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Ill THE RETURN Take them for all in all,
few people have done
my heart more good; they seemed so thoroughly entitled to happiness,
and to
enjoy it in so large a measure and so free from afterthought; almost
they
persuaded me to be a Jew. There was, indeed, a chink of money in their
talk.
They particularly commended people who were well to do. "He don't care
— ain't
it?" was their highest word of commendation to an individual fate; and
here I seem to grasp the root of their philosophy — it was to be free
from
care, to be free to make these Sunday wanderings, that they so eagerly
pursued
after wealth; and all this carefulness was to be careless. The fine,
good
humour of all three seemed to declare they had attained their end. Yet
there
was the other side to it; and the recipients of kettles perhaps cared
greatly. No sooner had they
returned, than the scene of
yesterday began again. The horses were not even tied with a straw rope
this
time — it was not worth while; and Kelmar disappeared into the bar,
leaving
them under a tree on the other side of the road. I had to devote
myself. I
stood under the shadow of that tree for, I suppose, hard upon an hour,
and had
not the heart to be angry. Once some one remembered me, and brought me
out half
a tumblerful of the playful, innocuous American cocktail. I drank it,
and lo!
veins of living fire ran down my leg; and then a focus of conflagration
remained
seated in my stomach, not unpleasantly, for quarter of an hour. I love
these sweet,
fiery pangs, but I will not court them. The bulk of the time I spent in
repeating as much French poetry as I could remember to the horses, who
seemed
to enjoy it hugely. And now it went — Où volent les rouges-gorges: " and again, to a more
trampling measure —
Santander, Almodovar, Sitôt qu'on entend le timbre Des cymbales de Bivar." But while I was thus
wandering in my fancy, great
feats had been transacted in the bar. Corwin the bold had fallen,
Kelmar was
again crowned with laurels, and the last of the ship's kettles had
changed
hands. If I had ever doubted the purity of Kelmar's motives, if I had
ever
suspected him of a single eye to business in his eternal dallyings, now
at
least, when the last kettle was disposed of, my suspicions must have
been
allayed. I dare not guess how much more time was wasted; nor how often
we drove
off, merely to drive back again and renew interrupted conversations
about nothing,
before the Toll House was fairly left behind. Alas! and not a mile down
the
grade there stands a ranche in a sunny vineyard, and here we must all
dismount
again and enter. Only the old lady was at
home, Mrs. Guele, a
brown old Swiss dame, the picture of honesty; and with her we drank a
bottle of
wine and had an age-long conversation, which would have been highly
delightful
if Fanny and I had not been faint with hunger. The ladies each narrated
the
story of her marriage, our two Hebrews with the prettiest combination
of sentiment
and financial bathos. Abramina, specially, endeared herself with every
word. She
was as simple, natural, and engaging as a kid that should have been
brought up
to the business of a money-changer. One touch was so resplendently
Hebraic that
I cannot pass it over. When her "old man" wrote home for her from
America, her old man's family would not entrust her with the money for
the
passage, till she had bound herself by an oath — on her knees, I think
she said
— not to employ it otherwise. This had tickled Abramina hugely, but I
think it
tickled me fully more. Mrs. Guele told of her
home-sickness up here in
the long winters; of her honest, countrywoman troubles and alarms upon
the
journey; how in the bank at Frankfort she had feared lest the banker,
after
having taken her cheque, should deny all knowledge of it — a fear I
have myself
every time I go to a bank; and how crossing the Luneburger Heath, an
old lady, witnessing
her trouble and finding whither she was bound, had given her "the
blessing
of a person eighty years old, which would be sure to bring her safely
to the
States. And the first thing I did," added Mrs. Guele, "was to fall
downstairs." At length we got out of
the house, and some of
us into the trap, when — judgment of Heaven! — here came Mr. Guele from
his
vineyard. So another quarter of an hour went by; till at length, at our
earnest
pleading, we set forth again in earnest, Fanny and I white-faced and
silent,
but the Jews still smiling. The heart fails me. There was yet another
stoppage!
And we drove at last into Calistoga past two in the afternoon, Fanny
and I
having breakfasted at six in the morning, eight mortal hours before. We
were a
pallid couple; but still the Jews were smiling. So ended our excursion
with the village usurers;
and, now that it was done, we had no more idea of the nature of the
business,
nor of the part we had been playing in it, than the child unborn. That
all the
people we had met were the slaves of Kelmar, though in various degrees
of
servitude; that we ourselves had been sent up the mountain in the
interests of none
but Kelmar; that the money we laid out, dollar by dollar, cent by cent,
and
through the hands of various intermediaries, should all hop ultimately
into
Kelmar's till; — these were facts that we only grew to recognise in the
course of
time and by the accumulation of evidence. At length all doubt was
quieted, when
one of the kettle-holders confessed. Stopping his trap in the
moonlight, a
little way out of Calistoga, he told me, in so many words, that he dare
not show
face there with an empty pocket. "You see, I don't mind if it was only
five dollars, Mr. Stevens," he said, "but I must give Mr. Kelmar
something." Even now, when the whole
tyranny is plain to
me, I cannot find it in my heart to be as angry as perhaps I should be
with the
Hebrew tyrant. The whole game of business is beggar my neighbour; and
though
perhaps that game looks uglier when played at such close quarters and
on so
small a scale, it is none the more intrinsically inhumane for that. The
village
usurer is not so sad a feature of humanity and human progress as the
millionaire manufacturer, fattening on the toil and loss of thousands,
and yet
declaiming from the platform against the greed and dishonesty of
landlords. If
it were fair for Cobden to buy up land from owners whom he thought
unconscious
of its proper value, it was fair enough for my Russian Jew to give
credit to
his farmers. Kelmar, if he was unconscious of the beam in his own eye,
was at
least silent in the matter of his brother's mote. |