By RUTH McENERY STUART
His mother named him Solomon because, when he was a baby, he looked so wise; and then she called him Crow because he was so black. True, she got angry when the boys caught it up, but then it was too late. They knew more about crows than they did about Solomon, and the name suited.
His twin-brother, who died when he was a day old, his mother had called Grundy—just because, as she said, “Solomon an’ Grundy b’longs together in de books.”
When the wee black boy began to talk, he knew himself equally as Solomon or Crow, and so, when asked his name, he would answer: “Sol’mon Crow,” and Solomon Crow he thenceforth became.
Crow was ten years old now, and he was so very black and polished and thin, and had so peaked and bright a face, that no one who had any sense of humor could hear him called Crow without smiling.
Crow’s mother, Tempest, had been a worker in her better days, but she had grown fatter and fatter until now she was so lazy and broad that her chief pleasure seemed to be sitting in her front door and gossiping with her neighbors over the fence, or in abusing or praising little Solomon, according to her mood.
Tempest had never been very honest. When, in the old days, she had hired out as cook and carried “her dinner” home at night, the basket on her arm had usually held enough for herself and Crow and a pig and the chickens—with some to give away. She had not meant Crow to understand, but the little fellow was wide awake, and his mother was his pattern.
But this is the boy’s story. It seemed best to tell a little about his mother, so that, if he should some time do wrong things, we might all, writer and readers, be patient with him. He had been poorly taught. If we could not trace our honesty back to our mothers, how many of us would love the truth?
Crow’s mother loved him very much—she thought. She would knock down any one who even blamed him for anything. Indeed, when things went well, she would sometimes go sound asleep in the door with her fat arm around him—very much as the mother-cat beside her lay half dozing while she licked her baby kitten.
But if Crow was awkward or forgot anything—or didn’t bring home money enough—her abuse was worse than any mother-cat’s claws.
One of her worst taunts on such occasions was about like this: “Well, you is a low-down nigger, I must say. Nobody, to look at you, would b’lieve you was twin to a angel!”
Or, “How you reckon yo’ angel-twin feels ef he’s a-lookin’ at you now?”
Crow had great reverence for his little lost mate. Indeed, he feared the displeasure of this other self, who, he believed, watched him from the skies, quite as much as the anger of God. Sad to say, the good Lord, whom most children love as a kind, heavenly Father, was to poor little Solomon Crow only a terrible, terrible punisher of wrong, and the little boy trembled at His very name. He seemed to hear God’s anger in the thunder or the wind; but in the blue sky, the faithful stars, the opening flowers and singing birds—in all loving-kindness and friendship—he never saw a heavenly Father’s love.
He knew that some things were right and others wrong. He knew that it was right to go out and earn dimes to buy the things needed in the cabin, but he equally knew it was wrong to get this money dishonestly. Crow was a very shrewd little boy, and he made money honestly in a number of ways that only a wide-awake boy would think about.
When fig season came, in hot summer-time, he happened to notice that beautiful ripe figs were drying up on the tip-tops of some great trees in a neighboring yard, where a stout old gentleman and his old wife lived alone, and he began to reflect.
“If I could des git a-holt o’ some o’ dem fine sugar figs dat’s a-swivelin’ up every day on top o’ dem trees, I’d meck a heap o’ money peddlin’ ‘em on de street.” And even while he thought this thought he licked his lips. There were, no doubt, other attractions about the figs for a very small boy with a very sweet tooth.
On the next morning after this, Crow rang the front gate-bell of the yard where the figs were growing.
“Want a boy to pick figs on sheers?” That was all he said to the fat old gentleman who had stepped around the house in answer to his ring.
Crow’s offer was timely.
Old Mr. Cary was red in the face and panting even yet from reaching up into the mouldy, damp lower limbs of his fig-trees, trying to gather a dishful for breakfast.
“Come in,” he said, mopping his forehead as he spoke.
“Pick on shares, will you?”
“Yassir.”
“Even?”
“Yassir.”
“Promise never to pick any but the very ripe figs?”
“Yassir.”
“Honest boy?”
“Yassir.”
“Turn in, then; but wait a minute.”
He stepped aside into the house, returning presently with two baskets.
“Here,” he said, presenting them both. “These are pretty nearly of a size. Go ahead, now, and let’s see what you can do.”
Needless to say, Crow proved a great success as fig-picker. The very sugary figs that old Mr. Cary had panted for and reached for in vain lay bursting with sweetness on top of both baskets.
The old gentleman and his wife were delighted, and the boy was quickly engaged to come every morning.
And this was how Crow went into the fig business.
Crow was a likable boy—”so bright and handy and nimble”—and the old people soon became fond of him.
They noticed that he always handed in the larger of the two baskets, keeping the smaller for himself. This seemed not only honest, but generous.
And generosity is a winning virtue in the very needy—as winning as it is common. The very poor are often great of heart.
But this is not a safe fact upon which to found axioms.
All God’s poor are not educated up to the point of even small, fine honesties, and the so-called “generous” are not always “just” or honest.
And—
Poor little Solomon Crow! It is a pity to have to write it, but his weak point was exactly that he was not quite honest. He wanted to be, just because his angel-twin might be watching him, and he was afraid of thunder. But Crow was so anxious to be “smart” that he had long ago begun doing “tricky” things. Even the men working the roads had discovered this. In eating Crow’s “fresh-boiled crawfish” or “shrimps,” they would often come across one of the left-overs of yesterday’s supply, mixed in with the others; and a yesterday’s shrimp is full of stomach-ache and indigestion. So that business suffered.
In the fig business the ripe ones sold well; but when one of Crow’s customers offered to buy all he would bring of green ones for preserving, Crow began filling his basket with them and distributing a top layer of ripe ones carefully over them. His lawful share of the very ripe he also carried away—in his little bread-basket.
This was all very dishonest, and Crow knew it. Still he did it many times.
And then—and this shows how one sin leads to another—and then, one day—oh, Solomon Crow, I’m ashamed to tell it on you!—one day he noticed that there were fresh eggs in the hen-house nests, quite near the fig-trees. Now, if there was anything Crow liked, it was a fried egg—two fried eggs. He always said he wanted two on his plate at once, looking at him like a pair of round eyes, “an’ when dey reco’nizes me,” he would say, “den I eats ‘em up.”
Why not slip a few of these tempting eggs into the bottom of the basket and cover them up with ripe figs?
And so—,
One day, he did it.
He had stopped at the dining-room door that day and was handing in the larger basket, as usual, when old Mr. Cary, who stood there, said, smiling:
“No, give us the smaller basket to-day, my boy. It’s our turn to be generous.”
He extended his hand as he spoke.
Crow tried to answer, but he could not. His mouth felt as dry and stiff and hard as a chip, and he suddenly began to open it wide and shut it slowly, like a chicken with the gapes.
Mr. Cary kept his hand out waiting, but still Crow stood as if paralyzed, gaping and swallowing.
Finally, he began to blink. And then he stammered:
“I ain’t p-p-p-ertic’lar b-b-bout de big basket. D-d-d-de best figs is in y’all’s pickin’—in dis, de big basket.”
Crow’s appearance was conviction itself. Without more ado, Mr. Cary grasped his arm firmly and fairly lifted him into the room.
“Now, set those baskets down.” He spoke sharply.
The boy obeyed.
“Here! empty the larger one on this tray. That’s it. All fine, ripe figs. You’ve picked well for us. Now turn the other one out.”
At this poor Crow had a sudden relapse of the dry gapes. His arm fell limp and he looked as if he might tumble over.
“Turn ‘em out!” The old gentleman shrieked in so thunderous a tone that Crow jumped off his feet, and, seizing the other basket with his little shaking paws, he emptied it upon the heap of figs.
Old Mrs. Cary had come in just in time to see the eggs roll out of the basket, and for a moment she and her husband looked at each other. And then they turned to the boy.
When she spoke her voice was so gentle that Crow, not understanding, looked quickly into her face:
“Let me take him into the library, William. Come, my boy.”
Her tone was so soft, so sorrowful and sympathetic, that Crow felt as he followed her as if, in the hour of his deepest disgrace, he had found a friend; and when presently he stood in a great square room before a high arm-chair, in which a white-haired old lady sat looking at him over her gold-rimmed spectacles and talking to him as he had never been spoken to in all his life before, he felt as if he were in a great court before a judge who didn’t understand half how very bad little boys were.
She asked him a good many questions—some very searching ones, too—all of which Crow answered as best he could, with his very short breath.
His first feeling had been of pure fright. But when he found he was not to be abused, not beaten or sent to jail, he began to wonder.
Little Solomon Crow, ten years old, in a Christian land, was hearing for the first time in his life that God loved him—loved him even now in his sin and disgrace, and wanted him to be good.
He listened with wandering eyes at first, half expecting the old gentleman, Mr. Cary, to appear suddenly at the door with a whip or a policeman with a club. But after a while he kept his eyes steadily upon the lady’s face.
“Has no one ever told you, Solomon”—she had always called him Solomon, declaring that Crow was not a fit name for a boy who looked as he did—it was altogether “too personal”—”has no one ever told you, Solomon,” she said, “that God loves all His little children, and that you are one of these children?”
“No, ma’am,” he answered, with difficulty. And then, as if catching at something that might give him a little standing, he added, quickly—so quickly that he stammered again:
“B-b-b-but I knowed I was twin to a angel. I know dat. An’ I knows ef my angel twin seen me steal dem aigs he’ll be mightly ap’ to tell Gord to strike me down daid.”
Of course he had to explain then about the “angel twin,” and the old lady talked to him for a long time. And then together they knelt down. When at last they came out of the library she held the boy’s hand and led him to her husband.
“Are you willing to try him again, William?” she asked. “He has promised to do better.”
Old Mr. Cary cleared his throat and laid down his paper.
“Don’t deserve it,” he began; “dirty little thief.” And then he turned to the boy: “What have you got on, sir?”
His voice was really quite terrible.
“N-n-n-nothin’; only but des my b-b-b-briches an’ jacket, an’—an’—an’ skin,” Crow replied, between gasps.
“How many pockets?”
“Two,” said Crow.
“Turn ‘em out!”
Crow drew out his little rust-stained pockets, dropping a few old nails and bits of twine upon the floor as he did so.
“Um—h’m! Well, now, I’ll tell you. You’re a dirty little thief, as I said before. And I’m going to treat you as one. If you wear those pockets hanging out, or rip ‘em out, and come in here before you leave every day dressed just as you are—pants and jacket and skin—and empty out your basket for us before you go, until I’m satisfied you’ll do better, you can come.”
The old lady looked at her husband as if she thought him pretty hard on a very small boy. But she said nothing.
Crow glanced appealingly at her before answering. And then he said, seizing his pocket:
“Is you got air pair o’ scissors, lady?”
Mrs. Cary wished her husband would relent even while she brought the scissors, but he only cried:
“Out with ‘em!”
“Suppose you cut them out yourself, Solomon,” she interposed, kindly, handing him the scissors. “You’ll have all this work to do yourself. We can’t make you good.”
When, after several awkward efforts, Crow finally put the coarse little pockets in her hands, there were tears in her eyes, and she tried to hide them as she leaned over and gathered up his treasures—three nails, a string, a broken top, and a half-eaten chunk of cold corn-bread. As she handed them to him she said: “And I’ll lay the pockets away for you, Solomon, and when we see that you are an honest boy I’ll sew them back for you myself.”
As she spoke she rose, divided the figs evenly between the two baskets, and handed one to Crow.
If there ever was a serious little black boy on God’s beautiful earth it was little Solomon Crow as he balanced his basket of figs on his head that day and went slowly down the garden walk and out the great front gate.
The next few weeks were not without trial to the boy. Old Mr. Cary continued very stern, even following him daily to the banquette, as if he dare not trust him to go out alone. And when he closed the iron gate after him he would say in a tone that was awfully solemn:
“Good-mornin’, sir!”
That was all.
Little Crow dreaded that walk to the gate more than all the rest of the ordeal. And yet, in a way, it gave him courage. He was at least worth while, and with time and patience he would win back the lost faith of the friends who were kind to him even while they could not trust him. They were, indeed, kind and generous in many ways, both to him and his unworthy mother.
Fig-time was soon nearly over, and, of course, Crow expected a dismissal; but it was Mr. Cary himself who set these fears at rest by proposing to him to come daily to blacken his boots and to keep the garden-walk in order for regular wages.
“But,” he warned him, in closing, “don’t you show your face here with a pocket on you. If your heavy pants have any in ‘em, rip ‘em out.” And then he added, severely: “You’ve been a very bad boy.”
“Yassir,” answered Crow, “I know I is. I been a heap wusser boy’n you knowed I was, too.”
“What’s that you say, sir?”
Crow repeated it. And then he added, for full confession:
“I picked green figs heap o’ days, and kivered ‘em up wid ripe ones, an’ sol’ ‘em to a white ‘oman fur perserves.” There was something desperate in the way he blurted it all out.
“The dickens you did! And what are you telling me for?”
He eyed the boy keenly as he put the question.
At this Crow fairly wailed aloud: “’Caze I ain’t gwine do it no mo’.” And throwing his arms against the door-frame he buried his face in them, and he sobbed as if his little heart would break.
For a moment old Mr. Cary seemed to have lost his voice, and then he said, in a voice quite new to Crow:
“I don’t believe you will, sir—I don’t believe you will.” And in a minute he said, still speaking gently: “Come here, boy.”
Still weeping aloud, Crow obeyed.
“Tut, tut! No crying!” he began. “Be a man—be a man. And if you stick to it, before Christmas comes, we’ll see about those pockets, and you can walk into the new year with your head up. But look sharp! Good-bye, now!”
For the first time since the boy’s fall Mr. Cary did not follow him to the gate. Maybe this was the beginning of trust. Slight a thing as it was, the boy took comfort in it.
At last it was Christmas eve. Crow was on the back “gallery” putting a final polish on a pair of boots. He was nearly done, and his heart was beginning to sink, when the old lady came and stood near him. There was a very hopeful twinkle in her eye as she said, presently: “I wonder what our little shoeblack, who has been trying so hard to be good, would like to have for his Christmas gift?”
But Crow only blinked while he polished the faster.
“Tell me, Solomon,” she insisted. “If you had one wish to-day, what would it be?”
The boy wriggled nervously. And then he said:
“You knows, lady. Needle—an’ thrade—an’—an’—you knows, lady. Pockets.”
“Well, pockets it shall be. Come into my room when you get through.”
Old Mrs. Cary sat beside the fire reading as he went in. Seeing him, she nodded, smiling, towards the bed, upon which Crow saw a brand-new suit of clothes—coat, vest, and breeches—all spread out in a row.
“There, my boy,” she said; “there are your pockets.”
Crow had never in all his life owned a full new suit of clothes. All his “new” things had been second-hand, and for a moment he could not quite believe his eyes; but he went quickly to the bed and began passing his hands over the clothes. Then he ventured to take up the vest—and to turn it over. And now he began to find pockets.
“Three pockets in de ves’—two in de pants—an’—an’ fo’, no five, no six—six pockets in de coat!”
He giggled nervously as he thrust his little black fingers into one and then another. And then, suddenly overcome with a sense of the situation, he turned to Mrs. Cary, and, in a voice that trembled a little, said:
“Is you sho’ you ain’t ‘feerd to trus’ me wid all deze pockets, lady?”
It doesn’t take a small boy long to slip into a new suit of clothes. And when a ragged urchin disappeared behind the head of the great old “four-poster” to-day, it seemed scarcely a minute before a trig, “tailor-made boy” strutted out from the opposite side, hands deep in pockets—breathing hard.
As Solomon Crow strode up and down the room, radiant with joy, he seemed for the moment quite unconscious of any one’s presence. But presently he stopped, looked involuntarily upward a minute, as if he felt himself observed from above. Then, turning to the old people, who stood together before the mantel, delightedly watching him, he said:
“Bet you my angel twin ain’t ashamed, ef he’s a-lookin’ down on me to-day.”