David Crockett eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 276 pages of information about David Crockett.

David Crockett eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 276 pages of information about David Crockett.

Crockett listened also, with increasing anxiety.  He knew that his turn was to come; that he must mount the stump and address the listening throng.  He perceived that he could not speak as these men were speaking; and perhaps for the first time in his life began to experience some sense of inferiority.  He writes: 

“The thought of having to make a speech made my knees feel mighty weak, and set my heart to fluttering almost as bad as my first love-scrape with the Quaker’s niece.  But as good luck would have it, these big candidates spoke nearly all day, and when they quit the people were worn out with fatigue, which afforded me a good apology for not discussing the Government.  But I listened mighty close to them, and was learning pretty fast about political matters.  When they were all done, I got up and told some laughable story, and quit.  I found I was safe in those parts; and so I went home, and did not go back again till after the election was over.  But to cut this matter short, I was elected, doubling my competitor, and nine votes over.

“A short time after this, I was at Pulaski, where I met with Colonel Polk, now a member of Congress from Tennessee.  He was at that time a member elected to the Legislature, as well as myself.  In a large company he said to me, ’Well, Colonel, I suppose we shall have a radical change of the judiciary at the next session of the Legislature.’  ‘Very likely, sir,’ says I. And I put out quicker, for I was afraid some one would ask me what the judiciary was; and if I know’d I wish I may be shot.  I don’t indeed believe I had ever before heard that there was any such thing in all nature.  But still I was not willing that the people there should know how ignorant I was about it.”

At length the day arrived for the meeting of the Legislature.  Crockett repaired to the seat of government.  With all his self-complacency he began to appreciate that he had much to learn.  The two first items of intelligence which he deemed it important that he, as a member of the Legislature, should acquire, were the meaning of the words government and judiciary.  By adroit questioning and fixed thought, he ere long stored up those intellectual treasures.  Though with but little capacity to obtain knowledge from books, he became an earnest student of the ideas of his fellow-legislators as elicited in conversation or debate.  Quite a heavy disaster, just at this time, came upon Crockett.  We must again quote his own words, for it is our wish, in this volume, to give the reader a correct idea of the man.  Whatever Crockett says, ever comes fresh from his heart.  He writes: 

“About this time I met with a very severe misfortune, which I may be pardoned for naming, as it made a great change in my circumstances, and kept me back very much in the world.  I had built an extensive grist-mill and powder-mill, all connected together, and also a large distillery.  They had cost me upward of three thousand dollars; more than I was worth in the world.  The first news that I heard, after I got to the Legislature, was that my mills were all swept to smash by a large freshet that came soon after I left home.

Copyrights
Project Gutenberg
David Crockett from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.