The fields were turning brown, and
in the dusty gray of the roadside, closed gentians
gloomed, and the aster burned like a purple star.
It was the finest autumn for many years. People
said, with every clear day, “Now this must be
a weather-breeder;” but still the storm delayed.
Then they anxiously scanned the heavens, as if, weeks
beforehand, the signs of the time might be written
there; for this was the fall of all others when wind
and sky should be kind to Tiverton. She was going
to celebrate her two hundred and fiftieth anniversary,
and she was big with the importance of it.
On a still afternoon, over three weeks
before that happy day, a slender old man walked erectly
along the country road. He carried a cane over
his shoulder, and, slung upon it, a small black leather
bag, bearing the words, painted in careful letters,
“Clocks repaired by N. Oldfield.”
As he went on, he cast a glance, now and then, to
either side, from challenging blue eyes, strong yet
in the indomitable quality of youth. He knew
every varying step of the road, and could have numbered,
from memory, the trees and bushes that fringed its
length; and now, after a week’s absence, he
swept the landscape with the air of a manorial lord,
to see what changes might have slipped in unawares.
At one point, a flat triangular stone had been tilted
up on edge, and an unpracticed hand had scrawled on
it, in chalk, “4 M to Sudleigh.” The
old man stopped, took the bag from his shoulder, and
laid it tenderly on a stone of the wall. Then,
with straining hands, he pulled the rock down into
the worn spot where it had lain, and gave a sigh of
relief when it settled into its accustomed place,
and the tall grass received it tremulously. Now
he opened his bag, took from it a cloth, carefully
folded, and rubbed the rock until those defiling chalk
marks were partially effaced.
“Little varmints!” he
said, apostrophizing the absent school children who
had wrought the deed. “Can’t they
let nothin’ alone?” He took up his bag,
and went on.
Nicholas Oldfield, as he walked the
road that day, was a familiar figure to all the county
round. He had a smooth, carefully shaven face,
with a fine outline of nose and chin, and his straight
gray hair shone from faithful brushing. He was
almost aggressively clean. Even his blue eyes
had the appearance of having just been washed, like
a spring day after a shower. It was a frequent
remark that he looked as if he had come out of a bandbox;
and one critic even went so far as to assert that on
Sundays he sandpapered his eyes and gave a little extra
polish to his bones. But these were calumnies;
though to-day his suit of home-made blue was quite
speckless, and the checked gingham neckerchief, which
made his ordinary wear, still kept its stiff, starched
creases.
“Dirt don’t stick to you,
Mr. Oldfield,” once said a seeking widow.
“Your washing can’t be much. I guess
anybody ’d be glad to undertake it for you.”
Mr. Oldfield nodded gravely, as one receiving the tribute
which was justly his, and continued to do his washing
himself.
As he walked the dusty road, bearing
his little bag, so he had walked it for years, sometimes
within a few miles of home, and again at the extreme
limit of the county edge. The clocks of the region
were all his clients, some regarded with compassion
("ramshackle things” that needed perpetual tinkering)
and others with a holy awe. “The only thing
Nicholas Oldfield bows the knee before is a double-back-action
clock a thousand years old,” said Brad Freeman,
the regardless. “That’s how he reads
Ancient of Days.” The justice of the remark
was acknowledged, though, as touching Mr. Oldfield,
it was felt to be striking rather too keenly at the
root of things. For Nicholas Oldfield was looked
upon with a respect not so much inspired by his outward
circumstances as by his method of taking them.
There are, indeed, ways and ways among us who serve
the public. When Tom O’Neil went round peddling
essences, children saw him from afar, ran to meet
him, and, falling on his pack, besought him for “two-three-drops-o’-c’logne”
with such fervor that the mothers had to haul them
off by main force, in order themselves to approach
his redolence; but when the clock-mender appeared,
with his little bag, propriety walked before him,
and the naughtiest scion of the flock would come soberly
in, to announce: -
“Mother, here’s Mr. Oldfield.”
It is true that this little old man
did exemplify the dignity and restraint of life to
such a degree that, had it not been for his one colossal
weakness, the town might have condemned him, in good
old Athenian fashion. Clock-mending was a legitimate
industry; but there were those who felt it to be,
in his case, a mere pretext for nosing round and identifying
ridiculous old things which nobody prized until Nicholas
Oldfield told them it was conformable so to do.
Some believed him and some did not; but it was known
that a MacDonough’s Victory tea-set drove him
to an almost outspoken rapture, and that the mere
mention of the Bay Psalm Book (a copy of which he sought
with the haggard fervor of one who worships but has
ceased to hope) was enough to make him “wild
as a hawk.” Old papers, too, drew him by
their very mildew; and when his townsfolk were in
danger of respecting him too tediously, they recalled
these amiable puerilities, drew a breath of relief,
and marked his value down.
Many facts in his life were not in
the least understood, because he never saw the possibility
of talking about them. For example, when at the
marriage of his son, Young Nick, he made over the farm,
and kept his own residence in the little gambrel-roofed
house where he had been born, and his father and grandfather
before him, the act was, for a time, regarded somewhat
gloomily by the public at large. There were Young
Nick and his Hattie, living in the big new house,
with its spacious piazza and cool green blinds; there
the two daughters were born and bred, and the elder
of them was married. The new house had its hired
girl and man; and meantime the other Nicholas (nobody
ever dreamed of calling him Old Nick) was cooking
his own meals, and even, of a Saturday, scouring his
kitchen floor. It was easy to see in him the pathetic
symbol of a bygone generation relegated to the past.
A little wave of sympathy crept to his very feet,
and then, finding itself unnoted, ebbed away again.
Only one village censor dared speak, saying slyly
to Young Nick’s Hattie: -
“Ain’t no room for grandpa in the new
house, is there?”
Hattie opened her eyes wide at this
discovery, though now she realized that echoes of
a like benevolence had reached her ears before.
She went home very early from the quilting, and that
night she said to her husband, as they sat on the
doorstone, waiting for the milk to cool: -
“Nicholas, little things I’ve
got hold of, first an’ last, make me conclude
folks pity father. Do you s’pose they do?”
Young Nick selected a fat plantain
spike, and began stripping the seeds.
“Well, I dunno what for,”
said he, after consideration. “Father seems
to be pretty rugged.”
Hattie was one of those who find no
quicker remedy than that of plentiful speech; and
later in the evening, she sped over to the little
house, across the dewy orchard. Mr. Oldfield had
come home only that afternoon, and now he had drawn
up at his kitchen table, which was covered by a hand-woven
cloth, beautifully ironed, and set with old-fashioned
dishes. He had hot biscuits and apple-pie, and
the odor of them rose soothingly to Hattie’s
nostrils, dissipating, for a moment, her consciousness
of tragedy and wrong. A man could not be quite
forlorn who cooked such “victuals,” and
sat before them so serenely.
“See here, father,” said
she, with the desperation of speaking her mind for
the first time to one from whom she had hitherto kept
awesomely remote; “when we moved into the new
house, I dunno’s there was any talk about your
comin’, too. I guess it never entered into
our heads you’d do anything but to stick to
the old place. An’ now, after it’s
all past an’ gone, the neighbors say” -
Nicholas Oldfield had been smiling
his slight, dry smile. At this point, he took
up a knife, and cut a careful triangle of pie.
He did all these things as if each one were very important.
“Here, Hattie,” said he,
“you taste o’ this dried apple. I
put a mite o’ lemon in.”
Hattie, somehow abashed by the mental
impact of the little man, ate her pie meekly, and
thenceforth waived the larger issue. All the same,
she knew the neighbors “pitied father,”
and that they would continue to pity him so long as
he lived alone in the little peaceful house, doing
his own washing and making his own pie.
To-night was a duplication of many
another when Nicholas Oldfield had turned the corner
and come in sight of his own home; but often as it
had been repeated, the experience was never the same.
Some would have named his springing emotion delight;
but it neither quickened his pace nor made him draw
his breath the faster. Perhaps he even walked
a little more slowly, to enjoy the taste, for he was
a saving man. There was the little house, white
as paint could make it, and snug in bowering foliage.
He noted, with an approving eye, that the dahlias in
the front yard, set in stiff nodding rows, were holding
their own bravely against the dry fall weather, and
that the asters were blooming profusely, purple and
pink. A rare softness came over his features when
he stepped into the yard; and though he examined the
roof critically in passing, it was with the eye of
love. He fitted the key in the lock; the sound
of its turning made music in his ears, and, setting
his foot upon the sill, he was a man for whom that
little was enough. Nicholas Oldfield was at home.
He laid down his bag, and went, without
an instant’s pause, straight through to the
sitting-room, and stood before the tall eight-day clock.
He put his hand on the woodwork, as if it might have
been the shoulder of a friend, and looked up understandingly
in its face.
“Well, here we be,” said
he. “You’d ha’ hil’ out
till mornin’, though.”
For wherever he might travel, he always
made it a point to be home in time to wind the clocks;
and however early he might hurry away again, under
stress of some antiquarian impulse, they were left
alive and pulsing behind him. There was one in
each room, besides the tall eight-day in the parlor,
and they were all soft-voiced and leisurely, reminiscent
of another age than ours. Though three of them
had been inherited, it almost seemed as if Nicholas
must have selected the entire company, so harmonious
were they, so serenely fitted to the calm decorum
of his own desires.
In half an hour he had accomplished
many things, and his fire sent a spiral breath toward
heaven. The dark old kitchen lay open, door and
window, to the still opulent sun, and from the pantry
and a corner cupboard came gleams of color, to delight
the eye. Here were riches, indeed: old India
china, an unbroken set of Sheltered Peasant, and, on
the top shelf, little mugs and cups of a pink lustre,
soft and sweet as flowers. Many a collector had
wooed Nicholas Oldfield to part with his china (for
the fame of it had spread afar,) but his only response
to solicitation was to open the doors more widely
on his treasures, remarking, without emphasis: -
“I guess they might as well stay where they
be.”
So passive was he, that many among
merchants judged they had impressed him, and returned
again and again to the charge; but when they found
always the same imperturbable front, the same mild
neutrality of demeanor, they melted sadly away, and
were seen no more, leaving their places to be taken
by others equally hopeful and as sure to be betrayed.
One creature only was capable of rousing
Nicholas Oldfield from that calm wherein he went ticking
on through life. She it was who, by some natal
likeness, understood him wholly; and to-night, just
as he was sitting down to his supper of “cream
o’ tartar” biscuits and smoking tea, her
clear voice broke upon his solitude.
“Gran’ther,” called
Mary Oldfield from the door, “mother says, ’Won’t
you come over to supper?’ She saw your smoke.”
Nicholas pushed back his chair a little;
he felt himself completed.
“You had yours?” he asked, in his usual
even tones.
“No. I waited for you.”
“Then you come right in an’
git it. Take your mug - here, I’ll
reach it down for ye - an’ there’s
the Good-Girl plate.”
Mary Oldfield was a tall, pleasant
looking maid of sixteen, and standing quietly by,
while her grandfather got out her own plate and mug,
she was an amazingly faithful copy of him. They
smiled a little at each other, in sitting down, but
there was no closer greeting between them. They
were exceedingly well content to be together again,
and this was so simple and natural a state that there
was nothing to say about it. Only Nicholas looked
at her from time to time - her capable brown
hands and careful braids of hair, - and nodded
briefly, as he had a way of nodding at his clocks.
“You know what I told you, Mary,
about the Flat-Iron Lot?” he asked, while Mary
buttered her biscuit.
She looked at him in assent.
“Well, I’ve proved it.”
“You don’t say!”
Mary had certain antique methods of
speech, which the new-fangled school teacher, not
liking to pronounce them vulgar, had tactfully dubbed
“obsolete.” “If we used ’em
all the time they wouldn’t get obsolete, would
they?” asked Mary; and the school teacher, being
a logical person, made no answer. So Mary went
on plying them with a conscientious calmness like
one determined to keep a precious and misprized metal
in circulation. She even called Nicholas gran’ther,
because he liked it, and because he had called his
own grandfather so.
“Ye see,” said Nicholas,
“the fust rec’ids were missin’.
‘Burnt up!’ says that town clerk over
to Sudleigh. ’Burnt when the old meetin’-house
ketched fire, arter the Injun raid.’ ‘Burnt
up!’ thinks I. ’The cat’s foot!
I guess so, when the communion service was carried
over fifteen mile an’ left in a potato sullar.’
So I says to myself, ‘What become o’ that
fust communion set?’ Why, before the meetin’-house
was repaired, they all rode over to what’s now
Saltash, to worship in Square Billin’s’s
kitchen. Now, when Square Billin’s died
of a fever, that same winter, they hove all his books
into that old lumber-room over Sudleigh court-house.
So, when I was fixin’ up the court-house clock,
t’ other day, I clim’ up to that room,
an’ shet myself in there. An’, Mary,
I found them rec’ids!” He looked at her
with that complete and awe-stricken triumph which
nobody else had ever seen upon his face. Her
own reflected it.
“Where are they, gran’ther?”
asked Mary. But she was the more excited; she
could only whisper.
“They’re loose sheets
o’ paper,” returned Nicholas, “an’
they’re in my bag!”
Mary made an involuntary movement
toward the bag, which lay, innocently secretive, on
a neighboring chair. Even its advertising legend
had a knowing look. Nicholas followed her glance.
“No,” said he firmly,
“not now. We’ll read ’em all
over this evenin’, when I’ve done the
dishes. But, Mary, I’ll tell ye this much:
it’s got the whole story of the settlers comin’
into town, an’ which way they come, an’
all about it, writ down by Simeon Gerry, the fust minister,
the one that killed five Injuns, stoppin’ to
load an’ fire, an’ then opened on the
rest with bilin’ fat. An’, Mary, the
fust settler of all was Nicholas Oldfield, haulin’
his wife on a kind of a drag made o’ withes;
an’ the path they took led straight over our
Flat-Iron Lot. An’, Mary, ‘t was
there they rested, an’ offered up prayer to God.”
“O my soul, gran’ther!”
breathed Mary, clasping her little brown hands.
“O my soul!” Her face grew curiously mature.
It seemed to mirror his. She leaned forward,
in a deadly earnestness. “Gran’ther,”
said she, “did they settle here first?
Or - or was it Sudleigh?”
Now, indeed, was Nicholas Oldfield
the herald of news good both to tell and hear.
“The fust settlement,”
said he, as if he read it from the book of fate, “was
made in Tiverton, on the sixteenth day of the month;
the second in Sudleigh, on the twenty-fifth.”
“So, when you guessed at the
date, and told parson to have the celebration then,
you got it right?”
“I got it right,” replied
Nicholas quietly. “But pa’son shall
see the rec’ids, an’ I’ll recommend
him to put ’em under lock an’ key.”
The two sat there and looked at each
other, with an outwelling of great content. Then
Mary passed her mug, and while Nicholas filled it,
he gave her an oft-repeated charge: -
“Don’t you open your head
now, Mary. All this is between you an’ me.
I’ll just mention it to pa’son, an’
make up my mind whether he sees the meanin’
on ‘t. But don’t you say one word
to your father an’ mother. To them it don’t
signify.”
Mary nodded wisely. She knew,
with the philosophy of a much older experience, that
she and gran’ther lived alone in a nest of kindly
aliens. As if their mention evoked a foreign presence,
her mother’s voice sounded that instant from
the door: -
“Mary, why under the sun didn’t
you come back? I sent word for you to run over
with her, father, an’ have some supper.
Well, if you two ain’t thick!”
“We’re havin’ a
dish o’ discourse,” returned Nicholas quietly.
Young Nick’s Hattie was forty-five,
but she looked much younger. Extreme plumpness
had insured her against wrinkles, and her light brown
hair was banded smoothly back. Hattie’s
originality lay in a desire for color, and therein
she overstepped the bounds of all decorum. It
was customary to see her barred across with enormous
plaids, or stripes going the broad way; and so long
had she lived under such insignia that no one would
have known her without them. She came in with
soft, heavy footfalls, and sat down in the little
rocking-chair at Mr. Oldfield’s right hand.
She smiled at him, somewhat nervously.
“Well, father,” said she, “you got
home!”
Nicholas helped himself to another
half cup of tea, after holding the teapot tentatively
across to Mary’s mug.
“Yes,” he answered, in
his dry and gentle fashion, “I’ve got home.”
Hattie began rocking, in a rapid staccato,
to punctuate her speech.
“Well,” she began, “I’ll
say my say an’ done with it. There’s
goin’ to be a town-meetin’ to-night, an’
Nicholas sent me over to mention it. ‘Father’ll
want to be on hand,’ says he.”
Mr. Oldfield pushed back his cup,
and then his chair. He bent his keen blue eyes
upon her.
“Town meetin’ this time o’ year?”
said he. “What for?”
“Oh, it’s about the celebration.
Old Mr. Eaton” -
“What Eaton?”
“William W.”
“He that went away in war time,
an’ made money in wool? Old War-Wool Eaton?”
Nicholas nodded, at her assent, and
his look blackened. He knew what was coming.
“Well, he sent word he meant
to give us a clock, same as he had other towns, an’
he wanted we should have it up before the celebration.”
“Yes,” said Nicholas Oldfield,
“he’ll give us a clock, will he? I
knew he would. I’ve said ‘twas comin’.
He give one to Saltash; he’s gi’n ’em
all over the county. Do you know what them clocks
be? They’ve got letters round the dial,
in place o’ figgers; an’ the letters spell
out, ‘In Memory of Me.’ An’
down to Saltash they’ve gi’n up sayin’
it’s quarter arter twelve, or the like o’
that. They say it’s O minutes past I.”
He glared at her. Young Nick’s
Hattie thought she had never heard father speak with
such bitterness; and indeed it was true. Never
before had he been assailed on his own ground; it
seemed as if the whole township now conspired to bait
him.
“Well” she remarked weakly,
“I dunno’s it does any hurt, so long as
they can tell what they mean by it.”
Nicholas threw her a pitying glance.
He scorned to waste eternal truth on one so dull.
“Well,” she went on, in
desperation, “that ain’t all, neither.
I might as well say the whole, an’ done with
it. He wants ’em to set up the clock on
the meetin’-house; an’ seeing the tower
mightn’t be firm enough, he’ll build it
up higher, an’ give ’em a new bell.”
Now, indeed, Nicholas Oldfield was
in the case of Shylock, when he learned his daughter’s
limit of larceny. “The curse never fell
upon our nation till now,” so he might have
quoted. “I never felt it till now.”
He rose from his chair.
“In the name of God Almighty,”
he asked solemnly, “what do they want of a new
bell?”
Young Nick’s Hattie gave an involuntary cry.
“O father!” she entreated,
“don’t say such words. I never see
you take on so. What under the sun has got into
you?”
Nicholas made no reply. Slowly
and methodically he was putting the dishes into the
wooden sink. When he touched Mary’s pink
mug, his fingers trembled a little; but he did not
look at her. He knew she understood. Young
Nick’s Hattie rolled her hands nervously in her
apron, and then unrolled them, and smoothed the apron
down. She gathered herself desperately.
“Well, father,” she said,
“I’ve got another arrant. I said I’d
do it, an’ I will; but I dunno how you’ll
take it.”
“O mother!” cried Mary, “don’t!”
“What is it?” asked Nicholas,
folding the tablecloth in careful creases. “Say
your say an’ git it over.”
Hattie rocked faster and faster.
Even in the stress of the moment Nicholas remembered
that the old chair was well made, and true to its
equilibrium.
“Well,” said she, “Luella
an’ Freeman Henry come over here this very day,
an’ Freeman Henry’s possessed you should
sell him the Flat-Iron Lot.”
“Wants the Flat-Iron Lot, does
he?” inquired Nicholas grimly. “What’s
he made up his mind to do with it?”
“He wants to build,” answered
Hattie, momentarily encouraged. “He says
he’ll be glad to ride over to work, every mornin’
of his life, if he can only feel ‘t he’s
settled in Tiverton for good. An’ there’s
that lot on high ground, right near the meetin’-house,
as sightly a place as ever was, an’ no good
to you, - there ain’t half a load o’
hay cut there in a season, - an’ he’d
pay the full vally” -
“Stop!” called Nicholas;
and though his tone was conversational, Hattie paused,
open-mouthed, in full swing. He turned and faced
her. “Hattie,” said he, “did
you know that the fust settlers of this town had anything
to do with that lot o’ land?”
“No, I didn’t know it,” answered
Hattie blankly.
“I guess you didn’t,”
concurred Nicholas. He had gone back to his old
gentleness of voice. “An’ ‘t
wouldn’t ha’ meant nothin’ to ye,
if ye had known it. Now, you harken to me!
It’s my last word. That Flat-Iron Lot stays
under this name so long as I’m above ground.
When I’m gone, you can do as ye like. Now,
I don’t want to hurry ye, but I’m goin’
down to vote.”
Hattie rose, abashed and nearly terrified.
“Well!” said she vacantly. “Well!”
Nicholas had taken the broom, under pretext of brushing
up the crumbs, and he seemed literally to be sweeping
her away. It was a wind of destiny; and scudding
softly and heavily before it, she disappeared in the
gathering dusk.
“Mary!” she called from
the gate, “Mary! Guess you better come along
with me.”
Mary did not hear. She was standing
by Nicholas, holding the edge of his sleeve.
The unaccustomed action was significant; it bespoke
a passionate loyalty. Her blue eyes were on fire,
and two hot tears stood in them, unstanched.
“O gran’ther!” she cried, “don’t
you let ’em have it. I wish I was father.
I’d see!”
Nicholas Oldfield stood quite still,
obedient to that touch upon his arm.
“It’s the name, Mary,”
said he. “Why, Freeman Henry’s a Titcomb!
He can’t help that. But he needn’t
think he can buy Oldfield land, an’ set up a
house there, as if ’t was all in the day’s
work. Why, Mary, I meant to leave that land to
you! An’ p’raps you won’t marry.
Nobody knows. Then, ’t would stand in the
name a mite longer.”
Mary blushed a little, but her eyes never wavered.
“No, gran’ther,” said she firmly,
“I sha’n’t ever marry anybody.”
“Well, ye can’t tell,”
responded Nicholas, with a sigh. “Ye can’t
tell. He might take your name if he wanted ye
enough; but I should call it a poor tool that would
do that.”
He sighed again, as he reached for
his hat, and Mary and he went out of the house together,
hand in hand. At the gate they parted, and Nicholas
took his way to the schoolhouse, where the town fathers
were already assembled.
Since he passed over it that afternoon,
the road had changed, responsive to twilight and the
coming dark. Nicholas knew it in all its phases,
from the dawn of spring, vocal with the peeping of
frogs, to the revery of winter, the silence of snow,
and a hopeful glow in the west. Just here, by
the barberry bush at the corner, he had stood still
under the spell of Northern Lights. That was
the night when his wife lay first in Tiverton churchyard;
and he remembered, as a part of the strangeness and
wonder of the time, how the north had streamed, and
the neighboring houses had been rosy red. But
at this hour of the brooding, sultry fall, there was
a bitter fragrance in the air, and the world seemed
tuned to the somnolent sound of crickets, singing
the fields to sleep. That one little note brooded
over the earth, and all the living things upon it:
hovering, and crooning, and lulling them to the rest
decreed from of old. The homely beauty of it
smote upon him, though it could not cheer. A
hideous progress seemed to threaten, not alone the
few details it touched, but all the sweet, familiar
things of life. Old War-Wool Eaton, in assailing
the town’s historic peace, menaced also the crickets
and the breath of asters in the air. He was the
rampant spirit of an awful change. So, in the
bitterness of revolt, Nicholas Oldfield marched on,
and stepped silently into the little schoolhouse, to
meet his fellows. They were standing about in
groups, each laying down the law according to his
kind. The doors were wide open, and Nicholas felt
as if he had brought in with him the sounds of coming
night. They kept him sane, so that he could hold
his own, as he might not have done in a room full
of winter brightness.
“Hullo!” cried Caleb Rivers,
in his neutral voice. “Here’s Mr.
Oldfield. Well, Mr. Oldfield, there’s a
good deal on hand.”
“Called any votes?” asked Nicholas.
“Well, no,” said Caleb,
scraping his chin. “I guess we’re
sort o’ takin’ the sense o’ the
meetin’.”
“Good deal like a quiltin’
so fur,” remarked Brad Freeman indulgently.
“All gab an’ no git there!”
“They tell me,” said Uncle
Eli Pike, approaching Nicholas as if he had something
to confide, “that out west, where they have them
new-fangled clocks, they’re all lighted up with
’lectricity.”
“Do they so?” asked Caleb,
but Nicholas returned, with an unwonted fierceness: -
“Does that go to the right spot
with you? Do you want to see a clock-face starin’
over Tiverton, like a full moon, chargin’ ye
to keep Old War-Wool Eaton in memory?”
“Well, no,” replied Eli
gently, “I dunno’s I do, an’ I dunno
but I do.”
“Might set a lantern back o’
the dial, an’ take turns lightin’ on ’t,”
suggested Brad Freeman.
“Might carve out a jack-o’-lantern
like Old Eaton’s face,” supplemented Tom
O’Neil irreverently.
“Well,” concluded Rivers,
“I guess, when all’s said and done, we
might as well take the clock, an’ bell, too.
When a man makes a fair offer, it’s no more’n
civil to close with it. Ye can’t rightly
heave it back ag’in.”
“My argyment is,” put
in Ebenezer Tolman, who knew how to lay dollar by
dollar, “if he’s willin’ to do one
thing for the town, he’s willin’ to do
another. S’pose he offered us a new brick
meetin’-house - or a fancy gate to
the cemet’ry! Or s’pose he had it
in mind to fill in that low land, so ’t we could
bury there! Why, he could bring the town right
up! Or, take it t’ other way round; he
could put every dollar he’s got into Sudleigh.”
Nicholas Oldfield groaned, but in
the stress of voices no one heard him. He slipped
about from one group to another, and always the sentiment
was the same. A few smiled at Old War-Wool Eaton,
who desired so urgently to be remembered, when no
one was likely to forget him; but all agreed that
it was, at the worst, a harmless and natural folly.
“Let him be remembered,”
said one, with a large impartiality. “’T
won’t do us no hurt, an’ we shall have
the clock an’ bell.”
Just as the meeting was called to
order, Nicholas Oldfield stole away, and no one missed
him. The proceedings began with some animated
discussion, all tending one way. Cupidity had
entered into the public soul, and everybody professed
himself willing to take the clock, lest, by refusing,
some golden future should be marred. Let Old Eaton
have his way, if thereby they might beguile him into
paving theirs. Let the town grow. Talk was
very full and free; but when the moment came for taking
a vote, an unexpected sound broke roundly on the air.
It was the bell of the old church. One! it tolled.
Each man looked at his neighbor. Had death entered
the village, and they unaware? Two! three! it
went solemnly on, the mellow cadence scarcely dying
before another stroke renewed it. The sexton
was Simeon Pease, a little red-headed man, a hunchback,
abnormally strong. Suddenly he rose in amazement.
His face looked ashen.
“Suthin’s tollin’
the bell!” he gasped. “The bell’s
a-tollin’ an’ I ain’t there!”
A new element of mystery and terror sprang to life.
“The sax’on’s here!”
whispered one and another. But nobody stirred,
for nobody would lose count. Twenty-three! the
dead was young. Twenty-four! and so it marched
and marched, to thirty and thirty-five. They looked
about them, taking a swift inventory of familiar faces,
and more than one man felt a tightening about his
heart, at thought of the women-folk at home.
The record climbed to middle-age, and tolled majestically
beyond it, like a life ripening to victorious close.
Sixty! seventy! eighty-one!
“It ain’t Pa’son True!” whispered
an awe-struck voice.
Then on it beat, to the completed century.
The women of Tiverton, in afterwards
weighing the immobility of their public representatives
under this mysterious clangor, dwelt upon the fact
with scorn.
“Well, I should think you was
smart!” cried sundry of them in turn. “Set
there like a bump on a log, an’ wonder what’s
the matter! Never heard of anything so numb in
all my born days. If I was a man, I guess I’d
see!”
It was Brad Freeman who broke the
spell, with a sudden thought and cry, -
“By thunder! maybe’s suthin’s afire!”
He leaped to his feet, and with long,
loping strides made his way up the hill to Tiverton
church. The men, in one excited, surging rabble,
followed him. The women were before them.
They, too, had heard the tolling for the unknown dead,
and had climbed a quicker way, leaving fire and cradle
behind. At the very moment when they were pressing,
men and women, to the open church door, the last lingering
clang had ceased, the bell lay humming itself to rest,
and Nicholas Oldfield strode out and faced them.
By this time, factions had broken up, and each woman
instinctively sought her husband’s side, assuring
herself of protection against the unresting things
of the spirit. Young Nick’s Hattie found
her lawful ally, with the rest.
“My soul!” said she in a whisper, “it’s
father!”
Nicholas touched her arm in warning,
and stood silent. He felt that the waters were
troubled, as he had known them to be once or twice
in his boyhood.
“He’s got his mad up,”
remarked Young Nick to himself. “Stan’
from under!”
Nicholas strode through the crowd,
and it separated to let him pass. There was about
him at that moment an amazing physical energy, apparent
even in the dark. He seemed a different man, and
one woman whispered to another, “Why, that can’t
be Mr. Oldfield! It’s a head taller.”
He walked across the green, and the
crowd turned also, to follow him. There, just
opposite the church, lay his own Flat-Iron Lot, and
he stepped into it, over the low stone boundary, and
turned about.
“Don’t ye come no nearer,”
called he. “This is my land. Don’t
ye set foot on it.”
The Flat-Iron Lot was a triangular
piece of ground, rich in drooping elms, and otherwise
varied only by a great boulder looming up within the
wall nearest the church. Nicholas paused for a
moment where he was; then with a thought of being
the better heard, he turned, ran up the rough side
of the boulder, and faced his fellows. As he stood
there, illumined by the rising moon, he seemed colossal.
“He’ll break his infernal
old neck!” said Brad Freeman admiringly.
But no one answered, for Nicholas Oldfield had begun
to speak.
“Don’t ye set foot on
my land!” he repeated. “Ye ain’t
wuth it. Do you know what this land is?
It belonged to a man that settled in a place that
knows enough to celebrate its foundin’, but don’t
know enough to prize what’s fell to it.
Do you know what I was doin’ of, when I tolled
that bell? I’ll tell ye. I tolled a
hunderd an’ ten strokes. That’s the
age of the bell you’re goin’ to throw aside
to flatter up a man that made money out o’ the
war. A hunderd an’ twelve years ago that
bell was cast in England; a hunderd an’ ten
years ago ’t was sent over here.”
“Now, how’s father know
that?” whispered Hattie disparagingly.
“I’ve cast my vote.
Them hunderd an’ ten strokes is all the voice
I’ll have in the matter, or any matter, so long
as I live in this God-forsaken town. I’d
ruther die than talk over a thing like that in open
meetin’. It’s an insult to them that
went before ye, an’ fit hunger and cold an’
Injuns. I’ve got only one thing more to
say,” he continued, and some fancied there came
a little break in his voice. “When ye take
the old bell down, send her out to sea, an’ sink
her; or bury her deep enough in the woods, so ’t
nobody’ll git at her till the Judgment Day.”
With one descending step, he seemed
to melt away into the darkness; and though every one
stood quite still, expectant, there was no sound, save
that of the crickets and the night. He had gone,
and left them trembling. Well as they knew him,
he had all the effect of some strange herald, freighted
with wisdom from another sphere.
“Well, I swear!” said
Brad Freeman, at length, and as if a word could shiver
the spell, men and woman turned silently about and
went down the hill. When they reached a lower
plane, they stopped to talk a little, and once indoors,
discussion had its way. Young Nick and Hattie
had walked side by side, feeling that the eyes of
the town were on them, reading their emblazoned names.
But Mary marched behind them, solemnly and alone.
She held her head very high, knowing what her kinsfolk
thought: that gran’ther had disgraced them.
A passionate protest rose within her.
That night, everybody watched the
old house in the shade of the poplars, to see if Nicholas
had “lighted up.” But the windows
lay dark, and little Mary, slipping over across the
orchard, when her mother thought her safe in bed,
tried the door in vain. She pushed at it wildly,
and then ran round to the front, charging against
the sentinel hollyhocks, and letting the knocker fall
with a desperate and repeated clang. The noise
she had herself evoked frightened her more than the
stillness, and she fled home again, crying softly,
and pursued by all the unresponsive presences of night.
For weeks Tiverton lay in a state
of hushed expectancy; one miracle seemed to promise
another. But Nicholas Oldfield’s house was
really closed; the windows shone blankly at men and
women who passed, interrogating it. Young Nick
and his Hattie had nothing to say, after Hattie’s
one unguarded admission that she didn’t know
what possessed father. The village felt that
it had been arraigned before some high tribunal, only
to be found lacking. It had an irritated conviction
that, meaning no harm, it should not have been dealt
with so harshly; and was even moved to declare that,
if Nicholas Oldfield knew so much about what was past
and gone, he needn’t have waited till the trump
o’ doom to say so. But, somehow, the affair
of clock and bell could not be at once revived, and
a vague letter was dispatched to the prospective donor
stating that, in regard to his generous offer, no decision
could at the moment be reached; the town was too busy
in preparing for its celebration, which would take
place in something over two weeks; after that the
question would be considered. The truth was that,
at the bottom of each heart, still lurked the natural
cupidity of the loyal citizen who will not see his
town denied; but side by side with that desire for
the march of progress, walked the spectre of Nicholas
Oldfield’s wrath. The trembling consciousness
prevailed that he might at any moment descend again,
wrapped in that inexplicable atmosphere of loftier
meanings.
Still, Tiverton was glad to put the
question by, for she had enough to do. The celebration
knocked at the door, and no one was ready. Only
Brad Freeman, always behindhand, save at some momentary
exigency of rod or gun, was fulfilling the prophecy
that the last shall be first. For he had, out
of the spontaneity of genius, elected to do one deed
for that great day, and his work was all but accomplished.
In public conclave assembled to discuss the parade,
he had offered to make an elephant, to lead the van.
Tiverton roared, and then, finding him gravely silent,
remained, with gaping mouth, to hear his story.
It seemed, then, that Brad had always cherished one
dear ambition. He would fain fashion an elephant;
and having never heard of Frankenstein, he lacked anticipation
of the dramatic finale likely to attend a meddling
with the creative powers. He did not confess,
save once to his own wife, how many nights he had
lain awake, in their little dark bedroom, planning
the anatomy of the eastern lord; he simply said that
he “wanted to make the critter,” and he
thought he could do it. Immediately the town gave
him to understand that he had full power to draw upon
the public treasury, to the extent of one elephant;
and the youth, who always flocked adoringly about
him, intimated that they were with him, heart and soul.
Thereupon, in Eli Pike’s barn, selected as of
goodly size, creation reveled, the while a couple
of men, chosen for their true eye and practiced hand,
went into the woods, and chopped down two beautiful
slender trees for tusks. For many a day now,
the atmosphere of sacred art had hung about that barn.
Brad was a maker, and everybody felt it. Fired
by no tradition of the horse that went to the undoing
of Troy, and with no plan before him, he set his framework
together, nailing with unerring hand. Did he
need a design, he who had brooded over his bliss these
many months when Tiverton thought he was “jest
lazin’ round?” Nay, it was to be “all
wrought out of the carver’s brain,” and
the brain was ready.
Often have I wished some worthy chronicler
had been at hand when Tiverton sat by at the making
of the elephant; and then again I have realized that,
though the atmosphere was highly charged, it may have
been void of homely talk. For this was a serious
moment, and even when Brad gave sandpaper and glass
into the hands of Lothrop Wilson, the cooper, bidding
him smooth and polish the tusks, there was no jealousy:
only a solemn sense that Mr. Wilson had been greatly
favored. Brad’s wife sewed together a dark
slate-colored cambric, for the elephant’s hide,
and wet and wrinkled it, as her husband bade her, for
the shambling shoulders and flanks. It was she
who made the ears, from a pattern cunningly conceived;
and she stuffed the legs with fine shavings brought
from the planing-mill at Sudleigh. Then there
came an intoxicating day when the trunk took shape,
the glass-bottle eyes were inserted, and Brad sprung
upon a breathless world his one surprise. Between
the creature’s fore-legs, he disclosed an opening,
saying meantime to the smallest Crane boy, -
“You crawl up there!”
The Crane boy was not valiant, but
he reasoned that it was better to seek an unguessed
fate within the elephant than to refuse immortal glory.
Trembling, he crept into the hole, and was eclipsed.
“Now put your hand up an’
grip that rope that’s hangin’ there,”
commanded Brad. Perhaps he, too, trembled a little.
The heart beats fast when we approach a great fruition.
“Pull it! Easy, now! easy!”
The boy pulled, and the elephant moved
his trunk. He stretched it out, he drew it in.
Never was such a miracle before. And Tiverton,
drunk with glory, clapped and shouted until the women-folk
clutched their sunbonnets and ran to see. No
situation since the war had ever excited such ferment.
Brad was the hero of his town. But now arose a
natural rivalry, the reaction from great, impersonal
joy in noble work. What lad, on that final day,
should ride within the elephant, and move his trunk?
The Crane boy contended passionately that he held the
right of possession. Had he not been selected
first? Others wept at home and argued the case
abroad, until it became a common thing to see two young
scions of Tiverton grappling in dusty roadways, or
stoning each other from afar. The public accommodated
itself to such spectacles, and grown-up relatives,
when they came upon little sons rolling over and over,
or sitting triumphantly, the one upon another’s
chest, would only remark, as they gripped two shirt
collars, and dragged the combatants apart: -
“Now, what do you want to act
so for? Brad’ll pick out the one he thinks
best. He’s got the say.”
In vain did mothers argue, at twilight
time, when the little dusty legs in overalls were
still, and stubbed toes did their last wriggling for
the day, that the boy who moved the trunk could not
possibly see the rest of the procession. The
candidates, to a boy, rejected that specious plea.
“What do I want to see anything
for, if I can jest set inside that elephant?”
sobbed the Crane boy angrily. And under every
roof the wail was repeated in many keys.
Meantime, the log cabin had been going
steadily up, and a week before the great day, it was
completed. This was a typical scene-setting, - the
cabin of a first settler, - and through one
wild leap of fancy it became suddenly and dramatically
dignified.
“For the land’s sake!”
said aunt Lucindy, when she went by and saw it standing,
in modest worth, “ain’t they goin’
to do anythin’ with it? Jest let
it set there? Why under the sun don’t they
have a party of Injuns tackle it?”
The woman who heard repeated the remark
as a sample of aunt Lucindy’s desire to have
everything “all of a whew;” but when it
came to the ears of a certain young man who had sat
brooding, in silent emulation, over the birth of the
elephant, he rose, with fire in his eye, and went to
seek his mates. Indians there should be, and he,
by right of first desire, should become their leader.
Thereupon, turkey feathers came into great demand,
and wattled fowl, once glorious, went drooping dejectedly
about, while maidens sat in doorways sewing wampum
and leggings for their favored swains. The first
rehearsal of this aboriginal drama was not an entire
success, because the leader, being unimaginative though
faithful, decreed that faces should be blackened with
burnt cork; and the result was a tribe of the African
race, greatly astonished at their own appearance in
the family mirror. Then the doctor suggested walnut
juice, and all went conformably again. But each
man wanted to be an Indian, and no one professed himself
willing to suffer the attack.
“I’ll stay in the cabin,
if I can shoot, an’ drop a redskin every time,”
said Dana Marden stubbornly; but no redskin would consent
to be dropped, and naturally no settler could yield.
It would ill befit that glorious day to see the log
cabin taken; but, on the other hand, what loyal citizen
could allow himself to be defeated, even as a skulking
redman, at the very hour of Tiverton’s triumph?
For a time a peaceful solution was promised by the
doctor, who proposed that a party of settlers on horseback
should come to the rescue, just when a settler’s
wife, within the cabin, was in danger of immolation.
That seemed logical and right, and for days thereafter
young men on astonished farm horses went sweeping
down Tiverton Street, alternately pursuing and pursued,
while Isabel North, as Priscilla, the Puritan maiden,
trembled realistically at the cabin door. Just
why she was to be Priscilla, a daughter of Massachusetts,
Isabel never knew; the name had struck the popular
fancy, and she made her costume accordingly.
But one day, when young Tiverton was galloping about
the town, to the sound of ecstatic yells, a farmer
drew up his horse to inquire: -
“Now see here! there’s
one thing that’s got to be settled. When
the day comes, who’s goin’ to beat?”
An Indian, his face scarlet with much
sound, and his later state not yet apparent, in that
his wampum, blanket, and horsehair wig lay at home,
on the best-room bed, made answer hoarsely, “We
be!”
“Not by a long chalk!”
returned the other, and the settlers growled in unison.
They had all a patriot’s pride in upholding white
blood against red.
“Well, by gum! then you can
look out for your own Injuns!” returned their
chief. “My last gun’s fired.”
Settlers and Indians turned sulkily
about; they rode home in two separate factions, and
the streets were stilled. Isabel North went faithfully
on, making her Priscilla dress, but it seemed, in those
days, as if she might remain in her log cabin, unattacked
and undefended. Tiverton was to be deprived of
its one dramatic spectacle. Young men met one
another in the streets, remarked gloomily, “How
are ye?” and passed by. There were no more
curdling yells at which even the oxen lifted their
dull ears; and one youth went so far as to pack his
Indian suit sadly away in the garret, as a jilted
girl might lay aside her wedding gown. It was
a sullen and all but universal feud.
Now in all this time two prominent
citizens had let public opinion riot as it would, - the
minister and the doctor. The minister, a grave-faced,
brown-bearded young man, had seen fit to get run down,
and have an attack of slow fever, from which he was
just recovering; and the doctor had been spending
most of his time in Saltash, with an epidemic of mumps.
But the mumps subsided, and the minister gained strength;
so, being public-spirited men, these two at once concerned
themselves in village affairs. The first thing
the minister did was to call on Nicholas Oldfield,
and Young Nick’s Hattie saw him there, knocking
at the front door.
“Mary! Mary!” cried
she, “if there ain’t the young pa’son
over to your grandpa’s. I dunno when anybody’s
called there, he’s away so much. Like as
not he’s heard how father carried on that night,
an’ now he’s got out, he’s come
right over, first thing, to tell him what folks think.”
Mary looked up from the serpentine
braid she was crocheting.
“Well, I guess he’d better
not,” she threatened. And her mother, absorbed
by curiosity, contented herself with the reproof implied
in a shaken head and pursed-up lips.
A sad and curious change had befallen
Mary. She looked older. One week had dimmed
her brightness, and little puckers between her eyes
were telling a story of anxious care. For gran’ther
had been home without her seeing him. Mary felt
as if he had repudiated the town. She knew well
that he had not abandoned her with it, but she could
guess what the loss of larger issues meant to him.
Young Nick, if he had been in the habit of expressing
himself, would have said that father’s mad was
still up. Mary knew he was grieved, and she grieved
also. She had not expected him until the end
of the week. Then watching wistfully, she saw
the darkness come, and knew next day would bring him;
but the next day it was the same. One placid
afternoon, a quick thought assailed her, and stained
her cheek with crimson. She laid down the sheet
which was her “stent” of over-edge, and
ran with flying feet to the little house. Hanging
by her hands upon the sill of the window nearest the
clock, she laid her ear to the glass. The clock
was ticking serenely, as of old. Gran’ther
had been home to wind it. So he had come in the
night, and slipped away again in silence!
“There! he’s gi’n
it up!” cried Hattie, still watching the minister.
“He’s turnin’ down the path.
My land! he’s headed this way. He’s
comin’ here. You beat up that cushion,
an’ throw open the best-room door. My soul!
if your grandpa’s goin’ to set the whole
town by the ears, I wisht he’d come home an’
fight his own battles!”
Hattie did not look at her young daughter;
but if she had looked, she might have been amazed.
Mary stood firm as iron; she was more than ever a
chip o’ the old block.
When the young minister had somewhat
weakly climbed the two front steps, he elected not
to sit in the best room, for he was a little chilly,
and would like the sun. Presently he was installed
in the new cane-backed rocker, and Mrs. Oldfield had
offered him some currant wine.
“Though I dunno’s you
would,” said she, anxiously flaunting a principle
righteous as his own. “I s’pose you’re
teetotal.”
The minister would not have wine, and he could not
stay.
“I’ve really come on business,”
said he. “Do you know anything about Mr.
Oldfield?”
So strong was the family conviction
that Nicholas had involved them in disgrace, that
Mary glanced up fiercely, and her mother gave an apologetic
cough.
“Well,” said Young Nick’s
Hattie, “I dunno’s I know anything particular
about father.”
“Where is he, I mean,”
asked the minister. “I want to see him.
I’ve got to.”
“Gran’ther’s gone
away,” announced Mary, looking up at him with
hot and loyal eyes. “We don’t know
where.” Her fingers trembled, and she lost
her stitch. She was furious with herself for not
being calmer. It seemed as if gran’ther
had a right to demand it of her. The minister
bent his brows impatiently.
“Why, I depended on seeing Mr.
Oldfield,” said he, with the fractiousness of
a man recently ill. “This sickness of mine
has put me back tremendously. I’ve got
to make the address, and I don’t know what to
say. I meant to read town records and hunt up
old stories; and then when I was sick I thought, ’Never
mind! Mr. Oldfield will have it all at his tongue’s
end.’ And now he isn’t here, and I’m
all at sea without him.”
This was perhaps the first time that
Young Nick’s Hattie had ever looked upon her
father’s pursuits with anything but a pitying
eye. A frown of perplexity grew between her brows.
Her brain ached in expanding. Mary leaned forward,
her face irradiated with pure delight.
“Why, yes,” said she,
at once accepting the minister for a friend, “gran’ther
could tell you, if he was here. He knows everything.”
“You see,” continued the
minister, now addressing her, “there are facts
enough that are common talk about the town, but we
only half know them. The first settlers came
from Devon. Well, where did they enter the town?
From which point? Sudleigh side, or along by the
river? I incline to the river. The doctor
says it would be a fine symbolic thing to take the
procession up to the church by the very way the first
settlers came in. But where was it? I don’t
know, and nobody does, unless it’s Nicholas
Oldfield.”
Mary folded her hands, in proud composure.
“Yes, sir,” said she,
“gran’ther knows. He could tell you,
if he was here.”
“I should like to inquire what
makes you so certain, Mary Oldfield,” asked
her mother, with the natural irritation of the unprepared.
“I should like to know how father’s got
hold of things pa’son and doctor ain’t
neither of ’em heard of?”
“Why,” said the minister,
rising, “he’s simply crammed with town
legends. He can repeat them by the yard.
He’s a local historian. But then, I needn’t
tell you that; you know what an untiring student he
has been.” And he went away thoughtful
and discouraged, omitting, as Hattie realized with
awe, to offer prayer.
Mary stepped joyously about, getting
supper and singing “Hearken, Ye Sprightly!”
in an exultant voice; but her mother brooded.
It was not until dusk, when the three sat before the
clock-room fire, “blazed” rather for company
than warmth, that Young Nick’s Hattie opened
her mouth and spoke.
“Mary,” said she, “how’d
you find out your grandpa was such great shakes?”
Mary was in some things much older
than her mother. She answered demurely, “I
don’t know as I can say.”
“Nick,” continued Hattie,
turning to her spouse, “did you ever hear your
father was smarter’n the minister an’ doctor
put together, so ’t they had to run round beseechin’
him to tell ’em how to act?”
Nicholas knocked his pipe against
the andiron, and rose, to lay it carefully on the
shelf. “I can’t say’s I did,”
he returned. Then he set forth for Eli Pike’s
barn, where it was customary now to stand about the
elephant and prophesy what Tiverton might become.
As for Hattie, realizing how little light she was
likely to borrow from those who were nearest and dearest
her, she remarked that she should like to shake them
both.
The next day began a new and exciting
era. It was bruited abroad that the presence
of Nicholas Oldfield was necessary for the success
of the celebration; and now young men but lately engaged
in unprofitable warfare rode madly over the county
in search of him. They inquired for him at taverns;
they sought him in farmhouses where he had been wont
to lodge. He gained almost the terrible notoriety
of an absconding cashier; and the current issue of
the Sudleigh “Star” wore a flaming headline,
“No Trace of Mr. Oldfield Yet!”
Mary at first waxed merry over the
pursuit. She knew very well why gran’ther
was staying away; and her pride grew insolent at seeing
him sought in vain. But when his loss flared
out at her in sacred print, she stared for a moment,
and then, after that wide-eyed, piteous glance at
the possibilities of things, walked with a firm tread
to her little room. There she knelt down, and
buried her face in the bed, being careful, meanwhile,
not to rumple the valance. At last she knew the
truth; he was dead, and village gossip seemed a small
thing in comparison.
It would have been difficult, as time
went on, to convince the rest of the township that
Mr. Oldfield was not in a better world.
“They’d ha’ found
him, if he’s above ground,” said the fathers,
full of faith in the detective instinct of their coursing
sons. It seemed incredible that sons should ride
so fast and far, and come to nothing. “Never
was known to go out o’ the county, an’
they’ve rid over it from one eend to t’
other. Must ha’ made way with himself.
He wa’n’t quite right, that time he tolled
the bell.”
They found ominous parallels of peddlers
who had been murdered in byways, or stuck in swamps,
and even cited a Tivertonian, of low degree, who was
once caught beneath the chin by a clothes-line, and
remained there, under the impression that he was being
hanged, until the family came out in the morning,
and tilted him the other way.
“But then,” they added,
“he was a drinkin’ man, an’ Mr. Oldfield
never was known to touch a drop, even when he had
a tight cold.”
Dark as the occasion waxed, what with
feuds and presentiments of ill, there was some casual
comfort in rolling this new tragedy as a sweet morsel
under the tongue, and a mournful pleasure in referring
to the night when poor Mr. Oldfield was last seen
alive. So time went on to the very eve of the
celebration, and it was as well that the celebration
had never been. For kindly as Tiverton proved
herself, in the main, and closely welded in union
against rival towns, now it seemed as if the hand
of every man were raised against his brother.
Settlers and Indians were still implacable; neither
would ride, save each might slay the other. The
Crane boy tossed in bed, swollen to the eyes with an
evil tooth; and his exulting mates so besieged Brad
Freeman for preferment, that even that philosopher’s
patience gave way, and he said he’d be hanged
if he’d take the elephant out at all, if there
was going to be such a to-do about it. Even the
minister sulked, though he wore a pretense of dignity;
for he had concocted a short address with very little
history in it, and that all hearsay, and the doctor
had said lightly, looking it over, “Well, old
man, not much of it, is there? But there’s
enough of it, such as it is.”
It was in vain for the doctor to declare
that this was a colloquialism which might mean much
or little, as you chose to take it. The minister,
justly hurt, remarked that, when a man was in a tight
place, he needed the support of his friends, if he
had any; and the doctor went whistling drearily away,
conscious that he could have said much worse about
the address, without doing it justice.
The only earthly circumstance which
seemed to be fulfilling its duty toward Tiverton was
the weather. That shone seraphically bright.
The air was never so soft, the skies were never so
clear and far, and they were looking down indulgently
on all this earthly turmoil when, something before
midnight, on the fateful eve, Nicholas Oldfield went
up the path to his side-door, and stumbled over despairing
Mary on the step.
“What under the heavens” - he
began; but Mary precipitated herself upon him, and
held him with both hands. The moral tension, which
had held her hopeless and rigid, gave way. She
was sobbing wildly.
“O gran’ther!” she
moaned, over and over again. “O gran’ther!”
Nicholas managed somehow to get the
door open and walk in, hampered as he was by the clinging
arms of his tall girl. Then he sat down in the
big chair, taking Mary there too, and stroked her cheek.
Perhaps he could hardly have done it in the light,
but at that moment it seemed very natural. For
a long time neither of them spoke. Mary had no
words, and it may be that Nicholas could not seek
for them. At last she began, catching her breath
tremulously: -
“They’ve hunted everywhere,
gran’ther. They’ve rode all over the
county; and after the celebration, they’re going
to - dr - drag the pond!”
“Well, I guess I can go out
o’ the county if I want to,” responded
Nicholas calmly. “I come across a sheet
in them rec’ids that told about a pewter communion
set over to Rocky Ridge, an’ I’ve found
part on ’t in a tavern there. Who put ’em
up to all this work? Your father?”
“No,” sobbed Mary. “The minister.”
“The minister? What’s he want?”
“He’s got to write an
address, and he wants you to tell him what to say.”
Then, in the darkness of the room,
a slow smile stole over Nicholas Oldfield’s
face, but his voice remained quite grave.
“Does, does he?” he remarked.
“Well, he ain’t the fust pa’son that’s
needed a lift; but he’s the fust one ever I knew
to ask for it. I’ve got nothin’ for
’em, Mary. I come home to wind up the clocks;
but I ain’t goin’ to stand by a town that’ll
swaller a Memory-o’-Me timekeeper an’
murder the old bell. You can say I was here, an’
they needn’t go to muddyin’ up the ponds;
but as to their doin’s, they can carry ’em
out as they may. I’ve no part nor lot in
’em.”
Mary, in the weakness of her kind,
was wiser than she knew. She drew her arms about
his neck, and clung to him the closer. All this
talk of plots and counter-plots seemed very trivial
now that she had him back; and being only a child,
wearied with care and watching, she went fast asleep
on his shoulder. Nicholas felt tired too; but
he thought he had only dozed a little when he opened
his eyes on a gleam of morning, and saw the doctor
come striding into the yard.
“Your door’s open!”
called the doctor. “You must be at home
to callers. Morning, Mary! Either of you
sick?”
Mary, abashed, drew herself away,
and slipped into the sitting-room, a hand upon her
tumbled hair; the doctor, wise in his honesty, slashed
at the situation without delay.
“See here, Mr. Oldfield,”
said he, “whether you’ve slept or not,
you’ve got to come right over to parson’s
with me, and straighten him out. He’s all
balled up. You are as bad as the rest of us.
You think we don’t know enough to refuse a clock
like a comic valentine, and you think we don’t
prize that old bell. How are we going to prize
things if nobody tells us anything about them?
And here’s the town going to pieces over a celebration
it hasn’t sense enough to plan, just because
you’re so obstinate. Oh, come along!
Hear that! The boys are beginning to toot, and
fire off their crackers, and Tiverton’s going
to the dogs, and Sudleigh’ll be glad of it!
Come, Mr. Oldfield, come along!”
Nicholas stood quite calmly looking
through the window into the morning dew and mist.
He wore his habitual air of gentle indifference, and
the doctor saw in him those everlasting hills which
persuasion may not climb. Suddenly there was
a rustling from the other room, and Mary appeared
in the doorway, standing there expectant. Her
face was pink and a little vague from sleep, but she
looked very dear and good. Though Nicholas had
“lost himself” that night, he had kept
time for thought; and perhaps he realized how precious
a thing it is to lay up treasure of inheritance for
one who loves us, and is truly of our kind. He
turned quite meekly to the doctor.
“Should you think,” he
inquired, “should you think pa’son would
be up an’ dressed?”
Ten minutes thereafter, the two were
knocking at the parson’s door.
Confused and turbulent as Tiverton
had become, Nicholas Oldfield settled her at once.
Knowledge dripped from his finger-ends; he had it ready,
like oil to give a clock. Doctor and minister
stood breathless while he laid out the track for the
procession by local marks they both knew well.
“They must ha’ come into
the town from som’er’s nigh the old cross-road,”
said he. “No, ’t wa’n’t
where they made the river road. Then they turned
straight to one side - ’t was thick
woods then, you understand - an’ went
up a little ways towards Horn o’ the Moon.
But they concluded that wouldn’t suit ’em,
‘t was so barren-like; an’ they wheeled
round, took what’s now the old turnpike, an’
clim’ right up Tiverton Hill, through Tiverton
Street that now is. An’ there” - Nicholas
Oldfield’s eyes burned like blue flame, and again
he told the story of the Flat-iron Lot.
“Indeed!” cried the parson.
“What a truly remarkable circumstance! We
might halt on that very spot, and offer prayer, before
entering the church.”
“’Pears as if that would
be about the rights on’t,” said Nicholas
quietly. “That is, if anybody wanted to
plan it out jest as ’t was.” He could
free his words from the pride of life, but not his
voice; it quivered and betrayed him.
“Your idea would be to have
the services before going down for the Indian raid?”
inquired the doctor. “They’re all
at logger-heads there.”
But Nicholas, hearing how neither
faction would forego its glory, had the remedy ready
in a cranny of his brain.
“Well,” said he, “you
know there was a raid in ’53, when both sides
gi’n up an’ run. A crazed creatur
on a white horse galloped up an’ dispersed ’em.
He was all wropped up in a sheet, and carried a jack-o’-lantern
on a pole over his head, so ’t he seemed more’n
nine feet high. The settlers thought ‘t
was a spirit; an’ as for the Injuns, Lord knows
what ’t was to them. ’T any rate,
the raid was over.”
“Heaven be praised!” cried
the doctor fervently. “Allah is great, and
you, Mr. Oldfield, are his prophet. Stay here
and coach the parson while I start up the town.”
The doctor dashed home and mounted
his horse. It was said that he did some tall
riding that day. From door to door he galloped,
a lesser Paul Revere, but sowing seeds of harmony.
It was true that the soil was ready. Indians
in full costume were lurking down cellar or behind
kitchen doors, swearing they would never ride, but
tremblingly eager to be urged. Settlers, gloomily
acquiescent in an unjust fate, brightened at his heralding.
The ghost was the thing. It took the popular fancy;
and everybody wondered, as after all illuminings of
genius, why nobody had thought of it before.
Brad Freeman was unanimously elected to act the part,
as the only living man likely to manage a supplementary
head without rehearsal; and Pillsbury’s white
colt was hastily groomed for the onslaught. Brad
had at once seen the possibilities of the situation
and decided, with an unerring certainty, that as a
jack-o’-lantern is naught by day, the pumpkin
face must be cunningly veiled. He was a busy
man that morning; for he not only had to arrange his
own ghostly progress, but settle the elephant on its
platform, to be dragged by vine-wreathed oxen, and
also, at the doctor’s instigation, to make the
sledge on which the first Nicholas Oldfield should
draw his wife into town. The doctor sought out
Young Nick, and asked him to undertake the part, as
tribute to his illustrious name; but he was of a prudent
nature and declined. What if the town should
laugh! “I guess I won’t,” said
he.
But Mary, regardless of maternal cacklings,
sped after the doctor as he turned his horse.
“O doctor!” she besought,
“let me be the first settler’s wife!
Please, please let me be Mary Oldfield!”
The doctor was glad enough. All
the tides of destiny were surging his way. Even
when he paused, in his progress, to pull the Crane
boy’s tooth, it seemed to work out public harmony.
For the victim, cannily anxious to prove his valor,
insisted on having the operation conducted before
the front window; and after it was accomplished, the
squads of boys waiting at the gate for his apotheosis
or down-fall, gave an unwilling yet delighted yell.
He had not winced; and when, with the fire of a dear
ambition still shining in his eyes, he held up the
tooth to them, through the glass, they realized that
he, and he only, could with justice take the crown
of that most glorious day. He must ride inside
the elephant.
So it came to pass that when the procession
wound slowly up from the cross-road, preceded by the
elephant, lifting his trunk at rhythmic intervals,
Nicholas Oldfield saw his little Mary, her eyes shining
and her cheeks aglow, sitting proudly upon a sledge,
drawn by the handsomest young man in town. A
pang may have struck the old man’s heart, realizing
that Phil Marden was so splendid in his strength, and
that he wore so sweet a look of invitation; but he
remembered Mary’s vow and was content.
A great pride and peace enwrapped him when the procession
halted at the Flat-Iron Lot, and the minister, lifting
up his voice, explained to the townspeople why they
were called upon to pause. The name of Oldfield
sounded clearly on the air.
“Now,” said the minister,
“let us pray.” The petition went forth,
and Mr. Oldfield stood brooding there, his thoughts
running back through a long chain of ancestry to the
Almighty, Who is the fount of all.
When heads were covered again, and
this little world began to surge into the church,
young Nick’s Hattie moved closer to her husband
and shot out a sibilant whisper: -
“Did you know that? - about the Flat-Iron
Lot?”
Young Nick shook his head. He was entirely dazed.
“Well,” continued Hattie,
full of awe, “I guess I never was nearer my
end than when I let myself be go-between for Freeman
Henry. I wonder father let me get out alive.”
The minister’s address was very
short and unpretending. He dwelt on the sacredness
of the past, and all its memories, and closed by saying
that, while we need not shrink from signs of progress,
we should guard against tampering with those ancient
landmarks which serve as beacon lights, to point the
brighter way. Hearing that, every man steeled
his heart against Memory-of-Me clocks, and resolved
to vote against them. Then the minister explained
that, since he had been unable to prepare a suitable
address, Mr. Oldfield had kindly consented to read
some precious records recently discovered by him.
A little rustling breath went over the audience.
So this amiable lunacy had its bearing on the economy
of life! They were amazed, as may befall us at
any judgment day, when grays are strangely alchemized
to white.
Mr. Oldfield, unmoved as ever, save
in a certain dominating quality of presence, rose
and stood before them, the records in his hands.
He read them firmly, explaining here and there, his
simple speech untouched by finer usage; and when the
minister interposed a question, he dropped into such
quaintness of rich legendry that his hearers sat astounded.
So they were a part of the world! and not the world
to-day, but the universe in its making.
It was long before Nicholas concluded;
but the time seemed brief. He sat down, and the
minister took the floor. He thanked Mr. Oldfield
and then went on to say that, although it might be
informal, he would suggest that the town, with Mr.
Oldfield’s permission, place an inscription on
the boulder in the Flat-Iron Lot, stating why it was
to be held historically sacred. The town roared
and stamped, but meanwhile Nicholas Oldfield was quietly
rising.
“In that case, pa’son,”
said he, “I should like to state that it would
be my purpose to make over that lot to the town to
be held as public land forever.”
Again the village folk outdid themselves
in applause, while Young Nick muttered, “Well,
I vum!” beneath his breath, and Hattie replied,
antiphonally, “My soul!” These were not
the notes of mere surprise. They were prayers
for guidance in this exigency of finding a despised
intelligence exalted.
The celebration went on to a victorious
close. Who shall sing the sweetness of Isabel
North, as she sat by the log-cabin door, placidly
spinning flax, or the horror of the moment when, redskins
swooping down on her and settlers on them, the ghost
swept in and put them all to flight? Who will
ever forget the exercises in the hall, when the “Suwanee
River” was sung by minstrels, to a set of tableaux
representing the “old folks” at their
cabin door, “playin’ wid my brudder”
as a game of stick-knife, and the “Swanny”
River itself by a frieze of white pasteboard swans
in the background? There were patriotic songs,
accompanied by remarks laudatory of England; since
it was justly felt that our mother-land might be wounded
if, on an occasion of this sort, we fomented international
differences by “America” or the reminiscent
triumph of “The Sword of Bunker Hill.”
A very noble sentiment pervaded Tiverton when, at
twilight, little groups of tired and very happy people
lingered here and there before “harnessing up”
and betaking themselves to their homes. The homes
themselves meant more to them now, not as shelters,
but as sacred shrines; and many a glance sought out
Nicholas Oldfield standing quietly by - the
reverential glance accorded those who find out unsuspected
wealth. Young Nick approached his father with
an awkwardness sitting more heavily upon him than
usual.
“Well,” said he, “I’m mighty
glad you gi’n ’em that lot.”
Old Nicholas nodded gravely, and at
that moment Hattie came up, all in a flutter.
“Father,” said she quite
appealingly, “I wisht you’d come over to
supper. Luella an’ Freeman Henry’ll
be there. It’s a great day, an’” -
“Yes, I know ’t is,”
answered Nicholas kindly. “I’m much
obleeged, but Mary’s goin’ to eat with
me. Mebbe we might look in, along in the evenin’.
Come, Mary!”
Mary, very sweet in her plain dress
and white kerchief, was talking with young Marden,
her husband for the day; but she turned about contentedly.
“Yes, gran’ther,”
said she, without a look behind, “I’m coming!”