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PAGE 2

Farmer Eli’s Vacation
by [?]

He nodded from the window, where he was patiently holding his head high and undergoing strangulation, while his wife, breathing huskily with haste and importance, put on his stock.

“You come in, Hattie, an’ help pack the doughnuts into that lard-pail on the table,” she called. “I guess you’ll have to take two pails. They ain’t very big.”

At length, the two teams were ready, and Eli mounted to his place, where he looked very slender beside his towering mate. The hired man stood leaning on the pump, chewing a bit of straw, and the cats rubbed against his legs, with tails like banners; they were all impressed by a sense of the unusual.

“Well, good-by, Luke,” Mrs. Pike called, over her shoulder; and Eli gave the man a solemn nod, gathered up the reins, and drove out of the yard. Just outside the gate, he pulled up.

“Whoa!” he called, and Luke lounged forward. “Don’t you forgit them cats! Git up, Doll!” And this time, they were gone.

For the first ten miles of the way, familiar in being the road to market, Eli was placidly cheerful. The sense that he was going to do some strange deed, to step into an unknown country, dropped away from him, and he chatted, in his intermittent, serious fashion, of the crops and the lay of the land.

“Pretty bad job up along here, ain’t it, father?” called Sereno, as they passed a sterile pasture where two plodding men and a yoke of oxen were redeeming the soil from its rocky fetters.

“There’s a good deal o’ pastur’, in some places, that ain’t fit for nothin’ but to hold the world together,” returned Eli; and then he was silent, his eyes fixed on Doll’s eloquent ears, his mouth working a little. For this progress through a less desirable stratum of life caused him to cast a backward glance over his own smooth, middle-aged road.

“We’ve prospered, ‘ain’t we, Maria?” he said, at last; and his wife, unconsciously following his thoughts, in the manner of those who have lived long together, stroked her black silk visite, and answered, with a well-satisfied nod:

“I guess we ‘ain’t got no cause to complain.”

The roadside was parched under an August sun; tansy was dust-covered, and ferns had grown ragged and gray. The jogging horses left behind their lazy feet a suffocating cloud.

“My land!” cried Mrs. Pike, “if that ain’t goldenrod! I do b’lieve it comes earlier every year, or else the seasons are changin’. See them elderberries! Ain’t they purple! You jest remember that bush, an’ when we go back, we’ll fill some pails. I dunno when I’ve made elderberry wine.”

Like her husband, she was vaguely excited; she began to feel as if life would be all holidays. At noon, they stopped under the shadow of an elm-tree which, from its foothold in a field, completely arched the road; and there they ate a lunch of pie and doughnuts, while the horses, freed from their headstalls, placidly munched a generous feed of oats, near by. Hattie and her mother accepted this picnicking with an air of apologetic amusement; and when one or two passers-by looked at them, they smiled a little at vacancy, with the air of wishing it understood that they were by no means accustomed to such irregularities.

“I guess they think we’re gypsies,” said Hattie, as one carriage rolled past.

“Well, they needn’t trouble themselves,” returned her mother, rising with difficulty to brush the crumbs from her capacious lap. “I guess I’ve got as good an extension-table to home as any on ’em.”

But Eli ate sparingly, and with a preoccupied and solemn look.

“Land, father!” exclaimed his wife, “you ‘ain’t eat no more’n a bird!

“I guess I’ll go over to that well,” said he, “an’ git a drink o’ water. I drink more’n I eat, if I ain’t workin’.” But when he came back, carefully bearing a tin pail brimming with cool, clear water, his face expressed strong disapprobation, and he smacked his lips scornfully.