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STANDING GUARD OVER HIMSELF. See page 132.
THE Hoosier School-Master. A NOVEL.
BYEDWARD EGGLESTON.
WITH TWENTY-NINE ILLUSTRATIONS.
NEW YORK:
ORANGE JUDD AND COMPANY,
245 BROADWAY.
Entered, according to Act of Congress, in the year 1871, by ORANGE JUDD & CO., In the office of the Librarian of Congress, at Washington.
PREFACE.
I MAY as well confess, what it would be affectation to conceal, that I am more than pleased with the generous reception accorded to this story as a serial in the columns of Hearth and Home. It has been in my mind since I was a Hoosier boy to do something toward describing life in the back-country districts of the Western States. It used to be a matter of no little jealousy with us, I remember, that the manners, customs, thoughts, and feelings of New England country people filled so large a place in books, while our life, not less interesting, not less romantic, and certainly not less filled with humorous and grotesque material, had no place in literature. It was as though we were shut out of good society. And, with the single exception of Alice Cary, perhaps, our Western writers did not dare speak of the West otherwise than as the unreal world to which Cooper's lively imagination had given birth.
I had some anxiety lest Western readers should take offense at my selecting what must always seem an exceptional phase of life to those who have grown up in the more refined regions of the West. But nowhere has the School-master been received more kindly than in his own country and among his own people.
Some of those who have spoken kindly of the School-master and his friends, have suggested that the story is an autobiography page: 6-7 (Table of Contents) [View Page 6-7 (Table of Contents) ] ography. But it is not, save in the sense in which every work of art is an autobiography, in that it is the result of the experience and observation of the writer. Readers will therefore bear in mind that not Ralph nor Bud nor Brother Sodom nor Dr. Small represents the writer, not do I appear, as Talleyrand said of Madame de Stael, "disguised as a woman," in the person of Hannah or Mirandy. Some of the incidents have been drawn from life; none of them, I believe, from my own. I should like to be considered a member of the Church of the Best Licks, however.
It has been in my mind to append some remarks, philological and otherwise, upon the dialect, but Professor Lowell's admirable and erudite preface to the Biglow Papers must be the despair of every one who aspires to write on Americanisms. To Mr. Lowell belongs the distinction of being the only one of our most eminent authors and the only one of our most eminent scholars who has given careful attention to American dialects. But while I have not ventured to discuss the provincialisms of the Indiana backwoods, I have been careful to preserve the true usus loquendi of each locution, and I trust my little story may afford material for some one better qualified than I to criticise the dialect.
I wish to dedicate this book to Rev. Williamson Terrell, D.D, of Columbus, Indiana, the Hoosier that I know best, and the best Hoosier that I know. This is not the place to express the reverence and filial affection I feel for him, but I am glad of the opportunity of saying that there is no one to whom Southern Indiana owes a larger debt. Perhaps my dedication to so orthodox a man may atone for any heresies in the book.
CONTENTS.
- CHAPTER I.—A Private Lesson from a Bull-dog. 11
- CHAPTER II.—A Spell Coming. 23
- CHAPTER III.—Mirandy, Hank, and Shocky. 26
- CHAPTER IV.—Spelling down the Master. 39
- CHAPTER V.—The Walk Home. 56
- CHAPTER VI.—A Night at Pete Jones's. 66
- CHAPTER VII.—Ominous Remarks of Mr. Jones. 74
- CHAPTER VIII.—The Struggle in the Dark. 77
- CHAPTER IX.—Has Gods Forgotten Shocky? 81
- CHAPTER X.—The Devil of Silence. 85
- CHAPTER XI.—Miss Martha Hawkins. 92
- CHAPTER XII.—The Hardshell Preacher. 101
- CHAPTER XIII.—A Struggle for the Mastery. 109
- CHAPTER XIV.—A Crisis with Bud. 115
- CHAPTER XV.—The Church of the Best Licks. 121
- CHAPTER XVI.—The Church Militant. 126
- CHAPTER XVII.—A Council of War. 132
- CHAPTER XVIII.—Odds and Ends. 137
- CHAPTER XIX.—Face to Face. 141
- CHAPTER XX.—God Remembers Shocky. 145
- CHAPTER XXI.—Miss Nancy Sawyer. 153
- CHAPTER XXII.—Pancakes. 156
- CHAPTER XXIII.—A Charitable Institution. 162
- CHAPTER XXIV.—The Good Samaritan. 170
- CHAPTER XXV.—Bud Wooing. 173
- CHAPTER XXVI.—A Letter and its Consequences. 178
- CHAPTER XXVII.—A Loss and a Gain. 181
- CHAPTER XXVIII.—The Flight. 184
- CHAPTER XXIX.—The Trial. 191
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- CHAPTER XXX.—"Brother Sodom". 202
- CHAPTER XXXI.—The Trial Concluded. 206
- CHAPTER XXXII.—After the Battle. 217
- CHAPTER XXXIII.—Into the Light. 221
- CHAPTER XXXIV.—"How it Came Out". 224
ILLUSTRATIONS.
BY FRANK BREAD.
- Standing Guard over Himself. (Tinted) (Frontispiece)
- First Acquaintance with Flat Creek. (Tinted) 10
- Old Jack Means, the School Trustee. (Tinted) 13
- Mirandy Means 27
- "'Git a Plenty while your're a Gittin','says I." 29
- Hank Banta's Improved Plunge-bath. (Tinted) 36
- Squire Hawkins. 44
- Jeems Phillips. 48
- "Next." (Tinted) 54
- Hannah. (Tinted) 58
- "You're a purty Gal, a'n't you? You air!" (Tinted) 62
- Pete Jones. (Tinted) 68
- Bull. 75
- Shocky. 82
- Dr. Small and Granny Sanders. (Tinted) 89
- Miss Martha Hawkins. 93
- "We're all Selfish akordin' to my Tell." (Tinted) 97
- "Come, Buck-ah!" 106
- Fire and Brimstone. 113
- Bud. 117
- The Church of the Best Licks. 124
- "Come on!" cried Bud. 129
- The Roan Colt's Best Licks. (Tinted) 150
- Miss Nancy Sawyer. 154
- Potato on One Side. 165
- "God ha'n't Forgot us, Mother!" 168
- Bud Wooing. 175
- Hannah with a White, White Face. (Tinted) 186
- Walter Johnson. 204