taken care of. It seems almost at times as if you can’t do anything but leave them to the mercy of God, and yet you can’t do that either, quite,” and he once more shook his head sadly.

I was for denouncing the county, but he explained very charitably that it was already very heavily taxed by such cases. He did not seem to know exactly what should be done at the time, but he was very sorry, very, and for the time being the warm argument in which he had been indulging was completely forgotten. Now he lapsed into silence and all communication was suspended, while he rocked silently in his great chair and thought.

One day in passing the local poor-farm (and this is of my own knowledge), he came upon a man beating a poor idiot with a whip. The latter was incapable of reasoning and therefore of understanding why it was that he was being beaten. The two were beside a wood-pile and the demented one was crying. In a moment the old patriarch had jumped out of his conveyance, leaped over the fence, and confronted the amazed attendant with an uplifted arm.

“Not another lick!” he fairly shouted. “What do you mean by striking an idiot?”

“Why,” explained the attendant, “I want him to carry in the wood, and he won’t do it.”

“It is not his place to bring in the wood. He isn’t put here for that, and in the next place he can’t understand what you mean. He’s put here to be taken care of. Don’t you dare strike him again. I’ll see about this, and you.”

Knowing his interrupter well, his position and power in the community, the man endeavored to explain that some work must be done by the inmates, and that this one was refractory. The only way he had of making him understand was by whipping him.

“Not another word,” the old man blustered, overawing the county hireling. “You’ve done a wrong, and you know it. I’ll see to this,” and off he bustled to the county courthouse, leaving the transgressor so badly frightened that whips thereafter were carefully concealed, in this institution at least. The court, which was held in his home town, was not in session at the time, and only the clerk was present when he came tramping down the aisle and stood before the latter with his right hand uplifted in the position of one about to make oath.

“Swear me,” he called solemnly, and without further explanation, as the latter stared at him. “I want you to take this testimony under oath.”

The clerk knew well enough the remarkable characteristics of his guest, whose actions were only too often inexplicable from the ground point of policy and convention. Without ado, after swearing him, he got out ink and paper, and the patriarch began.

“I saw,” he said, “in the yard of the county farm of this county, not over an hour ago, a poor helpless idiot, too weak-minded to understand what was required of him, and put in that institution by the people of this county to be cared for, being beaten with a cowhide by Mark Sheffels, who is an attendant there, because the idiot did not understand enough to carry in wood, which the people have hired Mark Sheffels to carry in. Think of it,” he added, quite forgetting the nature of his testimony and that he was now speaking for dictation and not for an audience to hear, and going off into a most scorching and brilliant arraignment of the entire system in which such brutality could occur, “a poor helpless idiot, unable to frame in his own disordered mind a single clear sentence, being beaten by a sensible, healthy brute too lazy and trifling to perform the duties for which he was hired and which he personally is supposed to perform.”

There was more to the effect, for instance, that the American people and the people of this county should be ashamed to think that such crimes should be permitted and go unpunished, and that this was a fair sample. The clerk, realizing the importance of Mr. White in the community, and the likelihood of his following up his charges very vigorously, quietly followed his address in a very deferential way, jotting down such salient features as he had time to write. When he was through, however, he ventured to lift his voice in protest.

“You know, Mr. White,” he said, “Sheffels is a member of our party, and was appointed by us. Of course, now, it’s too bad that this thing should have happened, and he ought to be dropped, but if you are going to make a public matter of it in this way it may hurt us in the election next month.”

The old patriarch threw back his head and gazed at him in the most blazing way, almost without comprehension, apparently, of so petty a view.

“What!” he exclaimed. “What’s that got to do with it? Do you want the Democratic Party to starve the poor and beat the insane?”

The opposition was rather flattened by the reply, and left the old gentleman to storm out. For once, at least, in this particular instance, anyhow, he had purified the political atmosphere, as if by lightning, and within the month following the offending attendant was dropped.

Politics, however, had long known his influence in a similar way. There was a time when he was the chief political figure in the county, and possessed the gift of oratory, apparently, beyond that of any of his fellow-citizens. Men came miles to hear him, and he took occasion to voice his views on every important issue. It was his custom in those days, for instance, when he had anything of special importance to say, to have printed at his own expense a few placards announcing his coming, which he would then carry to the town selected for his address and personally nail up. When the hour came, a crowd, as I am told, was never wanting. Citizens and farmers of both parties for miles about usually came to hear him.

Personally I never knew how towering his figure had been in the past, or how truly he had been admired, until one day I drifted in upon a lone bachelor who occupied a hut some fifteen miles from the patriarch’s home and who was rather noted in the community at the time that I was there for his love of seclusion and indifference to current events. He had not visited the nearest neighboring village in something like five years, and had not been to the moderate-sized county seat in ten. Naturally he treasured memories of his younger days and more varied activity.

“I don’t know,” he said to me one day, in discussing modern statesmen and political fame in general, “but getting up in politics is a queer game. I can’t understand it. Men that you’d think ought to get up don’t seem to. It doesn’t seem to be real greatness that helps ‘em along.”

“What makes you say that?” I asked.

“Well, there used to be a man over here at Danville that I always thought would get up, and yet he didn’t. He was the finest orator I ever heard.”

“Who was he?” I asked.

“Arch White,” he said quietly. “He was really a great man. He was a good man. Why, many’s the time I’ve driven fifteen miles to hear him. I used to like to go into Danville just for that reason. He used to be around there, and sometimes he’d talk a little. He could stir a fellow up.”

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