The Country of the Pointed Firs and Selected Short Fiction

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The Country of the Pointed Firs and Selected Short Fiction Page 30

by Sarah Orne Jewett


  “I’ve got to be a featur’ of the landscape,” said Mr. Briley plaintively. “This kind o’ weather the old mare and me, we wish we was done with it, and could settle down kind o’ comfortable. I’ve been lookin’ this good while, as I drove the road, and I’ve picked me out a piece o’ land two or three times. But I can’t abide the thought o’ buildin’,—’t would plague me to death; and both Sister Peak to North Kilby and Mis’ Deacon Ash to the Pond, they vie with one another to do well by me, fear I’ll like the other stoppin’-place best.”

  “I shouldn’t covet livin’ long o’ neither one o’ them women,” responded the passenger with some spirit. “I see some o’ Mis’ Peak’s cookin’ to a farmers’ supper once, when I was visitin’ Susan Ellen’s folks, an’ I says ‘Deliver me from sech pale-complected baked beans as them!’ and she give a kind of a quack. She was settin’ jest at my left hand, and couldn’t help hearin’ of me. I wouldn’t have spoken if I had known, but she needn’t have let on they was hers an’ make everything unpleasant. ‘I guess them beans taste just as well as other folks’,’ says she, and she wouldn’t never speak to me afterward.”

  “Do’ know ’s I blame her,” ventured Mr. Briley. “Women folks is dreadful pudjickydh about their cookin’. I’ve always heard you was one o’ the best o’ cooks, Mis’ Tobin. I know them doughnuts an’ things you’ve give me in times past, when I was drivin’ by. Wish I had some on ’em now. I never let on, but Mis’ Ash’s cookin’ ’s the best by a long chalk. Mis’ Peak’s handy about some things, and looks after mendin’ of me up.”

  “It doos seem as if a man o’ your years and your quiet make ought to have a home you could call your own,” suggested the passenger. “I kind of hate to think o’ your bangein’di here and boardin’ there, and one old woman mendin’, and the other settin’ ye down to meals that like’s not don’t agree with ye.”

  “Lor’, now, Mis’ Tobin, le’s not fuss round no longer,” said Mr. Briley impatiently. “You know you covet me same ’s I do you.”

  “I don’t nuther. Don’t you go an’ say fo’lish things you can’t stand to.”

  “I’ve been tryin’ to git a chance to put in a word with you ever sence—Well, I expected you’d want to get your feelin’s kind o’ calloused after losin’ Tobin.”

  “There’s nobody can fill his place,” said the widow.

  “I do’ know but I can fight for ye town-meetin’ days, on a pinch,” urged Jefferson boldly.

  “I never see the beat o’ you men fur conceit,” and Mrs. Tobin laughed. “I ain’t goin’ to bother with ye, gone half the time as you be, an’ carryin’ on with your Mis’ Peaks and Mis’ Ashes. I dare say you’ve promised yourself to both on ’em twenty times.”

  “I hope to gracious if I ever breathed a word to none on ’em!” protested the lover. “ ’T ain’t for lack o’ opportunities set afore me, nuther;” and then Mr. Briley craftily kept silence, as if he had made a fair proposal, and expected a definite reply.

  The lady of his choice was, as she might have expressed it, much beat about. As she soberly thought, she was getting along in years, and must put up with Jefferson all the rest of the time. It was not likely she would ever have the chance of choosing again, though she was one who liked variety.

  Jefferson wasn’t much to look at, but he was pleasant and appeared boyish and young-feeling. “I do’ know ’s I should do better,” she said unconsciously and half aloud. “Well, yes, Jefferson, seein’ it’s you. But we’re both on us kind of old to change our situation.” Fanny Tobin gave a gentle sigh.

  “Hooray!” said Jefferson. “I was scairt you meant to keep me suf ferin’ here a half an hour. I declare, I’m more pleased than I cal c’lated on. An’ I expected till lately to die a single man!”

  “ ’T would re’lly have been a shame; ’t ain’t natur’,” said Mrs. Tobin, with confidence. “I don’t see how you held out so long with bein’ solitary.”

  “I’ll hire a hand to drive for me, and we’ll have a good comfortable winter, me an’ you an’ the old sorrel. I’ve been promisin’ of her a rest this good while.”

  “Better keep her a steppin’,” urged thrifty Mrs. Fanny. “She’ll stiffen up master, an’ disapp’int ye, come spring.”

  “You’ll have me, now, won’t ye, sartin?” pleaded Jefferson, to make sure. “You ain’t one o’ them that plays with a man’s feelin’s. Say right out you’ll have me.”

  “I s’pose I shall have to,” said Mrs. Tobin somewhat mournfully. “I feel for Mis’ Peak an’ Mis’ Ash, pore creatur’s. I expect they’ll be hardshipped. They’ve always been hard-worked, an’ may have kind o’ looked forward to a little ease. But one of ’em would be left lamentin’, anyhow,” and she gave a girlish laugh. An air of victory animated the frame of Mrs. Tobin. She felt but twenty-five years of age. In that moment she made plans for cutting her Briley’s hair, and making him look smartened-up and ambitious. Then she wished that she knew for certain how much money he had in the bank; not that it would make any difference now. “He needn’t bluster none before me,” she thought gayly. “He’s harmless as a fly.”

  “Who’d have thought we’d done such a piece of engineerin’, when we started out?” inquired the dear one of Mr. Briley’s heart, as he tenderly helped her to alight at Susan Ellen’s door.

  “Both on us, jest the least grain,” answered the lover. “Gimme a good smack,dj now, you clever creatur’;” and so they parted. Mr. Briley had been taken on the road in spite of his pistol.

  A NATIVE OF WINBY

  I

  ON THE TEACHER’S DESK, in the little roadside school-house, there was a bunch of Mayflowers, beside a dented and bent brass bell, a small Worcester’s Dictionarydk without any cover, and a worn morocco-covered Bible. These were placed in an orderly row, and behind them was a small wooden box which held some broken pieces of blackboard crayon. The teacher, whom no timid new scholar could look at boldly, wore her accustomed air of authority and importance. She might have been nineteen years old,—not more,—but for the time being she scorned the frivolities of youth.

  The hot May sun was shining in at the smoky small-paned windows; sometimes an outside shutter swung to with a creak, and eclipsed the glare. The narrow door stood wide open, to the left as you faced the desk, and an old spotted dog lay asleep on the step, and looked wise and old enough to have gone to school with several generations of children. It was half past three o’clock in the afternoon, and the primer class, settled into the apathy of after-recess fatigue, presented a straggling front, as they stood listlessly on the floor. As for the big boys and girls, they also were longing to be at liberty, but the pretty teacher, Miss Marilla Hender, seemed quite as energetic as when school was begun in the morning.

  The spring breeze blew in at the open door, and even fluttered the primer leaves, but the back of the room felt hot and close, as if it were midsummer. The children in the class read their lessons in those high-keyed, droning voices which older teachers learn to associate with faint powers of perception. Only one or two of them had an awakened human look in their eyes, such as Matthew Arnolddl delighted himself in finding so often in the school-children of France. Most of these poor little students were as inadequate, at that weary moment, to the pursuit of letters as if they had been woolly spring lambs on a sunny hillside. The teacher corrected and admonished with great patience, glancing now and then toward points of danger and insurrection, whence came a suspicious buzz of whispering from behind a desk-lid or a pair of widespread large ge ographies. Now and then a toiling child would rise and come down the aisle, with his forefinger firm upon a puzzling word as if it were an unclassified insect. It was a lovely beckoning day out-of-doors. The children felt like captives; there was something that provoked rebellion in the droning voices, the buzzing of an early wild bee against the sunlit pane, and even in the stuffy familiar odor of the place,—the odor of apples and crumbs of doughnuts and gingerbread in the dinner pails on the high entry nails, and of all the
little gowns and trousers that had brushed through junipers and young pines on their way to school.

  The bee left his prisoning pane at last, and came over to the Mayflowers, which were in full bloom, although the season was very late, and deep in the woods there were still some graybacked snow-drifts, speckled with bits of bark and moss from the trees above.

  “Come, come, Ezra!” urged the young teacher, rapping her desk sharply. “Stop watchin’ that common bee! You know well enough what those letters spell. You won’t learn to read at this rate until you are a grown man. Mind your book, now; you ought to remember who went to this school when he was a little boy. You’ve heard folks tell about the Honorable Joseph K. Laneway? He used to be in primer just as you are now, and ’t wasn’t long before he was out of it, either, and was called the smartest boy in school. He’s got to be a general and a Senator, and one of the richest men out West. You don’t seem to have the least mite of ambition to-day, any of you!”

  The exhortation, entirely personal in the beginning, had swiftly passed to a general rebuke. Ezra looked relieved, and the other children brightened up as they recognized a tale familiar to their ears. Anything was better than trying to study in that dull last hour of afternoon school.

  “Yes,” continued Miss Hender, pleased that she had at last roused something like proper attention, “you all ought to be proud that you are schoolmates of District Number Four, and can remember that the celebrated General Laneway had the same early advantages as you, and think what he has made of himself by perseverance and ambition.”

  The pupils were familiar enough with the illustrious history of their noble predecessor. They were sure to be told, in lawless moments, that if Mr. Laneway were to come in and see them he would be mortified to death; and the members of the school committee always referred to him, and said that he had been a poor boy, and was now a self-made man,—as if every man were not self-made as to his character and reputation!

  At this point, young Johnny Spencer showed his next neighbor, in the back of his Colburn’s Arithmeticdm an imaginary portrait of their district hero, which caused them both to chuckle derisively. The Honorable Mr. Laneway figured on the flyleaf as an extremely cross-eyed person, with strangely crooked legs and arms and a terrific expression. He was outlined with red and blue pencils as to coat and trousers, and held a reddened scalp in one hand and a blue tomahawk in the other; being closely associated in the artist’s mind with the early settlements of the far West.

  There was a noise of wheels in the road near by, and, though Miss Hender had much more to say, everybody ceased to listen to her, and turned toward the windows, leaning far forward over their desks to see who might be passing. They caught a glimpse of a shiny carriage; the old dog bounded out, barking, but nothing passed the open door. The carriage had stopped; some one was coming to the school; somebody was going to be called out! It could not be the committee, whose pompous and uninspiring spring visit had taken place only the week before.

  Presently a well-dressed elderly man, with an expectant, masterful look, stood on the doorstep, glanced in with a smile, and knocked. Miss Marilla Hender blushed, smoothed her pretty hair anxiously with both hands, and stepped down from her little platform to answer the summons. There was hardly a shut mouth in the primer class.

  “Would it be convenient for you to receive a visitor to the school?” the stranger asked politely, with a fine bow of deference to Miss Hender. He looked much pleased and a little excited, and the teacher said,—

  “Certainly; step right in, won’t you, sir?” in quite another tone from that in which she had just addressed the school.

  The boys and girls were sitting straight and silent in their places, in something like a fit of apprehension and unpreparedness at such a great emergency. The guest represented a type of person previously unknown in District Number Four. Everything about him spoke of wealth and authority. The old dog returned to the doorstep, and after a careful look at the invader approached him, with a funny doggish grin and a desperate wag of the tail, to beg for recognition.

  The teacher gave her chair on the platform to the guest, and stood beside him with very red cheeks, smoothing her hair again once or twice, and keeping the hard-wood ruler fast in hand, like a badge of office. “Primer class may now retire!” she said firmly, although the lesson was not more than half through; and the class promptly escaped to their seats, waddling and stumbling, until they all came up behind their desks, face foremost, and added themselves to the number of staring young countenances. After this there was a silence, which grew more and more embarrassing.

  “Perhaps you would be pleased to hear our first class in geography, sir?” asked the fair Marilla, recovering her presence of mind; and the guest kindly assented.

  The young teacher was by no means willing to give up a certainty for an uncertainty. Yesterday’s lesson had been well learned; she turned back to the questions about the State of Kansota,dn and at the first sentence the mysterious visitor’s dignity melted into an unconscious smile. He listened intently for a minute, and then seemed to reoccupy himself with his own thoughts and purposes, looking eagerly about the old school-house, and sometimes gazing steadily at the children. The lesson went on finely, and when it was finished Miss Hender asked the girl at the head of the class to name the States and Territories, which she instantly did, mispronouncing nearly all the names of the latter; then others stated boundaries and capitals, and the resources of the New England States, passing on finally to the names of the Presidents. Miss Hender glowed with pride; she had worked hard over the geography class in the winter term, and it did not fail her on this great occasion. When she turned bravely to see if the gentleman would like to ask any questions, she found that he was apparently lost in a deep reverie, so she repeated her own question more distinctly.

  “They have done very well,—very well indeed,” he answered kindly; and then, to every one’s surprise, he rose, went up the aisle, pushed Johnny Spencer gently along his bench, and sat down beside him. The space was cramped, and the stranger looked huge and uncomfortable, so that everybody laughed, except one of the big girls, who turned pale with fright, and thought he must be crazy. When this girl gave a faint squeak Miss Hender recovered herself, and rapped twice with the ruler to restore order; then became entirely tranquil. There had been talk of replacing the hacked and worn old school-desks with patent desks and chairs; this was probably an agent connected with that business. At once she was resolute and self-reliant, and said, “No whispering!” in a firm tone that showed she did not mean to be trifled with. The geography class was dismissed, but the elderly gentleman, in his handsome overcoat, still sat there wedged in at Johnny Spencer’s side.

  “I presume, sir, that you are canvassing for new desks,” said Miss Hender, with dignity. “You will have to see the supervisor and the selectmen.” There did not seem to be any need of his lingering, but she had an ardent desire to be pleasing to a person of such evident distinction. “We always tell strangers—I thought, sir, you might be gratified to know—that this is the school-house where the Honorable Joseph K. Laneway first attended school. All do not know that he was born in this town, and went West very young; it is only about a mile from here where his folks used to live.”

  At this moment the visitor’s eyes fell. He did not look at pretty Marilla any more, but opened Johnny Spencer’s arithmetic, and, seeing the imaginary portrait of the great General Laneway, laughed a little,—a very deep-down comfortable laugh it was,—while Johnny himself turned cold with alarm, he could not have told why.

  It was very still in the school-room; the bee was buzzing and bumping at the pane again; the moment was one of intense expectation.

  The stranger looked at the children right and left. “The fact is this, young people,” said he, in a tone that was half pride and half apology, “I am Joseph K. Laneway myself.”

  He tried to extricate himself from the narrow quarters of the desk, but for an embarrassing moment found that he wa
s stuck fast. Johnny Spencer instinctively gave him an assisting push, and once free the great soldier, statesman, and millionaire took a few steps forward to the open floor; then, after hesitating a moment, he mounted the little platform and stood in the teacher’s place. Marilla Hender was as pale as ashes.

  “I have thought many times,” the great guest began, “that some day I should come back to visit this place, which is so closely interwoven with the memories of my childhood. In my counting-room, on the fields of war, in the halls of Congress, and most of all in my Western home, my thoughts have flown back to the hills and brooks of Winby and to this little old school-house. I could shut my eyes and call back the buzz of voices, and fear my teacher’s frown, and feel my boyish ambitions waking and stirring in my breast. On that bench where I just sat I saw some notches that I cut with my first jackknife fifty-eight years ago this very spring. I remember the faces of the boys and girls who went to school with me, and I see their grandchildren before me. I know that one is a Goodsoe and another a Winn by the old family look. One generation goes, and another comes.

  “There are many things that I might say to you. I meant, even in those early restricted days, to make my name known, and I dare say that you too have ambition. Be careful what you wish for in this world, for if you wish hard enough you are sure to get it. I once heard a very wise man say this, and the longer I live the more firmly I believe it to be true. But wishing hard means working hard for what you want, and the world’s prizes wait for the men and women who are ready to take pains to win them. Be careful and set your minds on the best things. I meant to be a rich man when I was a boy here, and I stand before you a rich man, knowing the care and anxiety and responsibility of wealth. I meant to go to Congress, and I am one of the Senators from Kansota. I say this as humbly as I say it proudly. I used to read of the valor and patriotism of the old Greeks and Romans with my youthful blood leaping along my veins, and it came to pass that my own country was in danger, and that I could help to fight her battles. Perhaps some one of these little lads has before him a more eventful life than I have lived, and is looking forward to activity and honor and the pride of fame. I wish him all the joy that I have had, all the toil that I have had, and all the bitter disappointments even; for adversity leads a man to depend upon that which is above him, and the path of glory is a lonely path, beset by temptations and a bitter sense of the weakness and imperfection of man. I see my life spread out like a great picture, as I stand here in my boyhood’s place. I regret my failures. I thank God for what in his kind providence has been honest and right. I am glad to come back, but I feel, as I look in your young faces, that I am an old man, while your lives are just beginning. When you remember, in years to come, that I came here to see the old school-house, remember that I said: Wish for the best things, and work hard to win them; try to be good men and women, for the honor of the school and the town, and the noble young country that gave you birth; be kind at home and generous abroad. Remember that I, an old man who had seen much of life, begged you to be brave and good.”

 

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