FREE BOOKS

Author's List




PREV.   NEXT  
|<   108   109   110   111   112   113   114   115   116   117   118   119   >>  
tugged from its creek-washed roots and stretched parallel with the water--every tooth showing delight in his find. With the cries and laughter of children, two boys sprang upon the tree with axes, but Bob waved them back. "Go back an' git dat cross-cut saw!" he said. Bob, as ex-warrior, took precedence even of his elders now. "Fool niggers don't seem to know dar'll be mo' wood to burn if we don't waste de chips!" The wisdom of this was clear, and, in a few minutes, the long-toothed saw was singing through the tough bark of the old monarch--a darky at each end of it, the tip of his tongue in the corner of his mouth, the muscles of each powerful arm playing like cords of elastic steel under its black skin--the sawyers, each time with a mighty grunt, drew the shining, whistling blade to and fro to the handle. Presently they began to sing--improvising: Pull him t'roo! (grunt) Yes, man. Pull him t'roo--huh! Saw him to de heart. Gwine to have Christmas. Yes, man! Gwine to have Christmas. Yes, man! Gwine to have Christmas Long as he can bu'n. Burn long, log! Yes, log! Burn long, log! Yes, log, Heah me, log, burn long! Gib dis nigger Christmas. Yes, Lawd, long Christmas! Gib dis nigger Christmas. O log, burn long! And the saw sang with them in perfect time, spitting out the black, moist dust joyously--sang with them and without a breath for rest; for as two pair of arms tired, another fresh pair of sinewy hands grasped the handles. In an hour the whistle of the saw began to rise in key higher and higher, and as the men slowed up carefully, it gave a little high squeak of triumph, and with a "kerchunk" dropped to the ground. With more cries and laughter, two men rushed for fence-rails to be used as levers. There was a chorus now: Soak him in de water, Up, now! Soak him in de water, Up, now! O Lawd, soak long! There was a tightening of big, black biceps, a swelling of powerful thighs, a straightening of mighty backs; the severed heart creaked and groaned, rose slightly, turned and rolled with a great splash into the black, winter water. Another delighted chorus: "Dyar now!" "Hol' on," said Bob; and he drove a spike into the end of the log, tied one end of a rope to the spike, and the other to a pliant young hickory, talking meanwhile: "Gwine to
PREV.   NEXT  
|<   108   109   110   111   112   113   114   115   116   117   118   119   >>  



Top keywords:

Christmas

 

powerful

 

mighty

 
chorus
 

higher

 
nigger
 

laughter

 

grasped

 

handles

 

sinewy


whistle

 

perfect

 

spitting

 

hickory

 

talking

 
breath
 

joyously

 

pliant

 
severed
 

creaked


groaned

 

straightening

 

biceps

 

swelling

 

thighs

 

slightly

 

delighted

 
Another
 

winter

 

turned


rolled
 

splash

 
tightening
 

squeak

 

triumph

 

kerchunk

 
slowed
 

carefully

 

dropped

 

ground


levers

 

rushed

 

precedence

 

elders

 
warrior
 

niggers

 

stretched

 
parallel
 

washed

 

tugged