CHAPTER I.
FIRST YEARS.
Many years ago, before railroads were
thought of, a company of Connecticut farmers, who
had heard marvellous stories of the richness of the
land in the West, sold their farms, packed up their
goods, bade adieu to their friends, and with their
families started for Ohio.
After weeks of travel over dusty roads,
they came to a beautiful valley, watered by a winding
brook. The hills around were fair and sunny.
There were groves of oaks, and maples, and lindens.
The air was fragrant with honeysuckle and jasmine.
There was plenty of game. The swift-footed deer
browsed the tender grass upon the hills. Squirrels
chattered in the trees and the ringdoves cooed in
the depths of the forest. The place was so fertile
and fair, so pleasant and peaceful, that the emigrants
made it their home, and called it New Hope.
They built a mill upon the brook.
They laid out a wide, level street, and a public square,
erected a school-house, and then a church. One
of their number opened a store. Other settlers
came, and then, as the years passed by, the village
rang with the shouts of children pouring from the
school-house for a frolic upon the square. Glorious
times they had beneath the oaks and maples.
One of the jolliest of the boys was
Paul Parker, only son of Widow Parker, who lived in
a little old house on the outskirts of the village,
shaded by a great maple. Her husband died when
Paul was in his cradle. Paul’s grandfather
was still living. The people called him “Old
Pensioner Parker,” for he fought at Bunker Hill,
and received a pension from government. He was
hale and hearty, though more than eighty years of
age.
The Pensioner was the main support
of the family; but by keeping a cow, a pig, turkeys
and chickens, by selling milk and eggs, which Paul
carried to their customers, they brought the years
round without running in debt. Paul’s pantaloons
had a patch on each knee, but he laughed just as loud
and whistled just as cheerily for all that.
In summer he went barefoot. He
did not have to turn out at every mud-puddle, and
he could plash into the mill-pond and give the frogs
a crack over the head without stopping to take off
stockings and shoes. Paul did not often have
a dinner of roast beef, but he had an abundance of
bean porridge, brown bread, and milk.
“Bean porridge is wholesome
food, Paul,” said his grandfather. “When
I was a boy we used to say,
’Bean porridge hot,
Bean porridge cold,
Bean porridge best
Nine days old.’
The wood-choppers in winter used to
freeze it into cakes and carry it into the woods.
Many a time I have made a good dinner on a chunk of
frozen porridge.”
The Pensioner remembered what took
place in his early years, but he lost his reckoning
many times a day upon what was going on in the town.
He loved to tell stories, and Paul was a willing listener.
Pleasant winter-evenings they had in the old kitchen,
the hickory logs blazing on the hearth, the tea-kettle
singing through its nose, the clock ticking soberly,
the old Pensioner smoking his pipe in the arm-chair,
Paul’s mother knitting, Bruno by
Paul’s side, wagging his tail and watching Muff
in the opposite corner rolling her great round yellow
eyes. Bruno was always ready to give Muff battle
whenever Paul tipped him the wink to pitch in.
The Pensioner’s stories were
of his boyhood, how he joined the army,
and fought the battles of the Revolution. Thus
his story ran.
“I was only a little bigger
than you are, Paul,” he said, “when the
red-coats began the war at Lexington. I lived
in old Connecticut then; that was a long time before
we came out here. The meeting-house bell rung,
and the people blew their dinner-horns, and ran up
to the meeting-house and found the militia forming.
The men had their guns and powder-horns. The
women were at work melting their pewter porringers
into bullets. I wasn’t old enough to train,
but I could fire a gun and bring down a squirrel from
the top of a tree. I wanted to go and help drive
the red-coats into the ocean. I asked mother if
I might. I was afraid that she didn’t want
me to go. ‘Why, Paul,’ says she, ’you
haven’t any clothes.’ ‘Mother,’
says I, ’I can shoot a red-coat just as well
as any of the men can.’ Says she, ‘Do
you want to go, Paul?’ ’Yes, mother!’
‘You shall go; I’ll fix you out.’
As I hadn’t any coat she took a meal-bag, cut
a hole for my head in the bottom, and made holes for
my arms, cut off a pair of her own stocking-legs,
and sewed them on for sleeves, and I was rigged.
I took the old gun which father carried at Ticonderoga,
and the powder-horn, and started. There is the
gun and the horn, Paul, hanging up.
“The red-coats had got back
to Boston, but we cooped them up. Our company
was in Colonel Knowlton’s regiment. I carried
the flag, which said, Qui transtulit sustinet.
I don’t know anything about Latin, but those
who do say it means that God who hath transported us
will sustain us, and that is true, Paul. He sustained
us at Bunker Hill, and we should have held it if our
powder had not given out. Our regiment was by
a rail-fence on the northeast side of the hill.
Stark, with his New Hampshire boys, was by the river.
Prescott was in the redoubt on the top of the hill.
Old Put kept walking up and down the lines. This
is the way it was, Paul.”
The Pensioner laid aside his pipe,
bent forward, and traced upon the hearth the positions
of the troops.
“There is the redoubt; here
is the rail-fence; there is where the red-coats formed
their lines. They came up in front of us here.
We didn’t fire a gun till they got close to
us. I’ll show you how the fire ran down
the line.”
He took down the horn, pulled out
the stopper, held his finger over the tip, and made
a trail of powder.
“There, Paul, that is by the
fence. As the red-coats came up, some of us began
to be uneasy and wanted to fire, but Old Put kept saying,
’Don’t fire yet! Wait till you can
see the white of their eyes! Aim at their belts!’”
While Pensioner was saying this, he
took the tongs and picked a live coal from the fire.
“They came up beautifully, Paul, the
tall grenadiers and light-infantry in their scarlet
coats, and the sun shining on their gun-barrels and
bayonets. They wer’n’t more than ten
rods off when a soldier on top of the hill couldn’t
stand it any longer. Pop! went his gun, and the
fire ran down the hill quicker than scat! just like
this!”
He touched the coal to the powder.
There was a flash, a puff of smoke rising to the ceiling,
and filling the room.
“Hooray!” shouted Paul,
springing to his feet. Muff went with a jump
upon the bureau in the corner of the room, her tail
as big as Paul’s arm, and her back up.
Bruno was after her in a twinkling, bouncing about,
barking, and looking round to Paul to see if it was
all right.
“There, grandpa, you have made
a great smut on the hearth,” said Mrs. Parker,
who kept her house neat and tidy, though it was a crazy
old affair.
“Well, mother, I thought it would please Paul.”
“S-s-s-s-si’c!”
Paul made a hiss which Bruno understood, and went at
Muff more fiercely. It was glorious to see Muff
spit fire, and hear her growl low and deep like distant
thunder. Paul would not have Muff hurt for anything,
but he loved to see Bruno show his teeth at her, and
see how gritty she was when she was waked up.
“Be still, Paul, and let Muff alone,”
said Paul’s mother.
“Come, Bruno, she ain’t worth minding,”
said Paul.
“They have got good courage,
both of ’em,” said the pensioner; “and
courage is one half of the battle, and truth and honor
is the other half. Paul, I want you to remember
that. It will be worth more than a fortune to
you. I don’t mean that cats and dogs know
much about truth and honor, and I have seen some men
who didn’t know much more about those qualities
of character than Muff and Bruno; but what I have said,
Paul, is true for all that. The men who win success
in life are those who love truth, and who follow what
is noble and good. No matter how brave a man
may be, if he hasn’t these qualities he won’t
succeed. He may get rich, but that won’t
amount to much. Success, Paul, is to have an
unblemished character, to be true to ourselves,
to our country, and to God.”
He went on with his story, telling
how the British troops ran before the fire of the
Yankees, how they re-formed and came on
a second time, and were repulsed again, how
General Clinton went over from Boston with reinforcements, how
Charlestown was set on fire, how the flames
leaped from house to house, and curled round the spire
of the church, how the red-coats advanced
a third time beneath the great black clouds of smoke, how
the ammunition of the Yankees gave out, and they were
obliged to retreat, how General Putnam tried
to rally them, how they escaped across
Charlestown Neck, where the cannon-balls from the British
floating batteries raked the ranks! He made it
all so plain, that Paul wished he had been there.
The story completed, Paul climbed
the creaking stairway to his narrow chamber, repeated
his evening prayer, and scrambled into bed.
“He is a jolly boy,” said
the pensioner to Paul’s mother, as Paul left
the room.
“I don’t know what will
become of him,” she replied, “he is so
wild and thoughtless. He leaves the door open,
throws his cap into the corner, sets Bruno and Muff
to growling, stops to play on his way home from school,
sings, whistles, shouts, hurrahs, and tears round like
all possessed.”
If she could have looked into Paul’s
desk at school, she would have found whirligigs, tops,
pin-boxes, nails, and no end of strings and dancing
dandy-jims.
“Paul is a rogue,” said
the Pensioner. “You remember how he got
on top of the house awhile ago and frightened us out
of our wits by shouting ‘Fire! fire!’
down the chimney; how we ran out to see about it; how
I asked him ‘Where?’ and says he, ‘Down
there in the fireplace, grandpa.’ He is
a chip of the old block. I used to do just so.
But there is one good thing about him, he don’t
do mean tricks. He don’t bend up pins and
put them in the boys’ seats, or tuck chestnut-burs
into the girls’ hoods. I never knew him
to tell a lie. He will come out all right.”
“I hope so,” said Mrs. Parker.
Paul could look through the crevices
between the shingles, and the cracks in the walls,
and behold the stars gleaming from the unfathomable
spaces. He wondered how far they were away.
He listened to the wind chanting a solemn dirge, filling
his soul with longings for he knew not what.
He thought over his grandfather’s stories, and
the words he had spoken about courage, truth, and
honor, till a shingle clattering in the wind took
up the refrain, and seemed to say, Truth and honor, truth
and honor, truth and honor, so
steadily and pleasantly, that while he listened the
stars faded from his sight, and he sailed away into
dream-land.
Paul was twelve years old, stout,
hearty, and healthy, full of life, and
brimming over with fun. Once he set the village
in a roar. The people permitted their pigs to
run at large. The great maple in front of the
Pensioner’s house was cool and shady, a
delightful place for the pigs through the hot summer
days.
Mr. Chrome, the carriage-painter,
lived across the road. He painted a great many
wagons for the farmers, the wheels yellow,
the bodies blue, green, or red, with scrolls and flowers
on the sides. Paul watched him by the hour, and
sometimes made up his mind to be a carriage-painter
when he became a man.
“Mr. Chrome,” said Paul,
“don’t you think that those pigs would
look better if they were painted?”
“Perhaps so.”
“I should like to see how they
would look painted as you paint your wagons.”
Mr. Chrome laughed at the ludicrous
fancy. He loved fun, and was ready to help carry
out the freak.
“Well, just try your hand on improving nature.”
Paul went to work. Knowing that
pigs like to have their backs scratched, he had no
difficulty in keeping them quiet. To one he gave
green legs, blue ears, red rings round its eyes, and
a red tail. Another had one red leg, one blue,
one yellow, one green, with red and blue stripes and
yellow stars on its body. “I will make him
a star-spangled pig,” Paul shouted to Mr. Chrome.
Another had a green head, yellow ears, and a red body.
Bruno watched the proceedings, wagging his tail, looking
now at Paul and then at the pigs, ready to help on
the fun.
“Si’c! si’c! si’c!”
said Paul. Bruno was upon them with a bound.
Away they capered, with Bruno at their heels.
As soon as they came into the sunshine the spirits
of turpentine in the paint was like fire to their
flesh. Faster they ran up the street squealing,
with Bruno barking behind. Mr. Chrome laughed
till the tears ran down his cheeks. All the dogs,
great and small, joined Bruno in chase of the strange
game. People came out from the stores, windows
were thrown up, and all hands men, women,
and children ran to see what was the matter,
laughing and shouting, while the pigs and dogs ran
round the square.
“Paul Parker did that, I’ll
bet,” said Mr. Leatherby, the shoemaker, peeping
out from his shop. “It is just like him.”
An old white horse, belonging to Mr.
Smith, also sought the shade of the maple before the
Pensioner’s house. Bruno barked at him by
the hour, but the old horse would not move for anything
short of a club or stone.
“I’ll see if I can’t
get rid of him,” said Paul to himself.
He went into the barn, found a piece
of rope, tied up a little bundle of hay, got a stick
five or six feet long, and some old harness-straps.
In the evening, when it was so dark that people could
not see what he was up to, he caught the old horse,
laid the stick between his ears and strapped it to
his neck, and tied the hay to the end of the stick;
then it hung a few inches beyond old Whitey’s
nose. The old horse took a step ahead to nibble
the hay, another, another, another!
“Don’t you wish you may get it?”
said Paul. Tramp, tramp, tramp.
Old Whitey went down the road. Paul heard him
go across the bridge by the mill, and up the hill
the other side of the brook.
“Go it, old fellow!” he
shouted, then listened again. It was a calm night,
and he could just hear old Whitey’s feet, tramp, tramp, tramp.
The next morning the good people of
Fairview, ten miles from New Hope, laughed to see
an old white horse, with a bundle of hay a few inches
beyond his nose, passing through the place.
“Have you seen my horse?”
Mr. Smith asked Paul in the morning.
“Yes, sir, I saw him going down
towards the bridge last evening,” Paul replied,
chuckling to himself.
Mr. Smith went down to the mill and
inquired. The miller heard a horse go over the
bridge. The farmer on the other side heard a horse
go up the hill. Mr. Smith looked at the tracks.
They were old Whitey’s, for he had a broken
shoe on his left hind foot. He followed on.
“I never knew him to go away before,”
he said to himself, as he walked hour after hour,
seeing the tracks all the way to Fairview.
“Have you seen a white horse
about here?” he asked of one of the villagers.
“Yes, sir; there was one here
this morning trying to overtake a bundle of hay,”
the man replied, laughing. “There he is
now!” he added.
Mr. Smith looked up and saw old Whitey,
who had turned about, and was reaching forward to
get a nibble of the hay. Mr. Smith felt like being
angry, but the old horse was walking so soberly and
earnestly that he couldn’t help laughing.
“That is some of Paul’s
doings, I know. I’ll give him a blessing
when I get back.”
It was noon before Mr. Smith reached
New Hope. Paul and Bruno were sitting beneath
the maple.
“Where did you find old Whitey?” Paul
asked.
“You was the one who did it, you little rascal?”
“Did what?”
“You know what. You have
made me walk clear to Fairview. I have a mind
to horsewhip you.”
Paul laughed to think that the old
horse had tramped so far, though he was sorry that
Mr. Smith had been obliged to walk that distance.
“I didn’t mean any harm,
Mr. Smith, but old Whitey has made our door-yard his
stamping-place all summer, and I thought I would see
if I could get rid of him.”
“Well, sir, if you do it again
I’ll trounce you,” said Mr. Smith as he
rode away, his anger coming up.
“Wouldn’t it be better
for you to put him in a pasture, Mr. Smith? Then
he wouldn’t trouble us,” said Paul, who
knew that Mr. Smith had no right to let old Whitey
run at large. Paul was not easily frightened when
he had right on his side. The people in the stores
and at the tavern had a hearty laugh when they heard
how old Whitey went to Fairview.
Mr. Cipher taught the village school.
He was tall, slim, thin-faced, with black eyes deeply
set in his head, and a long, hooked nose like an eagle’s
bill. He wore a loose swallow-tailed coat with
bright brass buttons, and pants which were several
inches too short. The Committee employed him,
not because he was a superior teacher, but they could
get him for twelve dollars a month, while Mr. Rudiment,
who had been through college, and who was known to
be an excellent instructor, asked sixteen.
There was a crowd of roistering boys
and rosy-cheeked girls, who made the old school-house
hum like a beehive. Very pleasant to the passers-by
was the music of their voices. At recess and at
noon they had leap-frog and tag. Paul was in
a class with Philip Funk, Hans Middlekauf, and Michael
Murphy. There were other boys and girls of all
nationalities. Paul’s ancestors were from
Connecticut, Philip’s father was a Virginian.
Hans was born in Germany, and Michael in Ireland.
Philip’s father kept a grocery, and sold sugar,
molasses, tobacco, and whiskey. He was rich,
and Philip wore good clothes and calf-skin boots.
Paul could get his lessons very quick whenever he
set about them in earnest, but he spent half his time
in inventing fly-traps, making whirligigs, or drawing
pictures on his slate. He could draw admirably,
for he had a quick eye and natural ability. Philip
could get his lessons also if he chose to apply himself,
but it was a great deal easier to get some one to work
out the problems in arithmetic than to do them himself.
“Here, Paul, just do this question
for me; that is a good fellow.”
It was at recess.
“No; Cipher has forbid it. Each one has
got to do his own,” said Paul.
“If you will do it, I will give
you a handful of raisins,” said Philip, who
usually had his pockets full of raisins, candy, or
nuts.
“It wouldn’t be right.”
“Come, just do that one; Cipher never will know
it.”
“No!” Paul said it resolutely.
“You are a mean, sneaking fellow,”
said Philip with a sneer, turning up his nose.
Philip was a year older than Paul.
He had sandy hair, white eyelashes, and a freckled
face. He carried a watch, and always had money
in his pocket. Paul, on the other hand, hardly
ever had a cent which he could call his own.
His clothes were worn till they were almost past mending.
“Rag-tag has got a hole in his trousers,”
said Philip to the other boys.
Paul’s face flushed. He
wanted to knock Philip’s teeth down his throat.
He knew that his mother had hard work to clothe him,
and felt the insult. He went into the school-house,
choked his anger down, and tried to forget all about
it by drawing a picture of the master. It was
an excellent likeness, his spindle legs,
great feet, short pants, loose coat, sunken eyes,
hooked nose, thin face, and long bony fingers.
Philip sat behind Paul. Instead
of studying his lesson, he was planning how to get
Paul into trouble. He saw the picture. Now
was his time. He giggled aloud. Mr. Cipher
looked up in astonishment.
“What are you laughing at, Master Funk?”
“At what Paul is doing.”
Paul hustled his slate into his desk.
“Let me see what you have here,”
said Cipher, walking up to Paul, who spat in his fingers,
and ran his hand into the desk, to rub out the drawing;
but he felt that it would be better to meet his punishment
boldly than to have the school think that he was a
sneak. He laid the slate before the master without
a line effaced.
“Giving your attention to drawing,
are you, Master Paul?” His eyes flashed.
He knit his brows. The blood rushed to his cheeks.
There was a popping up of heads all over the school-room
to get a sight of the picture.
The boys laughed aloud, and there
was a tittering among the girls, which made Cipher
very angry. “Silence!” he roared,
and stamped upon the floor so savagely that the windows
rattled. “Come out here, Sir. I’ll
give you a drawing-lesson of another sort.”
He seized Paul by the collar, and threw him into the
space in front of his own desk. “Hold out
your hand.”
Paul felt that he was about to receive
a tremendous thrashing; but he determined that he
would not flinch. He held out his right hand,
and spat! came the blow from a heavy ferule.
His hand felt as if he had been struck by a piece
of hot iron.
“The other, sir.”
Whack! it fell, a blow which made
the flesh purple. There was an Oh! upon his tongue;
but he set his teeth together, and bit his lips till
they bled, and so smothered it. Another blow, another, another, which
were hard to bear; but his teeth were set like a vice.
There was a twitching of the muscles round his lips;
he was pale. When the blows fell, he held his
breath, but he did not snivel.
“I’ll see if I can’t
bring you to your feeling, you good-for-nothing scape-grace,”
said the master, mad with passion, and surprised that
Paul made no outcry. He gave another round, bringing
the ferule down with great force. Blood began
to ooze from the pores. The last blow spattered
the drops around the room. Cipher came to his
senses. He stopped.
“Are you sorry, sir?”
“I don’t know whether
I am or not. I didn’t mean any harm.
I suppose I ought not to have drawn it in school;
but I didn’t do it to make fun. I drew
you just as you are,” said Paul, his
voice trembling a little in spite of his efforts to
control it.
The master could not deny that it
was a perfect likeness. He was surprised at Paul’s
cleverness at drawing, and for the first time in his
life saw that he cut a ridiculous figure wearing that
long, loose, swallow-tailed coat, with great, flaming
brass buttons, and resolved upon the spot that his
next coat should be a frock, and that he would get
a longer pair of pants.
“You may take your seat, sir!”
he said, puzzled to know whether to punish Paul still
more, and compel him to say that he was sorry, or
whether to accept the explanations, and apologize for
whipping him so severely.
Paul sat down. His hands ached
terribly; but what troubled him most was the thought
that he had been whipped before the whole school.
All the girls had witnessed his humiliation.
There was one among them, Azalia Adams, who
stood at the head of Paul’s class, the best reader
and speller in school. She had ruby lips, and
cheeks like roses; the golden sunlight falling upon
her chestnut hair crowned her with glory; deep, thoughtful,
and earnest was the liquid light of her hazel eyes;
she was as lovely and beautiful as the flower whose
name she bore. Paul had drawn her picture many
times, sometimes bending over her task,
sometimes as she sat, unmindful of the hum of voices
around her, looking far away into a dim and distant
dream-land. He never wearied of tracing the features
of one so fair and good as she. Her laugh was
as musical as a mountain-brook; and in the church
on Sunday, when he heard her voice sweetly, softly,
and melodiously mingling with the choir, he thought
of the angels, of her as in heaven and
he on earth.
“Run home, sonny, and tell your
marm that you got a licking,” said Philip when
school was out.
Paul’s face became livid.
He would have doubled his fist and given Philip a
blow in the face, but his palms were like puff-balls.
There was an ugly feeling inside, but just then a
pair of bright hazel eyes, almost swimming with tears,
looked into his own. “Don’t mind it,
Paul,” said Azalia.
The pain was not half so hard to bear
after that. He wanted to say, “I thank
you,” but did not know how. Till then his
lips had hardly quivered, and he had not shed a tear;
now his eyes became moist; one great drop rolled down
his cheeks, but he wiped it off with his coat-sleeve,
and turned away, for fear that Azalia would think that
he was a baby.
On his way home the thought uppermost
in his mind was, “What will mother say?”
Why tell her? Would it not be better to keep the
matter to himself? But then he remembered that
she had said, “Paul, I shall expect you to tell
me truthfully all that happens to you at school.”
He loved his mother. She was one of the best
mothers that ever lived, working for him day and night.
How could he abuse such confidence as she had given
him? He would not violate it. He would not
be a sneak.
His mother and the Pensioner were
sitting before the fire as he entered the house.
She welcomed him with a smile, a beautiful
smile it was, for she was a noble woman, and Paul
was her darling, her pride, the light, joy, and comfort
of her life.
“Well, Paul, how do you get
on at school?” his grandfather asked.
“I got a whipping to-day.”
It was spoken boldly and manfully.
“What! My son got a whipping!” his
mother exclaimed.
“Yes, mother.”
“I am astonished. Come here, and tell me
all about it.”
Paul stood by her side and told the
story, how Philip Funk tried to bribe him,
how he called him names, how, having got
his lessons, he made a picture of the master.
“Here it is, mother.” He took his
slate from his little green bag. The picture
had not been effaced. His mother looked at it
and laughed, notwithstanding her efforts to keep sober,
for it was such a perfect likeness. She had an
exquisite sense of the ludicrous, and Paul was like
her. She was surprised to find that he could
draw so well.
“We will talk about the matter
after supper,” she said. She had told Paul
many times, that, if he was justly punished at school,
he must expect a second punishment at home; but she
wanted to think awhile before deciding what to do.
She was pleased to know that her boy could not be
bribed to do what his conscience told him he ought
not to do, and that he was manly and truthful.
She would rather follow him to the church-yard and
lay him in his grave beneath the bending elms, than
to have him untruthful or wicked.
The evening passed away. Paul
sat before the fire, looking steadily into the coals.
He was sober and thoughtful, wondering what his mother
would say at last. The clock struck nine.
It was his bedtime. He went and stood by her
side once more. “You are not angry with
me, mother, are you?”
“No, my son. I do not think
that you deserved so severe a punishment. I am
rejoiced to know that you are truthful, and that you
despise a mean act. Be always as you have been
to-night, and I never shall be angry with you.”
He threw his arms around her neck,
and gave way to tears, such as Cipher could not extort
by his pounding. She gave him a good-night kiss, so
sweet that it seemed to lie upon his lips all through
the night.
“God bless you, Paul,” said the Pensioner.
Paul climbed the creaking stairs,
and knelt with an overflowing heart to say his evening
prayer. He spoke the words earnestly when he asked
God to take care of his mother and grandfather.
He was very happy. He looked out through the
crevices in the walls, and saw the stars and the moon
flooding the landscape with silver light. There
was sweet music in the air, the merry melody
of the water murmuring by the mill, the cheerful chirping
of the crickets, and the lullaby of the winds, near
at hand and far away, putting him in mind of the choirs
on earth and the choirs in heaven. “Don’t
mind it, Paul!” were the words they sung, so
sweetly and tenderly that for many days they rang
in his ears.
Carleton.