PAGE 5
At Sudleigh Fair
by
“See that little swampy patch!” she said, stopping when they had rounded the curve in the road. “A week or two ago, that was all alive with redbud flowers. I dunno the right name on ’em, an’ I don’t care. Redbirds, I call ’em. I went over there, one day, an’ walked along between the hummocks, spush! spush! You won’t find a nicer feelin’ than that, wherever ye go. Take off your shoes an’ stockin’s, an’ wade into a swamp! Warm, coarse grass atop! Then warm, black mud, an’ arter that, a layer all nice an’ cold that goes down to Chiny, fur’s I know! That was the day I meant to git some thoroughwort over there, to dry, but I looked at the redbird flowers so long I didn’t have time, an’ I never’ve been sence.”
Molly laughed out, with a pretty, free ripple in her voice.
“You’re always sayin’ that, Dilly! You never have time for anything but doin’ nothin’!”
A bright little sparkle came into Dilly’s eyes, and she laughed, too.
“Why, that’s what made me give’ up nussin’ two year ago,” she said, happily. “I wa’n’t havin’ no time at all. I couldn’t live my proper life. I al’ays knew I should come to that, so I’d raked an’ scraped, an’ put into the bank, till I thought I’d got enough to buy me a mite o’ flour while I lived, an’ a pine coffin arter I died; an’ then I jest set up my Ebenezer I’d be as free’s a bird. Freer, I guess I be, for they have to scratch pretty hard, come cold weather, an’ I bake me a ‘tater, an’ then go clippin’ out over the crust, lookin’ at the bare twigs. Oh, it’s complete! If I could live this way, I guess a thousand years’d be a mighty small dose for me. Look at that goldenrod, over there by the stump! That’s the kind that’s got the most smell.”
Molly broke one of the curving plumes.
“I don’t see as it smells at all,” she said, still sniffing delicately.
“Le’me take it! Why, yes, it does, too! Everything smells some. Oftentimes it’s so faint it’s more like a feelin’ than a smell. But there! you ain’t a witch, as I be!”
“I wish you wouldn’t say that!” put in Molly, courageously. “You make people think you are.”
“Law, then, let ’em!” said Dilly, with a kindly indulgence. “It don’t do them no hurt, an’ it gives me more fun’n the county newspaper. They’d ruther I’d say I was a witch’n tell ’em I’ve got four eyes an’ eight ears where they ‘ain’t but two. I tell ye, there’s a good deal missed when ye stay to home makin’ pies, an’ a good deal ye can learn if ye live out-door. Why, there’s Tolman’s cows! He dunno why they dry up; but I do. He, sends that little Davie with ’em, that don’t have no proper playtime; an’ Davie gallops ’em all the way to pastur’, so’t he can have a minute to fish in the brook. An’ then he gallops ’em home ag’in, because he’s stole a piece out o’ the arternoon. I ketched him down there by the brook, one day, workin’ away with a bent pin, an’ the next mornin’ I laid a fish-hook on the rock, an’ hid in the woods to see what he’d say. My! I ‘guess Jonah wa’n’t more tickled when he set foot on dry land. Here comes the wagons! There’s the Poorhouse team fust, an’ Sally Flint settin’ up straighter ‘n a ramrod. An’ there’s Heman an’ Roxy! She don’t look a day older’n twenty-five. Proper nice folks, all on ’em, but they make me kind o’ homesick jest because they be folks. They do look so sort o’ common in their bunnits an’ veils, an’ I keep thinkin’ o’ little four-legged creatur’s, all fur!” The Tiverton folk saluted them, always cordially, yet each after his kind. They liked Dilly as a product all their own, but one to be partaken of sparingly, like some wild, intoxicating root.