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<h2> CHAPTER XXVI THE QUIET AFTERNOON </h2>
<p>Perhaps middle-aged people might discern Nature's real intentions in the
matter of pain if they would examine a boy's punishments and sorrows, for
he prolongs neither beyond their actual duration. With a boy, trouble must
be of Homeric dimensions to last overnight. To him, every next day is
really a new day. Thus, Penrod woke, next morning, with neither the
unspared rod, nor Mr. Kinosling in his mind. Tar, itself, so far as his
consideration of it went, might have been an undiscovered substance. His
mood was cheerful and mercantile; some process having worked mysteriously
within him, during the night, to the result that his first waking thought
was of profits connected with the sale of old iron—or perhaps a
ragman had passed the house, just before he woke.</p>
<p>By ten o'clock he had formed a partnership with the indeed amiable Sam,
and the firm of Schofield and Williams plunged headlong into commerce.
Heavy dealings in rags, paper, old iron and lead gave the firm a balance
of twenty-two cents on the evening of the third day; but a venture in
glassware, following, proved disappointing on account of the scepticism of
all the druggists in that part of town, even after seven laborious hours
had been spent in cleansing a wheelbarrow-load of old medicine bottles
with hydrant water and ashes. Likewise, the partners were disheartened by
their failure to dispose of a crop of "greens," although they had uprooted
specimens of that decorative and unappreciated flower, the dandelion, with
such persistence and energy that the Schofields' and Williams' lawns
looked curiously haggard for the rest of that summer.</p>
<p>The fit passed: business languished; became extinct. The dog-days had set
in.</p>
<p>One August afternoon was so hot that even boys sought indoor shade. In the
dimness of the vacant carriage-house of the stable, lounged Masters Penrod
Schofield, Samuel Williams, Maurice Levy, Georgie Bassett, and Herman.
They sat still and talked. It is a hot day, in rare truth, when boys
devote themselves principally to conversation, and this day was that hot.</p>
<p>Their elders should beware such days. Peril hovers near when the
fierceness of weather forces inaction and boys in groups are quiet. The
more closely volcanoes, Western rivers, nitroglycerin, and boys are pent,
the deadlier is their action at the point of outbreak. Thus, parents and
guardians should look for outrages of the most singular violence and of
the most peculiar nature during the confining weather of February and
August.</p>
<p>The thing which befell upon this broiling afternoon began to brew and stew
peacefully enough. All was innocence and languor; no one could have
foretold the eruption.</p>
<p>They were upon their great theme: "When I get to be a man!" Being human,
though boys, they considered their present estate too commonplace to be
dwelt upon. So, when the old men gather, they say: "When I was a boy!" It
really is the land of nowadays that we never discover.</p>
<p>"When I'm a man," said Sam Williams, "I'm goin' to hire me a couple of
coloured waiters to swing me in a hammock and keep pourin' ice-water on me
all day out o' those waterin'-cans they sprinkle flowers from. I'll hire
you for one of 'em, Herman."</p>
<p>"No; you ain' goin' to," said Herman promptly. "You ain' no flowuh. But
nev' min' nat, anyway. Ain' nobody goin' haih me whens <i>I</i>'m a man.
Goin' be my own boss. <i>I</i>'m go' be a rai'road man!"</p>
<p>"You mean like a superintendent, or sumpthing like that, and sell
tickets?" asked Penrod.</p>
<p>"Sup'in—nev' min' nat! Sell ticket? NO suh! Go' be a PO'tuh! My
uncle a po'tuh right now. Solid gole buttons—oh, oh!"</p>
<p>"Generals get a lot more buttons than porters," said Penrod. "Generals——"</p>
<p>"Po'tuhs make the bes' l'vin'," Herman interrupted. "My uncle spen' mo'
money 'n any white man n'is town."</p>
<p>"Well, I rather be a general," said Penrod, "or a senator, or sumpthing
like that."</p>
<p>"Senators live in Warshington," Maurice Levy contributed the information.
"I been there. Warshington ain't so much; Niag'ra Falls is a hundred times
as good as Warshington. So's 'Tlantic City, I was there, too. I been
everywhere there is. I——"</p>
<p>"Well, anyway," said Sam Williams, raising his voice in order to obtain
the floor, "anyway, I'm goin' to lay in a hammock all day, and have
ice-water sprinkled on top o' me, and I'm goin' to lay there all night,
too, and the next day. I'm goin' to lay there a couple o' years, maybe."</p>
<p>"I bet you don't!" exclaimed Maurice. "What'd you do in winter?"</p>
<p>"What?"</p>
<p>"What you goin' to do when it's winter, out in a hammock with water
sprinkled on top o' you all day? I bet you——"</p>
<p>"I'd stay right there," Sam declared, with strong conviction, blinking as
he looked out through the open doors at the dazzling lawn and trees,
trembling in the heat. "They couldn't sprinkle too much for ME!"</p>
<p>"It'd make icicles all over you, and——"</p>
<p>"I wish it would," said Sam. "I'd eat 'em up."</p>
<p>"And it'd snow on you——"</p>
<p>"Yay! I'd swaller it as fast as it'd come down. I wish I had a BARREL o'
snow right now. I wish this whole barn was full of it. I wish they wasn't
anything in the whole world except just good ole snow."</p>
<p>Penrod and Herman rose and went out to the hydrant, where they drank long
and ardently. Sam was still talking about snow when they returned.</p>
<p>"No, I wouldn't just roll in it. I'd stick it all round inside my clo'es,
and fill my hat. No, I'd freeze a big pile of it all hard, and I'd roll
her out flat and then I'd carry her down to some ole tailor's and have him
make me a SUIT out of her, and——"</p>
<p>"Can't you keep still about your ole snow?" demanded Penrod petulantly.
"Makes me so thirsty I can't keep still, and I've drunk so much now I bet
I bust. That ole hydrant water's mighty near hot anyway."</p>
<p>"I'm goin' to have a big store, when I grow up," volunteered Maurice.</p>
<p>"Candy store?" asked Penrod.</p>
<p>"NO, sir! I'll have candy in it, but not to eat, so much. It's goin' to be
a deportment store: ladies' clothes, gentlemen's clothes, neckties, china
goods, leather goods, nice lines in woollings and lace goods——"</p>
<p>"Yay! I wouldn't give a five-for-a-cent marble for your whole store," said
Sam. "Would you, Penrod?"</p>
<p>"Not for ten of 'em; not for a million of 'em! <i>I</i>'m goin' to have——"</p>
<p>"Wait!" clamoured Maurice. "You'd be foolish, because they'd be a toy
deportment in my store where they'd be a hunderd marbles! So, how much
would you think your five-for-a-cent marble counts for? And when I'm
keepin' my store I'm goin' to get married."</p>
<p>"Yay!" shrieked Sam derisively. "MARRIED! Listen!" Penrod and Herman
joined in the howl of contempt.</p>
<p>"Certumly I'll get married," asserted Maurice stoutly. "I'll get married
to Marjorie Jones. She likes me awful good, and I'm her beau."</p>
<p>"What makes you think so?" inquired Penrod in a cryptic voice.</p>
<p>"Because she's my beau, too," came the prompt answer. "I'm her beau
because she's my beau; I guess that's plenty reason! I'll get married to
her as soon as I get my store running nice."</p>
<p>Penrod looked upon him darkly, but, for the moment, held his peace.</p>
<p>"Married!" jeered Sam Williams. "Married to Marjorie Jones! You're the
only boy I ever heard say he was going to get married. I wouldn't get
married for—why, I wouldn't for—for——" Unable to
think of any inducement the mere mention of which would not be
ridiculously incommensurate, he proceeded: "I wouldn't do it! What you
want to get married for? What do married people do, except just come home
tired, and worry around and kind of scold? You better not do it, M'rice;
you'll be mighty sorry."</p>
<p>"Everybody gets married," stated Maurice, holding his ground.</p>
<p>"They gotta."</p>
<p>"I'll bet <i>I</i> don't!" Sam returned hotly. "They better catch me
before they tell ME I have to. Anyway, I bet nobody has to get married
unless they want to."</p>
<p>"They do, too," insisted Maurice. "They GOTTA!"</p>
<p>"Who told you?"</p>
<p>"Look at what my own papa told me!" cried Maurice, heated with argument.
"Didn't he tell me your papa had to marry your mamma, or else he never'd
got to handle a cent of her money? Certumly, people gotta marry.
Everybody. You don't know anybody over twenty years old that isn't married—except
maybe teachers."</p>
<p>"Look at policemen!" shouted Sam triumphantly. "You don't s'pose anybody
can make policemen get married, I reckon, do you?"</p>
<p>"Well, policemen, maybe," Maurice was forced to admit. "Policemen and
teachers don't, but everybody else gotta."</p>
<p>"Well, I'll be a policeman," said Sam. "THEN I guess they won't come
around tellin' me I have to get married. What you goin' to be, Penrod?"</p>
<p>"Chief police," said the laconic Penrod.</p>
<p>"What you?" Sam inquired of quiet Georgie Bassett.</p>
<p>"I am going to be," said Georgie, consciously, "a minister."</p>
<p>This announcement created a sensation so profound that it was followed by
silence. Herman was the first to speak.</p>
<p>"You mean preachuh?" he asked incredulously. "You go' PREACH?"</p>
<p>"Yes," answered Georgie, looking like Saint Cecilia at the organ.</p>
<p>Herman was impressed. "You know all 'at preachuh talk?"</p>
<p>"I'm going to learn it," said Georgie simply.</p>
<p>"How loud kin you holler?" asked Herman doubtfully.</p>
<p>"He can't holler at all," Penrod interposed with scorn. "He hollers like a
girl. He's the poorest hollerer in town!"</p>
<p>Herman shook his head. Evidently he thought Georgie's chance of being
ordained very slender. Nevertheless, a final question put to the candidate
by the coloured expert seemed to admit one ray of hope.</p>
<p>"How good kin you clim a pole?"</p>
<p>"He can't climb one at all," Penrod answered for Georgie. "Over at Sam's
turning-pole you ought to see him try to——"</p>
<p>"Preachers don't have to climb poles," Georgie said with dignity.</p>
<p>"GOOD ones do," declared Herman. "Bes' one ev' <i>I</i> hear, he clim up
an' down same as a circus man. One n'em big 'vivals outen whens we livin'
on a fahm, preachuh clim big pole right in a middle o' the church, what
was to hol' roof up. He clim way high up, an' holler: 'Goin' to heavum,
goin' to heavum, goin' to heavum NOW. Hallelujah, praise my Lawd!' An' he
slide down little, an' holler: 'Devil's got a hol' o' my coat-tails; devil
tryin' to drag me down! Sinnuhs, take wawnun! Devil got a hol' o' my
coat-tails; I'm a-goin' to hell, oh Lawd!' Nex', he clim up little mo',
an' yell an' holler: 'Done shuck ole devil loose; goin' straight to heavum
agin! Goin' to heavum, goin' to heavum, my Lawd!' Nex', he slide down some
mo' an' holler, 'Leggo my coat-tails, ole devil! Goin' to hell agin,
sinnuhs! Goin' straight to hell, my Lawd!' An' he clim an' he slide, an'
he slide, an' he clim, an' all time holler: 'Now 'm a-goin' to heavum; now
'm a-goin' to hell! Goin'to heavum, heavum, heavum, my Lawd!' Las' he
slide all a-way down, jes' a-squallin' an' a-kickin' an' a-rarin' up an'
squealin', 'Goin' to hell. Goin' to hell! Ole Satum got my soul! Goin' to
hell! Goin' to hell! Goin' to hell, hell, hell!"</p>
<p>Herman possessed that extraordinary facility for vivid acting which is the
great native gift of his race, and he enchained his listeners. They sat
fascinated and spellbound.</p>
<p>"Herman, tell that again!" said Penrod, breathlessly.</p>
<p>Herman, nothing loath, accepted the encore and repeated the Miltonic
episode, expanding it somewhat, and dwelling with a fine art upon those
portions of the narrative which he perceived to be most exciting to his
audience. Plainly, they thrilled less to Paradise gained than to its
losing, and the dreadful climax of the descent into the Pit was the
greatest treat of all.</p>
<p>The effect was immense and instant. Penrod sprang to his feet.</p>
<p>"Georgie Bassett couldn't do that to save his life," he declared. "<i>I</i>'m
goin' to be a preacher! I'D be all right for one, wouldn't I, Herman?"</p>
<p>"So am I!" Sam Williams echoed loudly. "I guess I can do it if YOU can.
I'd be better'n Penrod, wouldn't I, Herman?"</p>
<p>"I am, too!" Maurice shouted. "I got a stronger voice than anybody here,
and I'd like to know what——"</p>
<p>The three clamoured together indistinguishably, each asserting his
qualifications for the ministry according to Herman's theory, which had
been accepted by these sudden converts without question.</p>
<p>"Listen to ME!" Maurice bellowed, proving his claim to at least the voice
by drowning the others. "Maybe I can't climb a pole so good, but who can
holler louder'n this? Listen to ME-E-E!"</p>
<p>"Shut up!" cried Penrod, irritated. "Go to heaven; go to hell!"</p>
<p>"Oo-o-oh!" exclaimed Georgie Bassett, profoundly shocked.</p>
<p>Sam and Maurice, awed by Penrod's daring, ceased from turmoil, staring
wide-eyed.</p>
<p>"You cursed and swore!" said Georgie.</p>
<p>"I did not!" cried Penrod, hotly. "That isn't swearing."</p>
<p>"You said, 'Go to a big H'!" said Georgie.</p>
<p>"I did not! I said, 'Go to heaven,' before I said a big H. That isn't
swearing, is it, Herman? It's almost what the preacher said, ain't it,
Herman? It ain't swearing now, any more—not if you put 'go to
heaven' with it, is it, Herman? You can say it all you want to, long as
you say 'go to heaven' first, CAN'T you, Herman? Anybody can say it if the
preacher says it, can't they, Herman? I guess I know when I ain't
swearing, don't I, Herman?"</p>
<p>Judge Herman ruled for the defendant, and Penrod was considered to have
carried his point. With fine consistency, the conclave established that it
was proper for the general public to "say it," provided "go to heaven"
should in all cases precede it. This prefix was pronounced a perfect
disinfectant, removing all odour of impiety or insult; and, with the
exception of Georgie Bassett (who maintained that the minister's words
were "going" and "gone," not "go"), all the boys proceeded to exercise
their new privilege so lavishly that they tired of it.</p>
<p>But there was no diminution of evangelical ardour; again were heard the
clamours of dispute as to which was the best qualified for the ministry,
each of the claimants appealing passionately to Herman, who, pleased but
confused, appeared to be incapable of arriving at a decision.</p>
<p>During a pause, Georgie Bassett asserted his prior rights. "Who said it
first, I'd like to know?" he demanded. "I was going to be a minister from
long back of to-day, I guess. And I guess I said I was going to be a
minister right to-day before any of you said anything at all. DIDN'T I,
Herman? YOU heard me, didn't you, Herman? That's the very thing started
you talking about it, wasn't it, Herman?"</p>
<p>"You' right," said Herman. "You the firs' one to say it."</p>
<p>Penrod, Sam, and Maurice immediately lost faith in Herman.</p>
<p>"What if you did say it first?" Penrod shouted. "You couldn't BE a
minister if you were a hunderd years old!"</p>
<p>"I bet his mother wouldn't let him be one," said Sam. "She never lets him
do anything."</p>
<p>"She would, too," retorted Georgie. "Ever since I was little, she——"</p>
<p>"He's too sissy to be a preacher!" cried Maurice. "Listen at his squeaky
voice!"</p>
<p>"I'm going to be a better minister," shouted Georgie, "than all three of
you put together. I could do it with my left hand!"</p>
<p>The three laughed bitingly in chorus. They jeered, derided, scoffed, and
raised an uproar which would have had its effect upon much stronger nerves
than Georgie's. For a time he contained his rising choler and chanted
monotonously, over and over: "I COULD! I COULD, TOO! I COULD! I COULD,
TOO!" But their tumult wore upon him, and he decided to avail himself of
the recent decision whereby a big H was rendered innocuous and unprofane.
Having used the expression once, he found it comforting, and substituted
it for: "I could! I could, too!"</p>
<p>But it relieved him only temporarily. His tormentors were unaffected by it
and increased their howlings, until at last Georgie lost his head
altogether. Badgered beyond bearing, his eyes shining with a wild light,
he broke through the besieging trio, hurling little Maurice from his path
with a frantic hand.</p>
<p>"I'll show you!" he cried, in this sudden frenzy. "You give me a chance,
and I'll prove it right NOW!"</p>
<p>"That's talkin' business!" shouted Penrod. "Everybody keep still a minute.
Everybody!"</p>
<p>He took command of the situation at once, displaying a fine capacity for
organization and system. It needed only a few minutes to set order in the
place of confusion and to determine, with the full concurrence of all
parties, the conditions under which Georgie Bassett was to defend his
claim by undergoing what may be perhaps intelligibly defined as the Herman
test. Georgie declared he could do it easily. He was in a state of great
excitement and in no condition to think calmly or, probably, he would not
have made the attempt at all. Certainly he was overconfident.</p>
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