The Duke of Stockbridge: A Romance of Shays' Rebellion by Edward Bellamy (classic books for 13 year olds .TXT) π
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- Author: Edward Bellamy
Read book online Β«The Duke of Stockbridge: A Romance of Shays' Rebellion by Edward Bellamy (classic books for 13 year olds .TXT) πΒ». Author - Edward Bellamy
βIf't comes to pluggin leaks ye kin look nigher hum nor Bosting,β observed Abner. βI hearn ez Squire Woodbridge giv fifty pound lawful fer that sorter tune box ez he'z get fer his gal, an they doos say ez them cheers o' Squire Sedgwick's cos twenty pound lawful in the old kentry.β
βWhat dew they call that air tune box?β inquired Israel Goodrich. βI've hearn tell but I kinder fergit. It's some Frenchified soundin name.β
βIt's a pianner,β said Obadiah.
βI guess peeanner's nigher right,β observed Peleg critically. βMy gal hearn the Edwards gal call it peeanner.β
βThey ain't nuther of ye in a mile o' right. 'Tain't pianner, an 'tain't peeanner; it's pianny,β said Abner, who on account of having once served a few weeks in connection with a detachment of the French auxiliaries, was conceded to be an authority on foreign pronunciation.
βI hain't got no idee on't, nohow,β said Israel shaking his head. βI hearn it a goin ez I wuz a comin by the store. Souns like ez if it wuz a hailin ontew a lot o' milk pans. I never suspicioned ez I should live tew hear sech a n'ise.β
βI guess Peleg's baout right,β said Abner. βThar won't be no show fer poor folks, 'nless they is a law agin' sendin money aouter the kentry.β
βI callate that would be a shuttin of the barn door arter the hoss is stole,β said Ezra Phelps, as he arrested a mug of flip on its way to his lips, to express his views. βThere ain' no use o' beginnin to save arter all's spent. I callate guvment's got ter print a big stack o' new bills ef we're a goin to git holt o' no money.β
βEf it's paper bills as ye're a talkin baout,β said Abner grimly, βI've got quite a slew on em tew hum, mebbe a peck or tew. I got em fer pay in the army. They're tew greasy tew kindle a fire with, an I dunno o' nothin else ez they're good for. Ye're welcome to em, Ezry. My little Bijah assed me fer some on em tew make a kite outer thuther day, an I says tew him, says I, 'Bijah, I don' callate they'll do nohow fer a kite, for I never hearn of a Continental bill a goin up, but ef yer want a sinker fer yer fish line they're jess the thing.'β
There was a sardonic snicker at Ezra's expense, but he returned to the charge quite undismayed.
βThat ain't nuther here nor there,β he said, turning toward Abner and emphasizing his words with the empty mug. βWhat I asses yew is, wan't them bills good fer suthin wen they wuz fuss printed?β
βThey wuz wuth suthin fer a wile,β assented Abner.
βEzackly,β said the other, βthat's the nater o' bills. Allers they is good fer a wile and then they kinder begins to run daown, an they runs daown till they ain't wuth nuthin,β and Ezra illustrated the process by raising the mug as high as his head and bringing it slowly down to his knees. βPaounds an shillins runs daown tew by gittin wored off till they's light weight. Every kine o' money runs daown, on'y it's the nater o' bills to run daown a leetle quicker nor other sorts. Naow I says, an I ain't the ony one ez says it, that all guvment's got to dew is tew keep a printin new bills ez fass ez the old ones gits run daown. Times wuz good long in the war. A feller could git baout what he assed fer his crops an he could git any wages he assed. Yer see guvment wuz a printin money fass. Jess's quick ez a bill run daown they up and printed another one, so they wuz allers plenty. Soon ez the war wuz over they stopped a printin bills and immejetly the hard times come. Hain't that so?β
βI dunno but yew be right,β said Abner, thoughtfully, βI never thort on't ezzackly that way,β and Isaiah Goodrich also expressed the opinion that there was βsomethin into what Ezry says.β
βWhat we wants,β pursued Ezra, βwhat we wants, is a kine o' bills printed as shall lose vally by reglar rule, jess so much a month, no more no less, cordin ez its fixed by law an printed on tew the bills so'z everybody'll understan an no-body'll git cheated. I hearn that's the idee as the Hampshire folks went fer in the convenshun daown tew Hatfield this week. Ye see, ez I wuz a sayin, bills is baoun tew come daown anyhow ony if they comes daown regler, cordin tew law, everybody'll know what t'expect, and nobody won' lose nothin.β
βPraps the convenshun what's a sittin up tew Lenox'll rekummen them bills,β hopefully suggested a farmer who had been taking in Ezra's wisdom with open mouth.
βI don' s'pose that it'll make any odds how many bills are printed as far's we're concerned,β said Hubbard, bitterly. βThe lawyers'll make out to git em all pretty soon. Ye might's well try to fat a hog with a tape worm in him, as to make folks rich as long as there are any lawyers round.β
βYas, an jestices' fees, an sheriff fees is baout ez bad ez lawyer's,β said Israel Goodrich, whose countenance was beginning to glow from the influence of his potations. βI tell you wesh'd be a dern sight better off 'f'all the courts wuz stopped. Most on ye is young fellers, 'cept you Elnathan Hamlin, thar. He'll tell ye, ez I tell ye, that this air caounty never seen sech good times, spite on'ts bein war times, ez long fur '74 to '80, arter we'd stopped the King's courts from sittin an afore we'd voted for the new constitution o' the state, ez we wuz durn fools fer doin of, ef I dew say it. In them six year thar warn't nary court sot nowhere in the caounty, from Boston Corner tew ole Fort Massachusetts, an o' course thar warn't no lawyers an no sheriffs ner no depity sheriffs nuther, tew make every debt twice as big with ther darnation fees. They warn't no sheriffs sales, nuther, a sellin of a feller outer house'n hum an winter comin on, an thar warn't no suein an no jailin of fellers fer debt. Folks wuz keerful who they trusted, ez they'd orter be allers, for ther warn't no klectin o' debts nohow, an ef that warn't allers jestice I reckin 'twas as nigh jestice as 'tis to klect bills swelled more'n double by lawyers' and sheriffs' and jestices' fees ez they doos naow. In them days ef any feller wuz put upon by another he'd jess got tew complain tew the slectmen or the committee, an they'd right him. I tell yew rich folks an poor folks lived together kinder neighborly in them times an 'cordin tew scripter. The rich folks warn't a grindin the face o' the poor, an the poor they
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