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<h2> IV </h2>
<p>For the first three years after John Bergson's death, the affairs of his
family prospered. Then came the hard times that brought every one on the
Divide to the brink of despair; three years of drouth and failure, the
last struggle of a wild soil against the encroaching plowshare. The first
of these fruitless summers the Bergson boys bore courageously. The failure
of the corn crop made labor cheap. Lou and Oscar hired two men and put in
bigger crops than ever before. They lost everything they spent. The whole
country was discouraged. Farmers who were already in debt had to give up
their land. A few foreclosures demoralized the county. The settlers sat
about on the wooden sidewalks in the little town and told each other that
the country was never meant for men to live in; the thing to do was to get
back to Iowa, to Illinois, to any place that had been proved habitable.
The Bergson boys, certainly, would have been happier with their uncle
Otto, in the bakery shop in Chicago. Like most of their neighbors, they
were meant to follow in paths already marked out for them, not to break
trails in a new country. A steady job, a few holidays, nothing to think
about, and they would have been very happy. It was no fault of theirs that
they had been dragged into the wilderness when they were little boys. A
pioneer should have imagination, should be able to enjoy the idea of
things more than the things themselves.</p>
<p>The second of these barren summers was passing. One September afternoon
Alexandra had gone over to the garden across the draw to dig sweet
potatoes—they had been thriving upon the weather that was fatal to
everything else. But when Carl Linstrum came up the garden rows to find
her, she was not working. She was standing lost in thought, leaning upon
her pitchfork, her sunbonnet lying beside her on the ground. The dry
garden patch smelled of drying vines and was strewn with yellow
seed-cucumbers and pumpkins and citrons. At one end, next the rhubarb,
grew feathery asparagus, with red berries. Down the middle of the garden
was a row of gooseberry and currant bushes. A few tough zenias and
marigolds and a row of scarlet sage bore witness to the buckets of water
that Mrs. Bergson had carried there after sundown, against the prohibition
of her sons. Carl came quietly and slowly up the garden path, looking
intently at Alexandra. She did not hear him. She was standing perfectly
still, with that serious ease so characteristic of her. Her thick, reddish
braids, twisted about her head, fairly burned in the sunlight. The air was
cool enough to make the warm sun pleasant on one's back and shoulders, and
so clear that the eye could follow a hawk up and up, into the blazing blue
depths of the sky. Even Carl, never a very cheerful boy, and considerably
darkened by these last two bitter years, loved the country on days like
this, felt something strong and young and wild come out of it, that
laughed at care.</p>
<p>"Alexandra," he said as he approached her, "I want to talk to you. Let's
sit down by the gooseberry bushes." He picked up her sack of potatoes and
they crossed the garden. "Boys gone to town?" he asked as he sank down on
the warm, sun-baked earth. "Well, we have made up our minds at last,
Alexandra. We are really going away."</p>
<p>She looked at him as if she were a little frightened. "Really, Carl? Is it
settled?"</p>
<p>"Yes, father has heard from St. Louis, and they will give him back his old
job in the cigar factory. He must be there by the first of November. They
are taking on new men then. We will sell the place for whatever we can
get, and auction the stock. We haven't enough to ship. I am going to learn
engraving with a German engraver there, and then try to get work in
Chicago."</p>
<p>Alexandra's hands dropped in her lap. Her eyes became dreamy and filled
with tears.</p>
<p>Carl's sensitive lower lip trembled. He scratched in the soft earth beside
him with a stick. "That's all I hate about it, Alexandra," he said slowly.
"You've stood by us through so much and helped father out so many times,
and now it seems as if we were running off and leaving you to face the
worst of it. But it isn't as if we could really ever be of any help to
you. We are only one more drag, one more thing you look out for and feel
responsible for. Father was never meant for a farmer, you know that. And I
hate it. We'd only get in deeper and deeper."</p>
<p>"Yes, yes, Carl, I know. You are wasting your life here. You are able to
do much better things. You are nearly nineteen now, and I wouldn't have
you stay. I've always hoped you would get away. But I can't help feeling
scared when I think how I will miss you—more than you will ever
know." She brushed the tears from her cheeks, not trying to hide them.</p>
<p>"But, Alexandra," he said sadly and wistfully, "I've never been any real
help to you, beyond sometimes trying to keep the boys in a good humor."</p>
<p>Alexandra smiled and shook her head. "Oh, it's not that. Nothing like
that. It's by understanding me, and the boys, and mother, that you've
helped me. I expect that is the only way one person ever really can help
another. I think you are about the only one that ever helped me. Somehow
it will take more courage to bear your going than everything that has
happened before."</p>
<p>Carl looked at the ground. "You see, we've all depended so on you," he
said, "even father. He makes me laugh. When anything comes up he always
says, 'I wonder what the Bergsons are going to do about that? I guess I'll
go and ask her.' I'll never forget that time, when we first came here, and
our horse had the colic, and I ran over to your place—your father
was away, and you came home with me and showed father how to let the wind
out of the horse. You were only a little girl then, but you knew ever so
much more about farm work than poor father. You remember how homesick I
used to get, and what long talks we used to have coming from school? We've
someway always felt alike about things."</p>
<p>"Yes, that's it; we've liked the same things and we've liked them
together, without anybody else knowing. And we've had good times, hunting
for Christmas trees and going for ducks and making our plum wine together
every year. We've never either of us had any other close friend. And now—"
Alexandra wiped her eyes with the corner of her apron, "and now I must
remember that you are going where you will have many friends, and will
find the work you were meant to do. But you'll write to me, Carl? That
will mean a great deal to me here."</p>
<p>"I'll write as long as I live," cried the boy impetuously. "And I'll be
working for you as much as for myself, Alexandra. I want to do something
you'll like and be proud of. I'm a fool here, but I know I can do
something!" He sat up and frowned at the red grass.</p>
<p>Alexandra sighed. "How discouraged the boys will be when they hear. They
always come home from town discouraged, anyway. So many people are trying
to leave the country, and they talk to our boys and make them
low-spirited. I'm afraid they are beginning to feel hard toward me because
I won't listen to any talk about going. Sometimes I feel like I'm getting
tired of standing up for this country."</p>
<p>"I won't tell the boys yet, if you'd rather not."</p>
<p>"Oh, I'll tell them myself, to-night, when they come home. They'll be
talking wild, anyway, and no good comes of keeping bad news. It's all
harder on them than it is on me. Lou wants to get married, poor boy, and
he can't until times are better. See, there goes the sun, Carl. I must be
getting back. Mother will want her potatoes. It's chilly already, the
moment the light goes."</p>
<p>Alexandra rose and looked about. A golden afterglow throbbed in the west,
but the country already looked empty and mournful. A dark moving mass came
over the western hill, the Lee boy was bringing in the herd from the other
half-section. Emil ran from the windmill to open the corral gate. From the
log house, on the little rise across the draw, the smoke was curling. The
cattle lowed and bellowed. In the sky the pale half-moon was slowly
silvering. Alexandra and Carl walked together down the potato rows. "I
have to keep telling myself what is going to happen," she said softly.
"Since you have been here, ten years now, I have never really been lonely.
But I can remember what it was like before. Now I shall have nobody but
Emil. But he is my boy, and he is tender-hearted."</p>
<p>That night, when the boys were called to supper, they sat down moodily.
They had worn their coats to town, but they ate in their striped shirts
and suspenders. They were grown men now, and, as Alexandra said, for the
last few years they had been growing more and more like themselves. Lou
was still the slighter of the two, the quicker and more intelligent, but
apt to go off at half-cock. He had a lively blue eye, a thin, fair skin
(always burned red to the neckband of his shirt in summer), stiff, yellow
hair that would not lie down on his head, and a bristly little yellow
mustache, of which he was very proud. Oscar could not grow a mustache; his
pale face was as bare as an egg, and his white eyebrows gave it an empty
look. He was a man of powerful body and unusual endurance; the sort of man
you could attach to a corn-sheller as you would an engine. He would turn
it all day, without hurrying, without slowing down. But he was as indolent
of mind as he was unsparing of his body. His love of routine amounted to a
vice. He worked like an insect, always doing the same thing over in the
same way, regardless of whether it was best or no. He felt that there was
a sovereign virtue in mere bodily toil, and he rather liked to do things
in the hardest way. If a field had once been in corn, he couldn't bear to
put it into wheat. He liked to begin his corn-planting at the same time
every year, whether the season were backward or forward. He seemed to feel
that by his own irreproachable regularity he would clear himself of blame
and reprove the weather. When the wheat crop failed, he threshed the straw
at a dead loss to demonstrate how little grain there was, and thus prove
his case against Providence.</p>
<p>Lou, on the other hand, was fussy and flighty; always planned to get
through two days' work in one, and often got only the least important
things done. He liked to keep the place up, but he never got round to
doing odd jobs until he had to neglect more pressing work to attend to
them. In the middle of the wheat harvest, when the grain was over-ripe and
every hand was needed, he would stop to mend fences or to patch the
harness; then dash down to the field and overwork and be laid up in bed
for a week. The two boys balanced each other, and they pulled well
together. They had been good friends since they were children. One seldom
went anywhere, even to town, without the other.</p>
<p>To-night, after they sat down to supper, Oscar kept looking at Lou as if
he expected him to say something, and Lou blinked his eyes and frowned at
his plate. It was Alexandra herself who at last opened the discussion.</p>
<p>"The Linstrums," she said calmly, as she put another plate of hot biscuit
on the table, "are going back to St. Louis. The old man is going to work
in the cigar factory again."</p>
<p>At this Lou plunged in. "You see, Alexandra, everybody who can crawl out
is going away. There's no use of us trying to stick it out, just to be
stubborn. There's something in knowing when to quit."</p>
<p>"Where do you want to go, Lou?"</p>
<p>"Any place where things will grow," said Oscar grimly.</p>
<p>Lou reached for a potato. "Chris Arnson has traded his half-section for a
place down on the river."</p>
<p>"Who did he trade with?"</p>
<p>"Charley Fuller, in town."</p>
<p>"Fuller the real estate man? You see, Lou, that Fuller has a head on him.
He's buying and trading for every bit of land he can get up here. It'll
make him a rich man, some day."</p>
<p>"He's rich now, that's why he can take a chance."</p>
<p>"Why can't we? We'll live longer than he will. Some day the land itself
will be worth more than all we can ever raise on it."</p>
<p>Lou laughed. "It could be worth that, and still not be worth much. Why,
Alexandra, you don't know what you're talking about. Our place wouldn't
bring now what it would six years ago. The fellows that settled up here
just made a mistake. Now they're beginning to see this high land wasn't
never meant to grow nothing on, and everybody who ain't fixed to graze
cattle is trying to crawl out. It's too high to farm up here. All the
Americans are skinning out. That man Percy Adams, north of town, told me
that he was going to let Fuller take his land and stuff for four hundred
dollars and a ticket to Chicago."</p>
<p>"There's Fuller again!" Alexandra exclaimed. "I wish that man would take
me for a partner. He's feathering his nest! If only poor people could
learn a little from rich people! But all these fellows who are running off
are bad farmers, like poor Mr. Linstrum. They couldn't get ahead even in
good years, and they all got into debt while father was getting out. I
think we ought to hold on as long as we can on father's account. He was so
set on keeping this land. He must have seen harder times than this, here.
How was it in the early days, mother?"</p>
<p>Mrs. Bergson was weeping quietly. These family discussions always
depressed her, and made her remember all that she had been torn away from.
"I don't see why the boys are always taking on about going away," she
said, wiping her eyes. "I don't want to move again; out to some raw place,
maybe, where we'd be worse off than we are here, and all to do over again.
I won't move! If the rest of you go, I will ask some of the neighbors to
take me in, and stay and be buried by father. I'm not going to leave him
by himself on the prairie, for cattle to run over." She began to cry more
bitterly.</p>
<p>The boys looked angry. Alexandra put a soothing hand on her mother's
shoulder. "There's no question of that, mother. You don't have to go if
you don't want to. A third of the place belongs to you by American law,
and we can't sell without your consent. We only want you to advise us. How
did it use to be when you and father first came? Was it really as bad as
this, or not?"</p>
<p>"Oh, worse! Much worse," moaned Mrs. Bergson. "Drouth, chince-bugs, hail,
everything! My garden all cut to pieces like sauerkraut. No grapes on the
creek, no nothing. The people all lived just like coyotes."</p>
<p>Oscar got up and tramped out of the kitchen. Lou followed him. They felt
that Alexandra had taken an unfair advantage in turning their mother loose
on them. The next morning they were silent and reserved. They did not
offer to take the women to church, but went down to the barn immediately
after breakfast and stayed there all day. When Carl Linstrum came over in
the afternoon, Alexandra winked to him and pointed toward the barn. He
understood her and went down to play cards with the boys. They believed
that a very wicked thing to do on Sunday, and it relieved their feelings.</p>
<p>Alexandra stayed in the house. On Sunday afternoon Mrs. Bergson always
took a nap, and Alexandra read. During the week she read only the
newspaper, but on Sunday, and in the long evenings of winter, she read a
good deal; read a few things over a great many times. She knew long
portions of the "Frithjof Saga" by heart, and, like most Swedes who read
at all, she was fond of Longfellow's verse,—the ballads and the
"Golden Legend" and "The Spanish Student." To-day she sat in the wooden
rocking-chair with the Swedish Bible open on her knees, but she was not
reading. She was looking thoughtfully away at the point where the upland
road disappeared over the rim of the prairie. Her body was in an attitude
of perfect repose, such as it was apt to take when she was thinking
earnestly. Her mind was slow, truthful, steadfast. She had not the least
spark of cleverness.</p>
<p>All afternoon the sitting-room was full of quiet and sunlight. Emil was
making rabbit traps in the kitchen shed. The hens were clucking and
scratching brown holes in the flower beds, and the wind was teasing the
prince's feather by the door.</p>
<p>That evening Carl came in with the boys to supper.</p>
<p>"Emil," said Alexandra, when they were all seated at the table, "how would
you like to go traveling? Because I am going to take a trip, and you can
go with me if you want to."</p>
<p>The boys looked up in amazement; they were always afraid of Alexandra's
schemes. Carl was interested.</p>
<p>"I've been thinking, boys," she went on, "that maybe I am too set against
making a change. I'm going to take Brigham and the buckboard to-morrow and
drive down to the river country and spend a few days looking over what
they've got down there. If I find anything good, you boys can go down and
make a trade."</p>
<p>"Nobody down there will trade for anything up here," said Oscar gloomily.</p>
<p>"That's just what I want to find out. Maybe they are just as discontented
down there as we are up here. Things away from home often look better than
they are. You know what your Hans Andersen book says, Carl, about the
Swedes liking to buy Danish bread and the Danes liking to buy Swedish
bread, because people always think the bread of another country is better
than their own. Anyway, I've heard so much about the river farms, I won't
be satisfied till I've seen for myself."</p>
<p>Lou fidgeted. "Look out! Don't agree to anything. Don't let them fool
you."</p>
<p>Lou was apt to be fooled himself. He had not yet learned to keep away from
the shell-game wagons that followed the circus.</p>
<p>After supper Lou put on a necktie and went across the fields to court
Annie Lee, and Carl and Oscar sat down to a game of checkers, while
Alexandra read "The Swiss Family Robinson" aloud to her mother and Emil.
It was not long before the two boys at the table neglected their game to
listen. They were all big children together, and they found the adventures
of the family in the tree house so absorbing that they gave them their
undivided attention.</p>
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