<h2 class="invisible"><SPAN name="KING_SOLOMON_OF_KENTUCKY" id="KING_SOLOMON_OF_KENTUCKY">King Solomon of Kentucky.</SPAN></h2>
<div class="figcenter"> <ANTIMG src="images/kingsol.jpg" alt="King Solomon of Kentucky." /></div>
<p class="subtitle">I.</p>
<p>It had been a year of strange disturbances—a desolating
drought, a hurly-burly of destructive tempests, killing
frosts in the tender valleys, mortal fevers in the tender
homes. Now came tidings that all day the wail of
myriads of locusts was heard in the green woods of Virginia
and Tennessee; now that Lake Erie was blocked
with ice on the very verge of summer, so that in the
Niagara new rocks and islands showed their startling
faces. In the Blue-grass Region of Kentucky countless
caterpillars were crawling over the ripening apple orchards
and leaving the trees as stark as when tossed in
the thin air of bitter February days.</p>
<p>Then, flying low and heavily through drought and
tempest and frost and plague, like the royal presence
of disaster, that had been but heralded by its mournful
train, came nearer and nearer the dark angel of the
pestilence.</p>
<p>M. Xaupi had given a great ball only the night before
in the dancing-rooms over the confectionery of M. Giron—that
M. Giron who made the tall pyramids of meringues
and macaroons for wedding-suppers, and spun
around them a cloud of candied webbing as white and
misty as the veil of the bride. It was the opening cotillon
party of the summer. The men came in blue<span class="pagenum" id="Page_66">66</span>
cloth coats with brass buttons, buff waistcoats, and
laced and ruffled shirts; the ladies came in white satins
with ethereal silk overdresses, embroidered in the
figure of a gold beetle or an oak leaf of green. The
walls of the ball-room were painted to represent landscapes
of blooming orange-trees, set here and there in
clustering tubs; and the chandeliers and sconces were
lighted with innumerable wax-candles, yellow and green
and rose.</p>
<p>Only the day before, also, Clatterbuck had opened
for the summer a new villa-house, six miles out in the
country, with a dancing-pavilion in a grove of maples
and oaks, a pleasure-boat on a sheet of crystal water,
and a cellar stocked with old sherry, Sauterne, and
Château Margaux wines, with anisette, "Perfect Love,"
and Guigholet cordials.</p>
<p>Down on Water Street, near where now stands a railway
station, Hugh Lonney, urging that the fear of cholera
was not the only incentive to cleanliness, had just
fitted up a sumptuous bath-house, where cold and shower
baths might be had at twelve and a half cents each, or
hot ones at three for half a dollar.</p>
<p>Yes, the summer of 1833 was at hand, and there must
be new pleasures, new luxuries; for Lexington was the
Athens of the West and the Kentucky Birmingham.</p>
<p>Old Peter Leuba felt the truth of this, as he stepped
smiling out of his little music-store on Main Street, and,
rubbing his hands briskly together, surveyed once more
his newly-arranged windows, in which were displayed
gold and silver epaulets, bottles of Jamaica rum, garden
seeds from Philadelphia, drums and guitars and harps.
Dewees & Grant felt it in their drug-store on Cheapside,
as they sent off a large order for calomel and su<span class="pagenum" id="Page_67">67</span>perior
Maccoboy, rappee, and Lancaster snuff. Bluff
little Daukins Tegway felt it, as he hurried on the
morning of that day to the office of the <cite>Observer and
Reporter</cite>, and advertised that he would willingly exchange
his beautiful assortment of painted muslins and
Dunstable bonnets for flax and feathers. On the threshold
he met a florid farmer, who had just offered ten dollars'
reward for a likely runaway boy with a long fresh
scar across his face; and to-morrow the paper would
contain one more of those tragical little cuts, representing
an African slave scampering away at the top of his
speed, with a stick swung across his shoulder and a bundle
dangling down his back. In front of Postlethwaite's
Tavern, where now stands the Phœnix Hotel, a company
of idlers, leaning back in Windsor chairs and
planting their feet against the opposite wall on a level
with their heads, smoked and chewed and yawned, as
they discussed the administration of Jackson and arranged
for the coming of Daniel Webster in June, when
they would give him a great barbecue, and roast in his
honor a buffalo bull taken from the herd emparked near
Ashland. They hailed a passing merchant, who, however,
would hear nothing of the bull, but fell to praising
his Rocky Mountain beaver and Goose Creek salt;
and another, who turned a deaf ear to Daniel Webster,
and invited them to drop in and examine his choice
essences of peppermint, bergamot, and lavender.</p>
<p>But of all the scenes that might have been observed
in Lexington on that day, the most remarkable occurred
in front of the old court-house at the hour of high noon.
On the mellow stroke of the clock in the steeple above
the sheriff stepped briskly forth, closely followed by a
man of powerful frame, whom he commanded to station<span class="pagenum" id="Page_68">68</span>
himself on the pavement several feet off. A crowd of
men and boys had already collected in anticipation, and
others came quickly up as the clear voice of the sheriff
was heard across the open public square and old market-place.</p>
<p>He stood on the topmost of the court-house steps,
and for a moment looked down on the crowd with the
usual air of official severity.</p>
<p>"Gentlemen," he then cried out sharply, "by an ordah
of the cou't I now offah this man at public sale to
the highes' biddah. He is able-bodied but lazy, without
visible property or means of suppoht, an' of dissolute
habits. He is therefoh adjudged guilty of high
misdemeanahs, an' is to be sole into labah foh a twelvemonth.
How much, then, am I offahed foh the vagrant?
How much am I offahed foh ole King Sol'mon?"</p>
<p>Nothing was offered for old King Solomon. The
spectators formed themselves into a ring around the
big vagrant and settled down to enjoy the performance.</p>
<p>"Staht 'im, somebody."</p>
<p>Somebody started a laugh, which rippled around the
circle.</p>
<p>The sheriff looked on with an expression of unrelaxed
severity, but catching the eye of an acquaintance
on the outskirts, he exchanged a lightning wink of secret
appreciation. Then he lifted off his tight beaver
hat, wiped out of his eyes a little shower of perspiration
which rolled suddenly down from above, and warmed
a degree to his theme.</p>
<p>"Come, gentlemen," he said, more suasively, "it's too
hot to stan' heah all day. Make me an offah! You all
know ole King Sol'mon; don't wait to be interduced.
How much, then, to staht 'im? Say fifty dollahs!<span class="pagenum" id="Page_69">69</span>
Twenty-five! Fifteen! Ten! Why, gentlemen! Not <em>ten</em>
dollahs? Remembah this is the Blue-grass Region of
Kentucky—the land of Boone an' Kenton, the home of
Henry Clay!" he added, in an oratorical <em>crescendo</em>.</p>
<p>"He ain't wuth his victuals," said an oily little tavern-keeper,
folding his arms restfully over his own stomach
and cocking up one piggish eye into his neighbor's
face. "He ain't wuth his 'taters."</p>
<p>"Buy 'im foh 'is rags!" cried a young law-student,
with a Blackstone under his arm, to the town rag-picker
opposite, who was unconsciously ogling the vagrant's
apparel.</p>
<p>"I <em>might</em> buy 'im foh 'is <em>scalp</em>," drawled a farmer, who
had taken part in all kinds of scalp contests and was now
known to be busily engaged in collecting crow scalps
for a match soon to come off between two rival counties.</p>
<p>"I think I'll buy 'im foh a hat-sign," said a manufacturer
of ten-dollar Castor and Rhorum hats. This
sally drew merry attention to the vagrant's hat, and the
merchant felt rewarded.</p>
<p>"You'd bettah say the town ought to buy 'im an' put
'im up on top of the cou't-house as a scarecrow foh the
cholera," said some one else.</p>
<p>"What news of the cholera did the stage-coach bring
this mohning?" quickly inquired his neighbor in his
ear; and the two immediately fell into low, grave talk,
forgot the auction, and turned away.</p>
<p>"Stop, gentlemen, stop!" cried the sheriff, who had
watched the rising tide of good-humor, and now saw his
chance to float in on it with spreading sails. "You're
runnin' the price in the wrong direction—down, not
up. The law requires that he be sole to the highes'
biddah, not the lowes'. As loyal citizens, uphole the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_70">70</span>
constitution of the commonwealth of Kentucky an'
make me an offah; the man is really a great bargain.
In the first place, he would cos' his ownah little or
nothin', because, as you see, he keeps himself in cigahs
an' clo'es; then, his main article of diet is whiskey—a
supply of which he always has on han'. He don't even
need a bed, foh you know he sleeps jus' as well on any
doohstep; noh a chair, foh he prefers to sit roun' on the
curb-stones. Remembah, too, gentlemen, that ole King
Sol'mon is a Virginian—from the same neighbohhood as
Mr. Clay. Remembah that he is well educated, that he is
an <em>awful</em> Whig, an' that he has smoked mo' of the stumps
of Mr. Clay's cigahs than any other man in existence.
If you don't b'lieve <em>me</em>, gentlemen, yondah goes Mr.
Clay now; call <em>him</em> ovah an' ask 'im foh yo'se'ves."</p>
<p>He paused, and pointed with his right forefinger towards
Main street, along which the spectators, with a
sudden craning of necks, beheld the familiar figure of
the passing statesman.</p>
<p>"But you don't need <em>any</em>body to tell you these fac's,
gentlemen," he continued. "You merely need to be reminded
that ole King Sol'mon is no ohdinary man. Mo'ovah
he has a kine heaht, he nevah spoke a rough wohd
to anybody in this worl', an' he is as proud as Tecumseh
of his good name an' charactah. An', gentlemen," he
added, bridling with an air of mock gallantry and laying
a hand on his heart, "if anythin' fu'thah is required in
the way of a puffect encomium, we all know that there
isn't anothah man among us who cuts as wide a swath
among the ladies. The'foh, if you have any appreciation
of virtue, any magnanimity of heaht; if you set a
propah valuation upon the descendants of Virginia, that
mothah of Presidents; if you believe in the pure laws<span class="pagenum" id="Page_71">71</span>
of Kentucky as the pioneer bride of the Union; if you
love America an' love the worl'—make me a gen'rous,
high-toned offah foh ole King Sol'mon!"</p>
<p>He ended his peroration amid a shout of laughter
and applause, and, feeling satisfied that it was a good
time for returning to a more practical treatment of his
subject, proceeded in a sincere tone:</p>
<p>"He can easily earn from one to two dollahs a day,
an' from three to six hundred a yeah. There's not anothah
white man in town capable of doin' as much work.
There's not a niggah han' in the hemp factories with
such muscles an' such a chest. <em>Look</em> at 'em! An', if
you don't b'lieve me, step fo'wahd and <em>feel</em> 'em. How
much, then, is bid foh 'im?"</p>
<p>"One dollah!" said the owner of a hemp factory,
who had walked forward and felt the vagrant's arm,
laughing, but coloring up also as the eyes of all were
quickly turned upon him. In those days it was not an
unheard-of thing for the muscles of a human being to
be thus examined when being sold into servitude to a
new master.</p>
<p>"Thank you!" cried the sheriff, cheerily. "One precinc'
heard from! One dollah! I am offahed one dollah
foh ole King Sol'mon. One dollah foh the king! Make
it a half. One dollah an' a half. Make it a half. One
dol-dol-dol-dollah!"</p>
<p>Two medical students, returning from lectures at the
old Medical Hall, now joined the group, and the sheriff
explained:</p>
<p>"One dollah is bid foh the vagrant ole King Sol'mon,
who is to be sole into labah foh a twelvemonth. Is
there any othah bid? Are you all done? One dollah,
once—"</p>
<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_72">72</span></p>
<p>"Dollah and a half," said one of the students, and
remarked half jestingly under his breath to his companion,
"I'll buy him on the chance of his dying. We'll
dissect him."</p>
<p>"Would you own his body if he <em>should</em> die?"</p>
<p>"If he dies while bound to me, I'll arrange <em>that</em>."</p>
<p>"One dollah an' a half," resumed the sheriff; and
falling into the tone of a facile auctioneer he rattled on:</p>
<p>"One dollah an' a half foh ole Sol'mon—sol, sol, sol,—do,
re, mi, fa, sol—do, re, mi, fa, sol! Why, gentlemen,
you can set the king to music!"</p>
<p>All this time the vagrant had stood in the centre of
that close ring of jeering and humorous by-standers—a
baffling text from which to have preached a sermon
on the infirmities of our imperfect humanity. Some
years before, perhaps as a master-stroke of derision,
there had been given to him that title which could but
heighten the contrast of his personality and estate with
every suggestion of the ancient sacred magnificence;
and never had the mockery seemed so fine as at this
moment, when he was led forth into the streets to receive
the lowest sentence of the law upon his poverty
and dissolute idleness. He was apparently in the very
prime of life—a striking figure, for nature at least had
truly done some royal work on him. Over six feet in
height, erect, with limbs well shaped and sinewy, with
chest and neck full of the lines of great power, a large
head thickly covered with long reddish hair, eyes blue,
face beardless, complexion fair but discolored by low
passions and excesses—such was old King Solomon.
He wore a stiff, high, black Castor hat of the period,
with the crown smashed in and the torn rim hanging
down over one ear; a black cloth coat in the old style,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_73">73</span>
ragged and buttonless; a white cotton shirt, with the
broad collar crumpled, wide open at the neck and down
his sunburnt bosom; blue jeans pantaloons, patched at
the seat and the knees; and ragged cotton socks that
fell down over the tops of his dusty shoes, which were
open at the heels.</p>
<p>In one corner of his sensual mouth rested the stump
of a cigar. Once during the proceedings he had produced
another, lighted it, and continued quietly smoking.
If he took to himself any shame as the central
figure of this ignoble performance, no one knew it.
There was something almost royal in his unconcern.
The humor, the badinage, the open contempt, of which
he was the public target, fell thick and fast upon him,
but as harmlessly as would balls of pith upon a coat of
mail. In truth, there was that in his great, lazy, gentle,
good-humored bulk and bearing which made the gibes
seem all but despicable. He shuffled from one foot to
the other as though he found it a trial to stand up so
long, but all the while looking the spectators full in the
eyes without the least impatience. He suffered the
man of the factory to walk round him and push and
pinch his muscles as calmly as though he had been the
show bull at a country fair. Once only, when the sheriff
had pointed across the street at the figure of Mr. Clay,
he had looked quickly in that direction with a kindling
light in his eye and a passing flush on his face. For
the rest, he seemed like a man who has drained his cup
of human life and has nothing left him but to fill again
and drink without the least surprise or eagerness.</p>
<p>The bidding between the man of the factory and the
student had gone slowly on. The price had reached
ten dollars. The heat was intense, the sheriff tired.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_74">74</span>
Then something occurred to revivify the scene. Across
the market-place and towards the steps of the court-house
there suddenly came trundling along in breathless
haste a huge old negress, carrying on one arm a
large shallow basket containing apple crab-lanterns and
fresh gingerbread. With a series of half-articulate
grunts and snorts she approached the edge of the
crowd and tried to force her way through. She coaxed,
she begged, she elbowed and pushed and scolded, now
laughing, and now with the passion of tears in her thick,
excited voice. All at once, catching sight of the sheriff,
she lifted one ponderous brown arm, naked to the elbow,
and waved her hand to him above the heads of
those in front.</p>
<p>"Hole on, marseter! Hole on!" she cried, in a tone
of humorous entreaty. "Don' knock 'im off till I
come! Gim <em>me</em> a bid at 'im!"</p>
<p>The sheriff paused and smiled. The crowd made
way tumultuously, with broad laughter and comment.</p>
<p>"Stan' aside theah an' let Aun' Charlotte in!"</p>
<p>"<em>Now</em> you'll see biddin'!"</p>
<p>"Get out of the way foh Aun' Charlotte!"</p>
<p>"Up, my free niggah! Hurrah foh Kentucky!"</p>
<p>A moment more and she stood inside the ring of
spectators, her basket on the pavement at her feet, her
hands plumped akimbo into her fathomless sides, her
head up, and her soft, motherly eyes turned eagerly
upon the sheriff. Of the crowd she seemed unconscious,
and on the vagrant before her she had not cast
a single glance.</p>
<p>She was dressed with perfect neatness. A red and
yellow Madras kerchief was bound about her head in a
high coil, and another was crossed over the bosom of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_75">75</span>
her stiffly starched and smoothly ironed blue cottonade
dress. Rivulets of perspiration ran down over her nose,
her temples, and around her ears, and disappeared mysteriously
in the creases of her brown neck. A single
drop accidentally hung glistening like a diamond on the
circlet of one of her large brass ear-rings.</p>
<p>The sheriff looked at her a moment, smiling, but a
little disconcerted. The spectacle was unprecedented.</p>
<p>"What do you want heah, Aun' Charlotte?" he asked,
kindly. "You can't sell yo' pies an' gingerbread heah."</p>
<p>"I don' <em>wan'</em> sell no pies en gingerbread," she replied,
contemptuously. "I wan' bid on <em>him</em>," and she nodded
sidewise at the vagrant.</p>
<p>"White folks allers sellin' niggahs to wuk fuh <em>dem</em>;
I gwine buy a white man to wuk fuh <em>me</em>. En he gwine
t' git a mighty hard mistiss, you heah <em>me</em>!"</p>
<p>The eyes of the sheriff twinkled with delight.</p>
<p>"Ten dollahs is offahed foh ole King Sol'mon. Is
theah any othah bid? Are you all done?"</p>
<p>"'Leben," she said.</p>
<p>Two young ragamuffins crawled among the legs of
the crowd up to her basket and filched pies and cake
beneath her very nose.</p>
<p>"Twelve!" cried the student, laughing.</p>
<p>"Thirteen!" she laughed too, but her eyes flashed.</p>
<p>"<em>You are bidding against a niggah</em>," whispered the
student's companion in his ear.</p>
<p>"So I am; let's be off," answered the other, with a
hot flush on his proud face.</p>
<p>Thus the sale was ended, and the crowd variously dispersed.
In a distant corner of the court-yard the ragged
urchins were devouring their unexpected booty. The
old negress drew a red handkerchief out of her bosom,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_76">76</span>
untied a knot in a corner of it, and counted out the
money to the sheriff. Only she and the vagrant were
now left on the spot.</p>
<p>"You have bought me. What do you want me to
do?" he asked quietly.</p>
<p>"Lohd, honey!" she answered, in a low tone of affectionate
chiding, "I don' wan' you to do <em>nothin'</em>! I wuzn'
gwine t' 'low dem white folks to buy you. Dey'd wuk
you till you dropped dead. You go 'long en do ez you
please."</p>
<p>She gave a cunning chuckle of triumph in thus setting
at naught the ends of justice, and, in a voice rich
and musical with affection, she said, as she gave him a
little push:</p>
<p>"You bettah be gittin' out o' dis blazin' sun. G' on
home! I be 'long by-en-by."</p>
<p>He turned and moved slowly away in the direction of
Water Street, where she lived; and she, taking up her
basket, shuffled across the market-place towards Cheapside,
muttering to herself the while:</p>
<p>"I come mighty nigh gittin' dah too late, foolin' 'long
wid dese pies. Sellin' <em>him</em> 'ca'se he don' wuk! Umph!
If all de men in dis town dat don' wuk wuz to be tuk
up en sole, d' wouldn' be 'nough money in de town to
buy 'em! Don' I see 'em settin' 'roun' dese taverns
f'om mohnin' till night?"</p>
<p>She snorted out her indignation and disgust, and
sitting down on the sidewalk, under a Lombardy poplar,
uncovered her wares and kept the flies away with a
locust bough, not discovering, in her alternating good
and ill humor, that half of them had been filched by her
old tormentors.</p>
<p>This was the memorable scene enacted in Lexington<span class="pagenum" id="Page_77">77</span>
on that memorable day of the year 1833—a day that
passed so briskly. For whoever met and spoke together
asked the one question: Will the cholera come
to Lexington? And the answer always gave a nervous
haste to business—a keener thrill to pleasure. It was
of the cholera that the negro woman heard two sweet
passing ladies speak as she spread her wares on the
sidewalk. They were on their way to a little picture-gallery
just opened opposite M. Giron's ball-room, and
in one breath she heard them discussing their toilets for
the evening and in the next several portraits by Jouett.</p>
<p>So the day passed, the night came on, and M. Xaupi
gave his brilliant ball. Poor old Xaupi—poor little
Frenchman! whirled as a gamin of Paris through the
mazes of the Revolution, and lately come all the way
to Lexington to teach the people how to dance. Hop
about blithely on thy dry legs, basking this night in
the waxen radiance of manners and melodies and
graces! Where will be thy tunes and airs to-morrow?
Ay, smile and prompt away! On and on! Swing corners,
ladies and gentlemen! Form the basket! Hands
all around!</p>
<p>While the bows were still darting across the strings,
out of the low, red east there shot a long, tremulous
bow of light up towards the zenith. And then, could
human sight have beheld the invisible, it might have
seen hovering over the town, over the ball-room, over
M. Xaupi, the awful presence of the plague.</p>
<p>But knowing nothing of this, the heated revellers went
merrily home in the chill air of the red and saffron
dawn. And knowing nothing of it also, a man awakened
on the door-step of a house opposite the ball-room,
where he had long since fallen asleep. His limbs were<span class="pagenum" id="Page_78">78</span>
cramped and a shiver ran through his frame. Staggering
to his feet, he made his way down to the house of
Free Charlotte, mounted to his room by means of a
stair-way opening on the street, threw off his outer garments,
kicked off his shoes, and taking a bottle from a
closet pressed it several times to his lips with long outward
breaths of satisfaction. Then, casting his great
white bulk upon the bed, in a minute more he had sunk
into a heavy sleep—the usual drunken sleep of old
King Solomon.</p>
<p>He, too, had attended M. Xaupi's ball, in his own way
and in his proper character, being drawn to the place
for the pleasure of seeing the fine ladies arrive and float
in, like large white moths of the summer night; of looking
in through the open windows at the many-colored
waxen lights and the snowy arms and shoulders, of
having blown out to him the perfume and the music;
not worthy to go in, being the lowest of the low, but attending
from a door-step of the street opposite—with
a certain rich passion in his nature for splendor and
revelry and sensuous beauty.</p>
<p class="subtitle">II.</p>
<p>About 10 o'clock the sunlight entered through the
shutters and awoke him. He threw one arm up over
his eyes to intercept the burning rays. As he lay out-stretched
and stripped of grotesque rags, it could be
better seen in what a mould nature had cast his figure.
His breast, bare and tanned, was barred by full, arching
ribs and knotted by crossing muscles; and his
shirt-sleeve, falling away to the shoulder from his bent<span class="pagenum" id="Page_79">79</span>
arm, revealed its crowded muscles in the high relief of
heroic bronze. For, although he had been sold as a
vagrant, old King Solomon had in earlier years followed
the trade of a digger of cellars, and the strenuous use
of mattock and spade had developed every sinew to the
utmost. His whole person, now half naked and in repose,
was full of the suggestions of unspent power.
Only his face, swollen and red, only his eyes, bloodshot
and dull, bore the impress of wasted vitality. There,
all too plainly stamped, were the passions long since
raging and still on fire.</p>
<p>The sunlight had stirred him to but a low degree of
consciousness, and some minutes passed before he realized
that a stifling, resinous fume impregnated the air.
He sniffed it quickly; through the window seemed to
come the smell of burning tar. He sat up on the edge
of the bed and vainly tried to clear his thoughts.</p>
<p>The room was a clean but poor habitation—uncarpeted,
whitewashed, with a piece or two of the cheapest
furniture, and a row of pegs on one wall, where usually
hung those tattered coats and pantaloons, miscellaneously
collected, that were his purple and fine linen.
He turned his eyes in this direction now and noticed
that his clothes were missing. The old shoes had disappeared
from their corner; the cigar stumps, picked
up here and there in the streets according to his wont,
were gone from the mantel-piece. Near the door was
a large bundle tied up in a sheet. In a state of bewilderment,
he asked himself what it all meant. Then a
sense of the silence in the street below possessed him.
At this hour he was used to hear noises enough—from
Hugh Lonney's new bath-house on one side, from Harry
Sikes's barber-shop on the other.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_80">80</span></p>
<p>A mysterious feeling of terror crept over and helped
to sober him. How long had he lain asleep? By degrees
he seemed to remember that two or three times
he had awakened far enough to drink from the bottle
under his pillow, only to sink again into heavier stupefaction.
By degrees, too, he seemed to remember that
other things had happened—a driving of vehicles this
way and that, a hurrying of people along the street.
He had thought it the breaking-up of M. Xaupi's ball.
More than once had not some one shaken and tried to
arouse him? Through the wall of Harry Sikes's barber-shop
had he not heard cries of pain—sobs of distress?</p>
<p>He staggered to the window, threw open the shutters,
and, kneeling at the sill, looked out. The street was
deserted. The houses opposite were closed. Cats were
sleeping in the silent door-ways. But as he looked up
and down he caught sight of people hurrying along
cross-streets. From a distant lumber-yard came the
muffled sound of rapid hammerings. On the air was
the faint roll of vehicles—the hush and the vague noises
of a general terrifying commotion.</p>
<p>In the middle of the street below him a keg was
burning, and, as he looked, the hoops gave way, the tar
spread out like a stream of black lava, and a cloud of
inky smoke and deep-red furious flame burst upward
through the sagging air. Just beneath the window a
common cart had been backed close up to the door of
the house. In it had been thrown a few small articles
of furniture, and on the bottom bedclothes had been
spread out as if for a pallet. While he looked old
Charlotte hurried out with a pillow.</p>
<p>He called down to her in a strange, unsteady
voice:</p>
<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_81">81</span></p>
<p>"What is the matter? What are you doing, Aunt
Charlotte?"</p>
<p>She uttered a cry, dropped the pillow, and stared up
at him. Her face looked dry and wrinkled.</p>
<p>"My God! De chol'ra's in town! I'm waitin' on
you! Dress, en come down en fetch de bun'le by de
dooh." And she hurried back into the house.</p>
<p>But he continued leaning on his folded arms, his
brain stunned by the shock of the intelligence. Suddenly
he leaned far out and looked down at the closed
shutters of the barber-shop. Old Charlotte reappeared.</p>
<p>"Where is Harry Sikes?" he asked.</p>
<p>"Dead en buried."</p>
<p>"When did he die?"</p>
<p>"Yestidd'y evenin'."</p>
<p>"What day is this?"</p>
<p>"Sadd'y."</p>
<p>M. Xaupi's ball had been on Thursday evening.
That night the cholera had broken out. He had lain
in his drunken stupor ever since. Their talk had lasted
but a minute, but she looked up anxiously and urged
him.</p>
<p>"D' ain' no time to was'e, honey! D' ain' no time
to was'e. I done got dis cyart to tek you 'way in, en I
be ready to start in a minute. Put yo' clo'es on en bring
de bun'le wid all yo' yudder things in it."</p>
<p>With incredible activity she climbed into the cart and
began to roll up the bedclothes. In reality she had
made up her mind to put him into the cart, and the
pallet had been made for him to lie and finish his
drunken sleep on, while she drove him away to a place
of safety.</p>
<p>Still he did not move from the window-sill. He was<span class="pagenum" id="Page_82">82</span>
thinking of Harry Sikes, who had shaved him many a
time for nothing. Then he suddenly called down to
her:</p>
<p>"Have many died of the cholera? Are there many
cases in town?"</p>
<p>She went on with her preparations and took no notice
of him. He repeated the question. She got down
quickly from the cart and began to mount the staircase.
He went back to bed, pulled the sheet up over him,
and propped himself up among the pillows. Her soft,
heavy footsteps slurred on the stair-way as though her
strength were failing, and as soon as she entered the
room she sank into a chair, overcome with terror. He
looked at her with a sudden sense of pity.</p>
<p>"Don't be frightened," he said, kindly. "It might
only make it the worse for you."</p>
<p>"I can' he'p it, honey," she answered, wringing her
hands and rocking herself to and fro; "de ole niggah
can' he'p it. If de Lohd jes spah me to git out'n dis
town wid you! Honey, ain' you able to put on yo'
clo'es?"</p>
<p>"You've tied them all up in the sheet."</p>
<p>"De Lohd he'p de crazy ole niggah!"</p>
<p>She started up and tugged at the bundle, and laid
out a suit of his clothes, if things so incongruous could
be called a suit.</p>
<p>"Have many people died of the cholera?"</p>
<p>"Dey been dyin' like sheep ev' since yestidd'y
mohnin'—all day, en all las' night, en dis mohnin'!
De man he done lock up de huss, en dey been buryin'
'em in cyarts. En de grave-diggah he done run away,
en hit look like d' ain' nobody to dig de graves."</p>
<p>She bent over the bundle, tying again the four cor<span class="pagenum" id="Page_83">83</span>ners
of the sheet. Through the window came the
sound of the quick hammers driving nails. She threw
up her arms into the air, and then seizing the bundle
dragged it rapidly to the door.</p>
<p>"You heah dat? Dey nailin' up cawfins in de lumbah-yahd!
Put on yo' clo'es, honey, en come on."</p>
<p>A resolution had suddenly taken shape in his mind.</p>
<p>"Go on away and save your life. Don't wait for me;
I'm not going. And good-bye, Aunt Charlotte, in case
I don't see you any more. You've been very kind to
me—kinder than I deserved. Where have you put my
mattock and spade?"</p>
<p>He said this very quietly, and sat up on the edge of
the bed, his feet hanging down, and his hand stretched
out towards her.</p>
<p>"Honey," she explained, coaxingly, from where she
stood, "can't you sobah up a little en put on yo' clo'es?
I gwine to tek you 'way to de country. You don' wan'
no tools. You can' dig no cellahs now. De chol'ra's
in town en de people's dyin' like sheep."</p>
<p>"I expect they will need me," he answered.</p>
<p>She perceived now that he was sober. For an instant
her own fear was forgotten in an outburst of resentment
and indignation.</p>
<p>"Dig graves fuh 'em, when dey put you up on de
block en sell you same ez you wuz a niggah! Dig
graves fuh 'em, when dey allers callin' you names on de
street en makin' fun o' you!"</p>
<p>"They are not to blame. I have brought it on myself."</p>
<p>"But we can' stay heah en die o' de chol'ra!"</p>
<p>"You mustn't stay. You must go away at once."</p>
<p>"But if I go, who gwine tek cyah o' <em>you</em>?"</p>
<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_84">84</span></p>
<p>"Nobody."</p>
<p>She came quickly across the room to the bed, fell on
her knees, clasped his feet to her breast, and looked up
into his face with an expression of imploring tenderness.
Then, with incoherent cries and with sobs and
tears, she pleaded with him—pleaded for dear life; his
and her own.</p>
<p>It was a strange scene. What historian of the heart
will ever be able to do justice to those peculiar ties
which bound the heart of the negro in years gone by to
a race of not always worthy masters? This old Virginia
nurse had known King Solomon when he was a boy
playing with her young master, till that young master
died on the way to Kentucky.</p>
<p>At the death of her mistress she had become free
with a little property. By thrift and industry she had
greatly enlarged this. Years passed and she became
the only surviving member of the Virginian household,
which had emigrated early in the century to the Blue-grass
Region. The same wave of emigration had brought
in old King Solomon from the same neighborhood. As
she had risen in life, he had sunk. She sat on the
sidewalks selling her fruits and cakes; he sat on the
sidewalks more idle, more ragged and dissolute. On
no other basis than these facts she began to assume a
sort of maternal pitying care of him, patching his rags,
letting him have money for his vices, and when, a year
or two before, he had ceased working almost entirely,
giving him a room in her house and taking in payment
what he chose to pay.</p>
<p>He brushed his hand quickly across his eyes as she
knelt before him now, clasping his feet to her bosom.
From coaxing him as an intractable child she had, in<span class="pagenum" id="Page_85">85</span>
the old servile fashion, fallen to imploring him, with
touching forgetfulness of their real relations:</p>
<p>"O my marseter! O my marseter Solomon! Go 'way
en save yo' life, en tek yo' po' ole niggah wid you!"</p>
<p>But his resolution was formed, and he refused to go.
A hurried footstep paused beneath the window and a
loud voice called up. The old nurse got up and went
to the window. A man was standing by the cart at her
door.</p>
<p>"For God's sake let me have this cart to take my
wife and little children away to the country! There is
not a vehicle to be had in town. I will pay you—"
He stopped, seeing the distress on her face.</p>
<p>"Is he dead?" he asked, for he knew of her care of
old King Solomon.</p>
<p>"He <em>will</em> die!" she sobbed. "Tilt de t'ings out on
de pavement. I gwine t' stay wid 'im en tek cyah o'
'im."</p>
<p class="subtitle">III.</p>
<p>A little later, dressed once more in grotesque rags
and carrying on his shoulder a rusty mattock and a
rusty spade, old King Solomon appeared in the street
below and stood looking up and down it with an air of
anxious indecision. Then shuffling along rapidly to the
corner of Mill Street, he turned up towards Main.</p>
<p>Here a full sense of the terror came to him. A man,
hurrying along with his head down, ran full against him
and cursed him for the delay:</p>
<p>"Get out of my way, you old beast!" he cried. "If
the cholera would carry you off it would be a blessing
to the town."</p>
<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_86">86</span></p>
<p>Two or three little children, already orphaned and
hungry, wandered past, crying and wringing their hands.
A crowd of negro men with the muscles of athletes,
some with naked arms, some naked to the waist, their
eyes dilated, their mouths hanging open, sped along in
tumultuous disorder. The plague had broken out in
the hemp factory and scattered them beyond control.</p>
<p>He grew suddenly faint and sick. His senses swam,
his heart seemed to cease beating, his tongue burned,
his throat was dry, his spine like ice. For a moment
the contagion of deadly fear overcame him, and, unable
to stand, he reeled to the edge of the sidewalk and sat
down.</p>
<p>Before him along the street passed the flying people—men
on horseback with their wives behind and children
in front, families in carts and wagons, merchants
in two-wheeled gigs and sulkies. A huge red and yellow
stage-coach rolled ponderously by, filled within, on
top, in front, and behind with a company of riotous
students of law and of medicine. A rapid chorus of
voices shouted to him as they passed:</p>
<p>"Good-bye, Solomon!"</p>
<p>"The cholera'll have you befoah sunset!"</p>
<p>"Better be diggin' yoah grave, Solomon! That 'll be
yoah last cellah."</p>
<p>"Dig us a big wine cellah undah the Medical Hall
while we are away."</p>
<p>"And leave yo' body there! We want yo' skeleton."</p>
<p>"Good-bye, old Solomon!"</p>
<p>A wretched carry-all passed with a household of more
wretched women; their tawdry and gay attire, their haggard
and painted and ghastly faces, looking horrible in
the blaze of the pitiless sunlight. They, too, simpered<span class="pagenum" id="Page_87">87</span>
and hailed him and spent upon him their hardened and
degraded badinage. Then there rolled by a high-swung
carriage, with the most luxurious of cushions, upholstered
with morocco, with a coat-of-arms, a driver and a
footman in livery, and drawn by sparkling, prancing
horses. Lying back on the satin cushions a fine gentleman;
at the window of the carriage two rosy children,
who pointed their fingers at the vagrant and
turned and looked into their father's face, so that he
leaned forward, smiled, leaned back again, and was
whirled away to a place of safety.</p>
<p>Thus they passed him, as he sat down on the sidewalk—even
physicians from their patients, pastors from
their stricken flocks. Why should not he flee? He
had no ties, except the faithful affection of an old negress.
Should he not at least save her life by going
away, seeing that she would not leave him?</p>
<p>The orphaned children wandered past again, sobbing
more wearily. He called them to him.</p>
<p>"Why do you not go home? Where is your mother?"
he asked.</p>
<p>"She is dead in the house," they answered; "and no
one has come to bury her."</p>
<p>Slowly down the street was coming a short funeral
train. It passed—a rude cortege: a common cart, in
the bottom of which rested a box of plain boards containing
the body of the old French dancing-master;
walking behind it, with a cambric handkerchief to his
eyes, the old French confectioner; at his side, wearing
the robes of his office and carrying an umbrella to ward
off the burning sun, the beloved Bishop Smith; and behind
them, two by two and with linked arms, perhaps a
dozen men, most of whom had been at the ball.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_88">88</span></p>
<p>No head was lifted or eye turned to notice the vagrant
seated on the sidewalk. But when the train had
passed he rose, laid his mattock and spade across his
shoulder, and, stepping out into the street, fell into line
at the end of the procession.</p>
<p>They moved down Short Street to the old burying-ground,
where the Baptist church-yard is to-day. As
they entered it, two grave-diggers passed out and hurried
away. Those before them had fled. They had
been at work but a few hours. Overcome with horror
at the sight of the dead arriving more and more rapidly,
they, too, deserted that post of peril. No one was left.
Here and there in the church-yard could be seen bodies
awaiting interment. Old King Solomon stepped quietly
forward and, getting down into one of the half-finished
graves, began to dig.</p>
<p>The vagrant had happened upon an avocation.</p>
<p class="subtitle">IV.</p>
<p>All summer long, Clatterbuck's dancing-pavilion was
as silent in its grove of oaks as a temple of the Druids,
and his pleasure-boat nestled in its moorings, with no
hand to feather an oar in the little lake. All summer
long, no athletic young Kentuckians came to bathe
their white bodies in Hugh Lonney's new bath-house
for twelve and a half cents, and no one read Daukins
Tegway's advertisement that he was willing to exchange
his Dunstable bonnets for flax and feathers. The likely
runaway boy, with a long, fresh scar across his face,
was never found, nor the buffalo bull roasted for Daniel
Webster, and Peter Leuba's guitars were never thrummed<span class="pagenum" id="Page_89">89</span>
on any moonlit verandas. Only Dewees and Grant were
busy, dispensing, not snuff, but calomel.</p>
<p>Grass grew in the deserted streets. Gardens became
little wildernesses of rank weeds and riotous creepers.
Around shut window-lattices roses clambered and shed
their perfume into the poisoned air, or dropped their
faded petals to strew the echoless thresholds. In darkened
rooms family portraits gazed on sad vacancy or
looked helplessly down on rigid sheeted forms.</p>
<p>In the trees of poplar and locust along the streets
the unmolested birds built and brooded. The oriole
swung its hempen nest from a bough over the door of
the spider-tenanted factory, and in front of the old
Medical Hall the blue-jay shot up his angry crest and
screamed harshly down at the passing bier. In a cage
hung against the wall of a house in a retired street a
mocking-bird sung, beat its breast against the bars,
sung more passionately, grew silent and dropped dead
from its perch, never knowing that its mistress had long
since become a clod to its full-throated requiem.</p>
<p>Famine lurked in the wake of the pestilence. Markets
were closed. A few shops were kept open to furnish
necessary supplies. Now and then some old negro
might have been seen, driving a meat-wagon in from the
country, his nostrils stuffed with white cotton saturated
with camphor. Oftener the only visible figure in the
streets was that of a faithful priest going about among
his perishing fold, or that of the bishop moving hither
and thither on his ceaseless ministrations.</p>
<p>But over all the ravages of that terrible time there
towered highest the solitary figure of that powerful
grave-digger, who, nerved by the spectacle of the common
misfortune, by one heroic effort rose for the time<span class="pagenum" id="Page_90">90</span>
above the wrecks of his own nature. In the thick of
the plague, in the very garden spot of the pestilence, he
ruled like an unterrified king. Through days unnaturally
chill with gray cloud and drizzling rain, or unnaturally
hot with the fierce sun and suffocating damps
that appeared to steam forth from subterranean caldrons,
he worked unfaltering, sometimes with a helper,
sometimes with none. There were times when, exhausted,
he would lie down in the half-dug graves and
there sleep until able to go on; and many a midnight
found him under the spectral moon, all but hidden by
the rank nightshade as he bent over to mark out the
lines of one of those narrow mortal cellars.</p>
<p>What weaknesses he fought and conquered through
those days and nights! Out of what unforeseen depths
of nature did he draw the tough fibre of such a resolution!
To be alone with the pestilential dead at night—is
not that a test of imperial courage? To live for
weeks braving swift death itself—is not that the fierce
and ungovernable flaring up of the soul in heroism?
For all the mockery and derision of his name, had it not
some fitness? For had he not a royal heart?</p>
<p class="subtitle">V.</p>
<p>Nature soon smiles upon her own ravages and
strews our graves with flowers, not as memories, but for
other flowers when the spring returns.</p>
<p>It was one cool, brilliant morning late in that autumn.
The air blew fresh and invigorating, as though
on the earth there were no corruption, no death. Far
southward had flown the plague. A spectator in the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_91">91</span>
open court-square might have seen many signs of life
returning to the town. Students hurried along, talking
eagerly. Merchants met for the first time and spoke of
the winter trade. An old negress, gayly and neatly
dressed, came into the market-place, and sitting down
on a sidewalk displayed her yellow and red apples and
fragrant gingerbread. She hummed to herself an old
cradle-song, and in her soft, motherly black eyes shone
a mild, happy radiance. A group of young ragamuffins
eyed her longingly from a distance. Court was to open
for the first time since the spring. The hour was early,
and one by one the lawyers passed slowly in. On the
steps of the court-house three men were standing:
Thomas Brown, the sheriff; old Peter Leuba, who had
just walked over from his music-store on Main Street;
and little M. Giron, the French confectioner. Each wore
mourning on his hat, and their voices were low and grave.</p>
<p>"Gentlemen," the sheriff was saying, "it was on this
very spot the day befoah the cholera broke out that I
sole 'im as a vagrant. An' I did the meanes' thing a
man can evah do. I hel' 'im up to public ridicule foh
his weaknesses an' made spoht of 'is infirmities. I
laughed at 'is povahty an' 'is ole clo'es. I delivahed
on 'im as complete an oration of sarcastic detraction as
I could prepare on the spot, out of my own meanness
an' with the vulgah sympathies of the crowd. Gentlemen,
if I only had that crowd heah now, an' ole King
Sol'mon standin' in the midst of it, that I might ask 'im
to accept a humble public apology, offahed from the
heaht of one who feels himself unworthy to shake 'is
han'! But, gentlemen, that crowd will nevah reassemble.
Neahly ev'ry man of them is dead, an' ole King
Sol'mon buried them."</p>
<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_92">92</span></p>
<p>"He buried my friend Adolphe Xaupi," said François
Giron, touching his eyes with his handkerchief.</p>
<p>"There is a case of my best Jamaica rum for him
whenever he comes for it," said old Leuba, clearing his
throat.</p>
<p>"But, gentlemen, while we are speakin' of ole King
Sol'mon we ought not to fohget who it is that has supported
'im. Yondah she sits on the sidewalk, sellin'
'er apples an' gingerbread."</p>
<p>The three men looked in the direction indicated.</p>
<p>"Heah comes ole King Sol'mon now," exclaimed the
sheriff.</p>
<p>Across the open square the vagrant was seen walking
slowly along with his habitual air of quiet, unobtrusive
preoccupation. A minute more and he had come over
and passed into the court-house by a side door.</p>
<p>"Is Mr. Clay to be in court to-day?"</p>
<p>"He is expected, I think."</p>
<p>"Then let's go in; there will be a crowd."</p>
<p>"I don't know; so many are dead."</p>
<p>They turned and entered and found seats as quietly
as possible; for a strange and sorrowful hush brooded
over the court-room. Until the bar assembled, it had
not been realized how many were gone. The silence
was that of a common overwhelming disaster. No one
spoke with his neighbor, no one observed the vagrant
as he entered and made his way to a seat on one of
the meanest benches, a little apart from the others.
He had not sat there since the day of his indictment
for vagrancy. The judge took his seat and, making a
great effort to control himself, passed his eyes slowly
over the court-room. All at once he caught sight of
old King Solomon sitting against the wall in an obscure<span class="pagenum" id="Page_93">93</span>
corner; and before any one could know what he was
doing, he hurried down and walked up to the vagrant
and grasped his hand. He tried to speak, but could
not. Old King Solomon had buried his wife and daughter—buried
them one clouded midnight, with no one
present but himself.</p>
<p>Then the oldest member of the bar started up and
followed the example; and then the other members,
rising by a common impulse, filed slowly back and one
by one wrung that hard and powerful hand. After
them came the other persons in the court-room. The
vagrant, the grave-digger, had risen and stood against
the wall, at first with a white face and a dazed expression,
not knowing what it meant; afterwards, when he
understood it, his head dropped suddenly forward and
his tears fell thick and hot upon the hands that he could
not see. And his were not the only tears. Not a man
in the long file but paid his tribute of emotion as he
stepped forward to honor that image of sadly eclipsed
but still effulgent humanity. It was not grief, it was not
gratitude, nor any sense of making reparation for the
past. It was the softening influence of an act of heroism,
which makes every man feel himself a brother hand
in hand with every other—such power has a single act
of moral greatness to reverse the relations of men, lifting
up one, and bringing all others to do him homage.</p>
<p>It was the coronation scene in the life of old King
Solomon of Kentucky.</p>
<hr class="chap" />
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_94" id="Page_94">[Pg 94]</SPAN><br/><SPAN name="Page_95" id="Page_95">[Pg 95]</SPAN></span></p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_96" id="Page_96">[Pg 96]</SPAN><br/><SPAN name="Page_97" id="Page_97">[Pg 97]</SPAN></span></p>
</div>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />