Tramping on Life eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 581 pages of information about Tramping on Life.

Tramping on Life eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 581 pages of information about Tramping on Life.

Later I learned that nothing could be done with her, she was so obstinate.  She had broken away despite the solicitude of all her children—­who all loved her and wanted her to stay with them.

At last she had answered an advertisement for a housekeeper ... that appeared in a farm journal ... and so she had met her old cork-legged veteran, whom she now had her mind set on marrying.

“But Granma, to get married at your age?”

“I’d like to ask why not?” she answered sweetly, “I feel as young as ever when it comes to men ... and the man ... you wait till you see him ... you’ll like him ... he’s such a good provider, Johnnie; he draws a steady pension of sixty dollars a month from the Government, and he’ll give me a good home.”

“But any of my aunts and uncles would do the same.”

“Yes, Johnnie, but it ain’t the same as having a man of your own around ... there’s nothing like that, Johnnie, for a woman.”

“But your own children welcome you and treat you well?”

“Oh, yes, Johnnie, my little boy, but in spite of that, I feel in the way.  And, no matter how much they love me, it’s better for me to have a home of my own and a man of my own.”

“Besides, Billy loves me so much,” she continued, wistfully, “and even though he’s seventy whereas I’m eighty past, he says his being younger don’t make no difference ... and he’s always so jolly ... always laughing and joking.”

* * * * *

“We must begin to allow for Granma,” Aunt Alice told me, “she’s coming into her second childhood.”

* * * * *

Granma believed thoroughly in my aspirations to become a poet.  With great delight she retailed incidents of my childhood, reminding me of a thousand youthful escapades of which she constituted me the hero, drawing therefrom auguries of my future greatness.

One of the incidents which alone sticks in my memory: 

“Do you ‘mind,’” she would say, “how you used to follow Millie about when she papered the pantry shelves with newspapers with scalloped edges? and how you would turn the papers and read them, right after her, as she laid them down, and make her frantic?”

“Yes,” I would respond, highly gratified with the anecdote, “and you would say, Oh, Millie, don’t get mad at the little codger, some day he might turn out to be a great man!’”

* * * * *

Uncle Beck had a fine collection of American Letters.  I found a complete set of Hawthorne and straightway became a moody and sombre Puritan ... and I wrote in Hawthornian prose, quaint essays and stories.  And I lived in a world of old lace and lavender, of crinoline and brocade.

And then I discovered my uncle’s books on gynecology and obstetrics ... full of guilty fevers I waited until he had gone out on a call and then slunk into his office to read....

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Project Gutenberg
Tramping on Life from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.