Tom joined the new order of Cadets
of Temperance, being attracted by the showy character
of their “regalia.” He promised to
abstain from smoking, chewing, and profanity as long
as he remained a member. Now he found out a new
thing—namely, that to promise not to do
a thing is the surest way in the world to make a body
want to go and do that very thing. Tom soon found
himself tormented with a desire to drink and swear;
the desire grew to be so intense that nothing but the
hope of a chance to display himself in his red sash
kept him from withdrawing from the order. Fourth
of July was coming; but he soon gave that up —gave
it up before he had worn his shackles over forty-eight
hours—and fixed his hopes upon old Judge
Frazer, justice of the peace, who was apparently on
his deathbed and would have a big public funeral, since
he was so high an official. During three days
Tom was deeply concerned about the Judge’s condition
and hungry for news of it. Sometimes his hopes
ran high—so high that he would venture to
get out his regalia and practise before the looking-glass.
But the Judge had a most discouraging way of fluctuating.
At last he was pronounced upon the mend—and
then convalescent. Tom was disgusted; and felt
a sense of injury, too. He handed in his resignation
at once—and that night the Judge suffered
a relapse and died. Tom resolved that he would
never trust a man like that again.
The funeral was a fine thing.
The Cadets paraded in a style calculated to kill the
late member with envy. Tom was a free boy again,
however —there was something in that.
He could drink and swear, now—but found
to his surprise that he did not want to. The simple
fact that he could, took the desire away, and the
charm of it.
Tom presently wondered to find that
his coveted vacation was beginning to hang a little
heavily on his hands.
He attempted a diary—but
nothing happened during three days, and so he abandoned
it.
The first of all the negro minstrel
shows came to town, and made a sensation. Tom
and Joe Harper got up a band of performers and were
happy for two days.
Even the Glorious Fourth was in some
sense a failure, for it rained hard, there was no
procession in consequence, and the greatest man in
the world (as Tom supposed), Mr. Benton, an actual
United States Senator, proved an overwhelming disappointment—for
he was not twenty-five feet high, nor even anywhere
in the neighborhood of it.
A circus came. The boys played
circus for three days afterward in tents made of rag
carpeting—admission, three pins for boys,
two for girls—and then circusing was abandoned.
A phrenologist and a mesmerizer came—and
went again and left the village duller and drearier
than ever.
There were some boys-and-girls’
parties, but they were so few and so delightful that
they only made the aching voids between ache the harder.
Becky Thatcher was gone to her Constantinople
home to stay with her parents during vacation—so
there was no bright side to life anywhere.
The dreadful secret of the murder
was a chronic misery. It was a very cancer for
permanency and pain.
Then came the measles.
During two long weeks Tom lay a prisoner,
dead to the world and its happenings. He was
very ill, he was interested in nothing. When he
got upon his feet at last and moved feebly down-town,
a melancholy change had come over everything and every
creature. There had been a “revival,”
and everybody had “got religion,” not only
the adults, but even the boys and girls. Tom
went about, hoping against hope for the sight of one
blessed sinful face, but disappointment crossed him
everywhere. He found Joe Harper studying a Testament,
and turned sadly away from the depressing spectacle.
He sought Ben Rogers, and found him visiting the poor
with a basket of tracts. He hunted up Jim Hollis,
who called his attention to the precious blessing
of his late measles as a warning. Every boy he
encountered added another ton to his depression; and
when, in desperation, he flew for refuge at last to
the bosom of Huckleberry Finn and was received with
a Scriptural quotation, his heart broke and he crept
home and to bed realizing that he alone of all the
town was lost, forever and forever.
And that night there came on a terrific
storm, with driving rain, awful claps of thunder and
blinding sheets of lightning. He covered his
head with the bedclothes and waited in a horror of
suspense for his doom; for he had not the shadow of
a doubt that all this hubbub was about him. He
believed he had taxed the forbearance of the powers
above to the extremity of endurance and that this
was the result. It might have seemed to him a
waste of pomp and ammunition to kill a bug with a
battery of artillery, but there seemed nothing incongruous
about the getting up such an expensive thunderstorm
as this to knock the turf from under an insect like
himself.
By and by the tempest spent itself
and died without accomplishing its object. The
boy’s first impulse was to be grateful, and reform.
His second was to wait—for there might
not be any more storms.
The next day the doctors were back;
Tom had relapsed. The three weeks he spent on
his back this time seemed an entire age. When
he got abroad at last he was hardly grateful that
he had been spared, remembering how lonely was his
estate, how companionless and forlorn he was.
He drifted listlessly down the street and found Jim
Hollis acting as judge in a juvenile court that was
trying a cat for murder, in the presence of her victim,
a bird. He found Joe Harper and Huck Finn up an
alley eating a stolen melon. Poor lads! they—like
Tom—had suffered a relapse.