devotion of a curate. He took an interest in education, was
an active member of the local school-board, and when I was
there, he had recently lost the
schoolhouse key. His waggon
was broken, but it never seemed to occur to him to mend it.
Like all truly idle people, he had an
artistic eye. He chose
the print stuff for his wife's dresses, and counselled her in
the making of a patchwork quilt, always, as she thought,
wrongly, but to the more educated eye, always with bizarre
and
admirable taste - the taste of an Indian. With all this,
he was a perfect, unoffending gentleman in word and act.
Take his clay pipe from him, and he was fit for any society
but that of fools. Quiet as he was, there burned a deep,
permanentexcitement in his dark blue eyes; and when this
grave man smiled, it was like
sunshine in a shady place.
Mrs. Hanson (NEE, if you please, Lovelands) was more
commonplace than her lord. She was a
comely woman, too,
plump, fair-coloured, with wonderful white teeth; and in her
print dresses (chosen by Rufe) and with a large sun-bonnet
shading her valued
complexion, made, I assure you, a very
agreeable figure. But she was on the surface, what there was
of her, out-spoken and loud-spoken. Her noisy
laughter had
none of the charm of one of Hanson's rare, slow-spreading
smiles; there was no reticence, no
mystery, no manner about
the woman: she was a
first-class dairymaid, but her husband
was an unknown quantity between the
savage and the nobleman.
She was often in and out with us, merry, and
healthy, and
fair; he came far seldomer - only, indeed, when there was
business, or now and again, to pay a visit of ceremony,
brushed up for the occasion, with his wife on his arm, and a
clean clay pipe in his teeth. These visits, in our forest
state, had quite the air of an event, and turned our red
canyon into a salon.
Such was the pair who ruled in the old Silverado Hotel, among
the windy trees, on the mountain shoulder overlooking the
whole length of Napa Valley, as the man aloft looks down on
the ship's deck. There they kept house, with
sundry horses
and fowls, and a family of sons, Daniel Webster, and I think
George Washington, among the number. Nor did they want
visitors. An old gentleman, of
singular stolidity, and
called Breedlove - I think he had crossed the plains in the
same
caravan with Rufe - housed with them for
awhile during
our stay; and they had besides a
permanent lodger, in the
form of Mrs. Hanson's brother, Irvine Lovelands. I spell
Irvine by guess; for I could get no information on the
subject, just as I could never find out, in spite of many
inquiries, whether or not Rufe was a
contraction for Rufus.
They were all
cheerfully at sea about their names in that
generation. And this is surely the more
notable where the
names are all so strange, and even the family names appear to
have been coined. At one time, at least, the ancestors of
all these Alvins and Alvas, Loveinas, Lovelands, and
Breedloves, must have taken serious council and found a
certain
poetry in these denominations; that must have been,
then, their form of
literature. But still times change; and
their next descendants, the George Washingtons and Daniel
Websters, will at least be clear upon the point. And anyway,
and however his name should be spelt, this Irvine Lovelands
was the most unmitigated Caliban I ever knew.
Our very first morning at Silverado, when we were full of
business, patching up doors and windows, making beds and
seats, and getting our rough
lodging into shape, Irvine and
his sister made their appearance together, she for
neighbourliness and general
curiosity; he, because he was
working for me, to my sorrow, cutting
firewood at I forget
how much a day. The way that he set about cutting wood was
characteristic. We were at that moment patching up and
unpacking in the kitchen. Down he sat on one side, and down
sat his sister on the other. Both were chewing pine-tree
gum, and he, to my
annoyance, accompanied that simple
pleasure with profuse expectoration. She rattled away,
talking up hill and down dale, laughing, tossing her head,
showing her
brilliant teeth. He looked on in silence, now
spitting heavily on the floor, now putting his head back and
uttering a loud, discordant, joyless laugh. He had a tangle
of shock hair, the colour of wool; his mouth was a grin;
although as strong as a horse, he looked neither heavy nor
yet adroit, only leggy, coltish, and in the road. But it was
plain he was in high spirits,
thoroughly enjoying his visit;
and he laughed
franklywhenever we failed to accomplish what
we were about. This was scarcely helpful: it was even, to
amateur carpenters, embarrassing; but it lasted until we
knocked off work and began to get dinner. Then Mrs. Hanson
remembered she should have been gone an hour ago; and the
pair
retired, and the lady's
laughter died away among the
nutmegs down the path. That was Irvine's first day's work in
my
employment - the devil take him!
The next morning he returned and, as he was this time alone,
he bestowed his conversation upon us with great liberality.
He prided himself on his
intelligence; asked us if we knew
the school ma'am. HE didn't think much of her, anyway. He
had tried her, he had. He had put a question to her. If a
tree a hundred feet high were to fall a foot a day, how long
would it take to fall right down? She had not been able to
solve the problem. "She don't know nothing," he opined. He
told us how a friend of his kept a school with a revolver,
and chuckled mightily over that; his friend could teach
school, he could. All the time he kept chewing gum and
spitting. He would stand a while looking down; and then he
would toss back his shock of hair, and laugh
hoarsely, and
spit, and bring forward a new subject. A man, he told us,
who bore a
grudge against him, had poisoned his dog. "That
was a low thing for a man to do now, wasn't it? It wasn't
like a man, that, nohow. But I got even with him: I pisoned
HIS dog." His
clumsyutterance, his rude embarrassed manner,
set a fresh value on the stupidity of his remarks. I do not
think I ever appreciated the meaning of two words until I
knew Irvine - the verb, loaf, and the noun, oaf; between
them, they complete his
portrait. He could
lounge, and
wriggle, and rub himself against the wall, and grin, and be
more in everybody's way than any other two people that I ever
set my eyes on. Nothing that he did became him; and yet you
were
conscious that he was one of your own race, that his
mind was cumbrously at work, revolving the problem of
existence like a quid of gum, and in his own cloudy manner
enjoying life, and passing judgment on his fellows. Above
all things, he was
delighted with himself. You would not
have thought it, from his
uneasy manners and troubled,
struggling
utterance; but he loved himself to the
marrow, and
was happy and proud like a
peacock on a rail.
His self-esteem was, indeed, the one joint in his harness.
He could be got to work, and even kept at work, by flattery.
As long as my wife stood over him, crying out how strong he
was, so long exactly he would stick to the matter in hand;
and the moment she turned her back, or ceased to praise him,
he would stop. His
physical strength was wonderful; and to
have a woman stand by and admire his achievements, warmed his
heart like
sunshine. Yet he was as
cowardly as he was