O. Henry: To Him Who Waits
American short story writer O. Henry (1862-1910) delights readers with wry description of his characters and his trademark surprise endings. Here is a short story about a "hermit of the Hudson."
To Him Who Waits
The Hermit of the Hudson was hustling about his cave with unusual animation.
The cave was on or in the top of a little spur of the Catskills that had strayed down to the river's edge, and, not having a ferry ticket, had to stop there. The bijou mountains were densely wooded and were infested by ferocious squirrels and woodpeckers that forever menaced the summer transients. Like a badly sewn strip of white braid, a macadamized road ran between the green skirt of the hills and the foamy lace of the river's edge. A dim path wound from the comfortable road up a rocky height to the hermit's cave. One mile upstream was the Viewpoint Inn, to which summer folk from the city came; leaving cool, electric-fanned apartments that they might be driven about in burning sunshine, shrieking, in gasoline launches, by spindle-legged Modreds bearing the blankest of shields.
Train your lorgnette upon the hermit and let your eye receive the personal touch that shall endear you to the hero.
A man of forty, judging him fairly, with long hair curling at the ends, dramatic eyes, and a forked brown beard like those that were imposed upon the West some years ago by self-appointed "divine healers" who succeeded the grasshopper crop. His outward vesture appeared to be kind of gunny-sacking cut and made into a garment that would have made the fortune of a London tailor. His long, well-shaped fingers, delicate nose, and poise of manner raised him high above the class of hermits who fear water and bury money in oyster-cans in their caves in spots indicated by rude crosses chipped in the stone wall above.
The hermit's home was not altogether a cave. The cave was an
addition to the hermitage, which was a rude hut made of poles daubed with clay
and covered with the best quality of rust-proof zinc roofing.
In the
house proper there were stone slabs for seats, a rustic bookcase made of
unplaned poplar planks, and a table formed of a wooden slab laid across two
upright pieces of granite--something between the furniture of a Druid temple and
that of a Broadway beefsteak dungeon. Hung against the walls were skins of wild
animals purchased in the vicinity of Eighth Street and University Place, New
York.
The rear of the cabin merged into the cave. There the hermit cooked
his meals on a rude stone hearth. With infinite patience and an old axe he had
chopped natural shelves in the rocky walls. On them stood his stores of flour,
bacon, lard, talcum-powder, kerosene, baking- powder, soda-mint tablets, pepper,
salt, and Olivo-Cremo Emulsion for chaps and roughness of the hands and
face.
The hermit had hermited there for ten years. He was an asset of the
Viewpoint Inn. To its guests he was second in interest only to the Mysterious
Echo in the Haunted Glen. And the Lover's Leap beat him only a few inches,
flat-footed. He was known far (but not very wide, on account of the topography)
as a. scholar of brilliant intellect who had forsworn the world because he had
been jilted in a love affair. Every Saturday night the Viewpoint Inn sent to him
surreptitiously a basket of provisions. He never left the immediate outskirts of
his hermitage. Guests of the inn who visited him said his store of knowledge,
wit, and scintillating philosophy were simply wonderful, you know.
That
summer the Viewpoint Inn was crowded with guests. So, on Saturday nights, there
were extra cans of tomatoes, and sirloin steak, instead of "rounds," in the
hermit's basket.
Now you have the material allegations in the case. So,
make way for Romance.
Evidently the hermit expected a visitor. He
carefully combed his long hair and parted his apostolic beard. When the
ninety-eight-cent alarm-clock on a stone shelf announced the hour of five he
picked up his gunny-sacking skirts, brushed them carefully, gathered an oaken
staff, and strolled slowly into the thick woods that surrounded the
hermitage.
He had not long to wait. Up the faint pathway, slippery with
its carpet of pine-needles, toiled Beatrix, youngest and fairest of the famous
Trenholme sisters. She was all in blue from hat to canvas pumps, varying in tint
from the shade of the tinkle of a bluebell at daybreak on a spring Saturday to
the deep hue of a Monday morning at nine when the washer-woman has failed to
show up.
Beatrix dug her cerulean parasol deep into the pine-needles and
sighed. The hermit, on the q. t., removed a grass burr from the ankle of one
sandalled foot with the big toe of his other one.
She blued--and almost
starched and ironed him--with her cobalt eyes.
"It must be so nice," she
said in little, tremulous gasps, "to be a hermit, and have ladies climb
mountains to talk to you."
The hermit folded his arms and leaned against
a tree. Beatrix, with a sigh, settled down upon the mat of pine-needles like a
bluebird upon her nest. The hermit followed suit; drawing his feet rather
awkwardly under his gunny-sacking.
"It must be nice to be a mountain,"
said he, with ponderous lightness, "and have angels in blue climb up you instead
of flying over you."
"Mamma had neuralgia," said Beatrix, "and went to
bed, or I couldn't have come. It's dreadfully hot at that horrid old inn. But we
hadn't the money to go anywhere else this summer."
"Last night," said the
hermit, "I climbed to the top of that big rock above us. I could see the lights
of the inn and hear a strain or two of the music when the wind was right. I
imagined you moving gracefully in the arms of others to the dreamy music of the
waltz amid the fragrance of flowers. Think how lonely I must have
been!"
The youngest, handsomest, and poorest of the famous Trenholme
sisters sighed.
"You haven't quite hit it," she said, plaintively. "I was
moving gracefully at the arms of another. Mamma had one of her periodical
attacks of rheumatism in both elbows and shoulders, and I had to rub them for an
hour with that horrid old liniment. I hope you didn't think that smelled like
flowers. You know, there were some West Point boys and a yachtload of young men
from the city at last evening's weekly dance. I've known mamma to sit by an open
window for three hours with one-half of her registering 85 degrees and the other
half frostbitten, and never sneeze once. But just let a bunch of ineligibles
come around where I am, and she'll begin to swell at the knuckles and shriek
with pain. And I have to take her to her room and rub her arms. To see mamma
dressed you'd be surprised to know the number of square inches of surface there
are to her arms. I think it must be delightful to be a hermit. That--cassock--
gabardine, isn't it?--that you wear is so becoming. Do you make it--or them--of
course you must have changes- yourself? And what a blessed relief it must be to
wear sandals instead of shoes! Think how we must suffer--no matter how small I
buy my shoes they always pinch my toes. Oh, why can't there be lady hermits,
too!"
The beautifulest and most adolescent Trenholme sister extended two
slender blue ankles that ended in two enormous blue-silk bows that almost
concealed two fairy Oxfords, also of one of the forty-seven shades of blue. The
hermit, as if impelled by a kind of reflex- telepathic action, drew his bare
toes farther beneath his gunny- sacking.
"I have heard about the romance
of your life," said Miss Trenholme, softly. "They have it printed on the back of
the menu card at the inn. Was she very beautiful and charming?"
"On the
bills of fare!" muttered the hermit; "but what do I care for the world's babble?
Yes, she was of the highest and grandest type. Then," he continued, "then I
thought the world could never contain another equal to her. So I forsook it and
repaired to this mountain fastness to spend the remainder of my life alone--to
devote and dedicate my remaining years to her memory."
"It's grand," said
Miss Trenholme, "absolutely grand. I think a hermit's life is the ideal one. No
bill-collectors calling, no dressing for dinner--how I'd like to be one! But
there's no such luck for me. If I don't marry this season I honestly believe
mamma will force me into settlement work or trimming hats. It isn't because I'm
getting old or ugly; but we haven't enough money left to butt in at any of the
swell places any more. And I don't want to marry--unless it's somebody I like.
That's why I'd like to be a hermit. Hermits don't ever marry, do they
?"
"Hundreds of 'em," said the hermit, "when they've found the right
one."
"But they're hermits," said the youngest and beautifulest, "because
they've lost the right one, aren't they?"
"Because they think they have,"
answered the recluse, fatuously. "Wisdom comes to one in a mountain cave as well
as to one in the world of 'swells,' as I believe they are called in the
argot."
"When one of the 'swells' brings it to them," said Miss
Trenholme. "And my folks are swells. That's the trouble. But there are so many
swells at the seashore in the summer-time that we hardly amount to more than
ripples. So we've had to put all our money into river and harbor appropriations.
We were all girls, you know. There were four of us. I'm the only surviving one.
The others have been married off. All to money. Mamma is so proud of my sisters.
They send her the loveliest pen-wipers and art calendars every Christmas. I'm
the only one on the market now. I'm forbidden to look at any one who hasn't
money."
"But--" began the hermit.
"But, oh," said the beautifulest,
"of course hermits have great pots of gold and doubloons buried somewhere near
three great oak-trees. They all have."
"I have not," said the hermit,
regretfully.
"I'm so sorry," said Miss Trenholme. "I always thought they
had. I think I must go now."
Oh, beyond question, she was the
beautifulest.
"Fair lady--" began the hermit.
"I am Beatrix
Trenholme--some call me Trix," she said. "You must come to the inn to see
me."
"I haven't been a stone's--throw from my cave in ten years," said
the hermit.
"You must come to see me there," she repeated. "Any evening
except Thursday."
The hermit smiled weakly.
"Good-bye," she said,
gathering the folds of her pale-blue skirt. "I shall expect you. But not on
Thursday evening, remember."
What an interest it would give to the future
menu cards of the Viewpoint Inn to have these printed lines added to them: "Only
once during the more than ten years of his lonely existence did the mountain
hermit leave his famous cave. That was when he was irresistibly drawn to the inn
by the fascinations of Miss Beatrix Trenholme, youngest and most beautiful of
the celebrated Trenholme sisters, whose brilliant marriage to--"
Aye, to
whom?
The hermit walked back to the hermitage. At the door stood Bob
Binkley, his old friend and companion of the days before he had renounced the
world--Bob, himself, arrayed like the orchids of the greenhouse in the summer
man's polychromatic garb--Bob, the millionaire, with his fat, firm, smooth,
shrewd face, his diamond rings, sparkling fob-chain, and pleated bosom. He was
two years older than the hermit, and looked five years younger.
"You're
Hamp Ellison, in spite of those whiskers and that going-away bathrobe," he
shouted. "I read about you on the bill of fare at the inn. They've run your
biography in between the cheese and 'Not Responsible for Coats and Umbrellas.'
What 'd you do it for, Hamp? And ten years, too--geewhilikins!"
"You're
just the same," said the hermit. "Come in and sit down. Sit on that limestone
rock over there; it's softer than the granite."
"I can't understand it,
old man," said Binkley. "I can see how you could give up a woman for ten years,
but not ten years for a woman. Of course I know why you did it. Everybody does.
Edith Carr. She jilted four or five besides you. But you were the only one who
took to a hole in the ground. The others had recourse to whiskey, the Klondike,
politics, and that similia similibus cure. But, say--Hamp, Edith Carr was just
about the finest woman in the world--high-toned and proud and noble, and playing
her ideals to win at all kinds of odds. She certainly was a
crackerjack."
"After I renounced the world," said the hermit, "I never
heard of her again."
"She married me," said Binkley.
The hermit
leaned against the wooden walls of his ante-cave and wriggled his
toes.
"I know how you feel about it," said Binkley. "What else could she
do? There were her four sisters and her mother and old man Carr--you remember
how he put all the money he had into dirigible balloons? Well, everything was
coming down and nothing going up with 'em, as you might say. Well, I know Edith
as well as you do--although I married her. I was worth a million then, but I've
run it up since to between five and six. It wasn't me she wanted as much
as--well, it was about like this. She had that bunch on her hands, and they had
to be taken care of. Edith married me two months after you did the
ground-squirrel act. I thought she liked me, too, at the time."
"And
now?" inquired the recluse.
"We're better friends than ever now. She got
a divorce from me two years ago. Just incompatibility. I didn't put in any
defense. Well, well, well, Hamp, this is certainly a funny dugout you've built
here. But you always were a hero of fiction. Seems like you'd have been the very
one to strike Edith's fancy. Maybe you did--but it's the bank - roll that
catches 'em, my boy--your caves and whiskers won't do it. Honestly, Hamp, don't
you think you've been a darned fool?"
The hermit smiled behind his
tangled beard. He was and always had been so superior to the crude and mercenary
Binkley that even his vulgarities could not anger him. Moreover, his studies and
meditations in his retreat had raised him far above the little vanities of the
world. His little mountain-side had been almost an Olympus, over the edge of
which he saw, smiling, the bolts hurled in the valleys of man below. Had his ten
years of renunciation, of thought, of devotion to an ideal, of living scorn of a
sordid world, been in vain? Up from the world had come to him the youngest and
beautifulest--fairer than Edith--one and three-seventh times lovelier than the
seven-years-served Rachel. So the hermit smiled in his beard.
When
Binkley had relieved the hermitage from the blot of his presence and the first
faint star showed above the pines, the hermit got the can of baking-powder from
his cupboard. He still smiled behind his beard.
There was a slight rustle
in the doorway. There stood Edith Carr, with all the added beauty and
stateliness and noble bearing that ten years had brought her.
She was
never one to chatter. She looked at the hermit with her large, thinking, dark
eyes. The hermit stood still, surprised into a pose as motionless as her own.
Only his subconscious sense of the fitness of things caused him to turn the
baking-powder can slowly in his hands until its red label was hidden against his
bosom.
"I am stopping at the inn," said Edith, in low but clear tones. "I
heard of you there. I told myself that I must see you. I want to ask your
forgiveness. I sold my happiness for money. There were others to be provided
for--but that does not excuse me. I just wanted to see you and ask your
forgiveness. You have lived here ten years, they tell me, cherishing my memory!
I was blind, Hampton. I could not see then that all the money in the world
cannot weigh in the scales against a faithful heart. If--but it is too late now,
of course."
Her assertion was a question clothed as best it could be in a
loving woman's pride. But through the thin disguise the hermit saw easily that
his lady had come back to him--if he chose. He had won a golden crown--if it
pleased him to take it. The reward of his decade of faithfulness was ready for
his hand--if he desired to stretch it forth.
For the space of one minute
the old enchantment shone upon him with a reflected radiance. And then by turns
he felt the manly sensations of indignation at having been discarded, and of
repugnance at having been--as it were--sought again. And last of all--how
strange that it should have come at last!--the pale-blue vision of the
beautifulest of the Trenholme sisters illuminated his mind's eye and left him
without a waver.
"It is too late," he said, in deep tones, pressing the
baking-powder can against his heart.
Once she turned after she had gone
slowly twenty yards down the path. The hermit had begun to twist the lid off his
can, but he hid it again under his sacking robe. He could see her great eyes
shining sadly through the twilight; but he stood inflexible in the doorway of
his shack and made no sign.
Just as the moon rose on Thursday evening the
hermit was seized by the world-madness.
Up from the inn, fainter than the
horns of elf-land, came now and then a few bars of music played by the casino
band. The Hudson was broadened by the night into an illimitable sea--those
lights, dimly seen on its opposite shore, were not beacons for prosaic trolley-
lines, but low-set stars millions of miles away. The waters in front of the inn
were gay with fireflies--or were they motor-boats, smelling of gasoline and oil?
Once the hermit had known these things and had sported with Amaryllis in the
shade of the red-and-white-striped awnings. But for ten years he had turned a
heedless ear to these far- off echoes of a frivolous world. But to-night there
was something wrong.
The casino band was playing a waltz--a waltz. What a
fool he had been to tear deliberately ten years of his life from the calendar of
existence for one who had given him up for the false joys that wealth- -"tum ti
tum ti tum ti"--how did that waltz go? But those years had not been
sacrificed--had they not brought him the star and pearl of all the world, the
youngest and beautifulest of--
"But do not come on Thursday evening," she
had insisted. Perhaps by now she would be moving slowly and gracefully to the
strains of that waltz, held closely by West-Pointers or city commuters, while
he, who had read in her eyes things that had recompensed him for ten lost years
of life, moped like some wild animal in its mountain den. Why
should--"
"Damn it," said the hermit, suddenly, "I'll do it!"
He
threw down his Marcus Aurelius and threw off his gunny-sack toga. he dragged a
dust-covered trunk from a corner of the cave, and with difficulty wrenched open
its lid.
Candles he had in plenty, and the cave was soon aglow.
Clothes--ten years old in cut--scissors, razors, hats, shoes, all his discarded
attire and belongings, were dragged ruthlessly from their renunciatory rest and
strewn about in painful disorder.
A pair of scissors soon reduced his
beard sufficiently for the dulled razors to perform approximately their office.
Cutting his own hair was beyond the hermit's skill. So he only combed and
brushed it backward as smoothly as he could. Charity forbids us to consider the
heartburnings and exertions of one so long removed from haberdashery and
society.
At the last the hermit went to an inner corner of his cave and
began to dig in the soft earth with a long iron spoon. Out of the cavity he thus
made he drew a tin can, and out of the can three thousand dollars in bills,
tightly rolled and wrapped in oiled silk. He was a real hermit, as this may
assure you.
You may take a brief look at him as he hastens down the
little mountain-side. A long, wrinkled black frock-coat reached to his calves.
White duck trousers, unacquainted with the tailor's goose, a pink shirt, white
standing collar with brilliant blue butterfly tie, and buttoned congress
gaiters. But think, sir and madam--ten years! >From beneath a narrow-brimmed
straw hat with a striped band flowed his hair. Seeing him, with all your
shrewdness you could not have guessed him. You would have said that he played
Hamlet--or the tuba--or pinochle--you would never have laid your hand on your
heart and said: "He is a hermit who lived ten years in a cave for love of one
lady--to win another."
The dancing pavilion extended above the waters of
the river. Gay lanterns and frosted electric globes shed a soft glamour within
it. A hundred ladies and gentlemen from the inn and summer cottages flitted in
and about it. To the left of the dusty roadway down which the hermit had tramped
were the inn and grill-room. Something seemed to be on there, too. The windows
were brilliantly lighted, and music was playing--music different from the
two-steps and waltzes of the casino band.
A negro man wearing a white
jacket came through the iron gate, with its immense granite posts and
wrought-iron lamp-holders.
"What is going on here to-night?" asked the
hermit.
"Well, sah," said the servitor, "dey is having de reg'lar
Thursday- evenin' dance in de casino. And in de grill-room dere's a beefsteak
dinner, sah."
The hermit glanced up at the inn on the hillside whence
burst suddenly a triumphant strain of splendid harmony.
"And up there,"
said he, "they are playing Mendelssohn--what is going on up there?"
"Up
in de inn," said the dusky one, "dey is a weddin' goin' on. Mr. Binkley, a
mighty rich man, am marryin' Miss Trenholme, sah--de young lady who am quite de
belle of de place, sah."
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