Willy proved to have fine powers as
a leader. Like the famous John Gilpin,
“A train-band captain
eke was he,
Of credit
and renown,”
and the Never-Give-Ups became such
an orderly, well-trained company, that some of the
rich fathers made them the present of a small cannon.
Do you know what a wonderful change
that made in the condition of things? Well, I
will tell you. They became at once an Artillery
Company! Not poor little infantry any more, but
great, brave artillery!
Every man among them cast aside his
Quaker gun with contempt, and wore a cut-and-thrust
sword, made out of the sharpest kind of wood.
An Artillery Company, think of that!
The boys threw up their caps, and Willy sang,
“Come, fill up my cup,
come, fill up my can;
Come, saddle your horses,
and call up your men!
Come, open the west port,
and let us gang free,
And it’s room for the
bonnets of Bonny Dundee!”
There was to be a General Muster that
fall, and if you suppose the Perseverance boys had
thought of anything else since the Fourth of July,
that shows how little you know about musters.
A muster, boys Well, I
never saw a muster, myself; but it must have been
something like this:
A mixture of guns and gingerbread;
men and music; horses and hard cider.
It was very exciting, I
know that. There were plumes dancing, flags waving,
cannons firing, men marching, boys screaming, dogs
barking; and women looking on in their Sunday bonnets.
The “Sharp-shooters” and
the “String Beans” were there from Cross
Lots; the Artillery from Harlow; the “Pioneers,”
in calico frocks, with wooden axes, from Camden; and
all the infantry and cavalry from the whole country
round about.
Seth Parlin belonged to the cavalry,
or “troop,” and made a fine figure on
horseback. Willy secretly wondered if he would
look as well when he grew up.
“Saddled and bridled
and booted rode he,
A plume at his helmet,
A sword at his knee.”
It seemed to be the general impression
that the muster would do the country a great deal
of good. The little artillery company, called
the Never-Give-Ups, were on the ground before any
one else, their cheeks painted with clear, cold air,
and their hearts bursting with patriotism. As
a rule, children were ordered out of the way; but as
the little Never-Give-Ups had a cannon, they were
allowed to march behind the large companies, provided
they would be orderly and make no disturbance.
“Boys,” said Willy, sternly, for
he felt all the importance of the occasion, “boys,
remember, George Washington was the Father of his
Country; so you’ve got to behave.”
The boys remembered “the father
of his country” for a while, but before the
close of the afternoon forgot him entirely. There
were several stalls where refreshments were to be
had, such as cakes, apples, molasses taffy,
sugar candy, and cider by the mugful, not to mention
the liquors, which were quite too fiery for the little
Never-Give-Ups.
At every halt in the march the boys
bought something to eat or drink. There had been
a barrel of cider brought from Mr. Chase’s for
their especial use, and Fred sold it out to the boys
for four cents a glass. This was a piece of extraordinary
meanness in him, for his father had intended the cider
as a present to the company. The boys did not
know this, however, and paid their money in perfect
good faith.
“Hard stuff,” said Willy,
draining his mug. “I don’t like it
much.”
“Why, it’s tip-top,”
returned Fred. “My father says it’s
the best he ever saw.”
Mr. Chase had never said anything
of the sort. He had merely ordered his colored
servant, Pompey, to put a barrel of cider on the wheelbarrow,
and take it to the muster-ground. Whether Pompey
and Fred had selected this one for its age I cannot
tell, but the boys all declared it was “as hard
as a stone wall.”
Dr. Hilton, who seemed to be everywhere
at once, heard them say that, and exclaimed,
“Then I wouldn’t drink
any more of it, boys. Hard cider does make anybody
dreadful cross. Better let it alone.”
I fear the boys did not follow this
advice, for certain it is that they grew outrageously
cross. The trouble began, I believe, with Abram
Noonin, who suddenly declared he wouldn’t march
another step with Jock Winter. As the marching
was all done for the day, Abram might as well have
kept quiet.
“Yes, you shall march with Jock
Winter, too,” said Captain Willy, exasperated
with the throbbing pain in his head the
first he had ever felt in his life. “Pretty
doings, if you are going to set up and say, ’I
will’ and ‘I won’t!’”
While the captain and the private
were shooting sharp words back and forth, and Fred
was busy drawing cider, Isaac Lovejoy, the rogue of
the company, was very busy with his own mischief.
“Look here, Fred,” said
Joshua Potter, going up to the stall with a twinkle
in his eye; “they don’t ask but three cents
a mug, round at the other end of the barrel!”
“What do you mean by that?”
cried the young cider merchant, looking up just in
time to see Isaac Lovejoy marching off with the pitcher
he had been filling from a hole in the barrel made
with his jack-knife.
“Stop thief! Stop thief!” cried Fred.
“That’s right,”
said one of the big boys from over the river.
“Ike’s selling your cider to the men for
three cents a glass.”
Perhaps this was one of Isaac’s
jokes, and he intended to give back the money; we
will hope so. But, be that as it may, Fred was
terribly angry; as angry, mind you, as if he was an
honest boy himself, and had a perfect right to all
the coppers jingling in his own pockets!
He ran after Ike, and caught him;
and there was a scuffle, in which the pitcher was
broken. Mr. Chase came up to inquire into it.
“Tut, tut, Isaac!” said
he; “aren’t you ashamed? You know
that cider was a present to the Never-Give-Ups.”
The boys were astonished, and Fred’s
face crimsoned with shame. As soon as Mr. Chase
had gone away, Willy exclaimed, with a sudden burst
of wrath,
“Well, boys, if you are going
to stand such a mean lieutenant as that, I won’t!
If he stays in lieutenant, I won’t stay captain so
there!”
“Three cheers for the captain!”
cried the boys; and there was another uproar.
And how did Fred feel towards the
fearless, out-spoken Willy? Very angry, of course;
but, if you will believe me, he respected him more
than ever. Pompous boys are often mean-spirited
and cowardly; they will browbeat those who are afraid
of them; but those who look down on them and despise
them, they hold in the highest esteem. Willy had
never scrupled to tell Fred just what he thought of
his conduct; and for that very reason Fred liked him
better than any other boy in town.
But the Never-Give-Ups were growing
decidedly noisy. After they learned that the
cider was their own, they must drink more of it, whether
they wanted it or not. The consequence was, they
soon began to act disgracefully.
“Can’t you have peace
there, you young scamps?” said one of the big
boys from over the river.
“Yes, we will have peace if
we have to fight for it,” replied the captain,
who had drawn the little hunchback Jock to his side,
and was darting glances at Abe Noonin as sharp as
a cut-and-thrust sword.
“Mr. Chase,” said Dr.
Hilton, struck with a new idea, “those boys act
as if they were drunk.”
“Why, how can they be?”
returned Mr. Chase; “they’ve had nothing
to drink but innocent cider.”
“Any way,” cried the doctor,
“they are getting up a regular mob, and we shall
have to quail it!”
Too true: it was necessary to
quell the Never-Give-Ups, that orderly artillery company,
the pride of the town! Quell it, and order it
off the grounds!
Dire disgrace! Their steps were
unsteady and slow; their heads were bowed, but not
with grief, for, to say the truth, they did not fully
comprehend the situation.
“The little captain is the furthest
gone of any of them,” said Dr. Hilton.
Indeed, before he reached home he was unable to walk,
and Stephen carried him into the house in his arms.
Not that Willy had drunk so much as some of the others,
but it had affected him more.
Poor Mrs. Parlin! She had to
know what was the matter with her boy; and the shock
was so great that she went to bed sick, and Mr. Parlin
sent for the doctor.
When Willy came to his senses next
morning, there was a guilty feeling hanging over him,
and his head ached badly. He crept down stairs,
and fixed his gaze first on the sanded floor of the
kitchen, then on the dresser full of dishes; but to
look any one in the face he was ashamed. His
mother was not at the table, and they ate almost in
silence.
“Now, young man,” said
Mr. Parlin, after breakfast, “you may walk out
to the barn with me.” Willy had a dim idea
that he had done something wrong; but exactly what
it was he could not imagine. He remembered scolding
Abe Noonin for hurting little Jock’s feelings;
was that what he was to be punished for?
Willy did not know he had been intoxicated.
He was sure he did not like that cider, yesterday,
and had taken only a little of it. He supposed
he had eaten too much, and that was what had made
him sick.
“Off with your jacket, young man!”
Old Dick neighed, Towler growled,
the sheep bleated; it seemed as if they were all protesting
against Willy’s being whipped.
“Now, sir,” said Mr. Parlin,
after a dozen hearty lashes, “shall I ever hear
of your getting drunk again?”
“Why, father! I didn’t O,
I didn’t! I only took some cider just
two mugfuls!” gasped Willy; “that’s
all; and you know you always let me drink cider.”
“Two mugfuls!” groaned
Mr. Parlin, distressed at what he considered a wilful
lie; and the blows fell heavier and faster, while Willy’s
face whitened, and his teeth shut together hard.
Mr. Parlin had never acted from purer motives; still
Willy felt that the punishment was not just, and it
only served to call up what the boys termed his “Indian
sulks.”
Angry and smarting with pain in mind
and body, he walked off that afternoon to the old
red store. Fred was sitting under a tree, chewing
gum.
“Had to take it, I guess, Billy?”
“Yes, an awful whipping,” replied Willy;
“did you?”
“Me? Of course not.
Do you know how I work it? When father takes down
the cowhide, I look him right in the eye, and that
scares him out of it. He darsn’t
flog me!”
This was a downright lie. Fred
was as great a coward as ever lived, and screamed
at sight of a cowhide. He had been whipped for
cheating about the cider, but would not tell Willy
so.
Willy looked at him with surprise
and something like respect. He could never seem
to learn that Freddy’s word was not to be trusted.
“Well, I’ll do so next
time,” cried he, his eyes flashing fire.
“Look here,” said Fred,
crossing his knees, and looking important; “let’s
run away.”
“Why, Fred Chase! ’Twould be wicked!”
“’Twouldn’t, either.
Things ain’t wicked when folks don’t catch
you at it; and we can go where folks won’t catch
us, now I promise you.”
Willy’s heart leaped up with
a strange joy. He would not run away, but if
Fred had a plan he wanted to hear it.
“Why, where could we go?”
“To sea.”
“Poh! our Caleb got flogged going to sea.”
“O, well, Captain Cutter never
flogs. He’s a nice man, lives
down to Casco Bay. And of all the oranges that
ever you saw, and the guava jelly, and the pine-apples!
he’s always sending them to mother.”
“I never ate a pine-apple.”
“Didn’t you? Well,
come, let’s go; Captain Cutter will be real glad
to see us; come, to-night; he’ll treat us first
rate.”
“‘My son, if sinners entice thee, consent
thou not.’”
It seemed as if Willy could hear his mother saying
the words.
“You and I are the best kind
of friends, Willy. We’d have a real nice
time, and come home when we got ready.”
Willy did not respond to this.
He did not care very much about Fred, nobody
did, and if he should be persuaded to go
with him, it would not be from friendship, most certainly.
“I wouldn’t go off and
leave mother; ’twould be real mean: but
sometimes I don’t like father one bit, now,
that’s a fact,” burst forth Willy, with
a heaving breast. “I told him I didn’t
like your cider, and didn’t take but two mugfuls;
but he didn’t believe a word I said.”
“You’re a fool to stand it, Billy.”
“I won’t stand it again so
there!”
“There, that’s real Injun grit,”
said Fred, approvingly; “stick to it.”
“Father thinks children are
foolish; he hates to hear ’em talk,” pursued
Willy; “and then, when you don’t talk,
he says you’re sulky.”
“Well, if you go off he won’t get a chance
to say it again.”
“O, but you see, Fred ”
“Pshaw! you darsn’t!”
“Now, you’re not the one to call
me a coward, Fred Chase.”
“Well, if you dars, then come on.”
Willy did not answer. He was
deliberating; and I wish you to understand that in
a case like this “the child that deliberates
is lost.”
Without listening to any more of the
boys’ conversation, we will go right on to the
next chapter, and see what comes of it.