Around the World with Josiah Allen's Wife by Marietta Holley (ereader with dictionary .TXT) đ
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- Author: Marietta Holley
Read book online «Around the World with Josiah Allen's Wife by Marietta Holley (ereader with dictionary .TXT) đ». Author - Marietta Holley
âYes,â sez Arvilly, âis it goinâ to make the home less full of discomfort to have him reel home at midnight and dash the hungry cryinâ baby aginst the wall and put out its feeble life, and mebby kill the complaininâ wife too?â
122âOh, those are extreme cases and uncommon,â sez Elder Wessel.
âNot oncommon at all,â sez Arvilly. âIf you read the daily papers you will see such things as this, the direct work of the saloon, are continually occurring, too common in fact to attract much attention.â
He couldnât deny this, for he knew that we read the papers jest the same as he did, and the fact that he couldnât deny it seemed to kinder tire him, and he sez, getting up:
âI guess I will go and smoke a cigar.â And he went. And I went up to my room, too, to pack my satchel bag, for we expected to start the very next morninâ and to be gone about a week or ten days.
Well, the steamer took us to Hilo, and the panorama that swepâ by us on that steamer canât never be reproduced by any camera or kodak; the sapphire blue water, the hills standing like mountains of beaten gold and velvety green verdure, and beyond the soft blue and purple mountain ranges, agin deep clefts and cliffs of richest colored rocks with feathery white waterfalls floating down on âem like a veil, anon pleasant landscapes, sugar cane plantations, picturesque houses, windmills, orchards, dancing brooks and broad green fields. No dissolvinâ view wuz ever so entrancinâ, but like all others it had to dissolve.
We reached Hilo the second day and we all went to a comfortable tarven, and the next morninâ bright and early we sot off on the stage for the volcano over, I state, and state it fearlessly, the most beautiful road that wuz ever built towards any volcano or anything else. Why, Iâve thought that the road between Jonesville and Loontown wuz beautiful and easy travellinâ. Old Hagadone is path-master and vain of the road, and calls the men out twice a year to pay poll taxes and such by workinâ it. Sugar maples, elder bushes, and shuemakes, and wild grapes and ivy run along the side of the stun wall, makinâ it, I always had thought, on-approachable in beauty. But, good land! if old Hagadone 123 had seen that road he would have turned green as grass with envy.
Imagine a wide road, smooth as glass, cut right out of a glowing tropical forest with a almost onimagined splendor, that I spoze was meant to be onseen by mortal eyes, risinâ up on each side onât. Why, Iâve been as proud as a peacock of my little hibiscus growinâ in grandma Allenâs old teapot, and when that blowed out one little blow I called the neighbors in to witness the gorgeous sight. Imagine a hibiscus tree, as big as one of our biggest maples, fairly burninâ all over with the gorgeous blossoms, and bananas with their great glossy leaves, and lantannas. Wuznât I proud of my lantanna growinâ in Ma Smithâs blue sugar bowl? I thought it wuz a lovely sight when it had three blows on it at one time. But imagine milds and milds of âem risinâ up thirty feet on each side of the road, and little spindlinâ palms, that we envy if growinâ two feet high, growinâ here to a hundred feet or more, and begonias and geraniums growinâ up into tall trees and of every color, tuberoses and magnolias loadinâ the air with fragance, the glossy green of the ohia tree with the iaia vine climbing and racing over it all, mingled in with tamarind and oranges and bamboo, and oleanders with their delicious pink and white blossoms. Sez I: âDo you remember my little oleander growinâ in a sap bucket, Josiah? Did you ever think of seeinâ âem growinâ fifty feet high? What a priceless treasure one would be in Jonesville.â
And he whispered back real voyalent: âDonât think, Samantha, of gittinâ me to lug one of them fifty-foot trees all the way hum. Iâve broke my back for years lugginâ round your old oleander in a tub, but never will I tackle one of them trees,â and he looked up defiantly into the glossy boughs overhead.
âI hainât asked you to, Josiah, but,â sez I dreamily: âI would love to git some slips of them fuchia and begonia trees, and that jasmine,â sez I, pintinâ up to the emerald waves of foliage enriched by them I have named, and as many other 124 glowinâ with perfume and beauty as there are stars in the heavens, or so it seemed to me. Sez I: âWhat a show I could make in Jonesville with âem.â Sez I: âWhat would Miss Bobbett and Sister Henzy say if they could see âem?â And I pinted up at a gigantick trumpet creeper and convolvuli, festooned along the boughs of a giant geranium and hanging down its banner of bloom.
âTheyâd say, let well enough alone. I tell you I canât break up my trip digginâ dirt and tendinâ to a lot of houseplants from Dan to Beersheba.â
âWeâre not goinâ to Dan,â sez I, âand if we wuz a man might meet Dan doinâ worse than pleasinâ his pardner. Look at that jasmine,â sez I. âIs that much like that little slip of Sister Bobbettâs growinâ in a tea-cup? And see! oh, do see, Josiah, them night bloominâ ceriuses! Oh, take it on a moonlight night, the walls of fragrant green on either side, and them lovely blows, hundreds and thousands of âem shininâ out like stars of whiteness, full of the odor of Paradise. Oh, what a sight, Josiah Allen, for us to see!â
And he sez, âDonât git any idee, Samantha, of you and me cominâ way back here by moonlight, for we canât do it. The road is thirty milds long, and if we tried it we shouldnât git here till they had done blowinâ.â
âI hainât no idee of tryinâ it, Josiah, I wuz only revellinâ in the idee of what the glory of the sight must be.â
âWell,â sez he, âI am revellinâ in the idee of havinâ a good meat dinner if we ever git to Hilo.â And he added with a sarcastick smile, âDonât that make you think of poker? High, lowââall it wants is Jack and the Game.â
I gin him a stern look and sez, âSome knowledge is demeaninâ to a perfessor.â And he acted puggicky and didnât say another word for a mild or so. But I sot calm and looked away into the entrancinâ seen. And all the time we wuz rollinâ on towards the volcano.
Robert and Dorothy seemed to be enjoying the seen as much as I did, and Arvilly wuz tryinâ to canvass the Scotchman. 125 The Englishman had already bought the âTwin Crimes,â and so she wuz as happy as she ever would be, I spozed.
Well, after that long enchantinâ ride through Paradise, at last we reached the place we wuz bound for and put up to the Volcano House, from which a good view of the volcano is seen at night, but nothinâ to what it is to stand on its shores. Well, I will pass over all interveninâ incidents, some as the lava duz when it gits started, and draw the curtain on us agin as we stood in front of that awful, majestic, dretful, sublime, unapproachable, devilish, gloriousââa thousand times gloriousââand not to be forgot till death, sight. Tongue canât utter words to describe it; the pen hainât made, the egg hainât laid to hatch out the soarinâ eagle whose feathers could be wrought into a pen fittinâ to describe that seen. Why, I have thought when the mash got to burninâ down to the lake it wuz a grand sight; Jonesvillians have driv milds to see it. I have seen upwards of ten acres of the mash burninâ over at one time, and felt awestruck, and so did Sister Bobbett, for we went down together once with our pardners on a buckboard. But, sez I to myself almost instinctively:
âWhat if Sister Bobbett wuz here? What would she say?â
Imagine a great lake of fire instead of water, waves of burning lava dashing up onto its shores, bustinâ way up in the air at times, towerinâ pillers of flame, swishinâ and swashinâ, fire and flames, and brimstun for all I know. Whatââwhat wuz goinâ on way down in the depths below if this wuz the seen outside? So wildly I questioned my heart and Josiah. âOh, Josiah!â sez I, âwhatââwhat a sight! Did I ever expect to witness such a seen? No, oh no,â I sez. âWhat do you spoze is goinâ on inside of that great roarinâ, blazinâ monster?â Sez he, âI know whatâs goinâ on inside of me; I know I am jest starvinâ, faintinâ away fur want of food.â
126âWell,â sez I soothinâly, âwhen we get back to the Volcano House I will ask for some bread and milk for you.â
âBread and milk!â sez he bitterly. âI want pork and beans, and ham, and biled greens, and chicken pie and Injun puddinâ!â
âWell, well,â sez I, âbe calm. Do jest see them great waves and fields of lava, milds and milds of âem, once jest melted fire, rollinâ on and rollinâ onââwhat a sight!â sez I. On one side wuz a sort of a high terrace, over which the fiery flames had fell and hardened into solid waves lookinâ some as our Niagara would look if her flowinâ waters should suddenly harden as they flowed. I pinted it out to Arvilly, who wuz by my side. Sez I, âDo look at that! It seems as if Nater had jest hung up that stupendous sheet there and writ on it the word Glory! Unapproachable glory and magesty!â
Sez Arvilly dreamily, âIf I could jest dig out in that smooth lava the words, âThe Twin Crimes of AmericaââIntemperance and Greed,â and train the volcano to run blazinâ fire into the mould, what a advertisement that would be for my book, or for the âWild, Wicked and Warlike Deeds of Man.â It would help the sale of both on âem tremendously.â
And I sez, âDonât try to train no volcanos, Arvilly; you would find them worse to handle than any man you ever tackled.â
âWell,â sez she dreamily, âI believe it could be done.â
Robert Strong and Dorothy stood clost together, he a-protectinâ her, as I spozed. âTennyrate he seemed dretful careful where she stepped and how and when, and she looked up real confidinâ and sweet into his face, and then, awestruck and wonder smit, down into the burninâ lake below. The Englishman and Scotchman had gone on a little nigher to it, with the guide. Hale-mau-mau (House of Endless Fire), well did the natives name it. Well, it wuz long before we tore ourselves from the sublime seen, and I dremp 127 of it all night. I see Josiah bore from me on the lava flood, and then agin I wuz swepâ from him and dashed up on a billow of flame, and visey versey, versey visey. I had a dretful night, and got up twice and looked out of the winder on the grand spectacle. But towards morninâ I had a beautiful vision: my pardner and me wuz bore back to Jonesville, and sot in our own door yard under a spreadinâ geranium tree, and Sister Bobbett stood admirinâly before me with a tea-cup in her hand, begginâ for a slip from the immense branches. It wuz a sweet dream, and I waked up refreshed.
Well, one week later we found ourselves agin on the boundless deep, the broad Pacific, bound for the Philippines. How fur off from Jonesville did I seem as I thought onât, but Love journeyed with me, and Duty. Tommy wuz gittinâ fat and rosy, his cough grew better every day, and he looked and acted like a different child.
This wuz to be a longer voyage than we had took. We layed out to stop to the Philippines first, and so on to China and Japan. It beats all how soon you settle down and seem to feel as if the great ship you are embarked on is the world, and the little corner you occupy your home, specially if you have a devoted pardner with you to share your corner, for Love can make a home anywhere. Arvilly got a number of new subscribers and made friends amongst the passengers, but Elder Wessel avoided her. And he didnât seem to like Sister Evangeline. I told him what I had seen and hearn, for it seemed to me like a olive branch bore into our dark, rainy world by a dove of Paradise. But he scoffed at it; he said that it wuz all imagination. But I sez:
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