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Long Jim
by
“Ain’t it a hummer of a day?” Jim exclaimed, suddenly, looking toward the valley swimming in a silver mist below us. “By Jiminy! it makes a man feel like livin’, don’t it?”
I turned to look at him. He, too, seemed to have caught the infection. His shoulders had straightened, his nostrils were dilated like a deer’s that sniffs some distant scent; his face was aglow. I began to wonder if, with my usual luck, I had not found the companion I always looked for in my outings–that rare other fellow of the right kind, who responds to your slightest wish with all the enthusiasm and gusto of a boy, and so vagabondish in his tendencies that he is delighted to have you think for him and to follow your lead.
I had not long to wait. Before we had gone a mile into the forest Jim jerked the mare back upon her haunches and, pointing to a great hemlock standing sentinel over us, cried out with boyish enthusiasm:
“Take a look at him once. Ain’t he a ring-tailed roarer? Seems to me a tree big as him must be awful proud just o’ bein’ a tree. Ain’t nothin’ ‘raound here kin see’s fur as he kin, anyways.” “My luck again,” I thought to myself. I knew I could not be mistaken in the outward signs.
“You like trees, then?” I asked, watching the glow on his face.
“Like ’em! Well, wouldn’t you if ye’d lived ‘mong ’em long’s I have? Trees don’t never go back on ye, and that’s what ye can’t say o’ everything.” The analogy was obscure, but I attributed it to Jim’s slender stock of phrases. “I’ve knowed that hemlock ever since I come here, and he’s just the same to me as the fust day I see him. Ain’t never no change in trees; once they’re good to ye they’re allus good to ye. Birds is different–so is cattle–but trees and dogs ye kin tie to. Don’t the woods smell nice? Do ye catch on to them spruces dead ahead of us? Maybe ye can’t smell ’em till ye git yer nose cleared out o’ them city nosegays,” he continued, with a kindly interest in his voice. “But ye will when ye’ve been here a spell. Folks that live in cities think there ain’t nothin’ smells sweet but flowers and cologne. They ain’t never slep’ on balsam-boughs nor got a whiff o’ a birchbark fire, nor tramped a bed o’ ferns at night. There’s a cool, fresh smell for ye! I tell ye there’s a heap o’ perfumes ‘raound that ye can’t buy at a flower-store and cork up in a bottle. Well, I guess–Git up, Bess!” and he flopped the reins once more along the ridges and hollows of the mare’s back while he encouraged her to renewed efforts with that peculiar clucking sound heeded only by certain beasts of burden.
At the end of the tenth mile he stopped the mare suddenly.
“Hold on,” he cried, excitedly, “there’s that scraggy-tail. I missed him when I come down. See! there he is on that green log. I was feared he’d passed in his chips.” I looked and saw a huge gray squirrel with a tail like a rabbit. “That’s him. Durn mean on his tail, warn’t it? And one paw gone, too. The dog catched him one day last year and left him tore up that way. I found him limping along when I was a-sugaring here in the spring and kinder fixed him up, and he’s sorter on the lookout for me when I come along. He’s got a hole ’round here somewheres.”
Jim sprang out of the buck-board. Fumbling under the seat he brought out a bag of nuts. The squirrel took them from his hand, stuffing his mouth full, five at a time, limping away to hide them, and back again for more until the bag was empty, Jim, contented and unhurried, squatting on the ground, his long knees bent under him. The way in which he did this gave me infinite delight. No vagabond I had ever known ignored time and duty more complacently.