The Cobbler In The Devils Kitchen | Page 6

Mary Hartwell Catherwood
lip doesn't desave me, John McGillis," responded
his cousin the cobbler, with grimness.
"But whin will ye give me the word you've got, Owen?"
"I'll not give it to ye till the boats go out."
"Will ye tell me, is the colleen alive, thin?"

"I've tould ye ye're not a widdy."
"If the colleen is alive, the towken would be sint to me."
"Thin ye've got it," said Owen.
Poor John smoked, biting hard on his pipe-stem. Ignorance, and the
helplessness of a limited man who is more a good animal than a
discerning soul; time, the slow transmission of news, his fixed state as a
voyageur--all these things were against him. He could not adjust
himself to any facts, and his feelings sometimes approached the
melting state. It was no use to war with Owen Cunning, whom he was
ashamed of handling roughly. The cobbler sat with swollen and
bandaged face, talking out of a slit, still bullying him.
But the time came for his brigade to go out, and then there was action,
decision, positive life once more. It went far northward, and was first to
depart, in order to reach winter-quarters before snow should fly.
At the log dock the boats waited, twelve of them in this outfit, each one
a mighty Argo, rowed by a dozen pairs of oars, and with centre-piece
for stepping a mast. Hundreds of pounds they could carry, and a crew
of fifteen men. The tarpaulin used for a night covering and to shelter
the trading-goods from storms was large as the roof of a house.
Quiescent on lapping water they rested, their loads and each man's
baggage of twenty or fewer pounds packed tightly to place.
The cobbler from the Devil's Kitchen was in the crowd thronging dock
and shore. The villagers were there, saying farewells, and all the
voyageurs who were soon to go out in other brigades snuffed as
war-horses ready for the charge. The life of the woods, which was their
true life, again drew them. They could scarcely wait. Dancing and
love-making suddenly cloyed; for a man was made to conquer the
wilderness and take the spoils of the earth. "Woodsman's habits
returned upon them. The frippery of the island was dropped like the
withes which bound Samson. Their companions the Indians were also
making ready the canoes. Blackbird stood erect behind the elbow of

John McGillis as he took leave of his cousin the cobbler.
"Do ye moind, Owen," exclaimed John, turning from the interests of
active life to that which had disturbed his spirit, convinced unalterably
of his own widowed state, yet harrowed unspeakably, "ye promised to
show me that word from the old counthry before the boats wint out."
"I niver promised to show ye any word from the old counthry,"
responded Owen, having his mouth free of bandages and both eyes for
the boats.
"Te tould me ye had a towken from the old counthry."
"I niver tould ye I had a towken from the old counthry."
"Ye did tell me ye had a towken."
"I have."
"Ye said it proved I was not a widdy."
"I did."
"Show me that same, thin."
"I will."
Owen looked steadily past John's shoulder at Blackbird, and laid in
John's hand a small gold coin with a hole in it, on one side of which
was rudely scratched the outline of a bird.
John McGillis's face burned red, and many expressions besides laughter
crossed it. Like a child detected in fault, he looked sheepishly at Owen
and glanced behind his shoulder. The faithful sunset-tinted face of
Blackbird, immovable as a fixed star, regarded the battered cobbler as it
might have regarded a great manitou when the island was young.
"How did you come by this, Owen?"

"I come by it from one that had throuble. Has yerself iver seen it before,
John McGillis?"
"I have."
"Is it a towken that ye're not a widdy?"
"It is."
The boats went out, and Blackbird sat in her Irish husband's boat, on
his baggage. Oars flashed, and the commandant's boat led the way.
Then the life of the Northwest rose like a great wave--the voyageurs'
song chanted by a hundred and fifty throats, with a chorus of thousands
on the shore:
[Illustration: Cobbler in the Devil's Kitchen 076]
Dans les chan - tiers nous hi - ver - ne - rons!
Dans lea chan - tiers nous hi - ver - ne - rons!
When Owen returned to his Kitchen he found a robe of the finest
beaver folded and laid on his shoemaker's bench.
"Begorra!" observed the cobbler, shaking it out and rubbing it against
his cheek, "she has paid me a beaver-shkin and the spalpeen wasn't
worrth it. But she can kape him now till she has a moind to
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