If there was any fellow in the Boy’s
Town fifty years ago who had a good reason to run
off it was Pony Baker. Pony was not his real name;
it was what the boys called him, because there were
so many fellows who had to be told apart, as Big Joe
and Little Joe, and Big John and Little John, and
Big Bill and Little Bill, that they got tired of telling
boys apart that way; and after one of the boys called
him Pony Baker, so that you could know him from his
cousin Frank Baker, nobody ever called him anything
else.
You would have known Pony from the
other Frank Baker, anyway, if you had seen them together,
for the other Frank Baker was a tall, lank, tow-headed
boy, with a face so full of freckles that you could
not have put a pin-point between them, and large,
bony hands that came a long way out of his coat-sleeves;
and the Frank Baker that I mean here was little and
dark and round, with a thick crop of black hair on
his nice head; and he had black eyes, and a smooth,
swarthy face, without a freckle on it. He was
pretty well dressed in clothes that fitted him, and
his hands were small and plump. His legs were
rather short, and he walked and ran with quick, nipping
steps, just like a pony; and you would have thought
of a pony when you looked at him, even if that had
not been his nickname.
That very thing of his being dressed
so well was one of the worst things that was done
to him by his mother, who was always disgracing him
before the other boys, though she may not have known
it. She never was willing to have him go barefoot,
and if she could she would have kept his shoes on
him the whole summer; as it was, she did keep them
on till all the other boys had been barefoot so long
that their soles were as hard as horn; and they could
walk on broken glass, or anything, and had stumped
the nails off their big toes, and had grass cuts under
their little ones, and yarn tied into them, before
Pony Baker was allowed to take his shoes off in the
spring. He would have taken them off and gone
barefoot without his mother’s knowing it, and
many of the boys said that he ought to do it; but
then she would have found it out by the look of his
feet when he went to bed, and maybe told his father
about it.
Very likely his father would not have
cared so much; sometimes he would ask Pony’s
mother why she did not turn the boy barefoot with the
other boys, and then she would ask Pony’s father
if he wanted the child to take his death of cold;
and that would hush him up, for Pony once had a little
brother that died.
Pony had nothing but sisters, after
that, and this was another thing that kept him from
having a fair chance with the other fellows. His
mother wanted him to play with his sisters, and she
did not care, or else she did not know, that a girl-boy
was about the meanest thing there was, and that if
you played with girls you could not help being a girl-boy.
Pony liked to play with his sisters well enough when
there were no boys around, but when there were his
mother did not act as if she could not see any difference.
The girls themselves were not so bad, and they often
coaxed their mother to let him go off with the other
boys, when she would not have let him without.
But even then, if it was going in swimming, or fishing,
or skating before the ice was very thick, she would
show that she thought he was too little to take care
of himself, and would make some big boy promise that
he would look after Pony; and all the time Pony would
be gritting his teeth, he was so mad.
Once, when Pony stayed in swimming
all day with a crowd of fellows, she did about the
worst thing she ever did; she came down to the river-bank
and stood there, and called to the boys, to find out
if Pony was with them; and they all had to get into
the water up to their necks before they could bear
to answer her, they were so ashamed; and Pony had to
put on his clothes and go home with her. He could
see that she had been crying, and that made him a
little sorry, but not so very; and the most that he
was afraid of was that she would tell his father.
But if she did he never knew it, and that night she
came to him after he went to bed, and begged him so
not to stay in swimming the whole day any more, and
told him how frightened she had been, that he had
to promise; and then that made him feel worse than
ever, for he did not see how he could break his promise.
She was not exactly a bad mother,
and she was not exactly a good mother. If she
had been really a good mother she would have let him
do whatever he wanted, and never made any trouble,
and if she had been a bad mother she would not have
let him do anything; and then he could have done it
without her letting him. In some ways she was
good enough; she would let him take out things to
the boys in the back yard from the table, and she put
apple-butter or molasses on when it was hot biscuit
that he took out. Once she let him have a birthday
party, and had cake and candy-pulling and lemonade,
and nobody but boys, because he said that boys hated
girls; even his own sisters did not come. Sometimes
she would give him money for ice-cream, and if she
could have got over being particular about his going
in swimming before he could swim, and pistols and powder
and such things, she would have done very well.
She was first-rate when he was sick,
and nobody could take care of him like her, cooling
his pillow and making the bed easy, and keeping everybody
quiet; and when he began to get well she would cook
things that tasted better than anything you ever knew:
stewed chicken, and toast with gravy on, and things
like that. Even when he was well, and just lonesome,
she would sit by his bed if he asked her, till he went
to sleep, or got quieted down; and if he was trying
to make anything she would help him all she could,
but if it was something that you had to use a knife
with she was not much help.
It always seemed to Pony that she
begrudged his going with the boys, and she said how
nice he used to keep his clothes before, and had such
pretty manners, and now he was such a sloven, and
was so rude and fierce that she was almost afraid
of him. He knew that she was making fun about
being afraid of him; and if she did hate to have him
go with some of the worst boys, still she was willing
to help in lots of ways. She gave him yarn to
make a ball with, and she covered it for him with leather.
Sometimes she seemed to do things for him that she
would not do for his sisters, and she often made them
give up to him when they had a dispute.
She made a distinction between boys
and girls, and did not make him help with the housework.
Of course he had to bring in wood, but all the fellows
had to do that, and they did not count it; what they
hated was having to churn, or wipe dishes after company.
Pony’s mother never made him do anything like
that; she said it was girls’ work; and she would
not let him learn to milk, either, for she said that
milking was women’s work, and all that Pony
had to do with the cow was to bring her home from the
pasture in the evening.
Sometimes when there was company she
would let him bring in a boy to the second table,
and she gave them all the preserves and cake that they
could eat. The kind of company she had was what
nearly all the mothers had in the Boy’s Town;
they asked a whole lot of other mothers to supper,
and had stewed chicken and hot biscuit, and tea and
coffee, and quince and peach preserves, and sweet
tomato pickles, and cake with jelly in between, and
pound-cake with frosting on, and buttered toast, and
maybe fried eggs and ham. The fathers never seemed
to come; or, if the father that belonged in the house
came, he did not go and sit in the parlor with the
mothers after supper, but went up-town, to the post-office,
or to some of the lawyers’ offices, or else
a store, and talked politics.
Pony never thought his mother was
good looking, or, rather, he did not think anything
about that, and it always seemed to him that she must
be a pretty old woman; but once when she had company,
and she came in from the kitchen with the last dish,
and put it on the table, one of the nicest of the
other mothers came up, and put her arm around Pony’s
mother, and said:
“How pretty you do look, Mrs.
Baker! I just want to kiss you on those red cheeks.
I should say you were a girl, instead of having all
those children.”
Pony was standing out on the porch
with his five sisters, and when he looked in through
the door, and saw his mother with her head thrown back
laughing, and her face flushed from standing over the
stove to cook the supper, and her brown hair tossed
a little, he did think that she was very nice looking,
and like the girls at school that were in the fourth
reader; and she was very nicely dressed, too, in a
white muslin dress, with the blue check apron she
had been working in flung behind the kitchen door,
as she came into the sitting-room carrying the dish
in one hand. He did not know what the other mother
meant by saying “all those children”; for
it was a small family for the Boy’s Town, and
he thought she must just be fooling.
Sometimes his mother would romp with
the children, or sing them funny, old-fashioned songs,
such as people used to sing when the country was first
settled and everybody lived in log cabins. When
she got into one of her joking times she would call
Pony “Honey! Honey!” like the old
colored aunty that had the persimmon-tree in her yard;
and if she had to go past him she would wind her arm
around his head and mumble the top of it with her
lips; and if there were any of the fellows there, and
Pony would fling her arm away because he hated to
have her do it before them, she would just laugh.
Of course, if she had been a good
mother about everything else Pony would not have minded
that, but she was such a very bad mother about letting
him have fun, sometimes, that Pony could not overlook
it, as he might have done. He did not think that
she ought to call him Pony before the boys, for, though
he did not mind the boys’ calling him Pony, it
was not the thing for a fellow’s mother, and
it was sure to give them the notion she babied him
at home. Once, after she called him “Pony,
dear!” the fellows mocked her when they got
away, and all of them called him “Pony, dear!”
till he began to cry and to stone them.
But the worst of her ways was about
powder, and her not wanting him to have it, or not
wanting him to have it where there was fire. She
would never let him come near the stove with it, after
one of the fellows had tried to dry his powder on
the stove when it had got wet from being pumped on
in his jacket-pocket while he was drinking at the pump,
and the fellow forgot to take it off the stove quick
enough, and it almost blew his mother up, and did
pretty nearly scare her to death; and she would not
let him keep it in a bottle, or anything, but just
loose in a paper, because another of the fellows had
begun to pour powder once from a bottle onto a coal
of fire, and the fire ran up the powder, and blew the
bottle to pieces, and filled the fellow’s face
so full of broken glass that the doctor was nearly
the whole of that Fourth of July night getting it out.
So, although she was a good mother in some things,
she was a bad mother in others, and these were the
great things; and they were what gave him the right
to run off.