One of Ours Willa Cather (accelerated reader books txt) đ
- Author: Willa Cather
Book online «One of Ours Willa Cather (accelerated reader books txt) đ». Author Willa Cather
âOh, I donât know about that!â the boy replied airily, tossing the bell up like a ball and catching it.
âWell, you ought to be. I didnât expect to see anything of this kind until I got to the front. Iâll be back here in a week, and Iâll make it hot for anybody thatâs been bothering her.â Claudeâs train was pulling in, and he ran for his baggage. Once seated in the âcottontail,â he began going down into his own country, where he knew every farm he passedâ âknew the land even when he did not know the owner, what sort of crops it yielded, and about how much it was worth. He did not recognize these farms with the pleasure he had anticipated, because he was so angry about the indignities Mrs. Voigt had suffered. He was still burning with the first ardour of the enlisted man. He believed that he was going abroad with an expeditionary force that would make war without rage, with uncompromising generosity and chivalry.
Most of his friends at camp shared his quixotic ideas. They had come together from farms and shops and mills and mines, boys from college and boys from tough joints in big cities; sheepherders, street car drivers, plumbersâ assistants, billiard markers. Claude had seen hundreds of them when they first came in; âshow menâ in cheap, loud sport suits, ranch boys in knitted waistcoats, machinists with the grease still on their fingers, farmhands like Dan, in their one Sunday coat. Some of them carried paper suitcases tied up with rope, some brought all they had in a blue handkerchief. But they all came to give and not to ask, and what they offered was just themselves; their big red hands, their strong backs, the steady, honest, modest look in their eyes. Sometimes, when he had helped the medical examiner, Claude had noticed the anxious expression in the faces of the long lines of waiting men. They seemed to say, âIf Iâm good enough, take me. Iâll stay by.â He found them like that to work with; serviceable, good-natured, and eager to learn. If they talked about the war, or the enemy they were getting ready to fight, it was usually in a facetious tone; they were going to âcan the Kaiser,â or to make the Crown Prince work for a living. Claude, loved the men he trained withâ âwouldnât choose to live in any better company.
The freight train swung into the river valley that meant homeâ âthe place the mind always came back to, after its farthest quest. Rapidly the farms passed; the haystacks, the cornfields, the familiar red barnsâ âthen the long coal sheds and the water tank, and the train stopped.
On the platform he saw Ralph and Mr. Royce, waiting to welcome him. Over there, in the automobile, were his father and mother, Mr. Wheeler in the driverâs seat. A line of motors stood along the siding. He was the first soldier who had come home, and some of the townspeople had driven down to see him arrive in his uniform. From one car Susie Dawson waved to him, and from another Gladys Farmer. While he stopped and spoke to them, Ralph took his bags.
âCome along, boys,â Mr. Wheeler called, tooting his horn, and he hurried the soldier away, leaving only a cloud of dust behind.
Mr. Royce went over to old man Dawsonâs car and said rather childishly, âIt canât be that Claudeâs grown taller? I suppose itâs the way they learn to carry themselves. He always was a manly looking boy.â
âI expect his motherâs a proud woman,â said Susie, very much excited. âItâs too bad Enid canât be here to see him. She would never have gone away if sheâd known all that was to happen.â
Susie did not mean this as a thrust, but it took effect. Mr. Royce turned away and lit a cigar with some difficulty. His hands had grown very unsteady this last year, though he insisted that his general health was as good as ever. As he grew older, he was more depressed by the conviction that his women-folk had added little to the warmth and comfort of the world. Women ought to do that, whatever else they did. He felt apologetic toward the Wheelers and toward his old friends. It seemed as if his daughters had no heart.
XICamp habits persisted. On his first morning at home Claude came downstairs before even Mahailey was stirring, and went out to have a look at the stock. The red sun came up just as he was going down the hill toward the cattle corral, and he had the pleasant feeling of being at home, on his fatherâs land. Why was it so gratifying to be able to say âour hill,â and âour creek down yonderâ? to feel the crunch of this particular dried mud under his boots?
When he went into the barn to see the horses, the first creatures to meet his eye were the two big mules that had run away with him, standing in the stalls next the door. It flashed upon Claude that these muscular quadrupeds were the actual authors of his fate. If they had not bolted with him and thrown him into the wire fence that morning, Enid would not have felt sorry for him and come to see him every day, and his life might have turned out differently. Perhaps if older people were a little more honest, and a boy were not taught to idealize in women the very qualities which can make him utterly unhappyâ âBut there, he had got away from those regrets. But wasnât it just like him to be dragged into matrimony by a pair of mules!
He laughed as he looked at them. âYou old devils, youâre strong enough to play such tricks on green fellows for years to come. Youâre chock full of meanness!â
One of
Comments (0)