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<h2> Chapter 10 </h2>
<p>Uncle Eb was a born lover of fun. But he had a solemn way of fishing that
was no credit to a cheerful man. It was the same when he played the bass
viol, but that was also a kind of fishing at which he tried his luck in a
roaring torrent of sound. Both forms of dissipation gave him a serious
look and manner, that came near severity. They brought on his face only
the light of hope and anticipation or the shadow of disappointment.</p>
<p>We had finished our stent early the day of which lam writing. When we had
dug our worms and were on our way to the brook with pole and line a squint
of elation had hold of Uncle Eb's face. Long wrinkles deepened as he
looked into the sky for a sign of the weather, and then relaxed a bit as
he turned his eyes upon the smooth sward. It was no time for idle talk. We
tiptoed over the leafy carpet of the woods. Soon as I spoke he lifted his
hand with a warning 'Sh—h!' The murmur of the stream was in our
ears. Kneeling on a mossy knoll we baited the hooks; then Uncle Eb
beckoned to me.</p>
<p>I came to him on tiptoe.</p>
<p>'See thet there foam 'long side o' the big log?' he whispered, pointing
with his finger.</p>
<p>I nodded.</p>
<p>'Cre-e-ep up jest as ca-a-areful as ye can,' he went on whispering. 'Drop
in a leetle above an' let 'er float down.'</p>
<p>Then he went on, below me, lifting his feet in slow and stealthy strides.</p>
<p>He halted by a bit of driftwood and cautiously threw in, his arm extended,
his figure alert. The squint on his face took a firmer grip. Suddenly his
pole gave a leap, the water splashed, his line sang in the air and a fish
went up like a rocket. As we were looking into the treetops it thumped the
shore beside him, quivered a moment and flopped down the bank He scrambled
after it and went to his knees in the brook coming up empty-handed. The
water was slopping out of his boot legs.</p>
<p>'Whew!' said he, panting with excitement, as I came over to him. 'Reg'lar
ol' he one,' he added, looking down at his boots. 'Got away from me—consarn
him! Hed a leetle too much power in the arm.'</p>
<p>He emptied his boots, baited up and went back to his fishing. As I looked
up at him he stood leaning over the stream jiggling his hook. In a moment
I saw a tug at the line. The end of his pole went under water like a
flash. It bent double as Uncle Eb gave it a lift. The fish began to dive
and rush. The line cut the water in a broad semicircle and then went far
and near with long, quick slashes. The pole nodded and writhed like a
thing of life. Then Uncle Eb had a look on him that is one of the
treasures of my memory. In a moment the fish went away with such a violent
rush, to save him, he had to throw his pole into the water.</p>
<p>'Heavens an' airth!' he shouted, 'the ol' settler!'</p>
<p>The pole turned quickly and went lengthwise into the rapids. He ran down
the bank and I after him. The pole was speeding through the swift water.
We scrambled over logs and through bushes, but the pole went faster than
we. Presently it stopped and swung around. Uncle Eb went splashing into
the brook. Almost within reach of the pole he dashed his foot upon a
stone, falling headlong in the current. I was close upon his heels and
gave him a hand. He rose hatless, dripping from head to foot and pressed
on. He lifted his pole. The line clung to a snag and then gave way; the
tackle was missing. He looked at it silently, tilting his head. We walked
slowly to the shore. Neither spoke for a moment.</p>
<p>'Must have been a big fish,' I remarked.</p>
<p>'Powerful!' said he, chewing vigorously on his quid of tobacco as he shook
his head and looked down at his wet clothing. 'In a desp'rit fix, ain't
I?'</p>
<p>'Too bad!' I exclaimed.</p>
<p>'Seldom ever hed sech a disapp'intment,' he said. 'Ruther counted on
ketchin' thet fish—he was s' well hooked.'</p>
<p>He looked longingly at the water a moment 'If I don't go hum,' said he,
'an' keep my mouth shet I'll say sumthin' I'll be sorry fer.'</p>
<p>He was never quite the same after that. He told often of his struggle with
this unseen, mysterious fish and I imagined he was a bit more given to
reflection. He had had hold of the 'ol' settler of Deep Hole'—a fish
of great influence and renown there in Faraway. Most of the local
fishermen had felt him tug at the line one time or another. No man had
ever seen him for the water was black in Deep Hole. No fish had ever
exerted a greater influence on the thought' the imagination, the manners
or the moral character of his contemporaries. Tip Taylor always took off
his hat and sighed when he spoke of the 'ol' settler'. Ransom Walker said
he had once seen his top fin and thought it longer than a razor. Ransom
took to idleness and chewing tobacco immediately after his encounter with
the big fish, and both vices stuck to him as long as he lived. Everyone
had his theory of the 'ol' settler'. Most agreed he was a very heavy
trout. Tip Taylor used to say that in his opinion ''twas nuthin' more'n a
plain, overgrown, common sucker,' but Tip came from the Sucker Brook
country where suckers lived in colder water and were more entitled to
respect.</p>
<p>Mose Tupper had never had his hook in the 'ol' settler' and would believe
none of the many stories of adventure at Deep Hole that had thrilled the
township.</p>
<p>'Thet fish hes made s' many liars 'round here ye dimno who t' b'lieve,' he
had said at the corners one day, after Uncle Eb had told his story of the
big fish. 'Somebody 't knows how t' fish hed oughter go 'n ketch him fer
the good o' the town—thet's what I think.'</p>
<p>Now Mr Tupper was an excellent man but his incredulity was always too
bluntly put. It had even led to some ill feeling.</p>
<p>He came in at our place one evening with a big hook and line from 'down
east'—the kind of tackle used in salt water.</p>
<p>'What ye goin' t' dew with it?' Uncle Eb enquired.</p>
<p>'Ketch thet fish ye talk 5' much about—goin' t' put him out o' the
way.'</p>
<p>''Tain't fair,' said Uncle Eb, 'its reedic'lous. Like leading a pup with a
log chain.'</p>
<p>'Don't care,' said Mose, 'I'm goin' t' go fishin t'morrer. If there reely
is any sech fish—which I don't believe there is—I'm goin' t'
rassle with him an' mebbe tek him out o' the river. Thet fish is sp'llin'
the moral character o' this town. He oughter be rode on a rail—thet
fish hed.'</p>
<p>How he would punish a trout in that manner Mr Tupper failed to explain,
but his metaphor was always a worse fit than his trousers and that was bad
enough.</p>
<p>It was just before haying and, there being little to do, we had also
planned to try our luck in the morning. When, at sunrise, we were walking
down the cow-path to the woods I saw Uncle Eb had a coil of bed cord on
his shoulder.</p>
<p>'What's that for?' I asked.</p>
<p>'Wall,' said he, 'goin' t' hev fun anyway. If we can't ketch one thing
we'll try another.'</p>
<p>We had great luck that morning and when our basket was near full we came
to Deep Hole and made ready for a swim in the water above it. Uncle Eb had
looped an end of the bed cord and tied a few pebbles on it with bits of
string.</p>
<p>'Now,' said he presently, 'I want t' sink this loop t' the bottom an' pass
the end o' the cord under the driftwood so 't we can fetch it 'crost under
water.'</p>
<p>There was a big stump, just opposite, with roots running down the bank
into the stream. I shoved the line under the drift with a pole and then
hauled it across where Uncle Eb drew it up the bank under the stump roots.</p>
<p>'In 'bout half an hour I cal'late Mose Tupper'll be 'long,' he whispered.
'Wisht ye'd put on yer clo's an' lay here back o' the stump an' hold on t'
the cord. When ye feel a bite give a yank er two an' haul in like Sam Hill—fifteen
feet er more quicker'n scat. Snatch his pole right away from him. Then lay
still.'</p>
<p>Uncle Eb left me, shortly, going up stream. It was near an hour before I
heard them coming. Uncle Eb was talking in a low tone as they came down
the other bank.</p>
<p>'Drop right in there,' he was saying, 'an' let her drag down, through the
deep water, deliberate like. Git clus t' the bottom.'</p>
<p>Peering through a screen of bushes I could see an eager look on the
unlovely face of Moses. He stood leaning toward the water and jiggling his
hook along the bottom. Suddenly I saw Mose jerk and felt the cord move. I
gave it a double twitch and began to pull. He held hard for a jiffy and
then stumbled and let go yelling like mad. The pole hit the water with a
splash and went out of sight like a diving frog. I brought it well under
the foam and driftwood. Deep Hole resumed its calm, unruffled aspect. Mose
went running toward Uncle Eb.</p>
<p>''S a whale!' he shouted. 'Ripped the pole away quicker'n lightnin'.'</p>
<p>'Where is it?' Uncle Eb asked.</p>
<p>'Tuk it away f'm me,' said Moses. 'Grabbed it jes' like thet,' he added
with a violent jerk of his hand.</p>
<p>'What d' he dew with it?' Uncle Eb enquired.</p>
<p>Mose looked thoughtfully at the water and scratched his head, his features
all a tremble.</p>
<p>'Dunno,' said he. 'Swallered it mebbe.'</p>
<p>'Mean t' say ye lost hook, line, sinker 'n pole?'</p>
<p>'Hook, line, sinker 'n pole,' he answered mournfully. 'Come nigh haulin'
me in tew.'</p>
<p>''Tain't possible,' said Uncle Eb.</p>
<p>Mose expectorated, his hands upon his hips, looking down at the water.</p>
<p>'Wouldn't eggzac'ly say 'twas possible,' he drawled, 'but 'twas a fact.'</p>
<p>'Yer mistaken,' said Uncle Eb.</p>
<p>'No I hain't,' was the answer, 'I tell ye I see it.'</p>
<p>'Then if ye see it the nex' thing ye orter see 's a doctor. There's
sumthin' wrong with you sumwheres.'</p>
<p>'Only one thing the matter o' me,' said Mose with a little twinge of
remorse. 'I'm jest a natural born perfec' dum fool. Never c'u'd b'lieve
there was any sech fish.'</p>
<p>'Nobody ever said there was any sech fish,' said Uncle Eb. 'He's done more
t' you 'n he ever done t' me. Never served me no sech trick as thet. If I
was you I'd never ask nobody t' b'lieve it 'S a leetle tew much.'</p>
<p>Mose went slowly and picked up his hat. Then he returned to the bank and
looked regretfully at the water.</p>
<p>'Never see the beat o' thet,' he went on. 'Never see sech power 'n a fish.
Knocks the spots off any fish I ever hearn of.'</p>
<p>'Ye riled him with that big tackle o' yourn,' said Uncle Eb. 'He wouldn't
stan' it.'</p>
<p>'Feel jest as if I'd hed holt uv a wil' cat,' said Mose. 'Tuk the hull
thing—pole an' all—quicker 'n lightnin'. Nice a bit o' hickory
as a man ever see. Gol' durned if I ever heem o' the like o' that, ever.'</p>
<p>He sat down a moment on the bank.</p>
<p>'Got t' rest a minute,' he remarked. 'Feel kind o' wopsy after thet
squabble.'</p>
<p>They soon went away. And when Mose told the story of 'the swallered pole'
he got the same sort of reputation he had given to others. Only it was
real and large and lasting.</p>
<p>'Wha' d' ye think uv it?' he asked, when he had finished.</p>
<p>'Wall,' said Ransom Walker, 'wouldn't want t' say right out plain t' yer
face.'</p>
<p>''Twouldn't he p'lite,' said Uncle Eb soberly.</p>
<p>'Sound a leetle ha'sh,' Tip Taylor added.</p>
<p>'Thet fish has jerked the fear o' God out o' ye—thet's the way it
looks t' me,' said Carlyle Barber.</p>
<p>'Yer up 'n the air, Mose,' said another. 'Need a sinker on ye.' They
bullied him—they talked him down, demurring mildly, but firmly.</p>
<p>'Tell ye what I'll do,' said Mose sheepishly, 'I'll b'lieve you fellers if
you'll b'lieve me.'</p>
<p>'What, swop even? Not much!' said one, with emphasis. ''Twouldn't be fair.
Ye've ast us t' b'lieve a genuwine out 'n out impossibility.'</p>
<p>Mose lifted his hat and scratched his head thoughtfully. There was a look
of embarrassment in his face.</p>
<p>'Might a ben dreamin',' said he slowly. 'I swear it's gittin' so here 'n
this town a feller can't hardly b'lieve himself.'</p>
<p>'Fur '5 my experience goes,' said Ransom Walker, 'he'd be a fool 'f he
did.'</p>
<p>''Minds me o' the time I went fishin' with Ab Thomas,' said Uncle Eb. 'He
ketched an ol' socker the fast thing. I went off by myself 'n got a good
sized fish, but 'twant s' big 's hisn. So I tuk 'n opened his mouth n
poured in a lot o' fine shot. When I come back Ab he looked at my fish 'n
begun t' brag. When we weighed 'em mine was a leetle heavier.</p>
<p>'"What!" says he. "'Tain't possible thet leetle cuss uv a trout 's heavier
'n mine."</p>
<p>''Tis sarrin,' I said.</p>
<p>'"Dummed deceivin' business," said he as he hefted 'em both. "Gittin' so
ye can't hardly b'lieve the stillyards."'</p>
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