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<h2><span style="font-size: 144%">XIV</span></h2>
<p id="p0646"><span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-variant: small-caps">The</span></span> day after
Commencement I moved my books and desk upstairs, to an empty room
where I should be undisturbed, and I fell to studying in earnest. I
worked off a year’s trigonometry that summer, and began Virgil
alone. Morning after morning I used to pace up and down my sunny
little room, looking off at the distant river bluffs and the roll of
the blond pastures between, scanning the Æneid aloud and
committing long passages to memory. Sometimes in the evening
<span class="tei tei-abbr">Mrs.</span> Harling called to me as I passed her gate, and asked
me to come in and let her play for me. She was lonely for Charley, she
said, and liked to have a boy about. Whenever my grandparents had
misgivings, and began to wonder whether I was not too young to go off
to college alone, <span class="tei tei-abbr">Mrs.</span> Harling took up my cause
vigorously. Grandfather had such respect for her judgment that I knew
he would not go against her.</p>
<p id="p0647">I had only one holiday that summer. It was in July. I
met Ántonia downtown on
Saturday afternoon, and learned that she and Tiny and Lena were going
to the river next day with Anna Hansen—the elder was all in
bloom now, and Anna wanted to make elder-blow wine.</p>
<p id="p0648">“Anna’s to drive us down in the
Marshalls’ delivery wagon, and we’ll take a nice lunch and
have a picnic. Just us; nobody else. Could n’t you happen along,
Jim? It would be like old times.”</p>
<p id="p0649">I considered a moment. “Maybe I can, if I
won’t be in the way.”</p>
<p id="p0650">On Sunday morning I rose early and got out of Black
Hawk while the dew was still heavy on the long meadow grasses. It was
the high season for summer flowers. The pink bee-bush stood tall along
the sandy roadsides, and the cone-flowers and rose mallow grew
everywhere. Across the wire fence, in the long grass, I saw a clump of
flaming orange-colored milkweed, rare in that part of the State. I
left the road and went around through a stretch of pasture that was
always cropped short in summer, where the gaillardia came up year
after year and matted over the ground with the deep, velvety red that
is in Bokhara carpets. The country was empty and solitary except for
the
larks that Sunday morning, and it seemed to lift itself up to me and
to come very close.</p>
<p id="p0651">The river was running strong for midsummer; heavy
rains to the west of us had kept it full. I crossed the bridge and
went upstream along the wooded shore to a pleasant dressing-room I
knew among the dogwood bushes, all overgrown with wild grapevines. I
began to undress for a swim. The girls would not be along yet. For the
first time it occurred to me that I would be homesick for that river
after I left it. The sandbars, with their clean white beaches and
their little groves of willows and cottonwood seedlings, were a sort
of No Man’s Land, little newly-created worlds that belonged to
the Black Hawk boys. Charley Harling and I had hunted through these
woods, fished from the fallen logs, until I knew every inch of the
river shores and had a friendly feeling for every bar and shallow.</p>
<p id="p0652">After my swim, while I was playing about indolently
in the water, I heard the sound of hoofs and wheels on the bridge. I
struck downstream and shouted, as the open spring wagon came into view
on the middle span. They stopped the horse, and the two girls in the
bottom of the cart stood up, steadying
themselves by the shoulders of the two in front, so that they could
see me better. They were charming up there, huddled together in the
cart and peering down at me like curious deer when they come out of
the thicket to drink. I found bottom near the bridge and stood up,
waving to them.</p>
<p id="p0653">“How pretty you look!” I called.</p>
<p id="p0654">“So do you!” they shouted altogether, and
broke into peals of laughter. Anna Hansen shook the reins and they
drove on, while I zigzagged back to my inlet and clambered up behind
an overhanging elm. I dried myself in the sun, and dressed slowly,
reluctant to leave that green enclosure where the sunlight flickered
so bright through the grapevine leaves and the woodpecker hammered
away in the crooked elm that trailed out over the water. As I went
along the road back to the bridge I kept picking off little pieces of
scaly chalk from the dried water gullies, and breaking them up in my
hands.</p>
<p id="p0655">When I came upon the Marshalls’ delivery horse,
tied in the shade, the girls had already taken their baskets and gone
down the east road which wound through the sand and scrub. I could
hear them calling to each other. The
elder bushes did not grow back in the shady ravines between the
bluffs, but in the hot, sandy bottoms along the stream, where their
roots were always in moisture and their tops in the sun. The blossoms
were unusually luxuriant and beautiful that summer.</p>
<p id="p0656">I followed a cattle path through the thick underbrush
until I came to a slope that fell away abruptly to the water’s
edge. A great chunk of the shore had been bitten out by some spring
freshet, and the scar was masked by elder bushes, growing down to the
water in flowery terraces. I did not touch them. I was overcome by
content and drowsiness and by the warm silence about me. There was no
sound but the high, sing-song buzz of wild bees and the sunny gurgle
of the water underneath. I peeped over the edge of the bank to see the
little stream that made the noise; it flowed along perfectly clear
over the sand and gravel, cut off from the muddy main current by a
long sandbar. Down there, on the lower shelf of the bank, I saw
Ántonia, seated alone under the pagoda-like elders. She looked
up when she heard me, and smiled, but I saw that she had been crying.
I slid down into the soft sand beside her and asked her what was the
matter.</p>
<p id="p0657">“It makes me homesick, Jimmy, this flower, this
smell,” she said softly. “We have this flower very much at
home, in the old country. It always grew in our yard and my papa had a
green bench and a table under the bushes. In summer, when they were in
bloom, he used to sit there with his friend that played the trombone.
When I was little I used to go down there to hear them talk—beautiful talk, like what I never hear in this country.”</p>
<p id="p0658">“What did they talk about?” I asked
her.</p>
<p id="p0659">She sighed and shook her head. “Oh, I
don’t know! About music, and the woods, and about God, and when
they were young.” She turned to me suddenly and looked into my
eyes. “You think, Jimmy, that maybe my father’s spirit can
go back to those old places?”</p>
<p id="p0660">I told her about the feeling of her father’s
presence I had on that winter day when my grandparents had gone over
to see his dead body and I was left alone in the house. I said I felt
sure then that he was on his way back to his own country, and that
even now, when I passed his grave, I always thought of him as being
among the woods and fields that were so dear to him.</p>
<p id="p0661">Ántonia had the most trusting, responsive
eyes in the world; love and credulousness seemed to look out of them
with open faces. “Why did n’t you ever tell me that
before? It makes me feel more sure for him.” After a while she
said: “You know, Jim, my father was different from my mother. He
did not have to marry my mother, and all his brothers quarreled with
him because he did. I used to hear the old people at home whisper
about it. They said he could have paid my mother money, and not
married her. But he was older than she was, and he was too kind to
treat her like that. He lived in his mother’s house, and she was
a poor girl come in to do the work. After my father married her, my
grandmother never let my mother come into her house again. When I went
to my grandmother’s funeral was the only time I was ever in my
grandmother’s house. Don’t that seem strange?”</p>
<p id="p0662">While she talked, I lay back in the hot sand and
looked up at the blue sky between the flat bouquets of elder. I could
hear the bees humming and singing, but they stayed up in the sun above
the flowers and did not come down into the shadow of the leaves.
Ántonia seemed to me that day exactly like the
little girl who used to come to our house with <span class="tei tei-abbr">Mr.</span>
Shimerda.</p>
<p id="p0663">“Some day, Tony, I am going over to your
country, and I am going to the little town where you lived. Do you
remember all about it?”</p>
<p id="p0664">“Jim,” she said earnestly, “if I
was put down there in the middle of the night, I could find my way all
over that little town; and along the river to the next town, where my
grandmother lived. My feet remember all the little paths through the
woods, and where the big roots stick out to trip you. I ain’t
never forgot my own country.”</p>
<p id="p0665">There was a crackling in the branches above us, and
Lena Lingard peered down over the edge of the bank.</p>
<p id="p0666">“You lazy things!” she cried. “All
this elder, and you two lying there! Did n’t you hear us calling
you?” Almost as flushed as she had been in my dream, she leaned
over the edge of the bank and began to demolish our flowery pagoda. I
had never seen her so energetic; she was panting with zeal, and the
perspiration stood in drops on her short, yielding upper lip. I sprang
to my feet and ran up the bank.</p>
<p id="p0667">It was noon now, and so hot that the dogwoods and
scrub-oaks began to turn up the silvery under-side of their leaves,
and all the foliage looked soft and wilted. I carried the lunch-basket
to the top of one of the chalk bluffs, where even on the calmest days
there was always a breeze. The flat-topped, twisted little oaks threw
light shadows on the grass. Below us we could see the windings of the
river, and Black Hawk, grouped among its trees, and, beyond, the
rolling country, swelling gently until it met the sky. We could
recognize familiar farmhouses and windmills. Each of the girls pointed
out to me the direction in which her father’s farm lay, and told
me how many acres were in wheat that year and how many in corn.</p>
<p id="p0668">“My old folks,” said Tiny Soderball,
“have put in twenty acres of rye. They get it ground at the
mill, and it makes nice bread. It seems like my mother ain’t
been so homesick, ever since father’s raised rye flour for
her.”</p>
<p id="p0669">“It must have been a trial for our
mothers,” said Lena, “coming out here and having to do
everything different. My mother had always lived in town. She says she
started behind in farm-work, and never has caught up.”</p>
<p id="p0670">“Yes, a new country’s hard on the old
ones, sometimes,” said Anna thoughtfully. “My
grandmother’s getting feeble now, and her mind wanders.
She’s forgot about this country, and thinks she’s at home
in Norway. She keeps asking mother to take her down to the waterside
and the fish market. She craves fish all the time. Whenever I go home
I take her canned salmon and mackerel.”</p>
<p id="p0671">“Mercy, it’s hot!” Lena yawned. She
was supine under a little oak, resting after the fury of her
elder-hunting, and had taken off the high-heeled slippers she had been
silly enough to wear. “Come here, Jim. You never got the sand
out of your hair.” She began to draw her fingers slowly through
my hair.</p>
<p id="p0672">Ántonia pushed her away. “You’ll
never get it out like that,” she said sharply. She gave my head
a rough touzling and finished me off with something like a box on the
ear. “Lena, you ought n’t to try to wear those slippers
any more. They’re too small for your feet. You’d better
give them to me for Yulka.”</p>
<p id="p0673">“All right,” said Lena good-naturedly,
tucking her white stockings under her skirt. “You get all
Yulka’s things, don’t you? I
wish father did n’t have such bad luck with his farm machinery;
then I could buy more things for my sisters. I’m going to get
Mary a new coat this fall, if the sulky plough’s never paid
for!”</p>
<p id="p0674">Tiny asked her why she did n’t wait until after
Christmas, when coats would be cheaper. “What do you think of
poor me?” she added; “with six at home, younger than I am?
And they all think I’m rich, because when I go back to the
country I’m dressed so fine!” She shrugged her shoulders.
“But, you know, my weakness is playthings. I like to buy them
playthings better than what they need.”</p>
<p id="p0675">“I know how that is,” said Anna.
“When we first came here, and I was little, we were too poor to
buy toys. I never got over the loss of a doll somebody gave me before
we left Norway. A boy on the boat broke her, and I still hate him for
it.”</p>
<p id="p0676">“I guess after you got here you had plenty of
live dolls to nurse, like me!” Lena remarked cynically.</p>
<p id="p0677">“Yes, the babies came along pretty fast, to be
sure. But I never minded. I was fond of them all. The youngest one,
that we did n’t any of us want, is the one we love best
now.”</p>
<p id="p0678">Lena sighed. “Oh, the babies are all right; if
only they don’t come in winter. Ours nearly always did. I
don’t see how mother stood it. I tell you
what
girls,” she sat up with sudden energy; “I’m going to
get my mother out of that old sod house where she’s lived so
many years. The men will never do it. Johnnie, that’s my oldest
brother, he’s wanting to get married now, and build a house for
his girl instead of his mother. <span class="tei tei-abbr">Mrs.</span> Thomas says she
thinks I can move to some other town pretty soon, and go into business
for myself. If I don’t get into business, I’ll maybe marry
a rich gambler.”</p>
<p id="p0679">“That would be a poor way to get on,”
said Anna sarcastically. “I wish I could teach school, like
Selma Kronn. Just think! She’ll be the first Scandinavian girl
to get a position in the High School. We ought to be proud of
her.”</p>
<p id="p0680">Selma was a studious girl, who had not much tolerance
for giddy things like Tiny and Lena; but they always spoke of her with
admiration.</p>
<p id="p0681">Tiny moved about restlessly, fanning herself with her
straw hat. “If I was smart like her, I’d be at my books
day and night. But
she was born smart—and look how her father’s trained
her! He was something high up in the old country.”</p>
<p id="p0682">“So was my mother’s father,”
murmured Lena, “but that’s all the good it does us! My
father’s father was smart, too, but he was wild. He married a
Lapp. I guess that’s what’s the matter with me; they say
Lapp blood will out.”</p>
<p id="p0683">“A real Lapp, Lena?” I exclaimed.
“The kind that wear skins?”</p>
<p id="p0684">“I don’t know if she wore skins, but she
was a Lapp all right, and his folks felt dreadful about it. He was
sent up north on some Government job he had, and fell in with her. He
would marry her.”</p>
<p id="p0685">“But I thought Lapland women were fat and ugly,
and had squint eyes, like Chinese?” I objected.</p>
<p id="p0686">“I don’t know, maybe. There must be
something mighty taking about the Lapp girls, though; mother says the
Norwegians up north are always afraid their boys will run after
them.”</p>
<p id="p0687">In the afternoon, when the heat was less oppressive,
we had a lively game of “Pussy Wants a Corner,” on the
flat bluff-top, with
the little trees for bases. Lena was Pussy so often that she finally
said she would n’t play any more. We threw ourselves down on the
grass, out of breath.</p>
<p id="p0688">“Jim,” Ántonia said dreamily,
“I want you to tell the girls about how the Spanish first came
here, like you and Charley Harling used to talk about. I’ve
tried to tell them, but I leave out so much.”</p>
<p id="p0689">They sat under a little oak, Tony resting against the
trunk and the other girls leaning against her and each other, and
listened to the little I was able to tell them about Coronado and his
search for the Seven Golden Cities. At school we were taught that he
had not got so far north as Nebraska, but had given up his quest and
turned back somewhere in Kansas. But Charley Harling and I had a
strong belief that he had been along this very river. A farmer in the
county north of ours, when he was breaking sod, had turned up a metal
stirrup of fine workmanship, and a sword with a Spanish inscription on
the blade. He lent these relics to <span class="tei tei-abbr">Mr.</span> Harling, who
brought them home with him. Charley and I scoured them, and they were
on exhibition in the Harling office all summer. Father Kelly, the
priest, had found the name of the Spanish maker on the sword, and an
abbreviation that stood for the city of Cordova.</p>
<p id="p0690">“And that I saw with my own eyes,”
Ántonia put in triumphantly. “So Jim and Charley were
right, and the teachers were wrong!”</p>
<p id="p0691">The girls began to wonder among themselves. Why had
the Spaniards come so far? What must this country have been like,
then? Why had Coronado never gone back to Spain, to his riches and his
castles and his king? I could n’t tell them. I only knew the
school books said he “died in the wilderness, of a broken
heart.”</p>
<p id="p0692">“More than him has done that,” said
Ántonia sadly, and the girls murmured assent.</p>
<p id="p0693">We sat looking off across the country, watching the
sun go down. The curly grass about us was on fire now. The bark of the
oaks turned red as copper. There was a shimmer of gold on the brown
river. Out in the stream the sandbars glittered like glass, and the
light trembled in the willow thickets as if little flames were leaping
among them. The breeze sank to stillness. In the ravine a ringdove
mourned plaintively, and somewhere
off in the bushes an owl hooted. The girls sat listless, leaning
against each other. The long fingers of the sun touched their
foreheads.</p>
<p id="p0694">Presently we saw a curious thing: There were no
clouds, the sun was going down in a limpid, gold-washed sky. Just as
the lower edge of the red disc rested on the high fields against the
horizon, a great black figure suddenly appeared on the face of the
sun. We sprang to our feet, straining our eyes toward it. In a moment
we realized what it was. On some upland farm, a plough had been left
standing in the field. The sun was sinking just behind it. Magnified
across the distance by the horizontal light, it stood out against the
sun, was exactly contained within the circle of the disc; the handles,
the tongue, the share—black against the molten red. There it
was, heroic in size, a picture writing on the sun.</p>
<p id="p0695">Even while we whispered about it, our vision
disappeared; the ball dropped and dropped until the red tip went
beneath the earth. The fields below us were dark, the sky was growing
pale, and that forgotten plough had sunk back to its own littleness
somewhere on the prairie.</p>
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