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aginā€™ on his food, but his looks wuz mournful, and if I could I would have put on a apron willinā€™ly and gone down into the kitchen and cooked him a good square meal, but I knew it wouldnā€™t be thought on, so I kepā€™ calm.

Well, our bed wuz kinder queer. It wuz quite noble lookinā€™, four high posts with lace curtains looped up and mosquito nettinā€™ danglinā€™ down, and instead of springs a woven cane mattress stretched out lookinā€™ some like our cane seat chairs. How to git under that canopy and not let in a swarm of mosquitoes wuz what we didnā€™t know, but we did finally creep under and lay down. It wuz like layinā€™ on the barn floor, the cane mattress didnā€™t yield a mite, and Josiahā€™s low groans mingled with my sithes for quite a spell. Tommy wuz fast asleep in his little bed and so didnā€™t sense anything. Well, the tegus night passed away, happily I spoze for the attentive mosquitoes who shared the canopy with us, and mebby liked to sample foreign acquaintances, 142 but tegus for us, and we wuz glad when it wuz time to git up.

The first meal of the day wuz brought to our room; chocolate not over good, some bread and some eggs, almost raw, wuz what it consisted of. Josiah, who wanted some lamb chops, baked potatoes and coffee, wuz mad as a hen. ā€œHeavens and earth!ā€ sez he, ā€œwhy I never sucked eggs when a boy; have I got to come to it in my old age? Raw eggs and chocklate you could cut with a knife. A few years of such food will leave you a widder, Samantha.ā€

ā€œWell,ā€ sez I, ā€œdo letā€™s make the best of it; when youā€™re in Rome do as the Romans do.ā€

ā€œI shanā€™t suck eggs, for no Romans or for no Phillippine.ā€

ā€œEat ā€™em with your spoon,ā€ sez I, ā€œas youā€™d ort to.ā€

ā€œOr with my knife,ā€ sez he. ā€œDid you see them officers last night to the table eatinā€™ sass with a knife? I should thought theyā€™d cut their mouths open.ā€

ā€œWell, it is their way here, Josiah. Letā€™s keep up and look forrerd to goinā€™ home; thatā€™s the best fruit of travellinā€™ abroad anyway, unless it is seeinā€™ Tommy so well and hearty.ā€

Josiah looked at his rosy face and didnā€™t complain another word. He jest worships Thomas Josiah. Well, after we eat this meal we went out walkinā€™, Josiah and I and Tommy, and I spoze Carabi went along, too, though we didnā€™t see him. But then what two folks ever did see each other? Why I never see Josiah, and Josiah never see me, not the real us.

Well, it wuz a strange, strange seen that wuz spread out before us; the place looked moreā€™n half asleep, and as if it had been nappinā€™ for some time; the low odd lookinā€™ houses looked too as if they wuz in a sort of a dream or stupor. The American flag waved out here and there with a kind of a lazy bewildered floppinā€™, as if it wuz wonderinā€™ how under the sun it come to be there ten thousand milds from 143 Washington, D. C., and it wuz wonderinā€™ what on earth it floated out there in the first place for. But come to look at it clost you could see a kind of a determined and sot look in the Stars and Stripes that seemed to say, ā€œWell, now I am here I hainā€™t goinā€™ to be driv out by no yeller grounded flags whatsumever.ā€

Some of the carriages that we met wuz queer lookinā€™, rough wooden two-wheeled carts, that looked as if theyā€™d been made by hand that morninā€™. Josiah said that he could go out into the woods with Ury and cut down a tree and make a better lookinā€™ wagon in half an hour, but I donā€™t spoze he could. Some on ā€™em wuz drawed by a buffalo, which filled Josiah with new idees about drivinā€™ one of our cows in the democrat.

Sez he: ā€œSamantha, it would be real uneek to take you to meetinā€™ with old Line back or Brindle, and if the minister got dry in meetinā€™, and you know ministers do git awful dry sometimes, I could just go out and milk a tumbler full and pass it round to him.ā€

But I drawed his attention off; I couldnā€™t brook the idee of ridinā€™ after a cow and havinā€™ it bellerinā€™ round the meetinā€™ house. The native wimmen we met wuz some on ā€™em dressed American style, and some on ā€™em dressed in their own picturesque native costoom. It wuz sometimes quite pretty, and one not calculated to pinch the waist in. A thin waist, with immense flowing sleeves and embroidered chemise showing through the waist, a large handkerchief folded about the neck with ends crossed, a gay skirt with a train and a square of black cloth drawn tight around the body from waist to knees. Stockings are not worn very much, and the slippers are not much more than soles with little strips of leather going over the foot, and no heels. Anon we would meet some Chinamen, with eyes set in on a bias, and their hair hanging in two long tails down their backs; lots of them we see, then a priest would move slowly along, then a Spanish seƱora, then a sailor, then perhaps a native 144 dressed partly in European costoom lookinā€™ like a fright. The street cars are little things drawed by one horse, and the streets are badly paved when theyā€™re paved at all.

There wuz some handsome houses in the residence portion of the city, but aside from the Cathedral there are few public buildings worth seeing. But one thing they have here always beautiful, and that is the luxuriant tropical vegetation, beautiful blossoming trees and shrubs, and the multitude of flowers, tall palms, bamboo, ebony, log-wood, mangoes, oranges, lemons, bread fruit, custard apples, and forty or fifty varieties of bananas, from little ones, not much more than a mouthful, to them eighteen or twenty inches long. Josiah enjoyed his walk, finding many things to emulate when he got back to Jonesville. Among ā€™em wuz the Chinamenā€™s hair; he thought it wuz a dressy way to comb a manā€™s hair, and he wondered dreamily how his would look if he let it grow out and braid it. But he said if he did, he should wear red ribbons on it, or baby blue. But I knew there wuz no danger of his hair ever stringinā€™ down his back, for I could, if danger pressed too near, cut it off durinā€™ his sleep, and would, too, even if it led to words.

Wall, Arvillyā€™s first work, after she had canvassed the hotel-keeper for the ā€œTwin Crimes,ā€ and as many of the guests as she could, wuz to find out if Waitstill wuz there. And sure enough she found her. She wuz in one of the hospitals and doinā€™ a good work, jest as she would anywhere she wuz put. She come to the hotel to see us as soon as she could, and Arvilly seemed to renew her age, having Waitstill with her agin. We writ to once to Cousin John Richard.

Robert Strong and Dorothy wuz dretful interested in Waitstill, I could see, and they asked a great many questions about her work in the hospital. And I see that Robert wuz only grounded in his convictions when Waitstill told him of the sickness the doctors and nurses had to contend with, and how largely it wuz caused by liquor drinking. 145 Hundreds of American saloons in Manila, so she said, and sez she, ā€œHow can the hospitals hope to undo the evils that these do to menā€™s souls and bodies?ā€ Sez she, ā€œYou know what a fearful disease and crime breeder it is in a temperate climate, but it is tenfold worse here in this tropical land.ā€

She wuz anxious to hear all the news from Jonesville, and I willinā€™ly told her what Phila Ann had told me about Elder White, and the noble work he was doinā€™ in East Loontown, and I sez, ā€œMissionary work is jest as necessary and jest as important and pleasinā€™ to God if done in Loontown as in the Antipithies.ā€

And she said she knew it. And I sez: ā€œElder White is working himself to death, and donā€™t have the comforts of life, to say nothinā€™ of the happiness he ort to.ā€

Waitstill didnā€™t say nothinā€™, but I fancied a faint pink flush stole up into her white cheeks, some like the color that flashes up onto a snowbank at sunset. Life wuz all snow and sunset to her, I could see, but I knowed that she wuz the one woman in the world for Ernest White, the ideal woman his soul had always worshipped, and found realized in Waitstillā€“ā€“poor little creeter!

I didnā€™t know whether the warm sun of his love could melt the snow and frozen hail or notā€“ā€“the sun duz melt such thingsā€“ā€“and I knew love wuz the greatest thing in the world. Well, I had to leave the event to Providence, and wuz willinā€™ to; but yet, after a woman duz leave things to the Most High to do, she loves to put in her oar and help things along; mebby that is the way of Providenceā€“ā€“who knows? But ā€™tennyrate I gin another blind hint to her before we left the conversation.

Sez I, ā€œErnest White is doinā€™ the Lordā€™s work if ever a man did, and I canā€™t think it is the Lordā€™s will that whilst heā€™s doinā€™ it he ort to eat such bread as he has toā€“ā€“milk emtinā€™s and sour at that, to say nothinā€™ of fried stuff that a anaconda couldnā€™t digest. He deserves a sweet, love-guarded 146 home, and to be tended to by a woman that he lovesā€“ā€“one who could inspire him and help him on in the heavenly way heā€™s treading alone and lonesome.ā€ Her cheeks did turn pink then, and her eyes looked like deep blue pools in which stars wuz shininā€™, but she didnā€™t say anything, and Robert Strong resoomed his talk with her about her hospital work. And before she left he gin her a big check to use for her patients; I donā€™t know exactly how big it wuz, but it went up into the hundreds, anyway; and Dorothy gin her one, too, for I see her write it; Miss Meechim gin her her blessinā€™ and moreā€™n a dozen tracts, which mebby will set well on the patients, if administered cautious. I myself gin her the receipt for the best mustard poultice that ever drawed, and two pairs of clouded blue-and-white wool socks I had knit on the way, and though it wuz a warm country she said they would come handy when her patients had chills.

There wuz two young American girls at the hotel, and they happened to come into the parlor while we wuz talkinā€™ and they sent a big present to the hospital. I guess they wuz real well off and good dispositioned. They wuz travellinā€™ alone and seemed to be havinā€™ a real good time. One on ā€™em wuz sunthinā€™ of a invalid, but wuz outdoors all day, I spoze tryinā€™ to git well. They minded their own bizness and didnā€™t do any hurt so fur as I could see, but Elder Wessel couldnā€™t bear ā€™em. Sez he to me one day:

ā€œI spoze they represent the new young woman?ā€

He said it real skornful, and Arvilly, who wuz present, took him up real snappish. ā€œWell, what of it? What have they done?ā€ If that poor man had said that black wuz black and white wuz white, Arvilly would found fault with it.

ā€œI donā€™t object to what they have done,ā€ sez he, ā€œso much as to what they are. Young American women know too much.ā€ And Arvilly sez with a meaninā€™ glance at him, ā€œThat is sunthinā€™ that everybody donā€™t have to stand.ā€

She might just as well have called him a fool, her axent wuz such. Arvilly is too hash. Sez he: ā€œNow my Lucia is 147 different. She knows nothing about sin and wickedness, and I got this position for her, so that as soon as she left the convent she was placed directly in the care of this good woman and her little innocent child. What does she know of sin or sorrow, or worldliness or vanity?ā€

ā€œOr danger?ā€ sez I meaninā€™ly. ā€œIf she always has some one at her side to guard her, her perfect ignorance and innocence is a charm, but how would it be in the hour of danger and temptation? Why should anybody fear being burned if they had no knowledge of fire?ā€

ā€œOh,ā€ sez he, ā€œher divine innocence is her safeguard. Evil would retire abashed before the timid glance of her pure eyes.ā€

ā€œI hope so,ā€ sez I dryly. ā€œI hope so. But I never knew the whiteness of its wool to help

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