Part 35 (1/2)
Many are the hearts that are weary to-night, Wis.h.i.+ng for this war to cease, Many are the hearts looking for the right To see the dawn of peace.
So the cavalry men sang, and we listened to their singing with hearts stirred to their depths. And then with prayers of thankfulness for our deliverance, we went to sleep. And over on the little island, under the shallow sands, the men who had fallen beside us lay with patient, folded hands waiting beside the Arickaree waters till the last reveille shall sound for them and they enter the kingdom of Eternal Peace.
CHAPTER XIX
A MAN'S BUSINESS
Mankind was my business; the common welfare was my business; charity, mercy, forbearance, and benevolence were all my business; the dealings of my trade were but a drop of water in the comprehensive ocean of my business.
--d.i.c.kENS.
Every little community has its customs peculiar to itself. With the people of Springvale the general visiting-time was on Sunday between the afternoon Sabbath-school and the evening service. The dishes that were prepared on Sat.u.r.day for the next day's supper excelled the warm Sunday dinner.
We come to know the heart and soul of the folks that fill up a little town, and when we get into the larger city we miss them oftener than we have the courage to say. Unselfishness and integrity and stalwart principles of right are not confined to the higher circles of society. A man may be hungry for friends on the crest of his popularity; he may long for the strong right hand of Christian fellows.h.i.+p in the centre of a brotherhood of churchmen. Cam Gentry and his good wife are among those whom in all my busy years of wide acquaintance with people of all ranks I account as genuine stuff. They were only common clay, generous, unselfish, clean of thought and act. Uneducated, with no high ideals, they gauged their way by the golden rule, and made the most of their time. A journey to Topeka was their ”trip abroad”; beyond the newspapers they read little except the Bible; and they built their faith on the Presbyterian Church and the Republican party. But the cosy lighted tavern on winter nights, and its clean, cool halls and resting-places in the summer heat, are still a green spot in the memory of many a traveller. Transients and regulars at the Cambridge House delighted in this Sabbath evening spread.
”Land knows,” Dollie Gentry used to declare, ”if ever a body feels lonesome it's on Sunday afternoon between Sunday-school and evenin'
service. Why, the blues can get you then, when they'd stan' no show ary other day er hour in the week. An' it stan's to reason a man, er woman, either, is livin' in a hotel because they ain't got no home ner n.o.body to make 'em feel glad to see 'em. If they're goin' to patronize the Cambridge House they're goin' to get the best that's comin' to 'em right then.”
So the old dining-room was a joy at this time of the week, with all that a good cook can make attractive to the appet.i.te.
Mary Gentry, sweet-tempered and credulous as in her childhood, grew up into a home-lover. We all wondered why John Anderson, who was studying medicine, should fancy Mary, plain good girl that she was. John had been a bashful boy and a hard student whom the girls failed to interest. But the home Mary made for him later, and her two sons that grew up in it, are justification of his choice of wife. The two boys are men now, one in Seattle, and one in New York City. Both in high places of trust and financial importance.
One October Sabbath afternoon, O'mie fell into step beside Marjie on the way from Sabbath-school. Since his terrible experience in the Hermit's Cave five years before, he had never been strong. We became so accustomed to his little hacking cough we did not notice it until there came a day to all of us when we looked back and wondered how we could have been so inattentive to the thing growing up before our eyes. O'mie was never anything but a good-hearted Irishman, and yet he had a keener insight into character and trend of events than any other boy or man I ever knew. I've always thought that if his life had been spared to mature manhood--but it wasn't.
”Marjie, I'm commissioned to invite you to the Cambridge House for lunch,” O'mie said. ”Mary wants to see you. She's got a lame arm, fell off a step ladder in the pantry. The papers on the top shelves had been on there fifteen minutes, and Aunt Dollie thought they'd better put up clean ones. That's the how. Dr. John Anderson's most sure to call professionally this evening, and Bill Mead's going to bring Bess over for tea, and there's still others on the outskirts, but you're specially wanted, as usual. Bud will be there, too. Says he wants to see all the Andersons once more before he leaves town, and he knows it's his last chance; for John's forever at the tavern, and Bill Mead is monopolizing Bess at home; and you know, Star-face, how Clayton divides himself around among the Whatelys and Grays over at Red Range and a girl he's got up at Lawrence.”
”All this when I'm starving for one of Aunt Dollie's good lunches. Offer some other inducement, O'mie,” Marjie replied laughingly.
”Oh, well, Tillhurst'll be there, and one or two of the new folks, all eligible.”
”What makes you call me 'Star-face'? That's what Jean Pahusca used to call me.” She s.h.i.+vered.
”Oh, it fits you; but if you object, I can make it, 'Moon-face,' or 'Sun-up.'”
”Or 'Skylight,' or 'Big Dipper'; so you can keep to the blue firmament.
Where's Bud going?”
Out of the tail of his eye O'mie caught sight of Judson falling in behind them here and he answered carelessly:
”Oh, I don't know where Bud is going exactly. Kansas City or St. Louis, or somewhere else. You'll come of course?”
”Yes, of course,” Marjie answered, just as Judson in his pompous little manner called to her:
”Marjory, I have invited myself up to your mother's for tea.”
”Why, there's n.o.body at home, Mr. Judson,” the girl said kindly; ”I'm going down to Mary Gentry's, and mother went up to Judge Baronet's with Aunt Candace for lunch.”
n.o.body called my father's sister by any other name. To Marjie, who had played about her knee, Aunt Candace was a part of the day's life in Springvale. But the name of Baronet was a red rag to Judson's temper. He was growing more certain of his cause every day; but any allusion to our family was especially annoying, and this remark of Marjie's fired him to hasten to something definite in his case of courts.h.i.+p.