I had been stage-ridden and bewildered
all day, and when we swept down with the darkness
into the Arcadian hamlet of “Wingdam,”
I resolved to go no farther, and rolled out in a gloomy
and dyspeptic state. The effects of a mysterious
pie, and some sweetened carbonic acid known to the
proprietor of the “Half-Way House” as “lemming
sody,” still oppressed me. Even the facetiae
of the gallant expressman who knew everybody’s
Christian name along the route, who rained letters,
newspapers, and bundles from the top of the stage,
whose legs frequently appeared in frightful proximity
to the wheels, who got on and off while we were going
at full speed, whose gallantry, energy, and superior
knowledge of travel crushed all us other passengers
to envious silence, and who just then was talking
with several persons and manifestly doing something
else at the same time, even this had failed
to interest me. So I stood gloomily, clutching
my shawl and carpet-bag, and watched the stage roll
away, taking a parting look at the gallant expressman
as he hung on the top rail with one leg, and lit his
cigar from the pipe of a running footman. I then
turned toward the Wingdam Temperance Hotel.
It may have been the weather, or it
may have been the pie, but I was not impressed favorably
with the house. Perhaps it was the name extending
the whole length of the building, with a letter under
each window, making the people who looked out dreadfully
conspicuous. Perhaps it was that “Temperance”
always suggested to my mind rusks and weak tea.
It was uninviting. It might have been called
the “Total Abstinence” Hotel, from the
lack of anything to intoxicate or inthrall the senses.
It was designed with an eye to artistic dreariness.
It was so much too large for the settlement, that
it appeared to be a very slight improvement on out-doors.
It was unpleasantly new. There was the forest
flavor of dampness about it, and a slight spicing
of pine. Nature outraged, but not entirely subdued,
sometimes broke out afresh in little round, sticky,
resinous tears on the doors and windows. It seemed
to me that boarding there must seem like a perpetual
picnic. As I entered the door, a number of the
regular boarders rushed out of a long room, and set
about trying to get the taste of something out of their
mouths, by the application of tobacco in various forms.
A few immediately ranged themselves around the fireplace,
with their legs over each other’s chairs, and
in that position silently resigned themselves to indigestion.
Remembering the pie, I waived the invitation of the
landlord to supper, but suffered myself to be conducted
into the sitting-room. “Mine host”
was a magnificent-looking, heavily bearded specimen
of the animal man. He reminded me of somebody
or something connected with the drama. I was
sitting beside the fire, mutely wondering what it
could be, and trying to follow the particular chord
of memory thus touched, into the intricate past, when
a little delicate-looking woman appeared at the door,
and, leaning heavily against the casing, said in an
exhausted tone, “Husband!” As the landlord
turned toward her, that particular remembrance flashed
before me in a single line of blank verse. It
was this: “Two souls with but one single
thought, two hearts that beat as one.”
It was Ingomar and Parthenia his wife.
I imagined a different denouement from the play.
Ingomar had taken Parthenia back to the mountains,
and kept a hotel for the benefit of the Alemanni,
who resorted there in large numbers. Poor Parthenia
was pretty well fagged out, and did all the work without
“help.” She had two “young barbarians,”
a boy and a girl. She was faded, but still good-looking.
I sat and talked with Ingomar, who
seemed perfectly at home and told me several stories
of the Alemanni, all bearing a strong flavor of the
wilderness, and being perfectly in keeping with the
house. How he, Ingomar, had killed a certain
dreadful “bar,” whose skin was just up
“yar,” over his bed. How he, Ingomar,
had killed several “bucks,” whose skins
had been prettily fringed and embroidered by Parthenia,
and even now clothed him. How he, Ingomar, had
killed several “Injins,” and was once
nearly scalped himself. All this with that ingenious
candor which is perfectly justifiable in a barbarian,
but which a Greek might feel inclined to look upon
as “blowing.” Thinking of the wearied
Parthenia, I began to consider for the first time
that perhaps she had better married the old Greek.
Then she would at least have always looked neat.
Then she would not have worn a woollen dress flavored
with all the dinners of the past year. Then she
would not have been obliged to wait on the table with
her hair half down. Then the two children would
not have hung about her skirts with dirty fingers,
palpably dragging her down day by day. I suppose
it was the pie which put such heartless and improper
ideas in my head, and so I rose up and told Ingomar
I believed I’d go to bed. Preceded by that
redoubtable barbarian and a flaring tallow candle,
I followed him up stairs to my room. It was the
only single room he had, he told me; he had built
it for the convenience of married parties who might
stop here, but, that event not happening yet, he had
left it half furnished. It had cloth on one side,
and large cracks on the other. The wind, which
always swept over Wingdam at night-time, puffed through
the apartment from different apertures. The window
was too small for the hole in the side of the house
where it hung, and rattled noisily. Everything
looked cheerless and dispiriting. Before Ingomar
left me, he brought that “bar-skin,” and
throwing it over the solemn bier which stood in one
corner, told me he reckoned that would keep me warm,
and then bade me good night. I undressed myself,
the light blowing out in the middle of that ceremony,
crawled under the “bar-skin,” and tried
to compose myself to sleep.
But I was staringly wide awake.
I heard the wind sweep down the mountain-side, and
toss the branches of the melancholy pine, and then
enter the house, and try all the doors along the passage.
Sometimes strong currents of air blew my hair all
over the pillow, as with strange whispering breaths.
The green timber along the walls seemed to be sprouting,
and sent a dampness even through the “bar-skin.”
I felt like Robinson Crusoe in his tree, with the
ladder pulled up, or like the rocked baby
of the nursery song. After lying awake half an
hour, I regretted having stopped at Wingdam; at the
end of the third quarter, I wished I had not gone
to bed; and when a restless hour passed, I got up
and dressed myself. There had been a fire down
in the big room. Perhaps it was still burning.
I opened the door and groped my way along the passage,
vocal with the snores of the Alemanni and the whistling
of the night wind; I partly fell down stairs, and
at last entering the big room, saw the fire still
burning. I drew a chair toward it, poked it with
my foot, and was astonished to see, by the upspringing
flash, that Parthenia was sitting there also, holding
a faded-looking baby.
I asked her why she was sitting up.
“She did not go to bed on Wednesday
night before the mail arrived, and then she awoke
her husband, and there were passengers to ’tend
to.”
“Did she not get tired sometimes?”
“A little, but Abner”
(the barbarian’s Christian name) “had promised
to get her more help next spring, if business was
good.”
“How many boarders had she?”
“She believed about forty came
to regular meals, and there was transient custom,
which was as much as she and her husband could ’tend
to. But he did a great deal of work.”
“What work?”
“O, bringing in the wood, and looking after
the traders’ things.”
“How long had she been married?”
“About nine years. She
had lost a little girl and boy. Three children
living. He was from Illinois. She from
Boston. Had an education (Boston Female High
School, Geometry, Algebra, a little Latin
and Greek). Mother and father died. Came
to Illinois alone, to teach school. Saw him yes a
love match.” ("Two souls,” etc., etc.)
“Married and emigrated to Kansas. Thence
across the Plains to California. Always on the
outskirts of civilization. He liked it.
“She might sometimes have wished
to go home. Would like to on account of her children.
Would like to give them an education. Had taught
them a little herself, but couldn’t do much
on account of other work. Hoped that the boy
would be like his father, strong and hearty. Was
fearful the girl would be more like her. Had
often thought she was not fit for a pioneer’s
wife.”
“Why?”
“O, she was not strong enough,
and had seen some of his friends’ wives in Kansas
who could do more work. But he never complained, was
so kind.” ("Two souls,” etc.)
Sitting there with her head leaning
pensively on one hand, holding the poor, wearied,
and limp-looking baby wearily on the other arm, dirty,
drabbled, and forlorn, with the firelight playing upon
her features no longer fresh or young, but still refined
and delicate, and even in her grotesque slovenliness
still bearing a faint reminiscence of birth and breeding,
it was not to be wondered that I did not fall into
excessive raptures over the barbarian’s kindness.
Emboldened by my sympathy, she told me how she had
given up, little by little, what she imagined to be
the weakness of her early education, until she found
that she acquired but little strength in her new experience.
How, translated to a backwoods society, she was hated
by the women, and called proud and “fine,”
and how her dear husband lost popularity on that account
with his fellows. How, led partly by his roving
instincts, and partly from other circumstances, he
started with her to California. An account of
that tedious journey. How it was a dreary, dreary
waste in her memory, only a blank plain marked by
a little cairn of stones, a child’s
grave. How she had noticed that little Willie
failed. How she had called Abner’s attention
to it, but, man-like, he knew nothing about children,
and pooh-poohed it, and was worried by the stock.
How it happened that after they had passed Sweetwater,
she was walking beside the wagon one night, and looking
at the western sky, and she heard a little voice say
“Mother.” How she looked into the
wagon and saw that little Willie was sleeping comfortably
and did not wish to wake him. How that in a few
moments more she heard the same voice saying “Mother.”
How she came back to the wagon and leaned down over
him, and felt his breath upon her face, and again
covered him up tenderly, and once more resumed her
weary journey beside him, praying to God for his recovery.
How with her face turned to the sky she heard the
same voice saying “Mother,” and directly
a great bright star shot away from its brethren and
expired. And how she knew what had happened,
and ran to the wagon again only to pillow a little
pinched and cold white face upon her weary bosom.
The thin red hands went up to her eyes here, and for
a few moments she sat still. The wind tore round
the house and made a frantic rush at the front door,
and from his couch of skins in the inner room Ingomar,
the barbarian, snored peacefully.
“Of course she always found
a protector from insult and outrage in the great courage
and strength of her husband?”
“O yes; when Ingomar was with
her she feared nothing. But she was nervous and
had been frightened once!”
“How?”
“They had just arrived in California.
They kept house then, and had to sell liquor to traders.
Ingomar was hospitable, and drank with everybody,
for the sake of popularity and business, and Ingomar
got to like liquor, and was easily affected by it.
And how one night there was a boisterous crowd in
the bar-room; she went in and tried to get him away,
but only succeeded in awakening the coarse gallantry
of the half-crazed revellers. And how, when she
had at last got him in the room with her frightened
children, he sank down on the bed in a stupor, which
made her think the liquor was drugged. And how
she sat beside him all night, and near morning heard
a step in the passage, and, looking toward the door,
saw the latch slowly moving up and down, as if somebody
were trying it. And how she shook her husband,
and tried to waken him, but without effect. And
how at last the door yielded slowly at the top (it
was bolted below), as if by a gradual pressure without;
and how a hand protruded through the opening.
And how as quick as lightning she nailed that hand
to the wall with her scissors (her only weapon), but
the point broke, and somebody got away with a fearful
oath. How she never told her husband of it, for
fear he would kill that somebody; but how on one day
a stranger called here, and as she was handing him
his coffee, she saw a queer triangular scar on the
back of his hand.”
She was still talking, and the wind
was still blowing, and Ingomar was still snoring from
his couch of skins, when there was a shout high up
the straggling street, and a clattering of hoofs, and
rattling of wheels. The mail had arrived.
Parthenia ran with the faded baby to awaken Ingomar,
and almost simultaneously the gallant expressman stood
again before me addressing me by my Christian name,
and inviting me to drink out of a mysterious black
bottle. The horses were speedily watered, and
the business of the gallant expressman concluded, and,
bidding Parthenia good by, I got on the stage, and
immediately fell asleep, and dreamt of calling on
Parthenia and Ingomar, and being treated with pie
to an unlimited extent, until I woke up the next morning
in Sacramento. I have some doubts as to whether
all this was not a dyspeptic dream, but I never witness
the drama, and hear that noble sentiment concerning
“Two souls,” etc., without thinking
of Wingdam and poor Parthenia.