The cool fogginess of an August morning
has melted under the fierce sun. The level fields,
like a waveless ocean, stretch away into the dim,
green distance. The hot air quivers above cotton-fields,
heavy with bolls and gay with blossoms, which give
out a half-sickening fragrance. A languid air
rustles low amid the corn, from whose dense growth
arises a damp, hot breath. Out in the pasture,
work-horses leisurely crop the sunburnt grass, or
stand under the trees, lazily switching away the swarming
gnats.
A restful quiet broods over the big
plantation, for the plow and the hoe have finished
their task; sun and showers must do the rest.
The crop is “laid by,” and the summer
holidays have begun. Three days of rest before
the gathering in begins.
Over at the quarter, the young people
fill the long, lazy day with patting and dancing,
banjo-playing and watermelon-eating. The elders,
for the most part, are absorbed in preparations for
the big holiday dinner. By dawn, holes have been
dug in the ground and heated for the barbecuing of
various meats, and those who hold the honorable posts
of cooks are busily engaged in basting, tasting, and
sending the small urchins after fuel. Some of
the women are kneading flour hoe-cakes; others, gathered
about a table under a great mulberry tree, are peeling
fruit for pies, while now and then they raise their
voices with blood-curdling threats to hasten the lagging
steps of a little gang, which, looking like a string
of black beetles, troop slowly along from the orchard,
each holding in the skirt of his solitary garment
the small store of fruit which he has not been able
to eat. A row of tables spread in the shade stands
ready for the feast, and, along the pathway, the guests
from neighboring plantations are already approaching.
Up at the great house an unnatural
quiet prevails, for upon this day all work is laid
aside and all are off to the barbecue; even old Aunt
Sylvie has forgotten the “misery” in her
back, has donned her Sunday garments, and stepped
briskly off to the quarter; cook, too, has closed
the ever-open kitchen door and departed, along with
nurse, over whose toilet her little charges have presided
with so much zeal that they have emptied their mother’s
cologne flask in order to bedew their mammy’s
pocket-handkerchief to their satisfaction.
Tiny curly-headed Jack feels rather
disconsolate without his mammy, but is partially consoled
by flattering visions of what her pockets will bring
home at the end of the day.
Away down upon the creek the little
gristmill stands silent; the old mossy wheel has for
to-day ceased its splash and clatter, and, like all
else upon the plantation, is resting from its labor;
to-day no sacks stand open-mouthed, awaiting their
turn; no little creaking carts, no mill boys mounted
astride their grists are seen upon the path, and Wat,
the miller, in the lazy content of dirt and idleness,
lies basking in the sun. Within the wattle fence
on the other side of the path, his three children,
little Dave, Emma Jane, and a fat baby, are sprawling
upon the ground, along with the house pig, two puppies,
and the chickens. Little Dave, who is perhaps
somewhat dwarfed by toting first Emma Jane in her
infancy, and now the fat baby, looks not unlike a
careworn little ape, as he sits flat upon the ground,
spreading his bony toes for the baby to claw at.
Emma Jane, with her stout little body
buttoned into a homespun frock, is also seated in
the sand, solemnly munching upon a hunk of corn bread,
while the chickens, with easy familiarity, peck at
the crumbs which fall upon her black shins. Within
the cabin, Polly, the miller’s wife, has tied
a string of beads about her sleek black throat, and
now, in all the bravery of her flowered calico, is
ready to set off for the quarter; first, though, she
pauses at the gate to speak to little Dave.
“When de chile git hongry,
you git dat sweeten water off de shelf and gie it
to him long wid his bread;” then adds, with a
suspicion of tenderness upon her comely face; “I
gwine fetch you some pie.” Then, calling
to Wat, that he had better “fix his sef and come
along, ef he speck to git any of de dinner,”
she steps briskly along the narrow pathway, mounts
the zigzag fence, and disappears amid the high corn.
Some miles below, where the little
creek which turns the mill-wheel steals from out the
swamp to join the river, a clumsy, flat-bottomed scow
lies grounded upon a sand-bar. This is no evil
to Boat Jim, who, sprawled upon the deck, snores away
the hours, regardless of the blistering sun beating
down upon his uncovered head, and all unconscious
of the departure of his chance passenger, an itinerant
organ-grinder. This fellow, having had the ill
luck to lose the respectable member of the firm, his
monkey, and finding difficulty without the aid of
his little partner to attract an audience, had, while
idling about the docks, encountered Boat Jim, and persuaded
the latter to give him a lift up the river, the condition
being that he was to grind as much music as Jim should
desire. But, disgusted with three days of slow
progress upon the boat, he had, after viciously kicking
the unconscious Jim, stolen the small boat and put
himself ashore. Following the windings of the
creek, he came to the little mill, where, attracted
by the shade, he seated himself close to the wattle
fence of Polly’s little yard. Hearing voices,
he peeped through the fence, and his eyes were soon
fixed upon little Dave, who, with the fat baby and
Emma Jane for spectators, is performing various tricks
with infinite delight to himself. He stands upon
his head, he turns somersaults, he dances, he pats,
and finally he swings himself into a tree, where he
skips about with the agility of a monkey. A thought
comes into the organ-grinder’s head; he glances
at the silent mill and at the cabin: evidently
both are deserted; here is a chance to replace the
dead monkey.
The sun is sending long shafts of
crimson light into the swamp and glinting upon the
millhouse; the high corn, awakening from its midday
torpor, rustles softly to the evening breeze, as Wat
and Polly wend their way homeward. A bucket,
lightly poised upon Polly’s head, holds scraps
of barbecue and little Dave’s promised pie, and,
as she draws near the wattle fence, she thinks, with
a pleased smile, of how she will set it before “de
chilluns,” when a prolonged howl falls upon her
ears. Recognizing the voice of Emma Jane, she
says to herself: “She hongry, I spek,”
and trudges on, in nowise disturbed by this familiar
sound. But, when they enter the yard, there is
only Emma Jane, bawling, open-mouthed, beside the
baby, who, with the house pig, lies asleep on the
warm sand. The chickens are daintily picking their
way to the house, the old muscovy duck has tucked
her head under her wing for the night, Old Keep, the
stump-tailed coon dog, crawls from under the cabin
to greet them. But where is Dave?
The miller carries the sleeping child
indoors, followed by the still bawling Emma Jane,
while the wrathful Polly goes to the back of the house.
Stripping the twigs from a switch, she mutters:
“I knows what you’s arter; you tuck yoursef
to dat watermillion patch, dat whar you gone; but
ne’ mine, boy, you jest lé’
me git hold o’ you.” Then, after
a time given to unsuccessful search, calls of “Da-a-vie oh,
oh, Dave!” fall upon the stillness, to be answered
only by weird echo from the lonely swamp. Returning
from her search, she finds Wat seated upon the doorstep.
“Dave done took hissel off to
de quarter,” he says; “but no mind, I
gwine fill him full o’ licks in de mornin’.”
But, when morning comes and brings
no little Dave, wrath gives place to fear. The
plantation is aroused; finally the mill-pond is dragged,
and, although the body is not found, the conclusion
is that the boy has been drowned.
After a time Polly’s smile beams
as broadly as ever, but her heart still yearns for
her boy, and amid the sleepy drone of her spinning-wheel,
she pauses to listen; or, standing in her door, she
looks ever wistfully along the crooked path. Across
the way, the little mill clatters on as merrily as
of yore; Wat heaves the great sacks upon his brawny
shoulder, metes out the grist, and faithfully feeds
the hopper; but, when a chance shadow falls athwart
the sunny doorway, he looks up with a gleam of hope
upon his stupid, honest face, then brushes his hand
across his eyes, and goes on in stolid patience with
his work. So the summer and the autumn pass, without
change, save that Emma Jane substitutes sweet potatoes
for corn bread, and the fat baby has learned to balance
himself upon his bowlegs.
Upon a winter evening Wat enters the
cabin at the usual hour. Polly has laid a bit
of clean homespun upon the table; his bowl of coffee,
his fried meat, and his hoe-cake stand ready; but,
instead of falling to, as his custom is, he sits silent
and despondent, with his face buried in his hands,
until Polly asks:
“What de matter; is you po’ly?”
“I dunno as I ’se,
to say, po’ly,” Wat replies, “but
dat boy’s been a-pesterin’ me dis
livelong day, a-callin’ ‘Daddy, Daddy!’
jes’ like I talkin’ now, till seem like
I ‘se most beat out along o’ him.”
“Dat mighty curous,” Polly
answered, “’cause Olé Keep, he’s
been a-howlin’ dis blessed day. I
’lowed dat Ung Silas were gwine be tuck.”
“’T ain’t dat,”
the miller interrupted. “Ung Silas, he done
got better; he howlin’ arter sompen nother,
but ’t ain’t arter Ung Silas.”
Upon that identical winter’s
day, in a back alley of New York, a small crowd of
idlers had gathered to witness the performance of the
“Man Monkey.” A little creature,
dressed in tinsel, leaped and capered, keeping time
to the grinding of an organ. When the spectators
were silent, he would glance timidly at his ill-favored
keeper, but when they cheered, the poor little figure
would strive to outdo itself, in spite of laboring
breath and trembling limbs. Then a rope was stretched,
and “The Man Monkey,” seizing an end, swung
himself up, and, amid the acclamations of the
admiring mob, began a new act of his performance.
The day was cold, and at that dizzy height the wind
struck bitterly through the starved little overtaxed
body; he lost his footing, caught wildly at the rope,
missed it, and fell.
In that brief second did he see the
old mill and the little cabin standing in the sunshine?
Did he hear his mother’s voice? God knows.
When a pitying hand gently turned the little heap of
quivering humanity, a happy smile lit up the pinched
face, and the dying lips murmured, “Daddy.”