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the friendly road-第21章

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 trying it。

〃Here goes;〃 said I; and for the next few minutes; and in my very best style; I hung Jeff Davis on the sour apple…tree; and I sent the soul of John Brown marching onward with an altogether unnecessary number of hallelujahs。

I think sometimes that peoplewhole families of 'emliterally perish for want of a good; hearty; whole…souled; mouth…opening; throat…stretching; side…aching laugh。 They begin to think themselves the abused of creation; they begin to advise with their livers and to hate their neighbours; and the whole world becomes a miserable dark blue place quite unfit for human habitation。 Well; all this is often only the result of a neglect to exercise properly those muscles of the body (and of the soul) which have to do with honest laughter。

I've never supposed I was an especially amusing person; but before I got through with it I had the Clark family well loosened up with laughter; although I wasn't quite sure some of the time whether Mrs。 Clark was laughing or crying。 I had them all laughing and talking; asking questions and answering them as though I were an old and valued neighbour。

Isn't it odd how unconvinced we often are by the crises in the lives of other people? They seem to us trivial or unimportant; but the fact is; the crises in the life of a boy; for example; or of a poor man; are as commanding as the crises in the life of the greatest statesman or millionaire; for they involve equally the whole personality; the entire prospects。

The Clark family; I soon learned; had lost its pig。 A trivial matter; you say? I wonder if anything is ever trivial。 A year of poor crops; sickness; low prices; discouragement and; at the end of it; on top of it all; the cherished pig had died!

From all accounts (and the man on the porch quite lost his apathy in telling me about it) it must have been a pig of remarkable virtues and attainments; a paragon of pigs in whom had been bound up the many possibilities of new shoes for the children; a hat for the lady; a new pair of overalls for the gentleman; and I know not what other kindred luxuries。 I do not think; indeed; I ever had the portrait of a pig drawn for me with quite such ardent enthusiasm of detail; and the more questions I asked the more eager the story; until finally it became necessary for me to go to the barn; the cattle…pen; the pig…pen and the chicken…house; that I might visualize more clearly the scene of the tragedy。 The whole family trooped after us like a classic chorus; but Mr。 Clark himself kept the centre of the stage。

How plainly I could read upon the face of the land the story of this hill farmer and his meagre existencehis ill…directed effort to wring a poor living for his family from these upland fields; his poverty; and; above all; his evident lack of knowledge of his own calling。 Added to these things; and perhaps the most depressing of all his difficulties; was the utter loneliness of the task; the feeling that it mattered little to any one whether the Clark family worked or not; or indeed whether they lived or died。 A perfectly good American family was here being wasted; with the precious land they lived on; because no one had taken the trouble。 to make them feel that they were a part of this Great American Job。


As we went back to the house; a freckled…nosed neighbour's boy came in at the gate。

〃A letter for you; Mr。 Clark;〃 said he。 〃I brought it up with our mail。〃

〃A letter!〃 exclaimed Mrs。 Clark。

〃A letter!〃 echoed at least three of the children in unison。

〃Probably a dun from Brewster;〃 said Mr。 Clark discouragingly。

I felt a curious sensation about the heart; and an eagerness of interest I have rarely experienced。 I had no idea what a mere lettera mere unopened unread letterwould mean to a family like this。

〃It has no stamp on it!〃 exclaimed the older girl。

Mrs。 Clark turned it over wonderingly in her hands。 Mr。 Clark hastily put on a pair of steel…bowed spectacles。

〃Let me see it;〃 he said; and when he also had inspected it minutely he solemnly tore open the envelope and drew forth my letter。

'I assure you I never awaited the reading of any writing of mine with such breathless interest。 How would they take it? Would they catch the meaning that I meant to convey? And would they suspect me of having written it?

Mr。 Clark sat on the porch and read the letter slowly through to the end; turned the sheet over and examined it carefully; and then began reading it again to himself; Mrs。 Clark leaning over his shoulder。

〃What does it mean?〃 asked Mr。 Clark。

〃It's too good to be true;〃 said Mrs。 Clark with a sigh。

I don't know how long the discussion might have continuedprobably for days or weekshad not the older girl; now flushed of face and rather pretty; looked at me and said breathlessly (she was as sharp as a briar):

〃You wrote it。〃

I stood the battery of all their eyes for a moment; smiling and rather excited。

〃Yes;〃 I said earnestly; 〃I wrote it; and I mean every word of it。〃

I had anticipated some shock of suspicion and inquiry; but to my surprise it was accepted as simply as a neighbourly good morning。 I suppose the mystery of it was eclipsed by my astonishing presence there upon the scene with my tin whistle。

At any rate; it was a changed; eager; interested family which now occupied the porch of that dilapidated farmhouse。 And immediately we fell into a lively discussion of crops and farming; and indeed the whole farm question; in which I found both the man and his wife singularly acutesharpened upon the stone of hard experience。

Indeed; I found right here; as I have many times found among our American farmers; an intelligence (a literacy growing out of what I believe to be improper education) which was better able to discuss the problems of rural life than to grapple with and solve them。 A dull; illiterate Polish farmer; I have found; will sometimes succeed much better at the job of life than his American neighbour。

Talk with almost any man for half an hour; and you will find that his conversation; like an old…fashioned song; has a regularly recurrent chorus。 I soon discovered Mr。 Clark's chorus。

〃Now; if only I had a little cash;〃 he sang; or; 〃If I had a few dollars; I could do so and so。〃

Why; he was as helplessly; dependent upon money as any soft…handed millionairess。 He considered himself poor and helpless because he lacked dollars; whereas people are really poor and helpless only when they lack courage and faith。

We were so much absorbed in our talk that I was greatly surprised to hear Mrs。 Clark's voice at the doorway。

〃Won't you come in to supper?〃

After we had eaten; there was a great demand for more of my tin whistle (oh; I know how Caruso must feel!); and I played over every blessed tune I knew; and some I didn't; four or five times; and after that we told stories and cracked jokes in a way that must have been utterly astonishing in that household。 After the children had been; yes; driven to bed; Mr。 Clark seemed about to drop back into his lamentations over his condition (which I have no doubt had come to give him a sort of pleasure); but I turned to Mrs。 Clark; whom I had come to respect very highly; and began to talk about the l
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