<h2><SPAN name="CHAPTER_VIII" id="CHAPTER_VIII"></SPAN>CHAPTER VIII</h2>
<p class="center">FAR DOWN THE PACIFIC—THE PROPOSAL</p>
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<p class="cap_1">AFTER the presidential election of that
year I went to South America with a
special party, consisting mostly of New
York capitalists and millionaires. We
traveled through the southwest, crossing the Rio
Grand at Eagle Pass, and on south by the way of
Toreon, Zacatecas, Aguas Calientes, Guadalajara,
Puebla, Tehauntepec and to the southwest coast,
sailing from Salina Cruz down the Pacific to Valparaiso,
Chile, going inland to Santiago, thence
over the Trans-Andean railway across the Andes,
and onward to the western plateau of Argentina.</p>
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<p>Arriving at the new city of Mendoza, we visited
the ruins of the ancient city of the same name.
Here, in the early part of the fifteenth century, on a
Sunday morning, when a large part of the people
were at church, an earthquake shook the city.
When it passed, it left bitter ruin in its wake, the
only part that stood intact being one wall of the
church. Of a population of thirteen thousand,
only sixteen hundred persons escaped alive. The
city was rebuilt later, and at the time we were there
it was a beautiful place of about twenty-five thousand
population. At this place a report of bubonic
plague, in Brazil, reached us. The party became
frightened and beat it in post haste back to Valparaiso,
setting sail immediately for Salina Cruz,
and spent the time that was scheduled for a tour
of Argentina, in snoopin' around the land of the
Montezumas.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_68" id="Page_68">[Pg 68]</SPAN></span>
This is the American center of
Catholic Churches; the home of many gaudy
Spanish women and begging peons; where the people,
the laws, and the customs, are two hundred years
behind those of the United States. Still, I thought
Mexico very beautiful, as well as of historical interest.</p>
<p>One day we journeyed far into the highlands,
where lay the ancient Mexican city of Cuernavaca,
the one time summer home of America's only Emperor,
Maximilian. From there we went to Puebla,
where we saw the old Cathedral which was begun
in 1518, and which at that time was said to be the
second largest in the world. We saw San Louis
Potosi, and Monterey, and returned by the way of
Loredo, Texas. I became well enough acquainted
with the liberal millionaires and so useful in serving
their families that I made five hundred and seventy-five
dollars on the trip, besides bringing back so
many gifts and curiosities of all kinds that I had
enough to divide up with a good many of my friends.</p>
<p>Flushed with prosperity and success in my undertakings
since leaving Southern Illinois less than three
years before, I went to M—boro to see my sister
and to see whether Miss Rooks had grown any.
I was received as a personage of much importance
among the colored people of the town, who were
about the same kind that lived in M—pls; not
very progressive, excepting with their tongues
when it came to curiosity and gossip. I arrived in
the evening too late to call on Miss Rooks and
having become quite anxious to see her again, the
night dragged slowly away, and I thought the conventional
afternoon<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_69" id="Page_69">[Pg 69]</SPAN></span>
would never come again. Her
father, who was an important figure among the
colored people, was a mail carrier and brought the
mail to the house that morning where I stopped.
He looked me over searchingly, and I tried to appear
unaffected by his scrutinizing glances.</p>
<p>By and by two o'clock finally arrived, and with
my sister I went to make my first call in three years.
I had grown quite tall and rugged, and I was anxious
to see how she looked. We were received by her
mother who said: "Jessie saw you coming and will
be out shortly." After a while she entered and how
she had changed. She, too, had grown much
taller and was a little stooped in the shoulders.
She was neatly dressed and wore her hair done up
in a small knot, in keeping with the style of that
time. She came straight to me, extended her hand
and seemed delighted to see me after the years of
separation.</p>
<p>After awhile her mother and my sister accommodatingly
found an excuse to go up town, and a
few minutes later with her on the settee beside me,
I was telling of my big plans and the air castles I
was building on the great plains of the west. Finally,
drawing her hand into mine and finding that she
offered no resistance, I put my arm around her
waist, drew her close and declared I loved her.
Then I caught myself and dared not go farther with
so serious a subject when I recalled the wild, rough,
and lonely place out on the plains that I had selected
as a home, and finally asked that we defer anything
further until the claim on the Little Crow should
develop into something more like an Illinois home.</p>
<p>"O,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_70" id="Page_70">[Pg 70]</SPAN></span>
we don't know what will happen before that
time," she spoke for the first time, with a blush as
I squeezed her hand.</p>
<p>"But nothing can happen," I defended, nonplused,
"can there?"</p>
<p>"Well, no," she answered hesitatingly, leaning
away.</p>
<p>"Then we will, won't we?" I urged.</p>
<p>"Well, yes", she answered, looking down and
appearing a trifle doubtful. I admired her the more.
Love is something I had longed for more than anything
else, but my ambition to overcome the vagaries
of my race by accomplishing something worthy
of note, hadn't given me much time to seek love.</p>
<p>I went to my old occupation of the road for awhile
and spent most of the winter on a run to Florida,
where the tipping was as good as it had been on the
run from St. Louis to New York. However, about
a month before I quit I was assigned to a run to
Boston. By this time I had seen nearly all the
important cities in the United States and of them
all none interested me so much as Boston.</p>
<p>What always appeared odd to me, however, was
the fact that the passenger yards were right at the
door of the fashionable Back Bay district on Huntington
Avenue, near the Hotel Nottingham, not
three blocks from where the intersection of Huntington
Avenue and Boylston Street form an acute angle
in which stands the Public Library, and in the opposite
angle stands Trinity Church, so thickly
purpled with aristocracy and the memory big with
the tradition of Philip Brooks, the last of that group
of mighty American pulpit orators, of whom I had
read<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_71" id="Page_71">[Pg 71]</SPAN></span>
so much. A little farther on stands the
Massachusetts Institute of Technology.</p>
<p>The mornings I spent wandering around the city,
visiting Faneuil Hall, the old State House, Boston
commons, Bunker Hill, and a thousand other reminders
of the early heroism, rugged courage, and
far seeing greatness of Boston's early citizens.
Afternoons generally found me on Tremont or
Washington Street attending a matinee or hearing
music. There once I heard Caruso, Melba, and two
or three other grand opera stars in the popular
Rigoletto Quartette, and another time I witnessed
"Siberia" and the gorgeous and blood-curdling
reproduction of the Kishneff Massacre, with two
hundred people on the stage. On my last trip to
Boston I saw Chauncy Olcott in "Terrence the
Coach Boy", a romance of old Ireland with the
scene laid in Valley Bay, which seemed to correspond
to the Back Bay a few blocks away.</p>
<p>Dear old Boston, when will I see you again, was
my thought as the train pulled out through the
most fashionable part of America, so stately and
so grand. Even now I recall the last trip with a
sigh. If the Little Crow, with Oristown as its
gateway, was a land of hope; through Massachusetts;
Worcester, with the Polytechnic Institute
arising in the back ground; Springfield, and Smith
School for girls, Pittsfield, Brookfield, and on to
Albany on the Hudson, is a memory never to be
forgotten, which evolved in my mind many long
years afterward, in my shack on the homestead.</p>
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<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_72" id="Page_72">[Pg 72]</SPAN></span></p>
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