We listened awhile then but heard
no sound in the thicket, although Fred was growling
ominously, his hair on end. As for myself I never
had a more fearful hour than that we suffered before
the light of morning came.
I made no outcry, but clung to my
old companion, trembling. He did not stir for
a few minutes, and then we crept cautiously into the
small hemlocks on one side of the opening.
‘Keep still,’ he whispered, ‘don’t
move er speak.’
Presently we heard a move in the brush
and then quick as a flash Uncle Eb lifted his rifle
and fired in the direction of it Before the loud echo
had gone off in the woods we heard something break
through the brush at a run.
‘’S a man,’ said
Uncle Eb, as he listened. ‘He ain’t
a losin’ no time nuther.’
We sat listening as the sound grew
fainter, and when it ceased entirely Uncle Eb said
he must have got to the road. After a little the
light of the morning began sifting down through the
tree-tops and was greeted with innumerable songs.
‘He done noble,’ said
Uncle Eb, patting the old dog as he rose to poke the
fire. ’Putty good chap I call ‘im!
He can hev half o’ my dinner any time he wants
it.’
‘Who do you suppose it was?’ I enquired.
‘Robbers, I guess,’ he
answered, ‘an’ they’ll be layin’
fer us when we go out, mebbe; but, if they are,
Fred’ll find ’em an’ I’ve got
Ol’ Trusty here ‘n’ I guess thet’ll
take care uv us.’
His rifle was always flattered with
that name of Ol’ Trusty when it had done him
a good turn.
Soon as the light had come clear he
went out in the near woods with dog and rifle and
beat around in the brush. He returned shortly
and said he had seen where they came and went.
’I’d a killed em deader
‘n a door nail,’ said he, laying down the
old rifle, ‘if they’d a come any nearer.’
Then we brought water from the river
and had our breakfast. Fred went on ahead of
us, when we started for the road, scurrying through
the brush on both sides of the trail, as if he knew
what was expected of him. He flushed a number
of partridges and Uncle Eb killed one of them on our
way to the road. We resumed our journey without
any further adventure. It was so smooth and level
under foot that Uncle Eb let me get in the wagon after
Fred was hitched to it The old dog went along soberly
and without much effort, save when we came to hills
or sandy places, when I always got out and ran on
behind. Uncle Eb showed me how to brake the wheels
with a long stick going downhill. I remember how
it hit the dog’s heels at the first down grade,
and how he ran to keep out of the way of it We were
going like mad in half a minute, Uncle Eb coming after
us calling to the dog. Fred only looked over
his shoulder, with a wild eye, at the rattling wagon
and ran the harder. He leaped aside at the bottom
and then we went all in a heap. Fortunately no
harm was done.
‘I declare!’ said Uncle
Eb as he came up to us, puffing like a spent horse,
and picked me up unhurt and began to untangle the harness
of old Fred, ‘I guess he must a thought the
devil was after him.’
The dog growled a little for a moment
and bit at the harness, but coaxing reassured him
and he went along all right again on the level.
At a small settlement the children came out and ran
along beside my wagon, laughing and asking me questions.
Some of them tried to pet the dog, but old Fred kept
to his labour at the heels of Uncle Eb and looked neither
to right nor left. We stopped under a tree by
the side of a narrow brook for our dinner, and one
incident of that meal I think of always when I think
of Uncle Eb. It shows the manner of man he was
and with what understanding and sympathy he regarded
every living thing. In rinsing his teapot he
accidentally poured a bit of water on a big bumble-bee.
The poor creature struggled to lift hill, and then
another downpour caught him and still another until
his wings fell drenched. Then his breast began
heaving violently, his legs stiffened behind him and
he sank, head downward, in the grass. Uncle Eb
saw the death throes of the bee and knelt down and
lifted the dead body by one of its wings.
‘Jes’ look at his velvet
coat,’ he said, ‘an’ his wings all
wet n’ stiff. They’ll never carry
him another journey. It’s too bad a man
has t’ kill every step he takes.’
The bee’s tail was moving faintly
and Uncle Eb laid him out in the warm sunlight and
fanned him awhile with his hat, trying to bring back
the breath of life.
‘Guilty!’ he said, presently,
coming back with a sober face. ’Thet’s
a dead bee. No tellin’ how many was dependent
on him er what plans he bed. Must a gi’n
him a lot o’ pleasure t’ fly round in the
sunlight, workin’ every fair day. ‘S
all over now.’
He had a gloomy face for an hour after
that and many a time, in the days that followed, I
heard him speak of the murdered bee.
We lay resting awhile after dinner
and watching a big city of ants. Uncle Eb told
me how they tilled the soil of the mound every year
and sowed their own kind of grain-a small
white seed like rice-and reaped their harvest
in the late summer, storing the crop in their dry cellars
under ground. He told me also the story of the
ant lion-a big beetle that lives in the
jungles of the grain and the grass-of which
I remember only an outline, more or less imperfect.
Here it is in my own rewording of
his tale: On a bright day one of the little black
folks went off on a long road in a great field of barley.
He was going to another city of his own people to bring
helpers for the harvest. He came shortly to a
sandy place where the barley was thin and the hot
sunlight lay near to the ground. In a little valley
close by the road of the ants he saw a deep pit, in
the sand, with steep sides sloping to a point in the
middle and as big around as a biscuit. Now the
ants are a curious people and go looking for things
that are new and wonderful as they walk abroad, so
they have much to tell worth hearing after a journey.
The little traveller was young and had no fear, so
he left the road and went down to the pit and peeped
over the side of it.
‘What in the world is the meaning
of this queer place?’ he asked himself as he
ran around the rim. In a moment he had stepped
over and the soft sand began to cave and slide beneath
him. Quick as a flash the big lion-beetle rose
up in the centre of the pit and began to reach for
him. Then his legs flew in the caving sand and
the young ant struck his blades in it to hold the
little he could gain. Upward he struggled, leaping
and floundering in the dust. He had got near the
rim and had stopped, clinging to get his breath, when
the lion began flinging the sand at him with his long
feelers. It rose in a cloud and fell on the back
of the ant and pulled at him as it swept down.
He could feel the mighty cleavers of the lion striking
near his hind legs and pulling the sand from under
them. He must go down in a moment and he knew
what that meant. He had heard the old men of
the tribe tell often-how they hold one
helpless and slash him into a dozen pieces. He
was letting go, in despair, when he felt a hand on
his neck. Looking up he saw one of his own people
reaching over the rim, and in a jiffy they had shut
their fangs together. He moved little by little
as the other tagged at him, and in a moment was out
of the trap and could feel the honest earth under
him. When they had got home and told their adventure,
some were for going to slay the beetle.
‘There is never a pit in the
path o’ duty,’ said the wise old chief
of the little black folks. ‘See that you
keep in the straight road.’
‘If our brother had not left
the straight road,’ said one who stood near,
‘he that was in danger would have gone down into
the pit.’
‘It matters much,’ he
answered, ’whether it was kindness or curiosity
that led him out of the road. But he that follows
a fool hath much need of wisdom, for if he save the
fool do ye not see that he hath encouraged folly?’
Of course I had then no proper understanding
of the chiefs counsel, nor do I pretend even to remember
it from that first telling, but the tale was told
frequently in the course of my long acquaintance with
Uncle Eb.
The diary of my good old friend lies
before me as I write, the leaves turned yellow and
the entries dim. I remember how stern he grew
of an evening when he took out this sacred little
record of our wanderings and began to write in it
with his stub of a pencil. He wrote slowly and
read and reread each entry with great care as I held
the torch for him. ’Be still, boy-be
still,’ he would say when some pressing interrogatory
passed my lips, and then he would bend to his work
while the point of his pencil bored further into my
patience. Beginning here I shall quote a few
entries from the diary as they cover, with sufficient
detail, an uneventful period of our journey.
August 20 Killed a partridge
today. Biled it in the teapot for dinner.
Went goo mild.
August 21 Seen a deer this morning.
Fred fit ag’in. Come near spilin’
the wagon. Hed to stop and fix the e mild.
August 22 Clumb a tree this morning
after wild grapes. Come near falling. Gin
me a little crick in the back. Willie hes
got a stun bruz mild.
August 23 Went in swinmun.
Ketched a few fish before breakfus’. Got
provisions an’ two case knives an’ one
fork, also one tin pie-plate. Used same to fry
fish for dinne mild.
August 24 Got some spirits for
Willie to rub on my back. Boots wearing out.
Terrible hot. Lay in the shade in the heat of
the day. Gypsies come an’ camped by us
tonigh mild.
I remember well the coming of those
gypsies. We were fishing in sight of the road
and our fire was crackling on the smooth cropped shore.
The big wagons of the gypsies-there were
four of them as red and beautiful as those of a circus
caravan-halted about sundown while the men
came over a moment to scan the field. Presently
they went back and turned their wagons into the siding
and began to unhitch. Then a lot of barefooted
children, and women under gay shawls, overran the field
gathering wood and making ready for night. Meanwhile
swarthy drivers took the horses to water and tethered
them with long ropes so they could crop the grass of
the roadside.
One tall, bony man, with a face almost
as black as that of an Indian, brought a big iron
pot and set it up near the water. A big stew of
beef bone, leeks and potatoes began to cook shortly,
and I remember it had such a goodly smell I was minded
to ask them for a taste of it. A little city
of strange people had surrounded us of a sudden.
Uncle Eb thought of going on, but the night was coming
fast and there would be no moon and we were footsore
and hungry. Women and children came over to our
fire, after supper, and made more of me than I liked.
I remember taking refuge between the knees of Uncle
Eb, and Fred sat close in front of us growling fiercely
when they came too near. They stood about, looking
down at us and whispered together, and one young miss
of the tribe came up and tried to kiss me in spite
of Fred’s warnings: She had flashing black
eyes and hair as dark as the night, that fell in a
curling mass upon her shoulders; but, somehow, I had
a mighty fear of her and fought with desperation to
keep my face from the touch of her red lips. Uncle
Eb laughed and held Fred by the collar, and I began
to cry out in terror, presently, when, to my great
relief, she let go and ran away to her own people.
They all went away to their wagons, save one young
man, who was tall with light hair and a fair skin,
and who looked like none of the other gypsies.
‘Take care of yourself,’
he whispered, as soon as the rest had gone. ‘These
are bad people. You’d better be off.’
The young man left us and Uncle Eb
began to pack up at once. They were going to
bed in their wagons when we came away. I stood
in the basket and Fred drew the wagon that had in
it only a few bundles. A mile or more further
on we came to a lonely, deserted cabin close to the
road. It had began to thunder in the distance
and the wind was blowing damp.
‘Guess nobody lives here,’
said Uncle Eb as he turned in at the sagging gate
and began to cross the little patch of weeds and hollyhocks
behind it ‘Door’s half down, but I guess
it’ll de better’n no house. Goin’
t’ rain sartin.’
I was nodding a little about then,
I remember; but I was wide awake when he took me out
of the basket The old house stood on a high hill, and
we could see the stars of heaven through the ruined
door and one of the back windows. Uncle Eb lifted
the leaning door a little and shoved it aside.
We heard then a quick stir in the old house-a
loud and ghostly rattle it seems now as I think of
it-like that made by linen shaking on the
line. Uncle Eb took a step backward as if it had
startled him.
‘Guess it’s nuthin’
to be ‘fraid of;’ he said, feeling in the
pet of his coat He had struck a match in a moment.
By its flickering light I could see only a bit of
rubbish on the floor.
‘Full o’ white owls,’
said he, stepping inside, where the rustling was now
continuous. ‘They’ll do us no harm.’
I could see them now flying about
under the low ceiling. Uncle Eb gathered an gathered
an armful of grass and clover, in the near field,
and spread it in a corner well away from the ruined
door and windows. Covered with our blanket it
made a fairly comfortable bed. Soon as we had
lain down, the rain began to rattle on the shaky roof
and flashes of lightning lit every corner of the old
room.
I have had, ever, a curious love of
storms, and, from the time when memory began its record
in my brain, it has delighted me to hear at night
the roar of thunder and see the swift play of the lightning.
I lay between Uncle Eb and the old dog, who both went
asleep shortly. Less wearied I presume than either
of them, for I had done none of the carrying, and
had slept along time that day in the shade of a tree,
I was awake an hour or more after they were snoring.
Every flash lit the old room like the full glare of
the noonday sun. I remember it showed me an old
cradle, piled full of rubbish, a rusty scythe hung
in the rotting sash of a window, a few lengths of
stove-pipe and a plough in one corner, and three staring
white owls that sat on a beam above the doorway.
The rain roared on the old roof shortly, and came dripping
down through the bare boards above us. A big
drop struck in my face and I moved a little.
Then I saw what made me hold my breath a moment and
cover my head with the shawl. A flash of lightning
revealed a tall, ragged man looking in at the doorway.
I lay close to Uncle Eb imagining much evil of that
vision but made no outcry.
Snugged in between my two companions
I felt reasonably secure and soon fell asleep.
The sun, streaming in at the open door, roused me in
the morning. At the beginning of each day of
our journey I woke to find Uncle Eb cooking at the
fire. He was lying beside me, this morning, his
eyes open.
‘Fraid I’m hard sick,’ he said as
I kissed him.
‘What’s the matter?’ I enquired.
He struggled to a sitting posture, groaning so it
went to my heart.
‘Rheumatiz,’ he answered presently.
He got to his feet, little by little,
and every move he made gave him great pain. With
one hand on his cane and the other on my shoulder he
made his way slowly to the broken gate. Even now
I can see clearly the fair prospect of that high place-a
valley reaching to distant hills and a river winding
through it, glimmering in the sunlight; a long wooded
ledge breaking into naked, grassy slopes on one side
of the valley and on the other a deep forest rolling
to the far horizon; between them big patches of yellow
grain and white buckwheat and green pasture land and
greener meadows and the straight road, with white houses
on either side of it, glorious in a double fringe
of golden rod and purple aster and yellow John’s-wort
and the deep blue of the Jacob’s ladder.
‘Looks a good deal like the
promised land,’ said Uncle Eb. ’Hain’t
got much further t’ go.’
He sat on the rotting threshold while
I pulled some of the weeds in front of the doorstep
and brought kindlings out of the house and built a
fire. While we were eating I told Uncle Eb of
the man that I had seen in the night.
‘Guess you was dreamin’,’
he said, and, while I stood firm for the reality of
that I had seen, it held our thought only for a brief
moment. My companion was unable to walk that
day so we lay by, in the shelter of the old house,
eating as little of our scanty store as we could do
with. I went to a spring near by for water and
picked a good mess of blackberries that I hid away
until supper time, so as to surprise Uncle Eb.
A longer day than that we spent in the old house, after
our coming, I have never known. I made the room
a bit tidier and gathered more grass for bedding.
Uncle Eb felt better as the day grew warm. I had
a busy time of it that morning bathing his back in
the spirits and rubbing until my small arms ached.
I have heard him tell often how vigorously I worked
that day and how I would say: ‘I’ll
take care o’ you, Uncle Eb-won’t
I, Uncle Eb?’ as my little hands flew with redoubled
energy on his bare skin. That finished we lay
down sleeping until the sun was low, when I made ready
the supper that took the last of everything we had
to eat. Uncle Eb was more like himself that evening
and, sitting up in the corner, as the darkness came,
told me the story of Squirreltown and Frog Ferry,
which came to be so great a standby in those days that,
even now, I can recall much of the language in which
he told it.
‘Once,’ he said, ’there
was a boy thet hed two grey squirrels in a cage.
They kep’ thinkin’ o’ the time they
used t’ scamper in the tree-tops an’ make
nests an’ eat all the nuts they wanted an’
play I spy in the thick leaves. An they grew
poor an’ looked kind o’ ragged an’
sickly an’ downhearted. When he brought
’em outdoors they used t’ look up in the
trees an’ run in the wire wheel as if they thought
they could get there sometime if they kep’ goin’.
As the boy grew older he see it was cruel to keep
’em shet in a cage, but he’d hed em a long
time an’ couldn’t bear t’ give ’em
up.
‘One day he was out in the woods
a little back o’ the clearin’. All
t’ once he heard a swift holler. ‘Twas
nearby an’ echoed so he couldn’t tell
which way it come from. He run fer home
but the critter ketched ’im before he got out
o’ the woods an’ took ‘im into a
cave, an’ give ‘im t’ the little
swifts t’ play with. The boy cried terrible.
The swifts they laughed an’ nudged each other.
’"O ain’t he cute!”
says one. “He’s a beauty!” says
another. “Cur’us how he can git along
without any fur,” says the mother swift, as she
run er nose over ’is bare foot. He thought
of ‘is folks waitin’ fer him an’
he begged em t’ let ‘im go. Then
they come an’ smelt ’im over.
‘"Yer sech a cunnin’ critter,”
says the mother swift, “we couldn’t spare
ye.”
’"Want to see my mother,” says the boy
sobbing.
‘"Couldn’t afford t’
let ye go-yer so cute,” says the swift.
“Bring the poor critter a bone an’ a bit
o’ snake meat.”
’The boy couldn’t eat.
They fixed a bed fer him, but ’twant clean.
The feel uv it made his back ache an’ the smell
uv it made him sick to his stomach.
’"When the swifts hed comp’ny
they ’d bring ’em overt’ look at
him there ‘n his dark corner.” “S
a boy,” said the mother swift pokin’ him
with a long stick “Wouldn’t ye like t’
see ’im run?” Then she punched him until
he got up an’ run ’round the cave
fer his life. Happened one day et a very
benevolent swift come int’ the cave.
’"‘S a pity t’ keep
the boy here,” said he; “he looks bad.”
’"But he makes fun fer the children,”
said the swift.
’"Fun that makes misery is only fit fer
a fool,” said the visitor.
‘They let him go thet day.
Soon as he got hum he thought o’ the squirrels
an’ was tickled t’ find ’em alive.
He tak ’em off to an island, in the middle of
a big lake, thet very day, an’ set the cage on
the shore n’ opened it He thought he would come
back sometime an’ see how they was ginin’
along. The cage was made of light wire an’
hed a tin bottom fastened to a big piece o’
plank. At fust they was ‘fraid t’
leave it an’ peeked out o’ the door an’
scratched their heads’s if they thought it a
resky business. After awhile one stepped out careful
an’ then the other followed. They tried
t’ climb a tree, but their nails was wore off
an’ they kep’ fallin’ back.
Then they went off ‘n the brush t’ find
some nuts. There was only pines an’ poppies
an’ white birch an’ a few berry bushes
on the island. They went t’ the water’s
edge on every side, but there was nuthin there a squirrel
ud give a flirt uv his tail fer. ‘Twas
near dark when they come back t’ the cage hungry
as tew bears. They found a few crumbs o’
bread in the cup an’ divided ’em even.
Then they went t’ bed ‘n their ol’
nest.
‘It hed been rainin’ a
week in the mount’ins. Thet night the lake
rose a foot er more an’ ‘fore mornin’
the cage begun t’ rock a teenty bit as the water
lifted the plank. They slep’ all the better
fer thet an’ they dreamed they was up in
a tree at the end uv a big bough. The cage begun
t’ sway sideways and then it let go o’
the shore an’ spun ’round once er twice
an’ sailed out ‘n the deep water.
There was a light breeze blowin’ offshore an’
purty soon it was pitchin’ like a ship in the
sea. But the two squirrels was very tired an’
never woke up ’til sunrise. They got a
terrible scare when they see the water ’round
’em an’ felt the motion o’ the ship.
Both on ’em ran into the wire wheel an’
that bore down the stern o’ the ship so the
under wires touched the water. They made it spin
like a buzz saw an’ got their clothes all wet.
The ship went faster when they worked the wheel, an’
bime bye they got tired an’ come out on the
main deck. The water washed over it a little so
they clim up the roof thet was a kin’ uv a hurricane
deck. It made the ship sway an’ rock fearful
but they hung on ‘midships, an’ clung t’
the handle that stuck up like a top mast. Their
big tails was spread over their shoulders, an’
the wind rose an’ the ship went faster ’n
faster. They could see the main shore where the
big woods come down t’ the water ‘n’
all the while it kep’ a comin’ nearer
‘n’ nearer. But they was so hungry
didn’t seem possible they could live to git
there.
‘Ye know squirrels are a savin’
people. In the day o’ plenty they think
o’ the day o’ poverty an’ lay by
fer it. All at once one uv ’em thought
uv a few kernels o’ corn, he hed pushed through
a little crack in the tin floor one day a long time
ago. It happened there was quite a hole under
the crack an’ each uv ’em bad stored some
kernels unbeknown t’ the other. So they
hed a good supper ‘n’ some left fer
a bite ’n the mornin’. ’Fore
daylight the ship made her pott ‘n’ lay
to, ’side liv a log in a little cove. The
bullfrogs jumped on her main deck an’ begun
t’ holler soon as she hove to: “all
ashore! all ashore! all ashore!” The two squirrels
woke up but lay quiet ’til the sun rose.
Then they come out on the log ‘et looked like
a long dock an’ run ashore ‘n’ foun’
some o’ their own folks in the bush. An’
when they bed tol’ their story the ol’
father o’ the tribe got up ‘n a tree an’
hollered himself hoarse preachin’ ’bout
how ‘t paid t’ be savin’.
‘"An’ we should learn
t’ save our wisdom es well es our nuts,”
said a sassy brother; “fer each needs his
own wisdom fer his own affairs.”
’An the little ship went back
‘n’ forth ‘cross the cove as the
win’ blew. The squirrels hed many a fine
ride in her an’ the frogs were the ferrymen.
An’ all ’long thet shore ’twas known
es Frog Ferry ’mong the squirrel folks.’
It was very dark when he finished
the tale an’ as we lay gaping a few minutes
after my last query about those funny people of the
lake margin I could hear nothing but the chirping
of the crickets. I was feeling a bit sleepy when
I heard the boards creak above our heads. Uncle
Eli raised himself and lay braced upon his elbow listening.
In a few moments we heard a sound as of someone coming
softly down the ladder at the other end of the room.
It was so dark I could see nothing.
‘Who’s there?’ Uncle Eb demanded.
‘Don’t p’int thet
gun at me,’ somebody whispered. ’This
is my home and I warn ye t’ leave it er I’ll
do ye harm.’