The papa had told the story so often
that the children knew just exactly what to expect
the moment he began. They all knew it as well
as he knew it himself, and they could keep him from
making mistakes, or forgetting. Sometimes he
would go wrong on purpose, or would pretend to forget,
and then they had a perfect right to pound him till
he quit it. He usually quit pretty soon.
The children liked it because it was
very exciting, and at the same time it had no moral,
so that when it was all over, they could feel that
they had not been excited just for the moral.
The first time the little girl heard it she began
to cry, when it came to the worst part; but the boy
had heard it so much by that time that he did not mind
it in the least, and just laughed.
The story was in season any time between
Thanksgiving and New Years; but the papa usually began
to tell it in the early part of October, when the
farmers were getting in their pumpkins, and the children
were asking when they were going to have any squash
pies, and the boy had made his first jack-o’-lantern.
“Well,” the papa said,
“once there were two little pumpkin seeds, and
one was a good little pumpkin seed, and the other was
bad — very proud, and vain, and ambitious.”
The papa had told them what ambitious
was, and so the children did not stop him when he
came to that word; but sometimes he would stop of his
own accord, and then if they could not tell what it
meant, he would pretend that he was not going on;
but he always did go on.
“Well, the farmer took both
the seeds out to plant them in the home-patch, because
they were a very extra kind of seeds, and he was not
going to risk them in the cornfield, among the corn.
So before he put them in the ground, he asked each
one of them what he wanted to be when he came up,
and the good little pumpkin seed said he wanted to
come up a pumpkin, and be made into a pie, and be
eaten at Thanksgiving dinner; and the bad little pumpkin
seed said he wanted to come up a morning-glory.
“‘Morning-glory!’
says the farmer. ’I guess you’ll come
up a pumpkin-glory, first thing you know,’
and then he haw-hawed, and told his son, who was helping
him to plant the garden, to keep watch of that particular
hill of pumpkins, and see whether that little seed
came up a morning-glory or not; and the boy stuck
a stick into the hill so he could tell it. But
one night the cow got in, and the farmer was so mad,
having to get up about one o’clock in the morning
to drive the cow out, that he pulled up the stick,
without noticing, to whack her over the back with
it, and so they lost the place.
“But the two little pumpkin
seeds, they knew where they were well enough, and
they lay low, and let the rain and the sun soak in
and swell them up; and then they both began to push,
and by-and-by they got their heads out of the ground,
with their shells down over their eyes like caps,
and as soon as they could shake them off and look round,
the bad little pumpkin vine said to his brother:
“‘Well, what are you going to do now?’
“The good little pumpkin vine
said, ’Oh, I’m just going to stay here,
and grow and grow, and put out all the blossoms I can,
and let them all drop off but one, and then grow that
into the biggest and fattest and sweetest pumpkin
that ever was for Thanksgiving pies.’
“‘Well, that’s what
I am going to do, too,’ said the bad little pumpkin
vine, ’all but the pies; but I’m not going
to stay here to do it. I’m going to that
fence over there, where the morning-glories were last
summer, and I’m going to show them what a pumpkin-glory
is like. I’m just going to cover myself
with blossoms; and blossoms that won’t shut
up, either, when the sun comes out, but ’ll stay
open, as if they hadn’t anything to be ashamed
of, and that won’t drop off the first day, either.
I noticed those morning-glories all last summer, when
I was nothing but one of the blossoms myself, and
I just made up my mind that as soon as ever I got
to be a vine, I would show them a thing or two.
Maybe I can’t be a morning-glory, but
I can be a pumpkin-glory, and I guess that’s
glory enough.’
“It made the cold chills run
over the good little vine to hear its brother talk
like that, and it begged him not to do it; and it began
to cry —
“What’s that?” The
papa stopped short, and the boy stopped whispering
in his sister’s ear, and she answered:
“He said he bet it was a girl!”
The tears stood in her eyes, and the boy said:
“Well, anyway, it was like a girl.”
“Very well, sir!” said
the papa. “And supposing it was? Which
is better: to stay quietly at home, and do your
duty, and grow up, and be eaten in a pie at Thanksgiving,
or go gadding all over the garden, and climbing fences,
and everything? The good little pumpkin vine was
perfectly right, and the bad little pumpkin would
have been saved a good deal if it had minded its little
sister.
“The farmer was pretty busy
that summer, and after the first two or three hoeings
he had to leave the two pumpkin vines to the boy that
had helped him to plant the seed, and the boy had
to go fishing so much, and then in swimming, that
he perfectly neglected them, and let them run wild,
if they wanted to; and if the good little pumpkin vine
had not been the best little pumpkin vine that ever
was, it would have run wild. But it just
stayed where it was, and thickened up, and covered
itself with blossoms, till it was like one mass of
gold. It was very fond of all its blossoms, and
it couldn’t bear hardly to think of losing any
of them; but it knew they couldn’t every one
grow up to be a very large pumpkin, and so it let
them gradually drop off till it only had one left,
and then it just gave all its attention to that one,
and did everything it could to make it grow into the
kind of pumpkin it said it would.
“All this time the bad little
pumpkin vine was carrying out its plan of being a
pumpkin-glory. In the first place it found out
that if it expected to get through by fall it couldn’t
fool much putting out a lot of blossoms and waiting
for them to drop off, before it began to devote itself
to business. The fence was a good piece off, and
it had to reach the fence in the first place, for
there wouldn’t be any fun in being a pumpkin-glory
down where nobody could see you, or anything.
So the bad little pumpkin vine began to pull and stretch
towards the fence, and sometimes it thought it would
surely snap in two, it pulled and stretched so hard.
But besides the pulling and stretching, it had to
hide, and go round, because if it had been seen it
wouldn’t have been allowed to go to the fence.
It was a good thing there were so many weeds, that
the boy was too lazy to pull up, and the bad little
pumpkin vine could hide among. But then they
were a good deal of a hinderance, too, because they
were so thick it could hardly get through them.
It had to pass some rows of pease that were perfectly
awful; they tied themselves to it and tried to keep
it back; and there was one hill of cucumbers that
acted ridiculously; they said it was a cucumber vine
running away from home, and they would have kept it
from going any farther, if it hadn’t tugged
with all its might and main, and got away one night
when the cucumbers were sleeping; it was pretty strong,
anyway. When it got to the fence at last, it thought
it was going to die. It was all pulled out so
thin that it wasn’t any thicker than a piece
of twine in some places, and its leaves just hung in
tatters. It hadn’t had time to put out
more than one blossom, and that was such a poor little
sickly thing that it could hardly hang on. The
question was, How can a pumpkin vine climb a fence,
anyway?
“Its knees and elbows were all
worn to strings getting there, or that’s what
the pumpkin thought, till it wound one of those tendrils
round a splinter of the fence, without thinking, and
happened to pull, and then it was perfectly surprised
to find that it seemed to lift itself off the ground
a little. It said to itself, ‘Let’s
try a few more,’ and it twisted some more of
the tendrils round some more splinters, and this time
it fairly lifted itself off the ground. It said,
‘Ah, I see!’ as if it had somehow expected
to do something of the kind all along; but it had
to be pretty careful getting up the fence not to knock
its blossom off, for that would have been the end
of it; and when it did get up among the morning-glories
it almost killed the poor thing, keeping it open night
and day, and showing it off in the hottest sun, and
not giving it a bit of shade, but just holding it
out where it could be seen the whole time. It
wasn’t very much of a blossom compared with the
blossoms on the good little pumpkin vine, but it was
bigger than any of the morning-glories, and that was
some satisfaction, and the bad little pumpkin vine
was as proud as if it was the largest blossom in the
world.
“When the blossom’s leaves
dropped off, and a little pumpkin began to grow on
in its place, the vine did everything it could for
it; just gave itself up to it, and put all its strength
into it. After all, it was a pretty queer-looking
pumpkin, though. It had to grow hanging down,
and not resting on anything, and after it started
with a round head, like other pumpkins, its neck began
to pull out, and pull out, till it looked like a gourd
or a big pear. That’s the way it looked
in the fall, hanging from the vine on the fence, when
the first light frost came and killed the vine.
It was the day when the farmer was gathering his pumpkins
in the cornfield, and he just happened to remember
the seeds he had planted in the home-patch, and he
got out of his wagon to see what had become of them.
He was perfectly astonished to see the size of the
good little pumpkin; you could hardly get it into a
bushel basket, and he gathered it, and sent it to
the county fair, and took the first premium with it.”
“How much was the premium?”
asked the boy. He yawned; he had heard all these
facts so often before.
“It was fifty cents; but you
see the farmer had to pay two dollars to get a chance
to try for the premium at the fair; and so it was some
satisfaction. Anyway, he took the premium, and
he tried to sell the pumpkin, and when he couldn’t,
he brought it home and told his wife they must have
it for Thanksgiving. The boy had gathered the
bad little pumpkin, and kept it from being fed to
the cow, it was so funny-looking; and the day before
Thanksgiving the farmer found it in the barn, and he
said,
“’Hollo! Here’s
that little fool pumpkin. Wonder if it thinks
it’s a morning-glory yet?’
“And the boy said, ‘Oh, father, mayn’t
I have it?’
“And the father said, ‘Guess so.
What are you going to do with it?’
“But the boy didn’t tell,
because he was going to keep it for a surprise; but
as soon as his father went out of the barn, he picked
up the bad little pumpkin by its long neck, and he
kind of balanced it before him, and he said, ’Well,
now, I’m going to make a pumpkin-glory out of
you!’
“And when the bad little pumpkin
heard that, all its seeds fairly rattled in it for
joy. The boy took out his knife, and the first
thing the pumpkin knew he was cutting a kind of lid
off the top of it; it was like getting scalped, but
the pumpkin didn’t mind it, because it was just
the same as war. And when the boy got the top
off he poured the seeds out, and began to scrape the
inside as thin as he could without breaking through.
It hurt awfully, and nothing but the hope of being
a pumpkin-glory could have kept the little pumpkin
quiet; but it didn’t say a word, even after
the boy had made a mouth for it, with two rows of
splendid teeth, and it didn’t cry with either
of the eyes he made for it; just winked at him with
one of them, and twisted its mouth to one side, so
as to let him know it was in the joke; and the first
thing it did when it got one was to turn up its nose
at the good little pumpkin, which the boy’s
mother came into the barn to get.”
“Show how it looked,” said the boy.
And the papa twisted his mouth, and
winked with one eye, and wrinkled his nose till the
little girl begged him to stop. Then he went on:
“The boy hid the bad pumpkin
behind him till his mother was gone, because he didn’t
want her in the secret; and then he slipped into the
house, and put it under his bed. It was pretty
lonesome up there in the boy’s room — he
slept in the garret, and there was nothing but broken
furniture besides his bed; but all day long it could
smell the good little pumpkin, boiling and boiling
for pies; and late at night, after the boy had gone
to sleep, it could smell the hot pies when they came
out of the oven. They smelt splendid, but the
bad little pumpkin didn’t envy them a bit; it
just said, ’Pooh! What’s twenty pumpkin
pies to one pumpkin-glory?’”
“It ought to have said ‘what
are,’ oughtn’t it, papa?”
asked the little girl.
“It certainly ought,”
said the papa. “But if nothing but it’s
grammar had been bad, there wouldn’t have been
much to complain of about it.”
“I don’t suppose it had
ever heard much good grammar from the farmer’s
family,” suggested the boy. “Farmers
always say cowcumbers instead of cucumbers.”
“Oh, do tell us about
the Cowcumber, and the Bullcumber, and the little
Calfcumbers, papa!” the little girl entreated,
and she clasped her hands, to show how anxious she
was.
“What! And leave off at
the most exciting part of the pumpkin-glory?”
The little girl saw what a mistake
she had made; the boy just gave her one look,
and she cowered down into the papa’s lap, and
the papa went on.
“Well, they had an extra big
Thanksgiving at the farmer’s that day. Lots
of the relations came from out West; the grandmother,
who was living with the farmer, was getting pretty
old, and every year or two she thought she wasn’t
going to live very much longer, and she wrote to the
relations in Wisconsin, and everywhere, that if they
expected to see her alive again, they had better come
this time, and bring all their families. She
kept doing it till she was about ninety, and then she
just concluded to live along and not mind how old
she was. But this was just before her eighty-ninth
birthday, and she had drummed up so many sons and
sons-in-law, and daughters and daughters-in-law, and
grandsons and great-grandsons, and granddaughters
and great-granddaughters, that the house was perfectly
packed with them. They had to sleep on the floor,
a good many of them, and you could hardly step for
them; the boys slept in the barn, and they laughed
and cut up so the whole night that the roosters thought
it was morning, and kept crowing till they made their
throats sore, and had to wear wet compresses round
them every night for a week afterwards.”
When the papa said anything like this
the children had a right to pound him, but they were
so anxious not to have him stop, that this time they
did not do it. They said, “Go on, go on!”
and the little girl said, “And then the tables!”
“Tables? Well, I should
think so! They got all the tables there were in
the house, up stairs and down, for dinner Thanksgiving
Day, and they took the grandmother’s work-stand
and put it at the head, and she sat down there; only
she was so used to knitting by that table that she
kept looking for her knitting-needles all through
dinner, and couldn’t seem to remember what it
was she was missing. The other end of the table
was the carpenter’s bench that they brought
in out of the barn, and they put the youngest and
funniest papa at that. The tables stretched from
the kitchen into the dining-room, and clear through
that out into the hall, and across into the parlor.
They hadn’t table-cloths enough to go the whole
length, and the end of the carpenter’s bench,
where the funniest papa sat, was bare, and all through
dinner-time he kept making fun. The vise was
right at the corner, and when he got his help of turkey,
he pretended that it was so tough he had to fasten
the bone in the vise, and cut the meat off with his
knife like a draw-shave.”
“It was the drumstick, I suppose,
papa?” said the boy. “A turkey’s
drumstick is all full of little wooden splinters, anyway.”
“And what did the mamma say?” asked the
little girl.
“Oh, she kept saying, ‘Now
you behave!’ and, ’Well, I should think
you’d be ashamed!’ but the funniest papa
didn’t mind her a bit; and everybody laughed
till they could hardly stand it. All this time
the boys were out in the barn, waiting for the second
table, and playing round. The farmer’s
boy went up to his room over the wood-shed, and got
in at the garret window, and brought out the pumpkin-glory.
Only he began to slip when he was coming down the
roof, and he’d have slipped clear off if he
hadn’t caught his trousers on a shingle-nail,
and stuck. It made a pretty bad tear, but the
other boys pinned it up so that it wouldn’t
show, and the pumpkin-glory wasn’t hurt a bit.
They all said that it was about the best jack-o’-lantern
they almost ever saw, on account of the long neck
there was to it; and they made a plan to stick the
end of the neck into the top of the pump, and have
fun hearing what the folks would say when they came
out after dark and saw it all lit up; and then they
noticed the pigpen at the corner of the barn, and began
to plague the pig, and so many of them got up on the
pen that they broke the middle board off; and they
didn’t like to nail it on again because it was
Thanksgiving Day, and you mustn’t hammer or anything;
so they just stuck it up in its place with a piece
of wood against it, and the boy said he would fix
it in the morning.
“The grown folks stayed so long
at the table that it was nearly dark when the boys
got to it, and they would have been almost starved
if the farm-boy hadn’t brought out apples and
doughnuts every little while. As it was, they
were pretty hungry, and they began on the pumpkin pie
at once, so as to keep eating till the mother and
the other mothers that were helping could get some
of the things out of the oven that they had been keeping
hot for the boys. The pie was so nice that they
kept eating at it all along, and the mother told them
about the good little pumpkin that it was made of,
and how the good little pumpkin had never had any
wish from the time it was nothing but a seed, except
to grow up and be made into pies and eaten at Thanksgiving;
and they must all try to be good, too, and grow up
and do likewise. The boys didn’t say anything,
because their mouths were so full, but they looked
at each other and winked their left eyes. There
were about forty or fifty of them, and when they all
winked their left eyes it made it so dark you could
hardly see; and the mother got the lamp; but the other
mothers saw what the boys were doing, and they just
shook them till they opened their eyes and stopped
their mischief.”
“Show how they looked!” said the boy.
“I can’t show how fifty
boys looked,” said the papa. “But
they looked a good deal like the pumpkin-glory that
was waiting quietly in the barn for them to get through,
and come out and have some fun with it. When
they had all eaten so much that they could hardly stand
up, they got down from the table, and grabbed their
hats, and started for the door. But they had
to go out the back way, because the table took up the
front entry, and that gave the farmer’s boy a
chance to find a piece of candle out in the kitchen
and some matches; and then they rushed to the barn.
It was so dark there already that they thought they
had better light up the pumpkin-glory and try it.
They lit it up, and it worked splendidly; but they
forgot to put out the match, and it caught some straw
on the barn floor, and a little more and it would have
burnt the barn down. The boys stamped the fire
out in about half a second; and after that they waited
till it was dark outside before they lit up the pumpkin-glory
again. Then they all bent down over it to keep
the wind from blowing the match anywhere, and pretty
soon it was lit up, and the farmer’s boy took
the pumpkin-glory by its long neck, and stuck the
point in the hole in the top of the pump; and just
then the funniest papa came round the corner of the
wood-house, and said:
“’What have you got there,
boys? Jack-o’-lantern? Well, well.
That’s a good one!’
“He came up and looked at the
pumpkin-glory, and he bent back and he bent forward,
and he doubled down and he straightened up, and laughed
till the boys thought he was going to kill himself.
“They had all intended to burst
into an Indian yell, and dance round the pumpkin-glory;
but the funniest papa said, ’Now all you fellows
keep still half a minute,’ and the next thing
they knew he ran into the house, and came out, walking
his wife before him with both his hands over her eyes.
Then the boys saw he was going to have some fun with
her, and they kept as still as mice, and waited till
he walked her up to the pumpkin-glory; and she was
saying all the time, ’Now, John, if this is
some of your fooling, I’ll give it to
you.’ When he got her close up he took
away his hands, and she gave a kind of a whoop, and
then she began to laugh, the pumpkin-glory was
so funny, and to chase the funniest papa all round
the yard to box his ears, and as soon as she had boxed
them she said, ‘Now let’s go in and send
the rest out,’ and in about a quarter of a second
all the other papas came out, holding their hands
over the other mothers’ eyes till they got them
up to the pumpkin-glory; and then there was such a
yelling and laughing and chasing and ear-boxing that
you never heard anything like it; and all at once
the funniest papa hallooed out: ’Where’s
gramma? Gramma’s got to see it! Grandma’ll
enjoy it. It’s just gramma’s kind
of joke,’ and then the mothers all got round
him and said he shouldn’t fool the grandmother,
anyway; and he said he wasn’t going to:
he was just going to bring her out and let her see
it; and his wife went along with him to watch that
he didn’t begin acting up.
“The grandmother had been sitting
all alone in her room ever since dinner; because she
was always afraid somehow that if you enjoyed yourself
it was a sign you were going to suffer for it, and
she had enjoyed herself a good deal that day, and
she was feeling awfully about it. When the funniest
papa and his wife came in she said, ’What is
it? What is it? Is the world a-burnin’
up? Well, you got to wrap up warm, then, or you’ll
ketch your death o’ cold runnin’ and then
stoppin’ to rest with your pores all open!’
“The funniest papa’s wife
she went up and kissed her, and said, ’No, grandmother,
the world’s all right,’ and then she told
her just how it was, and how they wanted her to come
out and see the jack-o’-lantern, just to please
the children; and she must come, anyway; because it
was the funniest jack-o’-lantern there ever
was, and then she told how the funniest papa had fooled
her, and then how they had got the other papas
to fool the other mothers, and they had all had the
greatest fun then you ever saw. All the time
she kept putting on her things for her, and the grandmother
seemed to get quite in the notion, and she laughed
a little, and they thought she was going to enjoy
it as much as anybody; they really did, because they
were all very tender of her, and they wouldn’t
have scared her for anything, and everybody kept cheering
her up and telling her how much they knew she would
like it, till they got her to the pump. The little
pumpkin-glory was feeling awfully proud and self-satisfied;
for it had never seen any flower or any vegetable
treated with half so much honor by human beings.
It wasn’t sure at first that it was very nice
to be laughed at so much, but after a while it began
to conclude that the papas and the mammas were
just laughing at the joke of the whole thing.
When the old grandmother got up close, it thought
it would do something extra to please her; or else
the heat of the candle had dried it up so that it
cracked without intending to. Anyway, it tried
to give a very broad grin, and all of a sudden it split
its mouth from ear to ear.”
“You didn’t say it had any ears before,”
said the boy.
“No; it had them behind,”
said the papa; and the boy felt like giving him just
one pound; but he thought it might stop the story,
and so he let the papa go on.
“As soon as the grandmother
saw it open its mouth that way she just gave one scream,
‘My sakes! It’s comin’ to life!’
And she threw up her arms, and she threw up her feet,
and if the funniest papa hadn’t been there to
catch her, and if there hadn’t been forty or
fifty other sons and daughters, and grandsons and
daughters, and great-grandsons and great-granddaughters,
very likely she might have fallen. As it was,
they piled round her, and kept her up; but there were
so many of them they jostled the pump, and the first
thing the pumpkin-glory knew, it fell down and burst
open; and the pig that the boys had plagued, and that
had kept squealing all the time because it thought
that the people had come out to feed it, knocked the
loose board off its pen, and flew out and gobbled
the pumpkin-glory up, candle and all, and that was
the end of the proud little pumpkin-glory.”
“And when the pig ate the candle
it looked like the magician when he puts burning tow
in his mouth,” said the boy.
“Exactly,” said the papa.
The children were both silent for
a moment. Then the boy said, “This story
never had any moral, I believe, papa?”
“Not a bit,” said the
papa. “Unless,” he added, “the
moral was that you had better not be ambitious, unless
you want to come to the sad end of this proud little
pumpkin-glory.”
“Why, but the good little pumpkin
was eaten up, too,” said the boy.
“That’s true,” the papa acknowledged.
“Well,” said the little
girl, “there’s a great deal of difference
between being eaten by persons and eaten by pigs.”
“All the difference in the world,”
said the papa; and he laughed, and ran out of the
library before the boy could get at him.