The Rise of Roscoe Paine
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第2章

myself over this fine mornin'? Why, rakin' this yard! And what am I rakin'? Why, dead leaves from last fall, and straws and sticks and pieces of seaweed and such that have blowed in durin' the winter.And what blowed 'em in? Why, the wind, sartin! And whose wind was it? The Almighty's, that's whose! Now then! if the Almighty didn't intend to have dead leaves around why did he put trees for 'em to fall off of? If he didn't want straws and seaweed and truck around why did He send them everlastin' no'theasters last November? Did that idea ever strike you?""I don't know that it ever did, exactly in that way.""No.Well, that's 'cause you ain't reasoned it out, same as Ihave.You've got the same trouble that most folks have, you don't reason things out.Now, let's look at it straight in the face."Lute let go of the rake altogether and used both hands to illustrate his point."That finger there, we'll say, is me, rakin'

and rakin' hard as ever I can.And that fist there is the Almighty, not meanin' anything irreverent.I rake, same as I'm doin' this mornin'.The yard's all cleaned up.Then--zing!"Lute's clenched fist swept across and knocked the offending finger out of the way."Zing! here comes one of the Almighty's no'theasters, same as we're likely to have to-morrer, and the consarned yard is just as dirty as ever.Ain't that so?"I looked at the yard."It seems to be about as it was," I agreed, with some sarcasm.Lute was an immune, so far as sarcasm was concerned.

"Yup," he said, triumphantly."Now, Dorindy, she's a good, pious woman.She believes the Powers above order everything.If that's so, then ain't it sacrilegious to be all the time flyin' in the face of them Powers by rakin' and rakin' and dustin' and dustin'?

That's the question."

"But, according to that reasoning," I observed, "we should neither rake nor dust.Wouldn't that make our surroundings rather uncomfortable, after a while?""Sartin.But when they got uncomfortable then we could turn to and make 'em comfortable again.I ain't arguin' against work--needful work, you understand.I like it.And I ain't thinkin' of myself, you know, but about Dorindy.It worries me to see her wearin'

herself out with--with dustin' and such.It ain't sense and 'tain't good religion.She's my wife and it's my duty to think for her and look out for her."He paused and reached into his overalls pocket for a pipe.Finding it, he reached into another pocket for the wherewithal to fill it.

"Have you suggested to her that she's flying in the face of Providence?" I asked.

Lute shook his head."No," he admitted, "I ain't.Got any tobacco about you? Dorindy hove my plug away yesterday.I left it back of the clock and she found it and was mad--dustin' again, of course."He took the pouch I handed him, filled his pipe and absently put the pouch in his pocket.

"Got a match?" he asked."Thanks.No, I ain't spoke to her about it, though it's been on my mind for a long spell.I didn't know but you might say somethin' to her along that line, Roscoe.

'Twouldn't sound so personal, comin' from you.What do you think?"I shook my head."Dorinda wouldn't pay much attention to my ideas on such subjects, I'm afraid," I answered."She knows I'm not a regular church-goer."Lute was plainly disappointed."Well," he said, with a sigh, "maybe you're right.She does cal'late you're kind of heathen, though she hopes you'll see the light some day.But, just the same," he added, "it's a good argument.I tried it on the gang up to the post-office last night.I says to 'em, says I, 'Work's all right.I believe in it.I'm a workin' man, myself.But to work when you don't have to is wrong.Take Ros Paine,' I says--""Why should you take me?" I interrupted, rather sharply.

"'Cause you're the best example I could think of.Everybody knows you don't do no work.Shootin' and sailin' and fishin' ain't work, and that's about all you do.'Take Ros,' says I.'He might be to work.He was in a bank up to the city once and he knows the bankin' trade.He might be at it now, but what would be the use?'

I says.'He's got enough to live on and he lives on it, 'stead of keepin' some poor feller out of a job.' That's right, too, ain't it?"I didn't answer at once.There was no reason why I should be irritated because Luther Rogers had held me up as a shining example of the do-nothing class to the crowd of hangers-on in a country post-office.What did I care for Denboro opinion? Six years in that gossipy village had made me, so I thought, capable of rising above such things.

"Well," I asked after a moment, "what did they say to that?""Oh, nothin' much.They couldn't; I had 'em, you see.Some of 'em laughed and old Cap'n Jed he hove out somethin' about birds of a feather stickin' up for each other.No sense to it.But, as Isaid afore, what can you expect of a Democrat?"I turned on my heel and moved toward the back gate."Ain't goin', be you?" asked Lute."Hadn't you better set down and rest your breakfast a spell?""No, I'm going.By the way, if you're through with that tobacco pouch of mine, I'll take it off your hands.I may want to smoke by and by."Lute coolly explained that he had forgotten the pouch; it had "gone clean out of his head." However, he handed it over and I left him seated on the wash bench, with his head tipped back against the shingles.I opened the gate and strolled slowly along the path by the edge of the bluff.I had gone perhaps a hundred yards when Iheard a shrill voice behind me.Turning, I saw Dorinda standing by the corner of the kitchen, dust cloth in hand.Her husband was raking for dear life.