Part 2 (1/2)
”The very idea!” I cried. ”You have come to my help, my dear, with your usual practical wisdom. Let us have the readings.”
Behold us, then, the entire Old Farm family, with the exception of Abby, who was absent on a visit to New England friends, seated around the great Elm during the long June evenings, trying the merits of the Fairies' history. When the early tea was over, we took our seats (or rather positions, for some of the party preferred to recline upon the gra.s.s), around the tree, and the reading began, and continued until twilight. Sometimes I read, sometimes the Mistress, and in three weeks the story was finished.
”Now for the verdict,” I said. ”The children first. What say you? Shall we print the Brownie book?”
”To be sure,” said Joe, ”why not, Sir? I think those wars and adventures with the Pixies are just the thing for boys like me.”
”I would print it,” said Jennie modestly. ”I think the Brownies' love stories are pretty indeed; though I don't like so much fighting, and the Pixies are just horrid.”
”Print it, Sir!” cried Harry enthusiastically. ”I'm sure boys like me will want to hear all about the Moth, Wasp, Bee and b.u.t.terfly ponies, and the curious, wise tricks of the Spider-pixies.”
”As for me,” said Hugh, ”I'm young enough yit to relish a fairy story uv mos' any sort. So I vote with the youngsters to prent the book.”
”My 'pinion hain't much good, I reckon,” said Sarah, who stood half concealed behind the Elm with her hands upon her hips in her favorite posture. ”An' I hain't no sort uv notion uv witches an' sich, no way.
Tho' laws-a-ma.s.sy! I b'lieve in 'em; 'v course I do! But somehow, I don't feel over comfo'ble to hev sech things a-prentin' about our Ole Farm. W'at's people goin' to say about sech goins-on, any way? I don't mind about the Brownies; like es not ther be sech folk. An' w'y not here as well as other places? I don't know w'ere they'd find a nicer home than jes' aroun' here; an' I'm pos'tive my kitchen's trig enough fer any kind o' fairies as ever was. Folks as hev sense enough to use a conch sh.e.l.l, now, as them Brownie heralds do, would be jes' likely to settle at the Ole Farm. But es for them Pixies--w'at's the use uv sech critters, anyhow? 'Tain't no ways comfo'ble to think thet they mought be squattin' on our premises. Howsomever, I'd prent the book, I reckon.
Leastways, ye kin do it, fer all me, 'f ye're a mine ter. My notion is it's a sight more interestener nor the Say-an-says. Though, they was worth prentin' too, that's a fac'!”
”Now, Dan, it's your turn,” I said; ”what say you?”
The old colored man sat on a low stool at the outer margin of the family circle, with his face leaning upon his hands. He raised his head, laid his palms upon his knees, rolled his eyes expressively and gave his verdict with all the solemnity of a judge pa.s.sing sentence on a capital offender.
”'Pears to me, Mars Mayfiel' an' Misses,” he began, ”dat dat's a powerful good story, an' a true one, too! W'y, I've seed dem wery Brownies myse'f. Uv coorse I hev!” he exclaimed emphatically, turning an indignant glance upon Sarah, who had uttered a significant guttural expression of unbelief. ”W'at do you know aboout Brownies, Sary Ann, I'd jes' like to know? Pixies is more in your line, a heap sight! Down in ole Marylan', now, dar's a power ob Brownies and Fairies an' all sech folkses. 'Tain't ebry one as gits to see 'em, dough. Dey's mighty 'tickler 'boout w'at company dey keeps, I kin tell _you_!
”I doan say es I eber seed any on 'em roun' dis Ole Farm,--an' I doan say es I didn't. But dat's needer hyar nur dar. Dey's hyar, I knows.
I've done seed de signs ob 'em, many's de time. W'y, lookee hyar! How d'ye tink dem insecks an' bugs and tings w'at Mars Mayfiel' tole us aboout, done foun' out how to do dar peert tricks? Hit stans to reason dat sech critters ain't got de larnin' fer sech cunnin' doins. W'at wid dar nes's, an' burrows, an' cobwebs, an' cute little housens, an' all dat, dey show heap moah sense dan some w'ite folks es I could name. Now, whar dey gwine to fin' out all dat, I ax agin, an' how is dey gwine to do it, unless de Fairies helps 'em? Dey jes' kine ob obersee de job; dat's how it 'pears to me.
”Den dar's dat gubner Wille--shoo! He ain't no suc.u.mstance ter w'at I knows 'boout how de insecks, an' fairies, an' goblins an' dem kine ob beins hes to do wid we uns. No, no!”--and he shook his head with serious gravity--”no, Sah! hit won't do ter go back on dat. We cullud folks knows heaps ob larnin' aboout dem critters; an' dey's jes' wove in, an'
in, an' in, an' out ob dese yere mohtal libes ob ourn! Dar's de Deaf's-head moff, an' de catumpillars, an' de antemires, an' de death watch, an' de cricket, an' de money-spinners, an' de measurin'
worm--sakes-alive! Dar's signs an' warnins fer we uns in dem critters agin all de Pixies, worl' widout en'. Amen. Yes, Sah, hit's all right; dat's a true story, an' no mistake.”
”But, Dan,” I said, ”you haven't told us yet what you think about printing the story.”
[Ill.u.s.tration: FIG. 10.--Our Farm Family in Literary Council.]
”Needer I have, Sah!” the old man replied, rolling up the whites of his eyes and shaking his s.h.a.ggy, gray poll. ”Needer I have! an' wat's moah, I ain't gwine ter. I doan see much good in dem kine ob books no how--specially de picters. Dar's like to be bad work aboout dem tings.
Hit doan do ter be too fumwiliar wid such tings. W'at's de good? Dar's no tellin' w'at dey mought do ter we'ns, ef dey gits sot agin us. You bes' keep clar ob dat business, Mars Mayfiel'. De ole Bible's good 'nough fer me, Sah; an' hit says dat much larnin' makes a man mad, an'
books is a-wearisome to de flesh. An' dat's a fac', Sah,--leastways, readin' an' a-studyin' on 'em is. You kin do w'at you's a mine ter, an'
I 'low you'll prent de Brownie book, any way. Hit's mighty good hearin', I'll say dat fer it, but--” he shook his head once more, and was silent.
The next day I wrote to the Schoolmistress as follows:
The Old Farm.