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John March, Southerner
The man behind them passed, looked back, stopped and returned. "Gen'lemen, sirs, to you. Mr. Mahch, escuse me by pyo accident earwhilin' yo' colloquial terms. I know e'zacly what cause yo' sick transit. Yass, seh. Thass the imagination. I've had it, myseff."
March stopped haughtily, Fair moved out of hearing, and Cornelius spoke low, with a sweet smile. "Yass, seh. You see the imagination o' yo' head is evil. You imaginin' somepm what ain't happm yit an' jiss like as not won't happm at all. But thass not why I seeks to interrup' you at this junction.
"Mr. Mahch, I'm impudize to espress to you in behalfs o' a vas' colo'ed constituency – but speakin' th'oo a small ban' o' they magnates with me as they sawt o' janizary chairman – that Gen'l Halliday seem to be ti-ud o' us an' done paass his bes' dotage, an' likewise the groun's an' debasements on an' faw which we be proud to help you depopulate yo' lan's, yass, seh, with all conceivable ligislation thereunto."
"What business is it of yours or your Blackland darkies what I do with my woods?"
"Why, thass jess it! Whass nobody's business is ev'ybody's business, you know."
March smiled and moved toward Fair. "I've no time to talk with you now, Leggett."
"Oh! no, seh, I knowed you wouldn't have. But bein' the talk' o' the town that you an' this young gen'leman" – dipping low to Fair – "is projeckin' said depopulation I has cawdially engross ow meaju' in writin' faw yo' conjint an' confidential consideration. Yass, seh, aw in default whereof then to compote it in like manneh to the nex' mos' interested."
"And, pray, who is the next most interested in my private property?"
"Why, Majo' Gyarnit, I reck'n – an' Mr. Ravenel, seein' he's the Djuke o' Suez – p-he!"
March let his hand accept a soiled document, saying, "Well, he's not Duke of me. Just leave me this. I'll either mail it to you or see you again. Good-by."
The title of the document as indorsed on it was: "The Suez and Three Counties Transportation, Immigration, Education, Navigation, and Construction Co."
XXXIV.
DAPHNE AND DINWIDDIE: A PASTEL IN PROSE
"Professor" Pettigrew had always been coldly indifferent to many things commonly counted chief matters of life. One of these was religion; another was woman. His punctuality at church at the head of Rosemont's cadets was so obviously perfunctory as to be without a stain of hypocrisy. Yet he never vaunted his scepticism, but only let it exhale from him in interrogative insinuations that the premises and maxims of religion were refuted by the outcome of the war. To woman his heart was as hard, cold, and polished as celluloid. Only when pressed did he admit that he regarded her as an insipid necessity. One has to have a female parent in order to get into this world – no gentleman admitted without a lady; and when one goes out of it again, it is good to leave children so as to keep the great unwashed from getting one's property. Property! – humph! he or his father, at least – he became silent.
He often saw Mrs. March in church, yet kept his heart. But one night a stereoptican lecture was given in Suez. In Mrs. March's opinion such things, unlike the deadly theatre, were harmful only when carried to excess. To keep John from carrying this one to excess – that is, from going to it with anybody else – she went with him, and they "happened" – I suppose an agnostic would say – to sit next to Dinwiddie Pettigrew. John being in a silent mood Daphne and Dinwiddie found time for much conversation. The hour fixed for the lecture was half-past seven. Promptly about half-past eight the audience began to arrive. At a quarter of nine it was growing numerous.
"Oh! no," said General Halliday to the lecturer, "don't you fret about them going home; they'll stay like the yellow fever" – and punctually somewhere about nine "The Great Love Stories of History" began to be told, and luminously pictured on a white cotton full moon.
With lights turned low and everybody enjoined to converse only in softest whispers, the conditions for spontaneous combustion were complete in many bosoms, and at the close of the entertainment Daphne Dalrymple, her own asbestos affections warmed, but not ignited, walked away with the celluloid heart of Dinwiddie Pettigrew in a light blaze.
XXXV.
A WIDOW'S ULTIMATUM
At the time of which we would here speak the lover had made one call at Widewood, but had not met sufficient encouragement to embolden him to ask that the lovee would give, oh, give him back a heart so damaged by fire, as to be worthless except to the thief; though his manner was rank with hints that she might keep it now and take the rest.
Mrs. March was altogether too sacred in her own eyes to be in haste at such a juncture. Her truly shrinking spirit was a stranger to all manner of auctioning, but she believed in fair play, and could not in conscience quite forget her exhilarating skirmish with Mr. Ravenel on the day of Susie's wedding.
It had not brought on a war of roses. Something kept him away from Widewood. Was it, she wondered, the noble fear that he might subject her to those social rumors that are so often all the more annoying because only premature? Ah, if he could but know how lightly she regarded such prattle! But she would not tell him, even in impersonal verse. On the contrary, she contributed to the Presbyterian Monthly– a non-sectarian publication – those lines – which caught one glance of so many of her friends and escaped any subsequent notice – entitled,
"LOVE-PROOF"She pities much, yet laughs at LoveFor love of laughter! Fadeless youth" —But the simple fact is that Mr. Ravenel's flatteries, when rare chance brought him and the poetess together, were without purpose, and justified in his liberal mind by the right of every Southern gentleman to treat as irresistible any and every woman in her turn. – "Got to do something pleasant, Miss Fannie; can't buy her poetry."
On the evening when March received from Leggett the draft of An Act Entitled, etc., the mother and son sat silent through their supper, though John was longing to speak. At last, as they were going into the front room he managed to say:
"Well, mother, Fair's gone – goes to-night."
He dropped an arm about her shoulders.
"Oh! – when I can scarcely bear my own weight!" She sank into her favorite chair and turned away from his regrets, sighing,
"Oh, no, youth and health never do think."
The son sat down and leaned thoughtfully on the centre-table.
"That's so! They don't think; they're too busy feeling."
"Ah, John, you don't feel! I wish you could."
"Humph! I wish I couldn't." He smoothed off a frown and let his palm fall so flat upon the bare mahogany that a woman of less fortitude than Mrs. March would certainly have squeaked. "Mother, dear, I believe I'll try to see how little I can feel and how much I can think."
"Providence permitting, my reckless boy."
"Oh, bless your dear soul, mother, Providence'll be only too glad! yes, I've a notion to try thinking. Fact is, I've begun already. Now, you love solitude – "
"Ah, John!"
"Well, at any rate, you can think best when you're alone."
"O John!"
"Well, father could. I can't. I need to rub against men. You don't."
"Oh! – h – h – John!" But when Mrs. March saw the intent was only figurative she drew her lips close and dropped her eyes.
Her son reflected a minute and spoke again. "Why, mother, just that Yankee's being here peeping around and asking his scared-to-death questions has pulled my wits together till I wonder where they've been. Oh, it's so! It's not because he's a Yankee. It's simply because he's in with the times. He knows what's got to come and what's got to go, and how to help them do it so's to make them count! He belongs – pshaw – he belongs to a live world. Now, here in this sleepy old Dixie – "
"Has it come to that, John?"
"Yes, it has, and it's cost a heap sight more than it's come to, because I didn't let it come long ago. I wouldn't look plain truth in the face for fear of going back on Rosemont and Suez, and all the time I've been going back on Widewood!" The speaker smote the family Bible with Leggett's document. His mother wept.
"Oh! golly," mumbled John.
"Oh! my son!"
"Why, what's the trouble, mother?"
Mrs. March could not tell him. It was not merely his blasphemies. There seemed to be more hope of sympathy from the damaged ceiling, and she moaned up to it,
"My son a Radical!"
He sprang to his feet. "Mother, take that insult back! For your own sake, take it back! I hadn't a thought of politics. If my words implied it they played me false!"
Mrs. March was anguished wonder. "Why, what else could they mean?"
"Anything! I don't know! I was only trying to blurt out what I've been thinking out, concerning our private interests. For I've thought out and found out – these last few days – more things that can be done, and must be done, and done right off with these lands of ours – "
"O John! Is that your swift revenge?"
"Why, mother, dear! Revenge for what? Who on?"
"For nothing, John; on widowed, helpless me!"
"Great Scott! mother, as I've begged you fifty times, I beg you now again, just tell me what to do or undo."
"Please don't mock me, John. You're the dictator now, by the terms of the will. They give you the legal rights, and the legal rights are all that count – with men. I'm in your power."
John laughed. "I wish you'd tell the dictator what to do."
"Too late, my son, you've taken the counsel of your country's enemies." She rose to leave the room. The son slapped his thigh.
"'Pon my soul, mother, you must excuse me. Here's a letter.
"Has Jeff-Jack accepted another poem?" he asked, as she read. "I wish he'd pay for it."
She did not say, though the missive must have ended very kindly, for in spite of herself she smiled.
"Ah, John! your vanity is so large it can include even your mother. I wish I had some of it; I might believe what my friends tell me. But maybe it's vanity in me not to think they know best." She let John press her hand upon his forehead.
"I wish I could know," she continued. "I yearn for wise counsel. O son! why do we, both of us, so distrust and shun our one only common friend? He could tell us what to do, son; and, oh, how we need some one to tell us!"
John dropped the hand. "I don't need Jeff-Jack. He's got to need me."
"Oh, presumptuous boy! John, you might say Mr. Ravenel. He's old enough to be your father."
"No, he's not! At any rate, that's one thing he'll never be!"
The widow flared up. "I can say that, sir, without your prompting."
"Why, mother! Why, I no more intended – "
"John, spare me! Oh, no, you were brutal merely by accident! I thank you! I must thank you for pointing your unfeeling hints at the most invincib – I mean inveterate – bachelor in the three counties."
"Inveterate lover, you'd better say. He marries Fannie Halliday next March. The General's telling every Tom, Dick and Harry to-day."
"John, I don't believe it! It can't be! I know better!"
"I wish you did, but they told me themselves, away last July, standing hand in hand. Mother, he's got no more right to marry her – "
"Than you have! And he knows it! For John, John! There never was a more pitiful or needless mismatch! Why, he could have – but it's none of my business, only – " she choked.
"No, of course not," said the son, emotionally, "and it's none of mine, either, only – humph!" He rose and strode about. "Why she could just as easily – Oh, me!" He jostled a chair. Mrs. March flinched and burst into tears.
"Oh, good heavens! mother, what have I done now? I know I'm coarse and irreverent and wilful and surly and healthy, and have got the big-head and the Lord knows what! But I swear I'll stop everything bad and be everything good if you'll just quit off sniv – weeping!"
Strange to say, this reasonable and practicable proposition did not calm either of them.
"I'll even go with you to Jeff-Jack and ask his advice – oh! Jane-Anne-Maria! now what's broke?"
"Only a mother's heart!" She looked up from her handkerchief. "Go seek his advice if you still covet it; I never trusted him; I only feared I might doubt him unjustly. But now I know his intelligence, no less than his integrity, is beneath the contempt of a Christian woman. I leave you to your books. My bed – "
"O mother, I wasn't reading! Come, stay; I'll be as entertaining as a circus."
"I can't; I'm all unstrung. Let me go while I can still drag – "
John rose. A horse's tread sounded. "Now, who can that be?"
He listened again, then rolled up his fists and growled between his teeth.
"Cawnsound that foo' – mother, go on up stairs, I'll tell him you've retired."
"I shall do nothing so dishonorable. Why should you bury me alive? Is it because one friend still comes with no scheme for the devastation of our sylvan home?"
Before John could reply sunshine lighted the inquirer's face and she stepped forward elastically to give her hand to Mr. Dinwiddie Pettigrew.
When he was gone, Daphne was still as bland as May, for a moment, and even John's gravity was of a pleasant sort. "Mother, you're just too sweet and modest to see what that man's up to. I'm not. I'd like to tell him to stay away from here. Why, mother, he's – he's courting!"
The mother smiled lovingly. "My son, I'll attend to that. Ah me! suitors! They come in vain – unless I should be goaded by the sight of these dear Widewood acres invaded by the alien." She sweetened like a bride.
The son stood aghast. She lifted a fond hand to his shoulder. "John, do you know what heart hunger is? You're too young. I am ready to sacrifice anything for you, as I always was for your father. Only, I must reign alone in at least one home, one heart! Fear not; there is but one thing that will certainly drive me again into marriage."
"What's that, mother?"
"A daughter-in-law. If my son marries, I have no choice – I must!" She floated upstairs.
XXXVI.
A NEW SHINGLE IN SUEZ
Next day – "John, didn't you rise very early this morning?"
"No, ma'am."
He had not gone to bed. Yet there was a new repose in his face and energy in his voice. He ate breakfast enough for two.
"Millie, hasn't Israel brought my horse yet?"
He came to where his mother sat, kissed her forehead, and passed; but her languorous eyes read, written all over him, the fact that she had drawn her cords one degree too tight, and that in the night something had snapped; she had a new force to deal with.
"John" – there was alarm in her voice – he had the door half open – "are you so cruel and foolish as to take last evening's words literally?"
"That's all gay, mother; 'tain't the parson I'm going after, it's the surveyor."
He shut the door on the last word and went away whistling. Not that he was merry; as his horse started he set his teeth, smote in the spurs, and cleared the paling fence at a bound.
The surveyors were Champion and Shotwell. John worked with them. To his own surprise he was the life of the party. Some nights they camped. They sang jolly songs together; but often Shotwell would say:
"O Champion, I'll hush if you will; we're scaring the wolves. Now, if you had such a voice as John's – Go on, March, sing 'Queen o' my Soul.'"
John would sing; Shotwell would lie back on the pine-needles with his eyes shut, and each time the singer reached the refrain, "Mary, Mary, queen of my soul," the impassioned listener would fetch a whoop and cry, "That's her!" although everybody had known that for years the only "her" who had queened it over Shotwell's soul was John's own Fannie Halliday.
"Now, March, sing, 'Thou wert the first, thou aht the layst,' an' th'ow yo' whole soul into it like you did last night!"
"John," said Champion once, after March had sung this lament, "You're a plumb fraud. If you wa'n't you couldn't sing that thing an' then turn round and sing, 'They laughed, ha-ha! and they quaffed, ha-ha!'"
"Let's have it!" cried Shotwell. "Paass tin cups once mo', gen'lemen!" – tink – tink —
"March," said Champion, "if you'll excuse the personality, what's changed you so?"
John laughed and said he didn't think he was changed, but if he was he reckoned it was evolution. Which did not satisfy Shotwell, who had "quaffed, ha-ha!" till he was argumentative.
"Don't you 'scuse personal'ty 't all, March. I know wha's change' you. 'Tain't no 'sperience. You ain't been converted. You're gettin' ripe! 'S all is about it. Wha' changes green persimmons? 's nature; 'tain't 'sperience."
"Well, I'd like to know if sunshine an' frost ain't experiences," retorted Champion.
"Some experiences," laughed John, "are mighty hot sunshine, and some are mighty hard frosts." To which the two old soldiers assented with more than one sentimental sigh as the three rolled themselves in their blankets and closed their eyes.
When the survey was done they made a large colored map of everything, and John kept it in a long tin tube – what rare times he was not looking at it.
"How short-sighted most men are! They'll have lands to dispose of and yet not have maps made! How the devil do they expect ever" – etc. Sometimes he smiled to himself as he rolled the gorgeous thing up, but only as we smile at the oddities of one whom we admire.
He opened an office. It contained a mantel-piece, a desk, four chairs, a Winchester rifle, and a box of cigars. The hearth and mantel-piece were crowded with specimens of earths, ores, and building stones, and of woods precious to the dyer, the manufacturer, the joiner and the cabinet-maker. Inside the desk lay the map whenever he was, and a revolver whenever he was not – "Out. Will be back in a few minutes."
On the desk's top were more specimens, three or four fat old books from Widewood, and on one corner, by the hour, his own feet, in tight boots, when he read Washington's Letters, Story on the Constitution, or the Geology of Dixie. What interested Suez most of all was his sign. It professed no occupation. "John March." That was all it proclaimed, for a time, in gilt, on a field of blue smalts. But one afternoon when he was – "Out of town. Will be back Friday" – some Rosemont boys scratched in the smalts the tin word, Gentleman.
"Let it alone, John," said the next day's Courier. "It's a good ad., and you can live up to it." It stayed.
XXXVII.
WISDOM AND FAITH KISS EACH OTHER
It came to pass in those days that an effort to start a religious revival issued from Suez "University." It seems the "Black-and-Tannery," as the Rosemont boys called it, was having such increase in numbers that its president had thought well to give the national thanks-giving day special emphasis on the devotional side. Prayer for gifts of grace to crown these temporal good fortunes extended over into a second and third evening, black young women and tan young men asked to be prayed for, the president "wired" glad news to the board in New York, the board "wired" back, "Speak unto the children of Israel that they go forward!" – just ten words, economy is the road to commendation – meetings were continued, and the gray-headed black janitor, richest man in the institution, leading in prayer, promised that if the Lord would "come down" then and there, "right thoo de roof," he himself would pay for the shingles!
Since corner-stone day the shabby-coated president had not known such joy. In the chapel, Sunday morning, he read the story of the two lepers who found the Syrian camp deserted in the siege of Samaria; and preached from the text, "We do not well: this day is a day of good tidings, and we hold our peace… So they came and called unto the porter of the city." That afternoon he went to Parson Tombs. The pastor was cordial, brotherly; full of tender gladness to hear of the "manifestations." They talked a great while, were pleased with each other, and came to several kind and unexpected agreements. They even knelt and prayed together. As to the president's specific errand – his proposal for a week of union revival meetings in Parson Tomb's church, with or without the town congregation, the "university students" offering to occupy only the gallery – the pastor said that as far as he was concerned, he was much disposed to favor it.
"Why, befo' the wa' ow slaves used to worship with us; I've seen ow gallery half full of 'm! And we'd be only too glad to see it so again – for we love 'em yet, seh – if they wouldn't insist so on mixin' religion an' politics. I'll consult some o' my people an' let you know."
When he consulted his church officers that evening only two replied approvingly. One of them was the oldest, whitest haired man in the church. "Faw my part," he said, "I don't think the churches air a-behavin' theyse'ves like Christians to the niggehs anywheres. I jest know ef my Lawd an' Master was here in Dixie now he'd not bless a single one of all these separations between churches, aw in churches, unless it's the separation o' the sexes, which I'm pow'ful sorry to see that broke up. I'm faw invitin' them people, dry-so, an' I don't give a cent whether they set upstairs aw down" – which was true.
The other approving voice was young Doctor Grace.
"Brethren, I believe in separating worshippers by race. But when, as now, this is so fully and amicably provided for, I would have all come together, joined, yet separated, to cry with one shout, 'Lord, revive us!' And he'll do it, brethren! I feel it right here!" He put his hand on the exact spot.
Garnet spoke. "Brother Grace, you say the separation is fully provided for – where'll the white teachers of our colored brethren sit? If they sit down-stairs we run the risk of offending some of our own folks; if they sit in the gallery that's a direct insult to the whole community. It'll not be stood. When colored mourners come up to the front – h-they'll come in troops – where'll you put 'em?"
"I'd put them wherever there's room for them," was the heroic reply.
"Oh, there'd be room for them everywhere," laughed Garnet, "for as far as our young folks are concerned, the whole thing would be a complete frazzle. Why, you take a graceless young fellow, say like John March. How are you going to get him to come up here and kneel down amongst a lot of black and saddle-colored bucks and wenches? – I word it his way, you understand. No, sir, as sure as we try this thing, we'll create dissension – in a church where everything now is as sweet and peaceful as the grave."
"Of course we mustn't have dissensions," said Parson Tombs.
Mr. Usher, who spoke last and very slowly, said but a word or two. He agreed with Brother Garnet. And yet he believed this was a message from on high to be up and a-doin'. "This church, brethren, has jest got to be replaastered, an' I don't see how we goin' to do it 'ithout we have a outpourin' o' the spirit that'll give us mo' church membehs."
So the good parson dropped the matter, and saw how rightly he had followed the divine guidance when only a day or two later the "university" insulted and exasperated all Suez by enrolling three young white women from Sandstone. The Courier, regretting to state that this infringed no statute, deprecated all violence, and while it extolled the forbearance of the people, yet declared that an education which educated backward, and an institution which sought to elevate an inferior race by degrading a superior, would compel the people to make laws they would rather not enact. The Black-and-Tannery's effort for a union revival meeting lay at the door of "our church," said Garnet smilingly to Sister Proudfit, "as dead as Ananias." The kind pastor was troubled.
Yet he was gladdened again when Barbara, on horseback, brought word from "pop-a" that he had found half a dozen of his students praying together for the conversion of their fellows, and that the merest hint of revival meetings in Suez had been met by them with such zeal that he saw they were divinely moved. "Get thee up, brother," the Major's note ended, "for there is a sound of abundance of rain."
"Is it good news?" asked Barbara. The white-haired man handed her the note, joyfully, and stood at her saddle-bow watching her face as she gravely read it.