The Law of the Land by Emerson Hough (the reader ebook .TXT) đ
The forest, the deep, vast forest of oak and ash and gum and ghostlysycamore; the forest, tangled with a thousand binding vines andbriers, wattled and laced with rank blue cane--sure proof of a soilexhaustlessly rich--this ancient forest still stood, mysterious andforbidding, all about the edges of the great plantation. Here andthere a tall white stump, fire-blackened at its foot, stood, even infields long cultivated, showing how laborious and slow had been thewhittling away of this jungle, which even now continually encroachedand claimed its own. The rim of the woods, marked white by thedeadened trees where the axes of the laborers were reclaiming yetother acres as the years rolled by, now showed in the morning sundistinctly, making a frame for the rich and restful picture of theBig House and it
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âHere, Jinny! Jinny!â he called, just loud enough to be heard, and not turning toward her more than halfway. âCome heah.â
âYassah,â said the girl, and slowly approached.
âGet us a little melk, Jinny,â said the speaker.
âWeâre plumb out oâ melk down home.â
âYassah,â said Jinny; and disappeared leisurely, to be gone perhaps half an hour.
There remained little sign of life on the board-pile, the bonnet tube pointing fixedly toward the railway station, the man now and then slowly shifting one leg across the other, but staring out at nothing, his lower lip drooping laxly. When the servant finally brought back the milk-pail and placed it beside him, he gave no word of thanks. The sunbonnet shifted to include the mulatto girl within its full vision, as the latter stood leaning her weight on one side-bent foot, idly wiping her hands upon her apron.
âFolks all well down to yoâ place, Mistah Bowles?â said she, affably.
âRight well.â
âUm-h-h.â Silence then fell until Jinny again found speech.
âOld Bess, thatâs the Cunnelâs favoright dawg, you-all know, she done have âleven puppies lasâ night.â
âThat so?â
âYassah. Cunnel, heâs off down on the Sun-flowah.â
âUm-h-h.â
âYassah; got most all his dawgs wid âim. We goinâ to have bâah meat now for shoâ,ââthis with a wide grin.
âReckon so,â said the visitor. âWhenâs Cunnel coming back, you reckon?â
âI dunno, suh, but he shoâ wonât come back lessen he gets a bâah. If you-all could wait a while, yon-all could take back some bâah meat, if you wantuh.â
âUm-h-h,â said the man, and fell again into silence. To all appearances, he was willing to wait here indefinitely, forgetful of the pail of milk, toward which the sun was now creeping ominously close. The way back home seemed long and weary at that moment. His lip drooped still more laxly, as he sat looking out vaguely.
Not so calm seemed his consort, she of the sunbonnet. Eestored to some extent by her tarrying in the shade, she began to shift and hitch about uneasily upon the board-pile. At length she leaned a bit to one side, reached into a pocket and, taking out a snuff-stick and a parcel of its attendant compound, began to take a dip of snuff, after the habit of certain of the population of that region. This done, she turned with a swift jerk of the head, bringing to bear the tube of her bonnet in full force upon her lord and master.
âJim Bowles,â she said, âthis heah is a shame! Hitâs a plumb shame!â
There was no answer, save an uneasy hitch on the part of the person so addressed. He seemed to feel the focus of the sunbonnet boring into his system. The voice in the bonnet went on, shot straight toward him, so that he might not escape.
âHitâs a plumb shame,â said Mrs. Bowles, again.
âI know it, I know it,â said her husband at length, uneasily. âThat is, about us having to walk up heah. That whut you mean?â
âYassir, thatâs whut I do mean, anâ you know it.â
âWell, now, how kin I help it? We kainât take the only mewel we got and make the nigger stop wuâk. That ainât reasonable. Besides, you donât think Cunnel Blount is goinâ to miss a pail oâ melk now and then, do you?â
A snort of indignation greeted this supposition.
âJim Bowles, you make me sick,â replied his wife. âWe kin get melk heah as long as we want to, oâ coâse; but who wants to keep a-cominâ up heah, three mile, for melk? It ainât right.â
âWell, now, Sarâ Ann, how kin I help it?â said Jim Bowles. âThe cow is daid, anâ I kainât help it, anâ thatâs all about it. My God, woman!â this with sudden energy, âdo you think I kin bring a cow to life thatâs been kilt by the old railroad kyahs? I ainât no âvangelist.â
âYou kainât bring old Muley to life,â said Sarah Ann Bowles, âbut thenââ
âWell, but then! But whut? Whut you goinâ to do? I reckon you do whut you do, huh! You just walk the track and come heah after melk, I reckon, if you want it. You ought to be mighty glad I come along to keep you company. âTainât every man goinâ to do that, I want to tell you. Now, it ainât my fault old Muley done got kilt.â
âAinât yoâ fault!â
âNo, it ainât my fault. Whut am I goinâ to do? I kainât get no otheh cow right now, anâ I done tolâ you so. You reckon cows grows on bushes?â
âGrows on bushes!â
âYes, or that they comes for nuthinâ?â
âComes for nuthinâ!â
âYes, Sarâ Ann, thatâs whut I said. I tell you, it ainât so fur to come, ainât so fur up heah, if you take it easy; only three mile. Anâ Cunnel Blountâll give us melk as long as we want. I reckon he would give us a cow, too, if I ast him. I sâpose I could pay him out oâ the next crop, if they wasnât so many things that has to be paid outân the crop. Itâs too blame bad âbout Muley.â He scratched his head thoughtfully.
âYes,â responded his spouse, âMuley was a heap better cow than youâll ever git agâin. Why, she give two quoâts oâ melk the very mawninâ she was kiltâtwo quoâts. I reckon we didnât have to walk no three mile that mawninâ, did we? Anâ she that kinâ and gentle-likeâoh, we ainât goinâ to git no new cow like Muley, no time right soon, I want to tell you that, Jim Bowles.â
âWell, well, I know all that,â said her husband, conciliatingly, a trifle easier now that the sunbonnet was for the moment turned aside. âThatâs all true, mighty true. But what kin you do?â
âDo? Why, do somethinâ! Somebody shoâ ought to suffer for this heah. This new fangled railroad a-cominâ through heah, a-killinâ things, anâ a-killinâ folks! Why, Bud Sowers said just the other week he heard of three darkies gittinâ kilt in one bunch down to Allenville. They standinâ on the track, jesâ talkinâ anâ visitinâ like. Didnât notice nuthinâ. Didnât notice the train a-cominâ. âBiff!â says Bud; anâ thah was them darkies.â
âYes,â said Mr. Bowles, âthatâs the way it was with Muley. She just walk up outân the cane, anâ stanâ thah in the sun on the track, to sort oâ look arounâ whah she could see free fer a little ways. Then, âlong comes the railroad train, anâ biff! Thahâs Muley!â
âPlumb daid!â
âPlumb daid!â
âAnâ she a good cow for us for foâteen yeahs! It donât look exactly right, now, does it? It shoâ donâtâ
âItâs a outrage, thatâs whut it is,â said Sarâ Ann Bowles.
âWell, we got the railroad,â said her husband, tentatively.
âYes, we got the railroad,â said Sarâ Ann Bowles, savagely, âanâ whut yearthly good is it? Who wants any railroad? Whut use have we-all got fer it? It comes through ouah farm, anâ scares ouah mewel, anâ it kills ouah cow; anâ itâs got me soâs Iâm afeared to set foot outsidân ouah doâ, lessen itâs goinâ to kill me, too. Why, all the way up heah this mawninâ, I was skeered every foot of the way, a-fear-inâ that there ingine was goinâ to come along anâ kill us both!â
âShoâ! Sarâ Ann,â said her husband, with superiority. âIt ainât time fer the train yitâleastwise I donât think it is.â He looked about uneasily.
âThatâs all right, Jim Bowles. One of them ingines might come along âmost any time. It might creep up behinâ you, then, biff! Thahâs Jim Bowles! Whut use is the railroad, Iâd like to know? I wouldnât be caught a-climbinâ in one oâ them thah kyars, not fer big money. Supposinâ it run off the track?â
âOh, well, now,â said her husband, âmaybe it donât, always.â
âBut supposinâ it did?â The front of the telescope turned toward him suddenly, and so perfect was the focus this time that Mr. Bowles shifted his seat and took refuge upon another board at the other end of the board-pile, out of range, albeit directly in the ardent sunlight, which, warm as it was, did not seem to him so burning as the black eyes in the bonnet, or so troublous as the tongue which went on with its questions.
âWhut made you vote fer this heah railroad?â said Sarah Ann, following him mercilessly with the bonnet tube. âWe didnât want no railroad. We never did have one, anâ we never ought to a-had one. You listen to me, that railroad is goinâ to ruin this country. Thah ainât a woman in these heah bottoms but would be skeered to have a baby grow up in her house. Supposinâ you got a baby; nice little baby, never did harm no one. You a-cookinâ or somethinââout to the smoke-house like enough; baby alone fer about two minutes. Baby crawls out on to the railroad track. Along comes the ingine, anâ biff! Thahâs yoâ baby!â
Mrs. Bowles shed tears at this picture which she had conjured up, and even her less imaginative consort became visibly affected, so that for a moment he half straightened up.
âHit donât look quite right,â said he, once more. âBut, then, whut you goinâ to do? Whut kin we do, woman?â he asked fiercely.
âWhy, if the men in these heah parts was half men,â said his wife, âI tell you whut theyâd do. Theyâd git out and tear up every foot of this heah cussed railroad track, anâ throw it back into the cane. Thatâs whut theyâd do.â
âShoâ now, would you?â said Jim Bowles.
âShore I would. You got to do it if things keeps on this-away.â
âWell, we couldnât, lessen Cunnel Blount said it was all right, you know. The Cunnel was the friend of the road through these heah bottoms. He âlowed it would help us all.â
âHelp? Help us? Huh! Like to know how it helps us, killinâ ouah cow anâ makinâ us walk three mile of a hot morninâ to git a pail oâ melk to make up some coâhn bread. You call that a help, do you, Jim Bowles? You may, but I donât anâ I hainât a-goinâ to. I got some sense, I reckon. Railroad! Help! Huh!â
Jim Bowles crept stealthily a little farther away on his own side of the board-pile, whither it seemed his wife could not quite so readily follow him with her transfixing gaze.
âWell, now, Sarâ Ann,â said he, âthe Cunnel done tolâ me hit was all right. He said some of ouah stock like enough git kilt, âcause you know these heah bottoms is growed up so close like, with cane anâ all that, that any sort of critters like to git out where itâs open, soâs they kin sort oâ look around like, you know. Why, I done seen four deer trails whilsâ we was a-cominâ up this mawninâ, and I seen whah a bâah had come out anâ stood on the track. Now, as fer cows, anâ as fer niggers, why, it stands to reason that some of them is shore goinâ to git kilt, thatâs all.â
âAnâ you men is goinâ to stand that from the railroad? Why donât you make them pay for whut gits kilt?â
âWell, now, Sarâ Ann,â said her husband, conciliatorily, âthatâs just whut I was goinâ to say. The time the fust man come down through heah to talk about buildinâ the railroad, he done said, like I tolâ you Cunnel Blount said, that we might git some stock kilt fer a little while, till things kind oâ got used to it, you know; but he âlowed that the railroad
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