The Conjure Woman Charles W. Chesnutt (best fiction novels .TXT) đ
- Author: Charles W. Chesnutt
Book online «The Conjure Woman Charles W. Chesnutt (best fiction novels .TXT) đ». Author Charles W. Chesnutt
One day I went over with my wife to show her the place. We drove out of the town over a long wooden bridge that spanned a spreading millpond, passed the long whitewashed fence surrounding the county fairground, and struck into a road so sandy that the horseâs feet sank to the fetlocks. Our route lay partly up hill and partly down, for we were in the sand-hill county; we drove past cultivated farms, and then by abandoned fields grown up in scrub-oak and short-leaved pine, and once or twice through the solemn aisles of the virgin forest, where the tall pines, well-nigh meeting over the narrow road, shut out the sun, and wrapped us in cloistral solitude. Once, at a crossroads, I was in doubt as to the turn to take, and we sat there waiting ten minutesâ âwe had already caught some of the native infection of restfulnessâ âfor some human being to come along, who could direct us on our way. At length a little negro girl appeared, walking straight as an arrow, with a piggin full of water on her head. After a little patient investigation, necessary to overcome the childâs shyness, we learned what we wished to know, and at the end of about five miles from the town reached our destination.
We drove between a pair of decayed gatepostsâ âthe gate itself had long since disappearedâ âand up a straight sandy lane, between two lines of rotting rail fence, partly concealed by jimson-weeds and briers, to the open space where a dwelling-house had once stood, evidently a spacious mansion, if we might judge from the ruined chimneys that were still standing, and the brick pillars on which the sills rested. The house itself, we had been informed, had fallen a victim to the fortunes of war.
We alighted from the buggy, walked about the yard for a while, and then wandered off into the adjoining vineyard. Upon Annieâs complaining of weariness I led the way back to the yard, where a pine log, lying under a spreading elm, afforded a shady though somewhat hard seat. One end of the log was already occupied by a venerable-looking colored man. He held on his knees a hat full of grapes, over which he was smacking his lips with great gusto, and a pile of grapeskins near him indicated that the performance was no new thing. We approached him at an angle from the rear, and were close to him before he perceived us. He respectfully rose as we drew near, and was moving away, when I begged him to keep his seat.
âDonât let us disturb you,â I said. âThere is plenty of room for us all.â
He resumed his seat with somewhat of embarrassment. While he had been standing, I had observed that he was a tall man, and, though slightly bowed by the weight of years, apparently quite vigorous. He was not entirely black, and this fact, together with the quality of his hair, which was about six inches long and very bushy, except on the top of his head, where he was quite bald, suggested a slight strain of other than negro blood. There was a shrewdness in his eyes, too, which was not altogether African, and which, as we afterwards learned from experience, was indicative of a corresponding shrewdness in his character. He went on eating the grapes, but did not seem to enjoy himself quite so well as he had apparently done before he became aware of our presence.
âDo you live around here?â I asked, anxious to put him at his ease.
âYas, suh. I lives des ober yander, behine de nexâ sanâ-hill, on de Lumberton plank-road.â
âDo you know anything about the time when this vineyard was cultivated?â
âLawd bless you, suh, I knows all about it. Dey ainâ naâer a man in dis settlement wâat wonâ tell you ole Julius McAdoo âuz bawn en raiseâ on dis yer same plantation. Is you de Norvân gemman wâatâs gwine ter buy de ole vimyaâd?â
âI am looking at it,â I replied; âbut I donât know that I shall care to buy unless I can be reasonably sure of making something out of it.â
âWell, suh, you is a stranger ter me, en I is a stranger ter you, en we is bofe strangers ter one anudder, but âf I âuz in yoâ place, I wouldnâ buy dis vimyaâd.â
âWhy not?â I asked.
âWell, I dunno wheâr you bâlieves in cunjâinâ er notâ âsome er de wâite folks donât, er says dey donâtâ âbut de truf er de matter is dat dis yer ole vimyaâd is goophered.â
âIs what?â I asked, not grasping the meaning of this unfamiliar word.
âIs goopheredâ âcunjuâd, bewitchâ.â
He imparted this information with such solemn earnestness, and with such an air of confidential mystery, that I felt somewhat interested, while Annie was evidently much impressed, and drew closer to me.
âHow do you know it is bewitched?â I asked.
âI wouldnâ specâ fer you ter bâlieve me âless you know all âbout de facâs. But ef you en young miss dere doanâ minâ lisâninâ ter a ole nigger run on a minute er two wâile you er restinâ, I kin âsplain to you how it all happenâ.â
We assured him that we would be glad to hear how it all happened, and he began to tell us. At first the current of his memoryâ âor imaginationâ âseemed somewhat sluggish; but as his embarrassment wore off, his language flowed more freely, and the story acquired perspective and coherence. As he became more and more absorbed in the narrative, his eyes assumed a dreamy expression, and he seemed to lose sight of his auditors, and to be living over again in monologue his life on the old plantation.
âOle Mars Dugalâ McAdoo,â he
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