Public Domain Poetry And Stories - Cousin Rufus' Story by James Whitcomb Riley
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Cousin Rufus' Story

    By James Whitcomb Riley



    My little story, Cousin Rufus said,
    Is not so much a story as a fact.
    It is about a certain willful boy -
    An aggrieved, unappreciated boy,
    Grown to dislike his own home very much,
    By reason of his parents being not
    At all up to his rigid standard and
    Requirements and exactions as a son
    And disciplinarian.

        So, sullenly
    He brooded over his disheartening
    Environments and limitations, till,
    At last, well knowing that the outside world
    Would yield him favors never found at home,
    He rose determinedly one July dawn -
    Even before the call for breakfast - and,
    Climbing the alley-fence, and bitterly
    Shaking his clenched fist at the woodpile, he
    Evanished down the turnpike. - Yes: he had,
    Once and for all, put into execution
    His long low-muttered threatenings - He had
    Run off! - He had - had run away from home!

    His parents, at discovery of his flight,
    Bore up first-rate - especially his Pa, -
    Quite possibly recalling his own youth,
    And therefrom predicating, by high noon,
    The absent one was very probably
    Disporting his nude self in the delights
    Of the old swimmin'-hole, some hundred yards
    Below the slaughter-house, just east of town.
    The stoic father, too, in his surmise
    Was accurate - For, lo! the boy was there!

    And there, too, he remained throughout the day -
    Save at one starving interval in which
    He clad his sunburnt shoulders long enough
    To shy across a wheatfield, shadow-like,
    And raid a neighboring orchard - bitterly,
    And with spasmodic twitchings of the lip,
    Bethinking him how all the other boys
    Had homes to go to at the dinner-hour -
    While he - alas! - he had no home! - At least
    These very words seemed rising mockingly,
    Until his every thought smacked raw and sour
    And green and bitter as the apples he
    In vain essayed to stay his hunger with.
    Nor did he join the glad shouts when the boys
    Returned rejuvenated for the long
    Wet revel of the feverish afternoon. -
    Yet, bravely, as his comrades splashed and swam
    And spluttered, in their weltering merriment,
    He tried to laugh, too, - but his voice was hoarse
    And sounded to him like some other boy's.
    And then he felt a sudden, poking sort
    Of sickness at the heart, as though some cold
    And scaly pain were blindly nosing it
    Down in the dreggy darkness of his breast.
    The tensioned pucker of his purple lips
    Grew ever chillier and yet more tense -
    The central hurt of it slow spreading till
    It did possess the little face entire.
    And then there grew to be a knuckled knot -
    An aching kind of core within his throat -
    An ache, all dry and swallowless, which seemed
    To ache on just as bad when he'd pretend
    He didn't notice it as when he did.
    It was a kind of a conceited pain -
    An overbearing, self-assertive and
    Barbaric sort of pain that clean outhurt
    A boy's capacity for suffering -
    So, many times, the little martyr needs
    Must turn himself all suddenly and dive
    From sight of his hilarious playmates and
    Surreptitiously weep under water.

        Thus
    He wrestled with his awful agony
    Till almost dark; and then, at last - then, with
    The very latest lingering group of his
    Companions, he moved turgidly toward home -
    Nay, rather oozed that way, so slow he went, -
    With lothful, hesitating, loitering,
    Reluctant, late-election-returns air,
    Heightened somewhat by the conscience-made resolve
    Of chopping a double-armful of wood
    As he went in by rear way of the kitchen.
    And this resolve he executed; - yet
    The hired girl made no comment whatsoever,
    But went on washing up the supper-things,
    Crooning the unutterably sad song, "Then think,
    Oh, think how lonely this heart must ever be!
"
    Still, with affected carelessness, the boy
    Ranged through the pantry; but the cupboard-door
    Was locked. He sighed then like a wet fore-stick
    And went out on the porch. - At least the pump,
    He prophesied, would meet him kindly and
    Shake hands with him and welcome his return!
    And long he held the old tin dipper up -
    And oh, how fresh and pure and sweet the draught!
    Over the upturned brim, with grateful eyes
    He saw the back-yard, in the gathering night,
    Vague, dim and lonesome, but it all looked good:
    The lightning-bugs, against the grape-vines, blinked
    A sort of sallow gladness over his
    Home-coming, with this softening of the heart.
    He did not leave the dipper carelessly
    In the milk-trough. - No: he hung it back upon
    Its old nail thoughtfully - even tenderly.
    All slowly then he turned and sauntered toward
    The rain-barrel at the corner of the house,
    And, pausing, peered into it at the few
    Faint stars reflected there. Then - moved by some
    Strange impulse new to him - he washed his feet.
    He then went in the house - straight on into
    The very room where sat his parents by
    The evening lamp. - The father all intent
    Reading his paper, and the mother quite
    As intent with her sewing. Neither looked
    Up at his entrance - even reproachfully, -
    And neither spoke.

        The wistful runaway
    Drew a long, quavering breath, and then sat down
    Upon the extreme edge of a chair. And all
    Was very still there for a long, long while. -
    Yet everything, someway, seemed restful-like
    And homey and old-fashioned, good and kind,
    And sort of kin to him! - Only too still!
    If somebody would say something - just speak -
    Or even rise up suddenly and come
    And lift him by the ear sheer off his chair -
    Or box his jaws - Lord bless 'em! - anything! -
    Was he not there to thankfully accept
    Any reception from parental source
    Save this incomprehensible voicelessness.
    O but the silence held its very breath!
    If but the ticking clock would only strike
    And for an instant drown the whispering,
    Lisping, sifting sound the katydids
    Made outside in the grassy nowhere.

        Far
    Down some back-street he heard the faint halloo
    Of boys at their night-game of "Town-fox,"
    But now with no desire at all to be
    Participating in their sport - No; no; -
    Never again in this world would he want
    To join them there! - he only wanted just
    To stay in home of nights - Always - always -
    Forever and a day!

        He moved; and coughed -
    Coughed hoarsely, too, through his rolled tongue; and yet
    No vaguest of parental notice or
    Solicitude in answer - no response -
    No word - no look. O it was deathly still! -
    So still it was that really he could not
    Remember any prior silence that
    At all approached it in profundity
    And depth and density of utter hush.
    He felt that he himself must break it: So,
    Summoning every subtle artifice
    Of seeming nonchalance and native ease
    And naturalness of utterance to his aid,
    And gazing raptly at the house-cat where
    She lay curled in her wonted corner of
    The hearth-rug, dozing, he spoke airily
    And said: "I see you've got the same old cat!"



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