Eng. 28 & 101, T. Amano-Tompkins
Love (1940) by Jesse Stuart
Yesterday when the bright sun blazed
down on the wilted corn my father and I walked around the edge of the new
ground to plan a fence. The cows kept coming through the chestnut oaks on the
cliff and running over the young corn. They bit off the tips of the corn and
trampled down the stubble.
My father walked in the cornbalk.
Bob, our Collie, walked in front of my father. We heard a ground squirrel
whistle down over the bluff among the dead treetops at the clearing’s edge.
“Whoop, take him, Bob,” said my father. He lifted up a young stalk of corn,
with wilted dried roots, where the ground squirrel had dug it up for the sweet
grain of corn left on its tender roots. This has been a dry spring and the corn
has kept well in the earth where the grain has sprouted. The ground squirrels
love this corn. They dig up rows of it and eat the sweet grains. The young corn
stalks are killed and we have to replant the corn.
I could see my father keep sicking
Bob after the ground squirrel. He jumped over the corn rows. He started to run
toward the ground squirrel. I, too, started running toward the clearing’s edge
where Bob was jumping and barking. The dust flew in tiny swirls behind our
feet. There was a big cloud of dust behind his.
“It’s a big bull blacksnake,” said
my father. “Kill him, Bob! Kill him, Bob!”
“Bob was jumping and snapping at the
snake so as to make it strike and throw itself off guard. Bob has killed
twenty-eight copperheads this spring. He knows how to kill a snake. He doesn’t
rush to do it. He takes his time and does the job well.
“Let’s don’t kill the snake,” I
said. “A blacksnake is a harmless snake. It kills poison snakes. It kills the
copperhead. It catches more mice from the fields than a cat.”
“I could see the snake didn’t want
to fight the dog. The snake wanted to get away. Bob wouldn’t let it. I wondered
why it was crawling toward a heap of black loamy earth at the bench of the
hill. I wondered why it had come from the chestnut oak sprouts and the matted
greenbriars on the cliff. I looked as the snake lifted its pretty head in
response to one of Bob’s jumps. “It’s not a bull blacksnake,” I said. “It’s a
she-snake. Look at the white on her throat.”
“A snake is an enemy to me,” my
father snapped. “I hate a snake. Kill it, Bob. Go in there and get that snake
and quit playing with it!”
Bob obeyed my father. I hated to see
him take this snake by the throat. She was so beautifully poised in the
sunlight. Bob grabbed the white patch on her throat. He cracked her long body
like an ox whip in the wind. He cracked it against the wind only. The blood
spurted from her fine-curved throat. Something hit against my legs like
pellets. Bob threw the snake down. I looked to see what had struck my legs. It
was snake eggs. Bob had slung them from her body. She was going to the sand
heap to lay her eggs, where the sun is the setting hen that warms them and
hatches them.
Bob grabbed her body there on the
earth where the red blood was running down on the gray-piled loam. Her body was
still writhing in pain. She acted like a greenweed held over a new-ground fire.
Bob slung her viciously many times. He cracked her limp body against the wind.
She was now limber as a shoestring in the wind. Bob threw her riddled body back
on the sand. She quivered like a leaf in the lazy wind, then her riddled body
lay perfectly still. The blood covered the loamy earth around the snake.
English 1A Page 2 of 2 Instructor:
Tom Amano-Tompkins
“Look at the eggs, won’t you?” said
my father. We counted thirty-seven eggs. I picked an egg up and held it in my
hand. Only a minute ago there was life in it. It was an immature seed. It would
not hatch. Mother sun could not incubate it on the warm earth. The egg I held
in my hand was almost the size of a quail’s egg. The shell on it was thin and
tough and the egg appeared under the surface to be a watery egg.
“Well, Bob, I guess you see now why
this snake couldn’t fight,” I said. “It is life. Stronger devour the weaker
even among human beings. Dog kills snake. Snake kills birds. Birds kill
butterflies. Man conquers all. Man, too, kills for sport.”
Bob was panting. He walked ahead of
us back to the house. His tongue was out of his mouth. He was tired. He was hot
under his shaggy coat of hair. His tongue nearly touched the dry dirt and white
flecks of foam dripped from it. We walked toward the house. Neither my father
nor I spoke. I still thought of the dead snake. The sun was going down over the
chestnut ridge. A lark was singing. It was late for a lark to sing. The red
evening clouds floated above the pine trees on our pasture hill. My father
stood beside the path. His black hair was moved by the wind. His face was red
in the blue wind of day. His eyes looked toward the sinking sun.
“And my father hates a snake,” I
thought.
I thought about the agony women know
of giving birth. I thought about how they will fight to save their children.
Then, I thought of the snake. I thought it was silly of me to think such
thoughts.
This morning my father and I got up
with the chickens. He says one has to get up with the chickens to do a day’s
work. We got the posthole digger, ax, spud, measuring pole and the mattock. We
started for the clearing’s edge. Bob didn’t go along.
The dew was on the corn. My father
walked behind with the posthole digger across his shoulder. I walked in front.
The wind was blowing. It was a good morning wind to breathe and a wind that
makes one feel like he can get under the edge of a hill and heave the whole
hill upside down.
I walked out the corn row where we
had come yesterday afternoon. I looked in front of me. I saw something. I saw
it move. It was moving like a huge black rope winds around a windlass.
“Steady,” I said to my father. “Here is the bull blacksnake.” He took one step
up beside me and stood. His eyes grew wide apart.
“What do you know about this,” he
said.
“You have seen the bull blacksnake
now,” I said. “Take a good look at him! He is lying beside his dead mate. He
has come to her. He, perhaps, was on her trail yesterday.”
The male snake had trailed her to
her doom. He had come in the night, under the roof of stars, as the moon shed
rays of light on the quivering clouds of green. He had found his lover dead. He
was coiled beside her, and she was dead.
The bull blacksnake lifted his head
and followed us as we walked around the dead snake. He would have fought us to
his death. He would have fought Bob to his death. “Take a stick,” said my
father, “and throw him over the hill so Bob won’t find him. Did you ever see
anything to beat that? I’ve heard they’d do that. But this is my first time to
see it.” I took a stick and threw him over the bank into the dewy sprouts on
the cliff.
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