The Hoosier Schoolmaster eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 199 pages of information about The Hoosier Schoolmaster.

The Hoosier Schoolmaster eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 199 pages of information about The Hoosier Schoolmaster.

Bud had not counted amiss when he thought that Mr. Soden’s preaching would be likely to arouse so mean-spirited a fellow as Walter.  So vivid was the impression that Johnson begged Bud to return to the office with him.  He felt sick, and was afraid that he should die before morning.  He insisted that Bud should stay with him all night.  To this Means readily consented, and by morning he had heard all that the frightened Walter had to tell.

And now let us return to the trial, where Ralph sits waiting the testimony of Walter Johnson, which is to prove his statement false.

CHAPTER XXXI.

THE TRIAL CONCLUDED.

I do not know how much interest the “gentle reader” may feel in Bud.  But I venture to hope that there are some Buddhists among my readers who will wish the contradictoriness of his actions explained.  The first dash of disappointment had well-nigh upset him.  And when a man concludes to throw overboard his good resolutions, he always seeks to avoid the witness of those resolutions.  Hence Bud, after that distressful Tuesday evening on which Miss Martha had given him “the sack,” wished to see Ralph less than any one else.  And yet when he came to suspect Small’s villainy, his whole nature revolted at it.  But having broken with Ralph, he thought it best to maintain an attitude of apparent hostility, that he might act as a detective, and, perhaps, save his friend from the mischief that threatened him.  As soon as he heard of Ralph’s arrest he determined to make Walter Johnson tell his own secret in court, because he knew that it would be best for Ralph that Walter should tell it.  Bud’s telling at second-hand would not be conclusive.  And he sincerely desired to save Walter from prison.  For Walter Johnson was the victim of Dr. Small, or of Dr. Small and such novels as “The Pirate’s Bride,” “Claude Duval,” “The Wild Rover of the West Indies,” and the cheap biographies of such men as Murrell.  Small found him with his imagination inflamed by the history of such heroes, and opened to him the path to glory for which he longed.

The whole morning after Ralph’s arrest Bud was working on Walter’s conscience and his fears.  The poor fellow, unable to act for himself, was torn asunder between the old ascendency of Small and the new ascendency of Bud Means.  Bud finally frightened him, by the fear of the penitentiary, into going to the place of trial.  But once inside the door, and once in sight of Small, who was more to him than God, or, rather, more to him than the devil—­for the devil was Walter’s God, or, perhaps, I should say, Walter’s God was a devil—­once in sight of Small, he refused to move an inch farther.  And Bud, after all his perseverance, was about to give up in sheer despair.

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The Hoosier Schoolmaster from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.