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The Young Musician; Or, Fighting His Way. Alger Horatio Jr.Читать онлайн книгу.

The Young Musician; Or, Fighting His Way - Alger Horatio Jr.


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all your life.”

      “You’ll have a chance to earn your livin’ with me.” said Mr. Tucker. “I shall give you something to do, you may depend.”

      “You can make him saw and split wood, father, and do the chores and milk the cow,” suggested Zeke.

      “I have no objection to doing any of those things for a farmer,” said Philip, “but I am not willing to do it where I shall be considered a pauper.”

      “Kinder uppish!” suggested Mr. Tucker, turning to Squire Pope. “Most all of them paupers is proud; but it’s pride in the wrong place, I reckon.”

      “If it is pride to want to earn an independent living, and not live on charity, then I am proud,” continued Philip.

      “Well, squire, how is it to be,” asked Mr. Tucker.

      “Philip,” said Squire Pope pompously, “you are very young, and you don’t know what is best for you. We do, and you must submit. Mr. Tucker, take him and put him in the wagon, and we’ll drive over to the poorhouse.”

      “What! now?” asked Philip, in dismay.

      “Just so,” answered Joe Tucker. “When you’ve got your bird, don’t let him go, that’s what I say.”

      “That’s the talk, dad!” said Zeke gladfully. “We’ll take down his pride, I guess, when we’ve got him home.”

      Joe Tucker approached Philip, and was about to lay hold of him, when our hero started back.

      “You needn’t lay hold of me, Mr. Tucker,” he said. “I will get into the wagon if Squire Pope insists upon it.”

      “I’m glad you’re gettin’ sensible,” said the squire, congratulating himself on finding Philip more tractable than he expected.

      “And you will go to the poorhouse peaceful, and without making a fuss?” asked Joe.

      “Yes, I will go there; but I won’t stay there.”

      “You won’t stay there!” ejaculated the squire.

      “No, sir! In treating me as a dependent on charity, you are doing what neither you nor any other man has a right to do,” said Philip firmly.

      “You don’t appear to remember that I am a selectman and overseer of the poor,” said the Squire.

      “I am aware that you hold those offices; but if so, you ought to save money to the town, and not compel them to pay for my support, when I am willing and able to support myself.”

      Squire Pope looked a little puzzled. This was putting the matter in a new light, and he could not help admitting to himself that Philip was correct, and that perhaps his fellow citizens might take the same view.

      On the other hand, the squire was fond of having his own way, and he had now gone so far that he could not recede without loss of dignity.

      “I think,” he answered stiffly, “that I understand my duty as well as a boy of fifteen. I don’t mean to keep you here long, but it is the best arrangement for the present.”

      “Of course it is,” said Zeke, well pleased with the humiliation of his enemy.

      “Shut up, Zeke!” said his father, observing from the squire’s expression that he did not fancy Zeke’s interference.

      “All right, dad,” said Zeke good-naturedly, seeing that things had turned out as he desired.

      “Jump in!” said Mr. Tucker to Philip.

      Our hero, without a word, obeyed. He was firmly resolved that Squire Pope should not have his way, but he did not choose to make himself ridiculous by an ineffectual resistance which would only have ended in his discomfiture.

      Seated between Mr. Tucker and the squire, he was driven rapidly toward the poorhouse.

      CHAPTER IX. THE POORHOUSE

      There was no room for Zeke to ride—that is, there was no seat for him—but he managed to clamber into the back part of the wagon, where he sat, or squatted, rather uncomfortably, but evidently in the best of spirits—if any inference could be drawn from his expression.

      The poorhouse was not far away. It was a three-story frame house, which badly needed painting, with a dilapidated barn, and shed near by.

      A three-story farmhouse is not common in the country, but this dwelling had been erected by a Mr. Parmenter, in the expectation of making a fortune by taking summer boarders.

      There was room enough for them, but they did not come. The situation was the reverse of pleasant, the soil about was barren, and there were no shade or fruit trees. It was a crazy idea, selecting such a spot for a summer boarding-house, and failure naturally resulted.

      There had, indeed, been two boarders—a man and his wife—who paid one week’s board, and managed to owe six before the unlucky landlord decided that they were a pair of swindlers. He had spent more money than he could afford on his house, and went steadily behind-hand year after year, till the town—which was in want of a poorhouse—stepped in and purchased the house and farm at a bargain. So it came to be a boarding-house, after all, but in a sense not contemplated by the proprietor, and, at present, accommodated eleven persons—mostly old and infirm—whom hard fortune compelled to subsist on charity.

      Mr. Tucker had this advantage, that his boarders, had no recourse except to stay with him, however poor his fare or harsh his treatment, unless they were in a position to take care of themselves.

      When Philip came in sight of the almshouse—which he had often seen, and always considered a very dreary-looking building—he was strengthened in his determination not long to remain a tenant.

      Mr. Tucker drove up to the front door with a flourish.

      A hard-featured woman came out, and regarded the contents of the wagon with curiosity.

      “Well, Abigail, can you take another boarder!” asked Mr. Tucker, as he descended from the wagon.

      “Who is it?”

      “Well, it ain’t likely to be Squire Pope!” said Joe facetiously; “and Zeke and I are regular boarders on the free list.”

      “Is it that boy?”

      “Yes; it’s Phil Gray.”

      “Humph! boys are a trial!” remarked Mrs. Tucker, whose experience with Zeke had doubtless convinced her of this fact.

      “I sha’n’t trouble you long, Mrs. Tucker,” said Philip. “I don’t intend to stay.”

      “You don’t, hey?” retorted Joe Tucker, with a wolfish grin and an emphatic nod of the head. “We’ll see about that—won’t we, Squire Pope?”

      “The boy is rather rebellious, Mrs. Tucker,” said the selectman. “He appears to think he knows better what is good for him than we do. You may look upon him as a permanent boarder. What he says is of no account.”

      Philip said nothing, but he looked full at the squire with an unflinching gaze. If ever determination was written upon any face, it was on his.

      “Come down there!” said Mrs. Tucker, addressing our hero. “You’re at home now.”

      “Mr. Dunbar won’t know what has become of me,” said Philip, with a sudden thought. “They will be anxious. May I go back there and tell them where I am?”

      “Do you think I am green enough for that?” Mr. Tucker, touching the side of his nose waggishly. “We shouldn’t be likely to set eyes on you again.”

      “I will promise to come back here this evening,” said Philip.

      “And will you promise to stay?” asked Squire Pope doubtfully.

      “No, sir,” answered Philip boldly. “I won’t do that, but I will engage to come back. Then Mr. Tucker will have to look out for me, for I tell you and him frankly I don’t mean to stay.”

      “Did you ever hear such talk, squire!” asked Mr. Tucker,


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