like those of some young wild beast, the child ran
at the snake, raining blows with the stout club, and
with rage in every feature. The black-snake,
checked in its course, turned with the constrictor’s
instinct and sprang at the boy, whipping its strong
coils about one of its assailant’s legs and
rearing its head aloft to a level with his face.
The boy but struck and gasped and stumbled over some
obstruction, and, somehow, the snake was wrenched
away, and then there was another rush at it, another
rain of blows, and it was hit as had been its mate,
and lay twisting with a broken back. The man
dashed through the creek and came upon the scene with
a great stick in his hand, but its use was not required.
The only labor which devolved upon him was to tear
away from his quarry the boy who was possessed of
a spirit of rage and vengeance beyond all reasoning.
Upon the heaving, tossing thing, so that he would
have been fairly in its coils had it possessed longer
any power, he leaped, striking fiercely and screaming
out all the fearful terms he knew—what
would have been the wildest of all abandonment of profanity
had he but acquired the words for such performance.
His father caught him by the arm, and he struggled
with him. It was simply a young madman.
Carried across the creek and held in bonds for a brief
period, he suddenly burst out sobbing, and then went
to inspect the ravished nest where the two old birds
hovered mourningly about, and where the remaining
nestlings seemed dead at first, though they subsequently
recovered, so gruesomely had the fascination of their
natural enemy affected them!
What happened then? What happens when any father
and mother have occasion to consider the matter of
a son, a child, bone of their bone and flesh of their
flesh, who has transgressed some rule they have set
up for him wisely, thoughtfully, but with no provision
for emotional or extraordinary contingencies, because
it would be useless, since he could not comprehend
exceptions. They took him to the house.
The father looked at him queerly, but with an expression
that was far removed from anger on his face, and his
mother took the young man aside and washed him, and
put on another hickory shirt, and told him that his
sparrows would raise a pretty good family after all,
and that it wouldn’t be so hard for the old
birds to feed three as four.
Early that same evening a six-foot father strolled
over to the place of the nearest settler, a mile or
so away, and the two men walked back, talking together
as neighbors will in a new country, though they do
not so well in cities, and when they reached the creek
one of them, the father, cut a forked twig and lifted
the black-snake to its full length. Its head,
raised even with his, allowed its tail to barely touch
the ground. Evidently the men were interested,
and evidently one of them was rather proud of something.
But he said nothing to his son about it. That
would, in its full consideration, have involved a
licking of somebody for disobedience of orders.
It was a good thing for the bereaved song-sparrows,
though. Older heads than that of the boy were
now considerate of their welfare. Lucky sparrows
were they!