The Project Gutenberg EBook of Una Of The Hill Country, by
Charles Egbert Craddock       (AKA Mary Noailles Murfree)

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Title: Una Of The Hill Country
       1911

Author: Charles Egbert Craddock (AKA Mary Noailles Murfree)

Release Date: November 19, 2007 [EBook #23550]
Last Updated: March 8, 2018

Language: English

Character set encoding: UTF-8

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Produced by David Widger





 










UNA OF THE HILL COUNTRY  

By Charles Egbert Craddock 

1911  







The old sawmill on Headlong Creek at the water-gap of Chilhowee Mountain  was silent and still one day, its habit of industry suggested only in the  ample expanse of sawdust spread thickly over a level open space in the  woods hard by, to serve as footing for the bran dance that had been so  long heralded and that was destined to end so strangely.  

A barbecue had added its attractions, unrivalled in the estimation of the  rustic epicure, but even while the shoats, with the delectable flavor  imparted by underground roasting and browned to a turn, were under  discussion by the elder men and the sun-bonneted matrons on a shady slope  near the mill, where tablecloths had been spread beside a crystal spring,  the dance went ceaselessly on, as if the flying figures were insensible of  fatigue, impervious to hunger, immune from heat.  

Indeed the youths and maidens of the contiguous coves and ridges had  rarely so eligible an opportunity, for it is one of the accepted tenets of  the rural religionist that dancing in itself is a deadly sin, and all the  pulpits of the countryside had joined in fulminations against it Nothing  less than a political necessity had compassed this joyous occasion. It was  said to have been devised by the machine to draw together the largest  possible crowd, that certain candidates might present their views on  burning questions of more than local importance, in order to secure  vigorous and concerted action at the polls in the luke-warm rural  districts when these measures should go before the people, in the person  of their advocates, at the approaching primary elections. However, even  the wisdom of a political boss is not infallible, and despite the  succulent graces of the barbecue numbers of the ascetic and jeans-clad  elder worthies, though fed to repletion, collogued unhappily together  among the ox-teams and canvas-hooded wagons on the slope, commenting  sourly on the frivolity of the dance. These might be relied on to cast no  ballots in the interest of its promoters, with whose views they were to be  favored between the close of the feast and the final dance before sunset.  

The trees waved full-foliaged branches above the circle of sawdust and  dappled the sunny expanse with flickering shade, and as they swayed apart  in the wind they gave evanescent glimpses of tiers on tiers of the faint  blue mountains of the Great Smoky Range in the distance, seeming ethereal,  luminous, seen from between the dark, steep, wooded slopes of the narrow  watergap hard by, through which Headlong Creek plunged and roared. The  principal musician, perched with his fellows on a hastily erected stand,  was burly, red-faced, and of a jovial aspect. He had a brace of fiddlers,  one on each side, but with his own violin under his double-chin he alone  called the figures of the old-fashioned contradances. Now and again,  with a wide, melodious, sonorous voice, he burst into a snatch of song:  
     “Shanghai chicken he grew so tall,
          In a few days—few days,
     Cannot hear him crow at all——-”
 

Sometimes he would intersperse jocund personal remarks in his  Terpsichorean commands: Gents, forward to the centrebackswing:  the lady ye love the best. Then in alternation, Ladies, forward to the  centreback and as the mountain damsels teetered in  expectation of the usual supplement of this mandate he called out in  apparent expostulation, Don't swing him, Misshe don't wuth  a turn.  

Suddenly the tune changed and with great gusto he chanted forth:  
     “When fust I did a-courtin' go,
     Says she 'Now, don't be foolish, Joe,'”
 

the tempo rubato giving fresh impetus to the kaleidoscopic whirl of  the dancers. The young men were of indomitable endurance and manifested a  crude agility as they sprang about clumsily in time to the scraping of the  fiddles, while their partners shuffled bouncingly or sidled mincingly  according to their individual persuasion of the most apt expression of  elegance. Considered from a critical point of view the dance was  singularly devoid of graceonly one couple illustrating the  exception to the rule. The youth it was who was obviously beautiful, of a  type as old as the fabled Endymion.  

His long brown hair hung in heavy curls to the collar of his butternut  jeans coat; his eyes were blue and large and finely set; his face was fair  and bespoke none of the midday toil at the plow-handles that had tanned  the complexion of his compeers, for Brent Kayle had little affinity for  labor of any sort. He danced with a light firm step, every muscle supplely  responsive to the strongly marked pulse of the music, and he had a lithe,  erect carriage which imparted a certain picturesque effect to his  presence, despite his much creased boots, drawn over his trousers to the  knee, and his big black hat which he wore on the back of his head. The  face of his partner had a more subtle appeal, and so light and willowy was  her figure as she danced that it suggested a degree of slenderness that  bordered on attenuation. Her unbonneted hair of a rich blonde hue had a  golden lustre in the sun; her complexion was of an exquisite whiteness and  with a delicate flush; the chiseling of her features was peculiarly fine,  in clear, sharp linesshe was called hatchet-faced by her  undiscriminating friends. She wore a coarse, flimsy, pink muslin dress  which showed a repetitious pattern of vague green leaves, and as she  flitted, lissome and swaying, through the throng, with the wind a-flutter  in her full draperies, she might have suggested to a spectator the  semblance of a pink flowerof the humbler varieties, perhaps, but  still a wild rose is a rose.  

Even the longest dance must have an end; even the stanchest mountain  fiddler will reach at last his limit of endurance and must needs be  refreshed and fed. There was a sudden significant flourish of frisky  bowing, now up and again down, enlisting every resonant capacity of  horsehair and catgut; the violins quavered to a final long-drawn scrape  and silence descended. Dullness ensued; the flavor of the day seemed to  pall; the dancers scattered and were presently following the crowd that  began to slowly gather about the vacated stand of the musicians, from  which elevation the speakers of the occasion were about to address their  fellow-citizens. One of the disaffected old farmers, gruff and averse,  could not refrain from administering a rebuke to Brent Kayle as crossing  the expanse of saw-dust on his way to join the audience he encountered the  youth in company with Valeria Clee, his recent partner.  

Ai-yi, Brent, the old man said, the last time I seen you uns I remember  well ez ye war a-settin' on the mourner's bench. For there had been a  great religious revival the previous year and many had been pricked in  conscience. Ye ain't so tuk up now in contemplatin' the goodness o' God  an' yer sins agin same, he pursued caustically.  

Brent retorted with obvious acrimony. I don't see no 'casion ter doubt  the goodness o' GodI never war so ongrateful nohow as that comes  to. He resented being thus publicly reproached, as if he were  individually responsible for the iniquity of the bran dancethe  scape-goat for the sins of all this merry company. Many of the whilom  dancers had pressed forward, crowding up behind the old mountaineer and  facing the flushed Brent and the flowerlike Valeria, the faint green  leaves of her muslin dress fluttering about her as her skirts swayed in  the wind.  

Ye ain't so powerful afeard of the devil now ez ye uster was on  the mourner's bench, the old man argued.  

I never war so mighty afeard of the devil, the goaded Brent broke forth  angrily, for the crowd was laughing in great relish of his predicamentthey,  who had shared all the enormity of shaking a foot on this festive day.  Brent flinched from the obvious injustice of their ridicule. He felt an  eager impulse for reprisal. I know ez sech dancin' ez I hev done ain't no  sin, he blustered. I ain't afeared o' the devil fur sech ez that. I  wouldn't be skeered a mite ef he war terterter speak right  out now agin it, an' I'll be bound ez all o' you uns would. IIlook  yanderlook!  

He had thrown himself into a posture of amazed intentness and was pointing  upward at the overhanging boughs of a tree above their heads. A squirrel  was poised thereon, gazing down motionless. Then, suddenlya  frightful thing happened. The creature seemed to speak. A strange falsetto  voice, such as might befit so eerie a chance, sounded on the airloud,  distinct, heard far up the slope, and electrifying the assemblage near at  hand that was gathering about the stand and awaiting the political  candidates.  

Quit yer foolin'quit yer fooling the strange voice iterated.  I'll larn ye ter be afeared o' the devil. Long legs now is special  grace.  

So wild a cry broke from the startled group below the tree that the  squirrel, with a sudden, alert, about-face movement, turned and swiftly  ran along the bough and up the bole. It paused once and looked back to cry  out again in distinct iteration, Quit yer foolin'! Quit yer foolin'!  

But none had stayed to listen. A general frantic rout ensued. The  possibility of ventriloquism was unknown to their limited experience. All  had heard the voice and those who had distinguished the words and their  seeming source needed no argument. In either case the result was the same.  Within ten minutes the grounds of the famous barbecue and bran dance were  deserted. The cumbrous wagons, all too slow, were wending with such speed  as their drivers could coerce the ox-teams to make along the woodland road  homeward, while happier wights on horseback galloped past, leaving clouds  of dust in the rear and a grewsome premonition of being hindmost in a  flight that to the simple minds of the mountaineers had a pursuer of  direful reality.  

The state of a candidate is rarely enviable until the event is cast and  the postulant is merged into the elect, but on the day signalized by the  barbecue, the bran dance, and the rout the unfortunate aspirants for  public favor felt that they had experienced the extremest spite of fate;  for although they realized in their superior education and sophistication  that the panic-stricken rural crowd had been tricked by some clever  ventriloquist, the political orators were left with only the winds and  waters and wilderness on which to waste their eloquence, and the wisdom of  their exclusive method of saving the country.  


Brent Kayle's talent for eluding the common doom of man to eat his bread  in the sweat of his face was peculiarly marked. He was the eldest of seven  sons, ranging in age from eleven to twenty years, including one pair of  twins. The parents had been greatly pitied for the exorbitant exactions of  rearing this large family during its immaturity, but now, the labor of  farm, barnyard and woodpile, distributed among so many stalwart fellows of  the same home and interest was light and the result ample. Perhaps none of  them realized how little of this abundance was compassed by Brent's  exertionshow many days he spent dawdling on the river bank idly  experimenting with the echoeshow often, even when he affected to  work, he left the plow in the furrow while he followed till sunset the  flight of successive birds through the adjacent pastures, imitating as he  went the fresh mid-air cry, whistling in so vibrant a bird-voice, so  signally clear and dulcet, yet so keen despite its sweetness, that his  brothers at the plow-handles sought in vain to distinguish between the  calls of the earth-ling and the winged voyager of the empyreal air. None  of them had ever heard of ventriloquism, so limited had been their  education and experience, so sequestered was their home amidst the  wilderness of the mountains. Only very gradually to Brent himself came the  consciousness of his unique gift, as from imitation he progressed to  causing a silent bird to seem to sing. The strangeness of the experience  frightened him at first, but with each experiment he had grown more  confident, more skilled, until at length he found that he could throw a  singularly articulate voice into the jaws of the old plow-horse, while his  brothers, accustomed to his queer vocal tricks, were convulsed with  laughter at the bizarre quadrupedal views of life thus elicited. This  development of proficiency, however, was recent, and until the incident at  the bran dance it had not been exercised beyond the limits of their  secluded home. It had revealed new possibilities to the young  ventriloquist and he looked at once agitated, excited, and triumphant when  late that afternoon he appeared suddenly at the rail fence about the  door-yard of Valeria Clee's home on one of the spurs of Chilhowee  Mountain. It was no such home as hislacking all the evidence of  rude comfort and coarse plenty that reigned thereand in its  tumbledown disrepair it had an aspect of dispirited helplessness. Here  Valeria, an orphan from her infancy, dwelt with her father's parents, who  always of small means had become yearly a more precarious support. The  ancient grandmother was sunken in many infirmities, and the household  tasks had all fallen to the lot of Valeria. Latterly a stroke of paralysis  had given old man Clee an awful annotation on the chapter of age and  poverty upon which he was entering, and his little farm was fast growing  up in brambles.  

But 't ain't no differ, gran Mad, Valeria often sought to reassure him.  I'll work some way out.  

And when he would irritably flout the possibility that she could do aught  to materially avert disaster she was wont to protest: You jes' watch me.  I'll find out some way. I be ez knowin' ez any old owel.  

Despite her slender physique and her recurrent heavy tasks the drear doom  of poverty with its multiform menace had cast no shadow on her ethereal  face, and her pensive dark gray eyes were full of serene light as she met  the visitor at the bars. A glimmer of mirth began to scintillate beneath  her long brown lashes, and she spoke first. The folks in the mountings  air mighty nigh skeered out'n thar boots by yer foolishness, Brentshe  sought to conserve a mien of reproof. They 'low ez it war a manifestation  of the Evil One.  

Brent laughed delightedly. Warn't it prime? he said. But I never  expected ter work sech a scatteration of the crowd Thar skeer plumb  terrified me. I jes' set out with the nimblest, an' run from the  devil myself.  

Won't them candidates fur office be mighty mad if they find out what it  war sure enough? she queried anxiously. They gin the crowd a barbecue  an' bran dance, an' arter all, the folks got quit of hevin' ter hear them  speak an' jaw about thar old politics an' sech.  

Them candidates air hoppin' mad fur true, he admitted. I been down  yander at Gilfillan's store in the Cove an' I hearn the loafers thar  talkin' powerful 'bout the strange happening. An' them candidates war thar  gittin' ready ter start out fur town in thar buggy. An' that thar gay onethough  now he seems ez sober ez that sour onehe said 't warn't no devil.  'Twar jes' a ventriloquisk from somewharthat's jes' what that town  man called it. But Inever said nuthin'. I kep' powerful quiet.  

Brent Kayle was as vain a man as ever stood in shoe leathereven in  the midst of his absorption in his disclosure he could not refrain from a  pause to reflect on the signal success of his prank and laugh and plume  himself.  

But old Gilfillan he loves ter believe ez the devil air hotfoot arter  other folks with a pitchfork, an' he axed how then did sech a man happen  ter be in the mountings 'thout none knowin' of it. An' that candidate, the  gay one, he say he reckon the feller kem from that circus what is goin'  fer show in Shaftesville termorrermebbe he hearn 'bout the bran  dance an' wanted ter hev some fun out'n the country folks. That candidate  say he hed hearn dozens o' ventriloquisks in shows in the big townsthough  this war about the bes' one he could remember. He said he hed no doubt  this feller is paid good money in the show, fur jes' sech fool tricks with  his voicegood money!  

Valeria had listened in motionless amazement But he had now paused, almost  choking with his rush of emotion, his excitement, his sense of triumph,  and straight ensued a certain reluctance, a dull negation, a prophetic  recoil from responsibility that clogged his resolve. His eyes roved  uncertainly about the familiar domestic scene, darkening now, duskily  purple beneath the luminous pearly and roseate tints of the twilight sky.  The old woman was a-drowse on the porch of the rickety little log-cabin  beneath the gourd vines, the paralytic grandfather came hirpling  unsteadily through the doorway on his supporting crutch, his pipe shaking  in his shaking hand, while he muttered and mumbled to himselfwho  knows what?whether of terror of the future, or regret for the past,  or doubt and despair of to-day. The place was obviously so meagre, so  poverty-bitten, so eloquent of the hard struggle for mere existence. If it  had been necessary for Brent Kayle to put his hand to the plow in its  behalf the words would never have been spokenbut good money for  this idle trade, these facile pranks!  

Vallie, he said impulsively, I'm going ter try itef ye'll go  with me. Ef ye war along I'd feel heartened ter stand up an' face the  crowd in a strange place. I always loved ye better than any of the other  galsshucks!whenst yewar about I never knowed ez they  war alive.  

Perhaps it was the after-glow of the sunset in the sky, but a crimson  flush sprang into her delicate cheek; her eyes were evasive, quickly  glancing here and there with an affectation of indifference, and she had  no mind to talk of love, she declared.  

But she should think of her gran'dad and gran'mam, he persisted. How had  she the heart to deprive them of his willing aid? He declared he had  intended to ask her to marry him anyhow, for she had always seemed to like  himshe could not deny thisbut now was the auspicious timeto-morrowwhile  the circus was in Shaftesville, and good money was to be had to provide  for the wants of her old grandparents.  

Though Valeria had flouted the talk of love she seemed his partisan when  she confided the matter to the two old people and their consent was  accorded rather for her sake than their own. They felt a revivifying  impetus in the thought that after their death Valeria would have a good  husband to care for her, for to them the chief grief of their loosening  hold on life was her inheritance of their helplessness and poverty.  

The courthouse in Shaftesville seemed a very imposing edifice to people  unaccustomed to the giddy heights of a second story.  

When the two staring young rustics left the desk of the county court clerk  and repaired to the dwelling of the minister of the Methodist Church near  by, with the marriage license just procured safely stowed away in Brent's  capacious hat, their anxieties were roused for a moment lest some delay  ensue, as they discovered that the minister was on the point of sitting  down to his dinner. He courteously deferred the meal, however, and as the  bride apologetically remarked after the ceremony that they might have  awaited his convenience were it not for the circus, he imagined that the  youthful couple had designed to utilize a round of the menagerie as a  wedding tour. The same thought was in the minds of the metropolitan  managers of the organization when presently the two young wildings from  the mountain fastness were ushered into their presence, having secured an  audience by dint of extreme persistence, aided by a mien of mysterious  importance.  

They found two men standing just within the great empty tent, for the  crowd had not as yet begun to gather. The most authoritative, who was tall  and portly, had the manner of swiftly disposing of the incident by asking  in a peremptory voice what he could do for them. The other, lean and  languid, looked up from a newspaper, in which he had been scanning a  flaming circus advertisement, as he stood smoking a cigar. He said  nothing, but concentrated an intent speculative gaze on the face of  Valeria, who had pulled off her faint green sunbonnet and in a flush of  eager hopefulness fanned with the slats.  

Ventriloquist! the portly man repeated with a note of surprise, as Brent  made known his gifts and his desire for an engagement. Oh, wellventriloquism  is a chestnut.  

Then with a qualm of pity, perhaps, for the blank despair that settled  down on the two young faces he explained: Nothing goes in the circus  business but novelty. The public is tired out with ventriloquism. No  mystery about it nowkind of thing, too, that a clever amateur can  compass.  

Brent, hurled from the giddy heights of imminent achievement to the depths  of nullity, could not at once relinquish the glowing prospects that had  allured him. He offered to give a sample of his powers. He would like to  bark a few, he said; you couldn't tell him from a sure enough dog; he  could imitate the different breedshound-dog, bull-pup, terrierbut  the manager was definitely shaking his head.  

Suddenly his partner spoke. The girl might take a turn!  

In the show? the portly man said in surprise.  

The Company's Una weighs two hundred pounds and has a face as broad as a  barn-door. She shows she is afraid of the lion when she stands beside him  in the street parade, andcurse himhe is so clever that he  knows it, no matter how he is doped. It incites him to growl at her all  through the pageant, and that simply queers the sweet peace of the idea.  

And you think this untrained girl could take her place!  

Why not? She couldn't do worseand she could look the part.  See, he continued, in as business-like way as if Valeria were merely a  bale of goods or deaf, ethereal figure, poetic type of beauty, fine  expression of candor and serene courage. She has a look of open-eyed  innocenceI don't mean ignorance. He made a subtle  distinction in the untutored aspect of the two countenances before him.  

Would you be afraid of the lion, child? the stout man asked Valeria. He  is chainedand drugged, tooin the pageant.  

It was difficult for the astonished Valeria to find her voice. A lion?  she murmured. I never seen a lion.  

No? Honest? they both cried in amazement that such a thing could be. The  portly man's rollicking laughter rang out through the thin walls of canvas  to such effect that some savage caged beast within reach of the elastic  buoyant sound was roused to anger and supplemented it with a rancorous  snarl.  

Valeria listened apprehensively, with dilated eyes. She thought of the  lion, the ferocious creature that she had never seen. She thought of the  massive strong woman who knew and feared him. Then she remembered the  desolate old grandparents and their hopeless, helpless poverty. I'll resk  the lion, she said with a tremulous bated voice.  

That's a brave girl, cried the manager.  

I hev read 'bout Daniel's lions an' him in the den, she explained. An'  Daniel hed consid'ble trust an' warn't afeardan' mebbe I won't be  afeard nuther.  

Daniel's Lions? Daniel's Lions? the portly manager repeated attentively.  I don't know the showperhaps in some combination now. For if he  had ever heard of that signal leonine incident recorded in Scripture he  had forgotten it. Yes, yes, as Valeria eagerly appealed to him in behalf  of Brent, we must try to give Hubby some little stunt to do in the  performancebut you are the ticketa sure winner.  

Of course the public knew, if it chose to reflect, that though apparently  free the lion was muzzled with a strong steel ring, and every ponderous  paw was chained down securely to the exhibition car; it may even have  suspected that the savage proclivities of the great beast were dulled by  drags. But there is always the imminent chance of some failure of  precaution, and the multitude must needs thrill to the spectacle of  intrepidity and danger. Naught could exceed the enthusiasm that greeted  this slim, graceful Una a few days later in the streets of a distant city,  as clad in long draperies of fleecy white she reclined against a splendid  leonine specimen, her shining golden hair hanging on her shoulders, or  mingling with his tawny mane as now and again she let her soft cheek rest  on his head, her luminous dark gray eyes smiling down at the cheering  crowds. This speedily became the favorite feature of the pageant, and the  billboards flamed with her portrait, leaning against the lion, hundreds of  miles in advance of her triumphal progress.  

All this unexpected success presently awoke Brent's emulationso far  he had not even barked a few. A liberal advance on his wife's salary had  quieted him for a time, but when the wonders of this new life began to  grow stalethe steam-cars, the great cities, the vast country the  Company traversedhe became importunate for the opportunity of  display. He barked a few so cleverly at a concert after the performance  one evening that the manager gave him a chance to throw the very  considerable volume of sound he could command into the jaws of one of the  lions. Let Emperor speak to the people, he said. Forthwith he wrote a  bit of rodomontade which he bade Brent memorize and had the satisfaction  soon to hear from the lion-trainer, to whom was intrusted all that  pertained to the exhibition of these kings of beasts, that the rehearsal  was altogether satisfactory.  

An immense audience was assembled in the great tent. The soaring dome of  white canvas reflected the electric light with a moony lustre. The display  of the three rings was in full swing. That magic atmosphere of the circus,  the sense of simple festivity, the crises of thrilling expectancy, the  revelation of successive wonders, the diffusive delight of a multitude not  difficult to entertainall were in evidence. Suddenly a ponderous  cage was rolled in; the band was playing liltingly; the largest of the  lions within the bars, a tawny monster, roused up and with head depressed  and switching tail paced back and forth within the restricted limits of  the cage, while the others looked out with motionless curiosity at the  tiers of people. Presently with a long supple stride the gigantic, blond  Norwegian trainer came lightly across the arenaa Hercules, with  broad bare chest and arms, arrayed in spangled blue satin and white tights  that forbade all suspicion of protective armor. At a single bound he  sprang into the cage, while Brent, garbed in carnation and white, stood  unheralded and unremarked close by outside among the armed attendants.  There seemed no need of precaution, however, so lightly the trainer  frolicked with the savage creatures. He performed wonderful acrobatic  feats with them in which one hardly knew which most to admire, the agility  and intrepidity of the man or the supple strength and curious intelligence  of the beasts. He wrestled with them; he leaped and rolled among them; he  put his head into their terrible full-fanged jawsbut before  springing forth he fired his pistols loaded with blank cartridges full in  their faces; for the instant the coercion of his eye was pretermitted  every one treacherously bounded toward him, seeking to seize him before he  could reach the door. Then Emperor, as was his wont, flung himself in  baffled fury against the bars and stood erect and shook them in his wrath.  

All at once, to the astonishment of the people, he spoke, voicing a  plaintive panegyric on liberty and protesting his willingness to barter  all the luxury of his captivity for one free hour on the desert sands.  

Surprise, absolute, unqualified, reigned for one moment. But a  circus-going crowd is uncannily quick. The audience perceived a certain  involuntary element of the entertainment. A storm of cat-calls ensued,  hisses, roars of laughter. For the place was the city of Glaston, the  Company being once more in East Tennessee, and the lion spoke the old  familiar mountain dialect so easily recognizable in this locality. Even a  lapsus linguae, you uns. was unmistakable amidst the high-flown  periods. Although the ventriloquism was appreciated, the incongruity of  this countrified jargon, held in great contempt by the townfolks,  discounted Emperor's majesty and he was in ludicrous eclipse.  

Behind the screening canvas the portly manager raged; How dare you make  that fine lion talk like a 'hill-Billy' such as yourselfas if he  were fresh caught in the Great Smoky Mountains! he stormed at the  indignant ventriloquist. The other partners in the management interfered  in Brent's behalf; they feared that the proud mountaineer, resenting the  contemptuous designation hill-Billy might withdraw from the Company,  taking his wife with him, and the loss of Valeria from the pageant would  be well nigh irreparable, for her ethereal and fragile beauty as Una with  her lion had a perennial charm for the public. The management therefore  assumed the responsibility for the linguistic disaster, having confided  the rehearsal to a foreigner, for the Norwegian lion-trainer naively  explained that to him it seemed that all Americans talked alike.  

A course in elocution was recommended to Brent by the managers, and he  fell in with this plan delightedly, but after two or three elementary  bouts with the vowel sounds, long and short, consonants, sonant and surd,  he concluded that mere articulation could be made as laborious as sawing  wood, and he discovered that it was incompatible with his dignity to be a  pupil in an art in which he had professed proficiency. Thereafter his  accomplishment rustedto the relief of the managementalthough  he required that Valeria should be described in the advertisements as the  wife of the celebrated ventriloquist, Mr. Brent Kayle, thus  seeking by faked notoriety to secure the sweets of fame, without the labor  of achievement.  

Valeria had welcomed the pacific settlement of the difficulty, because her  good money earned in the show so brightened and beautified the evening  of life for the venerable grandparents at home. For their sake she had  conquered her dread of the lion in the pageant. Indeed she had found other  lions in her path that she feared morethe glitter and gauds of her  tinsel world, the enervating love of ease, the influence of sordid  surroundings and ignoble ideals. But not one could withstand the simple  goodness of the unsophisticated girl. They retreated before the power of  her fireside traditions of right thinking and true living which she had  learned in her humble mountain home.  

It had come to be a dwelling of comfortable aspect, cared for in the  absence of the young couple by a thrifty hired housekeeper, a widowed  cousin, and here they spent the off-seasons when the circus company went  into winter quarters. Repairs had been instituted, several rooms were  added, and a wide veranda replaced the rickety little porch and gave upon  a noble prospect of mountain and valley and river. Here on sunshiny noons  in the good Saint Martin's summer the old gran'dad loved to sit, blithe  and hearty, chirping away the soft unseasonable December days. Sometimes  in the plenitude of content he would give Valeria a meaning glance and  mutter Oh, leetle Owel! Oh, leetle Owel! and then break  into laughter that must needs pause to let him wipe his eyes.  

Yes, Vallie 'pears ter hev right good sense an' makes out toler'ble well,  considerin', her husband would affably remark, though of course it war  meez interduced her ter the managers, an' she gits her main chance  in the show through my bein' a celebrated ventriloquisk.  













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