登陆注册
25542200000033

第33章

TROUBLE BREWS

"Old Lem Camp," as he had been called for so many years that there seemed no disrespect in the title, was waking up. Not many mornings was he a lie-abed. And the lines in his forehead seemed to be smoothing out, and his eyes had lost something of their dullness.

It was true that, at first, he wandered about the farmstead muttering to himself in his old way--an endless monologue which was a jumble of comment, gratitude, and the brief memories of other days. It took some time to adjust his poor mind to the fact that he had no longer to fear that Poverty which had stalked ever before him like a threatening spirit.

Gratitude spurred him to the use of his hands. He was not a broken man--not bodily. Many light tasks soon fell to his share, and Mrs. Atterson told Hiram and Sister to let him do what he would. To busy himself would be the best thing in the world for the old fellow.

"That's what's been the matter with Mr. Camp for years," she declared, with conviction. "Because he passed the sixty-year mark, and it was against the practise of the paper company to keep employees on the payroll over that age, they turned Lem Camp off.

"Ridiculous! He was just as well able to do the tasks that he had learned to do mechanically as he had been any time for the previous twenty years. He had worked in that office forty years, and more, you understand.

"That's the worst thing about a corporation of that kind--it has no thought beyond its 'rules.' Old Mr. Bundy remembered Lem--that's all. If he hadn't so much stock in the concern they'd turn him off, too. I expect he knows it and that's what softened his heart to Old Lem.

"Now, let Lem take hold of whatever he can do, and git interested in it," declared the practical Mrs. Atterson, "and he'll show you that there's work left in him yet. Yes-sir-ree-sir! And if he'll work in the open air, all the better for him."There was plenty for everybody to do, and Hiram would not say the old man nay. The seed boxes needed a good deal of attention, for theywere to be lifted out into the air on warm days, and placed in the sun. And Old Lem could do this--and stir the soil in them, and pull out the grass and other weeds that started.

Hiram had planted early cabbage and cauliflower and egg-plant in other boxes, and the beets were almost big enough to transplant to the open ground. Beets are hardy and although hair-roots are apt to form on transplanted garden beets, the transplanting aids the growth in other ways and Hiram expected to have table-beets very early.

In the garden itself he had already run out two rows of later beets, the width of the plot. Bunched beets will sell for a fair price the whole season through.

Hiram was giving his whole heart and soul to the work--he was wrapped up in the effort to make the farm pay. And for good reason.

It was "up to him" to not alone turn a profit for his employer, and himself; but he desired--oh, how strongly!--to show the city folk who had sneered at him that he could be a success in the right environment.

Besides, and in addition, Hiram Strong was ambitious--very ambitious indeed for a youth of his age. He wanted to own a farm of his own in time--and it was no "one-horse farm" he aimed at.

No, indeed! Hiram had read of the scientific farming of the Middle West, and the enormous tracts in the Northwest devoted to grain and other staple crops, where the work was done for the most part by machinery.

He longed to see all this--and to take part in it. He desired the big things in farming, nor would he ever be content to remain a helper.

"I'm going to be my own boss, some day--and I'm going to boss other men. I'll show these fellows around here that I know what I want, and when I get it I'll handle it right!" Hiram soliloquized.

"It's up to me to save every cent I can. Henry thinks I'm niggardly, I expect, because I wouldn't go to town Saturday night with him. But I haven't any money to waste.

"The hundred I'm to get next Christmas from Mrs. Atterson I don't wish to draw on at all. I'll get along with such old clothes as I've got."Hiram was not naturally a miser; he frequently bought some little thing for Sister when he went to town--a hair-ribbon, or the like, which he knewwould please the girl; but for himself he was determined to be saving.

At the end of his contract with Mrs. Atterson he would have two hundred dollars anyway. But that was not the end and aim of Hiram Strong's hopes.

"It's the clause in our agreement about the profits of our second season that is my bright and shining star," he told the good lady more than once. "I don't know yet what we had better put in next year to bring us a fortune; but we'll know before it comes time to plant it."Meanwhile the wheel-hoe and seeder he had insisted upon Mrs. Atterson buying had arrived, and Hiram, after studying the instructions which came with it, set the machine up as a seed-sower. Later, after the bulk of the seeds were in the ground, he would take off the seeding attachment and bolt on the hoe, or cultivator attachments, with which to stir the soil between the narrower rows of vegetables.

As he made ready to plant seeds such as carrot, parsnip, onion, salsify, and leaf-beet, as well as spring spinach, early turnips, radishes and kohlrabi, Hiram worked that part of his plowed land over again and again with the spike harrow, finally boarding the strips down smoothly as he wished to plant them. The seedbed must be as level as a floor, and compact, for good use to be made of the wheel-seeder.

When he had lined out one row with his garden line, from side to side of the plowed strip, the marking arrangement attached to his seeder would mark the following lines plainly, and at just the distance he desired.

Onions, carrots, and the like, he put in fifteen inches apart, intending to do all the cultivating of those extremely small plants with the wheel-hoe, after they were large enough. But he foresaw the many hours of cultivating before him and marked the rows for the bulk of the vegetables far enough apart, as he had first intended, to make possible the use of the horse-hoe.

同类推荐
  • 从公续录

    从公续录

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 净土五会念佛略法事仪赞

    净土五会念佛略法事仪赞

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 尼乾子问无我义经

    尼乾子问无我义经

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 窥天外乘

    窥天外乘

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 憨休禅师语录

    憨休禅师语录

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
热门推荐
  • 公务员

    公务员

    这是一部以官场为背景的当代小说。主人公辗转于单位、家庭与家乡之间,在权力地位、爱情婚姻和事业成败诸种困扰中奔波挣扎,历尽波折和困顿,甚而尴尬与无奈,显现出社会现实生活的纷扰复杂,情节曲折生动,富有可读性。
  • 带着灵兽闯天下

    带着灵兽闯天下

    温馨的小家一朝剧变,母亲身死,恶人紧逼,只能四处躲藏的小冉手握奇特火焰,带着贪吃灵兽一路奋起。可是这绕在身边滴男的女的是肿么回事,都要和她配成双。不要啊,她明明取向正常的说。若想知道身负母仇伪装成男孩的萝莉,如何一步步变强直至走上灵师巅峰,且由本人娓娓道来。另外如果喜欢请收藏,如果有推荐票就放心大胆的砸过来吧!霖琳撒欢打滚的接着!!
  • 渣男皇上VS魔女皇后

    渣男皇上VS魔女皇后

    欧阳雪莹在泳池内不慎穿越成了天启王朝的皇后!没想到啊,本以为是个好脾气的帅锅皇帝,但却是一个从地狱里来的撒旦!杀人连眼皮都不眨一下,就算欢爱也动作霸道,但却从来没去过皇后娘娘的寝宫。哼哼,任凭你在怎么冷血无情,迟早有一天我要让你拜倒在我的石榴裙下!
  • 一生所爱大话西游

    一生所爱大话西游

    本书承载着我对《大话西游2》的深厚感情,经过长期的思想准备,打算写一本书奉献给我心爱的大话。
  • 天行纪世

    天行纪世

    这是一个普通少年的不平凡遭遇这个世界是否会因为一个人而改变每一个动作每一句话都可能破坏未来形成新的未来有没有想过当凌天下之人的感受,这不是YY,这是一个故事史上最强大的阵容将在世界全面开战,谁生谁死并不重要人们只是想要一个可以结束这一切的那个人他们是最强但他,只会是一人
  • 弃妇太逍遥

    弃妇太逍遥

    堂堂都市白骨精,竟穿越成受气正妻,面对无良的夫家人,她只求和离。就在人人都为之叹息的时候,她却在一次次的机缘巧合下崭露头角,让多少王孙贵胄为之倾心。但世人却不知,那万丈荣光背后,她所求的,只不过是一生一世一双人。
  • 百变女汉子是学神

    百变女汉子是学神

    林殊冉这个人,很BT,明明可以当女神,却非要当女神经病。说她是不学无术的太妹,罢特,她又是个学神。她很会打架,因此,她收获了一堆小弟,也收获了一堆嫉妒她的人。于是,在中学生活中,她不仅当学神,斗小贱,也开启了无尽的撩汉之路……
  • 语言与认知译丛:认知的边界

    语言与认知译丛:认知的边界

    弗雷德里克·亚当斯和肯尼斯·埃扎瓦在本书中对认知科学领域的争论斥以严厉的批评。他们所关注的焦点问题在延展认知系统假设与延展认知假设的区别,以及最为重要的是提出了“心智标志”这一概念。借以批判安迪·克拉克和丹内特等人的理论。
  • 细节决定健康全集

    细节决定健康全集

    本书从居家、饮食、排毒、美容、睡眠、心态、两性、防病治病、养生等健康生活的细节入手,告诉人们如何更好地保持身体健康。本书内容丰富,通俗易懂,用平实的语言告诉人们保持健康的正确方法。
  • 路人男主养成计划

    路人男主养成计划

    本故事讲述古琼作为一名自我养成的优秀主角,强行游走在各种恶劣的修罗场当中却不幸被各种体位反杀的悲剧人生。【淡定卡】可以让他成为一名无论面对多大压力都能谈笑间被萌妹强撸灰飞烟灭。【神摔卡】触发各种姿势的神摔,然后被无情碾压吊打。【热血卡】无形装‘哔’,最为致命。......于是,古琼无限作死的生活开始了。