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<h1><span style="font-size: 173%">Book V—Cuzak’s Boys</span></h1>
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<h2><span style="font-size: 144%">I</span></h2>
<p id="p0906"><span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-variant: small-caps">I told</span></span>
Ántonia I would come back, but life intervened, and it was
twenty years before I kept my promise. I heard of her from time to
time; that she married, very soon after I last saw her, a young
Bohemian, a cousin of Anton Jelinek; that they were poor, and had a
large family. Once when I was abroad I went into Bohemia, and from
Prague I sent Ántonia some photographs of her native village.
Months afterward came a letter from her, telling me the names and ages
of her many children, but little else; signed, “Your old friend,
Ántonia Cuzak.” When I met Tiny Soderball in Salt Lake,
she told me that Ántonia had not “done very well”;
that her husband was not a man of much force, and she had had a hard
life. Perhaps it was cowardice that kept me away so long. My business
took me West several times every year, and it was always in the
back of my mind that I would stop in Nebraska some day and go to see
Ántonia. But I kept putting it off until the next trip. I did
not want to find her aged and broken; I really dreaded it. In the
course of twenty crowded years one parts with many illusions. I did
not wish to lose the early ones. Some memories are realities, and are
better than anything that can ever happen to one again.</p>
<p id="p0907">I owe it to Lena Lingard that I went to see
Ántonia at last. I was in San Francisco two summers ago when
both Lena and Tiny Soderball were in town. Tiny lives in a house of
her own, and Lena’s shop is in an apartment house just around
the corner. It interested me, after so many years, to see the two
women together. Tiny audits Lena’s accounts occasionally, and
invests her money for her; and Lena, apparently, takes care that Tiny
does n’t grow too miserly. “If there’s anything I
can’t stand,” she said to me in Tiny’s presence,
“it’s a shabby rich woman.” Tiny smiled grimly and
assured me that Lena would never be either shabby or rich. “And
I don’t want to be,” the other agreed complacently.</p>
<p id="p0908">Lena gave me a cheerful account of Ántonia and
urged me to make her a visit.</p>
<p id="p0909">“You really ought to go, Jim. It would be such
a satisfaction to her. Never mind what Tiny says. There’s
nothing the matter with Cuzak. You’d like him. He is n’t a
hustler, but a rough man would never have suited Tony. Tony has nice
children—ten or eleven of them by this time, I guess. I should
n’t care for a family of that size myself, but somehow
it’s just right for Tony. She’d love to show them to
you.”</p>
<p id="p0910">On my way East I broke my journey at Hastings, in
Nebraska, and set off with an open buggy and a fairly good livery team
to find the Cuzak farm. At a little past midday, I knew I must be
nearing my destination. Set back on a swell of land at my right, I saw
a wide farmhouse, with a red barn and an ash grove, and cattle yards
in front that sloped down to the high road. I drew up my horses and
was wondering whether I should drive in here, when I heard low voices.
Ahead of me, in a plum thicket beside the road, I saw two boys bending
over a dead dog. The little one, not more than four or five, was on
his knees, his hands folded, and his close-clipped, bare head drooping
forward in deep dejection. The other stood beside him, a hand on his
shoulder, and was comforting him in a language I had not heard for a
long while. When I stopped my horses opposite them, the older boy took
his brother by the hand and came toward me. He, too, looked grave.
This was evidently a sad afternoon for them.</p>
<p id="p0911">“Are you <span class="tei tei-abbr">Mrs.</span> Cuzak’s
boys?” I asked.</p>
<p id="p0912">The younger one did not look up; he was submerged in
his own feelings, but his brother met me with intelligent gray eyes.
“Yes, sir.”</p>
<p id="p0913">“Does she live up there on the hill? I am going
to see her. Get in and ride up with me.”</p>
<p id="p0914">He glanced at his reluctant little brother. “I
guess we’d better walk. But we’ll open the gate for
you.”</p>
<p id="p0915">I drove along the side-road and they followed slowly
behind. When I pulled up at the windmill, another boy, barefooted and
curly-headed, ran out of the barn to tie my team for me. He was a
handsome one, this chap, fair-skinned and freckled, with red cheeks
and a ruddy pelt as thick as a lamb’s wool, growing down on his
neck in little tufts. He tied my team with two flourishes of his
hands, and nodded when I asked him if his mother was at home. As he
glanced at me, his
face dimpled with a seizure of irrelevant merriment, and he shot up
the windmill tower with a lightness that struck me as disdainful. I
knew he was peering down at me as I walked toward the house.</p>
<p id="p0916">Ducks and geese ran quacking across my path. White
cats were sunning themselves among yellow pumpkins on the porch steps.
I looked through the wire screen into a big, light kitchen with a
white floor. I saw a long table, rows of wooden chairs against the
wall, and a shining range in one corner. Two girls were washing dishes
at the sink, laughing and chattering, and a little one, in a short
pinafore, sat on a stool playing with a rag baby. When I asked for
their mother, one of the girls dropped her towel, ran across the floor
with noiseless bare feet, and disappeared. The older one, who wore
shoes and stockings, came to the door to admit me. She was a buxom
girl with dark hair and eyes, calm and self-possessed.</p>
<p id="p0917">“Won’t you come in? Mother will be here
in a minute.”</p>
<p id="p0918">Before I could sit down in the chair she offered me,
the miracle happened; one of those quiet moments that clutch the heart,
and take more courage than the noisy, excited passages in life.
Ántonia came in and stood before me; a stalwart, brown woman,
flat-chested, her curly brown hair a little grizzled. It was a shock,
of course. It always is, to meet people after long years, especially
if they have lived as much and as hard as this woman had. We stood
looking at each other. The eyes that peered anxiously at me were—simply Ántonia’s eyes. I had seen no others like
them since I looked into them last, though I had looked at so many
thousands of human faces. As I confronted her, the changes grew less
apparent to me, her identity stronger. She was there, in the full
vigor of her personality, battered but not diminished, looking at me,
speaking to me in the husky, breathy voice I remembered so well.</p>
<p id="p0919">“My husband’s not at home, sir. Can I do
anything?”</p>
<p id="p0920">“Don’t you remember me, Ántonia?
Have I changed so much?”</p>
<p id="p0921">She frowned into the slanting sunlight that made her
brown hair look redder than it was. Suddenly her eyes widened, her
whole face seemed to grow broader. She caught her breath and put out
two hard-worked hands.</p>
<p id="p0922">“Why, it’s Jim! Anna, Yulka, it’s
Jim Burden!” She had no sooner caught my hands than she looked
alarmed. “What’s happened? Is anybody dead?”</p>
<p id="p0923">I patted her arm. “No. I did n’t come to
a funeral this time. I got off the train at Hastings and drove down to
see you and your family.”</p>
<p id="p0924">She dropped my hand and began rushing about.
“Anton, Yulka, Nina, where are you all? Run, Anna, and hunt for
the boys. They’re off looking for that dog, somewhere. And call
Leo. Where is that Leo!” She pulled them out of corners and came
bringing them like a mother cat bringing in her kittens. “You
don’t have to go right off, Jim? My oldest boy’s not here.
He’s gone with papa to the street fair at Wilber. I won’t
let you go! You’ve got to stay and see Rudolph and our
papa.” She looked at me imploringly, panting with excitement.</p>
<p id="p0925">While I reassured her and told her there would be
plenty of time, the barefooted boys from outside were slipping into
the kitchen and gathering about her.</p>
<p id="p0926">“Now, tell me their names, and how old they
are.”</p>
<p id="p0927">As she told them off in turn, she made several
mistakes about ages, and they roared with laughter. When she came to
my light-footed friend of the windmill, she said, “This is Leo,
and he’s old enough to be better than he is.”</p>
<p id="p0928">He ran up to her and butted her playfully with his
curly head, like a little ram, but his voice was quite desperate.
“You’ve forgot! You always forget mine. It’s mean!
Please tell him, mother!” He clenched his fists in vexation and
looked up at her impetuously.</p>
<p id="p0929">She wound her forefinger in his yellow fleece and
pulled it, watching him. “Well, how old are you?”</p>
<p id="p0930">“I’m twelve,” he panted, looking
not at me but at her; “I’m twelve years old, and I was
born on Easter day!”</p>
<p id="p0931">She nodded to me. “It’s true. He was an
Easter baby.”</p>
<p id="p0932">The children all looked at me, as if they expected me
to exhibit astonishment or delight at this information. Clearly, they
were proud of each other, and of being so many. When they had all been
introduced, Anna, the eldest daughter, who had met me at the
door, scattered them gently, and came bringing a white apron which she
tied round her mother’s waist.</p>
<p id="p0933">“Now, mother, sit down and talk to
<span class="tei tei-abbr">Mr.</span> Burden. We’ll finish the dishes quietly and not
disturb you.”</p>
<p id="p0934">Ántonia looked about, quite distracted.
“Yes, child, but why don’t we take him into the parlor,
now that we’ve got a nice parlor for company?”</p>
<p id="p0935">The daughter laughed indulgently, and took my hat
from me. “Well, you’re here, now, mother, and if you talk
here, Yulka and I can listen, too. You can show him the parlor after
while.” She smiled at me, and went back to the dishes, with her
sister. The little girl with the rag doll found a place on the bottom
step of an enclosed back stairway, and sat with her toes curled up,
looking out at us expectantly.</p>
<p id="p0936">“She’s Nina, after Nina Harling,”
Ántonia explained. “Ain’t her eyes like
Nina’s? I declare, Jim, I loved you children almost as much as I
love my own. These children know all about you and Charley and Sally,
like as if they’d grown up with you. I can’t think of what
I want to say, you’ve got me
so stirred up. And then, I’ve forgot my English so. I
don’t often talk it any more. I tell the children I used to
speak real well.” She said they always spoke Bohemian at home.
The little ones could not speak English at all—did n’t
learn it until they went to school.</p>
<p id="p0937">“I can’t believe it’s you, sitting
here, in my own kitchen. You would n’t have known me, would you,
Jim? You’ve kept so young, yourself. But it’s easier for a
man. I can’t see how my Anton looks any older than the day I
married him. His teeth have kept so nice. I have n’t got many
left. But I feel just as young as I used to, and I can do as much
work. Oh, we don’t have to work so hard now! We’ve got
plenty to help us, papa and me. And how many have you got,
Jim?”</p>
<p id="p0938">When I told her I had no children she seemed
embarrassed. “Oh, ain’t that too bad! Maybe you could take
one of my bad ones, now? That Leo; he’s the worst of all.”
She leaned toward me with a smile. “And I love him the
best,” she whispered.</p>
<p id="p0939">“Mother!” the two girls murmured
reproachfully from the dishes.</p>
<p id="p0940">Ántonia threw up her head and laughed.
“I can’t help it. You know I do. Maybe
it’s because he came on Easter day, I don’t know. And
he’s never out of mischief one minute!”</p>
<p id="p0941">I was thinking, as I watched her, how little it
mattered—about her teeth, for instance. I know so many women
who have kept all the things that she had lost, but whose inner glow
has faded. Whatever else was gone, Ántonia had not lost the
fire of life. Her skin, so brown and hardened, had not that look of
flabbiness, as if the sap beneath it had been secretly drawn away.</p>
<p id="p0942">While we were talking, the little boy whom they
called Jan came in and sat down on the step beside Nina, under the
hood of the stairway. He wore a funny long gingham apron, like a
smock, over his trousers, and his hair was clipped so short that his
head looked white and naked. He watched us out of his big, sorrowful
gray eyes.</p>
<p id="p0943">“He wants to tell you about the dog, mother.
They found it dead,” Anna said, as she passed us on her way to
the cupboard.</p>
<p id="p0944">Ántonia beckoned the boy to her. He stood by
her chair, leaning his elbows on her knees and twisting her apron
strings in his slender fingers, while he told her his story softly in
Bohemian, and the tears brimmed over and hung on his long lashes. His
mother listened, spoke soothingly to him, and in a whisper promised
him something that made him give her a quick, teary smile. He slipped
away and whispered his secret to Nina, sitting close to her and
talking behind his hand.</p>
<p id="p0945">When Anna finished her work and had washed her hands,
she came and stood behind her mother’s chair. “Why
don’t we show <span class="tei tei-abbr">Mr.</span> Burden our new fruit cave?”
she asked.</p>
<p id="p0946">We started off across the yard with the children at
our heels. The boys were standing by the windmill, talking about the
dog; some of them ran ahead to open the cellar door. When we
descended, they all came down after us, and seemed quite as proud of
the cave as the girls were. Ambrosch, the thoughtful-looking one who
had directed me down by the plum bushes, called my attention to the
stout brick walls and the cement floor. “Yes, it is a good way
from the house,” he admitted. “But, you see, in winter
there are nearly always some of us around to come out and get
things.”</p>
<p id="p0947">Anna and Yulka showed me three small barrels; one
full of dill pickles, one full of
chopped pickles, and one full of pickled watermelon rinds.</p>
<p id="p0948">“You would n’t believe, Jim, what it
takes to feed them all!” their mother exclaimed. “You
ought to see the bread we bake on Wednesdays and Saturdays! It’s
no wonder their poor papa can’t get rich, he has to buy so much
sugar for us to preserve with. We have our own wheat ground for flour,—but then there’s that much less to sell.”</p>
<p id="p0949">Nina and Jan, and a little girl named Lucie, kept
shyly pointing out to me the shelves of glass jars. They said nothing,
but glancing at me, traced on the glass with their finger-tips the
outline of the cherries and strawberries and crab-apples within,
trying by a blissful expression of countenance to give me some idea of
their deliciousness.</p>
<p id="p0950">“Show him the spiced plums, mother. Americans
don’t have those,” said one of the older boys.
“Mother uses them to make
<span lang="cs" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="cs">kolaches,</span>” he added.</p>
<p id="p0951">Leo, in a low voice, tossed off some scornful remark
in Bohemian.</p>
<p id="p0952">I turned to him. “You think I don’t know
what <span lang="cs" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="cs">kolaches</span> are, eh?
You’re mistaken, young man. I’ve eaten your mother’s
<span lang="cs" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="cs">kolaches</span> long before that
Easter day when you were born.”</p>
<p id="p0953">“Always too fresh, Leo,” Ambrosch
remarked with a shrug.</p>
<p id="p0954">Leo dived behind his mother and grinned out at me.</p>
<p id="p0955">We turned to leave the cave; Ántonia and I
went up the stairs first, and the children waited. We were standing
outside talking, when they all came running up the steps together, big
and little, tow heads and gold heads and brown, and flashing little
naked legs; a veritable explosion of life out of the dark cave into
the sunlight. It made me dizzy for a moment.</p>
<p id="p0956">The boys escorted us to the front of the house, which
I had n’t yet seen; in farmhouses, somehow, life comes and goes
by the back door. The roof was so steep that the eaves were not much
above the forest of tall hollyhocks, now brown and in seed. Through
July, Ántonia said, the house was buried in them; the
Bohemians, I remembered, always planted hollyhocks. The front yard was
enclosed by a thorny locust hedge, and at the gate grew two silvery,
moth-like trees of the mimosa family. From here one looked down over
the
cattle yards, with their two long ponds, and over a wide stretch of
stubble which they told me was a rye-field in summer.</p>
<p id="p0957">At some distance behind the house were an ash grove
and two orchards; a cherry orchard, with gooseberry and currant bushes
between the rows, and an apple orchard, sheltered by a high hedge from
the hot winds. The older children turned back when we reached the
hedge, but Jan and Nina and Lucie crept through it by a hole known
only to themselves and hid under the low-branching mulberry bushes.</p>
<p id="p0958">As we walked through the apple orchard, grown up in
tall bluegrass, Ántonia kept stopping to tell me about one tree
and another. “I love them as if they were people,” she
said, rubbing her hand over the bark. “There was n’t a
tree here when we first came. We planted every one, and used to carry
water for them, too—after we’d been working in the
fields all day. Anton, he was a city man, and he used to get
discouraged. But I could n’t feel so tired that I would
n’t fret about these trees when there was a dry time. They were
on my mind like children. Many a night after he was asleep I’ve
got up and come out and carried water to the poor things. And now, you
see,
we have the good of them. My man worked in the orange groves in
Florida, and he knows all about grafting. There ain’t one of our
neighbors has an orchard that bears like ours.”</p>
<p id="p0959">In the middle of the orchard we came upon a
grape-arbor, with seats built along the sides and a warped plank
table. The three children were waiting for us there. They looked up at
me bashfully and made some request of their mother.</p>
<p id="p0960">“They want me to tell you how the teacher has
the school picnic here every year. These don’t go to school yet,
so they think it’s all like the picnic.”</p>
<p id="p0961">After I had admired the arbor sufficiently, the
youngsters ran away to an open place where there was a rough jungle of
French pinks, and squatted down among them, crawling about and
measuring with a string. “Jan wants to bury his dog
there,” Ántonia explained. “I had to tell him he
could. He’s kind of like Nina Harling; you remember how hard she
used to take little things? He has funny notions, like her.”</p>
<p id="p0962">We sat down and watched them. Ántonia leaned
her elbows on the table. There was the
deepest peace in that orchard. It was surrounded by a triple
enclosure; the wire fence, then the hedge of thorny locusts, then the
mulberry hedge which kept out the hot winds of summer and held fast to
the protecting snows of winter. The hedges were so tall that we could
see nothing but the blue sky above them, neither the barn roof nor the
windmill. The afternoon sun poured down on us through the drying grape
leaves. The orchard seemed full of sun, like a cup, and we could smell
the ripe apples on the trees. The crabs hung on the branches as thick
as beads on a string, purple-red, with a thin silvery glaze over them.
Some hens and ducks had crept through the hedge and were pecking at
the fallen apples. The drakes were handsome fellows, with pinkish gray
bodies, their heads and necks covered with iridescent green feathers
which grew close and full, changing to blue like a peacock’s
neck. Ántonia said they always reminded her of soldiers—some uniform she had seen in the old country, when she was a child.</p>
<p id="p0963">“Are there any quail left now?” I asked.
I reminded her how she used to go hunting with me the last summer
before we moved to town. “You were n’t a bad shot, Tony. Do
you remember how you used to want to run away and go for ducks with
Charley Harling and me?”</p>
<p id="p0964">“I know, but I’m afraid to look at a gun
now.” She picked up one of the drakes and ruffled his green
capote with her fingers. “Ever since I’ve had children, I
don’t like to kill anything. It makes me kind of faint to wring
an old goose’s neck. Ain’t that strange, Jim?”</p>
<p id="p0965">“I don’t know. The young Queen of Italy
said the same thing once, to a friend of mine. She used to be a great
huntswoman, but now she feels as you do, and only shoots clay
pigeons.”</p>
<p id="p0966">“Then I’m sure she’s a good
mother,” Ántonia said warmly.</p>
<p id="p0967">She told me how she and her husband had come out to
this new country when the farm land was cheap and could be had on easy
payments. The first ten years were a hard struggle. Her husband knew
very little about farming and often grew discouraged.
“We’d never have got through if I had n’t been so
strong. I’ve always had good health, thank God, and I was able
to help him in the fields until right up to the time before my babies
came. Our children were good about taking care of each other. Martha,
the one you saw when she was a baby, was such a help to me, and she
trained Anna to be just like her. My Martha’s married now, and
has a baby of her own. Think of that, Jim!</p>
<p id="p0968">“No, I never got down-hearted. Anton’s a
good man, and I loved my children and always believed they would turn
out well. I belong on a farm. I’m never lonesome here like I
used to be in town. You remember what sad spells I used to have, when
I did n’t know what was the matter with me? I’ve never had
them out here. And I don’t mind work a bit, if I don’t
have to put up with sadness.” She leaned her chin on her hand
and looked down through the orchard, where the sunlight was growing
more and more golden.</p>
<p id="p0969">“You ought never to have gone to town,
Tony,” I said, wondering at her.</p>
<p id="p0970">She turned to me eagerly. “Oh, I’m glad I
went! I’d never have known anything about cooking or
housekeeping if I had n’t. I learned nice ways at the
Harlings’, and I’ve been able to bring my children up so
much better. Don’t you think they are pretty well-behaved for
country children? If it had n’t been for
what <span class="tei tei-abbr">Mrs.</span> Harling taught me, I expect I’d have
brought them up like wild rabbits. No, I’m glad I had a chance
to learn; but I’m thankful none of my daughters will ever have
to work out. The trouble with me was, Jim, I never could believe harm
of anybody I loved.”</p>
<p id="p0971">While we were talking, Ántonia assured me that
she could keep me for the night. “We’ve plenty of room.
Two of the boys sleep in the haymow till cold weather comes, but
there’s no need for it. Leo always begs to sleep there, and
Ambrosch goes along to look after him.”</p>
<p id="p0972">I told her I would like to sleep in the haymow, with
the boys.</p>
<p id="p0973">“You can do just as you want to. The chest is
full of clean blankets, put away for winter. Now I must go, or my
girls will be doing all the work, and I want to cook your supper
myself.”</p>
<p id="p0974">As we went toward the house, we met Ambrosch and
Anton, starting off with their milking-pails to hunt the cows. I
joined them, and Leo accompanied us at some distance, running ahead
and starting up at us out of clumps of ironweed, calling,
“I’m a jack rabbit,” or, “I’m a big
bull-snake.”</p>
<p id="p0975">I walked between the two older boys—straight,
well-made fellows, with good heads and clear eyes. They talked about
their school and the new teacher, told me about the crops and the
harvest, and how many steers they would feed that winter. They were
easy and confidential with me, as if I were an old friend of the
family—and not too old. I felt like a boy in their company,
and all manner of forgotten interests revived in me. It seemed, after
all, so natural to be walking along a barbed-wire fence beside the
sunset, toward a red pond, and to see my shadow moving along at my
right, over the close-cropped grass.</p>
<p id="p0976">“Has mother shown you the pictures you sent her
from the old country?” Ambrosch asked. “We’ve had
them framed and they’re hung up in the parlor. She was so glad
to get them. I don’t believe I ever saw her so pleased about
anything.” There was a note of simple gratitude in his voice
that made me wish I had given more occasion for it.</p>
<p id="p0977">I put my hand on his shoulder. “Your mother,
you know, was very much loved by all of us. She was a beautiful
girl.”</p>
<p id="p0978">“Oh, we know!” They both spoke
together; seemed a little surprised that I should think it necessary
to mention this. “Everybody liked her, did n’t they? The
Harlings and your grandmother, and all the town people.”</p>
<p id="p0979">“Sometimes,” I ventured, “it does
n’t occur to boys that their mother was ever young and
pretty.”</p>
<p id="p0980">“Oh, we know!” they said again, warmly.
“She’s not very old now,” Ambrosch added. “Not
much older than you.”</p>
<p id="p0981">“Well,” I said, “if you were
n’t nice to her, I think I’d take a club and go for the
whole lot of you. I could n’t stand it if you boys were
inconsiderate, or thought of her as if she were just somebody who
looked after you. You see I was very much in love with your mother
once, and I know there’s nobody like her.”</p>
<p id="p0982">The boys laughed and seemed pleased and embarrassed.
“She never told us that,” said Anton. “But
she’s always talked lots about you, and about what good times
you used to have. She has a picture of you that she cut out of the
Chicago paper once, and Leo says he recognized you when you drove up
to the windmill. You can’t tell about Leo, though; sometimes he
likes to be smart.”</p>
<p id="p0983">We brought the cows home to the corner nearest the
barn, and the boys milked them while night came on. Everything was as
it should be: the strong smell of sunflowers and ironweed in the dew,
the clear blue and gold of the sky, the evening star, the purr of the
milk into the pails, the grunts and squeals of the pigs fighting over
their supper. I began to feel the loneliness of the farm-boy at
evening, when the chores seem everlastingly the same, and the world so
far away.</p>
<p id="p0984">What a tableful we were at supper; two long rows of
restless heads in the lamplight, and so many eyes fastened excitedly
upon Ántonia as she sat at the head of the table, filling the
plates and starting the dishes on their way. The children were seated
according to a system; a little one next an older one, who was to
watch over his behavior and to see that he got his food. Anna and
Yulka left their chairs from time to time to bring fresh plates of <span lang="cs" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="cs">kolaches</span> and pitchers of milk.</p>
<p id="p0985">After supper we went into the parlor, so that Yulka
and Leo could play for me. Ántonia went first, carrying the
lamp. There were not nearly chairs enough to go round, so the younger
children sat down on the bare
floor. Little Lucie whispered to me that they were going to have a
parlor carpet if they got ninety cents for their wheat. Leo, with a
good deal of fussing, got out his violin. It was old <span class="tei tei-abbr">Mr.</span>
Shimerda’s instrument, which Ántonia had always kept, and
it was too big for him. But he played very well for a self-taught boy.
Poor Yulka’s efforts were not so successful. While they were
playing, little Nina got up from her corner, came out into the middle
of the floor, and began to do a pretty little dance on the boards with
her bare feet. No one paid the least attention to her, and when she
was through she stole back and sat down by her brother.</p>
<p id="p0986">Ántonia spoke to Leo in Bohemian. He frowned
and wrinkled up his face. He seemed to be trying to pout, but his
attempt only brought out dimples in unusual places. After twisting and
screwing the keys, he played some Bohemian airs, without the organ to
hold him back, and that went better. The boy was so restless that I
had not had a chance to look at his face before. My first impression
was right; he really was faun-like. He had n’t much head behind
his ears, and his tawny fleece grew down thick to the back of his
neck. His eyes were not frank and wide apart like those of the other
boys, but were deep-set, gold-green in color, and seemed sensitive to
the light. His mother said he got hurt oftener than all the others put
together. He was always trying to ride the colts before they were
broken, teasing the turkey gobbler, seeing just how much red the bull
would stand for, or how sharp the new axe was.</p>
<p id="p0987">After the concert was over Ántonia brought out
a big boxful of photographs; she and Anton in their wedding clothes,
holding hands; her brother Ambrosch and his very fat wife, who had a
farm of her own, and who bossed her husband, I was delighted to hear;
the three Bohemian Marys and their large families.</p>
<p id="p0988">“You would n’t believe how steady those
girls have turned out,” Ántonia remarked. “Mary
Svoboda’s the best butter-maker in all this country, and a fine
manager. Her children will have a grand chance.”</p>
<p id="p0989">As Ántonia turned over the pictures the young
Cuzaks stood behind her chair, looking over her shoulder with
interested faces. Nina and Jan, after trying to see round the taller
ones, quietly brought a chair, climbed up on it, and stood close
together, looking. The
little boy forgot his shyness and grinned delightedly when familiar
faces came into view. In the group about Ántonia I was
conscious of a kind of physical harmony. They leaned this way and
that, and were not afraid to touch each other. They contemplated the
photographs with pleased recognition; looked at some admiringly, as if
these characters in their mother’s girlhood had been remarkable
people. The little children, who could not speak English, murmured
comments to each other in their rich old language.</p>
<p id="p0990">Ántonia held out a photograph of Lena that had
come from San Francisco last Christmas. “Does she still look
like that? She has n’t been home for six years now.” Yes,
it was exactly like Lena, I told her; a comely woman, a trifle too
plump, in a hat a trifle too large, but with the old lazy eyes, and
the old dimpled ingenuousness still lurking at the corners of her
mouth.</p>
<p id="p0991">There was a picture of Frances Harling in a
be-frogged riding costume that I remembered well. “Is n’t
she fine!” the girls murmured. They all assented. One could see
that Frances had come down as a heroine in the family legend. Only Leo
was unmoved.</p>
<p id="p0992">“And there’s <span class="tei tei-abbr">Mr.</span> Harling, in
his grand fur coat. He was awfully rich, was n’t he,
mother?”</p>
<p id="p0993">“He was n’t any Rockefeller,” put
in Master Leo, in a very low tone, which reminded me of the way in
which <span class="tei tei-abbr">Mrs.</span> Shimerda had once said that my grandfather
“was n’t Jesus.” His habitual skepticism was like a
direct inheritance from that old woman.</p>
<p id="p0994">“None of your smart speeches,” said
Ambrosch severely.</p>
<p id="p0995">Leo poked out a supple red tongue at him, but a
moment later broke into a giggle at a tintype of two men,
uncomfortably seated, with an awkward-looking boy in baggy clothes
standing between them; Jake and Otto and I! We had it taken, I
remembered, when we went to Black Hawk on the first Fourth of July I
spent in Nebraska. I was glad to see Jake’s grin again, and
Otto’s ferocious mustaches. The young Cuzaks knew all about
them.</p>
<p id="p0996">“He made grandfather’s coffin, did
n’t he?” Anton asked.</p>
<p id="p0997">“Was n’t they good fellows, Jim?”
Ántonia’s eyes filled. “To this day I’m
ashamed because I quarreled with Jake that way. I was saucy and
impertinent to him, Leo, like you
are with people sometimes, and I wish somebody had made me
behave.”</p>
<p id="p0998">“We are n’t through with you, yet,”
they warned me. They produced a photograph taken just before I went
away to college; a tall youth in striped trousers and a straw hat,
trying to look easy and jaunty.</p>
<p id="p0999">“Tell us, <span class="tei tei-abbr">Mr.</span> Burden,” said
Charley, “about the rattler you killed at the
dog town.
How long was he? Sometimes mother says six feet and sometimes she says
five.”</p>
<p id="p1000">These children seemed to be upon very much the same
terms with Ántonia as the Harling children had been so many
years before. They seemed to feel the same pride in her, and to look
to her for stories and entertainment as we used to do.</p>
<p id="p1001">It was eleven o’clock when I at last took my
bag and some blankets and started for the barn with the boys. Their
mother came to the door with us, and we tarried for a moment to look
out at the white slope of the corral and the two ponds asleep in the
moonlight, and the long sweep of the pasture under the star-sprinkled
sky.</p>
<p id="p1002">The boys told me to choose my own place in the
haymow, and I lay down before a big
window, left open in warm weather, that looked out into the stars.
Ambrosch and Leo cuddled up in a hay-cave, back under the eaves, and
lay giggling and whispering. They tickled each other and tossed and
tumbled in the hay; and then, all at once, as if they had been shot,
they were still. There was hardly a minute between giggles and bland
slumber.</p>
<p id="p1003">I lay awake for a long while, until the slow-moving
moon passed my window on its way up the heavens. I was thinking about
Ántonia and her children; about Anna’s solicitude for
her, Ambrosch’s grave affection, Leo’s jealous, animal
little love. That moment, when they all came tumbling out of the cave
into the light, was a sight any man might have come far to see.
Ántonia had always been one to leave images in the mind that
did not fade—that grew stronger with time. In my memory there
was a succession of such pictures, fixed there like the old woodcuts
of one’s first primer: Ántonia kicking her bare legs
against the sides of my pony when we came home in triumph with our
snake; Ántonia in her black shawl and fur cap, as she stood by
her father’s grave in the snowstorm; Ántonia coming in
with her work-team along the
evening sky-line. She lent herself to immemorial human attitudes which
we recognize by instinct as universal and true. I had not been
mistaken. She was a battered woman now, not a lovely girl; but she
still had that something which fires the imagination, could still stop
one’s breath for a moment by a look or gesture that somehow
revealed the meaning in common things. She had only to stand in the
orchard, to put her hand on a little crab tree and look up at the
apples, to make you feel the goodness of planting and tending and
harvesting at last. All the strong things of her heart came out in her
body, that had been so tireless in serving generous emotions.</p>
<p id="p1004">It was no wonder that her sons stood tall and
straight. She was a rich mine of life, like the founders of early
races.</p>
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