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<h2><span style="font-size: 144%">XIII</span></h2>
<p id="p0226"><span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-variant: small-caps">The</span></span> week following
Christmas brought in a thaw, and by New Year’s Day all the world
about us was a broth of gray slush, and the guttered slope between the
windmill and the barn was running black water. The soft black earth
stood out in patches along the roadsides. I resumed all my chores,
carried in the cobs and wood and water, and spent the afternoons at
the barn, watching Jake shell corn with a hand-sheller.</p>
<p id="p0227">One morning, during this interval of fine weather,
Ántonia and her mother rode over on one of their shaggy old
horses to pay us a visit. It was the first time <span class="tei tei-abbr">Mrs.</span>
Shimerda had been to our house, and she ran about examining our
carpets and curtains and furniture, all the while commenting upon them
to her daughter in an envious, complaining tone. In the kitchen she
caught up an iron pot that stood on the back of the stove and said:
“You got many, Shimerdas no got.” I thought it weak-minded
of grandmother to give the pot to her.</p>
<p id="p0228">After dinner, when she was helping to wash the
dishes, she said, tossing her head: “You got many things for
cook. If I got all things like you, I make much better.”</p>
<p id="p0229">She was a conceited, boastful old thing, and even
misfortune could not humble her. I was so annoyed that I felt coldly
even toward Ántonia and listened unsympathetically when she
told me her father was not well.</p>
<p id="p0230">“My papa sad for the old country. He not look
good. He never make music any more. At home he play violin all the
time; for weddings and for dance. Here never. When I beg him for play,
he shake his head no. Some days he take his violin out of his box and
make with his fingers on the strings, like this, but never he make the
music. He don’t like this kawn-tree.”</p>
<p id="p0231">“People who don’t like this country ought
to stay at home,” I said severely. “We don’t make
them come here.”</p>
<p id="p0232">“He not want to come, nev-er!” she burst
out. “My
<span lang="cs" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="cs">mamenka</span>
make him come. All the time she say: ‘America big country; much
money, much land for my boys, much husband for my girls.’ My
papa, he cry for leave his old friends what make music with him. He
love very much the man what play the long horn like this”—she indicated a slide trombone. “They go to school
together and are friends from boys. But my mama, she want Ambrosch for
be rich, with many cattle.”</p>
<p id="p0233">“Your mama,” I said angrily, “wants
other people’s things.”</p>
<p id="p0234">“Your grandfather is rich,” she retorted
fiercely. “Why he not help my papa? Ambrosch be rich, too, after
while, and he pay back. He is very smart boy. For Ambrosch my mama
come here.”</p>
<p id="p0235">Ambrosch was considered the important person in the
family. <span class="tei tei-abbr">Mrs.</span> Shimerda and Ántonia always deferred
to him, though he was often surly with them and contemptuous toward
his father. Ambrosch and his mother had everything their own way.
Though Ántonia loved her father more than she did any one else,
she stood in awe of her elder brother.</p>
<p id="p0236">After I watched Ántonia and her mother go over
the hill on their miserable horse, carrying our iron pot with them, I
turned to grandmother, who had taken up her darning, and said I hoped
that snooping old woman would n’t come to see us any more.</p>
<p id="p0237">Grandmother chuckled and drove her bright
needle across a hole in Otto’s sock. “She’s not old,
Jim, though I expect she seems old to you. No, I would n’t mourn
if she never came again. But, you see, a body never knows what traits
poverty might bring out in ’em. It makes a woman grasping to see
her children want for things. Now read me a chapter in ‘The
Prince of the House of David.’ Let’s forget the
Bohemians.”</p>
<p id="p0238">We had three weeks of this mild, open weather. The
cattle in the corral ate corn almost as fast as the men could shell it
for them, and we hoped they would be ready for an early market. One
morning the two big bulls, Gladstone and Brigham Young, thought spring
had come, and they began to tease and butt at each other across the
barbed wire that separated them. Soon they got angry. They bellowed
and pawed up the soft earth with their hoofs, rolling their eyes and
tossing their heads. Each withdrew to a far corner of his own corral,
and then they made for each other at a gallop. Thud, thud, we could
hear the impact of their great heads, and their bellowing shook the
pans on the kitchen shelves. Had they not been dehorned, they would
have torn each other to pieces. Pretty
soon the fat steers took it up and began butting and horning each
other. Clearly, the affair had to be stopped. We all stood by and
watched admiringly while Fuchs rode into the corral with a pitchfork
and prodded the bulls again and again, finally driving them apart.</p>
<p id="p0239">The big storm of the winter began on my eleventh
birthday, the 20th of January. When I went down to breakfast that
morning, Jake and Otto came in white as snow-men, beating their hands
and stamping their feet. They began to laugh boisterously when they
saw me, calling:—</p>
<p id="p0240">“You’ve got a birthday present this time,
Jim, and no mistake. They was a full-grown blizzard ordered for
you.”</p>
<p id="p0241">All day the storm went on. The snow did not fall this
time, it simply spilled out of heaven, like thousands of feather-beds
being emptied. That afternoon the kitchen was a carpenter-shop; the
men brought in their tools and made two great wooden shovels with long
handles. Neither grandmother nor I could go out in the storm, so Jake
fed the chickens and brought in a pitiful contribution of eggs.</p>
<p id="p0242">Next day our men had to shovel until noon to reach
the barn—and the snow was still
falling! There had not been such a storm in the ten years my
grandfather had lived in Nebraska. He said at dinner that we would not
try to reach the cattle—they were fat enough to go without
their corn for a day or two; but to-morrow we must feed them and thaw
out their water-tap so that they could drink. We could not so much as
see the corrals, but we knew the steers were over there, huddled
together under the north bank. Our ferocious bulls, subdued enough by
this time, were probably warming each other’s backs.
“This’ll take the bile out of ’em!” Fuchs
remarked gleefully.</p>
<p id="p0243">At noon that day the hens had not been heard from.
After dinner Jake and Otto, their damp clothes now dried on them,
stretched their stiff arms and plunged again into the drifts. They
made a tunnel under the snow to the henhouse, with walls so solid that
grandmother and I could walk back and forth in it. We found the
chickens asleep; perhaps they thought night had come to stay. One old
rooster was stirring about, pecking at the solid lump of ice in their
water-tin. When we flashed the lantern in their eyes, the hens set up
a great cackling and flew about clumsily,
scattering down-feathers. The mottled, pin-headed guinea-hens, always
resentful of captivity, ran screeching out into the tunnel and tried
to poke their ugly, painted faces through the snow walls. By five
o’clock the chores were done—just when it was time to
begin them all over again! That was a strange, unnatural sort of
day.</p>
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