Salute to Adventurers eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 335 pages of information about Salute to Adventurers.

Salute to Adventurers eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 335 pages of information about Salute to Adventurers.

That was very well, but there was the devil to pay besides.  Every wastrel I sent off empty-handed was my enemy; the agents of the Englishmen looked sourly at me; and many a man who was swindled grossly by the Bristol buyers saw me as a marauder instead of a benefactor.  For this I was prepared; but what staggered me was the way that some of the better sort of the gentry came to regard me.  It was not that they did not give me their custom; that I did not expect, for gunpowder alone would change the habits of a Virginian Tory.  But my new business seemed to them such a downcome that they passed me by with a cock of the chin.  Before they had treated me hospitably, and made me welcome at their houses.  I had hunted the fox with them—­very little to my credit; and shot wildfowl in their company with better success.  I had dined with them, and danced in their halls at Christmas.  Then I had been a gentleman; now I was a shopkeeper, a creature about the level of a redemptioner.  The thing was so childish that it made me angry.  It was right for one of them to sell his tobacco on his own wharf to a tarry skipper who cheated him grossly, but wrong for me to sell kebbucks and linsey-woolsey at an even bargain.  I gave up the puzzle.  Some folks’ notions of gentility are beyond my wits.

I had taken to going to the church in James Town, first at Mr. Lambie’s desire, and then because I liked the sermons.  There on a Sunday you would see the fashion of the neighbourhood, for the planters’ ladies rode in on pillions, and the planters themselves, in gold-embroidered waistcoats and plush breeches and new-powdered wigs, leaned on the tombstones, and exchanged snuffmulls and gossip.  In the old ramshackle graveyard you would see such a parade of satin bodices and tabby petticoats and lace headgear as made it blossom like the rose.  I went to church one Sunday in my second summer, and, being late, went up the aisle looking for a place.  The men at the seat-ends would not stir to accommodate me, and I had to find rest in the cock-loft.  I thought nothing of it, but the close of the service was to enlighten me.  As I went down the churchyard not a man or woman gave me greeting, and when I spoke to any I was not answered.  These were men with whom I had been on the friendliest terms; women, too, who only a week before had chaffered with me at the store.  It was clear that the little society had marooned me to an isle by myself.  I was a leper, unfit for gentlefolks’ company, because, forsooth, I had sold goods, which every one of them did also, and had tried to sell them fair.

The thing made me very bitter.  I sat in my house during the hot noons when no one stirred, and black anger filled my heart.  I grew as peevish as a slighted girl, and would no doubt have fretted myself into some signal folly, had not an event occurred which braced my soul again.  This was the arrival of the English convoy.

When I heard that the ships were sighted, I made certain of trouble.  I had meantime added to my staff two other young men, who, like Faulkner, lived with me at the store.  Also I had got four stalwart negro slaves who slept in a hut in my garden.  ’Twas a strong enough force to repel a drunken posse from the plantations, and I had a fancy that it would be needed in the coming weeks.

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Salute to Adventurers from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.