How Deacon Tubman and Parson Whitney Kept New Year's eBook

William Hutchinson Murray
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 122 pages of information about How Deacon Tubman and Parson Whitney Kept New Year's.

How Deacon Tubman and Parson Whitney Kept New Year's eBook

William Hutchinson Murray
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 122 pages of information about How Deacon Tubman and Parson Whitney Kept New Year's.
came and smote upon him in volleys, still he clutched the rope and rushed along, threatening the crowd that was closing in ahead of him with his club, and so making headway on his dreadful errand, while the poor old man, unable to keep up with him, was filling the air with his cries, and, without knowing what he was saying, perhaps, kept calling on the people, saying, “Oh, good people, good people, don’t let him kill my dog.”

Indeed, his grief was piteous to see, for he was half distraught with fear, and like as a mother whose child had been snatched from her and was being hurried to death, so he, with tears, sobs and screams, kept entreating one moment the crowd and the next beseeching heaven, saying, “Don’t let him kill my dog,” and being an old man and white-headed, and as his countenance and gestures were eloquent with the eloquence of true grief, the people were filled with pity for him and their hearts melted with sympathy at the piteous spectacle they beheld.

Then up spake the honest carter, saying, “Friends, let’s give the old man a lift, for it’s a shame that one so old should lose his dog.  How much is it you lack of the tax?” he asked of the poor old gentleman as he came panting up.  But he was so confused and tremulous with terror that he could not answer, and so being unable to do more he stretched his old shaken hands in which the money was still, tightly clutched, up to him, but the old hands shook so that the carter could not count it, until he had taken it into his own steady palm.

“Here’s fifty cents and a few odd pennies,” he shouted, “and the law demands three dollars; two dollars and a half is wanted; who’ll help make up the three dollars and save the old man’s dog?  Here’s fifty cents,” he added as he took a silver half-dollar from his pocket and dropped it into the hat, “it’s half I earnt yesterday, and more than I’ll earn to-day, perhaps, for times be dull, but the old man shall have it, if Mary and I go without sugar and tea for a week.”

’Twas a good speech and bravely said, and the crowd responded to it as bravely, for it fairly rained dimes and quarters and pennies, not only into the carter’s hat until it sagged, but into his cart, too, until the bottom of it was speckled all over with copper and silver coin, and the honest fellow held up his hands for the crowd to give no more, crying: 

“Hold, hold!  Here’s enough, and more than enough.”

But he could scarcely make himself heard, because of the cheering and the laughing and the rattling of the pieces as the crowd continued to rain them all the faster into his cart.  Ah, me, what is that sweet something in human hearts, which, in its response to human want, translates us like a flash from low to highest mood; aye, which breaketh through all barriers of selfish habit, and even the adamantine of foreign tongues and poureth out its rich largess in a common tide to meet a brother’s need, where’er that brother is or whatever he may be?

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Project Gutenberg
How Deacon Tubman and Parson Whitney Kept New Year's from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.