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There was only one thing about her that was disappointing. He did not
admit it to himself but it kept falling on their interviews with a
depressive effect. To the call of beauty she remained unmoved. If he
drew up his horse to gaze on the wonders of the sunset the waiting made
her impatient. He had noticed that heat and mosquitoes would distract
her attention from the hazy distances drowsing in the clear yellow of
noon. The sky could flush and deepen in majestic splendors, but if she
was busy over the fire and her skillets she never raised her head to
look. And so it was with poetry. She did not know and did not care
anything about the fine frenzies of the masters. Byron? - wrinkling up
her forehead - yes, she thought she'd read something in school.
Shelley?"The Ode to the West Wind?" No, she'd never read that. What
was an ode anyway? Once he recited the "Lines to an Indian Air," his
voice trembling a little, for the words were almost sacred. She pondered for a space and then said: "What are champak odors?" David didn't know. He had never thought of inquiring. "Isn't that odd," she murmured. "That would have been the first thing
I would have wanted to know. Champak? I suppose it's some kind of a
flower - something like a magnolia. It has a sound like a magnolia." A lively imagination was evidently not one of Miss Gillespie's
possessions. Late one afternoon, riding some distance in front of the train, she and
David had seen an Indian loping by on his pony. It was not an unusual
sight. Many Indians had visited their camp and at the crossing of the
Kaw they had come upon an entire village in transit to the summer
hunting grounds. But there was something in this lone figure, moving
solitary through the evening glow, that put him in accord with the
landscape's solemn beauty, retouched him with his lost magnificence.
In buckskins black with filth, his blanket a tattered rag, an ancient
rifle across his saddle, the undying picturesqueness of the red man was
his. "Look," said David, his imagination fired. "Look at that Indian." The savage saw them and turned a face of melancholy dignity upon them,
giving forth a deep "How, How." "He's a very dirty Indian," said Susan, sweeping him with a glance of
disfavor. David did not hear her. He looked back to watch the lonely figure as
it rode away over the swells. It seemed to him to be riding into the
past, the lordly past, when the red man owned the land and the fruits
thereof. "Look at him as he rides away," he said. "Can't you seem to see him
coming home from a battle with his face streaked with vermilion and his
war bonnet on? He'd be solemn and grand with the wet scalps dripping
at his belt. When they saw him coming his squaws would come out in
front of the lodges and begin to sing the war chant." "Squaws!" in a tone of disgust. "That's as bad as the Mormons." The muse had possession of David and a regard for monogamy was not
sufficient to stay his noble rage.
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