The Wedge of Gold eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 255 pages of information about The Wedge of Gold.

The Wedge of Gold eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 255 pages of information about The Wedge of Gold.

“‘No wonder he licked the coon!’ said Jordan.

“And one of the cowboys standing near said, ‘Bet y’r boots!’

“I went to work and was a cowboy for a year, and it was a happy year, for I had no trouble and any number of friends.  I could ride and shoot with any of them, and soon learned to throw a rope.  My riding the big stallion gave me a mighty prestige, for I learned later that many had tried him and no one had kept the saddle for two minutes.  He was my vaquero horse, and many a cowboy stopped and looked as I rode by.

“I had been with Jordan but a short time when one evening he brought a book and said: 

“‘Jim! look at this.  A preacher-lookin’ chap stopped over night har a year ago and went off in the mornin’, and forgot ter take it.  See if yo’ don’t think it’s ther durndest stuff yo’ ever seen!’

“I looked at the book.  It was the Iliad, Pope’s translation.

“‘Why, Jordan,’ I said, ‘this is a wonderful book.’  Then I briefly explained what the great epic was, who the Greeks and who the Trojans were, the cause of the war between them, how nations fought in those days, what gods they worshiped, and added, ’Let me read you a little of it.’

“‘Why, in course,’ said Jordan.  ‘If yo’ ken make a blamed thing out er it, we’d all like to har it; wouldn’t we, boys?’

“They all assented.  I was just out of school and read pretty well.

“So I opened the volume at random and it happened to be in Book XVI., where Pelides consents that Patroclus shall put on his own armor and lead his Myrmidons into the fight, where Achilles arouses and sets in array his terrible warriors, has the steeds yoked and prays Dodonian Jove to give to his friend the victory, and then to grant him safe return.  After reading ten minutes, I closed the book, and asked Jordan if I should read anymore.

“‘Sarten,’ he said.  ‘That war fine.  It are like that mornin’ at Murfreesborough when all thar bugles war callin’ ’nd ther big guns war beginnin’ ter roar.’

“Then I opened at the beginning and read right along for an hour.  All the company were greatly excited, declaring ‘it war fine.’

“I read to them every evening the winter through, read the Iliad entire, and in the meantime Jordan had sent to Galveston for more books, begging me to select them, and declaring he would fill the house with them if I would only ‘steer his buyin’ so as not by his purchases ’ter make a holy show’ of himself.

“When finally the great annual round-up came, I held my own with the best riders, on trial I could draw and shoot with the quickest and surest shots, and could handle a rope fairly well.  I enjoyed the life.

“Generally every one was my friend, but there was one rough customer, a man named Turner, who did not like me, though I had never done a thing in the world to offend him.  He made his boasts that no one had ever ’got away’ with him or ever would.  He had a tough record and many people feared him, for he was a powerful man physically, and cruel in all his instincts.

Copyrights
Project Gutenberg
The Wedge of Gold from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.