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CHAPTER XXVI UNCLE SOLON CHASE COMES
ALONG THERE was
what the farmers and
indeed the whole country deemed "hard times" that fall, and the
"hard times" grew harder. Again we young folks had been obliged to
put off attending school at the village Academy — much to the
disappointment of
Addison and Theodora. Money was
scarce, and all business ventures
seemed to turn out badly. Everything appeared to be going wrong, or at
least
people imagined so. Uncle Solon Chase from Chase's Mills — afterward
the
Greenback candidate for the Presidency — was driving about the country
with his
famous steers and rack-cart, haranguing the farmers and advocating
unlimited
greenback money. To add to
our other troubles at the
old Squire's that fall, our twelve Jersey cows began giving bitter
milk, so
bitter that the cream was affected and the butter rendered unusable.
Yet the
pasture was an excellent one, consisting of sweet uplands, fringed
round with
sugar-maples, oaks and beeches, where the cleared land extended up the
hillsides into the borders of the great woods. For some
time we were wholly at a
loss to know what caused all those cows to give bitter milk. A strange
freak also manifested
itself in our other herd that summer; first one of our Black Dutch
belted
heifers, and then several others took to gnawing the bark from young
trees in
their pasture and along the lanes to the barn. Before we noticed what
they were
doing, the bark from twenty or more young maples, elms and other trees
had been
gnawed and stripped off as high as the heifers could reach. It was not
from
lack of food; there was grass enough in the pasture, and provender and
hay at
the barn; but an abnormal appetite had beset them; they would even pull
off the
tough bark of cedars, in the swamp by the brook, and stand for hours,
trying to
masticate long, stringy strips of it. In
consequence, probably, of eating
so much indigestible bark, first one, then another, "lost her cud,"
that is, was unable to raise her food for rumination at night; and as
cattle
must ruminate, we soon had several sick animals to care for. In such
cases, if the animal can only
be started chewing an artificially prepared cud she will often, on
swallowing
it, "raise" again; and rumination, thus started, will proceed once
more, and the congestion be relieved. For a week
or more we were kept
busy, night and morning, furnishing the bark-eaters with cuds, prepared
from
the macerated inner bark of sweet elder, impregnated with rennet. These
had to
be put in the mouths of the cows by main strength, and held there till
from
force of habit the animal began chewing, swallowing and "raising"
again. What was
stranger, this unnatural
appetite for gnawing bark was not confined wholly to cows that fall;
the shoats
out in the orchard took to gnawing apple-trees, and spoiled several
valuable
Sweetings and Gravensteins before the damage was discovered. It was an
"off year." Every living thing seemed to require a tonic. The bitter
milk proved the most
difficult problem. No bitter weed or foul grass grew in the pasture.
The herd
had grazed there for years; nothing of the sort had been noticed
before. The
village apothecary, who styled
himself a chemist, was asked to give an opinion on a specimen of the
cream; but
he failed to throw much light on the subject. "There seems to be tannic
acid in this milk," he said. At about
that time uncle Solon Chase
came along one afternoon, and gave one of his harangues at our
schoolhouse. I
well remember the old fellow and his high-pitched voice. Addison, I
recall,
refused to go to hear him; but Willis Murch and I went. We were late
and had
difficulty in squeezing inside the room. Uncle Solon, as everybody
called him,
stood at the teacher's desk, and was talking in his quaint, homely way:
a lean
man in farmer's garb, with a kind of Abraham Lincoln face, honest but
humorous,
droll yet practical; a face afterwards well known from Maine to Iowa. "We
farmers are bearin' the
brunt of the hard times," Uncle Solon said. "'Tain't fair. Them rich
fellers in New York, and them rich railroad men that's running things
at
Washington have got us down. 'Tis time we got up and did something
about it.
'Tis time them chaps down there heard the tramp o' the farmers' cowhide
boots,
comin' to inquire into this. And they'll soon hear 'em. They'll soon
hear the
tramp o' them old cowhides from Maine to Texas. "Over in
our town we have got a
big stone mortar. It will hold a bushel of corn. When the first
settlers came
there and planted a crop, they hadn't any gristmill. So they got
together and
made that 'ere mortar out of a block of granite. They pecked that big,
deep
hole in it with a hammer and hand-drill. That hole is more'n two feet
deep, but
they pecked it out, and then made a big stone pestle nearly as heavy as
a man
could lift, to pound their corn. "They used
to haul that mortar
and pestle round from one log house to another, and pounded all their
corn-meal
in it. "Now d'ye
know what I would do
if I was President? I'd get out that old stone mortar and pestle, and
I'd put
all the hard money in this country in it, all the rich man's
hard money, and I'd pound
it all up fine. I'd make meal on't!" "And what
would you do with the
meal?" some one cried. Uncle
Solon banged his fist on the
desk. "I'd make greenbacks on't!" he shouted, and then there was
great applause. That
solution of the financial
problem sounded simple enough; and yet it was not quite so clear as it
might
be. Uncle
Solon went on to picture what
a bright day would dawn if only the national government would be
reasonable and
issue plenty of greenbacks; and when he had finished his speech, he
invited
every one who was in doubt, or had anything on his mind, to ask
questions. "Ask me
everything you want
to!" he cried. "Ask me about anything that's troublin' your mind, and
I'll answer if I can, and the best I can." There was
something about Uncle
Solon which naturally invited confidence, and for fully half an hour
the people
asked questions, to all of which he replied after his quaint, honest
fashion. "You might
ask him what makes
cows give bitter milk," Willis whispered to me, and laughed. "He's an
old farmer." "I should
like to," said
I, but I had no thoughts of doing so — when suddenly Willis spoke up: "Uncle
Solon, there is a young
fellow here who would like to ask you what makes his cows give bitter
milk this
fall, but he is bashful." "Haw!
haw!" laughed Uncle
Solon. "Wal, now, he needn't be bashful with me, for like's not I can
tell
him. Like's not 'tis the bitterness in the hearts o' people, that's got
into
the dumb critters." Uncle
Solon's eyes twinkled, and he
laughed, as did everybody else. "Or,
like's not," he went
on, "'tis something the critters has et. Shouldn't wonder ef 'twas.
What
kind of a parster are them cows runnin' in?" Somewhat
abashed, I explained, and
described the pasture at the old Squire's. "How long
ago did the milk
begin to be bitter?" "About
three weeks ago." "Any red
oak in that
parster?" asked Uncle Solon. "Yes," I
said. "Lots
of red oaks, all round the borders of the woods." "Wal, now,
'tis an acorn
year," said Uncle Solon, reflectively. "I dunno, but ye all know how
bitter a red-oak acorn is. I shouldn't wonder a mite ef your cows had
taken to
eatin' them oak acorns. Critters will, sometimes. Mine did, once. Fust
one will
take it up, then the rest will foller." An
approving chuckle at Uncle
Solon's sagacity ran round, and some one asked what could be done in
such a
case to stop the cows from eating the acorns. "Wal, I'll
tell ye what I
did," said Uncle Solon, his homely face puckering in a reminiscent
smile.
"I went out airly in the mornin', before I turned my cows to parster,
and picked
up the acorns under all the oak-trees. I sot down on a rock, took a
hammer and
cracked them green acorns, cracked 'em 'bout halfway open at the butt
end. With
my left-hand thumb and forefinger, I held the cracked acorn open by
squeezing
it, and with my right I dropped a pinch o' Cayenne pepper into each
acorn, then
let 'em close up again. "It took
me as much as an hour
to fix up all them acorns. Then I laid them in little piles round under
the
trees, and turned out my cows. They started for the oaks fust thing,
for they
had got a habit of going there as soon as they were turned to parster
in the
morning. I stood by the bars and watched to see what would happen." Here a
still broader smile
overspread Uncle Solon's face. "Within ten minutes I saw all them cows
going lickety-split for the brook on the lower side o' the parster,
and some of 'em were in
such a hurry that they had their tails right up straight in the air! "Ef you
will believe it,"
Uncle Solon concluded, "not one of them cows teched an oak acorn
afterward." Another
laugh went round; but an
interruption occurred. A good lady from the city, who was spending the
summer
at a farmhouse near by, rose in indignation and made herself heard. "I think
that was a very cruel
thing to do!" she cried. "I think it was shameful to treat your
animals so!" "Wal, now,
ma'am, I'm glad you
spoke as you did. I'm glad to know that you've got a kind heart," said
Uncle Solon. "Kind-heartedness to man and beast is one of the best
things
in life. It's what holds this world together. Anybody that uses Cayenne
pepper
to torture an animal, or play tricks on it, is no friend of mine, I can
tell
ye. "But you
see, ma'am, it is this
way. Country folks who keep dumb animals of all kinds know a good many
things
about them that city folks don't. Like human beings, dumb animals
sometimes go
all wrong, and have to be corrected. Of course, we can't reason with
them. So
we have to do the next best thing, and correct them as we can. "I had a
little dog once that I
was tremendous fond of," Uncle Solon continued. "His name was Spot.
He was a bird-dog, and so bright it seemed as if he could almost talk.
But he
took to suckin' eggs, and began to steal eggs at my neighbors' barns
and
henhouses. He would fetch home eggs without crackin' the shells, and
hold 'em
in his mouth so cunning you wouldn't know he had anything there. He
used to
bury them eggs in the garden and all about. "Of course
that made trouble
with the neighbors. It looked as if I'd have to kill Spot, and I hated
to do it,
for I loved that little dog. But I happened to think of Cayenne. So I
took and
blowed an egg — made a hole at each end and blowed out the white and
the yelk.
I mixed the white with Cayenne pepper and put it back through the hole.
Then I
stuck little pieces of white paper over both holes, and laid the egg
where I
knew Spot would find it. "He found
it, and about three
minutes after that I saw him going to the brook in a hurry. He had
quite a time
on't, sloshin' water, coolin' off his mouth — and I never knew him to
touch an
egg afterward. "But I
see, ma'am, that you
have got quite a robustious prejudice against Cayenne. It isn't such
bad stuff,
after all. It's fiery, but it never does any permanent harm. It's a
good
medicine, too, for a lot of things that ail us. Why, Cayenne pepper
saved my
life once. I really think so. It was when I was a boy, and boy-like, I
had et a
lot of green artichokes. A terrible pain took hold of me. I couldn't
breathe. I
thought I was surely going to die; but my mother gave me a dose of
Cayenne and
molasses, and in ten minutes I was feeling better. "And even
now, old as I am,
when I get cold and feel pretty bad, I go and take a good stiff dose of
Cayenne
and molasses, and get to bed. In fifteen minutes I will be in a
perspiration;
pretty soon I'll go to sleep; and next morning I'll feel quite smart
again. "Just you
try that, ma'am, the
next time you get a cold. You will find it will do good. It is better
than so
much of that quinin that they are givin' us nowadays. That quinin
raises Cain.
with folks' ears. It permanently injures the hearin'. "When I
advise any one to use
Cayenne, either to cure a dog that sucks eggs or cows that eat acorns,
I advise
it as a medicine, just as I would ef the animal was sick. And you
mustn't
think, ma'am, that we farmers are so hard-hearted and cruel as all
that, for
our hearts are just as tender and compassionate to animals as if we
lived in a
great city." Uncle
Solon may not have been a safe
guide for the nation's finances, but he possessed a valuable knowledge
of farm
life and farm affairs. I went
home; and the next morning we
tried the quaint old Greenbacker's "cure" for bitter milk; it
"worked" as he said it would. We also
made a sticky wash, of which
Cayenne was the chief ingredient, for the trunks of the young trees
along the
lanes and in the orchard, and after getting a taste of it, neither the
Black
Dutch belted heifers nor the hogs did any further damage. A young
neighbor of
ours has also cured her pet cat of slyly pilfering eggs at the stable,
in much
the way Uncle Solon cured his dog. |