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CHAPTER II.
Youthful Adventures.
David at Gerardstown.--Trip to Baltimore.--Anecdotes.--He ships for
London.--Disappointment.--Defrauded of his Wages.--Escapes.--New
Adventures.--Crossing the River.--Returns Home.--His Reception.--A Farm
Laborer.--Generosity to his Father.--Love Adventure.--The Wreck of his
Hopes.--His School Education.--Second Love Adventure.--Bitter
Disappointment.--Life in the Backwoods.--Third Love Adventure.
The wagoner whom David had accompanied to Gerardstown was disappointed in his
endeavors to find a load to take back to Tennessee. He therefore took a load to
Alexandria, on the Potomac. David decided to remain at Gerardstown until Myers
should return. He therefore engaged to work for a man by the name of John Gray,
for twenty-five cents a day. It was light farm-work in which he was employed,
and he was so faithful in the performance of his duties that he pleased the
farmer, who was an old man, very much.
Myers continued for the winter in teaming backward and forward between
Gerardstown and Baltimore, while David found a comfortable home of easy industry
with the farmer. He was very careful in the expenditure of his money, and in the
spring found that he had saved enough from his small wages to purchase him a
suit of coarse but substantial clothes. He then, wishing to see a little more of
the world, decided to make a trip with the wagoner to Baltimore.
David had then seven dollars in his pocket, the careful savings of the labors of
half a year. He deposited the treasure with the wagoner for safe keeping. They
started on their journey, with a wagon heavily laden with barrels of flour. As
they were approaching a small settlement called Ellicott's Mills, David, a
little ashamed to approach the houses in the ragged and mud-bespattered clothes
which he wore on the way, crept into the wagon to put on his better garments.
While there in the midst of the flour barrels piled up all around him, the
horses took fright at some strange sight which they encountered, and in a
terrible scare rushed down a steep hill, turned a sharp corner, broke the tongue
of the wagon and both of the axle-trees, and whirled the heavy barrels about in
every direction. The escape of David from very serious injuries seemed almost
miraculous. But our little barbarian leaped from the ruins unscathed. It does
not appear that he had ever cherished any conception whatever of an overruling
Providence. Probably, a religious thought had never entered his mind. A colt
running by the side of the horses could not have been more insensible to every
idea of death, and responsibility at God's bar, than was David Crockett. And he
can be hardly blamed for this. The savages had some idea of the Great Spirit and
of a future world. David was as uninstructed in those thoughts as are the wolves
and the bears. Many years afterward, in writing of this occurrence, he says,
with characteristic flippancy, interlarded with coarse phrases:
"This proved to me, if a fellow is born to be hung he will never be drowned; and
further, that if he is born for a seat in Congress, even flour barrels can't
make a mash of him. I didn't know how soon I should be knocked into a cocked
hat, and get my walking-papers for another country."
The wagon was quite demolished by the disaster. Another was obtained, the flour
reloaded, and they proceeded to Baltimore, dragging the wreck behind them, to be
repaired there. Here young Crockett was amazed at the aspect of civilization
which was opened before him. He wandered along the wharves gazing bewildered
upon the majestic ships, with their towering masts, cordage, and sails, which he
saw floating there He had never conceived of such fabrics before. The mansions,
the churches, the long lines of brick stores excited his amazement. It seemed to
him that he had been suddenly introduced into a sort of fairy-land. All thoughts
of home now vanished from his mind. The great world was expanding before him,
and the curiosity of his intensely active mind was roused to explore more of its
wonders.
One morning he ventured on board one of the ships at a wharf, and was curiously
and cautiously peering about, when the captain caught sight of him. It so
happened that he was in need of a sailor-boy, and being pleased with the
appearance of the lad, asked David if he would not like to enter into his
service to take a voyage to London. The boy had no more idea of where London
was, or what it was, than of a place in the moon. But eagerly he responded,
"Yes," for he cared little where he went or what became of him, he was so glad
of an opportunity to see more of the wonders of this unknown world.
The captain made a few inquiries respecting his friends, his home, and his past
modes of life, and then engaged him for the cruise. David, in a state of high,
joyous excitement, hurried back to the wagoner, to get his seven dollars of
money and some clothes he had left with him. But Myers put a very prompt veto
upon the lad's procedure, assuming that he was the boy's master, he declared
that he should not go to sea. He refused to let him have either his clothes or
his money, asserting that it was his duty to take him back to his parents in
Tennessee. David would gladly have fled from him, and embarked without money and
without clothes; but the wagoner watched him so closely that escape was
impossible.
David was greatly down-hearted at this disappointment, and watched eagerly for
an opportunity to obtain deliverance from his bondage. But Myers was a burly
teamster who swung a very heavy wagon-whip, threatening the boy with a heavy
punishment if he should make any attempt to run away.
After a few days, Myers loaded his team for Tennessee, and with his reluctant
boy set out on his long journey. David was exceedingly restless. He now hated
the man who was so tyranically domineering over him. He had no desire to return
to his home, and he dreaded the hickory stick with which he feared his brutal
father would assail him. One dark night, an hour or two before the morning,
David carefully took his little bundle of clothes, and creeping noiselessly from
the cabin, rushed forward as rapidly as his nimble feet could carry him. He soon
felt quite easy in reference to his escape. He knew that the wagoner slept
soundly, and that two hours at least must elapse before he would open his eyes.
He then would not know with certainty in what direction the boy had fled. He
could not safely leave his horses and wagon alone in the wilderness, to pursue
him; and even should he unharness one of the horses and gallop forward in search
of the fugitive, David, by keeping a vigilant watch, would see him in the
distance and could easily plunge into the thickets of the forest, and thus elude
pursuit.
He had run along five or six miles, when just as the sun was rising he overtook
another wagon. He had already begun to feel very lonely and disconsolate. He had
naturally an affectionate heart and a strong mind; traits of character which
gleamed through all the dark clouds that obscured his life. He was alone in the
wilderness, without a penny; and he knew not what to do, or which way to turn.
The moment he caught sight of the teamster his heart yearned for sympathy. Tears
moistened his eyes, and hastening to the stranger, the friendless boy of but
thirteen years frankly told his whole story. The wagoner was a rough, profane,
burly man, of generous feelings. There was an air of sincerity in the boy, which
convinced him of the entire truth of his statements. His indignation was
aroused, and he gave expression to that indignation in unmeasured terms.
Cracking his whip in his anger, he declared that Myers was a scoundrel, thus to
rob a friendless boy, and that he would lash the money out of him.
This man, whose name also chanced to be Myers, was of the tiger breed, fearing
nothing, ever ready for a fight, and almost invariably coming off conqueror. In
his generous rage he halted his team, grasped his wagon-whip, and, accompanied
by the trembling boy, turned back, breathing vengeance. David was much alarmed,
and told his protector that he was afraid to meet the wagoner, who had so often
threatened him with his whip. But his new friend said," Have no fear. The man
shall give you back your money, or I will thrash it out of him."
They had proceeded but about two miles when they met the approaching team of
Adam Myers. Henry Myers, David's new friend, leading him by the hand, advanced
menacingly upon the other teamster, and greeted him with the words:
"You accursed scoundrel, what do you mean by robbing this friendless boy of his
money?" Adam Myers confessed that he had received seven dollars of the boy's
money. He said, however, that he had no money with him; that he had invested all
he had in articles in his wagon, and that he intended to repay the boy as soon
as they got back to Tennessee. This settled the question, and David returned
with Henry Myers to his wagon, and accompanied him for several days on his slow
and toilsome journey westward.
The impatient boy, as once before, soon got weary of the loitering pace of the
heavily laden team, and concluded to leave his friend and press forward more
rapidly alone. It chanced, one evening, that several wagons met, and the
teamsters encamped for the night together. Henry Myers told them the story of
the friendless boy, and that he was now about to set out alone for the long
journey, most of it through an entire wilderness, and through a land of
strangers wherever there might chance to be a few scattered cabins. They took up
a collection for David, and presented him with three dollars.
The little fellow pressed along, about one hundred and twenty-five miles, down
the valley between the Alleghany and the Blue ridges, until he reached
Montgomery Court House. The region then, nearly three quarters of a century ago,
presented only here and there a spot where the light of civilization had
entered. Occasionally the log cabin of some poor emigrant was found in the vast
expanse. David, too proud to beg, when he had any money with which to pay, found
his purse empty when he had accomplished this small portion of his journey.
In this emergence, he hired out to work for a man a month for five dollars,
which was at the rate of about one shilling a day. Faithfully he fulfilled his
contract, and then, rather dreading to return home, entered into an engagement
with a hatter, Elijah Griffith, to work in his shop for four years. Here he
worked diligently eighteen months without receiving any pay. His employer then
failed, broke up, and left the country. Again this poor boy, thus the sport of
fortune, found himself without a penny, with but few clothes, and those much
worn.
But it was not his nature to lay anything very deeply to heart. He laughed at
misfortune, and pressed on singing and whistling through all storms. He had a
stout pair of hands, good nature, and adaptation to any kind of work. There was
no danger of his starving; and exposures, which many would deem hardships, were
no hardships for him. Undismayed he ran here and there, catching at such
employment as he could find, until he had supplied himself with some comfortable
clothing, and had a few dollars of ready money in his purse. Again he set out
alone and on foot for his far-distant home. He had been absent over two years,
and was new fifteen years of age.
He trudged along, day after day, through rain and sunshine, until he reached a
broad stream called New River. It was wintry weather. The stream was swollen by
recent rains, and a gale then blowing was ploughing the surface into angry
waves. Teams forded the stream many miles above. There was a log hut here, and
the owner had a frail canoe in which he could paddle an occasional traveller
across the river. But nothing would induce him to risk his life in an attempt to
cross in such a storm.
The impetuous boy, in his ignorance of the effect of wind upon waves, resolved
to attempt to cross, at every hazard, and notwithstanding all remonstrances. He
obtained a leaky canoe, which was half stranded upon the shore, and pushed out
on his perilous voyage. He tied his little bundle of clothes to the bows of the
boat, that they might not be washed or blown away, and soon found himself
exposed to the full force of the wind, and tossed by billows such as he had
never dreamed of before. He was greatly frightened, and would have given all he
had in the world, to have been safely back again upon the shore. But he was sure
to be swamped if he should attempt to turn the boat broadside to the waves in
such a gale. The only possible salvation for him was to cut the approaching
billows with the bows of the boat. Thus he might possibly ride over them, though
at the imminent peril, every moment, of shipping a sea which would engulf him
and his frail boat in a watery grave.
In this way he reached the shore, two miles above the proper landing-place. The
canoe was then half full of water. He was drenched with spray, which was frozen
into almost a coat of mail upon his garments. Shivering with cold, he had to
walk three miles through the forest before he found a cabin at whose fire he
could warm and dry himself. Without any unnecessary delay he pushed on until he
crossed the extreme western frontier line of Virginia, and entered Sullivan
County, Tennessee.
An able-bodied young man like David Crockett, strong, athletic, willing to work,
and knowing how to turn his hand to anything, could, in the humblest cabin, find
employment which would provide him with board and lodging. He was in no danger
of starving. There was, at that time, but one main path of travel from the East
into the regions of the boundless West.
As David was pressing along this path he came to a little hamlet of log huts,
where he found the brother whom he had left when he started from home eighteen
months before with the drove of cattle. He remained with him for two or three
weeks, probably paying his expenses by farm labor and hunting. Again he set out
for home. The evening twilight was darkening into night when he caught sight of
his father's humble cabin. Several wagons were standing around, showing that
there must be considerable company in the house.
With not a little embarrassment, he ventured in. It was rather dark. His mother
and sisters were preparing supper at the immense fireside. Quite a group of
teamsters were scattered around the room, smoking their pipes, and telling their
marvellous stories. David, during his absence of two years, had grown, and
changed considerably in personal appearance. None of the family recognized him.
They generally supposed, as he had been absent so long, that he was dead.
David inquired if he could remain all night. Being answered in the affirmative,
he took a seat in a corner and remained perfectly silent, gazing upon the
familiar scene, and watching the movements of his father, mother, and sisters.
At length supper was ready, and all took seats at the table. As David came more
into the light, one of his sisters, observing him, was struck with his
resemblance to her lost brother. Fixing her eyes upon him, she, in a moment,
rushed forward and threw her arms around his neck, exclaiming, "Here is my
brother David."
Quite a scene ensued. The returning prodigal was received with as much affection
as could be expected in a family with such uncultivated hearts and such
unrefined habits as were found in the cabin of John Crockett. Even the stern old
man forgot his hickory switch, and David, much to his relief, found that he
should escape the long-dreaded whipping. Many years after this, when David
Crockett, to his own surprise, and that of the whole nation, found himself
elevated to the position of one of our national legislators, he wrote:
"But it will be a source of astonishment to many, who reflect that I am now a
member of the American Congress, the most enlightened body of men in the world,
that, at so advanced an age, the age of fifteen, I did not know the first letter
in the book."
By the laws and customs of our land, David was bound to obey his father and work
for him until he was twenty-one years of age. Until that time, whatever wages he
might earn belonged to his father. It is often an act of great generosity for a
hard-working farmer to release a stout lad of eighteen or nineteen from this
obligation, and "to give him," as it is phrased, "his time."
John Crockett owed a neighbor, Abraham Wilson, thirty-six dollars. He told David
that if he would work for Mr. Wilson until his wages paid that sum, he would
then release him from all his obligations to his father, and his son might go
free. It was a shrewd bargain for the old man, for he had already learned that
David was abundantly capable of taking care of himself, and that he would come
and go when and where he pleased.
The boy, weary of his wanderings, consented to the arrangement, and engaged to
work for Mr. Wilson for six months, in payment for which, the note was to be
delivered up to his father. It was characteristic of David that whatever he
undertook he engaged in with all his might. He was a rude, coarse boy. It was
scarcely possible, with his past training, that he should be otherwise. But he
was very faithful in fulfilling his obligations. Though his sense of right and
wrong was very obtuse, he was still disposed to do the right so far as his
uncultivated conscience revealed it to him.
For six months, David worked for Mr. Wilson with the utmost fidelity and zeal.
He then received the note, presented it to his father, and, before he was
sixteen years of age, stood up proudly his own man. His father had no longer the
right to whip him. His father had no longer the right to call upon him for any
service without paying him for it. And on the other hand, he could no longer
look to his father for food or clothing. This thought gave him no trouble. He
had already taken care of himself for two years, and he felt no more solicitude
in regard to the future than did the buffalo's calf or the wolf's whelp.
Wilson was a bad man, dissipated and unprincipled. But he had found David to be
so valuable a laborer that he offered him high wages if he would remain and work
for him. It shows a latent, underlying principle of goodness in David, that he
should have refused the offer. He writes:
"The reason was, it was a place where a heap of bad company met to drink and
gamble; and I wanted to get away from them, for I know'd very well, if I staid
there, I should get a bad name, as nobody could be respectable that would live
there."
About this time a Quaker, somewhat advanced in years, a good, honest man, by the
name of John Kennedy, emigrated from North Carolina, and selecting his four
hundred acres of land about fifteen miles from John Crockett's, reared a log hut
and commenced a clearing. In some transaction with Crockett he took his
neighbor's note for forty dollars. He chanced to see David, a stout lad of
prepossessing appearance, and proposed that he should work for him for two
shillings a day taking him one week upon trial. At the close of the week the
Quaker expressed himself as highly satisfied with his work, and offered to pay
him with his father's note of forty dollars for six months' labor on his farm.
David knew full well how ready his father was to give his note, and how slow he
was to pay it. He was fully aware that the note was not worth, to him, the paper
upon which it was written. But he reflected that the note was an obligation upon
his father, that he was very poor, and his lot in life was hard. It certainly
indicated much innate nobility of nature that this boy, under these
circumstances, should have accepted the offer of the Quaker. But David did this.
For six months he labored assiduously, without the slightest hope of reward,
excepting that he would thus relieve his father, whom he had no great cause
either to respect or love, from the embarrassment of the debt.
For a whole half-year David toiled upon the farm of the Quaker, never once
during that time visiting his home. At the end of the term he received his pay
for those long months of labor, in a little piece of rumpled paper, upon which
his father had probably made his mark. It was Saturday evening. The next morning
he borrowed a horse of his employer and set out for a visit home. He was kindly
welcomed. His father knew nothing of the agreement which his son had made with
Mr. Kennedy. As the family were talking together around the cabin fire, David
drew the note from his pocket and presented it to his father. The old man seemed
much troubled. He supposed Mr. Kennedy had sent it for collection. As usual, he
began to make excuses. He said that he was very sorry that he could not pay it,
that he had met with many misfortunes, that he had no money, and that he did not
know what to do.
David then told his father that he did not hand him the bill for collection, but
that it was a present from him--that he had paid it in full. It is easy for old
and broken-down men to weep. John Crockett seemed much affected by this
generosity of his son, and David says "he shed a heap of tears." He, however,
avowed his inability to pay anything whatever, upon the note.
David had now worked a year without getting any money for himself. His clothes
were worn out, and altogether he was in a very dilapidated condition. He went
back to the Quaker's, and again engaged in his service, desiring to earn some
money to purchase clothes. Two months thus passed away. Every ardent, impetuous
boy must have a love adventure. David had his. A very pretty young Quakeress, of
about David's age, came from North Carolina to visit Mr. Kennedy, who was her
uncle. David fell desperately in love with her. We cannot better describe this
adventure than in the unpolished diction of this illiterate boy. If one would
understand this extraordinary character, it is necessary thus to catch such
glimpses as we can of his inner life. Let this necessity atone for the
unpleasant rudeness of speech. Be it remembered that this reminiscence was
written after David Crockett was a member of Congress.
"I soon found myself head over heels in love with this girl. I thought that if
all the hills about there were pure chink, and all belonged to me, I would give
them if I could just talk to her as I wanted to. But I was afraid to begin; for
when I would think of saying anything to her, my heart would begin to flutter
like a duck in a puddle. And if I tried to outdo it and speak, it would get
right smack up in my throat, and choke me like a cold potato. It bore on my mind
in this way, till at last I concluded I must die if I didn't broach the subject.
So I determined to begin and hang on a-trying to speak, till my heart would get
out of my throat one way or t'other.
"And so one day at it I went, and after several trials I could say a little. I
told her how I loved her; that she was the darling object of my soul and body,
and I must have her, or else I should pine down to nothing, and just die away
with consumption.
"I found my talk was not disagreeable to her. But she was an honest girl, and
didn't want to deceive nobody. She told me she was engaged to her cousin, a son
of the old Quaker. This news was worse to me than war, pestilence, or famine.
But still I know'd I could not help myself. I saw quick enough my cake was
dough; and I tried to cool off as fast as possible. But I had hardly safety
pipes enough, as my love was so hot as mighty nigh to burst my boilers. But I
didn't press my claims any more, seeing there was no chance to do anything."
David's grief was very sincere, and continued as long as is usually the case
with disappointed lovers.
David soon began to cherish some slight idea of the deficiency in his education.
He had never been to school but four days; and in that time he had learned
absolutely nothing. A young man, a Quaker, had opened a school about a mile and
a half from Mr. Kennedy's. David made an arrangement with his employer by which
he was to go to school four days in the week, and work the other two days for
his board. He continued in this way for six months. But it was very evident that
David was not born for a scholar. At the end of that time he could read a little
in the first primer. With difficulty he could make certain hieroglyphics which
looked like his name. He could also perform simple sums in addition,
subtraction, and multiplication. The mysteries of division he never surmounted.
This was the extent of his education. He left school, and in the laborious life
upon which he entered, never after improved any opportunity for mental culture.
The disappointment which David had encountered in his love affair, only made him
more eager to seek a new object upon which he might fix his affections. Not far
from Mr. Kennedy's there was the cabin of a settler, where there were two or
three girls. David had occasionally met them. Boy as he was, for he was not yet
eighteen, he suddenly and impetuously set out to see if he could not pick, from
them, one for a wife.
Without delay he made his choice, and made his offer, and was as promptly
accepted as a lover. Though they were both very young, and neither of them had a
dollar, still as those considerations would not have influenced David in the
slightest degree, we know not why they where not immediately married. Several
months of very desperate and satisfactory courtship passed away, when the time
came for the nuptials of the little Quaker girl, which ceremony was to take
place at the cabin of her uncle David and his "girl" were invited to the
wedding. The scene only inflamed the desires of David to hasten his
marriage-day. He was very importunate in pressing his claims. She seemed quite
reluctant to fix the day, but at last consented; and says David, "I thought if
that day come, I should be the happiest man in the created world, or in the
moon, or anywhere else."
In the mean time David had become very fond of his rifle, and had raised enough
money to buy him one. He was still living with the Quaker. Game was abundant,
and the young hunter often brought in valuable supplies of animal food. There
were frequent shooting-matches in that region. David, proud of his skill, was
fond of attending them. But his Quaker employer considered them a species of
gambling, which drew together all the idlers and vagrants of the region, and he
could not approve of them.
There was another boy living at that time with the Quaker. They practised all
sorts of deceptions to steal away to the shooting-matches under pretence that
they were engaged in other things. This boy was quite in love with a sister of
David's intended wife. The staid member of the Society of Friends did not
approve of the rude courting frolics of those times, which frequently occupied
nearly the whole night.
The two boys slept in a garret, in what was called the gable end of the house.
There was a small window in their rough apartment. One Sunday, when the Quaker
and his wife were absent attending a meeting, the boys cut a long pole, and
leaned it up against the side of the house, as high as the window, but so that
it would not attract any attention. They were as nimble as catamounts, and could
run up and down the pole without the slightest difficulty. They would go to bed
at the usual early hour. As soon as all were quiet, they would creep from the
house, dressed in their best apparel, and taking the two farm-horses, would
mount their backs and ride, as fast as possible, ten miles through the forest
road to where the girls lived. They were generally expected. After spending all
the hours of the middle of the night in the varied frolics of country courtship,
they would again mount their horses and gallop home, being especially careful to
creep in at their window before the dawn of day The course of true love seemed
for once to be running smoothly. Saturday came, and the next week, on Thursday,
David was to be married.
It so happened that there was to be a shooting match on Saturday, at one of the
cabins not far from the home of his intended bride. David made some excuse as to
the necessity of going home to prepare for his wedding, and in the morning set
out early, and directed his steps straight to the shooting-match. Here he was
very successful in his shots, and won about five dollars. In great elation of
spirits, and fully convinced that he was one of the greatest and happiest men in
the world, he pressed on toward the home of his intended bride.
He had walked but a couple of miles, when he reached the cabin of the girl's
uncle. Considering the members of the family already as his relatives, he
stepped in, very patronizingly, to greet them. He doubted not that they were
very proud of the approaching alliance of their niece with so distinguished a
man as himself--a man who had actually five dollars, in silver, in his pocket.
Entering the cabin, he found a sister of his betrothed there. Instead of
greeting him with the cordiality he expected, she seemed greatly embarrassed.
David had penetration enough to see that something was wrong. The reception she
gave him was not such as he thought a brother-in-law ought to receive. He made
more particular inquiries. The result we will give in David's language.
"She then burst into tears, and told me that her sister was going to deceive me;
and that she was to be married to another man the next day. This was as sudden
to me as a clap of thunder of a bright sunshiny day. It was the capstone of all
the afflictions I had ever met with; and it seemed to me that it was more than
any human creature could endure. It struck me perfectly speechless for some
time, and made me feel so weak that I thought I should sink down. I however
recovered from the shock after a little, and rose and started without any
ceremony, or even bidding anybody good-bye. The young woman followed me out to
the gate, and entreated me to go on to her father's, and said she would go with
me.
"She said the young man who was going to marry her sister had got his license
and asked for her. But she assured me that her father and mother both preferred
me to him; and that she had no doubt that if I would go on I could break off the
match. But I found that I could go no farther. My heart was bruised, and my
spirits were broken down. So I bid her farewell, and turned my lonesome and
miserable steps back again homeward, concluding that I was only born for
hardship, misery, and disappointment. I now began to think that in making me it
was entirely forgotten to make my mate; that I was born odd, and should always
remain so, and that nobody would have me.
"But all these reflections did not satisfy my mind, for I had no peace, day nor
night, for several weeks. My appetite failed me, and I grew daily worse and
worse. They all thought I was sick; and so I was. And it was the worst kind of
sickness, a sickness of the heart, and all the tender parts, produced by
disappointed love."
For some time David continued in a state of great dejection, a lovelorn swain of
seventeen years. Thus disconsolate, he loved to roam the forest alone, with his
rifle as his only companion, brooding over his sorrows. The gloom of the forest
was congenial to him, and the excitement of pursuing the game afforded some
slight relief to his agitated spirit. One day, when he had wandered far from
home, he came upon the cabin of a Dutchman with whom he had formed some previous
acquaintance. He had a daughter, who was exceedingly plain in her personal
appearance, but who had a very active mind, and was a bright, talkative girl.
She had heard of David's misadventure, and rather unfeelingly rallied him upon
his loss. She however endeavored to comfort him by the assurance that there were
as good fish in the sea as had ever been caught out of it. David did not believe
in this doctrine at all, as applied to his own case, He thought his loss utterly
irretrievable. And in his still high appreciation of himself, notwithstanding
his deep mortification, he thought that the lively Dutch girl was endeavoring to
catch him for her lover. In this, however, he soon found himself mistaken.
She told him that there was to be a reaping frolic in their neighborhood in a
few days, and that if he would attend it, she would show him one of the
prettiest girls upon whom he ever fixed his eyes. Difficult as he found it to
shut out from his mind his lost love, upon whom his thoughts were dwelling by
day and by night, he very wisely decided that his best remedy would be found in
what Dr. Chalmers calls "the expulsive power of a new affection;" that is, that
he would try and fall in love with some other girl as soon as possible. His own
language, in describing his feelings at that time, is certainly very different
from that which the philosopher or the modern novelist would have used, but it
is quite characteristic of the man. The Dutch maiden assured him that the girl
who had deceived him was not to be compared in beauty with the one she would
show to him. He writes:
"I didn't believe a word of all this, for I had thought that such a piece of
flesh and blood as she had never been manufactured, and never would again. I
agreed with her that the little varmint had treated me so bad that I ought to
forget her, and yet I couldn't do it. I concluded that the best way to
accomplish it was to cut out again, and see if I could find any other that would
answer me; and so I told the Dutch girl that I would be at the reaping, and
would bring as many as I could with me."
David seems at this time to have abandoned all constant industry, and to be
loafing about with his rifle, thus supporting himself with the game he took. He
traversed the still but slightly broken forest in all directions, carrying to
many scattered farm-houses intelligence of the approaching reaping frolic. He
informed the good Quaker with whom he had worked of his intention to be there.
Mr. Kennedy endeavored to dissuade him. He said that there would be much bad
company there; that there would be drinking and carousing, and that David had
been so good a boy that he should be very sorry to have him get a bad name.
The curiosity of the impetuous young man was, however, by this time, too much
aroused for any persuasions to hold him back. Shouldering his rifle, he hastened
to the reaping at the appointed day. Upon his arrival at the place he found a
large company already assembled. He looked around for the pretty girl, but she
was nowhere to be seen. She chanced to be in a shed frolicking with some others
of the young people.
But as David, with his rifle on his shoulder, sauntered around, an aged Irish
woman, full of nerve and volubility, caught sight of him. She was the mother of
the girl, and had been told of the object of David's visit. He must have
appeared very boyish, for he had not yet entered his eighteenth year, and though
very wiry and athletic, he was of slender frame, and rather small in stature.
The Irish woman hastened to David; lavished upon him compliments respecting his
rosy cheeks, and assured him that she had exactly such a sweet heart for him as
he needed. She did not allow, David to have any doubt that she would gladly
welcome him as the husband of her daughter.
Pretty soon the young, fresh, blooming, mirthful girl came along; and David fell
in love with her at first sight. Not much formality of introduction was
necessary: each was looking for the other. Both of the previous loves of the
young man were forgotten in an instant. He devoted himself with the utmost
assiduity, to the little Irish girl. He was soon dancing with her. After a very
vigorous "double shuffle," as they were seated side by side on a bench intensely
talking, for David Crockett was never at a loss for words, the mother came up,
and, in her wonderfully frank mode of match-making, jocosely addressed him as
her son-in-law.
Even David's imperturbable self-possession was disturbed by this assailment.
Still he was much pleased to find both mother and daughter so favorably disposed
toward him. The rustic frolicking continued nearly all night. In the morning,
David, in a very happy frame of mind, returned to the Quaker's, and in
anticipation of soon setting up farming for himself, engaged to work for him for
six months for a low-priced horse.
Chapter 3
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