The money was counted. The sum amounted to a
little over twelve thousand dollars. It was more
than any one present had ever seen at one time before,
though several persons were there who were worth considerably
more than that in property.
CHAPTER XXXV
The reader may rest satisfied that Tom’s
and Huck’s windfall made a mighty stir in the
poor little village of St. Petersburg. So vast
a sum, all in actual cash, seemed next to incredible.
It was talked about, gloated over, glorified, until
the reason of many of the citizens tottered under
the strain of the unhealthy excitement. Every
“haunted” house in St. Petersburg and the
neighboring villages was dissected, plank by plank,
and its foundations dug up and ransacked for hidden
treasure—and not by boys, but men—pretty
grave, unromantic men, too, some of them. Wherever
Tom and Huck appeared they were courted, admired,
stared at. The boys were not able to remember
that their remarks had possessed weight before; but
now their sayings were treasured and repeated; everything
they did seemed somehow to be regarded as remarkable;
they had evidently lost the power of doing and saying
commonplace things; moreover, their past history was
raked up and discovered to bear marks of conspicuous
originality. The village paper published biographical
sketches of the boys.
The Widow Douglas put Huck’s money out at six
per cent., and Judge Thatcher did the same with Tom’s
at Aunt Polly’s request. Each lad had an
income, now, that was simply prodigious—a
dollar for every week-day in the year and half of
the Sundays. It was just what the minister got
—no, it was what he was promised—he
generally couldn’t collect it. A dollar
and a quarter a week would board, lodge, and school
a boy in those old simple days—and clothe
him and wash him, too, for that matter.
Judge Thatcher had conceived a great opinion of Tom.
He said that no commonplace boy would ever have got
his daughter out of the cave. When Becky told
her father, in strict confidence, how Tom had taken
her whipping at school, the Judge was visibly moved;
and when she pleaded grace for the mighty lie which
Tom had told in order to shift that whipping from
her shoulders to his own, the Judge said with a fine
outburst that it was a noble, a generous, a magnanimous
lie—a lie that was worthy to hold up its
head and march down through history breast to breast
with George Washington’s lauded Truth about the
hatchet! Becky thought her father had never looked
so tall and so superb as when he walked the floor
and stamped his foot and said that. She went straight
off and told Tom about it.
Judge Thatcher hoped to see Tom a great lawyer or
a great soldier some day. He said he meant to
look to it that Tom should be admitted to the National
Military Academy and afterward trained in the best
law school in the country, in order that he might
be ready for either career or both.
Copyrights
The Adventures of Tom Sawyer from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.