<SPAN name="chap08"></SPAN>
<h3 align="center"> CHAPTER VIII </h3>
<h3 align="center"> THE PUZZLING "DOS" AND "DON'TS" </h3>
<p>With the coming of Monday arrived a new life for David—a curious life
full of "don'ts" and "dos." David wondered sometimes why all the
pleasant things were "don'ts" and all the unpleasant ones "dos." Corn
to be hoed, weeds to be pulled, woodboxes to be filled; with all these
it was "do this, do this, do this." But when it came to lying under the
apple trees, exploring the brook that ran by the field, or even
watching the bugs and worms that one found in the earth—all these were
"don'ts."</p>
<p>As to Farmer Holly—Farmer Holly himself awoke to some new experiences
that Monday morning. One of them was the difficulty in successfully
combating the cheerfully expressed opinion that weeds were so pretty
growing that it was a pity to pull them up and let them all wither and
die. Another was the equally great difficulty of keeping a small boy at
useful labor of any sort in the face of the attractions displayed by a
passing cloud, a blossoming shrub, or a bird singing on a tree-branch.</p>
<p>In spite of all this, however, David so evidently did his best to carry
out the "dos" and avoid the "don'ts," that at four o'clock that first
Monday he won from the stern but would-be-just Farmer Holly his freedom
for the rest of the day; and very gayly he set off for a walk. He went
without his violin, as there was the smell of rain in the air; but his
face and his step and the very swing of his arms were singing (to
David) the joyous song of the morning before. Even yet, in spite of the
vicissitudes of the day's work, the whole world, to David's homesick,
lonely little heart, was still caroling that blessed "You're wanted,
you're wanted, you're wanted!"</p>
<p>And then he saw the crow.</p>
<p>David knew crows. In his home on the mountain he had had several of
them for friends. He had learned to know and answer their calls. He had
learned to admire their wisdom and to respect their moods and tempers.
He loved to watch them. Especially he loved to see the great birds cut
through the air with a wide sweep of wings, so alive, so gloriously
free!</p>
<p>But this crow—</p>
<p>This crow was not cutting through the air with a wide sweep of wing. It
was in the middle of a cornfield, and it was rising and falling and
flopping about in a most extraordinary fashion. Very soon David,
running toward it, saw why. By a long leather strip it was fastened
securely to a stake in the ground.</p>
<p>"Oh, oh, oh!" exclaimed David, in sympathetic consternation. "Here, you
just wait a minute. I'll fix it."</p>
<p>With confident celerity David whipped out his jackknife to cut the
thong; but he found then that to "fix it" and to say he would "fix it"
were two different matters.</p>
<p>The crow did not seem to recognize in David a friend. He saw in him,
apparently, but another of the stone-throwing, gun-shooting, torturing
humans who were responsible for his present hateful captivity. With
beak and claw and wing, therefore, he fought this new evil that had
come presumedly to torment; and not until David had hit upon the
expedient of taking off his blouse, and throwing it over the angry
bird, could the boy get near enough to accomplish his purpose. Even
then David had to leave upon the slender leg a twist of leather.</p>
<p>A moment later, with a whir of wings and a frightened squawk that
quickly turned into a surprised caw of triumphant rejoicing, the crow
soared into the air and made straight for a distant tree-top. David,
after a minute's glad surveying of his work, donned his blouse again
and resumed his walk.</p>
<p>It was almost six o'clock when David got back to the Holly farmhouse.
In the barn doorway sat Perry Larson.</p>
<p>"Well, sonny," the man greeted him cheerily, "did ye get yer weedin'
done?"</p>
<p>"Y—yes," hesitated David. "I got it done; but I didn't like it."</p>
<p>"'T is kinder hot work."</p>
<p>"Oh, I didn't mind that part," returned David. "What I didn't like was
pulling up all those pretty little plants and letting them die."</p>
<p>"Weeds—'pretty little plants'!" ejaculated the man. "Well, I'll be
jiggered!"</p>
<p>"But they WERE pretty," defended David, reading aright the scorn in
Perry Larson's voice. "The very prettiest and biggest there were,
always. Mr. Holly showed me, you know,—and I had to pull them up."</p>
<p>"Well, I'll be jiggered!" muttered Perry Larson again.</p>
<p>"But I've been to walk since. I feel better now."</p>
<p>"Oh, ye do!"</p>
<p>"Oh, yes. I had a splendid walk. I went 'way up in the woods on the
hill there. I was singing all the time—inside, you know. I was so glad
Mrs. Holly—wanted me. You know what it is, when you sing inside."</p>
<p>Perry Larson scratched his head.</p>
<p>"Well, no, sonny, I can't really say I do," he retorted. "I ain't much
on singin'."</p>
<p>"Oh, but I don't mean aloud. I mean inside. When you're happy, you
know."</p>
<p>"When I'm—oh!" The man stopped and stared, his mouth falling open.
Suddenly his face changed, and he grinned appreciatively. "Well, if you
ain't the beat 'em, boy! 'T is kinder like singin'—the way ye feel
inside, when yer 'specially happy, ain't it? But I never thought of it
before."</p>
<p>"Oh, yes. Why, that's where I get my songs—inside of me, you
know—that I play on my violin. And I made a crow sing, too. Only HE
sang outside."</p>
<p>"SING—A CROW!" scoffed the man. "Shucks! It'll take more 'n you ter
make me think a crow can sing, my lad."</p>
<p>"But they do, when they're happy," maintained the boy. "Anyhow, it
doesn't sound the same as it does when they're cross, or plagued over
something. You ought to have heard this one to-day. He sang. He was so
glad to get away. I let him loose, you see."</p>
<p>"You mean, you CAUGHT a crow up there in them woods?" The man's voice
was skeptical.</p>
<p>"Oh, no, I didn't catch it. But somebody had, and tied him up. And he
was so unhappy!"</p>
<p>"A crow tied up in the woods!"</p>
<p>"Oh, I didn't find THAT in the woods. It was before I went up the hill
at all."</p>
<p>"A crow tied up—Look a-here, boy, what are you talkin' about? Where
was that crow?" Perry Larson's whole self had become suddenly alert.</p>
<p>"In the field 'Way over there. And somebody—"</p>
<p>"The cornfield! Jingo! Boy, you don't mean you touched THAT crow?"</p>
<p>"Well, he wouldn't let me TOUCH him," half-apologized David. "He was so
afraid, you see. Why, I had to put my blouse over his head before he'd
let me cut him loose at all."</p>
<p>"Cut him loose!" Perry Larson sprang to his feet. "You did n't—you
DIDn't let that crow go!"</p>
<p>David shrank back.</p>
<p>"Why, yes; he WANTED to go. He—" But the man before him had fallen
back despairingly to his old position.</p>
<p>"Well, sir, you've done it now. What the boss'll say, I don't know; but
I know what I'd like ter say to ye. I was a whole week, off an' on,
gettin' hold of that crow, an' I wouldn't have got him at all if I
hadn't hid half the night an' all the mornin' in that clump o' bushes,
watchin' a chance ter wing him, jest enough an' not too much. An' even
then the job wa'n't done. Let me tell yer, 't wa'n't no small thing ter
get him hitched. I'm wearin' the marks of the rascal's beak yet. An'
now you've gone an' let him go—just like that," he finished, snapping
his fingers angrily.</p>
<p>In David's face there was no contrition. There was only incredulous
horror.</p>
<p>"You mean, YOU tied him there, on purpose?"</p>
<p>"Sure I did!"</p>
<p>"But he didn't like it. Couldn't you see he didn't like it?" cried
David.</p>
<p>"Like it! What if he didn't? I didn't like ter have my corn pulled up,
either. See here, sonny, you no need ter look at me in that tone o'
voice. I didn't hurt the varmint none ter speak of—ye see he could
fly, didn't ye?—an' he wa'n't starvin'. I saw to it that he had enough
ter eat an' a dish o' water handy. An' if he didn't flop an' pull an'
try ter get away he needn't 'a' hurt hisself never. I ain't ter blame
for what pullin' he done."</p>
<p>"But wouldn't you pull if you had two big wings that could carry you to
the top of that big tree there, and away up, up in the sky, where you
could talk to the stars?—wouldn't you pull if somebody a hundred times
bigger'n you came along and tied your leg to that post there?"</p>
<p>The man, Perry, flushed an angry red.</p>
<p>"See here, sonny, I wa'n't askin' you ter do no preachin'. What I did
ain't no more'n any man 'round here does—if he's smart enough ter
catch one. Rigged-up broomsticks ain't in it with a live bird when it
comes ter drivin' away them pesky, thievin' crows. There ain't a farmer
'round here that hain't been green with envy, ever since I caught the
critter. An' now ter have you come along an' with one flip o'yer knife
spile it all, I—Well, it jest makes me mad, clean through! That's all."</p>
<p>"You mean, you tied him there to frighten away the other crows?"</p>
<p>"Sure! There ain't nothin' like it."</p>
<p>"Oh, I'm so sorry!"</p>
<p>"Well, you'd better be. But that won't bring back my crow!"</p>
<p>David's face brightened.</p>
<p>"No, that's so, isn't it? I'm glad of that. I was thinking of the
crows, you see. I'm so sorry for them! Only think how we'd hate to be
tied like that—" But Perry Larson, with a stare and an indignant
snort, had got to his feet, and was rapidly walking toward the house.</p>
<p>Very plainly, that evening, David was in disgrace, and it took all of
Mrs. Holly's tact and patience, and some private pleading, to keep a
general explosion from wrecking all chances of his staying longer at
the farmhouse. Even as it was, David was sorrowfully aware that he was
proving to be a great disappointment so soon, and his violin playing
that evening carried a moaning plaintiveness that would have been very
significant to one who knew David well.</p>
<p>Very faithfully, the next day, the boy tried to carry out all the
"dos," and though he did not always succeed, yet his efforts were so
obvious, that even the indignant owner of the liberated crow was
somewhat mollified; and again Simeon Holly released David from work at
four o'clock.</p>
<p>Alas, for David's peace of mind, however; for on his walk to-day,
though he found no captive crow to demand his sympathy, he found
something else quite as heartrending, and as incomprehensible.</p>
<p>It was on the edge of the woods that he came upon two boys, each
carrying a rifle, a dead squirrel, and a dead rabbit. The threatened
rain of the day before had not materialized, and David had his violin.
He had been playing softly when he came upon the boys where the path
entered the woods.</p>
<p>"Oh!" At sight of the boys and their burden David gave an involuntary
cry, and stopped playing.</p>
<p>The boys, scarcely less surprised at sight of David and his violin,
paused and stared frankly.</p>
<p>"It's the tramp kid with his fiddle," whispered one to the other
huskily.</p>
<p>David, his grieved eyes on the motionless little bodies in the boys'
hands, shuddered.</p>
<p>"Are they—dead, too?"</p>
<p>The bigger boy nodded self-importantly.</p>
<p>"Sure. We just shot 'em—the squirrels. Ben here trapped the rabbits."
He paused, manifestly waiting for the proper awed admiration to come
into David's face.</p>
<p>But in David's startled eyes there was no awed admiration, there was
only disbelieving horror.</p>
<p>"You mean, you SENT them to the far country?"</p>
<p>"We—what?"</p>
<p>"Sent them. Made them go yourselves—to the far country?"</p>
<p>The younger boy still stared. The older one grinned disagreeably.</p>
<p>"Sure," he answered with laconic indifference. "We sent 'em to the far
country, all right."</p>
<p>"But—how did you know they WANTED to go?"</p>
<p>"Wanted—Eh?" exploded the big boy. Then he grinned again, still more
disagreeably. "Well, you see, my dear, we didn't ask 'em," he gibed.</p>
<p>Real distress came into David's face.</p>
<p>"Then you don't know at all. And maybe they DIDn't want to go. And if
they didn't, how COULD they go singing, as father said? Father wasn't
sent. He WENT. And he went singing. He said he did. But these—How
would YOU like to have somebody come along and send YOU to the far
country, without even knowing if you wanted to go?"</p>
<p>There was no answer. The boys, with a growing fear in their eyes, as at
sight of something inexplicable and uncanny, were sidling away; and in
a moment they were hurrying down the hill, not, however, without a
backward glance or two, of something very like terror.</p>
<p>David, left alone, went on his way with troubled eyes and a thoughtful
frown.</p>
<p>David often wore, during those first few days at the Holly farmhouse, a
thoughtful face and a troubled frown. There were so many, many things
that were different from his mountain home. Over and over, as those
first long days passed, he read his letter until he knew it by
heart—and he had need to. Was he not already surrounded by things and
people that were strange to him?</p>
<p>And they were so very strange—these people! There were the boys and
men who rose at dawn—yet never paused to watch the sun flood the world
with light; who stayed in the fields all day—yet never raised their
eyes to the big fleecy clouds overhead; who knew birds only as thieves
after fruit and grain, and squirrels and rabbits only as creatures to
be trapped or shot. The women—they were even more incomprehensible.
They spent the long hours behind screened doors and windows, washing
the same dishes and sweeping the same floors day after day. They, too,
never raised their eyes to the blue sky outside, nor even to the
crimson roses that peeped in at the window. They seemed rather to be
looking always for dirt, yet not pleased when they found it—especially
if it had been tracked in on the heel of a small boy's shoe!</p>
<p>More extraordinary than all this to David, however, was the fact that
these people regarded HIM, not themselves, as being strange. As if it
were not the most natural thing in the world to live with one's father
in one's home on the mountain-top, and spend one's days trailing
through the forest paths, or lying with a book beside some babbling
little stream! As if it were not equally natural to take one's violin
with one at times, and learn to catch upon the quivering strings the
whisper of the winds through the trees! Even in winter, when the clouds
themselves came down from the sky and covered the earth with their soft
whiteness,—even then the forest was beautiful; and the song of the
brook under its icy coat carried a charm and mystery that were quite
wanting in the chattering freedom of summer. Surely there was nothing
strange in all this, and yet these people seemed to think there was!</p>
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