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<h2><span style="font-size: 144%">VII</span></h2>
<p id="p0509"><span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-variant: small-caps">Winter</span></span> lies too
long in country towns; hangs on until it is stale and shabby, old and
sullen. On the farm the weather was the great fact, and men’s
affairs went on underneath it, as the streams creep under the ice. But
in Black Hawk the scene of human life was spread out shrunken and
pinched, frozen down to the bare stalk.</p>
<p id="p0510">Through January and February I went to the river with
the Harlings on clear nights, and we skated up to the big island and
made bonfires on the frozen sand. But by March the ice was rough and
choppy, and the snow on the river bluffs was gray and
mournful-looking. I was tired of school, tired of winter clothes, of
the rutted streets, of the dirty drifts and the piles of cinders that
had lain in the yards so long. There was only one break in the dreary
monotony of that month; when Blind d’Arnault, the negro pianist,
came to town. He gave a concert at the Opera House on Monday night,
and he and his manager spent Saturday and Sunday at our comfortable
hotel. <span class="tei tei-abbr">Mrs.</span>
Harling had known d’Arnault for years. She told Ántonia
she had better go to see Tiny that Saturday evening, as there would
certainly be music at the Boys’ Home.</p>
<p id="p0511">Saturday night after supper I ran downtown to the
hotel and slipped quietly into the parlor. The chairs and sofas were
already occupied, and the air smelled pleasantly of cigar smoke. The
parlor had once been two rooms, and the floor was sway-backed where
the partition had been cut away. The wind from without made waves in
the long carpet. A coal stove glowed at either end of the room, and
the grand piano in the middle stood open.</p>
<p id="p0512">There was an atmosphere of unusual freedom about the
house that night, for <span class="tei tei-abbr">Mrs.</span> Gardener had gone to Omaha for
a week. Johnnie had been having drinks with the guests until he was
rather absent-minded. It was <span class="tei tei-abbr">Mrs.</span> Gardener who ran the
business and looked after everything. Her husband stood at the desk
and welcomed incoming travelers. He was a popular fellow, but no
manager.</p>
<p id="p0513"><span class="tei tei-abbr">Mrs.</span> Gardener was admittedly the
best-dressed woman in Black Hawk, drove the best horse, and had a
smart trap and a little white-and-gold sleigh. She seemed indifferent
to her
possessions, was not half so solicitous about them as her friends
were. She was tall, dark, severe, with something Indian-like in the
rigid immobility of her face. Her manner was cold, and she talked
little. Guests felt that they were receiving, not conferring, a favor
when they stayed at her house. Even the smartest traveling men were
flattered when <span class="tei tei-abbr">Mrs.</span> Gardener stopped to chat with them
for a moment. The patrons of the hotel were divided into two classes;
those who had seen <span class="tei tei-abbr">Mrs.</span> Gardener’s diamonds, and
those who had not.</p>
<p id="p0514">When I stole into the parlor Anson Kirkpatrick,
Marshall Field’s man, was at the piano, playing airs from a
musical comedy then running in Chicago. He was a dapper little
Irishman, very vain, homely as a monkey, with friends everywhere, and
a sweetheart in every port, like a sailor. I did not know all the men
who were sitting about, but I recognized a furniture salesman from
Kansas City, a drug man, and Willy O’Reilly, who traveled for a
jewelry house and sold musical instruments. The talk was all about
good and bad hotels, actors and actresses and musical prodigies. I
learned that <span class="tei tei-abbr">Mrs.</span> Gardener had gone to Omaha to hear
Booth and Barrett, who
were to play there next week, and that Mary Anderson was having a
great success in “A Winter’s Tale,” in London.</p>
<p id="p0515">The door from the office opened, and Johnnie Gardener
came in, directing Blind d’Arnault,—he would never
consent to be led. He was a heavy, bulky mulatto, on short legs, and
he came tapping the floor in front of him with his gold-headed cane.
His yellow face was lifted in the light, with a show of white teeth,
all grinning, and his shrunken, papery eyelids lay motionless over his
blind eyes.</p>
<p id="p0516">“Good evening,
gentlemen. No ladies here? Good-evening, gentlemen. We going to have a
little music? Some of you gentlemen going to play for me this
evening?” It was the soft, amiable negro voice, like those I
remembered from early childhood, with the note of docile subservience
in it. He had the negro head, too; almost no head at all; nothing
behind the ears but folds of neck under close-clipped wool. He would
have been repulsive if his face had not been so kindly and happy. It
was the happiest face I had seen since I left Virginia.</p>
<p id="p0517">He felt his way directly to the piano. The moment he
sat down, I noticed the nervous infirmity of which <span class="tei tei-abbr">Mrs.</span>
Harling had told me.
When he was sitting, or standing still, he swayed back and forth
incessantly, like a rocking toy. At the piano, he swayed in time to
the music, and when he was not playing, his body kept up this motion,
like an empty mill grinding on. He found the pedals and tried them,
ran his yellow hands up and down the keys a few times, tinkling off
scales, then turned to the company.</p>
<p id="p0518">“She seems all right, gentlemen. Nothing
happened to her since the last time I was here. <span class="tei tei-abbr">Mrs.</span>
Gardener, she always has this piano tuned up before I come. Now,
gentlemen, I expect you’ve all got grand voices. Seems like we
might have some good old plantation songs to-night.”</p>
<p id="p0519">The men gathered round him, as he began to play
“My Old Kentucky Home.” They sang one negro melody after
another, while the mulatto sat rocking himself, his head thrown back,
his yellow face lifted, its shriveled eyelids never fluttering.</p>
<p id="p0520">He was born in the Far South, on the d’Arnault
plantation, where the spirit if not the fact of slavery persisted.
When he was three weeks old he had an illness which left him totally
blind. As soon as he was old enough
to sit up alone and toddle about, another affliction, the nervous
motion of his body, became apparent. His mother, a buxom young negro
wench who was laundress for the d’Arnaults, concluded that her
blind baby was “not right” in his head, and she was
ashamed of him. She loved him devotedly, but he was so ugly, with his
sunken eyes and his “fidgets,” that she hid him away from
people. All the dainties she brought down from the “Big
House” were for the blind child, and she beat and cuffed her
other children whenever she found them teasing him or trying to get
his chicken-bone away from him. He began to talk early, remembered
everything he heard, and his mammy said he “was n’t all
wrong.” She named him Samson, because he was blind, but on the
plantation he was known as “yellow Martha’s simple
child.” He was docile and obedient, but when he was six years
old he began to run away from home, always taking the same direction.
He felt his way through the lilacs, along the boxwood hedge, up to the
south wing of the “Big House,” where Miss Nellie
d’Arnault practiced the piano every morning. This angered his
mother more than anything else he could have done; she was so
ashamed of his ugliness that she could n’t bear to have white
folks see him. Whenever she caught him slipping away from the cabin,
she whipped him unmercifully, and told him what dreadful things old
<span class="tei tei-abbr">Mr.</span> d’Arnault would do to him if he ever found him
near the “Big House.” But the next time Samson had a
chance, he ran away again. If Miss d’Arnault stopped practicing
for a moment and went toward the window, she saw this hideous little
pickaninny, dressed in an old piece of sacking, standing in the open
space between the hollyhock rows, his body rocking automatically, his
blind face lifted to the sun and wearing an expression of idiotic
rapture. Often she was tempted to tell Martha that the child must be
kept at home, but somehow the memory of his foolish, happy face
deterred her. She remembered that his sense of hearing was nearly all
he had,—though it did not occur to her that he might have more
of it than other children.</p>
<p id="p0521">One day Samson was standing thus while Miss Nellie
was playing her lesson to her music-master. The windows were open. He
heard them get up from the piano, talk a little while, and then leave
the room. He heard the
door close after them. He crept up to the front windows and stuck his
head in: there was no one there. He could always detect the presence
of any one in a room. He put one foot over the window sill and
straddled it. His mother had told him over and over how his master
would give him to the big mastiff if he ever found him
“meddling.” Samson had got too near the mastiff’s
kennel once, and had felt his terrible breath in his face. He thought
about that, but he pulled in his other foot.</p>
<p id="p0522">Through the dark he found his way to the Thing, to
its mouth. He touched it softly, and it answered softly, kindly. He
shivered and stood still. Then he began to feel it all over, ran his
finger tips
along the slippery sides, embraced the carved legs, tried to get some
conception of its shape and size, of the space it occupied in primeval
night. It was cold and hard, and like nothing else in his black
universe. He went back to its mouth, began at one end of the keyboard
and felt his way down into the mellow thunder, as far as he could go.
He seemed to know that it must be done with the fingers, not with the
fists or the feet. He approached this highly artificial instrument
through a mere instinct, and coupled himself to it, as if he knew it
was to piece him out and make a whole creature of him. After he had
tried over all the sounds, he began to finger out passages from things
Miss Nellie had been practicing, passages that were already his, that
lay under the bones of his pinched, conical little skull, definite as
animal desires. The door opened; Miss Nellie and her music-master
stood behind it, but blind Samson, who was so sensitive to presences,
did not know they were there. He was feeling out the pattern that lay
all ready-made on the big and little keys. When he paused for a
moment, because the sound was wrong and he wanted another, Miss Nellie
spoke softly. He whirled about in a spasm of terror, leaped forward in
the dark, struck his head on the open window, and fell screaming and
bleeding to the floor. He had what his mother called a fit. The doctor
came and gave him opium.</p>
<p id="p0523">When Samson was well again, his young mistress led
him back to the piano. Several teachers experimented with him. They
found he had absolute pitch, and a remarkable memory. As a very young
child he could repeat, after a fashion, any composition that
was played for him. No matter how many wrong notes he struck, he never
lost the intention of a passage, he brought the substance of it across
by irregular and astonishing means. He wore his teachers out. He could
never learn like other people, never acquired any finish. He was
always a negro prodigy who played barbarously and wonderfully. As
piano playing, it was perhaps abominable, but as music it was
something real, vitalized by a sense of rhythm that was stronger than
his other physical senses,—that not only filled his dark mind,
but worried his body incessantly. To hear him, to watch him, was to
see a negro enjoying himself as only a negro can. It was as if all the
agreeable sensations possible to creatures of flesh and blood were
heaped up on those black and white keys, and he were gloating over
them and trickling them through his yellow fingers.</p>
<p id="p0524">In the middle of a crashing waltz d’Arnault
suddenly began to play softly, and, turning to one of the men who
stood behind him, whispered, “Somebody dancing in there.”
He jerked his bullet head toward the dining-room. “I hear little
feet,—girls, I ’spect.”</p>
<p id="p0525">Anson Kirkpatrick mounted a chair and
peeped over the transom. Springing down, he wrenched open the doors
and ran out into the dining-room. Tiny and Lena, Ántonia and
Mary Dusak, were waltzing in the middle of the floor. They separated
and fled toward the kitchen, giggling.</p>
<p id="p0526">Kirkpatrick caught Tiny by the elbows.
“What’s the matter with you girls? Dancing out here by
yourselves, when there’s a roomful of lonesome men on the other
side of the partition! Introduce me to your friends, Tiny.”</p>
<p id="p0527">The girls, still laughing, were trying to escape.
Tiny looked alarmed. “<span class="tei tei-abbr">Mrs.</span> Gardener would n’t
like it,” she protested. “She’d be awful mad if you
was to come out here and dance with us.”</p>
<p id="p0528">“<span class="tei tei-abbr">Mrs.</span> Gardener’s in Omaha,
girl. Now, you’re Lena, are you?—and you’re Tony
and you’re Mary. Have I got you all straight?”</p>
<p id="p0529">O’Reilly and the others began to pile the
chairs on the tables. Johnnie Gardener ran in from the office.</p>
<p id="p0530">“Easy, boys, easy!” he entreated them.
“You’ll wake the cook, and there’ll be the devil to
pay for me. She won’t hear the music, but she’ll be down
the minute anything’s moved in the dining-room.”</p>
<p id="p0531">“Oh, what do you care, Johnnie? Fire the cook
and wire Molly to bring another. Come along, nobody’ll tell
tales.”</p>
<p id="p0532">Johnnie shook his head. “’S a fact,
boys,” he said confidentially. “If I take a drink in Black
Hawk, Molly knows it in Omaha!”</p>
<p id="p0533">His guests laughed and slapped him on the shoulder.
“Oh, we’ll make it all right with Molly. Get your back up,
Johnnie.”</p>
<p id="p0534">Molly was <span class="tei tei-abbr">Mrs.</span> Gardener’s name, of
course. “Molly Bawn” was painted in large blue letters on
the glossy white side of the hotel bus, and “Molly” was
engraved inside Johnnie’s ring and on his watch-case—doubtless on his heart, too. He was an affectionate little man, and he
thought his wife a wonderful woman; he knew that without her he would
hardly be more than a clerk in some other man’s hotel.</p>
<p id="p0535">At a word from Kirkpatrick, d’Arnault spread
himself out over the piano, and began to draw the dance music out of
it, while the perspiration shone on his short wool and on his uplifted
face. He looked like some glistening African god of pleasure, full of
strong, savage blood. Whenever the dancers paused to change partners
or to catch breath, he would boom out softly, “Who’s that
goin’
back on me? One of these city gentlemen, I bet! Now, you girls, you
ain’t goin’ to let that floor get cold?”</p>
<p id="p0536">Ántonia seemed frightened at first, and kept
looking questioningly at Lena and Tiny over Willy
O’Reilly’s shoulder. Tiny Soderball was trim and slender,
with lively little feet and pretty ankles—she wore her dresses
very short. She was quicker in speech, lighter in movement and manner
than the other girls. Mary Dusak was broad and brown of countenance,
slightly marked by smallpox, but handsome for all that. She had
beautiful chestnut hair, coils of it; her forehead was low and smooth,
and her commanding dark eyes regarded the world indifferently and
fearlessly. She looked bold and resourceful and unscrupulous, and she
was all of these. They were handsome girls, had the fresh color of
their country up-bringing, and in their eyes that brilliancy which is
called,—by no metaphor, alas!—“the light of
youth.”</p>
<p id="p0537">D’Arnault played until his manager came and
shut the piano. Before he left us, he showed us his gold watch which
struck the hours, and a topaz ring, given him by some Russian nobleman
who delighted in negro
melodies, and had heard d’Arnault play in New Orleans. At last
he tapped his way upstairs, after bowing to everybody, docile and
happy. I walked home with Ántonia. We were so excited that we
dreaded to go to bed. We lingered a long while at the Harlings’
gate, whispering in the cold until the restlessness was slowly chilled
out of us.</p>
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