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<h2><span style="font-size: 144%">VIII</span></h2>
<p id="p0538"><span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-variant: small-caps">The</span></span> Harling
children and I were never happier, never felt more contented and
secure, than in the weeks of spring which broke that long winter. We
were out all day in the thin sunshine, helping <span class="tei tei-abbr">Mrs.</span>
Harling and Tony break the ground and plant the garden, dig around the
orchard trees, tie up vines and clip the hedges. Every morning, before
I was up, I could hear Tony singing in the garden rows. After the
apple and cherry trees broke into bloom, we ran about under them,
hunting for the new nests the birds were building, throwing clods at
each other, and playing hide-and-seek with Nina. Yet the summer which
was to change everything was coming nearer every day. When boys and
girls are growing up, life can’t stand still, not even in the
quietest of country towns; and they have to grow up, whether they will
or no. That is what their elders are always forgetting.</p>
<p id="p0539">It must have been in June, for <span class="tei tei-abbr">Mrs.</span>
Harling and Ántonia were preserving cherries, when I stopped
one morning to tell them that a dancing pavilion had come to town. I
had seen
two drays hauling the canvas and painted poles up from the depot.</p>
<p id="p0540">That afternoon three cheerful-looking Italians
strolled about Black Hawk, looking at everything, and with them was a
dark, stout woman who wore a long gold watch chain about her neck and
carried a black lace parasol. They seemed especially interested in
children and vacant lots. When I overtook them and stopped to say a
word, I found them affable and confiding. They told me they worked in
Kansas City in the winter, and in summer they went out among the
farming towns with their tent and taught dancing. When business fell
off in one place, they moved on to another.</p>
<p id="p0541">The dancing pavilion was put up near the Danish
laundry, on a vacant lot surrounded by tall, arched cottonwood trees.
It was very much like a merry-go-round tent, with open sides and gay
flags flying from the poles. Before the week was over, all the
ambitious mothers were sending their children to the afternoon dancing
class. At three o’clock one met little girls in white dresses
and little boys in the round-collared shirts of the time, hurrying
along the sidewalk on their way to the tent. <span class="tei tei-abbr">Mrs.</span> Vanni
received them at the
entrance, always dressed in lavender with a great deal of black lace,
her important watch chain lying on her bosom. She wore her hair on the
top of her head, built up in a black tower, with red coral combs. When
she smiled, she showed two rows of strong, crooked yellow teeth. She
taught the little children herself, and her husband, the harpist,
taught the older ones.</p>
<p id="p0542">Often the mothers brought their fancy-work and sat on
the shady side of the tent during the lesson. The popcorn man wheeled
his glass wagon under the big cottonwood by the door, and lounged in
the sun, sure of a good trade when the dancing was over.
<span class="tei tei-abbr">Mr.</span> Jensen, the Danish laundryman, used to bring a chair
from his porch and sit out in the grass plot. Some ragged little boys
from the depot sold pop and iced lemonade under a white umbrella at
the corner, and made faces at the spruce youngsters who came to dance.
That vacant lot soon became the most cheerful place in town. Even on
the hottest afternoons the cottonwoods made a rustling shade, and the
air smelled of popcorn and melted butter, and Bouncing Bets wilting in
the sun. Those hardy flowers had run away from the
laundryman’s garden, and the grass in the middle of the lot was
pink with them.</p>
<p id="p0543">The Vannis kept exemplary order, and closed every
evening at the hour suggested by the City Council. When
<span class="tei tei-abbr">Mrs.</span> Vanni gave the signal, and the harp struck up
“Home, Sweet Home,” all Black Hawk knew it was ten
o’clock. You could set your watch by that tune as confidently as
by the Round House whistle.</p>
<p id="p0544">At last there was something to do in those long,
empty summer evenings, when the married people sat like images on
their front porches, and the boys and girls tramped and tramped the
board sidewalks—northward to the edge of the open prairie,
south to the depot, then back again to the post-office, the ice-cream
parlor, the butcher shop. Now there was a place where the girls could
wear their new dresses, and where one could laugh aloud without being
reproved by the ensuing silence. That silence seemed to ooze out of
the ground, to hang under the foliage of the black maple trees with
the bats and shadows. Now it was broken by light-hearted sounds. First
the deep purring of <span class="tei tei-abbr">Mr.</span> Vanni’s harp came in
silvery ripples through the blackness of the
dusty-smelling night; then the violins fell in—one of them was
almost like a flute. They called so archly, so seductively, that our
feet hurried toward the tent of themselves. Why had n’t we had a
tent before?</p>
<p id="p0545">Dancing became popular now, just as roller skating
had been the summer before. The Progressive Euchre Club arranged with
the Vannis for the exclusive use of the floor on Tuesday and Friday
nights. At other times any one could dance who paid his money and was
orderly; the railroad men, the Round House mechanics, the delivery
boys, the iceman, the farmhands who lived near enough to ride into
town after their day’s work was over.</p>
<p id="p0546">I never missed a Saturday night dance. The tent was
open until midnight then. The country boys came in from farms eight
and ten miles away, and all the country girls were on the floor,—Ántonia and Lena and Tiny, and the Danish laundry girls
and their friends. I was not the only boy who found these dances gayer
than the others. The young men who belonged to the Progressive Euchre
Club used to drop in late and risk a tiff with their sweethearts and
general condemnation for a waltz with “the hired
girls.”</p>
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