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Gideon’s Band: A Tale of the Mississippi
Chapter 45. Applause
George Washington Cable
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       _ CHAPTER XLV. APPLAUSE
       Diffidence! Hugh had spoken of diffidence--in himself--in the twins. Could Julian really be hiding such a thing behind such a mask? Ramsey wondered.
       Every eye was on him and again the floor thundered, shaming her, flattering him. As he came on, the exhorter began to put out an arm, to speak and to rise, but the cub pilot blandly intervened and Julian ignored him. For there both brothers came face to face with the first mate. He had entered where Gilmore went out, and now passed them with a stare like their own, fire for fire, and at close quarters began to accost the exhorter and his two adherents.
       They rose, and with evident change of meaning thunder came again, though not for them. The departing twins and their triple escort; the exhorter and the four about him; Ramsey, Joy, and the returned Gilmore, who just then touched her shoulder and whispered something to which she replied with quick nods of consent--all these groups lifted their gaze, with the whole company's, to the curtained stage.
       Diffidence! oh, where _was_ diffidence? Hugh had stepped in behind the footlights and was standing and looking out across them as foursquare and unsmiling as a gravestone.
       Their light was on his brow, whose frown smote her with foreboding. Half folded he held a slip of paper as if about to give official notice of some grave matter, and his aggressive eyes, that seemed to her to look a greater distance away from a greater distance within than ever before, were fixed on one man. Absolute silence fell. And thereupon, to the open-mouthed amazement of the audience, with his stare yet on that one face, and in a voice that seemed octaves below hers, he began to sing straight at the exhorter:
       "Do you belong to Gideon's ban'?"
       A shout of laughter, a rain of clappings, a thunder of canes and feet. Sitters bumped up and down. They were safe home again in nonsense and were glad. Ramsey's laugh was like a dancer's bells though under cover of the dusk she let the tears roll down. Old Joy moaned and shook her head. John the Baptist had begun to retort but withered before a ferocious muffled threat from the mate while following him into the aisle. "Bucked and gagged," was the mate's odd phrase, at which a dozen or so nearest him laughed again, a bit nervously. They looked back to see if the twins had heard it, and were just in time to catch from Julian and the general a last glare of scorn as the group of five left the cabin. Then again came silence, except behind the footlights, where the sphinx-like singer bore straight on through the refrain and came to the new lines. Sing them out, sphinx; the more senseless the better.
       "Nex' come de 'coon and de cockatroo,
       Nex' come de 'coon and de cockatroo,
       Nex' come de 'coon and de cockatroo,
       De hawg and de whoopdedoodendoo.
       Do you belong----?"
       The inquiry was drowned in applause, which swelled as the mate and the exhorter went out with the latter's two backers--more eagle-eyed and stallion-eyed than ever--and with Watson's cub at the rear. A number stretched up for a glimpse of Ramsey but she too--and the actor--and Joy--were gone. There was another waiting hush, and the droll singer, so droll because so granite solemn, resumed:
       "Den turkle-dove an' blue-bird blue,
       Den turkle-dove an' blue-bird blue,
       Den turkle-dove an' blue-bird blue,
       De merry-go-roun' and de hullabaloo.
       Do you belong----?"
       Applause! Was that the end? Not if the applauders could help it! The day was coming when a boiler-deck and pilot-house tradition, heard by many with hearty enjoyment, by many with silent disdain, would be this: that aboard the old _Votaress_ on her first up trip--late spring of '52--cholera on every deck--mutiny hotly smouldering--the unreason of fear and of wrath were beaten in fair fight by the unreason of mirth, and men's, women's, children's lives--no telling how many--were saved, through the cleverness of some play-actors and first the youngest of all the Hayles and then the youngest of all the Courteneys singing a nonsense song! Sing it! sing on!
       He sang on:
       "Den de grizzly-b'ah and den de mole,
       De grizzly-b'ah and den de mole,
       De grizzly-b'ah and den de mole,
       De terrapintime and de wrigglemarole.
       Do you belong----?"
       The plaudits were at their height and Hugh still on the interrogative line when there came from behind the curtain a voice skilfully thrown to reach only him:
       "Give them one verse more and we'll be ready!"
       He gave it:
       "Las' de cattlemaran and de curlicue,
       De cattlemaran and de curlicue,
       De cattlemaran and de curlicue,
       De daddy-long-legs and de buggaboo.
       Do you belong----?"
       He stepped quickly from the "stage." The curtains drew apart. The scene revealed was a drawing-room. In it stood alone, as if playfully listening for something, the housemaid; not "Harriet" but Ramsey. (Laughter and applause.) _
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本书目录

Chapter 1. The Steamboat Levee
Chapter 2. The "Votaress"
Chapter 3. Certain Passengers
Chapter 4. The First Two Miles
Chapter 5. Ramsey Hayle
Chapter 6. Hayle's Twins
Chapter 7. Supper
Chapter 8. Questions
Chapter 9. Sitting Silent
Chapter 10. Peril
Chapter 11. First Night-Watch
Chapter 12. Hugh And The Twins
Chapter 13. The Superabounding Ramsey
Chapter 14. The Committee Of Seven
Chapter 15. Morning Watch
Chapter 16. Phyllis
Chapter 17. "It's A-Happmin' Yit--To We All"
Chapter 18. Ramsey Wins A Point Or Two
Chapter 19. This Way To Womanhood
Chapter 20. Ladies' Table
Chapter 21. Ramsey And The Bishop
Chapter 22. Basile And What He Saw
Chapter 23. A State Of Affairs
Chapter 24. A Senator Enlightened
Chapter 25. "Please Assemble"
Chapter 26. Alarm And Distress
Chapter 27. Pilots' Eyes
Chapter 28. Words And The "Westwood"
Chapter 29. Studying The River--Together
Chapter 30. Phyllis Again
Chapter 31. The Burning Boat
Chapter 32. A Prophet In The Wilderness
Chapter 33. Twins And Texas Tender
Chapter 34. The Peacemakers
Chapter 35. Unsettled Weather
Chapter 36. Captain's Room
Chapter 37. Basile Uses A Cane
Chapter 38. The Cane Again
Chapter 39. Fortitude
Chapter 40. Ramsey At The Footlights
Chapter 41. Quits
Chapter 42. Against Kin
Chapter 43. Which From Which
Chapter 44. Forbearance
Chapter 45. Applause
Chapter 46. After The Play
Chapter 47. Insomnia
Chapter 48. "California"
Chapter 49. Kangaroo Point
Chapter 50. "Delta Will Do"
Chapter 51. Loving-Kindness
Chapter 52. Love Runs Rough But Runs On
Chapter 53. Trading For Phyllis
Chapter 54. "Can't!"
Chapter 55. Love Makes A Cut-Off
Chapter 56. Eight Years After
Chapter 57. Farewell, "Votaress"
Chapter 58. 'Lindy Lowe
Chapter 59. "Conclusively"
Chapter 60. Once More Hugh Sings
Chapter 61. Wanted, Hayle's Twins
Chapter 62. Euthanasia
Chapter 63. The Captain's Chair