»
By permission of the Macmillan Company, Publishers.
By permission of the Macmillan Company, Publishers.
Warner - World's Best Literature - v01 - A to Apu
Daphne
was doing her best to hide now.
When Hilary realized it he moved in front of her, screening
her as well as possible.
(Hadn't you better lie down, too ? ” she asked.
«No,” he replied quickly.
“But if he sees you, he might take a notion to ride over this
way! ”
« Then he'll have to ride. "
"But, Hilary, suppose he were to find me lying down here
behind you, hiding ? ”
«Then he'll have to find you. "
“You get me into trouble, and then you won't help me out! »
exclaimed Daphne with considerable heat.
“It might not make matters any better for me to hide,” he
answered quietly. “But if he comes over here and tries to get
us into trouble, I'll see then what I can do. ”
Daphne lay silent for a moment, thinking. Then she nestled
more closely down, and said with gay, unconscious archness:
" “I'm not hiding because I'm afraid of him. I'm doing it just
because I want to. ”
She did not know that the fresh happiness flushing her at
that moment came from the fact of having Hilary between her-
self and her father as a protector; that she was drinking in the
delight a woman feels in getting playfully behind the man she
loves in the face of danger: but her action bound her to him
and brought her more under his influence.
His words showed that he also felt his position, the position
of the male who stalks forth from the herd and stands the silent
challenger. He was young, and vain of his manhood in the
usual innocent way that led him to carry the chip on his
## p. 415 (#449) ############################################
JAMES LANE ALLEN
415
shoulder for the world to knock off; and he placed himself
before Daphne with the understanding that if they were discov-
ered, there would be trouble. Her father was a violent man,
and the circumstances were not such that any Kentucky father
would overlook them. But with his inward seriousness, his face
wore its usual look of reckless unconcern.
Is he coming this way? ” asked Daphne, after an interval of
impatient waiting.
“Straight ahead. Are you hid ? »
"I can't see whether I'm hid or not. Where is he now ? »
Right on us. ”
« Does he see you ? ”
« Yes. ”
“Do you think he sees me ? »
“I'm sure of it. ”
«Then I might as well get up,” said Daphne, with the cour-
age of despair, and up she got. Her father was riding along
the path in front of them, but not looking. She was down
again like a partridge.
«How could you fool me, Hilary ? Suppose he had been
looking! ”
“I wonder what he thinks I'm doing, sitting over here in the
grass like a stump,” said Hilary. If he takes me for one, he
must think I've got an awful lot of roots. ”
« Tell me when it's time to get up. ”
«I will. "
He turned softly toward her. She was lying on her side, with
her burning cheek in one hand. The other hand rested high on
the curve of her hip. Her braids had fallen forward, and lay in
a heavy loop about her lovely shoulders. Her eyes were closed,
her scarlet lips parted in a smile. The edges of her snow-white
petticoats showed beneath her blue dress, and beyond these one
of her feet and ankles. Nothing more fragrant with innocence
ever lay on the grass.
"Is it time to get up now ? ”
«Not yet,” and he sat bending over her.
Now ? »
“Not yet,” he repeated more softly.
“Now, then ? ”
“Not for a long time. ”
His voice thrilled her, and she glanced up at him. His laugh-
ing eyes were glowing down upon her under his heavy mat of
C
## p. 416 (#450) ############################################
416
JAMES LANE ALLEN
hair. She sat up and looked toward the wagon crawling away in
the distance; her father was no longer in sight.
One of the ewes, dissatisfied with a back view, stamped her
forefoot impatiently, and ran round in front, and out into the
sun. Her lambs followed, and the three, ranging themselves
abreast, stared at Daphne, with a look of helpless inquiry.
« Sh-pp-pp! ” she cried, throwing up her hands at them, irri-
tated. “Go away! ”
They turned and ran; the others followed; and the whole
number, falling into line, took a path meekly homeward. They
left a greater sense of privacy under the tree. Several yards off
was a small stock-pond. Around the edge of this the water
stood hot and green in the tracks of the cattle and the sheep,
and about these pools the yellow butterflies were thick, alighting
daintily on the promontories of the mud, or rising two by two
through the dazzling atmosphere in columns of enamored flight.
Daphne leaned over to the blue grass where it swayed un-
broken in the breeze, and drew out of their sockets several stalks
of it, bearing on their tops the purplish seed-vessels. With them
she began to braid a ring about one of her fingers in the old
simple fashion of the country.
As they talked, he lay propped on his elbow, watching her
fingers, the soft slow movements of which little by little wove a
spell over his eyes. And once again the power of her beauty
began to draw him beyond control. He felt a desire to seize her
hands, to crush them in his. His eyes passed upward along her
tapering wrists, the skin of which was like mother-of-pearl; up-
ward along the arm to the shoulder — to her neck to her deeply
crimsoned cheeks — to the purity of her brow — to the purity of
her eyes, the downcast lashes of which hid them like conscious
fringes.
An awkward silence began to fall between them. Daphne
felt that the time had come for her to speak. But, powerless
to begin, she feigned to busy herself all the more devotedly
with braiding the deep-green circlet. Suddenly he drew himself
through the grass to her side.
“Let me ! »
"No! ” she cried, lifting her arm above his reach and looking
at him with a gay threat. « You don't know how. ”
«I do know how,” he said, with his white teeth on his red
underlip, and his eyes sparkling; and reaching upward, he laid
his hand in the hollow of her elbow and pulled her arm down.
## p. 417 (#451) ############################################
JAMES LANE ALLEN
417
»
»
«No! No! ” she cried again, putting her hands behind her
back. « You will spoil it ! »
“I will not spoil it,” he said, moving so close to her that his
breath was on her face, and reaching round to unclasp her hands.
“No! No! No! ” she cried, bending away from him. I don't
want any ring! ” and she tore it from her finger and threw it out
on the grass. Then she got up, and, brushing the grass-seed off
her lap, put on her hat.
He sat cross-legged on the grass before her. He had put on
his hat, and the brim hid his eyes.
And you are not going to stay and talk to me ? ” he said in
a tone of reproachfulness, without looking up.
She was excited and weak and trembling, and so she put out
her hand and took hold of a strong loop of the grape-vine hang-
ing from a branch of the thorn, and laid her cheek against her
hand and looked away from him.
“I thought you were better than the others,” he continued,
with the bitter wisdom of twenty years. “But you women are
all alike. When a man gets into trouble, you desert him. You
hurry him on to the devil. I have been turned out of the
church, and now you are down on Oh, well! But you
know how much I have always liked you, Daphne. ”
It was not the first time he had acted this character. It had
been a favorite rôle. But Daphne had never seen the like. She
was overwhelmed with happiness that he cared so much for her;
and to have him reproach her for indifference, and see him suf-
fering with the idea that she had turned against him—that
instantly changed the whole situation. He had not heard then
what had taken place at the dinner. Under the circumstances,
feeling certain that the secret of her love had not been dis-
covered, she grew emboldened to risk a little more.
So she turned toward him smiling, and swayed gently as she
clung to the vine.
« Yes; I have my orders not even to speak to you! Never
again! ” she said, with the air of tantalizing.
« Then stay with me a while now," he said, and lifted slowly
to her his appealing face. She sat down, and screened herself
with a little feminine transparency.
"I can't stay long: it's going to rain! ”
He cast a wicked glance at the sky from under his hat; there
were a few clouds on the horizon.
me.
»
1-27
## p. 418 (#452) ############################################
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JAMES LANE ALLEN
“And so you are never going to speak to me again ? ” he
said mournfully.
“Never! » How delicious her laughter was.
“I'll put a ring on your finger to remember me by. ”
He lay over in the grass and pulled several stalks. Then he
lifted his eyes beseechingly to hers.
“Will you let me ? ”
Daphne hid her hands. He drew himself to her side and
took one of them forcibly from her lap.
With a slow, caressing movement he began to braid the
grass ring around her finger- in and out, around and around,
his fingers laced with her fingers, his palm lying close upon her
palm, his blood tingling through the skin upon her blood. He
made the braiding go wrong, and took it off and began , over
again. Two or three times she drew a deep breath, and stole a
bewildered look at his face, which was so close to hers that his
hair brushed it—so close that she heard the quiver of his own
breath. Then all at once he folded his hands about hers with a
quick, fierce tenderness, and looked up at her. She turned her
face aside and tried to draw her hand away. His clasp tight-
ened. She snatched it away, and got up with a nervous laugh.
« Look at the butterflies! Aren't they pretty ? ”
He sprang up and tried to seize her hand again.
“You shan't go home yet! ” he said, in an undertone.
«Shan't I? ” she said, backing away from him. “Who's
going to keep me ? »
"I am,” he said, laughing excitedly and following her closely.
“My father's coming! " she cried out as a warning.
He turned and looked: there was no one in sight.
“He is coming sooner or later! she called.
She had retreated several yards off into the sunlight of the.
meadow.
The remembrance of the risk that he was causing her to run
checked him. He went over to her.
“When can I see you again — soon? ”
He had never spoken so seriously to her before. He had
never before been so serious. But within the last hour Nature
had been doing her work, and its effect was immediate. His
sincerity instantly conquered her. Her eyes fell.
“No one has any right to keep us from seeing each other! "
he insisted. “We must settle that for ourselves. »
>>
## p. 419 (#453) ############################################
JAMES LANE ALLEN
419
(
Daphne made no reply.
“But we can't meet here any more - with people passing
backward and forward! ” he continued rapidly and decisively.
“What has happened to-day mustn't happen again. ”
“No! ” she replied, in a voice barely to be heard. “It must
never happen again. We can't meet here. "
They were walking side by side now toward the meadow-
path. As they reached it he paused.
“Come to the back of the pasture — to-morrow! - at four
o'clock! ” he said, tentatively, recklessly.
Daphne did not answer as she moved away from him along
the path homeward.
“Will you come ? ” he called out to her.
She turned and shook her head. Whatever her own new
plans may have become, she was once more happy and laugh-
ing.
“Come, Daphne!
She walked several paces further and turned and shook her
head again.
“Come! ” he pleaded.
She laughed at him.
He wheeled round to his mare grazing near. As he put his
foot into the stirrup, he looked again: she was standing in the
same place, laughing still.
“You go," she cried, waving him good-by. « There'll not be
a soul to disturb you! To-morrow - at four o'clock ! »
“Will you be there? ” he said,
“Will you ? ” she answered.
« I'll be there to-morrow,” he said, “and every other day till
»
C
you come.
»
By permission of the Macmillan Company, Publishers.
OLD KING SOLOMON'S CORONATION
From (Flute and Violin, and Other Kentucky Tales and Romances)
Copyright 1891, by Harper and Brothers
E
H
STOOD on the topmost of the court-house steps, and for a
moment looked down on the crowd with the usual air of
official severity.
"Gentlemen," he then cried out sharply, "by an ordah of the
cou't I now offah this man at public sale the highes' biddah.
## p. 420 (#454) ############################################
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JAMES LANE ALLEN
He is able-bodied but lazy, without visible property or means of
suppoht, an' of dissolute habits. He is therefoh adjudged guilty
of high misdemeanahs, an' is to be sole into labah foh a twelve.
month. How much, then, am I offahed foh the vagrant? How
much am I offahed foh ole King Sol'mon ? »
Nothing was offered for old King Solomon. The spectators
formed themselves into a ring around the big vagrant, and settled
down to enjoy the performance.
Staht 'im, somebody. "
Somebody started a laugh, which rippled around the circle.
The sheriff looked on with an expression of unrelaxed severity,
but catching the eye of an acquaintance on the outskirts, he ex-
changed a lightning wink of secret appreciation. Then he lifted
off his tight beaver hat, wiped out of his eyes a little shower of
perspiration which rolled suddenly down from above, and warmed
a degree to his theme.
«Come, gentlemen,” he said more suasively, “it's too hot to
stan' heah all day. Make me an offah! You all know ole King
Sol'mon; don't wait to be interduced. How much, then, to staht
'im?
Say fifty dollahs! Twenty-five! Fifteen!
Ten! Why,
gentlemen! Not ten dollahs ? Remembah, this is the Blue-Grass
Region of Kentucky - the land of Boone an' Kenton, the home
of Henry Clay! ” he added, in an oratorical crescendo.
«He ain't wuth his victuals,” said an oily little tavern-keeper,
folding his arms restfully over his own stomach and cocking up
one piggish eye into his neighbor's face. “He ain't wuth his
'taters. ”
“Buy 'im foh 'is rags! ” cried a young law student, with a
Blackstone under his arm, to the town rag picker opposite, who
was unconsciously ogling the vagrant's apparel.
«I might buy 'im foh 'is scalp,” drawled a farmer, who had
taken part in all kinds of scalp contests, and was now known to
be busily engaged in collecting crow scalps for a match soon to
come off between two rival counties.
“I think I'll buy 'im foh a hat sign,” said a manufacturer of
ten-dollar Castor and Rhorum hats. This sally drew merry atten-
tion to the vagrant's hat, and the merchant felt rewarded.
“You'd bettah say the town ought to buy 'im an' put 'im up
on top of the cou't-house as a scarecrow foh the cholera,” said
some one else.
“What news of the cholera did the stage coach bring this
mohning ? » quickly inquired his neighbor in his ear; and the two
## p. 421 (#455) ############################################
JAMES LANE ALLEN
421
immediately fell into low, grave talk, forgot the auction, and
turned away
“Stop, gentlemen, stop! ” cried the sheriff, who had watched
the rising tide of good humor, and now saw his chance to float
in on it with spreading sails. "You're runnin' the price in the
wrong direction - down, not up. The law requires that he be
sole to the highes' biddah, not the lowes'. As loyal citizens,
uphole the constitution of the commonwealth of Kentucky an'
make me an offah; the man is really a great bargain. In the
first place, he would cos' his ownah little or nothin', because, as
you see, he keeps himself in cigahs an' clo'es; then, his main
article of diet is whisky-a supply of which he always has on
han'. He don't even need a bed, foh you know he sleeps jus'
as well on any doohstep; noh a chair, foh he prefers to sit roun'
on the curbstones. Remembah, too, gentlemen, that ole King
Sol'mon is a Virginian - from the same neighbohhood as Mr.
Clay. Remembah that he is well educated, that he is an awful
Whig, an' that he has smoked mo' of the stumps of Mr. Clay's
cigahs than any other man in existence. If you don't b'lieve me,
gentlemen, yondah goes Mr. Clay now; call him ovah an' ask
'im foh yo'se'ves. "
He paused, and pointed with his right forefinger towards
Main Street, along which the spectators, with a sudden craning
of necks, beheld the familiar figure of the passing statesman.
“But you don't need anybody to tell these fac's, gentlemen,"
he continued. “You merely need to be reminded that ole King
Sol'mon is no ohdinary man. Mo'ovah he has a kine heaht; he
nevah spoke a rough wohd to anybody in this worl', an' he is as
proud as Tecumseh of his good name an' charactah. An', gentle.
men,” he added, bridling with an air of mock gallantry and lay-
ing a hand on his heart, “if anythin' fu'thah is required in the
way of a puffect encomium, we all know that there isn't anothah
man among us who cuts as wide a swath among the ladies.
The'foh, if you have any appreciation of virtue, any magnanimity
of heaht; if you set a propah valuation upon the descendants of
Virginia, that mothah of Presidents; if you believe in the pure
laws of Kentucky as the pioneer bride of the Union; if you love
America an' love the worl'— make me a gen'rous, high-toned
offah foh ole King Sol'mon! ”
He ended his peroration amid a shout of laughter and ap-
plause, and feeling satisfied that it was a good time for returning
## p. 422 (#456) ############################################
422
JAMES LANE ALLEN
to a more practical treatment of his subject, proceeded in a sin-
cere tone:
“He can easily earn from one to two dollahs a day, an' from
three to six hundred a yeah. There's not anothah white man in
town capable of doin' as much work. There's not a niggah han'
in the hemp factories with such muscles an' such a chest. Look
at 'em! An', if you don't b'lieve me, step fo'ward and feel 'em.
How much, then, is bid foh 'im ? »
“One dollah! ” said the owner of a hemp factory, who had
walked forward and felt the vagrant's arm, laughing, but coloring
up also as the eyes of all were quickly turned upon him. In
those days it was not an unheard-of thing for the muscles of a
human being to be thus examined when being sold into servitude
to a new master,
« Thank you! » cried the sheriff, cheerily. «One precinc
heard from! One dollah! I am offahed one dollah foh ole King
Sol'mon. One dollah foh the king! Make it a half. One dollah
an' a half. Make it a half. One dol-dol-dol-dollah ! »
Two medical students, returning from lectures at the old Med.
ical Hall, now joined the group, and the sheriff explained:
“One dollah is bid foh the vagrant ole King Sol'mon, who is
to be sole into labah foh a twelvemonth. Is there any othah
bid ? Are you all done ? One dollah, once — "
“Dollah and a half,” said one of the students, and remarked
half jestingly under his breath to his companion, “I'll buy him
on the chance of his dying. We'll dissect him. ”
« Would you own his body if he should die ? »
“If he dies while bound to me, I'll arrange that. ”
«One dollah an' a half,” resumed the sheriff, and falling into
the tone of a facile auctioneer he rattled on:-
«One dollah an' a half foh ole Sol'mon - sol, sol, sol,- do, re,
mi, fa, sol,- do, re, mi, fa, sol! Why, gentlemen, you can set
the king to music!
All this time the vagrant had stood in the centre of that close
ring of jeering and humorous bystanders-a baffling text from
which to have preached a sermon on the infirmities of our imper-
fect humanity. Some years before, perhaps as a master-stroke of
derision, there had been given to him that title which could but
heighten the contrast of his personality and estate with every
suggestion of the ancient sacred magnificence; and never had the
mockery seemed so fine as at this moment, when he was led
## p. 423 (#457) ############################################
JAMES LANE ALLEN
423
forth into the streets to receive the lowest sentence of the law
upon his poverty and dissolute idleness. He was apparently in
the very prime of life - a striking figure, for nature at least had
truly done some royal work on him. Over six feet in height,
erect, with limbs well shaped and sinewy, with chest and neck full
of the lines of great power, a large head thickly covered with long,
reddish hair, eyes blue, face beardless, complexion fair but dis-
colored by low passions and excesses - such was old King Solo-
mon. He wore a stiff, high, black Castor hat of the period, with
the crown smashed in and the torn rim hanging down over one
ear; a black cloth coat in the old style, ragged and buttonless; a
white cotton shirt, with the broad collar crumpled wide open at
the neck and down his sunburnt bosom; blue jean pantaloons,
patched at the seat and the knees; and ragged cotton socks that
fell down over the tops of his dusty shoes, which were open at
the heels.
In one corner of his sensual mouth rested the stump of a
cigar. Once during the proceedings he had produced another,
lighted it, and continued quietly smoking. If he took to himself
any shame as the central figure of this ignoble performance, no
one knew it. There was something almost royal in his uncon-
cern. The humor, the badinage, the open contempt, of which he
was the public target, fell thick and fast upon him, but as harm-
lessly as would balls of pith upon a coat of mail. In truth, there
was that in his great, lazy, gentle, good-humored bulk and bear-
ing which made the gibes seem all but despicable. He shuffled
from one foot to the other as though he found it a trial to stand
up so long, but all the while looking the spectators full in the
eyes without the least impatience. He suffered the man of the
factory to walk round him and push and pinch his muscles as
calmly as though he had been the show bull at a country fair.
Once only, when the sheriff had pointed across the street at the
figure of Mr. Clay, he had looked quickly in that direction with
a kindling light in his eye and a passing flush on his face. For
the rest, he seemed like a man who has drained his cup of human
life and has nothing left him but to fill again and drink without
the least surprise or eagerness.
The bidding between the man of the factory and the student
had gone slowly on. The price had reached ten dollars. The
heat was intense, the sheriff tired. Then something occurred to
revivify the scene. Across the market place and toward the steps
## p. 424 (#458) ############################################
424
JAMES LANE ALLEN
of the court-house there suddenly came trundling along in breath-
less haste a huge old negress, carrying on one arm a large shal-
low basket containing apple-crab lanterns and fresh gingerbread.
With a series of half-articulate grunts and snorts she approached
the edge of the crowd and tried to force her way through. She
coaxed, she begged, she elbowed and pushed and scolded, now
laughing, and now with the passion of tears in her thick, excited
voice. All at once, catching sight of the sheriff, she lifted one
ponderous brown arm, naked to the elbow, and waved her hand
to him above the heads of those in front.
“Hole on marster! hole on! ” she cried in a tone of humorous
entreaty. “Don' knock 'im off till I come! Gim me a bid at 'im! ”
The sheriff paused and smiled. The crowd made way tumult-
uously, with broad laughter and comment.
“Stan' aside theah an' let Aun' Charlotte in! ”
"Now you'll see biddin'! ”
“Get out of the way foh Aun' Charlotte ! »
“Up, my free niggah! Hurrah foh Kentucky! ”
A moment more and she stood inside the ring of spectators,
her basket on the pavement at her feet, her hands plumped
akimbo into her fathomless sides, her head up, and her soft,
motherly eyes turned eagerly upon the sheriff. Of the crowd
she seemed unconscious, and on the vagrant before her she had
not cast a single glance.
She was dressed with perfect neatness. A red and yellow
Madras 'kerchief was bound about her head in a high coil, and
another over the bosom of her stiffly starched and smoothly
ironed blue cottonade dress. Rivulets of perspiration ran down
over her nose, her temples, and around her ears, and disappeared
mysteriously in the creases of her brown neck. A single drop
accidentally hung glistening like a diamond on the circlet of one
of her large brass earrings.
The sheriff looked at her a moment, smiling but a little dis-
concerted. The spectacle was unprecedented.
«What do you want heah, Aun' Charlotte ? ” he asked kindly.
“You can't sell yo' pies an' gingerbread heah. ”
"I don'wan' sell no pies en gingerbread," she replied, con-
temptuously. “I wan' bid on him," and she nodded sidewise at
the vagrant. “White folks allers sellin' niggahs to wuk fuh
dem; I gwine to buy a white man to wuk fuh me. En he
gwine t' git a mighty hard mistiss, you heah me! »
## p. 425 (#459) ############################################
JAMES LANE ALLEN
425
The eyes of the sheriff twinkled with delight.
«Ten dollahs is offahed foh ole King Sol'mon. Is theah any
othah bid. Are you all done? ”
"Leben,” she said.
Two young ragamuffins crawled among the legs of the crowd
up to her basket and filched pies and cake beneath her very
nose.
«Twelve! ” cried the student, laughing.
« Thirteen ! ” she laughed, too, but her eyes flashed.
« You are bidding against a niggah,” whispered the student's
companion in his ear.
«So I am; let's be off," answered the other, with a hot flush
on his proud face.
Thus the sale was ended, and the crowd variously dispersed.
In a distant corner of the courtyard the ragged urchins were
devouring their unexpected booty. The old negress drew a red
handkerchief out of her bosom, untied a knot in a corner of it,
and counted out the money to the sheriff. Only she and the
vagrant were now left on the spot.
« You have bought me. What do you want me to do? ” he
asked quietly.
“Lohd, honey! ” she answered, in a low tone of affectionate
chiding, "I don'wan' you to do nothin'! I wuzn' gwine t' 'low
dem white folks to buy you. Dey'd wuk you till you dropped
dead. You go 'long en do ez you please. ”
a cunning chuckle of triumph in thus setting at
naught the ends of justice, and in a voice rich and musical
with affection, she said, as she gave him a little push:-
“You bettah be gittin' out o' dis blazin' sun. G' on home! I
be 'long by-en-by. ”
He turned and moved slowly away in the direction of Water
Street, where she lived; and she, taking up her basket, shuffled
across the market place toward Cheapside, muttering to herself
the while:-
"I come mighty nigh gittin' dar too late, foolin' 'long wid
dese pies. Sellin' him 'ca'se he don' wuk! Umph! if all de men
in dis town dat don' wuk wuz to be tuk up en sole, d' wouldn'
be 'nough money in de town to buy em! Don' I see 'em settin'
'roun' dese taverns f'om mohnin' till night ? ”
She gave
## p. 426 (#460) ############################################
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JAMES LANE ALLEN
Nature soon smiles upon her own ravages and strews our
graves with flowers, not as memories, but for other flowers when
the spring returns.
It was one cool, brilliant morning late in that autumn. The
air blew fresh and invigorating, as though on the earth there
were no corruption, no death. Far southward had flown the
plague. A spectator in the open court square might have seen
many signs of life returning to the town. Students hurried
along, talking eagerly. Merchants met for the first time and
spoke of the winter trade. An old negress, gayly and neatly
dressed, came into the market place, and sitting down on a side-
walk displayed her yellow and red apples and fragrant ginger-
bread. She hummed to herself an old cradle-song, and in
her soft, motherly black eyes shone a mild, happy radiance. A
group of young ragamuffins eyed her longingly from a distance.
Court was to open for the first time since the spring. The
hour was early, and one by one the lawyers passed slowly in.
On the steps of the court-house three men were standing:
Thomas Brown, the sheriff; old Peter Leuba, who had just
walked over from his music store on Main Street; and little
M. Giron, the French confectioner. Each wore mourning on his
hat, and their voices were low and grave.
«Gentlemen,” the sheriff was saying, “it was on this very
spot the day befoah the cholera broke out that I sole 'im as a
An' I did the meanes' thing a man can evah do. I
hel' 'im up to public ridicule foh his weakness an' made spoht
of 'is infirmities. I laughed at 'is povahty an' 'is ole clo'es. I
delivahed on 'im as complete an oration of sarcastic detraction
as I could prepare on the spot, out of my own meanness an'
with the vulgah sympathies of the crowd. Gentlemen, if I only
had that crowd heah now, an' ole King Sol'mon standin' in the
midst of it, that I might ask 'im to accept a humble public
apology, offahed from the heaht of one who feels himself un-
worthy to shake 'is han'! But gentlemen, that crowd will nevah
reassemble. Neahly ev'ry man of them is dead, an' ole King
Sol'mon buried them. ”
« He buried my friend Adolphe Xaupi,” said François Giron,
touching his eyes with his handkerchief.
“There is a case of my best Jamaica rum for him whenever
he comes for it,” said old Leuba, clearing his throat.
“But, gentlemen, while we are speakin' of ole King Sol'mon
vagrant.
## p. 427 (#461) ############################################
JAMES LANE ALLEN
427
on
we ought not to forget who it is that has suppohted 'im. Yon-
dah she sits on the sidewalk, sellin' 'er apples an' gingerbread.
was doing her best to hide now.
When Hilary realized it he moved in front of her, screening
her as well as possible.
(Hadn't you better lie down, too ? ” she asked.
«No,” he replied quickly.
“But if he sees you, he might take a notion to ride over this
way! ”
« Then he'll have to ride. "
"But, Hilary, suppose he were to find me lying down here
behind you, hiding ? ”
«Then he'll have to find you. "
“You get me into trouble, and then you won't help me out! »
exclaimed Daphne with considerable heat.
“It might not make matters any better for me to hide,” he
answered quietly. “But if he comes over here and tries to get
us into trouble, I'll see then what I can do. ”
Daphne lay silent for a moment, thinking. Then she nestled
more closely down, and said with gay, unconscious archness:
" “I'm not hiding because I'm afraid of him. I'm doing it just
because I want to. ”
She did not know that the fresh happiness flushing her at
that moment came from the fact of having Hilary between her-
self and her father as a protector; that she was drinking in the
delight a woman feels in getting playfully behind the man she
loves in the face of danger: but her action bound her to him
and brought her more under his influence.
His words showed that he also felt his position, the position
of the male who stalks forth from the herd and stands the silent
challenger. He was young, and vain of his manhood in the
usual innocent way that led him to carry the chip on his
## p. 415 (#449) ############################################
JAMES LANE ALLEN
415
shoulder for the world to knock off; and he placed himself
before Daphne with the understanding that if they were discov-
ered, there would be trouble. Her father was a violent man,
and the circumstances were not such that any Kentucky father
would overlook them. But with his inward seriousness, his face
wore its usual look of reckless unconcern.
Is he coming this way? ” asked Daphne, after an interval of
impatient waiting.
“Straight ahead. Are you hid ? »
"I can't see whether I'm hid or not. Where is he now ? »
Right on us. ”
« Does he see you ? ”
« Yes. ”
“Do you think he sees me ? »
“I'm sure of it. ”
«Then I might as well get up,” said Daphne, with the cour-
age of despair, and up she got. Her father was riding along
the path in front of them, but not looking. She was down
again like a partridge.
«How could you fool me, Hilary ? Suppose he had been
looking! ”
“I wonder what he thinks I'm doing, sitting over here in the
grass like a stump,” said Hilary. If he takes me for one, he
must think I've got an awful lot of roots. ”
« Tell me when it's time to get up. ”
«I will. "
He turned softly toward her. She was lying on her side, with
her burning cheek in one hand. The other hand rested high on
the curve of her hip. Her braids had fallen forward, and lay in
a heavy loop about her lovely shoulders. Her eyes were closed,
her scarlet lips parted in a smile. The edges of her snow-white
petticoats showed beneath her blue dress, and beyond these one
of her feet and ankles. Nothing more fragrant with innocence
ever lay on the grass.
"Is it time to get up now ? ”
«Not yet,” and he sat bending over her.
Now ? »
“Not yet,” he repeated more softly.
“Now, then ? ”
“Not for a long time. ”
His voice thrilled her, and she glanced up at him. His laugh-
ing eyes were glowing down upon her under his heavy mat of
C
## p. 416 (#450) ############################################
416
JAMES LANE ALLEN
hair. She sat up and looked toward the wagon crawling away in
the distance; her father was no longer in sight.
One of the ewes, dissatisfied with a back view, stamped her
forefoot impatiently, and ran round in front, and out into the
sun. Her lambs followed, and the three, ranging themselves
abreast, stared at Daphne, with a look of helpless inquiry.
« Sh-pp-pp! ” she cried, throwing up her hands at them, irri-
tated. “Go away! ”
They turned and ran; the others followed; and the whole
number, falling into line, took a path meekly homeward. They
left a greater sense of privacy under the tree. Several yards off
was a small stock-pond. Around the edge of this the water
stood hot and green in the tracks of the cattle and the sheep,
and about these pools the yellow butterflies were thick, alighting
daintily on the promontories of the mud, or rising two by two
through the dazzling atmosphere in columns of enamored flight.
Daphne leaned over to the blue grass where it swayed un-
broken in the breeze, and drew out of their sockets several stalks
of it, bearing on their tops the purplish seed-vessels. With them
she began to braid a ring about one of her fingers in the old
simple fashion of the country.
As they talked, he lay propped on his elbow, watching her
fingers, the soft slow movements of which little by little wove a
spell over his eyes. And once again the power of her beauty
began to draw him beyond control. He felt a desire to seize her
hands, to crush them in his. His eyes passed upward along her
tapering wrists, the skin of which was like mother-of-pearl; up-
ward along the arm to the shoulder — to her neck to her deeply
crimsoned cheeks — to the purity of her brow — to the purity of
her eyes, the downcast lashes of which hid them like conscious
fringes.
An awkward silence began to fall between them. Daphne
felt that the time had come for her to speak. But, powerless
to begin, she feigned to busy herself all the more devotedly
with braiding the deep-green circlet. Suddenly he drew himself
through the grass to her side.
“Let me ! »
"No! ” she cried, lifting her arm above his reach and looking
at him with a gay threat. « You don't know how. ”
«I do know how,” he said, with his white teeth on his red
underlip, and his eyes sparkling; and reaching upward, he laid
his hand in the hollow of her elbow and pulled her arm down.
## p. 417 (#451) ############################################
JAMES LANE ALLEN
417
»
»
«No! No! ” she cried again, putting her hands behind her
back. « You will spoil it ! »
“I will not spoil it,” he said, moving so close to her that his
breath was on her face, and reaching round to unclasp her hands.
“No! No! No! ” she cried, bending away from him. I don't
want any ring! ” and she tore it from her finger and threw it out
on the grass. Then she got up, and, brushing the grass-seed off
her lap, put on her hat.
He sat cross-legged on the grass before her. He had put on
his hat, and the brim hid his eyes.
And you are not going to stay and talk to me ? ” he said in
a tone of reproachfulness, without looking up.
She was excited and weak and trembling, and so she put out
her hand and took hold of a strong loop of the grape-vine hang-
ing from a branch of the thorn, and laid her cheek against her
hand and looked away from him.
“I thought you were better than the others,” he continued,
with the bitter wisdom of twenty years. “But you women are
all alike. When a man gets into trouble, you desert him. You
hurry him on to the devil. I have been turned out of the
church, and now you are down on Oh, well! But you
know how much I have always liked you, Daphne. ”
It was not the first time he had acted this character. It had
been a favorite rôle. But Daphne had never seen the like. She
was overwhelmed with happiness that he cared so much for her;
and to have him reproach her for indifference, and see him suf-
fering with the idea that she had turned against him—that
instantly changed the whole situation. He had not heard then
what had taken place at the dinner. Under the circumstances,
feeling certain that the secret of her love had not been dis-
covered, she grew emboldened to risk a little more.
So she turned toward him smiling, and swayed gently as she
clung to the vine.
« Yes; I have my orders not even to speak to you! Never
again! ” she said, with the air of tantalizing.
« Then stay with me a while now," he said, and lifted slowly
to her his appealing face. She sat down, and screened herself
with a little feminine transparency.
"I can't stay long: it's going to rain! ”
He cast a wicked glance at the sky from under his hat; there
were a few clouds on the horizon.
me.
»
1-27
## p. 418 (#452) ############################################
418
JAMES LANE ALLEN
“And so you are never going to speak to me again ? ” he
said mournfully.
“Never! » How delicious her laughter was.
“I'll put a ring on your finger to remember me by. ”
He lay over in the grass and pulled several stalks. Then he
lifted his eyes beseechingly to hers.
“Will you let me ? ”
Daphne hid her hands. He drew himself to her side and
took one of them forcibly from her lap.
With a slow, caressing movement he began to braid the
grass ring around her finger- in and out, around and around,
his fingers laced with her fingers, his palm lying close upon her
palm, his blood tingling through the skin upon her blood. He
made the braiding go wrong, and took it off and began , over
again. Two or three times she drew a deep breath, and stole a
bewildered look at his face, which was so close to hers that his
hair brushed it—so close that she heard the quiver of his own
breath. Then all at once he folded his hands about hers with a
quick, fierce tenderness, and looked up at her. She turned her
face aside and tried to draw her hand away. His clasp tight-
ened. She snatched it away, and got up with a nervous laugh.
« Look at the butterflies! Aren't they pretty ? ”
He sprang up and tried to seize her hand again.
“You shan't go home yet! ” he said, in an undertone.
«Shan't I? ” she said, backing away from him. “Who's
going to keep me ? »
"I am,” he said, laughing excitedly and following her closely.
“My father's coming! " she cried out as a warning.
He turned and looked: there was no one in sight.
“He is coming sooner or later! she called.
She had retreated several yards off into the sunlight of the.
meadow.
The remembrance of the risk that he was causing her to run
checked him. He went over to her.
“When can I see you again — soon? ”
He had never spoken so seriously to her before. He had
never before been so serious. But within the last hour Nature
had been doing her work, and its effect was immediate. His
sincerity instantly conquered her. Her eyes fell.
“No one has any right to keep us from seeing each other! "
he insisted. “We must settle that for ourselves. »
>>
## p. 419 (#453) ############################################
JAMES LANE ALLEN
419
(
Daphne made no reply.
“But we can't meet here any more - with people passing
backward and forward! ” he continued rapidly and decisively.
“What has happened to-day mustn't happen again. ”
“No! ” she replied, in a voice barely to be heard. “It must
never happen again. We can't meet here. "
They were walking side by side now toward the meadow-
path. As they reached it he paused.
“Come to the back of the pasture — to-morrow! - at four
o'clock! ” he said, tentatively, recklessly.
Daphne did not answer as she moved away from him along
the path homeward.
“Will you come ? ” he called out to her.
She turned and shook her head. Whatever her own new
plans may have become, she was once more happy and laugh-
ing.
“Come, Daphne!
She walked several paces further and turned and shook her
head again.
“Come! ” he pleaded.
She laughed at him.
He wheeled round to his mare grazing near. As he put his
foot into the stirrup, he looked again: she was standing in the
same place, laughing still.
“You go," she cried, waving him good-by. « There'll not be
a soul to disturb you! To-morrow - at four o'clock ! »
“Will you be there? ” he said,
“Will you ? ” she answered.
« I'll be there to-morrow,” he said, “and every other day till
»
C
you come.
»
By permission of the Macmillan Company, Publishers.
OLD KING SOLOMON'S CORONATION
From (Flute and Violin, and Other Kentucky Tales and Romances)
Copyright 1891, by Harper and Brothers
E
H
STOOD on the topmost of the court-house steps, and for a
moment looked down on the crowd with the usual air of
official severity.
"Gentlemen," he then cried out sharply, "by an ordah of the
cou't I now offah this man at public sale the highes' biddah.
## p. 420 (#454) ############################################
420
JAMES LANE ALLEN
He is able-bodied but lazy, without visible property or means of
suppoht, an' of dissolute habits. He is therefoh adjudged guilty
of high misdemeanahs, an' is to be sole into labah foh a twelve.
month. How much, then, am I offahed foh the vagrant? How
much am I offahed foh ole King Sol'mon ? »
Nothing was offered for old King Solomon. The spectators
formed themselves into a ring around the big vagrant, and settled
down to enjoy the performance.
Staht 'im, somebody. "
Somebody started a laugh, which rippled around the circle.
The sheriff looked on with an expression of unrelaxed severity,
but catching the eye of an acquaintance on the outskirts, he ex-
changed a lightning wink of secret appreciation. Then he lifted
off his tight beaver hat, wiped out of his eyes a little shower of
perspiration which rolled suddenly down from above, and warmed
a degree to his theme.
«Come, gentlemen,” he said more suasively, “it's too hot to
stan' heah all day. Make me an offah! You all know ole King
Sol'mon; don't wait to be interduced. How much, then, to staht
'im?
Say fifty dollahs! Twenty-five! Fifteen!
Ten! Why,
gentlemen! Not ten dollahs ? Remembah, this is the Blue-Grass
Region of Kentucky - the land of Boone an' Kenton, the home
of Henry Clay! ” he added, in an oratorical crescendo.
«He ain't wuth his victuals,” said an oily little tavern-keeper,
folding his arms restfully over his own stomach and cocking up
one piggish eye into his neighbor's face. “He ain't wuth his
'taters. ”
“Buy 'im foh 'is rags! ” cried a young law student, with a
Blackstone under his arm, to the town rag picker opposite, who
was unconsciously ogling the vagrant's apparel.
«I might buy 'im foh 'is scalp,” drawled a farmer, who had
taken part in all kinds of scalp contests, and was now known to
be busily engaged in collecting crow scalps for a match soon to
come off between two rival counties.
“I think I'll buy 'im foh a hat sign,” said a manufacturer of
ten-dollar Castor and Rhorum hats. This sally drew merry atten-
tion to the vagrant's hat, and the merchant felt rewarded.
“You'd bettah say the town ought to buy 'im an' put 'im up
on top of the cou't-house as a scarecrow foh the cholera,” said
some one else.
“What news of the cholera did the stage coach bring this
mohning ? » quickly inquired his neighbor in his ear; and the two
## p. 421 (#455) ############################################
JAMES LANE ALLEN
421
immediately fell into low, grave talk, forgot the auction, and
turned away
“Stop, gentlemen, stop! ” cried the sheriff, who had watched
the rising tide of good humor, and now saw his chance to float
in on it with spreading sails. "You're runnin' the price in the
wrong direction - down, not up. The law requires that he be
sole to the highes' biddah, not the lowes'. As loyal citizens,
uphole the constitution of the commonwealth of Kentucky an'
make me an offah; the man is really a great bargain. In the
first place, he would cos' his ownah little or nothin', because, as
you see, he keeps himself in cigahs an' clo'es; then, his main
article of diet is whisky-a supply of which he always has on
han'. He don't even need a bed, foh you know he sleeps jus'
as well on any doohstep; noh a chair, foh he prefers to sit roun'
on the curbstones. Remembah, too, gentlemen, that ole King
Sol'mon is a Virginian - from the same neighbohhood as Mr.
Clay. Remembah that he is well educated, that he is an awful
Whig, an' that he has smoked mo' of the stumps of Mr. Clay's
cigahs than any other man in existence. If you don't b'lieve me,
gentlemen, yondah goes Mr. Clay now; call him ovah an' ask
'im foh yo'se'ves. "
He paused, and pointed with his right forefinger towards
Main Street, along which the spectators, with a sudden craning
of necks, beheld the familiar figure of the passing statesman.
“But you don't need anybody to tell these fac's, gentlemen,"
he continued. “You merely need to be reminded that ole King
Sol'mon is no ohdinary man. Mo'ovah he has a kine heaht; he
nevah spoke a rough wohd to anybody in this worl', an' he is as
proud as Tecumseh of his good name an' charactah. An', gentle.
men,” he added, bridling with an air of mock gallantry and lay-
ing a hand on his heart, “if anythin' fu'thah is required in the
way of a puffect encomium, we all know that there isn't anothah
man among us who cuts as wide a swath among the ladies.
The'foh, if you have any appreciation of virtue, any magnanimity
of heaht; if you set a propah valuation upon the descendants of
Virginia, that mothah of Presidents; if you believe in the pure
laws of Kentucky as the pioneer bride of the Union; if you love
America an' love the worl'— make me a gen'rous, high-toned
offah foh ole King Sol'mon! ”
He ended his peroration amid a shout of laughter and ap-
plause, and feeling satisfied that it was a good time for returning
## p. 422 (#456) ############################################
422
JAMES LANE ALLEN
to a more practical treatment of his subject, proceeded in a sin-
cere tone:
“He can easily earn from one to two dollahs a day, an' from
three to six hundred a yeah. There's not anothah white man in
town capable of doin' as much work. There's not a niggah han'
in the hemp factories with such muscles an' such a chest. Look
at 'em! An', if you don't b'lieve me, step fo'ward and feel 'em.
How much, then, is bid foh 'im ? »
“One dollah! ” said the owner of a hemp factory, who had
walked forward and felt the vagrant's arm, laughing, but coloring
up also as the eyes of all were quickly turned upon him. In
those days it was not an unheard-of thing for the muscles of a
human being to be thus examined when being sold into servitude
to a new master,
« Thank you! » cried the sheriff, cheerily. «One precinc
heard from! One dollah! I am offahed one dollah foh ole King
Sol'mon. One dollah foh the king! Make it a half. One dollah
an' a half. Make it a half. One dol-dol-dol-dollah ! »
Two medical students, returning from lectures at the old Med.
ical Hall, now joined the group, and the sheriff explained:
“One dollah is bid foh the vagrant ole King Sol'mon, who is
to be sole into labah foh a twelvemonth. Is there any othah
bid ? Are you all done ? One dollah, once — "
“Dollah and a half,” said one of the students, and remarked
half jestingly under his breath to his companion, “I'll buy him
on the chance of his dying. We'll dissect him. ”
« Would you own his body if he should die ? »
“If he dies while bound to me, I'll arrange that. ”
«One dollah an' a half,” resumed the sheriff, and falling into
the tone of a facile auctioneer he rattled on:-
«One dollah an' a half foh ole Sol'mon - sol, sol, sol,- do, re,
mi, fa, sol,- do, re, mi, fa, sol! Why, gentlemen, you can set
the king to music!
All this time the vagrant had stood in the centre of that close
ring of jeering and humorous bystanders-a baffling text from
which to have preached a sermon on the infirmities of our imper-
fect humanity. Some years before, perhaps as a master-stroke of
derision, there had been given to him that title which could but
heighten the contrast of his personality and estate with every
suggestion of the ancient sacred magnificence; and never had the
mockery seemed so fine as at this moment, when he was led
## p. 423 (#457) ############################################
JAMES LANE ALLEN
423
forth into the streets to receive the lowest sentence of the law
upon his poverty and dissolute idleness. He was apparently in
the very prime of life - a striking figure, for nature at least had
truly done some royal work on him. Over six feet in height,
erect, with limbs well shaped and sinewy, with chest and neck full
of the lines of great power, a large head thickly covered with long,
reddish hair, eyes blue, face beardless, complexion fair but dis-
colored by low passions and excesses - such was old King Solo-
mon. He wore a stiff, high, black Castor hat of the period, with
the crown smashed in and the torn rim hanging down over one
ear; a black cloth coat in the old style, ragged and buttonless; a
white cotton shirt, with the broad collar crumpled wide open at
the neck and down his sunburnt bosom; blue jean pantaloons,
patched at the seat and the knees; and ragged cotton socks that
fell down over the tops of his dusty shoes, which were open at
the heels.
In one corner of his sensual mouth rested the stump of a
cigar. Once during the proceedings he had produced another,
lighted it, and continued quietly smoking. If he took to himself
any shame as the central figure of this ignoble performance, no
one knew it. There was something almost royal in his uncon-
cern. The humor, the badinage, the open contempt, of which he
was the public target, fell thick and fast upon him, but as harm-
lessly as would balls of pith upon a coat of mail. In truth, there
was that in his great, lazy, gentle, good-humored bulk and bear-
ing which made the gibes seem all but despicable. He shuffled
from one foot to the other as though he found it a trial to stand
up so long, but all the while looking the spectators full in the
eyes without the least impatience. He suffered the man of the
factory to walk round him and push and pinch his muscles as
calmly as though he had been the show bull at a country fair.
Once only, when the sheriff had pointed across the street at the
figure of Mr. Clay, he had looked quickly in that direction with
a kindling light in his eye and a passing flush on his face. For
the rest, he seemed like a man who has drained his cup of human
life and has nothing left him but to fill again and drink without
the least surprise or eagerness.
The bidding between the man of the factory and the student
had gone slowly on. The price had reached ten dollars. The
heat was intense, the sheriff tired. Then something occurred to
revivify the scene. Across the market place and toward the steps
## p. 424 (#458) ############################################
424
JAMES LANE ALLEN
of the court-house there suddenly came trundling along in breath-
less haste a huge old negress, carrying on one arm a large shal-
low basket containing apple-crab lanterns and fresh gingerbread.
With a series of half-articulate grunts and snorts she approached
the edge of the crowd and tried to force her way through. She
coaxed, she begged, she elbowed and pushed and scolded, now
laughing, and now with the passion of tears in her thick, excited
voice. All at once, catching sight of the sheriff, she lifted one
ponderous brown arm, naked to the elbow, and waved her hand
to him above the heads of those in front.
“Hole on marster! hole on! ” she cried in a tone of humorous
entreaty. “Don' knock 'im off till I come! Gim me a bid at 'im! ”
The sheriff paused and smiled. The crowd made way tumult-
uously, with broad laughter and comment.
“Stan' aside theah an' let Aun' Charlotte in! ”
"Now you'll see biddin'! ”
“Get out of the way foh Aun' Charlotte ! »
“Up, my free niggah! Hurrah foh Kentucky! ”
A moment more and she stood inside the ring of spectators,
her basket on the pavement at her feet, her hands plumped
akimbo into her fathomless sides, her head up, and her soft,
motherly eyes turned eagerly upon the sheriff. Of the crowd
she seemed unconscious, and on the vagrant before her she had
not cast a single glance.
She was dressed with perfect neatness. A red and yellow
Madras 'kerchief was bound about her head in a high coil, and
another over the bosom of her stiffly starched and smoothly
ironed blue cottonade dress. Rivulets of perspiration ran down
over her nose, her temples, and around her ears, and disappeared
mysteriously in the creases of her brown neck. A single drop
accidentally hung glistening like a diamond on the circlet of one
of her large brass earrings.
The sheriff looked at her a moment, smiling but a little dis-
concerted. The spectacle was unprecedented.
«What do you want heah, Aun' Charlotte ? ” he asked kindly.
“You can't sell yo' pies an' gingerbread heah. ”
"I don'wan' sell no pies en gingerbread," she replied, con-
temptuously. “I wan' bid on him," and she nodded sidewise at
the vagrant. “White folks allers sellin' niggahs to wuk fuh
dem; I gwine to buy a white man to wuk fuh me. En he
gwine t' git a mighty hard mistiss, you heah me! »
## p. 425 (#459) ############################################
JAMES LANE ALLEN
425
The eyes of the sheriff twinkled with delight.
«Ten dollahs is offahed foh ole King Sol'mon. Is theah any
othah bid. Are you all done? ”
"Leben,” she said.
Two young ragamuffins crawled among the legs of the crowd
up to her basket and filched pies and cake beneath her very
nose.
«Twelve! ” cried the student, laughing.
« Thirteen ! ” she laughed, too, but her eyes flashed.
« You are bidding against a niggah,” whispered the student's
companion in his ear.
«So I am; let's be off," answered the other, with a hot flush
on his proud face.
Thus the sale was ended, and the crowd variously dispersed.
In a distant corner of the courtyard the ragged urchins were
devouring their unexpected booty. The old negress drew a red
handkerchief out of her bosom, untied a knot in a corner of it,
and counted out the money to the sheriff. Only she and the
vagrant were now left on the spot.
« You have bought me. What do you want me to do? ” he
asked quietly.
“Lohd, honey! ” she answered, in a low tone of affectionate
chiding, "I don'wan' you to do nothin'! I wuzn' gwine t' 'low
dem white folks to buy you. Dey'd wuk you till you dropped
dead. You go 'long en do ez you please. ”
a cunning chuckle of triumph in thus setting at
naught the ends of justice, and in a voice rich and musical
with affection, she said, as she gave him a little push:-
“You bettah be gittin' out o' dis blazin' sun. G' on home! I
be 'long by-en-by. ”
He turned and moved slowly away in the direction of Water
Street, where she lived; and she, taking up her basket, shuffled
across the market place toward Cheapside, muttering to herself
the while:-
"I come mighty nigh gittin' dar too late, foolin' 'long wid
dese pies. Sellin' him 'ca'se he don' wuk! Umph! if all de men
in dis town dat don' wuk wuz to be tuk up en sole, d' wouldn'
be 'nough money in de town to buy em! Don' I see 'em settin'
'roun' dese taverns f'om mohnin' till night ? ”
She gave
## p. 426 (#460) ############################################
426
JAMES LANE ALLEN
Nature soon smiles upon her own ravages and strews our
graves with flowers, not as memories, but for other flowers when
the spring returns.
It was one cool, brilliant morning late in that autumn. The
air blew fresh and invigorating, as though on the earth there
were no corruption, no death. Far southward had flown the
plague. A spectator in the open court square might have seen
many signs of life returning to the town. Students hurried
along, talking eagerly. Merchants met for the first time and
spoke of the winter trade. An old negress, gayly and neatly
dressed, came into the market place, and sitting down on a side-
walk displayed her yellow and red apples and fragrant ginger-
bread. She hummed to herself an old cradle-song, and in
her soft, motherly black eyes shone a mild, happy radiance. A
group of young ragamuffins eyed her longingly from a distance.
Court was to open for the first time since the spring. The
hour was early, and one by one the lawyers passed slowly in.
On the steps of the court-house three men were standing:
Thomas Brown, the sheriff; old Peter Leuba, who had just
walked over from his music store on Main Street; and little
M. Giron, the French confectioner. Each wore mourning on his
hat, and their voices were low and grave.
«Gentlemen,” the sheriff was saying, “it was on this very
spot the day befoah the cholera broke out that I sole 'im as a
An' I did the meanes' thing a man can evah do. I
hel' 'im up to public ridicule foh his weakness an' made spoht
of 'is infirmities. I laughed at 'is povahty an' 'is ole clo'es. I
delivahed on 'im as complete an oration of sarcastic detraction
as I could prepare on the spot, out of my own meanness an'
with the vulgah sympathies of the crowd. Gentlemen, if I only
had that crowd heah now, an' ole King Sol'mon standin' in the
midst of it, that I might ask 'im to accept a humble public
apology, offahed from the heaht of one who feels himself un-
worthy to shake 'is han'! But gentlemen, that crowd will nevah
reassemble. Neahly ev'ry man of them is dead, an' ole King
Sol'mon buried them. ”
« He buried my friend Adolphe Xaupi,” said François Giron,
touching his eyes with his handkerchief.
“There is a case of my best Jamaica rum for him whenever
he comes for it,” said old Leuba, clearing his throat.
“But, gentlemen, while we are speakin' of ole King Sol'mon
vagrant.
## p. 427 (#461) ############################################
JAMES LANE ALLEN
427
on
we ought not to forget who it is that has suppohted 'im. Yon-
dah she sits on the sidewalk, sellin' 'er apples an' gingerbread.