NIGHT THE SECOND
THE CHANGES OF A YEAR
A cordial grasp of the hand and a few words of hearty welcome greeted me as I
alighted from the stage at the "Sickle and Sheaf," on my next visit to
Cedarville. At the first glance, I saw no change in the countenance, manner, or
general bearing of Simon Slade, the landlord. With him, the year seemed to have
passed like a pleasant summer day. His face was round, and full, and rosy, and
his eyes sparkled with that good humor which flows from intense
self-satisfaction. Everything about him seemed to say—"All 'right with myself
and the world."
I had scarcely expected this. From what I saw during my last brief sojourn at
the "Sickle and Sheaf," the inference was natural, that elements had been called
into activity, which must produce changes adverse to those pleasant states of
mind that threw an almost perpetual sunshine over the landlord's countenance.
How many hundreds of times had I thought of Tom Morgan and Willy Hammond— of
Frank, and the temptations to which a bar-room exposed him. The heart of Slade
must, indeed, be as hard as one of his old mill- stones, if he could remain an
unmoved witness of the corruption and degradation of these.
"My fears have outrun the actual progress of things," said I to myself, with
a sense of relief, as I mused alone in the still neatly arranged sitting-room,
after the landlord, who sat and chatted for a few minutes, had left me. "There
is, I am willing to believe, a basis of good in this man's character, which has
led him to remove, as far as possible, the more palpable evils that ever attach
themselves to a house of public entertainment. He had but entered on the
business last year. There was much to be learned, pondered, and corrected.
Experience, I doubt not, has led to many important changes in the manner of
conducting the establishment, and especially in what pertains to the bar."
As I thought thus, my eyes glanced through the half-open door, and rested on
the face of Simon Slade. He was standing behind his bar —evidently alone in the
room—with his head bent in a musing attitude. At first I was in some doubt as to
the identity of the singularly changed countenance. Two deep perpendicular seams
lay sharply defined on his forehead—the arch of his eyebrows was gone, and from
each corner of his compressed lips, lines were seen reaching half-way to the
chin. Blending with a slightly troubled expression, was a strongly marked
selfishness, evidently brooding over the consummation of its purpose. For some
moments I sat gazing on his face, half doubting at times if it were really that
of Simon Slade. Suddenly a gleam flashed over it—an ejaculation was uttered, and
one clenched hand brought down, with a sharp stroke, into the open palm of the
other. The landlord's mind had reached a conclusion, and was resolved upon
action. There were no warm rays in the gleam of light that irradiated his
countenance— at least none for my heart, which felt under them an almost icy
coldness.
"Just the man I was thinking about." I heard the landlord say, as some one
entered the bar, while his whole manner underwent a sudden change.
"The old saying is true," was answered in a voice, the tones of which were
familiar to my ears.
"Thinking of the old Harry?" said Slade.
"Yes."
"True, literally, in the present case," I heard the landlord remark, though
in a much lower tone; "for, if you are not the devil himself, you can't be
farther removed than a second cousin."
A low, gurgling laugh met this little sally. There was something in it so
unlike a human laugh, that it caused my blood to trickle, for a moment, coldly
along my veins.
I heard nothing more except the murmur of voices in the bar, for a hand shut
the partly opened door that led from the sitting room.
Whose was that voice? I recalled its tones, and tried to fix in my thought
the person to whom it belonged, but was unable to do so. I was not very long in
doubt, for on stepping out on the porch in front of the tavern, the well
remembered face of Harvey Green presented itself. He stood in the bar-room door,
and was talking earnestly to Slade, whose back was toward me. I saw that he
recognized me, although I had not passed a word with him on the occasion of my
former visit, and there was a lighting up of his countenance as if about to
speak—but I withdrew my eyes from his face to avoid the unwelcome greeting. When
I looked at him again, I saw that he was regarding me with a sinister glance,
which was instantly withdrawn. In what broad, black characters was the word
TEMPTER written on his face! How was it possible for anyone to look thereon, and
not read the warning inscription!
Soon after, he withdrew into the bar-room and the landlord came and took a
seat near me on the porch.
"How is the 'Sickle and Sheaf' coming on?" I inquired.
"First rate," was the answer—"First rate."
"As well as you expected?"
"Better."
"Satisfied with your experiment?"
"Perfectly. Couldn't get me back to the rumbling old mill again, if you were
to make me a present of it."
"What of the mill?" I asked. "How does the new owner come on?"
"About as I thought it would be."
"Not doing very well?"
"How could it be expected when he didn't know enough of the milling business
to grind a bushel of wheat right? He lost half of the custom I transferred to
him in less than three months. Then he broke his main shaft, and it took over
three weeks to get in a new one. Half of his remaining customers discovered by
this time, that they could get far better meal from their grain at Harwood's
mill near Lynwood, and so did not care to trouble him any more. The upshot of
the whole matter is, he broke down next, and had to sell the mill at a heavy
loss."
"Who has it now?"
"Judge Hammond is the purchaser."
"He is going to rent it, I suppose?"
"No; I believe he means to turn it into some kind of a factory— and, I rather
think, will connect therewith a distillery. This is a fine grain-growing
country, as you know. If he does set up a distillery he'll make a fine thing of
it. Grain has been too low in this section for some years; this all the farmers
have felt, and they are very much pleased at the idea. It will help them
wonderfully. I always thought my mill a great thing for the farmers; but what I
did for them was a mere song compared to the advantage of an extensive
distillery."
"Judge Hammond is one of your richest men?"
"Yes—the richest in the county. And what is more, he's a shrewd, far-seeing
man, and knows how to multiply his riches."
"How is his son Willy coming on?"
"Oh! first-rate."
The landlord's eyes fell under the searching look I bent upon him.
"How old is he now?"
"Just twenty."
"A critical age," I remarked.
"So people say; but I didn't find it so," answered Slade, a little distantly.
"The impulses within and the temptations without, are the measure of its
dangers. At his age, you were, no doubt, daily employed at hard work."
"I was, and no mistake."
"Thousands and hundreds of thousands are indebted to useful work, occupying
many hours through each day, and leaving them with wearied bodies at night, for
their safe passage from yielding youth to firm, resisting manhood. It might not
he with you as it is now, had leisure and freedom to go in and out when you
pleased been offered at the age of nineteen."
"I can't tell as to that," said the landlord, shrugging his shoulders. "But I
don't see that Willy Hammond is in any especial danger. He is a young man with
many admirable qualities—is social-liberal—generous almost to a fault—but has
good common sense, and wit enough, I take it, to keep out of harm's way."
A man passing the house at the moment, gave Simon Slade an opportunity to
break off a conversation that was not, I could see, altogether agreeable. As he
left me, I arose and stepped into the bar-room. Frank, the landlord's son, was
behind the bar. He had grown considerably in the year—and from a rather
delicate, innocent-looking boy, to a stout, bold lad. His face was rounder, and
had a gross, sensual expression, that showed itself particularly about the
mouth. The man Green was standing beside the bar talking to him, and I noticed
that Frank laughed heartily, at some low, half obscene remarks that he was
making. In the midst of these, Flora, the sister of Frank, a really beautiful
girl, came in to get something from the bar. Green spoke to her familiarly, and
Flora answered him with a perceptibly heightening color.
I glanced toward Frank, half expecting to see an indignant flush on his young
face. But no—he looked on with a smile! "Ah!" thought I, "have the boy's pure
impulses so soon died out in this fatal atmosphere? Can he bear to see those
evil eyes—he knows they are evil—rest upon the face of his sister? or to hear
those lips, only a moment since polluted with vile words, address her with the
familiarity of a friend?"
"Fine girl, that sister of yours, Frank! Fine girl!" said Green, after Flora
had withdrawn—speaking of her with about as much respect in his voice as if he
were praising a fleet racer or a favorite hound.
The boy smiled, with a pleased air.
"I must try and find her a good husband, Frank. I wonder if she wouldn't have
me?"
"You'd better ask her," said the boy, laughing.
"I would if I thought there was any chance for me."
"Nothing like trying. Faint heart never won fair lady," returned Frank, more
with the air of a man than a boy. How fast he was growing old!
"A banter, by George!" exclaimed Green, slapping his hands together. "You're
a great boy, Frank! a great boy! I shall have to talk to your father about you.
Coming on too fast. Have to be put back in your lessons—hey!"
And Green winked at the boy, and shook his finger at him. Frank laughed in a
pleased way, as he replied: "I guess I'll do."
"I guess you will," said Green, as, satisfied with his colloquy, he turned
off and left the bar-room.
"Have something to drink, sir?" inquired Frank, addressing me in a bold, free
way.
I shook my head.
"Here's a newspaper," he added.
I took the paper and sat down—not to read, but to observe. Two or three men
soon came in, and spoke in a very familiar way to Frank, who was presently busy
setting out the liquors they had called for. Their conversation, interlarded
with much that was profane and vulgar, was of horses, horse-racing, gunning, and
the like, to all of which the young bar-tender lent an attentive ear, putting in
a word now and then, and showing an intelligence in such matters quite beyond
his age. In the midst thereof, Mr. Slade made his appearance. His presence
caused a marked change in Frank, who retired from his place among the men, a
step or two outside of the bar, and did not make a remark while his father
remained. It was plain from this, that Mr. Slade was not only aware of Frank's
dangerous precocity, but had already marked his forwardness by rebuke.
So far, all that I had seen and heard impressed me unfavorably,
notwithstanding the declaration of Simon Slade, that everything about the
"Sickle and Sheaf" was coming on "first-rate," and that he was "perfectly
satisfied" with his experiment. Why, even if the man had gained, in money, fifty
thousand dollars by tavern-keeping in a year, he had lost a jewel in the
innocence of his boy that was beyond all valuation. "Perfectly satisfied?"
Impossible! He was not perfectly satisfied. How could he be? The look thrown
upon Frank when he entered the bar-room, and saw him "hale fellow, well met,"
with three or four idle, profane, drinking customers, contradicted that
assertion.
After supper, I took a seat in the bar-room, to see how life moved on in that
place of rendezvous for the surface-population of Cedarville. Interest enough in
the characters I had met there a year before remained for me to choose this way
of spending the time, instead of visiting at the house of a gentleman who had
kindly invited me to pass an evening with his family.
The bar-room custom, I soon found, had largely increased in a year. It now
required, for a good part of the time, the active services of both the landlord
and his son to meet the calls for liquor. What pained me most, was to see the
large number of lads and young men who came in to lounge and drink; and there
was scarcely one of them whose face did not show marks of sensuality, or whose
language was not marred by obscenity, profanity, or vulgar slang. The subjects
of conversation were varied enough, though politics was the most prominent. In
regard to politics I heard nothing in the least instructive; but only abuse of
individuals and dogmatism on public measures. They were all exceedingly
confident in assertion; but I listened in vain for exposition, or even for
demonstrative facts. He who asseverated in the most positive manner, and swore
the hardest, carried the day in the petty contests.
I noticed, early in the evening, and at a time when all the inmates of the
room were in the best possible humor with themselves, the entrance of an elderly
man, on whose face I instantly read a deep concern. It was one of those mild,
yet strongly marked faces, that strike you at a glance. The forehead was broad,
the eyes large and far back in their sockets, the lips full but firm. You saw
evidences of a strong, but well-balanced character. As he came in, I noticed a
look of intelligence pass from one to another; and then the eyes of two or three
were fixed upon a young man who was seated not far from me, with his back to the
entrance, playing at dominoes. He had a glass of ale by his side. The old man
searched about the room for some moments, before his glance rested upon the
individual I have mentioned. My eyes were full upon his face, as he advanced
toward him, as yet unseen. Upon it was not a sign of angry excitement, but a
most touching sorrow.
"Edward!" he said, as he laid his hand gently on the young man's shoulder.
The latter started at the voice, and crimsoned deeply. A few moments he sat
irresolute.
"Edward, my son!" It would have been a cold, hard heart indeed that softened
not under the melting tenderness of these tones. The call was irresistible, and
obedience a necessity. The powers of evil had, yet, too feeble a grasp on the
young man's heart to hold him in thrall. Rising with a half-reluctant manner,
and with a shamefacedness that it was impossible to conceal, he retired as
quietly as possible. The notice of only a few in the bar-room was attracted by
the incident.
"I can tell you what," I heard the individual, with whom the young man had
been playing at dominoes, remark—himself not twenty years of age—"if my old man
were to make a fool of himself in this way —sneaking around after me in
bar-rooms-he'd get only his trouble for his pains. I'd like to see him try it,
though! There'd be a nice time of it, I guess. Wouldn't I creep off with him, as
meek as a lamb! Ho! ho!"
"Who is that old gentleman who came in just now?" I inquired of the person
who thus commented on the incident which had just occurred.
"Mr. Hargrove is his name."
"And that was his son?"
"Yes; and I'm only sorry he doesn't possess a little more spirit."
"How old is he?"
"About twenty."
"Not of legal age, then?"
"He's old enough to be his own master."
"The law says differently," I suggested.
In answer, the young man cursed the law, snapping his fingers in its
imaginary face as he did so.
"At least you will admit," said I, "that Edward Hargrove, in the use of a
liberty to go where he pleases, and do what he pleases, exhibits but small
discretion."
"I will admit no such thing. What harm is there, I would like to know, in a
social little game such as we were playing? There were no stakes—we were not
gambling."
I pointed to the half-emptied glass of ale left by young Hargrove.
"Oh! oh!" half sneered, half laughed a man, twice the age of the one I had
addressed, who sat near by, listening to our conversation. I looked at him for a
moment, and then said:
"The great danger lies there, without doubt. If it were only a glass of ale
and a game of dominoes—but it doesn't stop there, and well the young man's
father knows it."
"Perhaps he does," was answered. "I remember him in his younger days; and a
pretty high boy he was. He didn't stop at a glass of ale and a game of dominoes;
not he! I've seen him as drunk as a lord many a time; and many a time at a
horse-race, or cock-fight, betting with the bravest. I was only a boy, though a
pretty old boy; but I can tell you, Hargrove was no saint."
"I wonder not, then, that he is so anxious for his son," was my remark. "He
knows well the lurking dangers in the path he seems inclined to enter."
"I don't see that they have done him much harm. He sowed his wild oats—then
got married, and settled down into a good, substantial citizen. A little too
religious and pharisaical, I always thought; but upright in his dealings. He had
his pleasures in early life, as was befitting the season of youth—why not let
his son taste of the same agreeable fruit? He's wrong, sir—wrong! And I've said
as much to Ned. I only wish the boy had shown the right spunk this evening, and
told the old man to go home about his business."
"So do I," chimed in the young disciple in this bad school. "It's what I'd
say to my old man, in double quick time, if he was to come hunting after me."
"He knows better than to do that," said the other, in a way that let me
deeper into the young man's character.
"Indeed he does. He's tried his hand on me once or twice during the last
year, but found it wouldn't do, no how; Tom Peters is out of his
leading-strings."
"And can drink his glass with any one, and not be a grain the worse for it."
"Exactly, old boy!" said Peters, slapping his preceptor on the knee.
"Exactly! I'm not one of your weak-headed ones. Oh no!"
"Look here, Joe Morgan!"—the half-angry voice of Simon Slade now rung through
the bar-room,—"just take yourself off home!"
I had not observed the entrance of this person. He was standing at the bar,
with an emptied glass in his hand. A year had made no improvement in his
appearance. On the contrary, his clothes were more worn and tattered; his
countenance more sadly marred. What he had said to irritate the landlord, I know
not; but Slade's face was fiery with passion, and his eyes glared threateningly
at the poor besotted one, who showed not the least inclination to obey.
"Off with you, I say! And never show your face here again. I won't have such
low vagabonds as you are about my house. If you can't keep decent and stay
decent, don't intrude yourself here."
"A rum-seller talk of decency!" retorted Morgan. "Pah! You were a decent man
once, and a good miller into the bargain. But that time's past and gone. Decency
died out when you exchanged the pick and facing-hammer for the glass and
muddler. Decency! Pah! How you talk! As if it were any more decent to sell rum
than to drink it."
There was so much of biting contempt in the tones, as well as the words of
the half-intoxicated man, that Slade, who had himself been drinking rather more
freely than usual, was angered beyond self-control. Catching up an empty glass
from the counter, he hurled it with all his strength at the head of Joe Morgan.
The missive just grazed one of his temples, and flew by on its dangerous course.
The quick sharp cry of a child startled the air, followed by exclamations of
alarm and horror from many voices.
"It's Joe Morgan's child!" "He's killed her!" "Good heavens!" Such were the
exclamations that rang through the room. I was among the first to reach the spot
where a little girl, just gliding in through the door, had been struck on the
forehead by the glass, which had cut a deep gash, and stunned her into
insensibility. The blood flowed instantly from the wound, and covered her face,
which presented a shocking appearance. As I lifted her from the floor, upon
which she had fallen, Morgan, into whose very soul the piercing cry of his child
had penetrated, stood by my side, and grappled his arms around her insensible
form, uttering as he did so heart-touching moans and lamentations.
"What's the matter? Oh, what's the matter?" It was a woman's voice, speaking
in frightened tones.
"It's nothing! Just go out, will you, Ann?" I heard the landlord say.
But his wife—it was Mrs. Slade—having heard the shrieks of pain and terror
uttered by Morgan's child, had come running into the bar-room—heeded not his
words, but pressed forward into the little group that stood around the bleeding
girl.
"Run for Doctor Green, Frank," she cried in an imperative voice, the moment
her eyes rested on the little one's bloody face.
Frank came around from behind the bar, in obedience to the word; but his
father gave a partial countermand, and he stood still. Upon observing which, his
mother repeated the order, even more emphatically.
"Why don't you jump, you young rascal!" exclaimed Harvey Green. "The child
may be dead before the doctor can get here."
Frank hesitated no longer, but disappeared instantly through the door.
"Poor, poor child!" almost sobbed Mrs. Slade, as she lifted the insensible
form from my arms. "How did it happen? Who struck her?"
"Who? Curse him! Who but Simon Slade?" answered Joe Morgan, through his
clenched teeth.
The look of anguish, mingled with bitter reproach, instantly thrown upon the
landlord by his wife, can hardly be forgotten by any who saw it that night.
"Oh, Simon! Simon! And has it come to this already?" What a world of bitter
memories, and sad forebodings of evil, did that little sentence express. "To
this already"—Ah! In the downward way, how rapidly the steps do tread—how fast
the progress!
"Bring me a basin of water, and a towel, quickly!" she now exclaimed.
The water was brought, and in a little while the face of the child lay pure
and as white as snow against her bosom. The wound from which the blood had
flowed so freely was found on the upper part of the forehead, a little to the
side, and extending several inches back, along the top of the head. As soon as
the blood stains were wiped away, and the effusion partially stopped, Mrs. Slade
carried the still insensible body into the next room, whither the distressed,
and now completely sobered father, accompanied her. I went with them, but Slade
remained behind.
The arrival of the doctor was soon followed by the restoration of life to the
inanimate body. He happened to be at home, and came instantly. He had just taken
the last stitch in the wound, which required to be drawn together, and was
applying strips of adhesive plaster, when the hurried entrance of some one
caused me to look up. What an apparition met my eyes! A woman stood in the door,
with a face in which maternal anxiety and terror blended fearfully. Her
countenance was like ashes—her eyes straining wildly—her lips apart, while the
panting breath almost hissed through them.
"Joe! Joe! What is it? Where is Mary? Is she dead?" were her eager inquiries.
"No, Fanny," answered Joe Morgan, starting up from where he was actually
kneeling by the side of the reviving little one, and going quickly to his wife.
"She's better now. It's a bad hurt, but the doctor says it's nothing dangerous.
Poor, dear child!"
The pale face of the mother grew paler—she gasped—caught for breath two or
three times—a low shudder ran through her frame— and then she lay white and
pulseless in the arms of her husband. As the doctor applied restoratives, I had
opportunity to note more particularly the appearance of Mrs. Morgan. Her person
was very slender, and her face so attenuated that it might almost be called
shadowy. Her hair, which was a rich chestnut brown, with a slight golden lustre,
had fallen from her comb, and now lay all over her neck and bosom in beautiful
luxuriance. Back from her full temples it had been smoothed away by the hand of
Morgan, that all the while moved over her brow and temples with a caressing
motion that I saw was unconscious, and which revealed the tenderness of feeling
with which, debased as he was, he regarded the wife of his youth, and the long
suffering companion of his later and evil days. Her dress was plain and coarse,
but clean and well fitting; and about her whole person was an air of neatness
and taste. She could not now be called beautiful; yet in her marred features—
marred by suffering and grief—were many lineaments of beauty; and much that told
of a true, pure woman's heart beating in her bosom. Life came slowly back to the
stilled heart, and it was nearly half an hour before the circle of motion was
fully restored.
Then, the twain, with their child, tenderly borne in the arms of her father,
went sadly homeward, leaving more than one heart heavier for their visit.
I saw more of the landlord's wife on this occasion than before. She had acted
with a promptness and humanity that impressed me very favorably. It was plain,
from her exclamations on learning that her husband's hand inflicted the blow
that came so near destroying the child's life, that her faith for good in the
tavern-keeping experiment had never been strong. I had already inferred as much.
Her face, the few times I had seen her, wore a troubled look; and I could never
forget its expression, nor her anxious, warning voice, when she discovered Frank
sipping the dregs from a glass in the bar-room.
It is rarely, I believe, that wives consent freely to the opening of taverns
by their husbands; and the determination on the part of the latter to do so, is
not unfrequently attended with a breach of confidence and good feeling never
afterward fully healed. Men look close to the money result; women to the moral
consequences. I doubt if there be one dram-seller in ten, between whom and his
wife there exists a good understanding—to say nothing of genuine affection. And,
in the exceptional cases, it will generally be found that the wife is as
mercenary, or careless of the public good, as her husband. I have known some
women to set up grog- shops; but they were women of bad principles and worse
hearts. I remember one case, where a woman, with a sober, church-going husband,
opened a dram-shop. The husband opposed, remonstrated, begged, threatened—but
all to no purpose. The wife, by working for the clothing stores, had earned and
saved about three hundred dollars. The love of money, in the slow process of
accumulation, had been awakened; and, in ministering to the depraved appetites
of men who loved drink and neglected their families, she saw a quicker mode of
acquiring the gold she coveted. And so the dram- shop was opened. And what was
the result? The husband quit going to church. He had no heart for that; for,
even on the Sabbath day, the fiery stream was stayed not in his house. Next he
began to tipple. Soon, alas! the subtle poison so pervaded his system that
morbid desire came; and then he moved along quick-footed in the way of ruin. In
less than three years, I think, from the time the grog-shop was opened by his
wife, he was in a drunkard's grave. A year or two more, and the pit that was
digged for others by the hands of the wife, she fell into herself. After
breathing an atmosphere poisoned by the fumes of liquor, the love of tasting it
was gradually formed, and she, too, in the end, became a slave to the Demon
Drink. She died at last, poor as a beggar in the street. Ah! this liquor-selling
is the way to ruin; and they who open the gates, as well as those who enter the
downward path, alike go to destruction. But this is digressing.
After Joe Morgan and his wife left the "Sickle and Sheaf," with that gentle
child, who, as I afterward learned, had not, for a year or more, laid her little
head to sleep until her father returned home and who, if he stayed out beyond a
certain hour, would go for him, and lead him back, a very angel of love and
patience—I re-entered the bar-room, to see how life was passing there. Not one
of all I had left in the room remained. The incident which had occurred was of
so painful a nature, that no further unalloyed pleasure was to be had there
during the evening, and so each had retired. In his little kingdom the landlord
sat alone, his head resting on his hand, and his face shaded from the light. The
whole aspect of the man was that of one in self- humiliation. As I entered he
raised his head, and turned his face toward me. Its expression was painful.
"Rather an unfortunate affair," said he. "I'm angry with myself, and sorry
for the poor child. But she'd no business here. As for Joe Morgan, it would take
a saint to bear his tongue when once set a-going by liquor. I wish he'd stay
away from the house. Nobody wants his company. Oh, dear!"
The ejaculation, or rather groan, that closed the sentence showed how little
Slade was satisfied with himself, notwithstanding this feeble attempt at
self-justification.
"His thirst for liquor draws him hither," I remarked. "The attraction of your
bar to his appetite is like that of the magnet to the needle. He cannot stay
away."
"He MUST stay away!" exclaimed the landlord, with some vehemence of tone,
striking his fist upon the table by which he sat. "He MUST stay away! There is
scarcely an evening that he does not ruffle my temper, and mar good feelings in
all the company. Just see what he provoked me to do this evening. I might have
killed the child. It makes my blood run cold to think of it! Yes, sir—he must
stay away. If no better can be done, I'll hire a man to stand at the door and
keep him out."
"He never troubled you at the mill," said I. "No man was required at the mill
door?"
"No!" And the landlord gave emphasis to the word by an oath, ejaculated with
a heartiness that almost startled me. I had not heard him swear before. "No; the
great trouble was to get him and keep him there, the good-for-nothing, idle
fellow!"
"I am afraid," I ventured to suggest, "that things don't go on quite so
smoothly here as they did at the mill. Your customers are of a different class."
"I don't know about that; why not?" He did not just relish my remark.
"Between quiet, thrifty, substantial farmers, and drinking bar- room
loungers, are many degrees of comparison."
"Excuse me, sir!" Simon Slade elevated his person. "The men who visit my
bar-room, as a general thing, are quite as respectable, moral, and substantial
as any who came to the mill—and I believe more so. The first people in the
place, sir, are to be found here. Judge Lyman and Judge Hammond; Lawyer Wilks
and Doctor Maynard; Mr. Grand and Mr. Lee; and dozens of others—all our first
people. No, sir; you mustn't judge all by vagabonds like Joe Morgan."
There was a testy spirit manifested that I did not care to provoke. I could
have met his assertion with facts and inferences of a character to startle any
one occupying his position, who was in a calm, reflective state; but to argue
with him then would have been worse than idle; and so I let him talk on until
the excitement occasioned by my words died out for want of new fuel.