REAPING the whirlwind.
I was in Washington City during the
succeeding month. It was the short, or closing
session, of a regular Congressional term. The
implication of Judge Lyman in the affair of Green and
young Hammond had brought him into such bad odor in
Cedarville and the whole district from which he had
been chosen, that his party deemed it wise to set
him aside, and take up a candidate less likely to
meet with so strong and, it might be, successful an
opposition. By so doing, they were able to secure
the election, once more, against the growing temperance
party, which succeeded, however, in getting a Maine
Law man into the State Legislature. It was, therefore,
Judge Lyman’s last winter at the Federal Capital.
While seated in the reading-room at
Fuller’s Hotel, about noon, on the day after
my arrival in Washington, I noticed an individual,
whose face looked familiar, come in and glance about,
as if in search of some one. While yet questioning
my mind who he could be, I heard a man remark to a
person with whom he had been conversing:
“There’s that vagabond
member away from his place in the House, again.”
“Who?” inquired the other.
“Why. Judge Lyman,” was answered.
“Oh!” said the other,
indifferently; “it isn’t of much consequence.
Precious little wisdom does he add to that intelligent
body.”
“His vote is worth something,
at least, when important questions are at stake.”
“What does he charge for it?” was coolly
inquired.
There was a shrug of the shoulders,
and an arching of the eyebrows, but no answer.
“I’m in earnest, though,
in the question,” said the last speaker.
“Not in saying that Lyman will
sell his vote to the highest bidders?”
“That will depend altogether
upon whom the bidders may be. They must be men
who have something to lose as well as gain—men
not at all likely to bruit the matter, and in serving
whose personal interests no abandonment of party is
required. Judge Lyman is always on good terms
with the lobby members, and may be found in company
with some of them daily. Doubtless, his absence
from the House, now, is for the purpose of a special
meeting with gentlemen who are ready to pay well for
votes in favor of some bill making appropriations
of public money for private or corporate benefit.”
“You certainly can not mean
all you say to be taken in its broadest sense,”
was replied to this.
“Yes; in its very broadest.
Into just this deep of moral and political degradation
has this man fallen, disgracing his constituents,
and dishonoring his country.”
“His presence at Washington
doesn’t speak very highly in favor of the community
he represents.”
“No; still, as things are now,
we cannot judge of the moral worth of a community
by the man sent from it to Congress. Representatives
show merely the strength of parties. The candidate
chosen in party primary meetings is not selected because
he is the best man they have, and the one fittest
to legislate wisely in national affairs; but he who
happens to have the strongest personal friends among
those who nominate, or who is most likely to poll
the highest vote. This is why we find,’
in Congress, such a large preponderance of tenth-rate
men.”
“A man such as you represent
Judge Lyman to be would sell his country, like another
Arnold.”
“Yes; if the bid were high enough.”
“Does he gamble?”
“Gambling, I might say, is a
part of his profession. Very few nights pass,
I am told, without finding him at the gaming-table.”
I heard no more. At all this,
I was not in the least surprised; for my knowledge
of the man’s antecedents had prepared me for
allegations quite as bad as these.
During the week I spent at the Federal
Capital, I had several opportunities of seeing Judge
Lyman, in the House and out of it,— in
the House only when the yeas and nays were called on
some important measure, or a vote taken on a bill
granting special privileges. In the latter case,
his vote, as I noticed, was generally cast on the
affirmative side. Several times I saw him staggering
on the Avenue, and once brought into the House for
the purpose of voting, in so drunken a state, that
he had to be supported to his seat. And even
worse than this—when his name was called,
he was asleep, and had to be shaken several times before
he was sufficiently aroused to give his vote!
Happily, for the good of his country,
it was his last winter in Washington. At the
next session, a better man took his place.
Two years from the period of my last
visit to Cedarville, I found myself approaching that
quiet village again. As the church-spire came
in view, and house after house became visible, here
und there, standing out in pleasant relief against
the green background of woods and fields, all the
exciting events which rendered my last visit so memorable,
came up fresh in my mind. I was yet thinking
of Willy Hammond’s dreadful death, and of his
broken-hearted mother, whose life went out with his,
when the stage rolled by their old homestead.
Oh, what a change was here! Neglect, decay, and
dilapidation were visible, let the eye fall where
it would. The fences were down, here and there;
the hedges, once so green and nicely trimmed, had
grown rankly in some places, but were stunted and
dying in others; all the beautiful walks were weedy
and grass-grown, and the box-borders dead; the garden,
rainbow-hued in its wealth of choice and beautiful
flowers when I first saw it, was lying waste,—a
rooting-ground for hogs. A glance at the house
showed a broken chimney, the bricks unremoved from
the spot where they struck the ground; a moss grown
roof, with a large limb from a lightning-rent tree
lying almost balanced over the eaves, and threatening
to fall at the touch of the first wind-storm that
swept over. Half of the vines that clambered about
the portico were dead, and the rest, untrained, twined
themselves in wild disorder, or fell groveling to
the earth. One of the pillars of the portico
was broken, as were, also, two of the steps that went
up to it. The windows of the house were closed,
but the door stood open, and, as the stage went past,
my eyes rested, for a moment, upon an old man seated
in the hall. He was not near enough to the door
for me to get a view of his face; but the white flowing
hair left me in no doubt as to his identity. It
was Judge Hammond.
The “Sickle and Sheaf”
was yet the stage-house of Cedarville, and there,
a few minutes afterward, I found myself. The hand
of change had been here also. The first object
that attracted my attention was the sign-post, which
at my earlier arrival, some eight or nine years before,
stood up in its new white garment of paint, as straight
as a plummet-line, bearing proudly aloft the golden
sheaf and gleaming sickle. Now, the post, dingy
and shattered and worn from the frequent contact of
wheels, and gnawing of restless horses, leaned from
its trim perpendicular at an angle of many degrees,
as if ashamed of the faded, weather-worn, lying symbol
it bore aloft in the sunshine. Around the post
was a filthy mud-pool, in which a hog lay grunting
out its sense of enjoyment. Two or three old
empty whisky barrels lumbered up the dirty porch, on
which a coarse, bloated, vulgar-looking man sat leaning
against the wall—his chair tipped back
on its hind legs—squinting at me from one
eye, as I left the stage and came forward toward the
house.
“Ah! is this you?” said
he, as I came near to him, speaking thickly, and getting
up with a heavy motion. I now recognized the
altered person of Simon Slade. On looking at him
closer, I saw that the eye which I had thought only
shut was in fact destroyed. How vividly, now,
uprose in imagination the scenes I had witnessed during
my last night in his bar-room; the night when a brutal
mob, whom he had inebriated with liquor, came near
murdering him.
“Glad to see you once more,
my boy! Glad to see you! I—I—I’m
not just—you see. How are you?
How are you?”
And he shook my hand with a drunken
show of cordiality.
I felt shocked and disgusted.
Wretched man! down the crumbling sides of the pit
he had digged for other feet, he was himself sliding,
while not enough strength remained even to struggle
with his fate.
I tried for a few minutes to talk
with him; but his mind was altogether beclouded, and
his questions and answers incoherent; so I left him,
and entered the bar-room.
“Can I get accommodations here
for a couple of days?” I inquired of a stupid,
sleepy-looking man, who was sitting in a chair behind
the bar.
“I reckon so,” he answered, but did not
rise.
I turned, and walked a few paces toward
the door, and then walked back again.
“I’d like to get a room,” said I.
The man got up slowly, and going to
a desk, fumbled about it for a while. At length
he brought out an old, dilapidated bank-book, and
throwing it open on the counter, asked me, with an
indifferent manner, to write down my name.
“I’ll take a pen, if you please.”
“Oh, yes!” And he hunted
about again in the desk, from which, after a while,
he brought forth the blackened stump of a quill, and
pushed it toward me across the counter.
“Ink,” said I—fixing
my eyes upon him with a look of displeasure.
“I don’t believe there
is any,” he muttered. “Frank,”
and he called the landlord’s son, going to the
door behind the bar as he did so.
“What d’ye want?”
a rough, ill-natured voice answered.
“Where’s the ink?”
“Don’t know anything about it.”
“You had it last. What did you do with
it?”
“Nothing!” was growled back.
“Well, I wish you’d find it.”
“Find it yourself, and—”
I cannot repeat the profane language he used.
“Never mind,” said I.
“A pencil will do just as well.” And
I drew one from my pocket. The attempt to write
with this, on the begrimed and greasy page of the
register, was only partially successful. It would
have puzzled almost any one to make out the name.
From the date of the last entry, it appeared that mine
was the first arrival, for over a week, of any person
desiring a room.
As I finished writing my name, Frank
came stalking in, with a cigar in his mouth, and a
cloud of smoke around his head. He had grown
into a stout man—though his face presented
little that was manly, in the true sense of the word.
He was disgustingly sensual. On seeing me, a
slight flush tinged his cheeks.
“How do you do?” he said,
offering me his hand. “Peter,”—he
turned to the lazy-looking bar-keeper—“tell
Jane to have No. 11 put in order for a gentleman immediately,
and tell her to be sure and change the bed linen.”
“Things look rather dull here,”
I remarked, as the bar-keeper went out to do as he
had been directed.
“Rather; it’s a dull place, anyhow.”
“How is your mother?” I inquired.
A slight, troubled look came into his face, as he
answered:
“No better.”
“She’s sick, then?”
“Yes; she’s been sick
a good while; and I’m afraid will never be much
better.” His manner was not altogether cold
and indifferent, but there was a want of feeling in
his voice.
“Is she at home?”
“No, sir.”
As he showed no inclination to say
more on the subject, I asked no further questions,
and he soon found occasion to leave me.
The bar room had undergone no material
change, so far as its furniture and arrangements were
concerned; but a very great change was apparent in
the condition of these. The brass rod around the
bar, which, at my last visit was brightly polished,
was now a greenish-black, and there came from it an
unpleasant odor of verdigris. The walls were
fairly coated with dust, smoke, and fly-specks, and
the windows let in the light but feebly through the
dirt-obscured glass. The floor was filthy.
Behind the bar, on the shelves designed for a display
of liquors, was a confused mingling of empty or half-filled
decanters, cigar-boxes, lemons and lemon-peel, old
newspapers, glasses, a broken pitcher, a hat, a soiled
vest, and a pair of blacking brushes, with other incongruous
things, not now remembered. The air of the room
was loaded with offensive vapors.
Disgusted with every thing about the
bar, I went into the sitting-room. Here, there
was some order in the arrangement of the dingy furniture;
but you might have written your name in dust on the
looking-glass and table. The smell of the torpid
atmosphere was even worse than that of the bar-room.
So I did not linger here, but passed through the hall,
and out upon the porch, to get a draught of pure air.
Slade still sat leaning against the wall.
“Fine day this,” said he, speaking in
a mumbling kind of voice.
“Very fine,” I answered.
“Yes, very fine.”
“Not doing so well as you were a few years ago,”
said I.
“No—you see—these—these
’ere blamed temperance people are ruining everything.”
“Ah! Is that so?”
“Yes. Cedarville isn’t what it was
when you first came to the
‘Sickle and Sheaf.’ I—I—you
see. Curse the temperance people!
They’ve ruined every thing, you see. Every
thing! Ruined—”
And he muttered and mouthed his words
in such a way, that I could understand but little
he said; and, in that little, there was scarcely any
coherency. So I left him, with a feeling of pity
in my heart for the wreck he had become, and went
into the town to call upon one or two gentlemen with
whom I had business.
In the course of the afternoon, I
learned that Mrs. Slade was in an insane asylum, about
five miles from Cedarville. The terrible events
of the day on which young Hammond was murdered completed
the work of mental ruin, begun at the time her husband
abandoned the quiet, honorable calling of a miller,
and became a tavern-keeper. Reason could hold
its position no longer. When word came to her
that Willy and his mother were both dead, she uttered
a wild shriek, and fell down in a fainting fit.
From that period the balance of her mind was destroyed.
Long before this, her friends saw that reason wavered.
Frank had been her idol. A pure, bright, affectionate
boy he was, when she removed with him from their pleasant
cottage-home, where all the surrounding influences
were good, into a tavern, where an angel could scarcely
remain without corruption. From the moment this
change was decided on by her husband, a shadow fell
upon her heart. She saw, before her husband,
her children, and herself, a yawning pit, and felt
that, in a very few years, all of them must plunge
down into its fearful darkness.
Alas! how quickly began the realization
of her worst fears in the corruption of her worshipped
boy! And how vain proved all effort and remonstrance,
looking to his safety, whether made with himself or
his father! From the day the tavern was opened,
and Frank drew into his lungs full draughts of the
changed atmosphere by which he was now surrounded,
the work of moral deterioration commenced. The
very smell of the liquor exhilarated him unnaturally;
while the subjects of conversation, so new to him,
that found discussion in the bar-room, soon came to
occupy a prominent place in his imagination, to the
exclusion of those humane, child-like, tender, and
heavenly thoughts and impressions it had been the mother’s
care to impart and awaken. Ah! with what an eager
zest does the heart drink in of evil. And how
almost hopeless is the case of a boy, surrounded,
as Frank was, by the corrupting, debasing associations
of a bar-room! Had his father meditated his ruin,
he could not have more surely laid his plans for the
fearful consummation; and he reaped as he had sown.
With a selfish desire to get gain, he embarked in
the trade of corruption, ruin, and death, weakly believing
that he and his could pass through the fire harmless.
How sadly a few years demonstrated his error, we have
seen.
Flora, I learned, was with her mother,
devoting her life to her. The dreadful death
of Willy Hammond, for whom she had conceived a strong
attachment, came near depriving her of reason also.
Since the day on which that awful tragedy occurred,
she had never even looked upon her old home.
She went away with her unconscious mother, and ever
since had remained with her—devoting her
life to her comfort. Long before this, all her
own and mother’s influence over her brother
had come to an end. It mattered not how she sought
to stay his feet, so swiftly moving along the downward
way, whether by gentle entreaty, earnest remonstrance,
or tears; in either case, wounds for her own heart
were the sure consequences, while his steps never
lingered a moment. A swift destiny seemed hurrying
him on to ruin. The change in her father—once
so tender, so cheerful in his tone, so proud of and
loving toward his daughter—was another
source of deep grief to her pure young spirit.
Over him, as well as over her brother, all her power
was lost; and he even avoided her, as though her presence
were an offense to him. And so, when she went
out from her unhappy home, she took with her no desire
to return. Even when imagination bore her back
to the “Sickle and Sheaf,” she felt an
intense, heart-sickening repulsion toward the place
where she had first felt the poisoned arrows of life;
and in the depths of her spirit she prayed that her
eyes might never look upon it again. In her almost
cloister-like seclusion, she sought to gather the mantle
of oblivion about her heart.
Had not her mother’s condition
made Flora’s duty a plain one, the true, unselfish
instincts of her heart would have doubtless led her
back to the polluted home she had left, there, in a
kind of living death, to minister as best she could
to the comfort of a debased father and brother.
But she was spared that trial—that fruitless
sacrifice.
Evening found me once more in the
bar-room of the “Sickle and Sheaf.”
The sleepy, indifferent bar-keeper, was now more in
his element—looked brighter, and had quicker
motions. Slade, who had partially recovered from
the stupefying effects of the heavy draughts of ale
with which he washed down his dinner, was also in
a better condition, though not inclined to talk.
He was sitting at a table, alone, with his eyes wandering
about the room. Whether his thoughts were agreeable
or disagreeable, it was not easy to determine.
Frank was there, the centre of a noisy group of coarse
fellows, whose vulgar sayings and profane expletives
continually rung through the room. The noisiest,
coarsest, and most profane was Frank Slade; yet did
not the incessant volume of bad language that flowed
from his tongue appear in the least to disturb his
father.
Outraged, at length, by this disgusting
exhibition, that had not even the excuse of an exciting
cause, I was leaving the bar-room, when I heard some
one remark to a young man who had just come in:
“What! you here again, Ned? Ain’t
you afraid your old man will be after you, as usual?”
“No,” answered the person
addressed, chuckling inwardly, “he’s gone
to a prayer-meeting.”
“You’ll at least have
the benefit of his prayers,” was lightly remarked.
I turned to observe the young man
more closely. His face I remembered, though I
could not identify him at first. But, when I
heard him addressed soon after as Ned Hargrove, I had
a vivid recollection of a little incident that occurred
some years before, and which then made a strong impression.
The reader has hardly forgotten the visit of Mr. Hargrove
to the bar-room of the “Sickle and Sheaf,”
and the conversation among some of its inmates, which
his withdrawal, in company with his son, then occasioned.
The father’s watchfulness over his boy, and
his efforts to save him from the allurements and temptations
of a bar-room, had proved, as now appeared, unavailing.
The son was several years older; but it was sadly
evident, from the expression of his face, that he had
been growing older in evil faster than in years.
The few words that I have mentioned
as passing between this young man and another inmate
of the bar-room, caused me to turn back from the door,
through which I was about passing, and take a chair
near to where Hargrove had seated himself. As
I did so, the eyes of Simon Slade rested on the last-named
individual.
“Ned Hargrove!” he said,
speaking roughly—“if you want a drink,
you’d better get it, and make yourself scarce.”
“Don’t trouble yourself,”
retorted the young man, “you’ll get your
money for the drink in good time.”
This irritated the landlord, who swore
at Hargrove violently, and said something about not
wanting boys about his place who couldn’t stir
from home without having “daddy or mammy running
after them.”
“Never fear!” cried out
the person who had first addressed Hargrove—“his
old man’s gone to a prayer-meeting. We shan’t
have the light of his pious countenance here to-night.”
I fixed my eyes upon the young man
to see what effect this coarse and irreverent allusion
to his father would have. A slight tinge of shame
was in his face; but I saw that he had not sufficient
moral courage to resent the shameful desecration of
a parent’s name. How should he, when he
was himself the first to desecrate that name?
“If he were forty fathoms deep
in the infernal regions,” answered Slade, “he’d
find out that Ned was here, and get half an hour’s
leave of absence to come after him. The fact is,
I’m tired of seeing his solemn, sanctimonious
face here every night. If the boy hasn’t
spirit enough to tell him to mind his own business,
as I have done more than fifty times, why, let the
boy stay away himself.”
“Why don’t you send him
off with a flea in his ear, Ned?” said one of
the company, a young man scarcely his own age.
“My old man tried that game with me, but he
soon found that I could hold the winning cards.”
“Just what I’m going to
do the very next time he comes after me.”
“Oh, yes! So you’ve
said twenty times,” remarked Frank Slade, in
a sneering, insolent manner.
Edward Hargrove had not the spirit
to resent this; he only answered:
“Just let him show himself here
to-night, and you will see.”
“No, we won’t see,” sneered Frank.
“Wouldn’t it be fun!”
was exclaimed. “I hope to be on hand, should
it ever come off.”
“He’s as ’fraid
as death of the old chap,” laughed a sottish-looking
man, whose age ought to have inspired him with some
respect for the relation between father and son, and
doubtless would, had not a long course of drinking
and familiarity with debasing associates blunted his
moral sense.
“Now for it!” I heard
uttered, in a quick, delighted voice. “Now
for fun! Spunk up to him, Ned! Never say
die!”
I turned toward the door, and there
stood the father of Edward Hargrove. How well
I remembered the broad, fine forehead, the steady,
yet mild eyes, the firm lips, the elevated, superior
bearing of the man I had once before seen in that place,
and on a like errand. His form was slightly bent
now; his hair was whiter; his eyes farther back in
his head; his face thinner and marked with deeper
lines; and there was in the whole expression of his
face a touching sadness. Yet, superior to the
marks of time and suffering, an unflinching resolution
was visible in his countenance, that gave to it a
dignity, and extorted involuntary respect. He
stood still, after advancing a few paces, and then,
his searching eyes having discovered his son, he said
mildly, yet firmly, and with such a strength of parental
love in his voice that resistance was scarcely possible:
“Edward! Edward! Come, my son.”
“Don’t go.”
The words were spoken in an undertone, and he who
uttered them turned his face away from Mr. Hargrove,
so that the old man could not see the motion of his
lips. A little while before, he had spoken bravely
against the father of Edward; now, he could not stand
up in his presence.
I looked at Edward. He did not
move from where he was sitting, and yet I saw that
to resist his father cost him no light struggle.
“Edward.” There was
nothing imperative—nothing stern—nothing
commanding in the father’s voice; but its great,
its almost irresistible power, lay in its expression
of the father’s belief that his son would instantly
leave the place. And it was this power that prevailed.
Edward arose, and, with eyes cast upon the floor,
was moving away from his companions, when Frank Slade
exclaimed:
“Poor, weak fool!”
It was a lightning flash of indignation,
rather than a mere glance from the human eye, that
Mr. Hargrove threw instantly upon Frank; while his
fine form sprung up erect. He did not speak, but
merely transfixed him with a look. Frank curled
his lip impotently, as he tried to return the old
man’s withering glances.
“Now look here!” said
Simon Slade, in some wrath, “there’s been
just about enough of this. I’m getting tired
of it. Why don’t you keep Ned at home?
Nobody wants him here.”
“Refuse to sell him liquor,” returned
Mr. Hargrove.
“It’s my trade to sell liquor,”
answered Slade, boldly.
“I wish you had a more honorable
calling,” said Hargrove, almost mournfully.
“If you insult my father, I’ll
strike you down!” exclaimed Frank Slade, starting
up and assuming a threatening aspect.
“I respect filial devotion,
meet it where I will,” calmly replied Mr. Hargrove,—“I
only wish it had a better foundation in this case.
I only wish the father had merited——”
I will not stain my page with the
fearful oath that Frank Slade yelled, rather than
uttered, as, with clenched fist, he sprung toward
Mr. Hargrove. But ere he had reached the unruffled
old man —who stood looking at him as one
would look into the eyes of a wild beast, confident
that he could not stand the gaze—a firm
hand grasped his arm, and a rough voice said:
“Avast, there, young man!
Touch a hair of that white head, and I’ll wring
your neck off.”
“Lyon!” As Frank uttered
the man’s name, he raised his fist to strike
him. A moment the clenched hand remained poised
in the air; then it fell slowly to his side, and he
contented himself with an oath and a vile epithet.
“You can swear to your heart’s
content. It will do nobody any harm but yourself,”
coolly replied Mr. Lyon, whom I now recognized as
the person with whom I had held several conversations
during previous visits.
“Thank you, Mr. Lyon,”
said Mr. Hargrove, “for this manly interference.
It is no more than I should have expected from you.”
“I never suffer a young man
to strike an old man,” said Lyon firmly.
“Apart from that, Mr. Hargrove, there are other
reasons why your person must be free from violence
where I am.”
“This is a bad place for you,
Lyon,” said Mr. Hargrove; “and I’ve
said so to you a good many times.” He spoke
in rattier an undertone. “Why will
you come here?”
“It’s a bad place, I know,”
replied Lyon, speaking out boldly, “and we all
know it. But habit, Mr. Hargrove—habit.
That’s the cursed thing! If the bar-rooms
were all shut up, there would be another story to
tell. Get us the Maine law, and there will be
some chance for us.”
“Why don’t you vote the
temperance ticket?” asked Mr. Hargrove.
“Why did I? you’d better ask,” said
Lyon.
“I thought you voted against us.”
“Not I. Ain’t quite so
blind to my own interest as that. And, if the
truth were known, I should not at all wonder if every
man in this room, except Slade and his son, voted
on your side of the house.”
“It’s a little strange,
then,” said Mr. Hargrove, “that with the
drinking men on our side, we failed to secure the election.”
“You must blame that on your
moderate men, who see no danger and go blind with
their party,” answered Lyon. “We have
looked the evil in the face, and know its direful
quality.”
“Come! I would like to talk with you, Mr.
Lyon.”
Mr. Hargrove, his son, and Mr. Lyon
went out together. As they left the room, Frank
Slade said:
“What a cursed liar and hypocrite he is!”
“Who?” was asked.
“Why, Lyon,” answered Frank, boldly.
“You’d better say that to his face.”
“It wouldn’t be good for him,” remarked
one of the company.
At this Frank started to his feet,
stalked about the room, and put on all the disgusting
airs of a drunken braggart. Even his father saw
the ridiculous figure he cut, and growled out:
“There, Frank, that’ll
do. Don’t make a miserable fool of yourself!”
At which Frank retorted, with so much
of insolence that his father flew into a towering
passion, and ordered him to leave the bar-room.
“You can go out yourself if
you don’t like the company. I’m very
well satisfied,” answered Frank.
“Leave this room, you impudent young scoundrel!”
“Can’t go, my amiable
friend,” said Frank, with a cool self-possession
that maddened his father, who got up hastily, and moved
across the bar-room to the place where he was standing.
“Go out, I tell you!” Slade spoke resolutely.
“Would be happy to oblige you,”
Frank said, in a taunting voice; “but, ’pon
my word, it isn’t at all convenient.”
Half intoxicated as he was, and already
nearly blind with passion, Slade lifted his hand to
strike his son. And the blow would have fallen
had not some one caught his arm, and held him back
from the meditated violence. Even the debased
visitors of this bar-room could not stand by and see
nature outraged in a bloody strife between father
and son; for it was plain from the face and quickly
assumed attitude of Frank, that if his father had laid
his hand upon him, he would have struck him in return.
I could not remain to hear the awful
imprecations that father and son, in their impotent
rage, called down from heaven upon each other’s
heads. It was the most shocking exhibition of
depraved human nature that I had ever seen. And
so I left the bar-room, glad to escape from its stifling
atmosphere and revolting scenes.