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Under the Lion’s Paw
by
“Say, looky here, Council, you can’t do this. I never saw—” shouted Haskins in his neighbor’s ear.
Council moved about uneasily in his seat and stopped his stammering gratitude by saying: “Hold on, now; don’t make such a fuss over a little thing. When I see a man down, an’ things all on top of ‘m, I jest like t’ kick ’em off an’ help ‘m up. That’s the kind of religion I got, an’ it’s about the onlykind.”
They rode the rest of the way home in silence. And when the red light of the lamp shone out into the darkness of the cold and windy night, and he thought of this refuge for his children and wife, Haskins could have put his arm around the neck of his burly companion and squeezed him like a lover. But he contented himself with saying, “Steve Council, you’ll git y’r pay f’r this some day.”
“Don’t want any pay. My religion ain’t run on such business principles.”
The wind was growing colder, and the ground was covered with a white frost, as they turned into the gate of the Council farm, and the children came rushing out, shouting, “Papa’s come!” They hardly looked like the same children who had sat at the table the night before. Their torpidity, under the influence of sunshine and Mother Council, had given way to a sort of spasmodic cheerfulness, as insects in winter revive when laid on the hearth.
III
Haskins worked like a fiend, and his wife, like the heroic woman that she was, bore also uncomplainingly the most terrible burdens. They rose early and toiled without intermission till the darkness fell on the plain, then tumbled into bed, every bone and muscle aching with fatigue, to rise with the sun next morning to the same round of the same ferocity of labor.
The eldest boy, now nine years old, drove a team all through the spring, ploughing and seeding, milked the cows, and did chores innumerable, in most ways taking the place of a man; an infinitely pathetic but common figure—this boy—on the American farm, where there is no law against child labor. To see him in his coarse clothing, his huge boots, and his ragged cap, as he staggered with a pail of water from the well, or trudged in the cold and cheerless dawn out into the frosty field behind his team, gave the city-bred visitor a sharp pang of sympathetic pain. Yet Haskins loved his boy, and would have saved him from this if he could, but he could not.
By June the first year the result of such Herculean toil began to show on the farm. The yard was cleaned up and sown to grass, the garden ploughed and planted, and the house mended. Council had given them four of his cows.
“Take ’em an’ run ’em on shares. I don’t want ‘o milk s’ many. Ike’s away s’ much now, Sat’d’ys an’ Sund’ys, I can’t stand the bother anyhow.”
Other men, seeing the confidence of Council in the newcomer, had sold him tools on time; and as he was really an able farmer, he soon had round him many evidences of his care and thrift. At the advice of Council he had taken the farm for three years, with the privilege of re-renting or buying at the end of the term.
“It’s a good bargain, an’ y’ want ‘o nail it,” said Council.”If you have any kind ov a crop, you c’n pay y’r debts, an’ keep seed an’ bread.”
The new hope which now sprang up in the heart of Haskins and his wife grew almost as a pain by the time the wide field of wheat began to wave and rustle and swirl in the winds of July. Day after day he would snatch a few moments after supper to go and look at it.
“‘Have ye seen the wheat t’-day, Nettie?” he asked one night as he rose from supper.
“No, Tim, I ain’t had time.”
“Well, take time now. Le’s go look at it.”
She threw an old hat on her head—Tommy’s hat—and looking almost pretty in her thin, sad way, went out with her husband to the hedge.
“Ain’t it grand, Nettie? Just look at it.”
It was grand. Level, russet here and there, heavy-headed, wide as a lake, and full of multitudinous whispers and gleams of health, it stretched away before the gazers like the fabled field of the cloth of gold.