[The Shepherd of the Hills by Harold Bell Wright]@TWC D-Link book
The Shepherd of the Hills

CHAPTER XXII
1/10

CHAPTER XXII.
A LETTER FROM OLLIE STEWART.
The Postoffice at the Forks occupied a commanding position in the northeast corner of Uncle Ike's cabin, covering an area not less than four feet square.
The fittings were in excellent taste, and the equipment fully adequate to the needs of the service: an old table, on legs somewhat rickety; upon the table, a rude box, set on end and divided roughly into eight pigeon holes, duly numbered; in the table, a drawer, filled a little with stamps and stationery, filled mostly with scraps of leaf tobacco, and an odd company of veteran cob pipes, now on the retired list, or home on furlough; before the table, a little old chair, wrought in some fearful and wonderful fashion from hickory sticks from which the bark had not been removed.
With every change of the weather, this chair, through some unknown but powerful influence, changed its shape, thus becoming in its own way a sort of government weather bureau.

And if in all this "land of the free and home of the brave" there be a single throne, it must be this same curiously changeable chair.

In spite of, or perhaps because of, its strange powers, that weird piece of furniture managed to make itself so felt that it was religiously avoided by every native who called at the Forks.

Not the wildest "Hill-Billy" of them all dared to occupy for a moment this seat of Uncle Sam's representative.

Here Uncle Ike reigned supreme over his four feet square of government property.


<<Back  Index  Next>>

D-Link book Top

TWC mobile books