Hillsboro People eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 361 pages of information about Hillsboro People.

Hillsboro People eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 361 pages of information about Hillsboro People.

Still, those years with his sister, filled with labor beyond his age as they were, had been the happiest of his life.  In an almost complete isolation the two had toiled together five years, the most impressionable of his life; and all his affection centered on the silent, loving, always comprehending sister.  His own father and mother grew to seem far away and alien, and his sister came to be like a part of himself.  To her alone of all living souls had he spoken freely of his passion for adventuring far from home, which devoured, his boy-soul.  He was six-teen when her husband finally came back from the war, and he had no secrets from the young matron of twenty-six, who listened with such wide tender eyes of sympathy to his half-frantic outpourings of longing to escape from the dark, narrow valley where his fathers had lived their dark, narrow lives.

The day before he went back to his own home, now so strange to him, he was out with her, searching for some lost turkey-chicks, and found one with its foot caught in a tangle of rusty wire.  The little creature had beaten itself almost to death in its struggle to get away.  Kneeling in the grass, and feeling the wild palpitations of its heart under his rescuing hand, he had called to his sister, “Oh, look!  Poor thing!  It’s ’most dead, and yet it ain’t really hurt a mite, only desperate, over bein’ held fast.”  His voice broke in a sudden wave of sympathy:  “Oh, ain’t it terrible to feel so!”

For a moment the young mother put her little son aside and looked at her brother with brooding eyes.  A little later she said with apparent irrelevance, “Jehiel, as soon as you’re a man grown, I’ll help you to get off.  You shall be a sailor, if you like, and go around the world, and bring back coral to baby and me.”

A chilling premonition fell on the lad.  “I don’t believe it!” he said, with tears in his eyes.  “I just believe I’ve got to stay here in this hole all my life.”

His sister looked off at the tops of the trees.  Finally, “Surely He shall deliver thee from the snare of the fowler,” she quoted dreamily.

When she came to see him and their parents a few months later, she brought him a little square of crimson silk, on which she had worked in tiny stitches, “Surely He shall deliver thee from the snare of the fowler.”  She explained to her father and mother that it was a “text-ornament” for Jehiel to hang up over his desk; but she drew the boy aside and showed him that the silk was only lightly caught down to the foundation.

“Underneath is another text,” she said, “and when your day of freedom comes I want you should promise me to cut the stitches, turn back the silk, and take the second text for your motto, so you’ll remember to be properly grateful.  This is the second text.”  She put her hands on his shoulders and said in a loud, exultant voice, “My soul is escaped as a bird out of the snare of the fowler.  The snare is broken and I am escaped.”

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Project Gutenberg
Hillsboro People from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.