Samantha at Saratoga by Marietta Holley (i read a book txt) đ
- Author: Marietta Holley
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Josiah Allen paid the money demanded of him and we went in and advanced onwards to where a boy wuz a pullinâ up the water and handinâ of it round.
It looked dretful bubblinâ and sparklinâ. Why sunthinâ seemed to be a sparklinâ up all the time in the water and I thought to myself mebby it wuz water thoughts, mebby it wanted to tell sunthinâ, mebby it has all through these years been a tryinâ to bubble up and sparkle out in wisdom but haint found any one yet who could understand its liquid language. Who knows now?
I took my glass and looked close - sparkle, sparkle, up came the tiny thought sparks! But I wuznât wise enough to read the glitterinâ language. No I wuznât deep enough. It would take a deep mind, mebby thousands of feet deep, to understand the great glowinâ secret that it has been a tryinâ to reveal and couldnât. Mebby it has been a tryinâ to tell of big diamond mines that it has passed through - great cliffs and crags of gold sot deep with the crystalized dew of diamonds.
But no, I didnât believe that wuz it. That wouldnât help the world, only to make it happier, and these seemed to me to be dretful inspirinâ, upliftinâ thoughts. No, mebby it is a tryinâ to tell a cold world about a way to heat it. Mebby it has been a runninâ over and is sparklinâ with bright thoughts about how deep underneath the earth lay a big fireplace, that all the cold beggars of mortality could set round and warm their frozen fingers by,âa tryinâ to tell how the heat of that fire that escapes now up the chimbleys of volcanoes, and sometimes in sudden drafts blows out sideways into earthquakes, etc., could be utilized by conveyinâ it up on top of the ground, and have it carried into the houses like Croton water. Who knows now? Mebby that is it!
Oh! I felt that it would be a happy hour for Samantha when she could bile her potatoes by the heat of that large noble fire-place. And more than that, far more wuz the thought that heat might become, in the future, as cheap as cold. That the little cold hands that freeze every winter in the big cities, could be stretched out before the big generous warmth of that noble fire-place. And who built that fire in the first place? Who laid the first sticks on the handirons, and put the match to it? Who wuz it that did it, and how did he look, and when wuz he born, and why, and where?
These, and many other thoughts of similar size and shape, filled my brane almost full enough to lift up the bunnet, that reposed gracefully on my foretop, as I stood and held the sparklinâ glass in my hands.
Sparkle! sparkle! sparkle! what wuz it, it wuz a tryinâ to say to me and couldnât? Good land! I couldnât tell, and Josiah couldnât, I knew instinctively he couldnât, though I didnât ask him.
No, I turned and looked at that beloved man, for truly I had for the time beinâ been by the side of myself, and I see that he wuz a drinkinâ lavishly of the noble water. I see that he wuz a drinkinâ more than wuz for his good, his linement showed it, and sez I, for he wuz a liftinâ another tumbler full onto his lips, sez I, âPause, Josiah Allen, and donât imbibe too much.â
âWhy,â he whispered, âyou can drink all you are a mind to for 5 cents. I am bound for once, Samantha Allen, to get the worth of my money.â
And he drinked the tumbler full down at one swoller almost, and turned to the weary boy for another. He looked bad, and eager, and sez I, âHow many have you drinked?â
Sez he, in a eager, animated whisper, â9.â And he whispered in the same axents, â5 times 9 is 45 ; if it had been to a fair, or Fourth of July, or anything, it would have cost me 45 cents, and if it had been to a church social - lemme see - 9 times 10 is 90. It would have cost me a dollar bill! And here I am a havinâ it all for 5 cents. Why,â sez he, âI never see the beat onât in my life.â
And agâin he drinked a tumbler full down, and motioned to the frightened boy for another.
But I took him by the vest and whispered to him, sez I, âJosiah Allen, do you want to die, because you can die cheap? Why,â sez I, âit will kill you to drink so much.â
âBut think of the cheapness onât Samantha! The chance I have of getting the worth of my money.â
But I whispered back to him in anxus axents and told him, that I guessed if funeral expenses wuz added to that 5 cents it wouldnât come so cheap, and sez I, âyou wont live through many more glasses, and youâll see you wont. Why,â sez I, âyou are a drowndinâ out your insides.â
He wuz fairly a gettinâ white round the mouth, and I finally got him to withdraw, though he looked back longingly at the tumblers and murmured even after I had got him to the door, that it wuz a dumb pity when anybody got a chance to get the worth of their money, which wuznât often, to think they couldnât take advantage on it.
And I sez back to him in low deep axents, âThere is such a thing as beinâ too graspinâ, Josiah Allen.â Sez I, âThe children of Israel used to want to lay up more manny than they wanted or needed, and it spilte on their hands.â And sez I, âyou see if it haint jest so with you; you have been in too great haste to enrich yourself, and youâll be sorry for it, you see if you haint.â
And he was. Though he uttered language I wouldnât wish to repeat, about the children of Israel and about me for bringinâ of âem up. But the man wuz dethly sick. Why he had drinked 11 tumblers full, and I trembled to think what would have follered on, and ensued, if I hadnât interfered. As it wuz, he wuz confined to our abode for the rest of the day.
But I wouldnât have Josiah Allen blamed more than is due for this little incedent, for it only illustrates a pervailinâ trait in menâs nater, and sometimes wimmenâs - a too great desire to amass sudden riches, and when opportunity offers, burden themselves with useless and wearysome and oft-times painful gear.
They donât need it but seeing they have a chance to get it cheap, âdog cheap â as the poet observes, why they weight themselves down with it, and then groan under the burden of unnecessary and wearinâ wealth. This is a deep subject, deep as the well from which my companion drinked, and nearly drinked himself into a untimely grave.
Men heap up more riches than they can enjoy and then groan and rithe under the taxes, the charity given, the envy, the noteriety, the glare, and the glitter, the crowd of fortune-hunters and greedy hangers-on, and the care and anxiety. They orniment the high front of their houses with the paint, the gildinâ, the fashion, and the show of enormous wealth, and while the crowd of fashion-seekers and fortune-hunters pour in and out of the lofty doorway they set out on the back stoop a groaninâ and a sithinâ at the cares and sleepless anxietes of their big wealth, and then they git up and go down street and try their best to heap up more treasure to groan over.
And wimmen now, when wuz there ever a woman who could resist a good bargain? Her upper beauro draws may be a runninâ over with laces and ribbons, but let her see a great bargain sold for nothinâ almost, and where is the female woman that can resist addinâ to that already too filled up beauro draw.
A baby, be he a male, or be he a female child, when he has got a appel in both hands, will try to lay holt of another, if you hold it out to him. It is human nater. Josiah must not be considered as one alone in layinâ up more riches than he needed. He suffered, and I also, for sech is the divine law of love, that if one member of the family suffers, the other members suffer also, specially when the sufferinâ member is impatient and voyalent is his distress, and talks loud and angry at them who truly are not to blame.
Now I didnât make the springs nor I wuznât to blame for their beinâ discovered in the first place. But Josiah laid it to me. And though I tried to make him know that it wuz a Injun that discovered âem first, he wouldnât gin in and seemed to think they wouldnât have been there if it hadnât been for me.
I hated to hear him go on so. And in the cause of Duty, I brung up Sir William Johnson and others. But he lay there on the lounge, and kepâ his face turned resolute towards the wall, in a dretful oncomfertable position (sech wuz his temper of mind), and said, he never had heard of them, nor the springs nuther, and shouldnât if it hadnât been for me.
Why, sez I, âA Injun brought Sir William Johnson here on his back.â
âWall,â sez he, cross as a bear, âthat is the way youâll have to take me back, if you go on in this way much longer.â
âIn what way, Josiah?â sez I.
âWhy a findinâ springs and dragginâ a man off to âem, and makinâ him drink.â
âWhy, Josiah Allen,â sez I, âI told you not to drink - donât you remember?â
âNo! I donât remember nuthinâ, nor donât want to. I want to go to sleep!â sez he, snappish as anything, so I went out and let him think if he wanted to, that I made the Springs, and the Minerals, and the Gysers, and the Spoutinâ Rock, and everything. Good land! I knew I didnât; but I had to rest under the unkind insinnuation. Such is some of the trials of pardners.
But Josiah waked up real clever. And I brung him up some delicate warm toast and some fragrant tea, and his smile on me wuz dretful good-natured, almost warm. And I forgot all his former petulence and basked in the rays of love and happiness that beamed on me out of the blue sky of my companionâs eyes. The clear blue sky that held two stars, to which my heart turned.
Such is some of the joys of pardners with which the world donât meddle with, nor canât destroy.
But to resoom. Ardelia sot down awhile in our room before she went back to her boardinâ house. I see she wuz a writinâ for she had a long lead pencil in her right hand and occasionally she would lean her forrerd down upon it, in deep thought, and before she went, she slipped the verses into my hand:
âSTANZAS ON A MINERAL SPRING.
âOh! waters that doth bubble up and spout
Oh, didst thou bubble down insted of up,
Thou couldest not with all thy minerals get out
We could not then arise and drink thee in a cup.
âOh! human waves that float and seeth and tear
Oh wiltest thou not too a learn to bubble up
Instead of down, a lesson deep to bear,
Oh Soul, can here be learned, one smooth, or rough.
âA lesson deep of powerful min-er-als
That act with power the constitution on,[1]
And still that softly bubbles up, and tells
To souls unborn, how sweetly they have ron.
âOh water that doth mount on slender tip,
And spoutest up some 30 feet, through pole;
Oh Hope, learn thou a lesson from the waterâs lip,
Spout out, spout out, in peace from hollow soul.â
[1] As in the case of Mr. Allen, poor dear man.
Sez I, a lookinâ over my specks at Ardelia after I had finished readinâ the verses: âWhat does âronâ mean? I never heerd of that word before, nor knew there wuz sech a one.â
Sez she, âI meant ran, but I sâpose it is a poetical license to say âron,â donât you think so?â
âOh, yes,â sez I, âI sâpose so, I donât know much about licenses, nor donât want to, they are suthinâ I never believed in. But,â sez I, for I
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