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"Her eyes look as bright as ever to-day," said Harry.
"No compliments, please. I want you to be downright mean," Bim protested.
Kelso looked up with a smile: "My boy, it was Leonardo da Vinci who said that a man could have neither a greater nor a less dominion than that over himself."
"What a cruel-looking villain he is!" Bim exclaimed, with a smile.
"I wouldn't dare say what I think of him."
"If you keep picking on me I'll cut loose and express my opinion of you,"
he retorted.
"Your opinions have ceased to be important," she answered, with a look of indifference.
"I think this is a clear case of a.s.sault and flattery," said Kelso.
"It pains me to look at you," Bim went on.
"Wait until I learn to play the flute and the snare drum," Harry threatened.
"I'm glad that New Salem is so far away," she sighed.
"I'll go and look at the new moon through a knot hole," he laughed.
"My dears, no more of this piping," said Kelso. "Bim must tell us what she has learned of the great evil of slavery. It is most important that Abe should hear it."
Bim told of revolting scenes she had witnessed in St. Louis and New Orleans--of flogging and buying and selling and herding. It was a painful story, the like of which had been traveling over the prairies of Illinois for years. Some had accepted these reports; many, among whom were the most judicious men, had thought they detected in them the note of gross exaggeration. Here, at last, was a witness whose word it was impossible for those who knew her to doubt. Abe put many questions and looked very grave when the testimony was all in.
"If you have any doubt," said Bim, "I ask you to look at that mark on my arm. It was made by the whip of Mr. Eliphalet Biggs."
The young men looked with amazement at a scar some three or four inches long on her forearm.
"If he would do that to his wife, what treatment could you expect for his n.i.g.g.e.rs?" Bim asked. "There are many Biggses in the South."
"What so vile as a cheap, rococo aristocracy--growing up in idleness, too n.o.ble to be restrained, with every brutal pa.s.sion broad blown as flush as May?" Kelso growled.
"Nothing is long sacred in the view of any aristocracy--not even G.o.d,"
Abe answered. "They make a child's plaything of Him and soon cast Him aside."
"But I hold that if our young men are to be trained to tyranny in a lot of little n.i.g.g.e.r kingdoms, our Democracy will die."
Abe made no answer. He was always slow to commit himself.
"The North is partly to blame for what has come," said Samson. "I guess our Yankee captains brought over most of the n.i.g.g.e.rs and sold them to the planters of the South."
"There was a demand for them, or those Yankee pirates wouldn't have brought the n.i.g.g.e.rs," Harry answered. "Both seller and buyer were committing a crime."
"They established a great wrong and now the South is pus.h.i.+ng to extend and give it the sanction of law," said Abe. "There is the point of irritation and danger."
"I hear that in the next Legislature an effort will be made to endorse slavery," said Kelso. "It would be like endorsing Nero and Caligula."
"It is a dangerous subject," Abe answered. "Whatever happens, I shall not fail to express my opinion of slavery if I go back."
"The time is coming when you will take the bull by the horns," said Kelso. "There's no fence that will keep him at home."
"I hope that isn't true," Abe answered.
Soon Mrs. Kelso called Bim to set the table. She and Harry brought it out under the tree, where, in the cool shade, they had a merry dinner.
When the dishes were put away Percy Brimstead arrived with his sister Annabel in their buggy. Bim went out to meet them and came into the dooryard with her arm around Annabel's waist.
"Did any one ever see a lovelier girl than this?" Bim asked, as they stood up before the dinner party.
"Her cheeks are like wild roses, her eyes like the dew on them when the sun is rising," said Kelso.
"But look at her mouth and the teeth in it the next time she smiles," Bim went on.
"Aye, they are well wrought," her father answered.
"If you don't stop, I shall run," Annabel protested.
"I haven't said a word, but I want you to know that I am deeply impressed," said Harry. "No girl has a right to be as handsome as you are and come and look into the face of a young man who has resolved to look at the new moon through a knot bole."
"Well, who would have thought it!" Bim exclaimed. "Such a wonderful compliment, and from Harry Needles!"
"Of course he didn't mean it," said Annabel, whose cheeks were now very red.
"Of course I mean it," Harry declared. "That's why I keep away from your house. I am bound to stay single."
"Did you ever see a fairy going to mill on a b.u.t.terfly's back?" Bim asked, looking at Harry.
"Not as I remember," he answered.
"If you had, you wouldn't expect us to believe it," Bim a.s.serted.
"There was a soldier in Colonel Taylor's regiment who always ran when the enemy was in sight," Abe began. "When he was brought up for discipline, he said 'My heart is as brave as Julius Caesar's but my legs can't be trusted.' I know Harry's legs are all right, but I don't believe his heart can be trusted in a battle of this kind."
"I've heard all about his brave adventures in the war," said Bim. "He'll find that girls are worse than Indians."
"If they're as well armed as you two, I guess you're right," said Samson.
Abe rose and said: "The day is pa.s.sing. I'll start on with Parsons and the pony and read my stint afoot. You come along in a few minutes. By the time you overtake me I'll be ready to get into the saddle."
Half an hour or so after Abe had gone, Harry's horse, which had been whinnying for his mate, bounded out of the stable and went galloping down the road, having slipped his halter.
"He will not stop until he overtakes the other horse," said Harry.
"You can ride with us," Annabel suggested.
So the young man brought his saddle and bridle and put it under the seat of the buggy and got in with Annabel and her small brother.