no wuss off dan nobody else. Marse Tumlin had dish yer
-house an’ lot, an’ de plantation, an’ some lan’ way off yander. But all
-de hosses an’ mules an’ cattle been tuck off, an’ de niggers all gone.
-Ef he’d er stayed on de plantation, de niggers would ’a’ been dar yit,
-but stay he wouldn’t, an’ stay he didn’t, an’ so dar he wuz.
-
-“Do sump’n? What he gwine do? Fo’ de big turmoil he done some lawin’ an’
-a heap er farmin’. Leas’ways my ol’ Mistiss done de farmin’, an’ Marse
-Tumlin, he done de lawin’. He had ’im a office here in town, an’ on set
-days he’d come in an’ look arter de cases what he had. But how anybody
-gwine ter do any lawin’ dat-a-way? Marse Tumlin ain’t keerin’ whedder he
-git one case er none. He ain’t bleedze ter do no lawin’. An’ den ’pon
-top er dat he went off whar dey battlin’, an’ dar he stayed, an’ when he
-come back, look like de kinder lawin’ what he use ter do done gone outer
-fashion. Ef he hadn’t er been holp out, suh, I dunner what’d ’a’ come un
-’im. An’ ’twa’n’t only Marse Tumlin. Dey wuz a whole passel un um, too
-young ter die an’ too ol’ ter win money in dem kinder times. Ef you ain’t
-ol’ ’nuff ter ’member dem times, suh, you kin thank de Lord, kaze dey sho
-did look like tetotal ruination.
-
-“Now, you know yo’se’f, suh, dat you can’t eat a house an’ lot an’ live
-dar too; an’ you can’t eat lan’ des dry so less’n you got a mighty
-appetite fer dirt. Whyn’t he sell de lan’? You oughter be de las’ one
-ter ax me dat, suh. Who gwine buy it? Dem what ain’t got lan’ ain’t had
-no money, an’ dem what had money sholy lived a mighty long ways fum here.
-Day in an’ day out, suh, I wuz de wuss pester’d nigger you ever laid eyes
-on. I ain’t know what ter do.
-
-“An’ den ’pon top er dat, dar wuz Hamp, my ol’ man. When freedom come
-out, he tuck de notion dat we better go off some’rs an’ change de name
-what we got so dey can’t put us back in slave’y. Night an’ day it fair
-rankle in his min’, an’ he kep’ groanin’ an’ growlin’ ’bout it twel I
-got stirred up. I oughtn’t ter tell it, suh, but hit’s de Lord’s trufe.
-I got mad, I did, an’ I tol’ Hamp I’d go. An’ den I wa’n’t doin’ no good
-stayin’ here. ’Twuz des one mo’ mouf ter feed, an’ mo’ dan one, countin’
-Hamp. So, bimeby, one day, when I wuz sorter fretted, I tol’ Hamp ter go
-on out dar in de country, whar his daddy live at, an’ I’d meet ’im dar
-’fo’ night.
-
-“When de time come, I went in de house an’ hunt fer Miss Vallie. She ’uz
-settin’ in de parlor by de winder, but behime de curtain like, so nobody
-can’t see ’er. She ’uz settin’ dar wid ’er han’s crossed on ’er lap, an’
-she look so little, an’ pale, an’ weak, dat I come mighty nigh gwine
-right back in de kitchen. But she seed me too quick. Den I up’n tell ’er
-dat I’m gwine out in de country, ter whar Hamp daddy live at. She look at
-me right hard an’ say, ‘When you comin’ back, Aunt Minervy Ann?’ I ’low,
-‘I’m comin’ back des ez soon ez I kin make my ’rangements, honey.’ She
-say, ‘Well, I hope you’ll have a good time while you er gone.’ I ’low,
-‘Thanky, ma’m.’ Wid dat I went an’ got my bundle an’ put opt fum dar—an’
-I ain’t look back nudder, bekaze I had a mighty weakness in de knees, an’
-a mighty risin’ in my th’oat.
-
-“I went on down de road, an’ ef anybody had so much ez said _boo_ ter me,
-I’d ’a’ turned right ’roun’ an’ gone back home. I went on, I did, twel
-I come ter de mile branch. I see somebody crossin’ on de log, an’ when
-I come up wid um, who should it ’a’ been but Marse Tumlin. An’ he had
-_one chicken_! He had been out ter de plantation—sev’m mile ef its fifty
-yards—an’ here he wuz comin’ back wid one chicken—an’ him a walkin’, him
-dat use ter ride ’roun’ in his carriage! Walkin’ an’ totin’ one little
-chicken! Man, suh! I don’t never want ter feel again like I felt den.
-Whedder ’twuz de chicken, er what, I never did see Marse Tumlin Perdue
-look ez ol’ an’ ez weasly ez he did den. He look at me an’ sorter laugh
-like I done cotch ’im doin’ sump’n he ain’t got no business ter do. But
-dey wa’n’t no laugh in me; no, suh, not by a jugful.
-
-[Illustration: “Drapt down on de groun’ dar an’ holler an’ cry.”]
-
-“He say, ‘Hello, Minervy Ann! whar _you_ gwine?’ I ’low, I did, ‘I’m des
-gwine out yander whar Hamp kinnery live at.’
-
-“He sorter pull his goatee, an’ look down at de dus’ on his shoes—an’
-dey wuz fair kiver’d wid it—an’ den he say, ‘Well, Minervy Ann, I wish
-you mighty well. You sho is done a mighty good part by me an’ mine. Ef
-yo’ Miss Mary wuz ’live she’d know what ter say—I don’t, ’cep’ dis’—he
-straighten up an’ stretch out his han’—‘’cep’ dis: whenever you want ter
-come back home, you’ll fin’ de do’ open. Ef you come at night, des knock.
-We’ll know yo’ knock.’
-
-“You ain’t never seed no fool nigger ’oman cut up, is you? Well, ef you
-does see one, suh, I hope ter goodness ’twon’t be me! Marse Tumlin ain’t
-no mo’n got de words out’n his mouf, suh, ’fo’ I tuck de bundle what I
-had in my han’, an’ flung it fur ez I could send it.
-
-“Marse Tumlin look at me hard, an’ den he say, ‘Dam ef I don’t b’lieve
-youer crazy!’ Time he say it, I ’low, ‘_I don’t keer er dam ef I is!_’
-
-“Yasser! I say it sho, an’ den I drapt down on de groun’ dar an’ holler
-an’ cry like somebody wuz beatin’ de life out’n me. Marse Tumlin stood
-dar pullin’ at his goatee all dat time, an’ bimeby I got up. I wa’n’t
-feelin’ much better, but I done had my cry an’ dat’s sump’n. I got up, I
-did, an’ start back de way I come.
-
-“Marse Tumlin say, ‘Whar you gwine, Minervy Ann? I ’low, ‘I’m gwine back
-home—dat’s whar I’m gwine!’ He say, ‘Pick up yo’ bundle.’ Wid dat I turn
-’roun’ on him an’ ’low, ‘I ain’t gwine ter do it! Ef it hadn’t er been
-fer dat ar muslin dress in dar, what Miss Vallie make over an’ gi’ me,
-I’d been at home right dis minute.’
-
-“He ’low, ‘What dat got ter do wid it, Minervy Ann?’ I make answer,
-‘Bekaze ol’ Satan make me want ter put it on an’ sho’ off ’fo’ dem
-country niggers out dar whar Hamp’s folks live at.’ Wid dat I start back
-home, but Marse Tumlin holler at me—‘Minervy Ann, take dis chicken.’ I
-tuck it, I did, an’ made off up de road. Bimeby I sorter flung my eye
-’roun’, an’, bless gracious! dar wuz Marse Tumlin comin’ ’long totin’
-my bundle. Well, suh, it flewed all over me like fier. I got so mad wid
-myse’f dat I could ’a’ bit a piece out’n my own flesh.
-
-“I waited in de road twel he come up, an’ den I snatched de bundle out er
-his han’. I ’low, ‘I ain’t gwine ter have you totin’ none er my bundles
-in de public road—no, ner no chickens, needer.’ He say, ‘Well, don’t
-fling it ’way, Minervy Ann. De time may come when yo’ Miss Vallie’ll need
-dat ar muslin dress.’
-
-“When we got back home I went in de kitchen, an’ fix ter clean an’ kill
-de chicken. I ’speck Marse Tumlin must ’a’ tol’ Miss Vallie ’bout it,
-bekaze ’twan’t long ’fo’ I hear her runnin’ ’long de plank walk ter de
-kitchen. She whipt in de do’ she did, an’ grab me an’ cry like I done riz
-fum de dead. Well, suh, niggers ain’t got no sense, you kin take um de
-world over. No sooner is Miss Vallie start ter cry dan I chuned up, an’
-dar we had it.
-
-“’Bout dat time, Marse Tumlin, he come out—men folks is allers gwine
-some’rs dey got no business. He ’low, ‘What you’all blubberin’ ’bout?’
-I make answer, ‘We er cryin’ over dese two chickens.’ He ax, ‘What two
-chickens?’ I ’low, ‘I’m cryin’ over dis un, kaze it’s so little, an’ Miss
-Vallie cryin’ over de one what you ain’t brung.’ He say, ‘Well, I be
-dang!’ an’ wid dat he went back in de house.
-
-“An’ den, atter supper, such ez ’twuz, here come Hamp, an’ he say he
-come ter lay de law down. I ’speck I like my ol’ man ’bout ez good ez
-any udder ’oman what’s lawfully married, but ef I didn’t put a flea in
-Hamp year dat night you may shoot me dead. Ef he’d ’a’ waited a day er
-two, hit might er been diffunt; but, manlike, he had ter come at de wrong
-time, an’ he ain’t open his mouf ’fo’ I wuz fightin’ mad. Ol’ Miss allers
-use ter tell me I wuz a bad nigger when I got my dander up, but I never
-did look at myse’f dat-a-way twel dat night.
-
-“Well, Hamp he come an’ stood in de do’, but I ain’t say nothin’. Den he
-come in de kitchen, an’ stan’ ’roun’, but still I ain’t say nothin’. Den
-he sot down next de chimbley, but all dat time I ain’t say nothin’. He
-look right pitiful, suh, an’ ef I hadn’t been mad, I’d ’a’ been sorry fer
-’im. But I ain’t say nothin’.
-
-“Bimeby, he ’low, ‘’Nervy’—he allers call me ’Nervy—‘’Nervy, whyn’t you
-go whar you say you gwine?’ I flung myse’f ’roun’ at ’im an’ say, ‘Bekaze
-I ain’t choosen ter go—dar you got it!’ He ’low, ‘Well, you start ter
-go, kaze I seed you!’ I say, ‘Yes, an’ I start ter come back, an’ you’d
-’a’ seed dat ef you’d ’a’ looked right close.’ He ’low, ‘’Nervy, don’t
-you know dem folks in yander’ll think you b’long to um?’ I say, ‘I does.
-Ain’t I free? Can’t I b’long to um ef I wanter? I’d like ter see de one
-ter hender me. What dey done ter you? An’ what’s I done ter you dat you
-want ter drag me ’way fum my white folks? You go drag you’se’f—you can’t
-drag _me_.’ He ’low, ‘Dey done begin ter call you a white-folks nigger,
-an’ dey say you gwine back on yo’ own color.’”
-
-Aunt Minervy Ann paused here to laugh. “Mad ez I wuz, suh, de minnit
-Hamp said dat I know’d I had ter change my chune. I ’low, ‘I know right
-pine-blank who tol’ you dat. ’Twan’t nobody in de roun’ worl’ but ol’
-Cely Ensign, an’ she ain’t tell you dat in comp’ny, needer. She tol’ you
-whar nobody can’t hear ’er but you. Don’t you fret! des ez soon ez I
-git thoo wid supper, I’m gwine ’roun’ dar an’ drag ’er out an’ gi’ ’er
-de wuss frailin’ any nigger ever got sence de overseers quit bizness. I
-ain’t fergot dat ar’ possum you toted off ter her house.’
-
-“Well, suh, I had ’im! He caved in. He ’low, ‘’Twan’t no ’possum; ’twan’t
-nothin’ in de roun’ worl’ but a late watermillion.’ I holler, ‘_Ah-yi!
-watermillion!_ Well, den, ef you want ter drag anybody off fum der white
-folks, go an’ drag ol’ Cely Ensign—bekaze you can’t drag me.’
-
-“We jowered right smart, but I had Hamp in a cornder. He went off an’
-stayed maybe a mont’, an’ den he come back, an’ atter ’while he got
-’lected ter de legislature. He done mighty well, suh. He got nine dollars
-a day, an’ ev’y Sat’dy night he’d fetch de bigges’ part uv it home.
-’Twuz mighty handy, too, suh, kaze ef hadn’t been fer dat legislatur’
-money I dunner what me and Miss Vallie an’ Marse Tumlin would ’a’ done.
-
-“Dat wuz ’bout de time, suh, dat de town boys wanter ku-kluck Hamp, an’
-you an’ Marse Tumlin went out an’ ku-klucked dem. Hamp ain’t never forgot
-it, suh. He’d walk fum here to Atlanty fer you ef ’twould do you any
-good. He don’t say much, but I know how he feel. I hear ’im calling me
-now, suh.”
-
-“You haven’t told me about Paul Conant,” I suggested.
-
-“I’ll tell you, suh, ’fo’ you go.”
-
-In half a minute I heard Aunt Minervy Ann quarrelling and laughing at
-Hamp in the same breath.
-
-
-
-
-IV
-
-HOW SHE JOINED THE GEORGIA LEGISLATURE
-
-
-The second day of the fair, I saw more of Paul Conant. He insisted on
-taking charge of me, and, in his buggy, we visited every part of the
-fair-grounds, which had been laid out on a most liberal scale. When
-dinner-time came I was glad enough to excuse myself and hurry back to the
-refreshing shade of Major Perdue’s veranda. There I found Aunt Minervy
-Ann swinging the baby in a hammock.
-
-“I ’low’d maybe you’d git tired an’ come back, suh; an’ so I des let
-dinner sorter simmer whiles I got dish yer baby ter sleep. I dunner how
-you all does in Atlanty, but down here we has soon dinner. Dem what
-wanter kin have two meals a day, but dem what does sho ’nuff work better
-eat three. Me! I want three, whedder I works er not.”
-
-The baby stirred, and Aunt Minervy paused. At that moment a group of men,
-wearing badges, passed by, evidently officials of the fair going to
-dinner. They were evidently engaged in a very earnest discussion.
-
-“I’m for Conant,” said one, with considerable emphasis.
-
-“Oh, so am I,” assented another. “When Jim told me this morning that he
-was a candidate for the Legislature, I told him flat and plain that I was
-for Paul Conant.”
-
-“That’s right,” remarked a third. “We want a man there with some business
-sense, and Conant’s the man.”
-
-Aunt Minervy Ann laughed. “Ef de Legislatur’ up dar in Atlanty is like it
-wuz when I b’long’d ter it, dey can’t drag Marse Paul in dar; no, suh!
-dey can’t drag him in dar.”
-
-Amazement must have shown in my face, for Aunt Minervy Ann immediately
-became solemn. “Ain’t you never hear tell ’bout my j’inin’ de
-Legislatur’? You may look an’ you may laugh, but dat don’t wipe out de
-trufe. Dey wuz a time when I jined de Legislatur’ an’ when I b’long’d ter
-de gang same ez Hamp did. You don’t ’spute but what Hamp b’long’d ter de
-Legislatur’, suh?” asked Aunt Minervy Ann, anxious to make out the title
-of her own membership. No, I didn’t dispute Hamp’s credentials. He had
-been elected and he had served.
-
-“I know’d you couldn’t ’spute dat, suh,” Aunt Minervy Ann went on,
-“’kaze you wuz down dar when dey choosen’d ’im, an’ you wuz dar when dem
-ar white folks come mighty nigh ku-kluckin’ ’im; you wuz right dar wid
-Marse Tumlin an’ Marse Bolivar. I never is ter fergit dat, suh, ner Hamp
-nudder; an’ ef you don’t b’lieve it, you des sen’ us word you want us. Ef
-we git de word at midnight we’ll git up, an’ ef de railroad track is tore
-up we’ll git a waggin, an’ ef we can’t git a waggin, we’ll walk, but what
-we’ll come.”
-
-“Well,” said I, “tell us about your joining the Legislature.”
-
-“I may be long in tellin’ it, suh, but ’tain’t no long tale,” replied
-Aunt Minervy Ann. “Atter Hamp come up here an’ tuck his seat—dat what dey
-call it den, ef dey don’t call it dat now—well, atter he come up an’ been
-here some little time, I tuck notice dat he ’gun ter hol’ his head mighty
-high; a little too high fer ter suit me. He want me ter go up dar wid ’im
-an’ stay dar, ’kaze he sorter skittish ’bout comin’ home when dem country
-boys mought be hangin’ ’roun’ de depot. But I up an’ tol’ ’im flat an’
-plain dat I wa’n’t gwine ter leave Miss Vallie an’ let er’ git usen ter
-strange niggers. I tol’ ’im he mought go an’ stay ef he want ter, but de
-fus’ week he miss comin’ home, I wuz gwine atter ’im, an’ ef I fotch ’im
-home he won’t go back in a hurry; I tol’ ’im dat, flat an’ plain.
-
-“Well, suh, he done mighty well; I’ll say dat fer ’im. He want too many
-clean shirts an’ collars fer ter suit me, but he say he bleeze ter have
-um dar whar he at, an’ I ain’t make no complaint ’bout dat; but I took
-notice dat he wuz sorter offish wid Marse Tumlin. Mo’ dan dat, I tuck
-notice dat needer Marse Tumlin ner Marse Bolivar so much ez look at ’im
-when dey pass ’im by. I know’d by dat dat sump’n wuz up.
-
-“Now, Hamp ain’t had no reg’lar time fer comin’ home. Sometimes he’d come
-We’n’sday, an’ den ag’in he’d come Friday. I ax ’im why he ain’t stay de
-week out an’ ’ten’ ter his work like he oughter. He say he gettin’ des
-much pay when he at home loafin’ ’roun’ ez he do when he up yer. Well,
-suh, dat ’stonish me. You know yo’se’f, suh, dat when folks is gittin’
-pay fer dat what dey ain’t doin’, dey’s boun’ ter be swindlin’ gwine on
-some’rs, ef not wuss, an’ dat what I tol’ ’im. He laugh an’ say dat’s on
-account er politics an’ de erpublican party, an’ I make answer dat ef
-dat de case, dey er bofe rank an’ rotten; desso.
-
-“We went on fum one thing ter an’er, twel bimeby I ax ’im what dey is
-’twixt ’im an’ Marse Tumlin an’ Marse Bolivar. Hamp say dey ain’t nothin’
-’ceppin’ dat dey done ax ’im fer ter do sump’n dat ain’t in ’cordance
-wid erpublican pencerpuls, an’ he bleeze ter effuse um. Well, suh, dis
-kinder riled me. I know’d right pine-blank dat Hamp ain’t know no mo’
-’bout erpublican pencerpuls dan I is, an’ I wouldn’t a-know’d um ef I’d a
-met um in de road wid der name painted on um; so I ax ’im what erpublican
-pencerpuls hender’d ’im fum doin’ what Marse Tumlin ax ’im ter do. He
-sot dar an’ hummed an’ haw’d, an’ squirm’d in his cheer, an’ chaw’d on
-de een’ er his segyar. I wait long ’nuff, an’ den I ax ’im ag’in. Well,
-suh, dat’s been twenty years ago, an’ he ain’t never tol’ me yit what dem
-erpublican pencerpuls wuz. I ain’t flingin’ off on um, suh. I ’speck dey
-wuz a bairlful er dem erpublican pencerpuls, an’ maybe all good uns, but
-I know’d mighty well dat dey ain’t hender dat nigger man fum doin’ what
-Marse Tumlin ax ’im ter do.
-
-“So de nex’ chance I git, I up’n ax Marse Tumlin what de matter wuz
-’twix’ him an’ Hamp. He say ’twa’n’t nothin’ much, ’cep’ dat Hamp
-had done come up here in Atlanta an’ sol’ hisse’f out to a passel er
-kyarpit-baggers what ain’t no intruss down here but ter git han’s on all
-de money in sight. I say, ‘He may ’a’ gi’ hisse’f ’way, Marse Tumlin, but
-he sho’ ain’t sell hisse’f, ’kaze I ain’t seen one er de money.’ Marse
-Tumlin ’low, ‘Well, anyhow, it don’t make much diffunce, Minervy Ann. Dem
-kyarpit-baggers up dar, dey pat ’im on de back an’ tell ’im he des ez
-good ez what dey is. I had de idee, Minervy Ann,’ he say, ‘dat Hamp wuz
-lots better dan what dey is, but he ain’t; he des ’bout good ez dey is.’
-
-“Marse Tumlin do like he don’t wanter talk ’bout it, but dat ain’t nigh
-satchify me. I say, ‘Marse Tumlin, what did you want Hamp ter do?’ He
-drum on de arm er de cheer wid his fingers, an’ sorter study. Den he say,
-‘Bein’ it’s all done an’ over wid, I don’t min’ tellin’ you all about it.
-Does you know who’s a-runnin’ dis county now?’ I had a kinder idee, but I
-say, ‘Who, Marse Tumlin?’ He ’low, ‘Mahlon Botts an’ his br’er Mose; dey
-er runnin’ de county, an’ dey er ruinin’ it.’
-
-“Den he ax me ef I know de Bottses. Know um! I’d been a-knowin’ um sence
-de year one, an’ dey wuz de ve’y drugs an’ offscourin’s er creation. I
-ax Marse Tumlin how come dey ter have holt er de county, an’ he say dey
-make out dey wuz good erpublicans, des ter make de niggers vote um in
-office—so dey kin make money an’ plunder de county. Den I ax ’im what he
-want Hamp ter do. He say all he want Hamp ter do wuz ter he’p ’im git er
-whatyoumaycallum—yasser, dat’s it, a bill; dat’s de ve’y word he say—he
-want Hamp ter he’p ’im git a bill th’oo de Legislatur’; an’ den he went
-on an’ tell me a long rigamarolious ’bout what ’twuz, but I’ll never tell
-you in de roun’ worl’.”
-
-[The proceedings of the Georgia Legislature reported in the Atlanta _New
-Era_, of November 10, 1869, show that the measure in question was a local
-bill to revive the polling-places in the militia districts of the county
-represented by the Hon. Hampton Tumlin, and to regulate elections so that
-there could be no repeating. This verification of Aunt Minervy Ann’s
-statement was made long ago after she told the story, and purely out of
-curiosity. The discussions shed an illuminating light over her narrative,
-but it is impossible to reproduce them here, even in brief.]
-
-“He tol’ me dat, suh, an’ den he le’nt back in de cheer, an’ kinder
-hummed a chune. An’ me—I stood up dar by de fireplace an’ studied. Right
-den an’ dar I made up my min’ ter one thing, an’ I ain’t never change
-it, needer; I made up my min’ dat ef we wuz all gwine ter be free an’
-live in de same neighborhoods—dat ef we wuz gwine ter do dat, whatsomever
-wuz good fer de white folks bleeze ter be good fer de niggers, an’
-whatsomever wuz good fer Marse Tumlin an’ Miss Vallie wuz des ez good fer
-me an’ Hamp.
-
-“I ’low, ‘Marse Tumlin, when you gwine up dar whar Hamp at?’ He say, ‘Oh,
-I dunno; I’m tired er de infernal place,’ desso. Den he look at me right
-hard. ‘What make you ax?’ sez he. I ’low, ‘’Kaze ef youer gwine right
-soon, I’m gwine wid you.’ He laugh an’ say, ‘What de dickunce you gwine
-up dar fer?’ I ’low, ‘I gwine up dar fer ter jine de Legislatur’. I ain’t
-here tell dat dem what jines hatter be baptize in runnin’ water, an’ ef
-dey ain’t, den I’ll jine long wid Hamp.’ Marse Tumlin say, ‘You reckin
-Hamp would be glad fer to see you, Minervy Ann?’ I ’low, ‘He better had
-be, ef he know what good fer ’im.’ Marse Tumlin say, ‘Ef I wuz you,
-Minervy Ann, I wouldn’t go up dar spyin’ atter Hamp. He’ll like you none
-de better fer it. De las’ time I wuz up dar, Hamp wuz havin’ a mighty
-good time. Ef you know what’s good fer you, Minervy Ann, you won’t go up
-dar a-doggin’ atter Hamp.’
-
-“Well, suh, right at dat time I had de idee dat Marse Tumlin wuz prankin’
-an’ projeckin’; you know how he runs on; but he wa’n’t no mo’ prankin’
-dan what I am right now. (Nummine! I’ll git back ter Hamp terreckly.)
-I laugh an’ say, ‘I ain’t gwine ter dog atter Hamp, Marse Tumlin; I
-des wanter go up dar an’ see how he gittin’ on, an’ fin’ out how folks
-does when dey sets up dar in de Legislatur’. An’ ef you’ll put dat ar
-whatshisname—bill; dat’s right, suh; bill wuz de word—ef you’ll put dat
-ar bill in yo’ pocket, I’ll see what Hamp kin do wid it.’ Marse Tumlin
-’low, ‘’Tain’t no use fer ter see Hamp, Minervy Ann. He done tol’ me he
-can’t do nothin’. I lef’ de bill wid ’im.’
-
-“I say, ‘Marse Tumlin, you dunner nothin’ ’tall ’bout Hamp. He must er
-change mighty sence dey ’fo’ yistidy if he erfuse ter do what I tell ’im
-ter do. Ef dat de case, I’ll go up dar an’ frail ’im out an’ come on back
-home an’ ten’ ter my work.’
-
-“Marse Tumlin look at me wid his eyes half shot an’ kinder laugh way down
-in his stomach. He ’low, ‘Minervy Ann, I been livin’ a long time, an’ I
-been knowin’ a heap er folks, but you er de bangin’est nigger I ever is
-see. Free ez you is, I wouldn’t take two thousan’ dollars fer you, cash
-money. I’ll git Bolivar, an’ we’ll go up dar on de mornin’ train. Vallie
-kin stay wid er aunt. ’Tain’t gwine ter hurt you ter go; I want you ter
-see some things fer yo’se’f.’
-
-“Well, suh, sho’ ’nuff, de nex’ mornin’ me an’ Marse Tumlin an’ Marse
-Bolivar, we got on de train, an’ put out, an’ ’twa’n’t long ’fo’ we wuz
-pullin’ in under de kyar-shed. Dat ’uz de fus’ time I ever is been ter
-dis town, an’ de racket an’ de turmoil kinder tarrify me, but when I see
-’t’er folks gwine ’long ’tendin’ ter der bizness, ’twa’n’t no time ’fo’ I
-tuck heart, ’kaze dar wuz Marse Tumlin an’ Marse Bolivar right at me, an’
-dey wuz bowin’ an’ shakin’ han’s wid mos’ eve’ybody dat come ’long. Dey
-wuz two mighty pop’lous white men, suh; you know dat yo’se’f.
-
-“I ’speck de train must ’a’ got in ’fo’ de Legislatur’ sot down, ’kaze
-when we went th’oo a narrer street an’ turn inter de one what dey call
-Decatur, whar dey carry on all de devilment, I hear Marse Tumlin say dat
-we wuz ’bout a hour too soon. Right atter dat Marse Bolivar say, ‘Tumlin,
-dat ar nigger man ’cross dar wid de gals is got a mighty familious look
-ter me; I done been seed ’im somewhar, sho’.’ Marse Tumlin say, ‘Dat’s
-a fac’; I used ter know dat man some’rs.’ Well, suh, I lookt de way dey
-wuz a-lookin’, an’ dar wuz Hamp! Yassar! Hamp! Hamp an’ two mulatter
-gals. An’ I wish you could ’a’ seed um; I des wish you could! Dar wuz
-Hamp all diked out in his Sunday cloze which I tol’ ’im p’intedly not
-ter w’ar while he workin’ in de Legislatur’. He had a segyar in his mouf
-mos’ ez big an’ ez long ez a waggin-spoke, an’ dar he wuz a-bowin’ an’
-scrapin’, an’ scrapin’ an’ gigglin’, an’ de mulatter gals wuz gigglin’
-an’ snickerin’ an’ squealin’—I _declaire_, Mr. Tumlin! you oughter be
-_’shame_ er yo’se’f; oh, youer too _b-a-a-a-d_!’”
-
-With powers of mimicry unequalled, Aunt Minervy Ann illustrated the
-bowing and scraping of Hamp, and reproduced the shrill but not unmusical
-voices of the mulatto girls.
-
-“I tell you de trufe, suh, whiles you could count ten you might ’a’ pusht
-me over wid a straw, an’ den, suh, my dander ’gun ter rise. I must ’a’
-show’d it in my looks, ’kaze Marse Tumlin laid his han’ on my shoulder
-an’ say, ‘Don’t kick up no racket, Minervy Ann; you got Hamp right whar
-you want ’im. You know what we come fer.’ Well, suh, I hatter stan’ dar
-an’ swaller right hard a time er two, ’kaze I ain’t got no use fer
-mulatters; to make um, you got ter spile good white blood an’ good nigger
-blood, an’ when dey er made dey got in um all dat’s mean an’ low down
-on bofe sides, an’ ef dey yever is ter be saved, dey’ll all hatter be
-baptize twice han’ runnin’—once fer de white dat’s in um, and once fer de
-black. De Bible mayn’t sesso, but common-sense’ll tell you dat much.
-
-“Well, suh, I stood dar some little time watchin’ Hamp’s motions, an’ he
-wuz makin’ sech a big fool er hisse’f dat I des come mighty nigh laughin’
-out loud, but all dat time Marse Tumlin had de idee dat I wuz mad, an’
-when I start to’rds Hamp, wid my pairsol grabbed in de middle, he ’low,
-‘Min’ yo’ eye, Minervy Ann.’ I walk up, I did, an’ punch Hamp in de back
-wid de pairsol. Ef I’d ’a’ hit ’im on de head wid a pile-driver, he
-couldn’t ’a’ been mo’ dum’founder’d. He look like he wuz gwine th’oo’ de
-sidewalk. I say, ‘When you git time, I’d like ter have a little chat wid
-you.’ He ’low, ‘Why, why’—an’ wid dat he stuck de lit een’ er his segyar
-in his mouf. Well, suh, you may b’lieve you done seed splutterin’ an’
-splatterin’, but you ain’t never seed none like dat. He made a motion,
-Hamp did, like he wanter make me ’painted wid de mulatter gals, but I
-say, ‘When you git time fum yo’ Legislatur’, I got a sesso fer you ter
-hear.’
-
-“Wid dat, suh, I turn ’roun’ an’ cross de street an’ foller on atter
-Marse Tumlin an’ Marse Bolivar. I ain’t mo’n git ’cross, ’fo’ here come
-Hamp. He ’low, ‘Why, honey, whyn’t you tell me you wuz comin’? When’d you
-come?’ I say, ‘Oh, I’m _honey_, is I? Well, maybe you’ll fin’ a bee in de
-comb.’ He ’low, ‘Whyn’t you tell me you wuz comin’ so I kin meet you at
-de train?’ I say, ‘I wanter see what kinder fambly you got in dis town.
-An’ I seed it! I seed it!’
-
-“Well, suh, I ’speck I’d ’a’ got mad ag’in, but ’bout dat time we cotch
-up wid Marse Tumlin an’ Marse Bolivar. Marse Tumlin turn ’roun’, he did,
-an’ holler out, ‘Well, ef here ain’t Minervy Ann! What you doin’ up here,
-an’ how did you lef’ yo’ Miss Vallie?’ He shuck han’s des like he ain’t
-see me befo’ in a mont’, an’ Marse Bolivar done de same. I humor’d um,
-suh, but I ain’t know what dey wuz up ter fer long atterwards. Dey don’t
-want Hamp ter know dat I come ’long wid um. Den dey went on, an’ me an’
-Hamp went ter whar he stay at.
-
-“When I got ’im off by hisse’f, suh, he sot in ter tellin’ me how come
-’im ter be wid dem ar gals, an’ he want me ter know um, an’ he know
-mighty well I’d like um—you know how men-folks does, suh. But dey
-wa’n’t na’er minit in no day dat yever broke when Hamp kin fool me,
-an’ he know’d it. But I let ’im run on. Bimeby, when he get tired er
-splanifyin’, I ’low, ‘What dat paper what Marse Tumlin ax you ter put in
-de Legislatur’?’ He say, ‘How you know ’bout dat?’ I ’low, ‘I hear Marse
-Tumlin tellin’ Miss Vallie ’bout it, an’ I hear Miss Vallie wonder an’
-wonder what de matter wid you.’
-
-“I fotch Miss Vallie in, suh, bekaze Hamp think dey ain’t nobody in de
-worl’ like Miss Vallie. One time, des ’fo’ de big turmoil, when Marse
-Tumlin hire Hamp fum de Myrick ’state, he fell sick, an’ Miss Vallie (she
-wa’n’t nothin’ but a school-gal den) she got sorry fer ’im ’kaze he wuz
-a hired nigger, an’ she’d fill a basket wid things fum de white folks’
-table an’ tote um to ’im. Mo’ dan dat, she’d set dar whiles he’s eatin’
-an’ ax ’bout his folks. Atter dat, suh, de groun’ whar Miss Vallie walk
-wuz better’n any yuther groun’ ter Hamp. So when I call her name up, Hamp
-ain’t say nothin’ fer long time.
-
-“Den he shuck his head an’ say dey ain’t no use talkin’, he des can’t
-put dat ar paper in de Legislatur’. He say ef he wuz ter, ’twon’t do no
-good, ’kaze all de erpublicans would jump on it, an’ den dey’d jump on
-him ter boot. I ’low, ‘Whar you reckon I’ll be whiles all dat jumpin’
-gwine on?’ He say, ‘You’ll be on de outside, an’ ef you wuz on de inside,
-dey’d hike you out.’ ‘An’ who’d do de hikin’?’ sez I. ‘De surgeon er de
-armies,’ sez he. ‘White er black?’ sez I. ‘Yaller,’ sez Hamp. I ’low,
-‘Good ’nuff; we’ll see which un’ll be hiked.’ An’ I told Hamp right den
-an’ dar, dat ef he erfuse ter put dat paper in, I’ll do it myse’f.
-
-“Well, suh, whiles we settin’ dar talkin’, dey come a-rappin’ at de do’
-an’ in walk a big bushy-head mulatter, an’ I ain’t tellin’ you no lie, he
-de mos’ venomous-lookin’ creetur you ever laid yo’ eyes on. His ha’r wuz
-all spread out like a scourin’ mop, an’ he had a grin on ’im ez big ez
-dat gate dar. Hamp call ’im Arion Alperiar Ridley.”
-
-At this point I was compelled to come to the rescue of Aunt Minervy
-Ann’s memory. The stateman’s real name was Aaron Alpeora Bradley, and
-he was one of the most corrupt creatures of that corrupt era. He had a
-superficial education that only added to the density of his ignorance,
-but it gave him considerable influence with the negro members of the
-Legislature. Aunt Minervy Ann accepted the correction with alacrity.
-
-“I fergot his name, suh, but I ain’t never fergit him. He so mean-lookin’
-he make de col’ chills run over me. He wuz a low-country mulatter, an’
-you know how dey talk. Eve’y time he look at me, he’d bow, an’ de mo’ he
-bowed de mo’ I ’spized ’im. He call Hamp ‘Mistooah Tummalin,’ an’ eve’y
-time he say sump’n’, he’d gi’ one er dem venomous grins. I declar’ ter
-gracious, suh, I oughtn’t ter talk ’bout dat man dis way, but de way he
-look wuz scan’lous. I done fergive ’im for dat long time ’go on ’count er
-what he done; but when I hear white folks ’busin’ ’im in dat day an’ time
-I know’d dey had mighty good groun’, bekaze dey ain’t no human kin look
-like dat man an’ not be mean at bottom.
-
-“Well, suh, Hamp, he up’n tol’ dis yer Alpory er Alpiry (whatsomever his
-name mought be) what I come ter town fer, an’ Alpory, he say, ‘Mistooah
-Tummalin, you kyarn’t do it. Hit would-er ruin you in de-er party, suh—er
-ruin you.’ I kinder fired up at dat. I ’low, ‘How come he can’t do it?
-Ain’t he free?’ Ol’ Alpory, he grin an’ he talk, he talk an’ he grin, but
-he ain’t budge me. At de offstart I say ef Hamp don’t put dat paper in
-de Legislatur’, I’ll put it in myse’f, an’ at de windin’ up I still say
-dat ef he don’t put Marse Tumlin’s paper in de Legislatur’, den I’ll be
-de one ter do it. Ol’ Alpory say, ‘You-er is got no marster, ma’am.’ Den
-I snapt ’im up an’ cut ’im off short; I say, ‘I got one ef I want one.
-Ain’t I free?’ Den he went on wid a whole passel er stuff dat I can’t
-make head er tail un, ner him needer, fer dat matter, twel bimeby I say,
-‘Oh, hush up an’ go on whar you gwine.’
-
-“Hamp look so broke up at dis dat I wuz kinder sorry I say it, but dat’s
-de only way ter deal wid dem kind er folks, suh. Ol’ Alpory wuz des
-famishin’, suh, fer some un ter b’lieve he’s a big Ike; dat ’uz all de
-matter wid ’im an’ I know’d it. So he quit his jawin’ when I snapped ’im
-up, an’ he sot dar some time lookin’ like a cow does when her cud don’t
-rise. Bimeby he ax Hamp fer ter let ’im see de paper what I want ’im ter
-put in de Legislatur’. He tuck it, he did, an’ look at it sideways an’
-upside down, an’ eve’ywhichaway. Ez ef dat wa’n’t ’nuff, he took off his
-goggles an’ wiped um an’ put um on ag’in, an’ read de paper all over
-ag’in, noddin’ his head an’ movin’ his mouf, an’ grinnin’.
-
-“Atter he got th’oo, he fol’ de paper up an’ han’ it back ter Hamp. He
-say he can’t see no harm in it ter save his life, an’ he ’low dat ef
-Hamp’ll put it in at one een’ er de Legislatur’, he’ll put it in at de
-t’er een’. Dey call one part a house, but nobody ain’t never tell me why
-dey call a wranglin’ gang er men a house. Dey des might ez well call um a
-hoss an’ buggy; eve’y bit an’ grain. Well, suh, de house wuz de part what
-Hamp b’longs ter, an’ de ’t’er part wuz whar ol’ Alpory b’long’d at, an’
-by de time dey wuz ready fer ter set in dar dey had e’en ’bout ’greed fer
-put de paper in at bofe een’s.
-
-“I went ’long wid Hamp, suh, an’ he show’d me de way ter de gall’ry, an’
-I sot up dar an’ look down on um, an’ wonder why all un um, white an’
-black, wa’n’t at home yearnin’ der livin’ ’stidder bein’ in dat place
-a-wranglin’ an’ callin’ names, an’ howlin’ an’ wavin’ der arms an’ han’s.
-Dey wuz a big fat white man settin’ up in de pulpit, an’ he kep’ on
-a-maulin’ it wid a mallet. I dunner what his name wuz, but I hear one big
-buck nigger call ’im Mr. Cheer. Marse Tumlin tol’ me atterwards dat de
-man wuz de speaker, but all de res’ done lots mo’ speakin’ dan what he
-did; all un um ’cep’ Hamp.
-
-“Yasser; all un um ’cep’ Hamp, an’ he sot dar so still dat ’twa’n’t long
-’fo’ I ’gun ter git shame un him. He sot dar an’ fumble wid some papers,
-an’ helt his head down, an’ look like he skeer’d. I watch ’im, suh, twel
-I got so res’less in de min’ I can’t set still. Bimeby I got up an’ went
-down ter de front do’; I wuz gwine ter make my way in dar whar Hamp wuz
-at, an’ kinder fetch ’im out’n his dreams, ef so be he wuz dreamin’. An’
-I’d a gone in, but a nigger man at de do’ barred de way. He say, ‘Who you
-want ter see?’ I ’low, ‘I wanter see Hamp Tumlin, dat’s who.’ He say,
-‘Does you mean de Honnerbul Hampton Tumlin?’ I ’low, ‘Yes, I does ef you
-wanter put it dat away. _Go in dar an’ tell ’im dat de Honnerbul Minervy
-Ann Perdue is out here waitin’ fer ’im, an’ he better come quick ef he
-know what good fer ’im._’
-
-“Wid dat, suh, I hear somebody laugh, an’ look up an’ dar wuz Marse
-Tumlin standin’ not fur fum de do’ talkin’ wid an’er white man. He ’low,
-‘Scott, dis is Minervy Ann. She got mo’ sense an’ grit dan half de white
-folks you meet.’ Well, suh, de man come up, he did, an’ shuck han’s an’
-say he mighty glad ter see me. I never is ter fergit his name on ’count
-er what happen afterwards. ’Bout dat time Hamp come out an’ Marse Tumlin
-an’ de ’t’er man draw’d off up de hall.
-
-“I say, ‘Hamp, why in de name er goodness ain’t you ’ten’ ter yo’
-bizness? What you waitin’ fer? Is you skeer’d?’ He vow an’ declair’ dat
-he des waitin’ a chance fer ter put de paper in. I tol’ ’im dat de way
-ter git a chance wuz ter make one, an’ wid dat he went on in, an’ I went
-back in de gall’ry. Well, suh, ’twa’n’t long ’fo’ Hamp put in de paper.
-A man at de foot er de pulpit read it off, an’ den a white man settin’
-not fur fum Hamp jump up an’ say he want sump’n done wid it, I dunner
-what. Hamp say sump’n back at ’im, an’ den de white man say he sorry fer
-ter see de honnerbul gemman gwine back on de erpublican party. Den Mose
-Bently—I know’d Mose mighty well—he riz an’ say ef de erpublican party
-is got ter be led ’roun’ by men like de one what des tuck his seat, it’s
-high time fer honest folks ter turn der backs on it.
-
-“Well, suh, when Mose say dat, I clap my han’s, I did, an’ holla ‘Good!
-good! now you got it!’ I couldn’t he’p it fer ter save my life. De man
-in de pulpit maul de planks wid de mallet like he tryin’ ter split um,
-an’ he ’low dat ef folks in de gall’ry don’t keep still, he’ll have um
-cle’r’d out. I holla back at ’im, ‘You better some er dat gang down dar
-cle’r’d out!’ Quick ez a flash, suh, dat ar Mr. Scott what been talkin’
-wid Marse Tumlin jump up an’ ’low, ‘I secon’s de motion!’ De man in de
-pulpit say, ‘What motion does de gemman fum Floyd secon’?’ Den Mr. Scott
-fling his head back an’ low, ‘De Honnerbul Minervy Ann Perdue done move
-dat de flo’ be cle’r’d ’stidder de gall’ry. I secon’s de motion.’
-
-“Den fum dat he went on an’ ’buze de erpublican party, speshually dat ar
-man what had de ’spute wid Hamp. Mr. Scott say dey got so little sense
-dat dey go ag’in a paper put in by one er der own party. He say he ain’t
-keer nothin’ ’tall ’bout de paper hisse’f, but he des wanter show um up
-fer what dey wuz.
-
-“He totch’d um, suh, ez you may say, on de raw, an’ when he git th’oo
-he say, ‘Now, I hope de cheer will deal wid de motion of de Honnerbul
-Minervy Ann Perdue.’ Mr. Scott say, ‘She settin’ up dar in de gall’ry an’
-she got des ez much right ter set on dis flo’ ez nineteen out er twenty
-er dem settin’ here.’ De man in de pulpit look at me right hard, an’ den
-he ’gun ter laugh. I say, ‘You nee’n ter worry yo’se’f ’bout me. You
-better ’ten’ ter dem ar half-drunk niggers an’ po’ white trash down dar.
-I wouldn’t set wid ’em ef I never did fin’ a place fer ter set at.’
-
-“Wid dat, suh, I pickt up my pairsol an’ make my way out, but ez I went I
-hear um whoopin’ an’ hollerin’.”
-
-“Well, they didn’t pass the bill, did they?” I asked.
-
-“What? dat paper er Marse Tumlin’s? Bless yo’ soul, suh, dey run’d over
-one an’er tryin’ ter pass it. Mr. Scott fit it like he fightin’ fire,
-an’ make out he wuz terribly ag’in it, but dat des make um wuss. Hamp
-say dat inginer’lly dem ar laws has ter wait an’ hang fire; but dey tuck
-up dat un, an’ shove it th’oo. Dey tuck mo’ time in de ’t’er een’ er de
-Legislatur’, whar ol’ Alpory wuz at, but it went th’oo when it start.
-I hope dey don’t have no sech gwines-on now, suh. Ef dey does de whole
-county can’t drag Paul Conant in dar. I’ll jine um myse’f, ’fo’ I’ll let
-’im git in dat kind er crowd.”
-
-
-
-
-V
-
-HOW SHE WENT INTO BUSINESS
-
-
-Aunt Minervy Ann’s picturesque reminiscences were sufficiently amusing
-to whet my appetite for more. The county fair, which was the occasion of
-my visit to Halcyondale, was still dragging its slow length along, but
-it had lost its interest for me. The displays in the various departments
-were as attractive as ever to those who saw them for the first time,
-but it seemed to me that all my old acquaintances, or their wives and
-daughters, had something on exhibition, and nothing must do but I must
-go around and admire it. A little of this goes far, and, as I had been
-through the various departments a dozen times over, I concluded that it
-would be more comfortable to remain away from the grounds altogether,
-making more room for those who desired to see the judges deliver the
-prizes, or who were anxious to witness the trotting matches and running
-races.
-
-Therefore, when Major Tumlin Perdue (whose guest I was) and his
-daughter, Mrs. Conant, made an early start for the fair grounds, on the
-fourth day, I excused myself, on the plea of having some letters to
-write. The excuse was readily accepted, especially by Major Perdue, who
-expressed a very strong hope that I would do the fair justice in the
-Atlanta newspapers.
-
-“If you can put in a word about Paul Conant, I’d be glad if you’d do it,”
-the Major added. “He’s come mighty near working himself down to get the
-blamed thing a-going. If it wasn’t on account of Paul, me and Valentine
-wouldn’t go any closer to the fair grounds than we are right now. But we
-think maybe we can help Paul, and if we can’t do that, we hope to keep
-him from running his legs off. He ain’t well a bit. Vallie says he didn’t
-sleep more than two hours last night for the pains in his shoulder.”
-
-“It seems to be an old trouble,” I suggested.
-
-“Yes, it’s an old trouble,” replied the Major. Then he looked over the
-tree-tops and sighed.
-
-Here was the same air of mystery that I had observed when I first came,
-and I remembered that Aunt Minervy Ann had begun to tell me about it when
-she became entangled in her reminiscences. Therefore, when they were
-all gone, and Aunt Minervy Ann had cleaned up the house and coaxed the
-Conant baby to sleep (which was no hard thing to do, he was such a fat
-and good-humored little rascal), I ventured to remind the old negress
-that she had neglected to tell me why the Major and his daughter were so
-mysteriously solicitous about Paul Conant’s shoulder.
-
-“Well, de goodness knows!” Aunt Minervy Ann exclaimed, with well-affected
-surprise; “ain’t I done tell you ’bout dat? I sho’ wuz dreamin’, den,
-bekaze I had it right on de tip-eend er my tongue. I dunno what got de
-matter wid me deze days, less’n I’m gettin’ ol’ an’ light-headed. Well,
-suh! an’ I ain’t tol’ you ’bout dat!”
-
-She paused, as if reflecting, but continued to rock the baby’s cradle
-gently, moving it slower and slower, until, finally, she ceased to move
-it altogether. The baby merely gave a self-satisfied sigh, and settled
-into the profound and healthy sleep of infancy. Then Aunt Minervy Ann
-went out on the back porch, and seated herself on the top step. I
-followed, and found the rocking-chair I had occupied on a former occasion.
-
-“I’ll set here, suh, twel Hamp gits back wid de carriage, an’ den I’ll
-see ’bout gittin’ dinner, an’ he better make ’as’e, too, bekaze I ain’t
-got no time ter set here an’ lis’n at dat baby, whiles he projickin’ out
-dar at dem grounds. I kin wait, suh, but I can’t wait all day.”
-
-“Major Perdue said that Mr. Conant’s shoulder was very painful last
-night,” I suggested.
-
-“Dat what Miss Vallie say, suh. She say dey wuz up an’ down wid ’im
-mighty nigh all night long. I don’t blame um, suh, but, dey ain’t no
-use talkin’, grown folks kin be waited on twey dey er sp’iled same ez
-chilluns. I’d cut my tongue out, suh, ’fo’ I’d say it ter anybody else,
-but I done got ter b’lievin’ dat Marse Paul Conant grunts an’ groans many
-a time des bekaze he wants somebody fer ter worry wid ’im an’ honey ’im
-up. I may be doin’ ’im wrong, suh, but I done get a sneakin’ notion dat
-he’s one er deze yer kinder men-folks what likes to be much’d an’ petted.
-An’ dey’ll do it, suh—dey’ll much ’im night er day, hot er col’. Des let
-’im say, ‘Oh, my shoulder!’ an’ bofe un um’ll try ter outdo de udder in
-takin’ keer un ’im.
-
-[Illustration: “Oh, my shoulder!”]
-
-“Marse Tumlin is got mo’ ways like a ’oman dan any man I ever is laid
-eyes on. It’s de Lord’s trufe. He ain’t fussy like de common run er
-wimmen, but his han’ is des ez light an’ his heart des ez saft ez any
-’oman dat ever breave de breff er life, let er breave whence an’ whar she
-mought. I look at ’im sometimes, an’ I des nat’ally tease myse’f ter
-know how dat man kin stan’ up an’ shoot anybody like I done see ’im do.
-Hit’s de same way wid Marse Bolivar Blasengame—you know him, I spec. Dey
-married sisters, suh, an’ dey allers been monstus thick. Dem two wuz big
-dogs ’roun’ here, suh, ’fo’ de war. Ef you ain’t never seed um in dem
-days, you never is ter know how folks looked up to um an’ give way to um.
-
-“But dey ain’t put on no airs, suh. Dey des do like de quality all do.
-’Tain’t money dat makes de quality; hit’s dat ar kinder breedin’ what’ll
-make de finest folks stop an’ shake han’s wid a nigger des ez quick ez
-dey would wid de king er Rooshy—ef dey got any king dar. Long ’fo’ de
-turmoil, suh, endurin’ er de farmin’ days, ’twuz des dat-a-way. When he
-’uz at his richest, Marse Tumlin never did pass a nigger on de road, no
-matter how lonesome an’ ragged he look, widout stoppin’ an’ axin’ who he
-b’long ter, an’ what he name, an’ how he gittin’ on. An’ he allers gi’ um
-sump’n, maybe a piece er terbacker, er maybe a thrip. I know, suh; I done
-hear my color talk, an’ dey talks it down ter dis ve’y day. Dey ain’t
-never been a time in dat man’s life when he ain’t think mo’ er somebody
-else dan what he think er hisse’f. Dat’s what I call de quality, suh.
-’Tain’t money; ’tain’t land; ’tain’t fine duds; ’tain’t nothin’ ’tall
-like dat. I tell you, suh, dem what want ter be de quality is got ter
-have a long line er big graveyards behime um, an’ dem graveyards is
-got ter be full er folks what use ter know how ter treat yuther folks.
-Well, suh, Marse Tumlin is got um behime him, an’ dey retch fum here ter
-Ferginny an’ furder. An’ on dat account, he ain’t ’shame’ to show nobody
-dat he love um, an’ he ain’t afear’d ter tell nobody dat he hate um.
-
-“I bet you right now, suh, ef you wuz ter ax Miss Vallie ef she ever see
-’er pa mad, she’d look at you like she ain’t know what you talkin’ ’bout.
-Fum de time she has been born, suh, down ter dis ve’y day, she ain’t
-never hear a cross word come from his mouf. She’s seed ’im frownin’ an’
-she’s seed ’im frettin’, but she ain’t never hear no cross word. An’ dat
-what make I say what I does. ’Tain’t nobody but de quality dat kin show
-der breedin’ right in der own fambly.”
-
-“Why, I’ve heard that the Major has something of a temper,” I remarked.
-
-[Illustration: “Marse Tumlin never did pass a nigger on de road.”]
-
-“_Temper!_” exclaimed Aunt Minervy Ann, holding up both hands; “temper, I
-hear you say! Well, suh, dat ain’t no name fer it. I done seed bad men,
-but Marse Tumlin is de wuss man when he git his dander up dat I yever
-come ’cross in all my born days. De fust time I seed ’im mad, suh, wuz
-right atter de folks come home fum der fightin’ and battlin’. It make me
-open my eyes. I been livin’ wid ’im all dem years, an’ I never is know
-how servigrous dat man is.
-
-“An’ de funny part wuz, suh, dat he got mad ’bout a ole nigger ’oman.”
-Aunt Minervy Ann paused to indulge in a very hearty laugh. “Yasser, all
-’bout a ole nigger ’oman. In dem times we all had ter scuffle ’roun’
-right smart fer ter git vittles ter eat, let ’lone cloze ter w’ar. Miss
-Vallie wuz w’arin’ a frock what her mammy had when she wuz a gal. An’ de
-clof wuz right good an’ look’ mighty well on ’er. Ez fer me, I dunner
-whedder I had on any frock—ef I did ’twuz ’bout ter drap off’n me. ’Long
-’bout dat time, court-week wuz comin’ on, de fust court-week we had sence
-de folks come home fum battlin’. Dey wuz a great miration ’bout it,
-bekaze dey say ev’ybody gwine ter come an’ see de lawyers rastle.
-
-“Well, suh, it come ’cross my min’ dat ef I kin bake some ginger-cakes
-an’ make some chicken-pies, maybe I kin pick up a little money. De dime
-an’ thrip species had all done gone, but dey wuz oodles er shinplasters
-floatin’ ’roun’ ef you had sump’n fer ter git um wid. I dunner whar in
-de worl’ we got ’nuff flour an’ ’lasses fer ter make de cakes. I know I
-got one chicken, an’ Hamp he went off one night and borried two mo’. I
-ain’t ax ’im whar he borry um, suh, bekaze ’twan’t none er my business.
-We made de cakes, an’ den we made de pies. Ef you ain’t know how ter make
-um, suh, you’d be ’stonished ter know how fur dem ar chickens went. We
-made twelve pies ef we made one. Yasser! ez sho’ ez I’m settin’ here. We
-strung um out—a wing here, a piece er de back dar, an’ a neck yonner.
-Twelve pies, suh, an’ nuff chicken lef’ over fer ter gi’ Miss Vallie a
-right smart bait; an’ de Lord knows she need it, an’ need it bad.
-
-“Well, suh, I make de ginger-cakes de week ’fo’ court, bekaze it he’ps a
-ginger-cake ef you bake ’im an’ den shet ’im up in a tight box whar he
-kin sweat, an’ Monday we sot in ter bake de pies. I make de dough wid my
-own han’s, an’ I lef’ Miss Vallie fer ter bake um, wid Hamp ter keep de
-fire gwine. De word wuz dat ’bout half-pas’ ten Hamp wuz ter fetch me all
-de pies dey had ready, an’ den go back fer de yuthers.
-
-[Illustration: “We made twelve pies ef we made one.”]
-
-“I ain’t say nothin’ ’bout de balance er de cakes; bekaze I ’low’d ter
-myse’f dat I had ’nuff. I had many ez I kin tote widout gittin’ tired,
-an’ I ain’t no baby when it comes ter totin’ cakes. Well, suh, I been
-livin’ a mighty long time, but I ain’t never see folks wid such a cravin’
-fer ginger-cakes. Fum de word go dey wuz greedy fer ’m. Hit mought er
-been ’kaze dey wuz des natchally hongry, en den ag’in hit mought er been
-bekaze de cakes call up ol’ times; but no matter ’bout dat, suh, dey des
-showered de shinplasters down on me. ’Twa’n’t de country folks doin’
-de most er de buyin’ at fust. It ’uz de town boys an’ de clerks in de
-stores; an’ mos’ ’fo’ I know’d it de cakes wuz all gone, an’ Hamp ain’t
-come wid de pies.
-
-“I would ’a’ waited, suh, but dey kep’ callin’ fer cakes so ravenous dat
-bimeby I crumpled my shinplasters up in a wad an’ tuck my basket an’ went
-polin’ home fer ter hurry Hamp up. He wuz des gittin’ ready ter start
-when I got dar. I gi’ Miss Vallie de money—you kin count it up yourse’f,
-suh; ’twuz fer fo’ dozen ginger-cakes at a thrip a-piece—an’ tol’ her
-ter sen’ Hamp atter some mo’ flour an’ ’lasses ’fo’ night, ’kaze de
-ginger-cakes half-gone an’ court-week ain’t skacely open up. Hamp, he
-tuck de pies an’ de cakes, an’ I got me one er de low cheers out’n de
-kitchen, ’kaze I done tired er settin’ on de een’ uv a box.
-
-“I ’speck you know right whar I sot at, suh; ’twuz dar by dat big
-chany-tree front er Sanford’s sto’. Hit sho’ wuz a mighty tree. De win’
-done blow’d up an’ blew’d it down, but de stump stan’in’ dar sproutin’
-right now. Well, suh, right under de shadder er dat tree, on de outer
-aidge er de sidewalk, I tuck my stan’, an’ I ain’t been dar long ’fo’ de
-folks ’gun ter swarm atter my cakes, an’ den when dey seed my pies—well!
-hit look like dey fair dribble at de mouf.
-
-“I sol’ um all ’cep’ one, an’ ef I’d ’a’ sol’ dat un, I don’t ’speck
-dey’d ’a’ been any trouble; but you know what a fool a nigger kin be,
-suh, speshually a nigger ’oman. I tuck a notion in my min’ dat I done so
-pow’ful well, I’d save dat pie fer Marse Tumlin an’ Miss Vallie. So ev’y
-time somebody’s come ’long an’ want ter buy de pie, I’d up an’ say it
-done sold.
-
-“Bimeby, who should come ’long but dat ar Salem Birch! He dead now, but
-I ’speck you done hear talk un ’im, bekaze he made matters mighty hot in
-deze parts twel—twel—well, suh, twel he ’gun ter hone atter dat pie, ez
-you may say.” Aunt Minervy Ann paused and rubbed her hands together, as
-if reflecting. Then she shook her head and laughed somewhat doubtfully.
-
-[Illustration: “I gi’ Miss Vallie de money.”]
-
-“What dey want ter name ’im Salem fer, I’ll never tell you. Hit’s a
-Bible name, an’ mo’ dan dat, hit’s a church name. You know it yo’se’f,
-suh, bekaze dey’s a Salem church not mo’n sev’m mile fum whar we settin’
-at right now. _Salem_ Birch! Hit bangs my time how some folks kin go
-on—an’ I ain’t nothin’ but a nigger. Dey’s mo’ chillun ruint by der
-names, suh, dan any udder way. I done notice it. Name one un um a Bible
-name, an’ look like he bleedze ter go wrong. Name one un um atter some
-high an’ mighty man, an’ dey grows up wid des ’bout much sense ez a
-gate-post. I done watch um, suh.
-
-“I ’speck dis yer Salem Birch would ’a’ been a right good man but fer dat
-ar Bible name. Dat ruint ’im. I don’t b’lieve dey’s a man in de worl’
-what kin walk straight under dat name less’n he done been called fer ter
-be a preacher, an’ Salem Birch ain’t had no sech call up ter dat time.
-Dat much I know.
-
-“Well, suh, dar sot de pie, an’ dar wuz de ginger-cakes, ol’ timers,
-big ter look at, but light ter handle. Eve’ybody want de pie, but my
-min’ done made up. Some bought cakes stidder de pie, an’ some des wipe
-der mouf an’ go on. But, bimeby, here come Salem Birch, six feet high,
-an’ his hat sot on de side er his haid like he done bought de whole
-town. I know’d de minnit I laid eyes on ’im dat he had dram in ’im, an’
-dat he wuz up ter some devilment. Him an’ his bre’r, Bill-Tom, suh,
-had tarryfied de whole county. Dey wuz constant a-fightin’, an’ ef dey
-couldn’t git nobody else ter fight, dey’d fight ’mongst deyse’f. Yassir!
-dem ar Birches had done whip der own daddy.
-
-“An’ yit, suh, dis yer Salem wa’n’t no bad-lookin’ man. He had long curly
-ha’r, an’ he wuz constant a-laughin’. Ef de fac’ troof wuz ter come out,
-I ’speck he had more devilment in ’im dan downright meanness; an’ he wuz
-mean nuff, de Lord knows. But, be sech as it mought, bimeby here he come,
-sorter half tip-toein’, like some folks do when dey feel der dram an’
-dunner how ter show it. He stop right front er me, suh, an’ time his eye
-fell on me he sung out:
-
-“‘_Whoopee! Ef here ain’t ol’ Minervy Ann! Wid pies! An’ cakes! Come on,
-boys! Have some pies! An’ cakes!_’
-
-[Illustration: “Ef here ain’t ol’ Minervy Ann wid pies!”]
-
-“Well, suh, you mought er heer’d ’im a mile. He holler des like de
-She’ff do when he stick his haid out’n de court-house winder an’ call
-somebody in ter court—des dat ve’y way. He say, ‘How much you take fer
-yo’ chicken-pie?’ I ’low, ‘Hit done sol’, suh.’ He say, ‘I’ll gi’ you a
-quarter fer dat pie.’ I ’low, ‘De pie done sol’, suh.’ By dat time dey
-wuz a right smart clump er folks come up fer see what Salem Birch wuz
-holl’in’ ’bout, an’ you know yo’se’f, suh, how a half-drunk man’ll do
-when dey’s a crowd lis’nin’ at him.
-
-“He say, ‘Who done bought dat pie?’ I ’low, ‘Marse Tumlin Perdue.’ He
-sorter draw’d hisse’f up, he did, an’ say, ‘Ain’t I des ez good ez Tumlin
-Perdue?’ I ’low, ‘I ain’t know nothin’ ter de contrary, suh, but ef you
-is, you got ter be a monstus good man.’ He say, ‘I is! I’m de bes’ man in
-de county.’ I ’low, ‘Dat may be, suh; I ain’t ’sputin’ it.’ By dat time
-I ’gun ter feel de Ol’ Boy kinder ranklin’ in my gizzard. He say, ‘Why
-can’t I git dat pie?’ I ’low, ‘Bekaze it done sol’, suh.’ He say, ‘Fer
-cash?’ I ’low, ‘No, suh; but Marse Tumlin’s word is lots better’n some
-folks’ money.’
-
-“Well, suh, I know’d ’fo’ I open my mouf dat I ought’n ter say dat, but
-I couldn’t he’p it fer ter save my neck. He say, ‘Well, blast yo’ black
-hide, my money’s better’n anybody’s money!’ Wid dat he flung down a
-shinplaster quarter an’ retch fer de pie. By de time he grabbed it, I
-grabbed it, an’ he pulled an’ I pulled. I dunner whedder ’twuz de strenk
-in me er de dram in ’im, but in de pullin’, de box what de pie wuz on
-turnt over, an’ my cheer turnt over, an’ down come Salem Birch right
-spang on top er me.
-
-“I tell you now, suh, dis skeer’d me. ’Twuz mo’ dan I bargain fer. Right
-at de minnit, I had de idee dat de man had jumped on me an’ wuz gwine
-ter kill me—you know how some folks is ’bout niggers. So I des give one
-squall——
-
-“‘_Marse Tumlin! Run here, Marse Tumlin! He killin’ me! Oh, Marse
-Tumlin!_’
-
-“Well, suh, dey tell me dat squall wuz so inhuman it made de country
-hosses break loose fum de racks. One white lady at de tavern hear it, an’
-she had ter be put ter bed. Bless yo’ soul, honey! don’t never say you
-done hear anybody blate twel you hear ol’ Minervy Ann—an’ de Lord knows I
-hope you won’t never hear me.
-
-“Dey ain’t no use talkin’, suh, hit ’larmed de town. Eve’ybody broke an’
-run to’rds de place whar de fuss come fum. Salem Birch got up des ez
-quick ez he kin, an’ I wuz up des ez quick ez he wuz, an’ by dat time my
-temper done run my skeer off, an’ I des blazed out at him. What I say
-I’ll never tell you, bekaze I wuz so mad I ain’t never hear myse’f talk.
-Some say I called ’im dis an’ some say I called ’im dat, but whatsomever
-’twuz, hit wa’n’t no nice name—I kin promise you dat.
-
-[Illustration: “You see dat nigger ’oman?”]
-
-“’Twus ’nuff ter rise his dander, an’ he draw’d back his arm fer ter hit
-me, but des ’bout dat time Marse Tumlin shoved ’im back. Marse Tumlin
-’low, ‘You dirty dog! You sneakin’, nasty houn’! is dis de way you does
-yo’ fightin’?’
-
-“Well, suh, dis kinder skeer me ag’in, kaze I hear talk dat Salem Birch
-went ’bout wid dirks an’ pistols on ’im, ready fer ter use um. He look
-at Marse Tumlin, an’ his face got whiter an’ whiter, an’ he draw’d his
-breff, deep an’ long.
-
-“Marse Tumlin ’low, ‘You see dat nigger ’oman? Well, ef she wuz blacker
-dan de hinges er hell’—he say dem ve’y words, suh—‘ef she wuz blacker dan
-de hinges er hell, she’d be whiter dan you er any er yo’ thievin’ gang.’
-An’ den, suh—I ’clar’ I’m mos’ shame ter tell you—Marse Tumlin rise up on
-his tip-toes an’ spit in de man’s face. Yasser! Right spang in his face.
-You may well look ’stonish’d, suh. But ef you’d ’a’ seed de way Marse
-Tumlin looked you’d know why Salem Birch ain’t raise his han’ ’cep’ ter
-wipe his face. Ef dey ever wuz blood an’ killin’ in anybody’s eyes, hit
-wuz in Marse Tumlin’s right dat minnit. He stan’ dar while you kin count
-ten, an’ den he snap his thumb an’ turn on his heel, an’ dat ar Salem
-Birch tuck’n walk ’cross de public squar’ an’ sot down on de court-house
-steps, an’ he sot dar, suh, wid his haid ’twix’ his han’s fer I dunner
-how long.
-
-“Well, suh, I know in reason dat de een’ er dat business ain’t come. You
-know how our white folks is; you kin spit in one man’s face an’ he not
-take it up, but some er his kinnery er his frien’s is sho ter take it
-up. So I say ter myse’f, ‘Look here, nigger ’oman, you better keep yo’
-mouf shot an’ bofe eyes open, kaze dey gwine ter be hot times in deze
-diggin’s.’ When I come ter look at um, suh, my ginger-cakes wa’n’t hurt,
-an’ de chicken-pie wuz safe an’ soun’ ’cep’ dat er little er de gravy had
-sorter run out. When I git thoo brushin’ an’ cleanin’ um, I look up, I
-did, an’ dar wuz Marse Bolivar Blasengame walkin’ up an’ down right close
-at me. You oughter know ’im, suh, him an’ Marse Tumlin married sisters,
-an’ dey wuz ez thick ez two peas in a pod. So I ’low, ‘Won’t you have a
-ginger-cake, Marse Bolivar? I’d offer you de pie, but I’m savin’ dat fer
-Miss Vallie.’ He say he don’t b’lieve his appetite run ter cakes an’ pies
-right dat minnit. Dat make me eye ’im, suh, an’ he look like he mighty
-glum ’bout sump’n. He des walk up an’ down, up an’ down, wid his han’s in
-his pockets. It come back ter me atterwards, but I ain’t pay no ’tention
-den, dat de folks all ’roun’ town wuz kinder ’spectin’ anudder fuss. Dey
-wuz all standin’ in clumps here an’ dar, some in de middle er de street,
-an’ some on de sidewalks, but dey wa’n’t nobody close ter me ’cep’ Marse
-Bolivar. Look like dey wuz givin’ us elbow room.
-
-[Illustration: “An’ he sot dar, suh, wid his haid ’twix’ his han’s fer I
-dunner how long.”]
-
-“De bigges’ clump er folks, suh, wuz down at de public well, at de fur
-side er de squar’, an’ I notice dey kep’ movin’, now dis way, an’ now
-dat, sorter swayin’ like some un wuz shovin’ um ’bout an’ pushin’ um
-’roun’. An’ dat des de way it wuz, ’kaze ’twa’n’t long ’fo’ somebody
-broke loose fum um an’ come runnin’ to’rds whar I wuz settin’ at.
-
-“I know’d in a minnit, suh, dat wuz Bill-Tom Birch. He wuz holdin’ his
-han’ on his wes’cut pocket fer ter keep his watch fum fallin’ out. He
-come runnin’ up, suh, an’ he wuz so mad he wuz cryin’. His face wuz
-workin’ des like it hurted ’im. He holler at me. ‘Is you de——?’ I won’t
-name de name what he call me, suh. But I know ef he’d ’a’ been a nigger
-I’d ’a’ got up fum dar an’ brained ’im. I ain’t say nothin’. I des sot
-dar an’ look at ’im.
-
-“Well, suh, he jerk a cowhide fum under his cloze—he had it run down his
-britches leg, an’ say, ‘I’ll show you how you _erfuse_ ter sell pies when
-a gemman want ter buy um.’ I dunner what I’d ’a’ done, suh, ef he’d ’a’
-hit me, but he ain’t hit me. Marse Bolivar walk right ’twix’ us an’ ’low,
-‘You’ll settle dis wid me, right here an’ now.’ Wid dat, Bill-Tom Birch
-step back an’ say, ‘Colonel, does you take it up?’ Marse Bolivar ’low,
-‘Dat’s what I’m here fer.’ Bill-Tom Birch step back a little furder and
-make as ef ter draw his pistol, but his han’ ain’t got ter his pocket
-’fo’ _bang!_ went Marse Bolivar’s gun, an’ down went Bill-Tom Birch, des
-like somebody tripped ’im up.
-
-“I know mighty well, suh, dat I ain’t no hard-hearted nigger—anybody what
-know me will tell you dat—but when dat man drapt, I ain’t keer no mo’ dan
-ef he’d ’a’ been a mad dog. Dat’s de Lord’s trufe, ef I ever tol’ it. I
-ain’t know wharbouts de ball hit ’im, an’ I wa’n’t keerin’. Marse Bolivar
-ain’t move out’n he tracks. He stood dar, he did, an’ bresh de cap off’n
-de bairl what shot, an’ fix it fer ter shoot ag’in. ’Twuz one er deze yer
-ervolvers, suh, what move up a notch er two when you pull de trigger.
-
-[Illustration: “You’ll settle dis wid me.”]
-
-“Well, suh, time de pistol went off, folks come runnin’ fum eve’ywhars.
-Salem Birch, he come runnin’ ’cross de public squar’, bekaze he had de
-idee dat sump’n done happen. Marse Bolivar, he see Salem Birch a-comin’,
-an’ he walk out fum de crowd ter meet ’im. Dat make me feel sorter
-quare, kaze hit look like he wuz gwine ter shoot de man down. But Salem
-Birch seed ’im, an’ he stop an’ say, ‘Colonel, what de name er God is de
-matter?’ Marse Bolivar make answer, ‘Salem, I had ter shoot yo’ bre’r.’
-Salem Birch say, ‘Is he dead?’ Marse Bolivar ’spon’, ‘He ain’t nigh dead.
-I put de ball ’twix’ de hip an’ de knee-j’int. He’ll be up in a week.’
-Salem Birch say, ‘Colonel, I thank you fer dat. Will you shake han’s?’
-Marse Bolivar say dey ain’t nothin’ suit ’im better, bekaze he ain’t got
-a thing ag’in’ de Birches.
-
-“An’ ’twuz des like Marse Bolivar say. Bill-Tom Birch wuz wuss skeer’d
-dan hurt, an’ ’twa’n’t long ’fo’ he wuz well. Salem Birch, he went off
-ter Texas, an’ dem what been dar an’ come back, say dat he’s one er
-deze yer ervival preachers, gwine ’bout doin’ good an’ takin’ up big
-collections. Dat what dey say, an’ I hope it’s des dat way. I don’t
-begrudge nobody de money dey makes preachin’ ter sinners, bekaze hit’s
-des natchally w’arin’ ter de flesh.”
-
-At this juncture Aunt Minervy Ann called to Hamp and informed him, in
-autocratic tones, that it was time to cut wood with which to cook dinner.
-
-“I don’t keer ef you is been ter de legislatur’,” she added, “you better
-cut dat wood, an’ cut it quick.”
-
-I suggested that she had started to tell me about Paul Conant’s shoulder,
-but had neglected to do so.
-
-“Ain’t I tell you ’bout dat? Well, ef dat don’t bang my time! Hamp, you
-hear dat? You better go an’ make ’rangements fer ter have me put in de
-as’lum, bekaze I sho’ I’s gittin’ light-headed. Well, suh, dat beats all!
-But I’ll tell you ’bout it ’fo’ you go back.”
-
-Then Aunt Minervy Ann went to see about dinner.
-
-
-
-
-VI
-
-HOW SHE AND MAJOR PERDUE FRAILED OUT THE GOSSETT BOYS
-
-
-During the progress of the fair, there was some discussion of financial
-matters in Major Perdue’s family. As I remember, someone had given Paul
-Conant a check which was thrown out by the Atlanta bank on which it was
-drawn. The sum was not a considerable one, but it was sufficiently large
-to attract Aunt Minervy Ann’s attention.
-
-“I ’speck dey got mo’ banks in Atlanty dan what we-all got down here,”
-she remarked, the next time I had an opportunity to talk with her. She
-laughed so heartily as she made the remark that I regarded her with some
-astonishment. “You may look, suh, but I ain’t crazy. When I hear anybody
-say ‘bank’ it allers puts me in min’ er de time when me an’ Marse Tumlin
-frailed out de Gossett boys.”
-
-“Frailed out the Gossett boys?” I exclaimed.
-
-“Yasser, frailed is de word.”
-
-“But what has that to do with a bank?” I inquired.
-
-“Hit got all ter do wid it, suh,” she replied. We were in the
-sitting-room, and Aunt Minervy Ann sank down on a footstool and rested
-one arm on the lounge. “Right atter freedom dey wa’n’t nothin’ like no
-bank down whar we live at; you know dat yo’se’f, suh. Folks say dat banks
-kin run widout money, but ’fo’ you start um, dey got ter have money, er
-sump’n dat look like money. An’ atter freedom dey wa’n’t no money ’roun’
-here ’cep’ dat kin’ what nobody ain’t hankerin’ atter.
-
-“But bimeby it ’gun ter dribble in fum some’rs; fus’ dem ar little
-shinplasters, an’ den de bigger money come ’long. It kep’ on dribblin’
-in an’ dribblin’ in twel atter while you could git a dollar here an’ dar
-by workin’ yo’ han’s off, er spraining’ yo’ gizzard to git it. Bimeby de
-news got norated ’roun’ dat ol’ Joshaway Gossett gwine ter start a bank.
-Yasser! ol’ Joshaway Gossett. Dat make folks open der eyes an’ shake der
-head. I ’member de time, suh, when ol’ Joshaway wuz runnin’ a blacksmith
-shop out in de country. Den he sot in ter make waggins. Atter dat, he
-come ter be overseer fer Marse Bolivar Blasengame, but all de time he
-wuz overseein’ he wuz runnin’ de blacksmith shop an’ de waggin fact’ry.
-
-“When de war come on, suh, dey say dat ol’ Joshaway tuck all de money
-what he been savin’ an’ change it inter gol’; de natchul stuff. An’ he
-had a pile un it. He kep’ dat up all endurin’ er de turmoil, and by de
-time freedom come out he had mo’ er de natchul stuff dan what Cyarter
-had oats. Dat what folks say, suh, an’ when eve’ybody talk one way you
-may know dey ain’t fur fum de trufe. Anyhow, de word went ’roun’ dat ol’
-Joshaway gwine ter start a bank. Folks wa’n’t ’stonished ’kaze he had
-money, but bekaze he gwine ter start a bank, an’ he not much mo’ dan
-knowin’ B fum bullfoot. Some snicker, some laugh, an’ some make fun er
-ol’ Joshaway, but Marse Tumlin say dat ef he know how ter shave a note,
-he bleeze ter know how ter run a bank. I ain’t never see nobody shave a
-note, suh, but dat ’zackly what Marse Tumlin say.
-
-“But ol’ Joshaway, he ain’t a-keerin’ what folks say. He start de bank,
-an’ he kep’ it up twel de time I’m gwine tell you ’bout. He bought ’im
-a big strong safe, an’ he had it walled up in de back er de bank, an’
-dar ’twuz. Don’t make no diffunce what folks say ’bout ol’ Joshaway, dey
-can’t say he ain’t honest. He gwine ter have what’s his’n, an’ he want
-yuther folks fer ter have what’s der’n. When dat de case, ’tain’t no
-trouble ter git folks ter trus’ you. Dey put der money in ol’ Joshaway’s
-bank, whar he kin take keer un it, bekaze dey know’d he wa’n’t gwine ter
-run off wid it.
-
-“Well, suh, de bank wuz runnin’ ’long des like ’twuz on skids, an’ de
-skids greased. Ol’ Joshaway ain’t move ter town, but he hired ’im a
-clerk, an’ de clerk stayed in de bank night an’ day, an’ I hear folks say
-de town wuz better’n bigger on ’count er ol’ Joshaway’s bank. I dunner
-how dey make dat out, ’kaze de bank wa’n’t much bigger dan de kitchen
-back dar. Anyhow, dar she wuz, and dar she stayed fer a time an’ a time.
-
-“But one day Marse Tumlin Perdue tuck de notion dat he got ter borry some
-money. He seed yuther folks gwine in dar an’ borryin’ fum ol’ Joshaway,
-an’ he know he got des ez much bizness fer ter borry ez what dey is. Mo’
-dan dat, when he had plenty er money an’ niggers, he done ol’ Joshaway
-many a good turn. I know’d dat myse’f, suh, an’ ’tain’t no hearsay; I
-done seed it wid my own eyes. On de day I’m talkin’ ’bout, Miss Vallie
-sont me up town fer ter ax Marse Tumlin kin he spar’ two dollars—dat wuz
-befo’ Miss Vallie wuz married; ’bout a mont’ befo’, an’ she wuz makin’
-up her weddin’ fixin’s.
-
-“’Twa’n’t no trouble ter fin’ Marse Tumlin. He wuz settin’ in de shade
-wid a passel er men. He seed me, he did, an’ he come ter meet me. When
-I tell ’im what Miss Vallie want, he kinder scratch his head an’ look
-sollum. He studied a minit, an’ den he tell me ter come go ’long wid
-’im. He cut ’cross de squar’ an’ went right ter ol’ Joshaway’s bank, me
-a-follerin’ right at his heels. He went in, he did, an’ ’low, ‘Hello,
-Joshaway!’ Ol’ Joshaway, he say, ‘Howdy, Maje?’ He wuz settin’ in dar
-behime a counter what had wire palin’s on top un it, an’ he look fer all
-de worl’ like some ongodly creetur what dey put in a cage for ter keep
-’im fum doin’ devilment.
-
-“Marse Tumlin ’low, ‘Joshaway, I want ter borry a hunderd dollars for a
-mont’ er so.’ Ol’ Joshaway kinder change his cud er terbacker fum one
-side ter de yuther, an’ cle’r up his th’oat. He say, ‘Maje, right dis
-minit, I ain’t got fifty dollars in de bank.’ Nigger ez I is, I know’d
-dat wuz a lie, an’ I couldn’t help fum gruntin’ ef I wuz gwine to be kilt
-fer it. At dat ol’ Joshaway look up. Marse Tumlin stood dar drummin’ on
-de counter. Bimeby ol’ Joshaway say, ’Spoze’n I had it, Maje, who you
-gwine git fer yo’ skyority?’ des so. Marse Tumlin ’low, ‘Fer my what?”
-‘Fer yo’ skyority,’ sez ol’ Joshaway. I up an’ say, ‘Des lissen at dat!’
-Marse Tumlin ’low, ‘Who went yo’ skyority when I use ter loan you money?’
-‘Times is done change, Maje,’ sez ol’ Joshaway. Marse Tumlin flirted de
-little gate open, an’ went ’roun’ in dar so quick it made my head swim.
-He say, ‘_I_ ain’t change!’ an’ wid dat, he took ol’ Joshaway by de
-coat-collar an’ cuff’d ’im ’roun’ considerbul. He ain’t hurt ol’ Joshaway
-much, but he call ’im some names dat white folks don’t fling at one an’er
-widout dey’s gwine ter be blood-lettin’ in de neighborhoods.
-
-“Den Marse Tumlin come out fum behime de counter, an’ stood in de do’ an’
-look up town. By dat time I wuz done out on de sidewalk, ’kaze I don’t
-want no pistol-hole in my hide. When it come ter fa’r fis’ an’ skull, er
-a knock-down an’ drag-out scuffle, I’m wid you; I’m right dar; but deze
-yer guns an’ pistols what flash an’ bang an’ put out yo’ lights—an’ maybe
-yo’ liver—when it come ter dem, I lots druther be on t’er side de fence.
-Well, suh, I fully ’spected ol’ Joshaway to walk out atter Marse Tumlin
-wid de double-bairl gun what I seed behime de counter; an’ Marse Tumlin
-’spected it, too, ’kaze he walk up an’ down befo’ de bank, an’ eve’y once
-in a while he’d jerk his wescut down in front like he tryin’ ter t’ar de
-bindin’ off. Bimeby I see Marse Bolivar Blasengame git up fum whar he
-settin’ at, an’ here he come, swingin’ his gol’-head cane, an’ sa’nt’in’
-’long like he gwine on a promenade.
-
-“I know’d by dat, suh, dat Marse Bolivar been watchin’ Marse Tumlin’s
-motions, an’ he seed dat trouble er some kind wuz on han’. He walk up, he
-did, an’ atter he cut his eye at Marse Tumlin, he turn ter me an’ laugh
-ter hisse’f—he had de purtiest front teef you mos’ ever is see, suh—an’
-he ’low, ‘Well, dang my buttons, ef here ain’t ol’ Minervy Ann, de
-warhoss fum Wauhoo! Wharsomever dey’s trouble, dar’s de ol’ warhoss fum
-Wauhoo.’ Wid dat, he lock arms wid Marse Tumlin, an’ dey march off down
-de street, me a-follerin’. You ain’t kin fin’ two men like dem anywhar
-an’ eve’ywhar. Dey wa’n’t no blood-kin—dey married sisters—but dey wuz
-lots closer dan br’ers. Hit one an’ you’d hurt de yuther, an’ den ef you
-wa’n’t ready ter git in a scuffle wid two wil’-cats, you better leave
-town twel dey cool off.
-
-“Well, suh, dey ain’t took many steps ’fo’ dey wuz laughin’ an’ jokin’
-des like two boys. Ez we went up de street Marse Tumlin drapt in a sto’
-er two an’ tol’ um dat ol’ Joshaway Gossett vow’d dat he ain’t got fifty
-cash dollars in de bank. Dish yer money news is de kin’ what spreads, an’
-don’t you fergit it. It spread dat day des like powder ketchin’ fire an’
-’twa’n’t no time ’fo’ you could see folks runnin’ ’cross de squar’ des
-like dey er rabbit-huntin’, an’ by dinner-time dey wa’n’t no bank dar no
-mo’ dan a rabbit. Folks say dat ol’ Joshaway try mighty hard ter ’splain
-matters, but dem what had der money in dar say dey’d take de spondulix
-fus’ an’ listen ter de ’splainin’ atterwards. ’Long to’rds de noon-hour
-ol’ Joshaway hatter fling up his han’s. All de ready money done gone, an’
-folks at de do’ hollin’ fer dat what dey put in dar. I dunner how he ever
-got ’way fum dar, ’kaze dey wuz men in dat crowd ripe ter kill ’im; but
-he sneaked out an’ went home, an’ lef’ some un else fer ter win’ up de
-shebang.
-
-“De bank wuz des ez good ez any bank, an’ folks got back all dey put in
-dar des ez soon ez dey’d let ol’ Joshaway show his head in town; but he
-drapt dat kinder bizness an’ went back ter farmin’ an’ note-shavin’.
-An’ all bekaze he want skyority fer Marse Tumlin, which his word des ez
-good ez his bon’. He mought not er had de money when de clock struck de
-minit, but what diffunce do dat make when you know a man’s des ez good ez
-gol’? Huh! no wonder dey broke ol’ Joshaway down!”
-
-Aunt Minervy Ann’s indignation was a fine thing to behold. Her scorn
-of the man who wanted Major Perdue to put up security for his note was
-as keen and as bitter as it had been the day the episode occurred. She
-paused at this point as if her narrative had come to an end. Therefore, I
-put in a suggestion.
-
-“Was this what you call frailing out the Gossett boys?”
-
-“No, suh,” she protested, with a laugh; “all deze yer gwines-on ’bout dat
-ar bank wuz des de ’casion un it. You bleeze ter know dem Gossett boys,
-suh. Dey had sorter cool down by de time you come here, but dey wuz still
-ripe fer any devilment dat come ’long. Dar wuz Rube an’ Sam an’ John
-Henry, an’ a’er one un um wuz big ez a hoss. Dey use ter come ter town
-eve’y Chuseday an’ Sat’day, an’ by dinner-time dey’d be a-whoopin’ an’
-hollin’ in de streets, an’ a-struttin’ ’roun’ mashin’ folks’ hats down on
-der eyes. Not all de folks, but some un um. An’ all fer fun; dat what dey
-say.
-
-“Tooby sho’, dey had a spite ag’in Marse Tumlin and Marse Bolivar atter
-de bank busted. Dey show’d it by gwine des so fur; dey’d fling out der
-hints; but dey kep’ on de safe side, ’kaze Marse Tumlin wa’n’t de man fer
-ter go ’roun’ huntin’ a fuss, ner needer wuz Marse Bolivar; but fetch a
-fuss an’ lay it in der laps, ez you may say, an’ dey’d play wid it an’
-dandle it, an’ keep it fum ketchin’ col’. Dey sho’ would, suh. When dem
-Gossett boys’d come ter town, Marse Tumlin an’ Marse Bolivar would des
-set’ ’roun’ watchin’ um, des waitin’ twel dey cross de dead-line. But it
-seem like dey know des how fur ter go, an’ right whar ter stop.
-
-“Well, suh, it went on dis away fer I dunner how long, but bimeby, one
-day, our ol’ cow got out, an’ ’stidder hangin’ ’roun’ an’ eatin’ de grass
-in de streets like any yuther cow would ’a’ done, she made a straight
-shoot fer de plantation whar she come fum.
-
-“Miss Vallie tol’ Marse Tumlin ’bout it, an’ he say he gwine atter her.
-Den some er de niggers in de nex’ lot tol’ me dat de cow wuz out an’
-gone, an’ I put out atter her, too, not knowin’ dat Marse Tumlin wuz
-gwine. He went de front street an’ I went de back way. Ef de town wuz
-big ez de streets is long, we’d have a mighty city down here; you know
-dat yo’se’f, suh. De place whar de back street jines in wid de big road
-is mighty nigh a mile fum de tempunce hall, an’ when I got dar, dar wuz
-Marse Tumlin polin’ ’long. I holler an’ ax ’im whar he gwine. He say he
-gwine atter a glass er milk. Den he ax me whar I gwine. I say I’m gwine
-atter dat ol’ frame dat nigh-sighted folks call a cow. He ’low dat he’d
-be mighty thankful ef de nex’ time I tuck a notion fer ter turn de cow
-out I’d tell ’im befo’han’ so he kin run ’roun’ an’ head ’er off an’
-drive ’er back. He wuz constant a-runnin’ on dat away. He’d crack his
-joke, suh, ef he dyin’.
-
-“We went trudgin’ ’long twel we come ’pon de big hill dat leads down ter
-de town branch. You know de place, suh. De hill mighty steep, an’ on bofe
-sides er de road der’s a hedge er Cherrykee roses; some folks calls um
-Chickasaw; but Chicky er Cherry, dar dey wuz, growin’ so thick a rabbit
-can’t hardly squeeze thoo um. On one side dey wuz growin’ right on de
-aidge uv a big gully, an’ at one place de groun’ wuz kinder caved in, an’
-de briar vines wuz swayin’ over it.
-
-“Well, suh, des ez we got on de hill-top, I hear a buggy rattlin’ an’
-den I hear laughin’ an’ cussin’. I lookt ’roun’, I did, an’ dar wuz de
-Gossett boys, two in de buggy an’ one ridin’ hossback; an’ all un um full
-er dram. I could tell dat by de way dey wuz gwine on. You could hear um a
-mile, cussin’ one an’er fer eve’ything dey kin think un an’ den laughin’
-’bout it. Sump’n tol’ me dey wuz gwine ter be a rumpus, bekaze three ter
-one wuz too good a chance for de Gossett boys ter let go by. I dunner
-what make me do it, but when we got down de hill a little piece, I stoop
-down, I did, an’ got me a good size rock.
-
-“Terreckly here dey come. Dey kinder quiet down when dey see me an’ Marse
-Tumlin. Dey driv up, dey did, an’ driv on by, an’ dis make me b’lieve dat
-dey wuz gwine on ’bout der bizness an’ let we-all go on ’bout our’n, but
-dat idee wa’n’t in der head. Dey driv by, dey did, an’ den dey pulled
-up. We walkt on, an’ Marse Tumlin lookt at um mighty hard. Rube, he was
-drivin’, an’ ez we come up even wid um, he ’low, ‘Major Perdue, I hear
-tell dat you slap my pa’s face not so mighty long ago.’ Marse Tumlin say,
-‘I did, an’ my han’ ain’t clean yit.’ He helt it out so dey kin see fer
-deyse’f. ‘I b’lieve,’ sez Rube, ‘I’ll take a closer look at it.’ Wid dat
-he lipt out er de buggy, an’ by de time he hit de groun’, Marse Tumlin
-had knockt ’im a-windin’ wid his curly-hick’ry walkin’-cane. By dat
-time, John Henry had jumpt out’n de buggy, an’ he went at Marse Tumlin
-wid a dirk-knife. He kep’ de cane off’n his head by dodgin’, but Marse
-Tumlin hit a back lick an’ knock de knife out’n his han’ an’ den dey
-clincht. Den Rube got up, an’ start to’rds um on de run.
-
-“Well, suh, I wuz skeer’d an’ mad bofe. I seed sump’n had ter be done,
-an’ dat mighty quick; so I tuck atter Rube, cotch ’m by de ellybows,
-shoved ’im ahead faster dan he wuz gwine, an’ steer’d ’im right to’rds
-de caved-in place in de brier-bushes. He tried mighty hard ter stop, but
-he wuz gwine down hill, an’ I had de Ol’ Boy in me. I got ’im close ter
-de place, suh, an’ den I gi’ ’m a shove, an’ inter de briers he went,
-head over heels. All dis time I had de rock in my han’. By de time I turn
-’roun’ I see Sam a-comin’. When de rumpus start up, his hoss shied an’
-made a break down de hill wid ’im, but he slew’d ’im ’roun’, an’ jumped
-off, an’ here he come back, his face red, his hat off, an’ ol’ Nick
-hisse’f lookin’ out’n his eyes. I know’d mighty well I can’t steer him
-inter no brier-bush, an’ so when he run by me I let ’im have de rock in
-de burr er de year. ’Twa’n’t no light lick, suh; I wuz plum venomous by
-den; an’ he went down des like a beef does when you knock ’im in de head
-wid a ax.”
-
-Aunt Minervy Ann, all unconscious of her attitudes and gestures, had
-risen from the floor, and now stood in the middle of the room, tall,
-towering, and defiant.
-
-“Den I run ter whar Marse Tumlin an’ John Henry Gossett had been
-scufflin’; but by de time I got dar John Henry squalled out dat he had
-’nuff; an’ he wa’n’t tellin’ no lie, suh, fer Marse Tumlin had ketched
-his cane up short, an’ he used it on dat man’s face des like you see
-folks do wid ice-picks. He like to ’a’ ruint ’im. But when he holla dat
-he got ’nuff, Marse Tumlin let ’im up. He let ’im up, he did, an’ sorter
-step back. By dat time Rube wuz a-climbin’ out’n de briers, an’ Sam wuz
-makin’ motions like he comin’-to. Marse Tumlin say, ‘Lemme tell you
-cowardly rascals one thing. De nex’ time a’er one un you bat his eye at
-me, I’m gwine ter put a hole right spang th’oo you. Ef you don’t b’lieve
-it, you kin start ter battin’ um right now.’ Wid dat, he draw’d out his
-ervolver an’ kinder played wid it. Rube say, ‘We’ll drap it, Major; we
-des had a little too much licker. But I’ll not drap it wid dat nigger
-dar. I’ll pay her fer dis day’s work, an’ I’ll pay ’er well.’
-
-“Well, suh, de way he say it set me on fire. I stept out in de middle er
-de road, an’ ’low, ‘_Blast yo’ rotten heart, ef you’ll des walk out here
-I’ll whip you in a fa’r fight. Fight me wid yo’ naked han’s an’ I’ll eat
-you up, ef I hatter pizen myse’f ter do it._’”
-
-Once more Aunt Minervy Ann brought the whole scene mysteriously before
-me. Her eyes gleamed ferociously, her body swayed, and her outstretched
-arm trembled with the emotion she had resummoned from the past. We were
-on the spot. The red hill-side, the hedges of Cherokee roses, Major
-Perdue grim and erect, Sam Gossett struggling to his feet, John Henry
-wiping his beaten face, Rube astounded at the unwonted violence of a
-negro woman, the buggy swerved to one side by the horse searching for
-grass—all these things came into view and slowly faded away. Aunt Minervy
-Ann, suddenly recollecting herself, laughed sheepishly.
-
-“I ain’t tellin’ you no lie, suh, dat ar Rube Gossett stood dar like de
-little boy dat de calf run over. He mought er had sump’n ugly ter say,
-but Marse Tumlin put in. He ’low, ‘Don’t you fool yo’se’f ’bout dis
-nigger ’oman. When you hit her you hits me. Befo’ you put yo’ han’ on ’er
-you come an’ spit in my face. You’ll fin’ dat lots de cheapes’ way er
-gittin’ de dose what I got fer dem what hurts Minervy Ann.’
-
-“Well, suh, dis make me feel so funny dat a little mo’ an’ I’d a got ter
-whimperin’, but I happen ter look ’roun’, an’ dar wuz our ol’ cow lookin’
-at me over a low place in de briers. She done got in de fiel’ by a gap
-back up de road, an’ dar she wuz a-lookin’ at us like she sorry. Wid me,
-suh, de diffunce ’twixt laughin’ an’ cryin’ ain’t thicker dan a fly’s
-wing, an’ when I see dat ol’ cow lookin’ like she ready ter cry, I wuz
-bleeze to laugh. Marse Tumlin look at me right hard, but I say, ‘Marse
-Tumlin, ol’ June lis’nin’ at us,’ an’ den _he_ laughed.
-
-“Dem Gossett boys brush deyse’f off good ez dey kin an’ den dey put out
-fer home. Soon ez dey git out er sight, Marse Tumlin started in ter
-projickin’. He walk all ’roun’ me a time er two, an’ den he blow out his
-breff like folks does when dey er kinder tired. He look at me, an’ say,
-‘_Well, I be dam!_’ ‘Dat would ’a’ been de word,’ sez I, ‘ef ol’ Minervy
-Ann hadn’t ’a’ been here dis day an’ hour.’ He shuck his head slow. ‘You
-hit de mark dat time,’ sez he; ‘ef you hadn’t ’a’ been here, Minervy
-Ann, dem boys would sholy ’a’ smasht me; but ef I hadn’t ’a’ been here,
-I reely b’lieve you’d ’a’ frailed out de whole gang. You had two whipt,
-Minervy Ann, an’ you wuz hankerin’ fer de yuther one. I’ll hatter sw’ar
-ter de facts ’fo’ anybody’ll b’lieve um.’ I ’low ‘’Tain’t no use ter tell
-nobody, Marse Tumlin. Folks think I’m bad ’nuff now.’
-
-“But, _shoo!_ Marse Tumlin would ’a’ mighty nigh died ef he couldn’t tell
-’bout dat day’s work. I ain’t min’ dat so much, but it got so dat when de
-Gossetts come ter town an’ start ter prankin’, de town boys ’ud call um
-by name, an’ holla an’ say, ‘You better watch out dar! Minervy Ann Perdue
-comin’ ’roun’ de cornder!’ Dat wuz so errytatin’, suh, dat it kyo’d um.
-Dey drapt der dram-drinkin’ an’ spreein’, an’ now dey er high in Horeb
-Church. Dey don’t like me, suh, an’ no wonder; but ef dey kin git ter
-hev’m widout likin’ me, I’d be glad ter see um go.
-
-“Well, suh, I call de ol’ cow, an’ she foller long on ’er side er de
-briers, an’ when she got whar de gap wuz, she curl ’er tail over ’er back
-an’ put out fer home, des for all de worl’ like she glad ’kaze me an’
-Marse Tumlin frailed out de Gossett boys.
-
-“I say, ‘Marse Tumlin, I’m a member er de church an’ I don’t b’lieve in
-fightin’, but ef we hadn’t er fit wid dem Gossetts we’d ’a’ never foun’
-dat ol’ cow in de roun’ worl’.’ He ’low, ‘An’ ef we hadn’t er fit wid um,
-Minervy Ann, I’d ’a’ never know’d who ter take wid me fer ter keep de
-boogerman fum gittin’ me.’
-
-“Dat night, suh, Marse Bolivar Blasengame come rappin’ at my do’. Hamp
-wuz done gone ter bed, an’ I wuz fixin’ ter go. Marse Bolivar come in, he
-did, an’ shuck han’s wid me like he ain’t seed me sence de big war. Den
-he sot down over ag’in’ me an’ look at me, an’ make me tell ’im all ’bout
-de rumpus. Well, suh, he got ter laughin’, an’ he laughed twel he can’t
-hardly set in de cheer. He say, ‘Minervy Ann, ef dem folks say a word ter
-hurt yo’ feelin’s, don’t tell Tumlin. Des come a-runnin’ ter me. He done
-had his han’s on um, an’ now I want ter git mine on um.’
-
-“Dat ’uz de way wid Marse Bolivar. He wa’n’t no great han’ ter git in a
-row, but he wuz mighty hard ter git out’n one when he got in. When he
-start out he stop on de step an’ say, ‘Minervy Ann, I didn’t know you wuz
-sech a rank fighter.’ ‘I’m a Perdue,’ sez I. Wid dat he got ter laughin’,
-an’ fur ez I kin hear ’im he wuz still a-laughin’. He b’longed ter a
-mighty fine fambly, suh; you know dat yo’se’f.”
-
-
-
-
-VII
-
-MAJOR PERDUE’S BARGAIN
-
-
-When next I had an opportunity to talk with Aunt Minervy Ann, she
-indulged in a hearty laugh before saying a word, and it was some time
-before she found her voice.
-
-“What is so funny to-day?” I inquired.
-
-“Me, suh—nothin’ tall ’bout me, an’ ’tain’t only ter-day, nudder. Hit’s
-eve’y day sence I been big ’nuff fer to see myse’f in de spring branch. I
-laughed den, an’ I laugh now eve’y time I see myse’f in my min’—ef I’ got
-any min’. I wuz talkin’ ter Hamp las’ night an’ tellin’ ’im how I start
-in ter tell you sump’n ’bout Marse Paul Conant’ shoulder, an’ den eend up
-by tellin’ you eve’ything else I know but dat.
-
-“Hamp ’low, he did, ‘Dat ain’t nothin’, bekaze when I ax you ter marry
-me, you start in an’ tell me ’bout a nigger gal’ cross dar in Jasper
-County, which she make promise fer ter marry a man an’ she crossed her
-heart; an’ den when de time come she stood up an’ marry ’im an’ fin’ out
-’tain’t de same man, but somebody what she ain’t never see’ befo’.’
-
-“I ’speck dat’s so, suh, bekaze dey wuz sump’n like dat happen in Jasper
-County. You know de Waters fambly—dey kep’ race-hosses. Well, suh, ’twuz
-right on der plantation. Warren Waters tol’ me ’bout dat hisse’f. He wuz
-de hoss-trainer, an’ he ’uz right dar on de groun’. When de gal done
-married, she look up an’ holler, ‘You ain’t my husban’, bekaze I ain’t
-make no promise fer ter marry you.’ De man he laugh, an’ say, ‘Don’t need
-no promise atter you done married.’
-
-“Well, suh, dey say dat gal wuz skeer’d—skeer’d fer true. She sot an’
-look in de fire. De man sot an’ look at ’er. She try ter slip out de do’,
-an’ he slipped wid ’er. She walked to’rds de big house, an’ he walkt wid
-’er. She come back, an’ he come wid ’er. She run an’ he run wid ’er. She
-cry an’ he laugh at ’er. She dunner what to do. Bimeby she tuck a notion
-dat de man mought be de Ol’ Boy hisse’f, an’ she drapped down on her
-knees an’ ’gun ter pray. Dis make de man restless; look like he frettin’.
-Den he ’gun ter shake like he havin’ chill. Den he slip down out’n de
-cheer. Den he got on his all-fours. Den his cloze drapped off, an’ bless
-gracious! dar he wuz, a great big black shaggy dog wid a short chain
-roun’ his neck. Some un um flung a chunk of fire at ’im, an’ he run out
-howlin’.
-
-“Dat wuz de last dey seed un ’im, suh. Dey flung his cloze in de fire,
-an’ dey make a blaze dat come plum out’n de top er de chimbley stack. Dat
-what make me tell Hamp ’bout it, suh. He ax me fer ter marry ’im, an’ I
-wan’t so mighty sho’ dat he wan’t de Ol’ Boy.”
-
-“Well, that is queer, if true,” said I, “but how about Mr. Conant’s
-crippled shoulder?”
-
-“Oh, it’s de trufe, suh. Warren Waters tol’ me dat out’n his own mouf,
-an’ he wuz right dar. I dunno but what de gal wuz some er his kinnery. I
-don’t min’ tellin’ you dat ’bout Marse Paul, suh, but you mustn’t let on
-’bout it, bekaze Marse Tumlin an’ Miss Vallie des’ ez tetchous ’bout dat
-ez dey kin be. I’d never git der fergivunce ef dey know’d I was settin’
-down here tellin’ ’bout dat.
-
-“You know how ’twuz in dem days. De folks what wuz de richest wuz de
-wussest off when de army come home from battlin’. I done tol’ you ’bout
-Marse Tumlin. He ain’t had nothin’ in de roun’ worl’ but a whole passel
-er lan’, an’ me an’ Miss Vallie. I don’t count Hamp, bekaze Hamp ’fuse
-ter b’lieve he’s free twel he ramble ’roun’ an’ fin’ out de patterollers
-ain’t gwine ter take ’im up. Dat how come I had ter sell ginger-cakes an’
-chicken-pies dat time. De money I made at dat ain’t last long, bekaze
-Marse Tumlin he been use’ ter rich vittles, an’ he went right down-town
-an’ got a bottle er chow-chow, an’ some olives, an’ some sardines, an’
-some cheese, an’ you know yo’se’f, suh, dat money ain’t gwine ter las’
-when you buy dat kin’ er doin’s.
-
-“Well, suh, we done mighty well whiles de money helt out, but ’tain’t
-court-week all de time, an’ when dat de case, money got ter come fum
-some’rs else ’sides sellin’ cakes an’ pies. Bimeby, Hamp he got work at
-de liberty stable, whar dey hire out hosses an’ board um. I call it a
-hoss tavern, suh, but Hamp, he ’low its a liberty stable. Anyhow, he got
-work dar, an’ dat sorter he’p out. Sometimes he’d growl bekaze I tuck his
-money fer ter he’p out my white folks, but when he got right mad I’d gi’
-Miss Vallie de wink, an’ she’d say: ‘Hampton, how’d you like ter have a
-little dram ter-night? You look like youer tired.’ I could a-hugged ’er
-fer de way she done it, she ’uz dat cute. An’ den Hamp, he’d grin an’
-’low, ‘I ain’t honin’ fer it, Miss Vallie, but ’twon’t do me no harm,
-an’ it may do me good.’
-
-[Illustration: “Dat money ain’t gwine ter las’ when you buy dat kin’ er
-doin’s.”]
-
-“An’ den, suh, he’d set down, an’ atter he got sorter warmed up wid
-de dram, he’d kinder roll his eye and ’low, ‘Miss Vallie, she is a
-fine white ’oman!’ Well, suh, ’tain’t long ’fo’ we had dat nigger man
-trained—done trained, bless yo’ soul! One day Miss Vallie had ter
-go ’cross town, an’ she went by de liberty stable whar Hamp wuz at,
-leastways, he seed ’er some’rs; an’ he come home dat night lookin’ like
-he wuz feelin’ bad. He ’fuse ter talk. Bimeby, atter he had his supper,
-he say, ‘I seed Miss Vallie down-town ter-day. She wuz wid Miss Irene,
-an’ dat ’ar frock she had on look mighty shabby.’ I ’low, ‘Well, it de
-bes’ she got. She ain’t got money like de Chippendales, an’ Miss Irene
-don’t keer how folks’ cloze look. She too much quality fer dat.’ Hamp
-say, ‘Whyn’t you take some er yo’ money an’ make Miss Vallie git er nice
-frock?’ I ’low, ‘Whar I got any money? Hamp he hit his pocket an’ say,
-‘You got it right here.’
-
-“An’ sho’ ’nuff, suh, dat nigger man had a roll er money—mos’ twenty
-dollars. Some hoss drovers had come ’long an’ Hamp made dat money by
-trimmin’ up de ol’ mules dey had an’ makin’ um look young. He’s got de
-art er dat, suh, an’ dey paid ’im well. Dar wuz de money, but how wuz I
-gwine ter git it in Miss Vallie’s han’? I kin buy vittles an’ she not
-know whar dey come fum, but when it come ter buyin’ frocks—well, suh,
-hit stumped me. Dey wan’t but one way ter do it, an’ I done it. I make
-like I wuz mad. I tuck de money an’ went in de house dar whar Miss Vallie
-wuz sewin’ an’ mendin’. I went stompin’ in, I did, an’ when I got in I
-started my tune.
-
-“I ’low, ‘Ef de Perdues gwine ter go scandalizin’ deyse’f by trottin’
-down town in broad daylight wid all kinder frocks on der back, I’m gwine
-’way fum here; an’ I dun’ner but what I’ll go anyhow. ’Tain’t bekaze
-dey’s any lack er money, fer here de money right here.’ Wid dat I slammed
-it down on de table. ‘Dar! take dat an’ git you a frock dat’ll make you
-look like sump’n when you git outside er dis house. An’ whiles you er
-gittin’, git sump’n for ter put on yo’ head!’”
-
-[Illustration: Trimmin’ Up de Ol’ Mules.]
-
-Whether it was by reason of a certain dramatic faculty inherent in her
-race that she was able to summon emotions at will, or whether it was
-mere unconscious reproduction, I am not prepared to say. But certain it
-is that, in voice and gesture, in tone and attitude, and in a certain
-passionate earnestness of expression, Aunt Minervy Ann built up the
-whole scene before my eyes with such power that I seemed to have been
-present when it occurred. I felt as if she had conveyed me bodily into
-the room to become a witness of the episode. She went on, still with a
-frown on her face and a certain violence of tone and manner:
-
-“I whipped ’roun’ de room a time er two, pickin’ up de cheers an’
-slammin’ um down ag’in, an’ knockin’ things ’roun’ like I wuz mad.
-Miss Vallie put her sewin’ down an’ lay her han’ on de money. She
-’low, ‘What’s dis, Aunt Minervy Ann?’ I say, ‘Hit’s money, dat what
-’tis—nothin’ but nasty, stinkin’ money! I wish dey wan’t none in de worl’
-less’n I had a bairlful.’ She sorter fumble at de money wid ’er fingers.
-You dunno, suh, how white an’ purty an’ weak her han’ look ter me dat
-night. She ’low, ‘Aunt Minervy Ann, I can’t take dis.’ I blaze’ out at
-’er, ‘You don’t haf’ter take it; you done got it! An’ ef you don’t keep
-it, I’ll rake up eve’y rag an’ scrap I got an’ leave dis place. Now, you
-des’ try me!’”
-
-Again Aunt Minervy Ann summoned to her aid the passion of a moment that
-had passed away, and again I had the queer experience of seeming to
-witness the whole scene. She continued:
-
-“Wid dat, I whipt out er de room an’ out er de house an’ went an’ sot
-down out dar in my house whar Hamp was at. Hamp, he ’low, ‘What she say?’
-I say, ‘She ain’t had time ter say nothin’—I come ’way fum dar.’ He ’low,
-‘You ain’t brung dat money back, is you?’ I say: ‘Does you think I’m a
-start naked fool?’ He ’low: ’Kaze ef you is, I’ll put it right spang in
-de fire here.’
-
-“Well, suh, I sot dar some little time, but eve’ything wuz so still in
-de house, bein’s Marse Tumlin done gone down town, dat I crope back
-an’ crope in fer ter see what Miss Vallie doin’. Well, suh, she wuz
-cryin’—settin’ dar cryin’. I ’low, ‘Honey, is I say anything fer ter hurt
-yo’ feelin’s?’ She blubber’ out, ‘You know you ain’t!’ an’ den she cry
-good-fashion.
-
-“Des ’bout dat time, who should come in but Marse Tumlin. He look at
-Miss Vallie an’ den he look at me. He say, ‘Valentine, what de matter?’
-I say, ‘It’s me! I’m de one! I made ’er cry. I done sump’n ter hurt ’er
-feelin’s.’ She ’low, ‘’Tain’t so, an’ you know it. I’m des cryin’ bekaze
-you too good ter me.’
-
-[Illustration: “She wuz cryin’—settin’ dar cryin’.”]
-
-“Well, suh, I had ter git out er dar fer ter keep fum chokin’. Marse
-Tumlin foller me out, an’ right here on de porch, he ’low, ‘Minervy Ann,
-nex’ time don’t be so dam good to ’er.’ I wuz doin’ some snifflin’ myse’f
-’bout dat time, an’ I ain’t keerin’ what I say, so I stop an’ flung back
-at ’im, ‘_I’ll be des ez dam good ter ’er ez I please—I’m free!_’ Well,
-suh, stidder hittin’ me, Marse Tumlin bust out laughin’, an’ long atter
-dat he’d laugh eve’y time he look at me, des like sump’n wuz ticklin’ ’im
-mighty nigh ter death.
-
-“I ’speck he must er tol’ ’bout dat cussin’ part, bekaze folks ’roun’
-here done got de idee dat I’m a sassy an’ bad-tempered ’oman. Ef I had
-ter work fer my livin’, suh, I boun’ you I’d be a long time findin’
-a place. Atter dat, Hamp, he got in de Legislatur’, an’ it sho wuz a
-money-makin’ place. Den we had eve’ything we wanted, an’ mo’ too, but
-bimeby de Legislatur’ gun out, an’ den dar we wuz, flat ez flounders,
-an’ de white folks don’t want ter hire Hamp des kaze he been ter de
-Legislatur’; but he got back in de liberty stable atter so long a time.
-Yit ’twan’t what you may call livin’.
-
-“All dat time, I hear Marse Tumlin talkin’ ter Miss Vallie ’bout what
-he call his wil’ lan’. He say he got two thousan’ acres down dar in de
-wire-grass, an’ ef he kin sell it, he be mighty glad ter do so. Well,
-suh, one day, long to’rds night, a two-hoss waggin driv’ in at de side
-gate an’ come in de back-yard. Ol’ Ben Sadler wuz drivin’, an’ he ’low,
-‘Heyo, Minervy Ann, whar you want deze goods drapped at?’ I say, ‘Hello
-yo’se’f, ef you wanter hello. What you got dar, an’ who do it b’long
-ter?’ He ’low, ‘Hit’s goods fer Major Tumlin Perdue, an’ whar does you
-want um drapped at?’ Well, suh, I ain’t know what ter say, but I run’d
-an’ ax’d Miss Vallie, an’ she say put um out anywheres ’roun’ dar, kaze
-she dunner nothin’ ’bout um. So ol’ Ben Sadler, he put um out, an’ when
-I come ter look at um, dey wuz a bairl er sump’n, an’ a kaig er sump’n,
-an’ a box er sump’n. De bairl shuck like it mought be ’lasses, an’ de
-kaig shuck like it mought be dram, an’ de box hefted like it mought be
-terbarker. An’, sho’ ’nuff, dat what dey wuz—a bairl er sorghum syr’p,
-an’ a kaig er peach brandy, an’ a box er plug terbarker.
-
-[Illustration: “Here come a nigger boy leadin’ a bob-tail hoss.”]
-
-“I say right den, an’ Miss Vallie’ll tell you de same, dat Marse Tumlin
-done gone an’ swap off all his wil’ lan’, but Miss Vallie, she say no; he
-won’t never think er sech a thing; but, bless yo’ soul, suh, she wan’t
-nothin’ but a school-gal, you may say, an’ she ain’t know no mo’ ’bout
-men folks dan what a weasel do. An den, right ’pon top er dat, here come
-a nigger boy leadin’ a bob-tail hoss. When I see dat, I dez good ez
-know’d dat de wil’ lan’ done been swap off, bekaze Marse Tumlin ain’t
-got nothin’ fer ter buy all dem things wid, an’ I tell you right now,
-suh, I wuz rank mad, kaze what we want wid any ol’ bob-tail hoss? De
-sorghum mought do, an’ de dram kin be put up wid, an’ de terbarker got
-some comfort in it, but what de name er goodness we gwine ter do wid dat
-ol’ hoss, when we ain’t got hardly ’nuff vittles fer ter feed ourse’f
-wid? Dat what I ax Miss Vallie, an’ she say right pine-blank she dunno.
-
-“Well, suh, it’s de Lord’s trufe, I wuz dat mad I dunner what I say, an’
-I want keerin’ nudder, bekaze I know how we had ter pinch an’ squeeze fer
-ter git ’long in dis house. But I went ’bout gittin’ supper, an’ bimeby,
-Hamp, he come, an’ I tol’ ’im ’bout de ol’ bob-tail hoss, an’ he went out
-an’ look at ’im. Atter while, here he come back laughin’. I say, ‘You
-well ter laugh at dat ol’ hoss.’ He ’low, ‘I ain’t laughin’ at de hoss.
-I’m laughin’ at you. Gal, dat de finest hoss what ever put foot on de
-groun’ in dis town. Dat’s Marse Paul Conant’s trottin’ hoss. He’ll fetch
-fi’ hunder’d dollars any day. What he doin’ here?’ I up an’ tol’ ’im all
-I know’d, an’ he shuck his head; he ’low, ‘Gal, you lay low. Dey’s sump’n
-n’er behime all dat.’
-
-“What Hamp say sorter make me put on my studyin’-cap; but when you come
-ter look at it, suh, dey wan’t nothin’ ’tall fer me ter study ’bout. All
-I had ter do wuz ter try ter fin’ out what wuz behime it, an’ let it go
-at dat. When Marse Tumlin come home ter supper, I know’d sump’n wuz de
-matter wid ’im. I know’d it by his looks, suh. It’s sorter wid folks like
-’tis wid chillun. Ef you keer sump’n ’bout um you’ll watch der motions,
-and ef you watch der motions dey don’t hatter tell you when sump’n de
-matter. He come in so easy, suh, dat Miss Vallie ain’t hear ’im, but I
-hear de do’ screak, an’ I know’d ’twuz him. We wuz talkin’ an’ gwine on
-at a mighty rate, an’ I know’d he done stop ter lisn’.
-
-“Miss Vallie, she ’low she ’speck somebody made ’im a present er dem ar
-things. I say, ‘Uh-uh, honey! don’t you fool yo’se’f. Nobody ain’t gwine
-ter do dat. Our folks ain’t no mo’ like dey useter wuz, dan crabapples is
-like plums. Dey done come ter dat pass dat whatsomever dey gits der han’s
-on dey ’fuse ter turn it loose. All un um, ’cep’ Marse Tumlin Perdue. Dey
-ain’t no tellin’ what he gun fer all dat trash. _Trash!_ Hit’s wuss’n
-trash! I wish you’d go out dar an’ look at dat ol’ bob-tail hoss. Why dat
-ol’ hoss wuz stove up long ’fo’ de war. By rights he ought ter be in de
-bone-yard dis ve’y minnit. He won’t be here two whole days ’fo’ you’ll
-see de buzzards lined up out dar on de back fence waitin’, an’ dey won’t
-hatter wait long nudder. Ef dey sen’ any corn here fer ter feed dat bag
-er bones wid, I’ll parch it an’ eat it myse’f ’fo’ he shill have it. Ef
-anybody ’speck I’m gwine ter ’ten’ ter dat ol’ frame, deyer ’speckin’ wid
-de wrong specks. I tell you dat right now.’
-
-“All dis time Marse Tumlin wuz stan’in’ out in de hall lis’nin’. Miss
-Vallie talk mighty sweet ’bout it. She say, ‘Ef dey ain’t nobody else ter
-’ten’ de hoss, reckin I kin do it.’ I ’low, ‘My life er me, honey! de
-nex’ news you know you’ll be hirin’ out ter de liberty stable.’
-
-“Well, suh, my talk ’gun ter git so hot dat Marse Tumlin des had ter make
-a fuss. He fumbled wid de do’ knob, an’ den come walkin’ down de hall,
-an’ by dat time I wuz in de dinin’-room. I walk mighty light, bekaze ef
-he say anything I want ter hear it. You can’t call it eave-drappin’, suh;
-hit look ter me dat ’twuz ez much my business ez ’twuz dern, an’ I ain’t
-never got dat idee out’n my head down ter dis day.
-
-“But Marse Tumlin ain’t say nothin’, ’cep’ fer ter ax Miss Vallie ef she
-feelin’ well, an’ how eve’ything wuz, but de minnit I hear ’im open his
-mouf I know’d he had trouble on his min’. I can’t tell you how I know’d
-it, suh, but dar ’twuz. Look like he tried to hide it, bekaze he tol’ a
-whole lot of funny tales ’bout folks, an’ ’twan’t long befo’ he had Miss
-Vallie laughin’ fit ter kill. But he ain’t fool me, suh.
-
-“Bimeby, Miss Vallie, she come in de dinin’-room fer ter look atter
-settin’ de table, bekaze fum a little gal she allers like ter have de
-dishes fix des so. She wuz sorter hummin’ a chune, like she ain’t want’
-ter talk, but I ain’t let dat stan’ in my way.
-
-“I ’low, ‘I wish eve’ybody wuz like dat Mr. Paul Conant. I bet you right
-now he been down town dar all day makin’ money han’ over fist, des ez
-fast ez he can rake it in. I know it, kaze I does his washin’ and cleans
-up his room fer ’im.’
-
-“Miss Vallie say, ‘Well, what uv it? Money don’t make ’im no better’n
-anybody else.’ I ’low, ‘Hit don’t make ’im no wuss; an’ den, ’sides dat,
-he ain’t gwine ter let nobody swindle ’im.’
-
-“By dat time, I hatter go out an’ fetch supper in, an’ ’tain’t take me
-no time, bekaze I wuz des’ achin’ fer ter hear how Marse Tumlin come by
-dem ar contraptions an’ contrivances. An’ I stayed in dar ter wait on de
-table, which it ain’t need no waitin’ on.
-
-“Atter while, I ’low, ‘Marse Tumlin, I like ter forgot ter tell you—yo’
-things done come.’ He say, ‘What things, Minervy Ann?’ I ’low, ‘Dem ar
-contraptions, an’ dat ar bob-tail hoss. He look mighty lean an’ hongry,
-de hoss do, but Hamp he say dat’s bekaze he’s a high-bred hoss. He say
-dem ar high-bred hosses won’t take on no fat, no matter how much you feed
-um.’
-
-“Marse Tumlin sorter drum on de table. Atter while he ’low, ‘Dey done
-come, is dey, Minervy Ann?’ I say, ‘Yasser, dey er here right now. Hamp
-puts it down dat dat ar hoss one er de gayliest creatur’s what ever make
-a track in dis town.’
-
-“Well, suh, ’tain’t no use ter tell you what else wuz said, kaze ’twan’t
-much. I seed dat Marse Tumlin want gwine ter talk ’bout it, on account er
-bein’ ’fear’d he’d hurt Miss Vallie’s feelin’s ef he tol’ ’er dat he done
-swap off all dat wil’ lan’ fer dem ar things an’ dat ar bob-tail hoss.
-Dat what he done. Yasser! I hear ’im sesso atterwards. He swap it off ter
-Marse Paul Conant.
-
-“I thank my Lord it come out all right, but it come mighty nigh bein’ de
-ruination er de fambly.”
-
-“How was that?” I inquired.
-
-“Dat what I’m gwine ter tell you, suh. Right atter supper dat night,
-Marse Tumlin say he got ter go down town fer ter see a man on some
-business, an’ he ax me ef I won’t stay in de house dar wid Miss Vallie.
-’Twa’n’t no trouble ter me, bekaze I’d ’a’ been on de place anyhow, an’
-so when I got de kitchen cleaned up an’ de things put away, I went back
-in de house whar Miss Vallie wuz at. Marse Tumlin wuz done gone.
-
-“Miss Vallie, she sot at de table doin’ some kind er rufflin’, an’ I sot
-back ag’in de wall in one er dem ar high-back cheers. What we said I’ll
-never tell you, suh, bekaze I’m one er deze kinder folks what ain’t no
-sooner set down an’ git still dan dey goes ter noddin’. Dat’s me. Set
-me down in a cheer, high-back er low-back, an’ I’m done gone! I kin set
-here on de step an’ keep des ez wide-’wake ez a skeer’d rabbit, but set
-me down in a cheer—well, suh, I’d like ter see anybody keep me ’wake when
-dat’s de case.
-
-“Dar I sot in dat ar high-back cheer, Miss Vallie rufflin’ an’ flutin’
-sump’n, an’ tryin’ ter make me talk, an’ my head rollin’ ’roun’ like
-my neck done broke. Bimeby, _blam! blam!_ come on de do’. We got one
-er dem ar jinglin’ bells now, suh, but in dem times we had a knocker,
-an’ it soun’ like de roof fallin’ in. I like ter jumped out’n my skin.
-Miss Vallie drapped her conflutements an’ ’low, ‘What in de worl’! Aunt
-Minervy Ann, go ter de do’.’
-
-[Illustration: “He been axin’ me lots ’bout Miss Vallie.”]
-
-“Well, suh, I went, but I ain’t had no heart in it, bekaze I ain’t know
-who it mought be, an’ whar dey come fum, an’ what dey want. But I went.
-’Twuz me er Miss Vallie, an’ I want gwine ter let dat chile go, not dat
-time er night, dough ’twa’n’t so mighty late.
-
-“I open de do’ on de crack, I did, an’ ’low, ‘Who dat?’ Somebody make
-answer, ‘Is de Major in, Aunt Minervy Ann?’ an’ I know’d right den it
-wuz Marse Paul Conant. An’ it come over me dat he had sump’n ter do wid
-sendin’ er dem contraptions, mo’ ’speshually dat ar bob-tail hoss. An’
-den, too, suh, lots quicker’n I kin tell it, hit come over me dat he been
-axin’ me lots ’bout Miss Vallie. All come ’cross my min’, suh, whiles I
-pullin’ de do’ open.
-
-“I ’low, I did, ‘No, suh; Marse Tumlin gone down town fer ter look atter
-some business, but he sho ter come back terreckly. Won’t you come in,
-suh, an’ wait fer ’im?’ He sorter flung his head back an’ laugh, saft
-like, an’ say, ‘I don’t keer ef I do, Aunt Minervy Ann.’
-
-“I ’low, ‘Walk right in de parlor, suh, an’ I’ll make a light mos’ ’fo’
-you kin turn ’roun’.’ He come in, he did, an’ I lit de lamp, an’ time I
-lit ’er she ’gun ter smoke. Well, suh, he tuck dat lamp, run de wick up
-an’ down a time er two, an’ dar she wuz, bright ez day.
-
-“When I went back in de room whar Miss Vallie wuz at, she wuz stan’in’
-dar lookin’ skeer’d. She say, ‘Who dat?’ I ’low, ‘Hit’s Marse Paul
-Conant, dat’s who ’tis.’ She say, ‘What he want?’ I ’low, ‘Nothin’ much;
-he does come a-courtin’. Better jump up an’ not keep ’im waitin’.’
-
-“Well, suh, you could ’a’ knock’d ’er down wid a fedder. She stood dar
-wid ’er han’ on ’er th’oat takin’ short breffs, des like a little bird
-does when it flies in de winder an’ dunner how ter fly out ag’in.
-
-“Bimeby, she say, ‘Aunt Minervy Ann, you ought ter be ’shame or yo’se’f!
-I know dat man when I see ’im, an’ dat’s all.’ I ’low, ‘Honey, you know
-mighty well he ain’t come callin’. But he wanter see Marse Tumlin, an’
-dey ain’t nothin’ fer ter hender you fum gwine in dar an’ makin’ ’im feel
-at home while’s he waitin’.’ She sorter study awhile, an’ den she blush
-up. She say, ‘I dunno whedder I ought ter.’
-
-“Well, suh, dat settled it. I know’d by de way she look an’ talk dat she
-don’t need no mo’ ’swadin’. I say, ‘All right, honey, do ez you please;
-but it’s yo’ house; you er de mist’iss; an’ it’ll look mighty funny ef
-dat young man got ter set in dar by hisse’f an’ look at de wall whiles
-he waitin’ fer Marse Tumlin. I dunner what he’ll say, kaze I ain’t never
-hear ’im talk ’bout nobody; but I know mighty well he’ll do a heap er
-thinkin’.’
-
-“Des like I tell you, suh—she skipped ’roun’ dar, an’ flung on ’er Sunday
-frock, shuck out ’er curls, an’ sorter fumble’ ’roun’ wid some ribbons,
-an’ dar she wuz, lookin’ des ez fine ez a fiddle, ef not finer. Den she
-swep’ inter de parlor, an’, you mayn’t b’lieve it, suh, but she mighty
-nigh tuck de man’s breff ’way. Mon, she wuz purty, an’ she ain’t do no
-mo’ like deze eve’y-day gals dan nothin’. When she start ’way fum me,
-she wuz a gal. By de time she walk up de hall an’ sweep in dat parlor,
-she wuz a grown ’oman. De blush what she had on at fust stayed wid ’er
-an’ look like ’twuz er natchual color, an’ her eyes shine, suh, like
-she had fire in um. I peeped at ’er, suh, fum behime de curtains in de
-settin’-room, an’ I know what I’m talkin’ ’bout. It’s de Lord’s trufe,
-suh, ef de men folks could tote derse’f like de wimmen, an’ do one way
-whiles dey feelin’ annuder way, dey wouldn’t be no livin’ in de worl’.
-You take a school gal, suh, an’ she kin fool de smartest man what ever
-trod shoe leather. He may talk wid ’er all day an’ half de night, an’ he
-never is ter fin’ out what she thinkin’ ’bout. Sometimes de gals fools
-deyse’f, suh, but dat’s mighty seldom.
-
-“I dunner what all dey say, kaze I ain’t been in dar so mighty long
-’fo’ I wuz noddin’, but I did hear Marse Paul say he des drapt in fer
-’pollygize ’bout a little joke he played on Marse Tumlin. Miss Vallie ax
-what wuz de joke, an’ he ’low dat Marse Tumlin wuz banterin’ folks fer
-ter buy his wil’ lan’; an’ Marse Paul ax ’im what he take fer it, an’
-Marse Tumlin ’low he’ll take anything what he can chaw, sop, er drink.
-Dem wuz de words—chaw, sop, er drink. Wid dat, Marse Paul say he’d gi’
-’im a box er terbarker, a bairl er syr’p, an’ a kaig er peach brandy an’
-th’ow in his buggy-hoss fer good medjer. Marse Tumlin say ‘done’ an’ dey
-shuck han’s on it. Dat what Marse Paul tol’ Miss Vallie, an he ’low he
-des done it fer fun, kaze he done looked inter dat wil’ lan’, an’ he ’low
-she’s wuff a pile er money.
-
-[Illustration: “Marse Tumlin ’low he’ll take anything what he can chaw,
-sop, er drink.”]
-
-“Well, suh, ’bout dat time, I ’gun ter nod, an’ de fus news I know’d Miss
-Vallie wuz whackin’ ’way on de peanner, an’ it look like ter me she wuz
-des tryin’ ’erse’f. By dat time, dey wuz gettin’ right chummy, an’ so I
-des curl up on de flo’, an’ dream dat de peanner chunes wuz comin’ out’n
-a bairl des like ’lasses.
-
-“When I waked up, Marse Paul Conant done gone, an’ Marse Tumlin ain’t
-come, an’ Miss Vallie wuz settin’ dar in de parlor lookin’ up at de
-ceilin’ like she got some mighty long thoughts. Her color wuz still up. I
-look at ’er an’ laugh, an’ she made a mouf at me, an’ I say ter myse’f,
-‘Hey! sump’n de matter here, sho,’ but I say out loud, ‘Marse Paul Conant
-sho gwine ter ax me ef you ain’t had a dram.’ She laugh an’ say, ‘What
-answer you gwine ter make?’ I ’low, ‘I’ll bow an’ say, “No, suh; I’m de
-one dat drinks all de dram fer de fambly.”’
-
-“Well, suh, dat chile sot in ter laughin’, an’ she laugh an’ laugh twel
-she went inter highsterics. She wuz keyed up too high, ez you mought say,
-an’ dat’s de way she come down ag’in. Bimeby, Marse Tumlin come, an’ Miss
-Vallie, she tol’ ’m ’bout how Marse Paul done been dar; an’ he sot dar,
-he did, an’ hummed an’ haw’d, an’ done so funny dat, bimeby, I ’low,
-‘Well, folks, I’ll hatter tell you good-night,’ an’ wid dat I went out.”
-
-At this point Aunt Minervy leaned forward, clasped her hands over her
-knees, and shook her head. When she took up the thread of her narrative,
-if it can be called such, the tone of her voice was more subdued, almost
-confidential, in fact.
-
-“Nex’ mornin’ wuz my wash-day, suh, an’ ’bout ten o’clock, when I got
-ready, dey want no bluin’ in de house an’ mighty little soap. I hunted
-high an’ I hunted low, but no bluin’ kin I fin’. An’ dat make me mad,
-bekaze ef I hatter go down town atter de bluin’, my wash-day’ll be broke
-inter. But ’tain’t no good fer ter git mad, bekaze I wuz bleeze ter go
-atter de bluin’. So I tighten up my head-hankcher, an’ flung a cape on my
-shoulders an’ put out.
-
-“I ’speck you know how ’tis, suh. You can’t go down town but what you’ll
-see nigger wimmen stan’in’ out in de front yards lookin’ over de palin’s.
-Dey all know’d me an’ I know’d dem, an’ de las’ blessed one un um hatter
-hail me ez I go by, an’ I hatter stop an’ pass de time er day, kaze ef
-I’d ’a’ whipt on by, dey’d ’a’ said I wuz gwine back bofe on my church
-an’ on my color. I dunner how long dey kep’ me, but time I got ter
-Proctor’s sto’, I know’d I’d been on de way too long.
-
-[Illustration: “I hatter stop an’ pass de time er day.”]
-
-“I notice a crowd er men out dar, some settin’ an’ some stan’in’, but I
-run’d in, I did, an’ de young man what do de clerkin’, he foller me in
-an’ ax what I want. I say I want a dime’s wuff er bluin’, an’ fer ter
-please, suh, wrop it up des ez quick ez he kin. I tuck notice dat while
-he wuz gittin’ it out’n de box, he sorter stop like he lis’nin’ an’ den
-ag’in, whiles he had it in de scoop des ready fer ter drap it in de
-scales, he helt his han’ an’ wait. Den I know’d he wuz lis’nin’.
-
-“Dat makes me lis’n, an’ den I hear Marse Tumlin talkin’, an’ time I hear
-’im I know’d he wuz errytated. Twa’n’t bekaze he wuz talkin’ loud, suh,
-but ’twuz bekaze he wuz talkin’ level. When he talk loud, he feelin’
-good. When he talk low, an’ one word soun’ same ez anudder, den somebody
-better git out’n his way. I lef’ de counter an’ step ter de do’ fer ter
-see what de matter wuz betwix’ um.
-
-“Well, suh, dar wuz Marse Tumlin stan’in’ dar close ter Tom Perryman.
-Marse Tumlin ’low, ‘Maybe de law done ’pinted you my gyardeen. How you
-know I been swindled?’ Tom Perryman say, ‘Bekaze I hear you say he bought
-yo’ wil’ lan’ fer a little er nothin’. He’ll swindle you ef you trade wid
-’im, an’ you done trade wid ’im.’ Marse Tumlin, ’low, ‘Is Paul Conant
-ever swindle _you_?’ Tom Perryman say, ‘No, he ain’t, an’ ef he wuz ter
-I’d give ’im a kickin’.’ Marse Tumlin ’low, ‘Well, you know you is a
-swindler, an’ nobody ain’t kick you. How come dat?’ Tom Perryman say, ‘Ef
-you say I’m a swindler, you’re a liar.’
-
-“Well, suh, de man ain’t no sooner say dat dan _bang!_ went Marse
-Tumlin’s pistol, an’ des ez it banged Marse Paul Conant run ’twix’ um,
-an’ de ball went right spang th’oo de collar-bone an’ sorter sideways
-th’oo de p’int er de shoulder-blade. Marse Tumlin drapt his pistol an’
-cotch ’im ez he fell an’ knelt down dar by ’im, an’ all de time dat ar
-Tom Perryman wuz stan’in’ right over um wid his pistol in his han’. I
-squall out, I did, ‘Whyn’t some er you white men take dat man pistol ’way
-fum ’im? Don’t you see what he fixin’ ter do?’
-
-“I run’d at ’im, an’ he sorter flung back wid his arm, an’ when he done
-dat somebody grab ’im fum behime. All dat time Marse Tumlin wuz axin’
-Marse Paul Conant ef he hurt much. I hear ’im say, ‘I wouldn’t ’a’ done
-it fer de worl’, Conant—not fer de worl’.’ Den de doctor, he come up, an’
-Marse Tumlin, he pester de man twel he hear ’im say, ‘Don’t worry, Major;
-dis boy’ll live ter be a older man dan you ever will.’ Den Marse Tumlin
-got his pistol an’ hunt up an’ down fer dat ar Tom Perryman, but he done
-gone. I seed ’im when he got on his hoss.
-
-[Illustration: “Hunt up an’ down fer dat ar Tom Perryman.”]
-
-“I say to Marse Tumlin, ‘Ain’t you des ez well ter fetch Marse Paul
-Conant home whar we all kin take keer uv ’im?’ He ’low, ‘Dat’s a _fack_.
-Go home an’ tell yo’ Miss Vallie fer ter have de big room fixed up time
-we git dar wid ’im.’ I say, ‘Humph! I’ll fix it myse’f; I know’d I ain’t
-gwine ter let Miss Vallie do it.’
-
-“Well, suh, ’tain’t no use fer ter tell yer de rest. Dar’s dat ar baby in
-dar, an’ what mo’ sign does you want ter show you dat it all turned out
-des like one er dem ol’-time tales?”
-
-
-
-
-VIII
-
-THE CASE OF MARY ELLEN
-
-
-It came to pass in due time that Atlanta, following the example of
-Halcyondale, organized a fair. It was called the Piedmont Exposition,
-and, as might be supposed, Aunt Minervy Ann was among those attracted
-to the city by the event. She came to see whether the fair was a bigger
-one than that held at Halcyondale. Naturally enough she made my house
-her headquarters, and her coming was fortunately timed, for the cook,
-taking advantage of the heavily increased demand for kitchen servants,
-caused by the pressure of strangers in the city, had informed us that
-if we wanted her services we could either double her wages or dispense
-with her entirely. It was a very cunningly prepared plan, for there was
-company in the house, friends from middle Georgia, who had come to spend
-a week while the exposition was going on, and there would have been no
-alternative if Aunt Minervy Ann, her Sunday hat sitting high on her
-head, had not walked in the door.
-
-“I hope all er you-all is well,” she remarked. “Ef you ain’t been
-frettin’ an’ naggin’ one an’er den my nose done been knocked out er
-j’int, kaze I know sump’n ’bleeze ter be de matter.”
-
-The truth is, the lady of the house was blazing mad with the cook, and
-I was somewhat put out myself, for the ultimatum of the servant meant
-robbery. Aunt Minervy Ann was soon in possession of the facts. At first
-she was properly indignant, but in a moment she began to laugh.
-
-“Des come out on de back porch wid me, please’m. All I ax you is ter
-keep yo’ face straight, and don’t say a word less’n I ax you sump’n’.”
-She flung her hat and satchel in a corner and sallied out. “I don’t
-blame cooks fer wantin’ ter quit when dey’s so much gwine on up town,”
-she remarked, in a loud voice, as she went out at the back door. “Dey
-stan’ by a stove hot wedder er col’, an’ dey ain’t got time ter go ter
-buryin’s. But me! I don’t min’ de work; I’m ol’ an’ tough. Why, de well
-ain’t so mighty fur fum de steps, an’ dar’s de wood-cellar right dar. How
-much you pay yo’ cooks, ma’am?”
-
-“What wages have you been getting?” asked the lady of the house.
-
-“Wellum, down dar whar I come fum dey been payin’ me four dollars a
-mont’—dat de reason I come up here. Ef you gi’ me six I’ll stay an’ you
-won’t begrudge me de money. Tu’n me loose in de kitchen an’ I’m at home,
-ma’am—plum’ at home.”
-
-The lady seemed to be hesitating, and the silence in the kitchen was
-oppressive.
-
-“I’ll decide to-day,” she remarked. “Our cook is a good one, but she has
-been thinking of resting awhile. If she goes, you shall have the place.”
-
-“Den she ain’t gone?” cried Aunt Minervy Ann. “Well, I don’t want de
-place less’n she goes. I ain’t gwine ter run my color out’n no job ef I
-kin he’p it. We got ’nuff ter contend wid des dry so.” Then she turned
-and looked in the kitchen. “Ain’t dat Julie Myrick?” she asked.
-
-“How you know me?” cried the cook. “I b’lieve in my soul dat’s Miss
-’Nervy Ann Perdue!”
-
-With that Aunt Minervy Ann went into the kitchen, and the two old
-acquaintances exchanged reminiscences for a quarter of an hour.
-After awhile she came back in the sitting-room, stared at us with a
-half-indignant, half-quizzical expression on her face, and then suddenly
-collapsed, falling on the floor near a couch, and laughing as only an
-old-time negro can laugh. Then she sat bolt upright, and indignation,
-feigned or real, swept the smiles from her countenance, as if they had
-been suddenly wiped out with a sponge.
-
-“You know what you got in dat kitchen dar? You ain’t got nothin’ in de
-worl’ in dar but a Injun merlatter; dat zackly what you got. I know’d
-her daddy and I know’d her mammy. Ol’ one-legged Billy Myrick wuz her
-daddy, an’ he wuz one part white an’ one part nigger, an’ one part Injun.
-Don’t tell me ’bout dem kind er tribes. Dey ain’t no good in um. Hamp’ll
-tell you dat hisse’f, an’ he b’longed ter de Myrick ’state. Merlatter is
-bad ’nuff by itse’f, but when you put Injun wid it—well, you may hunt
-high an’ you may hunt low, but you can’t git no wuss mixtry dan dat. I
-tell you right now,” Aunt Minervy Ann went on, “I never did see but one
-merlatter dat wuz wuff a pinch er snuff, an’ she wuz so nigh white dat de
-ol’ boy hisse’f couldn’t ’a’ tol’ de difffunce. Seem like you must ’a’
-knowed Mary Ellen Tatum, suh?” she suggested, appealing to my memory.
-
-I had heard the name somehow and somewhere, but it was as vague in my
-recollection as a dream.
-
-“Maybe you didn’t know ’er, suh, but she was born an’ bred down whar I
-cum fum. Dat’s so! She wuz done gone fum dar when you come. Wuz ol’ Fed
-Tatum dead? Yasser! ol’ Fed died de year dey quit der battlin’, an’ ’twuz
-de year atter dat when you come; an’ you sho did look puny, suh, ter what
-you does now. Well, ol’ Fed Tatum, he wuz one er deze yer quare creeturs.
-He made money han’ over fist, an’ he had a sight er niggers. He had a
-place sorter close ter town, but he didn’t stay on it; an’ he had a house
-not fur fum Marse Bolivar Blasengame, but he’d des go out ter his place
-endurin’ er de day, an’ den he’d come back, git his vittles, an’ walk ter
-de tavern an’ dar he’d take a cheer an’ go off by hisse’f, an’ set wid
-his chin in his coat collar, an’ look at his foots an’ make his thum’s
-turn somersets over one an’er. Ef you wanted ter talk wid ol’ Fed Tatum,
-you’d hafter go whar he wuz settin’ at an’ do all de talkin’ yo’se’f.
-He’d des set back dar an’ grunt an’ maybe not know who you wuz. But when
-he come huntin’ you up, you better watch out. Dey say dey ain’t nobody
-ever is make a trade wid ol’ Fed but what dey come out at de little een’
-er de horn.
-
-“Well, ol’ Fed had a nigger ’oman keepin’ house fer ’im, an’ doin’ de
-cookin’ and washin’. I say ‘nigger,’ suh, but she wuz mighty nigh white.
-She wuz Mary Ellen’s mammy, an’ Mary Ellen wuz des white ez anybody,
-I don’t keer whar dey cum fum, an’ she wuz purty fum de word go. Dey
-wa’n’t never no time, suh, atter Mary Ellen wuz born dat she wa’n’t de
-purtiest gal in dat town. I des natchully ’spises merlatters, but dey wuz
-sump’n ’bout Mary Ellen dat allers made a lump come in my goozle. I tuck
-ter dat chile, suh, de minnit I laid my eyes on ’er. She made me think
-’bout folks I done forgot ef I ever know’d um, an’ des de sight un ’er
-made me think ’bout dem ol’ time chunes what mighty nigh break yo’ heart
-when you hear um played right. Dat wuz Mary Ellen up an’ down.
-
-“Well, suh, when Mary Ellen got so she could trot ’roun’, old Fed Tatum
-sorter woke up. He stayed at home mo’, and when de sun wuz shinin’ you
-might see ’im any time setting in his peazzer wid Mary Ellen playin’
-roun’, er walkin’ out in de back yard wid Mary Ellen trottin’ at his
-heels. I’m telling you de start-naked trufe—by de time dat chile wuz
-six-year ol’ she could read; yasser! read out’n a book, an’ read good. I
-seed her do it wid my own eyes, an’ heer’d ’er wid my own years. ’Tain’t
-none er dish yer readin’ an’ stoppin’ like you hear de school chillun
-gwine on; no, suh! ’Twuz de natchual readin’ right ’long. An’ by de time
-she wuz eight, dey wa’n’t no words in no book in dat town but what she
-could take an’ chaw um same as lawyers in de cote-house. Mo’ dan dat,
-suh, she could take a pencil, an’ draw yo’ likeness right ’fo’ yo’ face.
-
-“’Long ’bout dat time she struck up wid little Sally Blasengame, an’ when
-dem two got tergedder dar wuz de pick er de town ez fer ez de chillun
-went. I don’t say it, suh, bekaze Marse Bolivar was Marse Tumlin’s
-br’er-in-law—dey married sisters—but his little gal Sally wuz ez fine
-ez split silk. Mary Ellen had black hair an’ big black eyes, an’ Sally
-had yaller hair an’ big blue eyes. Atter dey come ter know one an’er dey
-wa’n’t a day but what dem two chillun wuz playin’ tergedder. How many an’
-many is de times I seed um gwine ’long wid der arms ’roun’ one an’er!
-
-“Well, one day atter dey been playin’ tergedder a right smart whet Marse
-Bolivar ’gun ter make inquirements ’bout Mary Ellen, an’ when he foun’
-out who an’ what she wuz, he went out whar dey at an’ tol’ her she better
-go home. I wuz right dar in de back yard when he said de word. Mary Ellen
-stood an’ looked at ’im, an’ den she picked up her bonnet an’ marched
-out’n de yard holdin’ her head up; she wuz twelve year ol’ by den.
-
-“Sally seed Mary Ellen go out, an’ she turn ’roun’ on her daddy, her
-face ez white ez a sheet. Den her whole frame ’gun ter shake. She ’low,
-‘I been lovin’ you all dis time, an’ I didn’t know you could be so mean
-an’ low-life.’ She flung at ’im de fust words dat pop in her min’.
-
-“Marse Bolivar say, ‘Why, honey! Why, precious!’ an’ start ter put his
-arm ’roun’ ’er. She flung fum ’im, she did, an’ cry out, ‘Don’t you never
-say dem words ter me no mo’ ez long ez you live, an’ don’t you never
-tetch me no mo’.’ Den she seed me, an’ she come runnin’ des like she wuz
-skeer’d. She holler, ‘Take me ’way! take me ’way! Don’t let ’im tetch
-me!’ Talk ’bout temper—talk ’bout venom! All dem Blasengames had it, an’
-when you hurt de feelin’s er dat kind er folks dey are hurted sho ’nuff.
-Marse Bolivar couldn’t ’a’ looked no wuss ef somebody had ’a’ spit in
-his face while his han’s tied. You talk ’bout people lovin’ der chillun,
-but you dunner nothin’ ’tall ’bout it twel you see Marse Bolivar lovin’
-Sally. Why, de very groun’ she walkt on wuz diffunt ter him fum any udder
-groun’. He wuz ready ter die fer ’er forty times a day, an’ yit here she
-wuz wid her feelin’s hurt so bad dat she won’t let ’im put his han’s on
-’er. An’ he ain’t try; he had sense ’nuff fer dat. He des walk ’roun’ and
-kick up de gravel wid de heel er his boots. But Sally, she had ’er face
-hid in my frock, an’ she ain’t so much ez look at ’im. Bimeby he went in
-de house, but he ain’t stay dar long. He come out an’ look at Sally, an’
-try ter make ’er talk, but she erfuse ter say a word, an’ atter while he
-went on up-town.
-
-“Ef dey ever wuz hard-headed folks, suh, dat wuz de tribe. He went
-up-town, but he ain’t stay long, an’ when he come back he foun’ Sally
-in de house cryin’ an’ gwine on. She won’t tell what de matter, an’ she
-won’t let nobody do nothin’ fer ’er. Now, ef she’d ’a’ been mine, suh,
-I’d ’a’ frailed ’er out den an’ dar, an’ I’d ’a’ kep’ on frailin’ ’er out
-twel she’d ’a’ vowed dat she never know’d no gal name Mary Ellen. Dat’s
-me! But Marse Bolivar ain’t look at it dat away, an’ de man what never
-knuckle ter no human bein’, rich er po’, high er low, had ter knuckle ter
-dat chile, an’ she wa’n’t much bigger dan yo’ two fists.
-
-“So bimeby he say, ‘Honey, I’m gwine atter Mary Ellen, ef dat’s her name,
-an’ she can stay here all day an’ all night, too, fer what I keer.’
-
-“Sally ’low, ‘She sha’n’t come here! she sha’n’t! I don’t want nobody ter
-come here dat’s got ter git der feelin’s hurted eve’y time dey come.’
-
-“Right dar, suh, is whar my han’ would ’a’ come down hard; but Marse
-Bolivar, he knuckle. He say, ‘Well, honey, you’ll hafter fergive me dis
-time. I’ll go fetch ’er ef she’ll come, an’ ef she won’t ’tain’t my
-fault.’
-
-“So out he went. I dunner how he coaxed Mary Ellen, but she say he tol’
-’er dat Sally wuz feelin’ mighty bad, an’ wuz ’bleeze ter see ’er; an’
-Mary Ellen, havin’ mo’ heart dan min’, come right along. An’ Marse
-Bolivar wuz happy fer ter see Sally happy.
-
-“Dis wuz long ’fo’ de battlin’, suh, but even dat fur back dey wuz
-talkin’ ’bout war. Ol’ Fed Tatum wuz a mighty long-headed man, an’ he
-know’d mighty well dat ef Mary Ellen stayed dar whar she wuz at, she
-won’t have no mo’ show dan a chicken wid its head wrung off. So he fixed
-’er up an’ packed ’er off up dar whar de Northrons is at. He’d ’a’ sont
-her mammy wid ’er, but she say no; she’d be in de way; folks would
-’spicion what de matter wuz; an’ so she shet her mouf an’ stayed. Ef Mary
-Ellen had ’a’ been my chile, suh, I’d ’a’ gone wid ’er ef I had ter claw
-my way wid my naked han’s thoo forty miles er brick wall. But her mammy
-was diffunt; she stayed an’ pined.
-
-“Now, ef anybody want pinin’ done dey’ll hafter go ter somebody else
-’sides ol’ Minervy Ann Perdue. When you see me pinin’, suh, you may know
-my tongue done cut out an’ my han’s pairlized. Ef Mary Ellen had ’a’ been
-my chile dey’d ’a’ been murder done, suh. I’d ’a’ cotch ol’ Fed Tatum
-by what little hair he had an’ I’d ’a’ ruint ’im; an’ ez ’twuz, I come
-mighty nigh havin’ a fight wid ’im. An’ ef I had—_ef I had_——”
-
-Aunt Minervy Ann was on her feet. Her right arm was raised high in the
-air, and her eyes blazed with passion. It was not a glimpse of temper
-she gave us, but a fleeting portrayal of mother-love at white heat. She
-had been carried away by her memory, and had carried us away with her;
-but she caught herself, as it were, in the act, laughed, and sat down
-again by the sofa, caressing it with both arms. Presently she resumed her
-narrative, addressing herself this time to the lady of the house. It was
-a stroke of rare tact that had its effect.
-
-“Wellum, Mary Ellen wa’n’t my chile, an’ ol’ Fed Tatum sont ’er off
-up dar ’mongst de Northrons; an’ ’bout de time de two sides ’gun der
-battlin’ he sol’ some lan’ an’ sont her ’nuff money ter las’ ’er twel she
-got all de larnin’ she want. Den de war come, an’ nobody ain’t hear no
-mo’ ’bout Mary Ellen. Dey fit an’ dey fout, an’ dey fout an’ dey fit, an’
-den, bimeby, dey quit, an’ fer long days nobody didn’t know whedder ter
-walk backerds er go forruds.
-
-“Ol’ Fed Tatum wuz one er dem kinder folks, ma’am, what you been seein’
-an’ knowin’ so long dat you kinder git de idee dey er gwine ter stay des
-like dey is; but one day ol’ Fed Tatum fetch’d a grunt an’ went ter bed,
-an’ de nex’ day he fetch’d a groan an’ died. He sho did. An’ den when dey
-come ter look into what he had, dey foun’ dat he ain’t got nothin’ he kin
-call his own but a little cabin in one een’ er town, an’ dis went ter
-Mary Ellen’s mammy.
-
-“I tell you now, ma’am, dat ’oman tried me. She wuz long an’ lank an’
-slabsided, an’ she went ’bout wid ’er mouf shet, an’ ’er cloze lookin’
-like somebody had flung um at ’er. I like ter hear folks talk, myself,
-an’ ef dey can’t do nothin’ else I like ter see um show dey temper. But
-dat ’oman, she des walk ’roun’ an’ not open her mouf fum mornin’ twel
-night, less’n you ax ’er sump’n. I tried ter git her ter talk ’bout Mary
-Ellen, but she ain’t know no mo’ ’bout Mary Ellen dan a rabbit.
-
-“I dunner but what we’d ’a’ got in a fuss, ma’am, kaze dat ’oman sho
-did try me, but ’long ’bout dat time Marse Bolivar’s gal tuck sick, an’
-’twa’n’t long ’fo’ she died. ’Twuz a mighty pity, too, kaze dat chile
-would ’a’ made a fine ’oman—none better. ’Long todes de las’ she got
-ter gwine on ’bout Mary Ellen. Look like she could see Mary Ellen in de
-fever-dreams, an’ she’d laugh an’ go on des like she useter when she wuz
-a little bit er gal.
-
-“Wellum, when dat chile died Marse Bolivar come mighty nigh losin’ ’is
-min’. He ain’t make no fuss ’bout it, but he des fell back on hisse’f an’
-walk de flo’ night atter night, an’ moan an’ groan when he think nobody
-ain’t lis’nin’. An’ den, atter so long a time, here come a letter fum
-Mary Ellen, an’ dat broke ’im all up. I tell you right now, ma’am, Marse
-Bolivar had a hard fight wid trouble. I don’t keer what folks may say;
-dey may tell you he’s a hard man, ready ter fight an’ quick ter kill.
-He’s all dat, an’ maybe mo’; but I know what I know.
-
-“Wellum, de days went an’ de days come. Bimeby I hear some er de niggers
-say dat Mary Ellen done come back. I laid off ter go an’ see de chile;
-but one day I wuz gwine ’long de street an’ I met a white lady. She say,
-‘Ain’t dat Aunt Minervy Ann?’ I ’low, ‘Yessum, dis is de remnants.’
-Wid dat, ma’am, she grab me ’roun’ de neck an’ hug me, an’ bu’st out
-a-cryin’, an’ ’twa’n’t nobody in de worl’ but Mary Ellen.
-
-“Purty! I never has foun’ out, ma’am, how any human can be ez purty ez
-Mary Ellen. Her skin wuz white ez milk an’ her eyes shine like stars. I’d
-’a’ never know’d her in de worl’. But dar she wuz, cryin’ one minnit an’
-laughin’ de nex’. An’ she wuz in trouble too. She had a telegraph in her
-han’ tellin’ ’er dat one er her ol’ schoolmates gwine on ter Flurridy
-wuz gwine ter stop over one train des ter see Mary Ellen. Hit seem like
-dat up dar whar she been stayin’ at she ain’t never tell nobody but what
-she wuz white, an’ de human wa’n’t born dat could tell de diffunce. So
-dar ’twuz. Here wuz de Northron lady comin’ fer ter see Mary Ellen, an’
-what wuz Mary Ellen gwine ter do?—whar wuz she gwine ter take de Northron
-lady? Dar wuz de ramshackle cabin, an’ dar wuz my kitchen. You may think
-’twuz funny, ma’am——”
-
-“But I don’t,” said the lady of the house, abruptly and unexpectedly; “I
-don’t think it was funny at all.”
-
-Aunt Minervy Ann looked at me and lifted her chin triumphantly, as she
-resumed: “No’m, ’twa’n’t funny. Mary Ellen wuz proud an’ high-strung;
-you could read dat in de way she walk an’ eve’y motion she make, an’ dat
-ar telegraph dat de Northron lady sont ’er fum Atlanty kinder run ’er in
-a corner. She dunner what ter do, ner which way ter turn. Look at it
-yo’se’f, ma’am, an’ see whar she wuz.
-
-“She laughed, ma’am, but she wuz in trouble, an’ I’m sech a big fool dat
-I’m allers in trouble ’long wid dem what I like. Take de tape-line ter
-der trouble an’ den ter mine, an’ you’ll fin’ dat dey medjer ’bout de
-same. Mary Ellen laugh an’ say, ‘Dey’s two things I kin do; I kin leave
-town, er I kin go down dar ter de cabin an’ kill myse’f.’ Oh, she wuz in
-a corner, ma’am—don’t you doubt it.
-
-“Right den an’ dar sump’n pop in my head. I ’low, ‘Is you been ter call
-on Marse Bolivar Blasengame?’ She say ‘No, I ain’t, Aunt Minervy Ann. I
-started ter go, but I’m afear’d ter.’ I ’low, ‘Well, I’m gwine dar right
-now; come go wid me.’
-
-“So we went dar, and I left Mary Ellen on de back porch, an’ I went in de
-house. Marse Bolivar wuz settin’ down, gwine over some papers, an’ Mis’
-Em’ly wuz darnin’ an’ patchin’.
-
-“I say, ‘Marse Bolivar, dey’s a gal out here dat I thought maybe you an’
-Mis’ Em’ly would be glad ter see?”
-
-“He ’low, ‘Dang you’ hide, Minervy Ann! You like ter make me jump out’n
-my skin. Who is de gal?’
-
-“I say, ‘I wanter see ef you know ’er.’ Wid dat I went back an’ fotch
-Mary Ellen in. Well, dey didn’t know ’er, ma’am, na’er one un um; an’ I
-dunner how it all happened, but de fust thing I know Mary Ellen fell on
-’er knees, by a lounge what sot under de place whar Miss Sally’s pictur’
-wuz hangin’ at. She fell on her knees, Mary Ellen did, and ’low, ‘She’d
-know who I is,’ an’ wid dat she bust aloose an’ went ter cryin’ des like
-’er heart wuz done broke in two.
-
-“Marse Bolivar stood dar an’ wait twel Mary Ellen cool off, an’ quiet
-down. Mis’ Em’ly, ma’am, is one er dem ar primity, dried-up wimmen,
-which, ef dey ain’t fightin’ you wid bofe han’s, er huggin’ you wid bofe
-arms, ain’t sayin’ nothin’ ’tall. An’ ef Mis’ Em’ly ain’t sayin’ nothin’
-you can’t put de key in de Bible an’ fin’ no tex’ dat’ll tell you what
-she got in ’er min’. But she wuz darnin’, an’ I see ’er wipe one eye on
-de leg er de sock, an’ den present’y she wipe t’er eye.
-
-“Wellum, Marse Bolivar stood dar an’ look at Mary Ellen, an’ when she riz
-fum her knees an’ stood dar, her head hangin’ down, still a-cryin’, but
-mo’ quieter, he went close up an’ ’low, ‘I know you, Mary Ellen, an’ I’m
-mighty glad ter see you. Dat ar letter what you writ me, I got it yit,
-an’ I’m gwine ter keep it whiles I live.’
-
-“He talk right husky, ma’am, an’ I ’gun ter feel husky myse’f; an’ den
-I know’d dat ef I didn’t change de tune, I’d be boo-hooin’ right dar
-’fo’ all un um wid needer ’casion nor ’skuce. I went up ter Mary Ellen
-an’ cotch ’er by de shoulder and say, ‘Shucks, gal! Dat train’ll be here
-terreckly, an’ den what you gwine ter do?’
-
-“’Twuz a hint ez broad ez a horse-blanket, ma’am, but Mary Ellen never
-tuck it. She des stood dar an’ look at me. An’ ’bout dat time Marse
-Bolivar he ketch’d holt er my shoulder an’ whirlt me ’roun’, an’ ’low,
-‘What de matter, Minervy Ann? Talk it right out!’
-
-“Wellum, I let you know I tol’ ’im; I des laid it off! I tol’ des how
-’twuz; how Mary Ellen been sont up dar by ol’ Fed Tatum, an’ how, on de
-’count er no fault er her’n de Northron folks tuck ’er ter be a white
-gal; an’ how one er de gals what went ter school wid ’er wuz gwine ter
-come ter see ’er an’ stay ’twixt trains. Den I ’low, ‘Whar is Mary Ellen
-gwine ter see ’er? In dat ar mud-shack whar her ma live at? In de big
-road? In de woods? In de hoss-lot?”
-
-The whole scene from beginning to end had been enacted by Aunt Minervy
-Ann. In the empty spaces of the room she had placed the colonel, his
-wife, and Mary Ellen, and they seemed to be before us, and not only
-before us, but the passionate earnestness with which she laid the case of
-Mary Ellen before the colonel made them live and move under our very eyes.
-
-“_In de big road? In de woods? In de hoss-lot?_”
-
-And when she paused for the reply of the colonel, the look of expectation
-on her face was as keen and as eager as it could have been on the day and
-the occasion when she was pleading for Mary Ellen. The spell was broken
-by the lady of the house, who leaned forward eagerly as if expecting the
-colonel himself to reply. Perhaps Aunt Minervy Ann misunderstood the
-movement. She paused a moment as if dazed, and then sank by the sofa with
-a foolish laugh.
-
-“I know you all put me down ter be a fool,” she said, “an’ I ’speck I is.”
-
-“Nonsense!” cried the lady of the house, sharply. “What did the colonel
-reply?”
-
-Aunt Minervy remained silent a little while, picking at one of the
-fringes of the sofa. She was evidently trying to reassemble in her mind
-the incidents and surroundings of her narrative. Presently she began
-again, in a tone subdued and confidential:
-
-“Marse Bolivar look at me right hard, den he look at Mary Ellen, an’ den
-he pull at de tip-een’ er his year. Wellum, I fair helt my breff; I say
-ter myse’f, ‘Man, whyn’t you look at poor Miss Sally’s pictur’? I wuz
-feared a fly might light on ’im an’ change his min’. But, look at de
-pictur’ he did, an’ dat settled it.
-
-“He ’low, ‘Set down, Mary Ellen; you look tired. Minervy Ann, fetch ’er a
-drink er water.’ Wellum, you may well b’lieve dat I flied up an’ flew’d
-’roun’ an’ fotch dat water. Den he ’low, ‘Minervy Ann, go in dar an’
-straighten out dat parlor; fling open de blinds an’ do ’bout in dar!’”
-
-Again Aunt Minervy Ann arose from her reclining position by the sofa and
-stood in the floor; again, by a wave of her hand, she brought the scene
-before our eyes.
-
-“I stood dar, I did, an’ look at dat man. I ’low, ‘Marse Bolivar, less’n
-it’s Marse Tumlin, youer de bes’ man dat God A’mighty ever breathe de
-breath er life inter!’ He rub his han’ over his face an’ say, ‘Dang yo’
-ol’ hide! go on an’ hush up! Fum de time I fust know’d you, you been
-gittin’ me an’ Tumlin in hot water.’
-
-“I flung back at ’im, ‘_’Tain’t never scald you! ’Tain’t never been too
-deep fer you!_’ He straighten hisse’f up an’ helt his head back an’
-laugh. He ’low, ‘Dang it all, Minervy Ann! Dey er times when I want it
-bofe hot an’ deep. You go an’ scuffle ’roun’ in dat parlor, an’ don’t you
-let yo’ Mis’ Em’ly do a han’s-turn in dar.’
-
-“Wellum, dat uz ’bout de upshot un it. De Northron lady wuz name Miss
-Wilbur, er Willard, I disremember which, but she was a mighty nice white
-gal. Marse Bolivar an’ Hamp wuz bofe at de train ter meet ’er, an’ Marse
-Bolivar fotch ’er right ter de house, an’ show’d ’er in de parlor. Atter
-while, Mary Ellen went in dar, an’ ’twuz a mighty meetin’ ’twix um. Dey
-chattered same ez a flock er blackbirds on a windy day; an’ atter so long
-a time Marse Bolivar went in dar. ’Twa’n’t long ’fo’ he got ter tellin’
-tales, an’ de Northron lady laugh so she kin hardly set on de cheer. Den
-he open de pianner, an’ ax de white lady ter play, but she vow she can’t
-play atter he been hearin’ Mary Ellen. Den he say, ‘Won’t you play me a
-chune, Mary Ellen? Sump’n ol’ timey?’
-
-“Dat gal went ter de pianner, ma’am, an’ sot dar wid her han’s over her
-face like she prayin’, an’ den she laid her han’s on de keys an’ started
-a chune des like yo’ hear in yo’ dreams. It got a little louder, an’
-den present’y you could hear ’er singin’. I never did know whar’bouts
-her voice slipped inter dat chune; but dar ’twuz, an’ it fit in wid de
-pianner des like a flute does.
-
-“Wellum, it tuck me back, way back dar in de ol’ days, an’ den brung me
-down ter later times, fer many a moonlight night did I hear Miss Sally
-an’ Mary Ellen sing dat song when dey wuz chillun. Den atter dat de
-Northron lady plump herse’f down at de pianner, an’ she sho did shake dat
-ol’ shebang up. ’Twuz dish yer highfalutin’ music what sprung up sence de
-war, an’ it sho sound like war ter me, drums a-rattlin’, guns a-shootin’,
-an’ forty-levm brass horns all tootin’ a diffunt chune.
-
-“When train-time come, ma’am, de Northron lady ax Mary Ellen ef she won’t
-go ter de train wid ’er. But Marse Bolivar spoke up an’ say dat Mary
-Ellen been feelin’ bad all de mornin’, an’ she hatter skuzen ’er. He went
-wid de lady hisse’f, an’ when he come back Mary Ellen tol’ ’im she never
-would fergit what he done fer her dat day, an’ say she gwine ter pay ’im
-back some day.
-
-“What did the neighbors say about it?” the lady of the house asked, in
-her practical way.
-
-“Dat what pestered me all de time, ma’am,” Aunt Minervy Ann replied. “I
-ax Marse Bolivar, ‘What de folks gwine ter say when dey hear ’bout dis
-come off?’ He stuck his thum’s in de armholes er his wescut, an’ ’low,
-‘Dat what I wanter know, an’ I wanter know so bad, Minervy Ann, dat ef
-you hear anybody talkin’ loose talk ’bout it, des come runnin’ ter me
-while it’s hot. Now don’t you fail.’
-
-“But Marse Bolivar ain’t wait fer me ter hear what folks say. He went
-polin’ up town de nex’ day, an’ tol’ ’bout it in eve’y sto’ on de street,
-an’ de las’ man in town vow’d ’twuz de ve’y thing ter do. An’ dat ain’t
-all, ma’am! De folks dar raise a lot er money fer Mary Ellen, an’ de way
-dat chile went on when Marse Bolivar put it in ’er han’ an’ tol’ er whar
-it come fum wuz pitiful ter see.
-
-“Dat’s de way ’tis, ma’am; ketch um in de humor an’ eve’ybody’s
-good; ketch um out’n de humor an’ dey er all mean—I know dat by my
-own feelin’s. Ef a fly had lit on Marse Bolivar’s face dat day, Mary
-Ellen would ’a’ had ter face ’er trouble by ’er own ’lone self. Ef
-some sour-minded man had gone up town an’ told how Marse Bolivar wuz
-en’tainin’ nigger gals an’ a Yankee ’oman in his parlor, dey’d all been
-down on ’im. An’ den——”
-
-“What, then?” the lady of the house asked, as Aunt Minervy Ann paused.
-
-“Dey’d ’a’ been weepin’ an’ whailin’ in de settlement sho. Ain’t it so,
-suh?”
-
-It was natural, after Aunt Minervy Ann had narrated the particulars
-of this episode, that her statements should dwell in my memory, and
-sally forth and engage my mind when it should have been concerned with
-other duties. One of these duties was to examine each day the principal
-newspapers of New England in search of topics for editorial comment.
-
-An eye trained to this business, as any exchange editor can tell you,
-will pick out at a glance a familiar name or suggestive phrase, no matter
-what its surroundings nor how obscurely it may be printed. Therefore, one
-day, weeks after Aunt Minervy Ann’s recital, when I opened the _Boston
-Transcript_ at its editorial page, it was inevitable that the first thing
-to catch my eye was the familiar name of “Mary Ellen Tatum.” It was
-printed in type of the kind called nonpareil, but I would have seen it
-no sooner nor more certainly if it had been printed in letters reaching
-half across the page.
-
-Mary Ellen Tatum! The name occurred in a three-line preface to the
-translation of an art note from a Paris newspaper. This note described,
-with genuine French enthusiasm, the deep impression that had been made on
-artists and art circles in Paris by a portrait painted by a gifted young
-American artist, Mlle. Marie Helen Tatum. It is needless to transcribe
-the eulogy—I have it in my scrapbook. It was a glowing tribute to a piece
-of work that had created a sensation, and closed with the announcement
-that another genius had “arrived.”
-
-The comments of the Boston editor, following the sketch, declared that
-the friends of Miss Mary Ellen Tatum in Boston, where she spent her early
-years and where she was educated, were proud of her remarkable success,
-and predicted for her a glorious career as an artist.
-
-I had no more than cut this piece from the newspaper when the door-bell
-rang, and as there happened to be no one in the house to answer it at
-the moment, I went to the door myself, the clipping still in my hand,
-and there before my eyes was Colonel Bolivar Blasengame, his fine face
-beaming with good-nature. He had come at a moment when I most desired to
-see him, and I greeted him cordially.
-
-“I see now,” said the colonel,“why it is I can never catch you in your
-office in town; you do your work at home. Well, that’s lots better than
-workin’ where any and everybody can come in on you. I thought I’d find
-you out here enjoying your _otium cum digitalis_, as old Tuck Bonner used
-to say; but instead of that you’re waist-deep in newspapers.”
-
-I assured the colonel that there were some people in the world whom I
-would be glad to see, no matter how busy I might be.
-
-“I know the feeling,” replied Colonel Blasengame; “but you’ll be cussing
-me as sure as the world, for I haven’t a grain of business to see you
-about. But I hear Tumlin and old Aunt Minervy Ann talking about you so
-constantly that I thought I’d come out and say howdye, if no more.”
-
-“Well, you’ll have to say more than that this time,” I remarked; “I was
-just thinking, when you rang the door-bell, that I would give something
-pretty to see you.”
-
-“Now, is that reely so?” cried the colonel. “Then I’m twice glad—once
-because I took a notion to come, and once again because you’re glad. You
-used to fight so shy of me when you lived among us that I was afraid I
-wouldn’t get on wi’ you; but I’m sorter offish myself.”
-
-“Colonel,” said I, “did you ever know Mary Ellen Tatum?”
-
-He rubbed his face and forehead with his hand, and regarded me with a
-slight frown, and a smile that seemed to mean anything except pleasure.
-
-“Will you allow me to ask you why you put such a question to me?”
-
-“Why, certainly, Colonel; read that.” I placed the clipping from the
-_Transcript_ in his hand. He held it off at arm’s length and tried to
-decipher it, but the print was too fine. Placing it on his knee, he
-searched in his pockets until he found his spectacles, and then he read
-the article through carefully—not once, but twice.
-
-Then smoothing the clipping out on his knee, he looked at me inquiringly.
-
-“Do you know Mary Ellen?” he asked. I did not, and said so. “Did you ever
-hear of her before?”
-
-“Why, yes,” I replied. “Aunt Minervy Ann told me some very interesting
-things about her, and I wanted to ask you if they were true.”
-
-The colonel jumped to his feet with a laugh. “Plague on old Minervy
-Ann!” he exclaimed. “Why, I came out here purposely to tell you about
-Mary Ellen. This thing,” indicating the clipping, “is away behind the
-time with its news. The picture it tells about is at my house this very
-minute, and another one in the bargain. The first chance you get, come
-down home and look at ’em. If you don’t open your eyes I’ll never sign
-my name S. B. Blasengame again.” He walked up and down the room in a
-restless way. “What do you reckon that gyurl did?” he asked, stopping
-before me and stretching out his right arm. “Why, she sent a man with
-the pictures—a right nice fellow he was, too. He said it cost a pile of
-money to git ’em through the custom-house at New York; he had to hang
-around there a week. When I asked him for his bill he raised his hands
-and laughed. Everything was paid.”
-
-The colonel continued to walk up and down the room. He was always
-restless when anything interested him, unless it happened to be a matter
-of life and death, and then he was calmness itself.
-
-“Did Aunt Minervy Ann—blame her old hide!—I wanted to tell you the
-whole story myself—did she tell you about a letter Mary Ellen wrote me
-when”—the colonel paused and cleared his throat—“about a letter Mary
-Ellen wrote me in the seventies?”
-
-“She did,” I replied.
-
-“Well, here’s the letter,” he said, after fumbling in his big pocketbook.
-“It’s not a matter to be showing around, but you seem almost like one of
-the family, and you’ll know better how to appreciate the pictures when
-you read that.”
-
-He turned and went out of the room into the hallway and then to the
-veranda, where I heard his firm and measured step pacing back and forth.
-The letter was not a very long one, but there was something in it—a vague
-undertone of loneliness, a muffled cry for sympathy, which, as I knew all
-the facts of the case, almost took my breath away.
-
-The letter was dated “Boston, September 8th, 1878,” and was as follows:
-
- “COLONEL BLASENGAME—Two days ago the home paper came to me
- bringing the news of the great loss which has come to your
- household, and to me. I feel most keenly that a letter from me
- is an unwarranted intrusion, but I must speak out my thoughts
- to someone. Miss Sallie was almost the only friend I had when
- she and I were children together—almost the only person that
- I ever cared for. I loved her while she lived, and I shall
- cherish her memory to the day of my death.
-
- “You do not know me, and you will not recognize the name signed
- to this. It is better, far better that this should be so. It
- is enough for you to know that a stranger in a strange land
- will lie awake many and many a long night, weeping for the dear
- young lady who is dead.
-
- “MARY ELLEN TATUM.”
-
-What has become of Mary Ellen? the reader may ask. I have asked the same
-question hundreds of times and received no reply to it. So far as we
-provincials are concerned, she has disappeared utterly from the face of
-the earth.
-
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-<div style='text-align:center; font-size:1.2em; font-weight:bold'>The Project Gutenberg eBook of The Chronicles of Aunt Minervy Ann, by Joel Chandler Harris</div>
-
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-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and
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-<div style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:1em; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Title: The Chronicles of Aunt Minervy Ann</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:1em; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Author: Joel Chandler Harris</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:1em; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Illustrator: A. B. Frost</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>Release Date: March 09, 2021 [eBook #64770]</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>Language: English</div>
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-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>Character set encoding: UTF-8</div>
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-<div style='display:block; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Produced by: David Edwards and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images generously made available by The Internet Archive)</div>
-
-<div style='margin-top:2em; margin-bottom:4em'>*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE CHRONICLES OF AUNT MINERVY ANN ***</div>
-
-<div class="transnote">
-<p>Transcriber’s Note: This book contains outdated racial stereotypes and
-words that are now considered highly offensive.</p>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_i"></a>[i]</span></p>
-
-<p class="center larger">THE CHRONICLES OF<br />
-AUNT MINERVY ANN</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 650px;">
-<img src="images/cover.jpg" width="650" height="1000" alt="" />
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_ii"></a>[ii]</span></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 575px;" id="illus1">
-<img src="images/illus1.jpg" width="575" height="700" alt="" />
-<p class="caption">“I ain’t fergot dat ar ’possum.”</p>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_iii"></a>[iii]</span></p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_iv"></a>[iv]</span></p>
-
-<p class="titlepage larger">THE CHRONICLES OF<br />
-AUNT MINERVY ANN</p>
-
-<p class="titlepage"><span class="smaller">BY</span><br />
-JOEL CHANDLER HARRIS</p>
-
-<p class="titlepage"><span class="smaller">ILLUSTRATED BY</span><br />
-A. B. FROST</p>
-
-<p class="titlepage">CHARLES SCRIBNER’S SONS<br />
-NEW YORK 1899</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_v"></a>[v]</span></p>
-
-<p class="titlepage smaller"><span class="smcap">Copyright, 1899, by</span><br />
-CHARLES SCRIBNER’S SONS</p>
-
-<p class="titlepage smaller"><span class="allsmcap">TROW DIRECTORY<br />
-PRINTING AND BOOKBINDING COMPANY<br />
-NEW YORK</span></p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_vi"></a>[vi]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">CONTENTS</h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<table summary="Contents">
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr"></td>
- <td></td>
- <td class="tdpg smaller">PAGE</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr">I.</td>
- <td>An Evening with the Ku-Klux</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#I">1</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr">II.</td>
- <td>“When Jess went a-fiddlin’”</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#II">34</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr">III.</td>
- <td>How Aunt Minervy Ann Ran Away and Ran Back Again</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#III">70</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr">IV.</td>
- <td>How She Joined the Georgia Legislature</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#IV">97</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr">V.</td>
- <td>How She Went Into Business</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#V">119</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr">VI.</td>
- <td>How She and Major Perdue Frailed Out the Gossett Boys</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#VI">139</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr">VII.</td>
- <td>Major Perdue’s Bargain</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#VII">157</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr">VIII.</td>
- <td>The Case of Mary Ellen</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#VIII">182</a></td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_vii"></a>[vii]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS</h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<table summary="List of illustrations">
- <tr>
- <td>“I ain’t fergot dat ar ’possum”</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#illus1"><i>Frontispiece</i></a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td></td>
- <td class="tdpg smaller">FACING PAGE</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>“Well, he can’t lead <em>me</em>”</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#illus2">6</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>He wore a blue army overcoat and a stove-pipe hat</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#illus3">8</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>“Sholy you-all ain’t gwine put dat in de paper, is you?”</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#illus4">10</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Inquired what day the paper came out</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#illus5">14</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>“I was on the lookout,” the Major explained</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#illus6">18</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>In the third he placed only powder</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#illus7">26</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>We administered to his hurts the best we could</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#illus8">30</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>“I’d a heap rather you’d pull your shot-gun on me than your pen”</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#illus9">32</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>The Committee of Public Comfort</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#illus10">72</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Buying cotton on his own account</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#illus11">76</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>“Miss Vallie!”</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#illus12">78</a><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_viii"></a>[viii]</span></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>“I saw him fling his hand to his shoulder and hold it there”</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#illus13">80</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>“Dat ar grape jelly on de right han’ side”</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#illus14">82</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>“‘Conant!’ here and ‘Conant’ dar”</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#illus15">84</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>“Drapt down on de groun’ dar an’ holler an’ cry”</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#illus16">90</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>“Oh, my shoulder!”</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#illus17">122</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>“Marse Tumlin never did pass a nigger on de road”</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#illus18">124</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>“We made twelve pies ef we made one”</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#illus19">126</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>“I gi’ Miss Vallie de money”</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#illus20">128</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>“Ef here ain’t ol’ Minervy Ann wid pies!”</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#illus21">130</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>“You see dat nigger ’oman?”</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#illus22">132</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>“An’ he sot dar, suh, wid his haid ’twix’ his han’s fer I dunner how long”</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#illus23">134</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>“You’ll settle dis wid me”</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#illus24">136</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>“Dat money ain’t gwine ter las’ when you buy dat kin’ er doin’s”</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#illus25">160</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Trimmin’ up de Ol’ Mules</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#illus26">162</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>“She wuz cryin’—settin’ dar cryin’”</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#illus27">164</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>“Here come a nigger boy leadin’ a bob-tail hoss”</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#illus28">166</a><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_ix"></a>[ix]</span></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>“He been axin’ me lots ’bout Miss Vallie”</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#illus29">172</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>“Marse Tumlin ’low he’ll take anything what he can chaw, sop, er drink”</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#illus30">176</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>“I hatter stop an’ pass de time er day”</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#illus31">178</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>“Hunt up an’ down fer dat ar Tom Perryman”</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#illus32">180</a></td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_1"></a>[1]</span></p>
-
-<h1>THE CHRONICLES OF<br />
-AUNT MINERVY ANN</h1>
-
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="I">I<br />
-<span class="smaller">AN EVENING WITH THE KU-KLUX</span></h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>The happiest, the most vivid, and certainly the
-most critical period of a man’s life is combined in
-the years that stretch between sixteen and twenty-two.
-His responsibilities do not sit heavily on him,
-he has hardly begun to realize them, and yet he has
-begun to see and feel, to observe and absorb; he is
-for once and for the last time an interested, and yet
-an irresponsible, spectator of the passing show.</p>
-
-<p>This period I had passed very pleasantly, if not
-profitably, at Halcyondale in Middle Georgia, directly
-after the great war, and the town and the
-people there had a place apart, in my mind. When,
-therefore, some ten years after leaving there, I received
-a cordial invitation to attend the county fair,
-which had been organized by some of the enterprising
-spirits of the town and county, among whom<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_2"></a>[2]</span>
-were Paul Conant and his father-in-law, Major
-Tumlin Perdue, it was natural that the fact should
-revive old memories.</p>
-
-<p>The most persistent of these memories were those
-which clustered around Major Perdue, his daughter
-Vallie, and his brother-in-law, Colonel Bolivar
-Blasengame, and Aunt Minervy Ann Perdue.
-Curiously enough, my recollection of this negro
-woman was the most persistent of all. Her individuality
-seemed to stand out more vitally than the rest.
-She was what is called “a character,” and something
-more besides. The truth is, I should have missed a
-good deal if I had never known Aunt Minervy Ann
-Perdue, who, as she described herself, was “Affikin
-fum ’way back yander ’fo’ de flood, an’ fum de
-word go”—a fact which seriously interferes with
-the somewhat complacent theory that Ham, son of
-Noah, was the original negro.</p>
-
-<p>It is a fact that Aunt Minervy Ann’s great-grandmother,
-who lived to be a hundred and twenty years
-old, had an eagle tattooed on her breast, the mark
-of royalty. The brother of this princess, Qua, who
-died in Augusta at the age of one hundred years, had
-two eagles tattooed on his breast. This, taken in
-connection with his name, which means The Eagle,
-shows that he was either the ruler of his tribe or<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_3"></a>[3]</span>
-the heir apparent. The prince and princess were
-very small, compared with the average African, but
-the records kept by a member of the Clopton family
-show that during the Revolution Qua performed
-some wonderful feats, and went through some
-strange adventures in behalf of liberty. He was in
-his element when war was at its hottest—and it has
-never been hotter in any age or time, or in any part
-of the world, savage or civilized, than it was then
-in the section of Georgia now comprised in the
-counties of Burke, Columbia, Richmond, and Elbert.</p>
-
-<p>However, that has nothing to do with Aunt Minervy
-Ann Perdue; but her relationship to Qua and
-to the royal family of his tribe, remote though it
-was, accounted for the most prominent traits of her
-character, and many contradictory elements of her
-strong and sharply defined individuality. She had
-a bad temper, and was both fierce and fearless when
-it was aroused; but it was accompanied by a heart
-as tender and a devotion as unselfish as any mortal
-ever possessed or displayed. Her temper was more
-widely advertised than her tenderness, and her independence
-more clearly in evidence than her unselfish
-devotion, except to those who knew her well
-or intimately.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_4"></a>[4]</span></p>
-
-<p>And so it happened that Aunt Minervy Ann,
-after freedom gave her the privilege of showing her
-extraordinary qualities of self-sacrifice, walked
-about in the midst of the suspicion and distrust of
-her own race, and was followed by the misapprehensions
-and misconceptions of many of the whites.
-She knew the situation and laughed at it, and if she
-wasn’t proud of it her attitude belied her.</p>
-
-<p>It was at the moment of transition from the old
-conditions to the new that I had known Aunt Minervy
-Ann and the persons in whom she was so profoundly
-interested, and she and they, as I have said,
-had a place apart in my memory and experience.
-I also remembered Hamp, Aunt Minervy Ann’s husband,
-and the queer contrast between the two. It
-was mainly on account of Hamp, perhaps, that Aunt
-Minervy Ann was led to take such a friendly interest
-in the somewhat lonely youth who was editor,
-compositor, and pressman of Halcyondale’s ambitious
-weekly newspaper in the days following the
-collapse of the confederacy.</p>
-
-<p>When a slave, Hamp had belonged to an estate
-which was in the hands of the Court of Ordinary
-(or, as it was then called, the Inferior Court), to be
-administered in the interest of minor heirs. This
-was not a fortunate thing for the negroes, of which<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_5"></a>[5]</span>
-there were above one hundred and fifty. Men,
-women, and children were hired out, some far and
-some near. They came back home at Christmastime,
-enjoyed a week’s frolic, and were then hired
-out again, perhaps to new employers. But whether
-to new or old, it is certain that hired hands in those
-days did not receive the consideration that men gave
-to their own negroes.</p>
-
-<p>This experience told heavily on Hamp’s mind.
-It made him reserved, suspicious, and antagonistic.
-He had few pleasant memories to fall back on, and
-these were of the days of his early youth, when he
-used to trot around holding to his old master’s coat-tails—the
-kind old master who had finally been sent
-to the insane asylum. Hamp never got over the idea
-(he had heard some of the older negroes talking
-about it) that his old master had been judged to be
-crazy simply because he was unusually kind to his
-negroes, especially the little ones. Hamp’s after-experience
-seemed to prove this, for he received
-small share of kindness, as well as scrimped rations,
-from the majority of those who hired him.</p>
-
-<p>It was a very good thing for Hamp that he married
-Aunt Minervy Ann, otherwise he would have
-become a wanderer and a vagabond when freedom
-came. It was a fate he didn’t miss a hair’s breadth;<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_6"></a>[6]</span>
-he “broke loose,” as he described it, and went off,
-but finally came back and tried in vain to persuade
-Aunt Minervy Ann to leave Major Perdue. He
-finally settled down, but acquired no very friendly
-feelings toward the white race.</p>
-
-<p>He joined the secret political societies, strangely
-called “Union Leagues,” and aided in disseminating
-the belief that the whites were only awaiting a
-favorable opportunity to re-enslave his race. He
-was only repeating what the carpet-baggers had told
-him. Perhaps he believed the statement, perhaps
-not. At any rate, he repeated it fervently and frequently,
-and soon came to be the recognized leader
-of the negroes in the county of which Halcyondale
-was the capital. That is to say, the leader of all except
-one. At church one Sunday night some of the
-brethren congratulated Aunt Minervy Ann on the
-fact that Hamp was now the leader of the colored
-people in that region.</p>
-
-<p>“What colored people?” snapped Aunt Minervy
-Ann.</p>
-
-<p>“We-all,” responded a deacon, emphatically.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, he can’t lead <em>me</em>, I’ll tell you dat right
-now!” exclaimed Aunt Minervy Ann.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 700px;" id="illus2">
-<img src="images/illus2.jpg" width="700" height="475" alt="" />
-<p class="caption">“Well, he can’t lead <em>me</em>.”</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>Anyhow, when the time came to elect members
-of the Legislature (the constitutional convention<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_7"></a>[7]</span>
-had already been held), Hamp was chosen to be the
-candidate of the negro Republicans. A white man
-wanted to run, but the negroes said they preferred
-their own color, and they had their way. They had
-their way at the polls, too, for, as nearly all the
-whites who would have voted had served in the
-Confederate army, they were at that time disfranchised.</p>
-
-<p>So Hamp was elected overwhelmingly, “worl’
-widout een’,” as he put it, and the effect it had on
-him was a perfect illustration of one aspect of human
-nature. Before and during the election (which
-lasted three days) Hamp had been going around
-puffed up with importance. He wore a blue army
-overcoat and a stove-pipe hat, and went about smoking
-a big cigar. When the election was over, and
-he was declared the choice of the county, he collapsed.
-His dignity all disappeared. His air of
-self-importance and confidence deserted him. His
-responsibilities seemed to weigh him down.</p>
-
-<p>He had once “rolled” in the little printing-office
-where the machinery consisted of a No. 2 Washington
-hand-press, a wooden imposing-stone, three
-stands for the cases, a rickety table for “wetting
-down” the paper, and a tub in which to wash the
-forms. This office chanced to be my headquarters,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_8"></a>[8]</span>
-and the day after the election I was somewhat surprised
-to see Hamp saunter in. So was Major Tumlin
-Perdue, who was reading the exchanges.</p>
-
-<p>“He’s come to demand a retraction,” remarked
-the Major, “and you’ll have to set him right. He’s
-no longer plain Hamp; he’s the Hon. Hamp—what’s
-your other name?” turning to the negro.</p>
-
-<p>“Hamp Tumlin my fergiven name, suh. I
-thought ’Nervy Ann tol’ you dat.”</p>
-
-<p>“Why, who named you after me?” inquired the
-Major, somewhat angrily.</p>
-
-<p>“Me an’ ’Nervy Ann fix it up, suh. She say it’s
-about de purtiest name in town.”</p>
-
-<p>The Major melted a little, but his bristles rose
-again, as it were.</p>
-
-<p>“Look here, Hamp!” he exclaimed in a tone that
-nobody ever forgot or misinterpreted; “don’t you
-go and stick Perdue onto it. I won’t stand
-that!”</p>
-
-<p>“No, suh!” responded Hamp. “I started ter do
-it, but ’Nervy Ann say she ain’t gwine ter have de
-Perdue name bandied about up dar whar de Legislature’s
-at.”</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 600px;" id="illus3">
-<img src="images/illus3.jpg" width="600" height="700" alt="" />
-<p class="caption">He wore a blue army overcoat and a stove-pipe hat.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>Again the Major thawed, and though he looked
-long at Hamp it was with friendly eyes. He seemed
-to be studying the negro—“sizing him up,” as the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_9"></a>[9]</span>
-saying is. For a newly elected member of the Legislature,
-Hamp seemed to take a great deal of interest
-in the old duties he once performed about the
-office. He went first to the box in which the “roller”
-was kept, and felt of its surface carefully.</p>
-
-<p>“You’ll hatter have a bran new roller ’fo’ de
-mont’s out,” he said, “an’ I won’t be here to he’p
-you make it.”</p>
-
-<p>Then he went to the roller-frame, turned the
-handle, and looked at the wooden cylinders. “Dey
-don’t look atter it like I use ter, suh; an’ dish yer
-frame monst’us shackly.”</p>
-
-<p>From there he passed to the forms where the advertisements
-remained standing. He passed his
-thumb over the type and looked at it critically.
-“Dey er mighty skeer’d dey’ll git all de ink off,”
-was his comment. Do what he would, Hamp
-couldn’t hide his embarrassment.</p>
-
-<p>Meanwhile, Major Perdue scratched off a few
-lines in pencil. “I wish you’d get this in Tuesday’s
-paper,” he said. Then he read: “The Hon. Hampton
-Tumlin, recently elected a member of the Legislature,
-paid us a pop-call last Saturday. We are always
-pleased to meet our distinguished fellow-townsman
-and representative. We trust Hon. Hampton
-Tumlin will call again when the Ku-Klux are in.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_10"></a>[10]</span></p>
-
-<p>“Why, certainly,” said I, humoring the joke.</p>
-
-<p>“Sholy you-all ain’t gwine put dat in de paper, is
-you?” inquired Hamp, in amazement.</p>
-
-<p>“Of course,” replied the Major; “why not?”</p>
-
-<p>“Kaze, ef you does, I’m a ruint nigger. Ef
-’Nervy Ann hear talk ’bout my name an’ entitlements
-bein’ in de paper, she’ll quit me sho. Uh-uh!
-I’m gwine ’way fum here!” With that Hamp
-bowed and disappeared. The Major chuckled over
-his little joke, but soon returned to his newspaper.
-For a quarter of an hour there was absolute quiet in
-the room, and, as it seemed, in the entire building,
-which was a brick structure of two stories, the stairway
-being in the centre. The hallway was, perhaps,
-seventy-five feet long, and on each side, at regular
-intervals, there were four rooms, making eight in all,
-and, with one exception, variously occupied as lawyers’
-offices or sleeping apartments, the exception
-being the printing-office in which Major Perdue and
-I were sitting. This was at the extreme rear of the
-hallway.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 625px;" id="illus4">
-<img src="images/illus4.jpg" width="625" height="700" alt="" />
-<p class="caption">“Sholy you-all ain’t gwine put dat in de paper, is you?”</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>I had frequently been struck by the acoustic properties
-of this hallway. A conversation carried on in
-ordinary tones in the printing-office could hardly be
-heard in the adjoining room. Transferred to the
-front rooms, however, or even to the sidewalk facing<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_11"></a>[11]</span>
-the entrance to the stairway, the lightest tone
-was magnified in volume. A German professor of
-music, who for a time occupied the apartment opposite
-the printing-office, was so harassed by the thunderous
-sounds of laughter and conversation rolling
-back upon him that he tried to remedy the matter
-by nailing two thicknesses of bagging along the floor
-from the stairway to the rear window. This was,
-indeed, something of a help, but when the German
-left, being of an economical turn of mind, he took
-his bagging away with him, and once more the hallway
-was torn and rent, as you may say, with the
-lightest whisper.</p>
-
-<p>Thus it happened that, while the Major and I
-were sitting enjoying an extraordinary season of
-calm, suddenly there came a thundering sound from
-the stairway. A troop of horse could hardly have
-made a greater uproar, and yet I knew that fewer
-than half a dozen people were ascending the steps.
-Some one stumbled and caught himself, and the
-multiplied and magnified reverberations were as
-loud as if the roof had caved in, carrying the better
-part of the structure with it. Some one laughed
-at the misstep, and the sound came to our ears with
-the deafening effect of an explosion. The party filed
-with a dull roar into one of the front rooms, the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_12"></a>[12]</span>
-office of a harum-scarum young lawyer who had
-more empty bottles behind his door than he had
-ever had briefs on his desk.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, the great Gemini!” exclaimed Major
-Perdue, “how do you manage to stand that sort of
-thing?”</p>
-
-<p>I shrugged my shoulders and laughed, and was
-about to begin anew a very old tirade against caves
-and halls of thunder, when the Major raised a warning
-hand. Some one was saying——</p>
-
-<p>“He hangs out right on ol’ Major Perdue’s lot.
-He’s got a wife there.”</p>
-
-<p>“By jing!” exclaimed another voice; “is that
-so? Well, I don’t wanter git mixed up wi’ the
-Major. He may be wobbly on his legs, but I don’t
-wanter be the one to run up ag’in ’im.”</p>
-
-<p>The Major pursed up his lips and looked at the
-ceiling, his attitude being one of rapt attention.</p>
-
-<p>“Shucks!” cried another; “by the time the ol’
-cock gits his bellyful of dram, thunder wouldn’t
-roust ’im.”</p>
-
-<p>A shrewd, foxy, almost sinister expression came
-over the Major’s rosy face as he glanced at me. His
-left hand went to his goatee, an invariable signal of
-deep feeling, such as anger, grief, or serious trouble.
-Another voice broke in here, a voice that we both<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_13"></a>[13]</span>
-knew to be that of Larry Pulliam, a big Kentuckian
-who had refugeed to Halcyondale during the war.</p>
-
-<p>“Blast it all!” exclaimed Larry Pulliam, “I
-hope the Major will come out. Me an’ him hain’t
-never butted heads yit, an’ it’s gittin’ high time. Ef
-he comes out, you fellers jest go ahead with your rat-killin’.
-<em>I</em>’ll ’ten’ to him.”</p>
-
-<p>“Why, you’d make two of him, Pulliam,” said
-the young lawyer.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, I’ll not hurt ’im; that is, not <em>much</em>—jest
-enough to let ’im know I’m livin’ in the same village,”
-replied Mr. Pulliam. The voice of the town
-bull could not have had a more terrifying sound.</p>
-
-<p>Glancing at the Major, I saw that he had entirely
-recovered his equanimity. More than that, a smile
-of sweet satisfaction and contentment settled on his
-rosy face, and stayed there.</p>
-
-<p>“I wouldn’t take a hundred dollars for that last
-remark,” whispered the Major. “That chap’s been
-a-raisin’ his hackle at me ever since he’s been here,
-and every time I try to get him to make a flutter he’s
-off and gone. Of course it wouldn’t do for me to
-push a row on him just dry so. But now——” The
-Major laughed softly, rubbed his hands together,
-and seemed to be as happy as a child with a new toy.</p>
-
-<p>“My son,” said he after awhile, “ain’t there<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_14"></a>[14]</span>
-some way of finding out who the other fellows are?
-Ain’t you got some word you want Seab Griffin”—this
-was the young lawyer—“to spell for you?”</p>
-
-<p>Spelling was the Major’s weakness. He was a
-well-educated man, and could write vigorous English,
-but only a few days before he had asked me how
-many <i>f</i>’s there are in <i>graphic</i>.</p>
-
-<p>“Let’s see,” he went on, rubbing the top of his
-head. “Do you spell <i>Byzantium</i> with two <i>y</i>’s, or
-with two <i>i</i>’s, or with one <i>y</i> and one <i>i</i>? It’ll make
-Seab feel right good to be asked that before company,
-and he certainly needs to feel good if he’s going
-with that crowd.”</p>
-
-<p>So, with a manuscript copy in my hand, I went
-hurriedly down the hall and put the important question.
-Mr. Griffin was all politeness, but not quite
-sure of the facts in the case. But he searched in his
-books of reference, including the Geographical Gazette,
-until finally he was able to give me the information
-I was supposed to stand in need of.</p>
-
-<p>While he was searching, Mr. Pulliam turned to
-me and inquired what day the paper came out.
-When told that the date was Tuesday, he smiled and
-nodded his head mysteriously.</p>
-
-<p>“That’s good,” he declared; “you’ll be in time
-to ketch the news.”</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 700px;" id="illus5">
-<img src="images/illus5.jpg" width="700" height="575" alt="" />
-<p class="caption">Inquired what day the paper came out.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_15"></a>[15]</span></p>
-
-<p>“What news?” I inquired.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, ef you don’t hear about it before to-morrer
-night, jest inquire of Major Perdue. He’ll tell
-you all about it.”</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Pulliam’s tone was so supercilious that I was
-afraid the Major would lose his temper and come
-raging down the hallway. But he did nothing of
-the kind. When I returned he was fairly beaming,
-and seemed to be perfectly happy. The Major took
-down the names in his note-book—I have forgotten
-all except those of Buck Sanford and Larry Pulliam;
-they were all from the country except Larry
-Pulliam and the young lawyer.</p>
-
-<p>After my visit to the room, the men spoke in
-lower tones, but every word came back to us as distinctly
-as before.</p>
-
-<p>“The feed of the horses won’t cost us a cent,” remarked
-young Sanford. “Tom Gresham said he’d
-’ten’ to that. They’re in the stable right now. And
-we’re to have supper in Tom’s back room, have a
-little game of ante, and along about twelve or one
-we’ll sa’nter down and yank that darned nigger
-from betwixt his blankets, ef he’s got any, and leave
-him to cool off at the cross-roads. Won’t you go
-’long, Seab, and see it well done?”</p>
-
-<p>“I’ll go and see if the supper’s well done, and I’ll<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_16"></a>[16]</span>
-take a shy at your ante,” replied Mr. Griffin. “But
-when it comes to the balance of the programme—well,
-I’m a lawyer, you know, and you couldn’t expect
-me to witness the affair. I might have to take
-your cases and prove an alibi, you know, and I
-couldn’t conscientiously do that if I was on hand at
-the time.”</p>
-
-<p>“The Ku-Klux don’t have to have alibis,” suggested
-Larry Pulliam.</p>
-
-<p>“Perhaps not, still—” Apparently Mr. Griffin
-disposed of the matter with a gesture.</p>
-
-<p>When all the details of their plan had been carefully
-arranged, the amateur Ku-Klux went filing
-out, the noise they made dying away like the echoes
-of a storm.</p>
-
-<p>Major Perdue leaned his head against the back of
-his chair, closed his eyes, and sat there so quietly that
-I thought he was asleep. But this was a mistake.
-Suddenly he began to laugh, and he laughed until
-the tears ran down his face. It was laughter that
-was contagious, and presently I found myself joining
-in without knowing why. This started the Major
-afresh, and we both laughed until exhaustion
-came to our aid.</p>
-
-<p>“O Lord!” cried the Major, panting, “I haven’t
-had as much fun since the war, and a long time before.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_17"></a>[17]</span>
-That blamed Pulliam is going to walk into a
-trap of his own setting. Now you jest watch how he
-goes out ag’in.”</p>
-
-<p>“But I’ll not be there,” I suggested.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, yes!” exclaimed the Major, “you can’t afford
-to miss it. It’ll be the finest piece of news your
-paper ever had. You’ll go to supper with me—”
-He paused. “No, I’ll go home, send Valentine to
-her Aunt Emmy’s, get Blasengame to come around,
-and we’ll have supper about nine. That’ll fix it.
-Some of them chaps might have an eye on my house,
-and I don’t want ’em to see anybody but me go in
-there. Now, if you don’t come at nine, I’ll send
-Blasengame after you.”</p>
-
-<p>“I shall be glad to come, Major. I was simply
-fishing for an invitation.”</p>
-
-<p>“<em>That</em> fish is always on your hook, and you know
-it,” the Major insisted.</p>
-
-<p>As it was arranged, so it fell out. At nine, I
-lifted and dropped the knocker on the Major’s front
-door. It opened so promptly that I was somewhat
-taken by surprise, but in a moment the hand of my
-host was on my arm, and he pulled me inside unceremoniously.</p>
-
-<p>“I was on the lookout,” the Major explained.
-“Minervy Ann has fixed to have waffles, and she’s<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_18"></a>[18]</span>
-crazy about havin’ ’em just right. If she waits too
-long to make ’em, the batter’ll spoil; and if she puts
-’em on before everybody’s ready, they won’t be
-good. That’s what she says. Here he is, you old
-Hessian!” the Major cried, as Minervy Ann peeped
-in from the dining-room. “Now slap that supper
-together and let’s get at it.”</p>
-
-<p>“I’m mighty glad you come, suh,” said Aunt
-Minervy Ann, with a courtesy and a smile, and then
-she disappeared. In an incredibly short time supper
-was announced, and though Aunt Minervy has
-since informed me confidentially that the Perdues
-were having a hard time of it at that period, I’ll do
-her the justice to say that the supper she furnished
-forth was as good as any to be had in that town—waffles,
-beat biscuit, fried chicken, buttermilk, and
-coffee that could not be surpassed.</p>
-
-<p>“How about the biscuit, Minervy Ann?” inquired
-Colonel Blasengame, who was the Major’s
-brother-in-law, and therefore one of the family.</p>
-
-<p>“I turned de dough on de block twelve times, an’
-hit it a hundred an forty-sev’m licks,” replied Aunt
-Minervy Ann.</p>
-
-<p>“I’m afeard you hit it one lick too many,” said
-Colonel Blasengame, winking at me.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 475px;" id="illus6">
-<img src="images/illus6.jpg" width="475" height="700" alt="" />
-<p class="caption">“I was on the lookout,” the Major explained.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>“Well, suh, I been hittin’ dat away a mighty<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_19"></a>[19]</span>
-long time,” Aunt Minervy Ann explained, “and I
-ain’t never hear no complaints.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, I’m not complainin’, Minervy Ann.” Colonel
-Blasengame waved his hand. “I’m mighty
-glad you did hit the dough a lick too many. If you
-hadn’t, the biscuit would ’a’ melted in my mouth,
-and I believe I’d rather chew on ’em to get the
-taste.”</p>
-
-<p>“He des runnin’ on, suh,” said Aunt Minervy
-Ann to me. “Marse Bolivar know mighty well
-dat he got ter go ’way fum de Nunited State fer ter
-git any better biscuits dan what I kin bake.”</p>
-
-<p>Then there was a long pause, which was broken
-by an attempt on the part of Major Perdue to give
-Aunt Minervy Ann an inkling of the events likely
-to happen during the night. She seemed to be both
-hard of hearing and dull of understanding when
-the subject was broached; or she may have suspected
-the Major was joking or trying to “run a rig” on
-her. Her questions and comments, however, were
-very characteristic.</p>
-
-<p>“I dunner what dey want wid Hamp,” she said.
-“Ef dey know’d how no-count he is, dey’d let ’im
-’lone. What dey want wid ’im?”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, two or three of the country boys and maybe
-some of the town chaps are going to call on him<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_20"></a>[20]</span>
-between midnight and day. They want to take him
-out to the cross-roads. Hadn’t you better fix ’em up
-a little snack? Hamp won’t want anything, but the
-boys will feel a little hungry after the job is over.”</p>
-
-<p>“Nobody ain’t never tell me dat de Legislatur’
-wuz like de Free Masons, whar dey have ter ride a
-billy goat an’ go down in a dry well wid de chains
-a-clankin’. I done tol’ Hamp dat he better not fool
-wid white folks’ doin’s.”</p>
-
-<p>“Only the colored members have to be initiated,”
-explained the Major, solemnly.</p>
-
-<p>“What does dey do wid um?” inquired Aunt
-Minervy Ann.</p>
-
-<p>“Well,” replied the Major, “they take ’em out
-to the nearest cross-roads, put ropes around their
-necks, run the ropes over limbs, and pull away as if
-they were drawing water from a well.”</p>
-
-<p>“What dey do dat fer?” asked Aunt Minervy
-Ann, apparently still oblivious to the meaning of it
-all.</p>
-
-<p>“They want to see which’ll break first, the ropes
-or the necks,” the Major explained.</p>
-
-<p>“Ef dey takes Hamp out,” remarked Aunt Minervy
-Ann, tentatively—feeling her way, as it were—“what
-time will he come back?”</p>
-
-<p>“You’ve heard about the Resurrection Morn,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_21"></a>[21]</span>
-haven’t you, Minervy Ann?” There was a pious
-twang in the Major’s voice as he pronounced the
-words.</p>
-
-<p>“I hear de preacher say sump’n ’bout it,” replied
-Aunt Minervy Ann.</p>
-
-<p>“Well,” said the Major, “along about that time
-Hamp will return. I hope his record is good enough
-to give him wings.”</p>
-
-<p>“Shuh! Marse Tumlin! you-all des fool’in’ me.
-I don’t keer—Hamp ain’t gwine wid um. I tell
-you dat right now.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, he may not want to go,” persisted the Major,
-“but he’ll go all the same if they get their hands
-on him.”</p>
-
-<p>“My life er me!” exclaimed Aunt Minervy Ann,
-bristling up, “does you-all ’speck I’m gwine ter let
-um take Hamp out dat away? De fus’ man come ter
-my door, less’n it’s one er you-all, I’m gwine ter fling
-a pan er hot embers in his face ef de Lord’ll gi’ me
-de strenk. An’ ef dat don’t do no good, I’ll scald
-um wid b’ilin’ water. You hear dat, don’t you?”</p>
-
-<p>“Minervy Ann,” said the Major, sweetly, “have
-you ever heard of the Ku-Klux?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yasser, I is!” she exclaimed with startling emphasis.
-She stopped still and gazed hard at the Major.
-In response, he merely shrugged his shoulders<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_22"></a>[22]</span>
-and raised his right hand with a swift gesture that
-told the whole story.</p>
-
-<p>“Name er God! Marse Tumlin, is you an’ Marse
-Bolivar and dish yer young genterman gwine ter set
-down here flat-footed and let dem Kukluckers scarify
-Hamp?”</p>
-
-<p>“Why should <em>we</em> do anything? You’ve got
-everything arranged. You’re going to singe ’em
-with hot embers, and you’re going to take their hides
-off with scalding water. What more do you want?”
-The Major spoke with an air of benign resignation.</p>
-
-<p>Aunt Minervy Ann shook her head vigorously.
-“Ef dey er de Kukluckers, fire won’t do um no
-harm. Dey totes der haids in der han’s.”</p>
-
-<p>“Their heads in their hands?” cried Colonel
-Blasengame, excitedly.</p>
-
-<p>“Dat what dey say, suh,” replied Aunt Minervy
-Ann.</p>
-
-<p>Colonel Blasengame looked at his watch. “Tumlin,
-I’ll have to ask you to excuse me to-night,” he
-said. “I—well, the fact is, I have a mighty important
-engagement up town. I’m obliged to fill
-it.” He turned to Aunt Minervy Ann: “Did I
-understand you to say the Ku-Klux carry their
-heads in their hands?”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_23"></a>[23]</span></p>
-
-<p>“Dat what folks tell me. I hear my own color
-sesso,” replied Aunt Minervy Ann.</p>
-
-<p>“I’d be glad to stay with you, Tumlin,” the Colonel
-declared; “but—well, under the circumstances,
-I think I’d better fill that engagement.
-Justice to my family demands it.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well,” responded Major Perdue, “if you are
-going, I reckon we’d just as well go, too.”</p>
-
-<p>“Huh!” exclaimed Aunt Minervy Ann, “ef
-gwine’s de word, dey can’t nobody beat me gittin’
-way fum here. Dey may beat me comin’ back, I
-ain’t ’sputin’ dat; but dey can’t beat me gwine ’way.
-I’m ol’, but I got mighty nigh ez much go in me ez
-a quarter-hoss.”</p>
-
-<p>Colonel Blasengame leaned back in his chair and
-studied the ceiling. “It seems to me, Tumlin, we
-might compromise on this. Suppose we get Hamp
-to come in here. Minervy Ann can stay out there in
-the kitchen and throw a rock against the back door
-when the Ku-Klux come.”</p>
-
-<p>Aunt Minervy Ann fairly gasped. “<em>Who?
-Me?</em> I’ll die fust. I’ll t’ar dat do’ down; I’ll holler
-twel ev’ybody in de neighborhood come a-runnin’.
-Ef you don’t b’lieve me, you des try me. I’ll paw
-up dat back-yard.”</p>
-
-<p>Major Perdue went to the back door and called<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_24"></a>[24]</span>
-Hamp, but there was no answer. He called him a
-second time, with the same result.</p>
-
-<p>“Well,” said the Major, “they’ve stolen a march
-on us. They’ve come and carried him off while we
-were talking.”</p>
-
-<p>“No, suh, dey ain’t, needer. I know right whar
-he is, an’ I’m gwine atter ’im. He’s right ’cross de
-street dar, colloguin’ wid dat ol’ Ceely Ensign.
-Dat’s right whar he is.”</p>
-
-<p>“Old! Why, Celia is young,” remarked the Major.
-“They say she’s the best cook in town.”</p>
-
-<p>Aunt Minervy Ann whipped out of the room and
-was gone some little time. When she returned, she
-had Hamp with her, and I noticed that both were
-laboring under excitement which they strove in vain
-to suppress.</p>
-
-<p>“Here I is, suh,” said Hamp. “’Nervy Ann say
-you call me.”</p>
-
-<p>“How is Celia to-night?” Colonel Blasengame
-inquired, suavely.</p>
-
-<p>This inquiry, so suddenly and unexpectedly put,
-seemed to disconcert Hamp. He shuffled his feet
-and put his hand to his face. I noticed a blue welt
-over his eye, which was not there when he visited
-me in the afternoon.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, suh, I ’speck she’s tolerbul.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_25"></a>[25]</span></p>
-
-<p>“<em>Is she? Is she? Ah-h-h!</em>” cried Aunt Minervy
-Ann.</p>
-
-<p>“She must be pretty well,” said the Major. “I
-see she’s hit you a clip over the left eye.”</p>
-
-<p>“Dat’s some er ’Nervy Ann’s doin’s, suh,” replied
-Hamp, somewhat disconsolately.</p>
-
-<p>“Den what you git in de way fer?” snapped
-Aunt Minervy Ann.</p>
-
-<p>“Marse Tumlin, dat ar ’oman ain’t done nothin’
-in de roun’ worl’. She say she want me to buy some
-hime books fer de church when I went to Atlanty,
-an’ I went over dar atter de money.”</p>
-
-<p>“<em>I himed ’er an’ I churched ’er!</em>” exclaimed
-Aunt Minervy Ann.</p>
-
-<p>“Here de money right here,” said Hamp, pulling
-a small roll of shinplasters out of his pocket;
-“an’ whiles we settin’ dar countin’ de money,
-’Nervy Ann come in dar an’ frail dat ’oman out.”</p>
-
-<p>“Ain’t you hear dat nigger holler, Marse Tumlin?”
-inquired Minervy Ann. She was in high
-good-humor now. “Look like ter me dey could
-a-heerd ’er blate in de nex’ county ef dey’d been
-a-lis’nin’. ’Twuz same ez a picnic, suh, an’ I’m
-gwine ’cross dar ’fo’ long an’ pay my party call.”</p>
-
-<p>Then she began to laugh, and pretty soon went
-through the whole episode for our edification,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_26"></a>[26]</span>
-dwelling with unction on that part where the unfortunate
-victim of her jealousy had called her
-“Miss ’Nervy.” The more she laughed the more
-serious Hamp became.</p>
-
-<p>At the proper time he was told of the visitation
-that was to be made by the Ku-Klux, and this information
-seemed to perplex and worry him no little.
-But his face lit up with genuine thankfulness
-when the programme for the occasion was announced
-to him. He and Minervy Ann were to remain
-in the house and not show their heads until
-the Major or the Colonel or their guest came to the
-back door and drummed on it lightly with the
-fingers.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 700px;" id="illus7">
-<img src="images/illus7.jpg" width="700" height="600" alt="" />
-<p class="caption">In the third he placed only powder.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>Then the arms—three shot-guns—were brought
-out, and I noticed with some degree of surprise, that
-as the Major and the Colonel began to handle these,
-their spirits rose perceptibly. The Major hummed
-a tune and the Colonel whistled softly as they oiled
-the locks and tried the triggers. The Major, in
-coming home, had purchased four pounds of mustard-seed
-shot, and with this he proceeded to load
-two of the guns. In the third he placed only powder.
-This harmless weapon was intended for me,
-while the others were to be handled by Major Perdue
-and Colonel Blasengame. I learned afterward<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_27"></a>[27]</span>
-that the arrangement was made solely for my benefit.
-The Major and the Colonel were afraid that a
-young hand might become excited and fire too high
-at close range, in which event mustard-seed shot
-would be as dangerous as the larger variety.</p>
-
-<p>At twelve o’clock I noticed that both Hamp and
-Aunt Minervy were growing restless.</p>
-
-<p>“You hear dat clock, don’t you, Marse Tumlin?”
-said Minervy as the chimes died away. “Ef
-you don’t min’, de Kukluckers’ll be a-stickin’ der
-haids in de back do’.”</p>
-
-<p>But the Major and the Colonel were playing a
-rubber of seven-up (or high-low-Jack) and paid no
-attention. It was a quarter after twelve when the
-game was concluded and the players pushed their
-chairs back from the table.</p>
-
-<p>“Ef you don’t fin’ um in de yard waitin’ fer you,
-I’ll be fooled might’ly,” remarked Aunt Minervy
-Ann.</p>
-
-<p>“Go and see if they’re out there,” said the Major.</p>
-
-<p>“<em>Me</em>, Marse Tumlin? <em>Me?</em> I wouldn’t go out
-dat do’ not for ham.”</p>
-
-<p>The Major took out his watch. “They’ll eat
-and drink until twelve or a little after, and then
-they’ll get ready to start. Then they’ll have another
-drink all ’round, and finally they’ll take another.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_28"></a>[28]</span>
-It’ll be a quarter to one or after when they
-get in the grove in the far end of the lot. But we’ll
-go out now and see how the land lays. By the time
-they get here, our eyes will be used to the darkness.”</p>
-
-<p>The light was carried to a front room, and we
-groped our way out at the back door the best we
-could. The night was dark, but the stars were shining.
-I noticed that the belt and sword of Orion had
-drifted above the tree-tops in the east, following the
-Pleiades. In a little while the darkness seemed to
-grow less dense, and I could make out the outlines
-of trees twenty feet away.</p>
-
-<p>Behind one of these trees, near the outhouse in
-which Hamp and Aunt Minervy lived, I was to take
-my stand, while the Major and the Colonel were to
-go farther into the wood-lot so as to greet the would-be
-Ku-Klux as they made their retreat, of which
-Major Perdue had not the slightest doubt.</p>
-
-<p>“You stand here,” said the Major in a whisper.
-“We’ll go to the far-end of the lot where they’re
-likely to come in. They’ll pass us all right enough,
-but as soon as you see one of ’em, up with the gun
-an’ lam aloose, an’ before they can get away give
-’em the other barrel. Then you’ll hear from us.”</p>
-
-<p>Major Perdue and Colonel Blasengame disappeared
-in the darkness, leaving me, as it were, on<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_29"></a>[29]</span>
-the inner picket line. I found the situation somewhat
-ticklish, as the saying is. There was not the
-slightest danger, and I knew it, but if you ever have
-occasion to stand out in the dark, waiting for something
-to happen, you’ll find there’s a certain degree
-of suspense attached to it. And the loneliness and
-silence of the night will take a shape almost tangible.
-The stirring of the half-dead leaves, the chirping
-of a belated cricket, simply emphasized the loneliness
-and made the silence more profound. At
-intervals, all nature seemed to heave a deep sigh,
-and address itself to slumber again.</p>
-
-<p>In the house I heard the muffled sound of the
-clock chime one, but whether it was striking the
-half-hour or the hour I could not tell. Then I heard
-the stealthy tread of feet. Someone stumbled over
-a stick of timber, and the noise was followed by a
-smothered exclamation and a confused murmur of
-voices. As the story-writers say, I knew that the
-hour had come. I could hear whisperings, and then
-I saw a tall shadow steal from behind Aunt Minervy’s
-house, and heard it rap gently on the door. I
-raised the gun, pulled the hammer back, and let
-drive. A stream of fire shot from the gun, accompanied
-by a report that tore the silence to atoms. I
-heard a sharp exclamation of surprise, then the noise<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_30"></a>[30]</span>
-of running feet, and off went the other barrel. In
-a moment the Major and the Colonel opened on the
-fugitives. I heard a loud cry of pain from one, and,
-in the midst of it all, the mustard-seed shot rattled
-on the plank fence like hominy-snow on a tin roof.</p>
-
-<p>The next instant I heard someone running back
-in my direction, as if for dear life. He knew the
-place apparently, for he tried to go through the orchard,
-but just before he reached the orchard fence,
-he uttered a half-strangled cry of terror, and then I
-heard him fall as heavily as if he had dropped from
-the top of the house.</p>
-
-<p>It was impossible to imagine what had happened,
-and it was not until we had investigated the matter
-that the cause of the trouble was discovered. A wire
-clothes-line, stretched across the yard, had caught
-the would-be Ku-Klux under the chin, his legs flew
-from under him, and he had a fall, from the effects
-of which he was long in recovering. He was a
-young man about town, very well connected, who
-had gone into the affair in a spirit of mischief. We
-carried him into the house, and administered to his
-hurts the best we could; Aunt Minervy Ann, be it
-said to her credit, being more active in this direction
-than any of us.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 600px;" id="illus8">
-<img src="images/illus8.jpg" width="600" height="700" alt="" />
-<p class="caption">We administered to his hurts the best we could.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>On the Tuesday following, the county paper contained<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_31"></a>[31]</span>
-the news in a form that remains to this day
-unique. It is hardly necessary to say that it was
-from the pen of Major Tumlin Perdue.</p>
-
-<p>“Last Saturday afternoon our local editor was
-informed by a prominent citizen that if he would
-apply to Major Perdue he would be put in possession
-of a very interesting piece of news. Acting
-upon this hint, ye local yesterday went to Major
-Perdue, who, being in high good-humor, wrote out
-the following with his own hand:</p>
-
-<p>“‘Late Saturday night, while engaged with a
-party of friends in searching for a stray dog on my
-premises, I was surprised to see four or five men
-climb over my back fence and proceed toward my
-residence. As my most intimate friends do not visit
-me by climbing over my back fence, I immediately
-deployed my party in such a manner as to make the
-best of a threatening situation. The skirmish
-opened at my kitchen-door, with two rounds from
-a howitzer. This demoralized the enemy, who
-promptly retreated the way they came. One of
-them, the leader of the attacking party, carried away
-with him two loads of mustard-seed shot, delivered
-in the general neighborhood and region of the coat-tails,
-which, being on a level with the horizon, afforded
-as fair a target as could be had in the dark.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_32"></a>[32]</span>
-I understand on good authority that Mr. Larry Pulliam,
-one of our leading and deservedly popular
-citizens, has had as much as a quart of mustard-seed
-shot picked from his carcass. Though hit in
-a vulnerable spot, the wound is not mortal.—<span class="smcap">T.
-Perdue.</span>’”</p>
-
-<p>I did my best to have Mr. Pulliam’s name suppressed,
-but the Major would not have it so.</p>
-
-<p>“No, sir,” he insisted; “the man has insulted
-me behind my back, and he’s got to cut wood or put
-down the axe.”</p>
-
-<p>Naturally this free and easy card created quite a
-sensation in Halcyondale and the country round
-about. People knew what it would mean if Major
-Perdue’s name had been used in such an off-hand
-manner by Mr. Pulliam, and they naturally supposed
-that a fracas would be the outcome. Public
-expectation was on tiptoe, and yet the whole town
-seemed to take the Major’s card humorously. Some
-of the older citizens laughed until they could hardly
-sit up, and even Mr. Pulliam’s friends caught the
-infection. Indeed, it is said that Mr. Pulliam, himself,
-after the first shock of surprise was over, paid
-the Major’s audacious humor the tribute of a hearty
-laugh. When Mr. Pulliam appeared in public,
-among the first men he saw was Major Perdue. This<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_33"></a>[33]</span>
-was natural, for the Major made it a point to be on
-hand. He was not a ruffler, but he thought it was
-his duty to give Mr. Pulliam a fair opportunity to
-wreak vengeance on him. If the boys about town
-imagined that a row was to be the result of this first
-meeting, they were mistaken. Mr. Pulliam looked
-at the Major and then began to laugh.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 525px;" id="illus9">
-<img src="images/illus9.jpg" width="525" height="700" alt="" />
-<p class="caption">“I’d a heap rather you’d pull your shot-gun on me than your pen.”</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>“Major Perdue,” he said, “I’d a heap rather
-you’d pull your shot-gun on me than your pen.”</p>
-
-<p>And that ended the matter.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_34"></a>[34]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="II">II<br />
-<span class="smaller">“WHEN JESS WENT A-FIDDLIN’”</span></h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>The foregoing recital is unquestionably a long
-and tame preface to the statement that, after thinking
-the matter over I concluded to accept the official
-invitation to the fair—“The Middle Georgia Exposition”
-it was called—if nothing occurred to prevent.
-With this conclusion I dismissed the matter from
-my mind for the time being, and would probably
-have thought of it no more until the moment arrived
-to make a final decision, if the matter had not
-been called somewhat sharply to my attention.</p>
-
-<p>Sitting on the veranda one day, ruminating over
-other people’s troubles, I heard an unfamiliar voice
-calling, “You-all got any bitin’ dogs here?” The
-voice failed to match the serenity of the suburban
-scene. Its tone was pitched a trifle too high for the
-surroundings.</p>
-
-<p>But before I could make any reply the gate was
-flung open, and the new-comer, who was no other
-than Aunt Minervy Ann, flirted in and began to<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_35"></a>[35]</span>
-climb the terraces. My recognition of her was not
-immediate, partly because it had been long since I
-saw her and partly because she wore her Sunday
-toggery, in which, following the oriental tastes of
-her race, the reds and yellows were emphasized with
-startling effect. She began to talk by the time she
-was half-way between the house and gate, and it
-was owing to this special and particular volubility
-that I was able to recognize her.</p>
-
-<p>“Huh!” she exclaimed, “hit’s des like clim’in’
-up sta’rs. Folks what live here bleeze ter b’long ter
-de Sons er Tempunce.” There was a relish about
-this reference to the difficulties of three terraces
-that at once identified Aunt Minervy Ann. More
-than that, one of the most conspicuous features of
-the country town where she lived was a large brick
-building, covering half a block, across the top of
-which stretched a sign—“Temperance Hall”—in
-letters that could be read half a mile away.</p>
-
-<p>Aunt Minervy Ann received a greeting that
-seemed to please her, whereupon she explained that
-an excursion had come to Atlanta from her town,
-and she had seized the opportunity to pay me a visit.
-“I tol’ um,” said she, “dat dey could stay up in
-town dar an’ hang ’roun’ de kyar-shed ef dey wanter,
-but here’s what wuz gwine ter come out an’ see whar<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_36"></a>[36]</span>
-you live at, an’ fin’ out fer Marse Tumlin ef you
-comin’ down ter de fa’r.”</p>
-
-<p>She was informed that, though she was welcome,
-she would get small pleasure from her visit. The
-cook had failed to make her appearance, and the
-lady of the house was at that moment in the kitchen
-and in a very fretful state of mind, not because she
-had to cook, but because she had about reached the
-point where she could place no dependence in the
-sisterhood of colored cooks.</p>
-
-<p>“Is she in de kitchen now?” Aunt Minervy’s
-tone was a curious mixture of amusement and indignation.
-“I started not ter come, but I had a call, I
-sho’ did; sump’n tol’ me dat you mought need me
-out here.” With that, she went into the house,
-slamming the screen-door after her, and untying
-her bonnet as she went.</p>
-
-<p>Now, the lady of the house had heard of Aunt
-Minervy Ann, but had never met her, and I was
-afraid that the characteristics of my old-time friend
-would be misunderstood and misinterpreted. The
-lady in question knew nothing of the negro race
-until long after emancipation, and she had not been
-able to form a very favorable opinion of its representatives.
-Therefore, I hastened after Aunt Minervy
-Ann, hoping to tone down by explanation<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_37"></a>[37]</span>
-whatever bad impression she might create. She
-paused at the screen-door that barred the entrance
-to the kitchen, and, for an instant, surveyed the
-scene within. Then she cried out:</p>
-
-<p>“You des ez well ter come out’n dat kitchen!
-You ain’t got no mo’ bizness in dar dan a new-born
-baby.”</p>
-
-<p>Aunt Minervy Ann’s voice was so loud and absolute
-that the lady gazed at her in mute astonishment.
-“You des es well ter come out!” she insisted.</p>
-
-<p>“Are you crazy?” the lady asked, in all seriousness.</p>
-
-<p>“I’m des ez crazy now ez I ever been; an’ I tell
-you you des ez well ter come out’n dar.”</p>
-
-<p>“Who are you anyhow?”</p>
-
-<p>“I’m Minervy Ann Perdue, at home an’ abroad,
-an’ in dish yer great town whar you can’t git niggers
-ter cook fer you.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, if you want me to come out of the
-kitchen, you will have to come in and do the cooking.”</p>
-
-<p>“Dat ’zackly what I’m gwine ter do!” exclaimed
-Aunt Minervy Ann. She went into the kitchen,
-demanded an apron, and took entire charge. “I’m
-mighty glad I come ’fo’ you got started,” she said,
-“’kaze you got ’nuff fier in dis stove fer ter barbecue<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_38"></a>[38]</span>
-a hoss; an’ you got it so hot in here dat it’s a
-wonder you ain’t bust a blood-vessel.”</p>
-
-<p>She removed all the vessels from the range, and
-opened the door of the furnace so that the fire
-might die down. And when it was nearly out—as
-I was told afterward—she replaced the vessels and
-proceeded to cook a dinner which, in all its characteristics,
-marked a red letter day in the household.</p>
-
-<p>“She’s the best cook in the country,” said the
-lady, “and she’s not very polite.”</p>
-
-<p>“Not very hypocritical, you mean; well if she
-was a hypocrite, she wouldn’t be Aunt Minervy
-Ann.”</p>
-
-<p>The cook failed to come in the afternoon, and so
-Aunt Minervy Ann felt it her duty to remain over
-night. “Hamp’ll vow I done run away wid somebody,”
-she said, laughing, “but I don’t keer what
-he think.”</p>
-
-<p>After supper, which was as good as the dinner had
-been, Aunt Minervy Ann came out on the veranda
-and sat on the steps. After some conversation,
-she placed the lady of the house on the witness-stand.</p>
-
-<p>“Mistiss, wharbouts in Georgy wuz you born
-at?”</p>
-
-<p>“I wasn’t born in Georgia; I was born in Lansingburgh,
-New York.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_39"></a>[39]</span></p>
-
-<p>“I know’d it!” Aunt Minervy turned to me and
-nodded her head with energy. “I know’d it right
-pine blank!”</p>
-
-<p>“You knew what?” the presiding genius of the
-household inquired with some curiosity.</p>
-
-<p>“I know’d ’m dat you wuz a Northron lady.”</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t see how you knew it,” I remarked.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, suh, she talk like we-all do, an’ she got
-mighty much de same ways. But when I went out
-dar dis mornin’ an’ holler at ’er in de kitchen, I
-know’d by de way she turn ’roun’ on me dat she ain’t
-been brung up wid niggers. Ef she’d ’a’ been a
-Southron lady, she’d ’a’ laughed an’ said, ‘Come in
-here an’ cook dis dinner yo’se’f, you ole vilyun,’ er
-she’d ’a’ come out an’ crackt me over de head with
-dat i’on spoon what she had in her han’.”</p>
-
-<p>I could perceive a vast amount of acuteness in the
-observation, but I said nothing, and, after a considerable
-pause, Aunt Minervy Ann remarked:</p>
-
-<p>“Dey er lots er mighty good folks up dar”—indicating
-the North—“some I’ve seed wid my own
-eyes an’ de yuthers I’ve heern talk un. Mighty
-fine folks, an’ dey say dey mighty sorry fer de niggers.
-But I’ll tell um all anywhar, any day, dat I’d
-lots druther dey’d be good ter me dan ter be sorry
-fer me. You know dat ar white lady what Marse<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_40"></a>[40]</span>
-Tom Chippendale married? Her pa come down
-here ter he’p de niggers, an’ he done it de best he
-kin, but Marse Tom’s wife can’t b’ar de sight un um.
-She won’t let um go in her kitchen, she won’t let
-um go in her house, an’ she don’t want um nowhars
-’roun’. She’s mighty sorry fer ’m, but she don’t
-like um. I don’t blame ’er much myse’f, bekaze it
-look like dat de niggers what been growin’ up sence
-freedom is des tryin’ der han’ fer ter see how no
-’count dey kin be. Dey’ll git better—dey er bleeze
-ter git better, ’kaze dey can’t git no wuss.”</p>
-
-<p>Here came another pause, which continued until
-Aunt Minervy Ann, turning her head toward me,
-asked if I knew the lady that Jesse Towers married;
-and before I had time to reply with certainty, she
-went on:</p>
-
-<p>“No, suh, you des can’t know ’er. She ain’t
-come dar twel sev’mty, an’ I mos’ know you ain’t
-see ’er dat time you went down home de las’ time,
-’kaze she wa’n’t gwine out dat year. Well, she wuz
-a Northron lady. I come mighty nigh tellin’ you
-’bout ’er when you wuz livin’ dar, but fus’ one
-thing an’ den anudder jumped in de way; er maybe
-’Twuz too new ter be goshup’d ’roun’ right den. But
-de way she come ter be dar an’ de way it all turn
-out beats any er dem tales what de ol’ folks use ter<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_41"></a>[41]</span>
-tell we childun. I may not know all de ins an’ outs,
-but what I does know I knows mighty well, ’kaze
-de young ’oman tol’ me herse’f right out ’er own
-mouf.</p>
-
-<p>“Fus’ an’ fo’mus’, dar wuz ol’ Gabe Towers. He
-wuz dar whence you wuz dar, an’ long time ’fo’ dat.
-You know’d him, sho’, ’kaze he wuz one er dem
-kinder men what sticks out fum de res’ like a waggin’
-tongue. Not dat he wuz any better’n anybody
-else, but he had dem kinder ways what make folks
-talk ’bout ’im an’ ’pen’ on ’im. I dunner ’zackly
-what de ways wuz, but I knows dat whatsomever ol’
-Gabe Towers say an’ do, folks ’d nod der head an’
-say an’ do de same. An’ me ’long er de res’. He
-had dem kinder ways ’bout ’im, an’ ’twa’n’t no use
-talkin’.”</p>
-
-<p>In these few words, Aunt Minervy conjured up
-in my mind the memory of one of the most remarkable
-men I had ever known. He was tall, with iron-gray
-hair. His eyes were black and brilliant, his
-nose slightly curved, and his chin firm without
-heaviness. To this day Gabriel Towers stands out
-in my admiration foremost among all the men I
-have ever known. He might have been a great
-statesman; he would have been great in anything
-to which he turned his hand. But he contented<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_42"></a>[42]</span>
-himself with instructing smaller men, who were
-merely politicians, and with sowing and reaping on
-his plantation. More than one senator went to him
-for ideas with which to make a reputation.</p>
-
-<p>His will seemed to dominate everybody with
-whom he came in contact, not violently, but serenely
-and surely, and as a matter of course. Whether
-this was due to his age—he was sixty-eight when I
-knew him, having been born in the closing year of
-the eighteenth century—or to his moral power, or
-to his personal magnetism, it is hardly worth while
-to inquire. Major Perdue said that the secret of his
-influence was common-sense, and this is perhaps as
-good an explanation as any. The immortality of
-Socrates and Plato should be enough to convince us
-that common-sense is almost as inspiring as the gift
-of prophecy. To interpret Aunt Minervy Ann in
-this way is merely to give a correct report of what
-occurred on the veranda, for explanation of this kind
-was necessary to give the lady of the house something
-like a familiar interest in the recital.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, suh,” Aunt Minervy Ann went on, “he
-had dem kinder ways ’bout ’im, an’ whatsomever he
-say you can’t shoo it off like you would a hen on de
-gyarden fence. Dar ’twuz an’ dar it stayed.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, de time come when ol’ Marse Gabe had<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_43"></a>[43]</span>
-a gran’son, an’ he name ’im Jesse in ’cordance wid
-de Bible. Jesse grow’d an’ grow’d twel he got ter
-be a right smart chunk uv a boy, but he wa’n’t no
-mo’ like de Towerses dan he wuz like de Chippendales,
-which he wa’n’t no kin to. He tuck atter his
-ma, an’ who his ma tuck atter I’ll never tell you,
-’kaze Bill Henry Towers married ’er way off yander
-somers. She wuz purty but puny, yit puny ez she
-wuz she could play de peanner by de hour, an’ play
-it mo’ samer de man what make it.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, suh, Jesse tuck atter his ma in looks, but
-’stidder playin’ de peanner, he l’arnt how ter play de
-fiddle, an’ by de time he wuz twelve year ol’, he
-could make it talk. Hit’s de fatal trufe, suh; he
-could make it talk. You hear folks playin’ de fiddle,
-an’ you know what dey doin’; you kin hear de
-strings a-plunkin’ an’ you kin hear de bow raspin’ on
-um on ’count de rozzum, but when Jesse Towers
-swiped de bow cross his fiddle, ’twa’n’t no fiddle—’twuz
-human; I ain’t tellin’ you no lie, suh, ’twuz
-human. Dat chile could make yo’ heart ache; he
-could fetch yo’ sins up befo’ you. Don’t tell me!
-many an’ many a night when I hear Jesse Towers
-playin’, I could shet my eyes an’ hear my childun
-cryin’, dem what been dead an’ buried long time
-ago. Don’t make no diffunce ’bout de chune, reel,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_44"></a>[44]</span>
-jig, er promenade, de human cryin’ wuz behime all
-un um.</p>
-
-<p>“Bimeby, Jesse got so dat he didn’t keer nothin’
-’tall ’bout books. It uz fiddle, fiddle, all day long,
-an’ half de night ef dey’d let ’im. Den folks ’gun
-ter talk. No need ter tell you what all dey say. De
-worl’ over, fum what I kin hear, dey got de idee dat
-a fiddle is a free pass ter whar ole Scratch live at.
-Well, suh, Jesse got so he’d run away fum school an’
-go off in de woods an’ play his fiddle. Hamp use ter
-come ’pon ’im when he haulin’ wood, an’ he say dat
-fiddle ain’t soun’ no mo’ like de fiddles what you
-hear in common dan a flute soun’ like a bass drum.</p>
-
-<p>“Now you know yo’se’f, suh, dat dis kinder
-doin’s ain’t gwine ter suit Marse Gabe Towers.
-Time he hear un it, he put his foot down on fiddler,
-an’ fiddle, an’ fiddlin’. Ez you may say, he sot
-down on de fiddle an’ smash it. Dis happen when
-Jesse wuz sixteen year ol’, an’ by dat time he wuz
-mo’ in love wid de fiddle dan what he wuz wid his
-gran’daddy. An’ so dar ’twuz. He ain’t look like
-it, but Jesse wuz about ez high strung ez his fiddle
-wuz, an’ when his gran’daddy laid de law down,
-he sol’ out his pony an’ buggy an’ made his disappearance
-fum dem parts.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, suh, ’twa’n’t so mighty often you’d hear<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_45"></a>[45]</span>
-sassy talk ’bout Marse Gabe Towers, but you could
-hear it den. Folks is allers onreasonable wid dem
-dey like de bes’; you know dat yo’se’f, suh. Marse
-Gabe ain’t make no ’lowance fer Jesse, an’ folks
-ain’t make none fer Marse Gabe. Marse Tumlin
-wuz dat riled wid de man dat dey come mighty nigh
-havin’ a fallin’ out. Dey had a splutter ’bout de
-time when sump’n n’er had happen, an’ atter dey
-wrangle a little, Marse Tumlin sot de date by sayin’
-dat ’twuz ‘a year ’fo’ de day when Jess went a-fiddlin’.’
-Dat sayin’ kindled de fier, suh, an’ it spread
-fur an’ wide. Marse Tom Chippendale say dat folks
-what never is hear tell er de Towerses went ’roun’
-talkin’ ’bout ‘de time when Jess went a-fiddlin’.’”</p>
-
-<p>Aunt Minervy Ann chuckled over this, probably
-because she regarded it as a sort of victory for Major
-Tumlin Perdue. She went on:</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, suh, ’twuz a by-word wid de childun. No
-matter what happen, er when it happen, er ef ’tain’t
-happen, ’twuz ’fo’ er atter ‘de day when Jess went
-a-fiddlin’.’ Hit look like dat Marse Gabe sorter
-drapt a notch or two in folks’ min’s. Yit he helt his
-head dez ez high. He bleeze ter hol’ it high, ’kaze
-he had in ’im de blood uv bofe de Tumlins an’ de
-Perdues; I dunner how much, but ’nuff fer ter
-keep his head up.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_46"></a>[46]</span></p>
-
-<p>“I ain’t no almanac, suh, but I never is ter fergit
-de year when Jess went a-fiddlin. ’Twuz sixty, ’kaze
-de nex’ year de war ’gun ter bile, an’ ’twa’n’t long
-’fo’ it biled over. Yes, suh! dar wuz de war come
-on an Jess done gone. Dey banged aloose, dey did,
-dem on der side, an’ we on our’n, an’ dey kep’ on a
-bangin’ twel we-all can’t bang no mo’. An’ den
-de war hushed up, an’ freedom come, an’ still nobody
-ain’t hear tell er Jesse. Den you come down
-dar, suh, an’ stay what time you did; still nobody
-ain’t hear tell er Jesse. He mought er writ ter his
-ma, but ef he did, she kep’ it mighty close. Marse
-Gabe ain’t los’ no flesh ’bout it, an’ ef he los’ any
-sleep on account er Jess, he ain’t never brag ’bout it.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, suh, it went on dis away twel, ten year
-atter Jess went a-fiddlin’, his wife come home. Yes,
-suh! His wife! Well! I wuz stan’in’ right in de
-hall talkin’ wid Miss Fanny—dat’s Jesse’s ma—when
-she come, an’ when de news broke on me you
-could ’a’ knockt me down wid a permeter fan. De
-house-gal show’d ’er in de parler, an’ den come atter
-Miss Fanny. Miss Fanny she went in dar, an’ I
-stayed outside talkin’ wid de house-gal. De gal say,
-‘Aunt Minervy Ann, dey sho’ is sump’n n’er de
-matter wid dat white lady. She white ez any er de
-dead, an’ she can’t git ’er breff good.’ ’Bout dat<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_47"></a>[47]</span>
-time, I hear somebody cry out in de parler, an’ den
-I hear sump’n fall. De house-gal cotch holt er me
-an’ ’gun ter whimper. I shuck ’er off, I did, an’
-went right straight in de parler, an’ dar wuz Miss
-Fanny layin’ face fo’mus’ on a sofy wid a letter in
-’er han’ an’ de white lady sprawled out on de flo’.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, suh, you can’t skeer me wid trouble ’kaze
-I done see too much; so I shuck Miss Fanny by de
-arm an’ ax ’er what de matter, an’ she cry out,
-‘Jesse’s dead an’ his wife come home.’ She uz plum
-heart-broke, suh, an’ I ’speck I wuz blubberin’ some
-myse’f when Marse Gabe walkt in, but I wuz tryin’
-ter work wid de white lady on de flo’. ’Twix’ Marse
-Gabe an’ Miss Fanny, ’twuz sho’ly a tryin’ time.
-When one er dem hard an’ uppity men lose der grip
-on deyse’f, dey turn loose ever’thing, an’ dat wuz de
-way wid Marse Gabe. When dat de case, sump’n
-n’er got ter be done, an’ it got ter be done mighty
-quick.”</p>
-
-<p>Aunt Minervy Ann paused here and rubbed her
-hands together contemplatively, as if trying to restore
-the scene more completely to her memory.</p>
-
-<p>“You know how loud I kin talk, suh, when I’m
-min’ ter. Well, I talk loud den an’ dar. I ’low,
-‘What you-all doin’? Is you gwine ter let Marse
-Jesse’s wife lay here an’ die des ’kaze he dead? Ef<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_48"></a>[48]</span>
-you is, I’ll des go whar I b’longs at!’ Dis kinder
-fotch um ’roun’, an’ ’twa’n’t no time ’fo’ we had de
-white lady in de bed whar Jesse use ter sleep at, an’
-soon’s we got ’er cuddled down in it, she come ’roun’.
-But she wuz in a mighty bad fix. She wanter git up
-an’ go off, an’ ’twuz all I could do fer ter keep ’er in
-bed. She done like she wuz plum distracted. Dey
-wa’n’t skacely a minnit fer long hours, an’ dey wuz
-mighty long uns, suh, dat she wa’n’t moanin’ an’
-sayin’ dat she wa’n’t gwine ter stay, an’ she hope de
-Lord’d fergive ’er. I tell you, suh, ’twuz tarryfyin’.
-I shuck nex’ day des like folks do when dey er
-honin’ atter dram.</p>
-
-<p>“You may ax me how come I ter stay dar,” Aunt
-Minervy Ann suggested with a laugh. “Well, suh,
-’twa’n’t none er my doin’s. I ’speck dey mus’ be
-sump’n wrong ’bout me, ’kaze no matter how rough
-I talk ner how ugly I look, sick folks an’ childun
-alters takes up wid me. When I go whar dey is, it’s
-mighty hard fer ter git ’way fum um. So, when I
-say ter Jesse’s wife, ‘Keep still, honey, an’ I’ll go
-home an’ not pester you,’ she sot up in bed an’ say
-ef I gwine she gwine too. I say, ‘Nummine ’bout
-me, honey, you lay down dar an’ don’t talk too
-much.’ She ’low, ‘Le’ me talk ter you an’ tell you
-all ’bout it.’ But I shuck my head an’ say dat ef<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_49"></a>[49]</span>
-she don’t hush up an’ keep still I’m gwine right
-home.</p>
-
-<p>“I had ter do ’er des like she wuz a baby, suh.
-She wa’n’t so mighty purty, but she had purty ways,
-’stracted ez she wuz, an’ de biggest black eyes you
-mos’ ever seed, an’ black curly ha’r cut short kinder,
-like our folks use ter w’ar der’n. Den de house-gal
-fotched some tea an’ toas’, an’ dis holp ’er up mightly,
-an’ atter dat I sont ter Marse Gabe fer some
-dram, an’ de gal fotched de decanter fum de side-bode.
-Bein’, ez you may say, de nurse, I tuck an’
-tas’e er de dram fer ter make sho’ dat nobody ain’t
-put nothin’ in it. An’, sho’ ’nuff, dey ain’t.”</p>
-
-<p>Aunt Minervy Ann paused and smacked her lips.
-“Atter she got de vittles an’ de dram, she sorter
-drap off ter sleep, but ’twuz a mighty flighty kinder
-sleep. She’d wake wid a jump des ’zackly like babies
-does, an’ den she’d moan an’ worry twel she
-dozed off ag’in. I nodded, suh, bekaze you can’t set
-me down in a cheer, night er day, but what I’ll nod,
-but in betwix’ an’ betweens I kin hear Marse Gabe
-Towers walkin’ up an’ down in de liberry; walk,
-walk; walk, walk, up an’ down. I ’speck ef I’d ’a’
-been one er de nervious an’ flighty kin’ dey’d ’a’ had
-to tote me out er dat house de nex’ day; but me! I
-des kep’ on a-noddin’.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_50"></a>[50]</span></p>
-
-<p>“Bimeby, I hear sump’n come swishin’ ’long,
-an’ in walkt Miss Fanny. I tell you now, suh, ef I’d
-a met ’er comin’ down de road, I’d ’a’ made a break
-fer de bushes, she look so much like you know sperrets
-oughter look—an’ Marse Jesse’s wife wuz layin’
-dar wid ’er eyes wide open. She sorter swunk back
-in de bed when she see Miss Fanny, an’ cry out,
-‘Oh, I’m mighty sorry fer ter trouble you; I’m
-gwine ’way in de mornin’.’ Miss Fanny went ter de
-bed an’ knelt down ’side it, an’ ’low, ‘No, you ain’t
-gwine no whar but right in dis house. Yo’ place is
-here, wid his mudder an’ his gran’fadder.’ Wid dat,
-Marse Jesse’s wife put her face in de piller an’ moan
-an’ cry, twel I hatter ax Miss Fanny fer ter please,
-ma’m, go git some res’.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, suh, I stayed dar dat night an’ part er de
-nex’ day, an’ by dat time all un um wuz kinder
-quieted down, but dey wuz mighty res’less in de
-min’, ’speshually Marse Jesse’s wife, which her
-name wuz Miss Sadie. It seem like dat Marse Jesse
-wuz livin’ at a town up dar in de fur North whar
-dey wuz a big lake, an’ he went out wid one er dem
-’scursion parties, an’ a storm come up an’ shuck de
-boat ter pieces. Dat what make I say what I does.
-I don’t min’ gwine on ’scursions on de groun’, but
-when it come ter water—well, suh, I ain’t gwine ter<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_51"></a>[51]</span>
-trus’ myse’f on water twel I kin walk on it an’ not
-wet my foots. Marse Jesse wuz de Captain uv a
-music-ban’ up dar, an’ de papers fum dar had some
-long pieces ’bout ’im, an’ de paper at home had a
-piece ’bout ’im. It say he wuz one er de mos’ renounced
-music-makers what yever had been, an’ dat
-when it come ter dat kinder doin’s he wuz a puffick
-prodigal. I ’member de words, suh, bekaze I made
-Hamp read de piece out loud mo’ dan once.</p>
-
-<p>“Miss Sadie, she got mo’ calmer atter while, an’
-’twa’n’t long ’fo’ Marse Gabe an’ Miss Fanny wuz
-bofe mighty tuck up wid ’er. Dey much’d ’er up
-an’ made a heap un ’er, an’ she fa’rly hung on dem.
-I done tol’ you she ain’t purty, but dey wuz sump’n
-’bout ’er better dan purtiness. It mought er been ’er
-eyes, en den ag’in mought er been de way er de gal;
-but whatsomever ’twuz, hit made you think ’bout
-’er at odd times durin’ de day, an’ des ’fo’ you go ter
-sleep at night.</p>
-
-<p>“Eve’ything went swimmin’ along des ez natchul
-ez a duck floatin’ on de mill-pon’. Dey wa’n’t skacely
-a day but what I seed Miss Sadie. Ef I ain’t go
-ter Marse Gabe’s house she’d be sho’ ter come ter
-mine. Dat uz atter Hamp wuz ’lected ter de legislatur,
-suh. He ’low dat a member er de ingener’l
-ensembly ain’t got no bizness livin’ in a kitchen, but<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_52"></a>[52]</span>
-I say he ain’t a whit better den dan he wuz befo’.
-So be, I done been cross ’im so much dat I tell ’im
-ter git de house an’ I’d live in it ef ’twa’n’t too fur
-fum Miss Vallie an’ Marse Tumlin. Well, he had it
-built on de outskyirts, not a big jump fum Miss Vallie
-an’ betwix’ de town an’ Marse Gabe Towers’s.
-When you come down ter de fa’r, you mus’ come
-see me. Me an’ Hamp’ll treat you right; we sholy
-will.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, suh, in dem days dey wa’n’t so many niggers
-willin’ ter do an’ be done by, an’ on account er
-dat, ef Miss Vallie wa’n’t hollin’ fer ’Nervy Ann,
-Miss Fanny er Miss Sadie wuz, an’ when I wa’n’t at
-one place, you might know I’d be at de yuther one.
-It went on dis away, an’ went on twel one day got so
-much like an’er dat you can’t tell Monday fum Friday.
-An’ it went on an’ went on twel bimeby I wuz
-bleeze ter say sump’n ter Hamp. You take notice,
-suh, an’ when you see de sun shinin’ nice an’ warm
-an’ de win’ blowin’ so saft an’ cool dat you wanter
-go in a-washin’ in it—when you see dis an’ feel dat
-away, <em>Watch out! Watch out</em>, I tell you! Dat des
-de time when de harrycane gwine ter come up out’n
-de middle er de swamp an’ t’ar things ter tatters.
-Same way when folks gitting on so nice dat dey
-don’t know dey er gittin’ on.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_53"></a>[53]</span></p>
-
-<p>“De fus’ news I know’d Miss Sadie wuz bringin’
-little bundles ter my house ’twix’ sundown an’ dark.
-She’d ’low, ‘Aunt Minervy Ann, I’ll des put dis in
-de cornder here; I may want it some time.’ Nex’
-day it’d be de same doin’s over ag’in. ‘Aunt Minervy
-Ann, please take keer er dis; I may want it
-some time.’ Well, it went on dis away fum day ter
-day, but I ain’t pay no ’tention. Ef any ’spicion
-cross my min’ it wuz dat maybe Miss Sadie puttin’
-dem things dar fer ter ’sprise me Chris’mus by tellin’
-me dey wuz fer me. But one day she come ter my
-house, an’ sot down an’ put her han’s over her face
-like she got de headache er sump’n.</p>
-
-<p>“Wellum”—Aunt Minervy Ann, with real tact,
-now began to address herself to the lady of the house—“Wellum,
-she sot dar so long dat bimeby I ax ’er
-what de matter is. She ain’t say nothin’; she ain’t
-make no motion. I ’low ter myse’f dat she don’t
-wanter be pestered, so I let ’er ’lone an’ went on
-’bout my business. But, bless you! de nex’ time I
-look at ’er she wuz settin’ des dat away wid ’er han’s
-over her face. She sot so still dat it sorter make me
-feel quare, an’ I went, I did, an’ cotch holt er her
-han’s sorter playful-like. Wellum, de way dey felt
-made me flinch. All I could say wuz, ‘Lord ’a’
-mercy!’ She tuck her han’s down, she did, an’ look<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_54"></a>[54]</span>
-at me an’ smile kinder faint-like. She ’low, ‘Wuz
-my han’s col’, Aunt Minervy Ann?’ I look at ’er
-an’ grunt, ‘Huh! dey won’t be no colder when
-youer dead.’ She ain’t say nothin’, an’ terreckly I
-’low, ‘What de name er goodness is de matter wid
-you, Miss Sadie?’ She say, ‘Nothin’ much. I’m
-gwine ter stay here ter-night, an’ ter-morrer mornin’
-I’m gwine ’way.’ I ax ’er, ‘How come dat? What
-is dey done to you?’ She say, ‘Nothin’ ’tall.’ I
-’low, ‘Does Marse Gabe an’ Miss Fanny know you
-gwine?’ She say, ‘No; I can’t tell um.’</p>
-
-<p>“Wellum, I flopt down on a cheer; yessum, I
-sho’ did. My min’ wuz gwine like a whirligig an’
-my head wuz swimmin’. I des sot dar an’ look at
-’er. Bimeby she up an’ say, pickin’ all de time at
-her frock, ‘I know’d sump’n wuz gwine ter happen.
-Dat de reason I been bringin’ dem bundles here.
-In dem ar bundles you’ll fin’ all de things I fotch
-here. I ain’t got nothin’ dey give me ’cep’n dish
-yer black dress I got on. I’d ’a’ fotch my ol’ trunk,
-but I dunner what dey done wid it. Hamp’ll hatter
-buy me one an’ pay for it hisse’f, ’kaze I ain’t got a
-cent er money.’ Dem de ve’y words she say. I
-’low, ‘Sump’n must ’a’ happen den.’ She nodded,
-an’ bimeby she say, ‘Mr. Towers comin’ home ter-night.
-Dey done got a telegraph fum ’im.’</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_55"></a>[55]</span></p>
-
-<p>“I stood up in de flo’, I did, an’ ax ’er, ‘Which
-Mr. Towers?’ She say, ‘Mr. Jesse Towers.’ I ’low,
-‘He done dead.’ She say, ‘No, he ain’t; ef he wuz
-he done come ter life; dey done got a telegraph fum
-’im, I tell you.’ ‘Is <em>dat</em> de reason you gwine ’way?’
-I des holla’d it at ’er. She draw’d a long breff an’
-say, ‘Yes, dat’s de reason.’</p>
-
-<p>“I tell you right now, ma’m, I didn’t know ef I
-wuz stannin’ on my head er floatin’ in de a’r. I wuz
-plum outdone. But dar she sot des es cool ez a curcumber
-wid de dew on it. I went out de do’, I did,
-an’ walk ’roun’ de house once ter de right an’ twice
-ter de lef’ bekaze de ol’ folks use ter tell me dat ef
-you wuz bewitched, dat ’ud take de spell away. I
-ain’t tellin’ you no lie, ma’m—fer de longes’ kinder
-minnit I didn’t no mo’ b’lieve dat Miss Sadie wuz
-settin’ dar in my house tellin’ me dat kinder rigamarole,
-dan I b’lieve I’m flyin’ right now. Dat
-bein’ de case, I bleeze ter fall back on bewitchments,
-an’ so I walk ’roun’ de house. But when I went
-back in, dar she wuz, settin’ in a cheer an’ lookin’
-up at de rafters.</p>
-
-<p>“Wellum, I went in an’ drapt down in a cheer
-an’ lookt at ’er. Bimeby, I say, ‘Miss Sadie, does
-you mean ter set dar an’ tell me youer gwine ’way
-’kaze yo’ husban’ comin’ home?’ She flung her<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_56"></a>[56]</span>
-arms behime ’er head, she did, an’ say, ‘I ain’t none
-er his wife; I des been playin’ off!’ De way she
-look an’ de way she say it wuz ’nuff fer me. I wuz
-pairlized; yessum, I wuz dumfounder’d. Ef anybody
-had des but totch me wid de tip er der finger,
-I’d ’a’ fell off’n dat cheer an’ never stirred atter I
-hit de flo’. Ever’thing ’bout de house lookt quare.
-Miss Vallie had a lookin’-glass one time wid de pictur’
-uv a church at de bottom. When de glass got
-broke, she gimme de pictur’, an’ I sot it up on de
-mantel-shelf. I never know’d ’fo’ dat night dat de
-steeple er der church wuz crooked. But dar ’twuz.
-Mo’ dan dat I cotch myse’f feelin’ er my fingers fer
-ter see ef ’twuz me an’ ef I wuz dar.</p>
-
-<p>“Talk ’bout <em>dreams</em>! dey wa’n’t no dream could
-beat dat, I don’t keer how twisted it mought be.
-An’ den, ma’m, she sot back dar an’ tol’ me de whole
-tale ’bout how she come ter be dar. I’ll never tell it
-like she did; dey ain’t nobody in de wide worl’ kin
-do dat. But it seem like she an’ Marse Jesse wuz
-stayin’ in de same neighborhoods, er stayin’ at de
-same place, he a-fiddlin’ an’ she a-knockin’ on de
-peanner er de harp, I fergit which. Anyhow, dey
-seed a heap er one an’er. Bofe un um had come dar
-fum way off yan’, an’ ain’t got nobody but deyse’f
-fer ter ’pen’ on, an’ dat kinder flung um togedder.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_57"></a>[57]</span>
-I ’speck dey must er swapt talk ’bout love an’ marryin’—you
-know yo’se’f, ma’m, dat dat’s de way
-young folks is. Howsomever dat may be, Marse
-Jesse, des ter tease ’er, sot down one day an’ writ a
-long letter ter his wife. Tooby sho’ he ain’t got no
-wife, but he des make out he got one, an’ dat letter
-he lef’ layin’ ’roun’ whar Miss Sadie kin see it.
-’Twa’n’t in no envelyup, ner nothin’, an’ you know
-mighty well, ma’m, dat when a ’oman, young er ol’,
-see dat kinder letter layin’ ’roun’ she’d die ef she
-don’t read it. Fum de way Miss Sadie talk, dat letter
-must ’a’ stirred up a coolness ’twix’ um, kaze de
-mornin’ when he wuz gwine on dat ’scursion, Marse
-Jesse pass by de place whar she wuz settin’ at an’
-flung de letter in her lap an’ say, ‘What’s in dar wuz
-fer you.’</p>
-
-<p>“Wellum, wid dat he wuz gone, an’ de fus’ news
-Miss Sadie know’d de papers wuz full er de names
-er dem what got drownded in de boat, an’ Marse
-Jesse head de roll, ’kaze he wuz de mos’ pop’lous
-music-maker in de whole settlement. Den dar wuz
-de gal an’ de letter. I wish I could tell dis part like
-she tol’ me settin’ dar in my house. You’ll never git
-it straight in yo’ head less’n you’d ’a’ been dar an’
-hear de way she tol’ it. Nigger ez I is, I know
-mighty well dat a white ’oman ain’t got no business<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_58"></a>[58]</span>
-parmin’ ’erse’f off ez a man’s wife. But de way she
-tol’ it tuck all de rough aidges off’n it. She wuz dar
-in dat big town, wuss’n a wilderness, ez you may
-say, by ’erse’f, nobody ’penin’ on ’er an’ nobody
-ter ’pen’ on, tired down an’ plum wo’ out, an’ wid
-all dem kinder longin’s what you know yo’se’f,
-ma’am, all wimmen bleeze ter have, ef dey er white
-er ef dey er black.</p>
-
-<p>“Yit she ain’t never tol’ nobody dat she wuz Marse
-Jesse’s wife. She des han’ de letter what she’d kep’
-ter Miss Fanny, an’ fell down on de flo’ in a dead
-faint, an’ she say dat ef it hadn’t but ’a’ been fer me,
-she’d a got out er de bed dat fust night an’ went
-’way fum dar; an’ I know dat’s so, too, bekaze she
-wuz ranklin’ fer ter git up fum dar. But at de time
-I put all dat down ter de credit er de deleeriums, an’
-made ’er stay in bed.</p>
-
-<p>“Wellum, ef I know’d all de books in de worl’
-by heart, I couldn’t tell you how I felt atter she
-done tol’ me dat tale. She sot back dar des ez calm
-ez a baby. Bimeby she say, ‘I’m glad I tol’ you;
-I feel better dan I felt in a mighty long time.’ It
-look like, ma’am, dat a load done been lift fum ’er
-min’. Now I know’d pine blank dat sump’n gotter
-be done, ’kaze de train’d be in at midnight, an’
-den when Marse Jesse come dey’d be a tarrifyin’<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_59"></a>[59]</span>
-time at Gabe Towers’s. Atter while I up an’ ax ’er,
-‘Miss Sadie, did you reely love Marse Jesse?’ She
-say, ‘Yes, I did’—des so. I ax ’er, ‘Does you love
-’im now?’ She say, ‘Yes, I does—an’ I love dem
-ar people up dar at de house; dat de reason I’m
-gwine ’way.’ She talk right out; she done come to
-de p’int whar she ain’t got nothin’ ter hide.</p>
-
-<p>“I say, ‘Well, Miss Sadie, dem folks up at de
-house, dey loves you.’ She sorter flincht at dis.
-I ’low, ‘Dey been mighty good ter you. What
-you done, you done done, an’ dat can’t be holp, but
-what you ain’t gone an’ done, dat kin be holp; an’
-what you oughter do, dat oughtn’t ter be holp.’ I
-see ’er clinch ’er han’s an’ den I riz fum de
-cheer.” Suiting the action to the word, Aunt
-Minervy Ann rose from the step where she had
-been sitting, and moved toward the lady of the
-house.</p>
-
-<p>“I riz, I did, an’ tuck my stan’ befo’ ’er. I ’low,
-‘You say you love Marse Jesse, an’ you say you love
-his folks. Well, den ef you got any blood in you,
-ef you got any heart in yo’ body, ef you got any
-feelin’ fer anybody in de roun’ worl’ ’cep’n’ yo’
-naked se’f, you’ll go up dar ter dat house an’ tell
-Gabe Towers dat you want ter see ’im, an’ you’ll tell
-Fanny Towers dat you want ter see her, an’ you’ll<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_60"></a>[60]</span>
-stan’ up befo’ um an’ tell um de tale you tol’ ter me,
-word fer word. Ef you’ll do dat, an’ you hatter
-come back here, <em>come! come!</em> Bless God! <em>come!</em>
-an’ me an’ Hamp’ll rake an’ scrape up ’nuff money
-fer ter kyar you whar you gwine. An’ don’t you be
-a’skeer’d er Gabe Towers. Me an’ Marse Tumlin
-ain’t a-skeer’d un ’im. I’m gwine wid you, an’ ef he
-say one word out de way, you des come ter de do’
-an’ call me, an’ ef I don’t preach his funer’l, it’ll be
-bekaze de Lord’ll strike me dumb!’ <em>An’ she
-went!</em>”</p>
-
-<p>Aunt Minervy paused. She had wrought the
-miracle of summoning to life one of the crises
-through which she had passed with others. It was
-not the words she used. There was nothing in
-them to stir the heart or quicken the pulse. Her
-power lay in the tones of her voice, whereby she was
-able to recall the passion of a moment that had long
-spent itself; in the fluent and responsive attitudes;
-in gesticulation that told far more than her words
-did. The light from the vestibule lamp shone full
-upon her and upon the lady whom she unconsciously
-selected to play the part of the young woman whose
-story she was telling. The illusion was perfect.
-We were in Aunt Minervy Ann’s house, Miss Sadie
-was sitting helpless and hopeless before her—the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_61"></a>[61]</span>
-whole scene was vivid and complete. She paused;
-her arm, which had been outstretched and rigid
-for an instant, slowly fell to her side, and—the
-illusion was gone; but while it lasted, it was as
-real as any sudden and extraordinary experience
-can be.</p>
-
-<p>Aunt Minervy Ann resumed her seat, with a
-chuckle, apparently ashamed that she had been betrayed
-into such a display of energy and emotion,
-saying, “Yessum, she sho’ went.”</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t wonder at it,” remarked the lady of the
-house, with a long-drawn sigh of relief.</p>
-
-<p>Aunt Minervy Ann laughed again, rather sheepishly,
-and then, after rubbing her hands together,
-took up the thread of the narrative, this time directing
-her words to me: “All de way ter de house, suh,
-she ain’t say two words. She had holt er my han’,
-but she ain’t walk like she uz weak. She went along
-ez peart ez I did. When we got dar, some er de
-niggers wuz out in de flower gyarden an’ out in de
-big grove callin’ ’er; an’ dey call so loud dat I hatter
-put um down. ‘Hush up!’ I say, ‘an’ go on ’bout
-yo’ business! Can’t yo’ Miss Sadie take a walk
-widout a whole passel er you niggers a-hollerin’ yo’
-heads off?’ One un um make answer, ‘Miss Fanny
-huntin’ fer ’er.’ She sorter grip my han’ at dat,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_62"></a>[62]</span>
-but I say, ‘She de one you wanter see—her an’
-Gabe Towers.’</p>
-
-<p>“We went up on de po’ch, an’ dar wuz Miss
-Fanny an’ likewise Marse Gabe. I know’d what
-dey wanted; dey wanted ter talk wid ’er ’bout Marse
-Jesse. She clum de steps fus’ an’ I clum atter
-her. She cotch ’er breff hard when she fus’ hit de
-steps, an’ den it come over me like a flash how
-deep an’ big her trouble wuz, an’ I tell you right
-now, ef dat had ’a’ been Miss Vallie gwine up dar,
-I b’lieve I’d ’a’ flew at ol’ Gabe Towers an’ to’ ’im
-lim’ fum lim’ ’fo’ anybody could ’a’ pull me off.
-Hit’s de trufe! You may laugh, but I sho’ would
-’a’ done it. I had it in me. Miss Fanny seed
-sump’n wuz wrong, de minnit de light fell on de gal’s
-face. She say, ‘Why, Sadie, darlin’, what de matter
-wid you?’—des so—an’ made ez ef ter put ’er
-arms ’roun’ ’er; but Miss Sadie swunk back. Miss
-Fanny sorter swell up. She say, ‘Oh, ef I’ve
-hurt yo’ feelin’s ter-day—<em>ter-day</em> uv all de days—please,
-please fergi’ me!’ Well, suh, I dunner
-whar all dis gwine ter lead ter, an’ I put in,
-‘She des wanter have a talk wid you an’ Marse
-Gabe, Miss Fanny; an’ ef ter-day is one er de
-days her feelin’s oughtn’ter be hurted, take keer
-dat you don’t do it. Kyar ’er in de parler dar, Miss<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_63"></a>[63]</span>
-Fanny.’ I ’speck you’ll think I wuz takin’ a mighty
-heap on myse’f, fer a nigger ’oman,” remarked
-Aunt Minervy Ann, smoothing the wrinkles out of
-her lap, “but I wuz des ez much at home in dat
-house ez I wuz in my own, an’ des ez free wid
-um ez I wuz wid my own folks. Miss Fanny look
-skeer’d, an’ Marse Gabe foller’d atter, rubbin’ a
-little mole he had on de top er his head. When he
-wus worried er aggervated, he allers rub dat mole.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, suh, dey went in, dey did, an’ I shot de
-do’ an’ tuck up my stan’ close by, ready fer to go in
-when Miss Sadie call me. I had myse’f keyed up ter
-de p’int whar I’d ’a’ tol’ Marse Gabe sump’n ’bout
-his own fambly connection; you know dey ain’t nobody
-but what got i’on rust on some er der cloze.
-But dey stayed in dar an’ stayed, twel I ’gun ter git
-oneasy. All kinder quare idees run th’oo my head.
-Atter while some un pull de do’ open, an’ hol’ it dat
-away, an’ I hear Marse Gabe say, wid a trimble an’
-ketch in his th’oat, ‘Don’t talk so, chil’. Ef you
-done wrong, you ain’t hurt nobody but yo’se’f, an’
-it oughtn’ter hurt you. You been a mighty big
-blessin’ ter me, an’ ter Fanny here, an’ I wouldn’t
-’a’ missed knowin’ you, not fer nothin’. Wid dat,
-he come out cle’rin up his th’oat an’ blowin’ his nose
-twel it soun’ like a dinner-horn. His eye fell on me,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_64"></a>[64]</span>
-an’ he ’low, ‘Look like you er allers on han’ when
-dey’s trouble.’ I made answer, ‘Well, Marse Gabe,
-dey might be wusser ones ’roun’ dan me.’ He look
-at me right hard an’ say, ‘Dey ain’t no better, Minervy
-Ann.’ Well, suh, little mo’ an’ I’d ’a’ broke
-down, it come so sudden. I had ter gulp hard an’
-quick, I tell you. He say, ‘Minervy Ann, go back
-dar an’ tell de house-gal ter wake up de carriage-driver
-ef he’s ’sleep, an’ tell ’im to go meet Jesse
-at de train. An’ he mus’ tell Jesse dat we’d ’a’
-all come, but his ma ain’t feelin’ so well.’ I say,
-‘I’ll go wake ’im up myse’f, suh.’ I look in de
-parler an’ say, ‘Miss Sadie, does you need me
-right now?’ She ’low, ‘No, not right now; I’ll
-stay twel—twel Mr. Towers come.’ Miss Fanny
-wuz settin’ dar holdin’ Miss Sadie’s han’.</p>
-
-<p>“I’ll never tell you how dey patcht it up in dar,
-but I made a long guess. Fus’ an’ fo’mus’, dey wuz
-right down fon’ er Miss Sadie, an’ den ef she run
-off time Marse Jesse put his foot in de town dey’d
-be a big scandal; an’ so dey fix it up dat ef she wuz
-bleeze ter go, ’twuz better to go a mont’ er two atter
-Marse Jesse come back. Folks may like you mighty
-well, but dey allers got one eye on der own consarns.
-Dat de way I put it down.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, suh, de wuss job wuz lef’ fer de las’, ’kaze<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_65"></a>[65]</span>
-dar wuz Marse Jesse. Sump’n tol’ me dat he
-oughter know what been gwine on ’fo’ he got in de
-house, ’kaze den he won’t be aggervated inter sayin’
-an’ doin’ sump’n he oughtn’ter. So when de carriage
-wuz ready, I got in an’ went down ter de depot;
-an’ when Marse Jesse got off de train, I wuz de fus’
-one he laid eyes on. I’d ’a’ never know’d ’im in de
-worl’, but he know’d me. He holler out, ‘Ef dar
-ain’t Aunt Minervy Ann! Bless yo’ ol’ soul! how
-you come on anyhow?’ He come mighty nigh huggin’
-me, he wuz so glad ter see me. He wuz big ez
-a skinned hoss an’ strong ez a mule. He say, ‘Ef
-I had you in my min’ once, Aunt Minervy Ann, I
-had you in dar ten thousan’ times.’</p>
-
-<p>“Whiles de carriage rollin’ ’long an’ grindin’ de
-san’ I try ter gi’ ’im a kinder inkling er what been
-gwine on, but ’twuz all a joke wid ’im. I wuz fear’d
-I mought go at ’im de wrong way, but I can’t do no
-better. I say, ‘Marse Jesse, yo’ wife been waitin’
-here fer you a long time.’ He laugh an’ ’low, ‘Oh,
-yes! did she bring de childun?’ I say, ‘Shucks,
-Marse Jesse! Dey’s a lady in deep trouble at Marse
-Gabe’s house, an’ I don’t want you ter go dar jokin’.
-She’s a monst’us fine lady, too.’ Dis kinder steady
-’im, an’ he say, ‘All right, Aunt Minervy Ann; I’ll
-behave myse’f des like a Sunday-school scholar. I<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_66"></a>[66]</span>
-won’t say bad words an’ I won’t talk loud.’ He had
-his fiddle-case in his lap, an’ he drummed on it like
-he keepin’ time ter some chune in his min’.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, suh, we got dar in de due time, an’ ’twuz
-a great meetin’ ’twixt Marse Jesse an’ his folks.
-Dey des swarmed on ’im, ez you may say, an’ while
-dis gwine on, I went in de parler whar Miss Sadie
-wuz. She wuz pale, tooby sha’, but she had done
-firm’d ’erse’f. She wuz standin’ by de fier-place,
-lookin’ down, but she lookt up when she hear de
-do’ open, an’ den she say, ‘I’m mighty glad it’s
-you, Aunt Minervy Ann; I want you ter stay in
-here.’ I ’low, ‘I’ll stay, honey, ef you say stay.’
-Den she tuck ’er stand by me an’ cotch holt er my
-arm wid bofe ’er han’s an’ kinder leant ag’in me.</p>
-
-<p>“Bimeby, here come Marse Jesse. Trouble wuz
-in his eye when he open de do’, but when he saw de
-gal, his face lit up des like when you strike a match
-in a closet. He say, ‘Why, Miss Sadie! You dunner
-how glad I is ter see you. I been huntin’ all
-over de country fer you.’ He make ez ef ter shake
-han’s, but she draw’d back. Dis cut ’im. He say:
-‘What de matter? Who you in mournin’ fer?’
-She ’low, ‘Fer myse’f.’ Wid dat she wuz gwine on
-ter tel ’im ’bout what she had done, but he wouldn’t
-have it dat way. He say, ‘When I come back ter<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_67"></a>[67]</span>
-life, atter I wuz drownded, I ’gun ter hunt fer you
-des ez soon’s I got out’n de hospittle. I wuz huntin’
-fer you ter tell you dat I love you. I’d ’a’ tol’ you
-dat den, an’ I tell you dat now.’ She grip my arm
-mighty hard at dat. Marse Jesse went on mightly.
-He tell ’er dat she ain’t done nobody no harm, dat
-she wuz welcome ter his name ef he’d ’a’ been dead,
-an’ mo’ welcome now dat he wuz livin’. She try ter
-put in a word here an’ dar, but he won’t have it.
-Stan’in’ up dar he wuz ol’ Gabe Towers over ag’in;
-’twuz de fus’ time I know’d he faver’d ’im.</p>
-
-<p>“He tol’ ’er ’bout how he wrenched a do’ off’n
-one er de rooms in de boat, an’ how he floated on dat
-twel he got so col’ an’ num’ dat he can’t hol’ on no
-longer, an’ how he turn loose an’ don’t know nothin’
-twel he wake up in some yuther town; an’ how,
-atter he git well, he had de plooisy an’ lay dar a
-mont’ er two, an’ den he ’gun ter hunt fer her. He
-went ’way up dar ter Hampsher whar she come fum,
-but she ain’t dar, an’ den he come home; an’ won’t
-she be good ’nuff ter set down an’ listen at ’im?</p>
-
-<p>“Well, suh, dey wuz mo’ in Marse Jesse dan I
-had any idee. He wuz a rank talker, sho’. I see ’er
-face warmin’ up, an’ I say, ‘Miss Sadie, I ’speck I
-better be gwine.’ Marse Jesse say, ‘You ain’t in
-my way, Aunt Minervy Ann; I done foun’ my<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_68"></a>[68]</span>
-sweetheart, an’ I ain’t gwine ter lose ’er no mo’,
-you kin des bet on dat.’ She ain’t say nothin’ an’ I
-know’d purty well dat eve’ything wuz all skew vee.”</p>
-
-<p>“I hope they married,” remarked the lady of the
-house, after waiting a moment for Aunt Minervy
-Ann to resume. There was just a shade of suspicion
-in her tone.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, dey married, all right ’nuff,” said Aunt
-Minervy Ann, laughing.</p>
-
-<p>“Didn’t it create a good deal of talk?” the
-lady asked, suspicion still in her voice.</p>
-
-<p>“Talk? No, ma’m! De man what dey git de
-license fum wuz Miss Fanny’s br’er, Gus Featherstone,
-an’ de man what married um wuz Marse
-Gabe’s bro’er, John Towers. Dey wa’n’t nobody
-ter do no talkin’. De nex’ mornin’ me an Miss
-Sadie an’ Marse Jesse got in de carriage an’ drove
-out ter John Towers’s place whar he runnin’ a
-church, an’ ’twuz all done an’ over wid mos’ quick
-ez a nigger kin swaller a dram.”</p>
-
-<p>“What do you think of it?” I asked the lady of
-the house.</p>
-
-<p>“Why, it is almost like a story in a book.”</p>
-
-<p>“Does dey put dat kinder doin’s in books?” asked
-Aunt Minervy Ann, with some solicitude.</p>
-
-<p>“Certainly,” replied the lady.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_69"></a>[69]</span></p>
-
-<p>“Wid all de turmile, an’ trouble, an’ tribulation—an’
-all de worry an’ aggervation? Well, Hamp
-wanted me ter l’arn how ter read, but I thank my
-stars dat I can’t read no books. Dey’s ’nuff er all
-dat right whar we live at widout huntin’ it up in
-books.”</p>
-
-<p>After this just observation, it was time to put out
-the lights.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_70"></a>[70]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="III">III<br />
-<span class="smaller">HOW AUNT MINERVY ANN RAN AWAY AND
-RAN BACK AGAIN</span></h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>In the matter of attending the fair at Halcyondale,
-Aunt Minervy Ann’s hospitable wishes jumped
-with my own desires, and it was not difficult to give
-her a hard and fast promise in the matter; nor did it
-take the edge off my desires to entertain a suspicion,
-verified long afterward, that Aunt Minervy Ann’s
-anxiety was based on a hope, expressed by Major
-Perdue, that the fair would be properly handled in
-the Atlanta papers.</p>
-
-<p>The directors of the fair were represented at the
-little railway station, at Halcyondale, by a committee,
-and into the hands of this committee fell every
-man, woman, and child that stepped from the passing
-trains. It mattered little what the business of
-these incoming travellers was; whether they came
-to visit the fair or to attend to their own private affairs.
-They were seized, bag and baggage, by the
-committee and borne triumphantly to the hotel, or<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_71"></a>[71]</span>
-to a boarding-place, or to some private house. The
-members of the committee had a duty to perform,
-and they performed it with an energy and a thoroughness
-that was amazing if not altogether satisfactory.
-As I remember, this vigorous body was
-called the Committee on Public Comfort, and most
-heroically did it live up to its name and its duties.</p>
-
-<p>These things I learned by observation and not by
-experience, for before the train on which I was a
-passenger had cleared the suburbs of Atlanta, I
-caught a glimpse of Major Tumlin Perdue, who had
-long been a prominent citizen of Halcyondale. He
-had changed but little during the ten years. His
-hair was whiter, and he was a trifle thinner, but his
-complexion was still rosy and his manners as buoyant
-as ever. I doubted whether he would know
-me again, though he had been very friendly with
-me in the old days, seeming to know by instinct
-just when and how to drop a word of encouragement
-and appreciation, and so I forbore to renew
-the acquaintance. The Major could be boisterous
-enough in those times when in the humor, but when
-at his best he had more ways like those of a woman
-(and a noble and tender-hearted woman at that)
-than any man I had ever known. He had a woman’s
-tact, intuition, and sympathy; and these qualities<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_72"></a>[72]</span>
-were so exquisitely developed in him that they
-lifted him high in the estimation of a young man
-who was living away from his mother, and who was
-somewhat lonely on that account.</p>
-
-<p>Presently, the Major came along the aisle for a
-drink of water. As he was in the act of drinking,
-his eyes met mine, and he recognized me instantly.
-He swallowed the water with a gulp.</p>
-
-<p>“Why, bless my soul!” he exclaimed, greeting
-me with the simple cordiality that springs from an
-affectionate nature. “Why, I wouldn’t take ten
-dollars for this! I was thinking about you this very
-day. Don’t you remember the night we went out to
-ku-klux the Ku-klux, and the chap that mighty
-nigh broke his neck running into a wire clothes-line?
-I saw him to-day. He would hardly speak to me,”
-the Major went on, laughing heartily. “He’s never
-got over that night’s business. I thought about you,
-and I started to hunt you up; but you know how it
-is in Atlanta. Folks ain’t got time to eat, much less
-to tell you where anybody lives. A man that’s too
-busy is bound to worry, and worry will kill him
-every bit and grain as quick as John Barleycorn.
-Business is bound to be the ruin of this country, and
-if you don’t live to see it, your children will.”</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 700px;" id="illus10">
-<img src="images/illus10.jpg" width="700" height="525" alt="" />
-<p class="caption">The Committee of Public Comfort.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>Thus the Major talked, blending wisdom with<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_73"></a>[73]</span>
-impracticable ideas in the most delightful way. He
-seemed to be highly pleased when he found that I
-was to spend a week at Halcyondale, attending the
-fair and renewing old friendships.</p>
-
-<p>“Then you belong to me!” he exclaimed. “It’s
-no use,” he went on, shaking his head when I
-would have protested against imposing on his good-nature;
-“you needn’t say a word. The tavern is
-stuffed full of people, and even if it wasn’t, you’d
-go to my house. If you ain’t been ruined by living
-in Atlanta, it’ll seem like home to you. Dang it all!
-I’ll <em>make</em> it seem like home to you anyhow.”</p>
-
-<p>Now, the affectation of hospitality is one of the
-commonest hypocrisies in life, and, to a thoughtful
-man, one of the most sinister; but the Major’s hospitality
-was genuine. It was brought over from the
-times before the war, and had stood the test of age
-and long usage, and, most trying of all, the test of
-poverty. “If you were welcome when I was well
-off, how much more welcome you’ll be now that I
-am poor!” This was not said by the Major, but by
-one of his contemporaries. The phrase fitted a
-whole generation of noble men and women, and I
-thank Heaven that it was true at one time even if it
-is not true now.</p>
-
-<p>When the train, with much clinking and clanking<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_74"></a>[74]</span>
-and hissing, came to a standstill at Halcyondale,
-the Major hustled me off on the side opposite the
-station, and so I escaped the ordeal of resisting the
-efforts of the Committee on Public Comfort to convey
-me to a lodging not of my own selection. The
-Major’s buggy was in waiting, with a negro driver,
-who got out to make room for me. He bowed very
-politely, calling me by name.</p>
-
-<p>“You remember Hamp, I reckon,” said the Major.
-“He was a member of the Legislature when
-you lived here.”</p>
-
-<p>Certainly I remembered Hamp, who was Aunt
-Minervy Ann’s husband. I inquired about her, and
-Hamp, who had swung up to the trunk-rack as
-the buggy moved off, replied that she was at home
-and as well as she could be.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes,” said the Major, “she’s at my house. You
-may <em>see</em> somebody else besides Minervy Ann, but
-you won’t <em>hear</em> anybody else. She owns the whole
-place and the people on it. I had a Boston man to
-dinner some time ago, one of Conant’s friends—you
-remember Paul Conant, don’t you?—and I
-stirred Minervy Ann up just to see what the man
-would say. We had a terrible quarrel, and the man
-never did know it was all in fun. He said they
-never would have such a lack of discipline among<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_75"></a>[75]</span>
-the servants in Boston. I told him I would give him
-any reasonable amount if he would go out and discipline
-Minervy Ann, just to show me how it was
-done. It would have been better than a circus.
-You heard her, didn’t you, Hamp?”</p>
-
-<p>Hamp chuckled good-naturedly. “Yasser, I did,
-an’ it make col’ chills run over me ter hear how
-Minervy Ann went on. She cert’n’y did try herse’f
-dat day.”</p>
-
-<p>The Major smiled a little proudly as I thought,
-slapped the horse—a bob-tailed black—with the left
-rein, and we went skimming along the level, sandy
-street at a three-minute gait. In a short while we
-were at the Major’s house, where I received a warm
-welcome from his daughter, whom I had known
-when she was a school-girl. She was now Mrs. Paul
-Conant, and even more beautiful as a matron than
-she had been as a girl. I had also known her husband,
-who had begun his business career in the town
-a year or two before I left, and even at that time he
-was one of the most prominent and promising young
-business men in the town.</p>
-
-<p>He had served in the army the last year of the
-war, and the service did him a world of good, physically
-and mentally. His faculties were broadened
-and enlarged. Contact with all sorts and conditions<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_76"></a>[76]</span>
-of men gave him ample knowledge of his kind, and
-yet he kept in touch with the finer issues of life. He
-was ripened and not hardened.</p>
-
-<p>The surrender had no such crushing effects on
-him as it had on older men. It left him youth, and
-where youth is there must be hope and energy. He
-returned home, remained a few weeks, sold a couple
-of horses he had picked up in the track of Sherman’s
-army, and then went into the office of a cotton factor
-in Savannah, giving his services for the knowledge
-and experience he desired to gain. In a very short
-time he learned all the secrets of sampling and
-grading the great staple. He might have remained
-in the office at a salary, for his aptness had made him
-useful, but he preferred to return to Halcyondale,
-where he engaged in buying cotton on his own account.
-There was just enough risk in this to stimulate
-his energies, and not enough to lead to serious
-speculation.</p>
-
-<p>To this business he added others as his capital
-grew, and he was soon the most prosperous man in
-the town. He had formed the stock company under
-whose auspices the county fair was held, and was
-president of the board of directors.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 575px;" id="illus11">
-<img src="images/illus11.jpg" width="575" height="700" alt="" />
-<p class="caption">Buying cotton on his own account.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>Aunt Minervy Ann was very much in evidence,
-for she acted as cook, nurse, and house-girl. The<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_77"></a>[77]</span>
-first glimpse I had of her, she had a bucket of water
-in her right hand and Conant’s baby—a bouncing
-boy—on her left arm. Just then Major Perdue
-hustled me off to my room, thus postponing, as I
-thought, the greeting I had for Aunt Minervy Ann.
-But presently I heard her coming upstairs talking
-to herself.</p>
-
-<p>“Ef dey gwine ter have folks puttin’ up wid um,
-dey better tell me in de due time, so I can fix up fer
-um. Dey ain’t been no fresh water in deze rooms
-sence dat baby wuz born’d.”</p>
-
-<p>She went on to the end of the hall and looked in
-each of the rooms. Then, with an exclamation I
-failed to catch, she knocked at my door, which was
-promptly opened. As she saw me a broad smile
-flashed over her good-natured face.</p>
-
-<p>“I ’low’d ’twuz you,” she said, “an’ I’m mighty
-glad you come.” She started to pour the water
-from can to pitcher, when suddenly she stayed her
-hand. With the exclamation, “Well, ef dis don’t
-bang my time!” she went to the head of the stairs
-and cried out: “Miss Vallie! Miss Vallie! you
-don’t want no town folks stuck in dish yer back
-room, does you?”</p>
-
-<p>“Why, certainly not!” cried the lady. “What
-could father have been thinking of?”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_78"></a>[78]</span></p>
-
-<p>“Shoo! he like all de men folks,” responded
-Aunt Minervy Ann.</p>
-
-<p>With that she seized my valise with one hand,
-and, carrying the can of water in the other, escorted
-me to one of the front rooms. It was an improvement
-on the back room only because it had more
-windows to admit the air and light. I put in a word
-for the Major, which I hoped would be carried to
-the ears of the daughter.</p>
-
-<p>“The Major gave me that room because he
-wanted to treat me as if I were one of the home
-folks. Now you’ve brought me here, and I’ll feel
-as uncomfortable as if I were company, sure
-enough.”</p>
-
-<p>“Dey’s sump’n in dat, I ’speck,” replied Aunt
-Minervy Ann, laughing; “but, lawsy, massy! you
-done been in dis house too much ter talk dat-a-way.
-When kin folks come home, we allus gin um de bes’
-dey is fer de fus’ week er so. Atter dat dey kin
-rustle ’roun’ fer deyse’f.”</p>
-
-<p>It is hardly necessary to say that Aunt Minervy
-Ann took very good care that I should want for
-none of those little attentions that sharpen the appreciation
-of a guest; and, in her case, obtrusiveness
-was not a fault, for her intentions shone clearly
-and unmistakably through it all.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 550px;" id="illus12">
-<img src="images/illus12.jpg" width="550" height="700" alt="" />
-<p class="caption">“Miss Vallie!”</p>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_79"></a>[79]</span></p>
-
-<p>Major Perdue had the art of entertainment at his
-fingers’ ends, which, though it is very simple, not one
-man in a hundred learns. It is the knack of leaving
-the guest to his own devices without seeming to do
-so. Most fortunate in his gifts is the host who
-knows how to temper his attentions!</p>
-
-<p>In his efforts to get the fair under way, Paul Conant
-found it impossible to come to dinner, but sent
-his apologies.</p>
-
-<p>“You’ll think it is a mighty small concern when
-you see it,” said the Major, “but it takes all that
-Paul can do to keep it from getting into a tangle.
-He has to be here, there, and everywhere, and there
-hasn’t been a minute for a week or more but what
-forty people were hollering at him at once, and forty
-more pulling and hauling him about. If he wasn’t
-a steam-engine, he couldn’t hold out half an hour.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, he’ll soon straighten matters out,” said I,
-“and then they’ll stay so.”</p>
-
-<p>“That’s so,” remarked the Major; “but when
-that’s done, he’ll have to rush around from post to
-pillar to keep ’em straight.”</p>
-
-<p>“Did he seem to be greatly worried?” Valentine
-asked.</p>
-
-<p>“No-o-o-o,” replied the Major, slowly and hesitatingly,
-“but I’m afear’d his shoulder has begun<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_80"></a>[80]</span>
-to trouble him again.” He leaned back in his chair
-and looked at the ceiling, apparently lost in thought.</p>
-
-<p>“Why should you think that, father?”</p>
-
-<p>“Once or twice, whilst he was rustling about I
-saw him fling his hand to his shoulder and hold it
-there, and I’m mightily afear’d it’s hurting him.”
-The Major drew a deep sigh as he spoke, and silence
-fell on all. It was brief, but it was long enough for
-one to know that an unpleasant subject had been
-touched on—that there was something more behind
-it all than a pain in Conant’s shoulder. Aunt Minervy
-Ann, who was equal to every emergency,
-created a diversion with the baby, and the Major
-soon pulled himself together.</p>
-
-<p>Paul Conant came home to supper, and in the
-sitting-room, before the meal was announced, I observed
-that the Major was as solicitous about him
-as a mother is of her baby. His eyes were constantly
-on his son-in-law, and if the latter showed any sign
-of worry, or frowned as if in pain, a shadow would
-pass over the Major’s genial face.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 700px;" id="illus13">
-<img src="images/illus13.jpg" width="700" height="575" alt="" />
-<p class="caption">“I saw him fling his hand to his shoulder and hold it there.”</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>This intense solicitude was something out of the
-usual order, and I wondered what was behind it.
-But the next day it was forgotten, nor was it remembered
-until Aunt Minervy Ann reminded me of it.
-I had been faithful in my attendance on the fair,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_81"></a>[81]</span>
-had listened patiently to the speeches, and had then
-tried to refresh my benumbed faculties with such
-fare as could be found on the grounds—barbecue,
-pickles, and ginger-cakes. But the occasion had
-been too much for me, and so, about two o’clock in
-the afternoon, I decided to return to my quarters at
-Major Perdue’s home and rest my weary limbs.
-The very thought of the quiet and cool house was refreshing,
-and so, without waiting for a conveyance,
-I set out on foot, going through the woods in preference
-to the public highway, thereby cutting the
-distance short by nearly a mile.</p>
-
-<p>A great many others had taken advantage of the
-short-cut through the woods, so that I had no lack
-of company. Among them I noticed Aunt Minervy
-and her husband, Hamp, the latter carrying the
-Conant baby, which, having had enough of the
-pomps and vanities of this life for the time being,
-was now fast asleep. I soon came up with the trio,
-and we went along home together.</p>
-
-<p>“You toughed it out mighty well, suh,” remarked
-Aunt Minervy Ann, after some talk
-about the various attractions of the fair. “Up
-dar in Atlanty deze kinder doin’s would be
-laughed at, I ’speck, but hit’s de bes’ we-all
-kin do. Me an’ Miss Vallie had some truck<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_82"></a>[82]</span>
-dar, speshually dat ar grape jelly on de right
-han’ side. Ef dat jelly don’t git de blue ribbon er
-sump’n better, hit’ll be bakaze dem ar jedgment
-men ain’t got no sense—I don’t keer who dey is.
-Ain’t you see dat ar quilt hangin’ up dar wid a pattern
-in it like a well-whorl, only de middle er de
-whorl was shape like de mornin’ star? Dat ar quilt
-is older dan what you is, suh—lots older. Me an’
-Mistiss made dat quilt long ’fo’ Miss Vallie wuz
-born, an’ dish yer baby’ll tell you she ain’t no chicken.
-Ef dey’s any purtier quilt on dat hill dey had
-it hid ter-day; dey ain’t brung it out whar folks kin
-look at it. I dunno much, but I knows dat much.”</p>
-
-<p>We reached the house after awhile, and I lost no
-time in stretching myself out on a lounge that sat
-invitingly in the hall behind the stairway. It was
-not the coolest place in the world; but, really, when
-one is fagged out, it is unnecessary to try to find all
-the comforts of life in one spot. Sleep fell on me
-unawares, and when I awoke, Aunt Minervy Ann
-was sitting near the head of the lounge fanning me.
-Such courtesy was surprising, as well as pleasing, but
-I chid her for taking so much trouble, for I had slept
-nearly two hours. But she made light of it, saying
-she had nothing else to do, the baby being in his
-cradle and sleeping like a log.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 500px;" id="illus14">
-<img src="images/illus14.jpg" width="500" height="700" alt="" />
-<p class="caption">“Dat ar grape jelly on de right han’ side.”</p>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_83"></a>[83]</span></p>
-
-<p>Then, to enjoy a smoke, I drew a rocking-chair
-into the back porch, and proceeded to fill my pipe
-with what I regarded as a very good brand of tobacco,
-offering some to Aunt Minervy Ann. She
-soon found her pipe—clay bowl and reed stem—cleaned
-it out carefully and filled it from my pouch.</p>
-
-<p>“It look mighty pale, suh,” she remarked. “I
-’speck dey steam it ’fo’ dey mash it up.” She seated
-herself on the top step, lit her pipe, took a few whiffs,
-and then shook her head. “’Tain’t nigh rank ’nuff
-for me, suh. Hit tas’e like you er dreamin’ ’bout
-smokin’ an’ know all de time ’tain’t nothin’ but a
-dream.” She knocked the tobacco out, and then refilled
-the pipe with the crumbs and cutting from the
-end of a plug. This she smoked with an air of supreme
-satisfaction.</p>
-
-<p>“I ’speck you got de idee dat I better be seein’
-’bout supper, stidder settin’ up here lookin’ biggity.
-But ’tain’t no use, suh. Marse Tumlin and Miss
-Vallie never is ter come home dis day less’n dey
-bring Marse Paul wid um. I done hear um sesso.
-An’ I know mighty well, deyer gwine ter come back
-late, bekaze Paul Conant’s one er dem kinder folks
-what go twel dey can’t go, an’ when dey git down
-dey make motions like dey gwine. Dey puts me in
-mind uv a lizard’s tail, suh. Knock it off, an’ it’ll<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_84"></a>[84]</span>
-hop ’bout an’ work an’ wiggle plum twel de sun go
-down.”</p>
-
-<p>I suggested that the illustration was somewhat
-inapt (though not in those words), for the reason
-that Paul Conant’s energy was not expended blindly.
-But I found that Aunt Minervy knew what she
-was saying.</p>
-
-<p>“I ain’t talkin’ ’bout his own business, suh, bekaze
-dey ain’t nobody beat ’im at dat. No, suh;
-I’m talkin’ ’bout dem ar doin’s out dar at de fair
-groun’s. He’s a-workin’ at dat lots harder dan he
-has ter work fer hisse’f. Maybe you tuck notice
-uv de way dem yuther folks done out dar, suh. Dey
-stood ’round wid dey mouf open, an’ de ribbon
-pinned on der coats, an’ when sump’n had ter be
-done, dey’d call out fer Conant. It ’uz ‘Conant!’
-here an’ ‘Conant!’ dar, an’ ef Conant wuz out er
-hearin’ de whole shebang had ter stop right still an’
-wait twel Conant kin be dragged up. I watched um
-p’intedly, suh, an’ it’s des like I tell you.”</p>
-
-<p>Aunt Minervy Ann’s characterization of the directors
-was so acute and so unexpected that I
-laughed—not at what she said, but at the vivid picture
-of a lot of helpless men standing about, full of
-dignity, and yet waiting for young Conant to tell
-them what to do.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 700px;" id="illus15">
-<img src="images/illus15.jpg" width="700" height="500" alt="" />
-<p class="caption">“‘Conant!’ here and ‘Conant!’ dar.”</p>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_85"></a>[85]</span></p>
-
-<p>“You may laugh, suh,” Aunt Minervy Ann
-went on with a little frown, “but I’m tellin’ you de
-Lord’s trufe. I kep’ my eyes on um, an’ ’twuz dat-a-way
-fum soon dis mornin’ ’twel I got mad an’
-come home. You kin ax Hamp, suh, an’ he’ll tell
-you de same. I reckon you heer’d Marse Tumlin
-las’ night at de table ax Marse Paul ef his shoulder
-hurted ’im. I know you did, suh, bekaze I tuck
-notice how you looked, an’ I tried ter shake de baby
-up so he’d cry, but dat wuz one er de times, suh,
-when he wouldn’t be shuck up. Any udder time
-dat chil’ would er laid back an’ blated twel you’d
-hafter put yo’ fingers in yo’ years. I wuz mad wid
-’im, suh, but I wuz bleedz ter laugh. Chillun
-mighty funny. When you don’t want um ter
-cry, dey’ll holler der heads off, an’ when you
-want um ter cry, dey’ll laugh in yo’ face. I
-bet you dey’s a blue place on dat baby’s arm
-whar I pinched ’im, but he didn’t no mo’ min’ it
-dan nothin’.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well,” said I, “there was something peculiar
-in the way all of you looked and acted when the Major
-asked about Mr. Conant’s shoulder. It was a
-very simple question.”</p>
-
-<p>“Ah, Lord!” exclaimed Aunt Minervy Ann,
-raising her right hand on high, “dey better ax ’bout<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_86"></a>[86]</span>
-dat shoulder. Yesser! ev’y day an’ ev’y night, an’
-in betwixt times.”</p>
-
-<p>“Is Mr. Conant troubled with rheumatism?” I
-inquired.</p>
-
-<p>“Rheumatiz! bless yo’ soul, honey! Ef ’twuz
-rheumatiz dey wouldn’t be no Paul Conant ’round
-dis house, ner no Conant baby.”</p>
-
-<p>Here is something decidedly interesting, I
-thought, but held my peace, knowing that whatever
-it was would be more quickly disclosed if there were
-any disclosure to make.</p>
-
-<p>“Ain’t you never hear ’bout it, suh? Well dat
-bangs me! An’ you right up dar in Atlanty, too!
-No, suh; you must er been in Savanny, bekaze
-’twuz de town talk in Atlanty. Anyhow, wharsomever
-you wuz er might er been, dey ain’t no
-rheumatiz de matter wid Marse Paul Conant’s
-shoulder-blade. I know dat much, an’ I know it
-mighty well, bekaze I wuz right here in dis house,
-an’ nowhars else ’cep’n ’roun’ de lot an’ up town an’
-back.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, den, suh, ef you ain’t never hear ’bout
-dat, I most know you ain’t never hear tell er how
-I run’d off, and how I run’d back, bekaze nobody
-ain’t never talk ’bout dat—leas’ways, not as I knows
-un.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_87"></a>[87]</span></p>
-
-<p>I declared to Aunt Minervy Ann that I never
-heard a whisper of it. She leaned back against the
-railing of the steps and drew a long whiff from her
-pipe.</p>
-
-<p>“’Tain’t no use ter tell you, suh, how times wuz
-right atter de war. You wuz right in um, an’ ef you
-don’t know, it’s bekaze you didn’t look ’roun’ an’
-see um. I hear um say, suh, dat niggers wuz po’
-when dey come free. Dey wuz, suh; dey wuz rank
-pizen po’; but dey never wuz in dis worl’ a nigger
-ez po’ ez some er our white folks wuz. You may
-shake yo’ haid, suh, but I’m givin’ you de straight
-gov’nment trufe. Niggers is use ter bein’ po’, an’
-dey never wuz dat po’ dat dey can’t scuffle ’roun’
-an’ make out somehow. Dey er been po’ so long
-dey er usen ter it. But white folks what been rich!
-I hope de Lord’ll call me home ’fo’ I see again what
-I done saw in dem days. I know in reason, suh,
-dat I seed mo’ er de trouble dan what you did, kaze
-you couldn’t go in at de back gates like me; an’
-what trouble folks does have dey allers keep it
-somers betwix’ de bedroom an’ de back gate.</p>
-
-<p>“De Perdues wa’n’t no wuss off dan nobody else.
-Marse Tumlin had dish yer house an’ lot, an’ de
-plantation, an’ some lan’ way off yander. But all
-de hosses an’ mules an’ cattle been tuck off, an’ de<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_88"></a>[88]</span>
-niggers all gone. Ef he’d er stayed on de plantation,
-de niggers would ’a’ been dar yit, but stay he
-wouldn’t, an’ stay he didn’t, an’ so dar he wuz.</p>
-
-<p>“Do sump’n? What he gwine do? Fo’ de big
-turmoil he done some lawin’ an’ a heap er farmin’.
-Leas’ways my ol’ Mistiss done de farmin’, an’ Marse
-Tumlin, he done de lawin’. He had ’im a office here
-in town, an’ on set days he’d come in an’ look arter
-de cases what he had. But how anybody gwine ter
-do any lawin’ dat-a-way? Marse Tumlin ain’t keerin’
-whedder he git one case er none. He ain’t
-bleedze ter do no lawin’. An’ den ’pon top
-er dat he went off whar dey battlin’, an’ dar he
-stayed, an’ when he come back, look like de kinder
-lawin’ what he use ter do done gone outer fashion.
-Ef he hadn’t er been holp out, suh, I dunner what’d
-’a’ come un ’im. An’ ’twa’n’t only Marse Tumlin.
-Dey wuz a whole passel un um, too young ter die
-an’ too ol’ ter win money in dem kinder times. Ef
-you ain’t ol’ ’nuff ter ’member dem times, suh, you
-kin thank de Lord, kaze dey sho did look like tetotal
-ruination.</p>
-
-<p>“Now, you know yo’se’f, suh, dat you can’t eat
-a house an’ lot an’ live dar too; an’ you can’t eat lan’
-des dry so less’n you got a mighty appetite fer dirt.
-Whyn’t he sell de lan’? You oughter be de las’ one<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_89"></a>[89]</span>
-ter ax me dat, suh. Who gwine buy it? Dem what
-ain’t got lan’ ain’t had no money, an’ dem what had
-money sholy lived a mighty long ways fum here.
-Day in an’ day out, suh, I wuz de wuss pester’d
-nigger you ever laid eyes on. I ain’t know what
-ter do.</p>
-
-<p>“An’ den ’pon top er dat, dar wuz Hamp, my ol’
-man. When freedom come out, he tuck de notion
-dat we better go off some’rs an’ change de name
-what we got so dey can’t put us back in slave’y.
-Night an’ day it fair rankle in his min’, an’ he kep’
-groanin’ an’ growlin’ ’bout it twel I got stirred up.
-I oughtn’t ter tell it, suh, but hit’s de Lord’s trufe.
-I got mad, I did, an’ I tol’ Hamp I’d go. An’ den
-I wa’n’t doin’ no good stayin’ here. ’Twuz des
-one mo’ mouf ter feed, an’ mo’ dan one, countin’
-Hamp. So, bimeby, one day, when I wuz sorter
-fretted, I tol’ Hamp ter go on out dar in de country,
-whar his daddy live at, an’ I’d meet ’im dar
-’fo’ night.</p>
-
-<p>“When de time come, I went in de house an’
-hunt fer Miss Vallie. She ’uz settin’ in de parlor
-by de winder, but behime de curtain like, so nobody
-can’t see ’er. She ’uz settin’ dar wid ’er han’s
-crossed on ’er lap, an’ she look so little, an’ pale, an’
-weak, dat I come mighty nigh gwine right back in<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_90"></a>[90]</span>
-de kitchen. But she seed me too quick. Den I
-up’n tell ’er dat I’m gwine out in de country, ter
-whar Hamp daddy live at. She look at me right
-hard an’ say, ‘When you comin’ back, Aunt Minervy
-Ann?’ I ’low, ‘I’m comin’ back des ez soon
-ez I kin make my ’rangements, honey.’ She say,
-‘Well, I hope you’ll have a good time while you er
-gone.’ I ’low, ‘Thanky, ma’m.’ Wid dat I went
-an’ got my bundle an’ put opt fum dar—an’ I ain’t
-look back nudder, bekaze I had a mighty weakness
-in de knees, an’ a mighty risin’ in my th’oat.</p>
-
-<p>“I went on down de road, an’ ef anybody had so
-much ez said <em>boo</em> ter me, I’d ’a’ turned right ’roun’
-an’ gone back home. I went on, I did, twel I come
-ter de mile branch. I see somebody crossin’ on de
-log, an’ when I come up wid um, who should it ’a’
-been but Marse Tumlin. An’ he had <em>one chicken</em>!
-He had been out ter de plantation—sev’m mile ef its
-fifty yards—an’ here he wuz comin’ back wid one
-chicken—an’ him a walkin’, him dat use ter ride
-’roun’ in his carriage! Walkin’ an’ totin’ one little
-chicken! Man, suh! I don’t never want ter feel
-again like I felt den. Whedder ’twuz de chicken,
-er what, I never did see Marse Tumlin Perdue look
-ez ol’ an’ ez weasly ez he did den. He look at me
-an’ sorter laugh like I done cotch ’im doin’ sump’n<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_91"></a>[91]</span>
-he ain’t got no business ter do. But dey wa’n’t no
-laugh in me; no, suh, not by a jugful.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 500px;" id="illus16">
-<img src="images/illus16.jpg" width="500" height="700" alt="" />
-<p class="caption">“Drapt down on de groun’ dar an’ holler an’ cry.”</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>“He say, ‘Hello, Minervy Ann! whar <em>you</em>
-gwine?’ I ’low, I did, ‘I’m des gwine out yander
-whar Hamp kinnery live at.’</p>
-
-<p>“He sorter pull his goatee, an’ look down at de
-dus’ on his shoes—an’ dey wuz fair kiver’d wid it—an’
-den he say, ‘Well, Minervy Ann, I wish you
-mighty well. You sho is done a mighty good part
-by me an’ mine. Ef yo’ Miss Mary wuz ’live she’d
-know what ter say—I don’t, ’cep’ dis’—he straighten
-up an’ stretch out his han’—‘’cep’ dis: whenever
-you want ter come back home, you’ll fin’ de
-do’ open. Ef you come at night, des knock. We’ll
-know yo’ knock.’</p>
-
-<p>“You ain’t never seed no fool nigger ’oman cut
-up, is you? Well, ef you does see one, suh, I hope
-ter goodness ’twon’t be me! Marse Tumlin ain’t no
-mo’n got de words out’n his mouf, suh, ’fo’ I tuck
-de bundle what I had in my han’, an’ flung it fur ez
-I could send it.</p>
-
-<p>“Marse Tumlin look at me hard, an’ den he say,
-‘Dam ef I don’t b’lieve youer crazy!’ Time he say
-it, I ’low, ‘<em>I don’t keer er dam ef I is!</em>’</p>
-
-<p>“Yasser! I say it sho, an’ den I drapt down on
-de groun’ dar an’ holler an’ cry like somebody wuz<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_92"></a>[92]</span>
-beatin’ de life out’n me. Marse Tumlin stood dar
-pullin’ at his goatee all dat time, an’ bimeby I got
-up. I wa’n’t feelin’ much better, but I done had my
-cry an’ dat’s sump’n. I got up, I did, an’ start back
-de way I come.</p>
-
-<p>“Marse Tumlin say, ‘Whar you gwine, Minervy
-Ann? I ’low, ‘I’m gwine back home—dat’s whar
-I’m gwine!’ He say, ‘Pick up yo’ bundle.’ Wid
-dat I turn ’roun’ on him an’ ’low, ‘I ain’t gwine ter
-do it! Ef it hadn’t er been fer dat ar muslin dress
-in dar, what Miss Vallie make over an’ gi’ me, I’d
-been at home right dis minute.’</p>
-
-<p>“He ’low, ‘What dat got ter do wid it, Minervy
-Ann?’ I make answer, ‘Bekaze ol’ Satan make me
-want ter put it on an’ sho’ off ’fo’ dem country niggers
-out dar whar Hamp’s folks live at.’ Wid dat
-I start back home, but Marse Tumlin holler at me—‘Minervy
-Ann, take dis chicken.’ I tuck it, I did,
-an’ made off up de road. Bimeby I sorter flung my
-eye ’roun’, an’, bless gracious! dar wuz Marse Tumlin
-comin’ ’long totin’ my bundle. Well, suh, it
-flewed all over me like fier. I got so mad wid myse’f
-dat I could ’a’ bit a piece out’n my own flesh.</p>
-
-<p>“I waited in de road twel he come up, an’ den I
-snatched de bundle out er his han’. I ’low, ‘I ain’t
-gwine ter have you totin’ none er my bundles in de<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_93"></a>[93]</span>
-public road—no, ner no chickens, needer.’ He say,
-‘Well, don’t fling it ’way, Minervy Ann. De time
-may come when yo’ Miss Vallie’ll need dat ar muslin
-dress.’</p>
-
-<p>“When we got back home I went in de kitchen,
-an’ fix ter clean an’ kill de chicken. I ’speck Marse
-Tumlin must ’a’ tol’ Miss Vallie ’bout it, bekaze
-’twan’t long ’fo’ I hear her runnin’ ’long de plank
-walk ter de kitchen. She whipt in de do’ she did,
-an’ grab me an’ cry like I done riz fum de dead.
-Well, suh, niggers ain’t got no sense, you kin take
-um de world over. No sooner is Miss Vallie start
-ter cry dan I chuned up, an’ dar we had it.</p>
-
-<p>“’Bout dat time, Marse Tumlin, he come out—men
-folks is allers gwine some’rs dey got no business.
-He ’low, ‘What you’all blubberin’ ’bout?’
-I make answer, ‘We er cryin’ over dese two chickens.’
-He ax, ‘What two chickens?’ I ’low, ‘I’m
-cryin’ over dis un, kaze it’s so little, an’ Miss Vallie
-cryin’ over de one what you ain’t brung.’ He say,
-‘Well, I be dang!’ an’ wid dat he went back in de
-house.</p>
-
-<p>“An’ den, atter supper, such ez ’twuz, here come
-Hamp, an’ he say he come ter lay de law down. I
-’speck I like my ol’ man ’bout ez good ez any udder
-’oman what’s lawfully married, but ef I didn’t put a<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_94"></a>[94]</span>
-flea in Hamp year dat night you may shoot me dead.
-Ef he’d ’a’ waited a day er two, hit might er been
-diffunt; but, manlike, he had ter come at de wrong
-time, an’ he ain’t open his mouf ’fo’ I wuz fightin’
-mad. Ol’ Miss allers use ter tell me I wuz a bad
-nigger when I got my dander up, but I never did
-look at myse’f dat-a-way twel dat night.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, Hamp he come an’ stood in de do’, but I
-ain’t say nothin’. Den he come in de kitchen, an’
-stan’ ’roun’, but still I ain’t say nothin’. Den he sot
-down next de chimbley, but all dat time I ain’t say
-nothin’. He look right pitiful, suh, an’ ef I hadn’t
-been mad, I’d ’a’ been sorry fer ’im. But I ain’t say
-nothin’.</p>
-
-<p>“Bimeby, he ’low, ‘’Nervy’—he allers call me
-’Nervy—‘’Nervy, whyn’t you go whar you say
-you gwine?’ I flung myse’f ’roun’ at ’im an’ say,
-‘Bekaze I ain’t choosen ter go—dar you got it!’
-He ’low, ‘Well, you start ter go, kaze I seed you!’
-I say, ‘Yes, an’ I start ter come back, an’ you’d ’a’
-seed dat ef you’d ’a’ looked right close.’ He ’low,
-‘’Nervy, don’t you know dem folks in yander’ll
-think you b’long to um?’ I say, ‘I does. Ain’t I
-free? Can’t I b’long to um ef I wanter? I’d like ter
-see de one ter hender me. What dey done ter you?
-An’ what’s I done ter you dat you want ter drag me<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_95"></a>[95]</span>
-’way fum my white folks? You go drag you’se’f—you
-can’t drag <em>me</em>.’ He ’low, ‘Dey done begin ter
-call you a white-folks nigger, an’ dey say you gwine
-back on yo’ own color.’”</p>
-
-<p>Aunt Minervy Ann paused here to laugh. “Mad
-ez I wuz, suh, de minnit Hamp said dat I know’d I
-had ter change my chune. I ’low, ‘I know right
-pine-blank who tol’ you dat. ’Twan’t nobody in
-de roun’ worl’ but ol’ Cely Ensign, an’ she ain’t tell
-you dat in comp’ny, needer. She tol’ you whar nobody
-can’t hear ’er but you. Don’t you fret! des ez
-soon ez I git thoo wid supper, I’m gwine ’roun’ dar
-an’ drag ’er out an’ gi’ ’er de wuss frailin’ any nigger
-ever got sence de overseers quit bizness. I ain’t
-fergot dat ar’ possum you toted off ter her house.’</p>
-
-<p>“Well, suh, I had ’im! He caved in. He ’low,
-‘’Twan’t no ’possum; ’twan’t nothin’ in de roun’
-worl’ but a late watermillion.’ I holler, ‘<em>Ah-yi!
-watermillion!</em> Well, den, ef you want ter drag anybody
-off fum der white folks, go an’ drag ol’ Cely
-Ensign—bekaze you can’t drag me.’</p>
-
-<p>“We jowered right smart, but I had Hamp in a
-cornder. He went off an’ stayed maybe a mont’, an’
-den he come back, an’ atter ’while he got ’lected ter
-de legislature. He done mighty well, suh. He got
-nine dollars a day, an’ ev’y Sat’dy night he’d fetch<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_96"></a>[96]</span>
-de bigges’ part uv it home. ’Twuz mighty handy,
-too, suh, kaze ef hadn’t been fer dat legislatur’
-money I dunner what me and Miss Vallie an’ Marse
-Tumlin would ’a’ done.</p>
-
-<p>“Dat wuz ’bout de time, suh, dat de town boys
-wanter ku-kluck Hamp, an’ you an’ Marse Tumlin
-went out an’ ku-klucked dem. Hamp ain’t never
-forgot it, suh. He’d walk fum here to Atlanty fer
-you ef ’twould do you any good. He don’t say
-much, but I know how he feel. I hear ’im calling
-me now, suh.”</p>
-
-<p>“You haven’t told me about Paul Conant,” I
-suggested.</p>
-
-<p>“I’ll tell you, suh, ’fo’ you go.”</p>
-
-<p>In half a minute I heard Aunt Minervy Ann
-quarrelling and laughing at Hamp in the same
-breath.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_97"></a>[97]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="IV">IV<br />
-<span class="smaller">HOW SHE JOINED THE GEORGIA LEGISLATURE</span></h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>The second day of the fair, I saw more of Paul
-Conant. He insisted on taking charge of me, and,
-in his buggy, we visited every part of the fair-grounds,
-which had been laid out on a most liberal
-scale. When dinner-time came I was glad enough
-to excuse myself and hurry back to the refreshing
-shade of Major Perdue’s veranda. There I found
-Aunt Minervy Ann swinging the baby in a hammock.</p>
-
-<p>“I ’low’d maybe you’d git tired an’ come back,
-suh; an’ so I des let dinner sorter simmer whiles
-I got dish yer baby ter sleep. I dunner how you all
-does in Atlanty, but down here we has soon dinner.
-Dem what wanter kin have two meals a day, but
-dem what does sho ’nuff work better eat three.
-Me! I want three, whedder I works er not.”</p>
-
-<p>The baby stirred, and Aunt Minervy paused. At
-that moment a group of men, wearing badges,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_98"></a>[98]</span>
-passed by, evidently officials of the fair going to
-dinner. They were evidently engaged in a very
-earnest discussion.</p>
-
-<p>“I’m for Conant,” said one, with considerable
-emphasis.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, so am I,” assented another. “When Jim
-told me this morning that he was a candidate for
-the Legislature, I told him flat and plain that I was
-for Paul Conant.”</p>
-
-<p>“That’s right,” remarked a third. “We want a
-man there with some business sense, and Conant’s
-the man.”</p>
-
-<p>Aunt Minervy Ann laughed. “Ef de Legislatur’
-up dar in Atlanty is like it wuz when I b’long’d
-ter it, dey can’t drag Marse Paul in dar; no, suh!
-dey can’t drag him in dar.”</p>
-
-<p>Amazement must have shown in my face, for
-Aunt Minervy Ann immediately became solemn.
-“Ain’t you never hear tell ’bout my j’inin’ de
-Legislatur’? You may look an’ you may laugh,
-but dat don’t wipe out de trufe. Dey wuz a time
-when I jined de Legislatur’ an’ when I b’long’d ter
-de gang same ez Hamp did. You don’t ’spute but
-what Hamp b’long’d ter de Legislatur’, suh?”
-asked Aunt Minervy Ann, anxious to make out the
-title of her own membership. No, I didn’t dispute<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_99"></a>[99]</span>
-Hamp’s credentials. He had been elected and he
-had served.</p>
-
-<p>“I know’d you couldn’t ’spute dat, suh,” Aunt
-Minervy Ann went on, “’kaze you wuz down dar
-when dey choosen’d ’im, an’ you wuz dar when dem
-ar white folks come mighty nigh ku-kluckin’ ’im;
-you wuz right dar wid Marse Tumlin an’ Marse
-Bolivar. I never is ter fergit dat, suh, ner Hamp
-nudder; an’ ef you don’t b’lieve it, you des sen’ us
-word you want us. Ef we git de word at midnight
-we’ll git up, an’ ef de railroad track is tore up we’ll
-git a waggin, an’ ef we can’t git a waggin, we’ll
-walk, but what we’ll come.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well,” said I, “tell us about your joining the
-Legislature.”</p>
-
-<p>“I may be long in tellin’ it, suh, but ’tain’t no
-long tale,” replied Aunt Minervy Ann. “Atter
-Hamp come up here an’ tuck his seat—dat what
-dey call it den, ef dey don’t call it dat now—well,
-atter he come up an’ been here some little time, I
-tuck notice dat he ’gun ter hol’ his head mighty
-high; a little too high fer ter suit me. He want me
-ter go up dar wid ’im an’ stay dar, ’kaze he sorter
-skittish ’bout comin’ home when dem country boys
-mought be hangin’ ’roun’ de depot. But I up
-an’ tol’ ’im flat an’ plain dat I wa’n’t gwine ter<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_100"></a>[100]</span>
-leave Miss Vallie an’ let er’ git usen ter strange
-niggers. I tol’ ’im he mought go an’ stay ef he
-want ter, but de fus’ week he miss comin’ home,
-I wuz gwine atter ’im, an’ ef I fotch ’im home
-he won’t go back in a hurry; I tol’ ’im dat, flat an’
-plain.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, suh, he done mighty well; I’ll say dat
-fer ’im. He want too many clean shirts an’ collars
-fer ter suit me, but he say he bleeze ter have um dar
-whar he at, an’ I ain’t make no complaint ’bout dat;
-but I took notice dat he wuz sorter offish wid Marse
-Tumlin. Mo’ dan dat, I tuck notice dat needer
-Marse Tumlin ner Marse Bolivar so much ez look
-at ’im when dey pass ’im by. I know’d by dat dat
-sump’n wuz up.</p>
-
-<p>“Now, Hamp ain’t had no reg’lar time fer comin’
-home. Sometimes he’d come We’n’sday, an’
-den ag’in he’d come Friday. I ax ’im why he ain’t
-stay de week out an’ ’ten’ ter his work like he
-oughter. He say he gettin’ des much pay when he
-at home loafin’ ’roun’ ez he do when he up yer.
-Well, suh, dat ’stonish me. You know yo’se’f,
-suh, dat when folks is gittin’ pay fer dat what dey
-ain’t doin’, dey’s boun’ ter be swindlin’ gwine on
-some’rs, ef not wuss, an’ dat what I tol’ ’im. He
-laugh an’ say dat’s on account er politics an’ de erpublican<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_101"></a>[101]</span>
-party, an’ I make answer dat ef dat de
-case, dey er bofe rank an’ rotten; desso.</p>
-
-<p>“We went on fum one thing ter an’er, twel
-bimeby I ax ’im what dey is ’twixt ’im an’ Marse
-Tumlin an’ Marse Bolivar. Hamp say dey ain’t
-nothin’ ’ceppin’ dat dey done ax ’im fer ter do
-sump’n dat ain’t in ’cordance wid erpublican pencerpuls,
-an’ he bleeze ter effuse um. Well, suh,
-dis kinder riled me. I know’d right pine-blank dat
-Hamp ain’t know no mo’ ’bout erpublican pencerpuls
-dan I is, an’ I wouldn’t a-know’d um ef I’d a
-met um in de road wid der name painted on um; so
-I ax ’im what erpublican pencerpuls hender’d ’im
-fum doin’ what Marse Tumlin ax ’im ter do. He
-sot dar an’ hummed an’ haw’d, an’ squirm’d in his
-cheer, an’ chaw’d on de een’ er his segyar. I wait
-long ’nuff, an’ den I ax ’im ag’in. Well, suh, dat’s
-been twenty years ago, an’ he ain’t never tol’ me yit
-what dem erpublican pencerpuls wuz. I ain’t
-flingin’ off on um, suh. I ’speck dey wuz a bairlful
-er dem erpublican pencerpuls, an’ maybe all
-good uns, but I know’d mighty well dat dey ain’t
-hender dat nigger man fum doin’ what Marse Tumlin
-ax ’im ter do.</p>
-
-<p>“So de nex’ chance I git, I up’n ax Marse Tumlin
-what de matter wuz ’twix’ him an’ Hamp. He<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_102"></a>[102]</span>
-say ’twa’n’t nothin’ much, ’cep’ dat Hamp had done
-come up here in Atlanta an’ sol’ hisse’f out to a passel
-er kyarpit-baggers what ain’t no intruss down
-here but ter git han’s on all de money in sight. I
-say, ‘He may ’a’ gi’ hisse’f ’way, Marse Tumlin,
-but he sho’ ain’t sell hisse’f, ’kaze I ain’t seen one er
-de money.’ Marse Tumlin ’low, ‘Well, anyhow,
-it don’t make much diffunce, Minervy Ann. Dem
-kyarpit-baggers up dar, dey pat ’im on de back an’
-tell ’im he des ez good ez what dey is. I had de
-idee, Minervy Ann,’ he say, ‘dat Hamp wuz lots
-better dan what dey is, but he ain’t; he des ’bout
-good ez dey is.’</p>
-
-<p>“Marse Tumlin do like he don’t wanter talk
-’bout it, but dat ain’t nigh satchify me. I say,
-‘Marse Tumlin, what did you want Hamp ter do?’
-He drum on de arm er de cheer wid his fingers, an’
-sorter study. Den he say, ‘Bein’ it’s all done an’
-over wid, I don’t min’ tellin’ you all about it. Does
-you know who’s a-runnin’ dis county now?’
-I had a kinder idee, but I say, ‘Who, Marse
-Tumlin?’ He ’low, ‘Mahlon Botts an’ his
-br’er Mose; dey er runnin’ de county, an’ dey
-er ruinin’ it.’</p>
-
-<p>“Den he ax me ef I know de Bottses. Know
-um! I’d been a-knowin’ um sence de year one, an’<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_103"></a>[103]</span>
-dey wuz de ve’y drugs an’ offscourin’s er creation.
-I ax Marse Tumlin how come dey ter have holt er
-de county, an’ he say dey make out dey wuz good
-erpublicans, des ter make de niggers vote um in
-office—so dey kin make money an’ plunder de
-county. Den I ax ’im what he want Hamp ter do.
-He say all he want Hamp ter do wuz ter he’p ’im git
-er whatyoumaycallum—yasser, dat’s it, a bill; dat’s
-de ve’y word he say—he want Hamp ter he’p ’im
-git a bill th’oo de Legislatur’; an’ den he went on
-an’ tell me a long rigamarolious ’bout what ’twuz,
-but I’ll never tell you in de roun’ worl’.”</p>
-
-<p>[The proceedings of the Georgia Legislature reported
-in the Atlanta <cite>New Era</cite>, of November 10,
-1869, show that the measure in question was a local
-bill to revive the polling-places in the militia districts
-of the county represented by the Hon. Hampton
-Tumlin, and to regulate elections so that there
-could be no repeating. This verification of Aunt
-Minervy Ann’s statement was made long ago after
-she told the story, and purely out of curiosity. The
-discussions shed an illuminating light over her narrative,
-but it is impossible to reproduce them here,
-even in brief.]</p>
-
-<p>“He tol’ me dat, suh, an’ den he le’nt back in de
-cheer, an’ kinder hummed a chune. An’ me—I<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_104"></a>[104]</span>
-stood up dar by de fireplace an’ studied. Right
-den an’ dar I made up my min’ ter one thing, an’ I
-ain’t never change it, needer; I made up my min’
-dat ef we wuz all gwine ter be free an’ live in de
-same neighborhoods—dat ef we wuz gwine ter do
-dat, whatsomever wuz good fer de white folks
-bleeze ter be good fer de niggers, an’ whatsomever
-wuz good fer Marse Tumlin an’ Miss Vallie wuz des
-ez good fer me an’ Hamp.</p>
-
-<p>“I ’low, ‘Marse Tumlin, when you gwine up dar
-whar Hamp at?’ He say, ‘Oh, I dunno; I’m tired
-er de infernal place,’ desso. Den he look at me
-right hard. ‘What make you ax?’ sez he. I ’low,
-‘’Kaze ef youer gwine right soon, I’m gwine wid
-you.’ He laugh an’ say, ‘What de dickunce you
-gwine up dar fer?’ I ’low, ‘I gwine up dar fer ter
-jine de Legislatur’. I ain’t here tell dat dem what
-jines hatter be baptize in runnin’ water, an’ ef dey
-ain’t, den I’ll jine long wid Hamp.’ Marse Tumlin
-say, ‘You reckin Hamp would be glad fer to
-see you, Minervy Ann?’ I ’low, ‘He better had
-be, ef he know what good fer ’im.’ Marse Tumlin
-say, ‘Ef I wuz you, Minervy Ann, I wouldn’t
-go up dar spyin’ atter Hamp. He’ll like you none
-de better fer it. De las’ time I wuz up dar, Hamp
-wuz havin’ a mighty good time. Ef you know<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_105"></a>[105]</span>
-what’s good fer you, Minervy Ann, you won’t go
-up dar a-doggin’ atter Hamp.’</p>
-
-<p>“Well, suh, right at dat time I had de idee dat
-Marse Tumlin wuz prankin’ an’ projeckin’; you
-know how he runs on; but he wa’n’t no mo’ prankin’
-dan what I am right now. (Nummine! I’ll git
-back ter Hamp terreckly.) I laugh an’ say, ‘I
-ain’t gwine ter dog atter Hamp, Marse Tumlin; I
-des wanter go up dar an’ see how he gittin’ on, an’
-fin’ out how folks does when dey sets up dar in de
-Legislatur’. An’ ef you’ll put dat ar whatshisname—bill;
-dat’s right, suh; bill wuz de word—ef
-you’ll put dat ar bill in yo’ pocket, I’ll see what
-Hamp kin do wid it.’ Marse Tumlin ’low, ‘’Tain’t
-no use fer ter see Hamp, Minervy Ann. He done
-tol’ me he can’t do nothin’. I lef’ de bill wid ’im.’</p>
-
-<p>“I say, ‘Marse Tumlin, you dunner nothin’ ’tall
-’bout Hamp. He must er change mighty sence
-dey ’fo’ yistidy if he erfuse ter do what I tell ’im
-ter do. Ef dat de case, I’ll go up dar an’ frail ’im
-out an’ come on back home an’ ten’ ter my work.’</p>
-
-<p>“Marse Tumlin look at me wid his eyes half shot
-an’ kinder laugh way down in his stomach. He
-’low, ‘Minervy Ann, I been livin’ a long time, an’
-I been knowin’ a heap er folks, but you er de
-bangin’est nigger I ever is see. Free ez you is, I<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_106"></a>[106]</span>
-wouldn’t take two thousan’ dollars fer you, cash
-money. I’ll git Bolivar, an’ we’ll go up dar on de
-mornin’ train. Vallie kin stay wid er aunt.
-’Tain’t gwine ter hurt you ter go; I want you ter
-see some things fer yo’se’f.’</p>
-
-<p>“Well, suh, sho’ ’nuff, de nex’ mornin’
-me an’ Marse Tumlin an’ Marse Bolivar,
-we got on de train, an’ put out, an’ ’twa’n’t
-long ’fo’ we wuz pullin’ in under de kyar-shed.
-Dat ’uz de fus’ time I ever is been ter dis
-town, an’ de racket an’ de turmoil kinder tarrify
-me, but when I see ’t’er folks gwine ’long ’tendin’
-ter der bizness, ’twa’n’t no time ’fo’ I tuck heart,
-’kaze dar wuz Marse Tumlin an’ Marse Bolivar
-right at me, an’ dey wuz bowin’ an’ shakin’ han’s
-wid mos’ eve’ybody dat come ’long. Dey wuz two
-mighty pop’lous white men, suh; you know dat
-yo’se’f.</p>
-
-<p>“I ’speck de train must ’a’ got in ’fo’ de Legislatur’
-sot down, ’kaze when we went th’oo a narrer
-street an’ turn inter de one what dey call Decatur,
-whar dey carry on all de devilment, I hear Marse
-Tumlin say dat we wuz ’bout a hour too soon.
-Right atter dat Marse Bolivar say, ‘Tumlin, dat ar
-nigger man ’cross dar wid de gals is got a mighty
-familious look ter me; I done been seed ’im somewhar,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_107"></a>[107]</span>
-sho’.’ Marse Tumlin say, ‘Dat’s a fac’; I
-used ter know dat man some’rs.’ Well, suh, I lookt
-de way dey wuz a-lookin’, an’ dar wuz Hamp!
-Yassar! Hamp! Hamp an’ two mulatter gals.
-An’ I wish you could ’a’ seed um; I des wish you
-could! Dar wuz Hamp all diked out in his Sunday
-cloze which I tol’ ’im p’intedly not ter w’ar
-while he workin’ in de Legislatur’. He had a
-segyar in his mouf mos’ ez big an’ ez long ez a
-waggin-spoke, an’ dar he wuz a-bowin’ an’ scrapin’,
-an’ scrapin’ an’ gigglin’, an’ de mulatter gals wuz
-gigglin’ an’ snickerin’ an’ squealin’—I <em>declaire</em>,
-Mr. Tumlin! you oughter be <em>’shame</em> er yo’se’f; oh,
-youer too <em>b-a-a-a-d</em>!’”</p>
-
-<p>With powers of mimicry unequalled, Aunt Minervy
-Ann illustrated the bowing and scraping of
-Hamp, and reproduced the shrill but not unmusical
-voices of the mulatto girls.</p>
-
-<p>“I tell you de trufe, suh, whiles you could count
-ten you might ’a’ pusht me over wid a straw, an’
-den, suh, my dander ’gun ter rise. I must ’a’
-show’d it in my looks, ’kaze Marse Tumlin laid his
-han’ on my shoulder an’ say, ‘Don’t kick up no
-racket, Minervy Ann; you got Hamp right whar
-you want ’im. You know what we come fer.’
-Well, suh, I hatter stan’ dar an’ swaller right hard<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_108"></a>[108]</span>
-a time er two, ’kaze I ain’t got no use fer mulatters;
-to make um, you got ter spile good white blood an’
-good nigger blood, an’ when dey er made dey got
-in um all dat’s mean an’ low down on bofe sides, an’
-ef dey yever is ter be saved, dey’ll all hatter be baptize
-twice han’ runnin’—once fer de white dat’s in
-um, and once fer de black. De Bible mayn’t sesso,
-but common-sense’ll tell you dat much.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, suh, I stood dar some little time watchin’
-Hamp’s motions, an’ he wuz makin’ sech a big fool
-er hisse’f dat I des come mighty nigh laughin’ out
-loud, but all dat time Marse Tumlin had de idee dat
-I wuz mad, an’ when I start to’rds Hamp, wid my
-pairsol grabbed in de middle, he ’low, ‘Min’ yo’
-eye, Minervy Ann.’ I walk up, I did, an’ punch
-Hamp in de back wid de pairsol. Ef I’d ’a’ hit ’im
-on de head wid a pile-driver, he couldn’t ’a’ been
-mo’ dum’founder’d. He look like he wuz gwine
-th’oo’ de sidewalk. I say, ‘When you git time, I’d
-like ter have a little chat wid you.’ He ’low,
-‘Why, why’—an’ wid dat he stuck de lit een’ er
-his segyar in his mouf. Well, suh, you may b’lieve
-you done seed splutterin’ an’ splatterin’, but you
-ain’t never seed none like dat. He made a motion,
-Hamp did, like he wanter make me ’painted
-wid de mulatter gals, but I say, ‘When you git<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_109"></a>[109]</span>
-time fum yo’ Legislatur’, I got a sesso fer you ter
-hear.’</p>
-
-<p>“Wid dat, suh, I turn ’roun’ an’ cross de street
-an’ foller on atter Marse Tumlin an’ Marse Bolivar.
-I ain’t mo’n git ’cross, ’fo’ here come Hamp. He
-’low, ‘Why, honey, whyn’t you tell me you wuz
-comin’? When’d you come?’ I say, ‘Oh, I’m
-<em>honey</em>, is I? Well, maybe you’ll fin’ a bee in de
-comb.’ He ’low, ‘Whyn’t you tell me you wuz
-comin’ so I kin meet you at de train?’ I say, ‘I
-wanter see what kinder fambly you got in dis town.
-An’ I seed it! I seed it!’</p>
-
-<p>“Well, suh, I ’speck I’d ’a’ got mad ag’in, but
-’bout dat time we cotch up wid Marse Tumlin an’
-Marse Bolivar. Marse Tumlin turn ’roun’, he did,
-an’ holler out, ‘Well, ef here ain’t Minervy Ann!
-What you doin’ up here, an’ how did you lef’ yo’
-Miss Vallie?’ He shuck han’s des like he ain’t see
-me befo’ in a mont’, an’ Marse Bolivar done de
-same. I humor’d um, suh, but I ain’t know what
-dey wuz up ter fer long atterwards. Dey don’t
-want Hamp ter know dat I come ’long wid um.
-Den dey went on, an’ me an’ Hamp went ter whar
-he stay at.</p>
-
-<p>“When I got ’im off by hisse’f, suh, he sot in ter
-tellin’ me how come ’im ter be wid dem ar gals, an’<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_110"></a>[110]</span>
-he want me ter know um, an’ he know mighty well
-I’d like um—you know how men-folks does, suh.
-But dey wa’n’t na’er minit in no day dat yever
-broke when Hamp kin fool me, an’ he know’d it.
-But I let ’im run on. Bimeby, when he get tired
-er splanifyin’, I ’low, ‘What dat paper what Marse
-Tumlin ax you ter put in de Legislatur’?’ He say,
-‘How you know ’bout dat?’ I ’low, ‘I hear Marse
-Tumlin tellin’ Miss Vallie ’bout it, an’ I hear Miss
-Vallie wonder an’ wonder what de matter wid you.’</p>
-
-<p>“I fotch Miss Vallie in, suh, bekaze Hamp think
-dey ain’t nobody in de worl’ like Miss Vallie. One
-time, des ’fo’ de big turmoil, when Marse Tumlin
-hire Hamp fum de Myrick ’state, he fell sick, an’
-Miss Vallie (she wa’n’t nothin’ but a school-gal
-den) she got sorry fer ’im ’kaze he wuz a hired nigger,
-an’ she’d fill a basket wid things fum de white
-folks’ table an’ tote um to ’im. Mo’ dan dat, she’d
-set dar whiles he’s eatin’ an’ ax ’bout his folks.
-Atter dat, suh, de groun’ whar Miss Vallie walk
-wuz better’n any yuther groun’ ter Hamp. So
-when I call her name up, Hamp ain’t say nothin’
-fer long time.</p>
-
-<p>“Den he shuck his head an’ say dey ain’t no use
-talkin’, he des can’t put dat ar paper in de Legislatur’.
-He say ef he wuz ter, ’twon’t do no good,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_111"></a>[111]</span>
-’kaze all de erpublicans would jump on it, an’ den
-dey’d jump on him ter boot. I ’low, ‘Whar you
-reckon I’ll be whiles all dat jumpin’ gwine on?’
-He say, ‘You’ll be on de outside, an’ ef you wuz on
-de inside, dey’d hike you out.’ ‘An’ who’d do de
-hikin’?’ sez I. ‘De surgeon er de armies,’ sez he.
-‘White er black?’ sez I. ‘Yaller,’ sez Hamp. I
-’low, ‘Good ’nuff; we’ll see which un’ll be hiked.’
-An’ I told Hamp right den an’ dar, dat ef he erfuse
-ter put dat paper in, I’ll do it myse’f.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, suh, whiles we settin’ dar talkin’, dey
-come a-rappin’ at de do’ an’ in walk a big bushy-head
-mulatter, an’ I ain’t tellin’ you no lie, he de
-mos’ venomous-lookin’ creetur you ever laid yo’
-eyes on. His ha’r wuz all spread out like a scourin’
-mop, an’ he had a grin on ’im ez big ez dat gate dar.
-Hamp call ’im Arion Alperiar Ridley.”</p>
-
-<p>At this point I was compelled to come to the
-rescue of Aunt Minervy Ann’s memory. The
-stateman’s real name was Aaron Alpeora Bradley,
-and he was one of the most corrupt creatures of that
-corrupt era. He had a superficial education that
-only added to the density of his ignorance, but it
-gave him considerable influence with the negro
-members of the Legislature. Aunt Minervy Ann
-accepted the correction with alacrity.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_112"></a>[112]</span></p>
-
-<p>“I fergot his name, suh, but I ain’t never fergit
-him. He so mean-lookin’ he make de col’ chills
-run over me. He wuz a low-country mulatter, an’
-you know how dey talk. Eve’y time he look at me,
-he’d bow, an’ de mo’ he bowed de mo’ I ’spized ’im.
-He call Hamp ‘Mistooah Tummalin,’ an’ eve’y
-time he say sump’n’, he’d gi’ one er dem venomous
-grins. I declar’ ter gracious, suh, I oughtn’t ter
-talk ’bout dat man dis way, but de way he look wuz
-scan’lous. I done fergive ’im for dat long time ’go
-on ’count er what he done; but when I hear white
-folks ’busin’ ’im in dat day an’ time I know’d dey
-had mighty good groun’, bekaze dey ain’t no
-human kin look like dat man an’ not be mean at
-bottom.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, suh, Hamp, he up’n tol’ dis yer Alpory
-er Alpiry (whatsomever his name mought be) what
-I come ter town fer, an’ Alpory, he say, ‘Mistooah
-Tummalin, you kyarn’t do it. Hit would-er ruin
-you in de-er party, suh—er ruin you.’ I kinder
-fired up at dat. I ’low, ‘How come he can’t do it?
-Ain’t he free?’ Ol’ Alpory, he grin an’ he talk,
-he talk an’ he grin, but he ain’t budge me. At de
-offstart I say ef Hamp don’t put dat paper in de
-Legislatur’, I’ll put it in myse’f, an’ at de windin’ up
-I still say dat ef he don’t put Marse Tumlin’s paper<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_113"></a>[113]</span>
-in de Legislatur’, den I’ll be de one ter do it. Ol’
-Alpory say, ‘You-er is got no marster, ma’am.’
-Den I snapt ’im up an’ cut ’im off short; I say, ‘I
-got one ef I want one. Ain’t I free?’ Den he
-went on wid a whole passel er stuff dat I can’t make
-head er tail un, ner him needer, fer dat matter, twel
-bimeby I say, ‘Oh, hush up an’ go on whar you
-gwine.’</p>
-
-<p>“Hamp look so broke up at dis dat I wuz kinder
-sorry I say it, but dat’s de only way ter deal wid
-dem kind er folks, suh. Ol’ Alpory wuz des famishin’,
-suh, fer some un ter b’lieve he’s a big
-Ike; dat ’uz all de matter wid ’im an’ I know’d it.
-So he quit his jawin’ when I snapped ’im up, an’ he
-sot dar some time lookin’ like a cow does when her
-cud don’t rise. Bimeby he ax Hamp fer ter let ’im
-see de paper what I want ’im ter put in de Legislatur’.
-He tuck it, he did, an’ look at it sideways an’
-upside down, an’ eve’ywhichaway. Ez ef dat
-wa’n’t ’nuff, he took off his goggles an’ wiped um
-an’ put um on ag’in, an’ read de paper all over ag’in,
-noddin’ his head an’ movin’ his mouf, an’ grinnin’.</p>
-
-<p>“Atter he got th’oo, he fol’ de paper up an’ han’
-it back ter Hamp. He say he can’t see no harm in
-it ter save his life, an’ he ’low dat ef Hamp’ll put it
-in at one een’ er de Legislatur’, he’ll put it in at de<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_114"></a>[114]</span>
-t’er een’. Dey call one part a house, but nobody
-ain’t never tell me why dey call a wranglin’ gang er
-men a house. Dey des might ez well call um a
-hoss an’ buggy; eve’y bit an’ grain. Well, suh, de
-house wuz de part what Hamp b’longs ter, an’ de
-’t’er part wuz whar ol’ Alpory b’long’d at, an’ by de
-time dey wuz ready fer ter set in dar dey had e’en
-’bout ’greed fer put de paper in at bofe een’s.</p>
-
-<p>“I went ’long wid Hamp, suh, an’ he show’d me
-de way ter de gall’ry, an’ I sot up dar an’ look down
-on um, an’ wonder why all un um, white an’ black,
-wa’n’t at home yearnin’ der livin’ ’stidder bein’ in
-dat place a-wranglin’ an’ callin’ names, an’ howlin’
-an’ wavin’ der arms an’ han’s. Dey wuz a big fat
-white man settin’ up in de pulpit, an’ he kep’ on
-a-maulin’ it wid a mallet. I dunner what his name
-wuz, but I hear one big buck nigger call ’im Mr.
-Cheer. Marse Tumlin tol’ me atterwards dat de
-man wuz de speaker, but all de res’ done lots mo’
-speakin’ dan what he did; all un um ’cep’ Hamp.</p>
-
-<p>“Yasser; all un um ’cep’ Hamp, an’ he sot dar
-so still dat ’twa’n’t long ’fo’ I ’gun ter git shame un
-him. He sot dar an’ fumble wid some papers, an’
-helt his head down, an’ look like he skeer’d. I
-watch ’im, suh, twel I got so res’less in de min’ I
-can’t set still. Bimeby I got up an’ went down ter<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_115"></a>[115]</span>
-de front do’; I wuz gwine ter make my way in dar
-whar Hamp wuz at, an’ kinder fetch ’im out’n his
-dreams, ef so be he wuz dreamin’. An’ I’d a gone
-in, but a nigger man at de do’ barred de way. He
-say, ‘Who you want ter see?’ I ’low, ‘I wanter
-see Hamp Tumlin, dat’s who.’ He say, ‘Does you
-mean de Honnerbul Hampton Tumlin?’ I ’low,
-‘Yes, I does ef you wanter put it dat away. <em>Go in
-dar an’ tell ’im dat de Honnerbul Minervy Ann
-Perdue is out here waitin’ fer ’im, an’ he better
-come quick ef he know what good fer ’im.</em>’</p>
-
-<p>“Wid dat, suh, I hear somebody laugh, an’ look
-up an’ dar wuz Marse Tumlin standin’ not fur fum
-de do’ talkin’ wid an’er white man. He ’low,
-‘Scott, dis is Minervy Ann. She got mo’ sense an’
-grit dan half de white folks you meet.’ Well, suh,
-de man come up, he did, an’ shuck han’s an’ say he
-mighty glad ter see me. I never is ter fergit his
-name on ’count er what happen afterwards. ’Bout
-dat time Hamp come out an’ Marse Tumlin an’ de
-’t’er man draw’d off up de hall.</p>
-
-<p>“I say, ‘Hamp, why in de name er goodness
-ain’t you ’ten’ ter yo’ bizness? What you waitin’
-fer? Is you skeer’d?’ He vow an’ declair’ dat he
-des waitin’ a chance fer ter put de paper in. I tol’
-’im dat de way ter git a chance wuz ter make one,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_116"></a>[116]</span>
-an’ wid dat he went on in, an’ I went back in de
-gall’ry. Well, suh, ’twa’n’t long ’fo’ Hamp put in
-de paper. A man at de foot er de pulpit read it off,
-an’ den a white man settin’ not fur fum Hamp
-jump up an’ say he want sump’n done wid it, I dunner
-what. Hamp say sump’n back at ’im, an’ den
-de white man say he sorry fer ter see de honnerbul
-gemman gwine back on de erpublican party. Den
-Mose Bently—I know’d Mose mighty well—he
-riz an’ say ef de erpublican party is got ter be led
-’roun’ by men like de one what des tuck his seat,
-it’s high time fer honest folks ter turn der backs
-on it.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, suh, when Mose say dat, I clap my han’s,
-I did, an’ holla ‘Good! good! now you got it!’ I
-couldn’t he’p it fer ter save my life. De man in de
-pulpit maul de planks wid de mallet like he tryin’
-ter split um, an’ he ’low dat ef folks in de gall’ry
-don’t keep still, he’ll have um cle’r’d out. I holla
-back at ’im, ‘You better some er dat gang down
-dar cle’r’d out!’ Quick ez a flash, suh, dat ar Mr.
-Scott what been talkin’ wid Marse Tumlin jump up
-an’ ’low, ‘I secon’s de motion!’ De man in de
-pulpit say, ‘What motion does de gemman fum
-Floyd secon’?’ Den Mr. Scott fling his head back
-an’ low, ‘De Honnerbul Minervy Ann Perdue<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_117"></a>[117]</span>
-done move dat de flo’ be cle’r’d ’stidder de gall’ry.
-I secon’s de motion.’</p>
-
-<p>“Den fum dat he went on an’ ’buze de erpublican
-party, speshually dat ar man what had de ’spute
-wid Hamp. Mr. Scott say dey got so little sense
-dat dey go ag’in a paper put in by one er der own
-party. He say he ain’t keer nothin’ ’tall ’bout de
-paper hisse’f, but he des wanter show um up fer
-what dey wuz.</p>
-
-<p>“He totch’d um, suh, ez you may say, on de raw,
-an’ when he git th’oo he say, ‘Now, I hope de cheer
-will deal wid de motion of de Honnerbul Minervy
-Ann Perdue.’ Mr. Scott say, ‘She settin’ up dar
-in de gall’ry an’ she got des ez much right ter set on
-dis flo’ ez nineteen out er twenty er dem settin’
-here.’ De man in de pulpit look at me right hard,
-an’ den he ’gun ter laugh. I say, ‘You nee’n ter
-worry yo’se’f ’bout me. You better ’ten’ ter dem
-ar half-drunk niggers an’ po’ white trash down dar.
-I wouldn’t set wid ’em ef I never did fin’ a place fer
-ter set at.’</p>
-
-<p>“Wid dat, suh, I pickt up my pairsol an’ make
-my way out, but ez I went I hear um whoopin’ an’
-hollerin’.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, they didn’t pass the bill, did they?” I
-asked.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_118"></a>[118]</span></p>
-
-<p>“What? dat paper er Marse Tumlin’s? Bless yo’
-soul, suh, dey run’d over one an’er tryin’ ter pass it.
-Mr. Scott fit it like he fightin’ fire, an’ make out he
-wuz terribly ag’in it, but dat des make um wuss.
-Hamp say dat inginer’lly dem ar laws has ter wait
-an’ hang fire; but dey tuck up dat un, an’ shove it
-th’oo. Dey tuck mo’ time in de ’t’er een’ er de
-Legislatur’, whar ol’ Alpory wuz at, but it went
-th’oo when it start. I hope dey don’t have no sech
-gwines-on now, suh. Ef dey does de whole county
-can’t drag Paul Conant in dar. I’ll jine um myse’f,
-’fo’ I’ll let ’im git in dat kind er crowd.”</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_119"></a>[119]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="V">V<br />
-<span class="smaller">HOW SHE WENT INTO BUSINESS</span></h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>Aunt Minervy Ann’s picturesque reminiscences
-were sufficiently amusing to whet my appetite for
-more. The county fair, which was the occasion of
-my visit to Halcyondale, was still dragging its slow
-length along, but it had lost its interest for me.
-The displays in the various departments were as
-attractive as ever to those who saw them for the
-first time, but it seemed to me that all my old acquaintances,
-or their wives and daughters, had
-something on exhibition, and nothing must do but
-I must go around and admire it. A little of this
-goes far, and, as I had been through the various departments
-a dozen times over, I concluded that it
-would be more comfortable to remain away from
-the grounds altogether, making more room for those
-who desired to see the judges deliver the prizes, or
-who were anxious to witness the trotting matches
-and running races.</p>
-
-<p>Therefore, when Major Tumlin Perdue (whose<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_120"></a>[120]</span>
-guest I was) and his daughter, Mrs. Conant, made
-an early start for the fair grounds, on the fourth
-day, I excused myself, on the plea of having some
-letters to write. The excuse was readily accepted,
-especially by Major Perdue, who expressed a very
-strong hope that I would do the fair justice in the
-Atlanta newspapers.</p>
-
-<p>“If you can put in a word about Paul Conant,
-I’d be glad if you’d do it,” the Major added. “He’s
-come mighty near working himself down to get
-the blamed thing a-going. If it wasn’t on account
-of Paul, me and Valentine wouldn’t go any closer
-to the fair grounds than we are right now. But
-we think maybe we can help Paul, and if we can’t
-do that, we hope to keep him from running his legs
-off. He ain’t well a bit. Vallie says he didn’t
-sleep more than two hours last night for the pains
-in his shoulder.”</p>
-
-<p>“It seems to be an old trouble,” I suggested.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, it’s an old trouble,” replied the Major.
-Then he looked over the tree-tops and sighed.</p>
-
-<p>Here was the same air of mystery that I had observed
-when I first came, and I remembered that
-Aunt Minervy Ann had begun to tell me about it
-when she became entangled in her reminiscences.
-Therefore, when they were all gone, and Aunt<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_121"></a>[121]</span>
-Minervy Ann had cleaned up the house and coaxed
-the Conant baby to sleep (which was no hard thing
-to do, he was such a fat and good-humored little
-rascal), I ventured to remind the old negress that
-she had neglected to tell me why the Major and his
-daughter were so mysteriously solicitous about Paul
-Conant’s shoulder.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, de goodness knows!” Aunt Minervy Ann
-exclaimed, with well-affected surprise; “ain’t I
-done tell you ’bout dat? I sho’ wuz dreamin’, den,
-bekaze I had it right on de tip-eend er my tongue.
-I dunno what got de matter wid me deze days, less’n
-I’m gettin’ ol’ an’ light-headed. Well, suh! an’ I
-ain’t tol’ you ’bout dat!”</p>
-
-<p>She paused, as if reflecting, but continued to rock
-the baby’s cradle gently, moving it slower and
-slower, until, finally, she ceased to move it altogether.
-The baby merely gave a self-satisfied sigh,
-and settled into the profound and healthy sleep of
-infancy. Then Aunt Minervy Ann went out on
-the back porch, and seated herself on the top step.
-I followed, and found the rocking-chair I had occupied
-on a former occasion.</p>
-
-<p>“I’ll set here, suh, twel Hamp gits back wid de
-carriage, an’ den I’ll see ’bout gittin’ dinner, an’ he
-better make ’as’e, too, bekaze I ain’t got no time ter<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_122"></a>[122]</span>
-set here an’ lis’n at dat baby, whiles he projickin’
-out dar at dem grounds. I kin wait, suh, but I
-can’t wait all day.”</p>
-
-<p>“Major Perdue said that Mr. Conant’s shoulder
-was very painful last night,” I suggested.</p>
-
-<p>“Dat what Miss Vallie say, suh. She say dey
-wuz up an’ down wid ’im mighty nigh all night
-long. I don’t blame um, suh, but, dey ain’t no use
-talkin’, grown folks kin be waited on twey dey er
-sp’iled same ez chilluns. I’d cut my tongue out,
-suh, ’fo’ I’d say it ter anybody else, but I done got
-ter b’lievin’ dat Marse Paul Conant grunts an’
-groans many a time des bekaze he wants somebody
-fer ter worry wid ’im an’ honey ’im up. I may be
-doin’ ’im wrong, suh, but I done get a sneakin’ notion
-dat he’s one er deze yer kinder men-folks what
-likes to be much’d an’ petted. An’ dey’ll do it, suh—dey’ll
-much ’im night er day, hot er col’. Des
-let ’im say, ‘Oh, my shoulder!’ an’ bofe un um’ll
-try ter outdo de udder in takin’ keer un ’im.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 700px;" id="illus17">
-<img src="images/illus17.jpg" width="700" height="600" alt="" />
-<p class="caption">“Oh, my shoulder!”</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>“Marse Tumlin is got mo’ ways like a ’oman dan
-any man I ever is laid eyes on. It’s de Lord’s trufe.
-He ain’t fussy like de common run er wimmen, but
-his han’ is des ez light an’ his heart des ez saft ez
-any ’oman dat ever breave de breff er life, let er
-breave whence an’ whar she mought. I look at ’im<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_123"></a>[123]</span>
-sometimes, an’ I des nat’ally tease myse’f ter know
-how dat man kin stan’ up an’ shoot anybody like I
-done see ’im do. Hit’s de same way wid Marse
-Bolivar Blasengame—you know him, I spec. Dey
-married sisters, suh, an’ dey allers been monstus
-thick. Dem two wuz big dogs ’roun’ here, suh, ’fo’
-de war. Ef you ain’t never seed um in dem days,
-you never is ter know how folks looked up to um
-an’ give way to um.</p>
-
-<p>“But dey ain’t put on no airs, suh. Dey des do
-like de quality all do. ’Tain’t money dat makes de
-quality; hit’s dat ar kinder breedin’ what’ll make
-de finest folks stop an’ shake han’s wid a nigger des
-ez quick ez dey would wid de king er Rooshy—ef
-dey got any king dar. Long ’fo’ de turmoil, suh,
-endurin’ er de farmin’ days, ’twuz des dat-a-way.
-When he ’uz at his richest, Marse Tumlin never did
-pass a nigger on de road, no matter how lonesome
-an’ ragged he look, widout stoppin’ an’ axin’ who
-he b’long ter, an’ what he name, an’ how he gittin’
-on. An’ he allers gi’ um sump’n, maybe a piece er
-terbacker, er maybe a thrip. I know, suh; I done
-hear my color talk, an’ dey talks it down ter dis ve’y
-day. Dey ain’t never been a time in dat man’s life
-when he ain’t think mo’ er somebody else dan what
-he think er hisse’f. Dat’s what I call de quality,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_124"></a>[124]</span>
-suh. ’Tain’t money; ’tain’t land; ’tain’t fine duds;
-’tain’t nothin’ ’tall like dat. I tell you, suh, dem
-what want ter be de quality is got ter have a long
-line er big graveyards behime um, an’ dem graveyards
-is got ter be full er folks what use ter know
-how ter treat yuther folks. Well, suh, Marse Tumlin
-is got um behime him, an’ dey retch fum here
-ter Ferginny an’ furder. An’ on dat account, he
-ain’t ’shame’ to show nobody dat he love um, an’ he
-ain’t afear’d ter tell nobody dat he hate um.</p>
-
-<p>“I bet you right now, suh, ef you wuz ter ax
-Miss Vallie ef she ever see ’er pa mad, she’d look
-at you like she ain’t know what you talkin’
-’bout. Fum de time she has been born, suh, down
-ter dis ve’y day, she ain’t never hear a cross word
-come from his mouf. She’s seed ’im frownin’ an’
-she’s seed ’im frettin’, but she ain’t never hear no
-cross word. An’ dat what make I say what I does.
-’Tain’t nobody but de quality dat kin show der
-breedin’ right in der own fambly.”</p>
-
-<p>“Why, I’ve heard that the Major has something
-of a temper,” I remarked.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 500px;" id="illus18">
-<img src="images/illus18.jpg" width="500" height="700" alt="" />
-<p class="caption">“Marse Tumlin never did pass a nigger on de road.”</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>“<em>Temper!</em>” exclaimed Aunt Minervy Ann,
-holding up both hands; “temper, I hear you say!
-Well, suh, dat ain’t no name fer it. I done seed
-bad men, but Marse Tumlin is de wuss man when<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_125"></a>[125]</span>
-he git his dander up dat I yever come ’cross in all
-my born days. De fust time I seed ’im mad, suh,
-wuz right atter de folks come home fum der fightin’
-and battlin’. It make me open my eyes. I been
-livin’ wid ’im all dem years, an’ I never is know
-how servigrous dat man is.</p>
-
-<p>“An’ de funny part wuz, suh, dat he got mad
-’bout a ole nigger ’oman.” Aunt Minervy Ann
-paused to indulge in a very hearty laugh. “Yasser,
-all ’bout a ole nigger ’oman. In dem times we
-all had ter scuffle ’roun’ right smart fer ter git vittles
-ter eat, let ’lone cloze ter w’ar. Miss Vallie
-wuz w’arin’ a frock what her mammy had when she
-wuz a gal. An’ de clof wuz right good an’ look’
-mighty well on ’er. Ez fer me, I dunner whedder I
-had on any frock—ef I did ’twuz ’bout ter drap off’n
-me. ’Long ’bout dat time, court-week wuz comin’
-on, de fust court-week we had sence de folks come
-home fum battlin’. Dey wuz a great miration
-’bout it, bekaze dey say ev’ybody gwine ter come
-an’ see de lawyers rastle.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, suh, it come ’cross my min’ dat ef I kin
-bake some ginger-cakes an’ make some chicken-pies,
-maybe I kin pick up a little money. De dime
-an’ thrip species had all done gone, but dey wuz
-oodles er shinplasters floatin’ ’roun’ ef you had<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_126"></a>[126]</span>
-sump’n fer ter git um wid. I dunner whar in de
-worl’ we got ’nuff flour an’ ’lasses fer ter make de
-cakes. I know I got one chicken, an’ Hamp he
-went off one night and borried two mo’. I ain’t ax
-’im whar he borry um, suh, bekaze ’twan’t none er
-my business. We made de cakes, an’ den we made
-de pies. Ef you ain’t know how ter make um, suh,
-you’d be ’stonished ter know how fur dem ar
-chickens went. We made twelve pies ef we made
-one. Yasser! ez sho’ ez I’m settin’ here. We
-strung um out—a wing here, a piece er de back
-dar, an’ a neck yonner. Twelve pies, suh, an’ nuff
-chicken lef’ over fer ter gi’ Miss Vallie a right smart
-bait; an’ de Lord knows she need it, an’ need it bad.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, suh, I make de ginger-cakes de week ’fo’
-court, bekaze it he’ps a ginger-cake ef you bake ’im
-an’ den shet ’im up in a tight box whar he kin
-sweat, an’ Monday we sot in ter bake de pies. I
-make de dough wid my own han’s, an’ I lef’ Miss
-Vallie fer ter bake um, wid Hamp ter keep de fire
-gwine. De word wuz dat ’bout half-pas’ ten Hamp
-wuz ter fetch me all de pies dey had ready, an’ den
-go back fer de yuthers.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 600px;" id="illus19">
-<img src="images/illus19.jpg" width="600" height="700" alt="" />
-<p class="caption">“We made twelve pies ef we made one.”</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>“I ain’t say nothin’ ’bout de balance er de cakes;
-bekaze I ’low’d ter myse’f dat I had ’nuff. I had
-many ez I kin tote widout gittin’ tired, an’ I ain’t<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_127"></a>[127]</span>
-no baby when it comes ter totin’ cakes. Well, suh,
-I been livin’ a mighty long time, but I ain’t never
-see folks wid such a cravin’ fer ginger-cakes. Fum
-de word go dey wuz greedy fer ’m. Hit mought
-er been ’kaze dey wuz des natchally hongry, en den
-ag’in hit mought er been bekaze de cakes call up ol’
-times; but no matter ’bout dat, suh, dey des
-showered de shinplasters down on me. ’Twa’n’t
-de country folks doin’ de most er de buyin’ at fust.
-It ’uz de town boys an’ de clerks in de stores; an’
-mos’ ’fo’ I know’d it de cakes wuz all gone, an’
-Hamp ain’t come wid de pies.</p>
-
-<p>“I would ’a’ waited, suh, but dey kep’ callin’ fer
-cakes so ravenous dat bimeby I crumpled my shinplasters
-up in a wad an’ tuck my basket an’ went polin’
-home fer ter hurry Hamp up. He wuz des gittin’
-ready ter start when I got dar. I gi’ Miss Vallie
-de money—you kin count it up yourse’f, suh; ’twuz
-fer fo’ dozen ginger-cakes at a thrip a-piece—an’
-tol’ her ter sen’ Hamp atter some mo’ flour an’
-’lasses ’fo’ night, ’kaze de ginger-cakes half-gone an’
-court-week ain’t skacely open up. Hamp, he tuck
-de pies an’ de cakes, an’ I got me one er de low
-cheers out’n de kitchen, ’kaze I done tired er settin’
-on de een’ uv a box.</p>
-
-<p>“I ’speck you know right whar I sot at, suh;<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_128"></a>[128]</span>
-’twuz dar by dat big chany-tree front er Sanford’s
-sto’. Hit sho’ wuz a mighty tree. De win’ done
-blow’d up an’ blew’d it down, but de stump stan’in’
-dar sproutin’ right now. Well, suh, right under
-de shadder er dat tree, on de outer aidge er
-de sidewalk, I tuck my stan’, an’ I ain’t been dar
-long ’fo’ de folks ’gun ter swarm atter my cakes, an’
-den when dey seed my pies—well! hit look like dey
-fair dribble at de mouf.</p>
-
-<p>“I sol’ um all ’cep’ one, an’ ef I’d ’a’ sol’ dat un,
-I don’t ’speck dey’d ’a’ been any trouble; but you
-know what a fool a nigger kin be, suh, speshually a
-nigger ’oman. I tuck a notion in my min’ dat I
-done so pow’ful well, I’d save dat pie fer Marse
-Tumlin an’ Miss Vallie. So ev’y time somebody’s
-come ’long an’ want ter buy de pie, I’d up an’ say
-it done sold.</p>
-
-<p>“Bimeby, who should come ’long but dat ar
-Salem Birch! He dead now, but I ’speck you done
-hear talk un ’im, bekaze he made matters mighty
-hot in deze parts twel—twel—well, suh, twel he
-’gun ter hone atter dat pie, ez you may say.” Aunt
-Minervy Ann paused and rubbed her hands together,
-as if reflecting. Then she shook her head
-and laughed somewhat doubtfully.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 550px;" id="illus20">
-<img src="images/illus20.jpg" width="550" height="700" alt="" />
-<p class="caption">“I gi’ Miss Vallie de money.”</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>“What dey want ter name ’im Salem fer, I’ll<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_129"></a>[129]</span>
-never tell you. Hit’s a Bible name, an’ mo’ dan
-dat, hit’s a church name. You know it yo’se’f, suh,
-bekaze dey’s a Salem church not mo’n sev’m mile
-fum whar we settin’ at right now. <em>Salem</em> Birch!
-Hit bangs my time how some folks kin go on—an’
-I ain’t nothin’ but a nigger. Dey’s mo’ chillun
-ruint by der names, suh, dan any udder way. I
-done notice it. Name one un um a Bible name, an’
-look like he bleedze ter go wrong. Name one un
-um atter some high an’ mighty man, an’ dey grows
-up wid des ’bout much sense ez a gate-post. I done
-watch um, suh.</p>
-
-<p>“I ’speck dis yer Salem Birch would ’a’ been a
-right good man but fer dat ar Bible name. Dat
-ruint ’im. I don’t b’lieve dey’s a man in de worl’
-what kin walk straight under dat name less’n he
-done been called fer ter be a preacher, an’ Salem
-Birch ain’t had no sech call up ter dat time. Dat
-much I know.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, suh, dar sot de pie, an’ dar wuz de ginger-cakes,
-ol’ timers, big ter look at, but light ter handle.
-Eve’ybody want de pie, but my min’ done
-made up. Some bought cakes stidder de pie, an’
-some des wipe der mouf an’ go on. But, bimeby,
-here come Salem Birch, six feet high, an’ his hat
-sot on de side er his haid like he done bought de<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_130"></a>[130]</span>
-whole town. I know’d de minnit I laid eyes on ’im
-dat he had dram in ’im, an’ dat he wuz up ter some
-devilment. Him an’ his bre’r, Bill-Tom, suh, had
-tarryfied de whole county. Dey wuz constant
-a-fightin’, an’ ef dey couldn’t git nobody else ter
-fight, dey’d fight ’mongst deyse’f. Yassir! dem ar
-Birches had done whip der own daddy.</p>
-
-<p>“An’ yit, suh, dis yer Salem wa’n’t no bad-lookin’
-man. He had long curly ha’r, an’ he wuz
-constant a-laughin’. Ef de fac’ troof wuz ter come
-out, I ’speck he had more devilment in ’im dan
-downright meanness; an’ he wuz mean nuff, de
-Lord knows. But, be sech as it mought, bimeby
-here he come, sorter half tip-toein’, like some folks
-do when dey feel der dram an’ dunner how ter show
-it. He stop right front er me, suh, an’ time his eye
-fell on me he sung out:</p>
-
-<p>“‘<em>Whoopee! Ef here ain’t ol’ Minervy Ann!
-Wid pies! An’ cakes! Come on, boys! Have
-some pies! An’ cakes!</em>’</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 625px;" id="illus21">
-<img src="images/illus21.jpg" width="625" height="700" alt="" />
-<p class="caption">“Ef here ain’t ol’ Minervy Ann wid pies!”</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>“Well, suh, you mought er heer’d ’im a mile.
-He holler des like de She’ff do when he stick his
-haid out’n de court-house winder an’ call somebody
-in ter court—des dat ve’y way. He say, ‘How
-much you take fer yo’ chicken-pie?’ I ’low, ‘Hit
-done sol’, suh.’ He say, ‘I’ll gi’ you a quarter fer<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_131"></a>[131]</span>
-dat pie.’ I ’low, ‘De pie done sol’, suh.’ By dat
-time dey wuz a right smart clump er folks come up
-fer see what Salem Birch wuz holl’in’ ’bout, an’
-you know yo’se’f, suh, how a half-drunk man’ll do
-when dey’s a crowd lis’nin’ at him.</p>
-
-<p>“He say, ‘Who done bought dat pie?’ I ’low,
-‘Marse Tumlin Perdue.’ He sorter draw’d hisse’f
-up, he did, an’ say, ‘Ain’t I des ez good ez Tumlin
-Perdue?’ I ’low, ‘I ain’t know nothin’ ter de contrary,
-suh, but ef you is, you got ter be a monstus
-good man.’ He say, ‘I is! I’m de bes’ man in de
-county.’ I ’low, ‘Dat may be, suh; I ain’t ’sputin’
-it.’ By dat time I ’gun ter feel de Ol’ Boy kinder
-ranklin’ in my gizzard. He say, ‘Why can’t I git
-dat pie?’ I ’low, ‘Bekaze it done sol’, suh.’ He
-say, ‘Fer cash?’ I ’low, ‘No, suh; but Marse
-Tumlin’s word is lots better’n some folks’ money.’</p>
-
-<p>“Well, suh, I know’d ’fo’ I open my mouf dat I
-ought’n ter say dat, but I couldn’t he’p it fer ter
-save my neck. He say, ‘Well, blast yo’ black hide,
-my money’s better’n anybody’s money!’ Wid dat
-he flung down a shinplaster quarter an’ retch fer de
-pie. By de time he grabbed it, I grabbed it, an’ he
-pulled an’ I pulled. I dunner whedder ’twuz de
-strenk in me er de dram in ’im, but in de pullin’, de
-box what de pie wuz on turnt over, an’ my cheer<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_132"></a>[132]</span>
-turnt over, an’ down come Salem Birch right spang
-on top er me.</p>
-
-<p>“I tell you now, suh, dis skeer’d me. ’Twuz
-mo’ dan I bargain fer. Right at de minnit, I had
-de idee dat de man had jumped on me an’ wuz
-gwine ter kill me—you know how some folks is
-’bout niggers. So I des give one squall——</p>
-
-<p>“‘<em>Marse Tumlin! Run here, Marse Tumlin!
-He killin’ me! Oh, Marse Tumlin!</em>’</p>
-
-<p>“Well, suh, dey tell me dat squall wuz so inhuman
-it made de country hosses break loose fum
-de racks. One white lady at de tavern hear it, an’
-she had ter be put ter bed. Bless yo’ soul, honey!
-don’t never say you done hear anybody blate twel
-you hear ol’ Minervy Ann—an’ de Lord knows I
-hope you won’t never hear me.</p>
-
-<p>“Dey ain’t no use talkin’, suh, hit ’larmed de
-town. Eve’ybody broke an’ run to’rds de place
-whar de fuss come fum. Salem Birch got up des
-ez quick ez he kin, an’ I wuz up des ez quick ez he
-wuz, an’ by dat time my temper done run my skeer
-off, an’ I des blazed out at him. What I say I’ll
-never tell you, bekaze I wuz so mad I ain’t never
-hear myse’f talk. Some say I called ’im dis an’
-some say I called ’im dat, but whatsomever ’twuz,
-hit wa’n’t no nice name—I kin promise you dat.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 600px;" id="illus22">
-<img src="images/illus22.jpg" width="600" height="700" alt="" />
-<p class="caption">“You see dat nigger ’oman?”</p>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_133"></a>[133]</span></p>
-
-<p>“’Twus ’nuff ter rise his dander, an’ he draw’d
-back his arm fer ter hit me, but des ’bout dat time
-Marse Tumlin shoved ’im back. Marse Tumlin
-’low, ‘You dirty dog! You sneakin’, nasty houn’!
-is dis de way you does yo’ fightin’?’</p>
-
-<p>“Well, suh, dis kinder skeer me ag’in, kaze I
-hear talk dat Salem Birch went ’bout wid dirks an’
-pistols on ’im, ready fer ter use um. He look at
-Marse Tumlin, an’ his face got whiter an’ whiter,
-an’ he draw’d his breff, deep an’ long.</p>
-
-<p>“Marse Tumlin ’low, ‘You see dat nigger
-’oman? Well, ef she wuz blacker dan de hinges er
-hell’—he say dem ve’y words, suh—‘ef she wuz
-blacker dan de hinges er hell, she’d be whiter dan
-you er any er yo’ thievin’ gang.’ An’ den, suh—I
-’clar’ I’m mos’ shame ter tell you—Marse Tumlin
-rise up on his tip-toes an’ spit in de man’s face.
-Yasser! Right spang in his face. You may well
-look ’stonish’d, suh. But ef you’d ’a’ seed de way
-Marse Tumlin looked you’d know why Salem Birch
-ain’t raise his han’ ’cep’ ter wipe his face. Ef dey
-ever wuz blood an’ killin’ in anybody’s eyes, hit wuz
-in Marse Tumlin’s right dat minnit. He stan’ dar
-while you kin count ten, an’ den he snap his thumb
-an’ turn on his heel, an’ dat ar Salem Birch tuck’n
-walk ’cross de public squar’ an’ sot down on de<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_134"></a>[134]</span>
-court-house steps, an’ he sot dar, suh, wid his haid
-’twix’ his han’s fer I dunner how long.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, suh, I know in reason dat de een’ er dat
-business ain’t come. You know how our white
-folks is; you kin spit in one man’s face an’ he not
-take it up, but some er his kinnery er his frien’s is
-sho ter take it up. So I say ter myse’f, ‘Look here,
-nigger ’oman, you better keep yo’ mouf shot an’
-bofe eyes open, kaze dey gwine ter be hot times in
-deze diggin’s.’ When I come ter look at um, suh,
-my ginger-cakes wa’n’t hurt, an’ de chicken-pie wuz
-safe an’ soun’ ’cep’ dat er little er de gravy had
-sorter run out. When I git thoo brushin’ an’
-cleanin’ um, I look up, I did, an’ dar wuz Marse
-Bolivar Blasengame walkin’ up an’ down right
-close at me. You oughter know ’im, suh, him an’
-Marse Tumlin married sisters, an’ dey wuz ez thick
-ez two peas in a pod. So I ’low, ‘Won’t you have
-a ginger-cake, Marse Bolivar? I’d offer you de
-pie, but I’m savin’ dat fer Miss Vallie.’ He say
-he don’t b’lieve his appetite run ter cakes an’ pies
-right dat minnit. Dat make me eye ’im, suh, an’
-he look like he mighty glum ’bout sump’n. He des
-walk up an’ down, up an’ down, wid his han’s in his
-pockets. It come back ter me atterwards, but I
-ain’t pay no ’tention den, dat de folks all ’roun’<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_135"></a>[135]</span>
-town wuz kinder ’spectin’ anudder fuss. Dey wuz
-all standin’ in clumps here an’ dar, some in de middle
-er de street, an’ some on de sidewalks, but dey
-wa’n’t nobody close ter me ’cep’ Marse Bolivar.
-Look like dey wuz givin’ us elbow room.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 700px;" id="illus23">
-<img src="images/illus23.jpg" width="700" height="575" alt="" />
-<p class="caption">“An’ he sot dar, suh, wid his haid ’twix’ his han’s fer I dunner how long.”</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>“De bigges’ clump er folks, suh, wuz down at
-de public well, at de fur side er de squar’, an’ I notice
-dey kep’ movin’, now dis way, an’ now dat,
-sorter swayin’ like some un wuz shovin’ um ’bout
-an’ pushin’ um ’roun’. An’ dat des de way it wuz,
-’kaze ’twa’n’t long ’fo’ somebody broke loose fum
-um an’ come runnin’ to’rds whar I wuz settin’ at.</p>
-
-<p>“I know’d in a minnit, suh, dat wuz Bill-Tom
-Birch. He wuz holdin’ his han’ on his wes’cut
-pocket fer ter keep his watch fum fallin’ out. He
-come runnin’ up, suh, an’ he wuz so mad he wuz
-cryin’. His face wuz workin’ des like it hurted
-’im. He holler at me. ‘Is you de——?’ I
-won’t name de name what he call me, suh. But
-I know ef he’d ’a’ been a nigger I’d ’a’ got up fum
-dar an’ brained ’im. I ain’t say nothin’. I des sot
-dar an’ look at ’im.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, suh, he jerk a cowhide fum under his
-cloze—he had it run down his britches leg, an’ say,
-‘I’ll show you how you <em>erfuse</em> ter sell pies
-when a gemman want ter buy um.’ I dunner<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_136"></a>[136]</span>
-what I’d ’a’ done, suh, ef he’d ’a’ hit me, but
-he ain’t hit me. Marse Bolivar walk right ’twix’
-us an’ ’low, ‘You’ll settle dis wid me, right
-here an’ now.’ Wid dat, Bill-Tom Birch step
-back an’ say, ‘Colonel, does you take it up?’
-Marse Bolivar ’low, ‘Dat’s what I’m here fer.’
-Bill-Tom Birch step back a little furder and make
-as ef ter draw his pistol, but his han’ ain’t got ter his
-pocket ’fo’ <em>bang!</em> went Marse Bolivar’s gun, an’
-down went Bill-Tom Birch, des like somebody
-tripped ’im up.</p>
-
-<p>“I know mighty well, suh, dat I ain’t no hard-hearted
-nigger—anybody what know me will tell
-you dat—but when dat man drapt, I ain’t keer no
-mo’ dan ef he’d ’a’ been a mad dog. Dat’s de Lord’s
-trufe, ef I ever tol’ it. I ain’t know wharbouts
-de ball hit ’im, an’ I wa’n’t keerin’. Marse Bolivar
-ain’t move out’n he tracks. He stood dar, he
-did, an’ bresh de cap off’n de bairl what shot, an’ fix
-it fer ter shoot ag’in. ’Twuz one er deze yer ervolvers,
-suh, what move up a notch er two when
-you pull de trigger.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 600px;" id="illus24">
-<img src="images/illus24.jpg" width="600" height="700" alt="" />
-<p class="caption">“You’ll settle dis wid me.”</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>“Well, suh, time de pistol went off, folks come
-runnin’ fum eve’ywhars. Salem Birch, he come
-runnin’ ’cross de public squar’, bekaze he had de
-idee dat sump’n done happen. Marse Bolivar, he<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_137"></a>[137]</span>
-see Salem Birch a-comin’, an’ he walk out fum de
-crowd ter meet ’im. Dat make me feel sorter
-quare, kaze hit look like he wuz gwine ter shoot de
-man down. But Salem Birch seed ’im, an’ he stop
-an’ say, ‘Colonel, what de name er God is de matter?’
-Marse Bolivar make answer, ‘Salem, I had
-ter shoot yo’ bre’r.’ Salem Birch say, ‘Is he
-dead?’ Marse Bolivar ’spon’, ‘He ain’t nigh dead.
-I put de ball ’twix’ de hip an’ de knee-j’int. He’ll
-be up in a week.’ Salem Birch say, ‘Colonel, I
-thank you fer dat. Will you shake han’s?’ Marse
-Bolivar say dey ain’t nothin’ suit ’im better, bekaze
-he ain’t got a thing ag’in’ de Birches.</p>
-
-<p>“An’ ’twuz des like Marse Bolivar say. Bill-Tom
-Birch wuz wuss skeer’d dan hurt, an’ ’twa’n’t
-long ’fo’ he wuz well. Salem Birch, he went off
-ter Texas, an’ dem what been dar an’ come back, say
-dat he’s one er deze yer ervival preachers, gwine
-’bout doin’ good an’ takin’ up big collections. Dat
-what dey say, an’ I hope it’s des dat way. I don’t
-begrudge nobody de money dey makes preachin’
-ter sinners, bekaze hit’s des natchally w’arin’ ter
-de flesh.”</p>
-
-<p>At this juncture Aunt Minervy Ann called to
-Hamp and informed him, in autocratic tones, that
-it was time to cut wood with which to cook dinner.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_138"></a>[138]</span></p>
-
-<p>“I don’t keer ef you is been ter de legislatur’,” she
-added, “you better cut dat wood, an’ cut it quick.”</p>
-
-<p>I suggested that she had started to tell me about
-Paul Conant’s shoulder, but had neglected to do so.</p>
-
-<p>“Ain’t I tell you ’bout dat? Well, ef dat don’t
-bang my time! Hamp, you hear dat? You better
-go an’ make ’rangements fer ter have me put in
-de as’lum, bekaze I sho’ I’s gittin’ light-headed.
-Well, suh, dat beats all! But I’ll tell you ’bout it
-’fo’ you go back.”</p>
-
-<p>Then Aunt Minervy Ann went to see about dinner.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_139"></a>[139]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="VI">VI<br />
-<span class="smaller">HOW SHE AND MAJOR PERDUE FRAILED OUT
-THE GOSSETT BOYS</span></h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>During the progress of the fair, there was some
-discussion of financial matters in Major Perdue’s
-family. As I remember, someone had given Paul
-Conant a check which was thrown out by the Atlanta
-bank on which it was drawn. The sum was
-not a considerable one, but it was sufficiently large
-to attract Aunt Minervy Ann’s attention.</p>
-
-<p>“I ’speck dey got mo’ banks in Atlanty dan
-what we-all got down here,” she remarked, the next
-time I had an opportunity to talk with her. She
-laughed so heartily as she made the remark that I
-regarded her with some astonishment. “You may
-look, suh, but I ain’t crazy. When I hear anybody
-say ‘bank’ it allers puts me in min’ er de time when
-me an’ Marse Tumlin frailed out de Gossett boys.”</p>
-
-<p>“Frailed out the Gossett boys?” I exclaimed.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_140"></a>[140]</span></p>
-
-<p>“Yasser, frailed is de word.”</p>
-
-<p>“But what has that to do with a bank?” I inquired.</p>
-
-<p>“Hit got all ter do wid it, suh,” she replied.
-We were in the sitting-room, and Aunt Minervy
-Ann sank down on a footstool and rested one arm
-on the lounge. “Right atter freedom dey wa’n’t
-nothin’ like no bank down whar we live at; you
-know dat yo’se’f, suh. Folks say dat banks kin run
-widout money, but ’fo’ you start um, dey got ter
-have money, er sump’n dat look like money. An’
-atter freedom dey wa’n’t no money ’roun’ here ’cep’
-dat kin’ what nobody ain’t hankerin’ atter.</p>
-
-<p>“But bimeby it ’gun ter dribble in fum some’rs;
-fus’ dem ar little shinplasters, an’ den de bigger
-money come ’long. It kep’ on dribblin’ in an’ dribblin’
-in twel atter while you could git a dollar here
-an’ dar by workin’ yo’ han’s off, er spraining’ yo’
-gizzard to git it. Bimeby de news got norated
-’roun’ dat ol’ Joshaway Gossett gwine ter start a
-bank. Yasser! ol’ Joshaway Gossett. Dat make
-folks open der eyes an’ shake der head. I ’member
-de time, suh, when ol’ Joshaway wuz runnin’ a
-blacksmith shop out in de country. Den he sot in
-ter make waggins. Atter dat, he come ter be overseer
-fer Marse Bolivar Blasengame, but all de time<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_141"></a>[141]</span>
-he wuz overseein’ he wuz runnin’ de blacksmith
-shop an’ de waggin fact’ry.</p>
-
-<p>“When de war come on, suh, dey say dat ol’
-Joshaway tuck all de money what he been savin’
-an’ change it inter gol’; de natchul stuff. An’
-he had a pile un it. He kep’ dat up all endurin’
-er de turmoil, and by de time freedom come out
-he had mo’ er de natchul stuff dan what Cyarter
-had oats. Dat what folks say, suh, an’ when eve’ybody
-talk one way you may know dey ain’t fur fum
-de trufe. Anyhow, de word went ’roun’ dat ol’
-Joshaway gwine ter start a bank. Folks wa’n’t
-’stonished ’kaze he had money, but bekaze he gwine
-ter start a bank, an’ he not much mo’ dan knowin’
-B fum bullfoot. Some snicker, some laugh, an’
-some make fun er ol’ Joshaway, but Marse Tumlin
-say dat ef he know how ter shave a note, he bleeze
-ter know how ter run a bank. I ain’t never see nobody
-shave a note, suh, but dat ’zackly what Marse
-Tumlin say.</p>
-
-<p>“But ol’ Joshaway, he ain’t a-keerin’ what folks
-say. He start de bank, an’ he kep’ it up twel de
-time I’m gwine tell you ’bout. He bought ’im a
-big strong safe, an’ he had it walled up in de back
-er de bank, an’ dar ’twuz. Don’t make no diffunce
-what folks say ’bout ol’ Joshaway, dey can’t say he<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_142"></a>[142]</span>
-ain’t honest. He gwine ter have what’s his’n, an’
-he want yuther folks fer ter have what’s der’n.
-When dat de case, ’tain’t no trouble ter git folks ter
-trus’ you. Dey put der money in ol’ Joshaway’s
-bank, whar he kin take keer un it, bekaze dey
-know’d he wa’n’t gwine ter run off wid it.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, suh, de bank wuz runnin’ ’long des like
-’twuz on skids, an’ de skids greased. Ol’ Joshaway
-ain’t move ter town, but he hired ’im a clerk,
-an’ de clerk stayed in de bank night an’ day, an’
-I hear folks say de town wuz better’n bigger
-on ’count er ol’ Joshaway’s bank. I dunner how
-dey make dat out, ’kaze de bank wa’n’t much bigger
-dan de kitchen back dar. Anyhow, dar she
-wuz, and dar she stayed fer a time an’ a time.</p>
-
-<p>“But one day Marse Tumlin Perdue tuck de notion
-dat he got ter borry some money. He seed
-yuther folks gwine in dar an’ borryin’ fum ol’ Joshaway,
-an’ he know he got des ez much bizness fer
-ter borry ez what dey is. Mo’ dan dat, when he
-had plenty er money an’ niggers, he done ol’ Joshaway
-many a good turn. I know’d dat myse’f, suh,
-an’ ’tain’t no hearsay; I done seed it wid my own
-eyes. On de day I’m talkin’ ’bout, Miss Vallie
-sont me up town fer ter ax Marse Tumlin kin he
-spar’ two dollars—dat wuz befo’ Miss Vallie wuz<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_143"></a>[143]</span>
-married; ’bout a mont’ befo’, an’ she wuz makin’
-up her weddin’ fixin’s.</p>
-
-<p>“’Twa’n’t no trouble ter fin’ Marse Tumlin. He
-wuz settin’ in de shade wid a passel er men. He
-seed me, he did, an’ he come ter meet me. When
-I tell ’im what Miss Vallie want, he kinder scratch
-his head an’ look sollum. He studied a minit, an’
-den he tell me ter come go ’long wid ’im. He cut
-’cross de squar’ an’ went right ter ol’ Joshaway’s
-bank, me a-follerin’ right at his heels. He went in,
-he did, an’ ’low, ‘Hello, Joshaway!’ Ol’ Joshaway,
-he say, ‘Howdy, Maje?’ He wuz settin’ in
-dar behime a counter what had wire palin’s on top
-un it, an’ he look fer all de worl’ like some ongodly
-creetur what dey put in a cage for ter keep ’im fum
-doin’ devilment.</p>
-
-<p>“Marse Tumlin ’low, ‘Joshaway, I want ter
-borry a hunderd dollars for a mont’ er so.’ Ol’
-Joshaway kinder change his cud er terbacker fum
-one side ter de yuther, an’ cle’r up his th’oat. He
-say, ‘Maje, right dis minit, I ain’t got fifty dollars
-in de bank.’ Nigger ez I is, I know’d dat wuz a
-lie, an’ I couldn’t help fum gruntin’ ef I wuz gwine
-to be kilt fer it. At dat ol’ Joshaway look up.
-Marse Tumlin stood dar drummin’ on de counter.
-Bimeby ol’ Joshaway say, ’Spoze’n I had it, Maje,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_144"></a>[144]</span>
-who you gwine git fer yo’ skyority?’ des so. Marse
-Tumlin ’low, ‘Fer my what?” ‘Fer yo’ skyority,’
-sez ol’ Joshaway. I up an’ say, ‘Des lissen at
-dat!’ Marse Tumlin ’low, ‘Who went yo’ skyority
-when I use ter loan you money?’ ‘Times is
-done change, Maje,’ sez ol’ Joshaway. Marse
-Tumlin flirted de little gate open, an’ went ’roun’ in
-dar so quick it made my head swim. He say, ‘<em>I</em>
-ain’t change!’ an’ wid dat, he took ol’ Joshaway
-by de coat-collar an’ cuff’d ’im ’roun’ considerbul.
-He ain’t hurt ol’ Joshaway much, but he call ’im
-some names dat white folks don’t fling at one an’er
-widout dey’s gwine ter be blood-lettin’ in de neighborhoods.</p>
-
-<p>“Den Marse Tumlin come out fum behime de
-counter, an’ stood in de do’ an’ look up town. By
-dat time I wuz done out on de sidewalk, ’kaze I
-don’t want no pistol-hole in my hide. When it
-come ter fa’r fis’ an’ skull, er a knock-down an’
-drag-out scuffle, I’m wid you; I’m right dar; but
-deze yer guns an’ pistols what flash an’ bang an’
-put out yo’ lights—an’ maybe yo’ liver—when it
-come ter dem, I lots druther be on t’er side de
-fence. Well, suh, I fully ’spected ol’ Joshaway to
-walk out atter Marse Tumlin wid de double-bairl
-gun what I seed behime de counter; an’ Marse<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_145"></a>[145]</span>
-Tumlin ’spected it, too, ’kaze he walk up an’ down
-befo’ de bank, an’ eve’y once in a while he’d jerk his
-wescut down in front like he tryin’ ter t’ar de
-bindin’ off. Bimeby I see Marse Bolivar Blasengame
-git up fum whar he settin’ at, an’ here he
-come, swingin’ his gol’-head cane, an’ sa’nt’in’ ’long
-like he gwine on a promenade.</p>
-
-<p>“I know’d by dat, suh, dat Marse Bolivar been
-watchin’ Marse Tumlin’s motions, an’ he seed dat
-trouble er some kind wuz on han’. He walk up,
-he did, an’ atter he cut his eye at Marse Tumlin, he
-turn ter me an’ laugh ter hisse’f—he had de purtiest
-front teef you mos’ ever is see, suh—an’ he ’low,
-‘Well, dang my buttons, ef here ain’t ol’ Minervy
-Ann, de warhoss fum Wauhoo! Wharsomever
-dey’s trouble, dar’s de ol’ warhoss fum Wauhoo.’
-Wid dat, he lock arms wid Marse Tumlin, an’ dey
-march off down de street, me a-follerin’. You ain’t
-kin fin’ two men like dem anywhar an’ eve’ywhar.
-Dey wa’n’t no blood-kin—dey married sisters—but
-dey wuz lots closer dan br’ers. Hit one an’ you’d
-hurt de yuther, an’ den ef you wa’n’t ready ter git
-in a scuffle wid two wil’-cats, you better leave town
-twel dey cool off.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, suh, dey ain’t took many steps ’fo’ dey
-wuz laughin’ an’ jokin’ des like two boys. Ez we<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_146"></a>[146]</span>
-went up de street Marse Tumlin drapt in a sto’ er
-two an’ tol’ um dat ol’ Joshaway Gossett vow’d dat
-he ain’t got fifty cash dollars in de bank. Dish
-yer money news is de kin’ what spreads, an’ don’t
-you fergit it. It spread dat day des like powder
-ketchin’ fire an’ ’twa’n’t no time ’fo’ you could see
-folks runnin’ ’cross de squar’ des like dey er rabbit-huntin’,
-an’ by dinner-time dey wa’n’t no bank dar
-no mo’ dan a rabbit. Folks say dat ol’ Joshaway
-try mighty hard ter ’splain matters, but dem what
-had der money in dar say dey’d take de spondulix
-fus’ an’ listen ter de ’splainin’ atterwards. ’Long
-to’rds de noon-hour ol’ Joshaway hatter fling up his
-han’s. All de ready money done gone, an’ folks at
-de do’ hollin’ fer dat what dey put in dar. I dunner
-how he ever got ’way fum dar, ’kaze dey wuz
-men in dat crowd ripe ter kill ’im; but he sneaked
-out an’ went home, an’ lef’ some un else fer ter win’
-up de shebang.</p>
-
-<p>“De bank wuz des ez good ez any bank,
-an’ folks got back all dey put in dar des ez
-soon ez dey’d let ol’ Joshaway show his head
-in town; but he drapt dat kinder bizness an’
-went back ter farmin’ an’ note-shavin’. An’
-all bekaze he want skyority fer Marse Tumlin,
-which his word des ez good ez his bon’.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_147"></a>[147]</span>
-He mought not er had de money when de clock
-struck de minit, but what diffunce do dat make
-when you know a man’s des ez good ez gol’? Huh!
-no wonder dey broke ol’ Joshaway down!”</p>
-
-<p>Aunt Minervy Ann’s indignation was a fine
-thing to behold. Her scorn of the man who wanted
-Major Perdue to put up security for his note was
-as keen and as bitter as it had been the day the episode
-occurred. She paused at this point as if her
-narrative had come to an end. Therefore, I put in
-a suggestion.</p>
-
-<p>“Was this what you call frailing out the Gossett
-boys?”</p>
-
-<p>“No, suh,” she protested, with a laugh; “all
-deze yer gwines-on ’bout dat ar bank wuz des de
-’casion un it. You bleeze ter know dem Gossett
-boys, suh. Dey had sorter cool down by de time
-you come here, but dey wuz still ripe fer any
-devilment dat come ’long. Dar wuz Rube an’ Sam
-an’ John Henry, an’ a’er one un um wuz big ez a
-hoss. Dey use ter come ter town eve’y Chuseday
-an’ Sat’day, an’ by dinner-time dey’d be a-whoopin’
-an’ hollin’ in de streets, an’ a-struttin’ ’roun’ mashin’
-folks’ hats down on der eyes. Not all de folks,
-but some un um. An’ all fer fun; dat what dey
-say.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_148"></a>[148]</span></p>
-
-<p>“Tooby sho’, dey had a spite ag’in Marse Tumlin
-and Marse Bolivar atter de bank busted. Dey
-show’d it by gwine des so fur; dey’d fling out der
-hints; but dey kep’ on de safe side, ’kaze Marse
-Tumlin wa’n’t de man fer ter go ’roun’ huntin’ a
-fuss, ner needer wuz Marse Bolivar; but fetch a
-fuss an’ lay it in der laps, ez you may say, an’ dey’d
-play wid it an’ dandle it, an’ keep it fum ketchin’
-col’. Dey sho’ would, suh. When dem Gossett
-boys’d come ter town, Marse Tumlin an’ Marse
-Bolivar would des set’ ’roun’ watchin’ um, des waitin’
-twel dey cross de dead-line. But it seem like
-dey know des how fur ter go, an’ right whar ter
-stop.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, suh, it went on dis away fer I dunner
-how long, but bimeby, one day, our ol’ cow got out,
-an’ ’stidder hangin’ ’roun’ an’ eatin’ de grass in de
-streets like any yuther cow would ’a’ done, she
-made a straight shoot fer de plantation whar she
-come fum.</p>
-
-<p>“Miss Vallie tol’ Marse Tumlin ’bout it, an’ he
-say he gwine atter her. Den some er de niggers
-in de nex’ lot tol’ me dat de cow wuz out an’ gone,
-an’ I put out atter her, too, not knowin’ dat
-Marse Tumlin wuz gwine. He went de front
-street an’ I went de back way. Ef de town wuz<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_149"></a>[149]</span>
-big ez de streets is long, we’d have a mighty city
-down here; you know dat yo’se’f, suh. De place
-whar de back street jines in wid de big road is
-mighty nigh a mile fum de tempunce hall, an’
-when I got dar, dar wuz Marse Tumlin polin’ ’long.
-I holler an’ ax ’im whar he gwine. He say he
-gwine atter a glass er milk. Den he ax me whar
-I gwine. I say I’m gwine atter dat ol’ frame dat
-nigh-sighted folks call a cow. He ’low dat he’d be
-mighty thankful ef de nex’ time I tuck a notion fer
-ter turn de cow out I’d tell ’im befo’han’ so he kin
-run ’roun’ an’ head ’er off an’ drive ’er back. He
-wuz constant a-runnin’ on dat away. He’d crack
-his joke, suh, ef he dyin’.</p>
-
-<p>“We went trudgin’ ’long twel we come ’pon de
-big hill dat leads down ter de town branch. You
-know de place, suh. De hill mighty steep, an’ on
-bofe sides er de road der’s a hedge er Cherrykee
-roses; some folks calls um Chickasaw; but Chicky
-er Cherry, dar dey wuz, growin’ so thick a rabbit
-can’t hardly squeeze thoo um. On one side dey
-wuz growin’ right on de aidge uv a big gully, an’
-at one place de groun’ wuz kinder caved in, an’ de
-briar vines wuz swayin’ over it.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, suh, des ez we got on de hill-top, I hear a
-buggy rattlin’ an’ den I hear laughin’ an’ cussin’.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_150"></a>[150]</span>
-I lookt ’roun’, I did, an’ dar wuz de Gossett boys,
-two in de buggy an’ one ridin’ hossback; an’ all un
-um full er dram. I could tell dat by de way dey
-wuz gwine on. You could hear um a mile, cussin’
-one an’er fer eve’ything dey kin think un an’ den
-laughin’ ’bout it. Sump’n tol’ me dey wuz gwine
-ter be a rumpus, bekaze three ter one wuz too good
-a chance for de Gossett boys ter let go by. I dunner
-what make me do it, but when we got down de
-hill a little piece, I stoop down, I did, an’ got me a
-good size rock.</p>
-
-<p>“Terreckly here dey come. Dey kinder quiet
-down when dey see me an’ Marse Tumlin. Dey
-driv up, dey did, an’ driv on by, an’ dis make me
-b’lieve dat dey wuz gwine on ’bout der bizness an’
-let we-all go on ’bout our’n, but dat idee wa’n’t in
-der head. Dey driv by, dey did, an’ den dey pulled
-up. We walkt on, an’ Marse Tumlin lookt at um
-mighty hard. Rube, he was drivin’, an’ ez we come
-up even wid um, he ’low, ‘Major Perdue, I hear tell
-dat you slap my pa’s face not so mighty long ago.’
-Marse Tumlin say, ‘I did, an’ my han’ ain’t clean
-yit.’ He helt it out so dey kin see fer deyse’f. ‘I
-b’lieve,’ sez Rube, ‘I’ll take a closer look at it.’
-Wid dat he lipt out er de buggy, an’ by de time he
-hit de groun’, Marse Tumlin had knockt ’im a-windin’<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_151"></a>[151]</span>
-wid his curly-hick’ry walkin’-cane. By
-dat time, John Henry had jumpt out’n de buggy,
-an’ he went at Marse Tumlin wid a dirk-knife. He
-kep’ de cane off’n his head by dodgin’, but Marse
-Tumlin hit a back lick an’ knock de knife out’n his
-han’ an’ den dey clincht. Den Rube got up, an’
-start to’rds um on de run.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, suh, I wuz skeer’d an’ mad bofe. I seed
-sump’n had ter be done, an’ dat mighty quick; so I
-tuck atter Rube, cotch ’m by de ellybows, shoved
-’im ahead faster dan he wuz gwine, an’ steer’d
-’im right to’rds de caved-in place in de brier-bushes.
-He tried mighty hard ter stop, but he wuz gwine
-down hill, an’ I had de Ol’ Boy in me. I got ’im
-close ter de place, suh, an’ den I gi’ ’m a shove, an’
-inter de briers he went, head over heels. All dis
-time I had de rock in my han’. By de time I turn
-’roun’ I see Sam a-comin’. When de rumpus start
-up, his hoss shied an’ made a break down de hill wid
-’im, but he slew’d ’im ’roun’, an’ jumped off, an’
-here he come back, his face red, his hat off, an’ ol’
-Nick hisse’f lookin’ out’n his eyes. I know’d
-mighty well I can’t steer him inter no brier-bush,
-an’ so when he run by me I let ’im have de rock in
-de burr er de year. ’Twa’n’t no light lick, suh; I
-wuz plum venomous by den; an’ he went down des<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_152"></a>[152]</span>
-like a beef does when you knock ’im in de head wid
-a ax.”</p>
-
-<p>Aunt Minervy Ann, all unconscious of her attitudes
-and gestures, had risen from the floor, and
-now stood in the middle of the room, tall, towering,
-and defiant.</p>
-
-<p>“Den I run ter whar Marse Tumlin an’ John
-Henry Gossett had been scufflin’; but by de time I
-got dar John Henry squalled out dat he had ’nuff;
-an’ he wa’n’t tellin’ no lie, suh, fer Marse Tumlin
-had ketched his cane up short, an’ he used it on dat
-man’s face des like you see folks do wid ice-picks.
-He like to ’a’ ruint ’im. But when he holla dat he
-got ’nuff, Marse Tumlin let ’im up. He let ’im up,
-he did, an’ sorter step back. By dat time Rube
-wuz a-climbin’ out’n de briers, an’ Sam wuz makin’
-motions like he comin’-to. Marse Tumlin say,
-‘Lemme tell you cowardly rascals one thing. De
-nex’ time a’er one un you bat his eye at me, I’m
-gwine ter put a hole right spang th’oo you. Ef you
-don’t b’lieve it, you kin start ter battin’ um right
-now.’ Wid dat, he draw’d out his ervolver an’
-kinder played wid it. Rube say, ‘We’ll drap it,
-Major; we des had a little too much licker. But
-I’ll not drap it wid dat nigger dar. I’ll pay her fer
-dis day’s work, an’ I’ll pay ’er well.’</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_153"></a>[153]</span></p>
-
-<p>“Well, suh, de way he say it set me on fire. I
-stept out in de middle er de road, an’ ’low, ‘<em>Blast
-yo’ rotten heart, ef you’ll des walk out here I’ll
-whip you in a fa’r fight. Fight me wid yo’ naked
-han’s an’ I’ll eat you up, ef I hatter pizen myse’f
-ter do it.</em>’”</p>
-
-<p>Once more Aunt Minervy Ann brought the
-whole scene mysteriously before me. Her eyes
-gleamed ferociously, her body swayed, and her outstretched
-arm trembled with the emotion she had
-resummoned from the past. We were on the spot.
-The red hill-side, the hedges of Cherokee roses,
-Major Perdue grim and erect, Sam Gossett struggling
-to his feet, John Henry wiping his beaten
-face, Rube astounded at the unwonted violence of
-a negro woman, the buggy swerved to one side by
-the horse searching for grass—all these things came
-into view and slowly faded away. Aunt Minervy
-Ann, suddenly recollecting herself, laughed sheepishly.</p>
-
-<p>“I ain’t tellin’ you no lie, suh, dat ar Rube Gossett
-stood dar like de little boy dat de calf run over.
-He mought er had sump’n ugly ter say, but Marse
-Tumlin put in. He ’low, ‘Don’t you fool yo’se’f
-’bout dis nigger ’oman. When you hit her you hits
-me. Befo’ you put yo’ han’ on ’er you come an’<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_154"></a>[154]</span>
-spit in my face. You’ll fin’ dat lots de cheapes’
-way er gittin’ de dose what I got fer dem what
-hurts Minervy Ann.’</p>
-
-<p>“Well, suh, dis make me feel so funny dat a little
-mo’ an’ I’d a got ter whimperin’, but I happen
-ter look ’roun’, an’ dar wuz our ol’ cow lookin’ at
-me over a low place in de briers. She done got in
-de fiel’ by a gap back up de road, an’ dar she wuz
-a-lookin’ at us like she sorry. Wid me, suh, de
-diffunce ’twixt laughin’ an’ cryin’ ain’t thicker dan
-a fly’s wing, an’ when I see dat ol’ cow lookin’ like
-she ready ter cry, I wuz bleeze to laugh. Marse
-Tumlin look at me right hard, but I say, ‘Marse
-Tumlin, ol’ June lis’nin’ at us,’ an’ den <em>he</em> laughed.</p>
-
-<p>“Dem Gossett boys brush deyse’f off good ez
-dey kin an’ den dey put out fer home. Soon ez
-dey git out er sight, Marse Tumlin started in ter
-projickin’. He walk all ’roun’ me a time er two,
-an’ den he blow out his breff like folks does when
-dey er kinder tired. He look at me, an’ say, ‘<em>Well,
-I be dam!</em>’ ‘Dat would ’a’ been de word,’ sez I,
-‘ef ol’ Minervy Ann hadn’t ’a’ been here dis day
-an’ hour.’ He shuck his head slow. ‘You hit de
-mark dat time,’ sez he; ‘ef you hadn’t ’a’ been here,
-Minervy Ann, dem boys would sholy ’a’ smasht
-me; but ef I hadn’t ’a’ been here, I reely b’lieve<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_155"></a>[155]</span>
-you’d ’a’ frailed out de whole gang. You had two
-whipt, Minervy Ann, an’ you wuz hankerin’ fer de
-yuther one. I’ll hatter sw’ar ter de facts ’fo’ anybody’ll
-b’lieve um.’ I ’low ‘’Tain’t no use ter tell
-nobody, Marse Tumlin. Folks think I’m bad ’nuff
-now.’</p>
-
-<p>“But, <em>shoo!</em> Marse Tumlin would ’a’ mighty
-nigh died ef he couldn’t tell ’bout dat day’s work.
-I ain’t min’ dat so much, but it got so dat when de
-Gossetts come ter town an’ start ter prankin’, de
-town boys ’ud call um by name, an’ holla an’ say,
-‘You better watch out dar! Minervy Ann Perdue
-comin’ ’roun’ de cornder!’ Dat wuz so errytatin’,
-suh, dat it kyo’d um. Dey drapt der dram-drinkin’
-an’ spreein’, an’ now dey er high in Horeb
-Church. Dey don’t like me, suh, an’ no wonder;
-but ef dey kin git ter hev’m widout likin’ me, I’d
-be glad ter see um go.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, suh, I call de ol’ cow, an’ she foller long
-on ’er side er de briers, an’ when she got whar de
-gap wuz, she curl ’er tail over ’er back an’ put out
-fer home, des for all de worl’ like she glad ’kaze me
-an’ Marse Tumlin frailed out de Gossett boys.</p>
-
-<p>“I say, ‘Marse Tumlin, I’m a member er de
-church an’ I don’t b’lieve in fightin’, but ef we
-hadn’t er fit wid dem Gossetts we’d ’a’ never foun’<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_156"></a>[156]</span>
-dat ol’ cow in de roun’ worl’.’ He ’low, ‘An’ ef
-we hadn’t er fit wid um, Minervy Ann, I’d ’a’ never
-know’d who ter take wid me fer ter keep de boogerman
-fum gittin’ me.’</p>
-
-<p>“Dat night, suh, Marse Bolivar Blasengame
-come rappin’ at my do’. Hamp wuz done gone ter
-bed, an’ I wuz fixin’ ter go. Marse Bolivar come
-in, he did, an’ shuck han’s wid me like he ain’t seed
-me sence de big war. Den he sot down over ag’in’
-me an’ look at me, an’ make me tell ’im all ’bout
-de rumpus. Well, suh, he got ter laughin’, an’ he
-laughed twel he can’t hardly set in de cheer. He
-say, ‘Minervy Ann, ef dem folks say a word ter
-hurt yo’ feelin’s, don’t tell Tumlin. Des come
-a-runnin’ ter me. He done had his han’s on um,
-an’ now I want ter git mine on um.’</p>
-
-<p>“Dat ’uz de way wid Marse Bolivar. He wa’n’t
-no great han’ ter git in a row, but he wuz mighty
-hard ter git out’n one when he got in. When he
-start out he stop on de step an’ say, ‘Minervy Ann,
-I didn’t know you wuz sech a rank fighter.’ ‘I’m
-a Perdue,’ sez I. Wid dat he got ter laughin’, an’
-fur ez I kin hear ’im he wuz still a-laughin’. He
-b’longed ter a mighty fine fambly, suh; you know
-dat yo’se’f.”</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_157"></a>[157]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="VII">VII<br />
-<span class="smaller">MAJOR PERDUE’S BARGAIN</span></h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>When next I had an opportunity to talk with
-Aunt Minervy Ann, she indulged in a hearty laugh
-before saying a word, and it was some time before
-she found her voice.</p>
-
-<p>“What is so funny to-day?” I inquired.</p>
-
-<p>“Me, suh—nothin’ tall ’bout me, an’ ’tain’t only
-ter-day, nudder. Hit’s eve’y day sence I been big
-’nuff fer to see myse’f in de spring branch. I
-laughed den, an’ I laugh now eve’y time I see myse’f
-in my min’—ef I’ got any min’. I wuz talkin’
-ter Hamp las’ night an’ tellin’ ’im how I start in ter
-tell you sump’n ’bout Marse Paul Conant’ shoulder,
-an’ den eend up by tellin’ you eve’ything else
-I know but dat.</p>
-
-<p>“Hamp ’low, he did, ‘Dat ain’t nothin’, bekaze
-when I ax you ter marry me, you start in an’ tell
-me ’bout a nigger gal’ cross dar in Jasper County,
-which she make promise fer ter marry a man an’<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_158"></a>[158]</span>
-she crossed her heart; an’ den when de time come
-she stood up an’ marry ’im an’ fin’ out ’tain’t de
-same man, but somebody what she ain’t never see’
-befo’.’</p>
-
-<p>“I ’speck dat’s so, suh, bekaze dey wuz sump’n
-like dat happen in Jasper County. You know de
-Waters fambly—dey kep’ race-hosses. Well, suh,
-’twuz right on der plantation. Warren Waters tol’
-me ’bout dat hisse’f. He wuz de hoss-trainer, an’
-he ’uz right dar on de groun’. When de gal done
-married, she look up an’ holler, ‘You ain’t my husban’,
-bekaze I ain’t make no promise fer ter marry
-you.’ De man he laugh, an’ say, ‘Don’t need no
-promise atter you done married.’</p>
-
-<p>“Well, suh, dey say dat gal wuz skeer’d—skeer’d
-fer true. She sot an’ look in de fire. De
-man sot an’ look at ’er. She try ter slip out de do’,
-an’ he slipped wid ’er. She walked to’rds de big
-house, an’ he walkt wid ’er. She come back, an’
-he come wid ’er. She run an’ he run wid ’er. She
-cry an’ he laugh at ’er. She dunner what to do.
-Bimeby she tuck a notion dat de man mought be de
-Ol’ Boy hisse’f, an’ she drapped down on her knees
-an’ ’gun ter pray. Dis make de man restless; look
-like he frettin’. Den he ’gun ter shake like he
-havin’ chill. Den he slip down out’n de cheer.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_159"></a>[159]</span>
-Den he got on his all-fours. Den his cloze drapped
-off, an’ bless gracious! dar he wuz, a great big black
-shaggy dog wid a short chain roun’ his neck. Some
-un um flung a chunk of fire at ’im, an’ he run out
-howlin’.</p>
-
-<p>“Dat wuz de last dey seed un ’im, suh. Dey
-flung his cloze in de fire, an’ dey make a blaze dat
-come plum out’n de top er de chimbley stack. Dat
-what make me tell Hamp ’bout it, suh. He ax me
-fer ter marry ’im, an’ I wan’t so mighty sho’ dat he
-wan’t de Ol’ Boy.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, that is queer, if true,” said I, “but how
-about Mr. Conant’s crippled shoulder?”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, it’s de trufe, suh. Warren Waters tol’
-me dat out’n his own mouf, an’ he wuz right dar.
-I dunno but what de gal wuz some er his kinnery.
-I don’t min’ tellin’ you dat ’bout Marse Paul, suh,
-but you mustn’t let on ’bout it, bekaze Marse Tumlin
-an’ Miss Vallie des’ ez tetchous ’bout dat ez dey
-kin be. I’d never git der fergivunce ef dey know’d
-I was settin’ down here tellin’ ’bout dat.</p>
-
-<p>“You know how ’twuz in dem days. De folks
-what wuz de richest wuz de wussest off when de
-army come home from battlin’. I done tol’ you
-’bout Marse Tumlin. He ain’t had nothin’ in de
-roun’ worl’ but a whole passel er lan’, an’ me an’<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_160"></a>[160]</span>
-Miss Vallie. I don’t count Hamp, bekaze Hamp
-’fuse ter b’lieve he’s free twel he ramble ’roun’ an’
-fin’ out de patterollers ain’t gwine ter take ’im up.
-Dat how come I had ter sell ginger-cakes an’
-chicken-pies dat time. De money I made at dat
-ain’t last long, bekaze Marse Tumlin he been use’
-ter rich vittles, an’ he went right down-town an’ got
-a bottle er chow-chow, an’ some olives, an’ some
-sardines, an’ some cheese, an’ you know yo’se’f, suh,
-dat money ain’t gwine ter las’ when you buy dat
-kin’ er doin’s.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, suh, we done mighty well whiles de
-money helt out, but ’tain’t court-week all de time,
-an’ when dat de case, money got ter come fum
-some’rs else ’sides sellin’ cakes an’ pies. Bimeby,
-Hamp he got work at de liberty stable, whar dey
-hire out hosses an’ board um. I call it a hoss tavern,
-suh, but Hamp, he ’low its a liberty stable. Anyhow,
-he got work dar, an’ dat sorter he’p out.
-Sometimes he’d growl bekaze I tuck his money fer
-ter he’p out my white folks, but when he got right
-mad I’d gi’ Miss Vallie de wink, an’ she’d say:
-‘Hampton, how’d you like ter have a little dram
-ter-night? You look like youer tired.’ I could
-a-hugged ’er fer de way she done it, she ’uz dat
-cute. An’ den Hamp, he’d grin an’ ’low, ‘I ain’t<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_161"></a>[161]</span>
-honin’ fer it, Miss Vallie, but ’twon’t do me no
-harm, an’ it may do me good.’</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 525px;" id="illus25">
-<img src="images/illus25.jpg" width="525" height="700" alt="" />
-<p class="caption">“Dat money ain’t gwine ter las’ when you buy
-dat kin’ er doin’s.”</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>“An’ den, suh, he’d set down, an’ atter he got
-sorter warmed up wid de dram, he’d kinder roll his
-eye and ’low, ‘Miss Vallie, she is a fine white
-’oman!’ Well, suh, ’tain’t long ’fo’ we had dat
-nigger man trained—done trained, bless yo’ soul!
-One day Miss Vallie had ter go ’cross town, an’ she
-went by de liberty stable whar Hamp wuz at, leastways,
-he seed ’er some’rs; an’ he come home dat
-night lookin’ like he wuz feelin’ bad. He ’fuse ter
-talk. Bimeby, atter he had his supper, he say, ‘I
-seed Miss Vallie down-town ter-day. She wuz wid
-Miss Irene, an’ dat ’ar frock she had on look mighty
-shabby.’ I ’low, ‘Well, it de bes’ she got. She
-ain’t got money like de Chippendales, an’ Miss
-Irene don’t keer how folks’ cloze look. She too
-much quality fer dat.’ Hamp say, ‘Whyn’t you
-take some er yo’ money an’ make Miss Vallie git er
-nice frock?’ I ’low, ‘Whar I got any money?
-Hamp he hit his pocket an’ say, ‘You got it right
-here.’</p>
-
-<p>“An’ sho’ ’nuff, suh, dat nigger man had a roll
-er money—mos’ twenty dollars. Some hoss
-drovers had come ’long an’ Hamp made dat money
-by trimmin’ up de ol’ mules dey had an’ makin’ um<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_162"></a>[162]</span>
-look young. He’s got de art er dat, suh, an’ dey
-paid ’im well. Dar wuz de money, but how wuz I
-gwine ter git it in Miss Vallie’s han’? I kin buy
-vittles an’ she not know whar dey come fum, but
-when it come ter buyin’ frocks—well, suh, hit
-stumped me. Dey wan’t but one way ter do it, an’
-I done it. I make like I wuz mad. I tuck de
-money an’ went in de house dar whar Miss Vallie
-wuz sewin’ an’ mendin’. I went stompin’ in, I did,
-an’ when I got in I started my tune.</p>
-
-<p>“I ’low, ‘Ef de Perdues gwine ter go scandalizin’
-deyse’f by trottin’ down town in broad daylight
-wid all kinder frocks on der back, I’m gwine ’way
-fum here; an’ I dun’ner but what I’ll go anyhow.
-’Tain’t bekaze dey’s any lack er money, fer here de
-money right here.’ Wid dat I slammed it down
-on de table. ‘Dar! take dat an’ git you a frock
-dat’ll make you look like sump’n when you git outside
-er dis house. An’ whiles you er gittin’, git
-sump’n for ter put on yo’ head!’”</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 700px;" id="illus26">
-<img src="images/illus26.jpg" width="700" height="550" alt="" />
-<p class="caption">Trimmin’ Up de Ol’ Mules.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>Whether it was by reason of a certain dramatic
-faculty inherent in her race that she was able to
-summon emotions at will, or whether it was mere
-unconscious reproduction, I am not prepared to say.
-But certain it is that, in voice and gesture, in tone
-and attitude, and in a certain passionate earnestness<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_163"></a>[163]</span>
-of expression, Aunt Minervy Ann built up the
-whole scene before my eyes with such power that I
-seemed to have been present when it occurred. I
-felt as if she had conveyed me bodily into the room
-to become a witness of the episode. She went on,
-still with a frown on her face and a certain violence
-of tone and manner:</p>
-
-<p>“I whipped ’roun’ de room a time er two, pickin’
-up de cheers an’ slammin’ um down ag’in, an’
-knockin’ things ’roun’ like I wuz mad. Miss Vallie
-put her sewin’ down an’ lay her han’ on de
-money. She ’low, ‘What’s dis, Aunt Minervy
-Ann?’ I say, ‘Hit’s money, dat what ’tis—nothin’
-but nasty, stinkin’ money! I wish dey wan’t
-none in de worl’ less’n I had a bairlful.’ She sorter
-fumble at de money wid ’er fingers. You dunno,
-suh, how white an’ purty an’ weak her han’ look ter
-me dat night. She ’low, ‘Aunt Minervy Ann, I
-can’t take dis.’ I blaze’ out at ’er, ‘You don’t
-haf’ter take it; you done got it! An’ ef you don’t
-keep it, I’ll rake up eve’y rag an’ scrap I got an’
-leave dis place. Now, you des’ try me!’”</p>
-
-<p>Again Aunt Minervy Ann summoned to her aid
-the passion of a moment that had passed away, and
-again I had the queer experience of seeming to witness
-the whole scene. She continued:</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_164"></a>[164]</span></p>
-
-<p>“Wid dat, I whipt out er de room an’ out er de
-house an’ went an’ sot down out dar in my house
-whar Hamp was at. Hamp, he ’low, ‘What she
-say?’ I say, ‘She ain’t had time ter say nothin’—I
-come ’way fum dar.’ He ’low, ‘You ain’t brung
-dat money back, is you?’ I say: ‘Does you think
-I’m a start naked fool?’ He ’low: ’Kaze ef you
-is, I’ll put it right spang in de fire here.’</p>
-
-<p>“Well, suh, I sot dar some little time, but eve’ything
-wuz so still in de house, bein’s Marse Tumlin
-done gone down town, dat I crope back an’ crope in
-fer ter see what Miss Vallie doin’. Well, suh, she
-wuz cryin’—settin’ dar cryin’. I ’low, ‘Honey,
-is I say anything fer ter hurt yo’ feelin’s?’ She
-blubber’ out, ‘You know you ain’t!’ an’ den she
-cry good-fashion.</p>
-
-<p>“Des ’bout dat time, who should come in but
-Marse Tumlin. He look at Miss Vallie an’ den he
-look at me. He say, ‘Valentine, what de matter?’
-I say, ‘It’s me! I’m de one! I made ’er cry. I
-done sump’n ter hurt ’er feelin’s.’ She ’low,
-‘’Tain’t so, an’ you know it. I’m des cryin’ bekaze
-you too good ter me.’</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 600px;" id="illus27">
-<img src="images/illus27.jpg" width="600" height="700" alt="" />
-<p class="caption">“She wuz cryin’—settin’ dar cryin’.”</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>“Well, suh, I had ter git out er dar fer ter keep
-fum chokin’. Marse Tumlin foller me out, an’
-right here on de porch, he ’low, ‘Minervy Ann,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_165"></a>[165]</span>
-nex’ time don’t be so dam good to ’er.’ I wuz doin’
-some snifflin’ myse’f ’bout dat time, an’ I ain’t keerin’
-what I say, so I stop an’ flung back at ’im, ‘<em>I’ll
-be des ez dam good ter ’er ez I please—I’m free!</em>’
-Well, suh, stidder hittin’ me, Marse Tumlin bust
-out laughin’, an’ long atter dat he’d laugh eve’y
-time he look at me, des like sump’n wuz ticklin’ ’im
-mighty nigh ter death.</p>
-
-<p>“I ’speck he must er tol’ ’bout dat cussin’ part,
-bekaze folks ’roun’ here done got de idee dat I’m a
-sassy an’ bad-tempered ’oman. Ef I had ter work
-fer my livin’, suh, I boun’ you I’d be a long time
-findin’ a place. Atter dat, Hamp, he got in de Legislatur’,
-an’ it sho wuz a money-makin’ place. Den
-we had eve’ything we wanted, an’ mo’ too, but
-bimeby de Legislatur’ gun out, an’ den dar we wuz,
-flat ez flounders, an’ de white folks don’t want ter
-hire Hamp des kaze he been ter de Legislatur’; but
-he got back in de liberty stable atter so long a time.
-Yit ’twan’t what you may call livin’.</p>
-
-<p>“All dat time, I hear Marse Tumlin talkin’ ter
-Miss Vallie ’bout what he call his wil’ lan’. He
-say he got two thousan’ acres down dar in de wire-grass,
-an’ ef he kin sell it, he be mighty glad ter do
-so. Well, suh, one day, long to’rds night, a two-hoss
-waggin driv’ in at de side gate an’ come in de<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_166"></a>[166]</span>
-back-yard. Ol’ Ben Sadler wuz drivin’, an’ he
-’low, ‘Heyo, Minervy Ann, whar you want deze
-goods drapped at?’ I say, ‘Hello yo’se’f, ef you
-wanter hello. What you got dar, an’ who do it
-b’long ter?’ He ’low, ‘Hit’s goods fer Major
-Tumlin Perdue, an’ whar does you want um
-drapped at?’ Well, suh, I ain’t know what ter say,
-but I run’d an’ ax’d Miss Vallie, an’ she say put um
-out anywheres ’roun’ dar, kaze she dunner nothin’
-’bout um. So ol’ Ben Sadler, he put um out, an’
-when I come ter look at um, dey wuz a bairl er
-sump’n, an’ a kaig er sump’n, an’ a box er sump’n.
-De bairl shuck like it mought be ’lasses, an’ de kaig
-shuck like it mought be dram, an’ de box hefted
-like it mought be terbarker. An’, sho’ ’nuff, dat
-what dey wuz—a bairl er sorghum syr’p, an’ a kaig
-er peach brandy, an’ a box er plug terbarker.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 700px;" id="illus28">
-<img src="images/illus28.jpg" width="700" height="550" alt="" />
-<p class="caption">“Here come a nigger boy leadin’ a bob-tail hoss.”</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>“I say right den, an’ Miss Vallie’ll tell you de
-same, dat Marse Tumlin done gone an’ swap off all
-his wil’ lan’, but Miss Vallie, she say no; he won’t
-never think er sech a thing; but, bless yo’ soul, suh,
-she wan’t nothin’ but a school-gal, you may say, an’
-she ain’t know no mo’ ’bout men folks dan what a
-weasel do. An den, right ’pon top er dat, here
-come a nigger boy leadin’ a bob-tail hoss. When I
-see dat, I dez good ez know’d dat de wil’ lan’ done<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_167"></a>[167]</span>
-been swap off, bekaze Marse Tumlin ain’t got nothin’
-fer ter buy all dem things wid, an’ I tell you
-right now, suh, I wuz rank mad, kaze what we want
-wid any ol’ bob-tail hoss? De sorghum mought do,
-an’ de dram kin be put up wid, an’ de terbarker got
-some comfort in it, but what de name er goodness
-we gwine ter do wid dat ol’ hoss, when we ain’t got
-hardly ’nuff vittles fer ter feed ourse’f wid? Dat
-what I ax Miss Vallie, an’ she say right pine-blank
-she dunno.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, suh, it’s de Lord’s trufe, I wuz dat mad
-I dunner what I say, an’ I want keerin’ nudder, bekaze
-I know how we had ter pinch an’ squeeze fer
-ter git ’long in dis house. But I went ’bout gittin’
-supper, an’ bimeby, Hamp, he come, an’ I tol’ ’im
-’bout de ol’ bob-tail hoss, an’ he went out an’ look
-at ’im. Atter while, here he come back laughin’.
-I say, ‘You well ter laugh at dat ol’ hoss.’ He ’low,
-‘I ain’t laughin’ at de hoss. I’m laughin’ at you.
-Gal, dat de finest hoss what ever put foot on de
-groun’ in dis town. Dat’s Marse Paul Conant’s
-trottin’ hoss. He’ll fetch fi’ hunder’d dollars any
-day. What he doin’ here?’ I up an’ tol’ ’im all
-I know’d, an’ he shuck his head; he ’low, ‘Gal, you
-lay low. Dey’s sump’n n’er behime all dat.’</p>
-
-<p>“What Hamp say sorter make me put on my<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_168"></a>[168]</span>
-studyin’-cap; but when you come ter look at it, suh,
-dey wan’t nothin’ ’tall fer me ter study ’bout. All
-I had ter do wuz ter try ter fin’ out what wuz behime
-it, an’ let it go at dat. When Marse Tumlin
-come home ter supper, I know’d sump’n wuz de
-matter wid ’im. I know’d it by his looks, suh. It’s
-sorter wid folks like ’tis wid chillun. Ef you keer
-sump’n ’bout um you’ll watch der motions, and ef
-you watch der motions dey don’t hatter tell you
-when sump’n de matter. He come in so easy, suh,
-dat Miss Vallie ain’t hear ’im, but I hear de do’
-screak, an’ I know’d ’twuz him. We wuz talkin’ an’
-gwine on at a mighty rate, an’ I know’d he done
-stop ter lisn’.</p>
-
-<p>“Miss Vallie, she ’low she ’speck somebody made
-’im a present er dem ar things. I say, ‘Uh-uh,
-honey! don’t you fool yo’se’f. Nobody ain’t
-gwine ter do dat. Our folks ain’t no mo’ like dey
-useter wuz, dan crabapples is like plums. Dey
-done come ter dat pass dat whatsomever dey gits
-der han’s on dey ’fuse ter turn it loose. All un
-um, ’cep’ Marse Tumlin Perdue. Dey ain’t no tellin’
-what he gun fer all dat trash. <em>Trash!</em> Hit’s
-wuss’n trash! I wish you’d go out dar an’ look at
-dat ol’ bob-tail hoss. Why dat ol’ hoss wuz stove
-up long ’fo’ de war. By rights he ought ter be in<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_169"></a>[169]</span>
-de bone-yard dis ve’y minnit. He won’t be here
-two whole days ’fo’ you’ll see de buzzards lined up
-out dar on de back fence waitin’, an’ dey won’t hatter
-wait long nudder. Ef dey sen’ any corn here
-fer ter feed dat bag er bones wid, I’ll parch it an’
-eat it myse’f ’fo’ he shill have it. Ef anybody
-’speck I’m gwine ter ’ten’ ter dat ol’ frame, deyer
-’speckin’ wid de wrong specks. I tell you dat right
-now.’</p>
-
-<p>“All dis time Marse Tumlin wuz stan’in’ out in
-de hall lis’nin’. Miss Vallie talk mighty sweet
-’bout it. She say, ‘Ef dey ain’t nobody else ter
-’ten’ de hoss, reckin I kin do it.’ I ’low, ‘My life
-er me, honey! de nex’ news you know you’ll be
-hirin’ out ter de liberty stable.’</p>
-
-<p>“Well, suh, my talk ’gun ter git so hot dat Marse
-Tumlin des had ter make a fuss. He fumbled wid
-de do’ knob, an’ den come walkin’ down de hall, an’
-by dat time I wuz in de dinin’-room. I walk
-mighty light, bekaze ef he say anything I want ter
-hear it. You can’t call it eave-drappin’, suh; hit
-look ter me dat ’twuz ez much my business ez ’twuz
-dern, an’ I ain’t never got dat idee out’n my head
-down ter dis day.</p>
-
-<p>“But Marse Tumlin ain’t say nothin’, ’cep’ fer
-ter ax Miss Vallie ef she feelin’ well, an’ how eve’ything<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_170"></a>[170]</span>
-wuz, but de minnit I hear ’im open his mouf
-I know’d he had trouble on his min’. I can’t tell
-you how I know’d it, suh, but dar ’twuz. Look like
-he tried to hide it, bekaze he tol’ a whole lot of
-funny tales ’bout folks, an’ ’twan’t long befo’ he
-had Miss Vallie laughin’ fit ter kill. But he ain’t
-fool me, suh.</p>
-
-<p>“Bimeby, Miss Vallie, she come in de dinin’-room
-fer ter look atter settin’ de table, bekaze fum
-a little gal she allers like ter have de dishes fix
-des so. She wuz sorter hummin’ a chune, like she
-ain’t want’ ter talk, but I ain’t let dat stan’ in my
-way.</p>
-
-<p>“I ’low, ‘I wish eve’ybody wuz like dat Mr. Paul
-Conant. I bet you right now he been down town
-dar all day makin’ money han’ over fist, des ez fast
-ez he can rake it in. I know it, kaze I does his
-washin’ and cleans up his room fer ’im.’</p>
-
-<p>“Miss Vallie say, ‘Well, what uv it? Money
-don’t make ’im no better’n anybody else.’ I ’low,
-‘Hit don’t make ’im no wuss; an’ den, ’sides dat,
-he ain’t gwine ter let nobody swindle ’im.’</p>
-
-<p>“By dat time, I hatter go out an’ fetch supper
-in, an’ ’tain’t take me no time, bekaze I wuz des’
-achin’ fer ter hear how Marse Tumlin come by dem
-ar contraptions an’ contrivances. An’ I stayed in<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_171"></a>[171]</span>
-dar ter wait on de table, which it ain’t need no waitin’
-on.</p>
-
-<p>“Atter while, I ’low, ‘Marse Tumlin, I like ter
-forgot ter tell you—yo’ things done come.’ He
-say, ‘What things, Minervy Ann?’ I ’low, ‘Dem
-ar contraptions, an’ dat ar bob-tail hoss. He look
-mighty lean an’ hongry, de hoss do, but Hamp he
-say dat’s bekaze he’s a high-bred hoss. He say dem
-ar high-bred hosses won’t take on no fat, no matter
-how much you feed um.’</p>
-
-<p>“Marse Tumlin sorter drum on de table. Atter
-while he ’low, ‘Dey done come, is dey, Minervy
-Ann?’ I say, ‘Yasser, dey er here right now.
-Hamp puts it down dat dat ar hoss one er de gayliest
-creatur’s what ever make a track in dis town.’</p>
-
-<p>“Well, suh, ’tain’t no use ter tell you what else
-wuz said, kaze ’twan’t much. I seed dat Marse
-Tumlin want gwine ter talk ’bout it, on account er
-bein’ ’fear’d he’d hurt Miss Vallie’s feelin’s ef he
-tol’ ’er dat he done swap off all dat wil’ lan’ fer dem
-ar things an’ dat ar bob-tail hoss. Dat what he
-done. Yasser! I hear ’im sesso atterwards. He
-swap it off ter Marse Paul Conant.</p>
-
-<p>“I thank my Lord it come out all right, but it
-come mighty nigh bein’ de ruination er de fambly.”</p>
-
-<p>“How was that?” I inquired.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_172"></a>[172]</span></p>
-
-<p>“Dat what I’m gwine ter tell you, suh. Right
-atter supper dat night, Marse Tumlin say he got ter
-go down town fer ter see a man on some business, an’
-he ax me ef I won’t stay in de house dar wid Miss
-Vallie. ’Twa’n’t no trouble ter me, bekaze I’d ’a’
-been on de place anyhow, an’ so when I got de
-kitchen cleaned up an’ de things put away, I went
-back in de house whar Miss Vallie wuz at. Marse
-Tumlin wuz done gone.</p>
-
-<p>“Miss Vallie, she sot at de table doin’ some kind
-er rufflin’, an’ I sot back ag’in de wall in one er dem
-ar high-back cheers. What we said I’ll never tell
-you, suh, bekaze I’m one er deze kinder folks what
-ain’t no sooner set down an’ git still dan dey goes
-ter noddin’. Dat’s me. Set me down in a cheer,
-high-back er low-back, an’ I’m done gone! I kin
-set here on de step an’ keep des ez wide-’wake ez a
-skeer’d rabbit, but set me down in a cheer—well,
-suh, I’d like ter see anybody keep me ’wake when
-dat’s de case.</p>
-
-<p>“Dar I sot in dat ar high-back cheer, Miss Vallie
-rufflin’ an’ flutin’ sump’n, an’ tryin’ ter make me
-talk, an’ my head rollin’ ’roun’ like my neck done
-broke. Bimeby, <em>blam! blam!</em> come on de do’.
-We got one er dem ar jinglin’ bells now, suh, but in
-dem times we had a knocker, an’ it soun’ like de<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_173"></a>[173]</span>
-roof fallin’ in. I like ter jumped out’n my skin.
-Miss Vallie drapped her conflutements an’ ’low,
-‘What in de worl’! Aunt Minervy Ann, go ter
-de do’.’</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 600px;" id="illus29">
-<img src="images/illus29.jpg" width="600" height="700" alt="" />
-<p class="caption">“He been axin’ me lots ’bout Miss Vallie.”</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>“Well, suh, I went, but I ain’t had no heart in
-it, bekaze I ain’t know who it mought be, an’ whar
-dey come fum, an’ what dey want. But I went.
-’Twuz me er Miss Vallie, an’ I want gwine ter let
-dat chile go, not dat time er night, dough ’twa’n’t so
-mighty late.</p>
-
-<p>“I open de do’ on de crack, I did, an’ ’low, ‘Who
-dat?’ Somebody make answer, ‘Is de Major in,
-Aunt Minervy Ann?’ an’ I know’d right den it wuz
-Marse Paul Conant. An’ it come over me dat he
-had sump’n ter do wid sendin’ er dem contraptions,
-mo’ ’speshually dat ar bob-tail hoss. An’ den, too,
-suh, lots quicker’n I kin tell it, hit come over me
-dat he been axin’ me lots ’bout Miss Vallie. All
-come ’cross my min’, suh, whiles I pullin’ de do’
-open.</p>
-
-<p>“I ’low, I did, ‘No, suh; Marse Tumlin gone
-down town fer ter look atter some business, but he
-sho ter come back terreckly. Won’t you come in,
-suh, an’ wait fer ’im?’ He sorter flung his head
-back an’ laugh, saft like, an’ say, ‘I don’t keer ef I
-do, Aunt Minervy Ann.’</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_174"></a>[174]</span></p>
-
-<p>“I ’low, ‘Walk right in de parlor, suh, an’ I’ll
-make a light mos’ ’fo’ you kin turn ’roun’.’ He
-come in, he did, an’ I lit de lamp, an’ time I lit ’er
-she ’gun ter smoke. Well, suh, he tuck dat lamp,
-run de wick up an’ down a time er two, an’ dar she
-wuz, bright ez day.</p>
-
-<p>“When I went back in de room whar Miss Vallie
-wuz at, she wuz stan’in’ dar lookin’ skeer’d. She
-say, ‘Who dat?’ I ’low, ‘Hit’s Marse Paul Conant,
-dat’s who ’tis.’ She say, ‘What he want?’ I
-’low, ‘Nothin’ much; he does come a-courtin’.
-Better jump up an’ not keep ’im waitin’.’</p>
-
-<p>“Well, suh, you could ’a’ knock’d ’er down wid
-a fedder. She stood dar wid ’er han’ on ’er th’oat
-takin’ short breffs, des like a little bird does when it
-flies in de winder an’ dunner how ter fly out ag’in.</p>
-
-<p>“Bimeby, she say, ‘Aunt Minervy Ann, you
-ought ter be ’shame or yo’se’f! I know dat man
-when I see ’im, an’ dat’s all.’ I ’low, ‘Honey, you
-know mighty well he ain’t come callin’. But he
-wanter see Marse Tumlin, an’ dey ain’t nothin’ fer
-ter hender you fum gwine in dar an’ makin’ ’im feel
-at home while’s he waitin’.’ She sorter study
-awhile, an’ den she blush up. She say, ‘I dunno
-whedder I ought ter.’</p>
-
-<p>“Well, suh, dat settled it. I know’d by de way<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_175"></a>[175]</span>
-she look an’ talk dat she don’t need no mo’ ’swadin’.
-I say, ‘All right, honey, do ez you please; but it’s
-yo’ house; you er de mist’iss; an’ it’ll look mighty
-funny ef dat young man got ter set in dar by hisse’f
-an’ look at de wall whiles he waitin’ fer Marse Tumlin.
-I dunner what he’ll say, kaze I ain’t never
-hear ’im talk ’bout nobody; but I know mighty well
-he’ll do a heap er thinkin’.’</p>
-
-<p>“Des like I tell you, suh—she skipped ’roun’
-dar, an’ flung on ’er Sunday frock, shuck out ’er
-curls, an’ sorter fumble’ ’roun’ wid some ribbons,
-an’ dar she wuz, lookin’ des ez fine ez a fiddle, ef not
-finer. Den she swep’ inter de parlor, an’, you
-mayn’t b’lieve it, suh, but she mighty nigh tuck de
-man’s breff ’way. Mon, she wuz purty, an’ she
-ain’t do no mo’ like deze eve’y-day gals dan nothin’.
-When she start ’way fum me, she wuz a gal. By
-de time she walk up de hall an’ sweep in dat parlor,
-she wuz a grown ’oman. De blush what she had
-on at fust stayed wid ’er an’ look like ’twuz er
-natchual color, an’ her eyes shine, suh, like she had
-fire in um. I peeped at ’er, suh, fum behime de curtains
-in de settin’-room, an’ I know what I’m talkin’
-’bout. It’s de Lord’s trufe, suh, ef de men folks
-could tote derse’f like de wimmen, an’ do one way
-whiles dey feelin’ annuder way, dey wouldn’t be no<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_176"></a>[176]</span>
-livin’ in de worl’. You take a school gal, suh, an’
-she kin fool de smartest man what ever trod shoe
-leather. He may talk wid ’er all day an’ half de
-night, an’ he never is ter fin’ out what she thinkin’
-’bout. Sometimes de gals fools deyse’f, suh, but
-dat’s mighty seldom.</p>
-
-<p>“I dunner what all dey say, kaze I ain’t been in
-dar so mighty long ’fo’ I wuz noddin’, but I did
-hear Marse Paul say he des drapt in fer ’pollygize
-’bout a little joke he played on Marse Tumlin. Miss
-Vallie ax what wuz de joke, an’ he ’low dat Marse
-Tumlin wuz banterin’ folks fer ter buy his wil’
-lan’; an’ Marse Paul ax ’im what he take fer it, an’
-Marse Tumlin ’low he’ll take anything what he can
-chaw, sop, er drink. Dem wuz de words—chaw,
-sop, er drink. Wid dat, Marse Paul say he’d gi’
-’im a box er terbarker, a bairl er syr’p, an’ a kaig er
-peach brandy an’ th’ow in his buggy-hoss fer good
-medjer. Marse Tumlin say ‘done’ an’ dey shuck
-han’s on it. Dat what Marse Paul tol’ Miss Vallie,
-an he ’low he des done it fer fun, kaze he done
-looked inter dat wil’ lan’, an’ he ’low she’s wuff a
-pile er money.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 700px;" id="illus30">
-<img src="images/illus30.jpg" width="700" height="600" alt="" />
-<p class="caption">“Marse Tumlin ’low he’ll take anything what he can chaw, sop, er drink.”</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>“Well, suh, ’bout dat time, I ’gun ter nod, an’
-de fus news I know’d Miss Vallie wuz whackin’
-’way on de peanner, an’ it look like ter me she wuz<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_177"></a>[177]</span>
-des tryin’ ’erse’f. By dat time, dey wuz gettin’
-right chummy, an’ so I des curl up on de flo’, an’
-dream dat de peanner chunes wuz comin’ out’n a
-bairl des like ’lasses.</p>
-
-<p>“When I waked up, Marse Paul Conant done
-gone, an’ Marse Tumlin ain’t come, an’ Miss Vallie
-wuz settin’ dar in de parlor lookin’ up at de ceilin’
-like she got some mighty long thoughts. Her color
-wuz still up. I look at ’er an’ laugh, an’ she made
-a mouf at me, an’ I say ter myse’f, ‘Hey! sump’n
-de matter here, sho,’ but I say out loud, ‘Marse
-Paul Conant sho gwine ter ax me ef you ain’t had a
-dram.’ She laugh an’ say, ‘What answer you
-gwine ter make?’ I ’low, ‘I’ll bow an’ say, “No,
-suh; I’m de one dat drinks all de dram fer de fambly.”’</p>
-
-<p>“Well, suh, dat chile sot in ter laughin’, an’ she
-laugh an’ laugh twel she went inter highsterics.
-She wuz keyed up too high, ez you mought say, an’
-dat’s de way she come down ag’in. Bimeby, Marse
-Tumlin come, an’ Miss Vallie, she tol’ ’m ’bout how
-Marse Paul done been dar; an’ he sot dar, he did,
-an’ hummed an’ haw’d, an’ done so funny dat,
-bimeby, I ’low, ‘Well, folks, I’ll hatter tell you
-good-night,’ an’ wid dat I went out.”</p>
-
-<p>At this point Aunt Minervy leaned forward,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_178"></a>[178]</span>
-clasped her hands over her knees, and shook her
-head. When she took up the thread of her narrative,
-if it can be called such, the tone of her voice
-was more subdued, almost confidential, in fact.</p>
-
-<p>“Nex’ mornin’ wuz my wash-day, suh, an’ ’bout
-ten o’clock, when I got ready, dey want no bluin’ in
-de house an’ mighty little soap. I hunted high an’
-I hunted low, but no bluin’ kin I fin’. An’ dat
-make me mad, bekaze ef I hatter go down town
-atter de bluin’, my wash-day’ll be broke inter.
-But ’tain’t no good fer ter git mad, bekaze I wuz
-bleeze ter go atter de bluin’. So I tighten up my
-head-hankcher, an’ flung a cape on my shoulders
-an’ put out.</p>
-
-<p>“I ’speck you know how ’tis, suh. You can’t go
-down town but what you’ll see nigger wimmen
-stan’in’ out in de front yards lookin’ over de palin’s.
-Dey all know’d me an’ I know’d dem, an’ de las’
-blessed one un um hatter hail me ez I go by, an’ I
-hatter stop an’ pass de time er day, kaze ef I’d ’a’
-whipt on by, dey’d ’a’ said I wuz gwine back bofe
-on my church an’ on my color. I dunner how long
-dey kep’ me, but time I got ter Proctor’s sto’, I
-know’d I’d been on de way too long.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 625px;" id="illus31">
-<img src="images/illus31.jpg" width="625" height="700" alt="" />
-<p class="caption">“I hatter stop an’ pass de time er day.”</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>“I notice a crowd er men out dar, some settin’
-an’ some stan’in’, but I run’d in, I did, an’ de young<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_179"></a>[179]</span>
-man what do de clerkin’, he foller me in an’ ax what
-I want. I say I want a dime’s wuff er bluin’, an’
-fer ter please, suh, wrop it up des ez quick ez he kin.
-I tuck notice dat while he wuz gittin’ it out’n de
-box, he sorter stop like he lis’nin’ an’ den ag’in,
-whiles he had it in de scoop des ready fer ter drap
-it in de scales, he helt his han’ an’ wait. Den I
-know’d he wuz lis’nin’.</p>
-
-<p>“Dat makes me lis’n, an’ den I hear Marse Tumlin
-talkin’, an’ time I hear ’im I know’d he wuz errytated.
-Twa’n’t bekaze he wuz talkin’ loud, suh,
-but ’twuz bekaze he wuz talkin’ level. When he
-talk loud, he feelin’ good. When he talk low, an’
-one word soun’ same ez anudder, den somebody
-better git out’n his way. I lef’ de counter an’ step
-ter de do’ fer ter see what de matter wuz betwix’
-um.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, suh, dar wuz Marse Tumlin stan’in’ dar
-close ter Tom Perryman. Marse Tumlin ’low,
-‘Maybe de law done ’pinted you my gyardeen.
-How you know I been swindled?’ Tom Perryman
-say, ‘Bekaze I hear you say he bought yo’ wil’
-lan’ fer a little er nothin’. He’ll swindle you ef
-you trade wid ’im, an’ you done trade wid ’im.’
-Marse Tumlin, ’low, ‘Is Paul Conant ever swindle
-<em>you</em>?’ Tom Perryman say, ‘No, he ain’t, an’ ef<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_180"></a>[180]</span>
-he wuz ter I’d give ’im a kickin’.’ Marse Tumlin
-’low, ‘Well, you know you is a swindler, an’ nobody
-ain’t kick you. How come dat?’ Tom
-Perryman say, ‘Ef you say I’m a swindler, you’re
-a liar.’</p>
-
-<p>“Well, suh, de man ain’t no sooner say dat dan
-<em>bang!</em> went Marse Tumlin’s pistol, an’ des ez it
-banged Marse Paul Conant run ’twix’ um, an’ de
-ball went right spang th’oo de collar-bone an’ sorter
-sideways th’oo de p’int er de shoulder-blade. Marse
-Tumlin drapt his pistol an’ cotch ’im ez he fell an’
-knelt down dar by ’im, an’ all de time dat ar Tom
-Perryman wuz stan’in’ right over um wid his pistol
-in his han’. I squall out, I did, ‘Whyn’t some er
-you white men take dat man pistol ’way fum ’im?
-Don’t you see what he fixin’ ter do?’</p>
-
-<p>“I run’d at ’im, an’ he sorter flung back wid his
-arm, an’ when he done dat somebody grab ’im fum
-behime. All dat time Marse Tumlin wuz axin’
-Marse Paul Conant ef he hurt much. I hear ’im
-say, ‘I wouldn’t ’a’ done it fer de worl’, Conant—not
-fer de worl’.’ Den de doctor, he come up, an’
-Marse Tumlin, he pester de man twel he hear ’im
-say, ‘Don’t worry, Major; dis boy’ll live ter be a
-older man dan you ever will.’ Den Marse Tumlin
-got his pistol an’ hunt up an’ down fer dat ar Tom<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_181"></a>[181]</span>
-Perryman, but he done gone. I seed ’im when he
-got on his hoss.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 550px;" id="illus32">
-<img src="images/illus32.jpg" width="550" height="700" alt="" />
-<p class="caption">“Hunt up an’ down fer dat ar Tom Perryman.”</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>“I say to Marse Tumlin, ‘Ain’t you des ez well
-ter fetch Marse Paul Conant home whar we all kin
-take keer uv ’im?’ He ’low, ‘Dat’s a <em>fack</em>. Go
-home an’ tell yo’ Miss Vallie fer ter have de big
-room fixed up time we git dar wid ’im.’ I say,
-‘Humph! I’ll fix it myse’f; I know’d I ain’t
-gwine ter let Miss Vallie do it.’</p>
-
-<p>“Well, suh, ’tain’t no use fer ter tell yer de rest.
-Dar’s dat ar baby in dar, an’ what mo’ sign does you
-want ter show you dat it all turned out des like one
-er dem ol’-time tales?”</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_182"></a>[182]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="VIII">VIII<br />
-<span class="smaller">THE CASE OF MARY ELLEN</span></h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>It came to pass in due time that Atlanta, following
-the example of Halcyondale, organized a fair.
-It was called the Piedmont Exposition, and, as
-might be supposed, Aunt Minervy Ann was among
-those attracted to the city by the event. She came
-to see whether the fair was a bigger one than that
-held at Halcyondale. Naturally enough she made
-my house her headquarters, and her coming was
-fortunately timed, for the cook, taking advantage
-of the heavily increased demand for kitchen servants,
-caused by the pressure of strangers in the city,
-had informed us that if we wanted her services we
-could either double her wages or dispense with her
-entirely. It was a very cunningly prepared plan,
-for there was company in the house, friends from
-middle Georgia, who had come to spend a week
-while the exposition was going on, and there would
-have been no alternative if Aunt Minervy Ann,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_183"></a>[183]</span>
-her Sunday hat sitting high on her head, had not
-walked in the door.</p>
-
-<p>“I hope all er you-all is well,” she remarked.
-“Ef you ain’t been frettin’ an’ naggin’ one an’er
-den my nose done been knocked out er j’int, kaze I
-know sump’n ’bleeze ter be de matter.”</p>
-
-<p>The truth is, the lady of the house was blazing
-mad with the cook, and I was somewhat put out
-myself, for the ultimatum of the servant meant
-robbery. Aunt Minervy Ann was soon in possession
-of the facts. At first she was properly indignant,
-but in a moment she began to laugh.</p>
-
-<p>“Des come out on de back porch wid me,
-please’m. All I ax you is ter keep yo’ face straight,
-and don’t say a word less’n I ax you sump’n’.” She
-flung her hat and satchel in a corner and sallied out.
-“I don’t blame cooks fer wantin’ ter quit when
-dey’s so much gwine on up town,” she remarked, in
-a loud voice, as she went out at the back door. “Dey
-stan’ by a stove hot wedder er col’, an’ dey ain’t got
-time ter go ter buryin’s. But me! I don’t min’ de
-work; I’m ol’ an’ tough. Why, de well ain’t so
-mighty fur fum de steps, an’ dar’s de wood-cellar
-right dar. How much you pay yo’ cooks, ma’am?”</p>
-
-<p>“What wages have you been getting?” asked
-the lady of the house.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_184"></a>[184]</span></p>
-
-<p>“Wellum, down dar whar I come fum dey been
-payin’ me four dollars a mont’—dat de reason I
-come up here. Ef you gi’ me six I’ll stay an’ you
-won’t begrudge me de money. Tu’n me loose in de
-kitchen an’ I’m at home, ma’am—plum’ at home.”</p>
-
-<p>The lady seemed to be hesitating, and the silence
-in the kitchen was oppressive.</p>
-
-<p>“I’ll decide to-day,” she remarked. “Our cook
-is a good one, but she has been thinking of resting
-awhile. If she goes, you shall have the place.”</p>
-
-<p>“Den she ain’t gone?” cried Aunt Minervy
-Ann. “Well, I don’t want de place less’n she goes.
-I ain’t gwine ter run my color out’n no job ef I kin
-he’p it. We got ’nuff ter contend wid des dry so.”
-Then she turned and looked in the kitchen. “Ain’t
-dat Julie Myrick?” she asked.</p>
-
-<p>“How you know me?” cried the cook. “I
-b’lieve in my soul dat’s Miss ’Nervy Ann Perdue!”</p>
-
-<p>With that Aunt Minervy Ann went into the kitchen,
-and the two old acquaintances exchanged
-reminiscences for a quarter of an hour. After
-awhile she came back in the sitting-room, stared
-at us with a half-indignant, half-quizzical expression
-on her face, and then suddenly collapsed, falling
-on the floor near a couch, and laughing as only
-an old-time negro can laugh. Then she sat bolt<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_185"></a>[185]</span>
-upright, and indignation, feigned or real, swept the
-smiles from her countenance, as if they had been
-suddenly wiped out with a sponge.</p>
-
-<p>“You know what you got in dat kitchen dar?
-You ain’t got nothin’ in de worl’ in dar but a Injun
-merlatter; dat zackly what you got. I know’d her
-daddy and I know’d her mammy. Ol’ one-legged
-Billy Myrick wuz her daddy, an’ he wuz one part
-white an’ one part nigger, an’ one part Injun.
-Don’t tell me ’bout dem kind er tribes. Dey ain’t
-no good in um. Hamp’ll tell you dat hisse’f, an’
-he b’longed ter de Myrick ’state. Merlatter is bad
-’nuff by itse’f, but when you put Injun wid it—well,
-you may hunt high an’ you may hunt low,
-but you can’t git no wuss mixtry dan dat. I tell
-you right now,” Aunt Minervy Ann went on, “I
-never did see but one merlatter dat wuz wuff a
-pinch er snuff, an’ she wuz so nigh white dat de ol’
-boy hisse’f couldn’t ’a’ tol’ de difffunce. Seem like
-you must ’a’ knowed Mary Ellen Tatum, suh?”
-she suggested, appealing to my memory.</p>
-
-<p>I had heard the name somehow and somewhere,
-but it was as vague in my recollection as a dream.</p>
-
-<p>“Maybe you didn’t know ’er, suh, but she was
-born an’ bred down whar I cum fum. Dat’s so!
-She wuz done gone fum dar when you come. Wuz<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_186"></a>[186]</span>
-ol’ Fed Tatum dead? Yasser! ol’ Fed died de year
-dey quit der battlin’, an’ ’twuz de year atter dat
-when you come; an’ you sho did look puny, suh,
-ter what you does now. Well, ol’ Fed Tatum, he
-wuz one er deze yer quare creeturs. He made
-money han’ over fist, an’ he had a sight er niggers.
-He had a place sorter close ter town, but he didn’t
-stay on it; an’ he had a house not fur fum Marse
-Bolivar Blasengame, but he’d des go out ter his
-place endurin’ er de day, an’ den he’d come back,
-git his vittles, an’ walk ter de tavern an’ dar he’d
-take a cheer an’ go off by hisse’f, an’ set wid his
-chin in his coat collar, an’ look at his foots an’
-make his thum’s turn somersets over one an’er. Ef
-you wanted ter talk wid ol’ Fed Tatum, you’d hafter
-go whar he wuz settin’ at an’ do all de talkin’ yo’se’f.
-He’d des set back dar an’ grunt an’ maybe
-not know who you wuz. But when he come huntin’
-you up, you better watch out. Dey say dey ain’t
-nobody ever is make a trade wid ol’ Fed but what
-dey come out at de little een’ er de horn.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, ol’ Fed had a nigger ’oman keepin’ house
-fer ’im, an’ doin’ de cookin’ and washin’. I say
-‘nigger,’ suh, but she wuz mighty nigh white. She
-wuz Mary Ellen’s mammy, an’ Mary Ellen wuz
-des white ez anybody, I don’t keer whar dey cum<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_187"></a>[187]</span>
-fum, an’ she wuz purty fum de word go. Dey
-wa’n’t never no time, suh, atter Mary Ellen wuz
-born dat she wa’n’t de purtiest gal in dat town. I
-des natchully ’spises merlatters, but dey wuz sump’n
-’bout Mary Ellen dat allers made a lump come in
-my goozle. I tuck ter dat chile, suh, de minnit I
-laid my eyes on ’er. She made me think ’bout
-folks I done forgot ef I ever know’d um, an’ des de
-sight un ’er made me think ’bout dem ol’ time
-chunes what mighty nigh break yo’ heart when you
-hear um played right. Dat wuz Mary Ellen up an’
-down.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, suh, when Mary Ellen got so she could
-trot ’roun’, old Fed Tatum sorter woke up. He
-stayed at home mo’, and when de sun wuz shinin’
-you might see ’im any time setting in his peazzer
-wid Mary Ellen playin’ roun’, er walkin’ out in de
-back yard wid Mary Ellen trottin’ at his heels.
-I’m telling you de start-naked trufe—by de time
-dat chile wuz six-year ol’ she could read; yasser!
-read out’n a book, an’ read good. I seed her do it
-wid my own eyes, an’ heer’d ’er wid my own years.
-’Tain’t none er dish yer readin’ an’ stoppin’ like you
-hear de school chillun gwine on; no, suh! ’Twuz
-de natchual readin’ right ’long. An’ by de time
-she wuz eight, dey wa’n’t no words in no book in<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_188"></a>[188]</span>
-dat town but what she could take an’ chaw um
-same as lawyers in de cote-house. Mo’ dan dat,
-suh, she could take a pencil, an’ draw yo’ likeness
-right ’fo’ yo’ face.</p>
-
-<p>“’Long ’bout dat time she struck up wid little
-Sally Blasengame, an’ when dem two got tergedder
-dar wuz de pick er de town ez fer ez de chillun
-went. I don’t say it, suh, bekaze Marse Bolivar
-was Marse Tumlin’s br’er-in-law—dey married
-sisters—but his little gal Sally wuz ez fine ez split
-silk. Mary Ellen had black hair an’ big black eyes,
-an’ Sally had yaller hair an’ big blue eyes. Atter
-dey come ter know one an’er dey wa’n’t a day but
-what dem two chillun wuz playin’ tergedder. How
-many an’ many is de times I seed um gwine ’long
-wid der arms ’roun’ one an’er!</p>
-
-<p>“Well, one day atter dey been playin’ tergedder
-a right smart whet Marse Bolivar ’gun ter make inquirements
-’bout Mary Ellen, an’ when he foun’
-out who an’ what she wuz, he went out whar dey
-at an’ tol’ her she better go home. I wuz right dar
-in de back yard when he said de word. Mary Ellen
-stood an’ looked at ’im, an’ den she picked up her
-bonnet an’ marched out’n de yard holdin’ her head
-up; she wuz twelve year ol’ by den.</p>
-
-<p>“Sally seed Mary Ellen go out, an’ she turn<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_189"></a>[189]</span>
-’roun’ on her daddy, her face ez white ez a sheet.
-Den her whole frame ’gun ter shake. She ’low,
-‘I been lovin’ you all dis time, an’ I didn’t know
-you could be so mean an’ low-life.’ She flung at
-’im de fust words dat pop in her min’.</p>
-
-<p>“Marse Bolivar say, ‘Why, honey! Why, precious!’
-an’ start ter put his arm ’roun’ ’er. She
-flung fum ’im, she did, an’ cry out, ‘Don’t you
-never say dem words ter me no mo’ ez long ez you
-live, an’ don’t you never tetch me no mo’.’ Den
-she seed me, an’ she come runnin’ des like she wuz
-skeer’d. She holler, ‘Take me ’way! take me
-’way! Don’t let ’im tetch me!’ Talk ’bout temper—talk
-’bout venom! All dem Blasengames had
-it, an’ when you hurt de feelin’s er dat kind er folks
-dey are hurted sho ’nuff. Marse Bolivar couldn’t
-’a’ looked no wuss ef somebody had ’a’ spit in his
-face while his han’s tied. You talk ’bout people
-lovin’ der chillun, but you dunner nothin’ ’tall
-’bout it twel you see Marse Bolivar lovin’ Sally.
-Why, de very groun’ she walkt on wuz diffunt ter
-him fum any udder groun’. He wuz ready ter die
-fer ’er forty times a day, an’ yit here she wuz wid
-her feelin’s hurt so bad dat she won’t let ’im put
-his han’s on ’er. An’ he ain’t try; he had sense
-’nuff fer dat. He des walk ’roun’ and kick up de<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_190"></a>[190]</span>
-gravel wid de heel er his boots. But Sally, she had
-’er face hid in my frock, an’ she ain’t so much ez
-look at ’im. Bimeby he went in de house, but he
-ain’t stay dar long. He come out an’ look at Sally,
-an’ try ter make ’er talk, but she erfuse ter say a
-word, an’ atter while he went on up-town.</p>
-
-<p>“Ef dey ever wuz hard-headed folks, suh, dat
-wuz de tribe. He went up-town, but he ain’t stay
-long, an’ when he come back he foun’ Sally in de
-house cryin’ an’ gwine on. She won’t tell what de
-matter, an’ she won’t let nobody do nothin’ fer ’er.
-Now, ef she’d ’a’ been mine, suh, I’d ’a’ frailed ’er
-out den an’ dar, an’ I’d ’a’ kep’ on frailin’ ’er out
-twel she’d ’a’ vowed dat she never know’d no gal
-name Mary Ellen. Dat’s me! But Marse Bolivar
-ain’t look at it dat away, an’ de man what never
-knuckle ter no human bein’, rich er po’, high er
-low, had ter knuckle ter dat chile, an’ she wa’n’t
-much bigger dan yo’ two fists.</p>
-
-<p>“So bimeby he say, ‘Honey, I’m gwine atter
-Mary Ellen, ef dat’s her name, an’ she can stay
-here all day an’ all night, too, fer what I keer.’</p>
-
-<p>“Sally ’low, ‘She sha’n’t come here! she sha’n’t!
-I don’t want nobody ter come here dat’s got ter git
-der feelin’s hurted eve’y time dey come.’</p>
-
-<p>“Right dar, suh, is whar my han’ would ’a’ come<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_191"></a>[191]</span>
-down hard; but Marse Bolivar, he knuckle. He
-say, ‘Well, honey, you’ll hafter fergive me dis
-time. I’ll go fetch ’er ef she’ll come, an’ ef she
-won’t ’tain’t my fault.’</p>
-
-<p>“So out he went. I dunner how he coaxed Mary
-Ellen, but she say he tol’ ’er dat Sally wuz feelin’
-mighty bad, an’ wuz ’bleeze ter see ’er; an’ Mary
-Ellen, havin’ mo’ heart dan min’, come right along.
-An’ Marse Bolivar wuz happy fer ter see Sally
-happy.</p>
-
-<p>“Dis wuz long ’fo’ de battlin’, suh, but even dat
-fur back dey wuz talkin’ ’bout war. Ol’ Fed Tatum
-wuz a mighty long-headed man, an’ he know’d
-mighty well dat ef Mary Ellen stayed dar whar she
-wuz at, she won’t have no mo’ show dan a chicken
-wid its head wrung off. So he fixed ’er up an’
-packed ’er off up dar whar de Northrons is at. He’d
-’a’ sont her mammy wid ’er, but she say no; she’d
-be in de way; folks would ’spicion what de matter
-wuz; an’ so she shet her mouf an’ stayed. Ef Mary
-Ellen had ’a’ been my chile, suh, I’d ’a’ gone wid
-’er ef I had ter claw my way wid my naked han’s
-thoo forty miles er brick wall. But her mammy
-was diffunt; she stayed an’ pined.</p>
-
-<p>“Now, ef anybody want pinin’ done dey’ll hafter
-go ter somebody else ’sides ol’ Minervy Ann Perdue.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_192"></a>[192]</span>
-When you see me pinin’, suh, you may know
-my tongue done cut out an’ my han’s pairlized. Ef
-Mary Ellen had ’a’ been my chile dey’d ’a’ been
-murder done, suh. I’d ’a’ cotch ol’ Fed Tatum by
-what little hair he had an’ I’d ’a’ ruint ’im; an’ ez
-’twuz, I come mighty nigh havin’ a fight wid ’im.
-An’ ef I had—<em>ef I had</em>——”</p>
-
-<p>Aunt Minervy Ann was on her feet. Her right
-arm was raised high in the air, and her eyes blazed
-with passion. It was not a glimpse of temper she
-gave us, but a fleeting portrayal of mother-love at
-white heat. She had been carried away by her
-memory, and had carried us away with her; but she
-caught herself, as it were, in the act, laughed, and
-sat down again by the sofa, caressing it with both
-arms. Presently she resumed her narrative, addressing
-herself this time to the lady of the house.
-It was a stroke of rare tact that had its effect.</p>
-
-<p>“Wellum, Mary Ellen wa’n’t my chile, an’ ol’
-Fed Tatum sont ’er off up dar ’mongst de Northrons;
-an’ ’bout de time de two sides ’gun der battlin’
-he sol’ some lan’ an’ sont her ’nuff money ter
-las’ ’er twel she got all de larnin’ she want. Den
-de war come, an’ nobody ain’t hear no mo’ ’bout
-Mary Ellen. Dey fit an’ dey fout, an’ dey fout
-an’ dey fit, an’ den, bimeby, dey quit, an’ fer long<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_193"></a>[193]</span>
-days nobody didn’t know whedder ter walk backerds
-er go forruds.</p>
-
-<p>“Ol’ Fed Tatum wuz one er dem kinder folks,
-ma’am, what you been seein’ an’ knowin’ so long
-dat you kinder git de idee dey er gwine ter stay des
-like dey is; but one day ol’ Fed Tatum fetch’d a
-grunt an’ went ter bed, an’ de nex’ day he fetch’d
-a groan an’ died. He sho did. An’ den when dey
-come ter look into what he had, dey foun’ dat he
-ain’t got nothin’ he kin call his own but a little cabin
-in one een’ er town, an’ dis went ter Mary Ellen’s
-mammy.</p>
-
-<p>“I tell you now, ma’am, dat ’oman tried me.
-She wuz long an’ lank an’ slabsided, an’ she went
-’bout wid ’er mouf shet, an’ ’er cloze lookin’ like
-somebody had flung um at ’er. I like ter hear folks
-talk, myself, an’ ef dey can’t do nothin’ else I like
-ter see um show dey temper. But dat ’oman, she
-des walk ’roun’ an’ not open her mouf fum mornin’
-twel night, less’n you ax ’er sump’n. I tried ter git
-her ter talk ’bout Mary Ellen, but she ain’t know
-no mo’ ’bout Mary Ellen dan a rabbit.</p>
-
-<p>“I dunner but what we’d ’a’ got in a fuss, ma’am,
-kaze dat ’oman sho did try me, but ’long ’bout dat
-time Marse Bolivar’s gal tuck sick, an’ ’twa’n’t long
-’fo’ she died. ’Twuz a mighty pity, too, kaze dat<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_194"></a>[194]</span>
-chile would ’a’ made a fine ’oman—none better.
-’Long todes de las’ she got ter gwine on ’bout Mary
-Ellen. Look like she could see Mary Ellen in de
-fever-dreams, an’ she’d laugh an’ go on des like
-she useter when she wuz a little bit er gal.</p>
-
-<p>“Wellum, when dat chile died Marse Bolivar
-come mighty nigh losin’ ’is min’. He ain’t make
-no fuss ’bout it, but he des fell back on hisse’f an’
-walk de flo’ night atter night, an’ moan an’ groan
-when he think nobody ain’t lis’nin’. An’ den, atter
-so long a time, here come a letter fum Mary Ellen,
-an’ dat broke ’im all up. I tell you right now,
-ma’am, Marse Bolivar had a hard fight wid trouble.
-I don’t keer what folks may say; dey may tell you
-he’s a hard man, ready ter fight an’ quick ter kill.
-He’s all dat, an’ maybe mo’; but I know what I
-know.</p>
-
-<p>“Wellum, de days went an’ de days come.
-Bimeby I hear some er de niggers say dat Mary
-Ellen done come back. I laid off ter go an’ see de
-chile; but one day I wuz gwine ’long de street an’ I
-met a white lady. She say, ‘Ain’t dat Aunt Minervy
-Ann?’ I ’low, ‘Yessum, dis is de remnants.’
-Wid dat, ma’am, she grab me ’roun’ de neck an’
-hug me, an’ bu’st out a-cryin’, an’ ’twa’n’t nobody
-in de worl’ but Mary Ellen.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_195"></a>[195]</span></p>
-
-<p>“Purty! I never has foun’ out, ma’am, how any
-human can be ez purty ez Mary Ellen. Her skin
-wuz white ez milk an’ her eyes shine like stars. I’d
-’a’ never know’d her in de worl’. But dar she wuz,
-cryin’ one minnit an’ laughin’ de nex’. An’ she wuz
-in trouble too. She had a telegraph in her han’
-tellin’ ’er dat one er her ol’ schoolmates gwine on
-ter Flurridy wuz gwine ter stop over one train des
-ter see Mary Ellen. Hit seem like dat up dar whar
-she been stayin’ at she ain’t never tell nobody but
-what she wuz white, an’ de human wa’n’t born dat
-could tell de diffunce. So dar ’twuz. Here wuz de
-Northron lady comin’ fer ter see Mary Ellen, an’
-what wuz Mary Ellen gwine ter do?—whar wuz she
-gwine ter take de Northron lady? Dar wuz de ramshackle
-cabin, an’ dar wuz my kitchen. You may
-think ’twuz funny, ma’am——”</p>
-
-<p>“But I don’t,” said the lady of the house, abruptly
-and unexpectedly; “I don’t think it was funny
-at all.”</p>
-
-<p>Aunt Minervy Ann looked at me and lifted her
-chin triumphantly, as she resumed: “No’m, ’twa’n’t
-funny. Mary Ellen wuz proud an’ high-strung;
-you could read dat in de way she walk an’ eve’y
-motion she make, an’ dat ar telegraph dat de Northron
-lady sont ’er fum Atlanty kinder run ’er in a<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_196"></a>[196]</span>
-corner. She dunner what ter do, ner which way ter
-turn. Look at it yo’se’f, ma’am, an’ see whar she
-wuz.</p>
-
-<p>“She laughed, ma’am, but she wuz in trouble,
-an’ I’m sech a big fool dat I’m allers in trouble
-’long wid dem what I like. Take de tape-line ter
-der trouble an’ den ter mine, an’ you’ll fin’ dat
-dey medjer ’bout de same. Mary Ellen laugh an’
-say, ‘Dey’s two things I kin do; I kin leave town,
-er I kin go down dar ter de cabin an’ kill myse’f.’
-Oh, she wuz in a corner, ma’am—don’t you
-doubt it.</p>
-
-<p>“Right den an’ dar sump’n pop in my head. I
-’low, ‘Is you been ter call on Marse Bolivar Blasengame?’
-She say ‘No, I ain’t, Aunt Minervy
-Ann. I started ter go, but I’m afear’d ter.’ I ’low,
-‘Well, I’m gwine dar right now; come go wid
-me.’</p>
-
-<p>“So we went dar, and I left Mary Ellen on de
-back porch, an’ I went in de house. Marse Bolivar
-wuz settin’ down, gwine over some papers, an’ Mis’
-Em’ly wuz darnin’ an’ patchin’.</p>
-
-<p>“I say, ‘Marse Bolivar, dey’s a gal out here dat
-I thought maybe you an’ Mis’ Em’ly would be glad
-ter see?”</p>
-
-<p>“He ’low, ‘Dang you’ hide, Minervy Ann! You<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_197"></a>[197]</span>
-like ter make me jump out’n my skin. Who is de
-gal?’</p>
-
-<p>“I say, ‘I wanter see ef you know ’er.’ Wid
-dat I went back an’ fotch Mary Ellen in. Well, dey
-didn’t know ’er, ma’am, na’er one un um; an’ I
-dunner how it all happened, but de fust thing I
-know Mary Ellen fell on ’er knees, by a lounge what
-sot under de place whar Miss Sally’s pictur’ wuz
-hangin’ at. She fell on her knees, Mary Ellen did,
-and ’low, ‘She’d know who I is,’ an’ wid dat she
-bust aloose an’ went ter cryin’ des like ’er heart wuz
-done broke in two.</p>
-
-<p>“Marse Bolivar stood dar an’ wait twel Mary
-Ellen cool off, an’ quiet down. Mis’ Em’ly, ma’am,
-is one er dem ar primity, dried-up wimmen, which,
-ef dey ain’t fightin’ you wid bofe han’s, er huggin’
-you wid bofe arms, ain’t sayin’ nothin’ ’tall. An’
-ef Mis’ Em’ly ain’t sayin’ nothin’ you can’t put de
-key in de Bible an’ fin’ no tex’ dat’ll tell you what
-she got in ’er min’. But she wuz darnin’, an’ I see
-’er wipe one eye on de leg er de sock, an’ den present’y
-she wipe t’er eye.</p>
-
-<p>“Wellum, Marse Bolivar stood dar an’ look at
-Mary Ellen, an’ when she riz fum her knees an’
-stood dar, her head hangin’ down, still a-cryin’, but
-mo’ quieter, he went close up an’ ’low, ‘I know you,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_198"></a>[198]</span>
-Mary Ellen, an’ I’m mighty glad ter see you. Dat
-ar letter what you writ me, I got it yit, an’ I’m
-gwine ter keep it whiles I live.’</p>
-
-<p>“He talk right husky, ma’am, an’ I ’gun ter feel
-husky myse’f; an’ den I know’d dat ef I didn’t
-change de tune, I’d be boo-hooin’ right dar ’fo’ all
-un um wid needer ’casion nor ’skuce. I went up
-ter Mary Ellen an’ cotch ’er by de shoulder and say,
-‘Shucks, gal! Dat train’ll be here terreckly, an’
-den what you gwine ter do?’</p>
-
-<p>“’Twuz a hint ez broad ez a horse-blanket,
-ma’am, but Mary Ellen never tuck it. She des
-stood dar an’ look at me. An’ ’bout dat time Marse
-Bolivar he ketch’d holt er my shoulder an’ whirlt
-me ’roun’, an’ ’low, ‘What de matter, Minervy
-Ann? Talk it right out!’</p>
-
-<p>“Wellum, I let you know I tol’ ’im; I des laid
-it off! I tol’ des how ’twuz; how Mary Ellen been
-sont up dar by ol’ Fed Tatum, an’ how, on de ’count
-er no fault er her’n de Northron folks tuck ’er ter
-be a white gal; an’ how one er de gals what went
-ter school wid ’er wuz gwine ter come ter see ’er an’
-stay ’twixt trains. Den I ’low, ‘Whar is Mary
-Ellen gwine ter see ’er? In dat ar mud-shack whar
-her ma live at? In de big road? In de woods? In
-de hoss-lot?”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_199"></a>[199]</span></p>
-
-<p>The whole scene from beginning to end had been
-enacted by Aunt Minervy Ann. In the empty
-spaces of the room she had placed the colonel, his
-wife, and Mary Ellen, and they seemed to be before
-us, and not only before us, but the passionate earnestness
-with which she laid the case of Mary Ellen
-before the colonel made them live and move under
-our very eyes.</p>
-
-<p>“<em>In de big road? In de woods? In de hoss-lot?</em>”</p>
-
-<p>And when she paused for the reply of the colonel,
-the look of expectation on her face was as keen and
-as eager as it could have been on the day and the
-occasion when she was pleading for Mary Ellen.
-The spell was broken by the lady of the house, who
-leaned forward eagerly as if expecting the colonel
-himself to reply. Perhaps Aunt Minervy Ann
-misunderstood the movement. She paused a moment
-as if dazed, and then sank by the sofa with a
-foolish laugh.</p>
-
-<p>“I know you all put me down ter be a fool,” she
-said, “an’ I ’speck I is.”</p>
-
-<p>“Nonsense!” cried the lady of the house, sharply.
-“What did the colonel reply?”</p>
-
-<p>Aunt Minervy remained silent a little while,
-picking at one of the fringes of the sofa. She was<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_200"></a>[200]</span>
-evidently trying to reassemble in her mind the incidents
-and surroundings of her narrative. Presently
-she began again, in a tone subdued and confidential:</p>
-
-<p>“Marse Bolivar look at me right hard, den he
-look at Mary Ellen, an’ den he pull at de tip-een’ er
-his year. Wellum, I fair helt my breff; I say ter
-myse’f, ‘Man, whyn’t you look at poor Miss Sally’s
-pictur’? I wuz feared a fly might light on ’im an’
-change his min’. But, look at de pictur’ he did,
-an’ dat settled it.</p>
-
-<p>“He ’low, ‘Set down, Mary Ellen; you look
-tired. Minervy Ann, fetch ’er a drink er water.’
-Wellum, you may well b’lieve dat I flied up an’
-flew’d ’roun’ an’ fotch dat water. Den he ’low,
-‘Minervy Ann, go in dar an’ straighten out dat
-parlor; fling open de blinds an’ do ’bout in
-dar!’”</p>
-
-<p>Again Aunt Minervy Ann arose from her reclining
-position by the sofa and stood in the floor;
-again, by a wave of her hand, she brought the scene
-before our eyes.</p>
-
-<p>“I stood dar, I did, an’ look at dat man. I ’low,
-‘Marse Bolivar, less’n it’s Marse Tumlin, youer de
-bes’ man dat God A’mighty ever breathe de breath
-er life inter!’ He rub his han’ over his face an’<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_201"></a>[201]</span>
-say, ‘Dang yo’ ol’ hide! go on an’ hush up! Fum
-de time I fust know’d you, you been gittin’ me an’
-Tumlin in hot water.’</p>
-
-<p>“I flung back at ’im, ‘<em>’Tain’t never scald you!
-’Tain’t never been too deep fer you!</em>’ He straighten
-hisse’f up an’ helt his head back an’ laugh. He
-’low, ‘Dang it all, Minervy Ann! Dey er times
-when I want it bofe hot an’ deep. You go an’
-scuffle ’roun’ in dat parlor, an’ don’t you let yo’ Mis’
-Em’ly do a han’s-turn in dar.’</p>
-
-<p>“Wellum, dat uz ’bout de upshot un it. De
-Northron lady wuz name Miss Wilbur, er Willard,
-I disremember which, but she was a mighty nice
-white gal. Marse Bolivar an’ Hamp wuz bofe at de
-train ter meet ’er, an’ Marse Bolivar fotch ’er right
-ter de house, an’ show’d ’er in de parlor. Atter
-while, Mary Ellen went in dar, an’ ’twuz a mighty
-meetin’ ’twix um. Dey chattered same ez a flock
-er blackbirds on a windy day; an’ atter so long a
-time Marse Bolivar went in dar. ’Twa’n’t long ’fo’
-he got ter tellin’ tales, an’ de Northron lady laugh
-so she kin hardly set on de cheer. Den he open de
-pianner, an’ ax de white lady ter play, but she vow
-she can’t play atter he been hearin’ Mary Ellen.
-Den he say, ‘Won’t you play me a chune, Mary
-Ellen? Sump’n ol’ timey?’</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_202"></a>[202]</span></p>
-
-<p>“Dat gal went ter de pianner, ma’am, an’ sot
-dar wid her han’s over her face like she prayin’, an’
-den she laid her han’s on de keys an’ started a chune
-des like yo’ hear in yo’ dreams. It got a little
-louder, an’ den present’y you could hear ’er singin’.
-I never did know whar’bouts her voice slipped inter
-dat chune; but dar ’twuz, an’ it fit in wid de pianner
-des like a flute does.</p>
-
-<p>“Wellum, it tuck me back, way back dar in de
-ol’ days, an’ den brung me down ter later times,
-fer many a moonlight night did I hear Miss Sally
-an’ Mary Ellen sing dat song when dey wuz chillun.
-Den atter dat de Northron lady plump herse’f down
-at de pianner, an’ she sho did shake dat ol’ shebang
-up. ’Twuz dish yer highfalutin’ music what sprung
-up sence de war, an’ it sho sound like war ter me,
-drums a-rattlin’, guns a-shootin’, an’ forty-levm
-brass horns all tootin’ a diffunt chune.</p>
-
-<p>“When train-time come, ma’am, de Northron
-lady ax Mary Ellen ef she won’t go ter de train wid
-’er. But Marse Bolivar spoke up an’ say dat Mary
-Ellen been feelin’ bad all de mornin’, an’ she hatter
-skuzen ’er. He went wid de lady hisse’f, an’ when
-he come back Mary Ellen tol’ ’im she never would
-fergit what he done fer her dat day, an’ say she
-gwine ter pay ’im back some day.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_203"></a>[203]</span></p>
-
-<p>“What did the neighbors say about it?” the lady
-of the house asked, in her practical way.</p>
-
-<p>“Dat what pestered me all de time, ma’am,”
-Aunt Minervy Ann replied. “I ax Marse Bolivar,
-‘What de folks gwine ter say when dey hear ’bout
-dis come off?’ He stuck his thum’s in de armholes
-er his wescut, an’ ’low, ‘Dat what I wanter
-know, an’ I wanter know so bad, Minervy Ann, dat
-ef you hear anybody talkin’ loose talk ’bout it, des
-come runnin’ ter me while it’s hot. Now don’t you
-fail.’</p>
-
-<p>“But Marse Bolivar ain’t wait fer me ter hear
-what folks say. He went polin’ up town de nex’
-day, an’ tol’ ’bout it in eve’y sto’ on de street, an’
-de las’ man in town vow’d ’twuz de ve’y thing ter
-do. An’ dat ain’t all, ma’am! De folks dar raise
-a lot er money fer Mary Ellen, an’ de way dat chile
-went on when Marse Bolivar put it in ’er han’ an’
-tol’ er whar it come fum wuz pitiful ter see.</p>
-
-<p>“Dat’s de way ’tis, ma’am; ketch um in de humor
-an’ eve’ybody’s good; ketch um out’n de humor
-an’ dey er all mean—I know dat by my own
-feelin’s. Ef a fly had lit on Marse Bolivar’s face
-dat day, Mary Ellen would ’a’ had ter face ’er
-trouble by ’er own ’lone self. Ef some sour-minded
-man had gone up town an’ told how Marse Bolivar<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_204"></a>[204]</span>
-wuz en’tainin’ nigger gals an’ a Yankee ’oman
-in his parlor, dey’d all been down on ’im. An’
-den——”</p>
-
-<p>“What, then?” the lady of the house asked, as
-Aunt Minervy Ann paused.</p>
-
-<p>“Dey’d ’a’ been weepin’ an’ whailin’ in de settlement
-sho. Ain’t it so, suh?”</p>
-
-<p>It was natural, after Aunt Minervy Ann had narrated
-the particulars of this episode, that her statements
-should dwell in my memory, and sally forth
-and engage my mind when it should have been concerned
-with other duties. One of these duties was
-to examine each day the principal newspapers of
-New England in search of topics for editorial comment.</p>
-
-<p>An eye trained to this business, as any exchange
-editor can tell you, will pick out at a glance a familiar
-name or suggestive phrase, no matter what
-its surroundings nor how obscurely it may be
-printed. Therefore, one day, weeks after Aunt Minervy
-Ann’s recital, when I opened the <cite>Boston
-Transcript</cite> at its editorial page, it was inevitable
-that the first thing to catch my eye was the familiar
-name of “Mary Ellen Tatum.” It was printed
-in type of the kind called nonpareil, but I would
-have seen it no sooner nor more certainly if it<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_205"></a>[205]</span>
-had been printed in letters reaching half across the
-page.</p>
-
-<p>Mary Ellen Tatum! The name occurred in a
-three-line preface to the translation of an art note
-from a Paris newspaper. This note described, with
-genuine French enthusiasm, the deep impression
-that had been made on artists and art circles in
-Paris by a portrait painted by a gifted young American
-artist, Mlle. Marie Helen Tatum. It is needless
-to transcribe the eulogy—I have it in my scrapbook.
-It was a glowing tribute to a piece of
-work that had created a sensation, and closed
-with the announcement that another genius had
-“arrived.”</p>
-
-<p>The comments of the Boston editor, following
-the sketch, declared that the friends of Miss Mary
-Ellen Tatum in Boston, where she spent her early
-years and where she was educated, were proud of
-her remarkable success, and predicted for her a
-glorious career as an artist.</p>
-
-<p>I had no more than cut this piece from the newspaper
-when the door-bell rang, and as there happened
-to be no one in the house to answer it at the
-moment, I went to the door myself, the clipping
-still in my hand, and there before my eyes was Colonel
-Bolivar Blasengame, his fine face beaming<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_206"></a>[206]</span>
-with good-nature. He had come at a moment when
-I most desired to see him, and I greeted him cordially.</p>
-
-<p>“I see now,” said the colonel,“why it is I can
-never catch you in your office in town; you do your
-work at home. Well, that’s lots better than workin’
-where any and everybody can come in on you. I
-thought I’d find you out here enjoying your <i lang="lat">otium
-cum digitalis</i>, as old Tuck Bonner used to say;
-but instead of that you’re waist-deep in newspapers.”</p>
-
-<p>I assured the colonel that there were some people
-in the world whom I would be glad to see, no
-matter how busy I might be.</p>
-
-<p>“I know the feeling,” replied Colonel Blasengame;
-“but you’ll be cussing me as sure as the
-world, for I haven’t a grain of business to see you
-about. But I hear Tumlin and old Aunt Minervy
-Ann talking about you so constantly that I thought
-I’d come out and say howdye, if no more.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, you’ll have to say more than that this
-time,” I remarked; “I was just thinking, when
-you rang the door-bell, that I would give something
-pretty to see you.”</p>
-
-<p>“Now, is that reely so?” cried the colonel.
-“Then I’m twice glad—once because I took a notion<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_207"></a>[207]</span>
-to come, and once again because you’re glad.
-You used to fight so shy of me when you lived
-among us that I was afraid I wouldn’t get on wi’
-you; but I’m sorter offish myself.”</p>
-
-<p>“Colonel,” said I, “did you ever know Mary
-Ellen Tatum?”</p>
-
-<p>He rubbed his face and forehead with his hand,
-and regarded me with a slight frown, and a smile
-that seemed to mean anything except pleasure.</p>
-
-<p>“Will you allow me to ask you why you put
-such a question to me?”</p>
-
-<p>“Why, certainly, Colonel; read that.” I placed
-the clipping from the <cite>Transcript</cite> in his hand. He
-held it off at arm’s length and tried to decipher it,
-but the print was too fine. Placing it on his knee,
-he searched in his pockets until he found his spectacles,
-and then he read the article through carefully—not
-once, but twice.</p>
-
-<p>Then smoothing the clipping out on his knee, he
-looked at me inquiringly.</p>
-
-<p>“Do you know Mary Ellen?” he asked. I did
-not, and said so. “Did you ever hear of her before?”</p>
-
-<p>“Why, yes,” I replied. “Aunt Minervy Ann
-told me some very interesting things about her, and
-I wanted to ask you if they were true.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_208"></a>[208]</span></p>
-
-<p>The colonel jumped to his feet with a laugh.
-“Plague on old Minervy Ann!” he exclaimed.
-“Why, I came out here purposely to tell you about
-Mary Ellen. This thing,” indicating the clipping,
-“is away behind the time with its news. The picture
-it tells about is at my house this very minute,
-and another one in the bargain. The first chance
-you get, come down home and look at ’em. If you
-don’t open your eyes I’ll never sign my name S. B.
-Blasengame again.” He walked up and down the
-room in a restless way. “What do you reckon that
-gyurl did?” he asked, stopping before me and
-stretching out his right arm. “Why, she sent a
-man with the pictures—a right nice fellow he was,
-too. He said it cost a pile of money to git ’em
-through the custom-house at New York; he had to
-hang around there a week. When I asked him for
-his bill he raised his hands and laughed. Everything
-was paid.”</p>
-
-<p>The colonel continued to walk up and down the
-room. He was always restless when anything
-interested him, unless it happened to be a matter
-of life and death, and then he was calmness
-itself.</p>
-
-<p>“Did Aunt Minervy Ann—blame her old hide!—I
-wanted to tell you the whole story myself—did<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_209"></a>[209]</span>
-she tell you about a letter Mary Ellen wrote me
-when”—the colonel paused and cleared his throat—“about
-a letter Mary Ellen wrote me in the
-seventies?”</p>
-
-<p>“She did,” I replied.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, here’s the letter,” he said, after fumbling
-in his big pocketbook. “It’s not a matter to
-be showing around, but you seem almost like one
-of the family, and you’ll know better how to appreciate
-the pictures when you read that.”</p>
-
-<p>He turned and went out of the room into the
-hallway and then to the veranda, where I heard his
-firm and measured step pacing back and forth. The
-letter was not a very long one, but there was something
-in it—a vague undertone of loneliness, a
-muffled cry for sympathy, which, as I knew all the
-facts of the case, almost took my breath away.</p>
-
-<p>The letter was dated “Boston, September 8th,
-1878,” and was as follows:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>“<span class="smcap">Colonel Blasengame</span>—Two days ago the home
-paper came to me bringing the news of the great loss
-which has come to your household, and to me. I feel
-most keenly that a letter from me is an unwarranted
-intrusion, but I must speak out my thoughts to someone.
-Miss Sallie was almost the only friend I had when
-she and I were children together—almost the only person
-that I ever cared for. I loved her while she lived,
-and I shall cherish her memory to the day of my death.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_210"></a>[210]</span></p>
-
-<p>“You do not know me, and you will not recognize the
-name signed to this. It is better, far better that this
-should be so. It is enough for you to know that a
-stranger in a strange land will lie awake many and many
-a long night, weeping for the dear young lady who is
-dead.</p>
-
-<p class="right">“<span class="smcap">Mary Ellen Tatum.</span>”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>What has become of Mary Ellen? the reader
-may ask. I have asked the same question hundreds
-of times and received no reply to it. So far as we
-provincials are concerned, she has disappeared utterly
-from the face of the earth.</p>
-
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