Web
and Book design,
Copyright, Kellscraft Studio 1999-2008 (Return to Web Text-ures) |
(HOME)
|
CHAPTER XXV WHEN THE LION ROARED AT
daybreak on September 26, if I
remember aright, we started to drive
from the old farm to Portland with eighteen live hogs. There was a
crisp frost
that morning, so white that till the sun rose you might have thought
there had
been a slight fall of snow in the night. We put
eight of the largest hogs
into one long farm wagon with high sideboards, drawn by a span of
Percheron
work horses, which I drove; the ten smaller hogs we put into another
wagon that
Willis Murch drove. By making an early start we hoped to cover forty
miles of
our journey before sundown, pass the night at a tavern in the town of
Gray
where the old Squire was acquainted, and reach Portland the next noon.
Since we
wished to avoid unloading the hogs, we took dry corn and troughs for
feeding
them in the wagons and buckets for fetching water to them. The old
Squire went
along with us for the first fifteen miles to see us well on our way,
then left
us and walked to a railroad station a mile or two off the wagon road,
where he
took the morning train into Portland, in order to make arrangements for
marketing the hogs. Everything
went well during the
morning, although the hogs diffused a bad odor along the highway.
Toward noon
we stopped by the wayside, near the Upper Village of the New Gloucester
Shakers, to rest and feed the horses, and to give the hogs water. About
one
o'clock we went on down the hill to Sabbath Day Pond and into the woods
beyond
it. The loads were heavy and the horses were plodding on slowly, when,
just
round a turn of the road in the woods ahead, we heard a deep, awful
sound, like
nothing that had ever come to our ears before. For an instant I thought
it was
thunder, it rumbled so portentously: Hough —
hough — hough — hough-er-er-er-er-hhh! It reverberated
through the
woods till it seemed to me that the earth actually trembled. Willis's
horses stopped short.
Willis himself rose to his feet, and it seemed to me his cap rose up on
his
head. Other indistinct sounds also came to our ears from along the road
ahead,
though nothing was as yet in sight. Then again that awful, prolonged Hough — hough — hough! broke
forth. Close by,
lumbermen had been hauling
timber from the forest into the highway and had made a distinct trail
across
the road ditch. While Willis stood up, staring, the horses suddenly
whirled
half round and bolted for the lumber trail, hogs and all. They did it
so
abruptly that Willis had no time to control them, and when the wagon
went
across the ditch, he was pitched off headlong into the brush. Before I
could
set my feet, my span followed them across the ditch; but I managed to
rein them
up to a tree trunk, which the wagon tongue struck heavily. There I held
them,
though they still plunged and snorted in their terror. Willis's
team was running away along
the lumber trail, but before it had gone fifty yards we heard a crash,
and then
a horrible squealing. The wagon had gone over a log or a stump and,
upsetting,
had spilled all ten hogs into the brushwood. Willis now jumped to his feet and ran to help me master my team, which was still plunging violently, and I kept it headed to the tree while he got the halters and tied the horses. Just then we heard that terrible Hough — hough! again, nearer now. Looking out toward the road, we saw four teams dragging large, gaudily painted cages that contained animals. The drivers, who wore a kind of red uniform, pulled up and sat looking in our direction, laughing and shouting derisively. That exasperated us so greatly that, checking our first impulse to run in pursuit of the horses and hogs, we rushed to the road to remonstrate. WHEN THE LION ROARED It was not
a full-fledged circus and
menagerie, but merely a show on its way from one county fair to
another. In one
cage there was a boa constrictor, untruthfully advertised to be thirty
feet
long, which a Fat Lady exhibited at each performance, the monster
coiled round
her neck. In another cage were six performing monkeys and four educated
dogs. When we
saw them that day on the
road, the Fat Lady, said to weigh four hundred pounds, was journeying
in a
double-seated carriage behind the cages. Squeezed on the seat beside
her, rode a
queer-looking little old man, with a long white beard, whose specialty
was to
eat glass tumblers, or at least chew them up. He also fought on his
hands and
knees with one of the dogs. His barking, growling and worrying were so
true to
life that the spectators could scarcely tell which was the dog and
which the
man. On the back seat was a gypsy fortune teller and a Wild Man,
alleged to
hail from the jungles of Borneo and to be so dangerous that two armed
keepers
had to guard him in order to prevent him from destroying the local
population.
As we first saw him, divested of his "get-up," he looked tame enough.
He was conversing sociably with the gypsy fortune teller. But for
the moment our attention and
our indignation were directed mainly at the lion. He was not such a
very large
lion, but he certainly had a full-sized roar, and the driver of the
cage sat
and grinned at us. "You've no
right to be on the
road with a lion roaring like that!" Willis shouted severely. "Wal,
young feller, you've no
right to be on the road with such a hog smell as that!" the driver
retorted. "Our lion is the best-behaved in the world; he wouldn't ha'
roared ef he hadn't smelt them hogs so strong." "But you
have damaged us!"
I cried. "Our horses have run away and smashed things! You'll have to
pay
for this!" Another
man, who appeared to be the
proprietor, now came from a wagon in the rear of the cavalcade. "What's
that about
damages?" he cried. "I'll pay nothing! I have a permit to travel on
the highway!" "You have
no right to scare
horses!" Willis retorted. "Your lion made a horrible noise." "His noise
wasn't worse than
your hog stench!" the showman rejoined hotly. "My lion has as good a
right to roar as your hogs have to squeal. Drive on!" he shouted to his
drivers. The show
moved forward. The Fat Lady
looked back and laughed, and the Wild Man pretended to squeal like a
pig; but
the gypsy fortune teller smiled and said, "Too bad!" Having got
no satisfaction, we
returned hastily to chase our runaway team. We came upon it less than a
hundred
yards away, jammed fast between two pine trees. Parts of the harness
were
broken, the wagon body was shattered, and ten hogs were at large. For some
minutes we were at a loss
to know what to do. How to catch the hogs and put them back into the
wagon was
a difficult matter, for many of them weighed three hundred pounds, and
moreover
a live hog is a disagreeable animal to lay hands on. But, taking an
axe, we cut
young pine trees and constructed a fence round the wagon to serve as a
hogpen. Leaving
a gap at one end that could be stopped when the hogs were inside, we
then set
near the wagon the troughs we had brought, poured the dry corn into
them and
called the hogs as if it were feeding time. Most of them, it seemed,
were not
far away. As soon as they heard the corn rattling into the troughs all
except
three came crowding in. Presently we drove two of the missing ones to
the pen,
but one we could not find. None of
the wagon wheels was broken,
and in the course of an hour or two, Willis and I succeeded in patching
up the
shattered body sufficiently to hold the hogs. But how to get the heavy
brutes
off the ground and up into the wagon was a task beyond our resources.
When you
try to take a live hog off its feet, he is likely to bite as well as to
squeal.
We had no tackle for lifting them. At last
Willis set off to get help.
He was gone till dusk and came back without any one; but he had
persuaded two
Shakers to come and help us/ early the next morning — they could not
come that
night on account of their evening prayer meeting. One of the Shaker
women had
sent a loaf of bread and a piggin half full of Shaker apple sauce to
us. The
lantern and bucket that went
with Willis's wagon had been smashed; but I had a similar outfit with
mine. So
we tied the horses to trees near our improvised hog pound, and fed and
blanketed them by lantern light. Afterwards we brought water for them
from a
brook not far away. It was
nine o'clock before we were
ready to eat our own supper of bread and Shaker apple sauce. The night
was
chilly; our lantern went out for lack of oil; we had only light
overcoats for
covering; and as. we had used our last two matches in lighting the
lantern, we
could not kindle a fire. The night
was so cold that we
frequently had to jump up and run round to get warm. We slept scarcely
at all.
The hogs squealed. They, too, were cold as well as hungry, and toward
morning
they quarreled, bit one another and made piercing outcries. "Oh, don't
I wish 'twas
morning!" Willis exclaimed again and again. Fortunately,
the Shakers were early
risers, and long before sunrise three of them, clad in gray homespun
frocks and
broad-brimmed hats, appeared. They greeted us solemnly. "Thee has
met with
trouble," said one of them, who was the elder of the village. "But I
think we can give thee aid." They
proved to be past masters at
handling hogs. From one of the halters they contrived a muzzle to
prevent the
hogs from biting us, and then with their help we caught and muzzled the
hogs
one by one and boosted them into the wagon. The good men stayed by us
till the
horses were hitched up and we were out of the woods and on the highway
again. I
had a little money with me and offered to pay them for their kind
services, but
the elder said: "Nay,
friend, thee has had trouble
enough already with the lion." And at parting all three said "Fare
thee well" very gravely. We fared
on, but not altogether
well, for those hungry hogs were now making a terrible uproar. We drove
as far
as Gray Corners, where there was a country store, and there I bought a
bushel
of oats for the horses and a hundred-pound bag of corn for the hogs.
The hogs
were so ravenous that it was hard to be sure that each got his proper
share;
but we did the best we could and somewhat reduced their squealing. The
hastily repaired wagon body had
also given us trouble, for it had threatened to shake to pieces as it
jolted
over the frozen ruts of the road; but we bought a pound of nails,
borrowed a
hammer and set to work to repair it better, with the hogs still aboard
— much
to the amusement of a crowd of boys who had collected. It was almost
noon when
we left Gray Corners, and it was after three o'clock before we reached
Westbrook, five miles out of Portland. Here whom should we see but the
old
Squire, who, growing anxious over our failure to appear, had driven out
to meet
us. He could not help smiling when he heard Willis's indignant account
of what
had delayed us. He thought
it likely that we could
recover the missing hog, and that evening he inserted a notice of the
loss in
the Eastern Argus. But
nothing
came of the notice or of the many inquiries that we made on our way
home the
next day. The animal had wandered off, and whoever captured it
apparently kept
quiet. Instead of blaming us, however, the old Squire praised us. "You did
well, boys, in trying
circumstances," he said. "You do not meet a lion every day." After what
had happened, Willis and
I felt much interest the following week in seeing the show that had
discomfited
us. It had established itself at the county fair in its big tent and
apparently
was doing a rushing business. Buying admission tickets, Willis and I
went in
and approached the lion's cage for a nearer view of the king of beasts.
We
hoped he would spring up and roar as he had done in the woods below the
Shaker
village; but he kept quiet. After all, he did not look very formidable,
and he
seemed sadly oppressed and bored. I think
the proprietor of the show
recognized us, for we saw him regarding us suspiciously; and we moved
on to the
cage in which the Wild Man sat, with a big brass chain attached to his
leg —
ostensibly to prevent him from running amuck among the spectators. Two
of his
keepers were guarding him, with axes in their hands. He was loosely
arrayed in
a tiger's skin, and his limbs appeared to be very hairy. His skin was
dark
brown and rough with warts. His hair, which was really a wig, hung in
tangled
snarls over his eyes. He gnashed his teeth, clenched his fists, and
every few
moments he uttered a terrific yell at which timid patrons of the show
promptly
retired to the far side of the tent. When
Willis and I approached the
cage, a smile suddenly broke across the Wild Man's face, and he nodded
to us.
"You were the fellows with the hogs, weren't you?" he said in very
good English. I can hardly describe what a shock that gave us. "Why, why
— aren't you from the
wilds of Borneo?" Willis asked him in low tones. "Thunder,
no!" the Wild
Man replied confidentially. "I don't even know where it is. I'm from
over
in Vermont — Bellows Falls." "But — but
— you do look pretty
savage!" stammered Willis in much astonishment. "You bet!"
said the Wild
Man. "Ain't this a dandy rig? It gets 'em, too. But don't give me away;
I
get a good living out of this." Just then
a group of spectators came
crowding forward, and the Wild Man let out a howl that brought them to
an
appalled halt. The keepers brandished their axes. "Well, did
you ever?"
Willis muttered as we moved on. "Doesn't that beat everything?" The Fat
Lady was ponderously
unwinding the coils of the boa constrictor from round her neck as we
paused in
front of her cage, but presently she recognized us and smiled. We asked
her
whether she wasn't afraid to let the snake coil itself round her neck. "No, not
when he has had his
powders," she replied. "Sometimes, when he is waking up, I have to be
a little careful not to let him get clean round me, or he'd give me a
squeeze." The old
man and the educated dogs
had just finished their performance when we came in, and so we went
over to the
platform on the other side of the tent, where the gypsy fortune teller
was
plying her vocation. "Cross me
palm, young
gentlemen," she droned. "Cross me palm wi' siller, and I'll tell your
fortunes and all that's going to happen to you." Then she, too,
recognized
us and smiled. "Did you find your hogs?" she asked. "All but
one," Willis told
her. "It was
too bad," she
said, "but you never will get anything out of the boss of this show.
He's
a brute! He cheats me out of half my contract money right along." "Where do
you come from?"
Willis said with a knowing air. "You are no gypsy." "No,
indeed!" the girl
replied, laughing, and, rubbing a place on the back of her left hand,
she
showed us that her skin was white under the walnut stain. "I'm from
Albany. I live with my mother there, and I'm sending my brother to the
Troy
Polytechnic School." "Well, did
you ever!"
Willis said again as, now completely disillusioned, we left the tent. |