The Gilded Age eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 597 pages of information about The Gilded Age.

The Gilded Age eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 597 pages of information about The Gilded Age.

The Judge.  “You will confine yourself, Col.  Sellers to the questions of the counsel.”

“Of course, your honor.  This,” continued the Colonel in confidential explanation, “was twenty years ago.  I shouldn’t have thought of referring to such a trifling circumstance now.  If I remember rightly, sir”—­

A bundle of letters was here handed to the witness.

“Do you recognize, that hand-writing?”

“As if it was my own, sir.  It’s Major Lackland’s.  I was knowing to these letters when Judge Hawkins received them. [The Colonel’s memory was a little at fault here.  Mr. Hawkins had never gone into detail’s with him on this subject.] He used to show them to me, and say, ’Col, Sellers you’ve a mind to untangle this sort of thing.’  Lord, how everything comes back to me.  Laura was a little thing then.  ’The Judge and I were just laying our plans to buy the Pilot Knob, and—­”

“Colonel, one moment.  Your Honor, we put these letters in evidence.”

The letters were a portion of the correspondence of Major Lackland with Silas Hawkins; parts of them were missing and important letters were referred to that were not here.  They related, as the reader knows, to Laura’s father.  Lackland had come upon the track of a man who was searching for a lost child in a Mississippi steamboat explosion years before.  The man was lame in one leg, and appeared to be flitting from place to place.  It seemed that Major Lackland got so close track of him that he was able to describe his personal appearance and learn his name.  But the letter containing these particulars was lost.  Once he heard of him at a hotel in Washington; but the man departed, leaving an empty trunk, the day before the major went there.  There was something very mysterious in all his movements.

Col.  Sellers, continuing his testimony, said that he saw this lost letter, but could not now recall the name.  Search for the supposed father had been continued by Lackland, Hawkins and himself for several years, but Laura was not informed of it till after the death of Hawkins, for fear of raising false hopes in her mind.

Here the Distract Attorney arose and said,

“Your Honor, I must positively object to letting the witness wander off into all these irrelevant details.”

Mr. Braham.  “I submit your honor, that we cannot be interrupted in this manner we have suffered the state to have full swing.  Now here is a witness, who has known the prisoner from infancy, and is competent to testify upon the one point vital to her safety.  Evidently he is a gentleman of character, and his knowledge of the case cannot be shut out without increasing the aspect of persecution which the State’s attitude towards the prisoner already has assumed.”

The wrangle continued, waxing hotter and hotter.  The Colonel seeing the attention of the counsel and Court entirely withdrawn from him, thought he perceived here his opportunity, turning and beaming upon the jury, he began simply to talk, but as the grandeur of his position grew upon him —­talk broadened unconsciously into an oratorical vein.

Copyrights
Project Gutenberg
The Gilded Age from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.