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                      ELSKET, AND OTHER STORIES




                        BY THOMAS NELSON PAGE.


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                                ELSKET
                          _AND OTHER STORIES_

                                  BY
                          THOMAS NELSON PAGE



                               NEW YORK
                        CHARLES SCRIBNER'S SONS
                                 1893




                          COPYRIGHT, 1891, BY
                       CHARLES SCRIBNER'S SONS.




                            TO HER MEMORY




                               CONTENTS.


                                                                    PAGE
  ELSKET                                                               1

  "GEORGE WASHINGTON'S" LAST DUEL                                     52

  P'LASKI'S TUNAMENT                                                 118

  "RUN TO SEED"                                                      147

  "A SOLDIER OF THE EMPIRE"                                          180




                                ELSKET.

                "The knife hangs loose in the sheath."
                                          --OLD NORSK PROVERB.


I spent a month of the summer of 188- in Norway--"Old Norway"--and a
friend of mine, Dr. John Robson, who is as great a fisherman as he is
a physician, and knows that I love a stream where the trout and I can
meet each other alone, and have it out face to face, uninterrupted
by any interlopers, did me a favor to which I was indebted for the
experience related below. He had been to Norway two years before, and
he let me into the secret of an unexplored region between the Nord
Fiord and the Romsdal. I cannot give the name of the place, because
even now it has not been fully explored, and he bound me by a solemn
promise that I would not divulge it to a single soul, actually going to
the length of insisting on my adding a formal oath to my affirmation.
This I consented to because I knew that my friend was a humorous man,
and also because otherwise he positively refused to inform me where
the streams were about which he had been telling such fabulous fish
stories. "No," he said, "some of those ---- cattle who think they
own the earth and have a right to fool women at will and know how to
fish, will be poking in there, worrying Olaf and Elsket, and ruining
the fishing, and I'll be ---- if I tell you unless you make oath." My
friend is a swearing man, though he says he swears for emphasis, not
blasphemy, and on this occasion he swore with extreme solemnity. I saw
that he was in earnest, so made affidavit and was rewarded.

"Now," he said, after inquiring about my climbing capacity in a way
which piqued me, and giving me the routes with a particularity which
somewhat mystified me, "Now I will write a letter to Olaf of the
Mountain and to Elsket. I once was enabled to do them a slight service,
and they will receive you. It will take him two or three weeks to get
it, so you may have to wait a little. You must wait at L---- until Olaf
comes down to take you over the mountain. You may be there when he
gets the letter, or you may have to wait for a couple of weeks, as he
does not come over the mountain often. However, you can amuse yourself
around L----; only you must always be on hand every night in case Olaf
comes."

Although this appeared natural enough to the doctor, it sounded rather
curious to me, and it seemed yet more so when he added, "By the way,
one piece of advice: don't talk about England to Elsket, and don't ask
any questions."

"Who is Elsket?" I asked.

"A daughter of the Vikings, poor thing," he said.

My curiosity was aroused, but I could get nothing further out of him,
and set it down to his unreasonable dislike of travelling Englishmen,
against whom, for some reason, he had a violent antipathy, declaring
that they did not know how to treat women nor how to fish. My friend
has a custom of speaking very strongly, and I used to wonder at
the violence of his language, which contrasted strangely with his
character; for he was the kindest-hearted man I ever knew, being a true
follower of his patron saint, old Isaac giving his sympathy to all the
unfortunate, and even handling his frogs as if he loved them.

Thus it was that on the afternoon of the seventh day of July, 188-,
having, for purposes of identification, a letter in my pocket to
"Olaf of the Mountain from his friend Dr. Robson," I stood, in the
rain in the so-called "street" of L----, on the ---- Fiord, looking
over the bronzed faces of the stolid but kindly peasants who lounged
silently around, trying to see if I could detect in one a resemblance
to the picture I had formed in my mind of "Olaf of the Mountain," or
could discern in any eye a gleam of special interest to show that its
possessor was on the watch for an expected guest.

There was none in whom I could discover any indication that he was
not a resident of the straggling little settlement. They all stood
quietly about gazing at me and talking in low tones among themselves,
chewing tobacco or smoking their pipes, as naturally as if they were in
Virginia or Kentucky, only, if possible, in a somewhat more ruminant
manner. It gave me the single bit of home feeling I could muster, for
it was, I must confess, rather desolate standing alone in a strange
land, under those beetling crags, with the clouds almost resting on our
heads, and the rain coming down in a steady, wet, monotonous fashion.
The half-dozen little dark log or frame-houses, with their double
windows and turf roofs, standing about at all sorts of angles to the
road, as if they had rolled down the mountain like the great bowlders
beyond them, looked dark and cheerless. I was weak enough to wish for
a second that I had waited a few days for the rainy spell to be over,
but two little bare-headed children, coming down the road laughing and
chattering, recalled me to myself. They had no wrapping whatever, and
nothing on their heads but their soft flaxen hair, yet they minded
the rain no more than if they had been ducklings. I saw that these
people were used to rain. It was the inheritance of a thousand years.
Something, however, had to be done, and I recognized the fact that I
was out of the beaten track of tourists, and that if I had to stay here
a week, on the prudence of my first step depended the consideration
I should receive. It would not do to be hasty. I had a friend with
me which had stood me in good stead before, and I applied to it now.
Walking slowly up to the largest, and one of the oldest men in the
group, I drew out my pipe and a bag of old Virginia tobacco, free from
any flavor than its own, and filling the pipe, I asked him for a light
in the best phrase-book Norsk I could command. He gave it, and I placed
the bag in his hand and motioned him to fill his pipe. When that was
done I handed the pouch to another, and motioned him to fill and pass
the tobacco around. One by one they took it, and I saw that I had
friends. No man can fill his pipe from another's bag and not wish him
well.

"Does any of you know Olaf of the Mountain?" I asked. I saw at once
that I had made an impression. The mention of that name was evidently a
claim to consideration. There was a general murmur of surprise, and the
group gathered around me. A half-dozen spoke at once.

"He was at L---- last week," they said, as if that fact was an item of
extensive interest.

"I want to go there," I said, and then was, somehow, immediately
conscious that I had made a mistake. Looks were exchanged and some
words were spoken among my friends, as if they were oblivious of my
presence.

"You cannot go there. None goes there but at night," said one,
suggestively.

"Who goes over the mountain comes no more," said another, as if he
quoted a proverb, at which there was a faint intimation of laughter on
the part of several.

My first adviser undertook a long explanation, but though he labored
faithfully I could make out no more than that it was something about
"Elsket" and "the Devil's Ledge," and men who had disappeared. This
was a new revelation. What object had my friend? He had never said a
word of this. Indeed, he had, I now remembered, said very little at
all about the people. He had exhausted his eloquence on the fish. I
recalled his words when I asked him about Elsket: "She is a daughter of
the Vikings, poor thing." That was all. Had he been up to a practical
joke? If so, it seemed rather a sorry one to me just then. But anyhow I
could not draw back now. I could never face him again if I did not go
on, and what was more serious, I could never face myself. I was weak
enough to have a thought that, after all, the mysterious Olaf might not
come; but the recollection of the fish of which my friend had spoken
as if they had been the golden fish of the "Arabian Nights," banished
that. I asked about the streams around L----. "Yes, there was good
fishing." But they were all too anxious to tell me about the danger
of going over the mountain to give much thought to the fishing. "No
one without Olaf's blood could cross the Devil's Ledge." "Two men had
disappeared three years ago." "A man had disappeared there last year.
He had gone, and had never been heard of afterward. The Devil's Ledge
was a bad pass."

"Why don't they look into the matter?" I asked.

The reply was as near a shrug of the shoulders as a Norseman can
accomplish.

"It was not easy to get the proof; the mountain was very dangerous,
the glacier very slippery; there were no witnesses," etc. "Olaf of the
Mountain was not a man to trouble."

"He hates Englishmen," said one, significantly.

"I am not an Englishman, I am an American," I explained.

This had a sensible effect. Several began to talk at once. One had a
brother in Idaho, another had cousins in Nebraska, and so on.

The group had by this time been augmented by the addition of almost the
entire population of the settlement; one or two rosy-cheeked women,
having babies in their arms, standing in the rain utterly regardless of
the steady downpour.

It was a propitious time. "Can I get a place to stay here?" I inquired
of the group generally.

"Yes,--oh, yes." There was a consultation in which the name of
"Hendrik" was heard frequently, and then a man stepped forward and
taking up my bag and rod-case, walked off, I following, escorted by a
number of my new friends.

I had been installed in Hendrik's little house about an hour, and we
had just finished supper, when there was a murmur outside, and then the
door opened, and a young man stepping in, said something so rapidly
that I understood only that it concerned Olaf of the Mountain, and in
some way myself.

"Olaf of the Mountain is here and wants to speak to you," said my host.
"Will you go?"

"Yes," I said. "Why does he not come in?"

"He will not come in," said my host; "he never does come in."

"He is at the church-yard," said the messenger; "he always stops
there." They both spoke broken English.

I arose and went out, taking the direction indicated. A number of my
friends stood in the road or street as I passed along, and touched
their caps to me, looking very queer in the dim twilight. They gazed at
me curiously as I walked by.

I turned the corner of a house which stood half in the road, and just
in front of me, in its little yard, was the little white church with
its square, heavy, short spire. At the gate stood a tall figure,
perfectly motionless, leaning on a long staff. As I approached I saw
that he was an elderly man. He wore a long beard, once yellow but now
gray, and he looked very straight and large. There was something grand
about him as he stood there in the dusk.

I came quite up to him. He did not move.

"Good-evening," I said.

"Good-evening."

"Are you Mr. Hovedsen?" I asked, drawing out my letter.

"I am Olaf of the Mountain," he said slowly, as if his name embraced
the whole title.

I handed him the letter.

"You are----?"

"I am----" taking my cue from his own manner.

"The friend of her friend?"

"His great friend."

"Can you climb?"

"I can."

"Are you steady?"

"Yes."

"It is well; are you ready?"

I had not counted on this, and involuntarily I asked, in some surprise,
"To-night?"

"To-night. You cannot go in the day."

I thought of the speech I had heard: "No one goes over the mountain
except at night," and the ominous conclusion, "Who goes over the
mountain comes no more." My strange host, however, diverted my thoughts.

"A stranger cannot go except at night," he said, gravely; and then
added, "I must get back to watch over Elsket."

"I shall be ready in a minute," I said, turning.

In ten minutes I had bade good-by to my simple hosts, and leaving them
with a sufficient evidence of my consideration to secure their lasting
good-will, I was on my way down the street again with my light luggage
on my back. This time the entire population of the little village
was in the road, and as I passed along I knew by their murmuring
conversation that they regarded my action with profound misgiving. I
felt, as I returned their touch of the cap and bade them good-by, a
little like the gladiators of old who, about to die, saluted Cæsar.

At the gate my strange guide, who had not moved from the spot where I
first found him, insisted on taking my luggage, and buckling his straps
around it and flinging it over his back, he handed me his stick, and
without a word strode off straight toward the black mountain whose vast
wall towered above us to the clouds.

I shall never forget that climb.

We were hardly out of the road before we began to ascend, and I
had shortly to stop for breath. My guide, however, if silent was
thoughtful, and he soon caught my gait and knew when to pause. Up
through the dusk we went, he guiding me now by a word telling me how to
step, or now turning to give me his hand to help me up a steep place,
over a large rock, or around a bad angle. For a time we had heard
the roar of the torrent as it boiled below us, but as we ascended it
had gradually hushed, and we at length were in a region of profound
silence. The night was cloudy, and as dark as it ever is in midsummer
in that far northern latitude; but I knew that we were climbing along
the edge of a precipice, on a narrow ledge of rock along the face of
the cliff. The vast black wall above us rose sheer up, and I could feel
rather than see that it went as sheer down, though my sight could not
penetrate the darkness which filled the deep abyss below. We had been
climbing about three hours when suddenly the ledge seemed to die out.
My guide stopped, and unwinding his rope from his waist, held it out to
me. I obeyed his silent gesture, and binding it around my body gave him
the end. He wrapped it about him, and then taking me by the arm, as if
I had been a child, he led me slowly along the narrow ledge around the
face of the wall, step by step, telling me where to place my feet, and
waiting till they were firmly planted. I began now to understand why no
one ever went "over the mountain" in the day. We were on a ledge nearly
three thousand feet high. If it had not been for the strong, firm hold
on my arm, I could not have stood it. As it was I dared not think.
Suddenly we turned a sharp angle and found ourselves in a curious
semicircular place, almost level and fifty or sixty feet deep in the
concave, as if a great piece had been gouged out of the mountain by the
glacier which must once have been there.

"This is a curious place," I ventured to say.

"It is," said my guide. "It is the Devil's Seat. Men have died here."

His tone was almost fierce. I accepted his explanation silently. We
passed the singular spot and once more were on the ledge, but except
in one place it was not so narrow as it had been the other side of the
Devil's Seat, and in fifteen minutes we had crossed the summit and the
path widened a little and began to descend.

"You do well," said my guide, briefly, "but not so well as Doctor
John." I was well content with being ranked a good second to the doctor
just then.

The rain had ceased, the sky had partly cleared, and, as we began to
descend, the early twilight of the northern dawn began to appear. First
the sky became a clear steel-gray and the tops of the mountains became
visible, the dark outlines beginning to be filled in, and taking on a
soft color. This lightened rapidly, until on the side facing east they
were bathed in an atmosphere so clear and transparent that they seemed
almost within a stone's throw of us, while the other side was still
left in a shadow which was so deep as to be almost darkness. The gray
lightened and lightened into pearl until a tinge of rose appeared, and
then the sky suddenly changed to the softest blue, and a little later
the snow-white mountain-tops were bathed in pink, and it was day.

I could see in the light that we were descending into a sort of upland
hollow between the snow-patched mountain-tops; below us was a lovely
little valley in which small pines and birches grew, and patches of the
green, short grass which stands for hay shone among the great bowlders.
Several little streams came jumping down as white as milk from the
glaciers stuck between the mountain-tops, and after resting in two or
three tiny lakes which looked like hand-mirrors lying in the grass
below, went bubbling and foaming on to the edge of the precipice, over
which they sprang, to be dashed into vapor and snow hundreds of feet
down. A half-dozen sheep and as many goats were feeding about in the
little valley; but I could not see the least sign of a house, except a
queer, brown structure, on a little knoll, with many gables and peaks,
ending in the curious dragon-pennants, which I recognized as one of the
old Norsk wooden churches of a past age.

When, however, an hour later, we had got down to the table-land, I
found myself suddenly in front of a long, quaint, double log cottage,
set between two immense bowlders, and roofed with layers of birch bark,
covered with turf, which was blue with wild pansies. It was as if it
were built under a bed of heart's-ease. It was very old, and had
evidently been a house of some pretension, for there was much curious
carving about the doors, and indeed about the whole front, the dragon's
head being distinctly visible in the design. There were several lesser
houses which looked as if they had once been dwellings, but they seemed
now to be only stables.

As we approached the principal door it was opened, and there
stepped forth one of the most striking figures I ever saw--a young
woman, rather tall, and as straight as an arrow. My friend's words
involuntarily recurred to me, "A daughter of the Vikings," and then,
somehow, I too had the feeling he had expressed, "Poor thing!" Her
figure was one of the richest and most perfect I ever beheld. Her face
was singularly beautiful; but it was less her beauty than her nobility
of look and mien combined with a certain sadness which impressed me.
The features were clear and strong and perfectly carved. There was a
firm mouth, a good jaw, strong chin, a broad brow, and deep blue eyes
which looked straight at you. Her expression was so soft and tender
as to have something pathetic in it. Her hair was flaxen, and as fine
as satin, and was brushed perfectly smooth and coiled on the back of
her shapely head, which was placed admirably on her shoulders. She was
dressed in the coarse, black-blue stuff of the country, and a kerchief,
also dark blue, was knotted under her chin, and fell back behind her
head, forming a dark background for her silken hair.

Seeing us she stood perfectly still until we drew near, when she made
a quaint, low courtesy and advanced to meet her father with a look of
eager expectancy in her large eyes.

"Elsket," he said, with a tenderness which conveyed the full meaning of
the sweet pet term, "darling."

There was something about these people, peasants though they were,
which gave me a strange feeling of respect for them.

"This is Doctor John's friend," said the old man, quietly.

She looked at her father in a puzzled way for a moment, as if she had
not heard him, but as he repeated his introduction a light came into
her eyes, and coming up to me she held out her hand, saying, "Welcome."

Then turning to her father--"Have you a letter for me, father?" she
asked.

"No, Elsket," he said, gently; "but I will go again next month."

A cloud settled on her face and increased its sadness, and she turned
her head away. After a moment she went into the house and I saw that
she was weeping. A look of deep dejection came over the old man's face
also.


                                  II.

I found that my friend, "Doctor John," strange to relate of a
fisherman, had not exaggerated the merits of the fishing. How they
got there, two thousand feet above the lower valley, I don't know;
but trout fairly swarmed in the little streams, which boiled among
the rocks, and they were as greedy as if they had never seen a fly in
their lives. I shortly became contemptuous toward anything under three
pounds, and addressed myself to the task of defending my flies against
the smaller ones, and keeping them only for the big fellows, which ran
over three pounds--the patriarchs of the streams. With these I had
capital sport, for they knew every angle and hole, they sought every
coign of vantage, and the rocks were so thick and so sharp that from
the time one of these veterans took the fly, it was an equal contest
which of us should come off victorious. I was often forced to rush
splashing and floundering through the water to my waist to keep my
line from being sawed, and as the water was not an hour from the green
glaciers above, it was not always entirely pleasant.

I soon made firm friends with my hosts, and varied the monotony of
catching three-pounders by helping them get in their hay for the
winter. Elsket, poor thing, was, notwithstanding her apparently
splendid physique, so delicate that she could no longer stand the
fatigue of manual labor, any extra exertion being liable to bring on a
recurrence of the heart-failure, from which she had suffered. I learned
that she had had a violent hemorrhage two summers before, from which
she had come near dying, and that the skill of my friend, the doctor,
had doubtless saved her life. This was the hold he had on Olaf of the
Mountain: this was the "small service" he had rendered them.

By aiding them thus, I was enabled to be of material assistance to
Olaf, and I found in helping these good people, that work took on
once more the delight which I remembered it used to have under like
circumstances when I was a boy. I could cut or carry on my back loads
of hay all day, and feel at night as if I had been playing. Such is the
singular effect of the spirit on labor.

To make up for this, Elsket would sometimes, when I went fishing, take
her knitting and keep me company, sitting at a little distance. With
her pale, calm face and shining hair outlined against the background
of her sad-colored kerchief, she looked like a mourning angel. I never
saw her smile except when her father came into her presence, and when
she smiled it was as if the sun had suddenly come out. I began to
understand the devotion of these two strange people, so like and yet so
different.

One rainy day she had a strange turn; she began to be restless. Her
large, sad eyes, usually so calm, became bright; the two spots in her
cheeks burned yet deeper; her face grew anxious. Then she laid her
knitting aside and took out of a great chest something on which she
began to sew busily. I was looking at her, when she caught my eye
and smiled. It was the first time she ever smiled for me. "Did you
know I was going to be married?" she asked, just as an American girl
might have done. And before I could answer, she brought me the work.
It was her wedding dress. "I have nearly finished it," she said. Then
she brought me a box of old silver ornaments, such as the Norsk brides
wear, and put them on. When I had admired them she put them away. After
a little, she arose and began to wander about the house and out into
the rain. I watched her with interest. Her father came in, and I saw a
distressed look come into his eyes. He went up to her, and laying his
hand on her drew her toward a seat. Then taking down an old Bible, he
turned to a certain place and began to read. He read first the Psalm:
"Lord, thou hast been our refuge, from one generation to another.
Before the mountains were brought forth, or ever the earth and the
world were made, thou art God from everlasting, and world without end."
Then he turned to the chapter of Corinthians, "Now is Christ risen
from the dead, and become the first-fruits of them that slept," etc.
His voice was clear, rich, and devout, and he read it with singular
earnestness and beauty. It gave me a strange feeling; it is a part of
our burial service. Then he opened his hymn-book and began to sing a
low, dirge-like hymn. I sat silent, watching the strange service and
noting its effect on Elsket. She sat at first like a person bound,
struggling to be free, then became quieter, and at last, perfectly
calm. Then Olaf knelt down, and with his hand still on her prayed one
of the most touching prayers I ever heard. It was for patience.

When he rose Elsket was weeping, and she went and leant in his arms
like a child, and he kissed her as tenderly as if he had been her
mother.

Next day, however, the same excited state recurred, and this time the
reading appeared to have less effect. She sewed busily, and insisted
that there must be a letter for her at L----. A violent fit of weeping
was followed by a paroxysm of coughing, and finally the old man, who
had sat quietly by her with his hand stroking her head, arose and said,
"I will go." She threw herself into his arms, rubbing her head against
him in sign of dumb affection, and in a little while grew calm. It was
still raining and quite late, only a little before sunset; but the old
man went out, and taking the path toward L---- was soon climbing the
mountain toward the Devil's Seat. Elsket sat up all night, but she was
as calm and as gentle as ever.

The next morning when Olaf returned she went out to meet him. Her look
was full of eager expectancy. I did not go out, but watched her from
the door. I saw Olaf shake his head, and heard her say bitterly, "It is
so hard to wait," and he said, gently, "Yes, it is, Elsket, but I will
go again," and then she came in weeping quietly, the old man following
with a tender look on his strong, weather-beaten face.

That day Elsket was taken ill. She had been trying to do a little work
in the field in the afternoon, when a sinking spell had come on. It
looked for a time as if the poor overdriven heart had knocked off work
for good and all. Strong remedies, however, left by Doctor John, set it
going again, and we got her to bed. She was still desperately feeble,
and Olaf sat up. I could not leave him, so we were sitting watching,
he one side the open platform fireplace in one corner, and I the
other; he smoking, anxious, silent, grim; I watching the expression
on his gray face. His eyes seemed set back deeper than ever under the
shaggy gray brows, and as the firelight fell on him he had the fierce,
hopeless look of a caged eagle. It was late in the night before he
spoke, and then it was half to himself and but half to me.

"I have fought it ten long years," he said, slowly.

Not willing to break the thread of his thought by speaking, I lit my
pipe afresh and just looked at him. He received it as an answer.

"She is the last of them," he said, accepting me as an auditor rather
than addressing me. "We go back to Olaf Traetelje, the blood of Harold
Haarfager (the Fair-haired) is in our veins, and here it ends. Dane
and Swede have known our power, Saxon and Celt have bowed bare-headed
to us, and with her it ends. In this stronghold many times her fathers
have found refuge from their foes and gained breathing-time after
battles by sea and land. From this nest, like eagles, they have swooped
down, carrying all before them, and here, at last, when betrayed
and hunted, they found refuge. Here no foreign king could rule over
them; here they learnt the lesson that Christ is the only king, and
that all men are his brothers. Here they lived and worshipped him. If
their dominions were stolen from them they found here a truer wealth,
content; if they had not power, they had what was better, independence.
For centuries they held this last remnant of the dominion which Harold
Haarfager had conquered by land, and Eric of the Bloody Axe had won by
sea, sending out their sons and daughters to people the lands; but the
race dwindled as their lands had done before, and now with her dies the
last. How has it come? As ever, by betrayal!"

The old man turned fiercely, his breast heaving, his eyes burning.

"Was she who came of a race at whose feet jarls have crawled and kings
have knelt not good enough?" I was hearing the story and did not
interrupt him--"Not good enough for him!" he continued in his low,
fierce monotone. "I did not want him. What if he was a Saxon? His
fathers were our boatmen. Rather Cnut a thousand times. Then the race
would not have died. Then she would not be--not be so."

The reference to her recalled him to himself, and he suddenly relapsed
into silence.

"At least, Cnut paid the score," he began once more, in a low intense
undertone. "In his arms he bore him down from the Devil's Seat, a
thousand feet sheer on the hard ice, where his cursed body lies crushed
forever, a witness of his falsehood."

I did not interrupt, and he rewarded my patience, giving a more
connected account, for the first time addressing me directly.

"Her mother died when she was a child," he said, softly. His gentle
voice contrasted strangely with the fierce undertone in which he had
been speaking. "I was mother as well as father to her. She was as good
as she was beautiful, and each day she grew more and more so. She was
a second Igenborg. Knowing that she needed other companionship than an
old man, I sought and brought her Cnut (he spoke of him as if I must
know all about him). Cnut was the son of my only kinsman, the last of
his line as well, and he was tall and straight and strong. I loved him
and he was my son, and as he grew I saw that he loved her, and I was
not sorry, for he was goodly to look on, straight and tall as one of
old, and he was good also. And she was satisfied with him, and from a
child ordered him to do her girlish bidding, and he obeyed and laughed,
well content to have her smile. And he would carry her on his shoulder,
and take her on the mountain to slide, and would gather her flowers.
And I thought it was well. And I thought that in time they would marry
and have the farm, and that there would be children about the house,
and the valley might be filled with their voices as in the old time.
And I was content. And one day he came! (the reference cost him an
effort). Cnut found him fainting on the mountain and brought him here
in his arms. He had come to the village alone, and the idle fools there
had told him of me, and he had asked to meet me, and they told him of
the mountain, and that none could pass the Devil's Ledge but those
who had the old blood, and that I loved not strangers; and he said he
would pass it, and he had come and passed safely the narrow ledge, and
reached the Devil's Seat, when a stone had fallen upon him, and Cnut
had found him there fainting, and had lifted him and brought him here,
risking his own life to save him on the ledge. And he was near to
death for days, and she nursed him and brought him from the grave.

"At first I was cold to him, but there was something about him that
drew me and held me. It was not that he was young and taller than Cnut,
and fair. It was not that his eyes were clear and full of light, and
his figure straight as a young pine. It was not that he had climbed the
mountain and passed the narrow ledge and the Devil's Seat alone, though
I liked well his act; for none but those who have Harold Haarfager's
blood have done it alone in all the years, though many have tried and
failed. I asked him what men called him, and he said, 'Harold;' then
laughing, said some called him, 'Harold the Fair-haired.' The answer
pleased me. There was something in the name which drew me to him.
When I first saw him I had thought of Harald Haarfager, and of Harald
Haardraarder, and of that other Harold, who, though a Saxon, died
bravely for his kingdom when his brother betrayed him, and I held out
my hand and gave him the clasp of friendship."

The old man paused, but after a brief reflection proceeded:

"We made him welcome and we loved him. He knew the world and could
tell us many things. He knew the story of Norway and the Vikings, and
the Sagas were on his tongue. Cnut loved him and followed him, and she
(the pause which always indicated her who filled his thoughts)--she,
then but a girl, laughed and sang for him, and he sang for her, and his
voice was rich and sweet. And she went with him to fish and to climb,
and often, when Cnut and I were in the field, we would hear her laugh,
clear and fresh from the rocks beside the streams, as he told her some
fine story of his England. He stayed here a month and a week, and then
departed, saying he would come again next year, and the house was empty
and silent after he left. But after a time we grew used to it once more
and the winter came.

"When the spring returned we got a letter--a letter to her--saying he
would come again, and every two weeks another letter came, and I went
for it and brought it to--to her, and she read it to Cnut and me. And
at last he came and I went to meet him, and brought him here, welcome
as if he had been my eldest born, and we were glad. Cnut smiled and
ran forward and gave him his hand, and--she--she did not come at first,
but when she came she was clad in all that was her best, and wore her
silver--the things her mother and her grandmother had worn, and as she
stepped out of the door and saluted him, I saw for the first time that
she was a woman grown, and it was hard to tell which face was brighter,
hers or his, and Cnut smiled to see her so glad."

The old man relapsed into reflection. Presently, however, he resumed:

"This time he was gayer than before:--the summer seemed to come with
him. He sang to her and read to her from books that he had brought,
teaching her to speak English like himself, and he would go and fish up
the streams while she sat near by and talked to him. Cnut also learned
his tongue well, and I did also, but Cnut did not see so much of him
as before, for Cnut had to work, and in the evening they were reading
and she--she--grew more and more beautiful, and laughed and sang more.
And so the summer passed. The autumn came, but he did not go, and I was
well content, for she was happy, and, in truth, the place was cheerier
that he was here. Cnut alone seemed downcast, but I knew not why; and
then the snow came. One morning we awoke and the farm was as white as
the mountains. I said to him, 'Now you are here for the winter,' and he
laughed and said, 'No, I will stay till the new-year. I have business
then in England, and I must go.' And I turned, and her face was like
sunshine, for she knew that none but Cnut and I had ever passed the
Devil's Ledge in the snow, and the other way by which I took the Doctor
home was worse then, though easier in the summer, only longer. But
Cnut looked gloomy, at which I chid him; but he was silent. And the
autumn passed rapidly, so cheerful was he, finding in the snow as much
pleasure as in the sunshine, and taking her out to slide and race on
shoes till she would come in with her cheeks like roses in summer, and
her eyes like stars, and she made it warm where she was.

"And one evening they came home. He was gayer than ever, and she more
beautiful, but silenter than her wont. She looked like her mother the
evening I asked her to be my wife. I could not take my eyes from her.
That night Cnut was a caged wolf. At last he asked me to come out, and
then he told me that he had seen Harold kiss her and had heard him tell
her that he loved her, and she had not driven him away. My heart was
wrung for Cnut, for I loved him, and he wept like a child. I tried to
comfort him, but it was useless, and the next day he went away for a
time. I was glad to have him go, for I grieved for him, and I thought
she would miss him and be glad when he came again, and though the snow
was bad on the mountain he was sure as a wolf. He bade us good-by and
left with his eyes looking like a hurt dog's. I thought she would have
wept to have him go, but she did not. She gave him her hand and turned
back to Harold, and smiled to him when he smiled. It was the first time
in all her life that I had not been glad to have her smile, and I was
sorry Harold had stayed, and I watched Cnut climb the mountain like a
dark speck against the snow till he disappeared. She was so happy and
beautiful that I could not long be out with her, though I grieved for
Cnut, and when she came to me and told me one night of her great love
for Harold I forgot my own regret in her joy, and I said nothing to
Harold, because she told me he said that in his country it was not
usual for the father to be told or to speak to a daughter's lover.

"They were much taken up together after that, and I was alone, and I
missed Cnut sorely, and would have longed for him more but for her
happiness. But one day, when he had been gone two months, I looked over
the mountain, and on the snow I saw a black speck. It had not been
there before, and I watched it as it moved, and I knew it was Cnut.

"I said nothing until he came, and then I ran and met him. He was thin,
and worn, and older; but his eyes had a look in them which I thought
was joy at getting home; only they were not soft, and he looked taller
than when he left, and he spoke little. His eyes softened when she,
hearing his voice, came out and held out her hand to him, smiling to
welcome him; but he did not kiss her as kinsfolk do after long absence,
and when Harold came out the wolf-look came back into his eyes. Harold
looked not so pleased to see him, but held out his hand to greet
him. But Cnut stepped back, and suddenly drawing from his breast a
letter placed it in his palm, saying slowly, 'I have been to England,
Lord Harold, and have brought you this from your Lady Ethelfrid
Penrith--they expect you to your wedding at the New Year.' Harold
turned as white as the snow under his feet, and she gave a cry and fell
full length on the ground.

"Cnut was the first to reach her, and lifting her in his arms he bore
her into the house. Harold would have seized her, but Cnut brushed
him aside as if he had been a barley-straw, and carried her and laid
her down. When she came to herself she did not remember clearly what
had happened. She was strange to me who was her father, but she knew
him. I could have slain him, but she called him. He went to her, and
she understood only that he was going away, and she wept. He told her
it was true that he had loved another woman and had promised to marry
her, before he had met her, but now he loved her better, and he would
go home and arrange everything and return; and she listened and clung
to him. I hated him and wanted him to go, but he was my guest, and I
told him that he could not go through the snow; but he was determined.
It seemed as if he wanted now to get away, and I was glad to have him
go, for my child was strange to me, and if he had deceived one woman
I knew he might another, and Cnut said that the letter he had sent by
him before the snow came was to say he would come in time to be married
at the New Year; and Cnut said he lived in a great castle and owned
broad lands, more than one could see from the whole mountain, and his
people had brought him in and asked him many questions of him, and
had offered him gold to bring the letter back, and he had refused the
gold, and brought it without the gold; and some said he had deceived
more than one woman. And Lord Harold went to get ready, and she wept,
and moaned, and was strange. And then Cnut went to her and told her of
his own love for her, and that he was loyal to her, but she waved him
from her, and when he asked her to marry him, for he loved her truly,
she said him nay with violence, so that he came forth into the air
looking white as a leper. And he sat down, and when I came out he was
sitting on a stone, and had his knife in his hand, looking at it with
a dangerous gleam in his eyes; and just then she arose and came out,
and, seeing him sitting so with his knife, she gave a start, and her
manner changed, and going to him she spoke softly to him for the first
time, and made him yield her up the knife; for she knew that the knife
hung loose in the sheath. But then she changed again and all her anger
rose against Cnut, that he had brought Harold the letter which carried
him away, and Cnut sat saying nothing, and his face was like stone.
Then Lord Harold came and said he was ready, and he asked Cnut would he
carry his luggage. And Cnut at first refused, and then suddenly looked
him full in his face, and said, 'Yes.' And Harold entered the house to
say good-by to her, and I heard her weeping within, and my heart grew
hard against the Englishman, and Cnut's face was black with anger, and
when Harold came forth I heard her cry out, and he turned in the door
and said he would return, and would write her a letter to let her know
when he would return. But he said it as one speaks to a child to quiet
it, not meaning it. And Cnut went in to speak to her, and I heard her
drive him out as if he had been a dog, and he came forth with his face
like a wolf's, and taking up Lord Harold's luggage, he set out. And so
they went over the mountain.

"And all that night she lay awake, and I heard her moaning, and all
next day she sat like stone, and I milked the goats, and her thoughts
were on the letters he would send.

"I spoke to her, but she spoke only of the letters to come, and I kept
silence, for I had seen that Lord Harold would come no more; for I had
seen him burn the little things she had given him, and he had taken
everything away, but I could not tell her so. And the days passed, and
I hoped that Cnut would come straight back; but he did not. It grieved
me, for I loved him, and hoped that he would return, and that in time
she would forget Lord Harold, and not be strange, but be as she had
been to Cnut before he came. Yet I thought it not wholly wonderful that
Cnut did not return at once, nor unwise; for she was lonely, and would
sit all day looking up the mountain, and when he came she would, I
thought, be glad to have him back.

"At the end of a week she began to urge me to go for a letter. But I
told her it could not come so soon; but when another week had passed
she began to sew, and when I asked her what she sewed, she said her
bridal dress, and she became so that I agreed to go, for I knew no
letter would come, and it broke my heart to see her. And when I was
ready she kissed me, and wept in my arms, and called me her good
father; and so I started.

"She stood in the door and watched me climb the mountain, and waved to
me almost gayly.

"The snow was deep, but I followed the track which Cnut and the
Englishman had made two weeks before, for no new snow had fallen, and I
saw that one track was ever behind the other, and never beside it, as
if Cnut had fallen back and followed behind him.

"And so I came near to the Devil's Seat, where it was difficult, and
from where Cnut had brought him in his arms that day, and then, for
the first time, I began to fear, for I remembered Cnut's look as he
came from the house when she waved him off, and it had been so easy
for him with a swing of his strong arm to have pushed the other over
the cliff. But when I saw that he had driven his stick in deep to hold
hard, and that the tracks went on beyond, I breathed freely again,
and so I passed the narrow path, and the black wall, and came to the
Devil's Seat; and as I turned the rock my heart stopped beating, and I
had nearly fallen from the ledge. For there, scattered and half-buried
in the snow, lay the pack Cnut had carried on his back, and the snow
was all dug up and piled about as if stags had been fighting there for
their lives. From the wall, across and back, were deep furrows, as if
they were ploughed by men's feet dug fiercely in; but they were ever
deeper toward the edge, and on one spot at the edge the snow was all
torn clear from the black rock, and beyond the seat the narrow path
lay smooth, and bright, and level as it had fallen, without a track.
My knees shook under me, and I clutched my stick for support, and
everything grew black before me: and presently I fell on my knees and
crawled and peered over the edge. But there was nothing to be seen,
only where the wall slants sharp down for a little space in one spot
the snow was brushed away as if something had struck there, and the
black, smooth rock showed clean, cutting off the sight from the glacier
a thousand feet down."

The old man's breast heaved. It was evidently a painful narrative, but
he kept on.

"I sat down in the snow and thought; for I could not think at once.
Cnut had not wished to murder, or else he had flung the Englishman from
the narrow ledge with one blow of his strong arm. He had waited until
they had stood on the Devil's Seat, and then he had thrown off his pack
and faced him, man to man. The Englishman was strong and active, taller
and heavier than Cnut. He had Harald's name, but he had not Harald's
heart nor blood, and Cnut had carried him in his arms over the cliff,
with his false heart like water in his body.

"I sat there all day and into the night; for I knew that he would
betray no one more. I sorrowed for Cnut, for he was my very son. And
after a time I would have gone back to her, but I thought of her at
home waiting and watching for me with a letter, and I could not; and
then I wept, and I wished that I were Cnut, for I knew that he had had
one moment of joy when he took the Englishman in his arms. And then I
took the scattered things from the snow and threw them over the cliff;
for I would not let it be known that Cnut had flung the Englishman
over. It would be talked about over the mountain, and Cnut would be
thought a murderer by those who did not know, and some would say he had
done it foully; and so I went on over the mountain, and told it there
that Cnut and the Englishman had gone over the cliff together in the
snow on their way, and it was thought that a slip of snow had carried
them. And I came back and told her only that no letter had come."

He was silent so long that I thought he had ended; but presently, in a
voice so low that it was just like a whisper, he added: "I thought she
would forget, but she has not, and every fortnight she begins to sew
her dress and I go over the mountains to give her peace; for each time
she draws nearer to the end, and wears away more and more; and some day
the thin blade will snap."

"The thin blade" was already snapping, and even while he was speaking
the last fibres were giving way.

The silence which followed his words was broken by Elsket; I heard a
strange sound, and Elsket called feebly, "Oh, father."

Olaf went quickly to her bedside. I heard him say, "My God in Heaven!"
and I sprang up and joined him. It was a hemorrhage. Her life-blood
was flowing from her lips. She could not last like that ten minutes.

Providentially the remedies provided by Doctor John were right at hand,
and, thanks to them, the crimson tide was stayed before life went out;
but it was soon apparent that her strength was gone and her power
exhausted.

We worked over her, but her pulse was running down like a broken clock.
There was no time to have got a physician, even had there been one to
get. I mentioned it; Olaf shook his head. "She is in the hands of God,"
he said.

Olaf never left the bedside except to heat water or get some stimulant
for her.

But, notwithstanding every effort, she failed to rally. The overtaxed
heart was giving out, and all day she sank steadily. I never saw such
a desperate face as that old man's. It haunts me now. He hung over
her. He held her hand, now growing cold, against his cheek to keep it
warm--stroked it and kissed it. As towards evening the short, quick
breaths came, which precede dissolution, he sank on his knees. At
first, he buried his face in his hands; then in the agony of his
despair, he began to speak aloud. I never heard a more moving appeal.
It was a man speaking face to face with God for one about to enter his
presence. His eyes were wide open, as if he saw His face. He did not
ask that she should be spared to him; it was all for his "Elsket," his
"Darling," that Jesus would be her "Herder," and lead her beside the
still waters; that she might be spared all suffering and sorrow, and
have peace.

Presently he ended and buried his face in his hands. The quick, faint
breaths had died away, and as I looked on the still white face on the
pillow I thought that she had gone. But suddenly the large eyes slowly
opened wide.

"Father," she said, faintly.

"Elsket," the old man bent over her eagerly.

"I am so tired."

"My Elsket."

"I love you."

"Yes, my Elsket."

"You will stay with me?"

"Yes, always."

"If Cnut comes?"

"Yes, my Elsket."

"If Cnut comes----" very faintly.

Her true lover's name was the last on her lips.

He bent his ear to her lips. "Yes?"

But we never knew just what she wanted. The dim, large eyes closed, and
then the lids lifted slowly a little; there was a sigh, and Elsket's
watching was over; the weary spirit was at peace.

"She is with God," he said, calmly.

I closed the white lids gently, and moved out. Later I offered to help
him, but he said "No," and I remained out of doors till the afternoon.

About sunset he appeared and went up toward the old church, and I went
into the house. I found that he had laid her out in the large room, and
she lay with her face slightly turned as if asleep. She was dressed
like a bride in the bridal dress she had sewn so long; her hair was
unbound, and lay about her, fine and silken, and she wore the old
silver ornaments she had showed me. No bride had ever a more faithful
attendant. He had put them all upon her.

After a time, as he did not come back, I went to look for him. As I
approached I heard a dull, thumping sound. When I reached the cleared
place I found him digging. He had chosen a spot just in front of the
quaint old door, with the rude, runic letters, which the earliest
sunbeams would touch. As I came up I saw he was digging her grave.
I offered to help, but he said "No." So I carried him some food and
placing it near him left him.

Late that evening he came down and asked me if I would sit up that
night. I told him, yes. He thanked me and went into the house. In a
little while he came out and silently went up the path toward the
mountain.

It was a strange night that I spent in that silent valley in that still
house, only I, and the dead girl lying there so white and peaceful.
I had strange thoughts, and the earth and things earthly disappeared
for me that night shut in by those mountain walls. I was in a world
alone. I was cut off from all but God and the dead. I have dear ones in
heaven, and I was nearer to them that night, amid the mountain-tops of
Norway, than I was to earthly friends. I think I was nearer to heaven
that night than I ever shall be again till I get there.

Day broke like a great pearl, but I did not heed it. It was all peace.

Suddenly there was a step outside, and Olaf, with his face drawn and
gray, and bowing under the weight of the burden upon his shoulder,
stepped wearily in at the door.

To do Elsket honor he had been over the mountain to get it. I helped
lift it down and place it, and then he waited for me to go. As I passed
out of the door I saw him bend over the quiet sleeper. I looked in
later; he had placed her in the coffin, but the top was not on and he
was on his knees beside her.

He did not bury her that day; but he never left her side; he sat by her
all day and all night. Next day he came to the door and looked at me.
I went in and understood that he wanted me to look for the last time
on her face. It was fairer than I ever saw it. He had cut her flowers
and placed them all about her, and on her breast was a small packet
of letters. All care, all suffering, all that was merely of the earth
were cleansed away, and she looked as she lay, like a dead angel. After
I came out I heard him fastening on the top, and when he finished I
went in again. He would have attempted to carry it by himself, but I
restrained him, and without a word he took the head and I the foot, and
so lifting her tenderly we went gently out and up toward the church. We
had to pause and rest several times, for he was almost worn out. After
we had lowered her into the grave I was in doubt what to do; but Olaf
drew from his coat his two books, and standing close by the side of the
grave he opened first the little Bible and began to read in a low but
distinct voice: "Lord, thou hast been our refuge, from one generation
to another. Before the mountains were brought forth, or ever the earth
and the world were made, thou art God from everlasting, and world
without end."

When he finished this he turned and read again: "Now is Christ risen
from the dead, and become the first-fruits of them that slept," etc.
They were the Psalm and the chapter which I had heard him read to
Elsket that first day when she became excited, and with which he had so
often charmed her restless spirit.

He closed, and I thought he was done, but he opened his hymn-book and
turning over a few leaves sang the same hymn he had sung to her that
day. He sang it all through to the end, the low, strange, dirge-like
hymn, and chanted as it was by that old man alone, standing in
the fading evening light beside the grave which he had dug for his
daughter, the last of his race, I never heard anything so moving.
Then he knelt, and clasping his hands offered a prayer. The words,
from habit, ran almost as they had done when he had prayed for Elsket
before, that God would be her Shepherd, her "Herder," and lead her
beside the still waters, and give her peace.

When he was through I waited a little, and then I took up a spade to
help him; but he reached out and took it quietly, and seeing that he
wanted to be alone I left him. He meant to do for Elsket all the last
sacred offices himself.

I was so fatigued that on reaching the house I dropped off to sleep and
slept till morning, and I do not know when he came into the house, if
he came at all. When I waked early next morning he was not there, and I
rose and went up to the church to hunt for him. He was sitting quietly
beside the grave, and I saw that he had placed at her head a little
cross of birchwood, on which he had burned one word, simply,

                               "ELSKET."

I spoke to him, asking him to come to the house.

"I cannot leave her," he said; but when I urged him he rose silently
and returned with me.

I remained with him for a while after that, and each day he went and
sat by the grave. At last I had to leave. I urged him to come with me,
but he replied always, "No, I must watch over Elsket."

It was late in the evening when we set off to cross the mountain. We
came by the same path by which I had gone, Olaf leading me as carefully
and holding me as steadily as when I went over before. I stopped at
the church to lay a few wild flowers on the little gray mound where
Elsket slept so quietly. Olaf said not a word; he simply waited till
I was done and then followed me dumbly. I was so filled with sorrow
for him that I did not, except in one place, think much of the fearful
cliffs along which we made our way. At the Devil's Seat, indeed, my
nerves for a moment seemed shaken and almost gave way as I thought of
the false young lord whose faithlessness had caused all the misery to
these simple, kindly folk, and of the fierce young Norseman who had
there found so sweet a revenge. But we came on and passed the ledge,
and descending struck the broader path just after the day broke, where
it was no longer perilous but only painful.

There Olaf paused. "I will go back if you don't want me," he said. I
did not need his services, but I urged him to come on with me--to pay a
visit to his friends. "I have none," he said, simply. Then to come home
with me and live with me in old Virginia. He said, "No," he "must watch
over Elsket." So finally I had to give in, and with a clasp of the hand
and a message to "her friend" Doctor John, to "remember Elsket," he
went back and was soon lost amid the rocks.

I was half-way down when I reached a cleared place an hour or so later,
and turned to look back. The sharp angle of the Devil's Ledge was the
highest point visible, the very pinnacle of the mountain, and there,
clear against the burnished steel of the morning sky, on the very edge,
clear in the rare atmosphere was a small figure. It stood for a second,
a black point distinctly outlined, and then disappeared.

It was Olaf of the Mountain, gone back to keep watch over Elsket.




                   "GEORGE WASHINGTON'S" LAST DUEL.


Of all the places in the county "The Towers" was the favorite with the
young people. There even before Margaret was installed the Major kept
open house with his major domo and factotum "George Washington"; and
when Margaret came from school, of course it was popular. Only one
class of persons was excluded.

There were few people in the county who did not know of the Major's
antipathy to "old women," as he called them. Years no more entered
into his definition of this class than celibacy did into his idea of
an "old bachelor." The state of single blessedness continued in the
female sex beyond the bloom of youth was in his eyes the sole basis
of this unpardonable condition. He made certain concessions to the
few individuals among his neighbors who had remained in the state of
spinsterhood, because, as he declared, neighborliness was a greater
virtue than consistency; but he drew the line at these few, and it was
his boast that no old woman had ever been able to get into his Eden.
"One of them," he used to say, "would close paradise just as readily
now as Eve did six thousand years ago." Thus, although as Margaret grew
up she had any other friends she desired to visit her as often as she
chose, her wish being the supreme law at Rock Towers, she had never
even thought of inviting one of the class against whom her uncle's
ruddy face was so steadfastly set. The first time it ever occurred to
her to invite any one among the proscribed was when she asked Rose
Endicott to pay her a visit. Rose, she knew, was living with her old
aunt, Miss Jemima Bridges, whom she had once met in R----, and she had
some apprehension that in Miss Jemima's opinion, the condition of the
South was so much like that of the Sandwich Islands that the old lady
would not permit Rose to come without her personal escort. Accordingly,
one evening after tea, when the Major was in a particularly gracious
humor, and had told her several of his oldest and best stories,
Margaret fell upon him unawares, and before he had recovered from the
shock of the encounter, had captured his consent. Then, in order to
secure the leverage of a dispatched invitation, she had immediately
written Rose, asking her and her aunt to come and spend a month or
two with her, and had without delay handed it to George Washington to
deliver to Lazarus to give Luke to carry to the post-office. The next
evening, therefore, when the Major, after twenty-four hours of serious
apprehension, re-opened the matter with a fixed determination to coax
or buy her out of the notion, because, as he used to say, "women can't
be _reasoned_ out of a thing, sir, not having been reasoned in,"
Margaret was able to meet him with the announcement that it was "too
late," as the letter had already been mailed.

Seated in one of the high-backed arm-chairs, with one white hand
shading her laughing eyes from the light, and with her evening dress
daintily spread out about her, Margaret was amused at the look of
desperation on the old gentleman's ruddy face. He squared his round
body before the fire, braced himself with his plump legs well apart, as
if he were preparing to sustain the shock of a blow, and taking a deep
inspiration, gave a loud and prolonged "Whew!"

This was too much for her.

Margaret rose, and, going up to him, took his arm and looked into his
face cajolingly.

"Uncle, I was bound to have Rose, and Miss Jemima would not have let
her come alone."

The tone was the low, almost plaintive key, the effectiveness of which
Margaret knew so well.

"'Not let her!'" The Major faced her quickly. "Margaret, she is one of
those _strong-minded_ women!"

Margaret nodded brightly.

"I bet my horse she wears iron-gray curls, caught on the side of her
head with tucking combs!"

"She does," declared Margaret, her eyes dancing.

"And has a long nose--red at the end."

"Uncle, you have seen her. I _know_ you have seen her," asserted
Margaret, laughing up at him. "You have her very picture."

The Major groaned, and vowed that he would never survive it, and that
Margaret would go down to history as the slayer of her uncle.

"I have selected my place in the graveyard," he said, with a mournful
shake of the head. "Put me close to the fence behind the raspberry
thicket, where I shall be secure. Tell her there are snakes there."

"But, uncle, she is as good as gold," declared Margaret; "she is always
doing good,--I believe she thinks it her mission to save the world."

The Major burst out, "That's part of this modern devilment of
substituting humanitarianism for Christianity. Next thing they'll be
wanting to abolish hell!"

The Major was so impressed with his peril that when Jeff, who had
galloped over "for a little while," entered, announced with great
ceremony by George Washington, he poured out all his apprehensions
into his sympathetic ear, and it was only when he began to rally Jeff
on the chance of his becoming a victim to Miss Endicott's charms,
that Margaret interfered so far as to say, that Rose had any number
of lovers, and one of them was "an awfully nice fellow, handsome and
rich and all that." She wished "some one" would invite him down to
pay a visit in the neighborhood, for she was "afraid Rose would find
it dreadfully dull in the country." The Major announced that he would
himself make love to her; but both Margaret and Jeff declared that
Providence manifestly intended him for Miss Jemima. He then suggested
that Miss Endicott's friend be invited to come with her, but Margaret
did not think that would do.

"What is the name of this Paragon?" inquired Jeff.

Margaret gave his name. "Mr. Lawrence--Pickering Lawrence."

"Why, I know him, 'Pick Lawrence.' We were college-mates, class-mates.
He used to be in love with somebody up at his home then; but I
never identified her with your friend. We were great cronies at the
University. He was going to be a lawyer; but I believe somebody died
and he came into a fortune." This history did not appear to surprise
Margaret as much as might have been expected, and she said nothing more
about him.

About a week later Jeff took occasion to ride over to tea, and
announced that his friend Mr. Lawrence had promised to run down and
spend a few weeks with him. Margaret looked so pleased and dwelt so
much on the alleged charms of the expected guest that Jeff, with a
pang of jealousy, suddenly asserted that he "didn't think so much of
Lawrence," that he was one of those fellows who always pretended to be
very much in love with somebody, and was "always changing his clothes."

"That's what girls like," said Margaret, decisively; and this was all
the thanks Jeff received.


                                  II.

There was immense excitement at the Towers next day when the visitors
were expected. The Major took twice his usual period to dress;
George Washington with a view to steadying his nerves braced them
so tight that he had great difficulty in maintaining his equipoise,
and even Margaret herself was in a flutter quite unusual to one so
self-possessed as she generally was. When, however, the carriage drove
up to the door, the Major, with Margaret a little in advance, met
the visitors at the steps in all the glory of new blue broadcloth
and flowered velvet. Sir Charles Grandison could not have been more
elegant, nor Sir Roger more gracious. Behind him yet grander stood
George--George Washington--his master's facsimile in ebony down to
the bandanna handkerchief and the trick of waving the right hand in a
flowing curve. It was perhaps this spectacle which saved the Major,
for Miss Jemima was so overwhelmed by George Washington's portentous
dignity that she exhibited sufficient humility to place the Major
immediately at his ease, and from this time Miss Jemima was at a
disadvantage, and the Major felt that he was master of the situation.

The old lady had never been in the South before except for a few
days on the occasion when Margaret had met her and Rose Endicott at
the hotel in R----, and she had then seen just enough to excite her
inquisitiveness. Her natural curiosity was quite amazing. She was
desperately bent on acquiring information, and whatever she heard
she set down in a journal, so as soon as she became sufficiently
acquainted with the Major she began to ply him with questions. Her
seat at table was at the Major's right, and the questions which she
put to him proved so embarrassing, that the old gentleman declared to
Margaret that if that old woman knew as much as she wanted to know
she would with her wisdom eclipse Solomon and destroy the value of
the Scriptures. He finally hit upon an expedient. He either traversed
every proposition she suggested, or else answered every inquiry with a
statement which was simply astounding. She had therefore not been at
the Towers a week before she was in the possession of facts furnished
by the Major which might have staggered credulity itself.

One of the many entries in her journal was to the effect that,
according to Major B----, it was the custom on many plantations to
shoot a slave every year, on the ground that such a sacrifice was
generally salutary; that it was an expiation of past derelictions and a
deterrent from repetition. And she added this memorandum:

"The most extraordinary and revolting part of it all is that this
barbarous custom, which might well have been supposed confined to
Dahomey, is justified by such men as Major B---- as a pious act." She
inserted this query, "Can it be true?"

If she did not wholly believe the Major, she did not altogether
disbelieve him. She at least was firmly convinced that it was quite
possible. She determined to inquire privately of George Washington.

She might have inquired of one of the numerous maids, whose useless
presence embarrassed her; but the Major foreseeing that she might
pursue her investigation in other directions, had informed her that the
rite was guarded with the greatest care, and that it would be as much
as any one's life were worth to divulge it. Miss Jemima, therefore,
was too loyal to expose one of her own sex to such danger; so she was
compelled to consult George Washington, whom she believed clever enough
to take care of himself.

She accordingly watched several days for an opportunity to see him
alone, but without success. In fact, though she was unaware of it,
George Washington had conceived for her a most violent dislike, and
carefully avoided her. He had observed with growing suspicion Miss
Jemima's investigation of matters relating to the estate, and her
persistent pursuit of knowledge at the table had confirmed him in his
idea that she contemplated the capture of his master and himself.

Like his master, he had a natural antipathy to "old women," and as the
Major's threat for years had varied between "setting him free next
morning" and giving him "a mistress to make him walk straight," George
Washington felt that prudence demanded some vigilance on his part.

One day, under cover of the hilarity incident to the presence at dinner
of Jeff and of his guest, Mr. Lawrence, Miss Jemima had pushed her
inquisition even further than usual. George Washington watched her
with growing suspicion, his head thrown back and his eyes half closed,
and so, when, just before dinner was over, he went into the hall to
see about the fire, he, after his habit, took occasion to express his
opinion of affairs to the sundry members of the family who looked down
at him from their dim gilt frames on the wall.

"I ain't pleased wid de way things is gwine on heah at all," he
declared, poking the fire viciously and addressing his remark more
particularly to an old gentlemen who in ruffles and red velvet sat
with crossed legs in a high-backed chair just over the piano. "Heah me
an' Marse Nat an' Miss Margaret been gittin' 'long all dese years easy
an' peaceable, an' Marse Jeff been comin' over sociable all de time,
an' d' ain' been no trouble nor nuttin' till now dat ole ooman what
ax mo' questions 'n a thousan' folks kin answer got to come heah and
set up to Marse Nat, an' talk to him so he cyarn hardly eat." He rose
from his knees at the hearth, and looking the old gentleman over the
piano squarely in the face, asserted, "She got her mine sot on bein' my
mistis, dat's what 'tis!" This relieved him so that he returned to his
occupation of "chunking" the fire, adding, "When women sets de mines on
a thing, you jes' well gin up!"

So intent was he on relieving himself of the burden on his mind that he
did not hear the door softly open, and did not know anyone had entered
until an enthusiastic voice behind him exclaimed:

"Oh! what a profound observation!" George Washington started in much
confusion; for it was Miss Jemima, who had stolen away from the table
to intercept him at his task of "fixing the fires." She had, however,
heard only his concluding sentence, and she now advanced with a beaming
smile intended to conciliate the old butler. George Washington gave
the hearth a final and hasty sweep, and was retiring in a long detour
around Miss Jemima when she accosted him.

"Uncle George."

"Marm." He stopped and half turned.

"What a charming old place you have here!"

George Washington cast his eye up towards the old gentleman in the
high-backed chair, as much as to say, "You see there? What did I tell
you?" Then he said briefly:

"Yes, 'm."

"What is its extent? How many acres are there in it?"

George Washington positively started. He took in several of the family
in his glance of warning.

"Well, I declare, marm, I don't know," he began; then it occurring
to him that the honor of the family was somehow at stake and must be
upheld, he added, "A leetle mo' 'n a hundred thousan', marm." His
exactness was convincing. Miss Jemima threw up her hands:

"Prodigious! How many nee--how many persons of the African blood are
there on this vast domain?" she inquired, getting nearer to her point.

George, observing how much she was impressed, eyed her with rising
disdain:

"Does you mean niggers, m'm? 'Bout three thousan', mum."

Another exclamation of astonishment burst from the old lady's lips.

"If you will permit me to inquire, Uncle George, how old are you?"

"She warn see if I kin wuck--dat's what she's after," said George to
himself, with a confidential look at a young gentleman in a hunting
dress on the wall between two windows. Then he said:

"Well, I declare, mum, you got me dyah. I ixpec' I is mos ninety years
ole, I reckon I'se ol'er 'n you is--I reckon I is."

"Oh!" exclaimed Miss Jemima with a little start as if she had pricked
her finger with a needle.

"Marse Nat kin tell you," continued George; "if you don't know how ole
you is, all you got to do is to ax him, an' he kin tell you--he got it
all set down in a book--he kin tell how ole you is to a day."

"Dear, how frightful!" exclaimed Miss Jemima, just as the Major entered
somewhat hastily.

"He's a gone coon," said George Washington through the crack of the
door to the old gentleman in ruffles, as he pulled the door slowly to
from the outside.

The Major had left the young people in the dining-room and had come to
get a book to settle a disputed quotation. He had found the work and
was trying to read it without the ignominy of putting on his glasses,
when Miss Jemima accosted him.

"Major, your valet appears to be a very intelligent person."

The Major turned upon her.

"My 'valet'! Madam! I have no valet!"

"I mean your body servant, your butler"--explained Miss Jemima. "I have
been much impressed by him."

"George!--George Washington?--you mean George Washington! No, madam, he
has not a particle of intelligence.--He is grossly and densely stupid.
I have never in fifty years been able to get an idea into his head."

"Oh, dear! and I thought him so clever! I was wondering how so
intelligent a person, so well informed, could be a slave."

The Major faced about.

"George! George Washington a slave! Madam, you misapprehend the
situation. _He_ is no slave. I am the slave, not only of him but of
three hundred more as arrogant and exacting as the Czar, and as lazy as
the devil!"

Miss Jemima threw up her hands in astonishment, and the Major, who was
on a favorite theme, proceeded:

"Why, madam, the very coat on my back belongs to that rascal George
Washington, and I do not know when he may take a fancy to order me out
of it. My soul is not my own. He drinks my whiskey, steals my tobacco,
and takes my clothes before my face. As likely as not he will have on
this very waistcoat before the week is out."

The Major stroked his well-filled velvet vest caressingly, as if he
already felt the pangs of the approaching separation.

"Oh, dear! You amaze me," began Miss Jemima.

"Yes, madam, I should be amazed myself, except that I have stood it so
long. Why, I had once an affair with an intimate and valued friend,
Judge Carrington. You may have heard of him, a very distinguished man!
and I was indiscreet enough to carry that rascal George Washington to
the field, thinking, of course, that I ought to go like a gentleman,
and although the affair was arranged after we had taken our positions,
and I did not have the pleasure of shooting at him,----"

"Good heavens!" exclaimed Miss Jemima. "_The pleasure of shooting at
your friend!_ Monstrous!"

"I say I did not have that pleasure," corrected the Major, blandly;
"the affair was, as I stated, arranged without a shot; yet do you know?
that rascal George Washington will not allow that it was so, and I
understand he recounts with the most harrowing details the manner in
which 'he and I,' as he terms it, shot my friend--murdered him."

Miss Jemima gave an "Ugh. Horrible! What depravity!" she said, almost
under her breath.

The Major caught the words.

"Yes, madam, it is horrible to think of such depravity. Unquestionably
he deserves death; but what can one do! The law, kept feeble by
politicians, does not permit one to kill them, however worthless they
are (he observed Miss Jemima's start,)--except, of course, by way of
example, under certain peculiar circumstances, as I have stated to
you." He bowed blandly.

Miss Jemima was speechless, so he pursued.

"I have sometimes been tempted to make a break for liberty, and have
thought that if I could once get the rascal on the field, with my old
pistols, I would settle with him which of us is the master."

"Do you mean that you would--would shoot him?" gasped Miss Jemima.

"Yes, madam, unless he should be too quick for me," replied the Major,
blandly,--"or should order me from the field, which he probably would
do."

The old lady turned and hastily left the room.


                                 III.

Though Miss Jemima after this regarded the Major with renewed
suspicion, and confided to her niece that she did not feel at all safe
with him, the old gentleman was soon on the same terms with Rose that
he was on with Margaret herself. He informed her that he was just
twenty-five his "last grass," and that he never could, would, or should
grow a year older. He notified Jeff and his friend Mr. Lawrence at
the table that he regarded himself as a candidate for Miss Endicott's
hand, and had "staked" the ground, and he informed her that as soon as
he could bring himself to break an oath which he had made twenty years
before, never to address another woman, he intended to propose to her.
Rose, who had lingered at the table a moment behind the other ladies,
assured the old fellow that he need fear no rival, and that if he could
not muster courage to propose before she left, as it was leap-year, she
would exercise her prerogative and propose herself. The Major, with his
hand on his heart as he held the door open for her, vowed as Rose swept
past him her fine eyes dancing, and her face dimpling with fun, that he
was ready that moment to throw himself at her feet if it were not for
the difficulty of getting up from his knees.

A little later in the afternoon Margaret was down among the
rose-bushes, where Lawrence had joined her, after Rose had executed
that inexplicable feminine manoeuvre of denying herself to oppose a
lover's request.

Jeff was leaning against a pillar, pretending to talk to Rose, but
listening more to the snatches of song in Margaret's rich voice, or to
the laughter which floated up to them from the garden below.

Suddenly he said abruptly, "I believe that fellow Lawrence is in love
with Margaret."

Rose insisted on knowing what ground he had for so peculiar an opinion,
on which he incontinently charged his friend with being one of "those
fellows who falls in love with every pretty girl on whom he lays his
eyes," and declared that he had done nothing but hang around Margaret
ever since he had come to the county.

What Rose might have replied to this unexpected attack on one whom
she reserved for her own especial torture cannot be recorded, for the
Major suddenly appeared around the verandah. Both the young people
instinctively straightened up.

"Ah! you rascals! I catch you!" he cried, his face glowing with
jollity. "Jeff, you'd better look out,--honey catches a heap of flies,
and sticks mighty hard. Rose, don't show him any mercy,--kick him,
trample on him."

"I am not honey," said Rose, with a captivating look out of her bright
eyes.

"Yes, you are. If you are not you are the very rose from which it is
distilled."

"Oh, how charming!" cried the young lady. "How I wish some woman could
hear that said to me!"

"Don't give him credit before you hear all his proverb," said Jeff. "Do
you know what he said in the dining-room?"

"Don't credit _him_ at all," replied the Major. "Don't believe
him--don't listen to him. He is green with envy at my success." And the
old fellow shook with amusement.

"What did he say? Please tell me." She appealed to Jeff, and then as he
was about to speak, seeing the Major preparing to run, she caught him.
"No, you have to listen. Now tell me," to Jeff again.

"Well, he said honey caught lots of flies, and women lots of fools."

Rose fell back, and pointing her tapering finger at the Major, who,
with mock humility, was watching her closely, declared that she would
"never believe in him again." The old fellow met her with an unblushing
denial of ever having made such a statement or held such traitorous
sentiments, as it was, he maintained, a well established fact that
flies never eat honey at all.

From this moment the Major conceived the idea that Jeff had been
caught by his fair visitor. It had never occurred to him that any
one could aspire to Margaret's hand. He had thought at one time that
Jeff was in danger of falling a victim to the charms of the pretty
daughter of an old friend and neighbor of his, and though it appeared
rather a pity for a young fellow to fall in love "out of the State,"
yet the claims of hospitality, combined with the fact that rivalry
with Mr. Lawrence, against whom, on account of his foppishness, he had
conceived some prejudice, promised a delightful excitement, more than
counterbalanced that objectionable feature. He therefore immediately
constituted himself Jeff's ardent champion, and always spoke of the
latter's guest as "that fellow Lawrence."

Accordingly, when, one afternoon, on his return from his ride, he
found Jeff, who had ridden over to tea, lounging around alone, in a
state of mind as miserable as a man should be who, having come with
the expectation of basking in the sunshine of Beauty's smile, finds
that Beauty is out horseback riding with a rival, he was impelled to
give him aid, countenance, and advice. He immediately attacked him,
therefore, on his forlorn and woebegone expression, and declared that
at his age he would have long ago run the game to earth, and have
carried her home across his saddle-bow.

"You are afraid, sir--afraid," he asserted, hotly. "I don't know what
you fellows are coming to."

Jeff admitted the accusation. "He feared," he said, "that he could not
get a girl to have him." He was looking rather red when the Major cut
him short.

"'Fear,' sir! Fear catches kicks, not kisses. 'Not _get_ a girl to have
you!' Well, upon my soul! Why don't you run after her and bawl like a
baby for her to stop, whilst you get down on your knees and--_get_ her
to have you!"

Jeff was too dejected to be stung even by this unexpected attack. He
merely said, dolorously:

"Well, how the deuce can it be done?"

"_Make_ her, sir--_make_ her," cried the Major. "Coerce her--compel
her." The old fellow was in his element. He shook his grizzled head,
and brought his hollowed hands together with sounding emphasis.

Jeff suggested that perhaps she might be impregnable, but the old
fellow affirmed that no woman was this; that no fortress was too strong
to be carried; that it all depended on the assailant and the vehemence
of the assault; and if one did not succeed, another would. The young
man brightened. His mentor, however, dashed his rising hopes by saying:
"But mark this, sir, no coward can succeed. Women are rank cowards
themselves, and they demand courage in their conquerors. Do you think a
woman will marry a man who trembles before her? By Jove, sir! He must
make her tremble!"

Jeff admitted dubiously that this sounded like wisdom. The Major burst
out, "Wisdom, sir! It is the wisdom of Solomon, who had a thousand
wives!"

From this time the Major constituted himself Jeff's ally, and was ready
to take the field on his behalf against any and all comers. Therefore,
when he came into the hall one day when Rose was at the piano, running
her fingers idly over the keys, whilst Lawrence was leaning over her
talking, he exclaimed:

"Hello! what treason's this? I'll tell Jeff. He was consulting me only
yesterday about--"

Lawrence muttered an objurgation; but Rose wheeled around on the
piano-stool and faced him.

--"Only yesterday about the best mode of winning--" He stopped
tantalizingly.

"Of winning what? I am so interested." She rose and stood just before
him with a cajoling air. The Major shut his mouth tight.

"I'm as dumb as an oyster. Do you think I would betray my friend's
confidence--for nothing? I'm as silent as the oracle of Delphi."

Lawrence looked anxious, and Rose followed the old man closely.

"I'll pay you anything."

"I demand payment in coin that buys youth from age." He touched his
lips, and catching Rose leaned slowly forward and kissed her.

"Now, tell me--what did he say? A bargain's a bargain," she laughed as
Lawrence almost ground his teeth.

"Well, he said,--he said, let me see, what did he say?" paltered the
Major. "He said he could not get a girl he loved to have him."

"Oh! did he say _that_?" She was so much interested that she just knew
that Lawrence half stamped his foot.

"Yes, he said just that, and I told him--"

"Well,--what did you say?"

"Oh! I did not bargain to tell what _I_ told _him_. I received payment
only for betraying his confidence. If you drive a bargain I will drive
one also."

Rose declared that he was the greatest old screw she ever knew, but she
paid the price, and waited.

"Well?--"

"'Well?' Of course, I told him 'well.' I gave him the best advice a man
ever received. A lawyer would have charged him five hundred dollars for
it. I'm an oracle on heart-capture."

Rose laughingly declared she would have to consult him herself,
and when the Major told her to consult only her mirror, gave him a
courtesy and wished he would teach some young men of her acquaintance
to make such speeches. The old fellow vowed, however, that they were
unteachable; that he would as soon expect to teach young moles.


                                  IV.

It was not more than a half hour after this when George Washington came
in and found the Major standing before the long mirror, turning around
and holding his coat back from his plump sides so as to obtain a fair
view of his ample dimensions.

"George Washington," said he.

"Suh."

"I'm afraid I'm growing a little too stout."

George Washington walked around and looked at him with the critical
gaze of a butcher appraising a fat ox.

"Oh! nor, suh, you aint, not to say too stout," he finally decided as
the result of this inspection, "you jis gittin' sort o' potely. Hit's
monsus becomin' to you."

"Do you think so?" The Major was manifestly flattered. "I was
apprehensive that I might be growing a trifle fat,"--he turned
carefully around before the mirror,--"and from a fat old man and a
scrawny old woman, Heaven deliver us, George Washington!"

"Nor, suh, you ain' got a ounce too much meat on you," said George,
reassuringly; "how much you weigh, Marse Nat, last time you was on de
stilyards?" he inquired with wily interest.

The Major faced him.

"George Washington, the last time I weighed I tipped the beam at one
hundred and forty-three pounds, and I had the waist of a girl."

He laid his fat hands with the finger tips touching on his round sides
about where the long since reversed curves of the lamented waist once
were, and gazed at George with comical melancholy.

"Dat's so," assented the latter, with wonted acquiescence. "I 'members
hit well, suh, dat wuz when me and you wuz down in Gloucester tryin' to
git up spunk to co'te Miss Ailsy Mann. Dat's mo'n thirty years ago."

The Major reflected. "It cannot be thirty years!--thir--ty--years," he
mused.

"Yes, suh, an' better, too. 'Twuz befo' we fit de duil wid Jedge
Carrington. I know dat, 'cause dat's what we shoot him 'bout--'cause he
co'te Miss Ailsy an' cut we out."

"Damn your memory! Thirty years! I could dance all night then--every
night in the week--and now I can hardly mount my horse without getting
the thumps."

George Washington, affected by his reminiscences, declared that he had
heard one of the ladies saying, "just the other day," what "a fine
portly gentleman" he was.

The Major brightened.

"Did you hear that? George Washington, if you tell me a lie I'll set
you free!" It was his most terrible threat, used only on occasions of
exceptional provocation.

George vowed that no reward could induce him to be guilty of such
an enormity, and followed it up by so skillful an allusion to the
progressing youth of his master that the latter swore he was right,
and that he could dance better than he could at thirty, and to prove
it executed, with extraordinary agility for a man who rode at twenty
stone, a _pas seul_ which made the floor rock and set the windows and
ornaments to rattling as if there had been an earthquake. Suddenly,
with a loud "Whew," he flung himself into an arm-chair, panting and
perspiring. "It's you, sir," he gasped--"you put me up to it."

"Nor, suh; tain me, Marse Nat--I's tellin' you de truf," asserted
George, moved to defend himself.

"You infernal old rascal, it is you," panted the Major, still mopping
his face--"you have been running riot so long you need regulation--I'll
tell you what I'll do--I'll marry and give you a mistress to manage
you--yes, sir, I'll get married right away. I know the very woman for
you--she'll make you walk chalk!"

For thirty years this had been his threat, so George was no more
alarmed than he was at the promise of being sold, or turned loose upon
the world as a free man. He therefore inquired solemnly,

"Marse Nat, le' me ax you one thing--you ain' thinkin' 'bout givin' me
that ole one for a mistis is you?"

"What old one, fool?" The Major stopped panting. George Washington
denoted the side of his head where Miss Jemima's thin curls nestled.

"Get out of this room. Tell Dilsy to pack your chest, I'll send you off
to-morrow morning."

George Washington blinked with the gravity of a terrapin. It might have
been obtuseness; or it might have been silent but exquisite enjoyment
which lay beneath his black skin.

"George Washington," said the Major almost in a whisper, "what made you
think that?"

It was to George Washington's undying credit that not a gleam flitted
across his ebony countenance as he said solemnly,

"Marse Nat, I ain say I _think_ nuttin--I jis ax you, Is you?--She been
meckin mighty partic'lar quiration 'bout de plantation and how many
niggers we got an' all an' I jis spicionate she got her eye sort o' set
on you an' me, dat's all."

The Major bounced to his feet, and seizing his hat and gloves from the
table, burst out of the room. A minute later he was shouting for his
horse in a voice which might have been heard a mile.


                                  V.

Jeff laid to heart the Major's wisdom; but when it came to acting upon
it the difficulty arose. He often wondered why his tongue became tied
and his throat grew dry when he was in Margaret's presence these days
and even just thought of saying anything serious to her. He had known
Margaret ever since she was a wee bit of a baby, and had often carried
her in his arms when she was a little girl and even after she grew up
to be "right big." He had thought frequently of late that he would be
willing to die if he might but take her in his arms. It was, therefore,
with no little disquietude that he observed what he considered his
friend's growing fancy for her. By the time Lawrence had taken a few
strolls in the garden and a horseback ride or two with her Jeff was
satisfied that he was in love with her, and before a week was out he
was consumed with jealousy. Margaret was not the girl to indulge in
repining on account of her lover's unhappiness. If Jeff had had a
finger-ache, or had a drop of sorrow but fallen in his cup her eyes
would have softened and her face would have shown how fully she felt
with him; but this--this was different. To wring his heart was a part
of the business of her young ladyhood; it was a healthy process from
which would come greater devotion and more loyal constancy. Then, it
was so delightful to make one whom she liked as she did Jeff look so
miserable. Perhaps some time she would reward him--after a long while,
though. Thus, poor Jeff spent many a wretched hour cursing his fate
and cursing Pick Lawrence. He thought he would create a diversion by
paying desperate attention to Margaret's guest; but it resolved itself
on the first opportunity into his opening his heart and confiding all
his woes to her. In doing this he fell into the greatest contradiction,
declaring one moment that no one suspected that he was in love with
Margaret, and the next vowing that she had every reason to know he
adored her, as he had been in love with her all her life. It was one
afternoon in the drawing-room. Rose, with much sapience, assured him
that no woman could have but one reason to know it. Jeff dolefully
inquired what it was.

Rising and walking up to him she said in a mysterious whisper,--

"Tell her."

Jeff, after insisting that he had been telling her for years, lapsed
into a declaration of helpless perplexity. "How can I tell her more
than I have been telling her all along?" he groaned. Rose said she
would show him. She seated herself on the sofa, spread out her dress
and placed him behind her.

"Now, do as I tell you--no, not so,--_so_;--now lean over,--put
your arm--no, it is not necessary to touch me," as Jeff, with prompt
apprehension, fell into the scheme, and declared that he was all right
in a rehearsal, and that it was only in the real drama he failed. "Now
say 'I love you.'" Jeff said it. They were in this attitude when the
door opened suddenly and Margaret stood facing them, her large eyes
opened wider than ever. She backed out and shut the door.

Jeff sprang up, his face very red.

Lawyers know that the actions of a man on being charged with a crime
are by no means infallible evidence of his guilt,--but it is hard to
satisfy juries of this fact. If the juries were composed of women
perhaps it would be impossible.

The ocular demonstration of a man's arm around a girl's waist is
difficult to explain on more than one hypothesis.

After this Margaret treated Jeff with a rigor which came near
destroying the friendship of a lifetime; and Jeff became so desperate
that inside of a week he had had his first quarrel with Lawrence, who
had begun to pay very devoted attention to Margaret, and as that young
man was in no mood to lay balm on a bruised wound, mischief might have
been done had not the Major arrived opportunely on the scene just as
the quarrel came to a white-heat. It was in the hall one morning. There
had been a quarrel. Jeff had just demanded satisfaction; Lawrence had
just promised to afford him this peculiar happiness, and they were both
glaring at each other, when the Major sailed in at the door, ruddy and
smiling, and laying his hat on the table and his riding-whip across it,
declared that before he would stand such a gloomy atmosphere as that
created by a man's glowering looks, when there was so much sunshine
just lying around to be basked in, he would agree to be "eternally
fried in his own fat."

"Why, I had expected at least two affairs before this," he said
jovially, as he pulled off his gloves, "and I'll be hanged if I shan't
have to court somebody myself to save the honor of the family."

Jeff with dignity informed him that an affair was then brewing, and
Lawrence intimated that they were both interested, when the Major
declared that he would "advise the young lady to discard both and
accept a soberer and a wiser man." They announced that it was a more
serious affair than he had in mind, and let fall a hint of what had
occurred. The Major for a moment looked gravely from one to the other,
and suggested mutual explanations and retractions; but when both young
men insisted that they were quite determined, and proposed to have a
meeting at once, he changed. He walked over to the window and looked
out for a moment. Then turned and suddenly offered to represent both
parties. Jeff averred that such a proceeding was outside of the Code;
this the Major gravely admitted; but declared that the affair even to
this point appeared not to have been conducted in entire conformity
with that incomparable system of rules, and urged that as Mr. Lawrence
was a stranger and as it was desirable to have the affair conducted
with as much secrecy and dispatch as possible, it might be well for
them to meet as soon as convenient, and he would attend rather as a
witness than as a second. The young men assented to this, and the
Major, now thoroughly in earnest, with much solemnity, offered the use
of his pistols, which was accepted.

In the discussion which followed, the Major took the lead, and
suggested sunset that afternoon as a suitable time, and the grass-plat
between the garden and the graveyard as a convenient and secluded
spot. This also was agreed to, though Lawrence's face wore a soberer
expression than had before appeared upon it.

The Major's entire manner had changed; his levity had suddenly given
place to a gravity most unusual to him, and instead of his wonted
jollity his face wore an expression of the greatest seriousness. He,
after a casual glance at Lawrence, suddenly insisted that it was
necessary to exchange a cartel, and opening his secretary, with much
pomp proceeded to write. "You see--if things were not regular it would
be butchery," he explained, considerately, to Lawrence, who winced
slightly at the word. "I don't want to see you murder each other,"
he went on in a slow comment as he wrote, "I wish you, since you are
determined to shoot--each other--to do it like--gentlemen." He took a
new sheet. Suddenly he began to shout,--

"George--George Washington." There was no answer, so as he wrote on he
continued to shout at intervals, "George Washington!"

After a sufficient period had elapsed for a servant crossing the yard
to call to another, who sent a third to summon George, and for that
functionary to take a hasty potation from a decanter as he passed
through the dining-room at his usual stately pace, he appeared at the
door.

"Did you call, suh?" he inquired, with that additional dignity which
bespoke his recourse to the sideboard as intelligibly as if he had
brought the decanters in his hand.

"Did I call!" cried the Major, without looking up. "Why don't you come
when you hear me?"

George Washington steadied himself on his feet, and assumed an
aggrieved expression.

"Do you suppose I can wait for you to drink all the whiskey in my
sideboard? Are you getting deaf-drunk as well as blind-drunk?" he
asked, still writing industriously.

George Washington gazed up at his old master in the picture on the
wall, and shook his head sadly.

"Nor, suh, Marse Nat. You know I ain' drink none to git drunk. I is a
member o' de church. I is full of de sperit."

The Major, as he blotted his paper, assured him that he knew he was
much fuller of it than were his decanters, and George Washington was
protesting further, when his master rose, and addressing Jeff as the
challenger, began to read. He had prepared a formal cartel, and all
the subsequent and consequential documents which appear necessary
to a well-conducted and duly bloodthirsty meeting under the duello,
and he read them with an impressiveness which was only equalled by
the portentious dignity of George Washington. As he stood balancing
himself, and took in the solemn significance of the matter, his whole
air changed; he raised his head, struck a new attitude, and immediately
assumed the position of one whose approval of the affair was of the
utmost moment.

The Major stated that he was glad that they had decided to use the
regular duelling pistols, not only as they were more convenient--he
having a very fine, accurate pair--but as they were smooth bore and
carried a good, large ball, which made a clean, pretty hole, without
tearing. "Now," he explained kindly to Lawrence, "the ball from one
of these infernal rifled concerns goes gyrating and tearing its way
through you, and makes an orifice like a _posthole_." He illustrated
his meaning with a sweeping spiral motion of his clenched fist.

Lawrence grew a shade whiter, and wondered how Jeff felt and looked,
whilst Jeff set his teeth more firmly as the Major added blandly that
"no gentleman wanted to blow another to pieces like a Sepoy mutineer."

George Washington's bow of exaggerated acquiescence drew the Major's
attention to him.

"George Washington, are my pistols clean?" he asked.

"Yes, suh, clean as yo' shut-front," replied George Washington, grandly.

"Well, clean them again."

"Yes, suh," and George was disappearing with ponderous dignity, when
the Major called him, "George Washington."

"Yes, suh."

"Tell carpenter William to come to the porch. His services may be
needed," he explained to Lawrence, "in case there should be a casualty,
you know."

"Yes, suh." George Washington disappeared. A moment later he re-opened
the door.

"Marse Nat."

"Sir."

"Shall I send de overseer to dig de graves, suh?"

Lawrence could not help exclaiming, "Good----!" and then checked
himself; and Jeff gave a perceptible start.

"I will attend to that," said the Major, and George Washington went out
with an order from Jeff to take the box to the office.

The Major laid the notes on his desk and devoted himself to a brief
eulogy on the beautiful symmetry of "the Code," illustrating his views
by apt references to a number of instances in which its absolute
impartiality had been established by the instant death of both parties.
He had just suggested that perhaps the two young men might desire
to make some final arrangements, when George Washington reappeared,
drunker and more imposing than before. In place of his ordinary apparel
he had substituted a yellowish velvet waistcoat and a blue coat with
brass buttons, both of which were several sizes too large for him,
as they had for several years been stretched over the Major's ample
person. He carried a well-worn beaver hat in his hand, which he never
donned except on extraordinary occasions.

"De pistils is ready, suh," he said, in a fine voice, which he
always employed when he proposed to be peculiarly effective. His
self-satisfaction was monumental.

"Where did you get that coat and waistcoat from, sir?" thundered the
Major. "Who told you you might have them?"

George Washington was quite taken aback at the unexpectedness of the
assault, and he shuffled one foot uneasily.

"Well, you see, suh," he began, vaguely, "I know you warn' never gwine
to wear 'em no mo', and seein' dat dis was a very serious recasion,
an' I wuz rip-ripresentin' Marse Jeff in a jewel, I thought I ought to
repear like a gent'man on dis recasion."

"You infernal rascal, didn't I tell you that the next time you took my
clothes without asking my permission, I was going to shoot you?"

The Major faced his chair around with a jerk, but George Washington had
in the interim recovered himself.

"Yes, suh, I remembers dat," he said, complacently, "but dat didn't
have no recose to dese solemn recasions when I rip-ripresents a
gent'man in de Code."

"Yes, sir, it did, I had this especially in mind," declared the Major,
unblushingly--"I gave you fair notice, and damn me! if I don't do it
too before I'm done with you--I'd sell you to-morrow morning if it
would not be a cheat on the man who was fool enough to buy you. My best
coat and waistcoat!"--he looked affectionately at the garments.

George Washington evidently knew the way to soothe him--"Who ever heah
de beat of dat!" he said in a tone of mild complaint, partly to the
young men and partly to his old master in the ruffles and velvet over
the piano, "Marse Nat, you reckon I ain' got no better manners 'n to
teck you _bes'_ coat and weskit! Dis heah coat and weskit nuver did
you no favor anyways--I hear Miss Marg'ret talkin' 'bout it de fust
time you ever put 'em on. Dat's de reason I tuck 'em." Having found an
excuse he was as voluble as a river--"I say to myself, I ain' gwine let
my young marster wyar dem things no mo' roun' heah wid strange ladies
an' gent'man stayin' in de house too,--an' I so consarned about it, I
say, 'George Wash'n'n, you got to git dem things and wyar 'em yo'self
to keep him f'om doin' it, dat's what you got to do,' I say, and dat's
de reason I tuk 'em." He looked the picture of self-sacrifice.

But the Major burst forth on him: "Why, you lying rascal, that's
three different reasons you have given in one breath for taking
them." At which George Washington shook his woolly head with doleful
self-abnegation.

"Just look at them!" cried the Major--"My favorite waistcoat! There is
not a crack or a brack in them--They look as nice as they did the day
they were bought!"

This was too much for George Washington. "Dat's the favor, suh, of de
pussen what has 'em on," he said, bowing grandly; at which the Major,
finding his ire giving way to amusement, drove him from the room,
swearing that if he did not shoot him that evening he would set him
free to-morrow morning.


                                  VI.

As the afternoon had worn away, and whilst the two principals in the
affair were arranging their matters, the Major had been taking every
precaution to carry out the plan for the meeting. The effect of the
approaching duel upon the old gentleman was somewhat remarkable. He was
in unusually high spirits; his rosy countenance wore an expression of
humorous content; and, from time to time as he bustled about, a smile
flitted across his face, or a chuckle sounded from the depths of his
satin stock. He fell in with Miss Jemima, and related to her a series
of anecdotes respecting duelling and homicide generally, so lurid in
their character that she groaned over the depravity of a region where
such barbarity was practised; but when he solemnly informed her that he
felt satisfied from the signs of the time that some one would be shot
in the neighborhood before twenty-four hours were over, the old lady
determined to return home next day.

It was not difficult to secure secrecy, as the Major had given
directions that no one should be admitted to the garden.

For at least an hour before sunset he had been giving directions to
George Washington which that dignitary would have found some difficulty
in executing, even had he remained sober; but which, in his existing
condition, was as impossible as for him to change the kinks in his
hair. The Major had solemnly assured him that if he got drunk he would
shoot him on the spot, and George Washington had as solemnly consented
that he would gladly die if he should be found in this unprecedented
condition. Immediately succeeding which, however, under the weight
of the momentous matters submitted to him, he had, after his habit,
sought aid and comfort of his old friends, the Major's decanters, and
he was shortly in that condition when he felt that the entire universe
depended upon him. He blacked his shoes at least twenty times, and
marched back and forth in the yard with such portentous importance that
the servants instinctively shrunk away from his august presence. One
of the children, in their frolics, ran against him; George Washington
simply said, "Git out my way," and without pausing in his gait or
deigning to look at him, slapped him completely over.

A maid ventured to accost him jocularly to know why he was so finely
dressed. George Washington overwhelmed her with a look of such infinite
contempt and such withering scorn that all the other servants forthwith
fell upon her for "interferin' in Unc' George Wash'n'ton's business."
At last the Major entered the garden and bade George Washington follow
him; and George Washington having paid his twentieth visit to the
dining-room, and had a final interview with the liquor-case, and having
polished up his old beaver anew, left the office by the side door,
carrying under his arm a mahogany box about two feet long and one foot
wide, partially covered with a large linen cloth. His beaver hat was
cocked on the side of his head, with an air supposed to be impressive.
He wore the Major's coat and flowered velvet waistcoat respecting
which he had won so signal a victory in the morning, and he flaunted a
large bandanna handkerchief, the ownership of which he had transferred
still more recently. The Major's orders to George Washington were to
convey the box to the garden in a secret manner, but George Washington
was far too much impressed with the importance of the part he bore in
the affair to lose the opportunity of impressing the other servants.
Instead, therefore, of taking a by-path, he marched ostentatiously
through the yard with a manner which effected his object, if not
his master's, and which struck the entire circle of servants with
inexpressible awe. However, after he gained the garden and reached a
spot where he was no longer in danger of being observed by any one,
he adopted a manner of the greatest secrecy, and proceeded to the
place selected for the meeting with a degree of caution which could
not have been greater had he been covertly stealing his way through a
band of hostile Indians. The spot chosen for the meeting was a grass
plot bounded on three sides by shrubbery and on the fourth by the wall
of the little square within which had been laid to rest the mortal
remains of some half dozen generations of the Burwells. Though the
grass was green and the sky above was of the deep steely hue which the
late afternoon brings; yet the thick shrubbery which secluded the place
gave it an air of wildness, and the tops of the tall monuments gleaming
white over the old wall against the dark cedars, added an impression
of ghostliness which had long caused the locality to be generally
avoided by the negroes from the time that the afternoon shadows began
to lengthen.

George Washington, indeed, as he made his way stealthily down towards
the rendezvous glanced behind him once or twice as if he were not at
all certain that some impalpable pursuer were not following him, and he
almost jumped out of his shoes when the Major, who had for ten minutes
been pacing up and down the grass-plat in a fume of impatience, caught
sight of him and suddenly shouted, "Why don't you come on, you--rascal?"

As soon as George Washington recognized that the voice was not
supernatural, he recovered his courage and at once disarmed the Major,
who, watch in hand, was demanding if he supposed he had nothing else
to do than to wait for him all night, by falling into his vein and
acquiescing in all that he said in abuse of the yet absent duellists,
or at least of one of them.

He spoke in terms of the severest reprobation of Mr. Lawrence,
declaring that he had never had a high opinion of his courage, or,
indeed, of any quality which he possessed. He was, perhaps, not quite
prepared to join in an attack on Jeff, of whose frequent benefactions
he entertained a lively recollection amounting to gratitude, at least
in the accepted French idea of that virtue, and as he had constituted
himself Jeff's especial representative for this "solemn recasion," he
felt a personal interest in defending him to some extent.

At last the Major ordered him to take out the weapons and some little
time was spent in handling them, George Washington examining them with
the air of a connoisseur. The Major asserted that he had never seen a
prettier spot, and George Washington, immediately striking an attitude,
echoed the sentiment. He was, indeed, so transported with its beauty
that he declared it reminded him of the duel he and the Major fought
with Judge Carrington, which he positively declared, was "a jewel like
you been read about," and he ended with the emphatic assertion, "Ef
dese gent'mens jes plump each urr like we did de Judge dat evelin!----"
A wave of the hand completed the period.

The Major turned on him with a positive denial that he had ever even
shot at the Judge, but George Washington unblushingly insisted that
they had, and in fact had shot him twice. "We hit him fyah an' squar'."
He levelled a pistol at a tree a few yards distant, and striking an
attitude, squinted along the barrel with the air of an old hand at the
weapon.

The Major reiterated his statement and recalled the fact that, as he
had told him and others a thousand times, they had shaken hands on the
spot, which George Washington with easy adaptability admitted, but
claimed that "ef he hadn't 'a'shook hands we'd 'a'shot him, sho! Dis
here gent'man ain' gwine git off quite so easy," he declared, having
already decided that Lawrence was to experience the deadly accuracy
of his and Jeff's aim. He ended with an unexpected "Hic!" and gave a
little lurch, which betrayed his condition, but immediately gathered
himself together again.

The Major looked at him quizzically as he stood pistols in hand in all
the grandeur of his assumed character. The shadow of disappointment at
the non-appearance of the duellists which had rested on his round face,
passed away, and he suddenly asked him which way he thought they had
better stand. George Washington twisted his head on one side and, after
striking a deliberative attitude and looking the plat well over, gave
his judgment.

"Ah--so," said the Major, and bade him step off ten paces.

George Washington cocked his hat considerably more to the side, and
with a wave of his hand, caught from the Major, took ten little
mincing steps; and without turning, glanced back over his shoulder and
inquired, "Ain' dat mighty fur apart?"

The Major stated that it was necessary to give them some chance. And
this appeared to satisfy him, for he admitted, "Yas, suh, dat's so, dee
'bleeged to have a chance," and immediately marked a point a yard or
more short of that to which he had stepped.

The Major then announced that he would load the pistols without waiting
for the advent of the other gentlemen, as he "represented both of them."

This was too much for so accomplished an adept at the Code as George
Washington, and he immediately asserted that such a thing was
preposterous, asking with some scorn, as he strutted up and down, "Who
ever heah o' one gent'man ripresentin' two in a jewel, Marse Nat?"

The Major bowed politely. "I was afraid it was a little incompatible,"
he said.

"Of cose it's incomfatible," said George Washington. "I ripresents one
and you de t'urr. Dat's de way! I ripresents _Marse Jeff_. I know _he_
ain' gwine fly de track. I done know him from a little lad. Dat urr
gent'man I ain' know nuttin tall about. You ripresents him." He waved
his hand in scorn.

"Ah!" said the Major, as he set laboriously about loading the pistols,
handling the balls somewhat ostentatiously.

George Washington asserted, "I b'lieve I know mo' 'bout the Code 'n you
does, Marse Nat."

The Major looked at him quizzically as he rammed the ball down hard. He
was so skilful that George at length added condescendingly, "But I see
you ain' forgit how to handle dese things."

The Major modestly admitted, as he put on a cap, that he used to be a
pretty fair shot, and George Washington in an attitude as declarative
of his pride in the occasion as his inebriated state admitted, was
looking on with an expression of supreme complacency, when the Major
levelled the weapon and sighted along its barrel. George Washington
gave a jump which sent his cherished beaver bouncing twenty feet.

"Look out, Marse Nat! Don' handle dat thing so keerless, please, suh."

The Major explained that he was just trying its weight, and declared
that it "came up beautifully;" to which George Washington after he had
regained his damaged helmet assented with a somewhat unsteady voice.
The Major looked at his watch and up at the trees, the tops of which
were still brightened with the reflection from the sunset sky, and
muttered an objurgation at the failure of the principals to appear,
vowing that he never before knew of a similar case, and that at least
he had not expected Jeff to fail to come to time. George Washington
again proudly announced that he represented Jeff and that it was "that
urr gent'man what had done fly de track, that urr gent'man what you
ripresents, Marse Nat." He spoke with unveiled contempt.

The Major suddenly turned on him.

"George Washington!"

"Suh!" He faced him.

"If my principal fails to appear, I must take his place. The rule is,
the second takes the place of his non-appearing principal."

"In cose dat's de rule," declared George Washington as if it were
his own suggestion; "de secon' tecks de place o' de non-repearin'
sprinciple, and dat's what mecks me say what I does, dat man is done
run away, suh, dat's what's de motter wid him. He's jes' natchelly
skeered. He couldn' face dem things, suh." He nodded towards the
pistols, his thumbs stuck in the armholes of his flowered velvet vest.
As the Major bowed George Washington continued with a hiccough, "He
ain' like we gent'mens whar's ust to 'em an' don' mine 'em no mo' 'n
pop-crackers."

"George Washington," said the Major, solemnly, with his eyes set on
George Washington's velvet waistcoat, "take your choice of these
pistols."

The old duellist made his choice with due deliberation. The Major
indicated with a wave of his hand one of the spots which George had
marked for the expected duellists. "Take your stand there, sir." George
Washington marched grandly up and planted himself with overwhelming
dignity, whilst the Major, with the other pistol in his hand, quietly
took his stand at the other position, facing him.

"George," he said, "George Washington."

"Suh." George Washington was never so imposing.

"My principal, Mr. Pickering Lawrence, having failed to appear at the
designated time and place to meet his engagement with Mr. Jefferson
Lewis, I, as his second and representative, offer myself to take his
place and assume any and all of his obligations."

George Washington bowed grandly.

"Yes, suh, of cose,--dat is accordin' to de Code," he said with
solemnity befitting the occasion.

The Major proceeded.

"And your principal, Mr. Jefferson Lewis, having likewise failed to
appear at the proper time, you take his place."

"Suh," ejaculated George Washington, in sudden astonishment, turning
his head slightly as if he were not certain he had heard correctly,
"Marse Nat, jis say dat agin, please, suh?"

The Major elevated his voice and advanced his pistol slightly.

"I say, your principal, Mr. Jefferson Lewis, having in like manner
failed to put in his appearance at the time and place agreed on for the
meeting, you as his representative take his place and assume all his
obligations."

"Oh! nor, suh, I don't!" exclaimed George Washington, shaking his head
so violently that the demoralized beaver fell off again and rolled
around unheeded. "I ain' bargain for no sich thing as dat. Nor, suh!"

But the Major was obdurate.

"Yes, sir, you do. When you accept the position of second, you assume
all the obligations attaching to that position, and----" the Major
advanced his pistol--"I shall shoot at you."

George Washington took a step towards him. "Oh! goodness! Marse Nat,
you ain' gwine do nuttin like dat, is you!" His jaw had fallen, and
when the Major bowed with deep solemnity and replied, "Yes, sir, and
you can shoot at me," he burst out.

"Marse Nat, I don' warn' shoot at you. What I warn' shoot at you for?
I ain' got nuttin 'ginst you on de fatal uth. You been good master to
me all my days an'----" The Major cut short this sincere tribute to his
virtues, by saying: "Very well, you can shoot or not as you please. I
shall aim at that waistcoat." He raised his pistol and partially closed
one eye. George Washington dropped on his knees.

"Oh, Marse Nat, please, suh. What you want to shoot me for? Po' ole
good-fornuttin George Washington, whar ain' nuver done you no harm"
(the Major's eye glanced over his blue coat and flowered vest; George
saw it), "but jes steal you' whiskey an' you' clo'es an'--Marse Nat,
ef you le' me off dis time I oon nuver steal no mo' o' you' clo'es,
er you' whiskey, er nuttin. Marse Nat, you wouldn' shoot po' ole
good-for-nuttin George Washington, whar fotch' up wid you?"

"Yes, sir, I would," declared the Major, sternly. "I am going to give
the word, and--" he raised the pistol once more.

George Washington began to creep toward him. "Oh, Lordy! Marse Nat,
please, suh, don' pint dat thing at me dat away--hit's loaded! Oh,
Lordy!" he shouted. The Major brandished his weapon fiercely.

"Stand up, sir, and stop that noise--one--two--three," he counted, but
George Washington was flat on the ground.

"Oh, Marse Nat, please, suh, don't. I'se feared o' dem things." A
sudden idea struck him. "Marse Nat, you is about to loss a mighty
valuable nigger," he pleaded; but the Major simply shouted to him
to stand up and not disgrace the gentleman he represented. George
Washington seized on the word; it was his final hope.

"Marse Nat, I don't ripresent nobody, suh, nobody at all, suh. I ain'
nuttin but a good-for-nuttin, wuthless nigger, whar brung de box down
heah cuz you tole me to, suh, dat's all. An' I'll teck off you' coat
an' weskit dis minit ef you'll jis le' me git up off de groun', suh."
Jeff suddenly appeared. George lay spraddled out on the ground as flat
as a field lark, but at Jeff's appearance, he sprang behind him. Jeff,
in amazement, was inquiring the meaning of all the noise he had heard,
when Lawrence appeared on the scene. The Major explained briefly.

"It was that redoubtable champion bellowing. As our principals failed
to appear on time, he being an upholder of the Code, suggested that we
were bound to take the places respectively of those we represented----"

"Nor, suh, I don' ripresent nobody," interrupted George Washington; but
at a look from the Major he dodged again behind Jeff. The Major, with
his eye on Lawrence, said:

"Well, gentlemen, let's to business. We have but a few minutes of
daylight left. I presume you are ready?"

Both gentlemen bowed, and the Major proceeded to explain that he had
loaded both pistols himself with precisely similar charges, and that
they were identical in trigger, sight, drift, and weight, and had been
tested on a number of occasions, when they had proved to be "excellent
weapons and remarkably accurate in their fire." The young men bowed
silently; but when he turned suddenly and called "George Washington,"
that individual nearly jumped out of his coat. The Major ordered him
to measure ten paces, which, after first giving notice that he "didn't
ripresent nobody," he proceeded to do, taking a dozen or more gigantic
strides, and hastily retired again behind the safe bulwark of Jeff's
back. As he stood there in his shrunken condition, he about as much
resembled the pompous and arrogant duellist of a half-hour previous
as a wet and bedraggled turkey does the strutting, gobbling cock of
the flock. The Major, with an objurgation at him for stepping "as
if he had on seven league boots," stepped off the distance himself,
explaining to Lawrence that ten paces was about the best distance, as
it was sufficiently distant to "avoid the unpleasantness of letting a
gentleman feel that he was within touching distance," and yet "near
enough to avoid useless mutilation."

Taking out a coin, he announced that he would toss up for the choice
of position, or rather would make a "disinterested person" do so, and,
holding out his hand, he called George Washington to toss it up. There
was no response until the Major shouted, "George Washington, where are
you--you rascal!"

"Heah me, suh," said George Washington, in a quavering voice, rising
from the ground, where he had thrown himself to avoid any stray
bullets, and coming slowly forward, with a pitiful, "Please, suh, don'
p'int dat thing dis away."

The Major gave him the coin, with an order to toss it up, in a tone so
sharp that it made him jump; and he began to turn it over nervously
in his hand, which was raised a little above his shoulder. In his
manipulation it slipped out of his hand and disappeared. George
Washington in a dazed way looked in his hand, and then on the ground.
"Hi! whar' hit?" he muttered, getting down on his knees and searching
in the grass. "Dis heah place is evil-sperited."

The Major called to him to hurry up, but he was too intent on solving
the problem of the mysterious disappearance of the quarter.

"I ain' nuver like dis graveyard bein' right heah," he murmured. "Marse
Nat, don' you have no mo' to do wid dis thing."

The Major's patience was giving out. "George Washington, you rascal!"
he shouted, "do you think I can wait all night for you to pull up all
the grass in the garden? Take the quarter out of your pocket, sir!"

"'Tain' in my pocket, suh," quavered George Washington, feeling there
instinctively, however, when the coin slipped down his sleeve into
his hand again. This was too much for him. "Hi! befo' de king," he
exclaimed, "how it git in my pocket? Oh, Marster! de devil is 'bout
heah, sho'! Marse Nat, you fling it up, suh. I ain' nuttin but a po'
sinful nigger. Oh, Lordy!" And handing over the quarter tremulously,
George Washington flung himself flat on the ground and, as a sort of
religious incantation, began to chant in a wild, quavering tone the
funeral hymn:

    "Hark! from the tombs a doleful sound."

The Major tossed up and posted the duellists, and with much solemnity
handed them the pistols, which both the two young men received
quietly. They were pale, but perfectly steady. The Major then asked
them, "Gentlemen, are you ready?" whilst at the ominous sound George
Washington's voice in tremulous falsetto, struck in,

    "Ye-ee--so-ons off meenn co-ome view-ew the-ee groun',
    Wher-ere you-ou m--uss' shor-ort-ly lie."

They announced themselves ready just as George Washington, looking up
from the ground, where he, like the "so-ons off meenn," was lying,
discovered that he was not more than thirty yards out of the line of
aim, and with a muttered "Lordy!" began to crawl away.

There was a confused murmur from the direction of the path which led to
the house, and the Major shouted, "Fire--one--two--three."

Both young men, facing each other and looking steadily in each other's
eyes, with simultaneous action fired their pistols into the air.

At the report a series of shrieks rang out from the shrubbery towards
the house, whilst George Washington gave a wild yell and began to kick
like a wounded bull, bellowing that he was "killed--killed."

The Major had just walked up to the duellists, and, relieving them of
their weapons, had with a comprehensive wave of the hand congratulated
them on their courage and urged them to shake hands, which they were
in the act of doing, when the shrubbery parted and Margaret, followed
closely by Rose and by Miss Jemima panting behind, rushed in upon them,
crying at the tops of their voices, "Stop! Stop!"

The two young ladies addressed themselves respectively to Jeff and
Lawrence, and both were employing all their eloquence when Miss Jemima
appeared. Her eye caught the prostrate form of George Washington, who
lay flat on his face kicking and groaning at intervals. She pounced
upon the Major with so much vehemence that he was almost carried away
by the sudden onset.

"Oh! You wretch! What have you done?" she panted, scarcely able to
articulate.

"Done, madam?" asked the Major, gravely.

"Yes; what have you done to _that_ poor miserable creature--_there!_"
She actually seized the Major and whirled him around with one hand,
whilst with the other she pointed at the prostrate and now motionless
George Washington.

"What have I been doing with him?"

"Yes, with _him_. Have you been carrying out your barbarous rite on his
inoffensive person!" she gasped.

The Major's eye lit up.

"Yes, madam," he said, taking up one of the pistols, "and I rejoice
that you are here to witness its successful termination. George
Washington has been selected as the victim this year; his monstrous
lies, his habitual drunken worthlessness, his roguery, culminating
in the open theft to-day of my best coat and waistcoat, marked him
naturally as the proper sacrifice. I had not the heart to cheat any
one by selling him to him. I was therefore constrained to shoot him.
He was, with his usual triflingness, not killed at the first fire,
although he appears to be dead. I will now finish him by putting a ball
into his back; observe the shot." He advanced, and cocking the pistol,
"click--click," stuck it carefully in the middle of George Washington's
fat back. Miss Jemima gave a piercing shriek and flung herself on the
Major to seize the pistol; but she might have spared herself; for
George Washington suddenly bounded from the ground and, with one glance
at the levelled weapon, rushed crashing through the shrubbery, followed
by the laughter of the young people, the shrieks of Miss Jemima, and
the shouts of the Major for him to come back and let him kill him.

                   *       *       *       *       *

That evening, when Margaret, seated on the Major's knee, was rummaging
in his vest pockets for any loose change which might be there (which
by immemorial custom belonged to her), she suddenly pulled out two
large, round bullets. The Major seized them; but it was too late. When,
however, he finally obtained possession of them he presented them to
Miss Jemima, and solemnly requested her to preserve them as mementoes
of George Washington's miraculous escape.




                          P'LASKI'S TUNAMENT.


I had the good fortune to come from "the old county of Hanover," as
that particular division of the State of Virginia is affectionately
called by nearly all who are so lucky as to have first seen the light
amid its broom-straw fields and heavy forests; and to this happy
circumstance I owed the honor of a special visit from one of its most
loyal citizens. Indeed, the glories of his native county were so
embalmed in his memory and were so generously and continuously imparted
to all his acquaintances, that he was in the county of his adoption
universally known after an absence of forty years as "Old Hanover." I
had not been long in F---- when I was informed that I might, in right
of the good fortune respecting my birthplace, to which I have referred,
expect a visit from my distinguished fellow-countyman, and thus I was
not surprised, when one afternoon a message was brought in that "Ole
Hanover was in the yard, and had called to pay his bes' bespecks to de
gent'man what hed de honor to come f'om de ole county."

I immediately went out, followed by my host, to find that the visit was
attended with a formality which raised it almost to the dignity of a
ceremonial. "Old Hanover" was accompanied by his wife, and was attended
by quite a number of other negroes, who had followed him either out of
curiosity excited by the importance he had attached to the visit, or
else in the desire to shine in reflected glory as his friends. "Old
Hanover" himself stood well out in front of the rest, like an old
African chief in state with his followers behind him about to receive
an embassy. He was arrayed with great care, in a style which I thought
at first glance was indicative of the clerical calling, but which I
soon discovered was intended to be merely symbolical of approximation
to the dignity which was supposed to pertain to that profession. He
wore a very long and baggy coat which had once been black, but was now
tanned by exposure to a reddish brown, a vest which looked as if it had
been velvet before the years had eaten the nap from it, and changed it
into a fabric not unlike leather. His shirt was obviously newly washed
for the occasion, and his high clean collar fell over an ample and
somewhat bulging white cloth, which partook of the qualities of both
stock and necktie. His skin was of that lustrous black which shines as
if freshly oiled, and his face was closely shaved except for two tufts
of short, white hair, one on each side, which shone like snow against
his black cheeks. He wore an old and very quaint beaver, and a pair of
large, old-fashioned, silver-rimmed spectacles, which gave him an air
of portentous dignity.

When I first caught sight of him, he was leaning on a long hickory
stick, which might have been his staff of state, and his face was set
in an expression of superlative importance. As I appeared, however,
he at once removed his hat, and taking a long step forward, made me a
profound bow. I was so much impressed by him, that I failed to catch
the whole of the grandiloquent speech with which he greeted me. I had
evidently secured his approval; for he boldly declared that he "would
'a' recognizated me for one of de rail quality ef he had foun' me
in a cuppen." I was immediately conscious of the effect which his
endorsement produced on his companions. They regarded me with new
interest, if any expression so bovine deserved to be thus characterized.

"I tell dese folks up heah dee don't know nuthin' 'bout rail quality,"
he asserted with a contemptuous wave of his arm, which was manifestly
intended to embrace the entire section in its comprehensive sweep. "Dee
'ain' nuver had no 'quaintance wid it," he explained, condescendingly.
His friends accepted this criticism with proper submissiveness.

"De Maconses, de Berkeleyses, de Carterses, de Bassettses, de
Wickhamses, de Nelsonses, an' dem!"--(the final ending "es" was plainly
supposed to give additional dignity)--"now _dee_ is sho 'nough quality.
I know all 'bout 'em." He paused long enough to permit this to sink in.

"I b'longst to Doc' Macon. _You_ know what _he_ wuz?"

His emphasis compelled me to acknowledge his exalted position or
abandon forever all hope of retaining my own; so I immediately
assented, and inquired how long he had been in "this country," as he
designated his adopted region. He turned with some severity to one of
his companions, a stout and slatternly woman, very black, and many
years his junior.

"How long is I been heah, Lucindy?"

The woman addressed, by way of answer, turned half away, and gave a
little nervous laugh. "I don't know how long you been heah, you been
heah so long; mos' forty years, I reckon." This sally called from her
companions a little ripple of amusement.

"Dat's my wife, suh," the old gentleman explained, apologetically.
"She's de one I got now; she come f'om up heah in dis kentry." His
voice expressed all that the words were intended to convey. Lucindy,
who appeared accustomed to such contemptuous reference, merely gave
another little explosion which shook her fat shoulders.

As, however, I was expected to endorse all his views, I changed the
embarrassing subject by inquiring how he had happened to leave the old
county.

"Ole marster gi' me to Miss Fanny when she ma'yed Marse William
Fitzhugh," he explained. "I wuz ma'yed den to Marth' Ann; she wuz Miss
Fanny's maid, an' when she come up heah wid Miss Fanny, I recompany
her." He would not admit that his removal was a permanent one. "I
al'ays layin' out to go back home, but I 'ain' been yit. Dee's mos' all
daid b'fo' dis, suh?"

He spoke as if this were a fact, but there was a faint inquiry in
his eyes if not in his tone. I was sorry not to be able to inform
him differently, and, to change the subject, I started to ask him a
question. "Martha Ann--" I began, and then paused irresolute.

"She's daid too," he said simply.

"How many children have you?" I asked.

"I 'ain' got but beah one now, suh, ef I got dat one," he replied;
"dat's P'laski."

"How many have you had?"

"Well, suh, dat's a partic'lar thing to tell," he said, with a
whimsical look on his face. "De Scripturs says you is to multiply an'
replanish de uth; but I s'pecks I's had some several mo'n my relowance;
dar's Jeems, an' Peter, an' Jeremiah, an' Hezekiah, an' Zekyel, Ananias
an' Malachi, Matthew an' Saint Luke, besides de gals. Dee's all gone;
an' now I 'ain' got but jes dat P'laski. He's de wuthlisses one o' de
whole gang. He tecks after his mammy."

The reference to Pulaski appeared to occasion some amusement among his
friends, and I innocently inquired if he was Martha Ann's son.

"Nor, _suh, dat_ he warn'!" was the vehement and indignant answer. "Ef
he had 'a' been, he nuver would 'a' got me into all dat trouble. Dat
wuz de mortification o' my life, suh. He got all dat meanness f'om his
mammy. Dat ooman dyah is his mammy." He indicated the plump Lucindy
with his long stick, which he poked at her contemptuously. "Dat's what
I git for mar'yin' one o' dese heah up-kentry niggers!" The "up-kentry"
spouse was apparently quite accustomed to this characterization, for
she simply looked away, rather in embarrassment at my gaze being
directed to her than under any stronger emotion. Her liege continued:
"Lucindy warn' quality like me an' Marth' Ann, an' her son tooken
after her. What's in de myah will come out in de colt; an' he is de
meanes' chile I uver had. I name de urrs f'om de Scriptur', but he come
o' a diff'ent stock, an' I name him arter Mr. P'laski Greener, whar
Lucindy use' to b'longst to, an' I reckon maybe dat's de reason he so
natchally evil. I had mo' trouble by recount o' dat boy 'n I hed when I
los' Marth' Ann."

The old fellow threw back his head and gave a loud "Whew!" actually
removing his large spectacles in his desperation at Pulaski's
wickedness. Again there was a suppressed chuckle from his friends; so,
seeing that some mystery attached to the matter, I put a question which
started him.

"Well, I'll tell you, suh," he began. "Hit all growed out of a
tunament, suh. You an' I knows all discerning tunaments, 'cuz we come
f'om de ole county o' Hanover, whar de _raise_ tunaments"--(he referred
to them as if they had been a species of vegetables)--"but we 'ain'
nuver hearn de modification of a _nigger_ ridin' in a tunament?"

I admitted this, and, after first laying his hat carefully on the
ground, he proceeded:

"Well, you know, suh, dat P'laski got de notionment in he haid dat he
wuz to ride in a tunament. He got dat f'om dat ooman." He turned and
pointed a trembling finger at his uncomplaining spouse; and then slowly
declared, "Lord! I wuz outdone dat day."

I suggested that possibly he had not followed Solomon's injunction as
rigidly as Pulaski's peculiar traits of character had demanded; but he
said promptly:

"Yes, suh, I did. I whupped him faithful; but he took whuppin' like a
ole steer. Hickory didn' 'pear to have no 'feck on him. He didn' had no
memory; he like a ole steer: got a thick skin an' a short memory; he
wuz what I call one o' dese disorde'ly boys."

He paused long enough to permit this term, taken from the police court
reports, to make a lodgement, and then proceeded:

"He wuz so wuthless at home, I hired him out to ole Mis' Twine for
fo' dollars an' a half a mont'--an' more'n he wuth, too!--to see ef
po' white ooman kin git any wuck out'n him. A po' white ooman kin git
wuck out a nigger ef anybody kin, an' 'twuz down dyah that he got had
foolishness lodgicated in he haid. You see, ole Mis' Twine warn' so fur
f'om Wash'n'n. Nigger think ef he kin git to Wash'n'n, he done got in
heaven. Well, I hire him to ole Mis' Twine, 'cuz I think she'll keep
P'laski straight, an' ef I don' git but one fo' dollars an' a half f'om
him, hit's dat much; but 'pear like he got to runnin' an' consortin'
wid some o' dem urr free-issue niggers roun' dyah, an' dee larne him
mo' foolishness'n I think dee able; 'cuz a full hawg cyarn drink no
mo'."

The old fellow launched out into diatribes against the "free issues,"
who, he declared, expected to be "better than white folks, like white
folks ain' been free sense de wull begin." He, however, shortly
returned to his theme.

"Well, fust thing I knowed, one Sunday I wuz settin' down in my house,
an' heah come P'laski all done fixed up wid a high collar on, mos' high
as ole master's, an' wid a better breeches on 'n I uver wear in my
_life_, an' wid a creevat! an' a cane! an' wid a seegar! He comes in de
do' an' hol' he seegar in he han', sort o' so" (illustrating), "an' he
teck off he hat kine o' flourishy 'whurr,' an' say, 'Good mornin', pa
an' ma.' He mammy--_dat_ she--monsus pleaged wid dem manners; she ain'
know no better; but I ain' nuver like nobody to gobble roun' _me_, an'
I say, 'Look heah, boy, don' fool wid me; I ain' feelin' well to-day,
an' ef you fool wid me, when I git done wid you, you oon feel well
you'self.' Den he kine o' let he feathers down; an' presney he say he
warn me to len' him three dollars an' a half. I ax him what he warn
do wid it, 'cuz I know I ain' gwine len' to him--jes well len' money
to a mus'rat hole;--an' he say he warn it for a tunament. 'Hi!' I say,
'P'laski, what air a tunament?' I mecked out, you see, like I ain'
recognizated what he meck correspondence to; an' he start to say, 'A
tunament, pa--' but I retch for a barrel hoop whar layin' by kine o'
amiable like, an' he stop, like young mule whar see mud-puddle in de
road, an' say, 'A tunament--a tunament is whar you gits 'pon a hoss
wid a pole, an' rides hard as you kin, an' pokes de pole at a ring,
an'--' When he gets right dyah, I interrup's him, an' I say, 'P'laski,'
says I, 'I's raised wid de fust o' folks, 'cuz I's raised wid de
Maconses at Doc' Macon's in Hanover, an' I's spectated fish fries,
an' festibals, an' bobbycues; but I ain' nuver witness nuttin' like
dat--a nigger ridin' 'pon a hoss hard as he kin stave, an' nominatin'
of it a tunament,' I says. 'You's talkin' 'bout a hoss-race,' I says,
''cuz dat's de on'yes' thing,' I says, 'a nigger rides in.' You know,
suh," he broke in suddenly, "you and I's seen many a hoss-race, 'cuz
we come f'om hoss kentry, right down dyah f'om whar Marse Torm Doswell
live, an' we done see hoss-races whar wuz hoss-races sho 'nough,
at the ole Fyarfiel' race-co'se, whar hosses used to run could beat
buds flyin' an' so I tole him. I tole him I nuver heah nobody but a
po' white folks' nigger call a hoss-race a tunament; an' I tole him
I reckon de pole he talkin' 'bout wuz de hick'ry dee used to tune de
boys' backs wid recasionally when dee didn' ride right. Dat cut him
down might'ly, 'cuz dat ermine him o' de hick'ries I done wyah out 'pon
him; but he say, 'Nor, 'tis a long pole whar you punch th'oo a ring,
an' de one whar punch de moes, he crown de queen.' I tole him dat de
on'yes' queen I uver heah 'bout wuz a cow ole master had, whar teck de
fust prize at de State fyah in Richmond one year; but he presist dat
this wuz a tunament queen, and he warn three dollars an' a half to get
him a new shut an' to pay he part ov de supper. Den I tole him ef he
think I gwine give him three dollars an' a half for dat foolishness
he mus' think I big a fool as he wuz. Wid dat he begin to act kine
o' aggervated, which I teck for impidence, 'cuz I nuver could abeah
chillern ner women to be sullen roun' me; an' I gi' him de notification
dat ef I cotch him foolin' wid any tunament I gwine ride him tell he
oon know wherr he ain't a mule hisself; an' I gwine have hick'ry pole
dyah too. Den I tolt him he better go 'long back to ole Mis' Twine,
whar I done hire him to; an' when he see me pick up de barrel hoop
an' start to roll up my sleeve, he went; an' I heah he jine dat Jim
Sinkfiel', an' dat's what git me into all dat tribilation."

"What got you in?" I inquired, in some doubt as to his meaning.

"Dat tunament, suh. P'laski rid it! An' what's mo,' suh, he won de
queen,--one o' ole man Bob Sibley's impident gals,--an' when he come to
crown her, he crown her wid ole Mis' Twine's weddin'-ring!"

There was a subdued murmur of amusement in the group behind him, and
I could not but inquire how he came to perform so extraordinary a
ceremony.

"Dat I don' know, suh; but so 'twair. Fust information I had on it
wuz when I went down to ole Mis' Twine's to get he mont's weges. I
received de ontelligence on de way dat he had done lef' dyah, an' dat
ole Mis' Twine gol' ring had lef' by de same road at de same time. Dat
correspondence mortify me might'ly' cuz I hadn' raised P'laski no
sich a ways as dat. He was dat ooman's son to be sho' an' I knowed he
wuz wuthless, but still I hadn' respect him to steal ole Mis' Twine
weddin'-ring, whar she wyah on her finger ev'y day, an' whar wuz gol'
too. I want de infimation 'bout de fo' dollars an' a half, so I went
'long; but soon as ole Mis' Twine see me she began to quoil. I tell
her I just come to git de reasonment o' de matter, an' I 'ain' got
nuthin' 'tall to say 'bout P'laski. Dat jes like bresh on fire; she
wuss'n befo'. She so savigrous I tolt her I 'ain' nuver had nobody to
prevaricate nuttin' 'bout me; dat I b'longst to Doc' Macon, o' Hanover,
an' I ax her ef she knowed de Maconses. She say, nor, she 'ain' know
'em, nor she ain' nuver hearn on 'em, an' she wished she hadn' nuver
hearn on me an' my thievin' boy--dat's P'laski. Well, tell then, I
mighty consarned 'bout P'laski; but when she said she 'ain' nuver hearn
on the Maconses, I ain' altogether b'lieve P'laski done teck her ring,
cause I ain' know whether she got any ring; though I know sence the
tunament he mean enough for anything; an' I tolt her so, an' I tolt her
I wuz raised wid quality--sence she ain' know the Maconses, I ain'
tole her no mo' 'bout dem, 'cuz de Bible say you is not to cast pearls
befo' hawgs--an' dat I had tote de corn-house keys many a time, an'
Marth' Ann used to go in ole Mistis' trunks same as ole Mistis herself.
Right dyah she mought 'a' cotch me ef she had knowed that P'laski warn'
Marth' Ann's son; but she ain' know de Maconses, an' in cose she ain'
'quainted wid de servants, so she don' know it. Well, suh, she rar an'
she pitch. Yo' nuver heah a ooman talk so befo' in yo' life; an' fust
thing I knew she gone in de house, she say she gwine git a gun an' run
me off dat lan'. But I ain' wait for dat: don nobody have to git gun to
run me off dee lan'. I jes teck my foot in my han' an' come 'long way
by myself, 'cuz I think maybe a ooman 'at could cuss like a man mout
shoot like a man too."

"Where did you go and what did you do next?" I asked the old fellow as
he paused with a whimsical little nod of satisfaction at his wisdom.

"I went home, suh," he said. "I heah on de way dat P'laski had sho
'nough done crownt Bob Sibly's gal, Lizzy Susan, wid de ring, an' dat
he wuz gwine to Wash'n'n, but wuz done come home to git some things
b'fo' he went; so I come straight 'long behinst him jes swif' as my
foot could teck me. I didn' was'e much time," he said, with some pride,
"'cuz he had done mighty nigh come gittin' me shot. I jes stop long
'nough to cut me a bunch o' right keen hick'ries, an' I jes come 'long
shakin' my foot. When I got to my house I ain' fine nobody dyah but
Lucindy--dat ve'y ooman dyah"--pointing his long stick at her--"an'
I lay my hick'ries on de bed, an' ax her is she see P'laski. Fust
she meck out dat she ain' heah me, she so induschus; I nuver see her
so induschus; but when I meck 'quiration agin she bleeged to answer
me, an' she 'spon' dat she 'ain' see him; 'cuz she see dat my blood
wuz up, an' she know dee wuz trouble 'pendin' for P'laski. Dat worry
me might'ly, an' I say, 'Lucindy, ef you is done meck dat boy resent
hisself f'om heah, you is done act like a po' white folks' nigger,' I
say, 'an' you's got to beah de depravity o' his transgression.' When
I tolt her dat she nuver got mad, 'cuz she know she air not quality
like me an' Marth' Ann; but she 'pear right smartly disturbed, an'
she 'clar' she ain' lay her eyes on P'laski. She done 'clar' so
partic'lar I mos' inclin' to b'lieve her; but all on a suddent I heah
some 'n' sneeze, 'Quechew!' De soun' come f'om onder de bed, an' I jes
retch over an' gether in my bunch o' hick'ries, an' I say, 'Come out!'
Lucindy say, 'Dat's a cat'; an' I say, 'Yes,' I say, 'hit's a cat I
gwine skin, too.'

"I jes stoop down, an' peep onder de bed, an', sho 'nough, dyah wuz
P'laski squinch up onder dyah, cane an' seegar an' all, jes like a ole
hyah in a trap. I ketch him by de leg, an' juck him out, an'--don'
you know, suh, dat ooman had done put _my_ shut on dat boy, an' wuz
gettin' ready to precipitate him in flight! I tolt her it wuz p'intedly
oudacious for her an' her son, after he had done stolt ole Mis' Taine
weddin'-ring, to come to my own house an' rob me jes like I wuz a
hen-roos'!"

"What reply did she make to that?" I asked, to facilitate his narrative.

"She 'ain' possessed no reply to dat indictment," he said, pompously.
"She glad by dat time to remit me to terminate my excitement on
P'laski, an' so I did. He hollered tell dee say you could heah him
two miles; he fyahly lumbered." The old fellow gave a chuckle of
satisfaction at the reminiscence, and began to draw figures in the
sand with his long stick. Suddenly, however, he looked up. "Ef I had
a-intimated how much tribilation dat lumberin' wuz gwine to get me in,
he nuver would 'a' hollered. Dat come o' dat chicken-stealin' nigger
Jem Sinkfiel'; he cyahed him off."

He again became reflective, so I asked, "Haven't you seen him since?"

"Oh, yes, suh, I seen him since," he answered. "I seen him after I come
out o' jail; but 'twuz a right close thing. I thought I wuz gone."

"Gone! for whipping him?"

"Nor, suh; 'bout de murder."

"Murder?"

"Yes, suh; murder o' him--o' P'laski."

"But you did not murder him?"

"Nor, suh; an' dat wuz whar de trouble presisted. Ef I had a-murdered
him I'd 'a' knowed whar he wuz when dee wanted him; but, as 'twair,
when de time arrove, I wair unable to perduce him: and I come mighty
nigh forfeitin' my life."

My exclamation of astonishment manifestly pleased him, and he proceeded
with increased gravity and carefulness of dictation:

"You see, suh, 'twair dis way." He laid his stick carefully down, and
spreading open the yellowish palm of one hand, laid the index finger
of the other on it, as if it had been a map. "When I waked up nex'
mornin' an' called P'laski, he did not rappear. He had departured; an'
so had my shut! Ef 't hadn' been for de garment, I wouldn' 'a' keered
so much, for I knowed I'd git my han's on him some time: hawgs mos'ly
comes up when de acorns all gone! an' I know hick'ries ain't gwine stop
growin': but I wuz cawnsiderably tossified decernin' my garment, an' I
gin Lucindy a little direction 'bout dat. But I jes went on gittin' my
sumac, an' whenever I come 'cross a right straight hick'ry, I gethered
dat too, an' laid it by, 'cus hick'ries grow mighty fine in ole fiel's
whar growin' up like. An' one day I wuz down in de bushes, an' Mr.
'Lias Lumpkins, de constable, come ridin' down dyah whar I wuz, an' ax
me whar P'laski is. Hit come in my mind torectly dat he warn' P'laski
'bout de ring, an' I tell him I air not aware whar P'laski is: and den
he tell me he got warrant for me, and I mus' come on wid him. I still
reposed, in co'se, 'twuz 'bout de ring, an' I say I ain' had nuttin'
to do wid it. An' he say, 'Wid what?' An' I say, 'Wid de ring.' Den he
say, 'Oh!' an' he say, ''Tain' nuttin' 'bout de ring; 'tis for murder.'
Well, I know I ain' murder nobody, an' I ax him who dee say I done
murder; an' he ax me agin, 'Whar air P'laski?' I tell him I don' know
whar P'laski air: I know I ain' murder him! Well, suh, hit subsequently
repeared dat dis wuz de wuss thing I could 'a' said, 'cus when de trial
come on, Major Torm Woods made mo' o' dat 'n anything else at all; an'
hit 'pears like ef you's skused o' murder er stealin', you mus'n' say
you ain' do it, 'cuz dat's dangersomer 'n allowing you is do it.

"Well, I went 'long wid him. I ax him to le' me go by my house; but
he say, nor, he 'ain' got time, dat he done been dyah. An' he teck me
'long to de cote-house, an' _lock me up in de jail!_ an' lef' me dyah
in de dark on de rock flo'! An' dyah I rejourned all night long. An' I
might 'a' been dyah now, ef 't hadn' been dat de co'te come on. Nex'
mornin' Mr. Landy Wilde come in dyah an' ax me how I gettin' on, an' ef
I warn' anything. I tell him I gettin' on toler'ble, an' I ain' warn'
nuttin' but a little tobacco. I warn' git out, but I knew I cyarn
do dat, 'cuz 'twuz de ambitiouses smellin' place I ever smelt in my
life. I tell you, suh, I is done smell all de smells o' mink an' mus'
an' puffume, but I ain' nuver smell nuttin' like dat jail. Mr. Landy
Wilde had to hole he nose while he in dyah; an' he say he'll git de ole
jedge to come an' ac' as my council. I tell him, 'Nor; Gord put me in
dyah, an' I reckon He'll git me out when He ready.' I tell you, suh, I
wair p'intedly ashamed for de ole jedge, whar wuz a gent'man, to come
in sich a scand'lous smellin' place as dat. But de ole jedge come;
an' he say it wuz a ---- shame to put a humin in sich place, an' he'd
git me bail; which I mus' say--even ef he is a church member--might
be ixcused ef you jes consider dat smell. But when de cote meet, dee
wouldn' gi' me no bail, 'cuz dee say I done commit murder; an' I heah
Jim Sinkfiel' an' Mr. Lumpkins an' ole Mis' Twine went in an' tole de
gran' jury I sutney had murder P'laski, an' bury him down in de sumac
bushes; an' dee had de gre't bundle o' switches dee fine in my house,
an' dee redite me, an' say ef I 'ain' murder him, why'n't I go 'long
an' preduce him. Dat's a curisome thing, suh; dee tell you to go 'long
and fine anybody, an' den lock you up in jail a insec' couldn' get out."

I agreed with him as to the apparent inconsistency of this, and he
proceeded:

"Well, suh, at las' de trial come on; 'twuz April cote, an' dee had
me in the cote-house, an' set me down in de cheer, wid de jury right
in front o' me, an' de jedge settin' up in he pulpit, lookin' mighty
aggrevated. Dat wuz de fus' time I 'gin to feel maybe I wuz sort o'
forgittin' things, I had done been thinkin' so much lately in jail
'bout de ole doctor--dat's ole master--an' Marth' Ann, an' all de ole
times in Hanover, I wuz sort o' misty as I wuz settin' dyah in de
cheer, an' I jes heah sort o' buzzin' roun' me, an' I warn' altogether
certified dat I warn' back in ole Hanover. Den I heah 'em say dat de
ole jedge wuz tooken down an' wuz ixpected to die, an' dee ax me don' I
want a continuance. I don' know what dat mean, 'sep dee say I have to
go back to jail, an' sense I smell de fresh air I don' warn' do dat no
mo'; so I tell 'em, 'Nor; I ready to die.' An' den dee made me stan'
up; an' dee read dat long paper to me 'bout how I done murder P'laski;
dee say I had done whup him to death, an' had done shoot him, an'
knock him in de haid, an' kill him mo' ways 'n 'twould 'a' teck to kill
him ef he had been a cat. Lucindy wuz dyah. I had done had her gwine
'bout right smart meckin' quiration for P'laski. At least she _say_
she had," he said, with a sudden reservation, and a glance of some
suspicion toward his spouse. "An' dee wuz a whole parecel o' niggers
stan'in' roun' dyah, black as buzzards roun' a ole hoss whar dyin'. An'
don' you know, dat Jim Sinkfiel' say he sutney hope dee would hang me,
an' all jes 'cuz he owe' me two dollars an' seventy-three cents, whar
he ain' warn' pay me!"

"Did you not have counsel?" I inquired.

"Council?"

"Yes--a lawyer."

"Oh, nor, suh; dat is, I had council, but not a la'yar, edzactly," he
replied, with careful discrimination. "I had a some sort of a la'yer,
but not much of a one. I had ixpected ole Jedge Thomas to git me off;
'cuz he knowed me; he wuz a gent'man, like we is; but when he wuz
tooken sick so providential I wouldn' had no urrs; I lef' it to Gord.
De jedge ax me at de trial didn' I had no la'yar, and I tell him nor,
not dyah; an' he ax me didn' I had no money to get one; an' I erspon'
'Nor, I didn' had none,' although I had at dat time forty-three dollars
an' sixty-eight cents in a ole rag in my waistcoat linin', whar I had
wid me down in de sumac bushes, an' whar I thought I better hole on to,
an' 'ain' made no mention on. So den de jedge ax me wouldn' I had a
young man dyah--a right tall young man; an' I enform him: 'Yes, suh. I
didn' reckon 'twould hu't none.' So den he come an' set by me an' say
he wuz my counsel."

There was such a suggestion of contempt in his tone that I inquired if
he had not done very well.

"Oh, yes, suh," he drawled, slowly, "he done toler'ble
well--considerin'. He do de bes' he kin, I reckon. He holler an' mix me
up some right smart; but dee wuz too strong for him; he warn' no mo'
to 'em 'n wurrm is to woodpecker. Major Torm Woods' de commonwealph's
attorney, is a powerful la'yer; he holler so you kin heah him _three_
mile. An' ole Mis' Twine wuz dyah, whar tell all 'bout de ring, an'
how impident I wuz to her dat day, an' skeer her to death. An' dat Jim
Sinkfiel', he wuz dyah, an' tolt' 'bout how I beat P'laski, an' how
he heah him 'way out in main road, hollerin' 'murder.' An' dee had de
gre't bundle o' hick'ries dyah, whar dee done fine in my house, an' dee
had so much evi_dence_ dat presney I 'mos' begin to think maybe I had
done kilt P'laski sho 'nough, an' had disermembered it. An' I thought
'bout Marth' Ann an' all de urr chil'ern, an' I wondered ef dee wuz to
hang me ef I wouldn' fine her; an' I got so I mos' hoped dee would sen'
me. An den de jury went out, an' stay some time, an' come back an' say
I wuz guilty, an' sen' me to de Pen'tentiy for six years."

I had followed him so closely, and been so satisfied of his innocence,
that I was surprised into an exclamation of astonishment, at which he
was evidently much pleased.

"What did your counsel do?" I asked.

He put his head on one side. "He? He jes lean over an' ax did I warn'
to repeal. I tell him I didn't know. Den he ax me is I got any money at
all. I tell him, nor; ef I had I would 'a' got me a la'yer."

"What happened then?" I inquired, laughing at his discomfiting reply.

"Well, den de jedge tole me to stan' up, an' ax me has I got anything
to say. Well, I know dat my las' chance, an' I tell him, 'Yes,
suh.' An' he inform me to precede wid de relation, an' so I did. I
preceded, an' I tolt 'em dyah in de cote-house ev'y wud jes like I have
explanified it heah. I tolt 'em all 'bout Marth' Ann an' de chillern
I hed had; I reformed 'em all decernin' de Maconses; an' I notified
'em how P'laski wuz dat urr ooman's son, not Marth' Ann's, an 'bout
de tunament an' how I had demonstrated wid him not to ride dyah, an'
how he had repudiated my admonition, an' had crown de queen wid ole
Mis' Twine weddin'-ring, whar he come nigh gittin' me shot fur; an'
how I had presented him de hick'ry, an' 'bout how he had departed de
premises while I wuz 'sleep, an' had purloined my garment, an' how I
wuz waitin' for him, an' getherin' de hick'ry crap an' all. An' dee wuz
all laughin', 'cuz dee know I wuz relatin' de gospel truth, an' jes
den I heah some o' de niggers back behine call out, 'Hi! heah he now!'
an' I look roun', an', ef you b'lieve me, suh, dyah wuz P'laski, jes
repeared, all fixed up, wid he cane an' seegar an' all, jes like I had
drawed he resemblance. He had done been to Wash'n'n, an' had done come
back to see de hangin'."

The old fellow broke into such a laugh at the reminiscence that I asked
him, "Well, what was the result?"

"De result, suh, wuz, de jury teck back all dee had say, an' ax me to
go down to de tavern an' have much whiskey as I could stan' up to,
an' dee'd pay for it; an' de jedge distructed 'em to tu'n me loose.
P'laski, he wuz sort o' bothered; he ain' know wherr to be disapp'inted
'bout de hangin' or pleased wid bein' set up so as de centre of
distraction, tell ole Mis' Twine begin to talk 'bout 'restin' of him.
Dat set him back; but I ax 'em, b'fo' dee 'rest him, couldn' I have
jurisdictionment on him for a leetle while. Dee grant my beques', 'cuz
dee know I gwine to erward him accordin' to his becessities, an' I jes
nod my head to him an' went out. When we got roun' hine de jail, I
invite him to per_ject_ his coat. He nex' garment wuz my own shut, an'
I tolt him to remove dat too; dat I had to get nigh to he backbone, an'
I couldn't 'ford to weah out dat shut no mor'n he had done already weah
it. Somebody had done fetch de bunch o' hick'ries whar dee had done
fine in my house, an' hit jes like Provi_dence_. I lay 'em by me while
I put him on de altar. I jes made him wrop he arms roun' a little
locus'-tree, an' I fasten he wris'es wid he own gallowses, 'cuz I didn'
warn' was'e dem hick'ries; an' all de time I bindin' him I tellin' him
'bout he sins. Den, when I had him ready, I begin, an' I rehearse de
motter wid him f'om de time he had ax me 'bout de tunament spang tell
he come to see me hang, an' wid ev'y wud I gin him de admonish_ment_,
tell when I got thoo wid him he wouldn' 'a' tetch a ring ef he had been
in 'em up to he neck; an' as to shuts, he would' a' gone naked in frost
b'fo' he'd 'a' put one on. He back gin out b'fo' my hick'ries did; but
I didn' wholly lors 'em. I receive de valyationo' dem too, 'cuz when I
let up on P'laski, fust man I see wuz dat Jim Sinkfiel', whar had warn'
me hanged 'cuz he didn't warn' pay me two dollars an' seventy-three
cents. He wuz standin' dyah lookin' on, 'joyin' hiself. I jes walk up
to him an' I tolt him dat he could pay it right den, or recommodate me
to teck de res' o' de hick'ries. He try to blunder out o' it, but all
de folks know 'bout it an' dee wuz wid me, an' b'fo' he knowed it some
on 'em had he coat off, an' had stretch him roun' de tree, an' tolt me
to perceed. An' I perceeded.

"I hadn't quite wo' out one hick'ry when he holler dat he'd borry de
money an' pay it; but I tolt him, nor; hick'ries had riz; dat I had
three mo', an' I warn' show him a man can meck a boy holler 'murder'
an' yit not kill him. An' dat I did, too: b'fo' I wuz done he hollered
'murder' jes natchel as P'laski."

The old fellow's countenance beamed with satisfaction at the
recollection of his revenge. I rewarded his narrative with a donation
which he evidently considered liberal; for he not only was profuse in
his thanks, but he assured me that the county of Hanover had produced
four people of whom he was duly proud--Henry Clay, Doctor Macon,
myself, and himself.




                            "RUN TO SEED."


Jim's father died at Gettysburg; up against the Stone Fence; went to
heaven in a chariot of fire on that fateful day when the issue between
the two parts of the country was decided: when the slaughter on the
Confederate side was such that after the battle a lieutenant was in
charge of a regiment, and a major commanded a brigade.

This fact was much to Jim, though no one knew it: it tempered his mind:
ruled his life. He never remembered the time when he did not know the
story his mother, in her worn black dress and with her pale face, used
to tell him of the bullet-dented sword and faded red sash which hung on
the chamber wall.

They were the poorest people in the neighborhood. Everybody was poor;
for the county lay in the track of the armies, and the war had swept
the country as clean as a floor. But the Uptons were the poorest even
in that community. Others recuperated, pulled themselves together, and
began after a time to get up. The Uptons got flatter than they were
before. The fences (the few that were left) rotted; the fields grew up
in sassafras and pines; the barns blew down; the houses decayed; the
ditches filled; the chills came.

"They're the shiftlesses' people in the worl'," said Mrs. Wagoner
with a shade of asperity in her voice (or was it satisfaction?). Mrs.
Wagoner's husband had been in a bomb-proof during the war, when Jim
Upton (Jim's father) was with his company. He had managed to keep his
teams from the quarter-masters, and had turned up after the war the
richest man in the neighborhood. He lived on old Colonel Duval's place,
which he had bought for Confederate money.

"They're the shiftlesses' people in the worl'," said Mrs. Wagoner.
"Mrs. Upton ain't got any spirit: she jus' sets still and cries her
eyes out."

This was true, every word of it. And so was something else that Mrs.
Wagoner said in a tone of reprobation, about "people who made their
beds having to lay on them"; this process of incubation being too well
known to require further discussion.

But what could Mrs. Upton do? She could not change the course of
Destiny. One--especially if she is a widow with bad eyes, and in feeble
health, living on the poorest place in the State--cannot stop the stars
in their courses. She could not blot out the past, nor undo what she
had done. She would not if she could. She could not undo what she had
done when she ran away with Jim and married him. She would not if she
could. At least, the memory of those three years was hers, and nothing
could take it from her--not debts, nor courts, nor anything. She knew
he was wild when she married him. Certainly Mrs. Wagoner had been
careful enough to tell her so, and to tell every one else so too. She
would never forget the things she had said. Mrs. Wagoner never forgot
the things the young girl said either--though it was more the way she
had looked than what she had said. And when Mrs. Wagoner descanted on
the poverty of the Uptons she used to end with the declaration: "Well,
it ain't any fault of _mine_: she can't blame _me_, for Heaven knows
I warned her: I did _my_ duty!" Which was true. Warning others was a
duty Mrs. Wagoner seldom omitted. Mrs. Upton never thought of blaming
her, or any one else. Not all her poverty ever drew one complaint from
her sad lips. She simply sat down under it, that was all. She did not
expect anything else. She had given her Jim to the South as gladly as
any woman ever gave her heart to her love. She would not undo it if she
could--not even to have him back, and God knew how much she wanted him.
Was not his death glorious--his name a heritage for his son? She could
not undo the debts which encumbered the land; nor the interest which
swallowed it up; nor the suit which took it from her--that is, all but
the old house and the two poor worn old fields which were her dower.
She would have given up those too if it had not been for her children,
Jim and Kitty, and for the little old enclosure on the hill under the
big thorn-trees where they had laid him when they brought him back in
the broken pine box from Gettysburg. No, she could not undo the past,
nor alter the present, nor change the future. So what could she do?

In her heart Mrs. Wagoner was glad of the poverty of the Uptons; not
merely glad in the general negative way which warms the bosoms of most
of us as we consider how much better off we are than our neighbors--the
"Lord-I-thank-thee-that-I-am-not-as-other-men-are" way;--but Mrs.
Wagoner was glad positively. She was glad that any of the Uptons and
the Duvals were poor. One of her grandfathers had been what Mrs.
Wagoner (when she mentioned the matter at all) called "Manager" for one
of the Duvals. She was aware that most people did not accept that term.
She remembered old Colonel Duval--the _old_ Colonel--tall, thin, white,
grave. She had been dreadfully afraid of him. She had had a feeling of
satisfaction at his funeral. It was like the feeling she had when she
learned that Colonel Duval had not forgiven Betty nor left her a cent.

Mrs. Wagoner used to go to see Mrs. Upton--she went frequently. It
was "her duty" she said. She carried her things--especially advice.
There are people whose visits are like spells of illness. It took Mrs.
Upton a fortnight to get over one of these visits--to convalesce. Mrs.
Wagoner was "a mother to her": at least, Mrs. Wagoner herself said so.
In some respects it was rather akin to the substance of that name
which forms in vinegar. It was hard to swallow: it galled. Even Mrs.
Upton's gentleness was overtaxed--and rebelled. She had stood all the
homilies--all the advice. But when Mrs. Wagoner, with her lips drawn
in, after wringing her heart, recalled to her the warning she had given
her before she married, she stopped standing it. She did not say much;
but it was enough to make Mrs. Wagoner's stiff bonnet-bows tremble.
Mrs. Wagoner walked out feeling chills down her spine, as if Colonel
Duval were at her heels. She had "meant to talk about sending Jim to
school": at least she said so. She condoled with every one in the
neighborhood on the "wretched ignorance" in which Jim was growing up,
"working like a common negro." She called him "that ugly boy."

Jim was ugly--Mrs. Wagoner said, very ugly. He was slim, red-headed,
freckle-faced, weak-eyed; he stooped and he stammered. Yet there was
something about him, with his thin features, which made one look twice.
Mrs. Wagoner used to say she did not know where that boy got all his
ugliness from, for she must admit his father was rather good-looking
before he became so bloated, and Betty Duval would have been "passable"
if she had had any "vivacity." There were people who said Betty Duval
had been a beauty. She was careful in her limitations, Mrs. Wagoner
was. Some women will not admit others are pretty, no matter what the
difference in their ages: they feel as if they were making admissions
against themselves.

Once when Jim was a boy Mrs. Wagoner had the good taste to refer in
his presence to his "homeliness," a term with which she sugar-coated
her insult. Jim grinned and shuffled his feet, and then said, "Kitty's
pretty." It was true: Kitty was pretty: she had eyes and hair. You
could not look at her without seeing them--big brown eyes, and brown
tumbled hair. Kitty was fifteen--two years younger than Jim in 187-.

Jim never went to school. They were too poor. All he knew his mother
taught him and he got out of the few old books in the book-case left by
the war,--odd volumes of the Waverley novels, and the _Spectator_, "Don
Quixote," and a few others, stained and battered. He could not have
gone to school if there had been a school to go to: he had to work:
work, as Mrs. Wagoner had truthfully said, "like a common nigger." He
did not mind it; a bird born in a cage cannot mind it much. The pitiful
part is, it does not know anything else. Jim did not know anything
else. He did not mind anything much--except chills. He even got used
to them; would just lie down and shake for an hour and then go to
ploughing again as soon as the ague was over, with the fever on him. He
had to plough; for corn was necessary. He had this compensation: he was
worshipped by two people--his mother and Kitty. If other people thought
him ugly, they thought him beautiful. If others thought him dull, they
thought him wonderfully clever; if others thought him ignorant, they
knew how wise he was.

Mrs. Upton's eyes were bad; but she saw enough to see Jim: the
light came into the house with him; Kitty sat and gazed at him with
speechless admiration; hung on his words, which were few; watched
for his smile, which was rare. He repaid it to her by being--Jim. He
slaved for her; waited for her (when a boy waits for his little sister
it is something); played with her when he had time (this also was
something); made traps for her; caught her young squirrels,--was at
once her slave and her idol. As he grew up he did not have time to
play. He had to plough: "just like a common nigger," Mrs. Wagoner said
with an unclouded face. In this she spoke the truth.

It is a curious thing that farming paid better shortly after the war
than it did later. Lands fell. Times grew harder. They were always
growing harder with Jim. The land was worked out. Guano was necessary
to make anything grow. Guano was bought on credit. The crops would not
pay. Several summers there was drouth; crops failed. One of the two old
mules that he had died; Jim ploughed with one. Then he broke his leg.
When he got about again he was lame: the leg had shortened.

"They're the shiftlesses' folks in the worl'," said Mrs. Wagoner; "they
can't blame _me_. Heaven knows I told----" etc. Which was true--more
than true.

Jim ploughed on, only slower than ever, thinner than ever, sleepier
than ever.

One day something happened which waked him up. It was a Sunday. They
went to church; they always went to church--old St. Ann's--whenever
there was service. There was service there since the war only every
first and third Sunday and every other fifth Sunday. The Uptons and the
Duvals had been vestrymen from the time they had brought the bricks
over from England, generations ago. They had sat, one family in one of
the front semicircular pews on one side the chancel, the other family
in the other. Mrs. Upton, after the war, had her choice of the pews;
for all had gone but herself, Jim, and Kitty. She had changed, the
Sunday after her marriage, to the Upton side, and she clung loyally
to it ever after. Mrs. Wagoner had taken the other pew--a cold, she
explained at first, had made her deaf. She always spoke of it afterward
as "our pew." (The Billings, from which Mrs. Wagoner came, had not been
Episcopalians until Mrs. Wagoner married.) Carry Wagoner, who was a
year older than Kitty, used to sit by her mother, with her big hat and
brown hair. Jim, in right of his sex, sat in the end of his pew.

On this Sunday in question Jim drove his mother and Kitty to church
in the horse cart. The old carriage was a wreck, slowly dropping to
pieces. The chickens roosted in it. The cart was the only vehicle
remaining which had two sound wheels, and even one of these "wabbled" a
good deal, and the cart was "shackling." But straw placed in the bottom
made it fairly comfortable. Jim always had clean straw in it for his
mother and sister. His mother and Kitty remarked on it. Kitty looked
so well. They reached church. The day was warm, Mr. Bickersteth was
dry. Jim went to sleep during the sermon. He frequently did this. He
had been up since four. When service was over he partially waked--about
half-waked. He was standing in the aisle moving toward the door with
the rest of the congregation. A voice behind him caught his ear:

"What a lovely girl Kitty Upton is." It was Mrs. Harrison, who lived at
the other end of the parish. Jim knew the voice. Another voice replied:

"If she only were not always so _shabby_!" Jim knew this voice also. It
was Mrs. Wagoner's. Jim waked.

"Yes, but even her old darned dress cannot hide her. She reminds me
of----" Jim did not know what it was to which Mrs. Harrison likened
her. But he knew it was something beautiful.

"Yes," said Mrs. Wagoner; then added, "Poor thing, she's got no
education, and never will have. To think that old Colonel Duval's
fam'bly's come to this! Well, they can't blame me. They're clean run to
seed."

Jim got out into the air. He felt sick. He had been hit vitally. This
was what people thought! and it was true. They were "clean run to
seed." He went to get his cart. (He did not speak to Kitty.) His home
came before his eyes like a photograph: fences down, gates gone, houses
ruinous, fields barren. It came to him as if stamped on the retina
by a lightning-flash. He had worked--worked hard. But it was no use.
It was true: they were "clean run to seed." He helped his mother and
Kitty into the cart silently--doggedly. Kitty smiled at him. It hurt
him like a blow. He saw every worn place, every darn in her old dress,
and little, faded jacket. Mrs. Wagoner drove past them in her carriage,
leaning out of the window and calling that she took the liberty of
passing as she drove faster than they. Jim gave his old mule a jerk
which made him throw up his head and wince with pain. He was sorry for
it. But he had been jerked up short himself. He was quivering too.


                                  II.

On the following Friday the President of one of the great railway lines
which cross Virginia was in his office when the door opened after
a gentle knock and some one entered. (The offices of presidents of
railroads had not then become the secret and mysterious sanctums which
they have since become.) The President was busily engaged with two or
three of the Directors, wealthy capitalists from the North, who had
come down on important business. He was very much engrossed; and he did
not look up immediately. When he did so he saw standing inside the door
a queer figure,--long, slim, angular,--a man who looked like a boy, or
a boy who looked like a man--red-headed, freckled-faced, bashful,--in
a coat too tight even for his thin figure, breeches too short for his
long legs; his hat was old and brown; his shirt was clean.

"Well, what do you want?" The President was busy.

It was Jim. His face twitched several times before any sound came:

"--I-w-w-w want t-t-t-to ge-get a place."

"This is not the place to get it. I have no place for you."

The President turned back to his friends. At the end of ten minutes,
seeing one of his visitors look toward the door, he stopped in the
middle of a sentence and glanced around.

The figure was still there--motionless. The President thought he had
been out and come back. He had not.

"Well?" His key was high.

"---- I-I-w-w-want to-to get a place."

"I told you I had no place for you. Go to the Superintendent."

"---- I-I've b-b-b-been to _him_."

"Well, what did he say?"

"S-s-s-says he ain't got any place."

"Well, I haven't any. Go to Mr. Blake."

"---- I'v'e b-been to him."

"Well, go to--to--" The President was looking for a paper. It occupied
his mind. He did not think any further of Jim. But Jim was there.

"--Go-go where?"

"Oh, I don't know--go anywhere--go out of _here_."

Jim's face worked. He turned and went slowly out. As he reached the
door he said: "Go-go-good-evening g-gentlemen."

The President's heart relented: "Go to the Superintendent," he called.

Next day he was engaged with his Directors when the door opened and the
same apparition stepped within--tall, slim, red-haired, with his little
tight coat, short trousers, and clean shirt.

The President frowned.

"Well, what is it?"

"---- I-I-I w-w-w-went to-to the S-S-Superintendent."

"Well, what about it?"

"Y-y-you told me to-to go-go to him. H-e-e ain't got any place." The
Directors smiled. One of them leaned back in his chair, took out a
cigar and prepared to cut the end.

"Well, I can't help it. I haven't anything for you. I told you that
yesterday. You must not come here bothering me; get out."

Jim stood perfectly still--perfectly motionless. He looked as if he had
been there always--would be there always. The Director with the cigar,
having cut it, took out a gold match-box, and opened it slowly, looking
at Jim with an amused smile. The President frowned and opened his mouth
to order him out. He changed his mind.

"What is your name?"

"J-J-James Upton."

"Where from?"

Jim told him.

"Whose son are you?"

"C-C-C-Captain J-J-James Upton's."

"What! You don't look much like him!"

Jim shuffled one foot. One corner of his mouth twitched up curiously.
It might have been a smile. He looked straight at the blank wall before
him.

"You are not much like your mother either--I used to know her as a
girl. How's that?"

Jim shuffled the other foot a little.

"R-r-run to seed, I reckon."

The President was a farmer--prided himself on it. The reply pleased
him. He touched a bell. A clerk entered.

"Ask Mr. Wake to come here."

"Can you carry a barrel of flour?" he asked Jim.

"I-I'll get it there," said Jim. He leaned a little forward. His eyes
opened.

"Or a sack of salt? They are right heavy."

"I-I-I'll get it there," said Jim. His form straightened.

Mr. Wake appeared.

"Write Mr. Day to give this man a place as brakeman."

"Yes, sir. Come this way." This to Jim.

Jim electrified them all by suddenly bursting out crying.

The tension had given way. He walked up to the wall and leaned his head
against it with his face on his arm, shaking from head to foot, sobbing
aloud.

"Thank you, I--I'm ever so much obliged to you," he sobbed.

The President rose and walked rapidly about the room.

Suddenly Jim turned and, with his arm over his eyes, held out his hand
to the President.

"Good-by." Then he went out.

There was a curious smile on the faces of the Directors as the door
closed.

"Well, I never saw anything like that before," said one of them. The
President said nothing.

"Run to seed," quoted the oldest of the Directors, "rather good
expression!"

"Damned good seed, gentlemen," said the President, a little shortly.
"Duval and Upton.--That fellow's father was in my command. Died at
Gettysburg. He'd fight hell."

Jim got a place--brakeman on a freight-train.

That night Jim wrote a letter home. You'd have thought he had been
elected President.

It was a hard life: harder than most. The work was hard; the fare was
hard; the life was hard. Standing on top of rattling cars as they
rushed along in the night around curves, over bridges, through tunnels,
with the rain and snow pelting in your face, and the tops as slippery
as ice. There was excitement about it, too: a sense of risk and danger.
Jim did not mind it much. He thought of his mother and Kitty.

There was a freemasonry among the men. All knew each other; hated or
liked each other; nothing negative about it.

It was a bad road. Worse than the average. Twice the amount of traffic
was done on the single track that should have been done. Result was
men were ground up--more than on most roads. More men were killed in
proportion to the number employed than were killed in service during
the war. The _esprit de corps_ was strong. Men stood by their trains
and by each other. When a man left his engine in sight of trouble, the
authorities might not know about it, but the men did. Unless there
was cause he had to leave. Sam Wray left his engine in sight of a
broken bridge after he reversed. The engine stopped on the track. The
officers never knew of it; but Wray and his fireman both changed to
another road. When a man even got shaky and began to run easy, the
superintendent might not mind it; but the men did: he had to go. A man
had to have not only courage but nerve.

Jim was not especially popular among men. He was reserved, slow,
awkward. He was "pious" (that is, did not swear). He was "stuck up"
(did not tell "funny things," by which was meant vulgar stories; nor
laugh at them either). And according to Dick Rail, he was "stingy as
h--l."

These things were not calculated to make him popular, and he was not.
He was a sort of butt for the free and easy men who lived in their
cabs and cabooses, obeyed their "orders," and owned nothing but their
overalls and their shiny Sunday clothes. He was good-tempered, though.
Took all their gibes and "dev'ling" quietly, and for the most part
silently. So, few actually disliked him. Dick Rail, the engineer of
his crew, was one of those few. Dick "dee-spised" him. Dick was big,
brawny, coarse: coarse in looks, coarse in talk, coarse every way, and
when he had liquor in him he was mean. Jim "bothered" him, he said.
He made Jim's life a burden to him. He laid himself out to do it. It
became his occupation. He thought about it when Jim was not present;
laid plans for it. There was something about Jim that was different
from most others. When Jim did not laugh at a "hard story," but just
sat still, some men would stop; Dick always told another harder yet,
and called attention to Jim's looks. His stock was inexhaustible. His
mind was like a spring which ran muddy water; its flow was perpetual.
The men thought Jim did not mind. He lost three pounds; which for a
man who was six feet (and would have been six feet two if he had been
straight) and who weighed 122, was considerable.

It is astonishing how one man can create a public sentiment. One
woman can ruin a reputation as effectually as a churchful. One bullet
can kill a man as dead as a bushel, if it hits him right. So Dick
Rail injured Jim. For Dick was an authority. He swore the biggest
oaths, wore the largest watch-chain, knew his engine better and sat
it steadier than any man on the road. He had had a passenger train
again and again, but he was too fond of whiskey. It was too risky.
Dick affected Jim's standing: told stories about him: made his life
a burden to him. "He shan't stay on the road," he used to say. "He's
stingier'n----! Carries his victuals about with him--I b'lieve he
sleeps with one o' them _I_-talians in a goods box." This was true--at
least, about carrying his food with him. (The rest was Dick's humor.)
Messing cost too much. The first two months' pay went to settle an old
guano-bill; but the third month's pay was Jim's. The day he drew that
he fattened a good deal. At least, he looked so. It was eighty-two
dollars (for Jim ran extra runs;--made double time whenever he could).
Jim had never had so much money in his life; had hardly ever seen it.
He walked about the streets that night till nearly midnight, feeling
the wad of notes in his breast-pocket. Next day a box went down the
country, and a letter with it, and that night Jim could not have bought
a chew of tobacco. The next letter he got from home was heavy. Jim
smiled over it a good deal, and cried a little too. He wondered how
Kitty looked in her new dress, and if the barrel of flour made good
bread; and if his mother's shawl was warm.

One day he was changed to the passenger service, the express. It was a
promotion, paid more, and relieved him from Dick Rail.

He had some queer experiences being ordered around, but he swallowed
them all. He had not been there three weeks when Mrs. Wagoner was a
passenger on the train. Carry was with her. They had moved to town.
(Mr. Wagoner was interested in railroad development.) Mrs. Wagoner
called him to her seat, and talked to him--in a loud voice. Mrs.
Wagoner had a loud voice. It had the "carrying" quality. She did not
shake hands; Carry did and said she was so glad to see him: she had
been down home the week before--had seen his mother and Kitty. Mrs.
Wagoner said, "We still keep our plantation as a country place." Carry
said Kitty looked so well; her new dress was lovely. Mrs. Wagoner said
his mother's eyes were worse. She and Kitty had walked over to see
them, to show Kitty's new dress. She had promised that Mr. Wagoner
would do what he could for him (Jim) on the road.

Next month Jim went back to the freight service. He preferred Dick Rail
to Mrs. Wagoner. He got him. Dick was worse than ever, his appetite was
whetted by abstinence; he returned to his attack with renewed zest. He
never tired--never flagged. He was perpetual: he was remorseless. He
made Jim's life a wilderness. Jim said nothing, just slouched along
silenter than ever, quieter than ever, closer than ever. He took to
going on Sunday to another church than the one he had attended, a
more fashionable one than that. The Wagoners went there. Jim sat far
back in the gallery, very far back, where he could just see the top
of Carry's head, her big hat and her face, and could not see Mrs.
Wagoner, who sat nearer the gallery. It had a curious effect on him:
he never went to sleep there. He took to going up-town walking by the
stores--looking in at the windows of tailors and clothiers. Once he
actually went into a shop and asked the price of a new suit of clothes.
(He needed them badly.) The tailor unfolded many rolls of cloth and
talked volubly: talked him dizzy. Jim looked wistfully at them, rubbed
his hand over them softly, felt the money in his pocket; and came out.
He said he thought he might come in again. Next day he did not have
the money. Kitty wrote him she could not leave home to go to school on
their mother's account, but she would buy books, and she was learning;
she would learn fast, her mother was teaching her; and he was the best
brother in the world, the whole world; and they had a secret, but he
must wait.

One day Jim got a big bundle from down the country. It was a new suit
of clothes. On top was a letter from Kitty. This was the secret. She
and her mother had sent for the cloth and had made them; they hoped
they would fit. They had cried over them. Jim cried a little too.
He put them on. They did not fit, were much too large. Under Dick
Rail's fire Jim had grown even thinner than before. But he wore them
to church. He felt that it would have been untrue to his mother and
Kitty not to wear them. He was sorry to meet Dick Rail on the street.
Dick had on a black broadcloth coat, a velvet vest, and large-checked
trousers. Dick looked Jim over. Jim winced, flushed a little: he was
not so sunburned now. Dick saw it. Next week Dick caught Jim in a crowd
in the "yard" waiting for their train. He told about the meeting.
He made a double shot. He said, "Boys, Jim's in love, he's got new
clothes! you ought to see 'em!" Dick was graphic; he wound up: "They
hung on him like breechin' on his old mule. By ----! I b'lieve he was
too ---- stingy to buy 'em and made 'em himself." There was a shout
from the crowd. Jim's face worked. He jumped for him. There was a
handspike lying near and he seized it. Some one grabbed him, but he
shook him off as if he had been a child. Why he did not kill Dick no
one ever knew. He meant to do it. For some time they thought he was
dead. He laid off for over a month. After that Jim wore what clothes he
chose: no one ever troubled him.

So he went on in the same way: slow, sleepy, stuttering, thin, stingy,
ill-dressed, lame.

He was made a fireman; preferred it to being a conductor, it led to
being an engineer, which paid more. He ran extra trips whenever he
could, up and double straight back. He could stand an immense amount of
work. If he got sleepy he put tobacco in his eyes to keep them open.
It was bad for the eyes, but waked him up. Kitty was going to take
music next year, and that cost money. He had not been home for several
months, but was going at Christmas.

They did not have any sight tests then. But the new Directory meant
to be thorough. Mr. Wagoner had become a Director, had his eye on the
presidency. Jim was one day sent for, and was asked about his eyes.
They were bad. There was not a doubt about it. They were inflamed; he
could not see a hundred yards. He did not tell them about the extra
trips and putting the tobacco in them. Dick Rail must have told about
him. They said he must go. Jim turned white. He went to his little
room, close up under the roof of a little dingy house in a back street,
and sat down in the dark; thought about his mother and Kitty, and dimly
about some one else; wrote his mother and Kitty a letter; said he
was coming home--called it "a visit"; cried over the letter, but was
careful not to cry on it. He was a real cry-baby--Jim was.

"Just run to seed," he said to himself, bitterly, over and over; "just
run to seed." Then he went to sleep.

The following day he went down to the railroad. That was the last day.
Next day he would be "off." The train-master saw him and called him. A
special was just going out. The Directors were going over the road in
the officers' car. Dick Rail was the engineer, and his fireman had been
taken sick. Jim must take the place. Jim had a mind not to do it. He
hated Dick. He thought of how he had pursued him. But he heard a voice
behind him and turned. Carry was standing down the platform, talking
with some elderly gentlemen. She had on a travelling cap and ulster.
She saw him and came forward--a step:

"How do you do?" she held out her little gloved hand. She was going out
over the road with her father. Jim took off his hat and shook hands
with her. Dick Rail saw him, walked round the other side of the engine,
and tried to take off his hat like that. It was not a success; Dick
knew it.

Jim went.

"Who was that?" one of the elderly gentlemen asked Carry.

"An old friend of mine--a gentleman," she said.

"Rather run to seed--hey?" the old fellow quoted, without knowing
exactly why; for he only half recognized Jim, if he recognized him at
all.

They started.

It was a bad trip. The weather was bad, the road was bad, the engine
bad; Dick bad;--worse than all. Jim had a bad time: he was to be off
when he got home. What would his mother and Kitty do?

Once Carry came (brought by the President) and rode in the engine for a
little while. Jim helped her up and spread his coat for her to sit on,
put his overcoat under her feet; his heart was in it. Dick was sullen,
and Jim had to show her about the engine. When she got down to go back
to the car she thanked him--she "had enjoyed it greatly"--she "would
like to try it again." Jim smiled. He was almost good-looking when he
smiled.

Dick was meaner than ever after that, sneered at Jim--swore; but Jim
didn't mind it. He was thinking of some one else, and of the rain which
would prevent her coming again.

They were on the return trip, and were half-way home when the accident
happened. It was just "good dusk," and it had been raining all night
and all day, and the road was as rotten as mud. The special was behind
and was making up. She had the right of way, and she was flying. She
rounded a curve just above a small "fill," under which was a little
stream, nothing but a mere "branch." In good weather it would never
be noticed. The gay party behind were at dinner. The first thing they
knew was the sudden jerk which came from reversing the engine at full
speed, and the grind as the wheels slid along under the brakes. Then
they stopped with a bump which jerked them out of their seats, set the
lamps to swinging, and sent the things on the table crashing on the
floor. No one was hurt, only shaken, and they crowded out of the car to
learn the cause. They found it. The engine was half buried in wet earth
on the other side of the little washout, with the tender jammed up into
the cab. The whole was wrapped in a dense cloud of escaping steam. The
roar was terrific. The big engineer, bare-headed and covered with mud,
and with his face deadly white, was trying to get down to the engine.
Some one was in there.

They got him out after a while (but it took some time), and laid him on
the ground, while a mattress was got. It was Jim.

Carry had been weeping and praying. She sat down and took his head
in her lap, and with her lace handkerchief wiped his blackened and
bleeding face, and smoothed his wet hair.

                   *       *       *       *       *

The newspaper accounts, which are always reflections of what
public sentiment is, or should be, spoke of it--some, as "a
providential"--others, as "a miraculous"--and yet others as "a
fortunate" escape on the part of the President and the Directors of
the road, according to the tendencies, religious or otherwise, of their
paragraphists.

They mentioned casually that "only one person was hurt--an employee,
name not ascertained." And one or two had some gush about the devotion
of the beautiful young lady, the daughter of one of the directors of
the road, who happened to be on the train, and who, "like a ministering
angel, held the head of the wounded man in her lap after he was taken
from the wreck." A good deal was made of this picture, which was
extensively copied.

Dick Rail's account, after he had come back from carrying the broken
body down to the old Upton place in the country, and helping to lay it
away in the old enclosure under the big trees on the hill, was this:

"By----!" he said, when he stood in the yard, with a solemn-faced
group around him, "we were late, and I was just shaking 'em up. I had
been meaner'n hell to Jim all the trip (I didn't know him, and you all
didn't neither), and I was workin' him for all he was worth: I didn't
give him a minute. The sweat was rolling off him, and I was damnin'
him with every shovelful. We was runnin' under orders to make up,
and we was just rounding the curve this side of Ridge Hill, when Jim
hollered. He saw it as he raised up with the shovel in his hand to wipe
the sweat off his face, and he hollered to me, 'My God! Look, Dick!
Jump!'

"I looked and Hell was right there. He caught the lever and reversed,
and put on the air and sand before I saw it, and then grabbed me,
and flung me clean out of the cab: 'Jump!' he says, as he give me a
swing. I jumped, expectin' of course he was comin' too; and as I lit,
I saw him turn and catch the lever. The old engine was jumpin' nigh
off the track. But she was too near. In she went, and the tender right
on her. You may talk about his eyes bein' bad; but by----! when he
gave me that swing, they looked to me like coals of fire. When we got
him out 'twarn't Jim! He warn't nothin' but mud and ashes. He warn't
quite dead; opened his eyes, and breathed onct or twict; but I don't
think he knew anything, he was so mashed up. We laid him out on the
grass, and that young lady took his head in her lap and cried over
him (she had come and seed him in the engine), and said she knew his
mother and sister down in the country (she used to live down there);
they was gentlefolks; that Jim was all they had. And when one of them
old director-fellows who had been swilling himself behind there come
aroun', with his kid gloves on and his hands in his great-coat pockets,
lookin' down, and sayin' something about, 'Poor fellow, couldn't he 'a
jumped? Why didn't he jump?' I let him have it; I said, 'Yes, and if
it hadn't been for him, you and I'd both been frizzin' in h--l this
minute.' And the President standin' there said to some of them, 'That
was the same young fellow who came into my office to get a place last
year when you were down, and said he had run to seed. 'But,' he says,
'Gentlemen, it was d----d good seed!'"

How good it was no one knew but two weeping women in a lonely house.




                      "A SOLDIER OF THE EMPIRE."


It was his greatest pride in life that he had been a soldier--a soldier
of the empire. He was known simply as "The Soldier," and it is probable
that there was not a man or woman, and certain that there was not a
child in the Quarter who did not know him: the tall, erect old Sergeant
with his white, carefully waxed moustache, and his face seamed with two
sabre cuts. One of these cuts, all knew, had been received the summer
day when he had stood, a mere boy, in the hollow square at Waterloo,
striving to stay the fierce flood of the "men on the white horses"; the
other, tradition said, was of even more ancient date.

Yes, they all knew him, and knew how when he was not over thirteen,
just the age of little Raoul the humpback, who was not as tall as
Pauline, he had received the cross which he always wore over his heart
sewed in the breast of his coat, from the hand of the emperor himself,
for standing on the hill at Wagram when his regiment broke, and beating
the long-roll, whilst he held the tattered colors resting in his arm,
until the men rallied and swept back the left wing of the enemy. This
the children knew, as their fathers and mothers and grandfathers and
grandmothers before them had known it, and rarely an evening passed
that some of the gamins were not to be found in the old man's kitchen,
which was also his parlor, or else on his little porch, listening with
ever-new delight to the story of his battles and of the emperor. They
all knew as well as he the thrilling part where the emperor dashed
by (the old Sergeant always rose reverently at the name, and the
little audience also stood,--one or two nervous younger ones sometimes
bobbing up a little ahead of time, but sitting down again in confusion
under the contemptuous scowls and pluckings of the rest),--where the
emperor dashed by, and reined up to ask an officer what regiment that
was that had broken, and who was that drummer that had been promoted
to ensign;--they all knew how, on the grand review afterwards, the
Sergeant, beating his drum with one hand (while the other, which had
been broken by a bullet, was in a sling), had marched with his company
before the emperor, and had been recognized by him. They knew how he
had been called up by a staff-officer (whom the children imagined to be
a fine gentleman with a rich uniform, and a great shako like Marie's
uncle, the drum-major), and how the emperor had taken from his own
breast and with his own hand had given him the cross, which he had
never from that day removed from his heart, and had said, "I would make
you a colonel if I could spare you."

This was the story they liked best, though there were many others which
they frequently begged to be told--of march and siege and battle, of
victories over or escapes from red-coated Britishers and fierce German
lancers, and of how the mere presence of the emperor was worth fifty
thousand men, and how the soldiers knew that where he was no enemy
could withstand them. It all seemed to them very long ago, and the
soldier of the empire was the only man in the Quarter who was felt to
be greater than the rich nobles and fine officers who flashed along the
great streets, or glittered through the boulevards and parks outside.
More than once when Paris was stirred up, and the Quarter seemed on the
eve of an outbreak, a mounted orderly had galloped up to his door with
a letter, requesting his presence somewhere (it was whispered at the
prefect's), and when he returned, if he refused to speak of his visit
the Quarter was satisfied; it trusted him and knew that when he advised
quiet it was for its good. He loved France first, the Quarter next. Had
he not been offered--? What had he not been offered! The Quarter knew,
or fancied it knew, which did quite as well. At least, it knew how he
always took sides with the Quarter against oppression. It knew how he
had gone up into the burning tenement and brought the children down out
of the garret just before the roof fell. It knew how he had jumped into
the river that winter when it was full of ice, to save Raoul's little
lame dog which had fallen into the water; it knew how he had reported
the gendarmes for arresting poor little Aimée just for begging a man
in the Place de L'Opéra for a franc for her old grandmother, who was
blind, and how he had her released instead of being sent to----. But
what was the need of multiplying instances! He was "the Sergeant," a
soldier of the empire, and there was not a dog in the Quarter which
did not feel and look proud when it could trot on the inside of the
sidewalk by him.

Thus the old Sergeant came to be regarded as the conservator of order
in the Quarter, and was worth more in the way of keeping it quiet than
all the gendarmes that ever came inside its precincts. And thus the
children all knew him.

One story that the Sergeant sometimes told, the girls liked to hear,
though the boys did not, because it had nothing about war in it, and
Minette and Clarisse used to cry so when it was told, that the Sergeant
would stop and put his arms around them and pet them until they only
sobbed on his shoulder.

It was of how he had, when a lonely old man, met down in Lorraine his
little Camille, whose eyes were as blue as the sky, and her hand as
white as the flower from which she took her name, and her cheeks as
pink as the roses in the gardens of the Tuileries. He had loved her,
and she, though forty years his junior, had married him and had come
here to live with him; but the close walls of the city had not suited
her, and she had pined and languished before his eyes like a plucked
lily, and, after she bore him Pierre, had died in his arms, and left
him lonelier than before. And the old soldier always lowered his voice
and paused a moment (Raoul said he was saying a mass), and then he
would add consolingly: "But she left a soldier, and when I am gone,
should France ever need one, Pierre will be here." The boys did not
fancy this story for the reasons given, and besides, although they
loved the Sergeant, they did not like Pierre. Pierre was not popular in
the Quarter,--except with the young girls and a few special friends.
The women said he was idle and vain like his mother, who had been, they
said, a silly lazy thing with little to boast of but blue eyes and a
white skin, of which she was too proud to endanger it by work, and that
she had married the Sergeant for his pension, and would have ruined him
if she had lived, and that Pierre was just like her.

The children knew nothing of the resemblance. They disliked Pierre
because he was cross and disagreeable to them, and however their
older sisters might admire his curling brown hair, his dark eyes, and
delicate features, which he had likewise inherited from his mother,
they did not like him; for he always scolded when he came home and
found them there; and he had several times ordered the whole lot out of
the house; and once he had slapped little Raoul, for which Jean Maison
had beaten him. Of late, too, when it drew near the hour for him to
come home, the old Sergeant had two or three times left out a part of
his story, and had told them to run away and come back in the morning,
as Pierre liked to be quiet when he came from his work--which Raoul
said was gambling.

Thus it was that Pierre was not popular in the Quarter.

He was nineteen years old when war was declared.

They said Prussia was trying to rob France,--to steal Alsace and
Lorraine. All Paris was in an uproar. The Quarter, always ripe for any
excitement, shared in and enjoyed the general commotion. It struck off
from work. It was like the commune; at least, so people said. Pierre
was the loudest declaimer in the district. He got work in the armory.
Recruiting officers went in and out of the saloons and cafés, drinking
with the men, talking to the women, and stirring up as much fervor
as possible. It needed little to stir it. The Quarter was seething.
Troops were being mustered in, and the streets and parks were filled
with the tramp of regiments; and the roll of the drums, the call of the
bugles, and the cheers of the crowds as they marched by floated into
the Quarter. Brass bands were so common that although in the winter a
couple of strolling musicians had been sufficient to lose temporarily
every child in the Quarter, it now required a full band and a grenadier
regiment, to boot, to draw a tolerable representation.

Of all the residents of the Quarter, none took a deeper interest than
the soldier of the empire. He became at once an object of more than
usual attention. He had married in Lorraine, and could, of course,
tell just how long it would take to whip the Prussians. He thought a
single battle would decide it. It would if the emperor were there.
His little court was always full of inquirers, and the stories of the
emperor were told to audiences now of grandfathers and grandmothers.
Once or twice the gendarmes had sauntered down, thinking, from seeing
the crowd, that a fight was going on. They had stayed to hear of the
emperor. A hint was dropped by the soldier of the empire that perhaps
France would conquer Prussia, and then go on across to Moscow to settle
an old score, and that night it was circulated through the Quarter that
the invasion of Russia would follow the capture of Berlin. The emperor
became more popular than he had been since the _coup d'état_. Half the
Quarter offered its services.

The troops were being drilled night and day, and morning after morning
the soldier of the empire locked his door, buttoned his coat tightly
around him, and with a stately military air marched over to the park to
see the drill, where he remained until it was time for Pierre to have
his supper.

The old Sergeant's acquaintance extended far beyond the Quarter.
Indeed, his name had been mentioned in the papers more than once,
and his presence was noted at the drill by those high in authority;
so that he was often to be seen surrounded by a group listening to
his accounts of the emperor, or showing what the _manuel_ had been
in his time. His air, always soldierly, was now imposing, and many a
visitor of distinction inquiring who he might be, and learning that he
was a soldier of the empire, sought an introduction to him. Sometimes
they told him that they could hardly believe him so old, could hardly
believe him much older than some of those in the ranks, and although
at first he used to declare he was like a rusty flint-lock, too old
and useless for service, their flattery soothed his vanity, and after
a while, instead of shaking his head and replying as he did at first
that France had no use for old men, he would smile doubtfully and say
that when they let Pierre go, maybe he would go too, "just to show the
children how they fought then."

The summer came. The war began in earnest. The troops were sent to
the front, the crowds shouting, "On to Berlin." Others were mustered
in and sent after them as fast as they were equipped. News of battle
after battle came; at first, of victory (so the papers said), full and
satisfying, then meagre and uncertain, and at last so scanty that only
the wise ones knew there had been a defeat. The Quarter was in a fever
of patriotism. Jean Maison and nearly all the young men had enlisted
and gone, leaving their sweet-hearts by turns waving their kerchiefs
and wiping their eyes with them. Pierre, however, still remained
behind. He said he was working for the Government. Raoul said he was
not working at all; that he was skulking.

Suddenly the levy came. Pierre was conscripted.

That night the Sergeant enlisted in the same company. Before the week
was out, their regiment was equipped and dispatched to the front, for
the news came that the army was making no advance, and it was said that
France needed more men. Some shook their heads and said that was not
what she needed, that what she needed was better officers. A suggestion
of this by some of the recruits in the old Sergeant's presence drew
from him the rebuke that in his day "such a speech would have called
out a corporal and a file of grenadiers."

The day they were mustered in, the captain of the company sent for him
and bade him have the first sergeant's chevrons sewed on his sleeve.
The order had come from the colonel, some even said from the marshal.
In the Quarter it was said that it came from the emperor. The Sergeant
suggested that Pierre was the man for the place; but the captain simply
repeated the order. The Quarter approved the selection, and several
fights occurred among the children who had gotten up a company as to
who should be the sergeant. It was deemed more honorable than to be the
captain.

The day the regiment left Paris, the Sergeant was ordered to report
several reliable men for special duty; he detailed Pierre among the
number. Pierre was sick, so sick that when the company started he would
have been left behind but for his father. The old soldier was too proud
of his son to allow him to miss the opportunity of fighting for France.
Pierre was the handsomest man in the regiment.

The new levies on arrival in the field went into camp, in and near
some villages and were drilled,--quite needlessly, Pierre and some of
the others declared. They were not accustomed to restraint, and they
could not see why they should be worked to death when they were lying
in camp doing nothing. But the soldier of the empire was a strict
drill-master, and the company was shortly the best-drilled one in the
regiment.

Yet the army lay still: they were not marching on to Berlin. The sole
principle of the campaign seemed to be the massing together of as many
troops as possible. What they were to do no one appeared very clearly
to know. What they were doing all knew: they were doing nothing. The
men, at first burning for battle, became cold or lukewarm with waiting;
dissatisfaction crept in, and then murmurs: "Why did they not fight?"
The soldier of the empire himself was sorely puzzled. The art of war
had clearly changed since his day. The emperor would have picked the
best third of these troops and have been at the gates of the Prussian
capital in less time than they had spent camped with the enemy right
before them. Still, it was not for a soldier to question, and he
reported for a week's extra guard duty a man who ventured to complain
in his presence that the marshal knew as little as the men. Extra guard
duty did no good. The army was losing heart.

Thus it was for several weeks. But at last, one evening, it was
apparent that some change was at hand: the army stirred and shook
itself as a great animal moves and stretches, not knowing if it will
awake or drop off to sleep again.

During the night it became wide awake. It was high time. The Prussians
were almost on them. They had them in a trap. They held the higher
grounds and hemmed the French in. All night long the tents were
being struck, and the army was in commotion. No one knew just why it
was. Some said they were about to be attacked; some said they were
surrounded. Uncertainty gave place to excitement. At length they
marched.

When day began to break, the army had been tumbled into line of battle,
and the regiment in which the old Sergeant and Pierre were was drawn
up on the edge of a gentleman's park outside of the villages. The line
extended beyond them farther than they could see, and large bodies of
troops were massed behind them, and were marching and countermarching
in clouds of dust. The rumor went along the ranks that they were in
the advanced line, and that the Germans were just the other side of
the little plateau, which they could dimly see in the gray light of
the dawn. The men, having been marching in the dark, were tired, and
most of them lay down, when they were halted, to rest. Some went to
sleep; others, like Pierre, set to work and with their bayonets dug
little trenches and threw up a slight earthwork before them, behind
which they could lie; for the skirmishers had been thrown out, looking
vague and ghostly as they trotted forward in the dim twilight, and they
supposed that the battle would be fought right there. By the time,
however, that the trenches were dug, the line was advanced, and the
regiment was moved forward some distance, and was halted just under
a knoll along which ran a road. The Sergeant was the youngest man in
the company; the sound of battle had brought back all his fire. To him
numbers were nothing. He thought it now but a matter of a few hours,
and France would be at the gates of Berlin. He saw once more the field
of glory and heard again the shout of victory; Lorraine would be saved;
he beheld the tricolor floating over the capital of the enemies of
France. Perhaps, it would be planted there by Pierre. And he saw in his
imagination Pierre climbing at a stride from a private to a captain,
a colonel, a--! who could tell?--had not the _baton_ been won in a
campaign? As to dreaming that a battle could bring any other result
than victory!--It was impossible!

"Where are you going?" shouted derisively the men of a regiment at
rest, to the Sergeant's command as they marched past.

"To Berlin," replied the Sergeant.

The reply evoked cheers, and that regiment that day stood its ground
until a fourth of its men fell. The old soldier's enthusiasm infected
the new recruits, who were pale and nervous under the strain of
waiting. His eye rested on Pierre, who was standing down near the other
end of the company, and the father's face beamed as he thought he saw
there resolution and impatience for the fight. Ha! France should ring
with his name; the Quarter should go wild with delight.

Just then the skirmishers ahead began to fire, and in a few moments it
was answered by a sullen note from the villages beyond the plain, and
the battle had begun. The dropping fire of the skirmish line increased
and merged into a rattle, and suddenly the thunder broke from a hill to
their right, and ran along the crest until the earth trembled under
their feet. Bullets began to whistle over their heads and clip the
leaves of the trees beyond them, and the long, pulsating scream of
shells flying over them and exploding in the park behind them made the
faces of the men look gray in the morning twilight. Waiting was worse
than fighting. It told on the young men.

In a little while a staff-officer galloped up to the colonel, who was
sitting on his horse in the road, quietly smoking a cigar, and a moment
later the whole line was in motion. They were wheeled to the right,
and marched under shelter of the knoll in the direction of the firing.
As they passed the turn of the road, they caught a glimpse of the hill
ahead where the artillery, enveloped in smoke, was thundering from an
ever-thickening cloud. A battery of eight guns galloped past them, and
turning the curve disappeared in a cloud of dust. To the new recruits
it seemed as if the whole battle was being fought right there. They
could see nothing but their own line, and only a part of that; smoke
and dust hid everything else; but the hill was plainly an important
point, for they were being pushed forward, and the firing on the rise
ahead of them was terrific. They were still partly protected by the
ridge, but shells were screaming over them, and the earth was rocking
under their feet. More batteries came thundering by,--the men clinging
to the pieces and the drivers lashing their horses furiously,--and
disappearing into the smoke on the hill, unlimbered and swelled the
deafening roar; they passed men lying on the ground dead or wounded, or
were passed by others helping wounded comrades to the rear. Several men
in the company fell, some crying out or groaning with pain, and two or
three killed outright.

The men were dodging and twisting, with heads bent forward a little as
if in a pelting rain. Only the old Sergeant and some of the younger
ones were perfectly erect.

"Why don't you dodge the balls?" asked a recruit of the Sergeant.

"A soldier of the empire never dodges," was the proud reply.

Some change occurred on the hills; they could not see what. Just then
the order came down the line to advance at a double-quick and support
the batteries. They moved forward at a run and passed beyond the
shelter of the ridge. Instantly they were in the line of fire from the
Prussian batteries, whose white puffs of smoke were visible across the
plain, and bullets and shell tore wide spaces in their ranks. They
could not see the infantrymen, who were in pits, but the bullets hissed
and whistled by them. The men on both sides of Pierre were killed and
fell forward on their faces with a thud, one of them still clutching
his musket. Pierre would have stopped, but there was no time, the
men in the rear pressed him on. As they appeared in the smoke of the
nearest battery, the artillerymen broke into cheers at the welcome
sight, and all down the line it was taken up. All around were dead and
dying men increasing in numbers momentarily. No one had time to notice
them. Some of them had blankets thrown over them. The infantry, who
were a little to the side of the batteries, were ordered to lie down;
most of them had already done so; even then they were barely protected;
shot and shell ploughed the ground around them as if it had been a
fallow field; men spoke to their comrades, and before receiving a reply
were shot dead at their sides. The wounded were more ghastly than the
dead; their faces growing suddenly deadly white from the shock as they
were struck.

The gunners lay in piles around their guns, and still the survivors
worked furiously in the dense heat and smoke, the sweat pouring down
their blackened faces. The fire was terrific.

Suddenly an officer galloped up, and spoke to the lieutenant of the
nearest battery.

"Where is the colonel?"

"Killed."

"Where is your captain?"

"Dead, there under the gun."

"Are you in command?"

"I suppose so."

"Well, hold this hill."

"How long?"

"Forever." And he galloped off.

His voice was heard clear and ringing in a sudden lull, and the old
Sergeant, clutching his musket, shouted:

"We will, forever."

There was a momentary lull.

Suddenly the cry was:

"Here they are."

In an instant a dark line of men appeared coming up the slope. The guns
were trained down on them, but shot over their heads; they were double
shotted and trained lower, and belched forth canister. They fell in
swathes, yet still they came on at a run, hurrahing, until they were
almost up among the guns, and the gunners were leaving their pieces.
The old Sergeant's voice speaking to his men was as steady as if on
parade, and kept them down, and when the command was given to fire
kneeling, they rose as one man, and poured a volley into the Germans'
faces which sent them reeling back down the hill, leaving a broken line
of dead and struggling men on the deadly crest. Just then a brigade
officer came along. They heard him say, "That repulse may stop them."
Then he gave some order in an undertone to the lieutenant in command of
the batteries, and passed on. A moment later the fire from the Prussian
batteries was heavier than before; the guns were being knocked to
pieces. A piece of shell struck the Sergeant on the cheek, tearing away
the flesh badly. He tore the sleeve from his shirt and tied it around
his head with perfect unconcern. The fire of the Germans was still
growing heavier; the smoke was too dense to see a great deal, but they
were concentrating or were coming closer. The lieutenant came back for
a moment and spoke to the captain of the company, who, looking along
the line, called the Sergeant, and ordered him to go back down the hill
to where the road turned behind it, and tell General ---- to send them
a support instantly, as the batteries were knocked to pieces, and they
could not hold the hill much longer. The announcement was astonishing
to the old soldier; it had never occurred to him that as long as a
man remained they could not hold the hill, and he was half-way down
the slope before he took it in. He had brought his gun with him, and
he clutched it convulsively as if he could withstand alone the whole
Prussian army. "He might have taken a younger man to do his trotting,"
he muttered to himself as he stalked along, not knowing that his wound
had occasioned his selection. "Pierre--" but, no, Pierre must stay
where he would have the opportunity to distinguish himself.

It was no holiday promenade that the old soldier was taking; for his
path lay right across the track swept by the German batteries, and
the whole distance was strewn with dead, killed as they had advanced
in the morning. But the old Sergeant got safely across. He found the
General with one or two members of his staff sitting on horseback in
the road near the park gate, receiving and answering dispatches. He
delivered his message.

"Go back and tell him he _must_ hold it," was the reply. "Upon it
depends the fate of the day; perhaps of France. Or wait, you are
wounded; I will send some one else; you go to the rear." And he gave
the order to one of his staff, who saluted and dashed off on his horse.
"Hold it for France," he called after him.

The words were heard perfectly clear even above the din of battle which
was steadily increasing all along the line, and they stirred the old
soldier like a trumpet. No rear for him! He turned and pushed back up
the hill at a run. The road had somewhat changed since he left, but
he marked it not; shot and shell were ploughing across his path more
thickly, but he did not heed them; in his ears rang the words--"For
France." They came like an echo from the past; it was the same cry he
had heard at Waterloo, when the soldiers of France that summer day
had died for France and the emperor, with a cheer on their lips. "For
France": the words were consecrated; the emperor himself had used them.
He had heard him, and would have died then; should he not die now for
her! Was it not glorious to die for France, and have men say that he
had fought for her when a babe, and had died for her when an old man!

With these thoughts was mingled the thought of Pierre--Pierre also
would die for France! They would save her or die together; and he
pressed his hand with a proud caress over the cross on his breast. It
was the emblem of glory.

He was almost back with his men now; he knew it by the roar, but the
smoke hid everything. Just then it shifted a little. As it did so, he
saw a man steal out of the dim line and start towards him at a run. He
had on the uniform of his regiment. His cap was pulled over his eyes,
and he saw him deliberately fling away his gun. He was skulking. All
the blood boiled up in the old soldier's veins. Desert!--not fight for
France! Why did not Pierre shoot him! Just then the coward passed close
to him, and the old man seized him with a grip of iron. The deserter,
surprised, turned his face; it was pallid with terror and shame; but no
more so than his captor's. It was Pierre.

"Pierre!" he gasped. "Good God! where are you going?"

"I am sick," faltered the other.

"Come back," said the father sternly.

"I cannot," was the terrified answer.

"It is for France, Pierre," pleaded the old soldier.

"Oh! I cannot," moaned the young man, pulling away. There was a
pause--the old man still holding on hesitatingly, then,--"Dastard!" he
hissed, flinging his son from him with indescribable scorn.

Pierre, free once more, was slinking off with averted face, when a new
idea seized his father, and his face grew grim as stone. Cocking his
musket, he flung it up, took careful and deliberate aim at his son's
retreating figure, and brought his finger slowly down upon the trigger.
But, before he could fire, a shell exploded directly in the line of his
aim, and when the smoke blew off, Pierre had disappeared. The Sergeant
lowered his piece, gazed curiously down the hill, and then hurried to
the spot where the shell had burst. A mangled form marked the place.
The coward had in the very act of flight met the death he dreaded.
Pierre lay dead on his face, shot in the back. The back of his head was
shattered by a fragment of shell. The countenance of the living man was
more pallid than that of the dead. No word escaped him, except that
refrain, "For France, for France," which he repeated mechanically.

Although this had occupied but a few minutes, momentous changes had
taken place on the ridge above. The sound of the battle had somewhat
altered, and with the roar of artillery were mingled now the continuous
rattle of the musketry and the shouts and cheers of the contending
troops. The fierce onslaught of the Prussians had broken the line
somewhere beyond the batteries, and the French were being borne back.
Almost immediately the slope was filled with retreating men hurrying
back in the demoralization of panic. All order was lost. It was a
rout. The soldiers of his own regiment began to rush by the spot where
the old Sergeant stood above his son's body. Recognizing him, some of
his comrades seized his arm and attempted to hurry him along; but
with a fierce exclamation the old soldier shook them off, and raising
his voice so that he was heard even above the tumult of the rout, he
shouted, "Are ye all cowards? Rally for France--For France----"

They tried to bear him along; the officers, they said, were dead; the
Prussians had captured the guns, and had broken the whole line. But it
was no use; still he shouted that rallying cry, For France, for France,
"Vive la France; Vive l'Empereur"; and steadied by the war-cry, and
accustomed to obey an officer, the men around him fell instinctively
into something like order, and for an instant the rout was arrested.
The fight was renewed over Pierre's dead body. As they had, however,
truly said, the Prussians were too strong for them. They had carried
the line and were now pouring down the hill by thousands in the ardor
of hot pursuit, the line on either side of the hill was swept away, and
whilst the gallant little band about the old soldier still stood and
fought desperately, they were soon surrounded. There was no thought
of quarter; none was asked, none was given. Cries, curses, cheers,
shots, blows, were mingled together, and clear above all rang the
old soldier's war-cry, For France, for France, "Vive la France, Vive
l'Empereur." It was the refrain from an older and bloodier field. He
thought he was at Waterloo.

Mad with excitement, the men took up the cry, and fought like tigers;
but the issue could not be doubtful.

Man after man fell, shot or clubbed down, with the cry "For France"
on his lips, and his comrades, standing astride his body, fought with
bayonets and clubbed muskets till they too fell in turn. Almost the
last one was the old Sergeant. Wounded to death, and bleeding from
numberless gashes, he still fought, shouting his battle-cry, "For
France," till his musket was hurled spinning from his shattered hand,
and staggering senseless back, a dozen bayonets were driven into his
breast, crushing out forever the brave spirit of the soldier of the
empire.

It was best, for France was lost.

A few hours later the Quarter was in mourning over the terrible defeat.

                   *       *       *       *       *

That night a group of Prussian officers going over the field with
lanterns looking after their wounded, stopped near a spot remarkable
even on that bloody slope for the heaps of dead of both armies
literally piled upon each other.

"It was just here," said one, "that they got reinforcements and made
that splendid rally."

A second, looking at the body of an old French sergeant lying amidst
heaps of slain, with his face to the sky, said simply as he saw his
scars:

"There died a brave soldier."

Another, older than the first, bending closer to count the bayonet
wounds, caught the gleam of something in the light of the lantern, and
stooping to examine a broken cross of the Legion on the dead man's
breast, said reverently:

"He was a _soldier of the empire_."



              Typography by J. S. Cushing & Co., Boston.
                 Presswork by Berwick & Smith, Boston.




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 DOMESTICUS. A Tale of the Imperial City. (12mo, $1.25.)

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 a running fire of good-natured hits at contemporary social follies.
 There is a delicate love story running through the book. The author's
 style is highly finished. One might term it old-fashioned in its
 exquisite choiceness and precision."--_The New York Journal of
 Commerce._


_George W. Cable._

 THE GRANDISSIMES. (12mo, paper, 50 cts.; cloth, $1.25)--OLD CREOLE
 DAYS. (12mo, cloth, $1.25; also in two parts, 16mo, cloth, each, 75
 cts.; paper, each, 30 cts.)--DR. SEVIER. (12mo, paper, 50 cts.; cloth,
 $1.25)--BONAVENTURE. A Prose Pastoral of Arcadian Louisiana. (12mo,
 paper, 50 cts. $1.25.)

                      _The set, 4 vols., $5.00._

 "There are few living American writers who can reproduce for us more
 perfectly than Mr. Cable does, in his best moments, the speech, the
 manners, the whole social atmosphere of a remote time and a peculiar
 people. A delicious flavor of humor penetrates his stories."--_The New
 York Tribune._


_Richard Harding Davis._

 GALLEGHER, and Other Stories. (12mo, paper, 50 cts.; cloth, $1.00.)

 The ten stories comprising this volume attest the appearance of a new
 and strong individuality in the field of American fiction. They are of
 a wide range and deal with very varied types of metropolitan character
 and situation; but each proves that Mr. Davis knows his New York as
 well as Dickens did his London.


_Edward Eggleston._

 ROXY--THE CIRCUIT RIDER. Illustrated (each 12mo, $1.50).

 "Dr. Eggleston's fresh and vivid portraiture of a phase of life and
 manners, hitherto almost unrepresented in literature; its boldly
 contrasted characters, and its unconventional, hearty, religious
 spirit, took hold of the public imagination."--_The Christian Union._


_Erckmann-Chatrian._

 THE CONSCRIPT. Illustrated--WATERLOO. Illustrated. (Sequel to
 The Conscript.)--MADAME THÉRÉSE--THE BLOCKADE OF PHALSBURG.
 Illustrated--THE INVASION OF FRANCE IN 1814. Illustrated--A MILLER'S
 STORY OF THE WAR. Illustrated.

 _The National Novels, each, $1.25; the set 6 vols., $7.50._

 FRIEND FRITZ. (12mo, paper, 50 cts.; cloth, $1.25.)


_Eugene Field._

 A LITTLE BOOK OF PROFITABLE TALES. (16mo, $1.25.)

 "This pretty little volume promises to perpetuate examples of a
 wit, humor, and pathos quaint and rare in their kind. Genial and
 sympathetic, Mr. Field has already made a mark in the literature of
 the day, which will not quickly wear out."--_New York Tribune._


_Harold Frederic._

 SETH'S BROTHER'S WIFE. (12mo, $1.25)--THE LAWTON GIRL. (12mo, $1.25;
 paper, 50 cts.)--IN THE VALLEY. Illustrated (12mo, $1.50).

 "Mr. Frederic's new tale takes a wide range, includes many characters,
 and embraces a field of action full of dramatic climaxes. It is almost
 reasonable to assert that there has not been since Cooper's day a
 better American novel dealing with a purely historical theme than 'In
 the Valley.'"--_Boston Beacon._


_Octave Thanet._

 EXPIATION. Illustrated by A. B. Frost. (12mo, paper, 50 cts.; cloth,
 $1.00.)

 "This remarkable novel shows an extraordinary grasp of dramatic
 possibilities as well as an exquisite delicacy of character drawing.
 Miss French has with this work taken her place among the very foremost
 of American writers of fiction."--_Boston Beacon._


_James Anthony Froude._

 THE TWO CHIEFS OF DUNBOY. An Irish Romance of the Last Century. (12mo,
 paper, 50 cts.; cloth, $1.50.)

 "The narrative is full of vigor, spirit, and dramatic power. It will
 unquestionably be widely read, for it presents a vivid and life-like
 study of character with romantic color and adventurous incident for
 the background."--_The New York Tribune._


_Robert Grant._

 FACE TO FACE. (12mo, paper, 50 cents; cloth, $1.25)--THE REFLECTIONS
 OF A MARRIED MAN. (12mo, paper, 50 cents; cloth, $1.00.)

 A delicious vein of humor runs through this new book by the author of
 "The Confessions of a Frivolous Girl," who takes the reader into his
 confidence and gives a picture of married life that is as bright and
 entertaining as it is amusing.


_Edward Everett Hale._

 PHILIP NOLAN'S FRIENDS. Illustrated (12mo, Paper, 50 cents; Cloth,
 $1.75.)

 "There is no question, we think, that this is Mr. Hale's completest
 and best novel. The characters are for the most part well drawn, and
 several of them are admirable."--_The Atlantic Monthly._


_Marion Harland._

 JUDITH: A Chronicle of Old Virginia. (12mo, paper, 50 cts.; cloth,
 $1.00)--HANDICAPPED. (12mo, $1.50)--WITH THE BEST INTENTIONS. A
 Midsummer Episode. (12mo, Cloth, $1.25; Paper, 50 cents.)

 "Fiction has afforded no more charming glimpses of old Virginia life
 than are found in this delightful story, with its quaint pictures,
 its admirably drawn characters, its wit, and its frankness."--_The
 Brooklyn Daily Times._


_Joel Chandler Harris._

 FREE JOE, and Other Georgian Sketches. (12mo, paper, 50 cts., cloth,
 $1.00.)

 "The author's skill as a story writer has never been more felicitously
 illustrated than in this volume. The title story is meagre almost to
 baldness in incident, but its quaint humor, its simple but broadly
 outlined characters, and, above all, its touching pathos, combine to
 make it a masterpiece of its kind."--_The New York Sun._


_Augustus Allen Hayes._

 THE JESUIT'S RING. A Romance of Mount Desert (12mo, paper, 50 cts.;
 cloth, $1.00).

 "The conception of the story is excellent."--_The Boston Traveller._


_George A. Hibbard._

 THE GOVERNOR, and Other Stories. (12mo, cloth, $1.00; paper, 50 cents.)

 Six of the best of Mr. Hibbard's magazine stories are included in
 this volume. Mr. Howells, in _Harper's_, refers to Mr. Hibbard's
 work as having a "certain felicity of execution and a certain ideal
 of performance which are not common. The wish to deal with poetic
 material in the region of physical conjecture is curiously blended
 with the desire of portraying the life of the society world."


_E. T. W. Hoffmann._

 WEIRD TALES. With Portrait. (12mo, 2 vols., $3.00.)

 "All those who are in search of a genuine literary sensation, or who
 care for the marvelous and supernatural, will find these two volumes
 fascinating reading."--_The Christian Union._


_Dr. J. G. Holland._

 SEVENOAKS--THE BAY PATH--ARTHUR BONNICASTLE--MISS GILBERT'S
 CAREER--NICHOLAS MINTURN.

 _Each, 12mo, $1.25; the set, $6.25; Sevenoaks, paper, 50 cents._

"Dr. Holland will always find a congenial audience in the homes of
culture and refinement. He does not affect the play of the darker and
fiercer passions, but delights in the sweet images that cluster around
the domestic hearth. He cherishes a strong fellow-feeling with the
pure and tranquil life in the modest social circles of the American
people, and has thus won his way to the companionship of many friendly
hearts."--_The New York Tribune._


_Thomas A. Janvier._

 COLOR STUDIES, AND A MEXICAN CAMPAIGN. (12mo, paper, 50 cts.; cloth,
 $1.00.)

 "Piquant, novel, and ingenious, these little stories, with all their
 simplicity, have excited a wide interest. The best of them, 'Jaune
 D'Antimoine,' is a little wonder in its dramatic effect, its ingenious
 construction."--_The Critic._


_Virginia W. Johnson._

 THE FAINALLS OF TIPTON. (12mo, $1.25.)

 "The plot is good, and in its working-out original. Character-drawing
 is Miss Johnson's recognized _forte_, and her pen-sketches are quite
 up to her best work."--_The Boston Commonwealth._


_Lieut. J. D. J. Kelley._

 A DESPERATE CHANCE. (12mo, paper, 50 cts.; cloth. $1.00.)


_The King's Men_:

 A TALE OF TO-MORROW. By Robert Grant, John Boyle O'Reilly, J. S. of
 Dale, and John T. Weelwright. (12mo, $1.25.)


_Andrew Lang._

 THE MARK OF CAIN. (12mo, paper, 25 cts.)

 "No one can deny that it is crammed as full of incident as it will
 hold, or that the elaborate plot is worked out with most ingenious
 perspicuity."--_The Saturday Review._


_George P. Lathrop._

 NEWPORT. (12mo, paper, 50 cts; cloth, $1.25)--AN ECHO OF PASSION.
 (12mo, paper, 50 cts.; cloth, $1.00)--IN THE DISTANCE. (12mo, paper,
 50 cts; cloth, $1.00.)

 "His novels have the refinement of motive which characterize
 the analytical school, but his manner is far more direct and
 dramatic."--_The Christian Union._


_Brander Matthews._

 THE SECRET OF THE SEA and Other Stories. (12mo, paper, 50 cts.; cloth,
 $1.00)--THE LAST MEETING. (12mo, cloth, $1.00.)

 "Mr. Matthews is a man of wide observation and of much familiarity
 with the world. His literary style is bright and crisp, with a
 peculiar sparkle about it--wit and humor judiciously mingled--which
 renders his pages more than ordinarily interesting."--_The Rochester
 Post-Express._


_George Moore._

 VAIN FORTUNE. (12mo, $1.00.)

 In this novel Mr. Moore has presented a subtle and powerful study of
 character and temperament. An English girl, impulsive, passionate,
 jealous, is the heroine of the story, which portrays very vividly and
 with extraordinary truth to human nature her emotions and experiences.
 No less masterly is the author's study of the young playwright and of
 the other personages in this drama in real life.


_Fitz-James O'Brien._

 THE DIAMOND LENS, with Other Stories. (12mo, paper, 50 cts.)

 "These stories are the only things in literature to be compared with
 Poe's work, and if they do not equal it in workmanship, they certainly
 do not yield to it in originality."--_The Philadelphia Record._


_Duffield Osborne._

 THE SPELL OF ASHTAROTH. (12mo, $1.00.)


_Bliss Perry._

 THE BROUGHTON HOUSE. (12mo, $1.25)

 An artistic and vivid picture of New England village life.


_Thomas Nelson Page._

 IN OLE VIRGINIA--Marse Chan and Other Stories. (12mo, $1.25)--ON
 NEWFOUND RIVER. (12mo, $1.00)--ELSKET, and Other Stories. (12mo,
 $1.00.)

 "In 'On Newfound River,' the rich promise of Mr. Page's rarely
 beautiful short stories has been fulfilled."--_Richmond Despatch._


_Saxe Holm's Stories._

 FIRST SERIES.--Draxy Miller's Dowry--The Elder's Wife--Whose Wife Was
 She?--The One-Legged Dancers--How One Woman Kept Her Husband--Esther
 Wynn's Love Letters.

 SECOND SERIES.--Four-Leaved Clover--Farmer Bassett's Romance--My
 Tourmalene--Joe Hale's Red Stocking--Susan Lawton's Escape.

              _Each, 12mo, paper, 50 cts.; cloth, $1.00._

 "Saxe Holm's' characters are strongly drawn, and she goes right to
 the heart of human experience as one who knows the way. We heartily
 commend them as vigorous, wholesome, and sufficiently exciting
 stories."--_The Advance._


_Robert Louis Stevenson._

 STRANGE CASE OF DR. JEKYLL AND MR. HYDE. (12mo, paper, 25 cts.; cloth,
 $1.00)--KIDNAPPED. (12mo, paper, 50 cts.; cloth, $1.00, illustrated,
 $1.25)--THE MERRY MEN, and Other Tales and Fables. (12mo, paper, 35
 cts.; cloth, $1.00)--NEW ARABIAN NIGHTS. (12mo, paper, 30 cts.; cloth,
 $1.00)--THE DYNAMITER. With Mrs. Stevenson (12mo, paper, 30 cts.;
 cloth, $1.00)--THE BLACK ARROW. Illustrated (12mo, paper, 50 cts.;
 cloth, $1.00)--THE WRONG BOX. With Lloyd Osbourne (12mo, paper, 50
 cts.; cloth, $1.00)--THE MASTER OF BALLANTRAE. A Winter's Tale. (12mo,
 paper, 50 cts.; cloth, illustrated, $1.25)--THE WRECKER. With Lloyd
 Osbourne. (12mo, paper, 50 cts.; cloth, illustrated. _In Press._)

 "Stevenson belongs to the romantic school of fiction writers. He
 is original in style, charming, fascinating, and delicious, with a
 marvelous command of words, and with a manner ever delightful and
 magnetic."--_Boston Transcript._


_T. R. Sullivan._

 DAY AND NIGHT STORIES. (12mo, cloth, $1.00; paper, 50 cts.)--ROSES OF
 SHADOW. (12mo, $1.00.)

 "Mr. Sullivan's style is at once easy and refined, conveying most
 happily that atmosphere of good breeding and polite society which
 is indispensable to the novel of manners, but which so many of them
 lamentably fail of."--_The Nation._


_Frederick J. Stimson_ (_J. S., of Dale._)

 GUERNDALE. (12mo, paper, 50 cts.; cloth, $1.25)--THE CRIME OF HENRY
 VANE. (12mo, paper, 50 cts.; cloth, $1.00)--THE SENTIMENTAL CALENDAR.
 Head Pieces by F. G. Attwood (12mo, $2.00)--FIRST HARVESTS. An Episode
 in the Career of Mrs. Levison Gower, a Satire without a Moral (12mo,
 $1.25)--THE RESIDUARY LEGATEE; or, The Posthumous Jest of the Late
 John Austin. (12mo, paper, 35 cts.; cloth, $1.00.)

 "No young novelist in this country seems better equipped than
 Mr. Stimson is. He shows unusual gifts in this and in his other
 stories."--_The Philadelphia Bulletin._


_Frank R. Stockton._

 RUDDER GRANGE. (12mo, paper, 60 cts.; cloth, $1.25; illustrated by
 A. B. Frost, Sq. 12mo, $2.00)--THE LATE MRS. NULL. (12mo, paper, 50
 cts.; cloth, $1.25)--THE LADY, OR THE TIGER? and Other Stories. (12mo,
 paper, 50 cts.; cloth, $1.25)--THE CHRISTMAS WRECK, and Other Stories.
 (12mo, paper, 50 cts.; cloth, $1.25)--THE BEE-MAN OF ORN, and Other
 Fanciful Tales. (12mo, cloth, $1.25)--AMOS KILBRIGHT, with Other
 Stories. (12mo, paper, 50 cts.; cloth, $1.25)--THE RUDDER GRANGERS
 ABROAD, and Other Stories. (12mo, paper, 50 cts.; cloth, $1.25.)

 "Of Mr. Stockton's stories what is there to say, but that they
 are an unmixed blessing and delight? He is surely one of the most
 inventive of talents, discovering not only a new kind in humor and
 fancy, but accumulating an inexhaustible wealth of details in each
 fresh achievement, the least of which would be riches from another
 hand."--W. D. HOWELLS, _in Harper's Magazine_.


_Stories by American Authors._

_Cloth, 16mo, 50c. each; set, 10 vols., $5.00; cabinet ed., in sets
only, $7.50._

 "The public ought to appreciate the value of this series, which is
 preserving permanently in American literature short stories that
 have contributed to its advancement. American writers lead all
 others in this form of fiction, and their best work appears in these
 volumes."--_The Boston Globe._


_John T. Wheelwright._

 A CHILD OF THE CENTURY. (12mo, paper, 50 cts.; cloth, $1.00.)

 "A typical story of political and social life, free from cynicism of
 morbid realism, and brimming over with good-natured fun, which is
 never vulgar."--_The Christian at Work._




Transcriber's Note:

Italics are indicated by _underscores_.
Small capitals have been rendered in full capitals.
A number of minor spelling errors have been corrected without note.





End of Project Gutenberg's Elsket and Other Stories, by Thomas Nelson Page