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Bricks Without Straw: A Novel
Chapter 45. Another Ox Gored
Albion Winegar Tourgee
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       _ CHAPTER XLV. ANOTHER OX GORED
       There was a caller who begged to see Mr. Le Moyne for a few minutes. Descending to the sitting-room, Hesden found there Mr. Jordan Jackson, who was the white candidate for the Legislature upon the same ticket with a colored man who had left the county in fright immediately after the raid upon Red Wing. Hesden was somewhat surprised at this call, for although he had known Mr. Jackson from boyhood, yet there had never been more than a passing acquaintance between them. It is true, Mr Jackson was a neighbor, living only two or three miles from Mulberry Hill; but he belonged to such an entirely different class of society that their knowledge of each other had never ripened into anything like familiarity.
       Mr. Jackson was what used to be termed a poor man. He and his father before him, as Hesden knew, had lived on a little, poor plantation, surrounded by wealthy neighbors. They owned no slaves, and lived, scantily on the products of the farm worked by themselves. The present occupant was about Hesden's own age. There being no free schools in that county, and his father having been unable, perhaps not even desiring, to educate him otherwise, he had grown up almost entirely illiterate. He had learned to sign his name, and only by strenuous exertions, after his arrival at manhood, had become able, with difficulty, to spell out words from the printed page and to write an ordinary letter in strangely-tangled hieroglyphics, in a spelling which would do credit to a phonetic reformer. He had entered the army, probably because he could not do otherwise, and being of stalwart build, and having great endurance and native courage, before the struggle was over had risen, despite his disadvantages of birth and education, to a lieutenancy.
       This experience had been of advantage to him in more ways than one. Chief among these had been the opening of his eyes to the fact that he himself, although a poor man, and the scion of a poor family, was, in all the manly requisites that go to make up a soldier, always the equal, and very often the superior, of his aristocratic neighbors. Little by little, the self-respect which had been ground out of him and his family by generations of that condition of inferiority which the common-liver, the self-helper of the South, was forced to endure under the old slave regime, began to grow up in his heart. He began to feel himself a man, and prized the rank-marks on his collar as the certificate and endorsement of his manhood. As this feeling developed, he began to consider the relations between himself, his family, and others like them, and the rich neighbors by whom they were surrounded and looked down upon. And more and more, as he did so, the feeling grew upon him that he and his class had been wronged, cheated--"put upon," he phrased it--in all the past. They had been the "chinking" between the "mud" of slavery and the "house-logs" of aristocracy in the social structure of the South--a little better than the mud because of the same grain and nature as the logs; but useless and nameless except as in relation to both. He felt the bitter truth of that stinging aphorism which was current among the privates of the Confederate army, which characterized the war of Rebellion as "the poor man's war and the rich man's fight."
       So, when the war was over, Lieutenant Jordan Jackson did not return easily and contentedly to the niche in the social life of his native region to which he had been born and bred. He found the habit of leadership and command very pleasant, and he determined that he would rise in the scale of Horsford society as he had risen in the army, simply because he was brave and strong. He knew that to do this he must acquire wealth, and looking about, he saw opportunities open before him which others had not noticed. Almost before the smoke of battle had cleared away, Jordan Jackson had opened trade with the invaders, and had made himself a prime favorite in the Federal camps. He coined money in those days of transition. Fortunately, he had been too poor to be in debt when the war broke out. He was independently poor, because beyond the range of credit.
       He had lost nothing, for he had nothing but the few poor acres of his homestead to lose.
       So he started fair, and before the period of reconstruction began he had by thrifty management accumulated quite a competency. He had bought several plantations whose aristocratic owners could no longer keep their grip upon half-worked lands, had opened a little store, and monopolized a considerable trade. Looking at affairs as they stood at that time, Jordan Jackson said to himself that the opportunity for him and his class had come. He had a profound respect for the power and authority of the Government of the United States, because it had put down the Rebellion. He had been two or three times at the North, and was astounded at its collective greatness. He said that the colored man and the poor-whites of the South ought to put themselves on the side of this great, busy North, which had opened the way of liberty and progress before them, and establish free schools and free thought and free labor in the fair, crippled, South-land. He thought he saw a great and fair future looming up before his country. He freely gave expression to these ideas, and, as he traded very largely with the colored people, soon came to be regarded by them as a leader, and by "the good people of Horsford" as a low-down white nigger, for whom no epithet was too vile.
       Nevertheless, he grew in wealth, for he attended to his business himself, early and late. He answered raillery with raillery, curses with cursing, and abuse with defiance. He was elected to conventions and Legislatures, where he did many foolish, some bad, and a few wise things in the way of legislation. He knew what he wanted--it was light, liberty, education, and a "fair hack" for all men. How to get it he did not know.
       He had been warned a thousand times that he must abandon this way of life. The natural rulers of the county felt that if they could neutralize his influence and that which went out from Red Wing, they could prevent the exercise of ballatorial power by a considerable portion of the majority, and by that means "redeem" the county.
       They did not wish to hurt Jordan Jackson. He was a good enough man. His father had been an honest man, and an old citizen. Nobody knew a word against his wife or her family, except that they had been poor. The people who had given their hearts to the Confederate cause, remembered too, at first, his gallant service; but that had all been wiped out from their minds by his subsequent "treachery." Even after the attack on Red Wing, he had been warned by his friends to desist.
       One morning, he had found on the door of his store a paper containing the following words, written inside a little sketch of a coffin:
       He had answered this by a defiant, ill-spelled notice, pasted just beside it, in which he announced himself as always ready to meet any crowd of "cowards and villains who were ashamed of their own faces, at any time, night or day." His card was English prose of a most vigorous type, interspersed with so much of illiterate profanity as to satisfy any good citizen that the best people of Horsford were quite right in regarding him as a most desperate and dangerous man--one of those whose influence upon the colored people was to array them against the whites, and unless promptly put down, bring about a war of races--which the white people were determined never to have in Horsford, if they had to kill every Radical in the county in order to live in peace with their former slaves, whom they had always nourished with paternal affection and still regarded with a most tender care.
       This man met Hesden as the latter came out upon the porch, and with a flushed face and a peculiar twitching about his mouth, asked if he could see him in private for a moment.
       Hesden led the way to his own room. Jackson then, having first shut the door, cautiously said:
       "You know me, Mr. Le Moyne?"
       "Certainly, Jackson."
       "An' you knew my father before me?"
       "Of course. I knew old man Billy Jackson very well in my young days."
       "Did you ever know anything mean or disreputable about him?"
       "No, certainly not; he was a very correct man, so far as I ever heard."
       "Poor but honest?"--with a sneer.
       "Well, yes; a poor man, but a very correct man."
       "Well, did you ever know anything disreputable about me? " keenly.
       "Well--why--Mr. Jackson--you--" stammered Hesden, much confused.
       "Out with it!" angrily. "I'm a Radical?"
       "Yes--and--you know, your political course has rendered you very unpopular."
       "Of course! A man has no right to his own political opinions."
       "Well, but you know, Mr. Jackson, yours have been so peculiar and so obnoxious to our best people. Besides, you have expressed them so boldly and defiantly. I do not think our people have any ill-feeling against you, personally; but you cannot wonder that so great a change as we have had should excite many of them very greatly. You should not be so violent, Mr. Jackson."
       "Violent--Hell! You'd better go and preach peace to Eliab Hill. Poor fellow! I don't reckon the man lives who ever heard him say a harsh thing to any one. He was always that mild I used to wonder the Lord didn't take him long ago. Nigger as he was, and cripple as he was, I'd ruther had his religion than that of all the mean, hypocritical, murdering aristocrats in Horsford."
       "But, Mr. Jackson, you should not speak in that way of our best citizens."
       "Oh, the devil! I know--but that is no matter, Mr. Le Moyne. I didn't come to argue with you. Did you ever hear anything agin' me outside of my politics?"
       "I don't know that I ever did."
       "If you were in a tight place, would you have confidence in Jordan Jackson as a friend?"
       "You know I have reason to remember that," said Hesden, with feeling. "You helped me when I could not help myself. It's not every man that would care about his horse carrying double when he was running away from the Yanks."
       "Ah! you remember that, then?" with a touch of pride in his voice.
       "Yes, indeed! Jackson," said Hesden, warmly.
       "Well, would you do me a good turn to pay for that?"
       "Certainly--anything that--" hesitating.
       "Oh, damn it, man, don't strain yourself! I didn't ask any questions when I helped you!"
       "Mr. Jackson," said Hesden, with dignity, "I merely wished to say that I do not care at this time to embroil myself in politics. You know I have an old mother who is very feeble. I have long regretted that affairs are in the condition that they are in, and have wondered if something could not be done. Theoretically, you are right and those who are with you. Practically, the matter is very embarrassing. But I do not hesitate to say, Mr. Jackson, that those who commit such outrages as that perpetrated at Red Wing disgrace the name of gentleman, the county, and State, the age we live in, and the religion we profess. That I will say."
       "And that's quite enough, Mr. Le Moyne. All I wanted was to ask you to act as my trustee."
       "Your trustee in what?"
       "There is a deed I have just executed conveying everything I have to you, and I want you to sell it off and dispose of it the best you can, and send me the money."
       "Send it to you?"
       "Yes, I'm going away."
       "Going away? Why? You are not in debt?"
       "I don't owe a hundred dollars."
       "Then why are you doing this? I don't understand."
       "Mr. Le Moyne," said Jackson, coming close to him and speaking in a low intense tone, "I was whipped last night!"
       "Whipped!"
       "Yes."
       "By whom?"
       "By my own neighbors, in the sight of my wife and daughter!"
       "By the Ku Klux?"
       "That's what they call themselves."
       "My God, it cannot be!"
       "Cannot?" The man's face twitched nervously, as, dropping his hat, he threw off his light coat and, opening his shirt-collar and turning away his head, showed his shoulder covered with wales, still raw and bleeding.
       "My God!" cried Hesden, as he put up his hand and started back in horror. "And you a white man?"
       "Yes, Mr. Le Moyne," said Jackson, turning his face, burning with shame and indignation, toward his high-bred neighbor, "and the only reason this was done--the only thing agin me--is that I was honestly in favor of giving to the colored man the rights which the law of the land says he shall have, like other men. When the war was over, Mr. Le Moyne, I didn't 'give up,' as all you rich folks talked about doing, and try to put up with what was to come afterward. I hadn't lost nothing by the war, but, on the contrary, had gained what I had no chance to git in any other way. So I jest looked things square in the face and made up my mind that it was a good thing for me, and all such as me, that the damned old Confederacy was dead. And the more I thought on't the more I couldn't help seein' and believin' that it was right and fair to free the niggers and let them have a fair show and a white man's chance--votin' and all. That's what I call a fair hack, and I swear, Mr. Le Moyne, I don't know how it may seem to you, but to my mind any man that ain't willing to let any other man have that, is a damn coward! I'm as white as anybody, and hain't no more reason to stand up for niggers than any of the rest of the white people--no, nor half as much as most of 'em, for, as fur as I know, I hain't got no relations among 'em. But I do say that if the white folks of the South can't stand up to a fair fight with the niggers at the polls, without cuttin', and murderin', and burnin', and shootin', and whippin', and Ku Kluxin', and cheatin', and swindlin', they are a damned no-'count people, and don't deserve no sort of show in the world--no more than a mean, sneakin', venomous moccasin-snake--there!"
       "But you don't think--" Hesden began.
       "Think? Damn it, I know!" broke in Jackson. "They said if I would quit standin' up for the niggers, they'd let me off, even after they'd got me stripped and hung up. I wouldn't do it! I didn't believe then they'd cut me up this way; but they did! An' now I'm goin'. I'd stay an' fight, but 'tain't no use; an' I couldn't look a man in the eye who I thought tuk a hand in that whippin' without killin' him. I've got to go, Le Moyne," he said with clenched fists, "or I shall commit murder before the sun goes down."
       "Where are you going?"
       "God knows! Somewhere where the world's free and the earth's fresh, and where it's no crime to have been born poor or to uphold and maintain the laws of the land."
       "I'm sorry, Jackson, but I don't blame you. You can't live here in peace, and you are wise to go," said Hesden, extending his hand.
       "Will you be my trustee?"
       "Yes."
       "God bless you!"
       The angry, crushed, and outraged man broke into tears as he shook the hand he held.
       There was an hour or two of close consultation, and then Hesden Le Moyne looked thoughtfully after this earnest and well-meaning man, who was compelled to flee from the land for which he had fought, simply because he had adopted the policy and principles which the conquering power had thrust into the fundamental law, and endeavored to carry them out in good faith. Like the fugitive from slavery in the olden time, he had started toward the North Pole on the quest for liberty. _
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Preface
Chapter 1. Tri-Nominate
Chapter 2. The Font
Chapter 3. The Junonian Rite
Chapter 4. Mars Meddles
Chapter 5. Nunc Pro Tunc
Chapter 6. The Toga Virilis
Chapter 7. Damon And Pythias
Chapter 8. A Friendly Prologue
Chapter 9. A Bruised Reed
Chapter 10. An Express Trust
Chapter 11. Red Wing
Chapter 12. On The Way To Jericho
Chapter 13. Negotiating A Treaty
Chapter 14. Born Of The Storm
Chapter 15. To Him And His Heirs Forever
Chapter 16. A Child Of The Hills
Chapter 17. Good-Morrow And Farewell
Chapter 18. "Prime Wrappers"
Chapter 19. The Shadow Of The Flag
Chapter 20. Phantasmagoria
Chapter 21. A Child-Man
Chapter 22. How The Fallow Was Seeded
Chapter 23. An Offering Of First-Fruits
Chapter 24. A Black Democritus
Chapter 25. A Double-Headed Argument
Chapter 26. Taken At His Word
Chapter 27. Motes In The Sunshine
Chapter 28. In The Path Of The Storm
Chapter 29. Like And Unlike
Chapter 30. An Unbidden Guest
Chapter 31. A Life For A Life
Chapter 32. A Voice From The Darkness
Chapter 33. A Difference Of Opinion
Chapter 34. The Majesty Of The Law
Chapter 35. A Particular Tenancy Lapses
Chapter 36. The Beacon-Light Of Love
Chapter 37. The "Best Friends" Reveal Themselves
Chapter 38. "The Rose Above The Mould"
Chapter 39. What The Mist Hid
Chapter 40 Dawning
Chapter 41. Q. E. D.
Chapter 42. Through A Cloud-Rift
Chapter 43. A Glad Good-By
Chapter 44. Putting This And That Together
Chapter 45. Another Ox Gored
Chapter 46. Backward And Forward
Chapter 47. Breasting The Torrent
Chapter 48. The Price Of Honor
Chapter 49. Highly Resolved
Chapter 50. Face Answereth To Face
Chapter 51. How Sleep The Brave?
Chapter 52. Redeemed Out Of The House Of Bondage
Chapter 53. In The Cyclone
Chapter 54. A Bolt Out Of The Cloud
Chapter 55. An Unconditional Surrender
Chapter 56. Some Old Letters
Chapter 57. A Sweet And Bitter Fruitage
Chapter 58. Coming To The Front
Chapter 59. The Shuttlecock Of Fate
Chapter 60. The Exodian
Chapter 61. What Shall The End Be?
Chapter 62. How?