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Cornell University Library 

PS 3505.A86M9 



My Antonia, 




3 1924 014 256 816 




Cornell University 
Library 



The original of this book is in 
the Cornell University Library. 

There are no known copyright restrictions in 
the United States on the use of the text. 



http://www.archive.org/details/cu31924014256816 



iip Willi Sibert Catl^er 



THE SONG OF THE LARK. 

O PIONEERS I With colored frontispiece. 

ALEXANDER'S BRIDGE. 

HOUGHTON MIFFLIN COMPANY 
Boston and New York 



MY ANTONIA 



MY ANTONIA 

BY 

WILLA SIBERT GATHER 



optima dies . . . prima fugit 

VIRGIL 

WITH ILLUSTRATIONS BY 
W. T. BENDA 




BOSTON AND NEW YORK 

HOUGHTON MIFFLIN COMPANY 






COPYRIGHT, 1918, BY WILIA SIBERT CATRBK 
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED 

Published October iqtS 






TO 

CARRIE AND IRENE MINER 

In memory of affections old and true 



CONTENTS 

BOOK I 
The Shimerdas 3 

BOOK II 
The Hired Girls 163 

BOOK III 
Lena Lingard « . . 291 

BOOK IV 
The Pioneer Woman's Story .... 335 

BOOK V 
Cuzak's Boys 369 



INTRODUCTION 

Last summer I happened to be crossing the 
plains of Iowa in a season of intense heat, and it 
was my good fortune to have for a traveling 
companion James Quayle Burden — Jim Bur- 
den, as we still call him in the West. He and I are 
old friends — we grew up together in the same 
Nebraska town — and we had much to say to 
each other. While the train flashed through 
never-ending miles of ripe wheat, by country 
towns and bright-flowered pastures and oak 
groves wilting in the sun, we sat in the observa- 
tion car, where the woodwork was hot to the 
touch and red dust lay deep over everything. 
The dust and heat, the burning wind, reminded 
us of many things. We were talking about what 
it is like to spend one's childhood in little towns 
like these, buried in wheat and corn, under stim- 
ulating extremes of climate: burning summers 
when the world lies green and billowy beneath 
a brilliant sky, when one is fairly stifled in vege- 
tation, in the color and smell of strong weeds 
and heavy harvests ; blustery winters with little 
snow, when the whole country is stripped bare 
and gray as sheet-iron. We agreed that no one 
who had not grown up in a little prairie town 

ix 



MY ANTONIA 

could know anything about it. It was a kind of 
freemasonry, we said. 

Although Jim Burden and I both live in New 
York, and are old friends, I do not see much of 
him there. He is legal counsel for one of the 
great Western railways, and is sometimes away 
from his New York office for weeks together. 
That is one reason why we do not often meet. 
Another is that I do not like his wife. 

When Jim was still an obscure young lawyer, 
struggling to make his way in New York, his 
career was suddenly advanced by a brilliant 
marriage. Genevieve Whitney was the only 
daughter of a distinguished man. Her marriage 
with young Burden was the subject of sharp 
comment at the time. It was said she had been 
brutally jilted by her cousin, Rutland Whitney," 
and that she married this unknown man from 
the West out of bravado. She was a restless, 
headstrong girl, even then, who liked to aston- 
ish her friends. Later, when I knew her, she was 
always doing something unexpected. She gave 
one of her town houses for a Suffrage head- 
quarters, produced one of her own plays at the 
Princess Theater, was arrested for picketing 
during a garment-makers' strike, etc. I am 
never able to believe that she has miich feeling 
for the causes to which she lends her name and 
her fleeting interest. She is handsome, energetic, 



MY ANTONIA 

executive, but to me she seems unimpressionable 
and temperamentally incapable of enthusiasm. 
Her husband's quiet tastes irritate her, I think, 
and she finds it worth while to play the patroness 
to a group of young poets and painters of ad- 
vanced ideas and mediocre ability. She has 
her own fortune and lives her own life. For some 
reason, she wishes to remain Mrs. James Burden. 
As for Jim, n o disappointments have been 
severe enoug h to' c hill his naturally romantic 
and ardent disposition. This disposition, though 
It often made him seem very funny when he was 
a boy, has been one of the strongest elements in 
his success. He loves with a personal passion 
the great country through which his railway 
runs and branches. His faith in it and his knowl- 
edge of it have played an important part in its 
development. He is always able to raise capi- 
tal for new enterprises in Wyoming or Mon- 
tana, and has helped young men out there to 
do remarkable things in mines and timber and 
oil. If a young man with an idea can once get 
Jim Burden's attention, can manage to accom- 
pany him when he goes off into the wilds hunt- 
ing for lost parks or exploring new canyons, then 
the money which means action is usually forth- 
coming. Jim is still able to lose himself in those 
big Western dreams. Though he is over forty 
now, he meets new people and new enterprises 

xi 



MY ANTONIA 

with the impulsiveness by which his boyhood 
friends remember him. He never seems to me 
to grow older. His fresh color and sandy hair 
and quick-changing blue eyes are those of a 
young man, and his sympathetic, solicitous in- 
terest in women is as youthful as it is Western 
and American. 

During that burning day when we were cross- 
ing Iowa, our talk kept returning to a central 
figure, a Bohemian girl whom we had known long 
ago and whom both of us admired. More than 
any other person we remembered, this gir l seemed 
t o mean to us the coun try, the coiiHitions, the 
whole adventure of ouTchildhood. I'olipeak her 
name was~to call up pictures of people and 
places, to set a quiet drama going in one's brain. 
I had lost sight of her altogether, but Jim had 
found her again after long years, had renewed a 
friendship that meant a great deal to him, and 
out of his~busy life had set apart time enough to 
enjoy that friendship. His mind was full of her 
that day. He made me see her again, feel her 
presence, revived all my old affection for her. 

"I can't see," he said impetuously, "why you 
have never written anything about Antonia." 

I told him I had always felt that other people 
— he himself, for one — knew her much better 
than I. I was ready, however, to make an agree- 
ment with him; I would set down on paper all 
xii 



MY ANTONIA 

that I remembered of Antonia if he would do 
the same. We might, in this way, get a picture 
of her. 

He rumpled his hair with a quick, excited 
gesture, which with him often announces a new 
determination, and I could see that my sugges- 
tion took hold of him. "Maybe I will, maybe I 
will ! " he declared. He stared out of the window 
for a few moments, and when he turned to me 
again his eyes had the sudden clearness that 
comes from something the mind itself sees. "Of 
course," he said, " I should have to do it in a 
direct way, and say a great deal about myself. 
It's through myself that I knew and felt her, 
and I've had no practice in any other form of 
presentation." 

I told him that how he knew her and felt her 
was exactly what I most wanted to know about 
Antonia. He had had opportunities that I, as a 
little girl who watched her come and go, had not. 

Months afterward Jim Burden arrived at my 
apartment one stormy winter afternoon, with a 
bulging legal portfolio sheltered under his fur 
overcoat. He brought it into the sitting-room 
with him and tapped it with some pride as he 
stood warming his hands. 

"I finished it last night — the thing about 
Antonia," he said. "Now, what about yours?" 
xiii 



MY ANTONIA 

I had to confess that mine had not gone be- 
yond a few straggling notes. 

"Notes? I did n't make any." He drank his 
tea all at once and put down the cup. "I did n't 
arrange or rearrange. I simply wrote down 
what of herself and myself and other people 
Antonia's name recalls to me. I suppose it hasn't 
any form. It has n't any title, either." He went 
into the next room, sat down at my desk and 
wrote on the pinkish face of the portfolio the 
word, " Antonia."'He frowned at this a moment, 
then prefixed another word, making it "My 
Antonia." That seemed to satisfy him. 

"Read it as soon as you can," he said, rising, 
"but don't let it influence your own story." 

My own story was never written, but the fol- 
lowing narrative is Jim's manuscript, substan- 
tially as he brought it to mc / 



MY AnTONIA 

Book I 
THE SHIMERDAS 



I FIRST heard of Antonia ^ on what seemed 
to me an interminable journey across the 
great midland plain of North America. I was 
ten years old then; I had lost both my father 
and mother within a year, and my Virginia 
relatives were sending me out to my grand- 
parents, who lived in Nebraska. I traveled 
in the care of a mountain boy, Jake Marpole, 
one of the " hands " on my father's old farm 
under the Blue Ridge, who was now going 
West to work for my grandfather. Jake's ex- 
perience of the world was not much wider than 
mine. He had never been in a railway train 
until the morning when we set out together 
to try our fortunes in a new world. 

1 The Bohemian name Antonia is strongly accented on 
the first syllable, like the English name Anthony, and the 
i is, of course, given the sound of long e. The name is 
pronounced An'-ton-ee-ah. 

3 



MY ANTONIA 

We went all the way in day-coaches, be- 
coming more sticky and grimy with each stage 
of the journey. Jake bought everything the 
newsboys offered him: candy, oranges, brass 
collar buttons, a watch-charm, and for me a 
" Life of Jesse James," which I remember as 
one of the most satisfactory books I have 
ever read. Beyond Chicago we were under the 
protection of a friendly passenger conductor, 
who knew all about the country to which 
we were going and gave us a great deal of 
advice in exchange for our confidence. He 
seemed to us an experienced and worldly man 
who had been almost everywhere; in his con- 
versation he threw out lightly the names of dis- 
tant States and cities. He wore the rings and 
pins and badges of different fraternal orders 
to which he belonged. Even his cuff-buttons 
were engraved with hieroglyphics, and he was 
more inscribed than an Egyptian obelisk. 
Once when he sat down to chat, he told us 
that in the immigrant car ahead there was a 
family from " across the water " whose des- 
tination was the same as ours. ' 

" They can't any of them speak English, 
except one little girl, and all she can say is 
* We go Black Hawk, Nebraska.' She 's not 

4 



THE SHIMERDAS 

much older than you, twelve or thirteen, 
maybe, and she 's as bright as a new dollar. 
Don't you want to go ahead and see her, 
Jimmy? She 's got the pretty brown eyes, 
too! " 

This last remark made me bashful, and I 
shook my head and settled down to " Jesse 
James." Jake nodded at me approvingly and 
said you were likely to get diseases from for- 
eigners. 

I do not remember crossing the Missouri 
River, or anything about the long day's jour- 
ney through Nebraska. Probably by that 
time I had crossed so many rivers that I 
was dull to them. The only thing very no- 
ticeable about Nebraska was that it was still, 
all day long, Nebraska. 

I had been sleeping, curled up in a red plush 
seat, for a long while when we reached Black 
Hawk. Jake roused me and took me by the 
hand. We stumbled down from the train to 
a wooden siding, where men were running 
about with lanterns. I could n't see any town, 
or even distant lights; we were surrounded 
by utter darkness. The engine was panting 
heavily after its long run. In the red glow 
from the fire-box, a group of people stood hud- 

5 



MY ANTONIA 

died together on the platform, encumbered by- 
bundles and boxes. I knew this must be the 
immigrant family the conductor had told us 
about. The woman wore a fringed shawl tied 
over her head, and she carried a little tin 
trunk in her arms, hugging it as if it were a 
baby. There was an old man, tall and stooped. 
Two half-grown boys and a girl stood holding 
oil-cloth bundles, and a little girl clung to 
her mother's skirts. Presently a man with a 
lantern approached them and began to talk, 
shouting and exclaiming. I pricked up my 
ears, for it was positively the first time I had 
ever heard a foreign tongue. 

Another lantern came along. A bantering 
voice called out: "Hello, are you Mr. Bur- 
den's folks ? If you are, it 's me you 're looking 
for. I'm Otto Fuchs. I'm Mr. Burden's 
hired man, and I 'm to drive you out. Hello, 
Jimmy, ain't you scared to come so far west? " 

I looked up with interest at the new face 
in the lantern light. He might have stepped 
out of the pages of " Jesse James." He wore 
a sombrero hat, with a wide leather band and 
a bright buckle, and the ends of his mustache 
were twisted up stiffly, like little horns. He 
looked lively and ferocious, I thought, and 

6 




ao 
was 



a 
lookv 



THE SHIMERDAS 

as if he had a history, A long scar ran across 
one cheek and drew the corner of his mouth 
tip in a sinister curl. The top of his left ear 
was gone, and his skin was brown as an In- 
dian's. Surely this was the face of a desper- 
ado. As he walked about the platform in his 
high-heeled boots, looking for our trunks, I 
saw that he was a rather slight man, quick 
and wiry, and light on his feet. He told us 
we had a long night drive ahead of us, and 
had better be on the hike. He led us to a 
hitching-bar where two farm wagons were 
tied, and I saw the foreign family crowding 
into one of them. The other was for us. Jake 
got on the front seat with Otto Fuchs, and I 
rode on the straw in the bottom of the wagon- 
box, covered up with a buffalo hide. The im- 
migrants rumbled off into the empty dark- 
ness, and we followed them. ' 
I tried to go to sleep, but the jolting made 
me bite my tongue, and I soon began to ache 
all over. When the straw settled down I had 
a hard bed. Cautiously I slipped from under 
the buffalo hide, got up on my knees and 
peered over the side of the wagon. There 
seemed to be nothing to see; no fences, no 
creeks or trees, no hills or fields. If there was 

7 



MY ANTONIA 

a road, I could not make it out in the faint 
starlight. There was nothing but land : not a 
country at all, but the material out of which 
countries are made. No, there was nothing 
but land — slightly undulating, I knew, be- 
cause often our wheels ground against the 
brake as we went down into a hollow and 
lurched up again on the other side. I had the 
feeling that the world was left behind, that 
we had got over the edge of it, and were out- 
side man's jurisdiction. I had never before 
looked up at the sky when there was not a 
familiar mountain ridge against it. But this 
was the complete dome of heaven, all there 
was of it. I did not believe that my dead 
father and mother were watching me from 
up there; they would still be looking for me 
at the sheep-fold down by the creek, or along 
the white road that led to the mountain pas- 
tures. I had left even their spirits behind 
me. The wagon jolted on, carrying me I 
knew not whither. I don't think I was home- 
sick. If we never arrived anywhere, it did not 
matter. Between that earth and that sky I 
felt erased, blotted out. I did not say my 
prayers that night: here, I felt, what would 
be would be. 



II 

I DO not remember our arrival at my grand- 
father's farm sometime before daybreak, after 
a drive of nearly twenty miles with heavy 
work-horses. When I awoke, it was after- 
noon. I was lying in a little room, scarcely 
larger than the bed that held me, and the 
window-shade at my head was flapping softly 
in a warm wind. A tall woman, with wrinkled 
brown skin and black hair, stood looking down 
at me; I knew that she must be my grand- 
mother. She had been crying, I could see, but 
when I opened my eyes she smiled, peered at me 
anxiously, and sat down on the foot of my bed. 
" Had a good sleep, Jimmy? " she asked 
briskly. Then in a very different tone she said, 
as if to herself, " My, how you do look like 
your father! " I remembered that my father 
had been her little boy; she must often have 
come to wake him like this when he overslept. 
" Here are your clean clothes," she went on, 
stroking my coverlid with her brown hand as 
she talked. " But first you come down to the 
kitchen with me, and have a nice warm bath 

9 



MY ANTONIA 

behind the stove. Bring your things; there 's 
nobody about." 

" Down to the kitchen " struck me as curi- 
ous; it was always " out in the kitchen" at 
home. I picked up my shoes and stockings 
and followed her through the living-room and 
down a flight of stairs into a basement. This 
basement was divided into a dining-room at 
the right of the stairs and a kitchen at the left. 
Both rooms were plastered and whitewashed 
— the plaster laid directly upon the earth 
walls, as it used to be in dugouts. The floor 
was of hard cement. Up under the wooden 
ceiling there were little half-windows with 
white curtains, and pots of geraniums and 
wandering Jew in the deep sills. As I entered 
the kitchen I sniffed a pleasant smell of gin- 
gerbread baking. The stove was very large, 
with bright nickel trimmings, and behind it 
there was a long wooden bench against the 
wall, and a tin washtub, into which grand- 
mother poured hot and cold water. When she 
brought the soap and towels, I told her that 
I was used to taking my bath without help. 

"Can you do your ears, Jimmy? Are you 
sure? Well, now, I call you a right smart little 
boy." 

lo 



THE SHIMERDAS 

It was pleasant there in the kitchen. The 
sun shone into my bath-water through the 
west half-window, and a big Maltese cat came 
up and rubbed himself against the tub, watch- 
ing me curiously. While I scrubbed, my grand- 
mother busied herself in the dining-room until 
I called anxiously, "Grandmother, I'm afraid 
the cakes are burning ! " Then she came laugh- 
ing, waving her apron before her as if she were 
shooing chickens. 

She was a spare, tall woman, a little stooped, 
and she was apt to carry her head thrust for- 
.ward in an attitude of attention, as if she were 
looking at something, or listening to some- 
thing, far away. As I grew older, I came to 
believe that it was only because she was so 
often thinking of things that were far away. 
She was quick-footed and energetic in all her 
movements. Her voice was high and rather 
shrill, and she often spoke with an anxious in- 
flection, for she was exceedingly desirous that 
everything should go with due order and de- 
corum. Her laugh, too, was high, and perhaps 
a little strident, but there was a lively intelli- 
gence in it. She was then fifty-five years old, 
a strong woman, of unusual endurance. 

After I was dressed I explored the long cellar 
II 



MY ANTONIA 

next the kitchen. It was dug out under the 
wing of the house, was plastered and ce- 
mented, with a stairway and an outside door 
by which the men came and went. Under one 
of the windows there was a place for them to 
wash when they came in from work. 

While my grandmother was busy about 
supper I settled myself on the wooden bench 
behind the stove and got acquainted with the 
cat — he caught not only rats and mice, but 
gophers, I was told. The patch of yellow sun- 
light on the floor traveled back toward the 
stairway, and grandmother and I talked about 
my journey, and about the arrival of the new 
Bohemian family; she said they were to be 
our nearest neighbors. We did not talk about 
the farm in Virginia, which had been her home 
for so many years. But after the men came 
in from the fields, and we were all seated at 
the supper-table, then she asked Jake about 
the old place and about our friends and neigh- 
bors there. 

My grandfather said little. When he first 
came in he kissed me and spoke kindly to me, 
but he was not demonstrative. I felt at once 
his deliberateness and personal dignity, and 
was a little in awe of him. The thing one im- 

12 



THE SHIMERDAS 

mediately noticed abotit him was his beauti- 
ful, crinkly, snow-white beard. I once heard a 
missionary say it was like the beard of an 
Arabian sheik. His bald crown only made it 
more impressive. 

Grandfather's eyes were not at all like those 
of an old man; they were bright blue, and 
had a fresh, frosty sparkle. His teeth were 
white and regular — so sound that he had 
never been to a dentist in his life. He had 
a delicate skin, easily roughened by sun and 
wind. When he was a young man his hair 
and beard were red; his eyebrows were still 
coppery. 

As we sat at the table Otto Fuchs and I kept 
stealing covert glances at each other. Grand- 
mother had told me while she was getting sup- 
per that he was an Austrian who came to this 
country a young boy and had led an adven- 
turous life in the Far West among mining- 
camps and cow outfits. His iron constitution 
was somewhat broken by mountain pneu- 
monia, and he had drifted back to live in a 
milder country for a while. He had relatives 
in Bismarck, a German settlement to the 
north of us, but for a year now he had been 
working for grandfather. 

13 



MY ANTONIA 

The minute supper was over, Otto took me 
into the kitchen to whisper to me about a 
pony down in the barn that had been bought 
for me at a sale; he had been riding him to find 
out whether he had any bad tricks, but he was 
a "perfect gentleman," and his name was 
Dude. Fuchs told me everything I wanted 
to know : how he had lost his ear in a Wyoming 
blizzard when he was a stage-driver, and how 
to throw a lasso. He promised to rope a steer 
for me before sundown next day. He got out 
his "chaps" and silver spurs to show them to 
Jake and me, and his best cowboy boots, with 
tops stitched in bold design — roses, and true- 
lover's knots, and undraped female figures. 
These, he solemnly explained, were angels. 

Before we went to bed Jake and Otto were 
called up to the living-room for prayers. 
Grandfather put on silver-rimmed spectacles 
and read several Psalms. His voice was so 
sympathetic and he read so interestingly that 
I wished he had chosen one of my favorite 
chapters in the Book of Kings. I was awed 
by his intonation of the word "Selah." "He 
shall choose our inheritance for us, the excellency 
of Jacob whom He loved. Selah." I had no idea 
what the word meant; perhaps he had not. 

H 



THE SHIMERDAS 

But, as he uttered it, it became oracular, the 
most sacred of words. 

Early the next morning I ran out of doors 
to look about me. I had been told that ours 
was the only wooden house west of Black 
Hawk — until you came to the Norwegian 
settlement, where there were several. Our 
neighbors lived in sod houses and dugouts — 
comfortable, but not very roomy. Our white 
frame house, with a story and half-story above 
the basement, stood at the east end of what I 
might call the farmyard, with the windmill 
close by the kitchen door. From the windmill 
the ground sloped westward, down to the 
barns and granaries and pig-yards. This slope 
was trampled hard and bare, and washed out 
in winding gullies by the rain. Beyond the 
corncribs, at the bottom of the shallow draw, 
was a muddy little pond, with rusty willow 
bushes growing about it. The road from the 
post-office came directly by our door, crossed 
the farmyard, and curved round this little 
pond, beyond which it began to climb the 
gentle swell of unbroken prairie to the west. 
There, along the western sky-line, it skirted a 
great cornfield, much larger than any field I 
had ever seen. This cornfield, and the sor- 

15 



MY ANTONIA 

ghum patch behind the barn, were the only 
broken land in sight. Everywhere, as far as 
the eye could reach, there was nothing but 
rough, shaggy, red grass, most of it as tall as L 
North of the house, inside the ploughed fire- 
breaks, grew a thick-set strip of box-elder 
trees, low and bushy, their leaves already 
turning yellow. This hedge was nearly a 
quarter of a mile long, but I had to look very 
hard to see it at all. The little trees were in- 
significant against the grass. It seemed as if 
the grass were about to run over them, and 
over the plum-patch behind the sod chicken- 
house. 

As I looked about me I felt that the grass 
was the country, as the water is the sea. The 
red of the grass made all the great prairie the 
color of wine-stains, I or of certain seaweeds 
when they are first washed up. And there was 
so much motion in it; the whole country 
seemed, somehow, to be running. 
• I had almost forgotten that I had a grand- 
mother, when she came out, her sunbonnet on 
her head, a grain-sack in her hand, and asked 
me if I did not want to go to the garden with 
her to dig potatoes for dinner. The garden, 
curiously enough, was a quarter of a mile from 

i6 



THE SHIMERDAS 

he house, and the way to it led up a shallow 
Iraw past the cattle corral. Grandmother 
:alled my attention to a stout hickory cane, 
;ipped with copper, which hung by a leather 
;hong from her belt. This, she said, was her 
•attlesnake cane. I must never go to the gar- 
len without a heavy stick or a corn-knife; she 
lad killed a good many rattlers on her way 
jack and forth. A little girl who lived on the 
Black Hawk road was bitten on the ankle 
ind had been sick all summer. 

I can remember exactly how the country 
looked to me as I walked beside my grand- 
ntiother along the faint wagon-tracks on that 
:arly September morning. Perhaps the glide 
Df long railway travel was still with me, for 
more than anything else I felt motion in the 
landscape; in the fresh, easy-blowing morning 
svind, and in the earth itself, as if the shaggy 
grass were a sort of loose hide, and underneath 
it herds of wild buffalo were galloping, gal- 
loping ... 

Alone, I should never have found the garden 
— except, perhaps, for the big yellow pumpkins 
that lay about unprotected by their withering 
vines — and I felt very little interest in it when 
I got there. I wanted to walk straight on 
17 



MY ANTONIA 

through the red grass and over the edge of 
the world, which could not be very far away. 
The light air about me told me that the 
world ended here: only the ground and sun 
and sky were left, and if one went a little 
farther there would be only sun and sky, and 
one would float off into them, like the tawny 
hawks which sailed over our heads making 
slow shadows on the grass. While grandmother 
took the pitchfork we found standing in one 
of the rows and dug potatoes, while I picked 
them up out of the soft brown earth and put 
them into the bag, I kept looking up at the 
hawks that were doing what I might so easily 
do. . 

When grandmother was ready to go, I said 
I would like to stay up there in the garden 
awhile. 

She peered down at me from under her sun- 
bonnet. "Are n't you afraid of snakes?" 
\ "A little," I admitted, "but I 'd like to stay 
anyhow." 

"Well, if you see one, don't have anything 
to do with him. The big yellow and brown 
ones won't hurt you; they're bull-snakes and 
help to keep the gophers down. Don't be 
scared if you see anything look out of that 
i8 



THE SHIMERDAS 

hole in the bank over there. That's a badger 
hole. He's about as big as a big 'possum, and 
his face is striped, black and white. He takes 
a chicken once in a while, but I won't let the 
men harm him. In a new country a body feels 
friendly to the animals. I like to have him 
come out and watch me when I'm at work." 

Grandmother swung the bag of potatoes 
over her shoulder and went down the path, 
leaning forward a little. The road followed 
the windings of the draw; when she came to 
the first bend she waved at me and disap- 
peared. I was left alone with this new feeling 
of lightness and content. 

I sat down in the middle of the garden, 
where snakes could scarcely approach unseen, 
and leaned my back against a warm yellow 
pumpkin. There were some ground-cherry 
bushes growing along the furrows, full of fruit. 
I turned back the papery triangular sheaths 
that protected the berries and ate a few. All 
about me giant grasshoppers, twice as big as 
any I had ever seen, were doing acrobatic 
feats among the dried vines. The gophers 
scurried up and down the ploughed ground. 
There in the sheltered draw-bottom the wind 
did not blow very hard, but I could hear it 

19 



MY ANTONIA 

singing its humming tune up on the level, and 
I could see the tall grasses wave. The earth 
was warm under me, and warm as I crumbled 
it through my fingers. Queer little red bugs 
came out and moved in slow squadrons around 
me. Their backs were polished vermilion, 
with black spots. I kept as still as I could. 
Nothing happened. I did not expect any- 
thing to happen. I was something that lay 
under the sun and felt it, like the pumpkins, 
and I did not want to be anything more. I 
was entirely happy. Perhaps we feel like that 
when we die and become a part of something 
entire, whether it is sun and air, or goodness 
and knowledge. At any rate, that is happi- 
ness; to be dissolved into something complete 
and great. When it comes to one, it comes as 
naturally as sleep. 



Ill 

On Sunday morning Otto Fuchs was to drive 
us over to make the acquaintance of our new 
Bohemian neighbors. We were taking them 
some provisions, as they had come to Uve on 
a wild place where there was no garden or 
chicken-house, and very little broken land. 
Fuchs brought up a sack of potatoes and a 
piece of cured pork from the cellar, and 
grandmother packed some loaves of Satur- 
day's bread, a jar of butter, and several 
pumpkin pies in the straw of the wagon-box. 
We clambered up to the front seat and jolted 
off past the little pond and along the road 
that climbed to the big cornfield. 

I could hardly wait to see what lay beyond 
that cornfield; but there was only red grass 
like ours, and nothing else, though from the 
high wagon-seat one could look off a long way. 
The road ran about like a wild thing, avoiding 
the deep draws, crossing them where they 
were wide and shallow. And all along it, wher- 
ever it looped or ran, the sunflowers grew; 
some of them were as big as little trees, with 

21 



MY ANTONIA 

great rough leaves and many branches which 
bore dozens of blossoms. They made a gold 
ribbon across the prairie. Occasionally one of 
the horses would tear off with his teeth a plant 
full of blossoms, and walk along munching it, 
the flowers nodding in time to his bites as he 
ate down toward them. 

The Bohemian family, grandmother told 
me as we drove along, had bought the home- 
stead of a fellow-countryman, Peter Krajiek, 
and had paid him more than it was worth. 
Their agreement with him was made before 
they left the old country, through a cousin 
of his, who was also a relative of Mrs, Shim- 
erda. The Shimerdas were the first Bohemian 
family to come to this part of the county. 
Krajiek was their only interpreter, and could 
tell them anything he chose. They could not 
speak enough English to ask for advice, or 
even to make their most pressing wants 
known. One son, Fuchs said, was well-grown, 
and strong enough to work the land; but the 
father was old and frail and knew nothing 
about farming. He was a weaver by trade; 
had been a skilled workman on tapestries and 
upholstery materials. He had brought his 
fiddle with him, which would n't be of much 

22 



THE SHIMERDAS 

use here, though he used to pick up money 
by it at home. 

"If they're nice people, I hate to think 
of them spending the winter in that cave of 
Krajiek's," said grandmother. "It's no better 
than a badger hole; no proper dugout at all. 
And I hear he's made them pay twenty dol- 
lars for his old cookstove that ain't worth 
ten." 

"Yes'm," said Otto; "and he's sold 'em his 
oxen and his two bony old horses for the 
price of good work-teams. I 'd have interfered 
about the horses — the old man can under- 
stand some German — if I'd 'a' thought it 
would do any good. But Bohemians has a 
natural distrust of Austrians." 

Grandmother looked interested. "Now, 
why is that, Otto.?" 

Fuchs wrinkled his brow and nose. "Well, 
ma'm, it's politics. It would take me a long 
while to explain." 

The land was growing rougher; I was told 
that we were approaching Squaw Creek, which 
cut up the west half of the Shimerdas' place 
and made the land of little value for farm- 
ing. Soon we could see the broken, grassy 
clay cliffs which indicated the windings of the 
23 



MY ANTONIA 

stream, and the glittering tops of the cotton- 
woods and ash trees that grew down in the 
raying. Some of the cottonwoods had already 
turned, and the yellow leaves and shining 
white bark made them look like the gold and 
silver trees in fairy tales. 

As we approached the Shimerdas' dwelling, 
I could still see nothing but rough red hillocks, 
and draws with shelving banks and long roots 
hanging out where the earth had crumbled 
away. Presently, against one of those banks, 
1 saw a sort of shed, thatched with the same 
wine-colored grass that grew everywhere. 
Near it tilted a shattered windmill-frame, that 
had no wheel. We drove up to this skeleton to 
tie our horses, and then I saw a door and win- 
dow sunk deep in the draw-bank. The door 
stood open, and a woman and a girl of fourteen 
ran out and looked up at us hopefully. A little 
girl trailed along behind them. The woman 
had on her head the same embroidered shawl 
with silk fringes that she wore when she had 
alighted from the train at Black Hawk. She 
was not old, but she was certainly not young. 
Her face was alert and lively, with a sharp 
chin and shrewd little eyes. She shook grand- 
mother's hand energetically. 
24 



THE SHIMERDAS 

"Very glad, very glad!" she ejaculated. 
Immediately she pointed to the bank out of 
which she had emerged and said, "House no 
good, house no good!" 

Grandmother nodded consolingly. "You'll 
get fixed up comfortable after while, Mrs. 
Shimerda; make good house," 

My grandmother always spoke in a very 
loud tone to foreigners, as if they were deaf. 
She made Mrs. Shimerda understand the 
friendly intention of our visit, and the Bohe- 
mian woman handled the loaves of bread and 
even smelled them, and examined the pies 
with lively curiosity, exclaiming, "Much good, 
much thank!" — and again she wrung grand- 
mother's hand. 

The oldest son, Ambro2, — they called it 
Ambrosch, — came out of the cave and stood 
beside his mother. He was nineteen years old, 
short and broad-backed, with a close-cropped, 
flat head, and a wide, flat face. His hazel eyes 
were little and shrewd, like his mother's, but 
more sly and suspicious; they fairly snapped 
at the food. The family had been living on 
corncakes and sorghvun molasses for three 
days. 

The little girl was pretty, but An-tonia — 

25 



MY ANTONIA 

they accented the name thus, strongly, when 
they spoke to her — was still prettier. I re- 
membered what the conductor had said about 
her eyes. They were big and warm and full 
of light, like the sun shining on brown pools 
in the wood. Her skin was brown, too, and 
in her cheeks she had a glow of rich, dark 
color. Her brown hair was curly and wild- 
looking. The little sister, whom they called 
Yulka (Julka), was fair, and seemed mild and 
obedient. While I stood awkwardly confront- 
ing the two girls, Krajiek came up from the 
barn to see what was going on. With him was 
another Shimerda son. Even from a distance 
one could see that there was something strange 
about this boy. As he approached us, he began 
to make uncouth noises, and held up his hands 
to show us his lingers, which were webbed to 
the first knuckle, like a duck's foot. When he 
saw me draw back, he began to crow delight- 
edly, "Hoo, hoo-hoo, hoo-hoo!" like a rooster. 
His mother scowled and said sternly, "Ma- 
rekl" then spoke rapidly to Krajiek in Bo- 
hemian. 

"She wants me to tell you he won't hurt 
nobody, Mrs. Burden. He was bom like that. 
The others are smart. Ambrosch, he make 
26 



THE SHIMERDAS 

good farmer." He struck Ambrosch on the 
back, and the boy smiled knowingly. 

At that moment the father came out of the 
hole in the bank. He wore no hat, and his 
thick, iron-gray hair was brushed straight 
back from his forehead. It was so long that it 
bushed out behind his ears, and made him 
look like the old portraits I remembered in 
Virginia. He was tall and slender, and his thin 
shoulders stooped. He looked at us under- 
standingly, then took grandmother's hand and 
bent over it. I noticed how white and well- 
shaped his own hands were. They looked 
calm, somehow, and skilled. His eyes were 
melancholy, and were set back deep under his 
brow. His face was ruggedly formed, but it 
looked like ashes — like something from which 
all the warmth and light had died out. Every- 
thing about this old man was in keeping with 
his dignified manner. He was neatly dressed. 
Under his coat he wore a knitted gray vest, 
and, instead of a collar, a silk scarf of a dark 
bronze-green, carefully crossed and held to- 
gether by a red coral pin. While Krajiek 
was translating for Mr. Shimerda, Antonia 
came up to me and held out her hand coax- 
ingly. In a moment we were running up 
27 



MY ANTONIA 

the steep drawside together, Yulka trotting 
after us. 

When we reached the level and could see the 
gold tree-tops, I pointed toward them, and 
Antonia laughed and squeezed my hand as if 
to tell me how glad she was I had come. We 
raced off toward Squaw Creek and did not 
stop until the ground itself stopped — fell 
away before us so abruptly that the next step 
would have been out into the tree-tops. We 
stood panting on the edge of the ravine, look- 
ing down at the trees and bushes that grew be- 
low us. The wind was so strong that I had to 
hold my hat on, and the girls' skirts were 
blown out before them. Antonia seemed to 
like it; she held her little sister by the hand 
and chattered away in that language which 
seemed to me spoken so much more rapidly 
than mine. She looked at me, her eyes fairly 
blazing with things she could not say. 

"Name? What name?" she asked, touching 
me on the shoulder. I told her my name, and 
she repeated it after me and made Yulka say 
it. She pointed into the gold cottonwood tree 
behind whose top we stood and said again, 
"What name?" 

, We sat down and made a nest in the 
28 



THE SHIMERDAS 

long red grass. Yulka curled up like a baby 
rabbit and played with a grasshopper. An- 
tonia pointed up to the sky and questioned 
me with her glance. I gave her the word, but 
she was not satisfied and pointed to my eyes. 
I told her, and she repeated the word, making 
■jt sound like "ice." She pointed up to the 
sky, then to my eyes, then back to the sky, 
with movements so quick and impulsive that 
she distracted me, and I had no idea what she 
wanted. She got up on her knees and wrung 
her hands. She pointed to her own eyes and 
shook her head, then to mine and to the sky, 
nodding violently. 

"Oh," I exclaimed, "blue; blue sky." 
She clapped her hands and murmured, 
"Blue sky, blue eyes," as if it amused her. 
While we snuggled down there out of the 
wind she learned a score of words. She was 
quick, and very eager. We were so deep in the 
grass that we could see nothing but the blue 
sky over us and the gold tree in front of us. It 
was wonderfully pleasant. After Antonia had 
said the new words over and over, she wanted 
to give me a little chased silver ring she wore 
on her middle finger. When she coaxed and 
insisted, I repulsed her quite sternly. I did n't 
29 



MY ANTONIA 

want her ring, and I felt there was something 
reckless and extravagant about her wishing 
to give it away to a boy she had never seen 
before. No wonder Krajiek got the better of 
these people, if this was how they behaved. 

While we were disputing about the ring, I 
heard a mournful voice calling, "An-tonia, 
An-tonial" She sprang up like a hare. "Tat- 
ineky Tatinek !" she shouted, and we ran to 
meet the old man who was coming toward us. 
Antonia reached him first, took his hand and 
kissed it. When I came up, he touched my 
shoulder and looked searchingly down into my 
face for several seconds. I became somewhat 
embarrassed, for I was used to being taken 
for granted by my elders. 

We went with Mr. Shimerda back to the 
dugout, where grandmother was waiting for 
me. Before I got into the wagon, he took a 
book out of his pocket, opened it, and showed 
me a page with two alphabets, one English and 
the other Bohemian. He placed this book in 
my grandmother's hands, looked at her en- 
treatingly, and said with an earnestness which 
I shall never forget, "Te-e-ach, te-e-ach my 
An-tonia!" 



IV 

On the afternoon of that same Sunday I took 
my first long ride on my pony, under Otto's 
direction. After that Dude and I went twice a 
week to the post-office, six miles east of us, and 
I saved the men a good deal of time by riding 
on errands to our neighbors. When we had to 
borrow anything, or to send about word that 
there would be preaching at the sod school- 
house, I was always the messenger. Formerly 
Fuchs attended to such things after working 
hours. 

All the years that have passed have not 
dimmed my memory of that first glorious 
autumn. The new country lay open before 
me : there were no fences in those days, and I 
could choose my own way over the grass up- 
lands, trusting the pony to get me home again. 
Sometimes I followed the sunflower-bordered 
roads. Fuchs told me that the sunflowers were 
introduced into that country by the Mormons ; 
that at the time of the persecution, when they 
left Missouri and struck out into the wilder- 
ness to find a place where they could worship 

31 



MY ANTONIA 

God in their own way, the members of the 
6rst exploring party, crossing the plains to 
Utah, scattered sunflower seed as they went. 
The next summer, when the long trains of 
wagons came through with all the women and 
children, they had the sunflower trail to fol- 
low. I believe that botanists do not confirm 
Jake's story, but insist that the sunflower was 
native to those plains. Nevertheless, that 
legend has stuck in my mind, and sunflower- 
bordered roads always seem to me the roads 
to freedom. 

I used to love to drift along the pale yellow 
cornfields, looking for the damp spots one 
sometimes found at their edges, where the 
smartweed soon turned a rich copper color and 
the narrow brown leaves hung curled like co- 
coons about the swollen joints of the stem. 
Sometimes I went south to visit our German 
neighbors and to admire their catalpa grove, 
or to see the big elm tree that grew up out of a 
deep crack in the earth and had a hawk's nest 
in its branches. Trees were so rare in that 
country, and they had to make such a hard 
fight to grow, that we used to feel anxious 
about them, and visit them as if they were 
persons. It must have been the scarcity of 
32 



THE SHIMERDAS 

detail in that tawny landscape that made de- 
tail so precious. 

Sometimes I rode north to the big prairie- 
dog town to watch the brown, earth-owls fly 
home in the late afternoon and go down to 
their nests underground with the dogs. An- 
tonia Shimerda liked to go with me, and we 
used to wonder a great deal about these birds 
of subterranean habit. We had to be on our 
guard there, for rattlesnakes were always lurk- 
ing about. They came to pick up an easy 
living among the dogs and owls, which were 
quite defenseless against them; took posses- 
sion of their comfortable houses and ate the 
eggs and puppies. We felt sorry for the owls. 
It was always mournful to see them come fly- 
ing home at sunset and disappear under the 
earth. But, after all, we felt, winged things 
who would live like that must be rather de- 
graded creatures. The dog-town was a long 
way from any pond or creek. Otto Fuchs 
said he had seen populous dog-towns in the 
desert where there was no surface water 
for fifty miles; he insisted that some of the 
holes must go down to water — nearly two 
hundred feet, hereabouts. Antonia said she 
didn't believe it; that the dogs probably 
33 



MY ANTONIA 

lapped up the dew in the early morning, like 
the rabbits. 

Antonia had opinions about everything, and 
she was soon able to make them known. Al- 
most every day she came running across the 
prairie to have her reading lesson with me. 
Mrs. Shimerda grumbled, but realized it was 
•important that one member of the family 
should learn English. When the lesson was 
over, we used to go up to the watermelon patch 
behind the garden. I split the melons with an 
old corn-knife, and we lifted out the hearts and 
ate them with the juice trickling through our 
fingers. The white Christmas melons we did 
not touch, but we watched them with curios- 
ity. They were to be picked late, when the 
hard frosts had set in, and put away for winter 
use. After weeks on the ocean, the Shimerdas 
were famished for fruit. The two girls would 
wander for miles along the edge of the corn- 
fields, hunting for ground-cherries. 

Antonia lov ed to h elp grandmother in the 
kitchen and ti^eara^out cooking and house- 
keeping. She would stand beside her, watch- 
ing her every movement. We were willing to 
believe that Mrs. Shimerda was a good house- 
wife in her own country, but she managed 
34 



THE SHIMERDAS 

poorly under new conditions: the conditions 
were bad enough, certainly! 

I remember how horrified we were at the 
sour, ashy-gray bread she gave her family to 
eat. She mixed her dough, we discovered, in 
an old tin peck-measure that Krajiek had used 
about the bam. When she took the paste out 
to bake it, she left smears of dough sticking to 
the sides of the measure, put the measiire on 
the shelf behind the stove, and let this residue 
ferment. The next time she made bread, she 
scraped this sour stuff down into the fresh 
dough to serve as yeast. 

During those first months the Shimerdas 
never went to town. Krajiek encouraged them 
in the belief that in Black Hawk they would 
somehow be mysteriously separated from their 
money .\ They hated Krajiek, but they clung to 
him because he was the only human being 
/With whom they could talk or from whoni..tliey_ 
"could get information. He slept with the old 
man and the two boys in the dugout bam, 
along with the oxen. They kept him in their 
hole and fed him for the same reason that the 
prairie dogs and the brown owls housed the 
rattlesnakes — because they did not know 
how to get rid of him. 



V 

We knew that things were hard for our Bohe- 
mian neighbors, but the two girls were light- 
hearted and never complained. They were 
always ready to forget their troubles at home, 
and to run away with me over the prairie, 
scaring rabbits or starting up flocks of quail. 

I remember Antonia's excitement when she 
came into our kitchen one afternoon and an- 
nounced: "My papa find friends up north, 
with Russian mans. Last night he take me for 
see, and I can understand very much talk. 
Nice mans, Mrs. Burden. One is fat and all 
the time' laugh. Everybody laugh. The first 
time I see my papa laugh in this kawn-tree. 
Oh, very nice!" 

I asked her if she meant the two Russians 
who lived up by the big dog-town. I had often 
been tempted to go to see them when I was 
riding in that direction, but one of them was a 
wild-looking fellow and I was a little afraid 
of him. Russia seemed to me more remote 
than any other country — farther away than 
China, almost as far as the North Pole. Of 
36 



THE SHIMERDAS 

all the strange, uprooted people among the 
first settlers, those two men were the strang- 
est and the most aloof. Their last names 
were unpronounceable, so they were called 
Pavel and Peter. They went about making 
signs to people, and until the Shimerdas came 
they had no friends. Krajiek could understand 
them a little, but he had cheated them in a 
trade, so they avoided him. Pavel, the tall 
one, was said to be an anarchist; since he had 
no means of imparting his opinions, probably 
his wild gesticulations and his generally excited 
and rebellious manner gave rise to this supposi- 
tion. He must once have been a very strong 
man, but now his great frame, with big, knotty 
joints, had a wasted look, and the skin was 
drawn tight over his high cheek-bones. His 
breathing was hoarse, and he always had a 
cough. 

Peter, his companion, was a very different 
sort of fellow; short, bow-legged, and as fat as 
butter. He always seemed pleased when hq 
met people on the road, smiled and took off 
his cap to every one, men as well as women. 
At a distance, on his wagon, he looked like an 
old man; his hair and beard were of such a 
pale flaxen color that they seemed white in 
37 



MY ANTONIA 

the sun. They were as thick and curly as 
carded wool. His rosy face, with its snub 
nose, set in this fleece, was like a melon among 
its leaves. He was usually called "Curly 
Peter," or "Rooshian Peter." 

The two Russians made good farmhands, 
and in summer they worked out together. I 
had heard our neighbors laughing when they 
told how Peter always had to go home at 
night to milk his cow. Other bachelor home- 
steaders used canned milk, to save trouble. 
Sometimes Peter came to church at the sod 
schoolhouse. It was there J first saw him, 
sitting on a low bench by the door, his plush 
cap in his hands, his bare feet tucked apolo- 
getically under the seat. 

After Mr. Shimerda discovered the Rus- 
sians, he went to see them almost every eve- 
ning, and sometimes took Antonia with him. 
She said they came from a part of Russia 
where the language was not very different 
from Bohemian, and if I wanted to go to their 
place, she could talk to them for me. One 
afternoon, before the heavy frosts began, we 
rode up there together on my pony. 

The Russians had a neat log house built on 
a grassy slope, with a windlass well beside the 
38 



THE SHIMERDAS 

door. As we rode up the draw we skirted a big 
melon patch, and a garden where squashes 
and yellow cucumbers lay about on the sod. 
We found Peter out behind his kitchen, bend- 
ing over a washtub. He was working so hard 
that he did not hear us coming. His whole 
body moved up and down as he rubbed, and 
he was a funny sight from the rear, with 
his shaggy head and bandy legs. When he 
straightened himself up to greet us, drops of 
perspiration were rolling from his thick nose 
down on to his curly beard. Peter dried his 
hands and seemed glad to leave his washing. 
He took us down to see his chickens, and his 
cow that was grazing on the hillside. He told 
Antonia that in his country only rich people 
had cows, but here any man could have one 
who would take care of her. The milk was 
good for Pavel, who was often sick, and he 
could make butter by beating sour cream with 
a wooden spoon. Peter was very fond of his 
cow. He patted her flanks and talked to her 
in Russian while he pulled up her lariat pin 
and set it in a new place. 

After he had shown us his garden, Peter 
trundled a load of watermelons up the hill in 
his wheelbarrow._ Pavel was not at home. He 
39 



MY ANTONIA 

was off somewhere helping to dig a well. The 
house I thought very comfortable for two men 
who were "batching." Besides the kitchen, 
there was a living-room, with a wide double 
bed built against the wall, properly made up 
with blue gingham sheets and pillows. There 
was a little storeroom, too, with a window, 
where they kept guns and saddles and tools, 
and old coats and boots. That day the floor 
was covered with garden things, drying for 
winter; com and beans and fat yellow cucum- 
bers. There were no screens or window-blinds 
in the house, and all the doors and windows 
stood wide open, letting in flies and sunshine 
alike. 

Peter put the melons in a row on the oil- 
cloth-covered table and stood over them, 
brandishing a butcher knife. Before the blade 
got fairly into them, they split of their own 
ripeness, with a delicious sound. He gave us 
knives, but no plates, and the top of the table 
was soon swimming with juice and seeds. I 
had never seen any one eat so many melons 
as Peter ate. He assured us that they were 
good for one — better than medicine; in his 
country people lived on them at this time of 
year. He was very hospitable and jolly. 
40 



THE SHIMERDAS 

Once, while he was looking at Antonia, he 
sighed and told us that if he had stayed at 
home in Russia perhaps by this time he would 
have had a pretty daughter of his own to cook 
and keep house for him. He said he had left 
his country because of a "great trouble." 

When we got up to go, Peter looked about 
in perplexity for something that would enter- 
tain us. He ran into the storeroom and brought 
out a gaudily painted harmonica, sat down on 
a bench, and spreading his fat legs apart be- 
gan to play like a whole band. The tunes were 
either very lively or very doleful, and he sang 
words to some of them. 

Before we left, Peter put ripe cucumbers 
into a sack for Mrs. Shimerda and gave us a 
lard-pail full of milk to cook them in. I had 
never heard of cooking cucumbers, but Anto- 
nia assured me they were very good. We had 
to walk the pony all the way home to keep 
from spilling the milk. 



VI 

One afternoon we were having our reading 
lesson on the warm, grassy bank where the 
badger lived. It was a day of amber sunlight, 
but there was a shiver of coming winter in the 
air, I had seen ice on the little horse-pond that 
morning, and as we went through the garden 
we found the tall asparagus, with its red ber- 
ries, lying on the ground, a mass of slimy green. 
Tony was barefooted, and she shivered in 
her cotton dress and was comfortable only 
when we were tucked down on the baked 
earth, in the full blaze of the sun. She could 
talk to me about almost anything by this time. 
That afternoon she was telling me how highly 
esteemed our friend the badger was in her part 
of the world, and how men kept a special kind 
of dog, with very short legs, to hunt him. 
Those dogs, she said, went down into the hole 
after the badger and killed him there in a ter- 
rific struggle underground; you could hear the 
barks and yelps outside. Then the dog dragged 
himself back, covered with bites and scratches, 
to be rewarded and petted by his master. She 
42 



THE SHIMERDAS 

knew a dog who had a star on his collar for 
every badger he had killed. 

The rabbits were unusually spry that after- 
noon. They kept starting up all about us, and 
dashing off down the draw as if they were 
playing a game of some kind. But the little 
buzzing things that lived in the grass were all 
dead — all but one. While we were lying there 
against the warm bank, a little insect of the 
palest, frailest green hopped painfully out of 
the buffalo grass and tried to leap into a bunch 
of bluestem. He missed it, fell back, and sat 
with his head sunk between his long legs, 
his antennse quivering, as if he were waiting 
for something to come and finish him. Tony 
made a warm nest for him in her hands; talked 
to him gayly and indulgently in Bohemian. 
Presently he began to sing for us — a thin, 
rusty little chirp. She held him close to her 
ear and laughed, but a moment afterward 
I saw there were tears in her eyes. She 
told me that in her village at home there was 
an old beggar woman who went about selling 
herbs and roots she had dug up in the forest. 
If you took her in and gave her a warm place 
by the fire, she sang old songs to the children 
in a cracked voice, like this. Old Hata, she 
43 



MY ANTONIA 

was called, and the children loved to see her 
coming and saved their cakes and sweets for 
her. 

When the bank on the other side of the draw 
began to throw a narrow shelf of shadow, we 
kiaew we ought to be starting homeward; the 
chill came on quickly when the sun got low, 
and Antonia's dress was thin. What were we 
to do with the frail little creature we had 
lured back to life by false pretenses? I offered 
my pockets, but Tony shook her head and 
carefully put the green insect in her hair, tying 
her big handkerchief down loosely over her 
curls. I said I would go with her until we could 
see Squaw Creek, and then turn and run home. 
We drifted along lazily, very happy, through 
the magical light of the late afternoon. 

All those fall afternoons were the same, 
but I never got used to them. As far as we 
could see, the miles of copper-red grass were 
drenched in sunlight that was stronger and 
fiercer than at any other time of the day. The 
blond cornfields were red gold, the haystacks 
turned rosy and threw long shadows. The 
whole prairie was like the bush that burned 
with fire and was not consumed. That hour 
always had the exultation of victory, of 
44 



THE SHIMERUAS 

triumphant ending, like a hero's death — 
heroes who died young and gloriously. It was 
a sudden transfiguration, a lifting-up of day. 

How many an afternoon Antonia and I have 
trailed along the prairie under that magnifi- 
cence! And always two long black shadows 
flitted before us or followed after, dark spots 
on the ruddy grass. 

We had been silent a long time, and the edge 
of the sun sank nearer and nearer the prairie 
floor, when we saw a figure moving on the edge 
of the upland, a gun over his shoulder. He was 
walking slowly, dragging his feet along as if 
he had no purpose. We broke into a run to 
overtake him. 

"My papa sick all the time," Tony panted 
as we flew. "He not look good, Jim." 

As we neared Mr. Shimerda she shouted, 
and he lifted his head and peered about. Tony 
ran up to him, caught his hand and pressed 
it against her cheek. She was the only one of 
his family who could rouse the old man from 
the torpor in which he seemed to live. He took 
the bag from his belt and showed us three rab- 
bits he had shot, looked at Antonia with a 
wintry flicker of a smile and began to tell her 
something. She turned to me. 
45 



MY ANTONIA 

"My taiinek make me little hat with the 
skins, little hat for win-ter!" she exclaimed 
joyfully. "Meat for eat, skin for hat," — she 
told off these benefits on her fingers. 

Her father put his hand on her hair, but she 
caught his wrist and lifted it carefully away, 
talking to him rapidly. I heard the name of 
old Hata. He untied the handkerchief, sepa- 
rated her hair with his fingers, and stood look- 
ing down at the green insect. When it began 
to chirp faintly, he listened as if it were a 
beautiful sound. 

I picked up the gun he had dropped; a queer 
piece from the old country, short and heavy, 
with a stag's head on the cock. When he saw 
me examining it, he turned to me with his far- 
away look that always made] me feel as if I 
were down at the bottom of a well. He spoke 
kindly and gravely, and Antonia translated : — 

"My tatinek say when you are big boy, he 
give you his gun. Very fine, from Bohemie. 
It was belong to a great man, very rich, like 
what you not got here; many fields, many 
forests, many big house. My papa play for 
his wedding, and he give my papa fine gun, 
and my papa give you." 

I was glad that this project was one of fu- 
46 




^ 















\\ yv 






.••-,<i 



y 



y-^ y^y-:' 








y/s- 







THE SHIMERDAS 

turity. There never were such people as the 
Shimerdas for wanting to give away every- 
thing they had. Even the mother was always 
offering' me things, though I knew she ex- 
pected substantial presents in return. We 
stood there in friendly silence, while the feeble 
minstrel sheltered in Antonia's hair went on 
with its scratchy chirp. The old man's smile, 
as he listened, was so full of sadness, of pity 
for things, that I never afterward forgot it. 
As the sun sank there came a sudden coolness 
and the strong smell of earth and drying 
grass. Antonia and her father went off hand 
in hand, and I buttoned up my jacket and 
raced my shadow home. 



VII 

Much as I liked Antonia, I hated a superior 
tone that she sometimes took with me. She 
was four years older than I, to be sure, and 
had seen more of the world; but I was a boy 
and she was a girl, and I resented her protect- 
ing manner. Before the autumn was over she 
began to treat me more like an equal and to 
defer to me in other things than reading les- 
sons. This change came about from an ad- 
venture we had together. 

One day when I rode over to the Shimerdas' 
I found Antonia starting off on foot for Rus- 
sian Peter's house, to borrow a spade Am- 
brosch needed. I offered to take her on the 
pony, and she got up behind me. There had 
been another black frost the night before, and 
the air was clear and heady as wine. Within a 
week all the blooming roads had been de- 
spoiled — hundreds of miles of yellow sun- 
flowers had been transformed into brown, 
rattling, burry stalks. 

We found Russian Peter digging his pota- 
toes. We were glad to go in and get warm 
48 



THE SHIMERDAS 

by his kitchen stove and to see his squashes 
and Christmas melons, heaped in the store- 
room for winter. As we rode away with the 
spade, Antonia suggested that we stop at 
the prairie-dog town and dig into one of the 
holes. We could find out whether they ran 
straight down, or were horizontal, like mole- 
holes; whether they had underground connec- 
tions; whether the owls had nests down there, 
lined with feathers. We might get some pup- 
pies, or owl eggs, or snake-skins. 

The dog-town was spread out over perhaps 
ten acres. The grass had been nibbled short 
and even, so this stretch was not shaggy and 
red like the surrounding country, but gray and 
velvety. The holes were several yards apart, 
and were disposed with a good deal of regu- 
larity, almost as if the town had been laid out 
in streets and avenues. One always felt that 
an orderly and very sociable kind of life was 
going on there. I picketed Dude down in a 
draw, and we went wandering about, looking 
for a hole that would be easy to dig. The 
dogs were out, as usual, dozens of them, sit- 
ting up on their hind legs over the doors of 
their houses. As we approached, they barked, 
shook their tails at us, and scurried under- 
49 



MY ANTONIA 

ground. Before the mouths of the holes were 
little patches of sand and gravel, scratched up, 
we supposed, from a long way below the sur- 
face. Here and there, in the town, we came 
on larger gravel patches, several yards away 
from any hole. If the dogs had scratched the 
sand up in excavating, how had they carried 
it so far.? It was on one of these gravel beds 
that I met my adventure. 

We were examining a big hole with two en- 
trances. The burrow sloped into the ground 
at a gentle angle, so that we could see where 
the two corridors united, and the floor was 
dusty from use, like a little highway over 
which much travel went. I was walking back- 
ward, in a crouching position, when I heard 
Antonia scream. She was standing opposite 
me, pointing behind me and shouting some- 
thing in Bohemian. I whirled round, and 
there, on one of those dry gravel beds, was the 
biggest snake I had ever seen. He was sunning 
himself, after the cold night, and he must have 
been asleep when Antonia screamed. When I 
turned he was lying in long loose waves, like a 
letter "W." He twitched and began to coil 
slowly. He was not merely a big snake, I 
thought — he was a circus monstrosity. His 
SO 



THE SHIMERDAS 

abominable muscularity, his loathsome, fluid 
motion, somehow made me sick. He was as 
thick as my leg, and looked as if millstones 
could n't crush the disgusting vitality out of 
him. He lifted his hideous little head, and 
rattled. I did n't run because I did n't think 
of it — if my back had been against a stone 
wall I could n't have felt more cornered. I 
saw his coils tighten — now he would spring, 
spring his length, I remembered. I ran up and 
drove at his head with my spade, struck him 
fairly across the neck, and in a minute he was 
all about my feet in wavy loops. I struck now 
from hate. Antonia, barefooted as she was, 
ran up behind me. Even after I had pounded 
his ugly head flat, his body kept on coiling 
and winding, doubling and falling back on it- 
self. I walked away and turned my back. I 
felt seasick. Antonia came after me, crying, 
"O Jimmy, he not bite you? You sure? Why 
you not run when I say?" 

"What did you jabber Bohunk for? You 
might have told me there was a snake behind 
me!" I said petulantly. 

"I know I am just awful, Jim, I was so 
scared." She took my handkerchief from my 
pocket and tried to wipe my face with it, but 

51 



MY ANTONIA 

I snatched it away from her. I suppose I 
looked as sick as I felt. 

"I never know you was so brave, Jim," she 
went on comfortingly. "You is just like big 
mans; you wait for him lift his head and then 
you go for him. Ain't you feel scared a bit? 
Now we take that snake home and show every- 
body. Nobody ain't seen in this kawn-tree so 
big snake like you kill." 

She went on in this strain until I began to 
think that I had longed for this opportunity, 
and had hailed it with joy. Cautiously we 
went back to the snake; he was still groping 
with his tail, turning up his ugly belly in the 
light. A faint, fetid smell came from him, and 
a thread of green liquid oozed from his crushed 
head. 

"Look, Tony, that's his poison," I said. 

I took a long piece of string from my pocket, 
and she lifted his head with the spade while I 
tied a noose around it. We pulled him out 
straight and measured him by my riding- 
quirt; he was about five and a half feet long. 
He had twelve rattles, but they were broken 
off before they began to taper, so I insisted 
that he must once have had twenty-four. I 
explained to Antonia how this meant that he 
S2 



THE SHIMERDAS 

was twenty-four years old, that he must have 
been there when white men first came, left on 
from buffalo and Indian times. As I turned 
him over I began to feel proud of him, to have 
a kind of respect for his age and size. He 
seemed like the ancient, eldest Evil. Certainly 
his kind have left horrible unconscious mem- 
ories in all warm-blooded life. When we 
dragged him down into the draw. Dude sprang 
off to the end of his tether and shivered all 
over — would n't let us come near him. 

We decided that Antonia should ride Dude 
home, and I would walk. As she rode along 
slowly, her bare legs swinging against the 
pony's sides, she kept shouting back to me 
about how astonished everybody would be. I 
followed with the spade over my shoulder, 
dragging my snake. Her exultation was con- 
tagious. The great land had never looked to 
me so big and free. If the red grass were full 
of rattlers, I was equal to them all. Neverthe- 
less, I stole furtive glances behind me now and 
then to see that no avenging mate, older and 
bigger than my quarry, was racing up from the 
rear. 

The sun had set when we reached our gar- 
den and went down the draw toward the 
53 



MY ANTONIA 

house. Otto Fuchs was the first one we met. 
He was sitting on the edge of the cattle-pond, 
having a quiet pipe before supper. Antonia 
called him to come quick and look. He did not 
say anything for a minute, but scratched his 
head and turned the snake over with his boot. 

"Where did you run onto that beauty, 
Jim?" 

"Up at the dog-town," I answered laconi- 
cally. 

"Kill him yourself? How come you to have 
a weepon?" 

"We'd been up to Russian Peter's, to bor- 
row a spade for Ambrosch." 

Otto shook the ashes out of his pipe and 
squatted down to count the rattles. "It was 
just luck you had a tool," he said cautiously. 
"Gosh! I would n't want to do any business 
with that fellow myself, unless I had a fence- 
post along. Your grandmother's snake-cane 
wouldn't more than tickle him. He could 
stand right up and talk to you, he could. Did 
he fight hard?" 

Antonia broke in: "He fight something aw- 
ful ! He is all over Jimmy's boots. I scream 
for him to run, but he just hit and hit that 
snake like he was crazy." 

54 



THE SHIMERDAS 

Otto winked at me. After Antonia rode on 
he said: "Got him in the head first crack, 
did n't you? That was just as well." 

We hung him up to the windmill, and when 
I went down to the kitchen I found Antonia 
standing in the middle of the floor, telling the 
story with a great deal of color. 

Subsequent experiences with rattlesnakes 
taught me that my first encounter was fortu- 
nate in circumstance. My big rattler was 
old, and had led too easy a life; there was not 
much fight in him. He had probably lived 
there for years, with a fat prairie dog for 
breakfast whenever he felt like it, a sheltered 
home, even an owl-feather bed, perhaps, and 
he had forgot that the world does n't owe rat- 
tlers a living. A snake of his size. In fighting 
trim, would be more than any boy could han- 
dle. So in reality it was a mock adventure; the 
game was fixed for me by chance, as it prob- 
ably was for many a dragon-slayer. I had been 
adequately armed by Russian Peter; the snake 
was old and lazy; and I had Antonia beside 
me, to appreciate and admire. 

That snake hung on our corral fence for 
several days; some of the neighbors came to 
see it and agreed that it was the biggest rattler 
55 



MY ANTONIA 

ever killed in those parts. This was enough for 
Antonia. She liked me better from that time 
on, and she never took a supercilious air with 
me again. I had killed a big snake — I was 
now a big fellow. 



VIII 

While the autumn color was growing pale on 
the grass and cornfields, things went badly 
with our friends the Russians. Peter told his 
troubles to Mr. Shimerda: he was unable to 
meet a note which fell due on the first of No- 
vember; had to pay an exorbitant bonus on 
renewing it, and to give a mortgage on his 
pigs and horses and even his milk cow. His 
creditor was Wick Cutter, the merciless Black 
Hawk money-lender, a man of evil name 
throughout the county, of whom I shall have 
more to say later. Peter could give no very 
clear account of his transactions with Cutter. 
He only knew that he had first borrowed two 
hundred dollars, then another hundred, then 
fifty — that each time a bonus was added to 
the principal, and the debt grew faster than 
any crop he planted. Now everything was 
plastered with mortgages. 

Soon after Peter renewed his note, Pavel 

strained himself lifting timbers for a new bam, 

and fell over among the shavings with such a 

gush of blood from the lungs that his fellow- 

57 



MY ANTONIA 

workmen thought he would die on the spot. 
They hauled him home and put him into his 
bed, and there he lay, very ill indeed. Mis- 
fortune seemed to settle like an evil bird on 
the roof of the log house, and to flap its wings 
there, warning human beings away. The Rus- 
sians had such bad luck that people were 
afraid of them and liked to put them out of 
mind. 

One afternoon Antonia and her father came 
over to our house to get buttermilk, and lin- 
gered, as they usually did, until the sun was 
low. Just as they were leaving, Russian Peter 
drove up. Pavel was very bad, he said, and 
wanted to talk to Mr. Shimerda and his 
daughter; he had come to fetch them. When 
Antonia and her father got into the wagon, I 
entreated grandmother to let me go with them: 
I would gladly go without my supper, I would 
sleep in the Shimerdas' barn and run home in 
the morning. My plan must have seemed very 
foolish to her, but she was often large-minded 
about humoring the desires of other people. 
She asked Peter to wait a moment, and when 
she came back from the kitchen she brought a 
bag of sandwiches and doughnuts for us. 

Mr. Shimerda and Peter were on the front 
58 



THE SHIMERDAS 

seat; Antonia and I sat in the straw behind 
and ate our lunch as we bumped along. After 
the sun sank, a cold wind sprang up and 
moaned over the prairie. If this turn in the 
weather had come sooner, I should not have 
got away. We burrowed down in the straw and 
curled up close together, watching the angry- 
red die out of the west and the stars begin to 
shine in the clear, windy sky. Peter kept sigh- 
ing and groaning. Tony whispered to me that 
he was afraid Pavel would never get well. We 
lay still and did not talk. Up there the stars 
grew magnificently bright. Though we had 
come from such different parts of the world, 
in both of us there was some dusky supersti- 
tion that those shining groups have their influ- 
ence upon what is and what is not to be. Per- 
haps Russian Peter, come from farther away 
than any of us, had brought from his land, 
too, some such belief. 

The little house on the hillside was so much 
the color of the night that we could not see it 
as we came up the draw. The ruddy window? 
guided us — the light from the kitchen stove, 
for there was no lamp burning. 

We entered softly. The man in the wide 
bed seemed to be asleep. Tony and I sat down 
59 



MY ANTONIA 

on the bench by the wall and leaned our arms 
on the table in front of us. The firelight flickr 
ered on the hewn logs that supported the 
thatch overhead. Pavel made a rasping sound 
when he breathed, and he kept moaning. We 
waited. The wind shook the doors and win- 
dows impatiently, then swept on again, sing-, 
ing through the big spaces. Each gust, as it 
bore down, rattled the panes, and swelled off 
like the others. They made me think of de- 
feated armies, retreating; or of ghosts who 
were trying desperately to get in for shelter, 
and then went moaning on. Presently, in 
one of those sobbing intervals between the 
blasts, the coyotes tuned up with their whin- 
ing howl; one, two, three, then all together — 
to tell us that winter was coming. This sound 
brought an answer from the bed, — a long 
complaining cry, — as if Pavel were having 
bad dreams or were waking to some old misery. 
Peter Hstened, but did not stir. He was sitting 
on the floor by the kitchen stove. The coy- 
otes broke out again; yap, yap, yap — then 
the high whine. Pavel called for something 
and struggled up on his elbow. 

"He is scared of the wolves," Antonia whis- 
pered to me. "In his country there are very 
60 



THE SHIMERDAS 

many, and they eat men and women." We 
slid closer together along the bench. 

I could not take my eyes off the man in the 
bed. His shirt was hanging open, and his 
emaciated chest, covered with yellow bristle, 
rose and fell horribly. He began to cough. 
Peter shuffled to his feet, caught up the tea- 
kettle and mixed him some hot water and 
whiskey. The sharp smell of spirits went 
through the room. 

Pavel snatched the cup and drank, then 
made Peter give him the bottle and slipped 
it under his pillow, grinning disagreeably, 
as if he had outwitted some one. His eyes fol- 
lowed Peter about the room with a contempt- 
uous, unfriendly expression. It seemed to 
me that he despised him for being so simple 
and docile. 

Presently Pavel began to talk to Mr. Shi- 
merda, scarcely above a whisper. He was 
telling a long story, and as he went on, An- 
tonia took my hand under the table and held 
it tight. She leaned forward and strained her 
ears to hear him. He grew more and more ex- 
cited, and kept pointing all around his bed, 
as if there were things there and he wanted 
Mr. Shimerda to see them. 
6i 



MY ANTONIA 

"It's wolves, Jimmy," Antonia whispered. 
"It's awful, what he says!" 

The sick man raged and shook his fist. He 
seemed to be cursing people who had wronged 
him. Mr. Shimerda caught him by the shoul- 
ders, but could hardly hold him in bed. At last 
he was shut off by a coughing fit which fairly 
choked him. He pulled a cloth from under his 
pillow and held it to his mouth. Quickly it 
was covered with bright red spots — I thought 
I had never seen any blood so bright. When 
he lay down and turned his face to the wall, 
all the rage had gone out of him. He lay pa- 
tiently fighting for breath, like a child with 
croup. Antonia's father uncovered one of his 
long bony legs and rubbed it rhythmically. 
From our bench we could see what a hollow 
case his body was. His spine and shoulder- 
blades stood out like the bones under the hide 
of a dead steer left in the fields. That sharp 
backbone must have hurt him when he lay 
on it. 

Gradually, relief came to all of us. What- 
ever it was, the worst was over. Mr. Shimerda 
signed to us that Pavel was asleep. Without 
a word Peter got up and lit his lantern. He 
was going out to get his team to drive us 
62 



THE SHIMERDAS 

home. Mr. Shimerda went with him. We sat 
and watched the long bowed back under the 
blue sheet, scarcely daring to breathe. 

On the way home, when we were lying in 
the straw, under the jolting and rattling An- 
tonia told me as much of the story as she 
could. What she did not tell me then, she 
told later; we talked of nothing else for days 
afterward. 

When Pavel and Peter were young men, 
living at home in Russia, they were asked to 
be groomsmen for a friend who was to marry 
the belle of another village. It was in the dead 
of winter and the groom's party went over to 
the wedding in sledges. Peter and Pavel drove 
in the groom's sledge, and six sledges followed 
with all his relatives and friends. 

After the ceremony at the church, the party 
went to a dinner given by the parents of the 
bride. The dinner lasted all afternoon; then 
it became a supper and continued far into the 
night. There was much dancing and drinking. 
At midnight the parents of the bride said 
good-bye to her and blessed her. The groom 
took her up in his arms and carried her out 
to his sledge and tucked her under the blan- 
63 



MY ANTONIA 

kets. He sprang in beside her, and Pavel 
and Peter (our Pavel and Peter!) took the 
front seat. Pavel drove. The party set out 
with singing and the jingle of sleigh-bells, 
the groom's sledge going first. All the drivers 
were more or less the worse for merry-making, 
and the groom was absorbed in his bride. 

The wolves were bad that winter, and every 
one knew it, yet when they heard the first 
wolf-cry, the drivers were not much alarmed. 
They had too much good food and drink in- 
side them. The first howls were taken up and 
echoed and with quickening repetitions. The 
wolves were coming together. There was no 
moon, but the starlight was clear on the snow. 
A black drove came up over the hill behind 
the wedding party. The wolves ran like 
streaks of shadow; they looked no bigger 
than dogs, but there were hundreds of them. 

Something happened to the hindmost 
sledge: the driver lost control, — he was prob- 
ably very drunk, — the horses left the road, 
the sledge was caught in a clump of trees, and 
overturned. The occupants rolled out over 
the snow, and the fleetest of the wolves sprang 
upon them. The shrieks that followed made 
everybody sober. The drivers stood up and 
64 



THE SHIMERDAS 

lashed their horses. The groom had the best 
team and his sledge was lightest — all the 
others carried from six to a dozen people. 

Another driver lost control. The screams 
of the horses were more terrible to hear than 
the cries of the men and women. Nothing 
seemed to check the wolves. It was hard to 
tell what was happening in the rear; the people 
who were falling behind shrieked as piteously 
as those who were already lost. The little 
bride hid her face on the groom's shoulder and 
sobbed. Pavel sat still and watched his horses. 
The road was clear and white, and the groom's 
three blacks went like the wind. It was only 
necessary to be calm and to guide them care- 
fully. 

At length, as they breasted a long hill, Peter 
rose cautiously and looked back. "There are 
only three sledges left," he whispered. 

"And the wolves?" Pavel asked. 

"Enough! Enough for all of us." 

Pavel reached the brow of the hill, but only 
two sledges followed him down the other side. 
In that moment on the hilltop, they saw be- 
hind them a whirling black group on the snow. 
Presently the groom screamed. He saw his 
father's sledge overturned, with his mother 
65 



MY ANTONIA 

and sisters. He sprang up as if he meant to 
jump, but the girl shrieked and held him back. 
It was even then too late. The black ground- 
shadows were already crowding over the heap 
in the road, and one horse ran out across the 
fields, his harness hanging to him, wolves at 
his heels. But the groom's movement had 
given Pavel an idea. 

They were within a few miles of their village 
now. The only sledge left out of six was not 
very far behind them, and Pavel's middle 
horse was failing. Beside a frozen pond some- 
thing happened to the other sledge; Peter saw 
it plainly. Three big wolves got abreast of the 
horses, and the horses went crazy. They tried 
to jump over each other, got tangled up in the 
harness, and overturned the sledge. 

When the shrieking behind them died away, 
Pavel realized that he was alone upon the fa- 
miliar road. "They still come? "he asked Peter. 

"Yes." 

"How many?" 

"Twenty, thirty — enough." 

Now his middle horse was being almost 

dragged by the other two. Pavel gave Peter 

the reins and stepped carefully into the back 

of the sledge. He called to the groom that 

66 



THE SHIMERDAS 

they must lighten — and pointed to the bride. 
The young man cursed him and held her 
tighter. Pavel tried to drag her away. In the 
struggle, the groom rose. Pavel knocked him 
over the side of the sledge and threw the girl 
after him. He said he never remembered ex- 
actly how he did it, or what happened after- 
ward. Peter, crouching in the front seat, saw 
nothing. The first thing either of them noticed 
was a new sound that broke into the clear air, 
louder than they had ever heard it before — 
the bell of the monastery of their own village, 
ringing for early prayers. 

Pavel and Peter drove into the village alone, 
and they had been alone ever since. They 
were run out of their village. Pavel's own 
mother would not look at him. They went 
away to strange towns, but when people 
learned where they came from, they were al- 
ways asked if they knew the two men who had 
fed the bride to the wolves. Wherever they 
went, the story followed them. It took them 
five years to save money enough to come to 
America. They worked in Chicago, Des 
Moines, Fort Wayne, but they were always 
unfortunate. When Pavel's health grew so 
bad, they decided to try farming. 
(^1 



MY ANTONIA 

Pavel died a few days after he unburdened 
his mind to Mr. Shimerda, and was buried 
in the Norwegian graveyard. Peter sold off 
everything, and left the country — went to 
be cook in a railway construction camp where 
gangs of Russians were employed. 

At his sale we bought Peter's wheelbarrow 
and some of his harness. During the auc- 
tion he went about with his head down, and 
never lifted his eyes. He seemed not to care 
about anything. The Black Hawk money- 
lender who held mortgages on Peter's live- 
stock was there, and he bought in the sale 
notes at about fifty cents on the dollar. Every 
one said Peter kissed the cow before she was 
led away by her new owner. I did not see 
him do it, but this I know: after all his furni- 
ture and his cook-stove and pots and pans 
had been hauled off by the purchasers, when 
his house was stripped and bare, he sat d6wn 
on the floor with his clasp-knife and ate all 
the melons that he had put away for winter. 
When Mr. Shimerda and Krajiek drove up in 
their wagon to take Peter to the train, they 
found him with a dripping beard, surrounded 
by heaps of melon rinds. 

The loss of his two friends had a depressing 
68 



THE SHIMERDAS 

effect upon old Mr. Shimerda. When he was 
out hunting, he used to go into the empty log 
house and sit there, brooding. This cabin was 
his hermitage until the winter snows penned 
him in his cave. For Antonia and me, the 
story of the wedding party was never at an 
end. We did not tell Pavel's secret to any one, 
but guarded it jealously — as if the wolves of 
the Ukraine had gathered that night long ago, 
and the wedding party been sacrificed, to give 
us a painful and peculiar pleasure. At night, 
before I went to sleep, I often found myself 
in a sledge drawn by three horses, dashing 
through a country that looked something like 
Nebraska and something like Virginia. 



IX 

The first snowfall came early in December. 
I remember how the world looked from our 
sitting-room window as I dressed behind the 
stove that morning: the low sky was like a 
sheet of metal; the blond cornfields had faded 
out into ghostliness at last; the little pond was 
frozen under its stiff willow bushes. Big white 
fiakes were whirling over everything and dis- 
appearing in the red grass. 

Beyond the pond, on the slope that climbed 
to the cornfield, there was, faintly marked in 
the grass, a great circle where the Indians used 
to ride. Jake and Otto were sure that when 
they galloped round that ring the Indians tor- 
tured prisoners, bound to a stake in the cen- 
ter; but grandfather thought they merely ran 
races or trained horses there. Whenever one 
looked at this slope against the setting sun, 
the circle showed like a pattern in the grass; 
and this morning, when the first light spray of 
snow lay over it, it came out with wonderful 
distinctness, like strokes of Chinese white on 
canvas. The old figure stirred me as it had 
70 



THE SHIMERDAS 

never done before and seemed a good omen 
for the winter. 

As soon as the snow had packed hard I be- 
gan to drive about the country in a clumsy 
sleigh that Otto Fuchs made for me by 
fastening a wooden goods-box on bobs. Fuchs 
had been apprenticed to a cabinet-maker in 
the old country and was very handy with 
tools. He would have done a better job if I 
had n't hurried him. My first trip was to the 
post-office, and the next day I went over to 
take Yulka and Antonia for a sleigh-ride. 

It was a bright, cold day. I piled straw and 
buffalo robes into the box, and took two hot 
bricks wrapped in old blankets. When I got 
to the Shimerdas' I did not go up to the house, 
but sat in my sleigh at the bottom of the draw 
and called. Antonia and Yulka came running 
out, wearing little rabbit-skin hats their father 
had made for them. They had heard about 
my sledge from Ambrosch and knew why I 
had come. They tumbled in beside me and we 
set off toward the north, along a road that 
happened to be broken. 

The sky was brilliantly blue, and the sun- 
light on the glittering white stretches of prai- 
rie was almost blinding. As Antonia said, the 
71 



MY ANTONIA 

whole world was changed by the snow; we 
kept looking in vain for familiar landmarks. 
The deep arroyo through which Squaw Creek 
wound was now only a cleft between snow- 
drifts — very blue when one looked down into 
it. The tree-tops that had been gold all the 
autumn were dwarfed and twisted, as if they 
would never have any life in them again. The 
few little cedars, which were so dull and dingy 
before, now stood out a strong, dusky green. 
The wind had the burning taste of fresh snow; 
my throat and nostrils smarted as if some 
one had opened a hartshorn bottle. The cold 
stung, and at the same time delighted one. 
My horse's breath rose like steam, and when- 
ever we stopped he smoked all over. The 
cornfields got back a little of their color under 
the dazzling light, and stood the palest possi- 
ble gold in the sun and snow. All about us 
the snow was crusted in shallow terraces, with 
tracings like ripple-marks at the edges, curly 
waves that were the actual impression of the 
stinging lash in the wind. 

The girls had on cotton dresses under their 
shawls; they kept shivering beneath the buf- 
falo robes and hugging each other for warmth. 
But they were so glad to get away from their 
72 



THE SHIMERDAS 

ugly cave and their mother's scolding that 
they begged me to go on and on, as far as Rus- 
sian Peter's house. The great fresh open, after 
the stupefying warmth indoors, made them 
behave like wild things. They laughed and 
shouted, and said they never wanted to go 
home again. Could n't we settle down and live 
in Russian Peter's house, Yulka asked, and 
could n't I go to town and buy things for us to 
keep house with? 

All the way to Russian Peter's we were ex- 
travagantly happy, but when we turned back, 
"=^ it must have been about four o'clock, — 
the east wind grew stronger and began to 
howl; the sun lost its heartening power and 
the sky became gray and somber. I took off 
my long woolen comforter and wound it 
around Yulka's throat. She got so cold that 
we made her hide her head under the buffalo 
robe. Antonia and I sat erect, but I held the 
reins clumsily, and my eyes were blinded by 
the wind a good deal of the time. It was grow- 
ing dark when we got to their house, but I re- 
fused to go in with them and get warm. I 
knew my hands would ache terribly if I went 
near a fire. Yulka forgot to give me back my 
comforter, and I had to drive home directly 
73 



MY ANTONIA 

against the wind. The next day I came down 
with an attack of quinsy, which kept me in 
the house for nearly two weeks. 

The basement kitchen seemed heavenly safe 
and warm in those days — like a tight little 
boat in a winter sea. The men were out in 
the fields all day, husking corn, and when they 
came in at noon, with long caps pulled down 
over their ears and their feet in red-lined over- 
shoes, I used to think they were like Arctic 
explorers. 

In the afternoons, when grandmother sat 
upstairs darning, or making husking-gloves, 
I read "The Swiss Family Robinson" aloud 
to her, and I felt that the Swiss family had 
no advantages over us in the way of an ad- 
venturous life. I was convinced that man^s 
strongest antagonist is the cold. I admired the 
pheerful zest with which grandmother went 
about keeping us warm and comfortable and 
well-fed. She often reminded me, when she 
was preparing for the return of the hungry 
men, that this country was not like Virginia, 
and that here a cook had, as she said, "very 
little to do with." On Sundays she gave us 
as much chicken as we could eat, and on other 
days we had ham or bacon or sausage meat. 
74 



THE SHIMERDAS 

She baked either pies or cake for us every day, 
unless, for a change, she made my favorite pud- 
ding, striped Avith currants and boiled in a bag. 

Next to getting warm and keeping warm, 
dinner and supper were the most interesting 
things we had to think about. Our lives cen- 
tered around warmth and food and the return 
of the men at nightfall. I used to wonder, when 
they came in tired from the fields, their feet 
numb and their hands cracked and sore, how 
they could do all the chores so conscientiously: 
feed and water and bed the horses, milk the 
cows, and look after the pigs. When supper 
was over, it took them a long while to get the 
cold out of their bones. While grandmother 
and I washed the dishes and grandfather 
read his paper upstairs, Jake and Otto sat on 
the long bench behind the stove, "easing" 
their inside boots, or rubbing mutton tallow 
into their cracked hands. 

Every Saturday night we popped com or 
made taffy, and Otto Fuchs used to sing, "For 
I Am a Cowboy and Know I 've Done Wrong," 
or, "Bury Me Not on the Lone Prairee." He 
had a good baritone voice and always led the 
singing when we went to church services at 
the sod schoolhouse. 

75 



MY ANTONIA 

I can still see those two men sitting on the 
bench; Otto's' close-clipped head and Jake's 
shaggy hair slicked flat in front by a wet 
comb. I can see the sag of their tired shoul- 
ders against the whitewashed wall. What 
good fellows they were, how much they knew, 
and how many things they had kept faith 
with! 

Fuchs had been a cowboy, a stage-driver, a 
bar-tender, a miner; had wandered all over 
that great Western country and done hard 
work everywhere, though, as grandmother 
said, he had nothing to show for it. Jake was 
duller than Otto. He could scarcely read, 
wrote even his name with difficulty, and 
he had a violent temper which sometimes 
made him behave like a crazy man — tore 
him all to pieces and actually made him ill. 
But he was so soft-hearted that any one could 
impose upon him. If he, as he said, "forgot 
himself" and swore before grandmother, he 
went about depressed and shamefaced all day. 
They were both of them jovial about the cold 
in winter and the heat in summer, always 
ready to work overtime and to meet emergen- 
cies. It was a matter of pride with them not 
to spare themselves. Yet they were the sort 
76 



THE SHIMERDAS 

of men who never get on, somehow, or do any- 
thing but work hard for a dollar or two a day. 

On those bitter, starlit nights, as we sat 
around the old stove that fed us and warmed 
us and kept us cheerful, we could hear the 
coyotes howling down by the corrals, and their 
hungry, wintry cry used to remind the boys 
of wonderful animal stories; about gray 
wolves and bears in the Rockies, wildcats and 
panthers in the Virginia mountains. Some- 
times Fuchs could be persuaded to talk about 
the outlaws and desperate characters he had 
known. I remember one funny story about 
himself that made grandmother, who was 
working her bread on the bread-board, laugh 
until she wiped her eyes with her bare arm, 
her hands being floury. It was like this : — ■ 

When Otto left Austria to come to America, 
he was asked by one of his relatives to look 
after a woman who was crossing on the same 
boat, to join her husband in Chicago. The 
woman started off with two children, but it 
was clear that her family might grow larger 
on the journey. Fuchs said he "got on fine 
with the kids," and liked the mother, though 
she played a sorry trick on him. In mid-ocean 
she proceeded to have not one baby, but three! 

77 



MY ANTONIA 

This event made Fuchs the object of unde- 
served notoriety, since he was traveling with 
her. The steerage stewardess was indignant 
with him, the doctor regarded him with sus- 
picion. The first-cabin passengers, who made 
up a purse for the woman, took an embar- 
rassing interest in Otto, and often inquired 
of him abojit his charge. When the triplets 
were taken ashore at New York, he had, as he 
said, "to carry some of them." The trip to 
Chicago was even worse than the ocean voy- 
age. On the train it was very diificult to get 
milk for the babies and to keep their bottles 
clean. The mother did her best, but no wo- 
man, out of her natural resources, could feed 
three babies. The husband, in Chicago, was 
working in a furniture factory for modest 
wages, and when he met his family at the sta- 
tion he was rather crushed by the size of it. 
He, too, seemed to consider Fuchs in some 
fashion to blame. "I was sure glad," Otto 
concluded, "that he did n't take his hard feel- 
ing out on that poor woman; but he had a 
sullen eye for me. all right! Now, did you ever 
hear of a young feller's having such hard luck, 
Mrs. Burden?" 
Grandmother told him she was sure the 
78 



THE SHIMERDAS 

Lord had remembered these things to his 
credit, and had helped him out of many a 
scrape when he didn't realize that he was 
being protected by Providence./ 



X 

For several weeks after my sleigh-ride, we 
heard nothing from the Shimerdas. My sore 
throat kept me indoors, and grandmother had 
a cold which made the housework heavy for 
her. When Sunday came she was glad to have 
a day of rest. One night at supper Fuchs told 
us he had seen Mr. Shimerda out hunting. 

"He's made himself a rabbit-skin cap, Jim, 
and a rabbit-skin collar that he buttons on 
outside his coat. They ain't got but one over- 
coat among 'em over there, and they take 
turns wearing it. They seem awful scared of j 
cold, and stick in that hole in the bank like ; 
badgers." 

"All but the crazy boy," Jake put in? "He 
never wears the coat. Krajiek says he's tur- 
rible strong and can stand anything. I guess 
rabbits must be getting scarce in this locality. 
Ambrosch come along by the cornfield yester- 
day where I was at work and showed me three 
prairie dogs he'd shot. He asked me if they 
was good to eat. I spit and made a face and 
took on, to scare him, but he just looked like 
80 



THE SHIMERDAS 

he was smarter 'n me and put 'em back in his 
sack and walked off." 

Grandmother looked up in alarm and spoke 
to grandfather. "Josiah, you don't suppose 
Krajiek would let them poor creatures eat 
prairie dogs, do you?" 

"You had better go over and see our 
neighbors to-morrow, Ejiunaline," he replied 
gravely. 

Fuchs put in a cheerful word and said prairie 
dogs were clean beasts and ought to be good 
for food, but their family connections were 
against them. I asked what he meant, and he 
grinned and said they belonged to the rat 
family. 

When I went downstairs in the morning, I 
found grandmother and Jake packing a ham- 
per basket in the kitchen. 

"Now, Jake," grandmother was saying, "if 
you can find that old rooster that got his comb 
froze, just give his neck a twist, and we'll take 
him along. There's no good reason why Mrs. 
Shimerda couldn't have got hens from her 
neighbors last fall and had a henhouse going 
by now. I reckon she was confused and did n't 
know where to begin. I 've come strange to a 
new country myself, but I never forgot hens 
8i 



MY ANTONIA 

are a good thing to have, no matter what you 
don't have." 

"Just as you say, mam," said Jake, "but I 
hate to think of Krajiek getting a leg of that 
old rooster." He tramped out through the 
long cellar and dropped the heavy door behind 
him. 

After breakfast grandmother and Jake and 
I bundled ourselves up and climbed into the 
cold front wagon-seat. As we approached the 
Shimerdas' we heard the frosty whine of the 
pump and saw Antonia, her head tied up and 
her cotton dress blown about her, throwing 
all her weight on the pump-handle as it went 
up and down. She heard our wagon, looked 
back over her shoulder, and catching up her 
pail of water, started at a run for the hole in 
the bank. 

Jake helped grandmother to the ground, 
saying he would bring the provisions after he 
had blanketed his horses. We went slowly up 
the icy path toward the door sunk in the 
drawside. Blue puffs of smoke came from the 
stovepipe that stuck out through the grass 
and snow, but the wind whisked them roughly 
away. 

Mrs. Shimerda opened the door before we 
82 



THE SHIMERDAS 

knocked and seized grandmother's hand. She 
did not say "How do!" as usual, but at once 
began to cry, talking very fast in her own lan- 
guage, pointing to her feet which were tied 
up in rags, and looking about accusingly at 
every one. 

The old man was sitting on a stump behind 
the stove, crouching over as if he were trying 
to hide from us. Yulka was on the floor at his 
feet, her kitten in her lap. She peeped out 
at me and smiled, but, glancing up at her 
mother, hid again. Antonia was washing pans 
and dishes in a dark corner. The cra2y boy 
lay under the only window, stretched on a 
gunnysack stuffed with straw. As soon as we 
entered he threw a grainsack over the crack at 
the bottom of the door. The air in the cave 
was stifling, and it was very dark, too. A 
lighted lantern, hung over the stove, threw 
out a feeble yellow glimmer. 

Mrs. Shimerda snatched off the covers of 
two barrels behind the door, and made us look 
into them. In one there were some potatoes 
that had been frozen and were rotting, in the 
other was a little pile of flou^r. Grandmother 
murmured something in embarrassment, but 
the Bohemian woman laughed scornfully, a 
83 



MY ANTONIA 

kind of whinny-laugh, and catching up an 
empty cofFee-pot from the shelf, shook it at us 
with a look positively vindictive. 

Grandmother went on talking in her polite 
Virginia way, not admitting their stark need 
or her own remissness, until Jake arrived with 
the hamper, as if in direct answer to Mrs. 
Shimerda's reproaches. Then the poor woman 
broke down. She dropped on the floor beside 
her crazy son, hid her face on her knees, and 
sat crying bitterly. Grandmother paid no 
heed to her, but called Antonia to come and 
help empty the basket. Tony left her corner 
reluctantly. I had never seen her crushed like 
this before. 

"You not mind my poor mamenka, Mrs. 
Burden. She is so sad," she whispered, as she 
wiped her wet hands on her skirt and took the 
things grandmother handed her. 

The crazy boy, seeing the food, began to 
make soft, gurgling noises and stroked his 
stomach. Jake came in again, this time with a 
sack of potatoes. Grandmother looked about 
in perplexity. 

"Have n't you got any sort of cave or cellar 
outside, Antonia ? This is no place to keep veg- 
etables. How did your potatoes get frozen?" 
84 



THE SHIMERDAS 

"We get from Mr. Bushy, at the post-ofEce, 
•—what he throw out. We got no potatoes, 
Mrs. Burden," Tony admitted mournfully. 

When Jake went out, Marek crawled along 
the floor and stuffed up the door-crack again. 
Then, quietly as a shadow, Mr. Shimerda 
came out from behind the stove. He stood 
brushing his hand over his smooth gray hair, 
as if he were trying to clear away a fog about 
his head. He was clean and neat as usual, with 
his green neckcloth and his coral pin. He took 
grandmother's arm and led her behind the 
stove, to the back of the room. In the rear 
wall was another little cave; a round hole, not 
much bigger than an oil barrel, scooped out in 
the black earth. When I got up on one of the 
stools and peered into it, I saw some quilts and 
a pile of straw. The old man held the lantern. 
"Yulka," he said in a low, despairing voice, 
"Yulka; my Antonia!" 

Grandmother drew back. "You mean they 
sleep in there, — your girls?" He bowed his 
head. 

Tony slipped under his arm. "It is very 
cold on the floor, and this is warm like the 
badger hole. I like for sleep there," she in- 
sisted eagerly. "My mamenka have nice bed, 
8S 



MY ANTONIA 

with pillows from our own geese in Bohemia. 
See, Jim?" She pointed to the narrow bunk 
which Krajiek had built against the wall for 
himself before the Shimerdas came. 

Grandmother sighed. "Sure enough, where 
would you sleep, dear! I don't doubt you're 
warm there. You'll have a better house after 
while, Antonia, and then you'll forget these 
hard times." 

Mr. Shimerda made grandmother sit down 
on the only chair and pointed his wife to a 
stool beside her. Standing before them with 
his hand on Antonia's shoulder, he talked in 
a low tone, and his daughter translated. He 
wanted us to know that they were not beg- 
gars in the old country; he made good wages, 
and his family were respected there. He left 
Bohemia with more than a thousand dollars 
in savings, after their passage money was 
paid. He had in some way lost on exchange 
in New York, and the railway fare to Ne- 
braska was more than they had expected. 
By the time they paid Krajiek for the land, 
and bought his horses and oxen and some old 
farm machinery, they had very little money 
left. He wished grandmother to know, how- 
ever, that he still had some money. If they 
86 



THE SHIMERDAS 

could get through until spring camcj, they 
would buy a cow and chickens and plant a 
garden, and would then do very well. Am- 
brosch and Antonia were both old enough to 
work in the fields, and they were willing to 
work. But the snow and the bitter weather 
had disheartened them all. 

Antonia explained that her father meant 
to build a new house for them in the spring; 
he and Ambrosch had already split the logs 
for it, but the logs were all buried in the 
snow, along the creek where they had been 
felled. 

While grandmother encouraged and gave 
them advice, I sat down on the floor with 
Yulka and let her show me her kitten. Marek 
slid cautiously toward us and began to exhibit 
his webbed fingers. I knew he wanted to 
make his queer noises for me — to bark like a 
dog or whinny like a horse, — but he did not 
dare in the presence of his elders. Marek was 
always trying to be agreeable, poor fellow, as 
if he had it on his mind that he must make up 
for his deficiencies. 

Mrs. Shimerda grew more calm and reason- 
able before our visit was over, and, while An- 
tonia translated, put in a word now and then 
87 



MY ANTONIA 

on her own account. The woman had a quick 
ear, and caught up phrases whenever she 
heard English spoken. As we rose to go, she 
opened her wooden chest and brought out a 
bag made of bed-ticking, about as long as a 
flour sack and half as wide, stuffed full of 
something. At sight of it, the crazy boy be- 
gan to smack his lips. When Mrs. Shimerda 
opened the bag and stirred the contents with 
her hand, it gave out a salty, earthy smell, 
very pungent, even among the other odors of 
that cave. She measured a teacup full, tied 
it up in a bit of sacking, and presented it cere- 
moniously to grandmother. 

"For cook," she announced. "Little now; 
be very much when cook," spreading out her 
hands as if to indicate that the pint would 
swell to a gallon. "Very good. You no have 
in this country. All things for eat better in 
my country." 

"Maybe so, Mrs. Shimerda," grandmother 
said drily. "I can't say but I prefer our bread 
to yours, myself." 

Antonia undertook to explain. '-'This very 

good, Mrs. Burden," — she clasped her hands 

as if she could not express how good, — "it 

make very much when you cook, like what 

88 



THE SHIMERDAS 

my mama say. Cook with rabbit, cook with 
chicken, in the gravy, — oh, so good!" 

All the way home grandmother and Jake 
talked about how easily good Christian people 
could forget they were their brothers' keepers. 

" I will say, Jake, some of our brothers and 
sisters are hard to keep. Where's a body to 
begin, with these people? They're wanting 
in everything, and most of all in horse-sense. 
Nobody can give 'em that, I guess. Jimmy, 
here, is about as able to take over a homestead 
as they are. Do you reckon that boy Am- 
brosch has any real push in him?" 

"He's a worker, all right, mam, and he's 
got some ketch-on about him; but he's a mean 
one. Folks can be mean enough to get on in 
this world; and then, ag'in, they can be too 
mean." 

That night, while grandmother was getting 
supper, we opened the package Mrs. Shimerda 
had given her. It was full of little brown chips 
that looked like the shavings of some root. 
They were as light as feathers, and the most 
noticeable thing about them was their pene- 
trating, earthy odor. We could not determine 
whether they were animal or vegetable. 

"They might be dried meat from some 
89 



MY ANTONIA 

queer beast, Jim. They ain't dried fish, and 
they never grew on stalk or vine. I 'm afraid 
of 'em. Anyhow, I should n't want to eat any- 
thing that had been shut up for months with 
old clothes and goose pillows." 

She threw the package into the stove, but I 
bit off a corner of one of the chips I held in my 
hand, and chewed it tentatively. I never for- 
got the strange taste; though it was many 
years before I knew that those little brown 
shavings, which the Shimerdas had brought 
so far and treasured so jealously, were dried 
mushrooms. They had been gathered, prob- 
ably, in some deep Bohemian forest 



XI 

During the week before Christmas, Jake was 
the most important person of our household, 
for he was to go to town and do all our Christ- 
mas shopping. But on the 2 1st of December, 
the snow began to fall. The flakes came down 
so thickly that from the sitting-room win- 
dows I could not see beyond the windmill — 
its frame looked dim and gray, unsubstantial 
like a shadow. The snow did not stop falling 
all day, or during the night that followed. The 
cold was not severe, but the storm was quiet 
and resistless. The men could not go farther 
than the barns and corral. They sat about 
the house most of the day as if it were Sun- 
day; greasing their boots, mending their sus- 
penders, plaiting whiplashes. 

On the morning of the 22d, grandfather an- 
nounced at breakfast that it would be impos- 
sible to go to Black Hawk for Christmas pur- 
chases. Jake was sure he could get through 
on horseback, and bring home our things in 
saddle-bags; but grandfather told him the 
roads would be obliterated, and a newcomer 
91 



MY ANTONIA 

in the country would be lost ten times oven 
Anyway, he would never allow one of his 
horses to be put to such a strain. , 

We decided to have a country Christmas, 
without any help from town. I had wanted 
to get some picture-books for Yulka and An- 
tonia; even Yulka was able to read a little 
now. Grandmother took me into the ice-cold 
storeroom, where she had some bolts of ging- 
ham and sheeting. She cut squares of cotton 
cloth and we sewed them together into a book. 
We bound it between pasteboards, which I 
covered with brilliant calico, representing 
scenes from a circus. For two days I sat at 
the dining-room table, pasting this book full 
of pictures for Yulka. We had files of those 
good old family magazines which used to pub- 
lish colored lithographs of popular paintings, 
and I was allowed to use some of these. I took 
"Napoleon Announcing the Divorce to Jo- 
sephine" for my frontispiece. On the white 
pages I grouped Sunday-School cards and 
advertising cards which I had brought from 
my "old country." Fuchs got out the old 
candle-moulds and made tallow candles. 
Grandmother hunted up her fancy cake-cut- 
ters and baked gingerbread men and roosters, 
92 



THE SHIMERDAS 

which we decorated with burnt sugar and red 
cinnamon drops. 

On the day before Christmas, Jake packed 
the things we were sending to the Shimerdas 
in his saddle-bags and set off on grandfather's 
gray gelding. When he mounted his horse at 
the door, I saw that he had a hatchet slung to 
his belt, and he gave grandmother a meaning 
look which told me he was planning a surprise 
for me. That afternoon I watched long and 
eagerly from the sitting-room window. At last 
I saw a dark spot moving on the west hill, 
beside the half-buried cornfield, where the sky 
was taking on a coppery flush from the sun 
that did not quite break through. I put on my 
cap and ran out to meet Jake. When I got to 
the pond I could see that he was bringing in a 
little cedar tree across his pommel. He used 
to help my father cut Christmas trees for me 
in Virginia, and he had not forgotten how 
much I liked them. 

By the time we had placed the cold, fresh- 
smelling little tree in a comer of the sitting- 
room, it was already Christmas Eve. After 
supper we all gathered there, and even grand- 
father, reading his paper by the table, looked 
up with friendly interest now and then. 
93 



MY ANTONIA 

The cedar was about five feet high and very 
shapely. We hung it with the gingerbread 
animals, strings of popcorn, and bits of candle 
which Fuchs had fitted into pasteboard sock- 
ets. Its real splendors, however, came from 
the most unlikely place in the world — from 
Otto's cowboy trunk. I had never seen any- 
thing in that trunk but old boots and spurs 
and pistols, and a fascinating mixture of yel- 
low leather thongs, cartridges, and shoemak- 
er's wax. From under the lining he now pro- 
duced a collection of brilliantly colored paper 
figures, several inches high and stiil enough 
to stand alone. They had been sent to him 
year after year, by his old mother in Austria. 
There was a bleeding heart, in tufts of paper 
lace; there were the three kings, gorgeously ap- 
pareled, and the ox and the ass and the shep- 
herds; there was the Baby in the manger, and a 
group of angels, singing; there were camels and 
leopards, held by the black slaves of the three 
kings. Our tree became the talking tree of the 
fairytale; legends and stories nestled like birds 
in its branches. Grandmother said it reminded 
her of the Tree of Knowledge. We put sheets 
of cotton wool under it for a snow-field, and 
Jake's pocket-mirror for a frozen lake. 
94 



THE SHIMERDAS 

I can see them now, exactly as they looked, 
working about the table in the lamplight: Jake 
with his heavy features, so rudely moulded 
that his face seemed, somehow, unfinished; 
Otto with his half-ear and the savage star that 
made his upper lip curl so ferociously under 
his twisted mustache. As I remember them, 
what unprotected faces they were; their very 
roughness and violence made them defense- 
less. These boys had no practiced manner 
behind which they could retreat and hold 
people at a distance. They had only their hard 
fists to batter at the world with. Otto was 
already one of those drifting, case-hardened 
laborers who never marry or have children of 
their own. Yet he was so fond of children! 



XII 

On Christmas morning, when I got down to 
the kitchen, the men were just coming in from 
their morning chores — the horses and pigs 
always had their breakfast before we did. 
Jake and Otto shouted "Merry Christmas"! 
to me, and winked at each other when they 
saw the waffle-irons on the stove. Grandfather 
came down, wearing a white shirt and his 
Sunday coat. Morning prayers were longer 
than usual. He read the chapters from St. 
Matthew about the birth of Christ, and as 
we listened it all seemed like something that 
had happened lately, and near at hand. In his 
prayer he thanked the Lord for the first 
Christmas, and for all that it had meant to the 
world ever since. He gave thanks for our food 
and comfort, and prayed for the poor and 
destitute in great cities, where the struggle 
for life was harder than it was here with us. 
Grandfather's prayers were often very inter- 
esting. He had the gift of simple and moving 
expression. Because he talked so little, his 
words had a peculiar force; they were not 
96 



THE SHIMERDAS 

worn dull from constant use. His prayers re- 
flected what he was thinking about at the 
time, and it was chiefly through them that 
we got to know his feelings and his views 
about things. 

After we sat down to our waffles and saus- 
age, Jake told us how pleased the Shimerdas 
had been with their presents; even Ambrosch 
was friendly and went to the creek with 
him to cut the Christmas tree. It was a soft 
gray day outside, with heavy clouds work- 
ing across the sky, and occasional squalls of 
snow. There were always odd jobs to be done 
about the barn on holidays, and the men were 
busy until afternoon. Then Jake and I played 
dominoes, while Otto wrote a long letter home 
to his mother. He always wrote to her on 
Christmas Day, he said, no matter where he 
was, and no matter how long it had been 
since his last letter. All afternoon he sat in 
the dining-room. He would write for a while, 
then sit idle, his clenched fist lying on the 
table, his eyes following the pattern of the oil- 
cloth. He spoke and wrote his own language 
so seldom that it came to him awkwardly. 
His effort to remember entirely absorbed him. 

At about four o'clock a visitor appeared: 
97 



MY ANTONIA 

Mr. Shimerda, wearing his rabbit-skin cap 
and collar, and new mittens his wife had 
knitted. He had come to thank us for the 
presents, and for all grandmother's kindness 
to his family. Jake and Otto joined us from 
the basement and we sat about the stove, 
enjoying the deepening gray of the winter af- 
ternoon and the atmosphere of comfort and 
security in my grandfather's house. This feel- 
ing seemed completely to take possession of 
Mr. Shimerda. I suppose, in the crowded 
clutter of their cave, the old man had come to 
believe that peace and order had vanished 
from the earth, or existed only in the old world 
he had left so far behind. He sat still and pas- 
sive, his head resting against the back of the 
wooden rocking-chair, his hands relaxed upon 
the arms. His face had a look of weariness 
and pleasure, like that of sick people when 
they feel relief from pain. Grandmother in- 
sisted on his drinking a glass of Virginia apple- 
brandy after his long walk in the cold, and 
when a faint flush came up in his cheeks, his 
features might have been cut out of a shell, 
they were so transparent. He said almost 
nothing, and smiled rarely; but as he rested 
there we all had a sense of his utter content. 
98 



THE SHIMERDAS 

As it grew dark, I asked whether I might 
light the Christmas tree before the lamp was 
brought. When the candle ends sent up their 
conical yellow flames, all the colored figures 
from Austria stood out clear and full of 
meaning against the green boughs. Mr. Shi- 
merda rose, crossed himself, and quietly knelt 
down before the tree, his head sunk forward. 
His long body formed a letter "S." I saw 
grandmother look apprehensively at grand- 
father. He was rather narrow in religious 
matters, and sometimes spoke out and hurt 
people's feelings. There had been nothing 
strange about the tree before, but now, with 
some one kneeling before it, — images, can- 
dles, . . . Grandfather merely put his finger- 
tips to his brow and bowed his venerable 
head, thus Protestantizing the atmosphere. 

We persuaded our guest to stay for supper 
with us. He needed little urging. As we sat 
down to the table, it occurred to me that he 
liked to look at us, and that our faces were 
open books to him. When his deep-seeing 
eyes rested on nie, I felt as if he were looking 
far ahead into the future for me, down the 
road I would have to travel. 

At nine o'clock Mr. Shimerda lighted one 
99 



MY ANTONIA 

of our lanterns and put on his overcoat and 
fur collar. He stood in the little entry hall, the 
lantern and his fur cap under his arm, shaking 
hands with us. When he took grandmother's 
hand, he bent over it as he always did, and 
said slowly, "Good wo-man!" He made the 
sign of the cross over me, put on his cap and 
went off in the dark. As we turned back to 
the sitting-room, grandfather looked at me 
searchingly. "The prayers of all good people 
are good," he said quietly. 



XIII 

The week foUomng Christmas brought in a 
thaw, and by New Year's Day all the world 
about us was a broth of gray slush, and the 
guttered slope between the windmill and the 
barn was running black water. The soft black 
earth stood out in patches along the roadsides. 
I resumed all my chores, carried in the cobs 
and wood and water, and spent the afternoons 
at the bam, watching Jake shell corn with a 
hand-sheller. 

One morning, during this interval of fine 
weather, Antonia and her mother rode over 
on one of their shaggy old horses to pay us a 
visit. It was the first time Mrs. Shimerda had 
been to our house, and she ran about exam- 
ining our carpets and curtains and furniture, 
all the while commenting upon them to her 
daughter in an envious, complaining tone. In 
the kitchen she caught up an iron pot that 
stood on the back of the stove and said : "You 
got many, Shimerdas no got." I thought it 
weak-minded of grandmother to give the pot 
to her. 

lOI 



MY ANTONIA 

After dinner, when she was helping to wash 
the dishes, she said, tossing her head: "You 
got many things for cook. If I got all things 
like you, I make much better." 

She was a conceited, boastful old thing, and 
even misfortune could not humble her. I was 
so annoyed that I felt coldly even toward 
Antonia and listened unsympathetically when 
she told me her father was not well. 

"My papa sad for the old country. He not 
look good. He never make music any more. 
At home he play violin all the time; for wed- 
dings and for dance. Here never. When I 
beg him for play, he shake his head no. Some 
days he take his violin out of his box and make 
with his fingers on the strings, like this, but 
never he make the music. He don't like this 
kawn-tree." 

"People who don't like this country ought 
to stay at home," I said severely. "We don't 
make them come here." 

"He not want to come, nev-er!" she burst 
out. "My mamenka make him come. AU the 
time she say: 'America big country; much 
money, much land for my boys, much hus- 
band for my girls.' My papa, he cry for leave 
his old friends what make music with him. He 

102 



THE SHIMERDAS 

love very much the man what play the long 
horn like this" — she indicated a slide trom- 
bone. "They go to school together and are 
friends from boys. But my mama, she want 
Ambrosch for be rich, with many cattle." 

"Your mama," I said angrily, "wants other 
people's things." 

"Your grandfather is rich," she retorted 
fiercely. "Why he not help my papa.? Am- 
brosch be rich, too, after while, and he pay 
back. He is very smart boy. For Ambrosch 
my mama come here." 

Ambrosch was considered the important 
person in the family. Mrs. Shimerda and 
Antonia always deferred to him, though he 
was often surly with them and contemptuous 
toward his father. Ambrosch and his mother 
had everything their own way. Though An- 
tonia loved her father more than she did any 
one else, she stood in awe of her elder brother. 

After I watched Antonia and her mother 
go over the hill on their miserable horse, carry- 
ing our iron pot with them, I turned to grand- 
mother, who had taken up her darning, and 
said I hoped that snooping old woman would 
n't come to see us any more. 

Grandmother chuckled and drove her bright 
103 



MY ANTONIA 

needle across a hole in Otto's sock. "She's 
not old, Jim, though I expect she seems old to 
you. No, I would n't mourn if she never came 
again. But, you see, a body never knows what 
traits poverty might bring out in 'em. It 
makes a woman grasping to see her children 
want for things. Now read me a chapter In 
'The Prince of the House of David.' Let's 
forget the Bohemians." 

We had three weeks of this mild, open 
weather. The cattle in the corral ate corn 
almost as fast as the men could shell it for 
them, and we hoped they would be ready for 
an early market. One morning the two big 
bulls, Gladstone and Brigham Young, thought 
spring had come, and they began to tease and 
butt at each other across the barbed wire that 
separated them. Soon they got angry. They 
bellowed and pawed up the soft earth with 
their hoofs, rolling their eyes and tossing their 
heads. Each withdrew to a far corner of his 
own corral, and then they made for each 
other at a gallop. Thud, thud, we could hear 
the impact of their great heads, and their 
bellowing shook the pans on the kitchen 
shelves. Had they not been dehorned, they 
would have torn each other to pieces. Pretty 
104 



THE SHIMERDAS 

soon the fat steers took it up and began butt- 
ing and horning each other. Clearly, the 
affair had to be stopped. We all stood by and 
watched admiringly while Fuchs rode into the 
corral with a pitchfork and prodded the bulls 
again and again, finally driving them apart. 

The big storm of the winter began on my 
eleventh birthday, the 20th of January. When 
I went down to breakfast that morning, Jake 
and Otto came in white as snow-men, beating 
their hands and stamping their feet. They 
began to laugh boisterously when they saw 
me, calling : — 

"You've got a birthday present this time, 
Jim, and no mistake. They was a full-grown 
blizzard ordered for you." 

All day the storm went on. The snow did 
not fall this time, it simply spilled out of 
heaven, like thousands of feather-beds being 
emptied. That afternoon the kitchen was a 
carpenter-shop; the men brought in their tools 
and made two great wooden shovels with long 
handles. Neither grandmother nor I could go 
out in the storm, so Jake fed the chickens and 
brought in a pitiful contribution of eggs. 

Next day our men had to shovel until noon 
to reach the barn — and the snow was still 
105 



MY ANTONIA 

falling! There had not been such a storm in 
the ten years my grandfather had lived in 
Nebraska. He said at dinner that we would 
not try to reach the cattle — they were fat 
enough to go without their com for a day or 
two; but to-morrow we must feed them and 
thaw out their water-tap so that they could 
drink. We could not so much as see the cor- 
rals, but we knew the steers were over there, 
huddled together under the north bank. Our 
ferocious bulls, subdued enough by this time, 
were probably warming each other's backs. 
"This '11 take the bile out of 'em!" Fuchs 
remarked gleefully. 

At noon that day the hens had not been 
heard from. After dinner Jake and Otto, their 
damp clothes now dried on them, stretched 
their stiff arms and plunged again into the 
drifts. They made a tunnel under the snow to 
the henhouse, with walls so solid that grand- 
mother and I could walk back and forth in it. 
We found the chickens asleep; perhaps they 
thought night had come to stay. One old 
rooster was stirring about, pecking at the 
soUd lump of ice in their water-tin. When we 
flashed the lantern in their eyes, the hens set 
up a great cackling and flew about clumsily, 
io6 



THE SHIMERDAS 

scattering down-feathers. The mottled, pin- 
headed guinea-hens, always resentful of cap- 
tivity, ran screeching out into the tunnel and 
tried to poke their ugly, painted faces through 
the snow walls. By five o'clock the chores 
were done — just when it was time to begin 
them all over again! That was a strange, un- 
natural sort of day. 



XIV 

On the morning of the 226. 1 wakened with a 
start. Before I opened my eyes, I seemed to 
know that something had happened. I heard 
excited voices in the kitchen — grandmother's 
was so shrill that I knew she must be almost 
beside herself. I looked forward to any new 
crisis with delight. What could it be, I won- 
dered, as I hurried into my clothes. Perhaps 
the bam had burned; perhaps the cattle had 
frozen to death; perhaps a neighbor was lost 
in the storm. 

Down in the kitchen grandfather was stand- 
ing before the stove with his hands behind 
him. Jake and Otto had taken off their boots 
and were rubbing their woolen socks. Their 
clothes and boots were steaming, and they 
both looked exhausted. On the bench behind 
the stove lay a man, covered up with a blan- 
ket. Grandmother motioned me to the dining- 
room. I obeyed reluctantly. I watched her 
as she came and went, carrying dishes. Her 
lips were tightly compressed and she kept 
whispering to herself: "Oh, dear Saviour!" 
"Lord, Thou knowest!" 
108 



THE SHIMERDAS 

Presently grandfather came in and spoke to 
me: "Jimmy, we will not have prayers this 
morning, because we have a great deal to do. 
Old Mr. Shimerda is dead, and his family are 
in great distress. Ambrosch came over here in 
the middle of the night, and Jake and Otto 
went back with him. The boys have had a 
hard night, and you must not bother them 
with questions. That is Ambrosch, asleep on 
the bench. Come in to breakfast, boys." 

After Jake and Otto had swallowed their 
first cup of coffee, they began to talk excitedly, 
disregarding grandmother's warning glances. 
I held my tongue, but I listened with all my 
ears. 

"No, sir," Fuchs said in answer to a ques- 
tion from grandfather, "nobody heard the 
gun go off. Ambrosch was out with the ox 
team, trying to break a road, and the women 
folks was shut up tight in their cave. When 
Ambrosch come in it was dark and he did n't 
see nothing, but the oxen acted kind of queer. 
One of 'em ripped around and got away from 
him — bolted clean out of the stable. His 
hands is blistered where the rope run through. 
He got a lantern and went back and found 
the old man, just as we seen him." 
109 



MY ANTONIA 

"Poor soul, poor soul!" grandmother 
groaned. "I'd like to think he never done it. 
He was always considerate and un-wishful to 
give trouble. How could he forget himself and 
bring this on us!" 

"I don't think he was out of his head for a 
minute, Mrs. Burden," Fuchs declared. "He 
done everything natural. You know he was 
always sort of fixy, and fixy he was to the 
last. He shaved after dinner, and washed his- 
self all over after the girls was done the dishes. 
Antonia heated the water for him. Then he 
put on a clean shirt and clean socks, and after 
he was dressed he kissed her and the little one 
and took his gun and said he was going out to 
hunt rabbits. He must have gone right down 
to the barn and done it then. He layed down 
on that bunk-bed, close to the ox stalls, where 
he always slept. When we found him, every- 
thing was decent except," — Fuchs wrinkled 
his brow and hesitated, — "except what he 
could n't nowise foresee. His coat was hung 
on a peg, and his boots was under the bed. 
He'd took off that silk neckcloth he always 
wore, and folded it smooth and stuck his pin 
through it. He turned back his shirt at the 
neck and rolled up his sleeves." 
no 



THE SHIMERDAS 

"I don't see how he could do it!" grand- 
mother kept saying. 

Otto misunderstood her. "Why, mam, it 
was simple enough; he pulled the trigger with 
his big toe. He layed over on his side and put 
the end of the barrel in his mouth, then he 
drew up one foot and felt for the trigger. He 
found it all right!" 

"Maybe he did," said Jake grimly. 
"There's something mighty queer about it." 

"Now what do you mean, Jake?" grand- 
mother asked sharply. 

"Well, mam, I found Krajiek's axe under 
the manger, and I picks it up and carries it 
over to the corpse, and I take my oath it just 
fit the gash in the front of the old man's face. 
That there Krajiek had been sneakin' round, 
pale and quiet, and when he seen me examinin' 
the axe, he begun whimperin', 'My God, man, 
don't do that!' 'I reckon I'm a-goin' to look 
into this,' says I. Then he begun to squeal like 
a rat and run about wringin' his hands. 
'They'll hang me!' says he. 'My God, they'll 
hang me sure!'" 

Fuchs spoke up impatiently. "Krajiek's 
gone silly, Jake, and so have you. The old 
man would n't have made all them prepara- 
III 



MY ANTONIA 

tions for Krajiek to murder him, would he? 
It don't hang together. The gun was right 
beside him when Ambrosch found him." 
. "Krajiek could 'a' put it there, couldn't 
he?" Jake demanded. 

Grandmother broke in excitedly: "See here, 
Jake Marpole, don't you go trying to add mur- 
der to suicide. We're deep enough in trouble. 
Otto reads you too many of them detective 
stories." 

"It will be easy to decide all that, Emma- 
line," said grandfather quietly. "If he shot 
himself in the way they think, the gash will be 
torn from the inside outward." 

"Just so it is, Mr. Burden," Otto affirmed. 
"I seen bunches of hair and stuff sticking to 
the poles and straw along the roof. They was 
blown up there by gunshot, no question." 

Grandmother told grandfather she meant 
to go over to the Shimerdas with him. 

"There is nothing you can do," he said 
doubtfully. "The body can't be touched until 
we get the coroner here from Black Hawk, and 
that will be a matter of several days, this 
weather." 

"Well, I can take them some victuals, any- 
way, and say a word of comfort to them poor 

112 



THE SHIMERDAS 

little girls. The oldest one was his darling, and 
was like a right hand to him. He might have 
thought of her. He's left her alone in a hard 
world." She glanced distrustfully at Am- 
brosch, who was now eating his breakfast at 
the kitchen table, 

Fuchs, although he had been up in the cold 
nearly all night, was going to make the long 
ride to Black Hawk to fetch the priest and the 
coroner. On the gray gelding, our best horse, 
he would try to pick his way across the coun- 
try with no roads to guide him. 

"Don't you worry about me, Mrs. Burden," 
he said cheerfully, as he put on a second pair 
of socks. "I 've got a good nose for directions, 
and I never did need much sleep. It's the gray 
I'm worried about. I'll save him what I can, 
but it'll strain him, as sure as I'm telling 
you!" 

"This is no time to be over-considerate of 
animals, Otto; do the best you can for your- 
self. Stop at the Widow Steavens's for dinner. 
She's a good woman, and she'll do well by 
you." 

After Fuchs rode away, I was left with Am- 
brosch. I saw a side of him I had not seen be- 
fore. He was deeply, even slavishly, devout. 
113 



MY ANTONIA 

He did not say a word all morning, but sat 
with his rosary in his hands, praying, now 
silently, now aloud. He never looked away 
from his beads, nor lifted his hands except 
to cross himself. Several times the poor boy 
fell asleep where he sat, wakened with a start, 
and began to pray again. 

No wagon could be got to the Shimerdas' 
until a road was broken, and that would be a 
day's job. Grandfather came from the bam 
on one of our big black horses, and Jake lifted 
grandmother up behind him. She wore her 
black hood and was bundled up in shawls. 
Grandfather tucked his bushy white beard in- 
side his overcoat. They looked very Biblical 
as they set off, I thought. Jake and Ambrosch 
followed them, riding the other black and my 
pony, carrying bundles of clothes that we had 
got together for Mrs. Shimerda. I watched 
them go past the pond and over the hill by 
the drifted cornfield. Then, for the first time, 
I realized that I was alone in the house. 

I felt a considerable extension of power and 
authority, and was anxious to acquit myself 
creditably. I carried in cobs and wood from 
the long cellar, and filled both the stoves. I 
remembered that in the hurry and excitement 
114 



THE SHIMERDAS 

of the morning nobody had thought of the 
chickens, and the eggs had not been gathered. 
Going out through the tunnel, I gave the hens 
their corn, emptied the ice from their drinking- 
pan, and filled it with water. After the cat 
had had his milk, I could think of nothing else 
to do, and I sat down to get warm. The quiet 
was delightful, and the ticking clock was the 
most pleasant of companions. I got "Robin- 
son Crusoe" and tried to read, but his life on 
the island seemed dull compared with ours. 
Presently, as I looked with satisfaction about 
our comfortable sitting-room, it flashed upon 
me that if Mr. Shimerda's soul were lingering 
about in this world at all, it would be here, in 
our house, which had been more to his liking 
than any other in the neighborhood. I remem- 
bered his contented face when he was with us 
on Christmas Day. If he could have lived 
with us, this terrible thing would never have 
happened. 

I knew it was homesickness that had killed 
Mr. Shimerda, and I wondered whether his 
released spirit would not eventually find its 
way back to his own country. I thought of 
how far it was to Chicago, and then to Vir- 
ginia, to Baltimore, — and then the great 



MY ANTONIA 

wintry ocean. No, he would not at once set 
out upon that long journey. Surely, his ex- 
hausted spirit, so tired of cold and crowding 
and the struggle with the ever-falling snow, 
was resting now in this quiet house. 

I was not frightened, but I made no noise. 
I did not wish to disturb him. I went softly 
down to the kitchen which, tucked away so 
snugly underground, always seemed to me the 
heart and center of the house. There, on the 
bench behind the stove, I thought and thought 
about Mr. Shimerda. Outside I could hear the 
wind singing over hundreds of miles of snow. 
It was as if I had let the old man in out of the 
tormenting winter, and were sitting there with 
him. I went over all that Antonia had ever 
told me about his life before he came to 
this country; how he used to play the fiddle 
at weddings and dances. I thought about the 
friends he had mourned to leave, the trom- 
bone-player, the great forest full of game, — 
belonging, as Antonia said, to the "nobles," — 
from which she and her mother used to steal 
wood on moonlight nights. There was a white 
hart that lived in that forest, and if any one 
killed it, he would be hanged, she said. Such 
vivid pictures came to me that they might 
ii6 



THE SHIMERDAS 

have been Mr. Shimerda's memories, not yet 
faded out from the air in which they had 
haunted him. 

It had begun to grow dark when my house- 
hold returned, and grandmother was so tired 
that she went at once to bed. Jake and I got 
supper, and while we were washing the dishes 
he told me in loud whispers about the state of 
things over at the Shimerdas'. Nobody could 
touch the body until the coroner came. If 
any one did, something terrible would hap- 
pen, apparently. The dead man was frozen 
through, "just as stiff as a dressed turkey 
you hang out to freeze," Jake said. The horses 
and oxen would not go into the bam until he 
was frozen so hard that there was no longer 
any smell of blood. They were stabled there 
now, with the dead man, because there was 
no other place to keep them, A lighted lan- 
tern was kept hanging over Mr. Shimerda's 
head. Antonia and Ambrosch and the mother 
took turns going down to pray beside him. 
The crazy boy went with them, because he did 
not feel the cold. I believed he felt cold as 
much as any one else, but he liked to be 
thought insensible to it. He was always covet- 
ing distinction, poor Marek! 
117 



MY ANTONIA 

Ambrosch, Jake said, showed more human 
feeling than he would have supposed him cap- 
able of; but he was chiefly concerned about 
getting a priest, and about his father's soul, 
which he believed was in a place of torment 
and would remain there until his family and 
the priest had prayed a great deal for him. 
"As I understand it," Jake concluded, "it will 
be a matter of years to pray his soul out of 
Purgatory, and right now he's in torment." 

"I don't believe it," I said stoutly. "I al- 
most know it is n't true." I did not, of course, 
say that I beUeved he had been in that very 
kitchen all afternoon, on his way back to his 
own country. Nevertheless, after I went to 
bed, this idea of punishment and PHirgatory 
came back on me crushingly. I remembered 
the account of Dives in torment, and shud- 
dered. But Mr. Shimerda had not been rich 
and selfish; he had only been so unhappy that 
he could not live any longer. 



XV 

Otto Fuchs got back from Black Hawk at 
noon the next day. He reported that the cor- 
oner would reach the Shimerdas' sometime 
that afternoon, but the missionary priest was 
at the other end of his parish, a hundred miles 
away, and the trains were not running. Fuchs 
had got a few hours' sleep at the livery bam in 
town, but he was afraid the gray gelding had 
strained himself. Indeed, he was never the 
same horse afterward. That long trip through 
the deep snow had taken all the endurance 
out of him. 

Fuchs brought home with him a stranger, a 
young Bohemian who had taken a homestead 
near Black Hawk, and who came on his only 
horse to help his fellow-countrymen in their 
trouble. That was the first time I ever saw 
Anton Jelinek. He was a strapping young 
fellow in the early twenties then, handsome, 
warm-hearted, and full of life, and he came to 
us like a miracle in the midst of that grim 
business. I remember exactly how he strode 
into our kitchen in his felt boots and long wolf- 
119 



MY ANTONIA 

skin coat, his eyes and cheeks bright with the 
cold. At sight of grandmother, he snatched 
off his fur cap, greeting her in a deep, rolling 
voice which seemed older than he. 

" I want to thank you very much, Mrs. Bur- 
den, for that you are so kind to poor strangers 
from my kawn-tree." 

He did not hesitate like a farmer boy, but 
looked one eagerly in the eye when he spoke. 
Everything about him was warm and spon- 
taneous. He said he would have come to see 
the Shimerdas before, but he had hired out to 
husk corn all the fall, and since winter began 
he had been going to the school by the mill, 
to learn English, along with the little children. 
He told me he had a nice " lady-teacher " and 
that he liked to go to school. 

At dinner grandfather talked to Jelinek 
more than he usually did to strangers. 

"Will they be much disappointed because 
we cannot get a priest?" he asked. 

Jelinek looked serious. "Yes, sir, that is very 
bad for them. Their father has done a great 
sin," he looked straight at grandfather. "Our 
Lord has said that." 

Grandfather seemed to like his frankness. 
"We believe that, too, Jelinek. But we be- 

I20 



THE SHIMERDAS 

Heve that Mr. Shimerda's soul will come to its 
Creator as well off without a priest. We be- 
lieve that Christ is our only intercessor." 

The young man shook his head. "I know 
how you think. My teacher at the school has 
explain. But I have seen too much. I believe 
in prayer for the dead. I have seen too much." 

We asked him what he meant. 

He glanced around the table. "You want 
I shall tell you ? When I was a little boy like 
this one, I begin to help the priest at the altar. 
I make my first communion very young; what 
the Church teach seem plain to me. By 'n' by 
war-times come, when the Austrians fight us. 
We have very many soldiers in camp near 
my village, and the cholera break out in that 
camp, and the men die like flies. All day long 
our priest go about there to give the Sacra- 
ment to dying men, and I go with him to carry 
the vessels with the Holy Sacrament. Every- 
body that go near that camp catch the sick- 
ness but me and the priest. But we have no 
sickness, we have no fear, because we carry 
that blood and that body of Christ, and it 
preserve us." He paused, looking at grand- 
father. "That I know, Mr. Burden, for it 
happened to myself. All the soldiers know, 

121 



MY ANTONIA 

too. When we walk along the road, the old 
priest and me, we meet all the time soldiers 
marching and officers on horse. All those 
officers, when they see what I carry under the 
cloth, pull up their horses and kneel down on 
the ground in the road until we pass. So I feel 
very bad for my kawntree-man to die without 
the Sacrament, and to die in a bad way for his 
soul, and I feel sad for his family." 

We had listened attentively. It was impos- 
sible not to admire his frank, manly faith. 

"I am always glad to meet a young man 
who thinks seriously about these things," said 
grandfather, "and I would never be the one 
to say you were not in God's care when you 
were among the soldiers." 

After dinner it was decided that young 
Jelinek should hook our two strong black 
farmhorses to the scraper and break a road 
through to the Shimerdas', so that a wagon 
could go when it was necessary. Fuchs, who 
was the only cabinet-maker in the neighbor- 
hood, was set to work on a coffin. 

Jelinek put on his long wolfskin coat, and 
when we admired it, he told us that he had 
shot and skinned the coyotes, and the young 
man who "batched" with him, Jan Bouska, 

122 



THE SHIMERDAS 

who had been a fur-worker in Vienna, made 
the coat. From the windmill I watched Jeli- 
nek come out of the bam with the blacks, and 
work his way up the hillside toward the corn- 
field. Sometimes he was completely hidden 
by the clouds of snow that rose about him; 
then he and the horses would emerge black 
and shining. 

*Our heavy carpenter's bench had to be 
brought from the bam and carried down into 
the kitchen. Fuchs selected boards from a 
pile of planks grandfather had hauled out from 
town in the fall to make a new floor for the 
oats bin. When at last the lumber and tools 
were assembled, and the doors were closed 
again and the cold drafts shut out, grand- 
father rode away to meet the coroner at the 
Shimerdas', and Fuchs took off his coat and 
settled down to work. I sat on his work-table 
and watched him. He did not touch his tools 
at first, but figured for a long while on a piece 
of paper, and measured the planks and made 
marks on them. While he was thus engaged, he 
whistled softly to himself, or teasingly pulled 
at his half-ear. Grandmother moved about 
quietly, so as not to disturb him. At last he 
folded his ruler and turned a cheerful face to us. 
123 



MY ANTONIA 

"The hardest part of my job's done," he 
announced. "It's the head end of it that 
comes hard with me, especially when I 'm out 
of practice. The last time I made one of 
these, Mrs. Burden," he continued, as he 
sorted and tried his chisels, "was for a fellow 
in the Black Tiger mine, up above Silverton, 
Colorado. The mouth of that mine goes right 
into the face of the cliff, and they used to put 
us in a bucket and run us over on a trolley 
and shoot us into the shaft. The bucket trav- 
eled across a box caiion three hundred feet 
deep, and about a third full of water. Two 
Swedes had fell out of that bucket once, and 
hit the water, feet down. If you '11 believe it, 
they went to work the next day. You can't 
kill a Swede. But in my time a little Eye- 
talian tried the high dive, and it turned out 
different with him. We was snowed in then, 
like we are now, and I happened to be the only 
man in camp that could make a coffin for him. 
It's a handy thing to know, when you knock 
about Hke I've done." 

"We'd be hard put to it now, if you did n't 
know. Otto," grandmother said. 

"Yes, 'm," Fuchs admitted with modest 
pride. "So few folks does know how to make 
124 



THE SHIMERDAS 

a good tight box that'll turn water. I some- 
times wonder if there'll be anybody about to 
do it for me. However, I 'm not at all particu- 
lar that way." 

All afternoon, wherever one went in the 
house, one could hear the panting wheeze of 
the saw or the pleasant purring of the plane. 
They were such cheerful noises, seeming to 
promise new things' for living people: it was a 
pity that those freshly planed pine boards 
were to be put underground so soon. The 
lumber was hard to work because it was full 
of frost, and the boards gave off a sweet 
smell of pine woods, as the heap of yellow 
shavings grew higher and higher. I wondered 
why Fuchs had not stuck to cabinet-work, he 
settled down to it with such ease and content. 
He handled the tools as if he liked the feel 
of them; and when he planed, his hands went 
back and forth over the boards in an eager, 
beneficent way as if he were blessing them. 
He broke out now and then into German 
hymns, as if this occupation brought back 
old times to him. 

At four o'clock Mr. Bushy, the postmaster, 
with another neighbor who lived east of us, 
stopped in to get warm. They were on their 

125 



MY ANTONIA 

way to the Shimerdas'. The news of what had 
happened over there had somehow got abroad 
through the snow-blocked country. Grand- 
mother gave the visitors sugar-cakes and hot 
coiFee. Before these callers were gone, the 
brother of the Widow Steavens, who lived on 
the Black Hawk road, drew up at our door, 
and after him came the father of the German 
family, our nearest neighbors on the south. 
They dismounted and joined us in the dining- 
room. They were all eager for any details 
about the suicide, and they were greatly con- 
cerned as to where Mr. Shimerda would be 
buried. The nearest Catholic cemetery was 
at Black Hawk, and it might be weeks before a 
wagon could get so far. Besides, Mr. Bushy 
and grandmother were sure that a man who 
had killed himself could not be buried in a 
Catholic graveyard. There was a burying- 
ground over by the Norwegian church, west 
of Squaw Creek; perhaps the Norwegians 
would take Mr. Shimerda in. 

After our visitors rode away in single file 
over the hill, we returned to the kitchen. 
Grandmother began to make the icing for a 
chocolate cake, and Otto again filled the house 
with the exciting, expectant song of the plane. 
126 



THE SHIMERDAS 

One pleasant thing about this time was that 
everybody talked more than usual. I had 
never heard the postmaster say anything but 
"Only papers, to-day," or, "I've got a sackful 
of mail for ye," until this afternoon. Grand- 
mother always talked, dear woman; to herself 
or to the Lord, if there was no one else to 
listen; but grandfather was naturally taci- 
turn, and Jake and Otto were often so tired 
after supper that I used to feel as if I were 
surrounded by a wall of silence. Now every 
one seemed eager to talk. That afternoon 
Fuchs told me story after story; about the 
Black Tiger mine, and about violent deaths 
and casual buryings, and the queer fancies of 
dying men. You never really knew a man, he 
said, until you saw him die. Most men were 
game, and went without a grudge. 

The postmaster, going home, stopped to 
say that grandfather would bring the coroner 
back with him to spend the night. The officers 
of the Norwegian church, he told us, had held 
a meeting and decided that the Norwegian 
graveyard could not extend its hospitality to 
Mr. Shimerda. 

Grandmother was indignant. "If these for- 
eigners are so clannish, Mr. Bushy, we'll have 
127 



MY ANTONIA 

to have an American graveyard that will be 
more liberal-minded. I'll get right after Josiah 
to start one in the spring. If anything was to 
happen to me, I don't want the Norwegians 
holding inquisitions over me to see whether 
I'm good enough to be laid amongst 'em." 

Soon grandfather returned, bringing with 
him Anton Jelinek, and that important person, 
the coroner. He was a mild, flurried old man, 
a Civil War veteran, with one sleeve hanging 
empty. He seemed to find this case very per- 
plexing, and said if it had not been for grand- 
father he would have sworn out a warrant 
against Krajiek. "The way he acted, and the 
way his axe fit the wound, was enough to 
convict any man." 

Although it was perfectly clear that Mr. 
Shimerda had killed himself, Jake and the 
coroner thought something ought to be done 
to Krajiek because he behaved like a guilty 
man. He was badly frightened, certainly, and 
perhaps he even felt some stirrings of remorse 
for his indifference to the old man's misery 
and loneliness. 

At supper the men ate like vikings, and the 
chocolate cake, which I had hoped would 
linger on until to-morrow in a mutilated 
128 



THE SHIMERDAS 

condition, disappeared on the second round. 
They talked excitedly about where they 
should bury Mr. Shimerda; I gathered that 
the neighbors were all disturbed and shocked 
about something. It developed that Mrs. 
Shimerda and Ambrosch wanted the old man 
buried on the southwest corner of their own 
land; indeed, under the very stake that 
marked the corner. Grandfather had ex- 
plained to Ambrosch that some day, when the 
country was put under fence and the roads 
were confined to section lines, two roads would 
cross exactly on that corner. But Ambrosch 
only said, "It makes no matter." 

Grandfather asked Jelinek whether in the 
old country there was some superstition to the 
effect that a suicide must be buried at the 
cross-roads. 

Jelinek said he did n't know; he seemed to 
remember hearing there had once been such 
a custom in Bohemia. "Mrs. Shimerda is 
made up her mind," he added. "I try to per- 
suade her, and say it looks bad for her to 
all the neighbors; but she say so it must be. 
'There I will bury him, if I dig the grave 
myself,' she say. I have to promise her I help 
Ambrosch make the grave to-morrow." 
129 



MY ANTONIA 

Grandfather smoothed his beard and looked 
judicial. "I don't know whose wish should 
decide the matter, if not hers. But if she 
thinks she will live to see the people of this 
country ride over that old man's head, she is 
mistaken." 



XVI 

Mr. Shimerda lay dead in the bam four days, 
and on the fifth they buried him. All day 
Friday Jelinek was off with Ambrosch digging 
the grave, chopping out the frozen earth with 
old axes. On Saturday we breakfasted before 
daylight and got into the wagon with the 
coffin. Jake and Jelinek went ahead on horse- 
back to cut the body loose from the pool of 
blood in which it was frozen fast to the ground. 

When grandmother and I went into the 
Shimerdas' house, we found the women-folk 
alone; Ambrosch and Marek were at the 
barn. Mrs. Shimerda sat crouching by the 
stove, Antonia was washing dishes. When 
she saw me she ran out of her dark comer and 
threw her arms around me. "Oh, Jimmy," she 
sobbed, "what you tink for my lovely papa!" 
It seemed to me that I could feel her heart 
breaking as she clung to me. 

Mrs. Shimerda, sitting on the stump by the 

stove, kept looking over her shoulder toward 

the door while the neighbors were arriving. 

They came on horseback, all except the post- 

131 



MY ANTONIA 

master, who brought his family in a wagon 
over the only broken wagon-trail. The Widow 
Steavens rode up from her farm eight miles 
down the Black Hawk road. The cold drove 
the women into the cave-house, and it was 
soon crowded. A fine, sleety snow was begin- 
ning to fall, and every one was afraid of 
another storm and anxious to have the burial 
over with. 

Grandfather and Jelinek came to tell Mrs, 
Shimerda that it was time to start. After 
bundling her mother up in clothes the neigh- 
bors had brought, Antonia put on an old cape 
from our house and the rabbit-skin hat her 
father had made for her. Four men carried 
Mr. Shimerda's box up the hill; Krajiek slunk 
along behind them. The coffin was too wide 
for the door, so it was put down on the slope 
outside. I slipped out from the cave and 
looked at Mr. Shimerda, He was lying on 
his side, with his knees drawn up. His body 
was draped in a black shawl, and his head 
was bandaged in white muslin, like a mum- 
my's; one of his long, shapely hands layout 
on the black cloth; that was all one could see 
of him, 

Mrs, Shimerda came out and placed an open 
132 



THE SHIMERDAS 

prayer-book against the body, making the sign 
of the cross on the bandaged head with her 
fingers. Ambrosch knelt down and made the 
same gesture, and after him Antonia and 
Marek. Yulka hung back. Her mother 
pushed her forward, and kept saying some- 
thing to her over and over. Yulka knelt 
down, shut her eyes, and put out her hand 
a little way, but she drew it back and began 
to cry wildly. She was afraid to touch the 
bandage. Mrs. Shimerda caught her by the 
shoulders and pushed her toward the coffin, 
but grandmother interfered. 

"No, Mrs. Shimerda," she said firmly, "I 
won't stand by and see that child frightened 
into spasms. She is too little to understand 
what you want of her. Let her alone." 

At a look from grandfather, Fuchs and Jeli- 
nek placed the lid on the box, and began to 
nail it down over Mr. Shimerda. I was afraid 
to look at Antonia. She put her arms round 
Yulka and held the little girl close to her. 

The coffin was put into the wagon. We 
drove slowly away, against the fine, icy snow 
which cut our faces like a sand-blast. When 
we reached the grave, it looked a very little 
spot in that snow-covered waste. The men 
133 



MY ANTONIA 

took the coffin to the edge of the hole and 
lowered it with ropes. We stood about watch- 
ing them, and the powdery snow lay with- 
out melting on the caps and shoulders of the 
men and the shawls of the women. Jelinek 
spoke in a persuasive tone to Mrs. Shimerda, 
and then turned to grandfather. 

"She says, Mr. Burden, she is very glad if 
you can make some prayer for him here in 
English, for the neighbors to understand." 

Grandmother looked anxiously at grand- 
father. He took off his hat, and the other men 
did likewise. I thought his prayer remarkable. 
I still remember it. He began, "Oh, great and 
just God, no man among us knows what the 
sleeper knows, nor is it for us to judge what 
lies between him and Thee." He prayed that 
if any man there had been remiss toward the 
stranger come to a far country, God would 
forgive him and soften his heart. He recalled 
the promises to the widow and the fatherless, 
and asked God to smooth the way before this 
widow and her children, and to "incline the 
hearts of men to deal justly with her." In 
closing, he said we were leaving Mr. Shimerda 
at "Thy judgment seat, which is also Thy 
mercy seat." 

134 



THE SHIMERDAS 

All the time he was praying, grandmother 
watched him through the black fingers of her 
glove, and when he said "Amen," I thought 
she looked satisfied with him. She turned 
to Otto and whispered, "Can't you start a 
hymn, Fuchs ? It would seem less heathenish." 

Fuchs glanced about to see if there was gen- 
eral approval of her suggestion, then began, 
"Jesus, Lover of my Soul," and all the men 
and women took it up after him. Whenever I 
have heard the hymn since, it has made me 
remember that white waste and the little 
group of people; and the bluish air, full of fine, 
eddying snow, like long veils flying: — 

" While the nearer waters roll, 
While the tempest still is high." 



Years afterward, when the open-grazing 
days were over, and the red grass had been 
ploughed under and under until it had almost 
disappeared from the prairie; when all the 
fields were under fence, and the roads no 
longer ran about like wild things, but followed 
the surveyed section-lines, Mr. Shimerda's 
grave was still there, with a sagging wire fence 
around it, and an unpainted wooden cross. 
135 



MY ANTONIA 

As grandfather had predicted, Mrs. Shimerda 
never saw the roads going over his head. The 
road from the north curved a little to the east 
just there, and the road from the west swung 
out a little to the south; so that the grave, 
with its tall red grass that was never mowed, 
was like a little island; and at twilight, under 
a new moon or the clear evening star, the 
dusty roads used to look like soft gray rivers 
flowing past it. I never came upon the place 
without emotion, and in all that country it 
was the spot most dear to me. I loved the dim 
superstition, the propitiatory intent, that had 
put the grave there; and still more I loved 
the spirit that could not carry out the sen- 
tence — 'the error from the surveyed lines, the 
clemency of the soft earth roads along which 
the home-coming wagons rattled after sunset. 
Never a tired driver passed the wooden cross, 
I am sure, without wishing well to the sleeper. 



XVII 

When spring came, after that hard winter, 
one could not get enough of the nimble air. 
Every morning I wakened with a fresh con- 
sciousness that winter was over. There were 
none of the signs of spring for which I used 
to watch in Virginia, no budding woods or 
blooming gardens. There was only — spring 
itself; the throb of it, the light restlessness, 
the vital essence of it everywhere; in the sky, 
in the swift clouds, in the pale sunshine, and 
in the warm, high wind — rising suddenly, 
sinking suddenly, impulsive and playful like 
a big puppy that pawed you and then lay 
down to be petted. If I had been tossed down 
blindfold on that red prairie, I should have 
known that it was spring. 

Everywhere now there was the smell of 
burning grass. Our neighbors burned off their 
pasture before the new grass made a start, 
so that the fresh growth would not be mixed 
with the dead stand of last year. Those light, 
swift fires, running about the country, seemed 
a part of the same kindling that was in the air. 
137 



MY ANTONIA 

The Shimerdas were in their new log house 
by then. The neighbors had helped them to 
build it in March. It stood directly in front 
of their old cave, which they used as a cellar. 
The family were now fairly equipped to begin 
their struggle with the soil. They had four 
comfortable rooms to live in, a new windmill, 
— bought on credit, — a chicken-house and 
poultry. Mrs. Shimerda had paid grandfather 
ten dollars for a milk cow, and was to give him 
fifteen more as soon as they harvested their 
first crop. 

When I rode up to the Shimerdas' one 
bright windy afternoon in April, Yulka ran 
out to meet me. It was to her, now, that I 
gave reading lessons; Antonia was busy with 
other things. I tied my pony and went into 
the kitchen where Mrs. Shimerda was baking 
bread, chewing poppy seeds as she worked. 
By this time she could speak enough English 
to ask me a great many questions about 
what our men were doing in the fields. She 
seemed to think that my elders withheld help- 
ful information, and that from me she might 
get valuable secrets. On this occasion she 
asked me very craftily when grandfather ex- 
pected to begin planting corn. I told her, add- 
138 



THE SHIMERDAS 

ing that he thought we should have a dry 
spring and that the corn would not be held 
back by too much rain, as it had been last 
year. 

She gave me a shrewd glance. "He not 
Jesus," she blustered; "he not know about 
the wet and the dry." 

I did not answer her; what was the use? As 
I sat waiting for the hour when Ambrosch 
and Antonia would return from the fields, 
I watched Mrs. Shimerda at her work. She 
took from the oven a coffee-cake which she 
wanted to keep warm for supper, and wrapped 
it in a quilt stuffed with feathers. I have 
seen her put even a roast goose in this quilt to 
keep it hot. When the neighbors were there 
building the new house they saw her do this, 
and the story got abroad that the Shimerdas 
kept their food in their feather beds. 

When the sun was dropping low, Antonia 
came up the big south draw with her team. 
How much older she had grown in eight 
months! She had come to us a child, and 
now she was a tall, strong yoimg giri, al^ 
though her fifteenth birthday had just slipped 
by. I ran out and met her as she brought her 
horses up to the windmill to water them. She 
139 



MY ANTONIA 

wore the boots her father had so thoughtfully 
taken off before he shot himself, and his old 
fur cap. Her outgrown cotton dress switched 
about her calves, over the boot-tops. She 
kept her sleeves rolled up all day, and her 
arms and throat were burned as brown as a 
sailor's. Her neck came up strongly out of 
her shoulders, like the bole of a tree out of the 
turf. One sees that draft-horse neck among 
the peasant women in all old countries. 

She greeted me gayly, and began at once to 
tell me how much ploughing she had done 
that day. Ambrosch, she said, was on the 
north quarter, breaking sod with the oxen. 

"Jim, you ask Jake how much he ploughed 
to-day. I don't want that Jake get more done 
in one day than me. I want we have very 
much corn this fall." 

While the horses drew in the water, and 
nosed each other, and then drank again, An- 
tonia sat down on the windmill step and 
rested her head on her hand. "You see the 
big prairie fire from your place last night? I 
hope your grandpa ain't lose no stacks? " 

"No, we did n't. I came to ask you some- 
thing, Tony. Grandmother wants to know if 
you can't go to the term of school that begins 
140 



THE SHIMERDAS 

next week over at the sod schoolhouse. She 
says there's a good teacher, and you'd learn 
a lot." 

Antonia stood up, lifting and dropping her 
shoulders as if they were stiff. "I ain't got 
time to learn. I can work like mans now. 
My mother can't say no more how Ambrosch 
do all and nobody to help him. I can work as 
much as him. School is all right for little boys. 
I help make this land one good farm." 

She clucked to her team and started for 
the bam. I walked beside her, feeling vexed. 
Was she going to grow up boastful like her 
mother, I wondered? Before we reached the 
stable, I felt something tense in her silence, 
and glancing up I saw that she was crying. 
She turned her face from me and looked off 
at the red streak of dying light, over the dark 
prairie. 

I climbed up into the loft and threw down 
the hay for her, while she unharnessed her 
team. We walked slowly back toward the 
house. Ambrosch had come in from the north 
quarter, and was watering his oxen at the 
tank. 

Antonia took my hand. " Sometime you will 
tell me all those nice things you learn at the 
141 



MY ANTONIA 

fichool, won't you, Jimmy?" she asked with 
a sudden rush of feeling in her voice. "My 
father, he went much to school. He know a 
great deal; how to make the fine cloth like 
what you not got here. He play horn and vio- 
lin, and he read so many books that the priests 
in Bohemie come to talk to him. You won't 
forget my father, Jim?" 

"No," I said, "I will never forget him." 

Mrs. Shimerda asked me to stay for supper. 
After Ambrosch and Antonia had washed the 
field dust from their hands and faces at the 
wash-basin by the kitchen door, we sat down 
at the oilcloth-covered table. Mrs. Shimerda 
ladled meal mush out of an iron pot and poured 
milk on it. After the mush we had fresh bread 
and sorghum molasses, and coffee with the cake 
that had been kept warm in the feathers. An- 
tonia and Ambrosch were talking in Bohe- 
mian; disputing about which of them had 
done more ploughing that day. Mrs. Shi- 
merda egged them on, chuckling while she 
gobbled her food. 

Presently Ambrosch said sullenly in Eng- 
lish: "You take them ox to-morrow and try 
the sod plough. Then you not be so smart." 

His sister laughed. "Don't be mad. I know 
142 




O./- 







THE SHIMERDAS 

it's awful hard work for break sod. I milk the 
cow for you to-morrow, if you want." 

Mrs. Shimerda turned quickly to me. 
"That cow not give so much milk like what 
your grandpa say. If he make talk about 
fifteen dollars, I send him back the cow." 

"He does n't talk about the fifteen dollars," 
I exclaimed indignantly. "He does n't find 
fault with people." 

"He say I break his saw when we build, and 
I never," grumbled Ambrosch. 

I knew he had broken the saw, and then hid 
it and lied about it. I began to wish I had not 
stayed for supper. Everything was disagree- 
able to me. Antonia ate so noisily now, like 
a man, and she yawned often at the table and 
kept stretching her arms over her head, as if 
they ached. Grandmother had said, "Heavy 
field work '11 spoil that girl. She'll lose all her 
nice ways and get rough ones." She had lost 
them already. 

After supper I rode home through the sad, 
soft spring twilight. Since winter I had seen 
very little of Antonia. She was out in the 
fields from sun-up until sun-down. If I rode 
over to see her where she was ploughing, she 
stopped at the end of a row to chat for a 
143 



MY ANTONIA 

moment, then gripped her plough-handles, 
clucked to her team, and waded on down the 
furrow, making me feel that she was now 
grown up and had no time for me. On Sun- 
days she helped her mother make garden or 
sewed all day. Grandfather was pleased with 
Antonia, When we complained of her, he only 
smiled and said, "She will help some fellow 
get ahead in the world." 

Nowadays Tony could talk of nothing but 
the prices of things, or how much she could 
lift and endure. She was too proud of her 
strength. I knew, too, that Ambrosch put 
upon her some chores a girl ought not to do, 
and that the farmhands around the country 
joked in a nasty way about it. Whenever I 
saw her come up the furrow, shouting to her 
beasts, sunburned, sweaty, her dress open at 
the neck, and her throat and chest dust- 
plastered, I used to think of the tone in 
which poor Mr. Shimerda, who could say so 
little, yet managed to say so much wheni he 
exclaimed, "My An-tonia!" 



XVIII 

After I began to go to the country school, I 
saw less of the Bohemians. We were sixteen 
pupils at the sod schoolhouse, and we all 
came on horseback and brought our dinner. 
My schoolmates were none of them very in- 
teresting, but I somehow felt that by making 
comrades of them I was getting even with 
Antonia for her indifference. Since the father's 
death, Ambrosch was more than ever the head 
of the house and he seemed to direct the feel- 
ings as well as the fortunes of his women-folk. 
Antonia often quoted his opinions to me, and 
she let me see that she admired him, while 
she thought of me only as a little boy. Before 
the spring was over, there was a distinct cold- 
ness between us and the Shimerdas. It came 
about in this way. 

One Sunday I rode over there with Jake to 
get a horse-collar which Ambrosch had bor- 
rowed from him and had not returned. It was 
a beautiful blue morning. The buffalo-peas 
were blooming in pink and purple masse}, 
along the roadside, and the larks, perched on 
145 



MY ANTONIA 

last year's dried sunflower stalks, were sing- 
ing straight at the sun, their heads thrown 
back and their yellow breasts a-quiver. The 
wind blew about us in warm, sweet gusts. We 
rode slowly, with a pleasant sense of Sunday 
indolence. 

We found the Shimerdas working just as if 
it were a week-day. Marek was cleaning out 
the stable, and Antonia and her mother were 
making garden, off across the pond in the 
draw-head. Ambrosch was up on the wind- 
mill tower, oiling the wheel. He came down, 
not very cordially. When Jake asked for the 
collar, he grunted and scratched his head. 
The collar belonged to grandfather, of course, 
and Jake, feeling responsible for it, flared up. 

"Now, don't you say you have n't got it, 
Ambrosch, because I know you have, and if 
you ain't a-going to look for it, I will." 

Ambrosch shrugged his shoulders and saun- 
tered down the hill toward the stable. I 
could see that it was one of his mean days. 
Presently he returned, carrying a collar that 
had been badly used — trampled in the dirt 
and gnawed by rats until the hair was sticking 
out of it. 

"This what you want?" he asked surlily. 
146 



THE SHIMERDAS 

Jake jumped off his horse. I saw a wave of 
red come up under the rough stubble on his 
face. "That ain't the piece of harness I loaned 
you, Ambrosch; or if it is, you've used it 
shameful. I ain't a-going to carry such a 
looking thing back to Mr. Burden." 

Ambrosch dropped the collar on the ground. 
"All right," he said coolly, took up his oil-can, 
and began to climb the mill. Jake caught him 
by the belt of his trousers and yanked him 
back. Ambrosch's feet had scarcely touched 
the ground when he lunged out with a vicious 
kick at Jake's stomach. Fortunately Jake 
was in such a position that he could dodge it. 
This was not the sort of thing country boys 
did when they played at fisticuffs, and Jake 
was furious. He landed Ambrosch a blow on 
the head — it sounded like the crack of an 
axe on a cow-pumpkin. Ambrosch dropped 
over, stunned. 

We heard squeals, and looking up saw An- 
tonia and her mother coming on the run. They 
did not take the path arovmd the pond, but 
plunged through the muddy water, without 
even lifting their skirts. They came on, 
screaming and clawing the air. By this time 
Ambrosch had come to his senses and was 
147 



MY ANTONIA 

sputtering with nose-bleed. Jake sprang into 
his saddle. "Let's get out of this, Jim," he 
called. 

Mrs. Shimerda threw her hands over her 
head and clutched as if she were going to pull 
down lightning. "Law, law!" she shrieked 
after us. "Law for knock my Ambrosch 
down!" 

"I never like you no more, Jake and Jim 
Burden," Antonia panted. "No friends any 
more!" 

Jake stopped and turned his horse for a 
second. "Well, you're a damned ungrateful 
lot, the whole pack of you," he shouted back. 
"I guess the Burdens can get along without 
you. You 've been a sight of trouble to them, 
anyhow!" 

We rode away, feeling so outraged that the 
fine morning was spoiled for us. I had n't a 
word to say, and poor Jake was white as paper 
and trembling all over. It made him sick to 
get so angry. "They ain't the same, Jimmy," 
he kept saying in a hurt tone. "These for- 
eigners ain't the same. You can't trust 'em to 
be fair. It's dirty to kick a feller. You heard 
how the women turned on you — and after 
all we went through on account of 'em last 
148 



THE SHIMERDAS 

vnnteri They ain't to be trusted. I don't 
want to see you get too thick with any of 'em." 

"I'll never be friends with them again, 
Jake," I declared hotly. "I believe they are 
all like Krajiek and Ambrosch underneath." 

Grandfather heard our story with a twinkle 
in his eye. He advised Jake to ride to town 
to-morrow, go to a justice of the peace, tell 
him he had knocked young Shimerda down, 
and pay his fine. Then if Mrs. Shimerda was 
inclined to make trouble — her son was still 
under age — she would be forestalled. Jake 
said he might as well take the wagon and 
haul to market the pig he had been fattening. 
On Monday, about an hour after Jake had 
started, we saw Mrs. Shimerda and her Am- 
brosch proudly driving by, looking neither to 
the right nor left. As they rattled out of sight 
down the Black Hawk road, grandfather 
chuckled, saying he had rather expected she 
would follow the matter up. 

Jake paid his fine with a ten-dollar bill 
grandfather had given him for that purpose. 
But when the Shimerdas found that Jake 
sold his pig in town that day, Ambrosch 
worked it out in his shrewd head that Jake 
had to sell his pig to pay his fine. This theory 
149 



MY ANTONIA 

afforded the Shimerdas great satisfaction, 
apparently. For weeks afterward, whenever 
Jake and I met Antonia on her way to the post- 
office, or going along the road with her work- 
team, she would clap her hands and call to us 
in a spiteful, crowing voice: — 

"Jake-y, Jake-y, sell the pig and pay the 
slap!" 

Otto pretended not to be surprised at An- 
tonia's behavior. He only lifted his brows and 
said, "You can't tell me anything new about 
a Czech; I'm an Austrian." 

Grandfather was never a party to what Jake 
called our feud with the Shimerdas. Am- 
brosch and Antonia always greeted him re- 
spectfully, and he asked them about their 
affairs and gave them advice as usual. He 
thought the future looked hopeful for them. 
Ambrosch was a far-seeing fellow; he soon 
realized that his oxen were too heavy for any 
work except breaking sod, and he succeeded in 
selling them to a newly arrived German. With 
the money he bought another team of horses, 
which grandfather selected for him. Marek was 
strong, and Ambrosch worked him hard; but 
he could never teach him to cultivate corn, 
I remember. The one idea that had ever got 
ISO 



THE SHIMERDAS 

through poor Marek's thick head was that all 
exertion was meritorious. He always bore 
down on the handles of the cultivator and 
drove the blades so deep into the earth that 
the horses were soon exhausted. 

In June Ambrosch went to work at Mr. 
Bushy's for a week, and took Marek with him 
at full wages. Mrs. Shimerda then drove the 
second cultivator; she and Antonia worked in 
the fields all day and did the chores at night. 
While the two women were running the place 
alone, one of the new horses got colic and gave 
them a terrible fright. 

Antonia had gone down to the barn one 
night to see that all was well before she went 
to bed, and she noticed that one of the roans 
was swollen about the middle and stood with 
its head hanging. She mounted another horse, 
without waiting to saddle him, and hammered 
on our door just as we were going to bed. 
Grandfather answered her knock. He did not 
send one of his men, but rode back with her 
himself, taking a syringe and an old piece of 
carpet he kept for hot applications when our 
horses were sick. He found Mrs. Shimerda 
sitting by the horse with her lantern, groan- 
ing and wringing her hands. It took but a few 
151 



MY ANTONIA 

moments to release the gases pent up in the 
poor beast, and the two women heard the 
rush of wind and saw the roan visibly diminish 
in girth. 

"If I lose that horse, Mr. Burden," Antonia 
exclaimed, "I never stay here till Ambrosch 
come home! I go drown myself in the pond 
before morning." 

When Ambrosch came back from Mr. 
Bushy's, we learned that he had given Marek's 
wages to the priest at Black Hawk, for masses 
for their father's soul. Grandmother thought 
Antonia needed shoes more than Mr. Shi- 
merda needed prayers, but grandfather said 
tolerantly, "If he can spare six dollars, 
pinched as he is, it shows he believes what 
he professes." 

It was grandfather who brought about a 
reconciliation with the Shimerdas. One morn- 
ing he told us that the small grain was coming 
on so well, he thought he would begin to cut 
his wheat on the first of July. He would need 
more men, and if it were agreeable to every 
one he would engage Ambrosch for the reaping 
and thrashing, as the Shimerdas had no small 
grain of their own. 

"I think, Emmaline," he concluded, " I will 
IS2 



THE SHIMERDAS 

ask Antonia to come over and help you in 
the kitchen. She will be glad to earn some- 
thing, and it will be a good time to end mis- 
understandings. I may as well ride over this 
morning and make arrangements. Do you 
want to go with me, Jim?" His tone told me 
that he had already decided for me. 

After breakfast we set off together. When 
Mrs. Shimerda saw us coming, she ran from 
her door down into the draw behind the stable, 
as if she did not want to meet us. Grandfather 
smiled to himself while he tied his horse, and 
we followed her. 

Behind the bam we came upon a funny 
sight. The cow had evidently been grazing 
somewhere in the draw. Mrs. Shimerda had 
run to the animal, pulled up the lariat pin, 
and, when we came upon her, she was trying 
to hide the cow in an old cave in the bank. As 
the hole was narrow and dark, the cow held 
back, and the old woman was slapping and 
pushing at her hind quarters, trying to spank 
her into the draw-side. 

Grandfather ignored her singular occupa- 
tion and greeted her politely. "Good-morning, 
Mrs. Shimerda. Can you tell me where I will 
findAmbrosch? Which field?" 
153 



MY ANTONIA 

"He with the sod com." She pointed to- 
ward the north, still standing in front of the 
cow as if she hoped to conceal it. 

"His sod com will be good for fodder 
this winter," said grandfather encouragingly. 
"And where is Antonia?" 
^ "She go with." Mrs. Shimerda kept wig- 
gling her bare feet about nervously in the dust. 

"Very well. I will ride up there. I want 
them to come over and help me cut my oats 
and wheat next m<fenth. I will pay them 
wages. Good-morning. By the way, Mrs. 
Shimerda," he said as he turned up the path, 
"I think we may as well call it square about 
the cow." 

She started and clutched the rope tighter. 
Seeing that she did not understand, grand- 
father turned back. "You need not pay me 
anything more; no more money. The cow is 
yours." 

"Pay no more, keep cow?" she asked in a 
bewildered tone, her narrow eyes snapping at 
us in the sunlight. 

"Elxactly. Pay no more, keep cow." He 
nodded. 

Mrs. Shimerda dropped the rope, ran aftej 
us, and crouching down beside grandfather, 
154 



THE SHIMERDAS 

she took his hand and kissed it. I doubt if he 
had ever been so much embarrassed before. 
I was a little startled, too. Somehow, that 
seemed to bring the Old World very close. 

We rode away laughing, and grandfather 
said: "I expect she thought we had come to 
take the cow away for certain, Jim. I wonder 
if she would n't have scratched a little if we'd 
laid hold of that lariat rope!" 

Our neighbors seemed glad to make peace 
with us. The next Sunday Mrs. Shimerda 
came over and brought Jake a pair of socks 
she had knitted. She presented them with an 
air of great magnanimity, saying, "Now you 
not come any more for knock my Ambrosch 
down?" 

Jake laughed sheepishly. " I don't want to 
have no trouble with Ambrosch. If he'll let 
me alone, I '11 let him alone." 

"If he slap you, we ain't got no pig for pay 
the fine," she said insinuatingly. 

Jake was not at all disconcerted. "Have 
the last word, mam," he said cheerfully. 
"It's a lady's privilege." ' 



XIX 

July came on with that breathless, brilliant 
heat which makes the plains of Kansas and 
Nebraska the best corn country in the world. 
It seemed as if we could hear the corn growing 
in the night; under the stars one caught a faint 
crackling in the dewy, heavy-odored corn- 
fields where the feathered stalks stood so juicy 
and green. If all the great plain from the Mis- 
souri to the Rocky Mountains had been under 
glass, and the heat regulated by a thermome- 
ter, it could not have been better for the yel- 
low tassels that were ripening and fertilizing 
each other day by day. The cornfields were 
far apart in those times, with miles of wild 
grazing land between. It took a clear, medi- 
tative eye like my grandfather's to foresee 
that they would enlarge and multiply until 
they would be, not the Shimerdas' cornfields, 
or Mr. Bushy's, but the world's cornfields; 
that their yield would be one of the great 
economic facets, like the wheat crop of Russia, 
which underlie all the activities of men, in 
peace or war. 

156 



THE SHIMERDAS 

The burning sun of those few weeks, with 
occasional rains at night, secured the corn. 
After the milky ears were once formed, we had 
little to fear from dry weather. The men were 
working so hard in the wheatfields that they 
did not notice the heat, — though I was kept 
busy carrying water for them, — and grand- 
mother and Antonia had so much to do in the 
kitchen that they could not have told whether 
one day was hotter than another. Each morn- 
ing, while the dew was still on the grass, 
Antonia went with me up to the garden to 
get early vegetables for dinner. Grandmother 
made her wear a sunbonnet, but as soon as we 
reached the garden she threw it on the grass 
and let her hair fly in the breeze. I remember 
how, as we bent over the pea-vines, beads of 
perspiration used to gather on her upper lip 
like a little mustache. 

" Oh, better I like to work out of doors than 
in a house!" she used to sing joyfully. "I not 
care that your grandmother say it makes me 
like a man. I like to be like a man." She 
would toss her head and ask me to feel the 
muscles swell in her brown arm. 

We were glad to have her in the house. She 
was so gay and responsive that one did not 
1 57 



MY ANTONIA 

mind her heavy, running step, or her clattery 
way with pans. Grandmother was in high 
spirits during the weeks that Antonia worked 
for us. 

All the nights were close and hot during 
that harvest season. The harvesters slept in 
the hayloft because it was cooler there than 
in the house. I used to lie in my bed by the 
open window, watching the heat lightning play 
softly along the horizon, or looking up at the 
gaunt frame of the windmill against the blue 
night sky. One night there was a beautiful 
electric storm, though not enough rain fell to 
damage the cut grain. The men went down to 
the barn immediately after supper, and when 
the dishes were washed Antonia and I climbed 
up on the slanting roof of the chicken-house 
to watch the clouds. The thunder was loud 
and metallic, like the rattle of sheet iron, and 
the lightning broke in great zigzags across the 
heavens, making everything stand out and 
come close to us for a moment. Half the 
sky was checkered with black thunderheads, 
but all the west was luminous and clear: in 
the lightning-flashes it looked like deep blue 
water, with the sheen of moonlight on it; and 
the mottled part of the sky was like marble 
158 




< xiTSii^ndoL. /^p 



THE SHIMERDAS 

pavement, like the quay of some splendid 
sea-coast city, doomed to destruction. Great 
warm splashes of rain fell on our upturned 
faces. One black cloud, no bigger than a little 
boat, drifted out into the clear space unat- 
tended, and kept moving westward. All about 
us we could hear the felty beat of the rain- 
drops on the soft dust of the farmyard. Grand- 
mother came to the door and said it was late, 
and we would get wet out there. 

"In a minute we come," Antonia called 
back to her. "I like your grandmother, and 
all things here," she sighed. "I wish my papa 
live to see this summer. I wish no winter ever 
come again," 

"It will be summer a long while yet," I re- 
assured her. "Why aren't you always nice 
like this, Tony?" 

"How nice?" 

"Why, just like this; like yourself. Why 
do you all the time try to be like Ambrosch?" 

She put her arms under her head and lay 
back, looking up at the sky. " If I live here, 
like you, that is different. Things will be easy 
for you. But they will be hard for us." 



Book II 
THE HIRED GIRLS 



Book II 
THE HIRED GIRLS 



I HAD been living with my grandfather for 
nearly three years when he decided to move to 
Black Hawk. He and grandmother were get- 
ting old for the heavy work of a farm, and as 
I was now thirteen they thought I ought to 
be going to school. Accordingly our homestead 
was rented to "that good woman, the Widow 
Steavens," and her bachelor brother, and we 
bought Preacher White's house, at the north 
end of Black Hawk. This was the first town 
house one passed driving in from the farm, a 
landmark which told country people their long 
ride was over. 

We were to move to Black Hawk in 
March, and as soon as grandfather had fixed 
the date he let Jake and Otto know of his 
intention. Otto said he would not be likely to 
find another place that suited him so well; 
that he was tired of farming and thought he 
would go back to what he called the "wild 
163 



MY ANTONIA 

West." Jake Marpole, lured by Otto's stories 
of adventure, decided to go with him. We did 
our best to dissuade Jake. He was so handi- 
capped by illiteracy and by his trusting dispo- 
sition that he would be an easy prey to sharp- 
ers. Grandmother begged him to stay among 
kindly, Christian people, where he was known; 
but there was no reasoning with him. He 
wanted to be a prospector. He thought a sil- 
ver mine was waiting for him in Colorado. 

Jake and Otto served us to the last. They 
moved us into town, put down the carpets 
in our new house, made shelves and cup- 
boards for grandmother's kitchen, and seemed 
loath to leave us. But at last they went, with- 
out warning. Those two fellows had been 
faithful to us through sun and storm, had 
given us things that cannot be bought in 
any market in the world. With me they had 
been like older brothers; had restrained their 
speech and manners out of care for me, and 
given me so much good comradeship. Now 
they got on the west-bound train one morning, 
in their Sunday clothes, with their oilcloth va- 
lises — and I never saw them again. Months 
afterward we got a card from Otto, saying 
that Jake had been down with mountain fever, 
164 



THE HIRED GIRLS 

but now they were both working in the Yan- 
kee Girl mine, and were doing well. I wrote 
to them at that address, but my letter was 
returned to me, "unclaimed." After that we 
never heard from them. 

Black Hawk, the new world in which we had 
come to live, was a clean, well-planted little 
prairie town, with white fences and good green 
yards about the dwellings, wide, dusty streets, 
and shapely little trees growing along the 
wooden sidewalks. In the center of the town 
there were two rows of new brick "store" 
buildings, a brick schoolhouse, the court- 
house, and four white churches. Our own 
house looked down over the town, and from 
our upstairs windows we could see the winding 
line of the river bluffs, two miles south of us. 
That river was to be my compensation for 
the lost freedom of the farming country. 

We came to Black Hawk in March, and by 
the end of April we felt like town people. 
Grandfather was a deacon in the new Baptist 
Church, grandmother was busy with church 
suppers and missionary societies, and I was 
quite another boy, or thought I was. Sud- 
denly put down among boys of my own age, 
I found I had a great deal to learn. Before 
i6s 



MY ANTONIA 

the spring term of school was over I could 
fight, play "keeps," tease the little girls, and 
use forbidden words as well as any boy in my 
class. I was restrained from utter savagery 
only by the fact that Mrs. Harling, our near- 
est neighbor, kept an eye on me, and if my 
behavior went beyond certain bounds I was 
not permitted to come into her yard or to 
play with her jolly children. 

We saw more of our country neighbors now 
than when we lived on the farm. Our house 
was a convenient stopping-place for them. 
We had a big barn where the farmers could 
put up their teams, and their women-folk 
more often accompanied them, now that they 
could stay with us for dinner, and rest and 
set their bonnets right before they went shop- 
ping. The more our house was like a coun- 
try hotel, the better I liked it. I was glad, 
when I came home from school at noon, to 
see a farm wagon standing in the back yard, 
and I was always ready to run downtown to 
get beefsteak or baker's bread for unexpected 
company. All through that first spring and 
summer I kept hoping that Ambrosch would 
bring Antonia and Yulka to see our new 
house. I wanted to show them our red plush 
i66 



THE HIRED GIRLS 

furniture, and the trumpet-blowing cherubs 
the German paper-hanger had put on our 
parlor ceiling. 

When Ambrosch came to town, however, 
he came alone, and though he put his hofses 
in our barn, he would never stay for dinner, 
or tell us anything about his mother and sis- 
ters. If we ran out and questioned him as 
he was slipping through the yard, he would 
merely work his shoulders about in his coat 
and say, "They all right, I guess." 

Mrs. Steavens, who now lived on our farm, 
grew as fond of Antonia as we had been, and 
always brought us news of her. All through 
the wheat season, she told us, Ambrosch hired 
his sister out like a man, and she went from 
farm to farm, binding sheaves or working with 
the thrashers. The farmers liked her and were 
kind to her; said they would rather have her 
for a hand than Ambrosch. When fall came 
she was to husk com for the neighbors until 
Christmas, as she had done the year before; 
but grandmother saved her from this by get- 
ting her a place to work with our neigh- 
bors, the Harlings. 



II 

Grandmother often said that if she had to 
live in town, she thanked God she lived next 
the Harlings. They had been farming people, 
like ourselves, and their place was like a little 
farm, with a big barn and a garden, and an 
orchard and grazing lots, — even a windmill. 
The Harlings were Norwegians, and Mrs. 
Harling had lived in Christiania until she 
was ten years old. Her husband was bom in 
Minnesota. He was a grain merchant and 
cattle buyer, and was generally considered 
the most enterprising business man in our 
county. He controlled a line of grain elevators 
in the little towns along the railroad to the 
west of us, and was away from home a great 
deal. In his absence his wife was the head of 
the household. 

Mrs. Harling was short and square and 
sturdy-looking, like her house. Every inch of 
her was charged with an energy that made 
itself felt the moment she entered a room. 
Her face was rosy and solid, with bright, 
twinkling eyes and a stubborn little chin. She 
i68 



THE HIRED GIRLS 

was quick to anger, quick to laughter, and 
jolly from the depths of her soul. How well I 
remember her laugh; it had in it the same 
sudden recognition that flashed into her eyes, 
was a burst of humor, short and intelligent. 
Her rapid footsteps shook her own floors, and 
she routed lassitude and indifference wher- 
ever she came. She could not be negative or 
perfunctory about anything. Her enthusiasm, 
and her violent likes and dislikes, asserted 
.themselves in all the every-day occupations 
of life. Wash-day was interesting, never 
dreary, at the Harlings'. Preserving-time was 
a prolonged festival, and house-cleaning was 
like a revolution. When Mrs. Harling made 
garden that spring, we could feel the stir of 
her undertaking through the willow hedge 
that separated our place from hers. 

Three of the Harling children were near me 
in age. Charley, the only son, — they had 
lost an older boy, — was sixteen; Julia, who 
was known as the musical one, was fourteen 
when I was; and Sally, the tomboy with short 
hair, was a year younger. She was nearly as 
strong as I, and uncannily clever at all boys' 
sports. Sally was a wild thing, with sun- 
burned yellow hair, bobbed about her ears, 
169 



MY ANTONIA 

and a brown skin, for she never wore a hat. 
She raced all over town on one roller skate, 
often cheated at "keeps," but was such a 
quick shot one could n't catch her at it. 

The grown-up daughter, Frances, was a 
very important person in our world. She was 
her father's chief clerk, and virtually managed 
his Black Hawk office during his frequent ab- 
sences. Because of her unusual business abil- 
ity, he was stern and exacting with her. He 
paid her a good salary, but she had few holi- 
days and never got away from her responsi- 
bilities. Even on Sundays she went to the 
office to open the mail and read the markets. 
With Charley, who was not interested in busi- 
ness, but was already preparing for Annapolis, 
Mr. Harling was very indulgent; bought him 
guns and tools and electric batteries, and 
never asked what he did with them. 

Frances was dark, like her father, and quite 
as tall. In winter she wore a sealskin coat 
and cap, and she and Mr. Harling used to walk 
home together in the evening, talking about 
grain-cars and cattle, like two men. Some- 
times she came over to see grandfather after 
supper, and her visits flattered him. More 
than once they put their wits together to 
170 



THE HIRED GIRLS 

rescue some unfortunate farmer from the 
clutches of Wick Cutter, the Black Hawk 
money-lender. Grandfather said Frances Har- 
ling was as good a judge of credits as any 
banker in the county. The two or three men 
who had tried to take advantage of her in a 
deal acquired celebrity by their defeat. She 
knew every farmer for miles about; how much 
land he had under cultivation, how many 
cattle he was feeding, what his liabilities 
were. Her interest in these people was more 
than a business interest. She carried them all 
in her mind as if they were characters in a 
book or a play. 

When Frances drove out into the country 
on business, she would go miles out of her 
way to call on some of the old people, or to 
see the women who seldom got to town. She 
was quick at understanding the grandmothers 
who spoke no English, and the most reticent 
and distrustful of them would tell her their 
story without realizing they were doing so. 
She went to country funerals and weddings 
in all weathers. A farmer's daughter who was 
to be married could count on a wedding pres- 
ent from Frances Harling. 

In August the Harlings' Danish cook had 
171 



MY AISTTONIA 

to leave them. Grandmother entreated them 
to try Antonia. She cornered Ambrosch the 
next time he came to town, and pointed out 
to him that any connection with Christian 
Harling would strengthen his credit and be 
of advantage to him. One Sunday Mrs. Har- 
ling took the long ride out to the Shimerdas' 
with Frances. She said she wanted to see 
"what the girl came from" and to have a 
clear understanding with her mother. I was 
in our yard when they came driving home, 
just before sunset. They laughed and waved 
to me as they passed, and I could see they 
were in great good humor. After supper, 
when grandfather set off to church, grand- 
mother and I took my short cut through the 
willow hedge and went over to hear about 
the visit to the Shimerdas. 

We found Mrs. Harling with Charley and 
Sally on the front porch, resting after her hard 
drive. Julia was in the hammock — she was 
fond of repose — and Frances was at the 
piano, playing without a light and talking to 
her mother through the open window. 

Mrs. Harling laughed when she saw us 
coming. "I expect you left your dishes on 
the table to-night, Mrs. Burden," she called. 
172 



THE HIRED GIRLS 

Frances shut the piano and came out to 
join us. 

They had liked Antonia from their first 
glimpse of her; felt they knew exactly what 
kind of girl she was. As for Mrs. Shimerda, 
they found her very amusing. Mrs. Harling 
chuckled whenever she spoke of her. "I ex- 
pect I am more at home with that sort of bird 
than you are, Mrs. Burden. They're a pair, 
Ambrosch and that old woman!" 

They had had a long argument with Am- 
brosch about Antonia's allowance for clothes 
and pocket-money. It was his plan that every 
cent of his sister's wages should be paid over 
to him each month, and he would provide 
her with such clothing as he thought neces- 
sary. When Mrs. Harling told him firmly 
that she would keep fifty dollars a year for 
Antonia's own use, he declared they wanted 
to take his sister to town and dress her up 
and make a fool of her. Mrs. Harling gave 
us a lively account of Ambrosch's behavior 
throughout the interview; how he kept jump- 
ing up and putting on his cap as if he were 
through with the whole business, and how his 
mother tweaked his coat-tail and prompted 
him in Bohemian. Mrs. Harling finally agreed 
173 



MY ANTONIA 

to pay three dollars a week for Antonia's 
services — good wages in those days — and 
to keep her in shoes. There had been hot dis- 
pute about the shoes, Mrs. Shimerda finally 
saying persuasively that she would send Mrs. 
Harling three fat geese every year to "make 
even." Ambrosch was to bring his sister to 
town next Saturday. 

"She'll be awkward and rough at first, like 
enough," grandmother said anxiously, "but 
unless she's been spoiled by the hard life she's 
led, she has it in her to be a real helpful girl." 

Mrs. Harling laughed her quick, decided 
laugh. "Oh, I'm not worrying, Mrs. Bur^- 
den! I can bring something out of that girl. 
She's barely seventeen, not too old to learn 
new ways. She's good-looking, too!" she 
added warmly. 

Frances turned to grandmother. "Oh, yes, 
Mrs, Burden, you did n't tell us that! She 
was working in the garden when we got there, 
barefoot and ragged. But she has such fine 
brown legs and arms, and splendid color in 
her cheeks — like those big dark red plums." 

We were pleased at this praise. Grand- 
mother spoke feelingly. "When she first came 
to this country, Frances, and had that gen- 
174 



THE HIRED GIRLS 

teel old man to watch over her, she was as 
pretty a girl as ever I saw. But, dear me, what 
a life she's led, out in the fields with those 
rough thrashers! Things would have been 
very different with poor Antonia if her father 
had lived." 

The Harlings begged us to tell them about 
Mr. Shimerda's death and the big snowstorm. 
By the time we saw grandfather coming home 
from church we had told them pretty much 
all we knew of the Shimerdas. 

"The girl will be happy here, and she'll 
forget those things," said Mrs. Hading confi- 
dently, as we rose to take our leave. 



Ill 

On Saturday Ambrosch drove up to the back 
gate, and Antonia jumped down from the 
wagon and ran into our kitchen just as she 
used to do. She was wearing shoes and stock- 
ings, and was breathless and excited. She 
gave me a playful shake by the shoulders. 
"You ain't forget about me, Jim?" 

Grandmother kissed her. "God bless you, 
child! Now you've come, you must try to do 
right and be a credit to us." 

Antonia looked eagerly about the house and 
admired everything. "Maybe I be the kind of 
girl you like better, now I come to town," she 
suggested hopefully. 

How good it was to have Antonia near us 
again; to see her every day and almost every 
night! Her greatest fault, Mrs. Harling 
found, was that she so often stopped her work 
and fell to playing with the children. She 
would race about the orchard with us, or take 
sides in our hay-fights in the barn, or be the 
old bear that came down from the mountain 
and carried off Nina. Tony learned English 
176 



THE HIRED GIRLS 

so quickly that by the time school began she 
could speak as well as any of us. 

I was jealous of Tony's admiration for 
Charley Harling. Because he was always first 
in his classes at school, and could mend the 
water-pipes or the door-bell and take the clock 
to pieces, she seemed to think him a sort of 
prince. Nothing that Charley wanted was too 
much trouble for her. She loved to put up 
lunches for him when he went hunting, to 
mend his ball-gloves and sew buttons on his 
shooting-coat, baked the kind of nut-cake he 
liked, and fed his setter dog when he was away 
on trips with his father. Antonia had made 
herself cloth working-slippers out of Mr. 
Harling's old coats, and in these she went 
padding about after Charley, fairly panting 
with eagerness to please him. 

Next to Charley, I think she loved Nina 
best. Nina was only six, and she was rather 
more complex than the other children. She 
was fanciful, had all sorts of unspoken prefer- 
ences, and was easily offended. At the slight- 
est disappointment or displeasure her velvety 
brown eyes filled with tears, and she would 
lift her chin and walk silently away. If 
we ran after her and tried to appease her, it 
177 



MY ANTONIA 

did no good. She walked on unmoUified. I 
used to think that no eyes in the world could 
grow so large or hold so many tears as Nina's. 
Mrs. Harling and Antonia invariably took her 
part. We were never given a chance to ex- 
plain. The charge was simply: "You have 
made Nina cry. Now, Jimmy can go home, 
aijid Sally must get her arithmetic." I liked 
Nina, too; she was so quaint and unexpected, 
and her eyes were lovely; but I often wanted 
to shake her. 

We had jolly evenings at the Harlings when 
the father was away. If he was at home, the 
children had to go to bed early, or they came 
over to my house to play. Mr. Harling not 
only demanded a quiet house, he demanded all 
his wife's attention. He used to take her away 
to their room in the west ell, and talk over his 
business with her all evening. Though we did 
not realize it then, Mrs. Harling was our audi- 
ence when we played, and we always looked 
to her for suggestions. Nothing flattered one 
like her quick laugh. 

Mr. Harling had a desk in his bedroom, and 

his own easy-chair by the window, in which no 

one else ever sat. On the nights when he was 

at home, I could see his shadow on the blind, 

178 



THE HIRED GIRLS 

and it seemed to me an arrogant shadow. 
Mrs. Harling paid no heed to any one else if 
he was there. Before he went to bed she al- 
ways got him a lunch of smoked salmon or 
anchovies and beer. He kept an alcohol lamp 
in his room, and a French coffee-pot, and his 
wife made coffee for him at any hour of the 
night he happened to want it. 

Most Black Hawk fathers had no personal 
habits outside their domestic ones; they paid 
the bills, pushed the baby carriage after office 
hours, moved the sprinkler about over the 
lawn, and took the family driving on Sunday. 
Mr. Harling, therefore, seemed to me auto- 
cratic and imperial in his ways. He walked, 
talked, put on his gloves, shook hands, like a 
man who felt that he had power. He was not 
tall, but he carried his head so haughtily that 
he looked a commanding figure, and there was 
something daring and challenging in his eyes. 
I used to imagine that the "nobles " of whom 
Antonia was always talking probably looked 
very much like Christian Harling, wore caped 
overcoats like his, and just such a glittering 
diamond upon the little finger. 

Except when the father was at home, the 
Harling house was never quiet. Mrs. Harling 
179 



MY ANTONIA 

and Nina and Antonia made as much noise 
as a houseful of children, and there was usually 
somebody at the piano. Julia was the only 
one who was held doAvn to regular hours of 
practicing, but they all played. When Frances 
came home at noon, she played until dinner 
was ready. When Sally got back from school, 
she sat down in her hat and coat and drummed 
the plantation melodies that negro minstrel 
troupes brought to town. Even Nina played 
the Swedish Wedding March. 

Mrs. Harling had studied the piano under a 
good teacher, and somehow she managed to 
practice every day. I soon learned that if I 
were sent over on an errand and found Mrs.. 
Harling at the piano, I must sit down and 
wait quietly until she turned to me. I can see 
her at this moment; her short, square person 
planted firmly on the stool, her Httle fat hands 
moving quickly and neatly over the keys, her 
eyes fixed on the music with intelligent con- 
centration. 



IV 

" I won't have none of your weevUy wheat, and I won't have 
none of your barley, 
But I'll take a measure of fine white flour, to make a cake for 
Charley." 

We were singing rhymes to tease Antonia 
while she was beating up one of Charley's 
favorite cakes in her big mixing-bowl. It was 
a crisp autumn evening, just cold enough to 
make one glad to quit playing tag in the yard, 
and retreat into the kitchen. We had begun 
to roll popcorn balls with syrup when we 
heard a knock at the back door, and Tony 
dropped her spoon and went to open it. A 
plump, fair-skinned girl was standing in the 
doorway. She looked demure and pretty, and 
made a graceful picture in her blue cashmere 
dress and little blue hat, with a plaid shawl 
drawn neatly about her shoulders and a 
clumsy pocketbook in her hand. 

"Hello, Tony. Don't you know me?" she 
asked in a smooth, low voice, looking in at 
us archly. 

"^ Antonia gasped and stepped back. "Why, 
i8i 



MY ANTONIA 

it's Lena! Of course I did n't know you, so 
dressed up!" 

Lena Lingard laughed, as if this pleased her. 
I had not recognized her for a moment, either. 
I had never seen her before with a hat on her 
head — or with shoes and stockings on her 
feet, for that matter. And here she was, 
brushed and smoothed and dressed like a town 
girl, smiling at us with perfect composure. 

"Hello, Jim," she said carelessly as she 
walked into the kitchen and looked about her. 
*'I've come to town to work, too, Tony." 

"Have you, now? Well, ain't that funny!" 
Antonia stood ill at ease, and did n't seem to 
know just what to do with her visitor. 

The door was open into the dining-room, 
where Mrs. Harling sat crocheting and Frances 
was reading. Frances asked Lena to come in 
and join them. 

"You are Lena Lingard, aren't you? I've 
been to see your mother, but you were off 
herding cattle that day. Mama, this is Qiris 
Lingard's oldest girl." 

Mrs. HarUng dropped her worsted and ex- 
amined the visitor with quick, keen eyes. 
Lena was not at all disconcerted. She sat 
down in the chair Frances pointed out, care- 



THE HIRED GIRLS 

fully arranging her pocketbcxDk and gray cot- 
ton gloves on her lap. We followed with our 
popcorn, but Antonia hung back — said she 
had to get her cake into the oven. 

"So you have come to town," said Mrs. ^ 
Harling, her eyes still fixed on Lena. "Where f 
are you working?" ^ 

"For Mrs. Thomas, the dressmaker. She 
is going to teach me to sew. She says I have 
quite a knack. I'm through with the farm. 
There ain't any end to the work on a farm, and 
always so much trouble happens. I'm going 
to be a dressmaker." 

"Well, there have to be dressmakers. It's 
a good trade. But I would n't run down the 
farm, if I were you," said Mrs. Harling rather 
severely. " How is your mother ? " 

*'0h, mother's never very well; she has too 
much to do. She'd get away from the farm, 
too, if she could. She was willing for me to 
come. After I learn to do sewing, I can make 
money and help her." 

"See that you don't forget to," said Mrs. 
Harling skeptically, as she took up her cro- 
cheting again and sent the hook in and out 
with nimble fingers. 

"No, 'm, I won't," said Lena blandly. She 
183 



MY ANTONIA 

took a few grains of the popcorn we pressed 
upon her, eating them discreetly and taking 
care not to get her fingers sticky. 

Frances drew her chair up nearer to the 
visitor. "I thought you were going to be 
married, Lena," she said teasingly. "Did n't 
I hear that Nick Svendsen was rushing you 
pretty hard?" 

Lena looked up with her curiously innocent 
smile. "He did go with me quite a while. But 
his father made a fuss about it and said he 
would n't give Nick any land if he married 
me, so he's going to marry Annie Iverson. I 
would n't like to be her; Nick's awful sullen, 
and he'll take it out on her. He ain't spoke to 
his father since he promised." 

Frances laughed. "And how do you feel 
about it?" 

"I don't want to marry Nick, or any other 
man," Lena murmured. "I've seen a good 
deal of married life, and I don't care for it. I 
want to be so I can help my mother and the 
children at home, and not have to ask lief of 
anybody." 

"That's right," said Frances. "And Mrs. 
Thomas thinks you can learn dressmaking?" 
V "Yes, 'm. I've always liked to sew, but I 
184 



THE HIRED GIRLS 

never had much to do with. Mrs. Thomas 
makes lovely things for all the town ladies. 
Did you know Mrs. Gardener is having a 
purple velvet made? The velvet came from 
Omaha. My, but it's lovely!" Lena sighed 
softly and stroked her cashmere folds. "Tony 
knows I never did like out-of-door work," she 
added. 

Mrs. Harling glanced at her. "I expect 
you'll learn to sew all right, Lena, if you'll 
only keep your head and not go gadding about 
to dances all the time and neglect your work, 
the way some country girls do." 

"Yes, 'm. Tiny Soderball is coming to town, 
too. She's going to work at the Boys' Home 
Hotel. She'll see lots of strangers," Lena 
added wistfully. 

"Too many, like enough," said Mrs. Har- 
ling. "I don't think a hotel is a good place for 
a girl; though I guess Mrs. Gardener keeps 
an eye on her waitresses." 

Lena's candid eyes, that always looked a 
little sleepy under their long lashes, kept 
straying about the cheerful rooms with naive 
admiration. Presently she drew on her cotton 
gloves. "I guess I must be leaving," she said 
irresolutely. 

I8S 



MY ANTONIA 

Frances told her to come again, whenever 
she was lonesome or wanted advice about 
anything. Lena replied that she did n't believe 
she would ever get lonesome in Black Hawk. 

She lingered at the kitchen door and begged 
Antonia to fcome and see her often. "I've got 
a room of my own at Mrs. Thomas's, with a 
carpet." 

Tony shuffled uneasily in her cloth slippers. 
"I'll come sometime, but Mrs. Harling don't 
like to have me run much," she said evasively. 

"You can do what you please when you go 
out, can't you.f"' Lena asked in a guarded 
whisper. "Ain't you cra2y about town, Tony? 
I don't care what anybody says, I'm done 
with the farm!" She glanced back over her 
shoulder toward the dining-room, where Mrs. 
Harling sat. 

When Lena was gone, Frances asked An- 
tonia why she had n't been a little more cor- 
dial to her. 

"I did n't know if your mother would like 
her coming here," said Antonia, looking 
troubled. "She was kind of talked about, out 
there." 

"Yes, I know. But mother won't hold it 
against her if she behaves well here. You 
1 86 



THE HIRED GIRLS 

need n't say anything about that to the chil- 
dren. I guess Jim has heard all that gossip?" 

When I nodded, she pulled my hair and told 
me I knew too much, anyhow. We were good 
friends, Frances and I. 

I ran home to tell grandmother that Lena 
Lingard had come to town. We were glad of 
it, for she had a hard life on the farm. 

Lena lived in the Norwegian settlement 
west of Squaw Creek, and she used to herd 
her father's cattle in the open country be- 
tween his place and the Shimerdas'. When- 
ever we rode over in that direction we saw 
her out among her cattle, bareheaded and 
barefooted, scantily dressed in tattered cloth- 
ing, always knitting as she watched her herd. 
Before I knew Lena, I thought of her as some- 
thing wild, that always lived on the prairie, 
because I had never seen her under a roof. 
Her yellow hair was burned to a ruddy thatch 
on her head; but her legs and arms, curiously 
enough, in spite of constant exposure to the 
sun, kept a miraculous whiteness which some- 
how made her seem more undressed than other 
girls who went scantily clad. The first time I 
stopped to talk to her, I was astonished at her 
soft voice and easy, gentle ways. The girls out 
187 



MY ANTONIA 

there usually got rough and mannish after 
they went to herding. But Lena asked Jake 
and me to get off our horses and stay awhile, 
and behaved exactly as if she were in a house 
and were accustomed to having visitors. She 
was not embarrassed by her ragged clothes, 
and treated us as if we were old acquaintances. 
Even then I noticed the unusual color of her 
eyes — a shade of deep violet — and their soft, 
confiding expression. 

Chris Lingard was not a very successful 
farmer, and he had a large family, Lena was 
always knitting stockings for little brothers 
and sisters, and even the Norwegian women, 
who disapproved of her, admitted that she 
was a good daughter to her mother. As 
Tony said, she had been talked about. She 
was accused of making Ole Benson lose the 
little sense he had — and that at an age 
when she should still have been in pinafores. 

Ole lived in a leaky dugout somewhere at the 
edge of the settlement. He was fat and lazy 
and discouraged, and bad luck had become a 
habit with him. After he had had every other 
kind of misfortune, his wife, "Cv&zy Mary," 
tried to set a neighbor's barn on fire, and was 
sent to the asylum at Lincoln. She was kept 
i88 





\)^p-m 



kT Q^cL^ 



THE HIRED GIRLS 

there for a few months, then escaped and 
walked all the way home, nearly two hundred 
miles, traveling by night and hiding in bams 
and haystacks by day. When she got back to 
the Norwegian settlement, her poor feet were 
as hard as hoofs. She promised to be good, and 
was allowed to stay at home — though every 
one realized she was as crazy as ever, and she 
still ran about barefooted through the snow, 
telling her domestic troubles to her neighbors. 
Not long after Mary came back from the 
asylum, I heard a young Dane, who was help- 
ing us to thrash, tell Jake and Otto that 
Chris Lingard's oldest girl had put Ole Benson 
out of his head, until he had no more sense 
than his crazy wife. When Ole -Was cultivating 
his com that summer, he used to get discouraged 
in the field, tie up his team, and wander off to 
wherever Lena Lingard was herding. There 
he would sit down on the draw-side and help 
her watch her cattle. All the settlement was 
talking about it. The Norwegian preacher's 
wife went to Lena and told her she ought not 
to allow this; she begged Lena to come to 
church on Sundays. Lena said she had n't a 
dress in the world any less ragged than the 
one on her back. Then the minister's wife went 
189 



MY ANTONIA 

through her old trunks and found some things 
she had worn before her marriage. 

The next Sunday Lena appeared at church, 
a little late, with her hair done up neatly on 
her head, like a young woman, wearing shoes 
and stockings, and the new dress, which she 
had made over for herself very becomingly. 
The congregation stared at her. Until that 
morning no one — unless it were Ole — had 
realized how pretty she was, or that she was 
growing up. The swelling lines of her figure 
had been hidden under the shapeless rags she 
wore in the fields. After the last hymn had been 
sung, and the congregation was dismissed, Ole 
slipped out to the hitch-bar and lifted Lena 
on her horse. That, in itself, was shocking; 
a married man was not expected to do such 
things. But it was nothing to the scene that 
followed. Crazy Mary darted out from the 
group of women at the church door, and ran 
down the road after Lena, shouting horrible 
threats. 

"Look out, you Lena Lingard, look out! 
I '11 come over with a corn-knife one day and 
trim some of that shape off you. Then you 
won't sail round so fine, making eyes at the 
men! . . ." 

igo 



THE HIRED GIRLS 

The Norwegian women did n't know where 
to look. They were formal housewives, most 
of them, with a severe sense of decorum. But 
Lena Lingard only laughed her lazy, good- 
natured laugh and rode on, gazing back over 
her shoulder at Ole's infuriated wife. 

The time came, however, when Lena did n't 
laugh. More than once Crazy Mary chased 
her across the prairie and round and round 
the Shimerdas' cornfield. Lena never told her 
father; perhaps she was ashamed; perhaps she 
was more afraid of his anger than of the com- 
knife. I was at the Shimerdas' one afternoon 
when Lena came bounding through the red 
grass as fast as her white legs could carry her. 
She ran straight into the house and hid in 
Antonia's feather-bed. Mary was not far be- 
hind; she came right up to the door and made 
us feel how sharp her blade was, showing us 
very graphically just what she meant to do to 
Lena. Mrs. Shimerda, leaning out of the 
window, enjoyed the situation keenly, and 
was sorry when Antonia sent Mary away, 
mollified by an apronful of bottle-tomatoes. 
Lena came out from Tony's room behind the 
kitchen, very pink from the heat of the 
feathers, but otherwise calm. She begged 
191 



MY ANTONIA 

Antonia and me to go with her, and help get 
her cattle together; they were scattered and 
might be gorging themselves in somebody's 
cornfield. 

"Maybe you lose a steer and learn not to 
make somethings with your eyes at married 
men," Mrs. Shimerda told her hectoringly. 

Lena only smiled her sleepy smile. "I never 
made anything to him with my eyes. I can't 
help it if he hangs around, and I can't order 
him off. It ain't my prairie." 



After Lena came to Black Hawk I often met 
her downtown, where she would be matching 
sewing silk or buying "findings" for Mrs. 
Thomas. If I happened to walk home with 
her, she told me all about the dresses she was 
helping to make, or about what she saw and 
heard when she was with Tiny Soderball at 
the hotel on Saturday nights. 

The Boys' Home was the best hotel on our 
branch of the BurUngton, and all the com- 
mercial travelers in that territory tried to get 
into Black Hawk for Sunday. They used to 
assemble in the parlor after supper on Satur- 
day nights. Marshall Field's man, Anson Kirk- 
patrick, played the piano and sang all the lat- 
est sentimental songs. After Tiny had helped 
the cook wash the dishes, she and Lena sat on 
the other side of the double doors between the 
parlor and the dining-room, listening to the 
music and giggling at the jokes and stories. 
Lena often said she hoped I would be a travel- 
ing man when I grew up. They had a gay life of 
it; nothing to do but ride about on trains all 
193 



MY ANTONIA 

day and go to theaters when they were in big 
cities. Behind the hotel there was an old store 
building, where the salesmen opened their big 
trunks and spread out their samples on the 
counters. The Black Hawk merchants went 
to look at these things and order goods, and 
Mrs. Thomas, though she was " retail trade," 
was permitted to see them and to "get ideas." 
They were all generous, these traveUng men; 
they gave Tiny Soderball handkerchiefs and 
gloves and ribbons and striped stockings, and 
so many bottles of perfume and cakes of 
scented soap that she bestowed some of them 
on Lena. 

One afternoon in the week before Christ- 
mas I came upon Lena and her funny, square- 
headed little brother Chris, standing before 
the drug-store, gazing in at the wax dolls and 
blocks and Noah's arks arranged in the frosty 
show window. The boy had come to town 
with a neighbor to do his Christmas shop- 
ping, for he had money of his own this year. 
He was only twelve, but that winter he had 
got the job of sweeping out the Norwegian 
church and making the fire in it every Sun- 
day morning. A cold job it must have been, 
too! 

194 



THE HIRED GIRLS 

We went into Duckford's dry-goods store, 
and Chris unwrapped all his presents and 
showed them to me — something for each of 
the six younger than himself, even a rubber 
pig for the baby. Lena had given him one of 
Tiny Soderball's bottles of perfume for his 
mother, and he thought he would get some 
handkerchiefs to go with it. They were cheap, 
and he had n't much money left. We found a 
tableful of handkerchiefs spread out for view 
at Duckford's. Chris wanted those with 
initial letters in the corner, because he had 
never seen any before. He studied them seri- 
ously, while Lena looked over his shoulder, 
telling him she thought the red letters would 
hold their color best. He seemed so perplexed 
that I thought perhaps he had n't enough 
money, after all. Presently he said gravely, — 

"Sister, you know mother's name is Berthe. 
I don't know if I ought to get B for Berthe, or 
M for Mother." 

Lena patted his bristly head. "I'd get the 
B, Chrissy. It will please her for you to think 
about her name. Nobody ever calls her by it 
now." 

That satisfied him. His face cleared at once, 
and he took three reds and three blues. When 
195 



MY ANTONIA 

the neighbor came in to say that it was time to 
start, Lena wound Chris's comforter about 
his neck and turned up his jacket collar — he 
had no overcoat — and we watched him climb 
into the wagon and start on his long, cold drive^ 
As we walked together up the windy street, 
Lena wiped her eyes with the back of her 
woolen glove. " I get awful homesick for them, 
all the same," she murmured, as if she were 
answering some remembered reproach. 



VI 

Winter comes down savagely over a little 
town on the prairie. The wind that sweeps in 
from the open country strips away all the leafy 
screens that hide one yard from another in 
summer, and the houses seem to draw closer 
together. The roofs, that looked so far away 
across the green tree-tops, now stare you in the 
face, and they are so much uglier than when 
their angles were softened by vines and shrubs. 
In the morning, when I was fighting my way 
to school against the wind, I could n't see any- 
thing but the road in front of me ; but in the 
late afternoon, when I was coming home, the 
town looked bleak and desolate to me. The 
pale, cold light of the winter sunset did not 
beautify — it was like the light of truth itself. 
When the smoky clouds hung low in the west 
and the red sun went down behind them, leav- 
ing a pink flush on the snowy roofs and the 
blue drifts, then the wind sprang up afresh, 
with a kind of bitter song, as if it said: "This 
is reality, whether you like it or not. All those 
frivolities of summer, the light and shadow, 
197 



MY ANTONIA 

the living mask of green that trembled oV'er 
everything, they were lies, and this is what 
was underneath. This is the truth." It was 
as if we were being punished for loving the 
loveliness of summer. 

If I loitered on the playground after school, 
or went to the post-office for the mail and lin- 
gered to hear the gossip about the cigar-stand, 
it would be growing dark by the time I came 
home. The sun was gone; the frozen streets 
stretched long and blue before me; the lights 
were shining pale in kitchen windows, and I 
could smell the suppers cooking as I passed. 
Few people were abroad, and each one of them 
was hurrying toward a fire. The glowing stoves 
in the houses were like magnets. When one 
passed an old man, one could see nothing of 
his face but a red nose sticking out between a 
frosted beard and a long plush cap. The young 
men capered along with their hands in their 
pockets, and sometimes tried a slide on the icy 
sidewalk. The children, in their bright hoods 
and comforters, never walked, but always ran 
from the moment they left their door, beat- 
ing their mittens against their sides. When I 
got as far as the Methodist Church, I was 
about halfway home. I can remember how 
198 



THE HIRED GIRLS 

glad I was when there happened to be a light 
in the church, and the painted glass window 
shone out at us as we came along the frozen 
street. In the winter bleakness a hunger for 
color came over people, like the Laplander's 
craving for fats and sugar. Without knowing 
why, we used to linger on the sidewalk out- 
side the church when the lamps were lighted' 
early for choir practice or prayer-meeting,- 
shivering and talking until our feet were like 
lumps of ice. The crude reds and greens and 
blues of that colored glass held us there. 

On winter nights, the lights in the Harlings' 
windows drew me like the painted glass. In- 
side that warm, roomy house there was color, 
too. After supper I used to catch up my 
cap, stick my hands in my pockets, and dive 
through the willow hedge as if witches were 
after me. Of course, if Mr. Harling was at 
home, if his shadow stood out on the blind 
of the west room, I did not go in, but turned 
and walked home by the long way, through the 
street, wondering what book I should read as 
I sat down with the two old people. 

Such disappointments only gave greater 
zest to the nights when we acted charades, or 
had a costume ball in the back parlor, with 
199 



MY ANTONIA 

Sally always dressed like a boy. Frances 
taught us to dance that winter, and she said, 
from the first lesson, that Antonia would make 
the best dancer among us. On Saturday nights, 
Mrs. Harling used to play the old operas for 
us, — "Martha," "Norma," "Rigoletto," — 
telling us the story while she played. Every 
Saturday night was like a party. The parlor, 
the back parlor, and the dining-room were 
warm and brightly lighted, with comfortable 
chairs and sofas, and gay pictures on the walls. 
One always felt at ease there. Antonia brought 
her sewing and sat with us — she was already 
beginning to make pretty clothes for her- 
self. After the long winter evenings on the 
prairie, with Ambrosch's sullen silences and 
her mother's complaints, the Harlings' house 
seemed, as she said, " like Heaven " to her. She 
was never too tired to make taffy or chocolate 
cookies for us. If Sally whispered in her ear, 
or Charley gave her three winks, Tony would 
rush into the kitchen and build a fire in the 
range on which she had already cooked three 
meals that day. 

While we sat in the kitchen waiting for the 
cookies to bake or the taffy to cool, Nina used 
to coax Antonia to tell her stories — about the 

200 



THE HIRED GIRLS 

calf that broke Its leg, or how Yulka saved her 
little turkeys from drowning in the freshet, or 
about old Christmases and weddings in Bo- 
hemia. Nina interpreted the stories about 
the creche fancifully, and in spite of our deri- 
sion she cherished a belief that Christ was 
bom in Bohemia a short time before the Shi- 
merdas left that country. We all liked Tony's 
stories. Her voice had a peculiarly engaging 
quality; it was deep, a little husky, and one 
always heard the breath vibrating behind it. 
Everything she said seemed to come right out 
\of her heart. 

One evening when we were picking out ker- 
nels for walnut taffy, Tony told us a new 
story. 

"Mrs. Harling, did you ever hear about 
what happened up in the Norwegian settle- 
ment last summer, when I was thrashing 
there? We were at Iversons', and I was driv- 
ing one of the grain wagons." 

Mrs. Harling came out and sat down among 
us. "Could you throw the wheat into the bin 
yourself, Tony?" She knew what heavy work 
it was. 

"Yes, mam, I did. I could shovel just as fast 
as that fat Andem boy that drove the other 

201 



MY ANTONIA 

wagon. One day it was just awful hot. When 
we got back to the field from dinner, we 
took things kind of easy. The men put in the 
horses and got the machine going, and Ole 
Iverson was up on the deck, cutting bands. I 
was sitting against a straw stack, trying to 
get some shade. My wagon was n't going out 
first, and somehow I felt the heat awful that 
day. The sun was so hot like it was going to 
burn the world up. After a while I see a man 
coming across the stubble, and when he got 
close I see it was a tramp. His toes stuck out 
of his shoes, and he had n't shaved for a long 
while, and his eyes was awful red and wild, 
like he had some sickness. He comes right up 
and begins to talk like he knows me already. 
He says: 'The ponds in this country is done 
got so low a man could n't drownd himself in 
one of 'em.' 

" I told him nobody wanted to drownd them- 
selves, but if we did n't have rain soon we'd 
have to pump water for the cattle. 

"'Oh, cattle,' he says, 'you'll all take care 
of your cattle! Ain't you got no beer here?' 
I told him he'd have to go to the Bohemians 
for beer; the Norwegians did n't have none 
when they thrashed. 'My God!' he says, 'so 
202 



THE HIRED GIRLS 

it's Norwegians now, is it? I thought this was 
Americy.' 

"Then he goes tip to the machine and yells 
out to Ole Iverson, 'Hello, partner, let me up 
there. I can cut bands, and I 'm tired of tramp- 
in'. I won't go no farther.' 

"I tried to make signs to Ole, 'cause I 
thought that man was crazy and might get the 
machine stopped up. But Ole, he was glad to 
get down out of the sun and chaff — it gets 
down your neck and sticks to you something 
awful when it's hot like that. So Ole jumped 
down and crawled under one of the wagons for 
shade, and the tramp got on the machine. 
He cut bands all right for a few minutes, and 
then, Mrs. Harling, he waved his hand to me 
and jumped head-first right into the thrashing 
machine after the wheat. 

"I begun to scream, and the men run to stop 
the horses, but the belt had sucked him down, 
and by the time they got her stopped he was 
all beat and cut to pieces. He was wedged 
in so tight it was a hard job to get him out, 
and the machine ain't never worked right 
since." 

"Was he clear dead, Tony?" we cried. 

"Was he dead? Well, I guess so! There, 
203 



MY ANTONIA 

now, Nina's all upset. We won't talk about it. 
Don't you cry, Nina. No old tramp won't get 
you while Tony's here." 

Mrs. Harling spoke up sternly. "Stop cry- 
ing, Nina, or I'll always send you upstairs 
when Antonia tells us about the country. Did 
they never .find out where he came from, 
Antonia?" 

"Never, mam. He hadn't been seen no- 
where except in a little town they call Conway. 
He tried to get beer there, but there was n't 
any saloon. Maybe he came in on a freight, 
but the brakeman had n't seen him. They 
could n't find no letters nor nothing on him; 
nothing but an old penknife in his pocket and 
the wishbone of a chicken wrapped up in a 
piece of paper, and some poetry." 

"Some poetry?" we exclaimed. 

"I remember," said Frances. "It was 'The 
Old Oaken Bucket,' cut out of a newspaper 
and nearly worn out. Ole Iverson brought it 
into the office and showed it to me." 

"Now, was n't that strange. Miss Frances?" 
Tony asked thoughtfully, "What would any- 
body want to kill themselves in summer for? 
In thrashing time, too! It's nice everywhere 
then." 

204 



THE HIRED GIRLS 

"So it is, Antonia," said Mrs. Hading 
heartily. "Maybe I'll go home and help you 
thrash next summer. Is n't that taffy nearly 
ready to eat? I've been smelling it a long 
while." 

There was a basic harmony between An- 
tonia and her mistress. They had strong, in- 
dependent natures, both of them. They knew 
what they liked, and were not always trying 
to imitate other people. They loved children 
and animals and music, and rough play and 
digging in the earth. They liked to prepare 
rich, hearty food and to see people eat it; to 
make up soft white beds and to see young- 
sters asleep in them. They ridiculed conceited 
people and were quick to help unfortunate 
ones. Deep down in each of them there was 
a kind of hearty joviality, a relish of life, not 
over-delicate, but very invigorating. I never 
tried to define it, but I was distinctly con- 
scious of it. I could not imagine Antonia's 
living for a week in any other house in Black 
Hawk than the Harlings'. 



VII 

Winter lies too long in country towns; hangs 
on until it is stale and shabby, old and sullen, 
On the farm the weather was the great fact, 
and men's aif airs went on underneath it, as the 
•^ streams creep under the ice. | But in Black 
Hawk the scene of human life was spread out 
shrunken and pinched, frozen down to the bare 
stalk. 

Through January and February I went to 
the river with the Harlings on clear nights, and 
we skated up to the big island and made bon- 
fires on the frozen sand. But by March the 
ice was rough and choppy, and the snow on the 
river bluffs was gray and mournful-looking. 
I was tired of school, tired of winter clothes, 
of the rutted streets, of the dirty drifts and the 
piles of cinders that had lain in the yards so 
long. There was only one break in the dreary 
monotony of that month; when BHnd d'Ar- 
nault, the negro pianist, came to town. He 
gave a concert at the Opera House on Monday 
night, and he and his manager spent Saturday 
and Sunday at our comfortable hotel. Mrs. 
206 



THE HIRED GIRLS 

Hading had known d' Arnault for years. She 
told Antonia she had better go to see Tiny that 
Saturday evening, as there would certainly be 
music at the Boys' Home. 

Saturday night after supper I ran downtown 
to the hotel and slipped quietly into the parlor. 
The chairs and sofas were already occupied, 
and the air smelled pleasantly of cigar smoke. 
The parlor had once been two rooms, and the 
floor was sway-backed where the partition 
had been cut away. The wind from without 
made waves in the long carpet. A coal stove 
glowed at either end qf the room, and the 
grand piano in the middle stood open. 

There was an atmosphere of unusual freedom 
about the house that night, for Mrs. Gardener 
had gone to Omaha for a week. Johnnie had 
been having drinks with the guests until he was 
rather absent-minded. It was Mrs. Gardener 
who ran the business and looked after every- 
thing. Her husband stood at the desk and 
welcomed incoming travelers. He was a pop- 
ular fellow, but no manager. 

Mrs. Gardener was admittedly the best- 
dressed woman in Black Hawk, drove the best- 
horse, and had a smart trap and a little white- 
and-gold sleigh. She seemed indifferent to her 
207 



MY ANTONIA 

possessions, was not half so solicitous about 
them as her friends were. She was tall, dark, 
severe, with something Indian-like in the rigid 
immobility of her face. Her manner was cold, 
and she talked little. Guests felt that they were 
receiving, not conferring, a favor when they 
stayed at her house. Even the smartest traV- 
eling men were flattered when Mrs. Gar- 
dener stopped to chat with them for a mo- 
ment. The patrons of the hotel were divided 
into two classes; those who had seen Mrs. 
Gardener's diamonds, and those who had not. 
When I stole into the parlor Anson Kirk- 
patrick, Marshall Field's man, was at the 
piano, playing airs from a musical comedy 
then running in Chicago. He was a dapper 
little Irishman, very vain, homely as a mon- 
key, with friends everywhere, and a sweetheart 
in every port, like a sailor. I did not know 
all the men who were sitting about, but I recog- 
nized a furniture salesman from Kansas City, 
a drug man, and Willy O'Reilly, who traveled 
for a jewelry house and sold musical instru- 
ments. The talk was all about good and bad 
hotels, actors and actresses and musical prodi- 
gies. I learned that Mrs. Gardener had gone 
to Omaha to hear Booth and Barrett, who 
208 



THE HIRED GIRLS 

were to play there next week, and that Mary 
Anderson was having a great success in "A 
Winter's Tale," in London. 

The door from the office opened, and 
Johnnie Gardener came in, directing Blind 
d' Arnault, — he would never consent to be 
led. He was a heavy, bulky mulatto, on short 
legs, and he came tapping the floor in front of 
him with his gold-headed cane. His yellow face 
was lifted in the light, with a show of white 
teeth, all grinning, and his shrunken, papery 
eyelids lay motionless over his blind eyes. 

"Good evening, gentlemen. No ladies here? 
Good-evening, gentlemen. We going to have 
a little music ? Some of you gentlemen going to 
play for me this evening?" It was the soft, 
amiable negro voice, like those I remembered 
from early childhood, with the note of docile 
subservience in it. He had the negro head, 
too; almost no head at all; nothing behind the 
ears but folds of neck under close-clipped wool. 
He would have been repulsive if his face had 
not been so kindly and happy. It was the hap- 
piest face I had seen since I left Virginia. 

He felt his way directly to the piano. The 
moment he sat down, I noticed the nervous 
infirmity of which Mrs, Harling had told me. 
209 



MY ANTONIA 

When he was sitting, or standing still, he 
swayed back and forth incessantly, like a rock- 
ing toy. At the piano, he swayed in time to 
the music, and when he was not playing, his 
body kept up this motion, like an empty mill 
grinding on. He found the pedals and tried 
them, ran his yellow hands up and down the 
keys a few times, tinkling off scales, then 
turned to the company. 

"She seems all right, gentlemen. Nothing 
happened to her since the last time I was here. 
Mrs. Gardener, she always has this piano 
tuned up before I come. Now, gentlemen, I 
expect you 've all got grand voices. Seems like 
we might have some good old plantation songs 
to-night." 

The men gathered round him, as he began 
to play "'My Old Kentucky Home." They 
sang one negro melody after another, while the 
mulatto sat rocking himself, his head thrown 
back, his yellow face lifted, its shriveled eye- 
lids never fluttering. 

He was bom in the Far South, on the d' Ar- 
nault plantation, where the spirit if not the 
fact of slavery persisted. When he was three 
weeks old he had an illness which left him 
totally blind. As soon as he was old enough 

210 



THE HIRED GIRLS 

to sit up alone and toddle about, another 
affliction, the nervous motion of his body, be- 
came apparent. His mother, a buxom young 
negro wench who was laundress for the d' Ar- 
naults, concluded that her blind baby was 
"not right" in his head, and she was ashamed 
of him. She loved him devotedly, but he was 
so ugly, with his sunken eyes and his "fidgets," 
that she hid him away from people. All the 
dainties she brought down from the "Big 
House" were for the bUnd child, and she beat 
and cuffed her other children whenever she 
found them teasing him or trying to get his 
chicken-bone away from him. He began to 
talk early, remembered everything he heard, 
and his mammy said he "was n't all wrong." 
She named him Samson, because he was blind, 
but on the plantation he was known as "yel- 
low Martha's simple child." He was docile and 
obedient, but when he was six years old he 
began to run away from home, always taking 
the same direction. He felt his way through 
the lilacs, along the boxwood hedge, up to the 
south wing of the "Big House," where Miss 
Nellie d'Amault practiced the piano every 
morning. This angered his mother more than 
anything else he could have done; she was so 

211 



MY ANTONIA 

ashamed of his ugliness that she couldn't 
bear to have white folks see him. Whenever 
she caught him slipping away from the cabin, 
she whipped him unmercifully, and told him 
what dreadful things old Mr. d'Amault would 
do to him if he ever found him near the "Big 
House." But the next time Samson had a 
chance, he ran away again. If Miss d'Amault 
stopped practicing for a moment and went 
toward the window, she saw this hideous little 
pickaninny, dressed in an old piece of sacking, 
standing in the open space between the holly- 
hock rows, his body rocking automatically, his 
blind face lifted to the sun and wearing an 
expression of idiotic rapture. Often she was 
tempted to tell Martha that the child must be 
kept at home, but somehow the memory of 
his foolish, happy face deterred her. She re- 
membered that his sense of hearing was nearly 
all he had, — though it did not occur to her 
that he might have more of it than other 
children. 

One day Samson was standing thus while 
Miss Nellie was playing her lesson to her 
music-master. The windows were open. He 
heard them get up from the piano, talk a little 
while, and then leave the room. He heard the 

212 



THE HIRED GIRLS 

door close after them. He crept up to the front 
windows and stuck his head in : there was no 
one there. He could always detect the pres- 
ence of any one in a room. He put one foot 
over the window sill and straddled it. His 
mother had told him over and over how his 
master would give him to the big mastiff if 
he ever found him "meddling." Samson had 
got too near the mastiff's kennel once, and 
had felt his terrible breath in his face. He 
thought about that, but he pulled in his other 
foot. 

Through the dark he found his way to the 
Thing, to its mouth. He touched it softly, and 
it answered softly, kindly. He shivered and 
stood still. Then he began to feel it all over, 
ran his finger tips along the slippery sides, em- 
braced the carved legs, tried to get some con- 
ception of its shape and size, of the space it 
occupied in primeval night. It was cold and 
hard, and like nothing else in his blackuniverse. 
He went back to its mouth, began at one end of 
the keyboard and felt his way down into the 
mellow thunder, as far as he could go. He 
seemed to know that it must be done with 
the fingers, not with the fists or the feet. He 
approached this highly artificial instrument 
213 



MY ANTONIA 

through a mere instinct, and coupled himself 
to it, as if he knew it was to piece him out and 
make a whole creature of him. After he had 
tried over all the sounds, he began to finger 
out passages from things Miss Nellie had been 
practicing, passages that were already his, that 
lay under the bones of his pinched, conical 
little skull, definite as animal desires. The door 
opened; Miss Nellie and her music-master 
stood behind it, but blind Samson, who was 
so sensitive to presences, did not know they 
were there. He was feeling out the pattern 
that lay all ready-made on the big and little 
keys. When he paused for a moment, because 
the sound was wrong and he wanted another, 
Miss Nellie spoke softly. He whirled about in 
a spasm of terror, leaped forward in the dark, 
struck his head on the open window, and fell 
screaming and bleeding to the floor. He had 
what his mother called a fit. The doctor came 
and gave him opium. 

When Samson was well again, his young 
mistress led him back to the piano. Several 
teachers experimented with him. They found 
he had absolute pitch, and a remarkable 
memory. As a very young child he could re- 
peat, after a fashion, any composition that 
214 



THE HIRED GIRLS 

was played for him. No matter how many 
wrong notes he struck, he never lost the inten- 
tion of a passage, he brought the substance 
of it across by irregular and astonishing 
means. He wore his teachers out. He could 
never learn like other people, never acquired 
any finish. He was always a negro prodigy who 
played barbarously and wonderfully. As piano 
playing, it was perhaps abominable, but as 
music it was something real, vitalized by a 
sense of rhythm that was stronger than his 
other physical senses, — that not only filled his 
dark mind, but worried his body incessantly. 
To hear him, to watch him, was to see a negro 
enjoying himself as only a negro can. It was 
as if all the agreeable sensations possible to 
creatures of flesh and blood were heaped up on 
those black and white keys, and he were gloat- 
ing over them and trickling them through his 
yellow fingers. 

In the middle of a crashing waltz d' Arnault 
suddenly began to play softly, and, turning to 
one of the men who stood behind him, whis- 
jpered, "Somebody dancing in there." He 
jerked his bullet head toward the dining-room. 
" I hear little feet, — girls, I 'spect." 

Anson Kirkpatrick mounted a chair and 
215 



MY ANTONIA 

peeped over the transom. Springing down, 
he wrenched open the doors and ran out into 
the dining-room. Tiny and Lena, Antonia and 
Mary Dusak, were waltzing in the middle of 
the floor. They separated and fled toward 
the kitchen, giggling. 

Kirkpatrick caught Tiny by the elbows. 
"What's the matter with you girls? Dancing 
out here by yourselves, when there's a room- 
ful of lonesome men on the other side of the 
partition ! Introduce me to your friends, Tiny." 

The girls, still laughing, were trying to es- 
cape. Tiny looked alarmed. "Mrs. Gardener 
would n't like it," she protested. "She'd be 
awful mad if you was to come out here and 
dance with us." 

"Mrs. Gardener's in Omaha, girl. Now, 
you 're Lena, are you ? — and you 're Tony and 
you're Mary. Have I got you all straight?" 

O'Reilly and the others began to pile the 
chairs on the tables. Johnnie Gardener ran in 
from the office. 

"Easy, boys, easy!" he entreated them. 
"You'll wake the cook, and there'll be the 
devil to pay for me. She won't hear the music, 
but she'll be down the minute anything 's 
moved in the dining-room." 
216 



THE HIRED GIRLS 

"Oh, what do you care, Johnnie? Fire the 
cook and wire Molly to bring another. Come 
along, nobody '11 telltales." 

Johnnie shook his head. " 'S a fact, boys," 
he said confidentially. "If I take a drink in 
Black Hawk, Molly knows it in Omaha!" 

His guests laughed and slapped him on the 
shoulder. "Oh, we'll make it all right with 
Molly. Get your back up, Johnnie." 

Molly was Mrs. Gardener's name, of course. 
"Molly Bawn" was painted in large blue 
letters on the glossy white side of the hotel bus, 
and "Molly" was engraved inside Johnnie's 
ring and on his watch-case — doubtless on his 
heart, too. He was an affectionate little man, 
and he thought his wife a wonderful woman; 
he knew that without her he would hardly be 
more than a clerk in some other man's hotel. 

At a' word from Kirkpatrick, d' Arnault 
spread himself out over the piano, and began 
to draw the dance music out of it, while the 
perspiration shone on his short wool and on 
his uplifted face. He looked like some glis- 
tening African god of pleasure, full of strong, 
savage blood. Whenever the dancers paused 
to change partners or to catch breath, he 
would boom out softly, "Who's that goin' 
217 



MY ANTONIA 

back on me? One of these city gentlemen, I 
bet! Now, you girls, you ain't goin' to let 
that floor get cold?" 

Antonia seemed frightened at first, and kept 
looking questioningly at Lena and Tiny over 
Willy O'Reilly's shoulder. Tiny Soderball was 
trim and slender, with lively little feet and 
pretty ankles — she wore her dresses very 
short. She was quicker in speech, lighter in 
movement and manner than the other girls. 
Mary Dusak was broad and brown of counte- 
nance, slightly marked by smallpox, but hand- 
some for all that. She had beautiful chestnut 
hair, coils of it; her forehead was low and 
smooth, and her commanding dark eyes re- 
garded the world indifferently and fearlessly. 
She looked bold and resourceful and unscru- 
pulous, and she was all of these. They were 
handsome girls, had the fresh color of their 
country up-bringing, and in their eyes that 
brilliancy which is called, — by no metaphor, 
alas! — "the light of youth." 

D'Arnault played until his manager came 
and shut the piano. Before he left us, he 
showed us his gold watch which struck the 
hours, and a topaz ring, given him by some 
Russian nobleman who delighted in negro 
218 



THE HIRED GIRLS 

melodies, and had heard d' Arnault play in 
New Orleans. At last he tapped his way up- 
stairs, after bowing to everybody, docile and 
happy. I walked home with Antonia. We were 
so excited that we dreaded to go to bed. We 
lingered a long while at the Harlings' gate, 
whispering in the cold until the restlessness 
was slowly chilled out of us. 



VIII 

The Harling children and I were never hap- 
pier, never felt more contented and secure, 
than in the weeks of spring which broke that 
long winter. We were out all day in the thin 
sunshine, helping Mrs. Harling and Tony 
break the ground and plant the garden, dig 
around the orchard trees, tie up vines and 
clip the hedges. Every morning, before I was 
up, I could hear Tony singing in the garden 
rows. After the apple and cherry trees broke 
into bloom, we ran about under them, hunting 
for the new nests the birds were building, 
throwing clods at each other, and playing hide- 
and-seek with Nina. Yet the summer which 
was to change everything was coming nearer 
every day. When boys and girls are growing 
up, life can't stand still, not even in the quiet- 
est of country towns; and they have to grow 
up, whether they will or no. That is what 
their elders are always forgetting. 

It must have been in June, for Mrs. Harling 
and Antonia were preserving cherries, when I 
stopped one morning to tell them that a danc- 
ing pavilion had come to town. I had seen 
220 



THE HIRED GIRLS 

two drays hauling the canvas and painted 
poles up from the depot. 

That afternoon three cheerful-looking Ital- 
ians strolled about Black Hawk, looking at 
everything, and with them was a dark, stout 
woman who wore a long gold watch chain 
about her neck and carried a black lace para- 
sol. They seemed especially interested in chil- 
dren and vacant lots. When I overtook them 
and stopped to say a word, I found them affa- 
ble and confiding. They told me they worked 
in Kansas City in the winter, and in summer 
they went out among the farming towns with 
their tent and taught dancing. When business 
fell off in one place, they moved on to another. 

The dancing pavilion was put up near the 
Danish laundry, on a vacant lot surrounded 
by tall, arched cottonwood trees. It was very 
much like a merry-go-round tent, with open 
sides and gay flags flying from the poles. Be- 
fore the week was over, all the ambitious 
mothers were sending their children to the 
afternoon dancing class. At three o'clock one 
met little girls in white dresses and little boys 
in the round-collared shirts of the time, hurry- 
ing along the sidewalk on their way to the 
tent. Mrs. Vanni received them at the en- 

221 



MY ANTONIA 

trance, always dressed in lavender with a great 
deal of black lace, her important watch chain 
lying on her bosom. She wore her hair on 
the top of her head, built up in a black tower, 
with red coral combs. When she smiled, she 
showed two rows of strong, crooked yellow 
teeth. She taught the little children herself, 
and her husband, the harpist, taught the older 
ones. 

Often the mothers brought their fancy-work 
and sat on the shady side of the tent during 
the lesson. The popcorn man wheeled his glass 
wagon under the big cottonwood by the door, 
and lounged in the sun, sure of a good trade 
when the dancing was over. Mr. Jensen, the 
Danish laundryman, used to bring a chair 
from his porch and sit out in the grass plot. 
Some ragged little boys from the depot sold 
pop and iced lemonade under a white um- 
brella at the corner, and made faces at the 
spruce youngsters who came to dance. That 
vacant lot soon became the most cheerful 
place in town. Even on the hottest afternoons 
the cottonwoods made a rustling shade, and 
the air smelled of popcorn and melted butter, 
and Bouncing Bets wilting in the sun. Those 
hardy flowers had run away from the laundry- 

222 



THE HIRED GIRLS 

man's garden, and the grass in the middle of 
the lot was pink with them. 

The Vannis kept exemplary order, and 
closed every evening at the hour suggested by 
the City Council. When Mrs. Vanni gave 
the signal, and the harp struck up "Home, 
Sweet Home," all Black Hawk knew it was 
ten o'clock. You could set your watch by that 
tune as confidently as by the Round House 
whistle. 

At last there was something to do in those 
long, empty summer evenings, when the mar- 
ried people sat like images on their front 
porches, and the boys and girls tramped and 
tramped the board sidewalks — northward to 
the edge of the open prairie, south to the de- 
pot, then back again to the post-office, the ice- 
cream parlor, the butcher shop. Now there 
was a place where the girls could wear their 
new dresses, and where one could laugh aloud 
without being reproved by the ensuing silence. 
That silence seemed to ooze out of the ground, 
to hang under the foliage of the black maple 
trees with the bats and shadows. Now it 
was broken by light-hearted sounds. First the 
deep purring of Mr. Vanni's harp came in 
silvery ripples through the blackness of the 
223 



MY ANTONIA 

dusty-smelling night; then the violins fell In 
' — one of them was almost like a flute. They 
called so archly, so seductively, that our feet 
hurried toward the tent of themselves. Why 
had n't we had a tent before? 

Dancing became popular now, just as roller 
skating had been the summer before. The 
Progressive Euchre Club arranged with the 
Vannis for the exclusive use of the floor on 
Tuesday and Friday nights. At other times 
any one could dance who paid his money and 
was orderly; the railroad men, the Round 
House mechanics, the delivery boys, the ice- 
man, the farmhands who lived near enough to 
ride into town after their day's work was over. 

I never missed a Saturday night dance. The 
tent was open until midnight then. The coun- 
try boys came in from farms eight and ten 
miles away, and all the country girls were on 
the floor, — Antonia and Lena and Tiny, and 
the Danish laundry girls and their friends. I 
was not the only boy who found these dances 
gayer than the others. The young men who 
belonged to the Progressive Euchre Club used 
to drop in late and risk a tiff with their sweet- 
hearts and general condemnation for a waltz 
with "the hired girls." 



IX 

There was a curious social situation in Black 
Hawk. All the young men felt the attraction 
of the fine, well-set-up country girls who had 
come to town to earn a living, and, in nearly 
every case, to help the father struggle out of 
debt, or to make it possible for the younger 
children of the family to go to school. 

Those girls had grown up in the first bitter- 
hard times, and had got little schooling them- 
selves. But the younger brothers and sisters, 
for whom they made such sacrifices and who 
have had "advantages," never seem to me, 
when I meet them now, half as interesting or 
as wdl educated. The older girls, who helped 
to break up the wild sod, learned so much 
from life, from poverty, from their mothers 
and grandmothers; they had all, like Antonia, 
been early awakened and made observant by 
coming at a tender age from an old country 
to a new. I can remember a score of these 
country girls who were in service in Black 
Hawk during the few years I lived there, and 

225 



MY ANTONIA 

I can remember something unusual and en- 
gaging about each of them. Physically they 
were almost a race apart, and out-of-door 
work had given them a vigor which, when they 
got over their first shyness on coming to town, 
developed into a positive carriage and freedom 
of movement, and made them conspicuous 
among Black Hawk women. 

That was before the day of High-School 
athletics. Girls v/ho had to walk more than 
half a mile to school were pitied. There was 
not a tennis court in the town; physical exer- 
cise was thought rather inelegant for the 
daughters of well-to-do families. Some of the 
High-School girls were jolly and pretty, but 
they stayed indoors in winter because of the 
cold, and in summer because of the heat. 
When one danced with them their bodies 
never moved inside their clothes; their mus- 
cles seemed to ask but one thing — • not to be 
disturbed. I remember those girls merely as 
faces in the schoolroom, gay and rosy, or Ust- 
less and dull, cut off below the shoulders, like 
cherubs, by the ink-smeared tops of the high 
desks that were surely put there to make us 
round-shouldered and hollow-chested. 

The daughters of Black Hawk merchants 
226 



THE HIRED GIRLS 

had a confident, uninquiring belief that they 
were "refined," and that the country girls, 
who "worked out," were not. The American 
farmers in our county were quite as hard- 
pressed as their neighbors from other coun- 
tries. All alike had come to Nebraska with 
little capital and no knowledge of the soil 
they must subdue. All had borrowed money 
on their land. But no matter in what straits 
the Pennsylvanian or Virginian found him- 
self, he would not let his daughters go out 
into service. Unless his girls could teach a 
country school, they sat at home in poverty. 
The Bohemian and Scandinavian girls could 
not get positions as teachers, because they had 
had no opportunity to learn the language. 
Determined to help in the struggle to clear the 
homestead from debt, they had no alternative 
but to go into service. Some of them, after 
they came to town, remained as serious and 
as discreet in behavior as they had been when 
they ploughed and herded on their father's 
farm. Others, like the three Bohemian Marys, 
tried to make up for the years of youth they 
had lost. But every one of them did what she 
had set out to do, and sent home those hard- 
earned dollars. The girls I knew were always 
227 



MY ANTONIA 

helping to pay for ploughs and reapers, brood- 
sows, or steers to fatten. 

One result of this family solidarity was that 
the foreign farmers in our county were the first 
to become prosperous. After the fathers were 
out of debt, the daughters married the sons of 
neighbors, — usually of like nationality, — and 
the girls who once worked in Black Hawk 
kitchens are to-day managing big farms and 
fine families of their own; their children are 
better off than the children of the town women 
they used to serve. 

I thought the attitude of the town people 
toward these girls very stupid. If I told my 
schoolmates that Lena Lingard's grandfather 
was a clergyman, and much respected in Nor- 
way, they looked at me blankly. What did it 
matter? All foreigners were ignorant people 
who could n't speak English. There was not a 
man in Black Hawk who had the intelligence 
or cultivation, much less the personal distinc- 
tion, of Antonia's father. Yet people saw no 
difference between her and the three Marys; 
they were all Bohemians, all "hired girls." 

I always knew I should live long enough to 
see my country girls come into their own, and 
I have. To-day the best that a harassed Black 
228 



THE HIRED GIRLS 

Hawk merchant can hope for is to sell provi- 
sions and farm machinery and automobiles to 
the rich farms where that first crop of stalwart 
Bohemian and Scandinavian girls are now the 
mistresses. 

The Black Hawk boys looked forward to 
marrying Black Hawk girls, and living in a 
brand-new little house with best chairs that 
must not be sat upon, and hand-painted china 
that must not be used. But sometimes a 
young fellow would look up from his ledger, or 
out through the grating of his father's bank, 
and let his eyes follow Lena Lingard, as she 
passed the window with her slow, undulating 
walk, or Tiny Soderball, tripping by in her 
short skirt and striped stockings. 

The country girls were considered a menace 
to the social order. Their beauty shone out too 
boldly against a conventional background. 
But anxious mothers need have felt no alarm. 
They mistook the mettle of their sons. The 
respect for respectability was stronger than 
any desire in Black Hawk youth. 

Our young man of position was like the son 

of a royal house; the boy who swept out his 

office or drove his delivery wagon might frolic 

with the jolly country girls, but he himself 

229 



MY ANTONIA 

must sit all evening in a plush parlor where 
conversation dragged so perceptibly that the 
father often came in and made blundering 
efforts to warm up the atmosphere. On his 
way home from his dull call, he would perhaps 
meet Tony and Lena, coming along the side- 
walk whispering to each other, or the three 
Bohemian Marys in their long plush coats 
and caps, comporting themselves with a dig- 
nity that only made their eventful histories 
the more piquant. If he went to the hotel to 
see a traveling man on business, there was 
Tiny, arching her shoulders at him like a kit- 
ten. If he went into the laundry to get his 
collars, there were the four Danish girls, smil- 
ing up from their ironing-boards, with their 
white throats and their pink cheeks. 

The three Marys were the heroines of a cycle 
of scandalous stories, which the old men were 
fond of relating as they sat about the cigar- 
stand in the drug-store, Mary Dusak had been 
housekeeper for a bachelor rancher from Bos- 
ton, and after several years in his service she 
was forced to retire from the world for a short 
time. Later she came back to town to take 
the place of her friend, Mary Svoboda, who 
was similarly embarrassed. The three Marys 
230 



THE HIRED GIRLS 

were considered as dangerous as high explo- 
sives to have about the kitchen, yet they were 
such good cooks and such admirable house- 
keepers that they never had to look for a place. 
The Vannis' tent brought the town boys and 
the country girls together on neutral ground. 
Sylvester Lovett, who was cashier in his fath- 
er's bank, always found his way to the tent on 
Saturday night. He took all the dances Lena 
Lingard would give him, and even grew bold 
enough to walk home with her. If his sisters 
or their friends happened to be among the 
onlookers on "popular nights," Sylvester 
stood back in the shadow under the cotton- 
wood trees, smoking and watching Lena with 
a harassed expression. Several times I stum- 
bled upon him there in the dark, and I felt 
rather sorry for him. He reminded me of Ole 
Benson, who used to sit on the draw-side and 
watch Lena herd her cattle. Later in the sum- 
mer, when Lena went home for a week to 
visit her mother, I heard from Antonia that 
young Lovett drove all the way out there to 
see her, and took her buggy-riding. In my in- 
genuousness I hoped that Sylvester would 
marry Lena, and thus give all the country 
girls a better position in the town. 
231 



MY ANTONIA 

Sylvester dallied about Lena until he be^/an 
to make mistakes in his work; had to stayrf at 
the bank until after dark to make his bctoks 
balance. He was daft about her, and every 
one knew it. To escape from his predicament 
he ran away with a widow six years older 
than himself, who owned a half-section. This 
remedy worked, apparently. He never looked 
at Lena again, nor lifted his eyes as he cere- 
moniously tipped his hat when he happened 
to meet her on the sidewalk. 

So that was what they were like, I thought, 
these white-handed, high-collared clerks and 
bookkeepers! I used to glare at young Lovett 
from a distance and only wished I had some 
way of showing my contempt for him. 



X 

It was at the Vannis' tent that Antonla was 
discovered. Hitherto she had been looked 
upon more as a ward of the Harlings than as 
one of the "hired girls." She had lived in their 
house and yard and garden; her thoughts 
never seemed to stray outside that little king- 
dom. But after the tent came to town she 
began to go about with Tiny and Lena and 
their friends. The Vannis often said that An- 
tonia was the best dancer of them all. I some- 
times heard murmurs in the crowd outside the 
pavilion that Mrs. Harling would soon have 
her hands full with that girl. The young men 
began to joke with each other about "the 
Harlings' Tony" as they did about "the Mar* 
shalls' Anna" or "the Gardeners' Tiny." 

Antonia talked and thought of nothing but 
the tent. She hummed the dance tunes all day. 
When supper was late, she hurried with her 
dishes, dropped and smashed them in her ex- 
citement. At the first call of the music, she 
became irresponsible. If she had n't time to 
dress, she merely flung off her apron and shot 
233 



MY ANTONIA 

out of the kitchen door. Sometimes I went 
with her; the moment the lighted tent came 
into view she would break into a run, like a 
boy. There were always partners waiting for 
her; she began to dance before she got her 
breath. 

Antonia's success at the tent had its conse- 
quences. The iceman lingered too long now, 
when he came into the covered porch to fill the 
refrigerator. The delivery boys hung about 
the kitchen when they brought the groceries. 
Young farmers who were in town for Saturday 
came tramping through the yard to the back 
door to engage dances, or to invite Tony to 
parties and picnics. Lena and Norwegian 
Anna dropped in to help her with her work, so 
that she could get away early. The boys who 
brought her home after the dances sometimes 
laughed at the back gate and wakened Mr. 
Harling from his first sleep. A crisis was 
inevitable. 

One Saturday night Mr. Harling had gone 
down to the cellar for beer. As he came up the 
stairs in the dark, he heard scuffling on the 
back porch, and then the sound of a vigor- 
ous slap. He looked out through the side door 
in time to see a pair of long legs vaulting over 
234 



THE HIRED GIRLS 

the picket fence. Antonia was standing there, 
angry and excited. Young Harry Paine, who 
was to marry his employer's daughter on Mon- 
day, had come to the tent with a crowd of 
friends and danced all evening. Afterward, he 
begged Antonia to let him walk home with 
her. She said she supposed he was a nice 
young man, as he was one of Miss Frances's 
friends, and she did n't mind. On the back 
porch he tried to kiss her, and when she pro- 
tested, — because he was going to be married 
on Monday, — he caught her and kissed her 
until she got one hand free and slapped him. 

Mr. Harling put his beer bottles down on 
the table. "This is what I've been expecting, 
Antonia. You've been going with girls who 
have a reputation for being free and easy, and 
now you've got the same reputation. I won't 
have this and that fellow tramping about my 
back yard all the time. This is the end of it, 
to-night. It stops, short. You can quit going 
to these dances, or you can hunt another 
place. Think it over." 

The next morning when Mrs. Harling and 
Frances tried to reason with Antonia, they 
found her agitated but determined. "Stop go- 
ing to the tent?" she panted. "I wouldn't 
235 



MY ANTONIA 

think of it for a minute! My own father 
could n't make me stop ! Mr. Harling ain't my 
boss outside my work. I won't give up my 
friends, either. The boys I go with are nice 
fellows. I thought Mr. Paine was all right, 
too, because he used to come here. I guess 
I gave him a red face for his wedding, all 
right!" she blazed out indignantly. 

"You'll have to do one thing or the other, 
Antonia," Mrs. Harling told her decidedly. 
"I can't go back on what Mr. Harling has 
said. This is his house." 

"Then I '11 just leave, Mrs. Harling. Lena's 
been wanting me to get a place closer to her 
for a long while. Mary Svoboda's going away 
from the Cutters' to work at the hotel, and I 
can have her place." 

Mrs. Harling rose from her chair. "Antonia, 
if you go to the Cutters to work, you cannot 
come back to this house again. You know 
what that man is. It will be the ruin of 
you." 

Tony snatched up the tea-kettle and began 
to pour boiling water over the glasses, laugh- 
ing excitedly. "Oh, I can take care of myself! 
I'm a lot stronger than Cutter is. They pay 
four dollars there, and there's no children. 
236 



THE HIRED GIRLS 

The work 's nothing ; I can have every evening, 
and be out a lot in the afternoons." 

"I thought you liked children. Tony, 
what's come over you?" 

"I don't know, something has." Antonia 
tossed her head and set her jaw. "A girl like 
me has got to take her good times when she 
can. Maybe there won't be any tent next 
year. I guess I want to have my fling, like the 
other girls." 

Mrs. Harling gave a short, harsh laugh. "If 
you go to work for the Cutters, you're likely 
to have a fling that you won't get up from in a 
hurry." 

Frances said, when she told grandmother 
and me about this scene, that every pan and 
plate and cup on the shelves trembled when 
her mother walked out of the kitchen. Mrs. 
Harling declared bitterly that she wished she 
had never let herself get fond of Antonia. 



XI 

Wick CtrrrER was the money-lender who had 
fleeced poor Russian Peter. When a farmer 
once got into the habit of going to Cutter, it 
was like gambling or the lottery; in an hour of 
discouragement he went back. 

Cutter's first name was Wycliffe, and he 
liked to talk about his pious bringing-up. 
He contributed regularly to the Protestant 
churches, "for sentiment's sake," as he said 
with a flourish of the hand. He came from a 
town in Iowa where there were a great many 
Swedes, and could speak a little Swedish, 
which gave him a great advantage with the 
early Scandinavian settlers. 

In every frontier settlement there are men 
who have come there to escape restraint. Cut- 
ter was one of the "fast set" of Black Hawk 
business men. He was an inveterate gambler, 
though a poor loser. When we saw a light 
burning in his office late at night, we knew 
that a game of poker was going on. Cutter 
boasted that he never drank anything stronger 
than sherry, and he said he got his start in life 
238 



THE HIRED GIRLS 

by saving the money that other young men 
spent for cigars. He was full of moral maxims 
for boys. When he came to our house on busi- 
ness, he quoted "Poor Richard's Almanack" 
to me, and told me he was delighted to find a 
town boy who could milk a cow. He was par- 
ticularly affable to grandmother, and when- 
ever they met he would begin at once to talk 
about "the good old times" and simple living. 
I detested his pink, bald head, and his yellow 
whiskers, always soft and glistening. It was 
said he brushed them every night, as a woman 
does her hair. His white teeth looked factory- 
made. His skin was red and rough, as if from 
perpetual sunburn; he often went away to 
hot springs to take mud baths. He was no- 
toriously dissolute with women. Two Swedish 
girls who had lived in his house were the worse 
for the experience. One of them he had taken 
to Omaha and established in the business 
for which he had fitted her. He still visited 
her. 

Cutter lived in a state of perpetual warfare 
with his wife, and yet, apparently, they never 
thought of separating. They dwelt in a fussy, 
scroll-work house, painted white and buried in 
thick evergreens, with a fussv white fence and 
239 



MY ANTONIA 

barn. Cutter thought he knew a great deal 
about horses, and usually had a colt which he 
was training for the track. On Sunday morn- 
ings one could see him out at the fair grounds, 
speeding around the race-course in his trot- 
ting-buggy, wearing yellow gloves and a black- 
and-white-check traveling cap, his whiskers 
blowing back in the breeze. If there were any 
boys about. Cutter would offer one of them a 
quarter to hold the stop-watch, and then drive 
off, saying he had no change and would "fix it 
up next time." No one could cut his lawn or 
wash his buggy to suit him. He was so fastidi- 
ous and prim about his place that a boy would 
go to a good deal of trouble to throw a dead 
cat into his back yard, or to dump a sackful of 
tin cans in his alley. It was a peculiar combi- 
nation of old-maidishness and licentiousness 
that mdde Cutter seem so despicable. 

He had certainly met his match when he 
married Mrs. Cutter. She was a terrifying- 
looking person; almost a giantess in height, 
raw-boned, with iron-gray hair, a face always 
flushed, and prominent, hysterical eyes. When 
she meant to be entertaining and agreeable, 
she nodded her head incessantly and snapped 
her eyes at one. Her teeth were long and 
240 



THE HIRED GIRLS 

curved, like a horse's; people said babies al- 
ways cried if she smiled at them. Her face had 
a kind of fascination for me; it was the very 
color and shape of anger. There was a gleam 
of something akin to insanity in her full, in- 
tense eyes. She was formal in manner, and 
made calls in rustling, steel-gray brocades and 
a tall bonnet with bristling aigrettes. 

Mrs. Cutter painted china so assiduously 
that even her washbowls and pitchers, and her 
husband's shaving-mug, were covered with 
violets and lilies. Once when Cutter was ex- 
hibiting some of his wife's china to a caller, he 
dropped a piece. Mrs. Cutter put her hand- 
kerchief to her lips as if she were going to faint 
and said grandly: "Mr. Cutter, you have 
broken all the Commandments — spare the 
finger-bowls!" 

They quarreled from the moment Cutter 
came into the house until they went to bed at 
night, and their hired girls reported these 
scenes to the town at large. Mrs. Cutter had 
several times cut paragraphs about unfaithful 
husbands out of the newspapers and mailed 
them to Cutter in a disguised handwriting. 
Cutter would come home at noon, find the 
mutilated journal in the paper-rack, and tri- 
241 



MY ANTONIA 

umphantly fit the clipping into the space from 
which it had been cut. Those two could quar- 
rel all morning about whether he ought to put 
on his heavy or his light underwear, and all 
evening about whether he had taken cold or 
not. 

j The Cutters had major as well as minor sub- 
jects for dispute. The chief of these was the 
question of inheritance: Mrs. Cutter told her 
husband it was plainly his fault they had no 

' children. He insisted that Mrs. Cutter had 
purposely remained childless, with the de- 
termination to outlive him and to share his 
property with her "people," whom he de- 
tested. To this she would reply that unless he 
changed his mode of life, she would certainly 
outlive him. After listening to her insinua- 
tions about his physical soundness, Cutter 
would resume his dumb-bell practice for a 
month, or rise daily at the hour when his wife 
most liked to sleep, dress noisily, and drive out 
to the track with his trotting-horse. 

Once when they had quarreled about house- 
hold expenses, Mrs. Cutter put on her brocade 
and went among their friends soliciting orders 
for painted china, saying that Mr. Cutter had 
compelled her "to live by her brush." Cutter 
242 



THE HIRED GIRLS 

was n't shamed as she had expected; he was 
deUghted ! 

Cutter often threatened to chop down the 
cedar trees which half-buried the house. His 
wife declared she would leave him if she were 
stripped of the "privacy" which she felt these 
trees afforded her. That was his opportunity, 
surely; but he never cut down the trees. The 
Cutters seemed to find their relations to each 
other interesting and stimulating, and cer- 
tainly the rest of us found them so. Wick 
Cutter was different from any other rascal I 
have ever known, but I have found Mrs. 
Cutters all over the world ; sometimes found- 
ing new religions, sometimes being forcibly 
fed — easily recognizable, even when superfi- 
cially tamed. 



XII 

After Antonia went to live with the Cutters, 
she seemed to care about nothing but picnics 
and parties and having a good time. When 
she was not going to a dance, she sewed un- 
til midnight. Her new clothes were the sub- 
ject of caustic comment. Under Lena's direc- 
tion she copied Mrs. Gardener's new party- 
dress and Mrs. Smith's street costume so in- 
geniously in cheap materials that those ladies 
were greatly annoyed, and Mrs. Cutter, who 
was jealous of them, was secretly pleased. 

Tony wore gloves now, and high-heeled 
shoes and feathered bonnets, and she went 
downtown nearly every afternoon with Tiny 
and Lena and the Marshalls' Norwegian Anna. 
We High-School boys used to linger on the 
playground at the afternoon recess to watch 
them as they came tripping down the hill 
along the board sidewalk, two and two. They 
were growing prettier every day, but as they 
passed us, I used to think with pride that An- 
tonia, like' Snow-White in the fairy tale, was 
still "fairest of them all." 
244 



THE HIRED GIRLS 

Being a Senior now, I got away from school 
early. Sometimes I overtook the girls down- 
town and coaxed them into the ice-cream 
parlor, where they would sit chattering and 
laughing, telling me all the news from the 
country. I remember how angry Tiny Soder- 
ball made me one afternoon. She declared 
she had heard grandmother was going to make 
a Baptist preacher of me. "I guess you'll 
have to stop dancing and wear a white necktie 
then. Won't he look funny, girls?" 

Lena laughed. "You'll have to hurry up, 
Jim. If you 're going to be a preacher, I want 
you to marry me. You must promise to marry 
us all, and then baptize the babies." 

Norwegian Anna, always dignified, looked 
at her reprovingly. 

"Baptists don't believe in christening ba- 
bies, do they, Jim?" 

I told her I did n't know what they be- 
lieved, and did n't care, and that I certainly 
was n't going to be a preacher. 

"That's too bad," Tiny simpered. She was 
in a teasing mood. "You 'd make such a good 
one. You're so studious. Maybe you'd like 
to be a professor. You used to teach Tony, 
did n't you?" 

245 



MY ANTONIA \ 

Antonia broke in. "I've set my heart on 
Jim being a doctor. You'd be good with sick 
people, Jim. Your grandmother's trained you 
up so nice. My papa always said you were an 
awful smart boy." 

I said I was going to be whatever I pleased. 
"Won't you be surprised, Miss Tiny, if I turn 
out to be a regular devil of a fellow?" 

They laughed until a glance from Ndrwe- 
gian Anna checked them; the High-School 
Principal had just come into the front part 
of the shop to buy bread for supper. Anna 
knew the whisper was going about that I was 
a sly one. People said there must be some- 
thing queer about a boy who showed no in- 
terest in girls of his own age, but who could 
be lively enough when he was with Tony and 
Lena or the three Marys. 

The enthusiasm for the dance, which the 
Vannis had kindled, did not at once die out. 
After the tent left town, the Euchre Club be- 
came the OWl Club, and gave dances in the 
Masonic Hall once a week. I was invited to 
join, but declined. I was moody and restless 
that winter, and tired of the people I saw every 
day. Charley Harling was already at Annapo- 
246 



THE HIRED GIRLS 

lis, while I was still sitting in Black Hawk, 
answering to my name at roll-call every morn- 
ing, rising from my desk at the sound of a bell 
and marching out like the grammar-school 
children. Mrs. Harling was a little cool toward 
me, because I continued to champion Antonia. 
What was there for me to do after supper? 
Usually I had learned next day's lessons by 
the time I left the school building, and I 
could n't sit still and read forever. 

In the evening I used to prowl about, hunt- 
ing for diversion. There lay the familiar 
streets, frozen with snow or liquid with mud. 
They led to the houses of good people who 
were putting the babies to bed, or simply sit- 
ting still before the parlor stove, digesting 
their supper. Black Hawk had two saloons. 
One of them was admitted, even by the 
church people, to be as respectable as a saloon 
could be. Handsome Anton Jelinek, who had 
rented his homestead and come to town, was 
the proprietor. In his saloon there were long 
tables where the Bohemian and German farm- 
ers could eat the lunches they brought from 
home while they drank their beer. Jelinek 
kept rye bread on hand, and smoked fish and 
strong imported cheeses to please the foreign 
247 



MY ANTONIA 

palate. I liked to drop into his bar-room 
and listen to the talk. But one day he over- 
took me on the street and clapped me on the 
shoulder. 

"Jim," he said, "I am good friends with 
you and I always like to see you. But you 
know how the church people think about 
saloons. Your grandpa has always treated me 
fine, and I don't like to have you come into 
my place, because I know he don't like it, and 
it puts me in bad with him." 

So I was shut out of that. 

One could hang about the drug-store, and 
listen to the old men who sat there every 
evening, talking politics and telling raw sto- 
ries. One could go to the cigar factory and chat 
with the old German who raised canaries for 
sale, and look at his stuffed birds. But what- 
ever you began with him, the talk went back 
to taxidermy. There was the depot, of course; 
I often went down to see the night train 
come in, and afterward sat awhile with the 
disconsolate telegrapher who was always hop- 
ing to be transferred to Omaha or Denver, 
"where there was some life." He was sure 
to bring out his pictures of actresses and 
dancers. He got them with cigarette coupons, 
248 



THE HIRED GIRLS 

and nearly smoked himself to death to possess 
these desired forms and faces. For a change, 
one could talk to the station agent; but he 
was another malcontent; spent all his spare 
time writing letters to officials requesting a 
transfer. He wanted to get back to Wyoming 
where he could go trout-fishing on Sundays. 
He used to say "there was nothing in life for 
him but trout streams, ever since he'd lost his 
twins." 

. These were the distractions I had to choose 
from. There were no other lights burning 
downtown after nine o'clock. On starUght 
nights I used to pace up and down those long, 
cold streets, scowling at the little, sleeping 
houses on either side, with their storm-win- 
dows and covered back porches. They were 
flimsy shelters, most of them poorly built of 
light wood, with spindle porch-posts horribly 
mutilated by the turning-lathe. Yet for all 
their frailness, how much jealousy and envy 
and unhappiness some of them managed to 
contain ! The life that went on in them seemed 
to me made up of evasions and negations; 
shifts to save cooking, to save washing and 
cleaning, devices to propitiate the tongue of 
gossip. This guarded mode of existence was 
249 



MY ANTONIA 

like living under a tyranny. People's speech, 
their voices, their very glances, became fur- 
tive and repressed. Every individual taste, 
every natural appetite, was bridled by cau- 
tion. The people asleep in those houses, I 
thought, tried to live like the mice in their 
own kitchens; to make no noise, to leave no 
trace, to slip over the surface of things in the 
dark. The growing piles of ashes and cinders 
in the back yards were the only evidence that 
the wasteful, consuming process of life went 
on at all. On Tuesday nights the Owl Club 
danced; then there was a little stir in the 
streets, and here and there one could see a 
lighted window until midnight. But the next 
night all was dark again. 

After I refused to join "the Owls," as they 
were called, I made a bold resolve to go to 
the Saturday night dances at Firemen's Hall. 
I knew it would be useless to acquaint my 
elders with any such plan. Grandfather did 
n't approve of dancing anyway; he would 
only say that if I wanted to dance I could go 
to the Masonic Hall, among "the people we 
knew." It was just my point that I saw al- 
together too much of the people we knew. 

My bedroom was on the ground floor, and as 
250 



THE HIRED GIRLS 

I studied there, I had a stove in it. I used to 
retire to my room early on Saturday night, 
change my shirt and collar and put on my 
Sunday coat. I waited until all was quiet and 
the old people were asleep, then raised my 
window, climbed out, and went softly through 
the yard. The first time I deceived my grand- 
parents I felt rather shabby, perhaps even 
the second time, but I soon ceased to think 
about it. 

The dance at the Firemen's Hall was the 
one thing I looked forward to all the week. 
There I met the same people I used to see at 
the Vannis' tent. Sometimes there were Bo- 
hemians from Wilber, or German boys who 
came down on the afternoon freight from Bis- 
marck. Tony and Lena and Tiny were always 
there, and the three Bohemian Marys, and the 
Danish laundry girls. 

The four Danish girls lived with the laun- 
dryman and his wife in their house behind the 
laundry, with a big garden where the clothes 
were hung out to dry. The laundryman was a 
kind, wise old fellow, who paid his girls well, 
looked out for them, and gave them a good 
home. He told me once that his own daugh- 
ter died just as she was getting old enough to 
251 



MY ANTONIA 

help her mother, and that he had been "try- 
ing to make up for it ever since." On summer 
afternoons he used to sit for hours on the side- 
walk in front of his laundry, his newspaper 
lying on his knee, watching his girls through 
the big open window while they ironed and 
talked in Danish. The clouds of white dust 
that blew up the street, the gusts of hot wind 
that withered his vegetable garden, never dis- 
turbed his calm. His droll expression seemed 
to say that he had found the secret of content- 
ment. Morning and evening he drove about 
in his spring wagon, distributing freshly 
ironed clothes, and collecting bags of linen 
that cried out for his suds and sunny drying- 
lines. His girls never looked so pretty at the 
dances as they did standing by the ironing- 
board, or over the tubs, washing the fine pieces, 
their white arms and throats bare, their cheeks 
bright as the brightest wild roses, their gold 
hair moist with the steam or the heat and 
curling in little damp spirals about their ears. 
They had not learned much English, and were 
not so ambitious as Tony or Lena; but they 
were kind, simple girls and they were always 
happy. When one danced with them, one 
smelled their clean, freshly ironed clothes that 
252 



THE HIRED GIRLS 

had been put away with rosemary leaves from 
Mr. Jensen's garden. 

There were never girls enough to go round 
at those dances, but every one wanted a turn 
with Tony and Lena. Lena moved without 
exertion, rather indolently, and her hand often 
accented the rhythm softly on her partner's 
shoulder. She smiled if one spoke to her, but 
seldom answered. The music seemed to put 
her into a soft, waking dream, and her violet- 
colored eyes looked sleepily and confidingly at 
one from under her long lashes. When she 
sighed she exhaled a heavy perfume of sachet 
powder. To dance "Home, Sweet Home," with 
Lena was like coming in with the tide. She 
danced every dance like a waltz, and it was 
always the same waltz — the waltz of coming 
home to something, of inevitable, fated return. 
After a while one got restless under it, as one 
does under the heat of a soft, sultry sununer 
day. 

When you spun out into the floor with 
Tony, you did n't return to anything. You 
set out every time upon a new adventure. I 
liked to schottische with her; she had so much 
spring and variety, and was always putting 
in new steps and slides. She taught me to 
253 



MY ANTONIA 

dance against and around the hard-and-fast 
beat of the music. If, instead of going to 
the end of the railroad, old Mr. Shimerda 
had stayed in New York and picked up a 
living with his fiddle, how different Antonia's 
life might have been! 

' Antonia often went to the d ances with Larry- 
Donovan, a passenger conductor who was a 
kind of professional ladies' man, as we said. 
I remember how admiringly all the boys 
looked at her the night she first wore her 
velveteen dress, made like Mrs. Gardener's 
black velvet. She was lovely to see, with 
her eyes shining, and her lips always a little 
parted when she danced. That constant, dark 
color in her cheeks never changed. 

One evening when Donovan was out on his 
run, Antonia came to the hall with Norwegian 
Anna and her young man, and that night I 
took her home. When we were in the Cutter's 
yard, sheltered by the evergreens, I told her 
she must kiss me good-night. 

"Why, sure, Jim." A moment later she drew 
her face away and whispered indignantly, 
"Why, Jim! You know you ain't right to kiss 
me Hke that. I'll tell your grandmother on 
you!" 

254 



THE HIRED GIRLS 

"Lena Lingard lets me kiss her," I retorted, 
"and I'm not half as fond of her as I am of 
you." 

"Lena does?" Tony gasped, "If she's up 
to any of her nonsense with you, I '11 scratch 
her eyes out!" She took my arm again and we 
walked out of the gate and up and down the 
sidewalk. "Now, don't you go and be a fool 
like some of these town boys. You 're not going 
to sit around here and whittle store-boxes and 
tell stories all your life. You are going away 
to school and make something of yourself. I 'm 
just awful proud of you. You won't go and get 
mixed up with the Swedes, will you ? " 

"I don't care anything about any of them 
but you," I said. "And you'll always treat 
me like a kid, I suppose." 

She laughed and threw her arms around 
me. " I expect I will, but you 're a kid I 'm aw- 
ful fond of, anyhow! You can like me all you 
want to, but if I see you hanging round with 
Lena much, I'll go to your grandmother, as 
sure as your name's Jim Burden! Lena's all 
right, only — well, you know yourself she's 
soft that way. She can't help it. It's natural 
to her." 

If she was proud of me, I was so proud of her 

2SS 



XIII 

I NOTICED one afternoon that grandmother 
had been crying. Her feet seemed to drag as 
she moved about the house, and I got up 
from the table where I was studying and went 
to her, asking if she did n't feel well, and if I 
could n't help her with her work. 

"No, thank you, Jim. I'm troubled, but 
I guess I 'm well enough. Getting a little rusty 
in the bones, maybe," she added bitterly. 

I stood hesitating. "What are you fretting 
about, grandmother? Has grandfather lost 
any money?" 

"No, it ain't money. I wish it was. But I 've 
heard things. You must 'a' known it would 
come back to me sometime." She dropped 
into a chair, and covering her face with her 
apron, began to cry. "Jim," she said, "I was 
never one that claimed old folks could bring 
up their grandchildren. But it came about so; 
there was n't any other way for you, it seemed 
like." 

I put my arms around her. I could n't bear 
to see her cry. 

258 



THE HIRED GIRLS 

"What is it, grandmother? Is it the Fire- 
men's dances?" 

She nodded. 

"I'm sorry I sneaked oflF like that. But 
there's nothing wrong about the dances, and 
I have n't done anything wrong. I Uke all 
those country girls, and I like to dance with 
them. That's all there is to it." 

"But it ain't right to deceive us, son, and 
it brings blame on us. People say you are 
growing up to be a bad boy, and that ain't 
just to us." 

"I don't care what they say about me, but 
if it hurts you, that settles it. I won't go to 
the Firemen's Hall again." 

I kept my promise, of course, but I found 
the spring months dull enough. I sat at home 
with the old people in the evenings now, read- 
ing Latin that was not in our High-School 
course. I had made up my mind to do a 
lot of college requirement work in the sum- 
mer, and to enter the freshman class at the 
University without conditions in the fall. I 
wanted to get away as soon as possible. 

Disapprobation hurt me, I found, — even 
that of people whom I did not admire. As the 
spring came on, I grew more and more lonely, 
259 



MY ANTONIA 

and fell back on the telegrapher and the cigar- 
maker and his canaries for companionship. I 
remember I took a melancholy pleasure in 
hanging a May-basket for Nina Harling that 
spring. I bought the flowers from an old Ger- 
man woman who always had more window 
plants than any one else, and spent an after- 
noon trimming a little work-basket. When 
dusk came on, and the new moon hung in the 
sky, I went quietly to the Harlings' front door 
with my offering, rang the bell, and then ran 
away as was the custom. Through the willow 
hedge I could hear Nina's cries of delight, and 
I felt comforted. 

On those warm, soft spring evenings I often 
lingered downtown to walk home with Fran- 
ces, and talked to her about my plans and 
about the reading I was doing. One evening 
she said she thought Mrs. Harling was not 
seriously offended with me. 

"Mama is as broad-minded as mothers 
ever are, I guess. But you know she was hurt 
about Antonia, and she can't understand why 
you like to be with Tiny and Lena better than 
with the girls of your own set." 

"Can you?" I asked bluntly. 

Frances laughed. "Yes, I think I can. You 
260 



THE HIRED GIRLS 

knew them in the country, and you like to 
take sides. In some ways you're older than 
boys of your age. It will be all right with 
mama after you pass your college examina- 
tions and she sees you 're in earnest." 

"If you were a boy," I persisted, "you 
would n't belong to the Owl Club, either. 
You 'd be just like me." 

She shook her head. "I would and I would 
n't. I expect I know the country girls better 
than you do. You always put a kind of glam- 
our over them. The trouble with you, Jim, is 
that you're romantic. Mama's going to your 
Commencement. She asked me the other day 
if I knew what your oration is to be about. 
She wants you to do well." 

I thought my oration very good. It stated 
with fervor a great many things I had lately 
discovered. Mrs. Harling came to the Opera 
House to hear the Commencement exercises, 
and I looked at her most of the time while I 
made my speech. Her keen, intelligent eyes 
never left my face. Afterward she came back 
to the dressing-room where we stood, with 
our diplomas in our hands, walked up to me, 
and said heartily: "You surprised me, Jim. I 
did n't believe you could do as well as that. 
261 



MY ANTONIA 

You didn't get that speech out of books," 
Among my graduation presents there was a 
silk umbrella from Mrs. Harling, with my 
name on the handle. 

I walked home from the Opera House 
alone. As I passed the Methodist Church, I 
saw three white figures ahead of me, pacing 
up and down under the arching maple trees, 
where the moonlight filtered through the lush 
June foliage. They hurried toward me; they 
were waiting for me — Lena and Tony and 
Anna Hansen. 

"Oh, Jim, it was splendid!" Tony was 
breathing hard, as she always did when her 
feelings outran her language. "There ain't a 
lawyer in Black Hawk could make a speech like 
that. I just stopped your grandpa and said so 
to him. He won't tell you, but he told us he 
was awful surprised himself, didn't he, girls?" 

Lena sidled up to me and said teasingly: 
"What made you so solemn? I thought you 
were scared. I was sure you'd forget." 

Anna spoke wistfully. "It must make you 
happy, Jim, to have fine thoughts like that in 
your mind all the time, and to have words to 
put them in. I always wanted to go to school, 
you know." 

262 



THE HIRED GIRLS 

"Oh, I just sat there and wished my papa 
could hear you! Jim," — ^Antonia took hold 
of my coat lapels, — "there was something 
in your speech that made me think so about 
my papa!" 

"I thought about your papa when I wrote 
my speech, Tony," I said. "I dedicated it to 
him." 

She threw her arms around me, and her dear 
face was all wet with tears. 

I stood watching their white dresses glim- 
mer smaller and smaller down the sidewalk 
as they went away. I have had no other suc- 
cess that pulled at my heartstrings like that 
one. 



XIV 

The day after Commencement I moved my 
books and desk upstairs, to an empty room 
where I should be undisturbed, and I fell to 
studying in earnest. I worked off a year's 
trigonometry that summer, and began Virgil 
alone. Morning after morning I used to pace 
up and down my sunny little room, looking 
off at the distant river bluffs and the roll 
of the blond pastures between, scanning the 
^neid aloud and committing long passages 
to memory. Sometimes in the evening Mrs. 
Harling called to me as I passed her gate, and 
asked me to come in and let her play for me. 
She was lonely for Charley, she said, and liked 
to have a boy about. Whenever my grand- 
parents had misgivings, and began to wonder 
whether I was not too young to go off to col- 
lege alone, Mrs. Harling took up my cause 
vigorously. Grandfather had such respect for 
her judgment that I knew he would not go 
against her. , 

I had only one holiday that summer. It 
was in July. I met Antonia downtown on 
264 



THE HIRED GIRLS 

Saturday- afternoon, and learned that she and 
Tiny and Lena were going to the river next 
day with Anna Hansen — the elder was all in 
bloofti now, and Anna wanted to make elder- 
blow wine. 

"Anna's to drive us down in the Mar- 
shall' delivery wagon, and we'll take a nice 
lunch and have a picnic. Just us; nobody 
else. Could n't you happen along, Jim? It 
would be like old times." 

I considered a moment. "Maybe I can, if 
I won't be in the way." 

On Sunday morning I rose early and got out 
of Black Hawk while the dew was still heavy 
on the long meadow grasses. It was the high 
season for summer flowers. The pink bee-bush 
stood tall along the sandy roadsides, and the 
cone-flowers and rose mallow grew everywhere. 
Across the wire fence, in the long grass, I saw 
a clump of flaming orange-colored milkweed, 
rare in that part of the State. I left the road 
and went around through a stretch of pasture 
that was always cropped short in summer, 
where the gaillardia came up year after year 
and matted over the ground with the deep, 
velvety red that is in Bokhara carpets. The 
country was empty and solitary except for the 
265 



MY ANTONIA 

larks that Sunday morning, and it seemed to 
lift itself up to me and to come very close. 

The river was running strong for midsum- 
mer; heavy rains to the west of us had kept it 
full. I crossed the bridge and went upstream 
along the wooded shore to a pleasant dress- 
ing-room I knew among the dogwood bushes, 
all overgrown with wild grapevines. I began 
to undress for a swim. The girls would not be 
along yet. For the first time it occurred to me 
that I would be homesick for that river after I 
left it. The sandbars, with their clean white 
beaches and their little groves of willows and 
Cottonwood seedlings, were a sort of No Man's 
Land, little newly-created worlds that be- 
longed to the Black Hawk boys. Charley 
Harling and I had hunted through these 
woods, fished from the fallen logs, until I knew 
every inch of the river shores and had a 
friendly feeling for every bar and shallow. 

After my swim, while I was playing about 
indolently in the water, I heard the sound 
of hoofs and wheels on the bridge. I struck 
downstream and shouted, as the open spring 
wagon came into view on the middle span. 
They stopped the horse, and the two girls in 
the bottom of the cart stood up, steadying 
266 



THE HIRED GIRLS 

themselves by the shoulders of the two in 
front, so that they could see me better. They 
were charming up there, huddled together in 
the cart and peering down at me like curious 
deer when they come out of the thicket to 
drink. I found bottom near the bridge and 
stood up, waving to them. 
"How pretty you look!" I called. 
"So do you!" they shouted altogether, and 
broke into peals of laughter. Anna Hansen 
shook the reins and they drove on, while I 
zigzagged back to my inlet and clambered 
up behind an overhanging elm. I dried my- 
self in the sun, and dressed slowly, reluctant 
to leave that green enclosure where the sun- 
light flickered so bright through the grapevine 
leaves and the woodpecker hammered away 
in the crooked elm that trailed out over the 
water. As I went along the road back to the 
bridge I kept picking off little pieces of scaly 
chalk from the dried water gullies, and break- 
ing them up in my hands. 

When I came upon the Marshalls' delivery 
horse, tied in the shade, the girls had already 
taken their baskets and gone down the east 
road which wound through the sand and scrub. 
I could hear them calling to each other. The 
267 



MY ANTONIA 

elder bushes did not grow back in the shady 
ravines between the bluffs, but in the hot, 
sandy bottoms along the stream, where their 
roots were always in moisture and their tops 
in the sun. The blossoms were unusually lux- 
uriant and beautiful that summer. 

I followed a cattle path through the thick 
underbrush until I came to a slope that fell 
away abruptly to the water's edge. A great 
chunk of the shore had been bitten out by 
some spring freshet, and the scar was masked 
by elder bushes, growing down to the water in 
flowery terraces. I did not touch them. I was 
overcome by content and drowsiness and by the 
warm silence about me. There was no sound 
but the high, sing-song buzz of wild bees and 
the sunny gurgle of the water underneath. I 
peeped over the edge of the bank to see the lit- 
tle stream that made the noise; it flowed along 
perfectly clear over the sand and gravel, cut 
off from the muddy main current by a long 
sandbar. Down there, on the lower shelf of the 
bank, I saw Antonia, seated alone under the 
pagoda-like elders. She looked up when she 
heard me, and smiled, but I saw that she had 
been crying. I slid down into the soft sand be- 
side her and asked her what was the matter. 
268 



THE HIRED GIRLS 

" It makes me homesick, Jimjny, this flower, 
this smell," she said softly. "We have this 
flower very much at home, in the old country. 
It always grew in our yard and my papa had 
a green bench and a table under the bushes. 
In summer, when they were in bloom, he used 
to sit there with his friend that played the 
trombone. When I was little I used to go 
down there to hear them talk — beautiful 
talk, like what I never hear in this country.'* 

"What did they talk about?" I asked her. 

She sighed and shook her head. "Oh, I 
don't know! About music, and the woods, 
and about God, and when they were young." 
She turned to me suddenly and looked into 
my eyes. "You think, Jimmy, that maybe my 
father's spirit can go back to those old places ? " 

I told her about the feeling of her father's 
presence I had on that winter day when my 
grandparents had gone over to see his dead 
body and I was left alone in the house. I said 
I felt sure then that he was on his way back 
to his own country, and that even now, when 
I passed his grave, I always thought of him 
as being among the woods and fields that were 
so dear to him. 

Antonia had the most trusting, responsive 
269 



MY ANTONIA 

eyes in the world; love and credulousness 
seemed to look out of them with open faces. 
"Why did n't you ever tell me that before? It 
makes me feel more sure for him." After 
a while she said: "You know, Jim, my father 
was different from my mother. He did not 
have to marry my mother, and all his brothers 
quarreled with him because he did. I used to 
hear the old people at home whisper about it. 
They said he could have paid my mother 
money, and not married her. But he was older 
than she was, and he was too kind to treat her 
like that. He lived in his mother's house, and 
she was a poor girl come in to do the work. 
After my father married her, my grandmother 
never let my mother come into her house 
again. When I went to my grandmother's 
funeral was the only time I was ever in 
my grandmother's house.- Don't that seem 
strange?" 

While she talked, I lay back in the hot 
sand and looked up at the blue sky between 
the flat bouquets of elder. I could hear the 
bees humming and singing, but they stayed 
up in the sun above the flowers and did not 
come down into the shadow of the leaves. An- 
tonia seemed to me that day exactly like the 
270 



THE HIRED GIRLS 

little girl who used to come to our house with 
Mr. Shimerda. 

"Some day, Tony, I am going over to your 
country, and I am going to the little town 
where you lived. Do you remember all about 
it?" 

"Jim," she said earnestly, "if I was put 
down there in the middle of the night, I could 
find my way all over that little town; and 
along the river to the next town, where my 
grandmother lived. My feet remember all the 
little paths through the woods, and where the 
big roots stick out to trip you. I ain't never 
forgot my own country." 

There was a crackling in the branches above 
us, and Lena Lingard peered down over the 
edge of the bank. 

"You lazy things!" she cried. "All this 
elder, and you two lying there! Didn't you 
hear us calling you.?" Almost as flushed as 
she had been in my dream, she leaned over the 
edge of the bank and began to demolish our 
flowery pagoda. I had never seen her so ener- 
getic; she was panting with zeal, and the per- 
spiration stood in drops on her short, yielding 
upper lip. I sprang to my feet and ran up the 
bank. 

271 



MY ANTONIA 

It was noon now, and so hot that the dog- 
woods and scrub-oaks began to turn up the 
silvery under-side of their leaves, and all the 
foliage looked soft and wilted. I carried the 
lunch-basket to the top of one of the chalk 
bluffs, where even on the calmest days there 
was always a breeze. The flat-topped, twisted 
little oaks threw light shadows on the grass. 
Below us we could see the windings of the 
river, and Black Hawk, grouped among its 
trees, and, beyond, the rolling country, swell- 
ing gently until it met the sky. We could 
recognize familiar farmhouses and windmills. 
Each of the girls pointed out to me the di- 
rection in which her father's farm lay, and 
told me how many acres were in wheat that 
year and how many in corn. 

"My old folks," said Tiny Soderball^ "have 
put in twenty acres of rye. They get it ground 
at the mill, and it makes nice bread. It seen^s 
like my mother ain't been so homesick, ever 
since father's raised rye flour for her." 

" It must have been a trial for our mothers," 
said Lena, "coming out here and having to do 
everything different. My mother had always 
lived in town. She says she started behind in 
farm-work, and never has caught up." 
272 



THE HIRED GIRLS 

*' Yes, a new country's hard on the old ones, 
sometimes," said Anna thoughtfully. "My 
grandmother's getting feeble now, and her 
mind wanders. She's forgot about this coun- 
try, and thinks she's at home in Norway. She 
keeps asking mother to take her down to the 
waterside and the fish market. She craves fish 
all the time. Whenever I go home I take her 
canned salmon and mackerel." 

"Mercy, it's hot!" Lena yawned. She was 
supine under a little oak, resting after the fury 
of her elder-hunting, and had taken off the 
high-heeled slippers she had been silly enough 
to wear. "Come here, Jim. You never got the 
sand out of your hair." She began to draw her 
fingers slowly through my hair. 

Antonia pushed her away. "You'll never 
get it out like that," she said sharply. She 
gave my head a rough touzling and finished 
me off with something like a box on the ear. 
"Lena, you ought n't to try to wear those 
slippers any more. They're too small for 
your feet. You 'd better give them to me for 
Yulka." 

"All right," said Lena good-naturedly, 
tucking her white stockings under her skirt. 
"You get all Yulka's things, don't you? I 
273 



MY ANTONIA 

wish father did n't have such bad luck with 
his farm machinery; then I could buy more 
things for my sisters. I'm going to get Mary 
a new coat this fall, if the sulky plough's 
never paid for!" 

Tiny asked her why she did n't wait until 
after Christmas, when coats would be cheaper. 
"What do you think of poor me?" she added; 
"with six at home, younger than I am? And 
they all think I'm rich, because when I go 
back to the country I 'm dressed so fine!" She 
shrugged her shoulders. "But, you know, my 
weakness is playthings. I like to buy them 
playthings better than what they need." 

"I know how that is," said Anna. "When 
we first came here, and I was little, we were 
too poor to buy toys. I never got over the 
loss of a doll somebody gave me before we 
left Norway. A boy on the boat broke her, 
and I still hate him for it." 

"I guess after you got here you had plenty 
of live dolls to nurse, like me!" Lena remarked 
cynically. 

"Yes, the babies came along pretty fast, to 

be sure. But I never minded. I was fond of 

them all. The youngest one, that we did n't 

any of us want, is the one we love best now." 

274 



THETnEEUTJIRLS 

Lena sighed. "Oh, the babies are all right; 
if only they don't come in winter. Ours nearly 
always did. I don't see how mother stood it. 
I tell you what girls," she sat up with sudden 
energy; "I'm going to get my mother out of 
that old sod house where she's lived so many 
years. The men will never do it. Johnnie, 
that's my oldest brother, he's wanting to get 
married now, and build a house for his girl 
instead of his mother. Mrs. Thomas says she 
thinks I can move to some other town pretty 
soon, and go into business for myself. If I 
don't get into business, I'll maybe marry a 
rich gambler." 

"That would be a poor way to get on," said 
Anna sarcastically. "I wish I could teach 
school, like Selma Kronn. Just think! She'll 
be the first Scandinavian girl to get a position 
in the High School. We ought to be proud of 
her." 

Selma was a studious girl, who had not 
much tolerance for giddy things like Tiny and 
Lena; but they always spoke of her with ad- 
miration. 

Tiny moved about restlessly, fanning her- 
self with her straw hat. "If I was smart like 
her, I 'd be at my books day and night. But 
275 



MY ANTONIA 

she was born smart — and look how her 
father's trained her! He was something high 
up in the old country." 

"So was my mother's father," murmured 
Lena, "but that's all the good it does us! My 
father's father was smart, too, but he was 
wild. He married a Lapp. I guess that's 
what's the matter with me; they say Lapp 
blood will out." 

"A real Lapp, Lena?" I exclaimed. "The 
kind that wear skins?" 

"I don't know if she wore skins, but she was 
a Lapp all right, and his folks felt dreadful 
about it. He was sent up north on some Gov- 
ernment job he had, and fell in with her. He 
would marry her." 

"But I thought Lapland women were fat 
and ugly, and had squint eyes, like Chinese?" 
I objected. 

"I don't know, maybe. There must be 
something mighty taking about the Lapp 
girls, though; mother says the Norwegians up 
north are always afraid their boys will run 
after them." 

In the afternoon, when the heat was less 
oppressive, we had a lively game of "Pussy 
Wants a Comer," on the flat bhiff-top, with 
276 



THE HIRED GIRLS 

the little trees for bases. Lena was Pussy so 
often that she finally said she would n't play 
any more. We threw ourselves down on the 
grass, out of breath. 

"Jim," Antonia said dreamily, "I want you 
to tell the girls about how the Spanish first 
came here, like you and Charley Harling used 
to talk about. I Ve tried to tell them, but I 
leave out so much." 

They sat under a little oak, Tony resting 
against the trunk and the other girls leaning 
against her and each other, and listened to the 
little I was able to tell them about Coronado 
and his search for the Seven Golden Cities. 
At school we were taught that he had not got 
so far north as Nebraska, but had given up his 
quest and turned back somewhere in Kansas. 
But Charley Harling and I had a strong be- 
lief that he had been along this very river. A 
farmer in the county north of ours, when he 
was breaking sod, had turned up a metal stir- 
rup of fine workmanship, and a sword with a 
Spanish inscription on the blade. He lent 
these relics to Mr. Harling, who brought 
them home with him. Charley and I scoured 
them, and they were on exhibition in the Har- 
ling office all summer. Father Kelly, the 
277 



MY ANTONIA 

priest, had found the name of the Spanish 
maker on the sword, and an abbreviation that 
stood for the city of Cordova. 

"And that I saw with my own eyes," An- 
tonia put in triumphantly. " So Jim and 
Charley were right, and the teachers were 
wrong!" 

The girls began to wonder among them- 
selves. Why had the Spaniards come so far? 
What must this country have been like, then? 
Why had Coronado never gone back to Spain, 
to his riches and his castles and his king? I 
could n't tell them. I only knew the school 
books said he "died in the wilderness, of a 
broken heart." 

"More than him has done that," said An- 
tonia sadly, and the girls murmured assent. 

We sat looking off across the country, 
watching the sun go down. The curly grass 
about us was on fire now. The bark of the 
oaks turned red as copper. There was a 
shimmer of gold on the brown river. Out in 
the stream the sandbars glittered like glass, 
and the light trembled in the willow thickets 
as if little flames were leaping among them. 
The breeze sank to stillness. In the ravine a 
ringdove mourned plaintively, and somewhere 
278 



THE HIRED GIRLS 

o£F in the bushes an owl hooted. The girls 
sat listless, leaning against each other. The 
long fingers of the sun touched their foreheads. 

Presently we saw a curious thing: There 
were no clouds, the sun was going down in a 
limpid, gold-washed sky. Just as the lower 
edge of the red disc rested on the high fields 
against the horizon, a* great black figure sud- 
denly appeared on the face of the sun. We 
sprang to our feet, straining our eyes toward 
it. In a moment we realized what it was. On 
some upland farm, a plough had been left 
standing in the field. The sun was sinking just 
behind it. Magnified across the distance by 
the horizontal light, it stood out against the 
sun, was exactly contained within the circle of 
the disc; the handles, the tongue, the share — ■ 
black against the molten red. There it was, 
heroic, in size, a picture writing on the sun. 

Even while we whispered about it, our 
vision disappeared; the ball dropped and 
dropped until the red tip went beneath the 
earth. The fields below us were dark, the sky 
was growing pale, and that forgotten plough 
had sunk back to its own littleness somewhere 
on the prairie. 



XV 

Late in August the Cutters went to Omaha 
for a few days, leaving Antonia in charge of 
the house. Since the scandal about the Swed-t 
ish girl, Wick Cutter could never get his wife 
to stir out of Black Hawk without him. 

The day after the Cutters left, Antonia 
came over to see us. Grandmother noticed 
that she seemed troubled and distracted. 
"You've got something on your mind, An- 
tonia," she said anxiously. 

"Yes, Mrs. Burden. I could n't sleep much 
last night." She hesitated, and then told us 
how strangely Mr. Cutter had behaved before 
he went away. He put all the silver in a basket 
and placed it under her bed, and with it a box 
of papers which he told her were valuable. He 
made her promise that she would not sleep 
away from the house, or be out late in the eve- 
ning, while he was gone. He strictly forbade 
her to ask any of the girls she knew to stay 
with her at night. She would be perfectly safe, 
he said, as he had just put a new Yale lock on 
the front door. 

280 



THE HIRED^SIRLS 

Cutter had been so insistent in regard to 
these details that now she felt uncomfortable 
about staying there alone. She had n't liked 
the way he kept coming into the kitchen to 
instruct her, or the way he looked at her. " I 
feel as if he is up to some of his tricks again, 
and is going to try to scare me, somehow." 

Grandmother was apprehensive at once. 
"I don't think it's right for you to stay there, 
feeling that way. I suppose it would n't be 
right for you to leave the place alone, either, 
after giving your word. Maybe Jim would be 
willing to go over there and sleep, and you 
could come here nights. I'd feel safer, know- 
ing you were \mder my own roof. I guess Jim 
could take care of their silver and old usury 
notes as well as you could." 

Antonia turned to me eagerly. "Oh, would 
you, Jim? I 'd make up my bed nice and fresh 
for you. It's a real cool room, and the bed's 
right next the window. I was afraid to leave 
the window open last night." 

I liked my own room, and I did n't like the 
Cutters' house under any circumstances; but 
Tony looked so troubled that I consented to 
try this arrangement. I found that I slept 
there as well as anywhere, and when I got 
281 



MY ANTONIA 

home in the morning, Tony had a good break- 
fast waiting for me. After prayers she sat 
down at the table with us, and it was like old 
times in the country. 

The third night I spent at the Cutters', I 
awoke suddenly with the impression that I 
had heard a door open and shut. Eversrthing 
was still, however, and I must have gone to 
sleep again immediately. 

The next thing I knew, I felt some one sit 
down on the edge of the bed. I was only half 
awake, but I decided that he might take the 
Cutters' silver, whoever he was. Perhaps if I 
did not move, he would find it and get out 
without troubling me. I held my breath and 
lay absolutely still. A hand closed softly on 
my shoulder, and at the same moment I felt 
something hairy and cologne-scented brushing 
my face. If the room had suddenly been 
flooded with electric light, I could n't have 
seen more clearly the detestable bearded 
countenance that I knew was bending over 
me. I caught a handful of whiskers and 
pulled, shouting something. The hand that 
held my shoulder was instantly at my throat. 
The man became insane; he stood over me, 
choking me with one fist and beating me in 
28a 



THE HIRED GIRLS 

the face with the other, hissing and chuck- 
ling and letting out a flood of abuse. 

" So this is what she 's up to when I 'm away, 
is it? Where is she, you nasty whelp, where is 
she? Under the bed, are you, hussy? I know 
your tricks! Wait tilll get at you ! I '11 fix this 
rat you've got in here. He's caught, all 
right!" 

So long as Cutter had me by the throat, 
there was no chance for me at all. I got hold 
of his thumb and bent it back, until he let go 
with a yell. In a bound, I was on my feet, 
and easily sent him sprawling to the floor. 
Then I made a dive for the open window, 
struck the wire screen, knocked it out, and 
tumbled after it into the yard. 

Suddenly I found myself running across the 
north end of Black Hawk in my nightshirt, 
just as one sometimes finds one's self behaving 
in bad dreams. When I got home I climbed in 
at the kitchen window. I was covered with 
blood from my nose and lip, but I was too sick 
to do anything about it. I found a shawl and 
an overcoat on the hatrack, lay down on the 
parlor sofa, and in spite of my hurts, went 
to sleep. 

Grandmother found me there in the morn- 
283 



MY ANTONIA 

ing. Her cry of fright awakened me. Truly, 
I was a battered object. As she helped me to 
my room, I caught a glimpse of myself in the 
mirror. My lip was cut and stood out like a 
snout. My nose looked like a big blue plum, 
and one eye was swollen shut and hideously 
discolored. Grandmother said we must have 
the doctor at once, but I implored her, as I 
had never begged for anything before, not to 
send for him. I could stand anything, I told 
her, so long as nobody saw me or knew what 
had happened to me. I entreated her not to 
let grandfather, even, come into my room. 
She seemed to understand, though I was too 
faint and miserable to go into explanations. 
When she took oil my nightshirt, she found 
such bruises on my chest and shoulders that 
she began to cry. She spent the whole morning 
bathing and poulticing me, and rubbing me 
with arnica. I heard Antonia sobbing outside 
^ydooi^^t I asked grandmother to send her 
away. I felt that I never wanted to see her 
again. I hated her almost as much as I 
hated Cutter. She had let me in for all this 
disgustingness. Grandmother kept saying 
how thankful we ought to be that I had been 
there instead of Antonia. But I lay with my 
284 



THE HIRED GIRLS 

disfigured face to the wall and felt no par- 
ticular gratitude. My one concern was that 
grandmother should keep every one away 
from me. If the story once got abroad, I 
would never hear the last of it. I could well 
imagine what the old men down at the drug- 
store would do with such a theme. 

While grandmother was trying to make me 
comfortable, grandfather went to the depot 
and learned that Wick Cutter had come home 
on the night express from the east, and had 
left again on the six o'clock train for Denver 
that morning. The agent said his face was 
striped with court-plaster, and he carried his 
left hand in a sling. He looked so used up, that 
the agent asked him what had happened to 
him since ten o'clock the night before; whereat 
Cutter began to swear at him and said he 
would have him discharged for incivility. 

That afternoon, while I was asleep, Antonia 
took grandmother with her, and went over to 
the Cutters' to pack her trunk. They found 
the place locked up, and they had to break the 
window to get into Antonia's bedroom. There 
everything was in shocking disorder. Her 
clothes had been taken out of her closet, 
thrown into the middle of the room, and 
28s 



MY ANTONIA 

trampled and torn. My own garments had 
been treated so badly that I never saw them 
again; grandmother burned them in the 
Cutters' kitchen range. 

While Antonia was packing her trunk and 
putting her room in order, to leave it, the front- 
door bell rang violently. There stood Mrs. 
Cutter, — locked out, for she had no key to 
the new lock — her head trembling with rage. 
"I advised her to control herself, or she would'' 
have a stroke," grandmother said afterwards. 

Grandmother would not let her see Antonia 
at all, but made her sit down in the parlor 
while she related to her just what had occurred 
the night before. Antonia was frightened, and 
was going home to stay for a while, she told 
Mrs. Cutter; it would be useless to interrogater 
the girl, for she knew nothing of what had 
happened. 

Then Mrs. Cutter told her story. She and 
her husband had started home from Omaha 
together the morning before. They had to 
stop over several hours at Waymore Junction 
to catch the Black Hawk train. During the 
wait. Cutter left her at the depot and went 
to the Waymore bank to attend to some busi- 
ness. When he returned, he told her that he 
286 



THE HIRED^mLS 

would have to stay overnight there, but she 
could go on home. He bought her ticket and 
put her on the train. She saw him slip a 
twenty-dollar bill into her handbag with her 
ticket. That bill, she said, should have 
aroused her suspicions at once — but did 
not. 

The trains are never called at little junction 
towns; everybody knows when they come in. 
Mr. Cutter showed his wife's ticket to the 
conductor, and settled her in her seat before 
the train moved off. It was not until nearly 
nightfall that she discovered she was on the 
express bound for Kansas City, that her ticket 
was made out to that point, and that Cutter 
must have planned it so. The conductor told 
her the Black Hawk train was due at Way- 
more twelve minutes after the Kansas City 
train left. She saw at once that her husband 
had played this trick in order to get back to 
Black Hawk without her. She had no choice 
but to go on to Kansas City and take the first 
fast train for home. 

Cutter could have got home a day earlier 

than his wife by any one of a dozen simpler 

devices; he could have left her in the Omaha 

hotel, and said he was going on to Chicago for 

287 



MY ANTONIA 

a few days. But apparently it was part of his 
fun to outrage her feelings as much as possible. 

"Mr, Cutter will pay for this, Mrs. Burden. 
He will pay!" Mrs. Cutter avouched, nodding 
her horselike head and rolling her eyes. 

Grandmother said she had n't a doubt of it. 

Certainly Cutter liked to have his wife 
think him a devil. In some way he depended 
upon the excitement he could arouse in her 
hysterical nature. Perhaps he got the feeling 
of being a rake more from his wife's rage and 
amazement than from any experiences of his 
own. His zest in debauchery might wane, but 
never Mrs. Cutter's belief in it. The reckoning 
with his wife at the end of an escapade was 
something he counted on — like the last pow- 
erful liqueur after a long dinner. The one ex- 
citement he really could n't do without was 
quarreling with Mrs. Cutter! 



Book III 
LENA LINGARD 



Book III 
LENA LINGARD 



At the University I had the good fortune to 
come immediately under the influence of a 
brilliant and inspiring young scholar. Gaston 
Cleric had arrived in Lincoln only a few 
weeks earlier than I, to begin his work as head 
of the Latin Department. He came West at 
the suggestion of his physicians, his health 
having been enfeebled by a long illness in 
Italy. When I took my entrance examinations 
he was my examiner, and my course was ar- 
ranged under his supervision. 

I did not go home for my first summer vaca- 
tion, but stayed in Lincoln, working off a 
year's Greek, which had been my only condi- 
tion on entering the Freshman class. Cleric's 
doctor advised against his going back to New 
England, and except for a few weeks in Colo- 
rado, he, too, was in Lincoln all that summer. 
We played tennis, read, and took long walks 
together. I shall always look back on that 
291 



MY ANTONIA 

time of mental awakening as one of the happi- 
est in my life. Gaston Cleric introduced me 
to the world of ideas; when one first enters 
that world everything else fades for a time, 
and all that went before is as if it had not 
been. Yet I found curious survivals; some of 
the figures of my old life seemed to be waiting 
for me in the new. 

In those days there were many serious 
young men among the students who had come 
up to the University from the farms and the 
little towns scattered over the thinly settled 
State. Some of those boys came straight from 
the cornfields with only a summer's wages in 
their pockets, hung on through the four years, 
shabby and underfed, and completed the 
course by really heroic self-sacrifice. Our 
instructors were oddly assorted; wandering 
pioneer school-teachers, stranded ministers of 
the Gospel, a few enthusiastic young men just 
out of graduate schools. There was an atmos- 
phere of endeavor, of expectancy and bright 
hopefulness about the young college that had 
lifted its head from the prairie only a few 
years before. 

Our personal life was as free as that of our 
instructors. There were no college dormitories; 
292 



LENA LINGARD 

we lived where we could and as we could. I 
took rooms with an old couple, early settlers 
in Lincoln, who had married off their children 
and now lived quietly in their house at the 
edge of town, near the open country. The 
house was inconveniently situated for stu- 
dents, and on that account I got two rooms 
for the price of one. My bedroom, originally 
a linen closet, was unheated and was barely 
large enough to contain my cot bed, but it 
enabled me to call the other room my study. 
The dresser, and the great walnut wardrobe 
which held all my clothes, even my hats and 
shoes, I had pushed out of the way, and I 
considered them non-existent, as children 
eliminate incongruous objects when they are 
playing house. I worked at a commodious 
green-topped table placed directly in front of 
the west window which looked out over the 
prairie. In the corner at my right were all 
my books, in shelves I had made and painted 
myself. On the blank wall at my left the 
dark, old-fashioned wall-paper was covered 
by a large map of ancient Rome, the work 
of some German scholar. Cleric had ordered 
it for me when he was sending for books from 
abroad. Over the bookcase hung a photo- 
293 



MY ANTONIA 

graph of the Tragic Theater at Pompeii, 
which he had given me from his collection. 

When I sat at work I half faced a deep, 
upholstered chair which stood at the end of 
my table, Its high back against the wall. I 
had bought It with great care. My Instructor 
sometimes looked In upon me when he was out 
for an evening tramp, and I noticed that he 
was more likely to linger and become talka- 
tive If I had a comfortable chair for him to 
sit In, and If he found a bottle of Benedictine 
and plenty of the kind of cigarettes he liked, 
at his elbow. He was, I had discovered, parsi-. 
monious about small expenditures — a trait 
absolutely inconsistent with his general char- 
acter. Sometimes when he came he was silent 
and moody, and after a few sarcastic remarks 
went away again, to tramp the streets of Lin- 
coln, which were almost as quiet and oppres- 
sively domestic as those of Black Hawk. 
Again, he would sit until nearly midnight, 
talking about Latin and English poetry, or 
telling me about his long stay in Italy. 

I can give no Idea of the peculiar charm 

and vividness of his talk. In a crowd he was 

nearly always silent. Even for his classroom 

he had no platitudes, no stock of professorial 

294 



LENA LINGARD 

anecdotes. When he was tired his lectures 
were clouded, obscure, elliptical; but when he 
was interested they were wonderful. I believe 
that Gaston Cleric narrowly missed being fi 
great poet, and I have sometimes thought that 
his bursts of imaginative talk were fatal to his 
poetic gift. He squandered too. much in the 
heat of personal communication. How often 
I have seen him draw his dark brows together, 
fix his eyes upon some object on the wall or a 
figure in the carpet, and then flash into the 
lamplight the very image that was in his brain. 
He could bring the drama of antique life be- 
fore one out of the shadows — white figures 
against blue backgrounds. I shall never for- 
get his face as it looked one night when he 
told me about the solitary day he spent among 
the sea temples at Paestum: the soft wind 
blowing through the roofless columns, the 
birds flying low over the flowering marsh 
grasses, the changing lights on the silver, 
cloud-hung mountains. He had willfully 
stayed the short summer night there, wrapped 
in his coat and rug, watching the constella- 
tions on their path down the sky until "tho 
bride of old Tithonus " rose out of the sea, and 
the mountains stood sharp in the daivn. It 
29S 



MY ANTONIA 

was there he caught the fever which held him 
back on the eve of his departure for Greece 
and of which he lay ill so long in Naples. He 
was still, indeed, doing penance for it. 

I remember vividly another evening, when 
something led us to talk of Dante's veneration 
for Virgil. Cleric went through canto afteir 
canto of the "Commedia," repeating the dis- 
course between Dante and his "sweet teacher," 
while his cigarette burned itself out unheeded 
between his long fingers. I can hear him now, 
speaking the lines of the poet Statius, who 
spoke for Dante: "/ was famous on earth with 
the name which endures longest and honors most. 
The seeds of my ardor were the sparks from that 
divine flame whereby more than a thousand have 
kindled; I speak of the jEneid, mother to me and 
nurse to me in poetry" 

Although I admired scholarship so much in 
Cleric, I was not deceived about myself; I 
knew that I should never be a scholar. I could 
never lose myself for long among impersonal 
things. Mental excitement was apt to send 
me with a rush back to my own naked land 
and the figures scattered upon it. While I was 
in the very act of yearning toward the new 
forms that Cleric brought up before me, my 
296 



LENA LINGARD 

mind plunged away from me, and I suddenly 
found myself thinking of the placesand people 
of my own iiifinitesimai'pastnrhey stood out 
strengthened and simplified now, like the 
image of the plough against the sun._They 
were all I had for an answer to the new appeal. 
I begrudged the room that Jake and Otto and 
Russian Peter took up in my memory, which I 
wanted to crowd with other things. But when- 
ever my consciousness was quickened, all 
those early friends were quickened within it, 
and in some strange way they accompanied' 
me through all my new experiences. They 
were so much alive in me that I scarcely 
stopped to wonder whether they were alive 
anywhere else, or how. ^ 



II 

One March evening in my Sophomore year I 
was sitting alone in my room after supper. 
There had been a warm thaw all day, with 
mushy yards and little streams of dark water 
gurgling cheerfully into the streets out of old 
snow-banks. My window was open, and the 
earthy wind blowing through made me indo- 
lent. On the edge of the prairie, where the sun 
had gone down, the sky was turquoise blue, like 
a lake, with gold light throbbing in it. Higher 
up, in the utter clarity of the western slope, 
the evening star hung like a lamp suspended 
by silver chains — like the lamp engraved 
upon the title-page of old Latin texts, which is 
always appearing in new heavens, and waking 
new desires in men. It reminded me, at any 
rate, to shut my window and light my wick 
in answer. I did so regretfully, and the dim 
objects in the room emerged from the shadows 
and took their place about me with the help- 
fulness which custom breeds. 

I propped my book open and stared list- 
lessly at the page of the Georgics where to- 
298 



LENA LINGARD 

morrow's lesson began. It opened with the 
melancholy reflection that, in the lives of mor- 
tals, the best days are the first to flee. "Op- 
tima dies . . . prima fugit." I turned back to 
the beginning of the third book, which we had 
read in class that morning. "Primus ego in 
patriam mecum . . . deducam Musas" ; "for I 
shall be the first, if I live, to bring the Muse 
into my country." Cleric had explained to us 
that "patria" here meant, not a nation or 
even a province, but the little rural neighbor- 
hood on the Mincio where the poet was bom. 
This was not a boast, but a hope, at once bold 
and devoutly humble, that he might bring 
the Muse (but lately come to Italy from her 
cloudy Grecian mountains), not to the capi- 
tal, the palatia Romana, but to his own little 
"country"; to his father's fields, "sloping 
down to the river and to the old beech trees 
with broken tops." 

Cleric said he thought Virgil, when he was 
dying at Brindisi, must have remembered that 
passage. After he had faced the bitter fact 
that he was to leave the ^neid unfinished, and 
had decreed that the great canvas, crowded 
with figures of gods and men, should be burned 
rather than survive him unperfected, then his 
299 



MY ANTONIA 

mind must have gone back to the perfect 
utterance of the Georgics, where the pen was 
fitted to the matter as the plough is to the 
furrow; and he must have said to himself 
with the thankfulness of a good man, "I was 
the first to bring the Muse into my country." 
We left the classroom quietly, conscious 
that we had been brushed by the wing of a 
great feeling, though perhaps I alone knew 
Cleric intimately enough to guess what that 
feeling was. In the evening, as I sat staring 
at my book, the fervor of his voice stirred 
through the quantities on the page before me. 
I was wondering whether that particular rocky 
strip of New England coast about which he 
had so often told me was Cleric's patria. Be- 
fore I had got far with my reading I was dis- 
turbed by a knock. I hurried to the door and 
when I opened it saw a woman standing in the 
dark hall. 

"I expect you hardly know me, Jim." 
The voice seemed familiar, but I did not 
recognize her until she stepped into the light 
of my doorway and I beheld — Lena Lingard! 
She was so quietly conventionalized by city 
clothes that I might have passed her on the 
street without seeing her. Her black suit fitted 
300 



LENA LINGARD 

her figure smoothly, and a black lace hat, with 
pale-blue forget-me-nots, sat demurely on her 
yellow hair. 

I led her toward Cleric's chair, the only 
comfortable one I had, questioning her con- 
fusedly. 

She was not disconcerted by my embarrass- 
ment. She looked about her with the naive 
curiosity I remembered so well. "You are 
quite comfortable here, are n't you ? I live in 
Lincoln now, too, Jim. I'm in business for 
myself. I have a dressmaking shop in the 
Raleigh Block, out on O Street. I 've made a 
real good start." 

"But, Lena, when did you come?" 

"Oh, I've been here all winter. Didn't 
your grandmother ever write you? I've 
thought about looking you up lots of times. 
But we've all heard what a studious young 
man you've got to be, and I felt bashful. I 
did n't know whether you 'd be glad to see 
me." She laughed her mellow, easy laugh, 
that was either very artless or very compre- 
hending, one never quite knew which. "You 
seem the same, though, — except you're a 
young man, now, of course. Do you think 
I've changed?" 

301 



MY ANTONIA 

"Maybe you 're prettier — though you were 
always pretty enough. Perhaps it's your 
clothes that make a difference." 

"You like my new suit? I have to dress 
pretty well in my business." She took off her 
jacket and sat more at ease in her blouse, of 
some soft, flimsy silk. She was already at 
home in- my place, had slipped quietly into 
it, as she did into everything. She told me 
her business was going well, and she had 
saved a little money. 

"This summer I'm going to build the house 
for mother I 've talked about so long. I won't 
be able to pay up on it at first, but I want her 
to have it before she is too old to enjoy it. 
Next summer I'll take her down new furni- 
ture and carpets, so she'll have something to 
look forward to all winter." 

I watched Lena sitting there so smooth 
and sunny and well cared-for, and thought of 
how she used to run barefoot over the prairie 
until after the snow began to fly, and how 
Crazy Mary chased her round and round the 
cornfields. It seemed to me wonderful that 
she should have got on so well in the world. 
Certainly she had no one but herself to thank 
for it. 

302 



LENA LINGARD 

"You must feel proud of yourself, Lena," 
I said heartily. "Look at me; I've never 
earned a dollar, and I don't know that I'll 
ever be able to." 

"Tony says you're going to be richer than 
Mr. Harling some day. She's always brag- 
ging about you, you know." 

"Tell me, how is Tony?" 

"She's fine. She works for Mrs. Gardener 
at the hotel now. She's housekeeper. Mrs. 
Gardener's health is n't what it was, and she 
can't see after everything like she used to. 
She has great confidence in Tony. Tony's 
made it up with the Harlings, too. Little Nina 
is so fond of her that Mrs. Harling kind of 
overlooked things." 

"Is she still going with Larry Donovan?" 

"Oh, that's on, worse than ever! I guess 
they're engaged. Tony talks about him like 
he was president of the railroad. Everybody 
laughs about it, because she was never a girl 
to be soft. She won't hear a word against him. 
She's so sort of innocent." 

I said I did n't Uke Larry, and never would. 

Lena's face dimpled. "Some of us could 
tell her things, but it would n't do any good. 
She'd always believe him. That's Antonia's 
303 



MY ANTONIA 

failing, you know; if she once likes people, she 
won't hear anything against them." 

"I think I'd better go home and look after 
Antonia," I said. 

"I think you had." Lena looked up at me 
in frank amusement. "It's a good thing the 
Harlings are friendly with her again. Larry's 
afraid of them. They ship so much grain, 
they have influence with the railroad people. 
What are you studying?" She leaned her el- 
bows on the table and drew my book toward 
her. I caught a faint odor of violet sachet. 
"So that's Latin, is it? It looks hard. You 
do go to the theater sometimes, though, for 
I've seen you there. Don't you just love a 
good play, Jim? I can't stay at home in the 
evening if there's one in town. I'd be willing 
to work like a slave, it seems to me, to live in 
a place where there are theaters." 

"Let's go to a show together sometime. 
You are going to let me come to see you, are 
n't you?" 

"Would you like to? I 'd be ever so pleased. 
I 'm never busy after six o'clock, and I let my 
sewing girls go at half-past five. I board, to 
save time, but sometimes I cook a chop for 
myself, and I 'd be glad to cook one for you. 
304 



LENA LINGARD 

Well," — she began to put on her white gloves, 
— "it's been awful good to see you, Jim." 

"You needn't hurry, need you? You've 
hardly told me anything yet." 

"We can talk when you come to see me. I 
expect you don't often have lady visitors. The 
old woman downstairs did n't want to let me 
come up very much. I told her I was from 
your home town, and had promised your 
grandmother to come and see you. How sur- 
prised Mrs. Burden would be!" Lena laughed 
softly as she rose. 

When I caught up my hat she shook her 
head. "No, I don't want you to go with me. 
I'm to meet some Swedes at the drug-store. 
You would n't care for them. I wanted to see 
your room so I could write Tony all about it, 
but I must tell her how I left you right here 
with your books. She's always so afraid 
some one will run off with you 1" Lena slipped 
her silk sleeves into the jacket I held for her, 
smoothed it over her person, and buttoned 
it slowly. I walked with her to the door. 
"Come and see me sometimes when you're 
lonesome. But maybe you have all the friends 
you want. Have you?" She turned her soft 
cheek to me. "Have you?" she whispered 
30s 



MY ANTONIA 

bloomed out one morning with gleaming white 
posters on which two names were impressively 
printed in blue Gothic letters: the name of an 
actress of whom I had often heard, and the 
name "Camille." 

I called at the Raleigh Block for Lena on 
Saturday evening, and we walked down to 
the theater. The weather was warm and 
sultry and put us both in a holiday humor. We 
arrived early, because Lena liked to watch the 
people come in. There was a note on the pro- 
gramme, saying that the "incidental music" 
would be from the opera "Traviata," which 
was made from the same story as the play. 
We had neither of us read the play, and we 
did not know what it was about — though 
I seemed to remember having heard it was a 
piece in which great actresses shone. "The 
Count of Monte Cristo," which I had seen 
James O'Neill pky that winter, was by the 
only Alexandre Dumas I knew. This play, 
I saw, was by his son, and I expected a family 
resemblance. A couple of jack-rabbits, run 
in off the prairie, could not have been more 
innocent of what awaited them than were 
Lena and L 

Our excitement began with the rise of the 
308 



LENA LINGARD 

curtain, when the moody Varville, seated 
before the fire, interrogated Nanine. De- 
cidedly, there was a new tang about this dia- 
logue. I had never heard in the theater lines 
that were alive, that presupposed and took 
for granted, like those which passed between 
Varville and Marguerite in the brief encoun- 
ter before her friends entered. This intro- 
duced the most brilliant, worldly, the most 
enchantingly gay scene I had ever looked 
upon. I had never seen champagne bottles 
opened on the stage before — indeed, I had 
never seen them opened anywhere. The 
memory of that supper makes me hungry 
now; the sight of it then, when I had only a 
students' boarding-house dinner behind me, 
was delicate torment. I seem to remember 
gilded chairs and tables (arranged hurriedly 
by footmen in white gloves. and stockings), 
linen of dazzling whiteness, glittering glass, 
silver dishes, a great bowl of fruit, and the 
reddest of roses. The room was invaded by 
beautiful women and dashing young men, 
laughing and talking together. The men were 
dressed more or less after the period in which 
the play was written; the women were not. 
I saw no inconsistency. Their talk seemed 
309 



MY ANTONIA 

to open to one the brilliant world in which 
they lived; every sentence made one older 
and wiser, every pleasantry enlarged one's 
horizon. One could experience excess and 
satiety without the inconvenience of learning 
what to do with one's hands in a drawing- 
room! When the characters all spoke at once 
and I missed some of the phrases they flashed 
at each other, I was in misery. I strained my 
ears and eyes to catch every exclamation. 

The actress who played Marguerite was 
even then old-fashioned, though historic. She 
had been a member of Daly's famous New 
York company, and afterward a "star" under 
his direction. She was a woman who could 
not be taught, it is said, though she had a 
crude natural force which carried with people 
whose feelings were accessible and whose 
taste was not squeamish. She was already 
old, with a ravaged countenance and a phy- 
sique curiously hard and stiff. She moved 
with difficulty — I think she was lame — I 
seem to remember some story about a malady 
of the spine. Her Armand was dispropor- 
tionately young and slight, a handsome youth, 
perplexed in the extreme. But what did it 
matter? I believed devoutly in her power to 
310 



LENA LINGARD 

fascinate him, in her dazzling loveliness. I 
believed her young, ardent, reckless, disil- 
lusioned, under sentence, feverish, avid of 
pleasure. I wanted to cross the footlights and 
help the slim-waisted Armand in the frilled 
shirt to convince her that there was still loy- 
alty and devotion in the world. Her sudden 
illness, when the gayety was at its height, her 
pallor, the handkerchief she crushed against 
her lips, the cough she smothered under the 
laughter while Gaston kept playing the piano 
lightly — it all wrung my heart. But not so 
much as her cynicism in the long dialogue 
with her lover which followed. How far was 
I from questioning her unbelief! While the 
charmingly sincere young man pleaded with 
her — accompanied by the orchestra in the 
old "Traviata" duet, "misterioso, misteri- 
oso!" — she maintained her bitter skepticism, 
and the curtain fell on her dancing recklessly 
with the others, after Armand had been sent 
away with his flower. 

Between the acts we had no time to forget. 
The orchestra kept sawing away at the "Tra- 
viata" music, so joyous and sad, so thin and 
far-away, so clap-trap and yet so heart- 
breaking. After the second act I left Lena in 
311 



MY ANTONIA 

tearful contemplation of the ceiling, and went 
out into the lobby to smoke. As I walked 
about there I congratulated myself that I had 
not brought some Lincoln girl who would 
talk during the waits about the Junior dances, 
or whether the cadets would camp at Platts- 
mouth. Lena was at least a woman, and I was 
a man. 

.Through the scene between Marguerite 
and the elder Duval, Lena wept unceasingly, 
and I sat helpless to prevent the closing of 
that chapter of idyllic love, dreading the re- 
turn of the young man whose ineffable happi- 
ness was only to be the measure of his fall. 

I suppose no woman could have been fur- 
ther in person, voice, and temperament from 
Dumas' appealing heroine than the veteran 
actress who first acquainted me with her. Her 
conception of the character was as heavy and 
uncompromising as her diction; she bore hard 
on the idea and on the consonants. At all 
times she was highly tragic, devoured by 
remorse. Lightness of stress or behavior was 
far from her. Her voice was heavy and deep: 
"Ar-r-r-mond!" she would begin, as if she 
were summoning him to the bar of Judg- 
ment. But the lines were enough. She had 
312 



LENA LINGARD 

only to utter them. They created the char- 
acter in spite of her. 

The heartless world which Marguerite re- 
entered with Varville had never been so glit- 
tering and reckless as on the night when it 
gathered in Olympe's salon for the fourth 
act. There were chandeliers hung from the 
ceiling, I remember, many servants in livery, 
gaming-tables where the men played with 
piles of gold, and a staircase down which the 
guests made their entrance. After all the 
others had gathered round the card tables, 
and young Duval had been warned by Pru- 
dence, Marguerite descended the staircase 
with Varville; such a cloak, such a fan, such 
jewels — and her face! One knew at a glance 
how it was with her. When Armand, with the 
terrible words, "Look, all of you, I owe this 
woman nothing!" flung the gold and bank- 
notes at the half-swooning Marguerite, Lena 
cowered beside me and covered her face with 
her hands. 

The curtain rose on the bedroom scene. By 
this time there was n't a nerve in me that 
had n't been twisted. Nanine alone could 
have made me cry. I loved Nanine tenderly; 
and Gaston, how one clung to that good fel- 
313 



MY ANTONIA 

low! The New Year's presents were not too 
much; nothing could be too much now. I 
wept unrestrainedly. Even the handkerchief 
in my breast-pocket, worn for elegance and 
not at all for use, was wet through by the 
time that moribund woman sank for the last 
time into the arms of her lover. 

When we reached the door of the theater,, 
the streets were shining with rain. I had 
prudently brought along Mrs. Harling's use- 
ful Commencement present, and I took Lena 
home under its shelter. After leaving her, I 
walked slowly out into the country part of 
the town where I lived. The lilacs were all 
blooming in the yards, and the smell of them 
after the rain, of the new leaves and the blos- 
soms together, blew into my face with a sort 
of bitter sweetness. I tramped through the 
puddles and under the showery trees, mourn- 
ing for Marguerite Gauthier as if she had died 
only yesterday, sighing with the spirit of 1 840, 
which had sighed so much, and which had 
reached me only that night, across long years 
and several languages, through the person of 
an infirm old actress. The idea is one that no 
circumstances can frustrate. Wherever and 
whenever that piece is put on, it is April. 



IV 

How well I remember the stiff little parlor 
where I used to wait for Lena : the hard horse- 
hair furniture, bought at some auction sale, 
the long mirror, the fashion-plates on the 
wall. If I sat down even for a moment I was 
sure to find threads and bits of colored silk 
clinging to my clothes after I went away, 
Lena's success puzzled me. She was so easy- 
going; had none of the push and self-asser- 
tiveness that get people ahead in business. 
She had come to Lincoln, a country girl, 
with no introductions except to some cous- 
ins of Mrs. Thomas who lived there, and she 
was already making clothes for the women 
of "the young married set." She evidently 
bad great natural aptitude for her work. She 
knew, as she said, "what people looked well 
in." She never tired of poring over fashion 
books. Sometimes in the evening I would 
find her alone in her work-room, draping folds 
of satin on a wire figure, with a quite blissful 
expression of countenance, I could n't help 
thinking that the years when Lena literally 
31S 



MY ANTONIA 

had n't enough clothes to cover herself might 
have something to do with her untiring inter- 
est in dressing the human figure. Her clients 
said that Lena "had style," and overlooked 
her habitual inaccuracies. She never, I dis- 
covered, finished anything by the time she 
had promised, and she frequently spent more 
money on materials than her customer had 
authorized. Once, when I arrived at six 
o'clock, Lena was ushering out a fidgety 
mother and her awkward, overgrown daugh- 
ter. The woman detained Lena at the door 
to say apologetically: — 

"You'll try to keep it under fifty for me, 
won't you. Miss Lingard? You see, she's 
really too young to come to an expensive 
dressmaker, but I knew you could do more 
with her than anybody else." 

"Oh, that will be all right, Mrs. Herron. 
I think we'll manage to get a good effect," 
Lena replied blandly. 

I thought her manner with her customers 
very good, and wondered where she had 
learned such self-possession. 

Sometimes after my morning classes were 
over, I used to encounter Lena downtown, 
in her velvet suit and a little black hat, with 
316 



LENA LINGARD 

a veil tied smoothly over her face, looking 
as fresh as the spring naoming. Maybe she 
would be carrying home a bunch of jonquils or 
a hyacinth plant. When we passed a candy 
store her footsteps would hesitate and lingei. 
"Don't let me go in," she would murmur. 
"Get me by if you can." She was very fond 
of sweets, and was afraid of growing too 
plump. 

We had delightful Sunday breakfasts to- 
gether at Lena's. At the back of her long 
work-room was a bay-window, large enough 
to hold a box-couch and a reading-table. We 
breakfasted in this recess, after drawing the 
curtains that shut out the long room, with 
cutting-tables and wire women and sheet- 
draped garments on the walls. The sunlight 
poured in, making everything on the table 
shine and glitter and the flame of the alcohol 
lamp disappear altogether. Lena's curly black 
water-spaniel. Prince, breakfasted with us. 
He sat beside her on the couch and behaved 
very well until the Polish violin-teacher across 
the hall began to practice, when Prince would 
growl and sniff the air with disgust. Lena's 
landlord, old Colonel Raleigh, had given her 
the dog, and at first she was not at all pleased. 
317 



MY ANTONIA 

She had spent too much of her life taking 
care of animals to have much sentiment about 
them. But Prince was a knowing little beast, 
and she grew fond of him. After breakfast 
I made him do his lessons; play dead dog, 
shake hands, stand up like a soldier. We used 
to put my cadet cap on his head — I had to 
take military drill at the University — and 
give him a yard-measure to hold with his 
front leg. His gravity made us laugh im- 
moderately. 

Lena's talk always amused me. Antonia 
had never talked like the people about her. 
Even after she learned to speak English read- 
ily there was always something impulsive 
and foreign in her speech. But Lena had 
picked up all the conventional expressions 
she heard at Mrs. Thomas's dressmaking 
shop. Those formal phrases, the very flower 
of small-town proprieties, and the flat com- 
monplaces, nearly all hypocritical in their ori- 
gin, became very funny, very engaging, when 
they were uttered in Lena's soft voice, with 
her caressing intonation and arch naivete. 
Nothing could be more diverting than to hear 
Lena, who was almost as candid as Nature, 
call a leg a "limb" or a house a "home." 
318 



LENA LINGARD 

We used to linger a long while over our 
coffee in that sunny comer. Lena was never 
so pretty as in the morning; she wakened 
fresh with the world every day, and her eyes 
had a deeper color then, like the blue flowers 
that are never so blue as when they first open. 
I could sit idle all through a Sunday morning 
and look at her. Ole Benson's behavior was 
now no mystery to me. 

"There was never any harm in Ole," she 
said once. "People need n't have troubled 
themselves. He just liked to come over and 
sit on the draw-side and forget about his bad 
luck. I liked to have him. Any company's 
welcome when you're off with cattle all the 
time." 

"But wasn't he always glum?" I asked. 
"People said he never talked at all." 

"Sure he talked, in Norwegian. He'd been 
a sailor on an English boat and had seen 
lots of queer places. He had wonderful tat- 
toos. We used to sit and look at them for 
hours ; there was n't much to look at out there. 
He was like a picture book. He had a ship 
and a strawberry girl on one arm, and on 
the other a girl standing before a little house, 
with a fence and gate and all, waiting for 
319 



MY ANTONIA 

her sweetheart. Farther up his arm, her 
sailor had come back and was kissing her. 
'The Sailor's Return,' he called it." 

I admitted it was no wonder Ole liked to 
look at a pretty girl once in a while, with 
such a fright at home. 

"You know," Lena said confidentially, 
"he married Mary because he thought she 
was strong-minded and would keep him 
straight. He never could keep straight on 
shore. The last time he landed in Liverpool 
he'd been out on a two years' voyage. He 
was paid off one morning, and by the next 
he had n't a cent left, and his watch and com- 
pass were gone. He'd got with some women, 
and they'd taken everything. He worked 
his way to this country on a little passenger 
boat. Mary was a stewardess, and she tried 
to convert him on the way over. He thought 
she was just the one to keep him steady. Poor 
Ole! He used to bring me candy from town, 
hidden in his feed-bag. He could n't refuse 
anything to a girl. He'd have given away 
his tattoos long ago, if he could. He's one 
of the people I 'm sorriest for." 

If I happened to spend an evening with 
Lena and stayed late, the Polish vioUn-teachf " 
320 



LENA LINGARD 

^, cross the hall used to come out and watch 
me descend the stairs, muttering so threat- 
eningly that it would have been easy to fall 
into a quarrel with him. Lena had told him 
once that she liked to hear hiin practice, so 
he always left his door open, and watched 
who came and went. 

There was a coolness between the Pole and 
Lena's landlord on her account. Old Colonel 
Raleigh had come to Lincoln from Kentucky 
and invested an inherited fortune in real 
estate, at the time of inflated prices. Now he 
sat day after day in his office in the Raleigh 
Block, trying to discover where his money 
had gone and how he could get some of it 
back. He was a widower, and found very 
little congenial companionship in this casual 
Western city. Lena's good looks and gentle 
manners appealed to him. He said her voice 
reminded him of Southern voices, and he 
found as many opportunities of hearing it as 
possible. He painted and papered her rooms 
for her that spring, and put in a porcelain 
bathtub in place of the tin one that had satis- 
fied the former tenant. While these repairs 
were being made, the old gentleman often 
dropped in to consult Lena's preferences. 
321 



MY ANTONIA 

She told me with amusement how Ordinsky, 
the Pole, had presented himself at her door 
one evening, and said that if the landlord 
was annoying her by his attentions, he would 
promptly put a stop to it. 

"I don't exactly know what to do about 
him," she said, shaking her head, "he's so 
sort of wild all the time. I would n't like to 
have him say anything rough to that nice 
old man. The Colonel is long-winded, but 
then I expect he's lonesome. I don't think 
he cares much for Ordinsky, either. He said 
once that if I had any complaints to make of 
my neighbors, I must n't hesitate." 

One Saturday evening when I was having 
supper with Lena we heard a knock at her 
parlor door, and there stood the Pole, coat- 
less, in a dress shirt and collar. Prince dropped ■ 
on his paws and began to growl like a mastiff, 
while the visitor apologized, saying that he 
could not possibly come in thus attired, but 
he begged Lena to lend him some safety pins. 

"Oh, you'll have to come in, Mr. Ordinsky, 
and let me see what's the matter." She closed 
the door behind him. "Jim, won't you make 
Prince behave?" 

I rapped Prince on the nose, while Ordin- 
322 



LENA LINGARD 

sky explained that he had not had his dress 
clothes on for a long time, and to-night, 
when he was going to play for a concert, his 
waistcoat had split down the back. He 
thought he could pin it together until he got 
it to a tailor. 

Lena took him by the elbow and turned 
him round. She laughed when she saw the 
long gap in the satin. "You could never pin 
that, Mr. Ordinsky. You've kept it folded 
too long, and the goods is all gone along the 
crease. Take it off. I can put a new piece of 
lining-silk in there for you in ten minutes." 
She disappeared into her work-room with 
the vest, leaving me to confront the Pole, who 
stood against the door like a wooden figure. 
He folded his arms and glared at me with his 
excitable, slanting brown eyes. His head was 
the shape of a chocolate drop, and was cov- 
ered with dry, straw-colored hair that fuzzed 
up about his pointed crown. He had never 
done more than mutter at me as I passed him, 
and I was surprised when he now addressed 
me. 

' "Miss Lingard," he said haughtily, "is a 
young woman for whom I have the utmost, 
the utmost respect." 

323 



MY ANTONIA 

"So have I," I said coldly. 

He paid no heed to my remark, but began 
to do rapid finger-exercises on his shirt-sleeves, 
as he stood with tightly folded arms. 

"Kindness of heart," he went on, staring 
at the ceiling, "sentiment, are not under- 
stood in a place like this. The noblest quali- 
ties are ridiculed. Grinning college boys, 
ignorant and conceited, what do they know 
of delicacy!" 

I controlled my features and tried to speak 
seriously. 

"If you mean me, Mr. Ordinsky, I have 
known Miss Lingard a long time, and I think 
I appreciate her kindness. We come from the 
same town, and we grew up together." 

His gaze traveled slowly down from the 
ceiling and rested on me. "Am I to under- 
stand that you have this young woman's 
interests at heart? That you do not wish to 
compromise her?" 

"That's a word we don't use much here, 
Mr. Ordinsky. A girl who makes her own 
living can ask a college boy to supper without 
being talked about. We take some things 
for granted." 

"Then I have misjudged you, and I ask 

324 



LENA LINGARD 

your pardon," — he bowed gravely. "Miss 
Lingard," he went on, "is an absolutely 
trustful heart. She has not learned the hard 
lessons of life. As for you and me, noblesse 
oblige" • — he watched me narrowly. (n* 

Lena returned with the vest. "Come in 
and let us look at you as you go out, Mr. 
Ordinsky. I've never seen you in your dress 
suit," she said as she opened the door for him. 

A few moments later he reappeared with 
his violin case — a heavy muffler about his 
neck and thick woolen gloves on his bony 
hands. Lena spoke encouragingly to him, and 
he went off with such an important, profes- 
sional air, that we fell to laughing as soon as 
we had shut the door. "Poor fellow," Lena 
said indulgently, "he takes everything so 
hard." 

After that Ordinsky was friendly to me, 
and behaved as if there were some deep un- 
derstanding between us. He wrote a furious 
article, attacking the musical taste of the 
town, and asked me to do him a great service 
by taking it to the editor of the morning paper. 
If the editor refused to print it, I was to tell 
him that he would be answerable to Ordin- 
sky "in person." He declared that he would 
32s 



MY ANTONIA 

never retract one word, and that he was 
quite prepared to lose all his pupils. In spite 
of the fact that nobody ever mentioned his 
article to him after it appeared — full of 
typographical errors which he thought inten- 
tional — he got a certain satisfaction from be- 
lieving that the citizens of Lincoln had meekly 
accepted the epithet "coarse barbarians." 
"You see how it is," he said to me, "where 
there is no chivalry, there is no amour propre." 
When I met him on his rounds now, I thought 
he carried his head more disdainfully than 
ever, and strode up the steps of front porches 
and rang doorbells with more assurance. He 
told Lena he vfrould never forget how I had 
stood by him when he was "under fire." !m| 

All this time, of course, I was drifting. Lena 
had broken up my serious mood. I wasn't 
interested in my classes. I played with Lena 
and Prince, I played with the Pole, I went 
buggy-riding with the old Colonel, who had 
taken a fancy to me and used to talk to me 
about Lena and the "great beauties" he had 
known in his youth. We were all three in 
love with Lena. 

Before the first of June, Gaston Cleric was 
offered an instructorship at Harvard College, 
326 



LENA LINGARD 

and accepted it. He suggested that I should 
follow him in the fall, and complete my course 
at Harvard. He had found out about Lena 
— not from me — and he talked to me seri- 
ously. 

"You won't do anything here now. You 
should either quit school and go to work, or 
change your college and begin again in earn- 
est. You won't recover yourself while you 
are playing about with this handsome Nor- 
wegian. Yes, I've seen her with you at the 
theater. She's very pretty, and perfectly irre- 
sponsible, I should judge." 

Cleric wrote my grandfather that he would 
like to take me East with him. To my aston- 
ishment, grandfather replied that I might go 
if I wished. I was both glad and sorry on 
the day when the letter came. I stayed in 
my room all evening and thought things over; 
I even tried to persuade myself that I was 
standing in Lena's way — it is so necessary 
to be a little noble! — and that if she had not 
me to play with, she would probably marry 
and secure her future. 

The next evening I went to call on Lena. 
I found her propped up on the couch in her 
bay window, with her foot in a big slipper. An 
327 



MY ANTONIA 

awkward little Russian girl whom she had 
taken into her work-room had dropped a flat- 
iron on Lena's toe. On the table beside her 
there was a basket of early summer flowers 
which the Pole had left after he heard of the 
accident. He always managed to know what 
went on in Lena's apartment. 

Lena was telling me some amusing piece of 
gossip about one of her clients, when I inter- 
rupted her and picked up the flower basket. 

"This old chap will be proposing to you 
some day, Lena." 

"Oh, he has — often!" she murmured. 

"What! After you've refused him?" 

"He does n't mind that. It seems to cheer 
him to mention the subject. Old men are like 
that, you know. It makes them feel impor- 
tant to think they 're in love with somebody." 

"The Colonel would marry you in a minute. 
I hope you won't marry some old fellow; not 
even a rich one." 

Lena shifted her pillows and looked up 
at me in surprise. "Why, I'm not going to 
marry anybody. Did n't you know that?" 

"Nonsense, Lena. That's what girls say, 
but you know better. Every handsome girl 
like you marries, of course." 
328 



LENA LINGARD 

She shook her head. "Not me." 

"But why not? What makes you say 
that?" I persisted. 

Lena laughed. "Well, it 's mainly because I 
don't want a husband. Men are all right for 
friends, but as soon as you marry them they 
turn into cranky old fathers, even the wild 
ones. They begin to tell you what's sensible 
and what's foolish, and want you to stick at 
home all the time. I prefer to be foolish when 
I feel like it, and be accountable to nobody." 

"But you'll be lonesome. You'll get tired 
of this sort of life, and you'll want a family." 

"Not me. I like to be lonesome. When I 
went to work for Mrs. Thomas I was nine- 
teen years old, and I had never slept a night 
in my life when there were n't three in the 
bed. I never had a minute to myself except 
when I was off with the cattle." 

Usually, when Lena referred to her life in 
the country at all, she dismissed it with a 
single remark, humorous or mildly cynical. 
But to-night her mind seemed to dwell on 
tljose early years. She told me she could n't 
remember a time when she was so little that 
she was n't lugging a heavy baby about, help- 
ing to wash for babies, trying to keep their 
329 



MY ANTONIA 

little chapped hands and faces clean. She re- 
membered home as a place where there were 
always too many children, a cross man, and 
work piling up around a sick woman. 

"It was n't mother's fault. She would 
have made us comfortable if she could. But 
that was no life for a girl! After I began to 
herd and milk I could never get the smell 
of the cattle off me. The few underclothes 
I had I kept in a cracker box. On Satur- 
day nights, after everybody was in bed, then 
I could take a bath if I was n't too tired. I 
could make two trips to the windmill to carry 
water, and heat it in the wash-boiler on the 
stove. While the water was heating, I could 
bring in a washtub out of the cave, and take 
my bath in the kitchen. Then I could put on 
a clean nightgown and get into bed with two 
others, who likely had n't had a bath unless 
I 'd given it to them. You can't tell me any- 
thing about family life. I've had plenty to 
last me." 

"But it's not all like that," I objected. 

"Near enough. It's all being under some- 
body's thumb. What's on your mind, Jim? 
Are you afraid I '11 want you to marry me 
some day?" 

330 



LENA LINGARD 

Then I told her I was going away. 

"What makes you want to go away, Jim? 
Have n't I been nice to you?" 

"You've been just awfully good to me, 
Lena," I blurted. "I don't think about much 
else. I never shall think about much else 
while I 'm with you. I '11 never settle down and 
grind if I stay here. You know that." I 
dropped down beside her and sat looking at 
the floor. I seemed to have forgotten all my 
reasonable explanations. 

Lena drew close to me, and the little hesi- 
tation in her voice that had hurt me was not 
there when she spoke again. 

"I oughtn't to have begun it, ought I?" 
she murmured. "I ought n't to have gone 
to see you that first time. But I did want to. 
I guess I've always been a little foolish about 
you. I don't know what first put it into my 
head, unless it was Antonia, always telling 
me I must n't be up to any of my nonsense 
with you. I let you alone for a long while, 
though, did n't I?" 

She was a sweet creature to those she loved, 
that Lena Lingard! 

At last she sent me away with her soft, 
slow, renunciatory kiss. "You are n't sorry 
331 



MY ANTONIA 

I came to see you that time?" she whispered. 
"It seemed so natural. I used to think I'd 
like to be your first sweetheart. You were 
such a funny kid!" She always kissed one as 
if she were sadly and wisely sending one 
away forever. 

We said many good-byes before I left Lin- 
coln, but she never tried to hinder me or hold 
me back. "You are going, but you have n't 
gone yet, have you?" she used to say. 

My Lincoln chapter closed abruptly. I went 
home to my grandparents for a few weeks, 
and afterward visited my relatives in Virginia 
until I joined Cleric in Boston. I was then 
nineteen years old. 



Book IV 
THE PIONEER WOMAN'S STORY, 



Book IV 

THE PIONEER WOMAN'S STORY 

I 

Two years after I left Lincoln I completed 
my academic course at Harvard. Before I en- 
tered the Law School I went home for the 
summer vacation. On the night of my arrival 
Mrs. Harling and Frances and Sally came 
over to greet me. Everything seemed just 
as it used to be. My grandparents looked 
very little older. Frances Harling was mar- 
ried now, and she and her husband managed 
the Harling interests in Black Hawk. When 
we gathered in grandmother's parlor, I could 
hardly believe that I had been away at all. 
One subject, however, we avoided all eve- 
ning. 

When I was walking home with Frances, 
after we had left Mrs. Harling at her gate, 
she said simply, "You know, of course, about 
poor Antonia." 

Poor Antonia ! Every one would be saying 
that now, I thought bitterly. I replied that 
335 



MY ANTONIA 

grandmother had written me how Antonia 
went away to marry Larry Donovan at some 
place where he was working; that he had 
deserted her, and that there was now a baby. 
This was all I knew. 

"He never married her," Frances said, " I 
have n't seen her since she came back. She 
lives at home, on the farm, and almost never 
comes to town. She brought the baby in to 
show it to mama once. I'm afraid she's set- 
tled down to be Ambrosch's drudge for good." 

I tried to shut; Antonia out of my mind. I 
was bitterly disappointed in her. I could not 
forgive her for becoming an object of pity, 
while Lena Lingard, for whom people had 
always foretold trouble, was now the leading 
dressmaker of Lincoln, much respected in 
Black Hawk. Lena gave her heart away 
when she felt like it, but she kept her head for 
her business and had got on in the world. 

Just then it was the fashion to speak in- 
dulgently of Lena and severely of Tiny Soder- 
ball, who had quietly gone West to try her 
fortune the year before. A Black Hawk boy, 
just back from Seattle, brought the news that 
Tiny had not gone to the coast on a venture, 
as she had allowed people to think, but with 
336 



THE PIONEER WOMAN'S STORY 

very definite plans. One of the roving pro- 
moters that used to stop at Mrs. Gardener's 
hotel OAvned idle property along the water- 
front in Seattle, and he had offered to set 
Tiny up in business in one of his empty 
buildings. She was now conducting a sailors' 
lodging-house. This, every one said, would 
be the end of Tiny. Even if she had begun 
by running a decent place, she couldn't 
keep it up; all sailors' boarding-houses were 
alike. 

When I thought about it, I discovered that 
I had never known Tiny as well as I knew 
the other girls. I remembered her tripping 
briskly about the dining-room on her high 
heels, carrying a big tray full of dishes, glanc- 
ing rather pertly at the spruce traveling men, 
and contemptuously at the scrubby ones — 
who were so afraid of her that they did n't 
dare to ask for two kinds of pie. Now it oc- 
curred to me that perhaps the sailors, too, 
might be afraid of Tiny. How astonished 
we would have been, as we sat talking about 
her on Frances Harling's front porch, if we 
could have known what her future was really 
to be! Of all the girls and boys who grew up 
together in Black Hawk, Tiny Soderball was 
337 



MY ANTONIA 

to lead the most adventurous life and to 
achieve the most solid worldly success. 

This is what actually happened to Tiny: 
While she was running her lodging-house in 
Seattle, gold was discovered in Alaska. Miners 
and sailors came back from the North with 
wonderful stories and pouches of gold. Tiny 
saw it and weighed it in her hands. That 
daring which nobody had ever suspected in 
her, awoke. She sold her business and set 
out for Circle City, in company with a car- 
penter and his wife whom she had persuaded 
to go along with her. They reached Skaguay 
in a snowstorm, went in dog sledges over the 
Chilkoot Pass, and shot the Yukon in flat- 
boats. They reached Circle City on the very 
day when some Siwash Indians came into the 
settlement with the report that there had 
been a rich gold strike farther up the river, 
on a certain Klondike Creek. Two days later 
Tiny and her friends, and nearly every one 
else in Circle City, started for the Klondike 
fields on the last steamer that went up the 
Yukon before it froze for the winter. That 
boatload of people founded Dawson City. 
Within a few weeks there were fifteen hun- 
dred homeless men in camp. Tiny and the 
338 



THE PIONEER WOMAN'S STORY 

carpenter's wife began to cook for them, iii 
a tent. The miners gave her a lot, and the 
carpenter put up a log hotel for her. There 
she sometimes fed a hundred and fifty men 
a day. Miners came in on snowshoes from 
their placer claims twenty miles away to buy 
fresh bread from her, and paid for it in gold. 

That winter Tiny kept in her hotel a Swede 
whose legs had been frozen one night in a 
storm when he was trying to find his way back 
to his cabin. The poor fellow thought it great 
good fortune to be cared for by a woman, and 
a woman who spoke his own tongue. When 
he was told that his feet must be amputated, 
he said he hoped he would not get well; what 
could a working-man do in this hard world 
without feet? He did, in fact, die from the 
operation, but not before he had deeded Tiny 
Soderball his claim on Hunker Creek. Tiny 
sold her hotel, invested half her money in 
Dawson building lots, and with the rest she 
developed her claim. She went oif into the 
wilds and lived on it. She bought other claims 
from discouraged miners, traded or sold them 
on percentages. 

After nearly ten years in the Klondike, 
Tiny returned, with a considerable fortune, 
339 



MY ANTONIA 

to live in San Francisco. I met her in Salt 
Lake City in 1908. She was a thin, hard- 
faced woman, very well-dressed, very re- 
served in manner. Curiously enough, she re- 
minded me of Mrs. Gardener, for whom she 
had worked in Black Hawk so long ago. She 
told me about some of the desperate chances 
she had taken in the gold country, but the 
thrill of them was quite gone. She said frankly 
that nothing interested her much now but 
making money. The only two human beings 
of whom she spoke with any feeling were the 
Swede, Johnson, who had given her his claim, 
and Lena Lingard. She had persuaded Lena 
to come to San Francisco and go into busi- 
ness there. 

"Lincoln was never any place for her," 
Tiny remarked. "In a town of that size Lena 
would always be gossiped about. Frisco's 
the right field for her. She has a fine class of 
trade. Oh, she's just the same as she always 
was! She's careless, but she's level-headed. 
She's the only person I know who never gets 
any older. It's fine for me to have her there; 
somebody who enjoys things like that. She 
keeps an eye on me and won't let me be 
shabby. When she thinks I need a new dress, 
340 



THE PIONEER WOMAN'S STORY 

she makes it and sends it home — with a bill 
that's long enough, I can tell youl" 

Tiny limped slightly when she walked. 
The claim on Hunker Creek took toll from 
its possessors. Tiny had been caught in a 
sudden turn of weather, like poor Johnson. 
She lost three toes from one of those pretty 
little feet that used to trip about Black Hawk 
in pointed slippers and striped stockings. 
Tiny mentioned this mutilation quite casu- 
ally — did n't seem sensitive about it. She 
was satisfied with her success, but not elated. 
She was like some one in whom the faculty 
of becoming interested is worn out. 



II 

Soon after I got home that summer I per- 
suaded my grandparents to have their photo- 
graphs taken, and one morning I went into 
the photographer's shop to arrange for sit- 
tings. While I was waiting for him to come 
out of his developing-room, I walked about 
trying to recognize the likenesses on his 
walls: girls in Commencement dresses, coun- 
try brides and grooms holding hands, family 
groups of three generations. I noticed, in a 
heavy frame, one of those depressing "crayon 
enlargements" often seen in farmhouse par- 
lors, the subject being a round-eyed baby in 
short dresses. The photographer came out 
and gave a constrained, apologetic laugh. 

"That's Tony Shimerda's baby. You re- 
member her; she used to be the Harling's 
Tony. Too bad! She seems proud of the baby, 
though; would n't hear to a cheap frame for 
the picture. I expect her brother will be in 
for it Saturday." 

I went away feeling that I must see An- 
tonia again. Another girl would have kept 
342 



THE PIONEER WOMAN'S STORY 

her baby out of sight, but Tony, of course, 
must have its picture on exhibition at the 
town photographer's, in a great gilt frame. 
How Hke her! I could forgive her, I told my- 
self, if she hadn't thrown herself away on 
such a cheap sort of fellow. 

Larry Donovan was a passenger conduc- 
tor, one of those train-crew aristocrats who 
are always afraid that some one may ask 
them to put up a car-window, and who, if 
requested to perform such a menial service, 
silently point to the button that calls the 
porter. Larry wore this air of official aloof- 
ness even on the street, where there were no 
car-windows to compromise his dignity. At 
the end of his run he stepped indifferently 
from the train along with the passengers, his 
street hat on his head and his conductor's 
cap in an alligator-skin bag, went directly 
into the station and changed his clothes. It 
was a matter of the utmost importance to 
him never to be seen in his blue trousers away 
from his train. He was usually cold and dis- 
tant with men, but with all women he had a 
silent, grave familiarity, a special handshakej 
accompanied by a significant, deliberate look. 
He took women, married or single, into his 
343 



MY ANTONIA 

confidence; walked them up and down in the 
moonlight, telling them what a mistake he 
had made by not entering the office branch 
")f the service, and how much better fitted he 
^as to fill the post of General Passenger 
Agent in Denver than the roughshod man 
who then bore that title. His unappreciated 
worth was the tender secret Larry shared 
with his sweethearts, and he was always able 
to make some foolish heart ache over it. 

As I drew near home that morning, I saw 
Mrs. Harling out in her yard, digging round 
her mountain-ash tree. It was a dry summer, 
and she had now no boy to help her. Charley 
was off in his battleship, cruising somewhere 
on the Caribbean sea. I turned in at the gate 
— it was with a feeling of pleasure that I 
opened and shut that gate in those days; I 
liked the feel of it under my hand, I took 
the spade away from Mrs. Harling, and while 
I loosened the earth around the tree, she sat 
down on the steps and talked about the oriole 
family that had a nest in its branches. 

"Mrs. Harling," I said presently, "I wish 
I could find out exactly how Antonia's mar- 
riage fell through." 

"Why don't you go out and see your grand- 
344 



THE PIONEER WOMAN'S STORY 

father's tenant, the Widow Steavens? She 
knows more about it than anybody else. She 
helped Antonia get ready to be married, anc? 
she was there when Antonia came back. Sht 
took care of her when the baby was bom. 
She could tell you everything. Besides, the 
Widow Steavens is a good talker, and she has 
a remarkable memory." 



Ill 

On the first or second day of August I got a 
horse and cart and set out for the high coun- 
try, to visit the Widow Steavens. The wheat 
harvest was over, and here and there along 
the horizon I could see black puffs of smoke 
from the steam thrashing-machines. The 
old pasture land was now being broken up 
into wheatfields and cornfields, the red grass 
was disappearing, and the whole face of the 
country was changing. There were wooden 
houses where the old sod dwellings used to 
be, and little orchards, and big red bams; all 
this meant happy children, contented women, 
and men who saw their lives coming to a 
fortunate issue. The windy springs and the 
blazing summers, one after another, had en- 
riched and mellowed that flat tableland; all 
the human effort that had gone into it was 
coming back in long, sweeping lines of fer- 
tility. The changes seemed beautiful and 
harmonious to me; it was like watching the 
growth of a great man or of a great idea. I 
recognized every tree and sandbank and 
346 



THE PIONEER WOMAN'S STORY 

rugged draw. I found that I remembered 
the conformation of the land as one remem- 
bers the modeling of human faces. 

When I drew up to our old windmill, the 
Widow Steavens came out to meet me. She 
was brown as an Indian woman, tall, and very- 
strong. When I was little, her massive head 
had always seemed to me like a Roman sena- 
tor's. I told her at once why I had come. 

"You'll stay the night with us, Jimmy? 
I'll talk to you after supper. I can take more 
interest when my work is off my mind. 
You 've no prejudice against hot biscuit for 
supper? Some have, these days." 

While I was putting my horse away I heard 
a rooster squawking. I looked at my -watch 
and sighed; it was three o'clock, and I knew 
that I must eat him at six. 

After supper Mrs. Steavens and I went 
upstairs to the old sitting-room, while her 
grave, silent brother remained in the base- 
ment to read his farm papers. All thd win- 
dows were open. The white summer moon 
was shining outside, the windmill was pump- 
ing lazily in the light breeze. My hostess 
put the lamp on a stand in the comer, and 
turned it low because of the heat. She sat 
347 



MY ANTONIA 

down in her favorite rocking-chair and set- 
tled a little stool comfortably under her tired 
feet. "I'm troubled with callouses, Jim; get- 
ting old," she sighed cheerfully. She crossed 
her hands in her lap and sat as if she were at 
a meeting of some kind. 

"Now, it's about that dear Antonia you 
want to know? Well, you've come to the 
right person. I've watched her like she'd 
been my own daughter. 

"When she came home to do her sewing 
that summer before she was to be married, 
she was over here about every day. They've 
never had a sewing machine at the Shimer- 
das', and she made all her things here. I 
taught her hemstitching, and I helped her 
to cut and fit. She used to sit there at that 
machine by the window, pedaling the life 
out of it — she was so strong — and always 
singing them queer Bohemian songs, like she 
was the happiest thing in the world. 

"'Antonia,' I used to say, 'don't run that 
machine so fast. You won't hasten the day 
none that way.' 

"Then. she'd laugh and slow down for a 
little, but she'd soon forget and begin to 
pedal and sing again. I never saw a girl 
348 



THE PIONEER WOMSN^, STORY 

work harder to go to housekeeping right and 
well-prepared. Lovely table linen the Har- 
Hngs had given her, and Lena Lingard had 
sent her nice things from Lincoln. We hem- 
stitched all the tablecloths and pillow-cases, 
and some of the sheets. Old Mrs. Shimerda 
knit yards and yards of lace for her under- 
clothes. Tony told me just how she meant 
to have everything in her house. She'd even 
bought silver spoons and forks, and kept 
them in her trunk. She was always coaxing 
brother to go to the post-office. Her young 
man did write her real often, from the differ- 
ent towns along his run, 

"The first thing that troubled her was when 
he wrote that his run had been changed, and 
they would likely have to live in Denver. ' I 'm 
a country girl,' she said, 'and I doubt if I'll 
be able to manage so well for him in a city. 
I was counting on keeping chickens, and 
maybe a cow.' She soon cheered up, though. 

*' At last she got the letter telling her when 
to come. She was shaken by it; she broke 
the seal and read it in this room. I suspected 
then that she'd begun to get faint-hearted, 
waiting; though she'd never let me see it. 

" Then there was a great time of packing. It 
349 



MY ANTONIA 

was in March, if I remember rightly, and a 
terrible muddy, raw spell, with the roads bad 
for hauling her things to town. And here 
let me say, Ambrosch did the right thing. 
He went to Black Hawk and bought her a 
set of plated silver in a purple velvet box, 
good enough for her station. He gave her 
three hundred dollars in money; I saw the 
check. He'd collected her wages all those 
first years she worked out, and it was but 
right. I shook him by the hand in this room. 
'You're behaving like a man, Ambrosch,' 
I said, 'and I'm glad to see it, son.' 

" 'T was a cold, raw day he drove her and 
her three trunks into Black Hawk to take 
the night train for Denver — the boxes had 
been shipped before. He stopped the wagon 
here, and she ran in to tell me good-bye. She 
threw her arms around me and kissed me, 
and thanked me for all I 'd done for her. She 
was so happy she was crying and laughing 
at the same time, and her red cheeks was all 
wet with rain. 

'"You're surely handsome enough for any 
man,' I said, looking her over. 

"She laughed kind of flighty like, and 
whispered, 'Good-bye, dear house!' and then 
3 SO 



THE PIONEER WOMAN'S STORY 

ran out to the wagon. I expect she meant 
that for you and your grandmother, as much 
as for me, so I'm particular to tell you. This 
house had always been a refuge to her. 

"Well, in a few days we had a letter say- 
ing she got to Denver safe, and he was there 
to meet her. They were to be married in a 
few days. He was trying to get his promotion 
before he married, she said. I didn't like 
that, but I said nothing. The next week Yulka 
got a postal card, saying she was 'well and 
happy.' After that we heard nothing. A 
month went by, and old Mrs. Shimerda be- 
gan to get fretful. Ambrosch was as sulky 
with me as if I'd picked out the man and 
arranged the match. 

"One night brother William came in and 
said that on his way back from the fields he 
had passed a livery team from town, driving 
fast out the west road. There was a trunk 
on the front seat with the driver, and an- 
other behind. In the back seat there was a 
woman all bundled up; but for all her veils, 
he thought 't was Antonia Shimerda, or An- 
tonia Donovan, as her name ought now to be. 

"The next morning I got brother to drive 
me over. I can walk still, but my feet ain't 
3SI 



MY ANTONIA 

what they used to be, and I try to save my- 
self. The lines outside the Shimerdas' house 
was full of washing, though it was the mid- 
dle of the week. As we got nearer I saw a 
sight that made my heart sink — all those 
underclothes we'd put so much work on, out 
there swinging in the wind. Yulka came 
bringing a dishpanful of wrung clothes, but 
she darted back into the house like she was 
loa:th to see us. When I went in, Antonia 
was standing over the tubs, just finishing 
up a big washing. Mrs. Shimerda was going 
about her work, talking and scolding to her- 
self. She did n't so much as raise her eyes. 
Tony wiped her hand on her apron and held 
it out to me, looking at me steady but mourn- 
ful. When I took her in my arms she drew 
away. 'Don't, Mrs. Steavens,' she says, 
'you'll make me cry, and I don't want to.' 

"I whispered and asked her to come out 
of doors with me. I knew she could n't talk 
free before her mother. She went out with 
me, bareheaded, and we walked up toward 
the garden. 

"'I'm not married, Mrs. Steavens,' she 
says to me very quiet and natural-like, 'and 
I ought to be.' 

352 



THE PIONEER WOMAN'S STORY 

"'Oh, my child/ says I, 'what's happened 
to you? Don't be afraid to tell me!' 

"She sat down on the drdw-side, out of 
■olght of the house. 'He's run away from me,' 
she said. 'I don't know if he ever meant to 
marry me.' 

"'You mean he's thrown up his job and 
quit the country?' says I. 

■"'He didn't have any job. He'd been 
fired; blacklisted for knocking down fares. I 
didn't know. I thought he hadn't been 
treated right. He was sick when I got there. 
He'd just come out of the hospital. He lived 
with me till my money gave out, and after- 
wards I found he had n't really been hunting 
work at all. Then he just did n't come back. 
One nice fellow at the stationrtoid me, when 
I kept going to look for him, to give it up. 
He said he was afraid Larry 'd gone bad and 
would n't come back any more. I guess he's 
gone to Old Mexico. The conductors get rich 
down there, collecting half-fares off the na- 
tives and robbing the company. He was al- 
ways talking about fellows who had got ahead 
that way.' 

"I asked her, of course, why she didn't 
insist on a civil marriage at once — that would 
353 



MY ANTONIA 

have given her some hold on him. She leaned 
her head on her hands, poor child, and said, 
'I just don't know, Mrs. Steavens. I guess 
my patience was wore out, waiting so long. 
I thought if he saw how well I could do for 
him, he'd want to stay with me.' 

"Jimmy, I sat right down on that bank 
beside her and made lament. I cried like a 
young thing. I could n't help it. I was just 
about heart-broke. It was one of them lovely 
warm May days, and the wind was blowing 
and the colts jumping around in the pas- 
tures; but I felt bowed with despair. My 
Antonia, that had so much good in her, had 
come home disgraced. And that Lena Lin- 
gard, that was always a bad one, say what 
you will, had turned out so well, and was 
coming home here every summer in her silks 
and her satins, and doing so much for her 
mother. I give credit where credit is due, 
but you know well enough, Jim Burden, there 
is a great difference in the principles of those 
two girls. And here it was the good one that 
had come to grief! I was poor comfort to her. 
I marveled at her calm. As we went back 
to the house, she stopped to feel of her clothet 
to see if they was drying well, and seemed 

354 



THE PIONEER WOMAN'S STORY 

to take pride in their whiteness — she said 
she'd been living in a brick block, where she 
did n't have proper conveniences to wash 
them. 

"The next time I saw Antonia, she was out 
in the fields ploughing corn. All that spring 
and summer she did the work of a man on 
the farm; it seemed to be an understood 
thing. Ambrosch did n't get any other hand 
to help him. Poor Marek had got violent and 
been sent away to an institution a good while 
back. We never even saw any of Tony's 
pretty dresses. She did n't take them out 
of her trunks. She was quiet and steady. 
Folks respected her industry and tried to 
treat her as if nothing had happened. They 
talked, to be sure; but not like they would 
if she'd put on airs. She was so crushed and 
quiet that nobody seemed to want to humble 
her. She never went anywhere. All that sum- 
mer she never once came to see me. At first 
I was hurt, but I got to feel that it was be- 
cause this house reminded her of too much. 
I went over there when I could, but the times 
when she was in from the fields were the 
times when I was busiest here. She talked 
about the grain and the weather as if she'd 
355 



MY ANTONIA 

never had another interest, and if I went over 
at night she always looked dead weary. She 
was afflicted with toothache; one tooth after 
another ulcerated, and she went about with 
her face swollen half the time. She would n't 
go to Black Hawk to a dentist for fear of 
meeting people she knew. Ambrosch had got 
over his good spell long ago, and was always 
surly. Once I told him he ought not to let 
Antonia work so hard and pull herself down. 
He said, 'If you put that in her head, you 
better stay home.' And after that I did. 

"Antonia worked on through harvest and 
thrashing, though she was too modest to go 
out thrashing for the neighbors, like when 
she was young and free. I did n't see much 
of her until late that fall when she begun to 
herd Ambrosch's cattle in the open ground 
north of here, up toward the big dog town. 
Sometimes she used to bring them over the 
west hill, there, and I would run to meet her 
and walk north a piece with her. She had 
thirty cattle in her bunch; it had been dry, 
and the pasture was short, or she would n't 
have brought them so far. 

"It was a fine open fall, and she liked to be 
alone. While the steers grazed, she used to 
3S6 



THE PIONEER WOMAN'S STORY 

sit on them grassy banks along the draws 
and sun herself for hours. Sometimes I slipped 
up to visit with her, when she had n't gone 
too far. 

"'It does seem like I ought to make lace, 
or knit like Lena used to,' she said one day, 
'but if I start to work, I look around and for- 
get to go on. It seems such a little while ago 
when Jim Burden and I was playing all over 
this country. Up here I can pick out the very 
places where my father used to stand. Some- 
times I feel like I'm not going to live very 
long, so I'm just enjoying every day of this 
fall.' 

"After the winter begun she wore a man's 
long overcoat and boots, and a man's felt hat 
with a wide brim. I used to watch her com- 
ing and going, and I could see that her steps 
were getting heavier. One day in December, 
the snow began to fall. Late in the afternoon 
I saw Antonia driving her cattle homeward 
across the hill. The snow was flying round 
her and she bent to face it, looking more lone- 
some-like to me than usual. 'Deary me,' I 
says to myself, 'the girl's stayed out too 
late. It'll be dark before she gets them cat- 
tle put into the corral.' I seemed to sense 
357 



MY ANTONIA 

she'd been feeling too miserable to get up 
and drive them. 

"That very night, it happened. She got 
her cattle home, turned them into the corral, 
and went into the house, into her room behind 
the kitchen, and shut the door. There, with- 
out calling to anybody, without a groan, she 
lay down on the bed and bore her child. 

"I was lifting supper when old Mrs. Shi- 
merda came running down the basement stairs, 
out of breath and screeching: ■ — 

" 'Baby come, baby come!' she says. 'Am- 
brosch much like devil!' 

"Brother William is surely a patient man. 
He was just ready to sit down to a hot sup- 
per after a long day in the fields. Without a 
word he rose and went down to the bam and 
hooked up his team. He got us over there 
as quick as it was humanly possible. I went 
right in, and began to do for Antonia; but 
she laid there with her eyes shut and took no 
account of me. The old woman got a tubful of 
warm water to wash the baby. I overlooked 
what she was doing and I said out loud: — 

"'Mrs. Shimerda, don't you put that 
strong yellow soap near that baby. You'll 
blister its little skin.' I was indignant. 
3S8 




k)T (^enja. 



THE PIONEER WOMAN'S STORY 

"'Mrs. Steavens,' Antonia said from the 
bed, 'if you'll look in the top tray of my 
trunk, you'll see some fine soap.' That was 
the first word she spoke. 

"After I'd dressed the baby, I took it out 
to show it to Ambrosch. He was muttering 
behind the stove and would n't look at it. 

"'You'd better put it out in the ram bar- 
rel,' he says. 

"'Now, see here, Ambrosch,' says I, 
'there's a law in this land, don't forget that. 
I stand here a witness that this baby has 
come into the world sound and strong, and 
I intend to keep an eye on what befalls it.' 
I pride myself I cowed him. 

"Well, I expect you're not much inter- 
ested in babies, but Antonia's got on fine. 
She loved it from the first as dearly as if 
she'd had a ring on her finger, and was never 
ashamed of it. It's a year and eight months 
old now, and no baby was ever better cared- 
for. Antonia is a natural-bom mother. I 
wish she could marry and raise a family, but 
I don't know as there's much chance now." 

I slept that night in the room I used to 
have when I was a little boy, with the sum- 
359 



MY ANTONIA 

mer wind blowing in at the windows, bringing 
the smell of the ripe fields. I lay awake and 
watched the moonlight shining over the bam 
and the stacks and the pond, and the wind- 
mill making its old dark shadow against the 
blue sky. 



IV 

The next afternoon I walked over to the 
Shimerdas'. Yulka showed me the baby and 
told me that Antonia was shocking wheat on 
the soudiwest quarter. I went down across 
the fields, and Tony saw me from a long way 
off. She stood still by her shocks, leaning on 
her pitchfork, watching me as I came. We 
met like the people in the old song, in silence, 
if not in tears. Her warm hand clasped mine. 

"I thought you'd come, Jim. I heard you 
were at Mrs. Steavens's last night. I've been 
looking for you all day." 

She was thinner than I had ever seen her, 
and looked, as Mrs. Steavens said, "worked 
down," but there was a new kind of strength 
in the gravity of her face, and her color still 
gave her that look of deep-seated health and 
ardor. Still? Why, it flashed across me that 
though so much had happened in her life and 
in mine, she was barely twenty-four years 
old. 

Antonia stuck her fork in the ground, 
and instinctively we walked toward that un- 
361 



MY ANTONIA 

ploughed patch at the crossing of the roads 
as the fittest place to talk to each other. We 
sat down outside the sagging wire fence that 
shut Mr. Shimerda's plot off from the rest 
of the world. The tall red grass had never 
been cut there. It had died down in winter 
and come up again in the spring until it was 
as thick and shrubby as some tropical garden- 
grass. I found myself telling her everything: 
why I had decided to study law and to go 
into the law office of one of my mother's rela- 
tives in New York City; about Gaston Cleric's 
death from pneumonia last winter, and the 
difference it had made in my life. She wanted 
to know about my friends and my way of 
living, and my dearest hopes. 

"Of course it means you are going away 
from us for good," she said with a sigh. "But 
that don't mean I'll lose you. Look at my 
papa here; he's been dead all these years, and 
yet he is more real to me than almost any- 
body else. He never goes out of my life. I 
talk to him and consult him all the time. The 
older I grow, the better I know him and the 
more I understand him." 

She asked me whether I had learned to like 
big cities. "I'd always be miserable in a 
362 



THE PIONEER WOMAN'S STORY 

city. I'd die of lonesomeness. I like to be 
where I know every stack and tree, and where 
all the ground is friendly. I want to live and 
die here. Father Kelly says everybody's put 
into this world for something, and I know 
what I've got to do. I'm going to see that 
my little girl has a better chance than ever 
I had. I'm going to take care of that girl, 
Jim." 

I told her I knew she would. "Do you 
know, Antonia, since I 've been away, I think 
of you more often than of any one else in this 
part of the world. I'd have liked to have 
you for a sweetheart, or a wife, or my mother 
or my sister — anything that a woman can 
be to a man. The idea of you is a part of my 
mind; you influence my likes and dislikes, all 
my tastes, hundreds of times when I don't 
realize it. You really are a part of me." 

She turned her bright, believing eyes to 
me, and the tears came up in them slowly. 
"How can it be like that, when you know so 
many people, and when I've disappointed 
you so? Ain't it wonderful, Jim, how much 
people can mean to each other? I'm so glad 
we had each other when we were little. I 
can't wait till my little girl's old enough to 
363 



MY ANTONIA 

tell her about all the things we used to do. 
You'll always remember me when you think 
about old times, won't you? And I guess 
everybody thinks about old times, even the 
happiest people." 

As we walked homeward across the fields, 
the sun dropped and lay like a great golden 
globe in the low west. While it hung there, 
the moon rose in the east, as big as a cart- 
wheel, pale silver and streaked with rose 
color, thin as a bubble or a ghost-moon. 
For five, perhaps ten minutes, the two lumi- 
naries confronted each other across the level 
land, resting on opposite edges of the world. 
In that singular light every little tree and 
shock of wheat, every sunflower stalk and 
clump of snow-on-the-mountain, drew itself 
up high and pointed; the very clods and fur- 
rows in the fields seemed to stand up sharply. 
I felt the old pull of the earth, the solemn 
magic that comes out of those fields at night- 
fall. I wished I could be a little boy again, 
and that my way could end there. 

We reached the edge of the field, where our 

ways parted. I took her hands and held them 

against my breast, feeling once more how 

strong and warm and good they were, those 

364 



THE PIONEER WOMAN'S STORY 

brown hands, and remembering how many- 
kind things they had done for me. I held them 
now a long while, over my heart. About us 
it was growing darker and darker, and I had 
to look hard to see her face, which I meant 
always to carry with me; the closest, realest 
face, under all the shadows of women's faces, 
at the very bottom of my memory. 

"I'll come back," I said earnestly, through 
the soft, intrusive darkness. 

"Perhaps you will" — I felt rather than 
saw her smile. "But even if you don't, you're 
here, like my father. So I won't be lonesome." 

As I went back alone over that familiar 
road, I could almost believe that a boy and 
girl ran along beside me, as our shadows used 
to do, laughing and whispering to each other 
in the grass. 



Book V 
CUZAK'S BOYS 



Book V 
CUZAK'S BOYS 



I TOLD Antonia I would come back, but life 
intervened, and it was twenty years before 
I kept my promise. I heard of her from 
time to time; that she married, very soon 
after I last saw her, a young Bohemian, 
a cousin of Anton Jelinek; that they were 
poor, and had a large family. Once when I 
was abroad I went into Bohemia, and from 
Prague I sent Antonia some photographs of 
her native village. Months afterward came 
a letter from her, telling me the names and 
ages of her many children, but little else; 
signed, "Your old friend, Antonia Cuzak." 
When I met Tiny Soderball in Salt Lake, she 
told me that Antonia had not "done very 
well"; that her husband was not a man of 
much force, and she had had a hard life. Per- 
haps it was cowardice that kept me away so 
long. My business took me West several 
times every year, and it was always in the 
369 



MY ANTONIA 

back of my mind that I would stop in Ne- 
braska some day and go to see Antonia. But 
I kept putting it off until the next trip. I 
did not want to find her aged and broken; 
I really dreaded it. In the cx>urse of twenty 
crowded years one parts with many illusions. 
I did not wish to lose the early ones. Some 
memories are realities, and are better than 
anjrthing that can ever happen to one again. 

I owe it to Lena Lingard that I went to 
see Antonia at last. I was in San Francisco 
two summers ago when both Lena and Tiny 
Soderball were in town. Tiny lives in a house 
of her own, and Lena's shop is in an apart- 
ment house just around the corner. It inter- 
ested me, after so many years, to see the two 
women together. Tiny audits Lena's accounts 
occasionally, and invests her money for her; 
and Lena, apparently, takes care that Tiny 
doesn't grow too miserly. "If there's any- 
thing I can't stand," she said to me in Tiny's 
presence, "it's a shabby rich woman." Tiny 
smiled grimly and assured me that Lena would 
never be either shabby or rich. "And I don't 
want to be," the other agreed complacently. 

Lena gave me a cheerful account of An- 
tonia and urged me to make her a visit. 
370 



CUZAK'S BOYS 

"You really ought to go, Jim. It would 
be such a satisfaction to her. Never mind 
what Tiny says. There's nothing the matter 
with Cuzak. You'd like him. He isn't a 
hustler, but a rough man would never have 
suited Tony. Tony has nice children — ten 
or eleven of them by this time, I guess. I 
should n't care for a family of that size my- 
self, but somehow it's just right for Tony. 
She'd love to show them to you." 

On my way East I broke my journey at 
Hastings, in Nebraska, and set off with an 
open buggy and a fairly good livery team to 
find the Cuzak farm. At a little past midday, 
I knew I must be nearing my destination. 
Set back on a swell of land at my right, I 
saw a wide farmhouse, with a red barn and 
an ash grove, and cattle yards in front that 
sloped down to the high road. I drew up my 
horses and was wondering whether I should 
drive in here, when I heard low voices. Ahead 
of me, in a plum thicket beside the road, I saw 
two boys bending over a dead dog. The little 
one, not more than foUr or five, was on his 
knees, his hands folded, and his close-clipped, 
bare head drooping forward in deep dejection. 
The other stood beside him, a hand on his 
371 



MY ANTONIA 

shoulder, and was comforting him in a lan- 
guage I had not heard for a long while. When 
I stopped my horses opposite them, the older 
boy took his brother by the hand and came 
toward me. He, too, looked grave. This was 
evidently a sad afternoon for them. 

"Are you Mrs. Cuzak's boys?" I asked. 

The younger one did not look up; he was 
submerged in his own feelings, but his brother 
met me with intelligent gray eyes. "Yes, 
sir." 

"Does she live up there on the hill? I am 
going to see her. Get in and ride up with me." 

He glanced at his reluctant little brother. 
"I guess we'd better walk. But we'll open 
the gate for you." 

I drove along the side-road and they fol- 
lowed slowly behind. When I pulled up at 
the windmill, another boy, barefooted and 
curly-headed, ran out of the bam to tie my 
team for me. He was a handsome one, this 
chap, fair-skinned and freckled, with red 
cheeks and a ruddy pelt as thick as a lamb's 
wool, growing down on his neck in little tufts. 
He tied my team with two flourishes of his 
hands, and nodded when I asked him if his 
mother was at home. As he glanced at me, his 
372 



CUZAK'S BOYS 

face dimpled with a seizure of irrelevant merri- 
ment, and he shot up the windmill tower with 
a lightness that struck me as disdainful. I 
knew he was peering down at me as I walked 
toward the house. 

Ducks and geese ran quacking across my 
path. White cats were sunning themselves 
among yellow pumpkins on the porch steps. 
I looked through the wire screen into a big, 
light kitchen with a white floor. I saw a long 
table, rows of wooden chairs against the wall, 
and a shining range in one corner. Two girls 
were washing dishes at the sink, laughing and 
chattering, and a little one, in a short pina- 
fore, sat on a stool playing with a rag baby. 
When I asked for their mother, one of the 
girls dropped her towel, ran across the floor 
with noiseless bare feet, and disappeared. 
The older one, who wore shoes and stock- 
ings, came to the door to admit me. She was 
a buxom girl with dark hair and eyes, calm 
and self-possessed. 

"Won't you come in? Mother will be here 
in a minute." 

Before I could sit down in the chair she 
offered me, the miracle happened; one of 
those quiet moments that clutch the heart, 
373 



MY ANTONIA 

jXid take more courage than the noisy, ex- 
cited passages in life. Antonia came in and 
stood before me; a stalwart, brown woman, 
Jat-chested, her curly brown hair a little 
grizzled. It was a shock, of course. It always 
is, to meet people after long years, especially 
if they have lived as much and as hard as this 
woman had. We stood looking at each other. 
The eyes that peered anxiously at me were 
— simply Antonia's eyes, I had seen no 
others like them since I looked into them last, 
though I had looked at so many thousands 
of human faces. As I confronted her, the 
changes grew less apparent to me, her iden- 
tity stronger. She was there, in the full vigor 
of her personality, battered but not dimin- 
ished, looking at me, speaking to me in the 
husky, breathy voice I remembered so well. 

"My husband's not at home, sir. Can I 
do anything?" 

"Don't you remember me, Antonia? Have 
I changed so much?" 

She frowned into the slanting sunlight that 
made her brown hair look redder than it was. 
Suddenly her eyes widened, her whole face 
seemed to grow broader. She caught her 
breath and put out two hard-worked hands. 

374 



CUZAK'S BOYS 

"Why, it's Jim! Anna, Yulka, it's Jim 
Burden!" She had no sooner caught my 
hands than she looked alarmed. "What's 
happened? Is anybody dead?" 

I patted her arm. "No. I did n't come to 
a funeral this time. I got off the train at Hast- 
ings and drove down to see you and your 
family." 

She dropped my hand and began rushing 
about. "Anton, Yulka, Nina, where are you 
all? Run, Anna, and hunt for the boys. 
They're off looking for that dog, somewhere. 
And call Leo. Where is that Leo!" She 
pulled them out of comers and came bringing 
them like a mother cat bringing in her kit- 
tens. "You don't have to go right off, Jim? 
My oldest boy's not here. He's gone with 
papa to the street fair at Wilber. I won't let 
you go! You've got to stay and see Rudolph 
and our papa." She looked at me implor- 
ingly, panting with excitement. 

While I reassured her and told her there 
would be plenty of time, the barefooted boys 
from outside were slipping into the kitchen 
and gathering about her. 

"Now, tell me their names, and how old 
they are." 

375 



MY ANTONIA 

As she told them off in turn, she made sev- 
eral mistakes about ages, and they roared 
with laughter. When she came to my light- 
footed friend of the windmill, she said, "This 
is heo, and he's old enough to be better than 
he is." 

He ran up to her and butted her plajrfuUy 
with his curly head, like a little ram, but his 
voice was quite desperate. "You've forgot! 
You always forget mine. It's mean! Please 
tell him, mother!" He clenched his fists 
in vexation and looked up at her impetu- 
ously. 

She wound her forefinger in his yellow fleece 
and pulled it, watching him. "Well, how old 
are you.?" 

"I'm twelve," he panted, looking not at 
me but at her; "I'm twelve years old, and I 
was born on Easter day!'' 

She nodded to me. "It's true. He was an 
Easter baby." 

The children all looked at me, as if they 
expected me to exhibit astonishment or de- 
light at this information. Clearly, they were 
proud of each other, and of being so many. 
When they had all been introduced, Anna, 
the eldest daughter, who had met me at the 
376 



CUZAK'S BOYS 

door, scattered them gently, and came bring- 
ing a white apron which she tied round her 
mother's waist. 

"Now, mother, sit down and talk to Mr. 
Burden. We'll finish the dishes quietly and 
not disturb you." 

Antonia looked about, quite distracted. 
"Yes, child, but why don't we take him into 
the parlor, now that we've got a nice parlor 
for company?" 

The daughter laughed indulgently, and 
took my hat from me. "Well, you're here, 
now, mother, and if you talk here, Yulka and 
I can listen, too. You can show him the par- 
lor after while." She smiled at me, and went 
back to the dishes, with her sister. The little 
girl with the rag doll found a place on the 
bottom step of an enclosed back stairway, and 
sat with her toes curled up, looking out at 
us expectantly. 

"She's Nina, after Nina Hading," An- 
tonia explained. "Ain't her eyes like Nina's? 
I declare, Jim, I loved you children almost 
as much as I love my own. These children 
know all about you and Charley and Sally, 
like as if they'd grown up with you. I can't 
think of what I want to say, you 've got me 
377 



MY ANTONIA 

so stirred up. And then, I 've forgot my Eng- 
lish so. I don't often talk it any more. I tell 
the children I used to speak real well." She 
said they always spoke Bohemian at home. 
The little ones could not speak English at all 
— did n't learn it until they went to school. 

"I can't believe it's you, sitting here, in my 
own kitchen. You would n't have known me, 
would you, Jim? You 've kept so young, your- 
self. But it's easier for a man. I can't see how 
my Anton looks any older than the day I mar- 
ried him. His teeth have kept so nice. I 
haven't got many left. But I feel just as 
young as I used to, and I can do as much work. 
Oh, we don't have to work so hard now! 
We've got plenty to help us, papa and me. 
And how many have you got, Jim?" 

When I told her I had no children she 
seemed embarrassed. " Oh, ain't that too bad! 
Maybe you could take one of my bad ones, 
now? That Leo; he's the worst of all." She 
leaned toward me with a smile. "And I love 
him the best," she whispered. 

"Mother!" the two girls murmured re- 
proachfully from the dishes. 

Antonia threw up her head and laughed. 
"I can't help it. You know I do. Maybe 
378 



CUZAK'S BOYS 

it's because he came on Easter day, I don't 
know. And he's never out of mischief one 
minute!" 

I was thinking, as I watched her, how little 
it mattered — about her teeth, for instance. 
I know so many women who have kept all the 
things that she had lost, but whose inner glow 
has faded. Whatever else was gone, Antonia 
had not lost the fire of life. Her skin, so brown 
and hardened, had not that look of flabbiness, 
as if the sap beneath it had been secretly 
drawn away. 

While we were talking, the little boy whom 
they called Jan came in and sat down on the 
step beside Nina, under the hood of the stair- 
way. He wore a funny long gingham apron, 
like a smock, over his trousers, and his hair 
was clipped so short that his head looked 
white and naked. He watched us out of his 
big, sorrowful gray eyes. 

"He wants to tell you about the dog, 
mother. They found it dead," Anna said, as 
she passed us on her way to the cupboard. 

Antonia beckoned the boy to her. He stood 

by her chair, leaning his elbows on her knees 

and twisting her apron strings in his slender 

fingers, while he told her his story softly in 

379 



MY ANTONIA 

Bohemian, and the tears brimmed over and 
hung on his long lashes. His mother listened, 
spoke soothingly to him, and in a whisper 
promised him something that made him give 
her a quick, teary smile. He slipped away and 
whispered his secret to Nina, sitting close to 
her and talking behind his hand. 

When Anna finished her work and had 
washed her hands, she came and stood be- 
hind her mother's chair. "Why don't we 
show Mr. Burden our new fruit cave?" she 
asked. 

We started off across the yard with the 
children at our heels. The boys were standing 
by the windmill, talking about the dog; some 
of them ran ahead to open the cellar door. 
When we descended, they all came down after 
us, and seemed quite as proud of the cave as 
the girls were. Ambrosch, the thoughtful-look- 
ing one who had directed me down by the plum 
bushes, called my attention to the stout brick 
walls and the cement floor. "Yes, it is a good 
way from the house," he admitted. "But, you 
see, in winter there are nearly always some of 
us around to come out and get things." 

Anna and Yulka showed me three small 
barrels; one full of dill pickles, one full of 
380 



CUZAK'S BOYS 

chopped pickles, and one full of pickled water- 
melon rinds. 

"You would n't believe, Jim, what it takes 
to feed them all!" their mother exclaimed. 
"You ought to see the bread we bake on 
Wednesdays and Saturdays! It's no wonder 
their poor papa can't get rich, he has to buy so 
much sugar for us to preserve with. We have 
our own wheat ground for flour, — but then 
there's that much less to sell." 

Nina and Jan, and a little girl named Lucie, 
kept shyly pointing out to me the shelves of 
glass jars. They said nothing, but glancing at 
me, traced on the glass with their finger-tips 
the outline of the cherries and strawberries and 
crab-apples within, trying by a blissful expres- 
sion of countenance to give me some idea of 
their deliciousness. 

"Show him the spiced plums, mother. 
Americans don't have those," said one of the 
older boys. "Mother uses them to make 
kolaches,"" he added. 

Leo, in a low voice, tossed off some scorn- 
ful remark in Bohemian. 

I turned to him. "You think I don't 
know what kolaches are, eh.^ You're mistaken, 
young man, I've eaten your mother's kol- 
381 



MY ANTONIA 

aches long before that Easter day when you 
were born." • 

"Always too fresh, Leo," Ambrosch re- 
marked with a shrug. 

Leo dived behind his mother and grinned 
out at me. 

We turned to leave the cave; Antonia and 
I went up the stairs first, and the children 
waited. We were standing outside talking, 
when they all came running up the steps to- 
gether, big and little, tow heads and gold 
heads and brown, and flashing little naked 
legs; a veritable explosion of life out of the 
dark cave into the sunlight. It made me dizzy 
for a moment. 

The boys escorted us to the front of the 
house, which I had n't yet seen; in farmhouses, 
somehow, life comes and goes by the back 
door. The roof was so steep that the eaves 
were not much above the forest of tall holly- 
hocks, now brown and in seed. Through July, 
Antonia said, the house was buried in them; 
the Bohemians, I remembered, always planted 
hollyhocks. The front yard was enclosed by 
a thorny locust hedge, and at the gate grew 
two silvery, moth-like trees of the mimosa 
family. From here one looked down over the 
382 



CUZAK'S BOYS 

cattle yards, with their two long ponds, and 
over a wide stretch of stubble which they 
told me was a rye-field in summer. 

At some distance behind the house were an 
ash grove and two orchards; a cherry orchard, 
with gooseberry and currant bushes between 
the rows, and an apple orchard, sheltered by a 
high hedge from the hot winds. The older chil- 
dren turned back when we reached the hedge, 
but Jan and Nina and Lucie crept through 
it by a hole known only to themselves and 
hid under the low-branching mulberry bushes. 

As we walked through the apple orchard, 
grown up in tall bluegrass, Antonia kept stop- 
ping to tell me about one tree and another. " I 
love them as if they were people," she said, rub- 
bing her hand over the bark. "There was n't 
a tree here when we first came. We planted 
every one, and used to carry water for them, 
too — after we'd been working in the fields all 
day. Anton, he was a city man, and he used to 
get discouraged. But I could n't feel so tired 
that I would n't fret about these trees when 
there was a dry time. They were on my mind 
like children. Many a night after he was 
asleep I 've got up and come out and carried 
water to the poor things. And now, you see, 
383 



MY ANTONIA 

we have the good of them. My man worked 
in the orange groves in Florida, and he knows 
all about grafting. There ain't one of our 
neighbors has an orchard that bears like 
ours." i 

In the middle of the orchard we came upon 
a grape-arbor, with seats built along the sides 
and a warped plank table. The three children 
were waiting for us there. They looked up at 
me bashfully and made some request of their 
mother. 

"They want me to tell you how the teacher 
has the school picnic here every year. These 
don't go to school yet, so they think it's all 
like the picnic." 

After I had admired the arbor sufficiently, 
the youngsters ran away to an open place 
where there was a rough jungle of French 
pinks, and squatted down among them, crawl- 
ing about and measuring with a string. "Jan 
wants to bury his dog there," Antonia ex- 
plained. "I had to tell him he could. He's 
kind of like Nina Harling; you remember how 
hard she used to take little things? He has 
funny notions, like her." 

We sat down and watched them. Antonia 
leaned her elbows on the table. There was the 
384 



CUZAK'S BOYS 

deepest peace in that orchard. It was sur- 
rounded by a triple enclosure; the wire fence, 
then the hedge of thorny locusts, then the 
mulberry hedge which kept out the hot winds 
of summer and held fast to the protecting 
snows of winter. The hedges were so tall that 
we could see nothing but the blue sky above 
them, neither the barn roof nor the windmill. 
The afternoon sun poured down on us through 
the drying grape leaves. The orchard seemed 
full of sun, like a cup, and we could smell the 
ripe apples on the trees. The crabs hung on the 
branches as thick as beads on a string, purple- 
red, with a thin silvery glaze over them. Some 
hens and ducks had crept through the hedge 
and were pecking at the fallen apples. The 
drakes were handsome fellows, with pinkish 
gray bodies, their heads and necks covered 
with iridescent green feathers which grew close 
and full, changing to blue like a peacock's 
neck. Antonia said they always reminded her 
of soldiers — some uniform she had seen in 
the old country, when she was a child. 

"Are there any quail left now?" I asked. 

I reminded her how she used to go hunting 

with me the last summer before we moved to 

town. "You were n't a bad shot, Tony. Do 

38S 



MY ANTONIA 

you remember how you used 'to want to run 
away and go for ducks with Charley Harling 
and me?" 

"I know, but I'm afraid to look at a 
gun now." She picked up one of the drakes 
and ruffled his green capote with her fingers. 
"Ever since I've had children, I don't like 
to kill anything. It makes me kind of faint to 
wring an old goose's neck. Ain't that strange, 
Jim?" 

"I don't know. The young Queen of Italy 
said the same thing once, to a friend of mine. 
She used to be a great huntswoman, but now 
she feels as you do, and only shoots clay pi- 
geons." 

"Then I'm sure she's a good mother," An- 
tonia said warmly. 

She told me how she and her husband had 
come out to this new country when the farm 
land was cheap and could be had on easy 
payments. The first ten years were a hard 
struggle. Her husband knew very little about 
farming and often grew discouraged. "We'd 
never have got through if I had n't been so 
strong. I've always had good health, thank 
God, and I was able to help him in the fields 
until right up to the time before my babies 
386 



CUZAK'S BOYS 

came. Our children were good about taking 
care of each other. Martha, the one you saw 
when she was a baby, was such a help to me, 
and she trained Anna to be just like her. My 
Martha's married now, and has a baby of her 
own^ Think of that, Jim! 

"No, I never got down-hearted. Anton's 
a good man, and I loved my children and 
always believed they would turn out well. I 
belong on a farm. I'm never lonesome here 
like I used to be in town. You remember what 
sad spells I used to have, when I did n't know 
what was the matter with me? I 've never had 
them out here. And I don't mind work a bit, 
if I don't have to put up with sadness." She 
leaned her chin on her hand and looked down 
through the orchard, where the sunlight was 
growing more and more golden. 

"You ought never to have gone to town, 
Tony," I said, wondering at her. 

She turned to me eagerly. "Oh, I'm glad I 
went! I'd never have known anything about 
cooking or housekeeping if I had n't. I learned 
nice ways at the Harlings', and I've been 
able to bring my children up so much better. 
Don't you think they are pretty well-behaved 
for country children.? If it hadn't been for 
387 



MY ANTONIA 

what Mrs. Harling taught me, I expect I'd 
have brought them up like wild rabbits. No, 
I'm glad I had a chance to learn; but I'm 
thankful none of my daughters will ever have 
to work out. The trouble with me was, Jim, 
I never could believe harm of anybody I 
loved." 

While we were talking, Antonia assured me 
that she could keep me for the night. "We've 
plenty of room. Two of the boys sleep in the 
haymow till cold weather comes, but there's 
no need for it. Leo always begs to sleep there, 
and Ambrosch goes along to look after him." 

I told her I would like to sleep in the hay- 
mow, with the boys. 

"You can do just as you want to. The chest 
is full of clean blankets, put away for winter. 
Now I must go, or my girls will be doing all 
the work, and I want to cook your supper 
myself." 

As we went toward the house, we met Am- 
brosch and Anton, starting off with their milk- 
ing-pails to hunt the cows. I joined them, and 
Leo accompanied us at some distance, running 
ahead and starting up at us out of clumps of 
ironweed, calling, "I'm a jack rabbit," or, 
"I'm a big bull-snake." 
388 



CUZAK'S BOYS 

I walked between the two older boys — 
straight, well-made fellows, with good heads 
and clear eyes. They talked about their school 
and the new teacher, told me about the crops 
and the harvest, and how many steers they 
would feed that winter. They were easy and 
confidential with me, as if I were an old friend 
of the family — and not too old. I felt like 
a boy in their company, and all manner of 
forgotten interests revived in me. It seemed, 
after all, so natural to be walking along a 
barbed-wire fence beside the sunset, toward 
a red pond, and to see my shadow moving 
along at my right, over the close-cropped 
grass. 

"Has mother shown you the pictures you 
sent her from the old country?" Ambrosch 
asked. "We've had them framed and they're 
hung up in the parlor. She was so glad to get 
them. I don't believe I ever saw her so pleased 
about anything." There was a note of simple 
gratitude in his voice that made me wish I had 
given more occasion for it. 

I put my hand on his shoulder. "Your 
mother, you know, was very much loved by 
all of us. She was a beautiful girl." 

"Oh, we know!" They both spoke to- 

389 



MY ANTONIA 

»ether; seemed a little surprised that I should 
think It necessary to mention this. "Every- 
body liked her, did n't they ? The Harlings and 
your grandmother, and all the town people." 

"Sometimes," I ventured, "it doesn't 
occur to boys that their mother was ever 
young and pretty." 

"Oh, we know!" they said again, warmly. 
"She's not very old now," Ambrosch added. 
"Not much older than you." 

"Well," I said, "if you were n't nice to her, 
I think I'd take a club and go for the whole 
lot of you. I could n't stand it if you boys 
were inconsiderate, or thought of her as if 
she were just somebody who looked after you. 
You see I was very much in love with your 
mother once, and I know there's nobody like 
her." 

The boys laughed and seemed pleased and 
embarrassed. "She never told us that," said 
Anton. "But she's always talked lots about 
you, and about what good times you used to 
have. She has a picture of you that she cut 
out of the Chicago paper once, and Leo says 
he recognized you when you drove up to the 
ivindmill. You can't tell about Leo, though; 
sometimes he likes to be smart." 
390 



CUZAK'S BOYS 

We brought the cows home to the comer 
nearest the bam, and the boys milked them 
while night came on. Everything was as it 
should be: the strong smell of sunflowers and 
ironweed in the dew, the clear blue and gold 
of the sky, the evening star, the purr of the 
milk into the pails, the gmnts and squeals 
of the pigs fighting over their supper. I began 
to feel the loneliness of the farm-boy at 
evening, when the chores seem everlastingly 
the same, and the world so far away. 

What a tableful we were at supper; two 
long rows of restless heads in the lamplight, 
and so many eyes fastened excitedly upon An- 
tonia as she sat at the head of the table, fill- 
ing the plates and starting the dishes on their 
way. The children were seated according to 
a system; a little one next an older one, who 
was to watch over his behavior and to see 
that he got his food. Anna and Yulka left 
their chairs from time to time to bring fresh 
plates of kolaches and pitchers of milk. 

After supper we went into the parlor, so 
that Yulka and Leo could play for me. An- 
tonia went first, carrying the lamp. There 
were not nearly chairs enough to go round, 
so the younger children sat down on the bare 
391 



MY ANTONIA 

floor. Little Lucie whispered to me that they 
were going to have a parlor carpet if they got 
ninety cents for their wheat. Leo, with a 
good deal of fussing, got out his violin. It 
was old Mr. Shimerda's instrument, which 
Antonia had always kept, and it was too big 
for him. But \ie played very well for a self- 
taught boy. Poor Yulka's efforts were not so 
successful. While they were playing, little 
Nina got up from her corner, came out into 
the middle of the floor, and began to do a 
pretty little dance on the boards with her 
bare feet. No one paid the least attention to 
her, and when she was through she stole back 
and sat down by her brother. 

Antonia spoke to Leo in Bohemian. He 
frowned and wrinkled up his face. He seemed 
to be trying to pout, but his attempt only 
brought out dimples in unusual places. After 
twisting and screwing the keys, he played 
some Bohemian airs, without the organ to hold 
him back, and that went better. The boy was 
so restless that I had not had a chance to 
look at his face before. My first impression 
was right; he really was faun-like. He had n't 
much head behind his ears, and his tawny 
fleece grew down thick to the back of his 
392 



CUZAK'S BOYS 

neck. His eyes were not frank and wide apart 
like those of the other boys, but were deep-set, 
gold-green in color, and seemed sensitive to the 
light. His mother said he got hurt oftener than 
all the others put together. He was always 
trying to ride the colts before they were bro- 
ken, teasing the turkey gobbler, seeing just 
how much red the bull would stand for, or 
how sharp the new axe was. 

After the concert was over Antonia brought 
out a big boxful of photographs; she and An- 
ton in their wedding clothes, holding hands; 
her brother Ambrosch and his very fat wife, 
who had a farm of her own, and who bossed 
her husband, I was delighted to hear; the three 
Bohemian Marys and their large families. 

"You would n't believe how steady those 
girls have turned out," Antonia remarked. 
"Mary Svoboda's the best butter-maker in all 
this country, and a fine manager. Her children 
will have a grand chance." 

As Antonia turned over the pictures the 
young Cuzaks stood behind her chair, look- 
ing over her shoulder with interested faces. 
Nina and Jan, after trying to see round the 
taller ones, quietly brought a chair, climbed 
up on it, and stood close together, looking. The 
393 



MY ANTONIA 

little boy forgot his shyness and grinned de- 
lightedly when familiar faces came into view. 
In the group about Antonia I was conscious 
of a kind of physical harmony. They leaned 
this way and that, and were not afraid to 
touch each other. They contemplated the pho- 
tographs with pleased recognition; looked at 
some admiringly, as if these characters in their 
mother's girlhood had been remarkable people. 
The little children, who could not speak Eng- 
lish, murmured comments to each other in their 
rich old language. 

Antonia held out a photograph of Lena that 
had come from San Francisco last Christmas. 
"Does she still look like that? She has n't 
been home for six years now." Yes, it was 
exactly like Lena, I told her; a comely woman, 
a trifle too plump, in a hat a trifle too large, 
but with the old lazy eyes, and the old dim- 
pled ingenuousness still lurking at the comers 
of her mouth. 

There was a picture of Frances Harling in 
a be-frogged riding costume that I remem- 
bered well. "Isn't she fine!" the girls mur- 
mured. They all assented. One could see that 
Frances had come down as a heroine in the 
family legend. Only Leo was unmoved. 
394 



CUZAK'S BOYS 

"And there's Mr. Harling, in his grand 
fur coat. He was awfully rich, was n't he, 
mother? " 

"He was n't any Rockefeller," put in Mas- 
ter Leo, in a very low tone, which reminded 
me of the way in which Mrs. Shimerda had 
once said that my grandfather "was n't Jesus." 
His habitual skepticism was like a direct in- 
heritance from that old woman. 

"None of your smart speeches," said Am- 
brosch severely. 

Leo poked out a supple red tongue at him, 
but a moment later broke into a giggle at a 
tintype of two men, uncomfortably seated, 
with an awkward-looking boy in baggy clothes 
standing between them; Jake and Otto and I! 
We had it taken, I remembered, when we went 
to Black Hawk on the first Fourth of July I 
spent in Nebraska. I was glad to see Jake's 
grin again, and Otto's ferocious mustaches. 
The young Cuzaks knew all about them. 

"He made grandfather's coffin, did n't he?" 
Anton asked. 

"Wasn't they good fellows, Jim?" An- 

tonia's eyes filled. "To this day I 'm ashamed 

because I quarreled with Jake that way. I was 

saucy and impertinent to him, Leo, like you 

395 



MY ANTONIA 

are with people sometimes, and I wish some- 
body had made me behave." 

"We are n't through with you, yet," they 
warned me. They produced a photograph 
taken just before I went away to college; a 
tall youth in siriped trousers and a straw hat, 
trying to look easy and jaunty. 

"Tell us, Mr. Burden," said Charley, 
"about the rattler you killed at the dog town. 
How long was he? Sometimes mother says 
six feet and sometimes she says five." 

These children seemed to be upon very 
much the same terms with Antonia as the 
Harling children had been so many years 
before. They seemed to feel the same pride in 
her, and to look to her for stories and enter- 
tainment as we used to do. 

It was eleven o'clock when I at last took 
my bag and some blankets and started for the 
barn with the boys. Their mother came to 
the door with us, and we tarried for a moment 
to look out at the white slope of the corral and 
the two ponds asleep in the moonlight, and the 
long sweep of the pasture under the star- 
sprinkled sky. • i 

The boys told me to choose my own place , 
in the haymow, and I lay down before a big 
396 



CUZAK'S BOYS 

window, left open in warm weather, that 
looked out into the stars. Ambrosch and Leo 
cuddled up in a hay-cave, back under the 
eaves, and lay giggling and whispering. They 
tickled each other and tossed and tumbled 
in the hay; and then, all at oace, as if they had 
been shot, they were still. There was hardly 
a minute between giggles and bland slumber. 
I lay awake for a long while, until the slow- 
moving moon passed my window on its way 
up the heavens. I was thinking about Anto- 
nia and her children; about Anna's solicitude 
for her, Ambrosch's grave affection, Leo's 
jealous, animal little love. That moment, 
when they all came tumbling out of the cave 
into the light, was a sight any man might 
have come far to see. Antonia had always been 
one to leave images in the mind that did not 
fade — that grew stronger with time. In my 
memory there was a succession of such pictures, 
fixed there like the old woodcuts of one's 
first primer: Antonia kicking her bare legs 
against the sides of my pony when we came 
home in triumph with our snake; Antonia in 
her black shawl and fur cap, as she stood by 
her father's grave in the snowstorm; Antonia 
coming in with her work-team along the eve- 
397 



MY ANTONIA 

^ing sky-line. She lent herself to immemorial 
human attitudes which we recognize by instinct 

. as universal and true. I had not been mistaken. 
She was a battered woman now, not a lovely 
girl; but sh e still had tiiat something which 
fires tEemiaginationTcould still stop one^s 
breath for a moment by a look or gesture that 
sohiehow revealed the meaning in common 
thingai. She had only to stand m the orchard, 
to put her hand on a little crab tree and look" 
up at the apples, to make you feel the goodness 
of plantmg and tending and harvesting at 
l ast. All the strong t hings of her heart came 
out in her bod y, that h ad been so tireless in 
serving generous emotions. 

It was no wonder that her sons stood tall 
and straight. She was a rich mine of life, like 
the founders of early races. / 



II 

When I awoke in the morning long bands of 
sunshine were coming in at the window and 
reaching back under the eaves where the two 
boys lay. Leo was wide awake and was tickling 
his brother's leg with a dried cone-flower he 
had pulled out of the hay. Ambrosch kicked 
at him and turned over. I closed my eyes and 
pretended to be asleep. Leo lay on his back, 
elevated one foot, and began exercising his 
toes. He picked up dried flowers with his toes 
and brandished them in the belt of sunlight. 
After he had amused himself thus for some 
time, he rose on one elbow and began to look 
at me, cautiously, then critically, blinking his 
eyes in the light. His expression was droll; it 
dismissed me lightly. "This old fellow is no 
different from other people. He does n't know 
my secret." He seemed conscious of possess- 
ing a keener power of enjoyment than other 
people; his quick recognitions made him 
frantically impatient of deliberate judgments. 
He always knew what he wanted without 
thinking. 

399 



MY ANTONIA 

After dressing in the hay, I washed my face 
in cold water at the windmiU. Breakfast was 
ready when I entered the kitchen, and Yulka 
was baking griddle-cakes. The three older boys 
set off for the fields early. Leo and Yulka were 
to drive to town to meet their father, who 
would return from Wilber on the nooin train. 

"We'll only have a lunch at noon," An- 
tonia said, "and cook the geese for supper, 
when our papa will be here. I wish my Martha 
could come down to see you. They have a Ford 
car now, and she don't seem so far away from 
me as she used to. But her husband's crazy 
about his farm and about having everything 
just right, and they almost never get away 
except on Sundays. He 's a handsome boy, and 
he'll be rich some day. Everything he takes 
hold of turns out well. When they bring that 
baby in here, and unwrap him, he looks like 
a little prince; Martha takes care of him so 
beautiful. I 'm reconciled to her being away 
from me now, but at first I cried like I was 
putting her into her coffin." 

We were alone in the kitchen, except for 

Anna, who was pouring cream into the churn. 

She looked up at me. "Yes, she did. We were 

just ashamed of mother. She went round cry- 

400 



CUZAK'S BOYS 

ing, when Martha was so happy, and the rest 
of us were all glad. Joe certainly was patient 
with you, mother." 

Antonia nodded and smiled at herself. "I 
know it was silly, but I could n't help it. I 
wanted her right here. She'd never been away 
from me a night since she was born. If Anton 
had made trouble about her when she was a 
baby, or wanted me to leave her with my 
mother, I would n't have married him. I 
could n't. But he always loved her like she 
was his own." 

"I didn't even know Martha wasn't my 
full sister until after she was engaged to Joe," 
Anna told me. 

Toward the middle of the afternoon the 
wagon drove in, with the father and the eldest 
son. I was smoking in the orchard, and as I 
went out to meet them, Antonia came run- 
ning down from the house and hugged the two 
men as if they had been away for months. 

" Papa " interested me, from my first glimpse 
of him. He was shorter than his older sons; a 
crumpled little man, with run-over boot heels, 
and he carried one shoulder higher than the 
other. But he moved very quickly, and there 
was an air of jaunty liveliness about him. He 
401 



MY ANTONIA 

had a strong, ruddy color, thick black hair, 
a little grizzled, a curly mustache, and red 
lips. His smile showed the strong teeth of 
which his wife was so proud, and as he saw 
me his lively, quizzical eyes told me that he 
knew all about me. He looked like a humor- 
ous philosopher who had hitched up one 
shoulder under the burdens of life, and gone 
on his way having a good time when he could. 
He advanced to meet me and gave me a hard 
hand, burned red on the back and heavily 
coated with hair. He wore his Sunday clothes, 
very thick and hot for the weather, an un- 
starched white shirt, and a blue necktie with 
big white dots, like a little boy's, tied in a 
flowing bow. Cuzak began at once to talk 
about his holiday — from politeness he spoke 
in English. 

"Mama,. I wish you had see the lady dance 
on the slack-wire in the street at night. They 
throw a bright light on her and she float 
through the air something beautiful, like a 
bird ! They have a dancing bear, like in the old 
country, and two three merry-go-around, and 
people in balloons, and what you call the big 
wheel, Rudolph?" 

"A Ferris wheel," Rudolph entered the con- 
402 



CUZAK'S BOYS 

versation in a deep baritone voice. He was six 
foot two, and had a chest Hke a young black- 
smith. "We went to the big dance in the hall 
behind the saloon last night, mother, and I 
danced with all the girls, and so did father. I 
never saw so many pretty girls. It was a Bo- 
hunk crowd, for sure. We did n't hear a word 
of English on the street, except from the show 
people, did we, papa.?" 

Cuzak nodded. "And very many send 
word to you, Antonia. You will excuse" — 
turning to me — "if I tell her." While we 
walked toward the house he related incidents 
and delivered messages in the tongue he spoke 
fluently, and I dropped a little behind, curious 
to know what their relations had become — 
or remained. The two seemed to be on terms 
of easy friendliness, touched with humor. 
Clearly, she was the impulse, and he the cor- 
rective. As they went up the hill he kept 
glancing at her sidewise, to see whether she 
got his point, or how she received it. I no- 
ticed later that he always looked at people 
sidewise, as a work-horse does at its yoke-mate. 
Even when he sat opposite me in the kitchen, 
talking, he would turn his head a little toward 
the clock or the stove and look at me from 
403 



MY ANTONIA 

the side, but with frankness and good-nature. 
This trick did not suggest duplicity or secre- 
tiveness, but merely long habit, as with the 
horse. 

He had brought a tintype of himself and 
Rudolph for Antonia's collection, and sev- 
eral paper bags of candy for the children. He 
looked a little disappointed when his wife 
showed him a big box of candy I had got in 
Denver — she had n't let the children touch 
it the night before. He put his candy away 
in the cupboard, "for when she rains," and 
glanced at the box, chuckling. " I guess you 
must have hear about how my family ain't 
so small," he said. 

Cuzak sat down behind the stove and 
watched his women-folk and the little chil- 
dren with equal amusement. He thought they 
were nice, and he thought they were funny, 
evidently. He had been off dancing with the 
girls and forgetting that he was an old fellow, 
and now his family rather surprised him; he 
seemed to think it a joke that all these chil- 
dren should belong to him. As the younger 
ones slipped up to him in his retreat, he kept 
taking things out of his pockets; penny dolls, 
a wooden clown, a balloon pig that was in- 
404 



CUZAK'S BOYS 

flated by a whistle. He beckoned to the little 
boy they called Jan, whispered to him, and 
presented him with a paper snake, gently, 
so as not to startle him. Looking over the 
boy's head he said to me, "This one is bashful. 
He gets left." 

Cuzak had brought home with him a roll 
of illustrated Bohemian papers. He opened 
them and began to tell his wife the news, 
much of which seemed to relate to one 
person. I heard the name Vasakova, Vasa- 
kova, repeated several times with lively in- 
terest, and presently I asked him whether 
he were talking about the singer, Maria 
Vasak. 

"You know? You have heard, maybe?" 
he asked incredulously. When I assured him 
that I had heard her, he pointed out her pic- 
ture and told me that Vasak had broken her 
leg, climbing in the Austrian Alps, and would 
not be able to fill her engagements. He seemed 
delighted to find that I had heard her sing 
in London and in Vienna; got out his pipe and 
lit it to enjoy our talk the better. She came 
from his part of Prague. His father used to 
mend her shoes for her when she was a stu- 
dent. Cuzak questioned me about her looks, 
405 



MY ANTONIA 

her popularity, her voice; but he particularly 
wanted to know whether I had noticed her 
tiny feet, and whether I thought she had saved 
much money. She was extravagant, of course 
but he hoped she would n't squander every- 
thing, and have nothing left when she was 
old. As a young man, working in Wienn, he 
had seen a good many artists who were old 
and poor, making one glass of beer last all 
evening, and "it was not very nice, that." 

When the boys came in from milking and 
feeding, the long table was laid, and two brown 
geese, stuifed with apples, were put down siz- 
zling before Antonia. She began to carve, and 
Rudolph, who sat next his mother, started the 
plates on their way. When everybody was 
served, he looked across the table at me. 

"Have you been to Black Hawk lately, Mr. 
Burden ? Then I wonder if you 've heard about 
the Cutters?" 

No, I had heard nothing at all about them. 

"Then you must tdl him, son, though it's a 
terrible thing to talk about at supper. Now, 
all you children be quiet, Rudolph is going to 
tell about the murder." 

"Hurrah! The murder!" the children mur- 
mured, looking pleased and interested. 
406 



CUZAK'S BOYS 

Rudolph told his story in great detail, with 
occasional promptings from his mother or father- 
Wick Cutter and his wife had gone on liv- 
ing in the house that Antonia and I knew so 
well, and in the way we knew so well. They 
grew to be very old people. He shriveled up, 
Antonia said, until he looked like a little old 
yellow monkey, for his beard and his fringe 
of hair never changed color. Mrs. Cutter 
remained flushed and wild-eyed as we had 
known her, but as the years passed she became 
afflicted with a shaking palsy which made her 
nervous nod continuous instead of occasional. 
Her hands were so uncertain that she could 
no longer disfigure china, poor woman! As 
the couple grew older, they quarreled more and 
more about the ultimate disposition of their 
"property." A new law was passed in the 
State, securing the surviving wife a third of 
her husband's estate under all conditions. 
Cutter was tormented by the fear that Mrs. 
Cutter would live longer than he, and that 
eventually her "people," whom he had always 
hated so violently, would inherit. Their quar- 
rels on this subject passed the boundary of the 
close-growing cedars, and were heard in the 
street by whoever wished to loiter and listen. 
407 



MY ANTONIA 

One morning, two years ago, Cutter went 
into the hardware store and bought a pistol, 
saying he was going to shoot a dog, and add- 
ing that he "thought he would take a shot at 
an old cat while he was about it," (Here the 
children interrupted Rudolph's narrative by 
smothered giggles.) 

Cutter went out behind the hardware store, 
put up a target, practiced for an hour or so, 
and then went home. At six o'clock that 
evening, when several men were passing the 
Cutter house on their way home to supper, 
they heard a pistol shot. They paused and 
were looking doubtfully at one another, when 
another shot came crashing through an up- 
stairs window. They ran into the house and 
found Wick Cutter lying on a sofa in his up- 
stairs bedroom, with his throat torn open, 
bleeding on a roll of sheets he had placed be- 
side his head. 

"Walk in, gentlemen," he said weakly. "I 
am alive, you see, and competent. You are 
witnesses that I have survived my wife. You 
will find her in her own room. Please make 
your examination at once, so that there will be 
no mistake." 

One of the neighbors telephoned for a doc- 
408 



CUZAK'S BOYS 

tor, while the others went into Mrs. Cutter's 
room. She was lying on her bed, in her night- 
gown and wrapper, shot through the heart. 
Her husband must have come in while she 
was taking her afternoon nap and shot her, 
holding the revolver near her breast. Her 
nightgown was burned from the powder. 

The horrified neighbors rushed back to Cut- 
ter. He opened his eyes and said distinctly, 
"Mrs. Cutter is quite dead, gentlemen, and I 
am conscious. My affairs are in order." Then, 
Rudolph said, "he let go and died." 

On his desk the coroner found a letter, dated 
at five o'clock that afternoon. It stated that 
he had just shot his wife; that any will she 
might secretly have made would be invalid, as 
he survived her. He meant to shoot himself 
at six o'clock and would, if he had strength^ 
fire a shot through the window in the hope 
that passers-by might come in and see him 
"before life was extinct," as he wrote. 
■ "Now, would you have thought that man 
had such a cruel heart?" Antonia turned to 
me after the story was told. "To go and do 
that poor woman out of any comfort she might 
have from his money after he was gone!" 

"Did you ever hear of anybody else that 
409 



MY ANTONIA 

Hlled himself for spite, Mr. Burden?" asked 
Rudolph. 

I admitted that I hadn't. Every lawyer 
learns over and over how strong a motive 
hate can be, but in my collection of legal 
anecdotes I had nothing to match this one. 
When I asked how much the estate amounted 
to, Rudolph said it was a little over a hundred 
thousand dollars. 

Cuzak gave me a twinkling, sidelong glance. 
"The lawyers, they got a good deal of it, sure," 
he said merrily. 

A hundred thousand dollars; so that was the 
fortune that had been scraped together by 
such hard dealing, and that Cutter himself 
had died for in the end! 

After supper Cuzak and I took a stroll in 
the orchard and sat down by the windmill to 
smoke. He told me his story as if it were 
my business to know it. 

His father was a shoemaker, his uncle a 
furrier, and he, being a younger son, was ap- 
prenticed to the latter's trade. You never got 
anywhere working for your relatives, he said, 
so when he was a journe3rman he went to 
Vienna and worked in a big fur shop, earning 
good money. But a young fellow who liked a 
410 



CUZAK'S BOYS 

good time didn't save anjrthing in Vienna; 
there were too many pleasant ways of spending 
every night what he'd made in the day. After 
three years there, he came to New York. He 
was badly advised and went to work on furs 
during a strike, when the factories were offer- 
ing big wages. The strikers won, and Cuzak 
was blacklisted. As he had a few hundred dol- 
lars ahead, he decided to go to Florida and 
raise oranges. He had always thought he would 
like to raise oranges ! The second year a hard 
frost killed his young grove, and he fell ill 
with malaria. He came to Nebraska to visit 
his cousin, Anton Jelinek, and to look about. 
When he began to look about, he saw Antonia, 
and she was exactly the kind of girl he had 
always been hunting for. They were married 
at once, though he had to borrow money from 
his cousin to buy the wedding-ring. 

"It was a pretty hard job, breaking up 
this place and making the first crops grow," 
he said, pushing back his hat and scratching 
his grizzled hair. " Sometimes I git awful sore 
on this place and want to quit, but my wife 
she always say we better stick it out. The 
babies come along pretty fast, so it look like 
it be hard to move, anyhow. I guess she was 
411 



MY ANTONIA 

right, all right. We got this place clear now. 
We pay only twenty dollars an acre then, and 
I been offered a hundred. We bought another 
quarter ten years ago, and we got it most paid 
for. We got plenty boys; we can work a lot 
of land. Yes, she is a good wife for a poor 
man. She ain't always so strict with me, 
neither. Sometimes maybe I drink a little too 
much beer in town, and when I come home she 
don't say nothing. She don't ask me no ques- 
tions. We always get along fine, her and me, 
like at first. The children don't make trouble 
between us, like sometimes happens." He lit 
another pipe and pulled on it contentedly. 

I found Cuzak a most companionable fel- 
low. He asked me a great many questions 
about my trip through Bohemia, about Vienna 
and the Ringstrasse and the theaters. 

"Gee! I like to go back there once, when the 
boys is big enough to farm the place. Some- 
times when I read the papers from the old 
country, I pretty near run away," he con- 
fessed with a little laugh. "I never did think 
how I would be a settled man like this." 

He was still, as Antonia said, a city man. 
He liked theaters and lighted streets and mu- 
sic and a game of dominoes after the day's 
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CUZAK'S BOYS 

work was over. His sociability was stronger 
than his acquisitive instinct. He liked to live 
day by day and night by night, sharing in the 
excitement of the crowd. — Yet his wife had 
managed to hold him here on a farm, in one 
of the loneliest countries in the world. 

I could see the little chap, sitting here every 
evening by the windmill, nursing his pipe and 
listening to the silence; the wheeze of the 
pump, the grunting of the pigs, an occasional 
squawking when the hens were disturbed by 
a rat. It did rather seem to me that Cuzak 
had been made the instrument of Antonia's 
special mission. This was a fine life, certainly, 
but it was n't the kind of life he had wanted 
to live. I wondered whether the life that was 
right for one was ever right for two! 

I asked Cuzak if he did n't find it hard to do 
without the gay company he had always been 
used to. He knocked out his pipe against an 
upright, sighed, and dropped it into his pocket. 

"At first I near go cra2y with lonesomeness," 
he said frankly, "but my woman is got such 
a warm heart. She always make it as good 
for me as she could. Now it ain't so bad; I can 
begin to have some fun with my boys, al- 
ready!" 

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MY ANTONIA 

As we walked toward the house, Cuzak 
cocked his hat jauntily over one ear and 
looked up at the moon. "Gee! " he said in a 
hushed voice, as if he had just wakened up, 
"it don't seem like I am away from there 
twenty-six year! " 



Ill 

After dinner the next day I said good-bye 
and drove back to Hastings to take the train 
for Black Hawk. Antonia and her children 
gathered round my buggy before I started, 
and even the little ones looked up at me with 
friendly faces, Leo and Ambrosch ran ahead 
to open the lane gate. When I reached the 
bottom of the hill, I glanced back. The group 
was still there by the windmill. Antonia was 
waving her apron. 

At the gate Ambrosch lingered beside my 
buggy, resting his arm on the wheel-rim. Leo 
slipped through the fence and ran off into the 
pasture. 

"That's like him," his brother said with a 
shrug. "He's a crazy kid. Maybe he's sorry 
to have you go, and maybe he's jealous. He's 
jealous of anybody mother makes a fuss over, 
even the priest." 

I found I hated to leave this boy, with his 
pleasant voice and his fine head and eyes. He 
looked very manly as he stood there without 
415 



MY ANTONIA 

a hat, the wind rippling his shirt about his 
brown neck and shoulders. 

"Don't forget that you and Rudolph are 
going hunting with me up on the Niobrara 
next summer," I said. "Your father's agreed 
to let you off after harvest." 

He smiled. "I won't likely forget. I've 
never had such a nice thing offered to me 
before. I don't know what makes you so nice 
to us boys," he added, blushing. 

"Oh, yes you do!" I said, gathering up my 
reins. 

He made no answer to this, except to smile 
at me with unabashed pleasure and affection 
as I drove away. 

My day in Black Hawk was disappointing. 
Most of my old friends were dead or had 
moved away. Strange children, who meant 
nothing to me, were playing in the Harlings' 
big yard when I passed; the mountain ash had 
been cut down, and only a sprouting stump was 
left of the tall Lombardy poplar that used to 
guard the gate. I hurried on. The rest of the 
morning I spent with Anton Jelinek, under a 
shady cottonwood tree in the yard behind his 
saloon. While I was having my mid-day din- 
416 



CUZAK'S BOYS 

ner at the hotel, I met one of the old lawyers 
who was still in practice, and he took me up to 
his office and talked over the Cutter case with 
me. After that, I scarcely knew how to put 
in the time until the night express was due. 

I took a long walk north of the town, out 
into the pastures where the land was so rough 
that it had never been ploughed up, and the 
long red grass of early times still grew shaggy 
over the draws and hillocks. Out there I felt 
at home again. Overhead the sky was that 
indescribable blue of autumn; bright and 
shadowless, hard as enamel. To the south I 
could see the dun-shaded river bluffs that 
used to look so big to me, and all about 
stretched drying cornfields, of the pale-gold 
color I remembered so well. Russian thistles 
were blowing across the uplands and piling 
against the wire fences like barricades. Along 
the cattle paths the plumes of golden-rod were 
already fading into sun-warmed velvet, gray 
with gold threads in it. I had escaped from 
the curious depression that hangs over little 
towns, and my mind was full of pleasant things ; 
trips I meant to take with the Cuzak boys, in 
the Bad Lands and up on the Stinking Water. 
There were enough Cuzaks to play with for 
417 



MY ANTONIA 

a long while yet. Even after the boys grew 
up, there would always be Cuzak himself! I 
meant to tramp along a few miles of lighted 
streets with Cuzak. 

As I wandered over those rough pastures, I 
had the good luck to stumble upon a bit of 
the first road that went from Black Hawk out 
to the north country; to my grandfather's 
farm, then on to the Shimerdas' and to the 
Norwegian settlement. Everywhere else it 
had been ploughed under when the highways 
were surveyed; this half-mile or so within the 
pasture fence was all that was left of that old 
road which used to run like a wild thing across 
the open prairie, clinging to the high places 
and circling and doubling like a rabbit be- 
fore the hounds. On the level land the tracks 
had almost disappeared — were mere shad- 
ings in the grass, and a stranger would not 
have noticed them. But wherever the road 
had crossed a draw, it was easy to find. The 
rains had made channels of the wheel-ruts 
and washed them so deep that the sod had 
never healed over them. They looked like 
gashes torn by a grizzly's claws, on the slopes 
where the farm wagons used to lurch up out 
of the hollows with a pull that brought curling 
418 



CUZAK'S BOYS 

muscles on the smooth hips of the horses. I 
sat down and watched the haystacks turn 
rosy in the slanting sunlight. 

This was the road over which Antonia and 
I came on that night when we got off the train 
at Black Hawk and were bedded down in 
the straw, wondering children, being taken we „ 
knew not whither. I had only to close my eyes 
to hear the rumbling of the wagons in the 
dark, and to be again overcome by that oblit- 
erating strangeness. The feelings of that night 
were so near that I could reach out and touch 
them with my hand. I had the sense of coming 
home to myself, and of having found out what 
a little circle man's experience is. For Antonia 
and for me, this had been the road of Destiny; 
had taken us to those early accidents of for- 
tune which predetermined for us all that we 
can ever be. Now I understood that the same 
road was to bring us together again. What- 
ever we had missed, we possessed together the / 
precious, the incommunicable past. 



THE END 



CAMBRIDGE . MASSACHUSBTTII 
D . 9 • A