4396 lines
174 KiB
Plaintext
4396 lines
174 KiB
Plaintext
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TOM SAWYER ABROAD
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CHAPTER I.
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TOM SEEKS NEW ADVENTURES
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DO you reckon Tom Sawyer was satisfied after all
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them adventures? I mean the adventures we had
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down the river, and the time we set the darky Jim free
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and Tom got shot in the leg. No, he wasn't. It only
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just p'isoned him for more. That was all the effect it
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had. You see, when we three came back up the river
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in glory, as you may say, from that long travel, and
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the village received us with a torchlight procession and
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speeches, and everybody hurrah'd and shouted, it
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made us heroes, and that was what Tom Sawyer had
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always been hankering to be.
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For a while he WAS satisfied. Everybody made
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much of him, and he tilted up his nose and stepped
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around the town as though he owned it. Some called
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him Tom Sawyer the Traveler, and that just swelled
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him up fit to bust. You see he laid over me and Jim
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considerable, because we only went down the river on
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a raft and came back by the steamboat, but Tom went
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by the steamboat both ways. The boys envied me and
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Jim a good deal, but land! they just knuckled to the
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dirt before TOM.
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Well, I don't know; maybe he might have been
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satisfied if it hadn't been for old Nat Parsons, which
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was postmaster, and powerful long and slim, and kind
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o' good-hearted and silly, and bald-headed, on account
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of his age, and about the talkiest old cretur I ever see.
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For as much as thirty years he'd been the only man in
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the village that had a reputation -- I mean a reputation
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for being a traveler, and of course he was mortal proud
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of it, and it was reckoned that in the course of that
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thirty years he had told about that journey over a
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million times and enjoyed it every time. And now
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comes along a boy not quite fifteen, and sets everybody
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admiring and gawking over HIS travels, and it just give
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the poor old man the high strikes. It made him sick
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to listen to Tom, and to hear the people say "My
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land!" "Did you ever!" "My goodness sakes
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alive!" and all such things; but he couldn't pull away
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from it, any more than a fly that's got its hind leg fast
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in the molasses. And always when Tom come to a
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rest, the poor old cretur would chip in on HIS same old
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travels and work them for all they were worth; but
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they were pretty faded, and didn't go for much, and it
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was pitiful to see. And then Tom would take another
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innings, and then the old man again -- and so on, and
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so on, for an hour and more, each trying to beat out
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the other.
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You see, Parsons' travels happened like this: When
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he first got to be postmaster and was green in the busi-
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ness, there come a letter for somebody he didn't know,
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and there wasn't any such person in the village. Well,
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he didn't know what to do, nor how to act, and there
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the letter stayed and stayed, week in and week out, till
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the bare sight of it gave him a conniption. The postage
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wasn't paid on it, and that was another thing to worry
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about. There wasn't any way to collect that ten cents,
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and he reckon'd the gov'ment would hold him respon-
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sible for it and maybe turn him out besides, when they
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found he hadn't collected it. Well, at last he couldn't
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stand it any longer. He couldn't sleep nights, he
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couldn't eat, he was thinned down to a shadder, yet
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he da'sn't ask anybody's advice, for the very person
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he asked for advice might go back on him and let the
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gov'ment know about the letter. He had the letter
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buried under the floor, but that did no good; if he
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happened to see a person standing over the place it'd
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give him the cold shivers, and loaded him up with
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suspicions, and he would sit up that night till the town
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was still and dark, and then he would sneak there and
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get it out and bury it in another place. Of course,
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people got to avoiding him and shaking their heads
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and whispering, because, the way he was looking and
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acting, they judged he had killed somebody or done
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something terrible, they didn't know what, and if he
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had been a stranger they would've lynched him.
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Well, as I was saying, it got so he couldn't stand it
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any longer; so he made up his mind to pull out for
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Washington, and just go to the President of the United
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States and make a clean breast of the whole thing, not
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keeping back an atom, and then fetch the letter out and
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lay it before the whole gov'ment, and say, "Now,
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there she is -- do with me what you're a mind to;
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though as heaven is my judge I am an innocent man
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and not deserving of the full penalties of the law and
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leaving behind me a family that must starve and yet
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hadn't had a thing to do with it, which is the whole
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truth and I can swear to it."
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So he did it. He had a little wee bit of steamboat-
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ing, and some stage-coaching, but all the rest of the
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way was horseback, and it took him three weeks to get
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to Washington. He saw lots of land and lots of vil-
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lages and four cities. He was gone 'most eight weeks,
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and there never was such a proud man in the village as
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he when he got back. His travels made him the greatest
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man in all that region, and the most talked about; and
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people come from as much as thirty miles back in the
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country, and from over in the Illinois bottoms, too,
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just to look at him -- and there they'd stand and gawk,
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and he'd gabble. You never see anything like it.
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Well, there wasn't any way now to settle which was
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the greatest traveler; some said it was Nat, some said
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it was Tom. Everybody allowed that Nat had seen
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the most longitude, but they had to give in that what-
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ever Tom was short in longitude he had made up in
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latitude and climate. It was about a stand-off; so both
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of them had to whoop up their dangerous adventures,
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and try to get ahead THAT way. That bullet-wound in
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Tom's leg was a tough thing for Nat Parsons to buck
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against, but he bucked the best he could; and at a
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disadvantage, too, for Tom didn't set still as he'd orter
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done, to be fair, but always got up and sauntered
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around and worked his limp while Nat was painting up
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the adventure that HE had in Washington; for Tom
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never let go that limp when his leg got well, but prac-
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ticed it nights at home, and kept it good as new right
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along.
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Nat's adventure was like this; I don't know how
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true it is; maybe he got it out of a paper, or some-
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where, but I will say this for him, that he DID know
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how to tell it. He could make anybody's flesh crawl,
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and he'd turn pale and hold his breath when he told
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it, and sometimes women and girls got so faint they
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couldn't stick it out. Well, it was this way, as near as
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I can remember:
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He come a-loping into Washington, and put up his
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horse and shoved out to the President's house with his
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letter, and they told him the President was up to the
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Capitol, and just going to start for Philadelphia -- not
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a minute to lose if he wanted to catch him. Nat 'most
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dropped, it made him so sick. His horse was put up,
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and he didn't know what to do. But just then along
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comes a darky driving an old ramshackly hack, and he
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see his chance. He rushes out and shouts: "A half a
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dollar if you git me to the Capitol in half an hour, and
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a quarter extra if you do it in twenty minutes!"
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"Done!" says the darky.
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Nat he jumped in and slammed the door, and away
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they went a-ripping and a-tearing over the roughest
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road a body ever see, and the racket of it was some-
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thing awful. Nat passed his arms through the loops
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and hung on for life and death, but pretty soon the
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hack hit a rock and flew up in the air, and the bottom
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fell out, and when it come down Nat's feet was on the
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ground, and he see he was in the most desperate danger
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if he couldn't keep up with the hack. He was horrible
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scared, but he laid into his work for all he was worth,
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and hung tight to the arm-loops and made his legs
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fairly fly. He yelled and shouted to the driver to
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stop, and so did the crowds along the street, for they
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could see his legs spinning along under the coach, and
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his head and shoulders bobbing inside through the
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windows, and he was in awful danger; but the more
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they all shouted the more the nigger whooped and
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yelled and lashed the horses and shouted, "Don't you
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fret, I'se gwine to git you dah in time, boss; I's gwine
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to do it, sho'!" for you see he thought they were all
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hurrying him up, and, of course, he couldn't hear any-
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thing for the racket he was making. And so they went
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ripping along, and everybody just petrified to see it;
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and when they got to the Capitol at last it was the
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quickest trip that ever was made, and everybody said
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so. The horses laid down, and Nat dropped, all tuck-
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ered out, and he was all dust and rags and barefooted;
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but he was in time and just in time, and caught the
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President and give him the letter, and everything was
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all right, and the President give him a free pardon on
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the spot, and Nat give the nigger two extra quarters
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instead of one, because he could see that if he hadn't
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had the hack he wouldn't'a' got there in time, nor
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anywhere near it.
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It WAS a powerful good adventure, and Tom Sawyer
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had to work his bullet-wound mighty lively to hold his
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own against it.
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Well, by and by Tom's glory got to paling down
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gradu'ly, on account of other things turning up for the
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people to talk about -- first a horse-race, and on top of
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that a house afire, and on top of that the circus, and
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on top of that the eclipse; and that started a revival,
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same as it always does, and by that time there wasn't
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any more talk about Tom, so to speak, and you never
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see a person so sick and disgusted.
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Pretty soon he got to worrying and fretting right
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along day in and day out, and when I asked him what
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WAS he in such a state about, he said it 'most broke his
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heart to think how time was slipping away, and him
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getting older and older, and no wars breaking out and
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no way of making a name for himself that he could
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see. Now that is the way boys is always thinking, but
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he was the first one I ever heard come out and say it.
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So then he set to work to get up a plan to make him
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celebrated; and pretty soon he struck it, and offered to
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take me and Jim in. Tom Sawyer was always free and
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generous that way. There's a-plenty of boys that's
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mighty good and friendly when YOU'VE got a good
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thing, but when a good thing happens to come their
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way they don't say a word to you, and try to hog it
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all. That warn't ever Tom Sawyer's way, I can say
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that for him. There's plenty of boys that will come
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hankering and groveling around you when you've got
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an apple and beg the core off of you; but when they've
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got one, and you beg for the core and remind them
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how you give them a core one time, they say thank
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you 'most to death, but there ain't a-going to be no
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core. But I notice they always git come up with; all
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you got to do is to wait.
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Well, we went out in the woods on the hill, and Tom
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told us what it was. It was a crusade.
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"What's a crusade?" I says.
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He looked scornful, the way he's always done when
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he was ashamed of a person, and says:
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"Huck Finn, do you mean to tell me you don't
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know what a crusade is?"
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"No," says I, "I don't. And I don't care to,
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nuther. I've lived till now and done without it, and
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had my health, too. But as soon as you tell me, I'll
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know, and that's soon enough. I don't see any use in
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finding out things and clogging up my head with them
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when I mayn't ever have any occasion to use 'em.
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There was Lance Williams, he learned how to talk
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Choctaw here till one come and dug his grave for him.
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Now, then, what's a crusade? But I can tell you one
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thing before you begin; if it's a patent-right, there's
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no money in it. Bill Thompson he --"
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"Patent-right!" says he. "I never see such an
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idiot. Why, a crusade is a kind of war."
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I thought he must be losing his mind. But no, he
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was in real earnest, and went right on, perfectly
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ca'm.
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"A crusade is a war to recover the Holy Land from
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the paynim."
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"Which Holy Land?"
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"Why, the Holy Land -- there ain't but one."
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"What do we want of it?"
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"Why, can't you understand? It's in the hands of
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the paynim, and it's our duty to take it away from
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them."
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"How did we come to let them git hold of it?"
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"We didn't come to let them git hold of it. They
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always had it."
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"Why, Tom, then it must belong to them, don't it?"
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"Why of course it does. Who said it didn't?"
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I studied over it, but couldn't seem to git at the
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right of it, no way. I says:
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"It's too many for me, Tom Sawyer. If I had a
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farm and it was mine, and another person wanted it,
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would it be right for him to --"
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"Oh, shucks! you don't know enough to come in
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when it rains, Huck Finn. It ain't a farm, it's entirely
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different. You see, it's like this. They own the land,
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just the mere land, and that's all they DO own; but it
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was our folks, our Jews and Christians, that made it
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holy, and so they haven't any business to be there
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defiling it. It's a shame, and we ought not to stand it
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a minute. We ought to march against them and take
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it away from them."
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"Why, it does seem to me it's the most mixed-up
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thing I ever see! Now, if I had a farm and another
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person --"
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"Don't I tell you it hasn't got anything to do with
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farming? Farming is business, just common low-down
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business: that's all it is, it's all you can say for it; but
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this is higher, this is religious, and totally different."
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"Religious to go and take the land away from
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people that owns it?"
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"Certainly; it's always been considered so."
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Jim he shook his head, and says:
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"Mars Tom, I reckon dey's a mistake about it
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somers -- dey mos' sholy is. I's religious myself, en
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I knows plenty religious people, but I hain't run across
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none dat acts like dat."
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It made Tom hot, and he says:
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"Well, it's enough to make a body sick, such
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mullet-headed ignorance! If either of you'd read any-
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thing about history, you'd know that Richard Cur de
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Loon, and the Pope, and Godfrey de Bulleyn, and lots
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more of the most noble-hearted and pious people in
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the world, hacked and hammered at the paynims for
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more than two hundred years trying to take their land
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away from them, and swum neck-deep in blood the
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whole time -- and yet here's a couple of sap-headed
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country yahoos out in the backwoods of Missouri set-
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ting themselves up to know more about the rights and
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wrongs of it than they did! Talk about cheek!"
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Well, of course, that put a more different light on it,
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and me and Jim felt pretty cheap and ignorant, and
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wished we hadn't been quite so chipper. I couldn't
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say nothing, and Jim he couldn't for a while; then he
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says:
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"Well, den, I reckon it's all right; beca'se ef dey
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didn't know, dey ain't no use for po' ignorant folks
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like us to be trying to know; en so, ef it's our duty,
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we got to go en tackle it en do de bes' we can. Same
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time, I feel as sorry for dem paynims as Mars Tom.
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De hard part gwine to be to kill folks dat a body hain't
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been 'quainted wid and dat hain't done him no harm.
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Dat's it, you see. Ef we wuz to go 'mongst 'em, jist
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we three, en say we's hungry, en ast 'em for a bite to
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eat, why, maybe dey's jist like yuther people. Don't
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you reckon dey is? Why, DEY'D give it, I know dey
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would, en den --"
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"Then what?"
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"Well, Mars Tom, my idea is like dis. It ain't no
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use, we CAN'T kill dem po' strangers dat ain't doin' us
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no harm, till we've had practice -- I knows it perfectly
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well, Mars Tom -- 'deed I knows it perfectly well. But
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ef we takes a' axe or two, jist you en me en Huck, en
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slips acrost de river to-night arter de moon's gone
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down, en kills dat sick fam'ly dat's over on the Sny,
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en burns dey house down, en --"
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"Oh, you make me tired!" says Tom. "I don't
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want to argue any more with people like you and Huck
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Finn, that's always wandering from the subject, and
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ain't got any more sense than to try to reason out a
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thing that's pure theology by the laws that protect real
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estate!"
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Now that's just where Tom Sawyer warn't fair. Jim
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didn't mean no harm, and I didn't mean no harm.
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We knowed well enough that he was right and we was
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wrong, and all we was after was to get at the HOW of
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it, and that was all; and the only reason he couldn't
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explain it so we could understand it was because we
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was ignorant -- yes, and pretty dull, too, I ain't deny-
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ing that; but, land! that ain't no crime, I should think.
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But he wouldn't hear no more about it -- just said if
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we had tackled the thing in the proper spirit, he would
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'a' raised a couple of thousand knights and put them
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in steel armor from head to heel, and made me a lieu-
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tenant and Jim a sutler, and took the command himself
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and brushed the whole paynim outfit into the sea like
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flies and come back across the world in a glory like
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sunset. But he said we didn't know enough to take
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the chance when we had it, and he wouldn't ever offer
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it again. And he didn't. When he once got set, you
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couldn't budge him.
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But I didn't care much. I am peaceable, and don't
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get up rows with people that ain't doing nothing to
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me. I allowed if the paynim was satisfied I was, and
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we would let it stand at that.
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Now Tom he got all that notion out of Walter Scott's
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book, which he was always reading. And it WAS a
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wild notion, because in my opinion he never could've
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raised the men, and if he did, as like as not he would've
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got licked. I took the book and read all about it, and
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as near as I could make it out, most of the folks that
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shook farming to go crusading had a mighty rocky
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time of it.
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CHAPTER II.
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THE BALLOON ASCENSION
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WELL, Tom got up one thing after another, but
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they all had tender spots about 'em somewheres,
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and he had to shove 'em aside. So at last he was
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about in despair. Then the St. Louis papers begun to
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talk a good deal about the balloon that was going to
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sail to Europe, and Tom sort of thought he wanted
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to go down and see what it looked like, but couldn't
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make up his mind. But the papers went on talking,
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and so he allowed that maybe if he didn't go he
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mightn't ever have another chance to see a balloon;
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and next, he found out that Nat Parsons was going
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down to see it, and that decided him, of course. He
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wasn't going to have Nat Parsons coming back brag-
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ging about seeing the balloon, and him having to listen
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to it and keep quiet. So he wanted me and Jim to go
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too, and we went.
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It was a noble big balloon, and had wings and fans
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and all sorts of things, and wasn't like any balloon you
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see in pictures. It was away out toward the edge of
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town, in a vacant lot, corner of Twelfth street; and
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there was a big crowd around it, making fun of it, and
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making fun of the man, -- a lean pale feller with that
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soft kind of moonlight in his eyes, you know, -- and
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they kept saying it wouldn't go. It made him hot to
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hear them, and he would turn on them and shake his
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fist and say they was animals and blind, but some day
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they would find they had stood face to face with one
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of the men that lifts up nations and makes civilizations,
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and was too dull to know it; and right here on this
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spot their own children and grandchildren would build
|
|
a monument to him that would outlast a thousand
|
|
years, but his name would outlast the monument.
|
|
And then the crowd would burst out in a laugh again,
|
|
and yell at him, and ask him what was his name before
|
|
he was married, and what he would take to not do it,
|
|
and what was his sister's cat's grandmother's name,
|
|
and all the things that a crowd says when they've got
|
|
hold of a feller that they see they can plague. Well,
|
|
some things they said WAS funny, -- yes, and mighty
|
|
witty too, I ain't denying that, -- but all the same it
|
|
warn't fair nor brave, all them people pitching on one,
|
|
and they so glib and sharp, and him without any gift
|
|
of talk to answer back with. But, good land! what
|
|
did he want to sass back for? You see, it couldn't do
|
|
him no good, and it was just nuts for them. They
|
|
HAD him, you know. But that was his way. I reckon
|
|
he couldn't help it; he was made so, I judge. He
|
|
was a good enough sort of cretur, and hadn't no harm
|
|
in him, and was just a genius, as the papers said, which
|
|
wasn't his fault. We can't all be sound: we've got to
|
|
be the way we're made. As near as I can make out,
|
|
geniuses think they know it all, and so they won't take
|
|
people's advice, but always go their own way, which
|
|
makes everybody forsake them and despise them, and
|
|
that is perfectly natural. If they was humbler, and
|
|
listened and tried to learn, it would be better for them.
|
|
|
|
The part the professor was in was like a boat, and
|
|
was big and roomy, and had water-tight lockers around
|
|
the inside to keep all sorts of things in, and a body
|
|
could sit on them, and make beds on them, too. We
|
|
went aboard, and there was twenty people there, snoop-
|
|
ing around and examining, and old Nat Parsons was
|
|
there, too. The professor kept fussing around getting
|
|
ready, and the people went ashore, drifting out one at
|
|
a time, and old Nat he was the last. Of course it
|
|
wouldn't do to let him go out behind US. We mustn't
|
|
budge till he was gone, so we could be last ourselves.
|
|
|
|
But he was gone now, so it was time for us to follow.
|
|
I heard a big shout, and turned around -- the city was
|
|
dropping from under us like a shot! It made me sick
|
|
all through, I was so scared. Jim turned gray and
|
|
couldn't say a word, and Tom didn't say nothing, but
|
|
looked excited. The city went on dropping down,
|
|
and down, and down; but we didn't seem to be doing
|
|
nothing but just hang in the air and stand still. The
|
|
houses got smaller and smaller, and the city pulled
|
|
itself together, closer and closer, and the men and
|
|
wagons got to looking like ants and bugs crawling
|
|
around, and the streets like threads and cracks; and
|
|
then it all kind of melted together, and there wasn't
|
|
any city any more it was only a big scar on the earth,
|
|
and it seemed to me a body could see up the river and
|
|
down the river about a thousand miles, though of
|
|
course it wasn't so much. By and by the earth was a
|
|
ball -- just a round ball, of a dull color, with shiny
|
|
stripes wriggling and winding around over it, which
|
|
was rivers. The Widder Douglas always told me the
|
|
earth was round like a ball, but I never took any stock
|
|
in a lot of them superstitions o' hers, and of course I
|
|
paid no attention to that one, because I could see my-
|
|
self that the world was the shape of a plate, and flat.
|
|
I used to go up on the hill, and take a look around
|
|
and prove it for myself, because I reckon the best way
|
|
to get a sure thing on a fact is to go and examine for
|
|
yourself, and not take anybody's say-so. But I had to
|
|
give in now that the widder was right. That is, she
|
|
was right as to the rest of the world, but she warn't
|
|
right about the part our village is in; that part is the
|
|
shape of a plate, and flat, I take my oath!
|
|
|
|
The professor had been quiet all this time, as if he
|
|
was asleep; but he broke loose now, and he was mighty
|
|
bitter. He says something like this:
|
|
|
|
"Idiots! They said it wouldn't go; and they
|
|
wanted to examine it, and spy around and get the
|
|
secret of it out of me. But I beat them. Nobody
|
|
knows the secret but me. Nobody knows what makes
|
|
it move but me; and it's a new power -- a new power,
|
|
and a thousand times the strongest in the earth!
|
|
Steam's foolishness to it! They said I couldn't go to
|
|
Europe. To Europe! Why, there's power aboard to
|
|
last five years, and feed for three months. They are
|
|
fools! What do they know about it? Yes, and they
|
|
said my air-ship was flimsy. Why, she's good for
|
|
fifty years! I can sail the skies all my life if I want
|
|
to, and steer where I please, though they laughed at
|
|
that, and said I couldn't. Couldn't steer! Come
|
|
here, boy; we'll see. You press these buttons as I
|
|
tell you."
|
|
|
|
He made Tom steer the ship all about and every
|
|
which way, and learnt him the whole thing in nearly
|
|
no time; and Tom said it was perfectly easy. He
|
|
made him fetch the ship down 'most to the earth, and
|
|
had him spin her along so close to the Illinois prairies
|
|
that a body could talk to the farmers, and hear every-
|
|
thing they said perfectly plain; and he flung out
|
|
printed bills to them that told about the balloon, and
|
|
said it was going to Europe. Tom got so he could
|
|
steer straight for a tree till he got nearly to it, and then
|
|
dart up and skin right along over the top of it. Yes,
|
|
and he showed Tom how to land her; and he done it
|
|
first-rate, too, and set her down in the prairies as soft
|
|
as wool. But the minute we started to skip out the
|
|
professor says, "No, you don't!" and shot her up in
|
|
the air again. It was awful. I begun to beg, and so
|
|
did Jim; but it only give his temper a rise, and he
|
|
begun to rage around and look wild out of his eyes,
|
|
and I was scared of him.
|
|
|
|
Well, then he got on to his troubles again, and
|
|
mourned and grumbled about the way he was treated,
|
|
and couldn't seem to git over it, and especially people's
|
|
saying his ship was flimsy. He scoffed at that, and at
|
|
their saying she warn't simple and would be always
|
|
getting out of order. Get out of order! That graveled
|
|
him; he said that she couldn't any more get out of
|
|
order than the solar sister.
|
|
|
|
He got worse and worse, and I never see a person
|
|
take on so. It give me the cold shivers to see him,
|
|
and so it did Jim. By and by he got to yelling and
|
|
screaming, and then he swore the world shouldn't ever
|
|
have his secret at all now, it had treated him so mean.
|
|
He said he would sail his balloon around the globe just
|
|
to show what he could do, and then he would sink it in
|
|
the sea, and sink us all along with it, too. Well, it was
|
|
the awfulest fix to be in, and here was night coming
|
|
on!
|
|
|
|
He give us something to eat, and made us go to the
|
|
other end of the boat, and he laid down on a locker,
|
|
where he could boss all the works, and put his old
|
|
pepper-box revolver under his head, and said if any-
|
|
body come fooling around there trying to land her, he
|
|
would kill him.
|
|
|
|
We set scrunched up together, and thought consider-
|
|
able, but didn't say much -- only just a word once in a
|
|
while when a body had to say something or bust, we
|
|
was so scared and worried. The night dragged along
|
|
slow and lonesome. We was pretty low down, and the
|
|
moonshine made everything soft and pretty, and the
|
|
farmhouses looked snug and homeful, and we could
|
|
hear the farm sounds, and wished we could be down
|
|
there; but, laws! we just slipped along over them like
|
|
a ghost, and never left a track.
|
|
|
|
Away in the night, when all the sounds was late
|
|
sounds, and the air had a late feel, and a late smell,
|
|
too -- about a two-o'clock feel, as near as I could make
|
|
out -- Tom said the professor was so quiet this time
|
|
he must be asleep, and we'd better --
|
|
|
|
"Better what?" I says in a whisper, and feeling sick
|
|
all over, because I knowed what he was thinking about.
|
|
|
|
"Better slip back there and tie him, and land the
|
|
ship," he says.
|
|
|
|
I says: "No, sir! Don' you budge, Tom Sawyer."
|
|
|
|
And Jim -- well, Jim was kind o' gasping, he was so
|
|
scared. He says:
|
|
|
|
"Oh, Mars Tom, DON'T! Ef you teches him, we's
|
|
gone -- we's gone sho'! I ain't gwine anear him, not
|
|
for nothin' in dis worl'. Mars Tom, he's plumb crazy."
|
|
|
|
Tom whispers and says -- "That's WHY we've got to
|
|
do something. If he wasn't crazy I wouldn't give
|
|
shucks to be anywhere but here; you couldn't hire me
|
|
to get out -- now that I've got used to this balloon and
|
|
over the scare of being cut loose from the solid ground
|
|
-- if he was in his right mind. But it's no good politics,
|
|
sailing around like this with a person that's out of his
|
|
head, and says he's going round the world and then
|
|
drown us all. We've GOT to do something, I tell you,
|
|
and do it before he wakes up, too, or we mayn't ever
|
|
get another chance. Come!"
|
|
|
|
But it made us turn cold and creepy just to think of
|
|
it, and we said we wouldn't budge. So Tom was for
|
|
slipping back there by himself to see if he couldn't get
|
|
at the steering-gear and land the ship. We begged and
|
|
begged him not to, but it warn't no use; so he got
|
|
down on his hands and knees, and begun to crawl an
|
|
inch at a time, we a-holding our breath and watching.
|
|
After he got to the middle of the boat he crept slower
|
|
than ever, and it did seem like years to me. But at
|
|
last we see him get to the professor's head, and sort
|
|
of raise up soft and look a good spell in his face and
|
|
listen. Then we see him begin to inch along again
|
|
toward the professor's feet where the steering-buttons
|
|
was. Well, he got there all safe, and was reaching
|
|
slow and steady toward the buttons, but he knocked
|
|
down something that made a noise, and we see him
|
|
slump down flat an' soft in the bottom, and lay still.
|
|
The professor stirred, and says, "What's that?" But
|
|
everybody kept dead still and quiet, and he begun to
|
|
mutter and mumble and nestle, like a person that's
|
|
going to wake up, and I thought I was going to die, I
|
|
was so worried and scared.
|
|
|
|
Then a cloud slid over the moon, and I 'most cried,
|
|
I was so glad. She buried herself deeper and deeper
|
|
into the cloud, and it got so dark we couldn't see Tom.
|
|
Then it began to sprinkle rain, and we could hear the
|
|
professor fussing at his ropes and things and abusing
|
|
the weather. We was afraid every minute he would
|
|
touch Tom, and then we would be goners, and no
|
|
help; but Tom was already on his way back, and when
|
|
we felt his hands on our knees my breath stopped
|
|
sudden, and my heart fell down 'mongst my other works,
|
|
because I couldn't tell in the dark but it might be the
|
|
professor! which I thought it WAS.
|
|
|
|
Dear! I was so glad to have him back that I was
|
|
just as near happy as a person could be that was up in
|
|
the air that way with a deranged man. You can't land
|
|
a balloon in the dark, and so I hoped it would keep on
|
|
raining, for I didn't want Tom to go meddling any
|
|
more and make us so awful uncomfortable. Well, I
|
|
got my wish. It drizzled and drizzled along the rest
|
|
of the night, which wasn't long, though it did seem so;
|
|
and at daybreak it cleared, and the world looked
|
|
mighty soft and gray and pretty, and the forests and
|
|
fields so good to see again, and the horses and cattle
|
|
standing sober and thinking. Next, the sun come a-
|
|
blazing up gay and splendid, and then we began to feel
|
|
rusty and stretchy, and first we knowed we was all
|
|
asleep.
|
|
|
|
|
|
CHAPTER III.
|
|
TOM EXPLAINS
|
|
|
|
WE went to sleep about four o'clock, and woke up
|
|
about eight. The professor was setting back
|
|
there at his end, looking glum. He pitched us some
|
|
breakfast, but he told us not to come abaft the midship
|
|
compass. That was about the middle of the boat.
|
|
Well, when you are sharp-set, and you eat and satisfy
|
|
yourself, everything looks pretty different from what it
|
|
done before. It makes a body feel pretty near com-
|
|
fortable, even when he is up in a balloon with a genius.
|
|
We got to talking together.
|
|
|
|
There was one thing that kept bothering me, and by
|
|
and by I says:
|
|
|
|
"Tom, didn't we start east?"
|
|
|
|
"Yes."
|
|
|
|
"How fast have we been going?"
|
|
|
|
"Well, you heard what the professor said when he
|
|
was raging round. Sometimes, he said, we was making
|
|
fifty miles an hour, sometimes ninety, sometimes a
|
|
hundred; said that with a gale to help he could make
|
|
three hundred any time, and said if he wanted the gale,
|
|
and wanted it blowing the right direction, he only had
|
|
to go up higher or down lower to find it."
|
|
|
|
"Well, then, it's just as I reckoned. The professor
|
|
lied."
|
|
|
|
"Why?"
|
|
|
|
"Because if we was going so fast we ought to be
|
|
past Illinois, oughtn't we?"
|
|
|
|
"Certainly."
|
|
|
|
"Well, we ain't."
|
|
|
|
"What's the reason we ain't?"
|
|
|
|
"I know by the color. We're right over Illinois
|
|
yet. And you can see for yourself that Indiana ain't
|
|
in sight."
|
|
|
|
"I wonder what's the matter with you, Huck. You
|
|
know by the COLOR?"
|
|
|
|
"Yes, of course I do."
|
|
|
|
"What's the color got to do with it?"
|
|
|
|
"It's got everything to do with it. Illinois is green,
|
|
Indiana is pink. You show me any pink down here,
|
|
if you can. No, sir; it's green."
|
|
|
|
"Indiana PINK? Why, what a lie!"
|
|
|
|
"It ain't no lie; I've seen it on the map, and it's
|
|
pink."
|
|
|
|
You never see a person so aggravated and disgusted.
|
|
He says:
|
|
|
|
"Well, if I was such a numbskull as you, Huck
|
|
Finn, I would jump over. Seen it on the map! Huck
|
|
Finn, did you reckon the States was the same color
|
|
out-of-doors as they are on the map?"
|
|
|
|
"Tom Sawyer, what's a map for? Ain't it to learn
|
|
you facts?"
|
|
|
|
"Of course."
|
|
|
|
"Well, then, how's it going to do that if it tells lies?
|
|
That's what I want to know."
|
|
|
|
"Shucks, you muggins! It don't tell lies."
|
|
|
|
"It don't, don't it?"
|
|
|
|
"No, it don't."
|
|
|
|
"All right, then; if it don't, there ain't no two
|
|
States the same color. You git around THAT if you
|
|
can, Tom Sawyer."
|
|
|
|
He see I had him, and Jim see it too; and I tell
|
|
you, I felt pretty good, for Tom Sawyer was always a
|
|
hard person to git ahead of. Jim slapped his leg and
|
|
says:
|
|
|
|
"I tell YOU! dat's smart, dat's right down smart.
|
|
Ain't no use, Mars Tom; he got you DIS time, sho'!"
|
|
He slapped his leg again, and says, "My LAN', but it
|
|
was smart one!"
|
|
|
|
I never felt so good in my life; and yet I didn't
|
|
know I was saying anything much till it was out. I
|
|
was just mooning along, perfectly careless, and not
|
|
expecting anything was going to happen, and never
|
|
THINKING of such a thing at all, when, all of a sudden,
|
|
out it came. Why, it was just as much a surprise to
|
|
me as it was to any of them. It was just the same way
|
|
it is when a person is munching along on a hunk of
|
|
corn-pone, and not thinking about anything, and all of
|
|
a sudden bites into a di'mond. Now all that HE knows
|
|
first off is that it's some kind of gravel he's bit into;
|
|
but he don't find out it's a di'mond till he gits it out
|
|
and brushes off the sand and crumbs and one thing or
|
|
another, and has a look at it, and then he's surprised
|
|
and glad -- yes, and proud too; though when you
|
|
come to look the thing straight in the eye, he ain't
|
|
entitled to as much credit as he would 'a' been if he'd
|
|
been HUNTING di'monds. You can see the difference
|
|
easy if you think it over. You see, an accident, that
|
|
way, ain't fairly as big a thing as a thing that's done
|
|
a-purpose. Anybody could find that di'mond in that
|
|
corn-pone; but mind you, it's got to be somebody
|
|
that's got THAT KIND OF A CORN-PONE. That's where that
|
|
feller's credit comes in, you see; and that's where
|
|
mine comes in. I don't claim no great things -- I
|
|
don't reckon I could 'a' done it again -- but I done it
|
|
that time; that's all I claim. And I hadn't no more
|
|
idea I could do such a thing, and warn't any more
|
|
thinking about it or trying to, than you be this minute.
|
|
Why, I was just as ca'm, a body couldn't be any
|
|
ca'mer, and yet, all of a sudden, out it come. I've
|
|
often thought of that time, and I can remember just
|
|
the way everything looked, same as if it was only last
|
|
week. I can see it all: beautiful rolling country with
|
|
woods and fields and lakes for hundreds and hundreds
|
|
of miles all around, and towns and villages scattered
|
|
everywheres under us, here and there and yonder; and
|
|
the professor mooning over a chart on his little table,
|
|
and Tom's cap flopping in the rigging where it was
|
|
hung up to dry. And one thing in particular was a
|
|
bird right alongside, not ten foot off, going our way
|
|
and trying to keep up, but losing ground all the time;
|
|
and a railroad train doing the same thing down there,
|
|
sliding among the trees and farms, and pouring out a
|
|
long cloud of black smoke and now and then a little
|
|
puff of white; and when the white was gone so long
|
|
you had almost forgot it, you would hear a little faint
|
|
toot, and that was the whistle. And we left the bird
|
|
and the train both behind, 'WAY behind, and done it
|
|
easy, too.
|
|
|
|
But Tom he was huffy, and said me and Jim was a
|
|
couple of ignorant blatherskites, and then he says:
|
|
|
|
"Suppose there's a brown calf and a big brown dog,
|
|
and an artist is making a picture of them. What is the
|
|
MAIN thing that that artist has got to do? He has got
|
|
to paint them so you can tell them apart the minute
|
|
you look at them, hain't he? Of course. Well, then,
|
|
do you want him to go and paint BOTH of them brown?
|
|
Certainly you don't. He paints one of them blue,
|
|
and then you can't make no mistake. It's just the
|
|
same with the maps. That's why they make every
|
|
State a different color; it ain't to deceive you, it's to
|
|
keep you from deceiving yourself."
|
|
|
|
But I couldn't see no argument about that, and
|
|
neither could Jim. Jim shook his head, and says:
|
|
|
|
"Why, Mars Tom, if you knowed what chuckle-
|
|
heads dem painters is, you'd wait a long time before
|
|
you'd fetch one er DEM in to back up a fac'. I's
|
|
gwine to tell you, den you kin see for you'self. I see
|
|
one of 'em a-paintin' away, one day, down in ole
|
|
Hank Wilson's back lot, en I went down to see, en he
|
|
was paintin' dat old brindle cow wid de near horn
|
|
gone -- you knows de one I means. En I ast him
|
|
what he's paintin' her for, en he say when he git her
|
|
painted, de picture's wuth a hundred dollars. Mars
|
|
Tom, he could a got de cow fer fifteen, en I tole him
|
|
so. Well, sah, if you'll b'lieve me, he jes' shuck his
|
|
head, dat painter did, en went on a-dobbin'. Bless
|
|
you, Mars Tom, DEY don't know nothin'."
|
|
|
|
Tom lost his temper. I notice a person 'most always
|
|
does that's got laid out in an argument. He told us to
|
|
shut up, and maybe we'd feel better. Then he see a
|
|
town clock away off down yonder, and he took up the
|
|
glass and looked at it, and then looked at his silver
|
|
turnip, and then at the clock, and then at the turnip
|
|
again, and says:
|
|
|
|
"That's funny! That clock's near about an hour
|
|
fast."
|
|
|
|
So he put up his turnip. Then he see another clock,
|
|
and took a look, and it was an hour fast too. That
|
|
puzzled him.
|
|
|
|
"That's a mighty curious thing," he says. "I
|
|
don't understand it."
|
|
|
|
Then he took the glass and hunted up another clock,
|
|
and sure enough it was an hour fast too. Then his
|
|
eyes began to spread and his breath to come out kinder
|
|
gaspy like, and he says:
|
|
|
|
"Ger-reat Scott, it's the LONGITUDE!"
|
|
|
|
I says, considerably scared:
|
|
|
|
"Well, what's been and gone and happened now?"
|
|
|
|
"Why, the thing that's happened is that this old
|
|
bladder has slid over Illinois and Indiana and Ohio like
|
|
nothing, and this is the east end of Pennsylvania or
|
|
New York, or somewheres around there."
|
|
|
|
"Tom Sawyer, you don't mean it!"
|
|
|
|
"Yes, I do, and it's dead sure. We've covered
|
|
about fifteen degrees of longitude since we left St.
|
|
Louis yesterday afternoon, and them clocks are right.
|
|
We've come close on to eight hundred miles."
|
|
|
|
I didn't believe it, but it made the cold streaks
|
|
trickle down my back just the same. In my experi-
|
|
ence I knowed it wouldn't take much short of two
|
|
weeks to do it down the Mississippi on a raft.
|
|
Jim was working his mind and studying. Pretty
|
|
soon he says:
|
|
|
|
"Mars Tom, did you say dem clocks uz right?"
|
|
|
|
"Yes, they're right."
|
|
|
|
"Ain't yo' watch right, too?"
|
|
|
|
"She's right for St. Louis, but she's an hour wrong
|
|
for here."
|
|
|
|
"Mars Tom, is you tryin' to let on dat de time ain't
|
|
de SAME everywheres?"
|
|
|
|
"No, it ain't the same everywheres, by a long
|
|
shot."
|
|
|
|
Jim looked distressed, and says:
|
|
|
|
"It grieves me to hear you talk like dat, Mars Tom;
|
|
I's right down ashamed to hear you talk like dat, arter
|
|
de way you's been raised. Yassir, it'd break yo' Aunt
|
|
Polly's heart to hear you."
|
|
|
|
Tom was astonished. He looked Jim over wonder-
|
|
ing, and didn't say nothing, and Jim went on:
|
|
|
|
"Mars Tom, who put de people out yonder in St.
|
|
Louis? De Lord done it. Who put de people here
|
|
whar we is? De Lord done it. Ain' dey bofe his
|
|
children? 'Cose dey is. WELL, den! is he gwine to
|
|
SCRIMINATE 'twixt 'em?"
|
|
|
|
"Scriminate! I never heard such ignorance. There
|
|
ain't no discriminating about it. When he makes you
|
|
and some more of his children black, and makes the
|
|
rest of us white, what do you call that?"
|
|
|
|
Jim see the p'int. He was stuck. He couldn't
|
|
answer. Tom says:
|
|
|
|
"He does discriminate, you see, when he wants to;
|
|
but this case HERE ain't no discrimination of his, it's
|
|
man's. The Lord made the day, and he made the
|
|
night; but he didn't invent the hours, and he didn't
|
|
distribute them around. Man did that."
|
|
|
|
"Mars Tom, is dat so? Man done it?"
|
|
|
|
"Certainly."
|
|
|
|
"Who tole him he could?"
|
|
|
|
"Nobody. He never asked."
|
|
|
|
Jim studied a minute, and says:
|
|
|
|
"Well, dat do beat me. I wouldn't 'a' tuck no
|
|
sich resk. But some people ain't scared o' nothin'.
|
|
Dey bangs right ahead; DEY don't care what happens.
|
|
So den dey's allays an hour's diff'unce everywhah,
|
|
Mars Tom?"
|
|
|
|
"An hour? No! It's four minutes difference for
|
|
every degree of longitude, you know. Fifteen of 'em's
|
|
an hour, thirty of 'em's two hours, and so on. When
|
|
it's one clock Tuesday morning in England, it's eight
|
|
o'clock the night before in New York."
|
|
|
|
Jim moved a little way along the locker, and you
|
|
could see he was insulted. He kept shaking his head
|
|
and muttering, and so I slid along to him and patted
|
|
him on the leg, and petted him up, and got him over
|
|
the worst of his feelings, and then he says:
|
|
|
|
"Mars Tom talkin' sich talk as dat! Choosday in
|
|
one place en Monday in t'other, bofe in the same day!
|
|
Huck, dis ain't no place to joke -- up here whah we is.
|
|
Two days in one day! How you gwine to get two
|
|
days inter one day? Can't git two hours inter one
|
|
hour, kin you? Can't git two niggers inter one nigger
|
|
skin, kin you? Can't git two gallons of whisky inter a
|
|
one-gallon jug, kin you? No, sir, 'twould strain de
|
|
jug. Yes, en even den you couldn't, I don't believe.
|
|
Why, looky here, Huck, s'posen de Choosday was
|
|
New Year's -- now den! is you gwine to tell me it's
|
|
dis year in one place en las' year in t'other, bofe in de
|
|
identical same minute? It's de beatenest rubbage! I
|
|
can't stan' it -- I can't stan' to hear tell 'bout it."
|
|
Then he begun to shiver and turn gray, and Tom
|
|
says:
|
|
|
|
"NOW what's the matter? What's the trouble?"
|
|
|
|
Jim could hardly speak, but he says:
|
|
|
|
"Mars Tom, you ain't jokin', en it's SO?"
|
|
|
|
"No, I'm not, and it is so."
|
|
|
|
Jim shivered again, and says:
|
|
|
|
"Den dat Monday could be de las' day, en dey
|
|
wouldn't be no las' day in England, en de dead
|
|
wouldn't be called. We mustn't go over dah, Mars
|
|
Tom. Please git him to turn back; I wants to be
|
|
whah --"
|
|
|
|
All of a sudden we see something, and all jumped
|
|
up, and forgot everything and begun to gaze. Tom
|
|
says:
|
|
|
|
"Ain't that the --" He catched his breath, then
|
|
says: "It IS, sure as you live! It's the ocean!"
|
|
|
|
That made me and Jim catch our breath, too. Then
|
|
we all stood petrified but happy, for none of us had
|
|
ever seen an ocean, or ever expected to. Tom kept
|
|
muttering:
|
|
|
|
"Atlantic Ocean -- Atlantic. Land, don't it sound
|
|
great! And that's IT -- and WE are looking at it -- we!
|
|
Why, it's just too splendid to believe!"
|
|
|
|
Then we see a big bank of black smoke; and when
|
|
we got nearer, it was a city -- and a monster she was,
|
|
too, with a thick fringe of ships around one edge; and
|
|
we wondered if it was New York, and begun to jaw
|
|
and dispute about it, and, first we knowed, it slid from
|
|
under us and went flying behind, and here we was, out
|
|
over the very ocean itself, and going like a cyclone.
|
|
Then we woke up, I tell you!
|
|
|
|
We made a break aft and raised a wail, and begun to
|
|
beg the professor to turn back and land us, but
|
|
he jerked out his pistol and motioned us back,
|
|
and we went, but nobody will ever know how bad we
|
|
felt.
|
|
|
|
The land was gone, all but a little streak, like a
|
|
snake, away off on the edge of the water, and down
|
|
under us was just ocean, ocean, ocean -- millions of
|
|
miles of it, heaving and pitching and squirming, and
|
|
white sprays blowing from the wave-tops, and only a
|
|
few ships in sight, wallowing around and laying over,
|
|
first on one side and then on t'other, and sticking their
|
|
bows under and then their sterns; and before long
|
|
there warn't no ships at all, and we had the sky and
|
|
the whole ocean all to ourselves, and the roomiest place
|
|
I ever see and the lonesomest.
|
|
|
|
|
|
CHAPTER IV.
|
|
STORM
|
|
|
|
AND it got lonesomer and lonesomer. There was
|
|
the big sky up there, empty and awful deep; and
|
|
the ocean down there without a thing on it but just the
|
|
waves. All around us was a ring, where the sky and
|
|
the water come together; yes, a monstrous big ring it
|
|
was, and we right in the dead center of it -- plumb in
|
|
the center. We was racing along like a prairie fire, but
|
|
it never made any difference, we couldn't seem to git
|
|
past that center no way. I couldn't see that we ever
|
|
gained an inch on that ring. It made a body feel
|
|
creepy, it was so curious and unaccountable.
|
|
|
|
Well, everything was so awful still that we got to
|
|
talking in a very low voice, and kept on getting creepier
|
|
and lonesomer and less and less talky, till at last the
|
|
talk ran dry altogether, and we just set there and
|
|
"thunk," as Jim calls it, and never said a word the
|
|
longest time.
|
|
|
|
The professor never stirred till the sun was overhead,
|
|
then he stood up and put a kind of triangle to his eye,
|
|
and Tom said it was a sextant and he was taking the
|
|
sun to see whereabouts the balloon was. Then he
|
|
ciphered a little and looked in a book, and then he
|
|
begun to carry on again. He said lots of wild things,
|
|
and, among others, he said he would keep up this
|
|
hundred-mile gait till the middle of to-morrow after-
|
|
noon, and then he'd land in London.
|
|
|
|
We said we would be humbly thankful.
|
|
|
|
He was turning away, but he whirled around when
|
|
we said that, and give us a long look of his blackest
|
|
kind -- one of the maliciousest and suspiciousest looks
|
|
I ever see. Then he says:
|
|
|
|
"You want to leave me. Don't try to deny it."
|
|
|
|
We didn't know what to say, so we held in and
|
|
didn't say nothing at all.
|
|
|
|
He went aft and set down, but he couldn't seem to
|
|
git that thing out of his mind. Every now and then he
|
|
would rip out something about it, and try to make us
|
|
answer him, but we dasn't.
|
|
|
|
It got lonesomer and lonesomer right along, and it
|
|
did seem to me I couldn't stand it. It was still worse
|
|
when night begun to come on. By and by Tom
|
|
pinched me and whispers:
|
|
|
|
"Look!"
|
|
|
|
I took a glance aft, and see the professor taking a
|
|
whet out of a bottle. I didn't like the looks of that.
|
|
By and by he took another drink, and pretty soon he
|
|
begun to sing. It was dark now, and getting black
|
|
and stormy. He went on singing, wilder and wilder,
|
|
and the thunder begun to mutter, and the wind to
|
|
wheeze and moan among the ropes, and altogether it
|
|
was awful. It got so black we couldn't see him any
|
|
more, and wished we couldn't hear him, but we could.
|
|
Then he got still; but he warn't still ten minutes till
|
|
we got suspicious, and wished he would start up his
|
|
noise again, so we could tell where he was. By and by
|
|
there was a flash of lightning, and we see him start to
|
|
get up, but he staggered and fell down. We heard
|
|
him scream out in the dark:
|
|
|
|
"They don't want to go to England. All right, I'll
|
|
change the course. They want to leave me. I know
|
|
they do. Well, they shall -- and NOW!"
|
|
|
|
I 'most died when he said that. Then he was still
|
|
again -- still so long I couldn't bear it, and it did seem
|
|
to me the lightning wouldn't EVER come again. But at
|
|
last there was a blessed flash, and there he was, on his
|
|
hands and knees crawling, and not four feet from us.
|
|
My, but his eyes was terrible! He made a lunge for
|
|
Tom, and says, "Overboard YOU go!" but it was
|
|
already pitch-dark again, and I couldn't see whether
|
|
he got him or not, and Tom didn't make a sound.
|
|
|
|
There was another long, horrible wait; then there
|
|
was a flash, and I see Tom's head sink down outside
|
|
the boat and disappear. He was on the rope-ladder
|
|
that dangled down in the air from the gunnel. The
|
|
professor let off a shout and jumped for him, and
|
|
straight off it was pitch-dark again, and Jim groaned
|
|
out, "Po' Mars Tom, he's a goner!" and made a
|
|
jump for the professor, but the professor warn't there.
|
|
|
|
Then we heard a couple of terrible screams, and then
|
|
another not so loud, and then another that was 'way
|
|
below, and you could only JUST hear it; and I heard
|
|
Jim say, "Po' Mars Tom!"
|
|
|
|
Then it was awful still, and I reckon a person could
|
|
'a' counted four thousand before the next flash come.
|
|
When it come I see Jim on his knees, with his arms
|
|
on the locker and his face buried in them, and he was
|
|
crying. Before I could look over the edge it was all
|
|
dark again, and I was glad, because I didn't want to
|
|
see. But when the next flash come, I was watching,
|
|
and down there I see somebody a-swinging in the wind
|
|
on the ladder, and it was Tom!
|
|
|
|
"Come up!" I shouts; "come up, Tom!"
|
|
|
|
His voice was so weak, and the wind roared so, I
|
|
couldn't make out what he said, but I thought he asked
|
|
was the professor up there. I shouts:
|
|
|
|
"No, he's down in the ocean! Come up! Can
|
|
we help you?"
|
|
|
|
Of course, all this in the dark.
|
|
|
|
"Huck, who is you hollerin' at?"
|
|
|
|
"I'm hollerin' at Tom."
|
|
|
|
"Oh, Huck, how kin you act so, when you know
|
|
po' Mars Tom --" Then he let off an awful scream,
|
|
and flung his head and his arms back and let off another
|
|
one, because there was a white glare just then, and he
|
|
had raised up his face just in time to see Tom's, as
|
|
white as snow, rise above the gunnel and look him right
|
|
in the eye. He thought it was Tom's ghost, you
|
|
see.
|
|
|
|
Tom clumb aboard, and when Jim found it WAS him,
|
|
and not his ghost, he hugged him, and called him all
|
|
sorts of loving names, and carried on like he was gone
|
|
crazy, he was so glad. Says I:
|
|
|
|
"What did you wait for, Tom? Why didn't you
|
|
come up at first?"
|
|
|
|
"I dasn't, Huck. I knowed somebody plunged
|
|
down past me, but I didn't know who it was in the
|
|
dark. It could 'a' been you, it could 'a' been Jim."
|
|
|
|
That was the way with Tom Sawyer -- always sound.
|
|
He warn't coming up till he knowed where the pro-
|
|
fessor was.
|
|
|
|
The storm let go about this time with all its might;
|
|
and it was dreadful the way the thunder boomed and
|
|
tore, and the lightning glared out, and the wind sung
|
|
and screamed in the rigging, and the rain come down.
|
|
One second you couldn't see your hand before you,
|
|
and the next you could count the threads in your coat-
|
|
sleeve, and see a whole wide desert of waves pitching
|
|
and tossing through a kind of veil of rain. A storm
|
|
like that is the loveliest thing there is, but it ain't at its
|
|
best when you are up in the sky and lost, and it's wet
|
|
and lonesome, and there's just been a death in the
|
|
family.
|
|
|
|
We set there huddled up in the bow, and talked low
|
|
about the poor professor; and everybody was sorry
|
|
for him, and sorry the world had made fun of him and
|
|
treated him so harsh, when he was doing the best he
|
|
could, and hadn't a friend nor nobody to encourage
|
|
him and keep him from brooding his mind away and
|
|
going deranged. There was plenty of clothes and
|
|
blankets and everything at the other end, but we
|
|
thought we'd ruther take the rain than go meddling
|
|
back there.
|
|
|
|
|
|
CHAPTER V.
|
|
LAND
|
|
|
|
WE tried to make some plans, but we couldn't come
|
|
to no agreement. Me and Jim was for turning
|
|
around and going back home, but Tom allowed that
|
|
by the time daylight come, so we could see our way,
|
|
we would be so far toward England that we might as
|
|
well go there, and come back in a ship, and have the
|
|
glory of saying we done it.
|
|
|
|
About midnight the storm quit and the moon come
|
|
out and lit up the ocean, and we begun to feel com-
|
|
fortable and drowsy; so we stretched out on the
|
|
lockers and went to sleep, and never woke up again
|
|
till sun-up. The sea was sparkling like di'monds, and
|
|
it was nice weather, and pretty soon our things was all
|
|
dry again.
|
|
|
|
We went aft to find some breakfast, and the first
|
|
thing we noticed was that there was a dim light burning
|
|
in a compass back there under a hood. Then Tom was
|
|
disturbed. He says:
|
|
|
|
"You know what that means, easy enough. It
|
|
means that somebody has got to stay on watch and
|
|
steer this thing the same as he would a ship, or she'll
|
|
wander around and go wherever the wind wants her
|
|
to."
|
|
|
|
"Well," I says, "what's she been doing since --
|
|
er -- since we had the accident?"
|
|
|
|
"Wandering," he says, kinder troubled --" wander-
|
|
ing, without any doubt. She's in a wind now that's
|
|
blowing her south of east. We don't know how long
|
|
that's been going on, either."
|
|
|
|
So then he p'inted her east, and said he would hold
|
|
her there till we rousted out the breakfast. The pro-
|
|
fessor had laid in everything a body could want; he
|
|
couldn't 'a' been better fixed. There wasn't no milk
|
|
for the coffee, but there was water, and everything
|
|
else you could want, and a charcoal stove and the
|
|
fixings for it, and pipes and cigars and matches; and
|
|
wine and liquor, which warn't in our line; and books,
|
|
and maps, and charts, and an accordion; and furs,
|
|
and blankets, and no end of rubbish, like brass beads
|
|
and brass jewelry, which Tom said was a sure sign that
|
|
he had an idea of visiting among savages. There was
|
|
money, too. Yes, the professor was well enough fixed.
|
|
|
|
After breakfast Tom learned me and Jim how to
|
|
steer, and divided us all up into four-hour watches,
|
|
turn and turn about; and when his watch was out I
|
|
took his place, and he got out the professor's papers
|
|
and pens and wrote a letter home to his aunt Polly, tell-
|
|
ing her everything that had happened to us, and dated
|
|
it "IN THE WELKIN, APPROACHING ENGLAND," and folded
|
|
it together and stuck it fast with a red wafer, and
|
|
directed it, and wrote above the direction, in big
|
|
writing, "FROM TOM SAWYER, THE ERRONORT," and said
|
|
it would stump old Nat Parsons, the postmaster, when
|
|
it come along in the mail. I says:
|
|
|
|
"Tom Sawyer, this ain't no welkin, it's a balloon."
|
|
|
|
"Well, now, who SAID it was a welkin, smarty?"
|
|
|
|
"You've wrote it on the letter, anyway."
|
|
|
|
"What of it? That don't mean that the balloon's
|
|
the welkin."
|
|
|
|
"Oh, I thought it did. Well, then, what is a
|
|
welkin?"
|
|
|
|
I see in a minute he was stuck. He raked and
|
|
scraped around in his mind, but he couldn't find noth-
|
|
ing, so he had to say:
|
|
|
|
"I don't know, and nobody don't know. It's just
|
|
a word, and it's a mighty good word, too. There
|
|
ain't many that lays over it. I don't believe there's
|
|
ANY that does."
|
|
|
|
"Shucks!" I says. "But what does it MEAN? --
|
|
that's the p'int. "
|
|
|
|
"I don't know what it means, I tell you. It's a
|
|
word that people uses for -- for -- well, it's orna-
|
|
mental. They don't put ruffles on a shirt to keep a
|
|
person warm, do they?"
|
|
|
|
"Course they don't."
|
|
|
|
"But they put them ON, don't they?"
|
|
|
|
"Yes."
|
|
|
|
"All right, then; that letter I wrote is a shirt, and
|
|
the welkin's the ruffle on it."
|
|
|
|
I judged that that would gravel Jim, and it did.
|
|
|
|
"Now, Mars Tom, it ain't no use to talk like dat;
|
|
en, moreover, it's sinful. You knows a letter ain't no
|
|
shirt, en dey ain't no ruffles on it, nuther. Dey ain't
|
|
no place to put 'em on; you can't put em on, and
|
|
dey wouldn't stay ef you did."
|
|
|
|
"Oh DO shut up, and wait till something's started
|
|
that you know something about."
|
|
|
|
"Why, Mars Tom, sholy you can't mean to say I
|
|
don't know about shirts, when, goodness knows, I's
|
|
toted home de washin' ever sence --"
|
|
|
|
"I tell you, this hasn't got anything to do with
|
|
shirts. I only --"
|
|
|
|
"Why, Mars Tom, you said yo'self dat a letter --"
|
|
|
|
"Do you want to drive me crazy? Keep still. I
|
|
only used it as a metaphor."
|
|
|
|
That word kinder bricked us up for a minute. Then
|
|
Jim says -- rather timid, because he see Tom was get-
|
|
ting pretty tetchy:
|
|
|
|
"Mars Tom, what is a metaphor?"
|
|
|
|
"A metaphor's a -- well, it's a -- a -- a metaphor's
|
|
an illustration." He see THAT didn't git home, so he
|
|
tried again. "When I say birds of a feather flocks
|
|
together, it's a metaphorical way of saying --"
|
|
|
|
"But dey DON'T, Mars Tom. No, sir, 'deed dey
|
|
don't. Dey ain't no feathers dat's more alike den a
|
|
bluebird en a jaybird, but ef you waits till you catches
|
|
dem birds together, you'll --"
|
|
|
|
"Oh, give us a rest! You can't get the simplest
|
|
little thing through your thick skull. Now don't bother
|
|
me any more."
|
|
|
|
Jim was satisfied to stop. He was dreadful pleased
|
|
with himself for catching Tom out. The minute Tom
|
|
begun to talk about birds I judged he was a goner,
|
|
because Jim knowed more about birds than both of us
|
|
put together. You see, he had killed hundreds and
|
|
hundreds of them, and that's the way to find out
|
|
about birds. That's the way people does that writes
|
|
books about birds, and loves them so that they'll
|
|
go hungry and tired and take any amount of trouble to
|
|
find a new bird and kill it. Their name is ornitholo-
|
|
gers, and I could have been an ornithologer myself,
|
|
because I always loved birds and creatures; and I
|
|
started out to learn how to be one, and I see a bird
|
|
setting on a limb of a high tree, singing with its head
|
|
tilted back and its mouth open, and before I thought I
|
|
fired, and his song stopped and he fell straight down
|
|
from the limb, all limp like a rag, and I run and picked
|
|
him up and he was dead, and his body was warm in my
|
|
hand, and his head rolled about this way and that, like
|
|
his neck was broke, and there was a little white skin
|
|
over his eyes, and one little drop of blood on the side
|
|
of his head; and, laws! I couldn't see nothing more
|
|
for the tears; and I hain't never murdered no creature
|
|
since that warn't doing me no harm, and I ain't going
|
|
to.
|
|
|
|
But I was aggravated about that welkin. I wanted
|
|
to know. I got the subject up again, and then Tom
|
|
explained, the best he could. He said when a person
|
|
made a big speech the newspapers said the shouts of
|
|
the people made the welkin ring. He said they always
|
|
said that, but none of them ever told what it was, so
|
|
he allowed it just meant outdoors and up high. Well,
|
|
that seemed sensible enough, so I was satisfied, and
|
|
said so. That pleased Tom and put him in a good
|
|
humor again, and he says:
|
|
|
|
"Well, it's all right, then; and we'll let bygones
|
|
be bygones. I don't know for certain what a welkin
|
|
is, but when we land in London we'll make it ring,
|
|
anyway, and don't you forget it."
|
|
|
|
He said an erronort was a person who sailed around
|
|
in balloons; and said it was a mighty sight finer to be
|
|
Tom Sawyer the Erronort than to be Tom Sawyer the
|
|
Traveler, and we would be heard of all round the
|
|
world, if we pulled through all right, and so he wouldn't
|
|
give shucks to be a traveler now.
|
|
|
|
Toward the middle of the afternoon we got every-
|
|
thing ready to land, and we felt pretty good, too, and
|
|
proud; and we kept watching with the glasses, like
|
|
Columbus discovering America. But we couldn't see
|
|
nothing but ocean. The afternoon wasted out and the
|
|
sun shut down, and still there warn't no land any-
|
|
wheres. We wondered what was the matter, but
|
|
reckoned it would come out all right, so we went on
|
|
steering east, but went up on a higher level so we
|
|
wouldn't hit any steeples or mountains in the dark.
|
|
|
|
It was my watch till midnight, and then it was Jim's;
|
|
but Tom stayed up, because he said ship captains done
|
|
that when they was making the land, and didn't stand
|
|
no regular watch.
|
|
|
|
Well, when daylight come, Jim give a shout, and we
|
|
jumped up and looked over, and there was the land
|
|
sure enough -- land all around, as far as you could see,
|
|
and perfectly level and yaller. We didn't know how
|
|
long we'd been over it. There warn't no trees, nor
|
|
hills, nor rocks, nor towns, and Tom and Jim had took
|
|
it for the sea. They took it for the sea in a dead
|
|
ca'm; but we was so high up, anyway, that if it had
|
|
been the sea and rough, it would 'a' looked smooth, all
|
|
the same, in the night, that way.
|
|
|
|
We was all in a powerful excitement now, and
|
|
grabbed the glasses and hunted everywheres for Lon-
|
|
don, but couldn't find hair nor hide of it, nor any
|
|
other settlement -- nor any sign of a lake or a river,
|
|
either. Tom was clean beat. He said it warn't his
|
|
notion of England; he thought England looked like
|
|
America, and always had that idea. So he said we
|
|
better have breakfast, and then drop down and inquire
|
|
the quickest way to London. We cut the breakfast
|
|
pretty short, we was so impatient. As we slanted
|
|
along down, the weather began to moderate, and
|
|
pretty soon we shed our furs. But it kept ON moder-
|
|
ating, and in a precious little while it was 'most too
|
|
moderate. We was close down now, and just blistering!
|
|
|
|
We settled down to within thirty foot of the land --
|
|
that is, it was land if sand is land; for this wasn't any-
|
|
thing but pure sand. Tom and me clumb down the
|
|
ladder and took a run to stretch our legs, and it felt
|
|
amazing good -- that is, the stretching did, but the
|
|
sand scorched our feet like hot embers. Next, we see
|
|
somebody coming, and started to meet him; but we
|
|
heard Jim shout, and looked around and he was fairly
|
|
dancing, and making signs, and yelling. We couldn't
|
|
make out what he said, but we was scared anyway, and
|
|
begun to heel it back to the balloon. When we got
|
|
close enough, we understood the words, and they
|
|
made me sick:
|
|
|
|
"Run! Run fo' yo' life! Hit's a lion; I kin see
|
|
him thoo de glass! Run, boys; do please heel it de
|
|
bes' you kin. He's bu'sted outen de menagerie, en
|
|
dey ain't nobody to stop him!"
|
|
|
|
It made Tom fly, but it took the stiffening all out of
|
|
my legs. I could only just gasp along the way you do
|
|
in a dream when there's a ghost gaining on you.
|
|
|
|
Tom got to the ladder and shinned up it a piece and
|
|
waited for me; and as soon as I got a foothold on it
|
|
he shouted to Jim to soar away. But Jim had clean
|
|
lost his head, and said he had forgot how. So Tom
|
|
shinned along up and told me to follow; but the lion
|
|
was arriving, fetching a most ghastly roar with every
|
|
lope, and my legs shook so I dasn't try to take one of
|
|
them out of the rounds for fear the other one would
|
|
give way under me.
|
|
|
|
But Tom was aboard by this time, and he started the
|
|
balloon up a little, and stopped it again as soon as the
|
|
end of the ladder was ten or twelve feet above ground.
|
|
And there was the lion, a-ripping around under me,
|
|
and roaring and springing up in the air at the ladder,
|
|
and only missing it about a quarter of an inch, it
|
|
seemed to me. It was delicious to be out of his reach,
|
|
perfectly delicious, and made me feel good and thank-
|
|
ful all up one side; but I was hanging there helpless
|
|
and couldn't climb, and that made me feel perfectly
|
|
wretched and miserable all down the other. It is most
|
|
seldom that a person feels so mixed like that; and it is
|
|
not to be recommended, either.
|
|
|
|
Tom asked me what he'd better do, but I didn't
|
|
know. He asked me if I could hold on whilst he sailed
|
|
away to a safe place and left the lion behind. I said I
|
|
could if he didn't go no higher than he was now; but
|
|
if he went higher I would lose my head and fall, sure.
|
|
So he said, "Take a good grip," and he started.
|
|
|
|
"Don't go so fast," I shouted. "It makes my
|
|
head swim."
|
|
|
|
He had started like a lightning express. He slowed
|
|
down, and we glided over the sand slower, but still in
|
|
a kind of sickening way; for it IS uncomfortable to see
|
|
things sliding and gliding under you like that, and not
|
|
a sound.
|
|
|
|
But pretty soon there was plenty of sound, for the
|
|
lion was catching up. His noise fetched others. You
|
|
could see them coming on the lope from every direc-
|
|
tion, and pretty soon there was a couple of dozen of
|
|
them under me, jumping up at the ladder and snarling
|
|
and snapping at each other; and so we went skimming
|
|
along over the sand, and these fellers doing what they
|
|
could to help us to not forgit the occasion; and then
|
|
some other beasts come, without an invite, and they
|
|
started a regular riot down there.
|
|
|
|
We see this plan was a mistake. We couldn't ever
|
|
git away from them at this gait, and I couldn't hold on
|
|
forever. So Tom took a think, and struck another
|
|
idea. That was, to kill a lion with the pepper-box
|
|
revolver, and then sail away while the others stopped
|
|
to fight over the carcass. So he stopped the balloon
|
|
still, and done it, and then we sailed off while the fuss
|
|
was going on, and come down a quarter of a mile off,
|
|
and they helped me aboard; but by the time we was
|
|
out of reach again, that gang was on hand once more.
|
|
And when they see we was really gone and they
|
|
couldn't get us, they sat down on their hams and
|
|
looked up at us so kind of disappointed that it was as
|
|
much as a person could do not to see THEIR side of the
|
|
matter.
|
|
|
|
|
|
CHAPTER VI.
|
|
IT'S A CARAVAN
|
|
|
|
I WAS so weak that the only thing I wanted was a
|
|
chance to lay down, so I made straight for my
|
|
locker-bunk, and stretched myself out there. But a
|
|
body couldn't get back his strength in no such oven as
|
|
that, so Tom give the command to soar, and Jim
|
|
started her aloft.
|
|
|
|
We had to go up a mile before we struck comfort-
|
|
able weather where it was breezy and pleasant and just
|
|
right, and pretty soon I was all straight again. Tom
|
|
had been setting quiet and thinking; but now he jumps
|
|
up and says:
|
|
|
|
"I bet you a thousand to one I know where we are.
|
|
We're in the Great Sahara, as sure as guns!"
|
|
|
|
He was so excited he couldn't hold still; but I
|
|
wasn't. I says:
|
|
|
|
"Well, then, where's the Great Sahara? In Eng-
|
|
land or in Scotland?"
|
|
|
|
"'Tain't in either; it's in Africa."
|
|
|
|
Jim's eyes bugged out, and he begun to stare down
|
|
with no end of interest, because that was where his
|
|
originals come from; but I didn't more than half be-
|
|
lieve it. I couldn't, you know; it seemed too awful
|
|
far away for us to have traveled.
|
|
|
|
But Tom was full of his discovery, as he called it,
|
|
and said the lions and the sand meant the Great Desert,
|
|
sure. He said he could 'a' found out, before we
|
|
sighted land, that we was crowding the land some-
|
|
wheres, if he had thought of one thing; and when we
|
|
asked him what, he said:
|
|
|
|
"These clocks. They're chronometers. You al-
|
|
ways read about them in sea voyages. One of them
|
|
is keeping Grinnage time, and the other is keeping St.
|
|
Louis time, like my watch. When we left St. Louis it
|
|
was four in the afternoon by my watch and this clock,
|
|
and it was ten at night by this Grinnage clock. Well,
|
|
at this time of the year the sun sets at about seven
|
|
o'clock. Now I noticed the time yesterday evening
|
|
when the sun went down, and it was half-past five
|
|
o'clock by the Grinnage clock, and half past 11 A.M.
|
|
by my watch and the other clock. You see, the sun
|
|
rose and set by my watch in St. Louis, and the Grin-
|
|
nage clock was six hours fast; but we've come so far
|
|
east that it comes within less than half an hour of set-
|
|
ting by the Grinnage clock now, and I'm away out --
|
|
more than four hours and a half out. You see, that
|
|
meant that we was closing up on the longitude of
|
|
Ireland, and would strike it before long if we was
|
|
p'inted right -- which we wasn't. No, sir, we've been
|
|
a-wandering -- wandering 'way down south of east, and
|
|
it's my opinion we are in Africa. Look at this map.
|
|
You see how the shoulder of Africa sticks out to the
|
|
west. Think how fast we've traveled; if we had gone
|
|
straight east we would be long past England by this
|
|
time. You watch for noon, all of you, and we'll stand
|
|
up, and when we can't cast a shadow we'll find that
|
|
this Grinnage clock is coming mighty close to marking
|
|
twelve. Yes, sir, I think we're in Africa; and it's just
|
|
bully."
|
|
|
|
Jim was gazing down with the glass. He shook his
|
|
head and says:
|
|
|
|
"Mars Tom, I reckon dey's a mistake som'er's.
|
|
hain't seen no niggers yit."
|
|
|
|
"That's nothing; they don't live in the desert.
|
|
What is that, 'way off yonder? Gimme a glass."
|
|
|
|
He took a long look, and said it was like a black
|
|
string stretched across the sand, but he couldn't guess
|
|
what it was.
|
|
|
|
"Well," I says, "I reckon maybe you've got a
|
|
chance now to find out whereabouts this balloon is,
|
|
because as like as not that is one of these lines here,
|
|
that's on the map, that you call meridians of longi-
|
|
tude, and we can drop down and look at its number,
|
|
and --"
|
|
|
|
"Oh, shucks, Huck Finn, I never see such a lunk-
|
|
head as you. Did you s'pose there's meridians of
|
|
longitude on the EARTH?"
|
|
|
|
"Tom Sawyer, they're set down on the map, and
|
|
you know it perfectly well, and here they are, and you
|
|
can see for yourself."
|
|
|
|
"Of course they're on the map, but that's nothing;
|
|
there ain't any on the GROUND."
|
|
|
|
"Tom, do you know that to be so?"
|
|
|
|
"Certainly I do."
|
|
|
|
"Well, then, that map's a liar again. I never see
|
|
such a liar as that map."
|
|
|
|
He fired up at that, and I was ready for him, and
|
|
Jim was warming his opinion, too, and next minute
|
|
we'd 'a' broke loose on another argument, if Tom
|
|
hadn't dropped the glass and begun to clap his hands
|
|
like a maniac and sing out:
|
|
|
|
"Camels! -- Camels!"
|
|
|
|
So I grabbed a glass and Jim, too, and took a look,
|
|
but I was disappointed, and says:
|
|
|
|
"Camels your granny; they're spiders."
|
|
|
|
"Spiders in a desert, you shad? Spiders walking
|
|
in a procession? You don't ever reflect, Huck Finn,
|
|
and I reckon you really haven't got anything to
|
|
reflect WITH. Don't you know we're as much as a
|
|
mile up in the air, and that that string of crawlers is
|
|
two or three miles away? Spiders, good land! Spiders
|
|
as big as a cow? Perhaps you'd like to go down
|
|
and milk one of 'em. But they're camels, just the
|
|
same. It's a caravan, that's what it is, and it's a mile
|
|
long."
|
|
|
|
"Well, then, let's go down and look at it. I
|
|
don't believe in it, and ain't going to till I see it and
|
|
know it."
|
|
|
|
"All right," he says, and give the command:
|
|
|
|
"Lower away."
|
|
|
|
As we come slanting down into the hot weather, we
|
|
could see that it was camels, sure enough, plodding
|
|
along, an everlasting string of them, with bales strapped
|
|
to them, and several hundred men in long white robes,
|
|
and a thing like a shawl bound over their heads and
|
|
hanging down with tassels and fringes; and some of
|
|
the men had long guns and some hadn't, and some
|
|
was riding and some was walking. And the weatherJ--
|
|
well, it was just roasting. And how slow they did
|
|
creep along! We swooped down now, all of a
|
|
sudden, and stopped about a hundred yards over their
|
|
heads.
|
|
|
|
The men all set up a yell, and some of them fell flat
|
|
on their stomachs, some begun to fire their guns at us,
|
|
and the rest broke and scampered every which way,
|
|
and so did the camels.
|
|
|
|
We see that we was making trouble, so we went up
|
|
again about a mile, to the cool weather, and watched
|
|
them from there. It took them an hour to get together
|
|
and form the procession again; then they started along,
|
|
but we could see by the glasses that they wasn't pay-
|
|
ing much attention to anything but us. We poked
|
|
along, looking down at them with the glasses, and by
|
|
and by we see a big sand mound, and something like
|
|
people the other side of it, and there was something
|
|
like a man laying on top of the mound that raised his
|
|
head up every now and then, and seemed to be watch-
|
|
ing the caravan or us, we didn't know which. As the
|
|
caravan got nearer, he sneaked down on the other side
|
|
and rushed to the other men and horses -- for that is
|
|
what they was -- and we see them mount in a hurry;
|
|
and next, here they come, like a house afire, some with
|
|
lances and some with long guns, and all of them yell-
|
|
ing the best they could.
|
|
|
|
They come a-tearing down on to the caravan, and the
|
|
next minute both sides crashed together and was all
|
|
mixed up, and there was such another popping of guns
|
|
as you never heard, and the air got so full of smoke
|
|
you could only catch glimpses of them struggling
|
|
together. There must 'a' been six hundred men in
|
|
that battle, and it was terrible to see. Then they
|
|
broke up into gangs and groups, fighting tooth and
|
|
nail, and scurrying and scampering around, and laying
|
|
into each other like everything; and whenever the
|
|
smoke cleared a little you could see dead and wounded
|
|
people and camels scattered far and wide and all about,
|
|
and camels racing off in every direction.
|
|
|
|
At last the robbers see they couldn't win, so their
|
|
chief sounded a signal, and all that was left of them
|
|
broke away and went scampering across the plain.
|
|
The last man to go snatched up a child and carried it
|
|
off in front of him on his horse, and a woman run
|
|
screaming and begging after him, and followed him
|
|
away off across the plain till she was separated a long
|
|
ways from her people; but it warn't no use, and she
|
|
had to give it up, and we see her sink down on the
|
|
sand and cover her face with her hands. Then Tom
|
|
took the hellum, and started for that yahoo, and we
|
|
come a-whizzing down and made a swoop, and knocked
|
|
him out of the saddle, child and all; and he was jarred
|
|
considerable, but the child wasn't hurt, but laid there
|
|
working its hands and legs in the air like a tumble-bug
|
|
that's on its back and can't turn over. The man went
|
|
staggering off to overtake his horse, and didn't know
|
|
what had hit him, for we was three or four hundred
|
|
yards up in the air by this time.
|
|
|
|
We judged the woman would go and get the child
|
|
now; but she didn't. We could see her, through the
|
|
glass, still setting there, with her head bowed down on
|
|
her knees; so of course she hadn't seen the perform-
|
|
ance, and thought her child was clean gone with the
|
|
man. She was nearly a half a mile from her people,
|
|
so we thought we might go down to the child, which
|
|
was about a quarter of a mile beyond her, and snake
|
|
it to her before the caravan people could git to us to
|
|
do us any harm; and besides, we reckoned they had
|
|
enough business on their hands for one while, anyway,
|
|
with the wounded. We thought we'd chance it, and
|
|
we did. We swooped down and stopped, and Jim
|
|
shinned down the ladder and fetched up the kid, which
|
|
was a nice fat little thing, and in a noble good humor,
|
|
too, considering it was just out of a battle and been
|
|
tumbled off of a horse; and then we started for the
|
|
mother, and stopped back of her and tolerable near
|
|
by, and Jim slipped down and crept up easy, and when
|
|
he was close back of her the child goo-goo'd, the way
|
|
a child does, and she heard it, and whirled and fetched
|
|
a shriek of joy, and made a jump for the kid and
|
|
snatched it and hugged it, and dropped it and hugged
|
|
Jim, and then snatched off a gold chain and hung it
|
|
around Jim's neck, and hugged him again, and jerked
|
|
up the child again, a-sobbing and glorifying all the
|
|
time; and Jim he shoved for the ladder and up it, and
|
|
in a minute we was back up in the sky and the woman
|
|
was staring up, with the back of her head between her
|
|
shoulders and the child with its arms locked around
|
|
her neck. And there she stood, as long as we was in
|
|
sight a-sailing away in the sky.
|
|
|
|
|
|
CHAPTER VII.
|
|
TOM RESPECTS THE FLEA
|
|
|
|
"NOON!" says Tom, and so it was. His shadder
|
|
was just a blot around his feet. We looked,
|
|
and the Grinnage clock was so close to twelve the
|
|
difference didn't amount to nothing. So Tom said
|
|
London was right north of us or right south of us, one
|
|
or t'other, and he reckoned by the weather and the
|
|
sand and the camels it was north; and a good many
|
|
miles north, too; as many as from New York to the
|
|
city of Mexico, he guessed.
|
|
|
|
Jim said he reckoned a balloon was a good deal the
|
|
fastest thing in the world, unless it might be some
|
|
kinds of birds -- a wild pigeon, maybe, or a railroad.
|
|
|
|
But Tom said he had read about railroads in England
|
|
going nearly a hundred miles an hour for a little ways,
|
|
and there never was a bird in the world that could do
|
|
that -- except one, and that was a flea.
|
|
|
|
"A flea? Why, Mars Tom, in de fust place he
|
|
ain't a bird, strickly speakin' --"
|
|
|
|
"He ain't a bird, eh? Well, then, what is he?"
|
|
|
|
"I don't rightly know, Mars Tom, but I speck he's
|
|
only jist a' animal. No, I reckon dat won't do, nuther,
|
|
he ain't big enough for a' animal. He mus' be a bug.
|
|
Yassir, dat's what he is, he's a bug."
|
|
|
|
"I bet he ain't, but let it go. What's your second
|
|
place?"
|
|
|
|
"Well, in de second place, birds is creturs dat goes
|
|
a long ways, but a flea don't."
|
|
|
|
"He don't, don't he? Come, now, what IS a long
|
|
distance, if you know?"
|
|
|
|
"Why, it's miles, and lots of 'em -- anybody knows
|
|
dat."
|
|
|
|
"Can't a man walk miles?"
|
|
|
|
"Yassir, he kin."
|
|
|
|
"As many as a railroad?"
|
|
|
|
"Yassir, if you give him time."
|
|
|
|
"Can't a flea?"
|
|
|
|
"Well -- I s'pose so -- ef you gives him heaps of
|
|
time."
|
|
|
|
"Now you begin to see, don't you, that DISTANCE
|
|
ain't the thing to judge by, at all; it's the time it takes
|
|
to go the distance IN that COUNTS, ain't it?"
|
|
|
|
"Well, hit do look sorter so, but I wouldn't 'a'
|
|
b'lieved it, Mars Tom."
|
|
|
|
"It's a matter of PROPORTION, that's what it is; and
|
|
when you come to gauge a thing's speed by its size,
|
|
where's your bird and your man and your railroad,
|
|
alongside of a flea? The fastest man can't run more
|
|
than about ten miles in an hour -- not much over ten
|
|
thousand times his own length. But all the books says
|
|
any common ordinary third-class flea can jump a hun-
|
|
dred and fifty times his own length; yes, and he can
|
|
make five jumps a second too -- seven hundred and
|
|
fifty times his own length, in one little second -- for he
|
|
don't fool away any time stopping and starting -- he
|
|
does them both at the same time; you'll see, if you
|
|
try to put your finger on him. Now that's a common,
|
|
ordinary, third-class flea's gait; but you take an Eye-
|
|
talian FIRST-class, that's been the pet of the nobility all
|
|
his life, and hasn't ever knowed what want or sickness
|
|
or exposure was, and he can jump more than three
|
|
hundred times his own length, and keep it up all day,
|
|
five such jumps every second, which is fifteen hundred
|
|
times his own length. Well, suppose a man could go
|
|
fifteen hundred times his own length in a second -- say,
|
|
a mile and a half. It's ninety miles a minute; it's
|
|
considerable more than five thousand miles an hour.
|
|
Where's your man NOW? -- yes, and your bird, and
|
|
your railroad, and your balloon? Laws, they don't
|
|
amount to shucks 'longside of a flea. A flea is just
|
|
a comet b'iled down small."
|
|
|
|
Jim was a good deal astonished, and so was I. Jim
|
|
said:
|
|
|
|
"Is dem figgers jist edjackly true, en no jokin' en
|
|
no lies, Mars Tom?"
|
|
|
|
"Yes, they are; they're perfectly true."
|
|
|
|
"Well, den, honey, a body's got to respec' a flea.
|
|
I ain't had no respec' for um befo', sca'sely, but dey
|
|
ain't no gittin' roun' it, dey do deserve it, dat's
|
|
certain."
|
|
|
|
"Well, I bet they do. They've got ever so much
|
|
more sense, and brains, and brightness, in proportion
|
|
to their size, than any other cretur in the world. A
|
|
person can learn them 'most anything; and they learn
|
|
it quicker than any other cretur, too. They've been
|
|
learnt to haul little carriages in harness, and go this
|
|
way and that way and t'other way according to their
|
|
orders; yes, and to march and drill like soldiers, doing
|
|
it as exact, according to orders, as soldiers does it.
|
|
They've been learnt to do all sorts of hard and
|
|
troublesome things. S'pose you could cultivate a flea
|
|
up to the size of a man, and keep his natural
|
|
smartness a-growing and a-growing right along up,
|
|
bigger and bigger, and keener and keener, in the same
|
|
proportion -- where'd the human race be, do you
|
|
reckon? That flea would be President of the United
|
|
States, and you couldn't any more prevent it than you
|
|
can prevent lightning."
|
|
|
|
"My lan', Mars Tom, I never knowed dey was so
|
|
much TO de beas'. No, sir, I never had no idea of it,
|
|
and dat's de fac'."
|
|
|
|
"There's more to him, by a long sight, than there
|
|
is to any other cretur, man or beast, in proportion to
|
|
size. He's the interestingest of them all. People have
|
|
so much to say about an ant's strength, and an ele-
|
|
phant's, and a locomotive's. Shucks, they don't begin
|
|
with a flea. He can lift two or three hundred times his
|
|
own weight. And none of them can come anywhere
|
|
near it. And, moreover, he has got notions of his
|
|
own, and is very particular, and you can't fool him;
|
|
his instinct, or his judgment, or whatever it is, is per-
|
|
fectly sound and clear, and don't ever make a mistake.
|
|
People think all humans are alike to a flea. It ain't
|
|
so. There's folks that he won't go near, hungry or
|
|
not hungry, and I'm one of them. I've never had one
|
|
of them on me in my life."
|
|
|
|
"Mars Tom!"
|
|
|
|
"It's so; I ain't joking."
|
|
|
|
"Well, sah, I hain't ever heard de likes o' dat befo'."
|
|
Jim couldn't believe it, and I couldn't; so we had to
|
|
drop down to the sand and git a supply and see. Tom
|
|
was right. They went for me and Jim by the thou-
|
|
sand, but not a one of them lit on Tom. There warn't
|
|
no explaining it, but there it was and there warn't no
|
|
getting around it. He said it had always been just so,
|
|
and he'd just as soon be where there was a million of
|
|
them as not; they'd never touch him nor bother
|
|
him.
|
|
|
|
We went up to the cold weather to freeze 'em out,
|
|
and stayed a little spell, and then come back to the
|
|
comfortable weather and went lazying along twenty or
|
|
twenty-five miles an hour, the way we'd been doing for
|
|
the last few hours. The reason was, that the longer
|
|
we was in that solemn, peaceful desert, the more the
|
|
hurry and fuss got kind of soothed down in us, and
|
|
the more happier and contented and satisfied we got to
|
|
feeling, and the more we got to liking the desert, and
|
|
then loving it. So we had cramped the speed down,
|
|
as I was saying, and was having a most noble good
|
|
lazy time, sometimes watching through the glasses,
|
|
sometimes stretched out on the lockers reading, some-
|
|
times taking a nap.
|
|
|
|
It didn't seem like we was the same lot that was in
|
|
such a state to find land and git ashore, but it was.
|
|
But we had got over that -- clean over it. We was
|
|
used to the balloon now and not afraid any more, and
|
|
didn't want to be anywheres else. Why, it seemed
|
|
just like home; it 'most seemed as if I had been born
|
|
and raised in it, and Jim and Tom said the same. And
|
|
always I had had hateful people around me, a-nagging
|
|
at me, and pestering of me, and scolding, and finding
|
|
fault, and fussing and bothering, and sticking to me,
|
|
and keeping after me, and making me do this, and
|
|
making me do that and t'other, and always selecting
|
|
out the things I didn't want to do, and then giving me
|
|
Sam Hill because I shirked and done something else,
|
|
and just aggravating the life out of a body all the time;
|
|
but up here in the sky it was so still and sunshiny and
|
|
lovely, and plenty to eat, and plenty of sleep, and
|
|
strange things to see, and no nagging and no pester-
|
|
ing, and no good people, and just holiday all the time.
|
|
Land, I warn't in no hurry to git out and buck at
|
|
civilization again. Now, one of the worst things about
|
|
civilization is, that anybody that gits a letter with
|
|
trouble in it comes and tells you all about it and makes
|
|
you feel bad, and the newspapers fetches you the
|
|
troubles of everybody all over the world, and keeps
|
|
you downhearted and dismal 'most all the time, and
|
|
it's such a heavy load for a person. I hate them
|
|
newspapers; and I hate letters; and if I had my way
|
|
I wouldn't allow nobody to load his troubles on to
|
|
other folks he ain't acquainted with, on t'other side of
|
|
the world, that way. Well, up in a balloon there ain't
|
|
any of that, and it's the darlingest place there is.
|
|
|
|
We had supper, and that night was one of the
|
|
prettiest nights I ever see. The moon made it just
|
|
like daylight, only a heap softer; and once we see a
|
|
lion standing all alone by himself, just all alone on the
|
|
earth, it seemed like, and his shadder laid on the sand
|
|
by him like a puddle of ink. That's the kind of moon-
|
|
light to have.
|
|
|
|
Mainly we laid on our backs and talked; we didn't
|
|
want to go to sleep. Tom said we was right in the
|
|
midst of the Arabian Nights now. He said it was right
|
|
along here that one of the cutest things in that book
|
|
happened; so we looked down and watched while he
|
|
told about it, because there ain't anything that is so
|
|
interesting to look at as a place that a book has talked
|
|
about. It was a tale about a camel-driver that had lost
|
|
his camel, and he come along in the desert and met a
|
|
man, and says:
|
|
|
|
"Have you run across a stray camel to-day?"
|
|
|
|
And the man says:
|
|
|
|
"Was he blind in his left eye?"
|
|
|
|
"Yes."
|
|
|
|
"Had he lost an upper front tooth?"
|
|
|
|
"Yes."
|
|
|
|
"Was his off hind leg lame?"
|
|
|
|
"Yes."
|
|
|
|
"Was he loaded with millet-seed on one side and
|
|
honey on the other?"
|
|
|
|
"Yes, but you needn't go into no more details --
|
|
that's the one, and I'm in a hurry. Where did you
|
|
see him?"
|
|
|
|
"I hain't seen him at all," the man says.
|
|
|
|
"Hain't seen him at all? How can you describe
|
|
him so close, then?"
|
|
|
|
"Because when a person knows how to use his eyes,
|
|
everything has got a meaning to it; but most people's
|
|
eyes ain't any good to them. I knowed a camel had
|
|
been along, because I seen his track. I knowed he
|
|
was lame in his off hind leg because he had favored
|
|
that foot and trod light on it, and his track showed it.
|
|
I knowed he was blind on his left side because he only
|
|
nibbled the grass on the right side of the trail. I
|
|
knowed he had lost an upper front tooth because where
|
|
he bit into the sod his teeth-print showed it. The
|
|
millet-seed sifted out on one side -- the ants told me
|
|
that; the honey leaked out on the other -- the flies
|
|
told me that. I know all about your camel, but I
|
|
hain't seen him."
|
|
|
|
Jim says:
|
|
|
|
"Go on, Mars Tom, hit's a mighty good tale, and
|
|
powerful interestin'."
|
|
|
|
"That's all," Tom says.
|
|
|
|
"ALL?" says Jim, astonished. "What 'come o'
|
|
de camel?"
|
|
|
|
"I don't know."
|
|
|
|
"Mars Tom, don't de tale say?"
|
|
|
|
"No."
|
|
|
|
Jim puzzled a minute, then he says:
|
|
|
|
"Well! Ef dat ain't de beatenes' tale ever I struck.
|
|
Jist gits to de place whah de intrust is gittin' red-hot,
|
|
en down she breaks. Why, Mars Tom, dey ain't no
|
|
SENSE in a tale dat acts like dat. Hain't you got no
|
|
IDEA whether de man got de camel back er not?"
|
|
|
|
"No, I haven't."
|
|
|
|
I see myself there warn't no sense in the tale, to
|
|
chop square off that way before it come to anything,
|
|
but I warn't going to say so, because I could see Tom
|
|
was souring up pretty fast over the way it flatted out
|
|
and the way Jim had popped on to the weak place in
|
|
it, and I don't think it's fair for everybody to pile on
|
|
to a feller when he's down. But Tom he whirls on
|
|
me and says:
|
|
|
|
"What do YOU think of the tale?"
|
|
|
|
Of course, then, I had to come out and make a clean
|
|
breast and say it did seem to me, too, same as it did
|
|
to Jim, that as long as the tale stopped square in the
|
|
middle and never got to no place, it really warn't
|
|
worth the trouble of telling.
|
|
|
|
Tom's chin dropped on his breast, and 'stead of
|
|
being mad, as I reckoned he'd be, to hear me scoff at
|
|
his tale that way, he seemed to be only sad; and he
|
|
says:
|
|
|
|
"Some people can see, and some can't -- just as
|
|
that man said. Let alone a camel, if a cyclone had
|
|
gone by, YOU duffers wouldn't 'a' noticed the
|
|
track."
|
|
|
|
I don't know what he meant by that, and he didn't
|
|
say; it was just one of his irrulevances, I reckon -- he
|
|
was full of them, sometimes, when he was in a close
|
|
place and couldn't see no other way out -- but I didn't
|
|
mind. We'd spotted the soft place in that tale sharp
|
|
enough, he couldn't git away from that little fact. It
|
|
graveled him like the nation, too, I reckon, much as
|
|
he tried not to let on.
|
|
|
|
|
|
CHAPTER VIII.
|
|
THE DISAPPEARING LAKE
|
|
|
|
WE had an early breakfast in the morning, and set
|
|
looking down on the desert, and the weather
|
|
was ever so bammy and lovely, although we warn't
|
|
high up. You have to come down lower and lower
|
|
after sundown in the desert, because it cools off so
|
|
fast; and so, by the time it is getting toward dawn,
|
|
you are skimming along only a little ways above the
|
|
sand.
|
|
|
|
We was watching the shadder of the balloon slide
|
|
along the ground, and now and then gazing off across
|
|
the desert to see if anything was stirring, and then
|
|
down on the shadder again, when all of a sudden
|
|
almost right under us we see a lot of men and camels
|
|
laying scattered about, perfectly quiet, like they was
|
|
asleep.
|
|
|
|
We shut off the power, and backed up and stood
|
|
over them, and then we see that they was all dead. It
|
|
give us the cold shivers. And it made us hush down,
|
|
too, and talk low, like people at a funeral. We
|
|
dropped down slow and stopped, and me and Tom
|
|
clumb down and went among them. There was men,
|
|
and women, and children. They was dried by the sun
|
|
and dark and shriveled and leathery, like the pictures
|
|
of mummies you see in books. And yet they looked
|
|
just as human, you wouldn't 'a' believed it; just like
|
|
they was asleep.
|
|
|
|
Some of the people and animals was partly covered
|
|
with sand, but most of them not, for the sand was
|
|
thin there, and the bed was gravel and hard. Most
|
|
of the clothes had rotted away; and when you took
|
|
hold of a rag, it tore with a touch, like spider-
|
|
web. Tom reckoned they had been laying there for
|
|
years.
|
|
|
|
Some of the men had rusty guns by them, some had
|
|
swords on and had shawl belts with long, silver-
|
|
mounted pistols stuck in them. All the camels had
|
|
their loads on yet, but the packs had busted or rotted
|
|
and spilt the freight out on the ground. We didn't
|
|
reckon the swords was any good to the dead people
|
|
any more, so we took one apiece, and some pistols.
|
|
We took a small box, too, because it was so handsome
|
|
and inlaid so fine; and then we wanted to bury the
|
|
people; but there warn't no way to do it that we could
|
|
think of, and nothing to do it with but sand, and that
|
|
would blow away again, of course.
|
|
|
|
Then we mounted high and sailed away, and pretty
|
|
soon that black spot on the sand was out of sight, and
|
|
we wouldn't ever see them poor people again in this
|
|
world. We wondered, and reasoned, and tried to
|
|
guess how they come to be there, and how it all hap-
|
|
pened to them, but we couldn't make it out. First we
|
|
thought maybe they got lost, and wandered around and
|
|
about till their food and water give out and they
|
|
starved to death; but Tom said no wild animals nor
|
|
vultures hadn't meddled with them, and so that guess
|
|
wouldn't do. So at last we give it up, and judged we
|
|
wouldn't think about it no more, because it made us
|
|
low-spirited.
|
|
|
|
Then we opened the box, and it had gems and jewels
|
|
in it, quite a pile, and some little veils of the kind the
|
|
dead women had on, with fringes made out of curious
|
|
gold money that we warn't acquainted with. We
|
|
wondered if we better go and try to find them again
|
|
and give it back; but Tom thought it over and said
|
|
no, it was a country that was full of robbers, and they
|
|
would come and steal it; and then the sin would be on
|
|
us for putting the temptation in their way. So we
|
|
went on; but I wished we had took all they had, so
|
|
there wouldn't 'a' been no temptation at all left.
|
|
|
|
We had had two hours of that blazing weather down
|
|
there, and was dreadful thirsty when we got aboard
|
|
again. We went straight for the water, but it was
|
|
spoiled and bitter, besides being pretty near hot enough
|
|
to scald your mouth. We couldn't drink it. It was
|
|
Mississippi river water, the best in the world, and we
|
|
stirred up the mud in it to see if that would help, but
|
|
no, the mud wasn't any better than the water.
|
|
Well, we hadn't been so very, very thirsty before,
|
|
while we was interested in the lost people, but we was
|
|
now, and as soon as we found we couldn't have a
|
|
drink, we was more than thirty-five times as thirsty as
|
|
we was a quarter of a minute before. Why, in a little
|
|
while we wanted to hold our mouths open and pant
|
|
like a dog.
|
|
|
|
Tom said to keep a sharp lookout, all around, every-
|
|
wheres, because we'd got to find an oasis or there
|
|
warn't no telling what would happen. So we done it.
|
|
We kept the glasses gliding around all the time, till our
|
|
arms got so tired we couldn't hold them any more.
|
|
Two hours -- three hours -- just gazing and gazing,
|
|
and nothing but sand, sand, SAND, and you could see
|
|
the quivering heat-shimmer playing over it. Dear,
|
|
dear, a body don't know what real misery is till he is
|
|
thirsty all the way through and is certain he ain't ever
|
|
going to come to any water any more. At last I
|
|
couldn't stand it to look around on them baking plains;
|
|
I laid down on the locker, and give it up.
|
|
|
|
But by and by Tom raised a whoop, and there she
|
|
was! A lake, wide and shiny, with pa'm-trees leaning
|
|
over it asleep, and their shadders in the water just as
|
|
soft and delicate as ever you see. I never see anything
|
|
look so good. It was a long ways off, but that
|
|
warn't anything to us; we just slapped on a hundred-
|
|
mile gait, and calculated to be there in seven minutes;
|
|
but she stayed the same old distance away, all the
|
|
time; we couldn't seem to gain on her; yes, sir, just as
|
|
far, and shiny, and like a dream; but we couldn't get
|
|
no nearer; and at last, all of a sudden, she was gone!
|
|
|
|
Tom's eyes took a spread, and he says:
|
|
|
|
"Boys, it was a MYridge!" Said it like he was
|
|
glad. I didn't see nothing to be glad about. I says:
|
|
|
|
"Maybe. I don't care nothing about its name, the
|
|
thing I want to know is, what's become of it?"
|
|
|
|
Jim was trembling all over, and so scared he couldn't
|
|
speak, but he wanted to ask that question himself if he
|
|
could 'a' done it. Tom says:
|
|
|
|
"What's BECOME of it? Why, you see yourself it's
|
|
gone."
|
|
|
|
"Yes, I know; but where's it gone TO?"
|
|
|
|
He looked me over and says:
|
|
|
|
"Well, now, Huck Finn, where WOULD it go to!
|
|
Don't you know what a myridge is?"
|
|
|
|
"No, I don't. What is it?"
|
|
|
|
"It ain't anything but imagination. There ain't
|
|
anything TO it. "
|
|
|
|
It warmed me up a little to hear him talk like that,
|
|
and I says:
|
|
|
|
"What's the use you talking that kind of stuff, Tom
|
|
Sawyer? Didn't I see the lake?"
|
|
|
|
"Yes -- you think you did."
|
|
|
|
"I don't think nothing about it, I DID see it."
|
|
|
|
"I tell you you DIDN'T see it either -- because it
|
|
warn't there to see."
|
|
|
|
It astonished Jim to hear him talk so, and he broke
|
|
in and says, kind of pleading and distressed:
|
|
|
|
"Mars Tom, PLEASE don't say sich things in sich an
|
|
awful time as dis. You ain't only reskin' yo' own
|
|
self, but you's reskin' us -- same way like Anna Nias
|
|
en Siffra. De lake WUZ dah -- I seen it jis' as plain
|
|
as I sees you en Huck dis minute."
|
|
|
|
I says:
|
|
|
|
"Why, he seen it himself! He was the very one
|
|
that seen it first. NOW, then!"
|
|
|
|
"Yes, Mars Tom, hit's so -- you can't deny it. We
|
|
all seen it, en dat PROVE it was dah."
|
|
|
|
"Proves it! How does it prove it?"
|
|
|
|
"Same way it does in de courts en everywheres,
|
|
Mars Tom. One pusson might be drunk, or dreamy
|
|
or suthin', en he could be mistaken; en two might,
|
|
maybe; but I tell you, sah, when three sees a thing,
|
|
drunk er sober, it's SO. Dey ain't no gittin' aroun'
|
|
dat, en you knows it, Mars Tom."
|
|
|
|
"I don't know nothing of the kind. There used to
|
|
be forty thousand million people that seen the sun
|
|
move from one side of the sky to the other every day.
|
|
Did that prove that the sun DONE it?"
|
|
|
|
"Course it did. En besides, dey warn't no 'casion
|
|
to prove it. A body 'at's got any sense ain't gwine to
|
|
doubt it. Dah she is now -- a sailin' thoo de sky,
|
|
like she allays done."
|
|
|
|
Tom turned on me, then, and says:
|
|
|
|
"What do YOU say -- is the sun standing still?"
|
|
|
|
"Tom Sawyer, what's the use to ask such a jackass
|
|
question? Anybody that ain't blind can see it don't
|
|
stand still."
|
|
|
|
"Well," he says, "I'm lost in the sky with no
|
|
company but a passel of low-down animals that don't
|
|
know no more than the head boss of a university did
|
|
three or four hundred years ago."
|
|
|
|
It warn't fair play, and I let him know it. I
|
|
says:
|
|
|
|
"Throwin' mud ain't arguin', Tom Sawyer."
|
|
|
|
"Oh, my goodness, oh, my goodness gracious,
|
|
dah's de lake agi'n!" yelled Jim, just then. "NOW,
|
|
Mars Tom, what you gwine to say?"
|
|
|
|
Yes, sir, there was the lake again, away yonder
|
|
across the desert, perfectly plain, trees and all, just
|
|
the same as it was before. I says:
|
|
|
|
"I reckon you're satisfied now, Tom Sawyer."
|
|
|
|
But he says, perfectly ca'm:
|
|
|
|
"Yes, satisfied there ain't no lake there."
|
|
|
|
Jim says:
|
|
|
|
"DON'T talk so, Mars Tom -- it sk'yers me to hear
|
|
you. It's so hot, en you's so thirsty, dat you ain't in
|
|
yo' right mine, Mars Tom. Oh, but don't she look
|
|
good! 'clah I doan' know how I's gwine to wait tell
|
|
we gits dah, I's SO thirsty."
|
|
|
|
"Well, you'll have to wait; and it won't do you no
|
|
good, either, because there ain't no lake there, I tell
|
|
you."
|
|
|
|
I says:
|
|
|
|
"Jim, don't you take your eye off of it, and I
|
|
won't, either."
|
|
|
|
"'Deed I won't; en bless you, honey, I couldn't ef
|
|
I wanted to."
|
|
|
|
We went a-tearing along toward it, piling the miles
|
|
behind us like nothing, but never gaining an inch on it
|
|
-- and all of a sudden it was gone again! Jim stag-
|
|
gered, and 'most fell down. When he got his breath
|
|
he says, gasping like a fish:
|
|
|
|
"Mars Tom, hit's a GHOS', dat's what it is, en I
|
|
hopes to goodness we ain't gwine to see it no mo'.
|
|
Dey's BEEN a lake, en suthin's happened, en de lake's
|
|
dead, en we's seen its ghos'; we's seen it twiste, en
|
|
dat's proof. De desert's ha'nted, it's ha'nted, sho;
|
|
oh, Mars Tom, le''s git outen it; I'd ruther die den
|
|
have de night ketch us in it ag'in en de ghos' er dat
|
|
lake come a-mournin' aroun' us en we asleep en doan'
|
|
know de danger we's in."
|
|
|
|
"Ghost, you gander! It ain't anything but air and
|
|
heat and thirstiness pasted together by a person's
|
|
imagination. If I -- gimme the glass!"
|
|
|
|
He grabbed it and begun to gaze off to the right.
|
|
|
|
"It's a flock of birds," he says. "It's getting
|
|
toward sundown, and they're making a bee-line across
|
|
our track for somewheres. They mean business --
|
|
maybe they're going for food or water, or both. Let
|
|
her go to starboard! -- Port your hellum! Hard down!
|
|
There -- ease up -- steady, as you go."
|
|
|
|
We shut down some of the power, so as not to out-
|
|
speed them, and took out after them. We went skim-
|
|
ming along a quarter of a mile behind them, and when
|
|
we had followed them an hour and a half and was get-
|
|
ting pretty discouraged, and was thirsty clean to
|
|
unendurableness, Tom says:
|
|
|
|
"Take the glass, one of you, and see what that is,
|
|
away ahead of the birds."
|
|
|
|
Jim got the first glimpse, and slumped down on the
|
|
locker sick. He was most crying, and says:
|
|
|
|
"She's dah ag'in, Mars Tom, she's dah ag'in, en I
|
|
knows I's gwine to die, 'case when a body sees a ghos'
|
|
de third time, dat's what it means. I wisht I'd never
|
|
come in dis balloon, dat I does."
|
|
|
|
He wouldn't look no more, and what he said made
|
|
me afraid, too, because I knowed it was true, for that
|
|
has always been the way with ghosts; so then I
|
|
wouldn't look any more, either. Both of us begged
|
|
Tom to turn off and go some other way, but he
|
|
wouldn't, and said we was ignorant superstitious
|
|
blatherskites. Yes, and he'll git come up with, one
|
|
of these days, I says to myself, insulting ghosts that
|
|
way. They'll stand it for a while, maybe, but they
|
|
won't stand it always, for anybody that knows about
|
|
ghosts knows how easy they are hurt, and how revenge-
|
|
ful they are.
|
|
|
|
So we was all quiet and still, Jim and me being
|
|
scared, and Tom busy. By and by Tom fetched the
|
|
balloon to a standstill, and says:
|
|
|
|
"NOW get up and look, you sapheads."
|
|
|
|
We done it, and there was the sure-enough water
|
|
right under us! -- clear, and blue, and cool, and deep,
|
|
and wavy with the breeze, the loveliest sight that ever
|
|
was. And all about it was grassy banks, and flowers,
|
|
and shady groves of big trees, looped together with
|
|
vines, and all looking so peaceful and comfortable --
|
|
enough to make a body cry, it was so beautiful.
|
|
|
|
Jim DID cry, and rip and dance and carry on, he was
|
|
so thankful and out of his mind for joy. It was my
|
|
watch, so I had to stay by the works, but Tom and
|
|
Jim clumb down and drunk a barrel apiece, and
|
|
fetched me up a lot, and I've tasted a many a good
|
|
thing in my life, but nothing that ever begun with that
|
|
water.
|
|
|
|
Then we went down and had a swim, and then Tom
|
|
came up and spelled me, and me and Jim had a swim,
|
|
and then Jim spelled Tom, and me and Tom had a
|
|
foot-race and a boxing-mill, and I don't reckon I ever
|
|
had such a good time in my life. It warn't so very
|
|
hot, because it was close on to evening, and we hadn't
|
|
any clothes on, anyway. Clothes is well enough in
|
|
school, and in towns, and at balls, too, but there ain't
|
|
no sense in them when there ain't no civilization nor
|
|
other kinds of bothers and fussiness around.
|
|
|
|
"Lions a-comin'! -- lions! Quick, Mars Tom!
|
|
Jump for yo' life, Huck!"
|
|
|
|
Oh, and didn't we! We never stopped for clothes,
|
|
but waltzed up the ladder just so. Jim lost his head
|
|
straight off -- he always done it whenever he got ex-
|
|
cited and scared; and so now, 'stead of just easing the
|
|
ladder up from the ground a little, so the animals
|
|
couldn't reach it, he turned on a raft of power, and we
|
|
went whizzing up and was dangling in the sky before
|
|
he got his wits together and seen what a foolish thing
|
|
he was doing. Then he stopped her, but he had clean
|
|
forgot what to do next; so there we was, so high that
|
|
the lions looked like pups, and we was drifting off on
|
|
the wind.
|
|
|
|
But Tom he shinned up and went for the works and
|
|
begun to slant her down, and back toward the lake,
|
|
where the animals was gathering like a camp-meeting,
|
|
and I judged he had lost HIS head, too; for he knowed
|
|
I was too scared to climb, and did he want to dump
|
|
me among the tigers and things?
|
|
|
|
But no, his head was level, he knowed what he was
|
|
about. He swooped down to within thirty or forty
|
|
feet of the lake, and stopped right over the center, and
|
|
sung out:
|
|
|
|
"Leggo, and drop!"
|
|
|
|
I done it, and shot down, feet first, and seemed to
|
|
go about a mile toward the bottom; and when I come
|
|
up, he says:
|
|
|
|
"Now lay on your back and float till you're rested
|
|
and got your pluck back, then I'll dip the ladder in
|
|
the water and you can climb aboard."
|
|
|
|
I done it. Now that was ever so smart in Tom, be-
|
|
cause if he had started off somewheres else to drop
|
|
down on the sand, the menagerie would 'a' come
|
|
along, too, and might 'a' kept us hunting a safe place
|
|
till I got tuckered out and fell.
|
|
|
|
And all this time the lions and tigers was sorting out
|
|
the clothes, and trying to divide them up so there
|
|
would be some for all, but there was a misunderstand-
|
|
ing about it somewheres, on account of some of them
|
|
trying to hog more than their share; so there was
|
|
another insurrection, and you never see anything like
|
|
it in the world. There must 'a' been fifty of them, all
|
|
mixed up together, snorting and roaring and snapping
|
|
and biting and tearing, legs and tails in the air, and
|
|
you couldn't tell which was which, and the sand and
|
|
fur a-flying. And when they got done, some was
|
|
dead. and some was limping off crippled, and the rest
|
|
was setting around on the battlefield, some of them
|
|
licking their sore places and the others looking up at
|
|
us and seemed to be kind of inviting us to come down
|
|
and have some fun, but which we didn't want any.
|
|
|
|
As for the clothes, they warn't any, any more.
|
|
Every last rag of them was inside of the animals; and
|
|
not agreeing with them very well, I don't reckon, for
|
|
there was considerable many brass buttons on them,
|
|
and there was knives in the pockets, too, and smoking
|
|
tobacco, and nails and chalk and marbles and fish-
|
|
hooks and things. But I wasn't caring. All that was
|
|
bothering me was, that all we had now was the pro-
|
|
fessor's clothes, a big enough assortment, but not suit-
|
|
able to go into company with, if we came across any,
|
|
because the britches was as long as tunnels, and the
|
|
coats and things according. Still, there was everything
|
|
a tailor needed, and Jim was a kind of jack legged
|
|
tailor, and he allowed he could soon trim a suit or two
|
|
down for us that would answer.
|
|
|
|
|
|
CHAPTER IX.
|
|
TOM DISCOURSES ON THE DESERT
|
|
|
|
STILL, we thought we would drop down there a
|
|
minute, but on another errand. Most of the pro-
|
|
fessor's cargo of food was put up in cans, in the new
|
|
way that somebody had just invented; the rest was
|
|
fresh. When you fetch Missouri beefsteak to the
|
|
Great Sahara, you want to be particular and stay up
|
|
in the coolish weather. So we reckoned we would
|
|
drop down into the lion market and see how we could
|
|
make out there.
|
|
|
|
We hauled in the ladder and dropped down till we
|
|
was just above the reach of the animals, then we let
|
|
down a rope with a slip-knot in it and hauled up a
|
|
dead lion, a small tender one, then yanked up a cub
|
|
tiger. We had to keep the congregation off with the
|
|
revolver, or they would 'a' took a hand in the proceed-
|
|
ings and helped.
|
|
|
|
We carved off a supply from both, and saved the
|
|
skins, and hove the rest overboard. Then we baited
|
|
some of the professor's hooks with the fresh meat and
|
|
went a-fishing. We stood over the lake just a con-
|
|
venient distance above the water, and catched a lot of
|
|
the nicest fish you ever see. It was a most amazing
|
|
good supper we had; lion steak, tiger steak, fried fish,
|
|
and hot corn-pone. I don't want nothing better than
|
|
that.
|
|
|
|
We had some fruit to finish off with. We got it out
|
|
of the top of a monstrous tall tree. It was a very slim
|
|
tree that hadn't a branch on it from the bottom plumb
|
|
to the top, and there it bursted out like a feather-
|
|
duster. It was a pa'm-tree, of course; anybody knows
|
|
a pa'm-tree the minute he see it, by the pictures. We
|
|
went for cocoanuts in this one, but there warn't none.
|
|
There was only big loose bunches of things like over-
|
|
sized grapes, and Tom allowed they was dates, because
|
|
he said they answered the description in the Arabian
|
|
Nights and the other books. Of course they mightn't
|
|
be, and they might be poison; so we had to wait a
|
|
spell, and watch and see if the birds et them. They
|
|
done it; so we done it, too, and they was most amaz-
|
|
ing good.
|
|
|
|
By this time monstrous big birds begun to come and
|
|
settle on the dead animals. They was plucky creturs;
|
|
they would tackle one end of a lion that was being
|
|
gnawed at the other end by another lion. If the lion
|
|
drove the bird away, it didn't do no good; he was
|
|
back again the minute the lion was busy.
|
|
|
|
The big birds come out of every part of the sky --
|
|
you could make them out with the glass while they was
|
|
still so far away you couldn't see them with your naked
|
|
eye. Tom said the birds didn't find out the meat was
|
|
there by the smell; they had to find it out by seeing
|
|
it. Oh, but ain't that an eye for you! Tom said at
|
|
the distance of five mile a patch of dead lions couldn't
|
|
look any bigger than a person's finger-nail, and he
|
|
couldn't imagine how the birds could notice such a
|
|
little thing so far off.
|
|
|
|
It was strange and unnatural to see lion eat lion,
|
|
and we thought maybe they warn't kin. But Jim said
|
|
that didn't make no difference. He said a hog was
|
|
fond of her own children, and so was a spider, and he
|
|
reckoned maybe a lion was pretty near as unprincipled
|
|
though maybe not quite. He thought likely a lion
|
|
wouldn't eat his own father, if he knowed which was
|
|
him, but reckoned he would eat his brother-in-law if
|
|
he was uncommon hungry, and eat his mother-in-law
|
|
any time. But RECKONING don't settle nothing. You
|
|
can reckon till the cows come home, but that don't
|
|
fetch you to no decision. So we give it up and let it
|
|
drop.
|
|
|
|
Generly it was very still in the Desert nights, but this
|
|
time there was music. A lot of other animals come to
|
|
dinner; sneaking yelpers that Tom allowed was jackals,
|
|
and roached-backed ones that he said was hyenas; and
|
|
all the whole biling of them kept up a racket all the
|
|
time. They made a picture in the moonlight that was
|
|
more different than any picture I ever see. We had a
|
|
line out and made fast to the top of a tree, and didn't
|
|
stand no watch, but all turned in and slept; but I was
|
|
up two or three times to look down at the animals and
|
|
hear the music. It was like having a front seat at a
|
|
menagerie for nothing, which I hadn't ever had before,
|
|
and so it seemed foolish to sleep and not make the
|
|
most of it; I mightn't ever have such a chance
|
|
again.
|
|
|
|
We went a-fishing again in the early dawn, and then
|
|
lazied around all day in the deep shade on an island,
|
|
taking turn about to watch and see that none of the
|
|
animals come a-snooping around there after erronorts
|
|
for dinner. We was going to leave the next day, but
|
|
couldn't, it was too lovely.
|
|
|
|
The day after, when we rose up toward the sky and
|
|
sailed off eastward, we looked back and watched that
|
|
place till it warn't nothing but just a speck in the
|
|
Desert, and I tell you it was like saying good-bye to a
|
|
friend that you ain't ever going to see any more.
|
|
|
|
Jim was thinking to himself, and at last he says:
|
|
|
|
"Mars Tom, we's mos' to de end er de Desert now,
|
|
I speck."
|
|
|
|
"Why?"
|
|
|
|
"Well, hit stan' to reason we is. You knows how
|
|
long we's been a-skimmin' over it. Mus' be mos' out
|
|
o' san'. Hit's a wonder to me dat it's hilt out as long
|
|
as it has."
|
|
|
|
"Shucks, there's plenty sand, you needn't worry."
|
|
|
|
"Oh, I ain't a-worryin', Mars Tom, only wonderin',
|
|
dat's all. De Lord's got plenty san', I ain't doubtin'
|
|
dat; but nemmine, He ain't gwyne to WAS'E it jist on
|
|
dat account; en I allows dat dis Desert's plenty big
|
|
enough now, jist de way she is, en you can't spread
|
|
her out no mo' 'dout was'in' san'."
|
|
|
|
"Oh, go 'long! we ain't much more than fairly
|
|
STARTED across this Desert yet. The United States is a
|
|
pretty big country, ain't it? Ain't it, Huck?"
|
|
|
|
"Yes," I says, "there ain't no bigger one, I don't
|
|
reckon."
|
|
|
|
"Well," he says, "this Desert is about the shape
|
|
of the United States, and if you was to lay it down on
|
|
top of the United States, it would cover the land of
|
|
the free out of sight like a blanket. There'd be a little
|
|
corner sticking out, up at Maine and away up north-
|
|
west, and Florida sticking out like a turtle's tail, and
|
|
that's all. We've took California away from the
|
|
Mexicans two or three years ago, so that part of the
|
|
Pacific coast is ours now, and if you laid the Great
|
|
Sahara down with her edge on the Pacific, she would
|
|
cover the United States and stick out past New York
|
|
six hundred miles into the Atlantic ocean."
|
|
|
|
I say:
|
|
|
|
"Good land! have you got the documents for that,
|
|
Tom Sawyer?"
|
|
|
|
"Yes, and they're right here, and I've been study-
|
|
ing them. You can look for yourself. From New
|
|
York to the Pacific is 2,600 miles. From one end of
|
|
the Great Desert to the other is 3,200. The United
|
|
States contains 3,600,000 square miles, the Desert
|
|
contains 4,162,000. With the Desert's bulk you could
|
|
cover up every last inch of the United States, and in
|
|
under where the edges projected out, you could tuck
|
|
England, Scotland, Ireland, France, Denmark, and all
|
|
Germany. Yes, sir, you could hide the home of the
|
|
brave and all of them countries clean out of sight under
|
|
the Great Sahara, and you would still have 2,000
|
|
square miles of sand left."
|
|
|
|
"Well," I says, "it clean beats me. Why, Tom,
|
|
it shows that the Lord took as much pains makin' this
|
|
Desert as makin' the United States and all them other
|
|
countries."
|
|
|
|
Jim says: "Huck, dat don' stan' to reason. I
|
|
reckon dis Desert wa'n't made at all. Now you take
|
|
en look at it like dis -- you look at it, and see ef I's
|
|
right. What's a desert good for? 'Taint good for
|
|
nuthin'. Dey ain't no way to make it pay. Hain't
|
|
dat so, Huck?"
|
|
|
|
"Yes, I reckon."
|
|
|
|
"Hain't it so, Mars Tom?"
|
|
|
|
"I guess so. Go on."
|
|
|
|
"Ef a thing ain't no good, it's made in vain, ain't it?"
|
|
|
|
"Yes."
|
|
|
|
"NOW, den! Do de Lord make anything in vain?
|
|
You answer me dat."
|
|
|
|
"Well -- no, He don't."
|
|
|
|
"Den how come He make a desert?"
|
|
|
|
"Well, go on. How DID He come to make it?"
|
|
|
|
"Mars Tom, I b'lieve it uz jes like when you's buildin'
|
|
a house; dey's allays a lot o' truck en rubbish lef' over.
|
|
What does you do wid it? Doan' you take en k'yart
|
|
it off en dump it into a ole vacant back lot? 'Course.
|
|
Now, den, it's my opinion hit was jes like dat -- dat
|
|
de Great Sahara warn't made at all, she jes HAPPEN'."
|
|
|
|
I said it was a real good argument, and I believed it
|
|
was the best one Jim ever made. Tom he said the same,
|
|
but said the trouble about arguments is, they ain't
|
|
nothing but THEORIES, after all, and theories don't prove
|
|
nothing, they only give you a place to rest on, a spell,
|
|
when you are tuckered out butting around and around
|
|
trying to find out something there ain't no way TO find
|
|
out. And he says:
|
|
|
|
"There's another trouble about theories: there's
|
|
always a hole in them somewheres, sure, if you look
|
|
close enough. It's just so with this one of Jim's.
|
|
Look what billions and billions of stars there is. How
|
|
does it come that there was just exactly enough star-
|
|
stuff, and none left over? How does it come there
|
|
ain't no sand-pile up there?"
|
|
|
|
But Jim was fixed for him and says:
|
|
|
|
"What's de Milky Way? -- dat's what I want to
|
|
know. What's de Milky Way? Answer me dat!"
|
|
|
|
In my opinion it was just a sockdologer. It's only
|
|
an opinion, it's only MY opinion and others may think
|
|
different; but I said it then and I stand to it now -- it
|
|
was a sockdologer. And moreover, besides, it landed
|
|
Tom Sawyer. He couldn't say a word. He had that
|
|
stunned look of a person that's been shot in the back
|
|
with a kag of nails. All he said was, as for people
|
|
like me and Jim, he'd just as soon have intellectual
|
|
intercourse with a catfish. But anybody can say that
|
|
-- and I notice they always do, when somebody has
|
|
fetched them a lifter. Tom Sawyer was tired of that
|
|
end of the subject.
|
|
|
|
So we got back to talking about the size of the
|
|
Desert again, and the more we compared it with this
|
|
and that and t'other thing, the more nobler and bigger
|
|
and grander it got to look right along. And so, hunt-
|
|
ing among the figgers, Tom found, by and by, that it
|
|
was just the same size as the Empire of China. Then
|
|
he showed us the spread the Empire of China made on
|
|
the map, and the room she took up in the world.
|
|
Well, it was wonderful to think of, and I says:
|
|
|
|
"Why, I've heard talk about this Desert plenty of
|
|
times, but I never knowed before how important she
|
|
was."
|
|
|
|
Then Tom says:
|
|
|
|
"Important! Sahara important! That's just the
|
|
way with some people. If a thing's big, it's important.
|
|
That's all the sense they've got. All they can see is
|
|
SIZE. Why, look at England. It's the most important
|
|
country in the world; and yet you could put it in
|
|
China's vest-pocket; and not only that, but you'd
|
|
have the dickens's own time to find it again the next
|
|
time you wanted it. And look at Russia. It spreads
|
|
all around and everywhere, and yet ain't no more im-
|
|
portant in this world than Rhode Island is, and hasn't
|
|
got half as much in it that's worth saving."
|
|
|
|
Away off now we see a little hill, a-standing up just
|
|
on the edge of the world. Tom broke off his talk, and
|
|
reached for a glass very much excited, and took a look,
|
|
and says:
|
|
|
|
"That's it -- it's the one I've been looking for,
|
|
sure. If I'm right, it's the one the dervish took the
|
|
man into and showed him all the treasures."
|
|
|
|
So we begun to gaze, and he begun to tell about it
|
|
out of the Arabian Nights.
|
|
|
|
|
|
CHAPTER X.
|
|
THE TREASURE-HILL
|
|
|
|
TOM said it happened like this.
|
|
|
|
A dervish was stumping it along through the
|
|
Desert, on foot, one blazing hot day, and he had come
|
|
a thousand miles and was pretty poor, and hungry,
|
|
and ornery and tired, and along about where we are
|
|
now he run across a camel-driver with a hundred
|
|
camels, and asked him for some a'ms. But the camel-
|
|
driver he asked to be excused. The dervish said:
|
|
|
|
"Don't you own these camels?"
|
|
|
|
"Yes, they're mine."
|
|
|
|
"Are you in debt?"
|
|
|
|
"Who -- me? No."
|
|
|
|
"Well, a man that owns a hundred camels and ain't
|
|
in debt is rich -- and not only rich, but very rich.
|
|
Ain't it so?"
|
|
|
|
The camel-driver owned up that it was so. Then
|
|
the dervish says:
|
|
|
|
"God has made you rich, and He has made me
|
|
poor. He has His reasons, and they are wise, blessed
|
|
be His name. But He has willed that His rich shall
|
|
help His poor, and you have turned away from me,
|
|
your brother, in my need, and He will remember this,
|
|
and you will lose by it."
|
|
|
|
That made the camel-driver feel shaky, but all the
|
|
same he was born hoggish after money and didn't like
|
|
to let go a cent; so he begun to whine and explain,
|
|
and said times was hard, and although he had took a
|
|
full freight down to Balsora and got a fat rate for it,
|
|
he couldn't git no return freight, and so he warn't
|
|
making no great things out of his trip. So the dervish
|
|
starts along again, and says:
|
|
|
|
"All right, if you want to take the risk; but I
|
|
reckon you've made a mistake this time, and missed a
|
|
chance."
|
|
|
|
Of course the camel-driver wanted to know what
|
|
kind of a chance he had missed, because maybe there
|
|
was money in it; so he run after the dervish, and
|
|
begged him so hard and earnest to take pity on him
|
|
that at last the dervish gave in, and says:
|
|
|
|
"Do you see that hill yonder? Well, in that hill is
|
|
all the treasures of the earth, and I was looking around
|
|
for a man with a particular good kind heart and a
|
|
noble, generous disposition, because if I could find just
|
|
that man, I've got a kind of a salve I could put on
|
|
his eyes and he could see the treasures and get them
|
|
out."
|
|
|
|
So then the camel-driver was in a sweat; and he
|
|
cried, and begged, and took on, and went down on his
|
|
knees, and said he was just that kind of a man, and
|
|
said he could fetch a thousand people that would say
|
|
he wasn't ever described so exact before.
|
|
|
|
"Well, then," says the dervish, "all right. If we
|
|
load the hundred camels, can I have half of them?"
|
|
|
|
The driver was so glad he couldn't hardly hold in,
|
|
and says:
|
|
|
|
"Now you're shouting."
|
|
|
|
So they shook hands on the bargain, and the dervish
|
|
got out his box and rubbed the salve on the driver's
|
|
right eye, and the hill opened and he went in, and
|
|
there, sure enough, was piles and piles of gold and
|
|
jewels sparkling like all the stars in heaven had fell down.
|
|
|
|
So him and the dervish laid into it, and they loaded
|
|
every camel till he couldn't carry no more; then they
|
|
said good-bye, and each of them started off with his
|
|
fifty. But pretty soon the camel-driver come a-running
|
|
and overtook the dervish and says:
|
|
|
|
"You ain't in society, you know, and you don't
|
|
really need all you've got. Won't you be good, and
|
|
let me have ten of your camels?"
|
|
|
|
"Well," the dervish says, "I don't know but what
|
|
you say is reasonable enough."
|
|
|
|
So he done it, and they separated and the dervish
|
|
started off again with his forty. But pretty soon here
|
|
comes the camel-driver bawling after him again, and
|
|
whines and slobbers around and begs another ten off of
|
|
him, saying thirty camel loads of treasures was enough
|
|
to see a dervish through, because they live very simple,
|
|
you know, and don't keep house, but board around
|
|
and give their note.
|
|
|
|
But that warn't the end yet. That ornery hound
|
|
kept coming and coming till he had begged back all
|
|
the camels and had the whole hundred. Then he was
|
|
satisfied, and ever so grateful, and said he wouldn't
|
|
ever forgit the dervish as long as he lived, and nobody
|
|
hadn't been so good to him before, and liberal. So
|
|
they shook hands good-bye, and separated and started
|
|
off again.
|
|
|
|
But do you know, it warn't ten minutes till the
|
|
camel-driver was unsatisfied again -- he was the low-
|
|
downest reptyle in seven counties -- and he come a-
|
|
running again. And this time the thing he wanted was
|
|
to get the dervish to rub some of the salve on his other
|
|
eye.
|
|
|
|
"Why?" said the dervish.
|
|
|
|
"Oh, you know," says the driver.
|
|
|
|
"Know what?"
|
|
|
|
"Well, you can't fool me," says the driver.
|
|
"You're trying to keep back something from me,
|
|
you know it mighty well. You know, I reckon, that
|
|
if I had the salve on the other eye I could see a lot
|
|
more things that's valuable. Come -- please put it on."
|
|
|
|
The dervish says:
|
|
|
|
"I wasn't keeping anything back from you. I
|
|
don't mind telling you what would happen if I put it
|
|
on. You'd never see again. You'd be stone-blind the
|
|
rest of your days."
|
|
|
|
But do you know that beat wouldn't believe him.
|
|
No, he begged and begged, and whined and cried, till
|
|
at last the dervish opened his box and told him to put
|
|
it on, if he wanted to. So the man done it, and sure
|
|
enough he was as blind as a bat in a minute.
|
|
|
|
Then the dervish laughed at him and mocked at him
|
|
and made fun of him; and says:
|
|
|
|
"Good-bye -- a man that's blind hain't got no use
|
|
for jewelry."
|
|
|
|
And he cleared out with the hundred camels, and
|
|
left that man to wander around poor and miserable and
|
|
friendless the rest of his days in the Desert.
|
|
|
|
Jim said he'd bet it was a lesson to him.
|
|
|
|
"Yes," Tom says, "and like a considerable many
|
|
lessons a body gets. They ain't no account, because
|
|
the thing don't ever happen the same way again -- and
|
|
can't. The time Hen Scovil fell down the chimbly
|
|
and crippled his back for life, everybody said it would
|
|
be a lesson to him. What kind of a lesson? How
|
|
was he going to use it? He couldn't climb chimblies
|
|
no more, and he hadn't no more backs to break."
|
|
|
|
"All de same, Mars Tom, dey IS sich a thing as
|
|
learnin' by expe'ence. De Good Book say de burnt
|
|
chile shun de fire."
|
|
|
|
"Well, I ain't denying that a thing's a lesson if it's
|
|
a thing that can happen twice just the same way.
|
|
There's lots of such things, and THEY educate a person,
|
|
that's what Uncle Abner always said; but there's forty
|
|
MILLION lots of the other kind -- the kind that don't
|
|
happen the same way twice -- and they ain't no real
|
|
use, they ain't no more instructive than the small-pox.
|
|
When you've got it, it ain't no good to find out you
|
|
ought to been vaccinated, and it ain't no good to git
|
|
vaccinated afterward, because the small-pox don't
|
|
come but once. But, on the other hand, Uncle Abner
|
|
said that the person that had took a bull by the tail
|
|
once had learnt sixty or seventy times as much as a
|
|
person that hadn't, and said a person that started in to
|
|
carry a cat home by the tail was gitting knowledge that
|
|
was always going to be useful to him, and warn't ever
|
|
going to grow dim or doubtful. But I can tell you,
|
|
Jim, Uncle Abner was down on them people that's all
|
|
the time trying to dig a lesson out of everything that
|
|
happens, no matter whether --"
|
|
|
|
But Jim was asleep. Tom looked kind of ashamed,
|
|
because you know a person always feels bad when he
|
|
is talking uncommon fine and thinks the other person
|
|
is admiring, and that other person goes to sleep that
|
|
way. Of course he oughtn't to go to sleep, because
|
|
it's shabby; but the finer a person talks the certainer
|
|
it is to make you sleep, and so when you come to look
|
|
at it it ain't nobody's fault in particular; both of
|
|
them's to blame.
|
|
|
|
Jim begun to snore -- soft and blubbery at first,
|
|
then a long rasp, then a stronger one, then a half a
|
|
dozen horrible ones like the last water sucking down
|
|
the plug-hole of a bath-tub, then the same with more
|
|
power to it, and some big coughs and snorts flung in,
|
|
the way a cow does that is choking to death; and
|
|
when the person has got to that point he is at his level
|
|
best, and can wake up a man that is in the next block
|
|
with a dipperful of loddanum in him, but can't wake
|
|
himself up although all that awful noise of his'n ain't
|
|
but three inches from his own ears. And that is the
|
|
curiosest thing in the world, seems to me. But you
|
|
rake a match to light the candle, and that little bit of a
|
|
noise will fetch him. I wish I knowed what was the
|
|
reason of that, but there don't seem to be no way to
|
|
find out. Now there was Jim alarming the whole
|
|
Desert, and yanking the animals out, for miles and
|
|
miles around, to see what in the nation was going on
|
|
up there; there warn't nobody nor nothing that was as
|
|
close to the noise as HE was, and yet he was the only
|
|
cretur that wasn't disturbed by it. We yelled at him
|
|
and whooped at him, it never done no good; but the
|
|
first time there come a little wee noise that wasn't of a
|
|
usual kind it woke him up. No, sir, I've thought it
|
|
all over, and so has Tom, and there ain't no way to
|
|
find out why a snorer can't hear himself snore.
|
|
|
|
Jim said he hadn't been asleep; he just shut his eyes
|
|
so he could listen better.
|
|
|
|
Tom said nobody warn't accusing him.
|
|
|
|
That made him look like he wished he hadn't said
|
|
anything. And he wanted to git away from the sub-
|
|
ject, I reckon, because he begun to abuse the camel-
|
|
driver, just the way a person does when he has got
|
|
catched in something and wants to take it out of some-
|
|
body else. He let into the camel-driver the hardest he
|
|
knowed how, and I had to agree with him; and he
|
|
praised up the dervish the highest he could, and I had
|
|
to agree with him there, too. But Tom says:
|
|
|
|
"I ain't so sure. You call that dervish so dreadful
|
|
liberal and good and unselfish, but I don't quite see it.
|
|
He didn't hunt up another poor dervish, did he? No,
|
|
he didn't. If he was so unselfish, why didn't he go in
|
|
there himself and take a pocketful of jewels and go
|
|
along and be satisfied? No, sir, the person he was
|
|
hunting for was a man with a hundred camels. He
|
|
wanted to get away with all the treasure he could."
|
|
|
|
"Why, Mars Tom, he was willin' to divide, fair and
|
|
square; he only struck for fifty camels."
|
|
|
|
"Because he knowed how he was going to get all of
|
|
them by and by."
|
|
|
|
"Mars Tom, he TOLE de man de truck would make
|
|
him bline."
|
|
|
|
"Yes, because he knowed the man's character. It
|
|
was just the kind of a man he was hunting for -- a
|
|
man that never believes in anybody's word or any-
|
|
body's honorableness, because he ain't got none of his
|
|
own. I reckon there's lots of people like that dervish.
|
|
They swindle, right and left, but they always make the
|
|
other person SEEM to swindle himself. They keep inside
|
|
of the letter of the law all the time, and there ain't no
|
|
way to git hold of them. THEY don't put the salve on
|
|
-- oh, no, that would be sin; but they know how to
|
|
fool YOU into putting it on, then it's you that blinds
|
|
yourself. I reckon the dervish and the camel-driver
|
|
was just a pair -- a fine, smart, brainy rascal, and a
|
|
dull, coarse, ignorant one, but both of them rascals,
|
|
just the same."
|
|
|
|
"Mars Tom, does you reckon dey's any o' dat kind
|
|
o' salve in de worl' now?"
|
|
|
|
"Yes, Uncle Abner says there is. He says they've
|
|
got it in New York, and they put it on country people's
|
|
eyes and show them all the railroads in the world, and
|
|
they go in and git them, and then when they rub the
|
|
salve on the other eye the other man bids them good-
|
|
bye and goes off with their railroads. Here's the
|
|
treasure-hill now. Lower away!"
|
|
|
|
We landed, but it warn't as interesting as I thought
|
|
it was going to be, because we couldn't find the place
|
|
where they went in to git the treasure. Still, it was
|
|
plenty interesting enough, just to see the mere hill
|
|
itself where such a wonderful thing happened. Jim
|
|
said he wou'dn't 'a' missed it for three dollars, and I
|
|
felt the same way.
|
|
|
|
And to me and Jim, as wonderful a thing as any was
|
|
the way Tom could come into a strange big country
|
|
like this and go straight and find a little hump like that
|
|
and tell it in a minute from a million other humps that
|
|
was almost just like it, and nothing to help him but
|
|
only his own learning and his own natural smartness.
|
|
We talked and talked it over together, but couldn't
|
|
make out how he done it. He had the best head on
|
|
him I ever see; and all he lacked was age, to make a
|
|
name for himself equal to Captain Kidd or George
|
|
Washington. I bet you it would 'a' crowded either of
|
|
THEM to find that hill, with all their gifts, but it warn't
|
|
nothing to Tom Sawyer; he went across Sahara and
|
|
put his finger on it as easy as you could pick a nigger
|
|
out of a bunch of angels.
|
|
|
|
We found a pond of salt water close by and scraped
|
|
up a raft of salt around the edges, and loaded up the
|
|
lion's skin and the tiger's so as they would keep till Jim
|
|
could tan them.
|
|
|
|
|
|
CHAPTER XI.
|
|
THE SAND-STORM
|
|
|
|
WE went a-fooling along for a day or two, and then
|
|
just as the full moon was touching the ground
|
|
on the other side of the desert, we see a string of little
|
|
black figgers moving across its big silver face. You
|
|
could see them as plain as if they was painted on the
|
|
moon with ink. It was another caravan. We cooled
|
|
down our speed and tagged along after it, just to have
|
|
company, though it warn't going our way. It was a
|
|
rattler, that caravan, and a most bully sight to look at
|
|
next morning when the sun come a-streaming across
|
|
the desert and flung the long shadders of the camels
|
|
on the gold sand like a thousand grand-daddy-long-
|
|
legses marching in procession. We never went very
|
|
near it, because we knowed better now than to act like
|
|
that and scare people's camels and break up their cara-
|
|
vans. It was the gayest outfit you ever see, for rich
|
|
clothes and nobby style. Some of the chiefs rode on
|
|
dromedaries, the first we ever see, and very tall, and
|
|
they go plunging along like they was on stilts, and
|
|
they rock the man that is on them pretty violent and
|
|
churn up his dinner considerable, I bet you, but they
|
|
make noble good time, and a camel ain't nowheres with
|
|
them for speed.
|
|
|
|
The caravan camped, during the middle part of the
|
|
day, and then started again about the middle of the
|
|
afternoon. Before long the sun begun to look very
|
|
curious. First it kind of turned to brass, and then to
|
|
copper, and after that it begun to look like a blood-
|
|
red ball, and the air got hot and close, and pretty soon
|
|
all the sky in the west darkened up and looked thick
|
|
and foggy, but fiery and dreadful -- like it looks
|
|
through a piece of red glass, you know. We looked
|
|
down and see a big confusion going on in the caravan,
|
|
and a rushing every which way like they was scared;
|
|
and then they all flopped down flat in the sand and
|
|
laid there perfectly still.
|
|
|
|
Pretty soon we see something coming that stood up
|
|
like an amazing wide wall, and reached from the Desert
|
|
up into the sky and hid the sun, and it was coming
|
|
like the nation, too. Then a little faint breeze struck
|
|
us, and then it come harder, and grains of sand begun
|
|
to sift against our faces and sting like fire, and Tom
|
|
sung out:
|
|
|
|
"It's a sand-storm -- turn your backs to it!"
|
|
|
|
We done it; and in another minute it was blowing a
|
|
gale, and the sand beat against us by the shovelful, and
|
|
the air was so thick with it we couldn't see a thing. In
|
|
five minutes the boat was level full, and we was setting
|
|
on the lockers buried up to the chin in sand, and only
|
|
our heads out and could hardly breathe.
|
|
|
|
Then the storm thinned, and we see that monstrous
|
|
wall go a-sailing off across the desert, awful to look at,
|
|
I tell you. We dug ourselves out and looked down,
|
|
and where the caravan was before there wasn't any-
|
|
thing but just the sand ocean now, and all still and
|
|
quiet. All them people and camels was smothered and
|
|
dead and buried -- buried under ten foot of sand, we
|
|
reckoned, and Tom allowed it might be years before
|
|
the wind uncovered them, and all that time their friends
|
|
wouldn't ever know what become of that caravan.
|
|
Tom said:
|
|
|
|
"NOW we know what it was that happened to the
|
|
people we got the swords and pistols from."
|
|
|
|
Yes, sir, that was just it. It was as plain as day
|
|
now. They got buried in a sand-storm, and the wild
|
|
animals couldn't get at them, and the wind never un-
|
|
covered them again until they was dried to leather and
|
|
warn't fit to eat. It seemed to me we had felt as sorry
|
|
for them poor people as a person could for anybody,
|
|
and as mournful, too, but we was mistaken; this last
|
|
caravan's death went harder with us, a good deal
|
|
harder. You see, the others was total strangers, and
|
|
we never got to feeling acquainted with them at all,
|
|
except, maybe, a little with the man that was watching
|
|
the girl, but it was different with this last caravan. We
|
|
was huvvering around them a whole night and 'most a
|
|
whole day, and had got to feeling real friendly with
|
|
them, and acquainted. I have found out that there
|
|
ain't no surer way to find out whether you like people
|
|
or hate them than to travel with them. Just so with
|
|
these. We kind of liked them from the start, and
|
|
traveling with them put on the finisher. The longer
|
|
we traveled with them, and the more we got used to
|
|
their ways, the better and better we liked them, and
|
|
the gladder and gladder we was that we run across
|
|
them. We had come to know some of them so well
|
|
that we called them by name when we was talking
|
|
about them, and soon got so familiar and sociable that
|
|
we even dropped the Miss and Mister and just used
|
|
their plain names without any handle, and it did not
|
|
seem unpolite, but just the right thing. Of course, it
|
|
wasn't their own names, but names we give them.
|
|
There was Mr. Elexander Robinson and Miss Adaline
|
|
Robinson, and Colonel Jacob McDougal and Miss
|
|
Harryet McDougal, and Judge Jeremiah Butler and
|
|
young Bushrod Butler, and these was big chiefs mostly
|
|
that wore splendid great turbans and simmeters, and
|
|
dressed like the Grand Mogul, and their families. But
|
|
as soon as we come to know them good, and like them
|
|
very much, it warn't Mister, nor Judge, nor nothing,
|
|
any more, but only Elleck, and Addy, and Jake, and
|
|
Hattie, and Jerry, and Buck, and so on.
|
|
|
|
And you know the more you join in with people in
|
|
their joys and their sorrows, the more nearer and
|
|
dearer they come to be to you. Now we warn't cold
|
|
and indifferent, the way most travelers is, we was right
|
|
down friendly and sociable, and took a chance in every-
|
|
thing that was going, and the caravan could depend on
|
|
us to be on hand every time, it didn't make no differ-
|
|
ence what it was.
|
|
|
|
When they camped, we camped right over them, ten
|
|
or twelve hundred feet up in the air. When they et a
|
|
meal, we et ourn, and it made it ever so much home-
|
|
liker to have their company. When they had a wed-
|
|
ding that night, and Buck and Addy got married, we
|
|
got ourselves up in the very starchiest of the professor's
|
|
duds for the blow-out, and when they danced we jined
|
|
in and shook a foot up there.
|
|
|
|
But it is sorrow and trouble that brings you the
|
|
nearest, and it was a funeral that done it with us. It
|
|
was next morning, just in the still dawn. We didn't
|
|
know the diseased, and he warn't in our set, but that
|
|
never made no difference; he belonged to the caravan,
|
|
and that was enough, and there warn't no more sincerer
|
|
tears shed over him than the ones we dripped on him
|
|
from up there eleven hundred foot on high.
|
|
|
|
Yes, parting with this caravan was much more
|
|
bitterer than it was to part with them others, which was
|
|
comparative strangers, and been dead so long, anyway.
|
|
We had knowed these in their lives, and was fond of
|
|
them, too, and now to have death snatch them from
|
|
right before our faces while we was looking, and leave
|
|
us so lonesome and friendless in the middle of that big
|
|
desert, it did hurt so, and we wished we mightn't ever
|
|
make any more friends on that voyage if we was
|
|
going to lose them again like that.
|
|
|
|
We couldn't keep from talking about them, and
|
|
they was all the time coming up in our memory, and
|
|
looking just the way they looked when we was all alive
|
|
and happy together. We could see the line marching,
|
|
and the shiny spearheads a-winking in the sun; we
|
|
could see the dromedaries lumbering along; we could
|
|
see the wedding and the funeral; and more oftener
|
|
than anything else we could see them praying, because
|
|
they don't allow nothing to prevent that; whenever
|
|
the call come, several times a day, they would stop
|
|
right there, and stand up and face to the east, and lift
|
|
back their heads, and spread out their arms and begin,
|
|
and four or five times they would go down on their
|
|
knees, and then fall forward and touch their forehead
|
|
to the ground.
|
|
|
|
Well, it warn't good to go on talking about them,
|
|
lovely as they was in their life, and dear to us in their
|
|
life and death both, because it didn't do no good, and
|
|
made us too down-hearted. Jim allowed he was going
|
|
to live as good a life as he could, so he could see them
|
|
again in a better world; and Tom kept still and didn't
|
|
tell him they was only Mohammedans; it warn't no
|
|
use to disappoint him, he was feeling bad enough just
|
|
as it was.
|
|
|
|
When we woke up next morning we was feeling a
|
|
little cheerfuller, and had had a most powerful good
|
|
sleep, because sand is the comfortablest bed there is,
|
|
and I don't see why people that can afford it don't
|
|
have it more. And it's terrible good ballast, too; I
|
|
never see the balloon so steady before.
|
|
|
|
Tom allowed we had twenty tons of it, and wondered
|
|
what we better do with it; it was good sand, and it
|
|
didn't seem good sense to throw it away. Jim says:
|
|
|
|
"Mars Tom, can't we tote it back home en sell it?
|
|
How long'll it take?"
|
|
|
|
"Depends on the way we go."
|
|
|
|
"Well, sah, she's wuth a quarter of a dollar a load
|
|
at home, en I reckon we's got as much as twenty
|
|
loads, hain't we? How much would dat be?"
|
|
|
|
"Five dollars."
|
|
|
|
"By jings, Mars Tom, le's shove for home right on
|
|
de spot! Hit's more'n a dollar en a half apiece, hain't
|
|
it?"
|
|
|
|
"Yes."
|
|
|
|
"Well, ef dat ain't makin' money de easiest ever I
|
|
struck! She jes' rained in -- never cos' us a lick o'
|
|
work. Le's mosey right along, Mars Tom."
|
|
|
|
But Tom was thinking and ciphering away so busy
|
|
and excited he never heard him. Pretty soon he says:
|
|
|
|
"Five dollars -- sho! Look here, this sand's worth
|
|
-- worth -- why, it's worth no end of money."
|
|
|
|
"How is dat, Mars Tom? Go on, honey, go on!"
|
|
|
|
"Well, the minute people knows it's genuwyne sand
|
|
from the genuwyne Desert of Sahara, they'll just be in
|
|
a perfect state of mind to git hold of some of it to
|
|
keep on the what-not in a vial with a label on it for a
|
|
curiosity. All we got to do is to put it up in vials and
|
|
float around all over the United States and peddle them
|
|
out at ten cents apiece. We've got all of ten thousand
|
|
dollars' worth of sand in this boat."
|
|
|
|
Me and Jim went all to pieces with joy, and begun
|
|
to shout whoopjamboreehoo, and Tom says:
|
|
|
|
"And we can keep on coming back and fetching
|
|
sand, and coming back and fetching more sand, and
|
|
just keep it a-going till we've carted this whole Desert
|
|
over there and sold it out; and there ain't ever going
|
|
to be any opposition, either, because we'll take out a
|
|
patent."
|
|
|
|
"My goodness," I says, "we'll be as rich as Creo-
|
|
sote, won't we, Tom?"
|
|
|
|
"Yes -- Creesus, you mean. Why, that dervish was
|
|
hunting in that little hill for the treasures of the earth,
|
|
and didn't know he was walking over the real ones for
|
|
a thousand miles. He was blinder than he made the
|
|
driver."
|
|
|
|
"Mars Tom, how much is we gwyne to be worth?"
|
|
|
|
"Well, I don't know yet. It's got to be ciphered,
|
|
and it ain't the easiest job to do, either, because it's
|
|
over four million square miles of sand at ten cents a
|
|
vial."
|
|
|
|
Jim was awful excited, but this faded it out consider-
|
|
able, and he shook his head and says:
|
|
|
|
"Mars Tom, we can't 'ford all dem vials -- a king
|
|
couldn't. We better not try to take de whole Desert,
|
|
Mars Tom, de vials gwyne to bust us, sho'."
|
|
|
|
Tom's excitement died out, too, now, and I reck-
|
|
oned it was on account of the vials, but it wasn't. He
|
|
set there thinking, and got bluer and bluer, and at last
|
|
he says:
|
|
|
|
"Boys, it won't work; we got to give it up."
|
|
|
|
"Why, Tom?"
|
|
|
|
"On account of the duties."
|
|
|
|
I couldn't make nothing out of that, neither could
|
|
Jim. I says:
|
|
|
|
"What IS our duty, Tom? Because if we can't git
|
|
around it, why can't we just DO it? People often has
|
|
to."
|
|
|
|
But he says:
|
|
|
|
"Oh, it ain't that kind of duty. The kind I mean
|
|
is a tax. Whenever you strike a frontier -- that's the
|
|
border of a country, you know -- you find a custom-
|
|
house there, and the gov'ment officers comes and rum-
|
|
mages among your things and charges a big tax, which
|
|
they call a duty because it's their duty to bust you if
|
|
they can, and if you don't pay the duty they'll hog
|
|
your sand. They call it confiscating, but that don't
|
|
deceive nobody, it's just hogging, and that's all it is.
|
|
Now if we try to carry this sand home the way we're
|
|
pointed now, we got to climb fences till we git tired --
|
|
just frontier after frontier -- Egypt, Arabia, Hindostan,
|
|
and so on, and they'll all whack on a duty, and so you
|
|
see, easy enough, we CAN'T go THAT road."
|
|
|
|
"Why, Tom," I says, "we can sail right over their
|
|
old frontiers; how are THEY going to stop us?"
|
|
|
|
He looked sorrowful at me, and says, very grave:
|
|
|
|
"Huck Finn, do you think that would be honest?"
|
|
|
|
I hate them kind of interruptions. I never said
|
|
nothing, and he went on:
|
|
|
|
"Well, we're shut off the other way, too. If we go
|
|
back the way we've come, there's the New York
|
|
custom-house, and that is worse than all of them others
|
|
put together, on account of the kind of cargo we've
|
|
got."
|
|
|
|
"Why?"
|
|
|
|
"Well, they can't raise Sahara sand in America, of
|
|
course, and when they can't raise a thing there, the
|
|
duty is fourteen hundred thousand per cent. on it if
|
|
you try to fetch it in from where they do raise it."
|
|
|
|
"There ain't no sense in that, Tom Sawyer."
|
|
|
|
"Who said there WAS? What do you talk to me
|
|
like that for, Huck Finn? You wait till I say a thing's
|
|
got sense in it before you go to accusing me of say-
|
|
ing it."
|
|
|
|
"All right, consider me crying about it, and sorry.
|
|
Go on."
|
|
|
|
Jim says:
|
|
|
|
"Mars Tom, do dey jam dat duty onto everything
|
|
we can't raise in America, en don't make no 'stinction
|
|
'twix' anything?"
|
|
|
|
"Yes, that's what they do."
|
|
|
|
"Mars Tom, ain't de blessin' o' de Lord de mos'
|
|
valuable thing dey is?"
|
|
|
|
"Yes, it is."
|
|
|
|
"Don't de preacher stan' up in de pulpit en call it
|
|
down on de people?"
|
|
|
|
"Yes."
|
|
|
|
"Whah do it come from?"
|
|
|
|
"From heaven."
|
|
|
|
"Yassir! you's jes' right, 'deed you is, honey -- it
|
|
come from heaven, en dat's a foreign country. NOW,
|
|
den! do dey put a tax on dat blessin'?"
|
|
|
|
"No, they don't."
|
|
|
|
"Course dey don't; en so it stan' to reason dat
|
|
you's mistaken, Mars Tom. Dey wouldn't put de tax
|
|
on po' truck like san', dat everybody ain't 'bleeged to
|
|
have, en leave it off'n de bes' thing dey is, which
|
|
nobody can't git along widout."
|
|
|
|
Tom Sawyer was stumped; he see Jim had got him
|
|
where he couldn't budge. He tried to wiggle out by
|
|
saying they had FORGOT to put on that tax, but they'd
|
|
be sure to remember about it, next session of Con-
|
|
gress, and then they'd put it on, but that was a poor
|
|
lame come-off, and he knowed it. He said there
|
|
warn't nothing foreign that warn't taxed but just that
|
|
one, and so they couldn't be consistent without taxing
|
|
it, and to be consistent was the first law of politics.
|
|
So he stuck to it that they'd left it out unintentional
|
|
and would be certain to do their best to fix it before
|
|
they got caught and laughed at.
|
|
|
|
But I didn't feel no more interest in such things, as
|
|
long as we couldn't git our sand through, and it made
|
|
me low-spirited, and Jim the same. Tom he tried to
|
|
cheer us up by saying he would think up another
|
|
speculation for us that would be just as good as this
|
|
one and better, but it didn't do no good, we didn't
|
|
believe there was any as big as this. It was mighty
|
|
hard; such a little while ago we was so rich, and could
|
|
'a' bought a country and started a kingdom and been
|
|
celebrated and happy, and now we was so poor and
|
|
ornery again, and had our sand left on our hands.
|
|
The sand was looking so lovely before, just like gold
|
|
and di'monds, and the feel of it was so soft and so
|
|
silky and nice, but now I couldn't bear the sight of it,
|
|
it made me sick to look at it, and I knowed I wouldn't
|
|
ever feel comfortable again till we got shut of it, and I
|
|
didn't have it there no more to remind us of what we
|
|
had been and what we had got degraded down to.
|
|
The others was feeling the same way about it that I
|
|
was. I knowed it, because they cheered up so, the
|
|
minute I says le's throw this truck overboard.
|
|
|
|
Well, it was going to be work, you know, and pretty
|
|
solid work, too; so Tom he divided it up according to
|
|
fairness and strength. He said me and him would
|
|
clear out a fifth apiece of the sand, and Jim three-
|
|
fifths. Jim he didn't quite like that arrangement. He
|
|
says:
|
|
|
|
"Course I's de stronges', en I's willin' to do a share
|
|
accordin', but by jings you's kinder pilin' it onto ole
|
|
Jim, Mars Tom, hain't you?"
|
|
|
|
"Well, I didn't think so, Jim, but you try your hand
|
|
at fixing it, and let's see."
|
|
|
|
So Jim reckoned it wouldn't be no more than fair if
|
|
me and Tom done a TENTH apiece. Tom he turned his
|
|
back to git room and be private, and then he smole a
|
|
smile that spread around and covered the whole Sahara
|
|
to the westward, back to the Atlantic edge of it where
|
|
we come from. Then he turned around again and
|
|
said it was a good enough arrangement, and we was
|
|
satisfied if Jim was. Jim said he was.
|
|
|
|
So then Tom measured off our two-tenths in the
|
|
bow and left the rest for Jim, and it surprised Jim a
|
|
good deal to see how much difference there was and
|
|
what a raging lot of sand his share come to, and said
|
|
he was powerful glad now that he had spoke up in time
|
|
and got the first arrangement altered, for he said that
|
|
even the way it was now, there was more sand than
|
|
enjoyment in his end of the contract, he believed.
|
|
|
|
Then we laid into it. It was mighty hot work, and
|
|
tough; so hot we had to move up into cooler weather
|
|
or we couldn't 'a' stood it. Me and Tom took turn
|
|
about, and one worked while t'other rested, but there
|
|
warn't nobody to spell poor old Jim, and he made all
|
|
that part of Africa damp, he sweated so. We couldn't
|
|
work good, we was so full of laugh, and Jim he kept
|
|
fretting and wanting to know what tickled us so, and
|
|
we had to keep making up things to account for it, and
|
|
they was pretty poor inventions, but they done well
|
|
enough, Jim didn't see through them. At last when
|
|
we got done we was 'most dead, but not with work
|
|
but with laughing. By and by Jim was 'most dead,
|
|
too, but: it was with work; then we took turns and
|
|
spelled him, and he was as thankfull as he could be,
|
|
and would set on the gunnel and swab the sweat, and
|
|
heave and pant, and say how good we was to a poor
|
|
old nigger, and he wouldn't ever forgit us. He was
|
|
always the gratefulest nigger I ever see, for any little
|
|
thing you done for him. He was only nigger outside;
|
|
inside he was as white as you be.
|
|
|
|
|
|
CHAPTER XII.
|
|
JIM STANDING SIEGE
|
|
|
|
THE next few meals was pretty sandy, but that
|
|
don't make no difference when you are hungry;
|
|
and when you ain't it ain't no satisfaction to eat, any-
|
|
way, and so a little grit in the meat ain't no particular
|
|
drawback, as far as I can see.
|
|
|
|
Then we struck the east end of the Desert at last,
|
|
sailing on a northeast course. Away off on the edge
|
|
of the sand, in a soft pinky light, we see three little
|
|
sharp roofs like tents, and Tom says:
|
|
|
|
"It's the pyramids of Egypt."
|
|
|
|
It made my heart fairly jump. You see, I had seen
|
|
a many and a many a picture of them, and heard tell
|
|
about them a hundred times, and yet to come on them
|
|
all of a sudden, that way, and find they was REAL, 'stead
|
|
of imaginations, 'most knocked the breath out of me
|
|
with surprise. It's a curious thing, that the more you
|
|
hear about a grand and big and bully thing or person,
|
|
the more it kind of dreamies out, as you may say, and
|
|
gets to be a big dim wavery figger made out of moon-
|
|
shine and nothing solid to it. It's just so with George
|
|
Washington, and the same with them pyramids.
|
|
|
|
And moreover, besides, the thing they always said
|
|
about them seemed to me to be stretchers. There was
|
|
a feller come to the Sunday-school once, and had a
|
|
picture of them, and made a speech, and said the big-
|
|
gest pyramid covered thirteen acres, and was most five
|
|
hundred foot high, just a steep mountain, all built out
|
|
of hunks of stone as big as a bureau, and laid up
|
|
in perfectly regular layers, like stair-steps. Thirteen
|
|
acres, you see, for just one building; it's a farm. If
|
|
it hadn't been in Sunday-school, I would 'a' judged it
|
|
was a lie; and outside I was certain of it. And he
|
|
said there was a hole in the pyramid, and you could go
|
|
in there with candles, and go ever so far up a long
|
|
slanting tunnel, and come to a large room in the
|
|
stomach of that stone mountain, and there you would
|
|
find a big stone chest with a king in it, four thousand
|
|
years old. I said to myself, then, if that ain't a lie I
|
|
will eat that king if they will fetch him, for even
|
|
Methusalem warn't that old, and nobody claims it.
|
|
|
|
As we come a little nearer we see the yaller sand
|
|
come to an end in a long straight edge like a blanket,
|
|
and on to it was joined, edge to edge, a wide country
|
|
of bright green, with a snaky stripe crooking through
|
|
it, and Tom said it was the Nile. It made my heart
|
|
jump again, for the Nile was another thing that wasn't
|
|
real to me. Now I can tell you one thing which is
|
|
dead certain: if you will fool along over three thou-
|
|
sand miles of yaller sand, all glimmering with heat so
|
|
that it makes your eyes water to look at it, and you've
|
|
been a considerable part of a week doing it, the green
|
|
country will look so like home and heaven to you that
|
|
it will make your eyes water AGAIN.
|
|
|
|
It was just so with me, and the same with Jim.
|
|
|
|
And when Jim got so he could believe it WAS the
|
|
land of Egypt he was looking at, he wouldn't enter it
|
|
standing up, but got down on his knees and took off
|
|
his hat, because he said it wasn't fitten' for a humble
|
|
poor nigger to come any other way where such men
|
|
had been as Moses and Joseph and Pharaoh and the
|
|
other prophets. He was a Presbyterian, and had a
|
|
most deep respect for Moses which was a Presbyterian,
|
|
too, he said. He was all stirred up, and says:
|
|
|
|
"Hit's de lan' of Egypt, de lan' of Egypt, en I's
|
|
'lowed to look at it wid my own eyes! En dah's de
|
|
river dat was turn' to blood, en I's looking at de very
|
|
same groun' whah de plagues was, en de lice, en de
|
|
frogs, en de locus', en de hail, en whah dey marked
|
|
de door-pos', en de angel o' de Lord come by in de
|
|
darkness o' de night en slew de fust-born in all de lan'
|
|
o' Egypt. Ole Jim ain't worthy to see dis day!"
|
|
|
|
And then he just broke down and cried, he was so
|
|
thankful. So between him and Tom there was talk
|
|
enough, Jim being excited because the land was so full
|
|
of history -- Joseph and his brethren, Moses in the
|
|
bulrushers, Jacob coming down into Egypt to buy
|
|
corn, the silver cup in the sack, and all them interesting
|
|
things; and Tom just as excited too, because the land
|
|
was so full of history that was in HIS line, about
|
|
Noureddin, and Bedreddin, and such like monstrous
|
|
giants, that made Jim's wool rise, and a raft of other
|
|
Arabian Nights folks, which the half of them never
|
|
done the things they let on they done, I don't believe.
|
|
|
|
Then we struck a disappointment, for one of them
|
|
early morning fogs started up, and it warn't no use to
|
|
sail over the top of it, because we would go by Egypt,
|
|
sure, so we judged it was best to set her by compass
|
|
straight for the place where the pyramids was gitting
|
|
blurred and blotted out, and then drop low and skin
|
|
along pretty close to the ground and keep a sharp
|
|
lookout. Tom took the hellum, I stood by to let go
|
|
the anchor, and Jim he straddled the bow to dig
|
|
through the fog with his eyes and watch out for danger
|
|
ahead. We went along a steady gait, but not very
|
|
fast, and the fog got solider and solider, so solid that
|
|
Jim looked dim and ragged and smoky through it. It
|
|
was awful still, and we talked low and was anxious.
|
|
Now and then Jim would say:
|
|
|
|
"Highst her a p'int, Mars Tom, highst her!" and
|
|
up she would skip, a foot or two, and we would slide
|
|
right over a flat-roofed mud cabin, with people that
|
|
had been asleep on it just beginning to turn out and
|
|
gap and stretch; and once when a feller was clear up
|
|
on his hind legs so he could gap and stretch better, we
|
|
took him a blip in the back and knocked him off. By
|
|
and by, after about an hour, and everything dead still
|
|
and we a-straining our ears for sounds and holding our
|
|
breath, the fog thinned a little, very sudden, and Jim
|
|
sung out in an awful scare:
|
|
|
|
"Oh, for de lan's sake, set her back, Mars Tom,
|
|
here's de biggest giant outen de 'Rabian Nights a-
|
|
comin' for us!" and he went over backwards in the
|
|
boat.
|
|
|
|
Tom slammed on the back-action, and as we slowed
|
|
to a standstill a man's face as big as our house at home
|
|
looked in over the gunnel, same as a house looks out
|
|
of its windows, and I laid down and died. I must 'a'
|
|
been clear dead and gone for as much as a minute or
|
|
more; then I come to, and Tom had hitched a boat-
|
|
hook on to the lower lip of the giant and was holding
|
|
the balloon steady with it whilst he canted his head
|
|
back and got a good long look up at that awful face.
|
|
|
|
Jim was on his knees with his hands clasped, gazing
|
|
up at the thing in a begging way, and working his lips,
|
|
but not getting anything out. I took only just a
|
|
glimpse, and was fading out again, but Tom says:
|
|
|
|
"He ain't alive, you fools; it's the Sphinx!"
|
|
|
|
I never see Tom look so little and like a fly;
|
|
but that was because the giant's head was so big and
|
|
awful. Awful, yes, so it was, but not dreadful any
|
|
more, because you could see it was a noble face,
|
|
and kind of sad, and not thinking about you, but about
|
|
other things and larger. It was stone, reddish stone,
|
|
and its nose and ears battered, and that give it an
|
|
abused look, and you felt sorrier for it for that.
|
|
|
|
We stood off a piece, and sailed around it and over
|
|
it, and it was just grand. It was a man's head, or
|
|
maybe a woman's, on a tiger's body a hundred and
|
|
twenty-five foot long, and there was a dear little temple
|
|
between its front paws. All but the head used to be
|
|
under the sand, for hundreds of years, maybe thou-
|
|
sands, but they had just lately dug the sand away and
|
|
found that little temple. It took a power of sand to
|
|
bury that cretur; most as much as it would to bury a
|
|
steamboat, I reckon.
|
|
|
|
We landed Jim on top of the head, with an American
|
|
flag to protect him, it being a foreign land; then we
|
|
sailed off to this and that and t'other distance, to git
|
|
what Tom called effects and perspectives and propor-
|
|
tions, and Jim he done the best he could, striking all
|
|
the different kinds of attitudes and positions he could
|
|
study up, but standing on his head and working his
|
|
legs the way a frog does was the best. The further we
|
|
got away, the littler Jim got, and the grander the
|
|
Sphinx got, till at last it was only a clothespin on a
|
|
dome, as you might say. That's the way perspective
|
|
brings out the correct proportions, Tom said; he said
|
|
Julus Cesar's niggers didn't know how big he was,
|
|
they was too close to him.
|
|
|
|
Then we sailed off further and further, till we
|
|
couldn't see Jim at all any more, and then that great
|
|
figger was at its noblest, a-gazing out over the Nile
|
|
Valley so still and solemn and lonesome, and all the
|
|
little shabby huts and things that was scattered about it
|
|
clean disappeared and gone, and nothing around it now
|
|
but a soft wide spread of yaller velvet, which was the
|
|
sand.
|
|
|
|
That was the right place to stop, and we done it.
|
|
We set there a-looking and a-thinking for a half an
|
|
hour, nobody a-saying anything, for it made us feel
|
|
quiet and kind of solemn to remember it had been
|
|
looking over that valley just that same way, and think-
|
|
ing its awful thoughts all to itself for thousands of
|
|
years. and nobody can't find out what they are to this
|
|
day.
|
|
|
|
At last I took up the glass and see some little black
|
|
things a-capering around on that velvet carpet, and
|
|
some more a-climbing up the cretur's back, and then I
|
|
see two or three wee puffs of white smoke, and told
|
|
Tom to look. He done it, and says:
|
|
|
|
"They're bugs. No -- hold on; they -- why, I be-
|
|
lieve they're men. Yes, it's men -- men and horses
|
|
both. They're hauling a long ladder up onto the
|
|
Sphinx's back -- now ain't that odd? And now they're
|
|
trying to lean it up a -- there's some more puffs of
|
|
smoke -- it's guns! Huck, they're after Jim."
|
|
|
|
We clapped on the power, and went for them a-
|
|
biling. We was there in no time, and come a-whizzing
|
|
down amongst them, and they broke and scattered every
|
|
which way, and some that was climbing the ladder after
|
|
Jim let go all holts and fell. We soared up and found
|
|
him laying on top of the head panting and most
|
|
tuckered out, partly from howling for help and partly
|
|
from scare. He had been standing a siege a long time
|
|
-- a week, HE said, but it warn't so, it only just seemed
|
|
so to him because they was crowding him so. They
|
|
had shot at him, and rained the bullets all around him,
|
|
but he warn't hit, and when they found he wouldn't
|
|
stand up and the bullets couldn't git at him when he
|
|
was laying down, they went for the ladder, and then
|
|
he knowed it was all up with him if we didn't come
|
|
pretty quick. Tom was very indignant, and asked him
|
|
why he didn't show the flag and command them to GIT,
|
|
in the name of the United States. Jim said he done
|
|
it, but they never paid no attention. Tom said he
|
|
would have this thing looked into at Washington, and
|
|
says:
|
|
|
|
"You'll see that they'll have to apologize for insult-
|
|
ing the flag, and pay an indemnity, too, on top of it
|
|
even if they git off THAT easy."
|
|
|
|
Jim says:
|
|
|
|
"What's an indemnity, Mars Tom?"
|
|
|
|
"It's cash, that's what it is."
|
|
|
|
"Who gits it, Mars Tom?"
|
|
|
|
"Why, WE do."
|
|
|
|
"En who gits de apology?"
|
|
|
|
"The United States. Or, we can take whichever
|
|
we please. We can take the apology, if we want to,
|
|
and let the gov'ment take the money."
|
|
|
|
"How much money will it be, Mars Tom?"
|
|
|
|
"Well, in an aggravated case like this one, it will
|
|
be at least three dollars apiece, and I don't know but
|
|
more."
|
|
|
|
"Well, den, we'll take de money, Mars Tom, blame
|
|
de 'pology. Hain't dat yo' notion, too? En hain't it
|
|
yourn, Huck?"
|
|
|
|
We talked it over a little and allowed that that was as
|
|
good a way as any, so we agreed to take the money.
|
|
It was a new business to me, and I asked Tom if
|
|
countries always apologized when they had done wrong,
|
|
and he says:
|
|
|
|
"Yes; the little ones does."
|
|
|
|
We was sailing around examining the pyramids, you
|
|
know, and now we soared up and roosted on the flat top
|
|
of the biggest one, and found it was just like what the
|
|
man said in the Sunday-school. It was like four pairs
|
|
of stairs that starts broad at the bottom and slants up
|
|
and comes together in a point at the top, only these
|
|
stair-steps couldn't be clumb the way you climb other
|
|
stairs; no, for each step was as high as your chin, and
|
|
you have to be boosted up from behind. The two
|
|
other pyramids warn't far away, and the people moving
|
|
about on the sand between looked like bugs crawling,
|
|
we was so high above them.
|
|
|
|
Tom he couldn't hold himself he was so worked up
|
|
with gladness and astonishment to be in such a cele-
|
|
brated place, and he just dripped history from every
|
|
pore, seemed to me. He said he couldn't scarcely
|
|
believe he was standing on the very identical spot the
|
|
prince flew from on the Bronze Horse. It was in the
|
|
Arabian Night times, he said. Somebody give the
|
|
prince a bronze horse with a peg in its shoulder, and
|
|
he could git on him and fly through the air like a bird,
|
|
and go all over the world, and steer it by turning the
|
|
peg, and fly high or low and land wherever he wanted
|
|
to.
|
|
|
|
When he got done telling it there was one of them
|
|
uncomfortable silences that comes, you know, when a
|
|
person has been telling a whopper and you feel sorry
|
|
for him and wish you could think of some way to
|
|
change the subject and let him down easy, but git stuck
|
|
and don't see no way, and before you can pull your
|
|
mind together and DO something, that silence has got in
|
|
and spread itself and done the business. I was embar-
|
|
rassed, Jim he was embarrassed, and neither of us
|
|
couldn't say a word. Well, Tom he glowered at me a
|
|
minute, and says:
|
|
|
|
"Come, out with it. What do you think?"
|
|
|
|
I says:
|
|
|
|
"Tom Sawyer, YOU don't believe that, yourself."
|
|
|
|
"What's the reason I don't? What's to hender
|
|
me?"
|
|
|
|
"There's one thing to hender you: it couldn't
|
|
happen, that's all."
|
|
|
|
"What's the reason it couldn't happen?"
|
|
|
|
"You tell me the reason it COULD happen."
|
|
|
|
"This balloon is a good enough reason it could
|
|
happen, I should reckon."
|
|
|
|
"WHY is it?"
|
|
|
|
"WHY is it? I never saw such an idiot. Ain't this
|
|
balloon and the bronze horse the same thing under
|
|
different names?"
|
|
|
|
"No, they're not. One is a balloon and the other's
|
|
a horse. It's very different. Next you'll be saying a
|
|
house and a cow is the same thing."
|
|
|
|
"By Jackson, Huck's got him ag'in! Dey ain't no
|
|
wigglin' outer dat!"
|
|
|
|
"Shut your head, Jim; you don't know what you're
|
|
talking about. And Huck don't. Look here, Huck,
|
|
I'll make it plain to you, so you can understand. You
|
|
see, it ain't the mere FORM that's got anything to do
|
|
with their being similar or unsimilar, it's the PRINCI-
|
|
PLE involved; and the principle is the same in both.
|
|
Don't you see, now?"
|
|
|
|
I turned it over in my mind, and says:
|
|
|
|
"Tom, it ain't no use. Principles is all very well,
|
|
but they don't git around that one big fact, that the
|
|
thing that a balloon can do ain't no sort of proof of
|
|
what a horse can do."
|
|
|
|
"Shucks, Huck, you don't get the idea at all. Now
|
|
look here a minute -- it's perfectly plain. Don't we
|
|
fly through the air?"
|
|
|
|
"Yes."
|
|
|
|
"Very well. Don't we fly high or fly low, just as
|
|
we please?"
|
|
|
|
"Yes."
|
|
|
|
"Don't we steer whichever way we want to?"
|
|
|
|
"Yes."
|
|
|
|
"And don't we land when and where we please?"
|
|
|
|
"Yes."
|
|
|
|
"How do we move the balloon and steer it?"
|
|
|
|
"By touching the buttons."
|
|
|
|
"NOW I reckon the thing is clear to you at last. In
|
|
the other case the moving and steering was done by
|
|
turning a peg. We touch a button, the prince turned
|
|
a peg. There ain't an atom of difference, you see. I
|
|
knowed I could git it through your head if I stuck to it
|
|
long enough."
|
|
|
|
He felt so happy he begun to whistle. But me and
|
|
Jim was silent, so he broke off surprised, and says:
|
|
|
|
"Looky here, Huck Finn, don't you see it YET?"
|
|
|
|
I says:
|
|
|
|
"Tom Sawyer, I want to ask you some questions."
|
|
|
|
"Go ahead," he says, and I see Jim chirk up to
|
|
listen.
|
|
|
|
"As I understand it, the whole thing is in the buttons
|
|
and the peg -- the rest ain't of no consequence. A
|
|
button is one shape, a peg is another shape, but that
|
|
ain't any matter?"
|
|
|
|
"No, that ain't any matter, as long as they've both
|
|
got the same power."
|
|
|
|
"All right, then. What is the power that's in a
|
|
candle and in a match?"
|
|
|
|
"It's the fire."
|
|
|
|
"It's the same in both, then?"
|
|
|
|
"Yes, just the same in both."
|
|
|
|
"All right. Suppose I set fire to a carpenter shop
|
|
with a match, what will happen to that carpenter
|
|
shop?"
|
|
|
|
"She'll burn up."
|
|
|
|
"And suppose I set fire to this pyramid with a
|
|
candle -- will she burn up?"
|
|
|
|
"Of course she won't."
|
|
|
|
"All right. Now the fire's the same, both times.
|
|
WHY does the shop burn, and the pyramid don't?"
|
|
|
|
"Because the pyramid CAN'T burn."
|
|
|
|
"Aha! and A HORSE CAN'T FLY!"
|
|
|
|
"My lan', ef Huck ain't got him ag'in! Huck's
|
|
landed him high en dry dis time, I tell you! Hit's
|
|
de smartes' trap I ever see a body walk inter -- en
|
|
ef I --"
|
|
|
|
But Jim was so full of laugh he got to strangling and
|
|
couldn't go on, and Tom was that mad to see how neat
|
|
I had floored him, and turned his own argument ag'in
|
|
him and knocked him all to rags and flinders with it,
|
|
that all he could manage to say was that whenever he
|
|
heard me and Jim try to argue it made him ashamed
|
|
of the human race. I never said nothing; I was feel-
|
|
ing pretty well satisfied. When I have got the best of
|
|
a person that way, it ain't my way to go around crow-
|
|
ing about it the way some people does, for I consider
|
|
that if I was in his place I wouldn't wish him to crow
|
|
over me. It's better to be generous, that's what I
|
|
think.
|
|
|
|
|
|
CHAPTER XIII.
|
|
GOING FOR TOM'S PIPE:
|
|
|
|
BY AND BY we left Jim to float around up there in
|
|
the neighborhood of the pyramids, and we clumb
|
|
down to the hole where you go into the tunnel, and
|
|
went in with some Arabs and candles, and away in
|
|
there in the middle of the pyramid we found a room and
|
|
a big stone box in it where they used to keep that king,
|
|
just as the man in the Sunday-school said; but he was
|
|
gone, now; somebody had got him. But I didn't take
|
|
no interest in the place, because there could be ghosts
|
|
there, of course; not fresh ones, but I don't like no
|
|
kind.
|
|
|
|
So then we come out and got some little donkeys and
|
|
rode a piece, and then went in a boat another piece,
|
|
and then more donkeys, and got to Cairo; and all the way
|
|
the road was as smooth and beautiful a road as ever I
|
|
see, and had tall date-pa'ms on both sides, and naked
|
|
children everywhere, and the men was as red as copper,
|
|
and fine and strong and handsome. And the city was
|
|
a curiosity. Such narrow streets -- why, they were
|
|
just lanes, and crowded with people with turbans, and
|
|
women with veils, and everybody rigged out in blazing
|
|
bright clothes and all sorts of colors, and you wondered
|
|
how the camels and the people got by each other in
|
|
such narrow little cracks, but they done it -- a perfect
|
|
jam, you see, and everybody noisy. The stores warn't
|
|
big enough to turn around in, but you didn't have to
|
|
go in; the storekeeper sat tailor fashion on his counter,
|
|
smoking his snaky long pipe, and had his things where
|
|
he could reach them to sell, and he was just as good as
|
|
in the street, for the camel-loads brushed him as they
|
|
went by.
|
|
|
|
Now and then a grand person flew by in a carriage
|
|
with fancy dressed men running and yelling in front of
|
|
it and whacking anybody with a long rod that didn't
|
|
get out of the way. And by and by along comes the
|
|
Sultan riding horseback at the head of a procession,
|
|
and fairly took your breath away his clothes was so
|
|
splendid; and everybody fell flat and laid on his
|
|
stomach while he went by. I forgot, but a feller
|
|
helped me to remember. He was one that had a rod
|
|
and run in front.
|
|
|
|
There was churches, but they don't know enough to
|
|
keep Sunday; they keep Friday and break the Sab-
|
|
bath. You have to take off your shoes when you go
|
|
in. There was crowds of men and boys in the church,
|
|
setting in groups on the stone floor and making no end
|
|
of noise -- getting their lessons by heart, Tom said, out
|
|
of the Koran, which they think is a Bible, and people
|
|
that knows better knows enough to not let on. I never
|
|
see such a big church in my life before, and most awful
|
|
high, it was; it made you dizzy to look up; our
|
|
village church at home ain't a circumstance to it; if
|
|
you was to put it in there, people would think it was a
|
|
drygoods box.
|
|
|
|
What I wanted to see was a dervish, because I was
|
|
interested in dervishes on accounts of the one that
|
|
played the trick on the camel-driver. So we found a
|
|
lot in a kind of a church, and they called themselves
|
|
Whirling Dervishes; and they did whirl, too. I never
|
|
see anything like it. They had tall sugar-loaf hats on,
|
|
and linen petticoats; and they spun and spun and
|
|
spun, round and round like tops, and the petticoats
|
|
stood out on a slant, and it was the prettiest thing I
|
|
ever see, and made me drunk to look at it. They was
|
|
all Moslems, Tom said, and when I asked him what a
|
|
Moslem was, he said it was a person that wasn't a
|
|
Presbyterian. So there is plenty of them in Missouri,
|
|
though I didn't know it before.
|
|
|
|
We didn't see half there was to see in Cairo, because
|
|
Tom was in such a sweat to hunt out places that was
|
|
celebrated in history. We had a most tiresome time to
|
|
find the granary where Joseph stored up the grain
|
|
before the famine, and when we found it it warn't
|
|
worth much to look at, being such an old tumble-down
|
|
wreck; but Tom was satisfied, and made more fuss over
|
|
it than I would make if I stuck a nail in my foot.
|
|
How he ever found that place was too many for me.
|
|
We passed as much as forty just like it before we come
|
|
to it, and any of them would 'a' done for me, but none
|
|
but just the right one would suit him; I never see any-
|
|
body so particular as Tom Sawyer. The minute he
|
|
struck the right one he reconnized it as easy as I would
|
|
reconnize my other shirt if I had one, but how he done
|
|
it he couldn't any more tell than he could fly; he said
|
|
so himself.
|
|
|
|
Then we hunted a long time for the house where the
|
|
boy lived that learned the cadi how to try the case of
|
|
the old olives and the new ones, and said it was out of
|
|
the Arabian Nights, and he would tell me and Jim
|
|
about it when he got time. Well, we hunted and
|
|
hunted till I was ready to drop, and I wanted Tom to
|
|
give it up and come next day and git somebody that
|
|
knowed the town and could talk Missourian and could
|
|
go straight to the place; but no, he wanted to find it
|
|
himself, and nothing else would answer. So on we
|
|
went. Then at last the remarkablest thing happened I
|
|
ever see. The house was gone -- gone hundreds of
|
|
years ago -- every last rag of it gone but just one mud
|
|
brick. Now a person wouldn't ever believe that a
|
|
backwoods Missouri boy that hadn't ever been in that
|
|
town before could go and hunt that place over and find
|
|
that brick, but Tom Sawyer done it. I know he done
|
|
it, because I see him do it. I was right by his very
|
|
side at the time, and see him see the brick and see him
|
|
reconnize it. Well, I says to myself, how DOES he do
|
|
it? Is it knowledge, or is it instink?
|
|
|
|
Now there's the facts, just as they happened: let
|
|
everybody explain it their own way. I've ciphered
|
|
over it a good deal, and it's my opinion that some of it
|
|
is knowledge but the main bulk of it is instink. The
|
|
reason is this: Tom put the brick in his pocket to give
|
|
to a museum with his name on it and the facts when he
|
|
went home, and I slipped it out and put another brick
|
|
considerable like it in its place, and he didn't know the
|
|
difference -- but there was a difference, you see. I
|
|
think that settles it -- it's mostly instink, not knowledge.
|
|
Instink tells him where the exact PLACE is for the brick to
|
|
be in, and so he reconnizes it by the place it's in, not
|
|
by the look of the brick. If it was knowledge, not
|
|
instink, he would know the brick again by the look of
|
|
it the next time he seen it -- which he didn't. So it
|
|
shows that for all the brag you hear about knowledge
|
|
being such a wonderful thing, instink is worth forty of
|
|
it for real unerringness. Jim says the same.
|
|
|
|
When we got back Jim dropped down and took us
|
|
in, and there was a young man there with a red skull-
|
|
cap and tassel on and a beautiful silk jacket and baggy
|
|
trousers with a shawl around his waist and pistols in it
|
|
that could talk English and wanted to hire to us as
|
|
guide and take us to Mecca and Medina and Central
|
|
Africa and everywheres for a half a dollar a day and his
|
|
keep, and we hired him and left, and piled on the
|
|
power, and by the time we was through dinner we was
|
|
over the place where the Israelites crossed the Red Sea
|
|
when Pharaoh tried to overtake them and was caught
|
|
by the waters. We stopped, then, and had a good
|
|
look at the place, and it done Jim good to see it. He
|
|
said he could see it all, now, just the way it happened;
|
|
he could see the Israelites walking along between the
|
|
walls of water, and the Egyptians coming, from away
|
|
off yonder, hurrying all they could, and see them start
|
|
in as the Israelites went out, and then when they was
|
|
all in, see the walls tumble together and drown the last
|
|
man of them. Then we piled on the power again and
|
|
rushed away and huvvered over Mount Sinai, and saw
|
|
the place where Moses broke the tables of stone, and
|
|
where the children of Israel camped in the plain and
|
|
worshiped the golden calf, and it was all just as
|
|
interesting as could be, and the guide knowed every
|
|
place as well as I knowed the village at home.
|
|
|
|
But we had an accident, now, and it fetched all the
|
|
plans to a standstill. Tom's old ornery corn-cob pipe
|
|
had got so old and swelled and warped that she couldn't
|
|
hold together any longer, notwithstanding the strings
|
|
and bandages, but caved in and went to pieces. Tom
|
|
he didn't know WHAT to do. The professor's pipe
|
|
wouldn't answer; it warn't anything but a mershum,
|
|
and a person that's got used to a cob pipe knows it
|
|
lays a long ways over all the other pipes in this world,
|
|
and you can't git him to smoke any other. He
|
|
wouldn't take mine, I couldn't persuade him. So
|
|
there he was.
|
|
|
|
He thought it over, and said we must scour around
|
|
and see if we could roust out one in Egypt or Arabia or
|
|
around in some of these countries, but the guide said no,
|
|
it warn't no use, they didn't have them. So Tom was
|
|
pretty glum for a little while, then he chirked up and said
|
|
he'd got the idea and knowed what to do. He says:
|
|
|
|
"I've got another corn-cob pipe, and it's a prime
|
|
one, too, and nearly new. It's laying on the rafter
|
|
that's right over the kitchen stove at home in the
|
|
village. Jim, you and the guide will go and get it,
|
|
and me and Huck will camp here on Mount Sinai till
|
|
you come back."
|
|
|
|
"But, Mars Tom, we couldn't ever find de village.
|
|
I could find de pipe, 'case I knows de kitchen, but my
|
|
lan', we can't ever find de village, nur Sent Louis, nur
|
|
none o' dem places. We don't know de way, Mars
|
|
Tom."
|
|
|
|
That was a fact, and it stumped Tom for a minute.
|
|
Then he said:
|
|
|
|
"Looky here, it can be done, sure; and I'll tell you
|
|
how. You set your compass and sail west as straight
|
|
as a dart, till you find the United States. It ain't any
|
|
trouble, because it's the first land you'll strike the other
|
|
side of the Atlantic. If it's daytime when you strike it,
|
|
bulge right on, straight west from the upper part of the
|
|
Florida coast, and in an hour and three quarters you'll
|
|
hit the mouth of the Mississippi -- at the speed that
|
|
I'm going to send you. You'll be so high up in the
|
|
air that the earth will be curved considerable -- sorter
|
|
like a washbowl turned upside down -- and you'll see a
|
|
raft of rivers crawling around every which way, long
|
|
before you get there, and you can pick out the Miss-
|
|
issippi without any trouble. Then you can follow the
|
|
river north nearly, an hour and three quarters, till you
|
|
see the Ohio come in; then you want to look sharp,
|
|
because you're getting near. Away up to your left
|
|
you'll see another thread coming in -- that's the
|
|
Missouri and is a little above St. Louis. You'll come
|
|
down low then, so as you can examine the villages as
|
|
you spin along. You'll pass about twenty-five in the
|
|
next fifteen minutes, and you'll recognize ours when
|
|
you see it -- and if you don't, you can yell down and
|
|
ask."
|
|
|
|
"Ef it's dat easy, Mars Tom, I reckon we kin do
|
|
it -- yassir, I knows we kin."
|
|
|
|
The guide was sure of it, too, and thought that he
|
|
could learn to stand his watch in a little while.
|
|
|
|
"Jim can learn you the whole thing in a half an
|
|
hour," Tom said. "This balloon's as easy to manage
|
|
as a canoe."
|
|
|
|
Tom got out the chart and marked out the course
|
|
and measured it, and says:
|
|
|
|
"To go back west is the shortest way, you see.
|
|
It's only about seven thousand miles. If you went
|
|
east, and so on around, it's over twice as far." Then
|
|
he says to the guide, "I want you both to watch the
|
|
tell-tale all through the watches, and whenever it don't
|
|
mark three hundred miles an hour, you go higher or
|
|
drop lower till you find a storm-current that's going
|
|
your way. There's a hundred miles an hour in this
|
|
old thing without any wind to help. There's two-
|
|
hundred-mile gales to be found, any time you want to
|
|
hunt for them."
|
|
|
|
"We'll hunt for them, sir."
|
|
|
|
"See that you do. Sometimes you may have to
|
|
go up a couple of miles, and it'll be p'ison cold, but
|
|
most of the time you'll find your storm a good deal
|
|
lower. If you can only strike a cyclone -- that's the
|
|
ticket for you! You'll see by the professor's books
|
|
that they travel west in these latitudes; and they travel
|
|
low, too."
|
|
|
|
Then he ciphered on the time, and says --
|
|
|
|
"Seven thousand miles, three hundred miles an
|
|
hour -- you can make the trip in a day -- twenty-four
|
|
hours. This is Thursday; you'll be back here Sat-
|
|
urday afternoon. Come, now, hustle out some blankets
|
|
and food and books and things for me and Huck, and
|
|
you can start right along. There ain't no occasion to
|
|
fool around -- I want a smoke, and the quicker you
|
|
fetch that pipe the better."
|
|
|
|
All hands jumped for the things, and in eight min-
|
|
utes our things was out and the balloon was ready for
|
|
America. So we shook hands good-bye, and Tom
|
|
gave his last orders:
|
|
|
|
"It's 1O minutes to 2 P.M. now, Mount Sinai time.
|
|
In 24 hours you'll be home, and it'll be 6 to-mor-
|
|
row morning, village time. When you strike the
|
|
village, land a little back of the top of the hill, in the
|
|
woods, out of sight; then you rush down, Jim, and
|
|
shove these letters in the post-office, and if you see
|
|
anybody stirring, pull your slouch down over your face
|
|
so they won't know you. Then you go and slip in the
|
|
back way to the kitchen and git the pipe, and lay this
|
|
piece of paper on the kitchen table, and put something
|
|
on it to hold it, and then slide out and git away, and
|
|
don't let Aunt Polly catch a sight of you, nor nobody
|
|
else. Then you jump for the balloon and shove for
|
|
Mount Sinai three hundred miles an hour. You won't
|
|
have lost more than an hour. You'll start back at 7 or
|
|
8 A.M., village time, and be here in 24 hours, arriving
|
|
at 2 or 3 P.M., Mount Sinai time."
|
|
|
|
Tom he read the piece of paper to us. He had
|
|
wrote on it:
|
|
|
|
"THURSDAY AFTERNOON. Tom Sawyer the Erro-
|
|
nort sends his love to Aunt Polly from Mount Sinai
|
|
where the Ark was, and so does Huck Finn, and she
|
|
will get it to-morrow morning half-past six." *
|
|
|
|
[* This misplacing of the Ark is probably Huck's
|
|
error, not Tom's. -- M.T.]
|
|
|
|
"That'll make her eyes bulge out and the tears
|
|
come," he says. Then he says:
|
|
|
|
"Stand by! One -- two -- three -- away you go!"
|
|
|
|
And away she DID go! Why, she seemed to whiz
|
|
out of sight in a second.
|
|
|
|
Then we found a most comfortable cave that looked
|
|
out over the whole big plain, and there we camped to
|
|
wait for the pipe.
|
|
|
|
The balloon come hack all right, and brung the pipe;
|
|
but Aunt Polly had catched Jim when he was getting
|
|
it, and anybody can guess what happened: she sent
|
|
for Tom. So Jim he says:
|
|
|
|
"Mars Tom, she's out on de porch wid her eye sot on
|
|
de sky a-layin' for you, en she say she ain't gwyne to
|
|
budge from dah tell she gits hold of you. Dey's gwyne
|
|
to be trouble, Mars Tom, 'deed dey is."
|
|
|
|
So then we shoved for home, and not feeling very
|
|
gay, neither.
|
|
|
|
END.
|
|
|