Reaping
You want to know what’s the
matter with me, do yer?
My! ain’t men blinder’n
moles?
It ain’t nothin’ new,
be sure o’ that.
Why, ef you’d had eyes you’d
ha’ seed
Me changin’ under your very
nose,
Each day a little diff’rent.
But you never see nothin’,
you don’t.
Don’t touch me, Jake,
Don’t you dars’t to
touch me,
I ain’t in no humour.
That’s what’s come over
me;
Jest a change clear through.
You lay still, an’ I’ll
tell yer,
I’ve had it on my mind to
tell yer
Fer some time.
It’s a strain livin’
a lie from mornin’ till night,
An’ I’m goin’
to put an end to it right now.
An’ don’t make any mistake
about one thing,
When I married yer I loved yer.
Why, your voice ’ud make
Me go hot and cold all over,
An’ your kisses most stopped
my heart from beatin’.
Lord! I was a silly fool.
But that’s the way ’twas.
Well, I married yer
An’ thought Heav’n was
comin’
To set on the door-step.
Heav’n didn’t do no
settin’,
Though the first year warn’t
so bad.
The baby’s fever threw you
off some, I guess,
An’ then I took her death
real hard,
An’ a mopey wife kind o’
disgusts a man.
I ain’t blamin’ yer
exactly.
But that’s how ’twas.
Do lay quiet,
I know I’m slow, but it’s
harder to say ’n I thought.
There come a time when I got to
be
More wife agin than mother.
The mother part was sort of a waste
When we didn’t have no other
child.
But you’d got used ter lots
o’ things,
An’ you was all took up with
the farm.
Many’s the time I’ve
laid awake
Watchin’ the moon go clear
through the elm-tree,
Out o’ sight.
I’d foller yer around like
a dog,
An’ set in the chair you’d
be’n settin’ in,
Jest to feel its arms around me,
So long’s I didn’t have
yours.
It preyed on me, I guess,
Longin’ and longin’
While you was busy all day, and
snorin’ all night.
Yes, I know you’re wide awake
now,
But now ain’t then,
An’ I guess you’ll think
diff’rent
When I’m done.
Do you mind the day you went to
Hadrock?
I didn’t want to stay home
for reasons,
But you said someone ’d have
to be here
‘Cause Elmer was comin’
to see t’ th’ telephone.
An’ you never see why I was
so set on goin’ with yer,
Our married life hadn’t be’n
any great shakes,
Still marriage is marriage, an’
I was raised God-fearin’.
But, Lord, you didn’t notice
nothin’,
An’ Elmer hangin’ around
all Winter!
‘Twas a lovely mornin’.
The apple-trees was jest elegant
With their blossoms all flared out,
An’ there warn’t a cloud
in the sky.
You went, you wouldn’t pay
no ’tention to what I said,
An’ I heard the Ford chuggin’
for most a mile,
The air was so still.
Then Elmer come.
It’s no use your frettin’,
Jake,
I’ll tell you all about it.
I know what I’m doin’,
An’ what’s worse, I
know what I done.
Elmer fixed th’ telephone
in about two minits,
An’ he didn’t seem in
no hurry to go,
An’ I don’t know as
I wanted him to go either,
I was awful mad at your not takin’
me with yer,
An’ I was tired o’ wishin’
and wishin’
An’ gittin’ no comfort.
I guess it ain’t necessary
to tell yer all the things.
He stayed to dinner,
An’ he helped me do the dishes,
An’ he said a home was a fine
thing,
An’ I said dishes warn’t
a home
Nor yet the room they’re in.
He said a lot o’ things,
An’ I fended him off at first,
But he got talkin’ all around
me,
Clost up to the things I’d
be’n thinkin’,
What’s the use o’ me
goin’ on, Jake,
You know.
He got all he wanted,
An’ I give it to him,
An’ what’s more, I’m
glad!
I ain’t dead, anyway,
An’ somebody thinks I’m
somethin’.
Keep away, Jake,
You can kill me to-morrer if you
want to,
But I’m goin’ to have
my say.
Funny thing! Guess I ain’t
made to hold a man.
Elmer ain’t be’n here
for mor’n two months.
I don’t want to pretend nothin’,
Mebbe if he’d be’n lately
I shouldn’t have told yer.
I’ll go away in the mornin’,
o’ course.
What you want the light fer?
I don’t look no diff’rent.
Ain’t the moon bright enough
To look at a woman that’s
deceived yer by?
Don’t, Jake, don’t,
you can’t love me now!
It ain’t a question of forgiveness.
Why! I’d be thinkin’
o’ Elmer ev’ry minute;
It ain’t decent.
Oh, my God! It ain’t
decent any more either way!
Off the Turnpike
Good ev’nin’, Mis’
Priest.
I jest stepped in to tell you Good-bye.
Yes, it’s all over.
All my things is packed
An’ every last one o’
them boxes
Is on Bradley’s team
Bein’ hauled over to th’
depot.
No, I ain’t goin’ back
agin.
I’m stoppin’ over to
French’s fer to-night,
And goin’ down first train
in th’ mornin’.
Yes, it do seem kinder queer
Not to be goin’ to see Cherry’s
Orchard no more,
But Land Sakes! When a change’s
comin’,
Why, I al’ays say it can’t
come too quick.
Now, that’s real kind o’
you,
Your doughnuts is always so tasty.
Yes, I’m goin’ to Chicago,
To my niece,
She’s married to a fine man,
hardware business,
An’ doin’ real well,
she tells me.
Lizzie’s be’n at me
to go out ther for the longest while.
She ain’t got no kith nor
kin to Chicago, you know
She’s rented me a real nice
little flat,
Same house as hers,
An’ I’m goin’
to try that city livin’ folks say’s so
pleasant.
Oh, yes, he was real generous,
Paid me a sight o’ money fer
the Orchard;
I told him ‘twouldn’t
yield nothin’ but stones,
But he ain’t farmin’
it.
Lor’, no, Mis’ Priest,
He’s jest took it to set and
look at the view.
Mebbe he wouldn’t be so stuck
on the view
Ef he’d seed it every mornin’
and night for forty year
Same’s as I have.
I dessay it’s pretty enough,
But it’s so pressed into me
I c’n see’t with my
eyes shut.
No. I ain’t cold, Mis’
Priest,
Don’t shut th’ door.
I’ll be all right in a minit.
But I ain’t a mite sorry to
leave that view.
Well, mebbe ’tis queer to
feel so,
An’ mebbe ’taint.
My! But that tea’s revivin’.
Old things ain’t always pleasant
things, Mis’ Priest.
No, no, I don’t cal’late
on comin’ back,
That’s why I’d ruther
be to Chicago,
Boston’s too near.
It ain’t cold, Mis’
Priest,
It’s jest my thoughts.
I aint sick, only-
Mis’ Priest, ef you’ve
nothin’ ter take yer time,
An’ have a mind to listen,
Ther’s somethin’ I’d
like ter speak about
I ain’t never mentioned it,
But I’d like to tell yer ’fore
I go.
Would you mind lowerin’ them
shades,
Fall twilight’s awful grey,
An’ that fire’s real
cosy with the shades drawed.
Well, I guess folks about here think
I’ve be’n dret’ful onsociable.
You needn’t say ’taint
so, ’cause I know diff’rent.
An’ what’s more, it’s
true.
Well, the reason is I’ve be’n
scared out o’ my life.
Scared ev’ry minit o’
th’ time, fer eight year.
Eight mortal year ’tis, come
next June.
‘Twas on the eighteenth o’
June,
Six months after I’d buried
my husband,
That somethin’ happened ter
me.
Mebbe you’ll mind that afore
that
I was a cheery body.
Hiram was too,
Al’ays liked to ask a neighbor
in,
An’ ev’n when he died,
Barrin’ low sperrits, I warn’t
averse to seein’ nobody.
But that eighteenth o’ June
changed ev’rythin’.
I was doin’ most o’
th’ farmwork myself,
With jest a hired boy, Clarence
King, ’twas,
Comin’ in fer an hour
or two.
Well, that eighteenth o’ June
I was goin’ round,
Lockin’ up and seein’
to things ’fore I went to bed.
I was jest steppin’ out t’
th’ barn,
Goin’ round outside ‘stead
o’ through the shed,
‘Cause there was such a sight
o’ moonlight
Somehow or another I thought ’twould
be pretty outdoors.
I got settled for pretty things
that night, I guess.
I ain’t stuck on ’em
no more.
Well, them laylock bushes side o’
th’ house
Was real lovely.
Glitt’rin’ and shakin’
in the moonlight,
An’ the smell o’ them
rose right up
An’ most took my breath away.
The colour o’ the spikes was
all faded out,
They never keep their colour when
the moon’s on ’em,
But the smell fair ’toxicated
me.
I was al’ays partial to a
sweet scent,
An’ I went close up t’
th’ bushes
So’s to put my face right
into a flower.
Mis’ Priest, jest’s
I got breathin’ in that laylock bloom
I saw, layin’ right at my
feet,
A man’s hand!
It was as white’s the side
o’ th’ house,
And sparklin’ like that lum’nous
paint they put on gate-posts.
I screamed right out,
I couldn’t help it,
An’ I could hear my scream
Goin’ over an’ over
In that echo be’ind th’
barn.
Hearin’ it agin an’
agin like that
Scared me so, I dar’sn’t
scream any more.
I jest stood ther,
And looked at that hand.
I thought the echo’d begin
to hammer like my heart,
But it didn’t.
There was only th’ wind,
Sighin’ through the laylock
leaves,
An’ slappin’ ’em
up agin the house.
Well, I guess I looked at that hand
Most ten minits,
An’ it never moved,
Jest lay there white as white.
After a while I got to thinkin’
that o’ course
’Twas some drunken tramp over
from Redfield.
That calmed me some,
An’ I commenced to think I’d
better git him out
From under them laylocks.
I planned to drag him in t’
th’ barn
An’ lock him in ther till
Clarence come in th’ mornin’.
I got so mad thinkin’ o’
that all-fired brazen tramp
Asleep in my laylocks,
I jest stooped down and grabbed
th’ hand and give it an awful pull.
Then I bumped right down settin’
on the ground.
Mis’ Priest, ther warn’t
no body come with the hand.
No, it ain’t cold, it’s
jest that I can’t abear thinkin’ of it,
Ev’n now.
I’ll take a sip o’ tea.
Thank you, Mis’ Priest, that’s
better.
I’d ruther finish now I’ve
begun.
Thank you, jest the same.
I dropped the hand’s ef it’d
be’n red hot
‘Stead o’ ice cold.
Fer a minit or two I jest laid
on that grass
Pantin’.
Then I up and run to them laylocks
An’ pulled ’em every
which way.
True es I’m settin’
here, Mis’ Priest,
Ther warn’t nothin’
ther.
I peeked an’ pryed all about
’em,
But ther warn’t no man ther
Neither livin’ nor dead.
But the hand was ther all right,
Upside down, the way I’d dropped
it,
And glist’nin’ fit to
dazzle yer.
I don’t know how I done it,
An’ I don’t know why
I done it,
But I wanted to git that dret’ful
hand out o’ sight
I got in t’ th’ barn,
somehow,
An’ felt roun’ till
I got a spade.
I couldn’t stop fer
a lantern,
Besides, the moonlight was bright
enough in all conscience.
Then I scooped that awful thing
up in th’ spade.
I had a sight o’ trouble doin’
it.
It slid off, and tipped over, and
I couldn’t bear
Ev’n to touch it with my foot
to prop it,
But I done it somehow.
Then I carried it off be’ind
the barn,
Clost to an old apple-tree
Where you couldn’t see from
the house,
An’ I buried it,
Good an’ deep.
I don’t rec’lect nothin’
more o’ that night.
Clarence woke me up in th’
mornin’,
Hollerin’ fer me to come
down and set th’ milk.
When he’d gone,
I stole roun’ to the apple-tree
And seed the earth all new turned
Where I left it in my hurry.
I did a heap o’ gardenin’
That mornin’.
I couldn’t cut no big sods
Fear Clarence would notice and ask
me what I wanted ’em fer,
So I got teeny bits o’ turf
here and ther,
And no one couldn’t tell ther’d
be’n any diggin’
When I got through.
They was awful days after that,
Mis’ Priest,
I used ter go every mornin’
and poke about them bushes,
An’ up and down the fence,
Ter find the body that hand come
off of.
But I couldn’t never find
nothin’.
I’d lay awake nights
Hearin’ them laylocks blowin’
and whiskin’.
At last I had Clarence cut ’em
down
An’ make a big bonfire of
’em.
I told him the smell made me sick,
An’ that warn’t no lie,
I can’t abear the smell on
’em now;
An’ no wonder, es you
say.
I fretted somethin’ awful
’bout that hand
I wondered, could it be Hiram’s,
But folks don’t rob graveyards
hereabouts.
Besides, Hiram’s hands warn’t
that awful, starin’ white.
I give up seein’ people,
I was afeared I’d say somethin’.
You know what folks thought o’
me
Better’n I do, I dessay,
But mebbe now you’ll see I
couldn’t do nothin’ diff’rent.
But I stuck it out,
I warn’t goin’ to be
downed
By no loose hand, no matter how
it come ther
But that ain’t the worst,
Mis’ Priest,
Not by a long ways.
Two year ago, Mr. Densmore made
me an offer for Cherry’s Orchard.
Well, I’d got used to th’
thought o’ bein’ sort o’ blighted,
An’ I warn’t scared
no more.
Lived down my fear, I guess.
I’d kinder got used to th’
thought o’ that awful night,
And I didn’t mope much about
it.
Only I never went out o’ doors
by moonlight;
That stuck.
Well, when Mr. Densmore’s
offer come,
I started thinkin’ ’bout
the place
An’ all the things that had
gone on ther.
Thinks I, I guess I’ll go
and see where I put the hand.
I was foolhardy with the long time
that had gone by.
I know’d the place real well,
Fer I’d put it right
in between two o’ the apple roots.
I don’t know what possessed
me, Mis’ Priest,
But I kinder wanted to know
That the hand had been flesh and
bone, anyway.
It had sorter bothered me, thinkin’
I might ha’ imagined it.
I took a mornin’ when the
sun was real pleasant and warm;
I guessed I wouldn’t jump
for a few old bones.
But I did jump, somethin’
wicked.
Ther warn’t no bones!
Ther warn’t nothin’!
Not ev’n the gold ring I’d
minded bein’ on the little finger.
I don’t know ef ther ever
was anythin’.
I’ve worried myself sick over
it.
I be’n diggin’ and diggin’
day in and day out
Till Clarence ketched me at it.
Oh, I know’d real well what
you all thought,
An’ I ain’t sayin’
you’re not right,
But I ain’t goin’ to
end in no county ’sylum
If I c’n help it.
The shiv’rin’ fits come
on me sudden like.
I know ’em, don’t you
trouble.
I’ve fretted considerable
about the ’sylum,
I guess I be’n frettin’
all the time I ain’t be’n diggin’.
But anyhow I can’t dig to
Chicago, can I?
Thank you, Mis’ Priest,
I’m better now. I only
dropped in in passin’.
I’ll jest be steppin’
along down to French’s.
No, I won’t be seein’
nobody in the mornin’,
It’s a pretty early start.
Don’t you stand ther, Mis’
Priest,
The wind’ll blow yer lamp
out,
An’ I c’n see easy,
I got aholt o’ the gate now.
I ain’t a mite tired, thank
you.
Good-night.
The Grocery
“Hullo, Alice!”
“Hullo, Leon!”
“Say, Alice, gi’ me
a couple
O’ them two for five cigars,
Will yer?”
“Where’s your nickel?”
“My! Ain’t you
close!
Can’t trust a feller, can
yer.”
“Trust you! Why
What you owe this store
Would set you up in business.
I can’t think why Father ’lows
it.”
“Yer Father’s a sight
more neighbourly
Than you be. That’s
a fact.
Besides, he knows I got a vote.”
“A vote! Oh, yes, you
got a vote!
A lot o’ good the Senate’ll
be to Father
When all his bank account
Has run away in credits.
There’s your cigars,
If you can relish smokin’
With all you owe us standin’.”
“I dunno as that makes ’em
taste any diff’rent.
You ain’t fair to me, Alice,
’deed you ain’t.
I work when anythin’s doin’.
I’ll get a carpenterin’
job next Summer sure.
Cleve was tellin’ me to-day
he’d take me on come Spring.”
“Come Spring, and this December!
I’ve no patience with you,
Leon,
Shilly-shallyin’ the way you
do.
Here, lift over them crates o’
oranges
I wanter fix ’em in the winder.”
“It riles yer, don’t
it, me not havin’ work.
You pepper up about it somethin’
good.
You pick an’ pick, and that
don’t help a mite.
Say, Alice, do come in out o’
that winder.
Th’ oranges c’n wait,
An’ I don’t like talkin’
to yer back.”
“Don’t you! Well,
you’d better make the best o’ what you
can git.
Maybe you won’t have my back
to talk to soon.
They look good in pyramids with
the ’lectric light on ’em,
Don’t they?
Now hand me them bananas
An’ I’ll string ’em
right acrost.”
“What do yer mean
‘Bout me not havin’
you to talk to?
Are yer springin’ somethin’
on me?”
“I don’t know ‘bout
springin’
When I’m tellin’ you
right out.
I’m goin’ away, that’s
all.”
“Where? Why?
What yer mean-goin’
away?”
“I’ve took a place
Down to Boston, in a candy store
For the holidays.”
“Good Land, Alice,
What in the Heavens fer!”
“To earn some money,
And to git away from here, I guess.”
“Ain’t yer Father got
enough?
Don’t he give yer proper pocket-money?”
“He’d have a plenty,
if you folks paid him.”
“He’s rich I tell yer.
I never figured he’d be close
with you.”
“Oh, he ain’t.
Not close.
That ain’t why.
But I must git away from here.
I must! I must!”
“You got a lot o’ reason
in yer
To-night.
How long d’ you cal’late
You’ll be gone?”
“Maybe for always.”
“What ails yer, Alice?
Talkin’ wild like that.
Ain’t you an’ me goin’
to be married
Some day.”
“Some day! Some day!
I guess the sun’ll never rise
on some day.”
“So that’s the trouble.
Same old story.
’Cause I ain’t got the
cash to settle right now.
You know I love yer,
An’ I’ll marry yer as
soon
As I c’n raise the money.”
“You’ve said that any
time these five year,
But you don’t do nothin’.”
“Wot could I do?
Ther ain’t no work here Winters.
Not fer a carpenter, ther ain’t.”
“I guess you warn’t
born a carpenter.
Ther’s ice-cuttin’ a
plenty.”
“I got a dret’ful tender
throat;
Dr. Smiles he told me
I mustn’t resk ice-cuttin’.”
“Why haven’t you gone
to Boston,
And hunted up a job?”
“Have yer forgot the time
I went expressin’
In the American office, down ther?”
“And come back two weeks later!
No, I ain’t.”
“You didn’t want I should
git hurted,
Did yer?
I’m a sight too light fer
all that liftin’ work.
My back was commencin’ to
strain, as ’twas.
Ef I was like yer brother now,
I’d ha’ be’n down
to the city long ago.
But I’m too clumsy fer
a dancer.
I ain’t got Arthur’s
luck.”
“Do you call it luck to be
a disgrace to your folks,
And git locked up in jail!”
“Oh, come now, Alice,
‘Disgrace’ is a mite
strong.
Why, the jail was a joke.
Art’s all right.”
“All right!
All right to dance, and smirk, and
lie
For a livin’,
And then in the end
Lead a silly girl to give you
What warn’t hers to give
By pretendin youd marry her-
And she a pupil.”
“He’d ha’ married
her right enough,
Her folks was millionaires.”
“Yes, he’d ha’
married her!
Thank God, they saved her that.”
“Art’s a fine feller.
I wish I had his luck.
Swellin’ round in Hart, Schaffner
& Marx fancy suits,
And eatin’ in rest’rants.
But somebody’s got to stick
to the old place,
Else Foxfield’d have to shut
up shop,
Hey, Alice?”
“You admire him!
You admire Arthur!
You’d be like him only you
can’t dance.
Oh, Shame! Shame!
And I’ve been like that silly
girl.
Fooled with your promises,
And I give you all I had.
I knew it, oh, I knew it,
But I wanted to git away ’fore
I proved it.
You’ve shamed me through and
through.
Why couldn’t you hold your
tongue,
And spared me seein’ you
As you really are.”
“What the Devil’s the
row?
I only said Art was lucky.
What you spitfirin’ at me
fer?
Ferget it, Alice.
We’ve had good times, ain’t
we?
I’ll see Cleve ’bout
that job agin to-morrer,
And we’ll be married ‘fore
hayin’ time.”
“It’s like you to remind
me o’ hayin’ time.
I’ve good cause to love it,
ain’t I?
Many’s the night I’ve
hid my face in the dark
To shut out thinkin’!”
“Why, that ain’t nothin’.
You ain’t be’n half
so kind to me
As lots o’ fellers’
girls.
Gi’ me a kiss, Dear,
And let’s make up.”
“Make up!
You poor fool.
Do you suppose I care a ten cent
piece
For you now.
You’ve killed yourself for
me.
Done it out o’ your own mouth.
You’ve took away my home,
I hate the sight o’ the place.
You’re all over it,
Every stick an’ stone means
you,
An’ I hate ’em all.”
“Alice, I say,
Don’t go on like that.
I can’t marry yer
Boardin’ in one room,
But I’ll see Cleve to-morrer,
Ill make him--
“Oh, you fool!
You terrible fool!”
“Alice, don’t go yit,
Wait a minit,
Ill see Cleve--
“You terrible fool!”
“Alice, don’t go.
Alice--”
(Door slams)
Number 3 on the Docket
The lawyer, are you?
Well! I ain’t got nothin’
to say.
Nothin’!
I told the perlice I hadn’t
nothin’.
They know’d real well ’twas
me.
Ther warn’t no supposin’,
Ketchin’ me in the woods as
they did,
An’ me in my house dress.
Folks don’t walk miles an’
miles
In the drifted snow,
With no hat nor wrap on ’em
Ef everythin’s all right,
I guess.
All right? Ha! Ha!
Ha!
Nothin’ warn’t right
with me.
Never was.
Oh, Lord! Why did I do it?
Why ain’t it yesterday, and
Ed here agin?
Many’s the time I’ve
set up with him nights
When he had cramps, or rheumatizm,
or somethin’.
I used ter nurse him same’s
ef he was a baby.
I wouldn’t hurt him, I love
him!
Don’t you dare to say I killed
him. ’Twarn’t me!
Somethin’ got aholt o’
me. I couldn’t help it.
Oh, what shall I do! What
shall I do!
Yes, Sir.
No, Sir.
I beg your pardon, I-I-
Oh, I’m a wicked woman!
An’ I’m desolate, desolate!
Why warn’t I struck dead or
paralyzed
Afore my hands done it.
Oh, my God, what shall I do!
No, Sir, ther ain’t no extenuatin’
circumstances,
An’ I don’t want none.
I want a bolt o’ lightnin’
To strike me dead right now!
Oh, I’ll tell yer.
But it won’t make no diff’rence.
Nothin’ will.
Yes, I killed him.
Why do yer make me say it?
It’s cruel! Cruel!
I killed him because o’ th’
silence.
The long, long silence,
That watched all around me,
And he wouldn’t break it.
I tried to make him,
Time an’ agin,
But he was terrible taciturn, Ed
was.
He never spoke ’cept when
he had to,
An’ then he’d only say
“yes” and “no”.
You can’t even guess what
that silence was.
I’d hear it whisperin’
in my ears,
An’ I got frightened, ’twas
so thick,
An’ al’ays comin’
back.
Ef Ed would ha’ talked sometimes
It would ha’ driven it away;
But he never would.
He didn’t hear it same as
I did.
You see, Sir,
Our farm was off’n the main
road,
And set away back under the mountain;
And the village was seven mile off,
Measurin’ after you’d
got out o’ our lane.
We didn’t have no hired man,
‘Cept in hayin’ time;
An’ Dane’s place,
That was the nearest,
Was clear way ’tother side
the mountain.
They used Marley post-office
An’ ours was Benton.
Ther was a cart-track took yer to
Dane’s in Summer,
An’ it warn’t above
two mile that way,
But it warn’t never broke
out Winters.
I used to dread the Winters.
Seem’s ef I couldn’t
abear to see the golden-rod bloomin’;
Winter’d come so quick after
that.
You don’t know what snow’s
like when yer with it
Day in an’ day out.
Ed would be out all day loggin’,
An’ I set at home and look
at the snow
Layin’ over everythin’;
It ’ud dazzle me blind,
Till it warn’t white any more,
but black as ink.
Then the quiet ‘ud commence
rushin’ past my ears
Till I most went mad listenin’
to it.
Many’s the time I’ve
dropped a pan on the floor
Jest to hear it clatter.
I was most frantic when dinner-time
come
An’ Ed was back from the woods.
I’d ha’ give my soul
to hear him speak.
But he’d never say a word
till I asked him
Did he like the raised biscuits
or whatever,
An’ then sometimes he’d
jest nod his answer.
Then he’d go out agin,
An’ I’d watch him from
the kitchin winder.
It seemed the woods come marchin’
out to meet him
An’ the trees ‘ud press
round him an’ hustle him.
I got so I was scared o’ th’
trees.
I thought they come nearer,
Every day a little nearer,
Closin’ up round the house.
I never went in t’ th’
woods Winters,
Though in Summer I liked ’em
well enough.
It warn’t so bad when my little
boy was with us.
He used to go sleddin’ and
skatin’,
An’ every day his father fetched
him to school in the pung
An’ brought him back agin.
We scraped an’ scraped fer
Neddy,
We wanted him to have a education.
We sent him to High School,
An’ then he went up to Boston
to Technology.
He was a minin’ engineer,
An’ doin’ real well,
A credit to his bringin’ up.
But his very first position ther
was an explosion in the mine.
And I’m glad! I’m
glad!
He ain’t here to see me now.
Neddy! Neddy!
I’m your mother still, Neddy.
Don’t turn from me like that.
I can’t abear it. I
can’t! I can’t!
What did you say?
Oh, yes, Sir.
I’m here.
I’m very sorry,
I don’t know what I’m
sayin’.
No, Sir,
Not till after Neddy died.
’Twas the next Winter the
silence come,
I don’t remember noticin’
it afore.
That was five year ago,
An’ it’s been gittin’
worse an’ worse.
I asked Ed to put in a telephone.
I thought ef I felt the whisperin’
comin’ on
I could ring up some o’ th’
folks.
But Ed wouldn’t hear of it.
He said we’d paid so much
for Neddy
We couldn’t hardly git along
as ’twas.
An’ he never understood me
wantin’ to talk.
Well, this year was worse’n
all the others;
We had a terrible spell o’
stormy weather,
An’ the snow lay so thick
You couldn’t see the fences
even.
Out o’ doors was as flat as
the palm o’ my hand,
Ther warn’t a hump or a holler
Fer as you could see.
It was so quiet
The snappin’ o’ the
branches back in the wood-lot
Sounded like pistol shots.
Ed was out all day
Same as usual.
An’ it seemed he talked less’n
ever.
He didn’t even say ‘Good-mornin’’,
once or twice,
An’ jest nodded or shook his
head when I asked him things.
On Monday he said he’d got
to go over to Benton
Fer some oats.
I’d oughter ha’ gone
with him,
But ‘twas washin’ day
An’ I was afeared the fine
weather’d break,
An’ I couldn’t do my
dryin’.
All my life I’d done my work
punctual,
An’ I couldn’t fix my
conscience
To go junketin’ on a washin’-day.
I can’t tell you what that
day was to me.
It dragged an’ dragged,
Fer ther warn’t no Ed
ter break it in the middle
Fer dinner.
Every time I stopped stirrin’
the water
I heerd the whisperin’ all
about me.
I stopped oftener’n I should
To see ef ’twas still ther,
An’ it al’ays was.
An’ gittin’ louder
It seemed ter me.
Once I threw up the winder to feel
the wind.
That seemed most alive somehow.
But the woods looked so kind of
menacin’
I closed it quick
An’ started to mangle’s
hard’s I could,
The squeakin’ was comfortin’.
Well, Ed come home ’bout four.
I seen him down the road,
An’ I run out through the
shed inter th’ barn
To meet him quicker.
I hollered out, ‘Hullo!’
But he didn’t say nothin’,
He jest drove right in
An’ climbed out o’ th’
sleigh
An’ commenced unharnessin’.
I asked him a heap o’ questions;
Who he’d seed
An’ what he’d done.
Once in a while he’d nod or
shake,
But most o’ th’ time
he didn’t do nothin’.
‘Twas gittin’ dark then,
An’ I was in a state,
With the loneliness
An’ Ed payin’ no attention
Like somethin’ warn’t
livin’.
All of a sudden it come,
I don’t know what,
But I jest couldn’t stand
no more.
It didn’t seem ’s though
that was Ed,
An’ it didn’t seem as
though I was me.
I had to break a way out somehow,
Somethin’ was closin’
in
An’ I was stiflin’.
Ed’s loggin’ axe was
ther,
An’ I took it.
Oh, my God!
I can’t see nothin’
else afore me all the time.
I run out inter th’ woods,
Seemed as ef they was pullin’
me;
An’ all the time I was wadin’
through the snow
I seed Ed in front of me
Where I’d laid him.
An’ I see him now.
There! There!
What you holdin’ me fer?
I want ter go to Ed,
He’s bleedin’.
Stop holdin’ me.
I got to go.
I’m comin’, Ed.
I’ll be ther in a minit.
Oh, I’m so tired!
(Faints)