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THE HAND-MADE GENTLEMAN
A Tale of the Battles of Peace
"Silas Strong" etc., etc.
New York and London
TO MY DEAR FRIEND E. PRENTISS BAILEY
FOREWORD
|THIS is a tale of youth--of its loves and dreams and hazards, and of the incredible riches of purity which often belong to it.
Many of the adventures which led to the Hand-Made Gentleman and the shop at Rushwater are from the author's own experience. Pearl is a composite of Davenport and of a certain modest veteran of northern New York.
It tells how steam-power chose its first long pathway and began its swift errands from the Atlantic to the middle continent; how the roar and rush of the water-floods betrayed their secret and suggested the coming of great things; how "the horses of the river" began to tread the turbine and yield their power to man; how the spirit of new enterprise contended with conservatism, ignorance, and greed in the capitals, and how, thereby, evils developed which we are now striving to correct.
For its background of railroad and political history the author is indebted to many forgotten records, and to his friends A. Barton Hepburn, William C. Hudson, Arthur D. Chandler, and Mark D. Wilber, an honored Assemblyman in the sessions of 1865, 1866, and 1867, and later United States District Attorney. For the color of the day in Pittsburg, at the close of the war, he is under obligation to Mr. Andrew Carnegie; for that of Black Friday, to Mr. Thomas A. Edison.
The author has held to no strict observance of the unity of place, the work of his characters being that of turning the State into one neighborhood.
BOOK ONE--IN WHICH THE ADVENTURES OF CRICKET PRESENTED, WITH SOME ACCOUNT OF HIM
THE HAND-MADE GENTLEMAN
A TALE OF THE BATTLES OF PEACE
ADVENTURE I--BEING THAT OF CRICKET AND THE CHILD GHOST
WAS born in 1843. Since then I have endured many perils, of which I shall try to tell you. First of all, there was the peril of being named Solomon; and it would appear that, fora day or two, I was threatened also with the name of Zephaniah, but escaped at last with the lighter penalty of Jacob.
When I found myself I had just printed my full name in big letters on a slate--Jacob Ezra Heron. I have had some success, but--bless you!--it is poverty when I think of the sense of riches that I had that day. I will try to give only the merest outline of my chief assets, and they were: this name, which was all my own; a mother, who was the joint possession of myself and my sister, four years older than I; one friend of the name of Lizzie McCormick, and one little green book which was a legacy from my grandmother. I had practically no liabilities save a number of unpunished sins.
Now, a little as to my schedule of assets. First of all, there is the boy indicated by the name on my slate--a small boy five years old. I was in the little red school-house! My eyes were not much above the level of my reading-book that rested on the teacher's knee. The watch at her belt seemed to prattle in my ear as if to put me out, and, when she opened the hateful thing, I felt sure it complained of me, for immediately she grew impatient. I was afraid, and spoke scarcely any louder than the watch itself. I feared that somebody would do something to me, and I had three occupations--looking out for danger, drawing cats, and printing my name on a slate.
Every evening I used to sit by the fireside in my little chair and rock and sing. My mother called me Cricket, because I was small and spry and cheerful. Others called me Cricket because she did.
Now, an important item in the schedule is my friend and confidant, Lizzie McCormick. She was one of the most remarkable things that ever was, being much and yet nothing. She was a myth--a creation of my fancy--but almost as real as any of you sitting here. There was a drunken old bachelor of the name of McCormick who lived not far away, and Lizzie claimed that she was his girl. I made her acquaintance one day when I had been very bad and was shut in my room alone. She sprang out of the air suddenly, and sat down beside me on the rag carpet, and made a gulping sound--like that of "a hen with the pip," as our washerwoman said when I tried to make the sound for her. Lizzie was a freckled girl with red hair and a very long neck, and gold teeth and a wooden leg, because she had been shot in the war.
We played marbles together, and talked freely in a tongue so "foreign" that no human being could understand it, as my mother informed me later. She showed me her trinkets, and among them was a thing she called "a silver horruck," which Santa Claus had brought to her--a shiny thing that looked like a goose's leg. She was with me a good deal after that, and always slept with me in my trundle-bed. In due time she began to do and say things for which I was held responsible, and eventually became a ghost, when I would have no more to do with her.
You will remember I spoke of the little green book. It was kept in a high drawer. Often I begged for a look at it, and when my mother opened the drawer I was on my tiptoes and reaching for the sacred thing. When I had looked at the pictures she put it away again very tenderly.
Well, that is about as things stood with me in my childhood. I have given you a core out of the bed-rock, and let it go at that--saving one circumstance. It will all help you to understand me.
I come now to the true tales, which are better for the fireside, on a white Christmas, than all that kind of thing. First, I shall tell you the very brief adventure of
CRICKET AND THE CHILD GHOST
Go back with me to the winter of 1850, when hard times travelled over the land like a pestilence, and even entered the houses of the great. I was in my seventh year, and my assets had been largely increased by the steady friendship of Santa Claus. But he was going to pass me that year, the times being harder for him than for other people. I felt sorry for him, and sorry for my sister and mother, and sorry, too, for myself.
Well, it was the day before Christmas, and I had been to school and was on my way home alone, my sister being ill, and night was near. Suddenly I became aware that Lizzie McCormick was limping along beside me.
"It don't pay to be good," said she, impatiently.
"I've been very good for a long, long time," I answered. "I've filled the wood-box every night an' morning, an' I gave half my candy to Sarah. I guess God was surprised."
"So was Sarah," she answered, as I recalled the delight of my sister.
I thought a moment and then said, "God loves me."
"Why don't he give you a pair of new boots, then?"
"It's hard times."
"He gives 'em to some children."
I felt of the treasure, which I had concealed in my pocket, and wondered whether, under the circumstances, I had better let it go. I tried to take a look at it, but the air was dusky and I could not see.
"Come on!" Lizzie called, swinging her wooden leg very fast and keeping ahead of me. "I ain't going home. I'm going to see if I can find Santa Claus."
"So 'm I," was my answer. "Maybe he'll give us a ride."
We hurried along without speaking until I saw how dark it was, and knew that we were a long way from home.
"My mother will be looking for me!" I called, with a little sob.
Lizzie stopped and again made a sound like that of a hen with the pip, and I knew it to be a token of her contempt for me.
"I don't believe there is any Santa Claus," she remarked, presently.
I had been thinking of that. The faith of my childhood was failing a little, but I clung to the dear old saint and could not let him go. However, I was on the brink of change.
In a moment Lizzie put her hand in my coat-pocket.
"There," said she, "see what you've got now."
I felt, and upon my word there was something hard in my pocket wrapped in tissue-paper, and it felt very promising.
"It's a real horruck," said she; "I am going to give it to you."
Then I saw her hand moving before my face. I put up my own hand, but hers began to fly around in the air, and I could not touch it. Now I suddenly remembered that ghosts had a trick of that kind, for so the washerwoman had informed me. For the first time I began to think of the word, and felt its mystery. Lizzie stood shivering, and a sound came out of her mouth like wind whistling in a chimney.
"You go 'way!" I cried, in a fright.
Lizzie turned and looked at me and uttered a cry of fear, and began to run. Her clothes had a strange rustle, and I could scarcely see her in the darkness. She seemed to run up a stairway into the snowy air, and was out of sight in a jiffy. Then I could hear her screaming to me in a dark tree-top, as if she saw something terrible.
"Look out, Cricket! Look out! Look out!"
I was in a panic of fear, knowing not the peril that threatened me. I struggled through the drifts and ran till I 'could see the lights of the village. The sight allayed my fear a little.
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