BY ROSE TERRY COOKE.
"Well, he no need to ha' done it, Sary. I've told him more'n four times he hadn't ought to pull a gun tow'rds him by the muzzle on't. Now he's up an' did it once for all."
"He won't never have no chance to do it again, Scotty,if you don't hurry up after the doctor," said Sary, wiping her eyes on her dirty calico apron, thereby adding an effective shadow under their redness.
"Well, I'm a-goin', ain't I? But ye know yerself 'twon't do to go so fur on eend, 'thout ye're vittled consider'ble well."
So saying, he fell to at the meal she had interrupted, hot potatoes, cold pork, dried venison, and blueberry pie vanishing down his throat with an alacrity and dispatch that augured well for the thorough "vittling" he intended, while Sary went about folding chunks of boiled ham, thick slices of brown bread, solid rounds of "sody biskit," and slab-sided turnovers in a newspaper, filling a flat bottle with whiskey, and now and then casting a look at the low bed where young Harry McAlister lay, very much whiter than the sheets about him, and quite as unconscious of surroundings, the blood oozing slowly through such bandages as Scott Peck's rude surgery had twisted about a gunshot-wound in his thigh, and brought to close tension by a stick thrust through the folds, turned as tight as could be borne, and strapped into place by a bit of coarse twine.
It was a long journey paddling up the Racquette River, across creek and carry, with the boat on his back, to the lakes, and then from Martin's to "Harri'tstown," where he knew a surgeon of repute from a great city was spending his vacation. It was touch-and-go with Harry before Scott and Dr. Drake got back. Sary had dosed him with venison-broth, hot and greasy, weak whiskey and water, and a little milk (only a little), for their cow was old and pastured chiefly on leaves and twigs, and she only came back to the shanty when she liked or needed to come, so their milksupply was uncertain, and Sary dared not leave her patient long enough to row to the end of Tupper's Lake, where the nearest cow was kept. But youth has a power of recovery that defies circumstance, and Dr. Drake was very skilful. Long weeks went by, and the green woods of July had brightened and faded into October's dim splendor before Harry McAlister could be carried up the river and over to Bartlett's, where his mother had been called to meet him. She was a widow, and he her only child; and, though she was rather silly and altogether unpractical, she had a tender, generous heart, and was ready to do anything possible for Scott and Sarah Peck to show her gratitude for their kindness to her boy. She did not consult Harry at all. He had lost much blood from his accident and recovered strength slowly. She kept everything like thought or trouble out of his way as far as she could, and when the family physician found her heart was set on taking him to Florida for the winter, because he looked pale and her grandmother's aunt had died of consumption, Dr. Peet, like a wise man, rubbed his hands together, bowed, and assured her it would be the very thing. But something must be done for the Pecks before she went away. It occurred to her how difficult it must be for them to row everywhere in a small boat. A horse would be much better. Even if the roads were not good they could ride, Sarah behind Scott. And so useful in farming, too. Her mind was made up at once. She dispatched a check for three hundred dollars to Peter Haas, her old coachman, who had bought a farm in Vermont with his savings, and retired, with the cook for his wife, into the private life of afarmer. Mrs. McAlister had much faith in Peter's knowledgeof horses and his honesty. She wrote him to buy astrong, steady animal, and convey it to Scott Peck, either sending him word to come up to Bartlett's after it, or taking it down the river; but, at any rate, to make sure he had it. If the check would not pay all expenses, he was to draw on her for more. Peter took the opportunity to get rid of a horse he had no use for in winter; a beast restive as a racer when not in daily use, but strong enough for any work, and steady enough if he had work. Two hundred and fifty dollars was the price now set on his head, though Peter had bought him for seventy-five, and thought him dear at that. The remaining fifty was ample for expenses; but Peter was a prudent German and liked a margin. There was no difficulty in getting the horse as far as Martin's, and by dint of patient insistence Peter contrived to have him conveyed to Bartlett's; but here he rested and sent a messenger down to Scott Peck, while he himself returned to Bridget at the farm, slowly cursing the country and the people as he went his way, for his delays and troubles had been numerous.
"Gosh!" said Scott Peck, when he stepped up to the log-house that served for the guides, unknowing what awaited him, for the messenger had not found him at home, but left word he was to come to Bartlett's for something, and the first thing he saw was this gray horse.
"What fool fetched his hoss up here?"
The guides gathered about the door of their hut, burst into a loud cackle of laughter; even the beautiful hounds in their rough kennel leaped up and bayed.
"W-a-a-l;" drawled lazy Joe Tucker, "the feller 't owns him ain't nobody's fool. Be ye, Scotty?"
"Wha-t!" ejaculated Scott.
"It's your'n, man, sure as shootin'!" laughed Hearty Jack, Joe Tucker's brother.
"Mine? Jehoshaphat! Blaze that air track, will ye? I'm lost, sure."
"Well, Bartlett's gone out Keeseville way, so't kinder was lef' to me to tell ye. 'Member that ar chap that shot hisself in the leg down to your shanty this summer?"
"Well, I expect I do, seein' I ain't more'n a hundred year old," sarcastically answered Scott.
"He's cleared out South-aways some'eres, and his ma consaited she was dredful obleeged to ye; 'n I'm blessed if she didn't send an old Dutch feller up here fur to fetch ye that hoss fur a present. He couldn't noways wait to see ye pus'nally, he sed, fur he mistrusted the' was snows here sometimes 'bout this season. Ho! ho! ho!"
"Good land!" said Scott, sitting down on a log, and putting his hands in his pockets, the image of perplexity, while the men about him roared with fresh laughter. "What be I a-goin' to do with the critter?" he asked of the crowd.
"Blessed if I know," answered Hearty Jack.
"Can't ye get him out to 'Sable Falls or Keeseville 'n sell him fur what he'll fetch?" suggested Joe Tucker.
"I can't go now, noways. Sary's wood-pile's nigh gin out, 'n there was a mighty big sundog yesterday; 'nd moreover I smell snow. It'll be suthin' to git hum as 'tis. Mabbe Bartlett'll keep him a spell."
"No, he won't; you kin bet your head. His fodder's a-runnin' short for the hornid critters. He's bought some up to Martin's, that's a-comin' down dyrect; but 'tain'tenough. He's put to't for more. Shouldn't wonder ef he had to draw from North Elby when sleddin' sets in."
"Well, I dono's there's but one thing for to do; fetch him hum somehow or 'nother; 'nd there's my boat over to the carry!"
"You'd better tie the critter on behind an' let him wade down the Racket!"
Another shout of laughter greeted this proposal.
"I s'all take ze boat for you!" quietly said a little brown Canadian—Jean Poiton. "I am go to Tupper to-morrow. I have one hunt to make. I can take her."
"Well said, Gene. I'll owe you a turn. But, fur all, how be I goin' to get that animile 'long the trail?"
"I dono!" answered Joe Tucker. "I expect, if it's got to be did, you'll fetch it somehow. But I'm mighty glad 'tain't my job!"
Scott Peck thought Joe had good reason for joy in that direction before he had gone a mile on his homeward way! The trail was only a trail, rough, devious, crossed with roots of trees, brushed with boughs of fir and pine, and the horse was restive and unruly. By nightfall he had gone only a few miles, and when he had tied the beast to a tree and covered him with a blanket brought from Bartlett's for the purpose, and strapped on his own back all the way, the light of the camp-fire startled the horse so that Scott was forced to blind him with a comforter before he would stand still. Then in the middle of the night, a great owl hooting from the tree-top just above him was a fresh scare, and but that the strap and rope both were new and strong he would have escaped. Scott listened to his rearing, trampling, snorts, and wild neigh with the composure of a sleepyman; but when he awoke at daylight, and found four inches of snow had fallen during the night, he swore.
This was too much. Even to his practised woodcraft it seemed impossible to get the horse safe to his clearing without harm. It was only by dint of the utmost care and patience, the greatest watchfulness of the way, that he got along at all. Every rod or two he stumbled, and all but fell himself. Here and there a loaded hemlock bough, weighed out of its uprightness by the wet snow, snapped in his face and blinded him with its damp burden; and he knew long before nightfall that another night in the woods was inevitable. He could feed the horse on young twigs of beech and birch; fresh moss, and new-peeled bark (fodder the animal would have resented with scorn under any other conditions); but hunger has no law concerning food. Scott himself was famished; but his pipe and tobacco were a refuge whose value he knew before, and his charge was tired enough to be quiet this second night; so the man had an undisturbed sleep by his comfortable fire. It was full noon of the next day when he reached his cabin. Jean Poiton had tied his boat to its stake, and gone on without stopping to speak to Sarah; so her surprise was wonderful when she saw Scott emerge from the forest, leading a gray creature, with drooping head and shambling gait, tired and dispirited.
"Heaven's to Betsey, Scott Peck! What hev you got theer?"
"The devil!" growled Scott.
Sary screamed.
"Do hold your jaw, gal, an' git me su'thin' hot to eat 'n drink. I'm savager'n an Injin. Come, git along." And, tying his horse to a stump, the hungry man followed Sarahinto the house and helped himself out of a keg in the corner to a long, reviving draught.
"Du tell!" said Sarah, when the pork began to frizzle in the pan. "What upon airth did you buy a hoss for?" (She had discovered it was a horse.)
"Buy it! I guess not. I ain't no such blamed fool as that comes to. That feller you nussed up here a spell back, he up an' sent it roun' to Bartlett's, for a present to me."
"Well! Did he think you was a-goin' to set up canawl long o' Racket?"
"I expect he calc'lated I'd go racin'," dryly answered Scott.
"But what be ye a-goin' to feed him with?" said Sary, laying venison steaks into the pan.
"Lord knows! I don't. Shut up, Sary! I'm tuckered out with the beast. I'd ruther still-hunt three weeks on eend than fetch him in from Sar'nac, now I tell ye. Ain't them did enough? I could eat a raw bear."
Sary laughed and asked no more questions till the ravenous man had satisfied himself with the savory food; but, if she had asked them, Scott would have had no answer, for his mind was perplexed to the last degree. He fed the beast for a while on potatoes; but that was taking the bread out of his own mouth, though he supplemented it with now and then a boat-load of coarse, frost-killed grass, but the horse grew more and more gaunt and restive. His eyes glared with hunger and fury. He kicked out one side of the cowshed and snapped at Scott whenever he came near him. Want of use and food had restored him to the original savagery of his race. Hitherto Scott had never acknowledged Mrs McAlister's gift; but Sary, who had avague idea of good manners, caught from the picture papers and occasional dime novels the tribe of Adirondack travellers strew even in such a wilderness, kept pecking at him.
"Ta'n't no more'n civil to say thank ye, to the least," she said, till Scott's temper gave way.
"Stop a-pesterin' of me! I've hed too much. I ain't a speck thankful! I'm mightily t'other thing, whatever 'tis. Write to her yourself, if you're a mind tu. You can make a better fist at it, anyways. Comes as nateral to women to lie as sap to run. I'll be etarnally blessed ef I touch paper for to do it." And he flung out of the door with a bang.
Of course Sary wrote the letter, which one balmy day electrified Harry and his mother as they sat basking in Southern sunshine:
"Mis Macallistur: This is fur to say wee is reel obliged to ye fur theHoss."
"Mis Macallistur: This is fur to say wee is reel obliged to ye fur theHoss."
"Good gracious, mother! Did you send them a horse?" ejaculated Harry.
"Why, my dear, I wanted to show my sense of their kindness, and I could not offer these people money. I thought a horse would be so useful!"
"Useful! in the Adirondack woods!" And Harry burst into a fit of laughter that scarcely permitted his mother to go on; but at last she proceeded:
"But Scotty and me ain't ackwainted So to speak with Hoss ways; he seems kinder Hum-sick if you may say that of a Cretur. We air etarnally gratified to You for sech a Valewble Pressent, but if you was Wiling we shood Like to swapp it of in spring fur a kow, ourn Being some in years.
"But Scotty and me ain't ackwainted So to speak with Hoss ways; he seems kinder Hum-sick if you may say that of a Cretur. We air etarnally gratified to You for sech a Valewble Pressent, but if you was Wiling we shood Like to swapp it of in spring fur a kow, ourn Being some in years.
"yours to Command,Sary Peck."
But long before Mrs. McAlister's permission to "swap" the horse reached Scott Peck, the creature took his destiny into his own hands. Scott had gone away on a desperate errand, to fetch some sort of food for the poor creature, whose bones stared him in the face, and Sary went out one morning to give him her potato-peelings and some scraps of bread, when, suddenly, he jerked his head fiercely, snapped his halter in two, and wheeled round upon the frightened woman, rearing, snorting, and showing his long, yellow teeth. Sary fled at once and barred the door behind her; but neither she nor Scott ever saw their "gift horse" again. For aught I know he still roams the Adirondack forest, and maybe personates the ghostly and ghastly white deer of song and legend. Who can tell? But he was lifted off Scott Peck's shoulders, and all Scott said by way of epitaph on the departed, when he came home to find his white steed gone, was, "Hang presents!"
"Samantha Allen" will now have "a brief opportunity for remark."
Admire her graphic description of the excitement Josiah caused by voting, at a meeting of the "Jonesville Creation Searchers," for his own spouse as a delegate from Jonesville to the "Sentinel." She reports thus:
"It was a fearful time, but right where the excitement was raining most fearfully I felt a motion by the side of me, and my companion got up and stood on his feet and says, inprettyfirm accents, thoughsomesheepish:
"'Idid, and there's where I stand now;Ivote forSamantha!'
"And then he sot down again. Oh, the fearful excitement and confusion that rained down again! The president got up and tried to speak; the editor of theAugertalked wildly; Shakespeare Bobbet talked to himself incoherently, but Solomon Cypher's voice drowned 'em all out, as he kep' a-smitin' his breast and a hollerin' that he wasn't goin' to be infringed upon, or come in contract withnowoman!
"No female woman needn't think she was the equal of man; and I should go as a woman or stay to home. I was so almost wore out by their talk, that I spoke right out, and, says I, 'Good land!how did yous'poseI was a-goin'?'
"The president then said that he meant, if I went I mustn't look upon things with the eye of a 'Creation Searcher' and a man (here he p'inted his forefinger right up in the air and waved it round in a real free and soarin' way), but look at things with the eye of a private investigator and awoman(here he p'inted his finger firm and stiddy right down into the wood-box and a pan of ashes). It war impressive—VERY."
A Terrible Accident.
BY METTA VICTORIA VICTOR.
"Dora! Dora! Dora! wake up, wake up, I say! Don't you smell something burning? Wake up, child! Don't you smell fire? Good Lord! so do I. I thought I wasn't mistaken. The room's full of smoke. Oh, dear! what'll we do? Don't stop to put on your petticoat. We'll all be burned to death. Fire! fire! fire! fire!
"Yes, there is! I don't know where! It's all over—our room's all in a blaze, and Dora won't come out till she getsher dress on. Mr. Little, youshan'tgo in—I'll hold you—you'll be killed just to save that chit of a girl, when—I—I—He's gone—rushed right into the flames. Oh, my house! my furniture! all my earnings! Can't anything be done? Fire! fire! fire! Call the fire-engines! ring the dinner-bell! Be quiet! How can I be quiet? Yes, it is all in flames. I saw them myself! Where's my silver spoons? Oh, where's my teeth, and my silver soup-ladle? Let me be! I'm going out in the street before it's too late! Oh, Mr. Grayson! have you got water? have you found the place? are they bringing water?
"Did you say the fire was out? Was that you that spoke, Mr. Little? I thought you were burned up, sure; and there's Dora, too. How did they get it out? My clothes-closet was on fire, and the room, too! We would have been smothered in five minutes more if we hadn't waked up! But it's all out now, and no damage done, but my dresses destroyed and the carpet spoiled. Thank the Lord, if that's the worst! But itain'tthe worst. Dora, come along this minute to my room. I don't care if it is cold, and wet, and full of smoke. Don't you see—don't you see I'm in my night-clothes? I never thought of it before. I'm ruined, ruined completely! Go to bed, gentlemen; get out of the way as quick as you can Dora, shut the door. Hand me that candle; I want to look at myself in the glass. To think that all those gentlemen should have seen me in this fix! I'd rather have perished in the flames. It's the very first night I've worn these flannel night-caps, and to be seen in 'em! Good gracious! how old I do look! Not a spear of hair on my head scarcely, and this red nightgown and old petticoat on, and my teeth in thetumbler, and the paint all washed off my face, and scarred besides! It's no use! I never, never can again make any ofthosemen believe that I'm only twenty-five, and I felt so sure of some of them.
"Oh, Dora Adams!youneedn't look pale; you've lost nothing. I'll warrant Mr. Little thought you never looked so pretty as in that ruffled gown, and your hair all down over your shoulders. He says you were fainting from the smoke when he dragged you out. You must be a little fool to be afraid to come out lookingthatway. They say that new boarder is a drawing-master, and I seen some of his pictures yesterday; he had some such ridiculous things. He'll caricature me for the amusement of the young men, I know. Only think how my portrait would look taken to-night! and he'll have it, I'm sure, for I noticed him looking at me—the first that reminded me of my situation after the fire was put out. Well, there's but one thing to be done, and that's to put a bold face on it. I can't sleep any more to-night; besides, the bed's wet, and it's beginning to get daylight. I'll go to work and get myself ready for breakfast, and I'll pretend to something—I don't know just what—to get myself out of this scrape, if I can....
"Good-morning, gentlemen, good-morning! We had quite a fright last night, didn't we? Dora and I came pretty near paying dear for a little frolic. You see, we were dressing up in character to amuse ourselves, and I was all fixed up for to represent an old woman, and had put on a gray wig and an old flannel gown that I found, and we'd set up pretty late, having some fun all to ourselves; and I expect Dora must have been pretty sleepy when she was putting some of the things away, and set fire to a dress inthe closet without noticing it. I've lost my whole wardrobe, nigh about, by her carelessness; but it's such a mercy we wasn't burned in our bed that I don't feel to complain so much on that account. Isn't it curious how I got caught dressed up like my grandmother? We didn't suppose we were going to appear before so large an audience when we planned out our little frolic. What character did Dora assume? Really, Mr. Little, I was so scared last night that I disremember. She took offherrigging before she went to bed. Don't you think I'd personify a pretty good old woman, gentlemen—ha! ha!—for a lady of my age? What's that, Mr. Little? You wish I'd make you a present of that nightcap, to remember me by? Of course; I've no further use for it. Of course I haven't. It's one of Bridget's, that I borrowed for the occasion, and I've got to give it back to her. Have some coffee, Mr. Grayson—do! I've got cream for it this morning. Mr. Smith, help yourself to some of the beefsteak. It's a very cold morning—fine weather out of doors. Eat all you can, all of you. Have you any profiles to take yet, Mr. Gamboge? Imaymake up my mind to set for mine before you leave us; I've always thought I should have it taken some time. In character? He! he! Mr. Little, you're so funny! But you'll excusemethis morning, as I had such a fright last night. I must go and take up that wet carpet."
A BRACE OF WITTY WOMEN.
By the courtesy of Harper Brothers I am allowed to give you "Aunt Anniky's Teeth," by Sherwood Bonner. The illustrations add much, but the story is good enough without pictures.
BY SHERWOOD BONNER.
Aunt Anniky was an African dame, fifty years old, and of an imposing presence. As a waffle-maker she possessed a gift beyond the common, but her unapproachable talent lay in the province of nursing. She seemed born for the benefit of sick people. She should have been painted with the apple of healing in her hand. For the rest, she was a funny, illiterate old darkey, vain, affable, and neat as a pink.
On one occasion my mother had a dangerous illness. Aunt Anniky nursed her through it, giving herself no rest, night nor day, until her patient had come "back to de walks an' ways ob life," as she expressed the dear mother's recovery. My father, overjoyed and grateful, felt that we owed this result quite as much to Aunt Anniky as to our family doctor, so he announced his intention of making her a handsome present, and, like King Herod, left her free to choose what it should be. I shall never forget how AuntAnniky looked as she stood there smiling and bowing, and bobbing the funniest little courtesies all the way down to the ground.
And you would never guess what it was the old woman asked for.
"Well, Mars' Charles," said she (she had been one of our old servants, and always called my father 'Mars' Charles'), "to tell you de livin' trufe, my soul an' body is a-yearnin' fur a han'sum chany set o' teef."
"A set of teeth!" said father, surprised enough. "And have you none left of your own?"
"I has gummed it fur a good many ye'rs," said Aunt Anniky, with a sigh; "but not wishin' ter be ongrateful ter my obligations, I owns ter havin' five nateral teef. But dey is po' sogers; dey shirks battle. One ob dem's got a little somethin' in it as lively as a speared worm, an' I tell you when anything teches it, hot or cold, it jest makes medance! An' anudder is in my top jaw, an' ain't got no match fur it in de bottom one; an' one is broke off nearly to de root; an' de las' two is so yaller dat I's ashamed ter show 'em in company, an' so I lif's my turkey-tail ter my mouf every time I laughs or speaks."
Father turned to mother with a musing air. "The curious student of humanity," he remarked, "traces resemblances where they are not obviously conspicuous. Now, at the first blush, one would not think of any common ground of meeting for our Aunt Anniky and the Empress Josephine. Yet that fine French lady introduced the fashion of handkerchiefs by continually raising delicate lacemouchoirsto her lips to hide her bad teeth. Aunt Anniky lifts her turkey-tail! It really seems that human beingsshould be classed bystrata, as if they were metals in the earth. Instead of dividing by nations, let us class by quality. So we might find Turk, Jew, Christian, fashionable lady and washerwoman, master and slave, hanging together like cats on a clothes-line by some connecting cord of affinity—"
"In the mean time," said my mother, mildly, "Aunt Anniky is waiting to know if she is to have her teeth."
"Oh, surely, surely!" cried father, coming out of the clouds with a start. "I am going to the village to-morrow, Anniky, in the spring wagon. I will take you with me, and we will see what the dentist can do for you."
"Bless yo' heart, Mars' Charles!" said the delighted Anniky; "you're jest as good as yo' blood and yo' name, and mo' Icouldn'tsay."
The morrow came, and with it Aunt Anniky, gorgeously arrayed in a flaming red calico, a bandanna handkerchief, and a string of carved yellow beads that glittered on her bosom like fresh buttercups on a hill-slope.
I had petitioned to go with the party, for, as we lived on a plantation, a visit to the village was something of an event. A brisk drive soon brought us to the centre of "the Square." A glittering sign hung brazenly from a high window on its western side, bearing, in raised black letters, the name, "Doctor Alonzo Babb."
Dr. Babb was the dentist and the odd fish of our village. He beams in my memory as a big, round man, with hair and smiles all over his face, who talked incessantly, and said things to make your blood run cold.
"Do you see this ring?" he said, as he bustled about, polishing his instruments and making his preparations forthe sacrifice of Aunt Anniky. He held up his right hand, on the forefinger of which glistened a ring the size of a dog-collar. "Now, what d'ye s'pose that's made of?"
"Brass," suggested father, who was funny when not philosophical.
"Brass!" cried Dr. Babb, with a withering look; "it's virgin gold, that ring is. And where d'ye s'pose I found the gold?"
My father ran his hands into his pockets in a retrospective sort of way.
"In the mouths of my patients, every grain of it," said the dentist, with a perfectly diabolical smack of the lips. "Old fillings—plugs, you know—that I saved, and had made up into this shape. Good deal of sentiment about such a ring as this."
"Sentiment of a mixed nature, I should say," murmured my father, with a grimace.
"Mixed—rather! A speck here, a speck there. Sometimes an eye, oftener a jaw, occasionally a front. More than a hundred men, I s'pose, have helped in the cause."
"Law, doctor! you beats de birds, you does," cries Aunt Anniky, whose head was as flat as the floor, where her reverence should have been. "You know dey snatches de wool from ebery bush to make deir nests."
"Lots of company for me, that ring is," said the doctor, ignoring the pertinent or impertinent interruption. "Often as I sit in the twilight, I twirl it around and around, a-thinking of the wagon-loads of food it has masticated, the blood that has flowed over it, the groans that it has cost! Now, old lady, if you will sit just here."
He motioned Aunt Anniky to the chair, into which shedropped in a limp sort of way, recovering herself immediately, however, and sitting bolt upright in a rigid attitude of defiance. Some moments of persuasion were necessary before she could be induced to lean back and allow Dr. Babb's fingers on her nose while she breathed the laughing-gas; but, once settled, the expression faded from her countenance almost as quickly as a magic-lantern picture vanishes. I watched her nervously, my attention divided between her vacant-looking face and a dreadful picture on the wall. It represented Dr. Babb himself, minus the hair, but with double the number of smiles, standing by a patient from whose mouth he had apparently just extracted a huge molar that he held triumphantly in his forceps. A gray-haired old gentleman regarded the pair with benevolent interest. The photograph was entitled, "His First Tooth."
"Attracted by that picture?" said Dr. Alonzo, affably, his fingers on Aunt Anniky's pulse. "My par had that struck off the first time I ever got a tooth out. That's par with the gray hair and the benediction attitude. Tell you, he was proud of me! I had such an awful tussle with that tooth! Thought the old fellow's jaw wasboundto break! But I got it out, and after that my par took me with him round the country—starring the provinces, you know—and I practised on the natives."
By this time Aunt Anniky was well under the influence of the gas, and in an incredibly short space of time her five teeth were out. As she came to herself I am sorry to say she was rather silly, and quite mortified me by winking at Dr. Babb in the most confidential manner, and repeating, over and over again: "Honey, yer ain't harf as smart as yer thinks yer is!"
After a few weeks of sore gums, Aunt Anniky appeared, radiant with her new teeth. The effect was certainly funny. In the first place, blackness itself was not so black as Aunt Anniky. She looked as if she had been dipped in ink and polished off with lamp-black. Her very eyes showed but the faintest rim of white. But those teeth were white enough to make up for everything. She had selected them herself, and the little ridiculous milk-white things were more fitted for the mouth of a Titania than for the great cavern in which Aunt Anniky's tongue moved and had its being. The gums above them were black, and when she spread her wide mouth in a laugh, it always reminded me of a piano-lid opening suddenly and showing all the black and white ivories at a glance. Aunt Anniky laughed a good deal, too, after getting her teeth in, and declared she had never been so happy in her life. It was observed, to her credit, that she put on no airs of pride, but was as sociable as ever, and made nothing of taking out her teeth and handing them around for inspection among her curious and admiring visitors. On that principle of human nature which glories in calling attention to the weakest part, she delighted in tough meats, stale bread, green fruits, and all other eatables that test the biting quality of the teeth. But finally destruction came upon them in a way that no one could have foreseen. Uncle Ned was an old colored man who lived alone in a cabin not very far from Aunt Anniky's, but very different from her in point of cleanliness and order. In fact, Uncle Ned's wealth, apart from a little corn crop, consisted in a lot of fine young pigs, that ran in and out of the house at all times, and were treated by their owner as tenderly as if they hadbeen his children. One fine day the old man fell sick of a fever, and he sent in haste for Aunt Anniky to come and nurse him. He agreed to give her a pig in case she brought him through; should she fail to do so, she was to receive no pay. Well, Uncle Ned got well, and the next thing we heard was that he refused to pay the pig. My father was usually called on to settle all the disputes in the neighborhood; so one morning Anniky and Ned appeared before him, both looking very indignant.
"I'd jes' like ter tell yer, Mars' Charles," began Uncle Ned, "ob de trick dis miser'ble ole nigger played on me."
"Go on, Ned," said my father, with a resigned air.
"Well, it wuz de fift night o' de fever," said Uncle Ned, "an' I wuz a-tossin' an' a-moanin', an' old Anniky jes' lay back in her cheer an' snored as ef a dozen frogs wuz in her throat. I wuz a-perishin' an' a-burnin' wid thirst, an' I hollered to Anniky; but Lor'! I might as well 'a hollered to a tombstone! It wuz ice I wanted; an' I knowed dar wuz a glass somewhar on my table wid cracked ice in it. Lor'! Lor'! how dry I wuz! I neber longed fer whiskey in my born days ez I panted fur dat ice. It wuz powerful dark, fur de grease wuz low in de lamp, an' de wick spluttered wid a dyin' flame. But I felt aroun', feeble like an' slow, till my fingers touched a glass. I pulled it to me, an' I run my han' in an' grabbed de ice, as I s'posed, an' flung it in my mouf, an' crunched, an' crunched—"
Here there was an awful pause. Uncle Ned pointed his thumb at Anniky, looked wildly at my father, and said, in a hollow voice: "It wuz Anniky's teef!"
My father threw back his head and laughed as I hadnever heard him laugh. Mother from her sofa joined in. I was doubled up like a jack-knife in the corner. But as for the principals in the affair, neither of their faces moved a muscle. They saw no joke. Aunt Anniky, in a dreadful, muffled, squashy sort of voice, took up the tale:
"Nexsh ting I knowed, Marsh Sharles, somebody's sheizin' me by de head, a-jammin' it up 'gin de wall, a-jawin' at me like de Angel Gabriel at de rish ole sinners in de bad plashe—an' dar wash ole Ned a-spittin' like a black cat, an' a-howlin' so dreadful dat I tought he wash de debil; an' when I got de light, dar wash my beautiful chany teef a-flung aroun', like scattered seed-corn, on de flo', an' Ned a-swarin' he'd have de law o' me."
"An' arter all dat," broke in Uncle Ned, "she pretends to lay a claim fur my pig. But I says no, sir; I don't pay nobody nothin' who's played me a trick like dat."
"Trick!" said Aunt Anniky, scornfully, "whar's de trick? Tink I wanted yer ter eat my teef? An' furder-mo', Marsh Sharles, dar's jes' dis about it: when dat night set in dar warn't no mo' hope fur old Ned dan fur a foundered sheep. Laws-a-massy! dat's why I went ter sleep. I wanted ter hev strengt' ter put on his burial clo'es in de mornin'. But don' yer see, Marsh Sharles, dat when he got so mad it brought on a sweat datbroke de fever! It saved him! But, fur all dat, arter munchin' an' manglin' my chany teef, he has de imperdence ob tryin' to 'prive me ob de pig I honestly 'arned."
It was a hard case. Uncle Ned sat there a very image of injured dignity, while Aunt Anniky bound a red handkerchief around her mouth and fanned herself with her turkey-tail.
"I am sure I don't know how to settle the matter," saidfather, helplessly. "Ned, I don't see but that you'll have to pay up."
"Neber, Mars' Charles, neber."
"Well, suppose you get married?" suggested father, brilliantly. "That will unite your interests, you know."
Aunt Anniky tossed her head. Uncle Ned was old, wizened, wrinkled as a raisin, but he eyed Anniky over with a supercilious gaze, and said with dignity: "Ef I wanted ter marry, I could git a likely young gal."
All the four points of Anniky's turban shook with indignation. "Pay me fur dem chany teef!" she hissed.
Some visitors interrupted the dispute at this time, and the two old darkies went away.
A week later Uncle Ned appeared with rather a sheepish look.
"Well, Mars' Charles," he said, "I's about concluded dat I'll marry Anniky."
"Ah! is that so?"
"'Pears like it's de onliest way I kin save my pigs," said Uncle Ned, with a sigh. "When she's married she boun' ter'beyme. Women 'bey your husbands; dat's what de good Book says."
"Yes, she willbayyou, I don't doubt," said my father, making a pun that Uncle Ned could not appreciate.
"An' ef ever she opens her jaw ter me 'bout dem ar teef," he went on, "I'llmashher."
Uncle Ned tottered on his legs like an unscrewed fruit-stand, and I had my own opinion as to his "mashing" Aunt Anniky. This opinion was confirmed the next day when father offered her his congratulations. "You are old enough to know your own mind," he remarked.
"I's ole, maybe," said Anniky, "but so is a oak-tree,an' it's vigorous, I reckon. I's a purty vigorous sort o' growth myself, an' I reckon I'll have my own way with Ned. I'm gwine ter fatten dem pigs o' hisn, an' you see ef I don't sell 'em nex' Christmas fur money 'nouf ter git a new string o' chany teef."
"Look here, Anniky," said father, with a burst of generosity, "you and Ned will quarrel about those teeth till the day of doom, so I will make you a wedding present of another set, that you may begin married life in harmony."
Aunt Anniky expressed her gratitude. "An'distime," she said, with sudden fury, "I sleeps wid 'emin."
The teeth were presented, and the wedding preparations began. The expectant bride went over to Ned's cabin and gave it such a clearing up as it had never had. But Ned did not seem happy. He devoted himself entirely to his pigs, and wandered about looking more wizened every day. Finally he came to our gate and beckoned to me mysteriously.
"Come over to my house, honey," he whispered, "an' bring a pen an' ink an' a piece o' paper wid yer. I wants yer ter write me a letter."
I ran into the house for my little writing-desk, and followed Uncle Ned to his cabin.
"Now, honey," he said, after barring the door carefully, "don't you ax me no questions, but jes' put down de words dat comes out o' my mouf on dat ar paper."
"Very well, Uncle Ned, go on."
"Anniky Hobbleston," he began, "dat weddin' ain't a-gwine ter come off. You cleans up too much ter suit me. I ain't used ter so much water splashin' aroun'. Dirt iswarmin'. 'Spec I'd freeze dis winter if you wuz here. An' you got too much tongue. Besides, I's got anudder wife over in Tipper. An' I ain't a-gwine ter marry. As fur havin' de law, I's a leavin' dese parts, an' I takes der pigs wid me. Yer can't fin'dem, an' yer can't fin'me.Fur I ain't a-gwine ter marry.I wuz born a bachelor, an' a bachelor will I represent myself befo' de judgment-seat. If you gives yer promise ter say no mo' 'bout dis marryin' business, p'r'aps I'll come back some day. So no mo' at present, from your humble worshipper,
"Ned Cuddy."
"Isn't that last part rather inconsistent?" said I, greatly amused.
"Yes, honey, if yer says so; an' it's kind o' soothin' to de feelin's of a woman, yer know."
I wrote it all down and read it aloud to Uncle Ned.
"Now, my chile," he said, "I'm a-gwine ter git on my mule as soon as der moon rises, an' drive my pigs ter Col' Water Gap, whar I'll stay an' fish. Soon as I am well gone, you take dis letter ter Anniky; butmin', don't tell whar I's gone. An' if she takes it all right, an' promises ter let me alone, you write me a letter, an' I'll git de fust Methodis' preacher I run across in der woods ter read it ter me. Den, ef it's all right, I'll come back an' weed yer flower-garden fur yer as purty as preachin'."
I agreed to do all uncle Ned asked, and we parted like conspirators. The next morning Uncle Ned was missing, and, after waiting a reasonable time I explained the matter to my parents, and went over with his letter to Aunt Anniky.
"Powers above!" was her only comment as I gotthrough the remarkable epistle. Then, after a pause to collect her thoughts, she seized me by the shoulder, saying: "Run to yo' pappy, honey, quick, an' ax him ef he's gwine ter stick ter his bargain 'bout de teef. Yer know he pintedly said dey wuz aweddin'gif'."
Of course my father sent word that she must keep the teeth, and my mother added a message of sympathy, with a present of a pocket-handkerchief to dry Aunt Anniky's tears.
"But it's all right," said that sensible old soul, opening her piano-lid with a cheerful laugh. "Bless you, chile, it wuz de teef I wanted, not de man! An', honey, you jes' sen' word to dat shif'less old nigger, ef you know whar he's gone, to come back home and git his crap in de groun'; an', as fur asI'mconsarned, yer jes' let him know dat I wouldn't pick him up wid a ten-foot pole, not ef he wuz to beg me on his knees till de millennial day."—From "Dialect Tales," published in 1883 by Harper Brothers.
It is not easy to tell what satire is, or where it originated. "In Eden," says Dryden, "the husband and wife excused themselves by laying the blame on each other, and gave a beginning to those conjugal dialogues in prose which poets have perfected in verse." Whatever it may be, we know it when it cuts us, and Sherwood Bonner's hit on the Radical Club of Boston was almost inexcusable.
She was admitted as a guest, and her subsequent ridicule was a violation of all good breeding. But like so many wicked things it is captivating, and while you are shocked, you laugh. While I hold up both hands in horror, I intend to give you an idea of it; leaving out the most personal verses.
BY SHERWOOD BONNER.
Dear friends, I crave attention to some facts that I shall mentionAbout a Club called "Radical," you haven't heard before;Got up to teach the nation was this new light federation,To teach the nation how to think, to live, and to adore;To teach it of the heights and depths that all men should explore;Only this and nothing more.It is not my inclination, in this brief communication,To produce a false impression—which I greatly would deplore—But a few remarks I'm makin' on some notes a chiel's been takin,'And, if I'm not mistaken, they'll make your soul upsoar,As you bend your eyes with eagerness to scan these verses o'er;Truly this and something more.And first, dear friends, the fact is, I'm sadly out of practice,And may fail in doing justice to this literary bore;But when I do begin it, I don't think 'twill take a minuteTo prove there's nothing in it (as you've doubtless heard before),But a free religious wrangling club—of this I'm very sure—Only this and nothing more!'Twas a very cordial greeting, one bright morning of their meeting;Such eager salutations were never heard before.After due deliberation on the importance of the occasion,To begin the organization, Mr. Pompous took the floorWith an air quite self-complacent, strutted up and took the floor,As he'd often done before!With an air of condescension he bespoke their close attentionTo an essay from a Wiseman versed in theologic lore;He himself had had the pleasure of a short glance at the treasure,And in no stinted measure said we had a treat in store;Then he waved his hand to Wiseman and resigned to him the floor;Only this and nothing more.Quick and nervous, short and wiry, with a look profound, yet fiery,Mr. Wiseman now stepped forward and eyed us darkly o'er,Then an arm-chair, quaint and olden, gay with colors green and golden,By the pretty hostess rolled in from its place behind the door,Was offered to the reader, in the centre of the floor,And he took the chair be sure.Then with arguments elastic, and a voice and eye sarcastic,Mr. Wiseman into flinders the Holy Bible tore;And he proved beyond all question that the God of Moses' mentionWas a fraudulent invention of some Hebrews, three or four,And the Son of God's ascension an imaginary soar!Only this and nothing more.Each member then admitted that his part was well acquitted,For his strong, impassioned reasoning had touched them to the core;He felt sure, as he surveyed them through his specs, that he had "played" them,And was proud that he had made them all astonished by his lore;Not a continental cared he for the fruits such lessons bore,So he bowed and left the floor.Then a Colonel, cold and smiling, with a stately air beguiling,Who punctuates his paragraphs on Newport's sounding shore,Said his friend was wise and witty, and yet it seemed a pityTo destroy in this old city the belief it had beforeIn the ancient superstitions of the days of yore.This he said, and something more.Orthodoxy, he lamented, thought the Christian world demented,Yet still he felt a rev'rence as he read the Bible o'er,And he thought the modern preacher, though a poor stick for a teacher,Or a broken reed, like Beecher, ought to have his claims looked o'er,And the "tyranny of science" was indeed, he felt quite sure,Ourdanger more and more.His remarks our pulses quicken, when a British Lion, strickenWith his wondrous self-importance—he knew everything and more—Said heloathedsuch moderation; and he made his declarationThat, in spite of all creation, he found no God to adore;And his voice was like the ocean as its surges loudly roar;Only this and nothing more.But the interest now grew lukewarm, for an ancient Concord book-wormWith authoritative tramping, forward came and took the floor,And in Orphic mysticisms talked of life and light and prisms,And the Infinite baptisms on a transcendental shore,And the concrete metaphysic, till we yawned in anguish sore;But still he kept the floor.Then uprose a kindred spirit almost ready to inheritThe rare and radiant Aiden that he begged us to adore;His smile was beaming brightly, and his soft hair floated whitelyRound a face as fair and sightly as a pious priest's of yore;And we forgave the arguments worn out years before,For we loved this saintly bore.Then a lively little charmer, noted as a dress reformer,Because that mystic garment, chemiloon, she wore,Said she had no "views" of Jesus, and therefore would not tease us,But that she thought 'twould please us to look her figure o'er,For she wore no bustlesanywhere, and corsets, she felt sure,Should squeeze hernevermore.This pretty little pigeon said of course the true religionDemanded ease of body before the mind could soar;But that no emancipation could come unto our nationUntil the aggregation of the clothes that women woreWere suspended from the shoulders, and smooth with many a gore,Plain behind and plain before!Her remarks were full of reason, but a little out of season,And the proper tone of talking Mr. Fairman did restore,When he sneered at priests and preaching, and indorsed theIndexteaching,And with philanthropic screeching, said he sought for evermoreThe light of sense and freedom into darkened minds to pour;Truly this, but something more!Then with eyes as bright as Phœbus, and hair dark as Erebus,A maid with stunning eye-glass next appeared upon the floor;In her aspect she looked regal, though her words were few and feeble,But she vowed his logic legal and as pure as golden ore,And indorsed theIndexeditor in every word he swore,And then—said nothing more.Then a tall and red-faced member, large and loose and somewhat limber(And though his creed was shaky, he the name of Bishop bore),Said that if he lived forever, he should forget, ah! never,The Radicals so clever, in Boston by the shore;But a badgoldin his 'eadbuststop his sayingbore,And we all criedencore.Then a rarely gifted mortal, to whom the triple portalOf Music, Art, and Poesy had opened years before,With a look of sombre feeling, depths within his soul revealing,Leaving room for no appealing, he decided o'er and o'erThe old, old vexing questions of thewhyand thewherefore,And taught us—nothing more.There are others I could mention who took part in this contention,And at first 'twas my intention, but at present I forbear;There's young Look-sharp, and Wriggle, who would make an angel giggle,And a young conceited Zeigel, who was seated near the door;If you could only see them, you'd laugh till you were sore,And then you'd laugh some more.But, dear friends, I now must close, of these Radicals dispose,For I am sad and weary as I view their folly o'er;In their wild Utopian dreaming, and impracticable schemingFor a sinful world's redeeming, common sense flies out the door,And the long-drawn dissertations come to—words and nothing more;Only words, and nothing more.
Dear friends, I crave attention to some facts that I shall mentionAbout a Club called "Radical," you haven't heard before;Got up to teach the nation was this new light federation,To teach the nation how to think, to live, and to adore;To teach it of the heights and depths that all men should explore;Only this and nothing more.
It is not my inclination, in this brief communication,To produce a false impression—which I greatly would deplore—But a few remarks I'm makin' on some notes a chiel's been takin,'And, if I'm not mistaken, they'll make your soul upsoar,As you bend your eyes with eagerness to scan these verses o'er;Truly this and something more.
And first, dear friends, the fact is, I'm sadly out of practice,And may fail in doing justice to this literary bore;But when I do begin it, I don't think 'twill take a minuteTo prove there's nothing in it (as you've doubtless heard before),But a free religious wrangling club—of this I'm very sure—Only this and nothing more!
'Twas a very cordial greeting, one bright morning of their meeting;Such eager salutations were never heard before.After due deliberation on the importance of the occasion,To begin the organization, Mr. Pompous took the floorWith an air quite self-complacent, strutted up and took the floor,As he'd often done before!
With an air of condescension he bespoke their close attentionTo an essay from a Wiseman versed in theologic lore;He himself had had the pleasure of a short glance at the treasure,And in no stinted measure said we had a treat in store;Then he waved his hand to Wiseman and resigned to him the floor;Only this and nothing more.
Quick and nervous, short and wiry, with a look profound, yet fiery,Mr. Wiseman now stepped forward and eyed us darkly o'er,Then an arm-chair, quaint and olden, gay with colors green and golden,By the pretty hostess rolled in from its place behind the door,Was offered to the reader, in the centre of the floor,And he took the chair be sure.
Then with arguments elastic, and a voice and eye sarcastic,Mr. Wiseman into flinders the Holy Bible tore;And he proved beyond all question that the God of Moses' mentionWas a fraudulent invention of some Hebrews, three or four,And the Son of God's ascension an imaginary soar!Only this and nothing more.
Each member then admitted that his part was well acquitted,For his strong, impassioned reasoning had touched them to the core;He felt sure, as he surveyed them through his specs, that he had "played" them,And was proud that he had made them all astonished by his lore;Not a continental cared he for the fruits such lessons bore,So he bowed and left the floor.
Then a Colonel, cold and smiling, with a stately air beguiling,Who punctuates his paragraphs on Newport's sounding shore,Said his friend was wise and witty, and yet it seemed a pityTo destroy in this old city the belief it had beforeIn the ancient superstitions of the days of yore.This he said, and something more.
Orthodoxy, he lamented, thought the Christian world demented,Yet still he felt a rev'rence as he read the Bible o'er,And he thought the modern preacher, though a poor stick for a teacher,Or a broken reed, like Beecher, ought to have his claims looked o'er,And the "tyranny of science" was indeed, he felt quite sure,Ourdanger more and more.
His remarks our pulses quicken, when a British Lion, strickenWith his wondrous self-importance—he knew everything and more—Said heloathedsuch moderation; and he made his declarationThat, in spite of all creation, he found no God to adore;And his voice was like the ocean as its surges loudly roar;Only this and nothing more.
But the interest now grew lukewarm, for an ancient Concord book-wormWith authoritative tramping, forward came and took the floor,And in Orphic mysticisms talked of life and light and prisms,And the Infinite baptisms on a transcendental shore,And the concrete metaphysic, till we yawned in anguish sore;But still he kept the floor.
Then uprose a kindred spirit almost ready to inheritThe rare and radiant Aiden that he begged us to adore;His smile was beaming brightly, and his soft hair floated whitelyRound a face as fair and sightly as a pious priest's of yore;And we forgave the arguments worn out years before,For we loved this saintly bore.
Then a lively little charmer, noted as a dress reformer,Because that mystic garment, chemiloon, she wore,Said she had no "views" of Jesus, and therefore would not tease us,But that she thought 'twould please us to look her figure o'er,For she wore no bustlesanywhere, and corsets, she felt sure,Should squeeze hernevermore.
This pretty little pigeon said of course the true religionDemanded ease of body before the mind could soar;But that no emancipation could come unto our nationUntil the aggregation of the clothes that women woreWere suspended from the shoulders, and smooth with many a gore,Plain behind and plain before!
Her remarks were full of reason, but a little out of season,And the proper tone of talking Mr. Fairman did restore,When he sneered at priests and preaching, and indorsed theIndexteaching,And with philanthropic screeching, said he sought for evermoreThe light of sense and freedom into darkened minds to pour;Truly this, but something more!
Then with eyes as bright as Phœbus, and hair dark as Erebus,A maid with stunning eye-glass next appeared upon the floor;In her aspect she looked regal, though her words were few and feeble,But she vowed his logic legal and as pure as golden ore,And indorsed theIndexeditor in every word he swore,And then—said nothing more.
Then a tall and red-faced member, large and loose and somewhat limber(And though his creed was shaky, he the name of Bishop bore),Said that if he lived forever, he should forget, ah! never,The Radicals so clever, in Boston by the shore;But a badgoldin his 'eadbuststop his sayingbore,And we all criedencore.
Then a rarely gifted mortal, to whom the triple portalOf Music, Art, and Poesy had opened years before,With a look of sombre feeling, depths within his soul revealing,Leaving room for no appealing, he decided o'er and o'erThe old, old vexing questions of thewhyand thewherefore,And taught us—nothing more.
There are others I could mention who took part in this contention,And at first 'twas my intention, but at present I forbear;There's young Look-sharp, and Wriggle, who would make an angel giggle,And a young conceited Zeigel, who was seated near the door;If you could only see them, you'd laugh till you were sore,And then you'd laugh some more.
But, dear friends, I now must close, of these Radicals dispose,For I am sad and weary as I view their folly o'er;In their wild Utopian dreaming, and impracticable schemingFor a sinful world's redeeming, common sense flies out the door,And the long-drawn dissertations come to—words and nothing more;Only words, and nothing more.
Mary Clemmer Hudson has spoken of Phœbe Cary as "the wittiest woman in America." But she truly adds:
"A flash of wit, like a flash of lightning, can only be remembered, it cannot be reproduced. Its very marvel lies in its spontaneity and evanescence; its power is in being struck from the present. Divorced from that, the keenest representation of it seems cold and dead. We read over the few remaining sentences which attempt to embody the repartees andbon motsof the most famous wits of society, such as Beau Nash, Beau Brummel, Madame du Deffand, and Lady Mary Montagu; we wonder at the poverty of these memorials of their fame. Thus it must be with Phœbe Cary. Her most brilliant sallies were perfectly unpremeditated, and by herself never repeated or remembered. When she was in her best moods they came like flashes of heat lightning, like a rush of meteors, so suddenly and constantly you were dazzled while you were delighted, and afterward found it difficult to single out any distinct flash or separate meteor from the multitude.... This most wonderful of her gifts can only be represented by a few stray sentences gleaned here and there from the faithful memories of loving friends....
"One tells how, at a little party, where fun rose to a great height, one quiet person was suddenly attacked by a gay lady with the question: 'Why don't you laugh? You sit there just like a post!'
"'There! she called you a post; why don't you rail at her?' was Phœbe's quick exclamation.
"Mr. Barnum mentioned to her that the skeleton man and the fat woman then on exhibition in his 'greatest show on earth' were married.
"'I suppose they loved through thick and thin,' was her comment.
"'On one occasion, when Phœbe was at the Museum looking about at the curiosities,' says Mr. Barnum, 'I preceded her and had passed down a couple of steps. She, intently watching a big anaconda in a case at the top of the stairs, walked off, not noticing them, and fell. I was just in time to catch her in my arms and save her from a good bruising.'
"'I am more lucky than that first woman was who fell through the influence of the serpent,' said Phœbe, as she recovered herself.
"And when asked by some one at a dinner-party what brand of champagne they kept, she replied: 'Oh, we drink Heidsieck, but we keep Mum.'
"Again, a certain well-known actor, then recently deceased, and more conspicuous for his professional skill than for his private virtues, was discussed. 'We shall never,' remarked some one, 'see —— again.'
"'No,' quietly responded Phœbe, 'not unless we go to the pit.'"
These stray shots may not fairly represent Miss Cary's brilliancy, but we are grateful for what has been preserved, meagre as it would seem to those who had the privilege of knowing her intimately and enjoying those Sunday evening receptions, where, unrestrained and happy, every one was at his best.
Her verses on the subject of Woman's Rights, as discussed in masculine fashion, with masculine logic, by Chanticleer Dorking, are capital, and her parodies, shockingly literal, have been widely copied. Enjoy these as given in her life, written by Mary Clemmer.
GINGER-SNAPS.
I will now offer you some good things of various degrees of humor. I do not feel it necessary to impress their merits upon you, for they speak for themselves Here is a quaint bit of satire from a bright Boston woman, which those on her side of the vexed Indian question will enjoy:
BY LOUISA HALL.
He was a long, lean man, with a sad expression, as if weighed down by pity for poor humanity. His heart was evidently a great many sizes too large for him. He yearned to enfold all tribes and conditions of men in his encircling arms. He surveyed his audience with such affectionate interest that he seemed to look into the very depths of their pockets.
A few resolute men buttoned their coats, but the majority knew that this artifice would not save them, and they rather enjoyed it as a species of harmless dissipation. They liked to be talked into a state of exhilaration which obliged them to give without thinking much about it, and they felt very good and benevolent afterward. So they cheered the agent enthusiastically, as a signal for him to begin, and he came forward bowing, while the three redbrothers who accompanied him remained seated on the platform. He appeared to smile on every one present as he said:
"Friends and Fellow-Citizens, I have the honor to introduce to you these chiefs of the Laughing Dog Nation. Twenty-five years ago this tribe was one of the fiercest on our Western plains. Snarling Bear, the most noted chief of his tribe, was a great warrior. Fifty scalps adorned his wigwam. Some of them had once belonged to his best friends. He was murdered while in the prime of life by a white man whose wife he had accidentally shot at the door of her cabin. He was one of the first to welcome the white men and adopt the improvements they brought with them. When he became sufficiently civilized to understand that polygamy was unlawful, he separated from his oldest wife. Her scalp was carefully preserved among those of the great warriors he had conquered. His son, Flying Deer, who is with us to-day, will address you in his own language, which I shall interpret for you. The last twenty years have made a great change in their condition. These men are not savages, but educated gentlemen. They are all graduates of Tomahawk College, at Bloody Mountain, near the Gray Wolf country. They are chiefs of their tribes, each one holding a position equal to the Governor of our own State. Their influence at the West is great. Last year they sent a small party of missionaries to the highlands of the Wolf country, where the women and children pasture the ponies during the dry season. Not one of these noble men ever returned. Unfortunately for the success of this mission, the Gray Wolf warriors were at home. The medicine man's dreams had been unfavorable, and they dared not setout on their annual hunt. This year they will send a larger party well armed.
"These devoted men have left their Western homes and come here to assure you of their confidence in your affection, and the love and gratitude they feel toward you. They come to ask for churches and schools, that their children may grow up like yours. But these things require money. On account of the great scarcity of stone in the Rocky Mountains, and the necessity of preserving standing timber for the Indian hunting-grounds, all building materials for churches and school-houses must be carried from the East at great expense. The door-steps of the third orthodox Kickapoo church cost one hundred and fifty dollars. But it is money well invested. The gradual decrease of crime at the West has convinced the most sceptical that a great work can be done among these people. The number of murders committed in this country last year was one hundred and twenty-five; this year only one hundred and twenty-three.
"Although a great deal has been done for these people, you will be surprised to learn how much remains to be done. I need not tell you that every dollar intrusted to me will be spent, and I hope you will live to see the result of your generosity.
"I wish to build at least fifteen churches and school-houses before the cold weather sets in. The cost of building has been greatly lessened by employing native workmen, who are capable of designing and erecting simple edifices. The pulpits will be supplied by native preachers, and the expense of light and heat will be paid by the congregation.
"We have at least twenty-five well-qualified native teachers, who will require no salary beyond the necessary expense of food and clothing.
"A few boarding-houses must be built and tastefully furnished. We have a large number of Laughing Dog widows, who would gladly take charge of such establishments.
"The native committee will make a careful selection of such matrons as are most capable of guiding and encouraging young people.
"All money for the benefit of these people has been used with the strictest economy; and will be while I retain the agency. I have secured a slender provision for my declining years, and shall return to spend my days with my adopted people.
"But I will let these men who once owned this great country speak for themselves. Flying Deer, who will now address you, is about forty years of age. He lives with his wife and ten children near the agency, at a place called Humanketchet."
Flying Deer came forward and spoke very distinctly, though rapidly.
"O hoo bree-gutchee, gumme maw choo kibbe showain nemeshin. Dawmasse choochugah goo waugh; kawboo. Nokka brewis goo, honowin nudwag moonoo shugh kawmun menjeis. Babas kwasind waugh muskoday, wawa gessonwon goo. Nahna naskeen oza yenadisse mayben mudjo, kenemoosha. Wawconassee nushka kahgagoo, jossahut, wabenas ogu winemon jabs. Ahmuck wana wayroossen chooponnuk segwan maysen. Opeechee annewayman, kewadoda shenghen kad goo tagamengow."
"He says, my friends, that he has always loved and trusted the white people. He says that since he has seen the great cities and towns of the East, he loves his white brothers more than before. His red brothers, White Crow and the Rock on End, wish him to say that they also love you. He says the savage Gray Wolf tribe threaten to shoot and scalp them if they continue friendly to the whites. He asks for powder, guns, and ponies, that they may defend themselves from their enemies. He wants to convince you that they are rapidly becoming a civilized nation. The assistance you are about to give will only be required for a short time. They will soon become self-supporting, and relieve the Government of a heavy tax. They thank you for the kindness you have shown, and for the generous collection which will now be taken up.
"Will some friend close the doors while we give every one an opportunity to contribute to this good cause? Remember that he who shutteth up his ears to the cry of the poor, he shall also cry himself and shall not be heard. Those who prefer can leave a check with Deacon Meekham at the door, or with me at the hotel. These substantial tokens of your regard will cause the wilderness to blossom as the rose.
"In the name of our red brethren, let me again thank you."
If one inclines to Irish fun, try this burlesque from Mrs. Lippincott.
BY GRACE GREENWOOD.