The Gilded Age, Part 1. eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 95 pages of information about The Gilded Age, Part 1..

The Gilded Age, Part 1. eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 95 pages of information about The Gilded Age, Part 1..
and little negro boys with nothing whatever on but tow-linen shirts with a fine southern exposure, came from various directions and stood with their hands locked together behind them and aided in the inspection.  The rest of the population were laying down their employments and getting ready to come, when a man burst through the assemblage and seized the new-comers by the hands in a frenzy of welcome, and exclaimed—­indeed almost shouted: 

“Well who could have believed it!  Now is it you sure enough—­turn around! hold up your heads!  I want to look at you good!  Well, well, well, it does seem most too good to be true, I declare!  Lord, I’m so glad to see you!  Does a body’s whole soul good to look at you!  Shake hands again!  Keep on shaking hands!  Goodness gracious alive.  What will my wife say?—­Oh yes indeed, it’s so!—­married only last week—­lovely, perfectly lovely creature, the noblest woman that ever—­you’ll like her, Nancy!  Like her?  Lord bless me you’ll love her—­you’ll dote on her —­you’ll be twins!  Well, well, well, let me look at you again!  Same old —­why bless my life it was only jest this very morning that my wife says, ’Colonel’—­she will call me Colonel spite of everything I can do—­she says ‘Colonel, something tells me somebody’s coming!’ and sure enough here you are, the last people on earth a body could have expected.  Why she’ll think she’s a prophetess—­and hanged if I don’t think so too —­and you know there ain’t any, country but what a prophet’s an honor to, as the proverb says.  Lord bless me and here’s the children, too!  Washington, Emily, don’t you know me?  Come, give us a kiss.  Won’t I fix you, though!—­ponies, cows, dogs, everything you can think of that’ll delight a child’s heart-and—­Why how’s this?  Little strangers?  Well you won’t be any strangers here, I can tell you.  Bless your souls we’ll make you think you never was at home before—­’deed and ’deed we will, I can tell you!  Come, now, bundle right along with me.  You can’t glorify any hearth stone but mine in this camp, you know—­can’t eat anybody’s bread but mine—­can’t do anything but just make yourselves perfectly at home and comfortable, and spread yourselves out and rest!  You hear me!  Here—­Jim, Tom, Pete, Jake, fly around!  Take that team to my place—­put the wagon in my lot—­put the horses under the shed, and get out hay and oats and fill them up!  Ain’t any hay and oats?  Well get some—­have it charged to me—­come, spin around, now!  Now, Hawkins, the procession’s ready; mark time, by the left flank, forward-march!”

And the Colonel took the lead, with Laura astride his neck, and the newly-inspired and very grateful immigrants picked up their tired limbs with quite a spring in them and dropped into his wake.

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Project Gutenberg
The Gilded Age, Part 1. from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.