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Governor was getting fierce;
Asked me, with paternal frown,
When I meant to go to work,

Take a wife, and settle down.
Stormed at my extravagance,

Talked of cutting off suppliesFairly bullied me, you know

Sort of thing that I despise. Well, you see, I lost worst way

At the races-Governor ragedSo, to try and smooth him down,

I went off, and got engaged. Sort of put up thing, you know— All arranged with old LatineNelly raved about it first,

Said her " pa was awful mean!"

Now it's done we don't much mindTell the truth, I'm rather glad; Looking at it every way,

One must own it isn't bad.

She's good-looking, rather rich,Mother left her quite a pile; Dances, goes out everywhere;

Fine old family, real good style. Then she's good, as girls go now, Some idea of wrong and right, Don't let every man she meets Kiss her, on the self-same night.

We don't do affection much,

Nell and I are real good friends,

Call there often, sit and chat,
Take her 'round, and there it ends.

Spooning! Well, I tried it once-
Acted like an awful calf-
Said I really loved her. Gad!

You should just have heard her
laugh.

Why, she ran me for a month,

Teased me till she made me wince: "Mustn't flirt with her," she said, So I haven't tried it since.

"Twould be pleasant to be loved

Like you read about in booksMingling souls, and tender eyes—

Love, and that, in all their looks; Thoughts of you, and no one else; Voice that has a tender ring, Sacrifices made, and-wellYou know-all that sort of thing.

That's all worn-out talk, they say,

Don't see any of it nowSpooning on your fiancée Isn't good style, anyhow.

Just suppose that one of us

Nell and me, you know-some day Got like that on some one else

Might be rather awkward-eh! All in earnest, like the booksWouldn't it be awful rough! Jove! if I-but pshaw, what bosh! Nell and I are safe enough. Some time in the Spring, I guess; Be on hand to wish us joy? Be a groomsman, if you likeLots of wine-good-bye, old boy.

Katharine Sherwood Bonner McDowell.

BORN in Holly Springs, Miss., 1849. DIED there, 1883.

AUNT BECKEY "KUNJURED."

[Suwanee River Tales. By Sherwood Bonner. 1884.]

WHILE we were at breakfast, Aunt Beckey's niece, Leah, came running

in. Leah was a queer little darky, with her hair tied in countless pigtails pointing in every direction, and her eyes continually rolling about like beads in a socket.

"Mars' Charles," said she, "Aunt Beckey done sont me fur you. She want ter see you quick. She's powerful low dis mornin'."

"What's the matter?"

"She do say she's been tricked "-in a loud whisper.

"Nonsense!" cried my father, tossing a biscuit at the small messenger. "Tell her I'll be with her in five minutes."

I went with father to Aunt Beckey's cabin. What a change in one night! Her face looked drawn and pinched; her eyes were startled and full of fear. "Oh, Mars' Charles!" she cried, pitifully, "ole Sini has witched me sho' an' sartin', an' I'm full of little snakes!"

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'Why, Aunt Beckey, what on earth do you mean ?"

"Jes' what I say, Mars' Charles; an' it's God's trufe I'm speakin'. When I saw ole Sini at de camp meetin' I mistrusted dat she meant ter work me a mischief; an' I kep' away from her jes' as much as I could; fur, as sho❜ly as de devil lives an' trimbles befo' de face o' de Lord, dat ole witch 'ooman hes got de Evil Eye. But I couldn't keep my thoughts off'n her; an' I wus awishin' her evil in my heart all de time."

"Well, Beckey, that was natural enough," said my father, kindly.

"Mebbe it wus natural," groaned Aunt Beckey; "but oh! it wus sinful, an' I am punished fur it, jes' as little Missy said I would be."

“Why, what have you to do with this?" said my father, turning to me sternly, to my great alarm.

"I only told her a proverb," faltered I.

"Curses, like chickens, come home ter roost," moaned Aunt Beckey,"come home ter roost! Mebbe if I hadn't been harborin' sech wickedness an' ill-will in my heart, de good Lord would have protected me from her deperadations on me. For I'll tell you, Mars' Charles, what happened," and Aunt Beckey half raised herself in bed and fixed her great black feverish eyes on my father's face.

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Las' night I was a-lyin' here, wid my eyes wide open an' all my faculties broad awake, when in come ole Sini, a-slippin' an' a-glidin', like de snake dat she is. I tried ter jump up an' scream, but she hel' me ter de bed wid dat witch eye of hern, till I wus jes' stagnated, an' couldn't 'a' moved an inch. No, not if it had 'a' been ter have slipped my neck from de hang-man's noose.

"Drink dis,' she says, bendin' over me, an hissin' hot in my ear. An' she

hel' out a cup of water, witch water, full o' somethin' like wrigglin' hairs. I knowed dey wus snakes, but I had no power ter push dat cup away. I jes' drunk it down like a baby, an' from dat minnit I wus lost. Ole Sini laughed, an' a sort of blue flame busted out all around her, an' dar was sech a smell of brimstone dat I fainted clean away. When I come to, Sini wus gone, but dem snakes wus wrigglin' through me in streaks of pain, an' from dat on, Mars' Charles, I ain't had one minnit's peace."

"You should have sent for me, Beckey. I might have given you something to relieve that pain at once. You have evidently taken a violent cold; and your trouble is caused by your old foe, rheumatism. As for the rest, my poor soul, you have had a bad dream. Old Sini couldn't trick you if she wanted to! The good Lord never gave one mortal that power over another.”

"And then, papa,” cried I eagerly, "Sini lives on the Weatherly plantation, thirty miles away. She couldn't get here!"

"Dey rides through de air," murmured poor Aunt Beckey. "Dey rides on de souls o' lost sinners dat wanders up an' down an' over de earth."

"I won't have that nonsense," said my father sharply; "where is your common-sense, Beckey?"

"Snakes! snakes!" cried Aunt Beckey frantically; and then to our horror the poor creature went off into convulsions, foaming at the mouth, clinching her hands until the nails drew blood, stiffening and relaxing her form, resisting all attempts at quieting her, until forced to yield to the effects of an opiate.

This was the beginning. "And Heaven knows what the end will be," said my father, his kind face clouded with anxiety.

During the next two weeks three doctors in turn were called in to see Aunt Beckey. Through their skill, perhaps, the attack of pneumonia or inflammatory rheumatism with which she had seemed threatened was warded off; but she grew no stronger. All sorts of remedies were tried in vain. The doctors declared they could do no more for her, and that there was no reason why she should not, as it were, take up her bed and walk. But poor Aunt Beckey! There she lay, tranquil now, sometimes even smiling, saying little, losing flesh daily, looking out on the vanishing world with big solemn eyes glowing strangely in her gaunt face,-dying as surely as though Aunt Sini's imagined draught had been in truth the deadly Italian acqua, the introvabile poison whose traces could never be discovered, though one drop sufficed to kill with slow and nameless tortures.

My mother spent hours beside the sufferer, but all her influence was of no avail. Tricked Aunt Beckey was, and tricked she meant to remain, in the teeth of a whole college of physicians or sceptics.

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"Don't you know, Aunt Beckey," cried my mother one day, "that what you say is impossible?-that snakes cannot live in the human stomach?" Dey ain't in my stomach, honey, not in pertikeler. Dey is everywhar dat feelin' lives, a-curlin' an' a-coilin' an' a-strikin' dar fangs over every part of my po' tormented body."

"Like Ariel, flaming amazement' over all the ship," murmured I; for I had just begun to read Shakespeare.

"Dey's in my legs now," continued Aunt Beckey, mournfully; "an' I tell you, Mis' Mary, I'd be willin' fur my legs ter be cut off, if I could git red of de snakes dat race from my knees ter my feet."

It was a strange, gloomy time. The place was never so quiet. No more dancing to the banjo's ting, nor singing on moonlight nights. The negroes moved about silently, and talked in low frightened whispers. Every evening the little cabin was filled with visitors from the adjoining plantations, who mourned and sang over Aunt Beckey, I believe, the entire night through. Some of their songs were fine old Methodist hymns, which were rolled out with grand effect; others must have been improvised for the occasion, as for instance:

Satan's sech a liar,
And a kunjurer too;
Ef you don't mind,
He'll kunjur you!
Kunjur you-

He will kunjur you!

During the fourth week of Aunt Beckey's illness, my father was called away from home, to be gone some days. But for his absence, the audacious piece of roguery I am about to chronicle would never have been attempted, and I should have had no story to tell.

It began with Cousin Henry's persuading mamma to let him take charge of Aunt Beckey's case.

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You know uncle has given her up," he urged.

"True," said my mother with a sigh; "he told me, the night before he left, that, although he believed her disease purely imaginary, yet he had given up all hope of saving her. But what can you do for her, Henry,-a mere boy like you, though you are a saucy medical student?"

"Fancying myself very wise!" laughed Henry. "Go on, Aunt May; I know you want a rap at my conceit! But I am not going over the old ground with Aunt Beckey. I fancy the wisdom of the schools has been exhausted in her behalf. I'm so liberal in my views that I've no objection to a bit of quackery, when I can gain a point by it."

"There seems to be only one thing to be said in favor of quacks," remarked my mother, thoughtfully; "they always cure their patients!"

"Treason in the home camp!" cried Henry. "What would uncle say to such a speech? But do let me try to help poor old Beckey, aunty dear. If I could save her life, would you object to any means by which that good end came about?"

"How could I?" cried my mother. "No indeed, Henry, if you can help poor Aunt Beckey, God's blessing will be on your effort; and my prayers will go with you every step of the way."

Henry had the grace to blush a little at this, but he skipped off quite cheerfully to Aunt Beckey's cabin. Of course I went with him. Where Henry led I usually followed in those days! What a torment I was, to be sure!

"I'm awfully sorry to see you so ill, Aunt Beckey," he said cordially. "Yes, Marster, I'se mighty bad off," she said feebly. Poor soul! she talked

no more of being tricked. She was tired of telling her story to sceptical

ears.

Henry looked at her with perfect gravity. "There has been foul work here," said he; "this is a case of witchcraft."

Aunt Beckey burst into tears. At last she had found some one to believe her. "Oh, Mars' Henry! how come you so wise? You's de fust one-de only one-ter know de trufe."

"None so blind as those who won't see,'" quoted Henry; "it's as plain to me as the sunlight; you've been tricked."

"Not many days of life left for poor old Beckey," said the interesting victim.

"I'm not so sure of that," said Henry cheerfully. "I've studied this subject, and I know the ins and outs of it. I've read more books about demons than there are hairs on your head; and I've seen sights to make your heart jump out of your body. With my own eyes I have seen water blazing like a tar-barrel on fire; and I have seen a dead man rise in his shroud and thrust out his cold arm as if to seize you'

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"Oh! Mars' Henry, hush! it skeers me to hear sech things. Maybe you're a Hoodoo witch yourself."

"How can you think such a thing?" shouted Henry. "No! I am the bitterest enemy the Hoodoos have; and I know how to come up with all their tricks."

"Maybe you can help me," said Aunt Beckey timidly.

"Of course I can. I would have offered to do it long before, but these grand doctors were so sure they could cure you! But mind, Aunt Beckey! if I take you in hand you must obey me in everything. The least slip in following my directions might prove fatal."

"Try me! try me!" she cried, eagerly; "oh ! Mars' Henry, you can't tell me nothin' tu hard ter do; fur I ain't ready yit-de good Lord knows I ain't -ter cross beyond de swellin' floods."

Henry drew a hideous little wooden image from his pocket, and gave it to Aunt Beckey with the injunction that she should wear it over her heart night and day. It is a very powerful fetich," said he, "and will protect you from any future harm.”

Then he turned to gran'mammy, who stood by, with a gleam of hope brightening her face, and told her to kill a white chicken just as the moon rose, and make a strong broth for Aunt Beckey.

"Put plenty of red pepper and rice in it," said he, "and feed her exactly one pint every three hours; not a spoonful more or less, or I can't answer for the consequences. To-morrow I shall call at the same hour, and I will see to the snakes that have caused you so much trouble. I suppose you are willing to suffer some pain in order to get them out of your system?"

"Yes, Mars' Henry, God knows I'm willin' ter suffer anything." And Aunt Beckey closed her lips with the air of a martyr.

That afternoon my cousin and my small brother Sam went hunting. On their return, I noticed that Sam carried a small oblong box in his hand; but he would not tell us what it held.

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