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The Dancin’ Party at Harrison’s Cove
by
"Yes, – Kossute say ez how he’ll dance with her ef none the rest will, fur Kossute say ez how he hev laid off ter dance, Mis’ Darley; an’ when I ax him what he thinks will become of his soul ef he dances, he say the devil may crack away at it, an’ ef he kin hit it he’s welcome. Fur soul or no soul he’s agoin’ ter dance. Kossute is a-fixin’ of hisself this very minit ter go; but I am verily afeard the boy’ll be slaughtered, Mis’ Darley, ‘kase thar is goin’ ter be a fight, an’ ye never in all yer life hearn sech sass ez Kossute and Rick Pearson done sent word ter each other.”
Mr. Kenyon expressed some surprise that she should fear for so young a fellow as Kossuth. "Surely,” he said,"the man is not brute enough to injure a mere boy; your son is a mere boy.”
"That’s so,” Mrs. Johns drawled. "Kossute ain’t more ‘n twenty year old, an’ Rick Pearson is double that ef he is a day; but ye see it’s the fire-arms ez makes Kossute more ‘n a match fur him, ‘kase Kossute is the best shot on the mounting, an’ Rick knows that in a shootin’ fight Kossute’s better able ter take keer of hisself an’ hurt somebody else nor ennybody. Kossute’s more likely ter hurt Rick nor Rick is ter hurt him in a shootin’ fight; but ef Rick didn’t hurt him, an’ he war ter shoot Rick, the gang would tear him ter pieces in a minit; and ‘mongst ’em I’m actially afeard they’ll slaughter the boy.”
Mr. Kenyon looked even graver than was his wont upon receiving this information, but said no more; and after giving Mrs. Johns the febrifuge she wished for her husband, he returned to his seat on the piazza.
Mrs. Darley watched him with some little indignation as he proceeded to light a fresh cigar.”How cold and unsympathetic uncle Ambrose is,” she said to herself. And after condoling effusively with Mrs. Johns on her apprehensions for her son’s safety, she returned to the gossips in the hotel parlor, and Mrs. Johns, with her pink calico sun-bonnet on her head, went her way in the brilliant summer moon light.
The clear lustre shone white upon all the dark woods and chasms and flashing waters that lay between the New Helvetia Springs and the wide, deep ravine called Harrison’s Cove, where from a rude log hut the vibrations of a violin, and the quick throb of dancing feet, already mingled with the impetuous rush of a mountain stream close by and the weird night-sounds of the hills, – the cry of birds among the tall trees, the stir of the wind, the monotonous chanting of frogs at the water-side, the long, drowsy drone of the nocturnal insects, the sudden faint blast of a distant hunter’s horn, and the far baying of hounds.
Mr. Harrison had four marriageable daughters, and had arrived at the conclusion that something must be done for the girls; for, strange as it may seem, the prudent father exists even among the “mounting folks.” Men there realize the importance of providing suitable homes for their daughters as men do elsewhere, and the eligible youth is as highly esteemed in those wilds as is the much scarcer animal at a fashionable watering-place. Thus it was that Mr. Harrison had “determinated on a dancin’ party.” True, he stood in bodily fear of the judgment day and the circuit-rider; but the dancing party was a rarity eminently calculated to please the young hunters of the settlements round about, so he swallowed his qualms, to be indulged at a more convenient season, and threw himself into the vortex of preparation with an ardor very gratifying to the four young ladies, who had become imbued with sophistication at Cheatham’s Cross-Roads.