In the Days of Poor Richard eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 387 pages of information about In the Days of Poor Richard.

In the Days of Poor Richard eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 387 pages of information about In the Days of Poor Richard.

Colonel Hare was astonished that neither Solomon Binkus nor John Irons nor his son would accept any gift for the great service they had done him.

“I owe you more than I can ever pay,” he said to the faithful Binkus.  “Money would not be good enough for your reward.”

Solomon stepped close to the great man and said in a low tone: 

“Them young ‘uns has growed kind o’ love sick an’ I wouldn’t wonder.  I don’t ask only one thing.  Don’t make no mistake ’bout this ’ere boy.  In the bush we have a way o’ pickin’ out men.  We see how they stan’ up to danger an’ hard work an’ goin’ hungry.  Jack is a reg’lar he-man.  I know ’em when I see ’em, which—­it’s a sure fact—­I’ve seen all kinds.  He’s got brains an’ courage, an’ a tough arm an’ a good heart.  He’d die fer a friend any day.  Ye kin’t do no more.  So don’t make no mistake ’bout him.  He ain’t no hemlock bow.  I cocalate there ain’t no better man-timber nowhere—­no, sir, not nowhere in this world—­call it king er lord er duke er any name ye like.  So, sir, if ye feel like doin’ suthin’ fer me—­which I didn’t never expect it, when I done what I did—­I’ll say be good to the boy.  You’d never have to be ‘shamed o’ him.”

“He’s a likely lad,” said Colonel Hare.  “And I am rather impressed by your words, although they present a view that is new to me.  We shall be returning soon and I dare say they will presently forget each other, but if not, and he becomes a good man—­as good a man as his father—­let us say—­and she should wish to marry him, I would gladly put her hand in his.”

A letter of the handsome British officer to his friend, Doctor Benjamin Franklin, reviews the history of this adventure and speaks of the learning, intelligence and agreeable personality of John Irons.  Both Colonel and Mrs. Hare liked the boy and his parents and invited them to come to England, although the latter took the invitation as a mere mark of courtesy.

At Fort Stanwix, John Irons sold his farm and house and stock to Peter Bones and decided to move his family to Albany where he could educate his children.  Both he and his wife had grown weary of the loneliness of the back country, and the peril from which they had been delivered was a deciding factor.  So it happened that the Irons family and Solomon went to Albany by bateaux with the Hares.  It was a delightful trip in good autumn weather in which Colonel Hare has acknowledged that both he and his wife acquired a deep respect “for these sinewy, wise, upright Americans, some of whom are as well learned, I should say, as most men you would meet in London.”

They stopped at Schenectady, landing in a brawl between Whigs and Tories which soon developed into a small riot over the erection of a liberty pole.  Loud and bitter words were being hurled between the two factions.  The liberty lovers, being in much larger force, had erected the pole without violent opposition.

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In the Days of Poor Richard from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.