“Couldn’t you give more’n
six pea-nuts for a cent?” was a question asked
by a very small boy, with big, staring eyes, of a candy
vender at a circus booth. And as he spoke he
looked wistfully at the quantity of nuts piled high
up on the basket, and then at the six, each of which
now looked so small as he held them in his hand.
“Couldn’t do it,”
was the reply of the proprietor of the booth, as he
put the boy’s penny carefully away in the drawer.
The little fellow looked for another
moment at his purchase, and then carefully cracked
the largest one.
A shade - and a very deep
shade it was - of disappointment passed over
his face, and then, looking up anxiously, he asked,
“Don’t you swap ’em when they’re
bad?”
The man’s face looked as if
a smile had been a stranger to it for a long time;
but one did pay it a visit just then, and he tossed
the boy two nuts, and asked him a question at the
same time. “What is your name?”
The big brown eyes looked up for an
instant, as if to learn whether the question was asked
in good faith, and then their owner said, as he carefully
picked apart another nut, “Toby Tyler.”
“Well, that’s a queer name.”
“Yes, I s’pose so, myself;
but, you see, I don’t expect that’s the
name that belongs to me. But the fellers call
me so, an’ so does Uncle Dan’l.”
“Who is Uncle Daniel?”
was the next question. In the absence of other
customers the man seemed disposed to get as much amusement
out of the boy as possible.
“He hain’t my uncle at
all; I only call him so because all the boys do, an’
I live with him.”
“Where’s your father and mother?”
“I don’t know,”
said Toby, rather carelessly. “I don’t
know much about ‘em, an’ Uncle Dan’l
says they don’t know much about me. Here’s
another bad nut; goin’ to give me two more?”
The two nuts were given him, and he
said, as he put them in his pocket, and turned over
and over again those which he held in his hand, “I
shouldn’t wonder if all of these was bad.
Sposen you give me two for each one of ’em before
I crack ’em, an’ then they won’t
be spoiled so you can’t sell ’em again.”
As this offer of barter was made,
the man looked amused, and he asked, as he counted
out the number which Toby desired, “If I give
you these, I suppose you’ll want me to give
you two more for each one, and you’ll keep that
kind of a trade going until you get my whole stock?”
“I won’t open my head if every one of
’em’s bad.”
“All right; you can keep what
you’ve got, and I’ll give you these besides;
but I don’t want you to buy any more, for I don’t
want to do that kind of business.”
Toby took the nuts offered, not in
the least abashed, and seated himself on a convenient
stone to eat them, and at the same time to see all
that was going on around him. The coming of a
circus to the little town of Guilford was an event,
and Toby had hardly thought of anything else since
the highly colored posters had first been put up.
It was yet quite early in the morning, and the tents
were just being erected by the men. Toby had
followed, with eager eyes, everything that looked as
if it belonged to the circus, from the time the first
wagon had entered the town until the street parade
had been made, and everything was being prepared for
the afternoon’s performance.
The man who had made the losing trade
in pea-nuts seemed disposed to question the boy still
further, probably owing to the fact that he had nothing
better to do.
“Who is this Uncle Daniel you
say you live with - is he a farmer?”
“No; he’s a deacon, an’
he raps me over the head with the hymn-book whenever
I go to sleep in meetin’, an’ he says I
eat four times as much as I earn. I blame him
for hittin’ so hard when I go to sleep, but I
s’pose he’s right about my eatin’.
You see,” and here his tone grew both confidential
and mournful, “I am an awful eater, an’
I can’t seem to help it. Somehow I’m
hungry all the time. I don’t seem ever to
get enough till carrot-time comes, an’ then
I can get all I want without troubling anybody.”
“Didn’t you ever have enough to eat?”
“I s’pose I did; but you
see Uncle Dan’l he found me one mornin’
on his hay, an’ he says I was cryin’ for
something to eat then, an’ I’ve kept it
up ever since. I tried to get him go give me money
enough to go into the circus with; but he said a cent
was all he could spare these hard times, an’
I’d better take that an’ buy something
to eat with it, for the show wasn’t very good
anyway. I wish pea-nuts wasn’t but a cent
a bushel.”
“Then you would make yourself sick eating them.”
“Yes, I s’pose I should;
Uncle Dan’l says I’d eat till I was sick,
if I got the chance; but I’d like to try it
once.”
He was a very small boy, with a round
head covered with short, red hair a face as speckled
as any turkey’s egg, but thoroughly good-natured-looking;
and as he sat there on the rather sharp point of the
rock, swaying his body to and fro as he hugged his
knees with his hands, and kept his eyes fastened on
the tempting display of good things before him, it
would have been a very hard-hearted man who would not
have given him something. But Mr. Job Lord, the
proprietor of the booth, was a hard-hearted man, and
he did not make the slightest advance toward offering
the little fellow anything.
Toby rocked himself silently for a
moment, and then he said, hesitatingly, “I don’t
suppose you’d like to sell me some things, an’
let me pay you when I get older, would you?”
Mr. Lord shook his head decidedly at this proposition.
“I didn’t s’pose
you would,” said Toby, quickly; “but you
didn’t seem to be selling anything, an’
I thought I’d just see what you’d say about
it.” And then he appeared suddenly to see
something wonderfully interesting behind him, which
served as an excuse to turn his reddening face away.
“I suppose your uncle Daniel
makes you work for your living, don’t he?”
asked Mr. Lord, after he had rearranged his stock of
candy, and had added a couple of slices of lemon-peel
to what was popularly supposed to be lemonade.
“That’s what I think;
but he says that all the work I do wouldn’t pay
for the meal that one chicken would eat, an’
I s’pose it’s so, for I don’t like
to work as well as a feller without any father and
mother ought to. I don’t know why it is,
but I guess it’s because I take up so much time
eatin’ that it kinder tires me out. I s’pose
you go into the circus whenever you want to, don’t
you?”
“Oh yes; I’m there at
every performance, for I keep the stand under the
big canvas as well as this one out here.”
There was a great big sigh from out
Toby’s little round stomach, as he thought what
bliss it must be to own all those good things, and
to see the circus wherever it went. “It
must be nice,” he said, as he faced the booth
and its hard-visaged proprietor once more.
“How would you like it?”
asked Mr. Lord, patronizingly, as he looked Toby over
in a business way, very much as if he contemplated
purchasing him.
“Like it!” echoed Toby; “why, I’d
grow fat on it.”
“I don’t know as that
would be any advantage,” continued Mr. Lord,
reflectively, “for it strikes me that you’re
about as fat now as a boy of your age ought to be.
But I’ve a great mind to give you a chance.”
“What!” cried Toby, in
amazement, and his eyes opened to their widest extent,
as this possible opportunity of leading a delightful
life presented itself.
“Yes, I’ve a great mind
to give you the chance. You see,” and now
it was Mr. Lord’s turn to grow confidential,
“I’ve had a boy with me this season, but
he cleared out at the last town, and I’m running
the business alone now.”
Toby’s face expressed all the
contempt he felt for the boy who would run away from
such a glorious life as Mr. Lord’s assistant
must lead; but he said not a word, waiting in breathless
expectation for the offer which he now felt certain
would be made him.
“Now I ain’t hard on a
boy,” continued Mr. Lord, still confidentially,
“and yet that one seemed to think that he was
treated worse and made to work harder than any boy
in the world.”
“He ought to live with Uncle
Dan’l a week,” said Toby, eagerly.
“Here I was just like a father
to him,” said Mr. Lord, paying no attention
to the interruption, “and I gave him his board
and lodging, and a dollar a week besides.”
“Could he do what he wanted to with the dollar?”
“Of course he could. I
never checked him, no matter how extravagant he was,
an’ yet I’ve seen him spend his whole week’s
wages at this very stand in one afternoon. And
even after his money had all gone that way, I’ve
paid for peppermint and ginger out of my own pocket
just to cure his stomach-ache.”
Toby shook his head mournfully, as
if deploring that depravity which could cause a boy
to run away from such a tender-hearted employer, and
from such a desirable position. But even as he
shook his head so sadly he looked wistfully at the
pea-nuts, and Mr. Lord observed the look.
It may have been that Mr. Job Lord
was the tender-hearted man he prided himself upon
being, or it may have been that he wished to purchase
Toby’s sympathy; but, at all events, he gave
him a large handful of nuts, and Toby never bothered
his little round head as to what motive prompted the
gift. Now he could listen to the story of the
boy’s treachery and eat at the same time; therefore
he was an attentive listener.
“All in the world that boy had
to do,” continued Mr. Lord, in the same injured
tone he had previously used, “was to help me
set things to rights when we struck a town in the
morning, and then tend to the counter till we left
the town at night, and all the rest of the time he
had to himself. Yet that boy was ungrateful enough
to run away.”
Mr. Lord paused, as if expecting some
expression of sympathy from his listener; but Toby
was so busily engaged with his unexpected feast, and
his mouth was so full, that it did not seem even possible
for him to shake his head.
“Now what should you say if
I told you that you looked to me like a boy that was
made especially to help run a candy counter at a circus,
and if I offered the place to you?”
Toby made one frantic effort to swallow
the very large mouthful, and in a choking voice he
answered, quickly, “I should say I’d go
with you, an’ be mighty glad of the chance.”
“Then it’s a bargain,
my boy, and you shall leave town with me to-night.”