I remember as well as though it were
yesterday the first time I met Auntie Sue.
It happened during my first roaming
visit to the Ozarks, when I had wandered by chance,
one day, into the Elbow Rock neighborhood. Twenty
years it was, at least, before the time of this story.
She was standing in the door of her little schoolhouse,
the ruins of which you may still see, halfway up the
long hill from the log house by the river, where the
most of this story was lived.
It was that season of the year when
the gold and brown of our Ozark Hills is overlaid
with a filmy veil of delicate blue haze and the world
is hushed with the solemn sweetness of the passing
of the summer. And as the old gentlewoman stood
there in the open door of that rustic temple of learning,
with the deep-shadowed, wooded hillside in the background,
and, in front, the rude clearing with its crooked rail
fence along which the scarlet sumac flamed, I thought, as
I still think, after all these years, that
I had never before seen such a woman.
Fifty years had gone into the making
of that sterling character which was builded upon
a foundation of many generations of noble ancestors.
Without home or children of her own, the life strength
of her splendid womanhood had been given to the teaching
of boys and girls. An old-maid schoolteacher?
Yes, if you will. But, as I saw her
standing there that day, tall and slender,
dressed in a simple gown that was fitting to her work, there
was a queenly dignity, a stately sweetness, in her
bearing that made me feel, somehow, as if I had come
unexpectedly into the presence of royalty. Not
the royalty of caste and court and station with their
glittering pretenses of superiority and their superficial
claims to distinction, I do not mean that;
I mean that true royalty which needs no caste or court
or station but makes itself felt because it is
She did not notice me at first, for
the noise of the children at play in the yard covered
the sound of my approach, and she was looking far,
far away, over the river which lay below at the foot
of the hill; over the forest-clad mountains in the
glory of their brown and gold; over the vast sweep
of the tree-crowned Ozark ridges that receded wave
after wave into the blue haze until, in the vastness
of the distant sky, they were lost. And something
made me know that, in the moment’s respite from
her task, the woman was looking even beyond the sky
itself.
Her profile, clean-chiselled, but
daintily formed, was beautiful in its gentle strength.
Her hair was soft and silvery like the gray mist of
the river in the morning. Then she turned to
greet me, and I saw her eyes. Boy that I was
then, and not given overmuch to serious thought, I
knew that the high, unwavering purpose, the loving
sympathy, and tender understanding that shone in the
calm depth of those eyes could belong only to one
who habitually looks unafraid beyond all earthly scenes.
Only those who have learned thus to look beyond the
material horizon of our little day have that beautiful
inner light which shone in the eyes of Auntie Sue the
teacher of a backwoods school.
Auntie Sue had come to the Elbow Rock
neighborhood the summer preceding that fall when I
first met her. She had grown too old, she said,
with her delightful little laugh, to be of much use
in the larger schools of the more thickly populated
sections of the country. But she was still far
too young, she stoutly maintained, to be altogether
useless.
Tom Warden, who lived just over the
ridge from the schoolhouse, and who was blessed with
the largest wife, the largest family, and the most
pretentious farm in the county, had kinsfolk somewhere
in Illinois. Through these relatives of the Ozark
farmer Miss Susan Wakefield had learned of the needs
of the Elbow Rock school, and so, finally, had come
into the hills. It was the influential Tom who
secured for her the modest position. It was the
motherly Mrs. Tom who made her at home in the Warden
household. It was the Warden boys and girls who
first called her “Auntie Sue.” But
it was Auntie Sue herself who won so large a place
in the hearts of the simple mountain folk of the district
that she held her position year after year, until
she finally gave up teaching altogether.
Not one of her Ozark friends ever
came to know in detail the history of this remarkable
woman’s life. It was known in a general
way that she was born in Connecticut; that she had
a brother somewhere in some South-American country;
that two other brothers had been killed in the Civil
War; that she had taught in the lower and intermediate
grades of public schools in various places all the
years of her womanhood. Also, it was known that
she had never married.
“And that,” said Uncle
Lige Potter, voicing the unanimous opinion, of the
countryside, “is a doggone funny thing and plumb
unnatural, considerin’ the kind of woman she
is.”
To which Lem Jordan, who
was then living with his fourth wife, and might therefore
be held to speak with a degree of authority, added:
“Hit sure is a dad burned shame, an’ a
plumb disgrace to the men of this here country, when
you come to look at the sort of wimmen most of ’em
are a marryin’ most of the time.”
Another matter of universal and never-failing
interest to the mountain folk was the unprecedented
number of letters that Auntie Sue received and wrote.
That some of these letters written by their backwoods
teacher were addressed to men and women of such prominence
in the world that their names were known even to that
remote Ozark district was a source of no little pride
to Auntie Sue’s immediate neighbors, and served
to mark her in their eyes with no small distinction.
It was during the fourth year of her
life amid the scenes of this story, as
I recall time, that Auntie Sue invested
the small savings of her working years in the little
log house by the river and the eighty acres of land
known as the “Old Bill Wilson place.”
The house was a substantial building
of three rooms, a lean-to kitchen, and a porch overlooking
the river. The log barn, with “Prince,”
a gentle old horse, and “Bess,” a mild-mannered,
brindle cow, completed the modest establishment.
About thirty acres of the land were cleared and under
cultivation of a sort. The remaining acreage was
in timber. The price, under the kindly and expert
supervision of Tom Warden, was fifteen dollars an
acre. But Auntie Sue always laughingly insisted
that she really paid fifty cents an acre for the land
and fourteen dollars and a half an acre for the sunsets.
The tillable land, except for the
garden, she “let out on shares,” always
under the friendly guardianship of neighbor Tom; while
Tom’s boys cared for the little garden in season,
and saw to it that the woodpile was always ample and
ready for the stove. And, in addition to these
fixed and regular homely services, there were many
offerings of helpful hands whenever other needs arose;
for, as time passed, there came to be in all the Elbow
Rock district scarce a man, young or old, who did not
now and then honor himself by doing some little job
for Auntie Sue; while the women and girls, in the
same neighborly spirit, brought from their own humble
households many tokens of their loving thoughtfulness.
And never did one visit that little log house by the
river without the consciousness of something received
from the silvery-haired old teacher a something
intangible, perhaps, which they could not have expressed
in words, but which, nevertheless, enriched the lives
of those simple mountain people with a very real joy
and a very tangible happiness.
For six years, Auntie Sue continued
teaching the Elbow Rock school; climbing
the hill in the morning from her log house by the
river to the cabin schoolhouse in the clearing on the
mountain-side above; returning in the late afternoon,
when her day’s work was over, down the winding
road to her little home, there to watch, from the porch
that overlooked the river, the sunset in the evening.
And every year the daily climb grew a little harder;
the days of work grew a little longer; she went down
the hill in the afternoon a little slower. And
every year the sunsets were to her eyes more beautiful;
the evening skies to her understanding glowed with
richer meaning; the twilight hours filled her heart
with a deeper peace.
And so, at last, her teaching days
were over; that is, she taught no more in the log
schoolhouse in the clearing on the mountain-side.
But in her little home beside the river she continued
her work; not from text-books, indeed, but as all
such souls must continue to teach, until the sun sets
for the last time upon their mortal days.
Work-worn, toil-hardened mountaineer
mothers, whose narrow world denied them so many of
the finer thoughts and things, came to counsel with
this childless woman, and to learn from her a little
of the art of contentment and happiness. Strong
men, of rude dress and speech, whose lives were as
rough as the hills in which they were reared, and whose
thoughts were often as crude as their half-savage and
sometimes lawless customs, came to sit at the feet
of this gentle one, who received them all with such
kindly interest and instinctive understanding.
And young men and girls came, drawn by the magic that
was hers, to confide in this woman who listened with
such rare tact and loving sympathy to their troubles
and their dreams, and who, in the deepest things of
their young lives, was mother to them all.
Nor were the mountain folk her only
disciples. Always there were the letters she
continued to write, addressed to almost every corner
of the land. And every year there would come,
for a week or a month, at different times during the
summer, men and women from the great world of larger
affairs who had need of the strength and courage and
patience and hope they never failed to find in that
little log house by the river. And so, in time,
it came to be known that those letters written by
Auntie Sue went to men and women who, in their childhood
school days, had received from her their first lessons
in writing; and that her visitors, many of them distinguished
in the world of railroads and cities, were of that
large circle of busy souls who had never ceased to
be her pupils.
Thus it came that the garden was made
a little larger, and two rooms were added to the house,
with other modest improvements, to accommodate Auntie
Sue’s grown-up boys and girls when they came
to visit her. But never was there a hired servant,
so that her guests must do their own household tasks,
because, Auntie Sue said, that was good for them and
mostly what they needed.
It should also be said here that among
her many pupils who lived beyond the sky-line of the
far, blue hills, not one knew more of the real secret
of Auntie Sue’s life and character than did the
Ozark mountaineers of the Elbow Rock district, among
whom she had chosen to pass the evening of her day.
Then came one who learned the secret.
He learned but that is my story. I
must not tell the secret here.