The Conjure Woman eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 240 pages of information about The Conjure Woman.

The Conjure Woman eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 240 pages of information about The Conjure Woman.

SIS’ BECKY’S PICKANINNY

We had not lived in North Carolina very long before I was able to note a marked improvement in my wife’s health.  The ozone-laden air of the surrounding piney woods, the mild and equable climate, the peaceful leisure of country life, had brought about in hopeful measure the cure we had anticipated.  Toward the end of our second year, however, her ailment took an unexpected turn for the worse.  She became the victim of a settled melancholy, attended with vague forebodings of impending misfortune.

“You must keep up her spirits,” said our physician, the best in the neighboring town.  “This melancholy lowers her tone too much, tends to lessen her strength, and, if it continue too long, may be fraught with grave consequences.”

I tried various expedients to cheer her up.  I read novels to her.  I had the hands on the place come up in the evening and serenade her with plantation songs.  Friends came in sometimes and talked, and frequent letters from the North kept her in touch with her former home.  But nothing seemed to rouse her from the depression into which she had fallen.

One pleasant afternoon in spring, I placed an armchair in a shaded portion of the front piazza, and filling it with pillows led my wife out of the house and seated her where she would have the pleasantest view of a somewhat monotonous scenery.  She was scarcely placed when old Julius came through the yard, and, taking off his tattered straw hat, inquired, somewhat anxiously:—­

“How is you feelin’ dis atternoon, ma’m?”

“She is not very cheerful, Julius,” I said.  My wife was apparently without energy enough to speak for herself.

The old man did not seem inclined to go away, so I asked him to sit down.  I had noticed, as he came up, that he held some small object in his hand.  When he had taken his seat on the top step, he kept fingering this object,—­what it was I could not quite make out.

“What is that you have there, Julius?” I asked, with mild curiosity.

“Dis is my rabbit foot, suh.”

This was at a time before this curious superstition had attained its present jocular popularity among white people, and while I had heard of it before, it had not yet outgrown the charm of novelty.

“What do you do with it?”

“I kyars it wid me fer luck, suh.”

“Julius,” I observed, half to him and half to my wife, “your people will never rise in the world until they throw off these childish superstitions and learn to live by the light of reason and common sense.  How absurd to imagine that the fore-foot of a poor dead rabbit, with which he timorously felt his way along through a life surrounded by snares and pitfalls, beset by enemies on every hand, can promote happiness or success, or ward off failure or misfortune!”

“It is ridiculous,” assented my wife, with faint interest.

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Project Gutenberg
The Conjure Woman from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.