"He is a great man, isn't he?" Meredith said to Helen, gravely, as he

handed her out of the buckboard. "I've been trying to realize for the last

few minutes, that he is the same old fellow I've been treating so

familiarly all day long."

"Yes, he is a great man," she answered. "This is only the beginning."

"That's true," said Briscoe, who had overheard her. "He'll go pretty far.

A man that people know is steady and strong and level-headed can get

whatever he wants, because a public man can get anything, if people know

he's safe and honest and they can rely on him for sense. It sounds like

a simple matter; but only three or four public men in the country have

convinced us that they are like that. Hurry along, young people."

Crossing the street, they met Miss Tibbs; she was wiping her streaming

eyes with the back of her left hand and still mechanically waving her

handkerchief with her right. "Isn't it beautiful?" she said, not ceasing

to flutter, unconsciously, the little square of cambric. "There was such a

throng that I grew faint and had to come away. I don't mind your seeing me

crying. Pretty near everybody cried when he walked up to the steps and we

saw that he was lame."

Standing on the outskirts of the crowd, they could hear the mellow ring of

Harkless's voice, but only fragments of the speech, for it was rather

halting, and was not altogether clear in either rhetoric or delivery; and

Mr. Bence could have been a good deal longer in saying what he had to say,

and a thousand times more oratorical. Nevertheless, there was not a man or

woman present who did not declare that it was the greatest speech ever

heard in Plattville; and they really thought so--to such lengths are

loyalty and friendship sometimes carried in Carlow and Amo and Gaines.

He looked down upon the attentive, earnest faces and into the kindly eyes

of the Hoosier country people, and, as he spoke, the thought kept

recurring to him that this was the place he had dreaded to come back to;

that these were the people he had wished to leave--these, who gave him

everything they had to give--and this made it difficult to keep his tones

steady and his throat clear.

Helen stood so far from the steps (nor could she be induced to penetrate

further, though they would have made way for her) that only fragments

reached her, but what she heard she remembered:




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