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The Plums Hang High
The Plums Hang High
The Plums Hang High
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The Plums Hang High

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A young English couple sail to the new land where fortunes like plums are for the taking. But nothing has prepared Hannah Maria, who trusts in the comforts of her brother’s home, for the crude life of a Midwest farm in 1868. Only a deep love and her proud spirit sustain her in early bitterness and despair.

Jethro, with no experience on the land, wants to be a farmer. A kindly, hardworking couple take the tyros to their hearts. Some lessons are bitter, some laughable, as they become farmer folk. Their first farm turns out to be worthless and they must hire out again on shares. Tender and poignant is the tale of the dress washed out each night, of the two who ran away to see the circus and sold the family’s valuable horse. In a great blizzard Jethro goes for nurse and doctor, returns to find a baby has been born without their help. At last Jethro is famous for his Clydesdales.

They have an assured position and honors come.

The Plums Hang High has a sense of the drama of life itself, of generation succeeding generation.
LanguageEnglish
Release dateOct 21, 2016
ISBN9781787201712
The Plums Hang High
Author

Gertrude E. Finney

Gertrude Elva Finney (1892-1977) was an American novelist. She was born in Morocco, Indiana and was educated at the State College of Washington. Finney was a member of the Authors Guild, Eastern Washington Historical Society, and Spokane Writers. She died in Spokane, Washington aged 85 in 1977.

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    The Plums Hang High - Gertrude E. Finney

    This edition is published by PICKLE PARTNERS PUBLISHING—www.pp-publishing.com

    To join our mailing list for new titles or for issues with our books—picklepublishing@gmail.com

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    Text originally published in 1955 under the same title.

    © Pickle Partners Publishing 2016, all rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system or transmitted by any means, electrical, mechanical or otherwise without the written permission of the copyright holder.

    Publisher’s Note

    Although in most cases we have retained the Author’s original spelling and grammar to authentically reproduce the work of the Author and the original intent of such material, some additional notes and clarifications have been added for the modern reader’s benefit.

    We have also made every effort to include all maps and illustrations of the original edition the limitations of formatting do not allow of including larger maps, we will upload as many of these maps as possible.

    THE PLUMS HANG HIGH

    BY

    GERTRUDE E. FINNEY

    TABLE OF CONTENTS

    Contents

    TABLE OF CONTENTS 4

    DEDICATION 6

    1 7

    2 17

    3 22

    4 26

    5 31

    6 39

    7 44

    8 49

    9 59

    10 67

    11 73

    12 79

    13 86

    14 90

    15 95

    16 102

    17 106

    18 110

    19 115

    20 128

    21 131

    22 136

    23 143

    24 145

    25 151

    26 157

    27 161

    28 169

    29 177

    30 181

    31 189

    REQUEST FROM THE PUBLISHER 194

    DEDICATION

    To

    Hannah Maria’s good friend

    Bertha L. Gunterman,

    and those of us who know

    will appreciate what it means

    1

    THERE WAS MUCH LAUGHTER BUT LITTLE MERRIMENT IN THE old house in England that night. Staglands once again had gathered beneath its venerable roof what was left of the flock it had produced, nurtured and prodded into adulthood. Tonight they had assembled to bid Godspeed to the fourth of their number to leave for America.

    Elizabeth Castlereagh, the mother, in her chair by the briskly leaping flames in the great stone fireplace sat with shawl-covered feet on their hassock: the only concession to age she allowed herself. Tall, handsome, not quite austere, hex dignity was unassailable. Her capable hands, lying in her lap, were veined, but any smoothness glycerine and rose water could preserve remained fragrantly upon them. Her hair had turned but little gray and was habitually worn close to the head in careful high arrangement. Frequently it had been said that her eyes were the color of the inside of a wild violet.

    Close to her hassock stood James Castlereagh, the father. Round, and barely as tall as his wife, he always maintained there was more to him than to her, only he preferred to keep his weight close to the good earth.

    Elizabeth looked up at him now. By nature more given to jollity and high spirits than his wife, he now was pathetically without them. Occasionally he shook his head forlornly as though in negation, or protest, to his thoughts. Giving up the child of his old age to America, which had claimed too many of them already, was almost more than he could bear.

    In pity Elizabeth turned to the four daughters who stood together at the table under the high mullioned windows. By day these windows flooded the room with east light. Tonight, they were brooding and dark and cold.

    Ring for Jenks to draw the curtains, Elizabeth called gently, and come closer.

    Eliza pulled the cord and old Jenks came, limping with rheumatism. The swinging red-velvet folds were warmer than the night.

    In a soft swishing of taffeta and crinoline, the four women left the package they had been examining on the table. Eliza and Esther were tall like their mother but lacked her grace. Betty and Jemima were shorter and leaned toward obesity like their father. At their approach, their father eyed them somberly. Elizabeth put out her hand to them. It is a time to draw close.

    She watched them as they drew up their chairs, these good, almost elderly, women who were her daughters. Noting their advancing age was ever a shock to her.

    When Hannah Maria comes down, she said, remember to be merry. She is putting on a performance of bravery...But she is frightened. Having to catch that miserable train before dawn isn’t helping...

    Heavens, no! Jemima, closest sister to Hannah Maria in age, but still fifteen years older, spoke with unusual agitation. Just the thought of going to America gives me a chill. Starting in the fairest sunlight, or the deepest night, would yet be the end of the world to me. If my husband should say...

    Yes, interrupted Eliza, the oldest sister, if your husband should say, ‘Come, we are going to America,’ you would weep, but you would go, Hannah Maria isn’t weeping but she is going.

    Hush, not so loud! She will be down any minute.

    Sh-h-h, Jethro will hear!

    The four sisters turned to glance down the room where their husbands stood, laughing and talking, grouped around Jethro Howard. From that young man of them all this night, confidence and enthusiasm emanated in waves of energy. Dawn could not come too soon for him; his whole manner proclaimed it.

    What possesses Jethro? Eliza protested. He is usually level-headed. And he was beginning to do well in business...

    Their father turned to answer Eliza. He’s going back to the land and he wants plenty of space to do it in. With his horses and seeds and lands, James Castlereagh understood this move better than any of them. It was only that the loss of his daughter, who had turned to him since toddling days more than to her mother, was like bereavement. Aye, business, to some, is not the aim and end of existence, he added, glancing significantly at these daughters whose husbands to a man were engaged in business in London. And who was to take over his farms when he no longer was able? The matter gave him grave concern, his only two sons gone to America as they were. One already dead there.

    But America! exclaimed Jemima. It’s a land of no return. It has taken three of us already. Stephen and James. And Ann. Ann, their oldest sister, had been most beautiful of them all. Jemima lowered her voice, as they all did when they spoke of their sister Ann. "How can Jethro take Hannah Maria to America! It is certain death. Always fighting, first with England, continually with the Indians, and now, only just finished, among themselves, North against South. What will it be next?"

    Jethro’s vibrant young voice rose for a moment above the others. So I say, if you want to make a fortune, go where fortunes are made.

    A burst of half-reluctant laughter rose from the group at the end of the room. The sisters waited impatiently until the rumbling male conversation had been resumed, then Eliza, oldest of them now, spoke, her glance still upon the men.

    "I suppose there isn’t a man among them who is not secretly envying Jethro his courage in going to America. A man feels no compunction in breaking up a family.

    But of all people, Hannah Maria to go to America! Why, she is no more capable of managing a household than a kitten. And her baby! Her Jeffie, Mother, is your baby. And you know it. Yours and Laurice’s. Her tone implied that her own children had had no French nurses. Aside from the actual physical functions she knows absolutely nothing of the baby. Or his needs. In fact, she doesn’t know he has needs, excepting that he becomes hungry too often.

    Elizabeth, without answer, gazed into the fire. Her conscience accused her unbearably. It was the tragic heritage of English mothers to lose their children: to Africa, to Australia, India; New Zealand, Canada, the United States. As soon as they were old enough, boys especially, so many of them went. Four of her eight! It was a high percentage. This common urge had taken Stephen, only seventeen, and now he was dead somewhere in America...But Ann and James! In a swift gesture her hand rose to cover her eyes.

    Out of the silence, Betty spoke, Betty, the manager. Can’t someone stop this? Father, can’t you get Jethro’s parents to intercede? The Vicar should have some influence over his son.

    James Castlereagh looked down at his daughter. There was no cheer in his eyes. They have been to the vicarage, Jethro and Hannah Maria, to say good-by.

    What did he say?

    Aye! It was restraining and all that! He said, ‘Go with my blessing, son. It’s what I would have done had I been able when I was young.’ Helpful! Ha!

    Betty moaned. But Jethro has never farmed a foot of ground. How does he expect to make a success of farming? He has been in college and then in his haberdashery all his adult years. Selling neckties and coats and hats—how has that been any preparation for farming?

    Her father, though opposed to this move as much as anyone, felt constrained in honesty to present Jethro’s cause as far as he knew it. Aye, the haberdashery shop was only a means to an end for Jethro. It takes capital to cross an ocean and to buy a bit’ land. And capital Jethro did not have. Sons of vicars are not noted for possessing well-lined pockets. Aye. But why cross an ocean? He could farm in England. I’ve made him every sort of offer—short of giving him the farms outright—to induce him to come in with me. But he’s an obdurate lad. From the conversations I’ve held with him, I’m beginning to think—aye, I’m beginning to think there’s something more than meets the eye here...

    No! Betty and Jemima exclaimed together. No! Not like Ann...

    Their father shook his head, thoughtfully.

    Elizabeth Castlereagh continued to sit, silent, her tired eyes watching the fire. Her heart was cold with dread, and words choked in her throat.

    * * * * *

    ALONG the hall upstairs came Hannah Maria. She could not wait longer to appear. She had been in her room almost an hour while the family waited downstairs.

    Inside her gray-silk basque her heart pumped icy fear. Tomorrow! Tomorrow was such little time. The whole terrifying situation rose before her like an advancing tidal wave. She put up her hands to fend it off.

    No! She had spoken aloud.

    Quickly she glanced about. The privacy of the candle lighted stairs and the hall below had not betrayed her. No! I can’t! I won’t! She stood on the top step and spoke down into the silence. I will not!

    Hannah Maria’s No to parents and doting sisters had almost always cleared away any state of affairs which annoyed her. She had made good use of it. Then she had seen that such open tactics did not endear her to friend or stranger. To sisters, even, but with growing wisdom she had tempered demeanor to circumstance. Under the strict tutelage of the Misses Speke-Ridley at Wellington Seminary for Young Ladies, she had dropped such abrupt attack altogether when abroad from home. She had never used it with Jethro Howard. From the moment she had seen him, his presence had quietly melted any mounting burst of rebellion. Even after two years of marriage to him, he still possessed that power.

    But now, she wanted to say, No! No! No! She wanted to stamp her feet. She wanted to scream, No! I won’t! I will not do this thing!

    But she knew she would! Jethro was going to America, That raw terrible country. That horrible continent of disgrace and heartbreak and awful death. Her brother Stephen, only a boy, was there somewhere in a lonely grave. And beautiful Ann, swallowed up and dead! Her sister had better have stayed at home and faced the disgrace than to have gone out to that wilderness to die of a broken heart, with only a dissolute husband to watch her out of wretched life.

    And now Jethro was going. With sickening conviction she said, And I’m going tool I am doing this dreadful thing to the baby. I am going to take Jeffie to a land of cutthroats, and worse! Oh, no! How could I!

    She took another step. Her full skirts cascaded like gray foam behind her. Her hand slipped along the century-old rail, her footfall lost in the deep pile of the stair rug.

    A burst of laughter floated to her from the library. She moved toward it. Her feet dragged over the Chinese rugs on the stone-floored hall. Absently, she paused before the mahogany mirror, habit stronger than thought. The candles in their iron sconces flickered. The glass gave back an unsteady reflection of frightened violet-blue eyes in oval face, brown curls caught at the crown and allowed to spill where they would.

    But she did not see shining curls. She saw a ship. On it, her Jethro, alone. He was standing in the bow. He was looking expectantly out over the sea. Out ahead to America!

    On the ship then she saw her Jethro, and herself, and little Jeffie. The wind was cold. And little Jeffie in all his six weeks of life had never been cold. He had never been out of the warm flannel and lavender of the nursery. The old rosewood cradle upstairs...Jethro must be mad! I will not go!

    But there was James...

    Suddenly she left the mirror, and lifting her skirts, she ran back upstairs. She hurried along past her mother’s door, past the nursery, past her own door. She stopped at a table farther along the hall. There in the familiar darkness she felt for the candle which stood in its silver holder with the matches and the snuffer close by. Hastily, she struck the match and lighted the candle. Holding it high, she went to stand before a full-length painting. The merry face of her brother James came out of the gloom, breathtakingly warm and living in the flickering light.

    His violet-blue eyes looked down at her benignly, his mouth was smiling. A dashing fellow! She looked up at him. He had gone with his servant-girl wife to America before she could remember. But she had always loved him as she saw him in the picture. She had need of him now. She leaned closer. She lifted the candle higher and peered out beneath it.

    Oh, James, we’re coming, she whispered. Did she see a twinkle in an eye?

    She stood still, wondering if she should have written James. But, no. What could she have said? She caught his eye again, and directed her thoughts to this pictured brother as she had done since childhood. No. You will know about it then. We will need only a nursery for Jeffie and his nurse and a sitting room and bedroom for Jethro and me. You will have room and to spare.

    The lively eyes above her were full of understanding, inviting and interested. She could almost see him nod. She looked questioningly at the painted face. There was so much she wanted to ask and no one she knew could answer. Going to America was like dying. People went there, as had James and Ann and Stephen, but none came back to tell of the experience.

    There was the laughter again.

    She snuffed the candle and her footfalls lost themselves in the deep floor covering as she went, light as a kitten, back toward the light in the stairwell. She had reached the lower steps when the library door opened and spilled a square of light across the floor. The lean, well-turned-out figure of her husband hesitated there, outlined a moment in the brightness. His elation was evident.

    But he had discovered her on the stairs. He came quickly forward.

    Oh, here you are, my lady. You have been gone a long time. He took her hand in his, to glance questioningly in her face. It is dark out here. What are you doing all alone?

    He stooped to kiss her tenderly. He felt he was tearing her bodily from her family, from surroundings he would not be able to duplicate in many years, perhaps. But if there was to be any family life of their own...if she were ever to become a woman...he must get her away. To his mind there was nothing tragic in this. They would be coming back frequently for visits. In any case, he must go. He must get away from England. Yes, whether Hannah Maria came or stayed...He was glad she was going. Jeffie’s all right? he said as though the question were an afterthought.

    Hannah Maria did not answer. Desperately she was thinking, no one must know how frightened I am.

    She looked up at him. His face was glowing. No! He would not leave her behind!

    Yes, Jethro, sleeping as though he has had a very hard day. She managed a small laugh. It may be that it is hard work to add a pound and a half to seven in only six weeks. Mother weighed him on the cheese scales today.

    I say, you two! You haven’t by any chance forgot that we are giving this party for you? Granger, Esther’s husband, tall, slightly stooped, stood in the door. His friendly face was smiling, though his glance was searching.

    As they went into the brighter light, Hannah Maria drew a long breath. If she could get through these next few minutes, she would be all right. How she loved this great room! Now that she was to leave it, she must commit it to memory, line by line. Its mullioned windows, the stag’s head in a blue-glass panel in the upper corner of each, and thus multiplied around the room, the stags which had watched with passive, unblinking eyes through the years her good and bad deeds alike. The tall-backed chairs repeating the staghead motif in their heavy carving. The books which lined the far wall from floor to ceiling. The drawing room beyond. At the side, the fire in the great fireplace, now burning brightly.

    And these people who were her family. There by the fire in her special chair sat her mother, beautiful, dignified, gracious, understanding. And leaning against the mantel, her round twinkly father, with a wisp of silvery hair combed carefully over his shining pink pate. His short white beard.

    There were her four sisters. She looked at them critically. They were more like indulgent aunts than sisters, they were so much older than she. They were regarding her now, intently. As she passed, she heard Esther whisper tragically to one of the others, What is to become of her! At the end of the room their husbands talked in a group.

    She spread a smile over her stiff face. These were her family. They had all come out from London for high tea and dinner, to be with her and Jethro tonight. That was better. A cheerful thought.

    She glanced up at Jethro beside her, murmured an apology, and went to sit by her mother’s feet on the hassock. Jethro strolled down the room toward his brothers-in-law, bending over some object they were examining.

    At his approach, Granger turned quickly and held up his hand. No, my lad. Take your place at the fireside by your wife. There is speechmaking ahead.

    Jethro hastily retreated and took his stand near Hannah Maria, who rose from her low seat, wondering what it was all about. As they waited, she turned to Jethro. In a low tone she said, I neglected to ask you, Jethro; if Laurice is not going along to care for Jeffie, who is?

    Jethro looked at her. This wife of his never ceased to amaze him. Very carefully he had explained that the most rigid economy would be necessary as they made this trip, and also in America itself, until affairs were well in hand and a substantial income assured. But an occasional question such as this showed that her ideas of rigid economy and his own did not meet even at the fringes. They never had, of course. But since she had never left her parents’ home or style of living, that difference had not been as apparent as it would now become. She did not know...

    There was a stir in the farther end of the room. The brothers-in-law were advancing toward them. Jethro found Hannah Maria’s hand among the many folds of gray-silk skirt. He pressed it gently. ‘We’ll manage, he murmured.

    Hannah Maria glanced at her sisters. They were looking expectant.

    Stocky John Huckle, Betty’s husband, was being pushed forward, No, no, not I. Age has nothing to do here. One of you chaps, now, you’re the speechmakers. He succeeded in getting himself into the background, thrusting a small package into George’s hand as he did so. George hastily disposed of the package by slipping it into Joshua’s pocket.

    You’re elected, Josh—unless your conscience troubles. It came from your shop, you know.

    Thus challenged, Joshua stepped forward, squaring his pudgy shoulders as he came. He slipped his hand into his pocket and drew forth the package. He turned it round and round a moment as he stood silent before Hannah Maria and Jethro, who waited expectantly. And suddenly the mantel clock began to tick in measured beats. Tick tock—tick tock.

    Jethro—tick tock—Jethro, you have not been a member of this family very long, I mean, not as long as most of us have—tick tock—but long enough that we have come to have high regard for you. You have been a fine member of this clan. In token of our regard, we are presenting this gift. Take it to your far-off land. His voice faltered. It—it—well, here it is. He thrust the package into Jethro’s hand and retreated, whipping out his handkerchief and blowing his nose noisily as he went.

    Then, before Jethro could reply, Jemima came, package laden, from among the sisters. She looked more like her father every day, Hannah Maria thought. Here, Hannah Maria. Jemima’s voice was only slightly shaky. Here is something Esther says you admired when you were in London last time.

    She held out a long slim package. Take it, and see that you do not come trailing home with a freckled nose from your America. The laugh that followed was brave and hearty.

    Hannah Maria received her package eagerly and lost no time in removing the wrappings. Jethro dropped his wrappings on the fire, but Hannah Maria carefully piled hers in her mother’s lap.

    What have you, Jethro? she asked. She heard his low voice, but did not stop to look up. Oh, look! The tiny black carriage parasol! Oh, you were right, I did want it!

    She opened the diminutive parasol, hardly larger than a dinner plate, and reached up to make sure the handle was jointed under the top to allow tilting. It was this feature that had appealed to her. Now she tilted the sunshade until the ruffle touched the black stick, and began parading back and forth, smiling from around the edge. But her sister stopped that in quick time. Hannah Maria! Don’t you know better? A death in the family! Put it down this instant!

    Obediently she closed the offending parasol, but kept it in her hand where she could admire it frequently. She came to stand beside her husband again. She murmured her thanks.

    Jethro, I asked you what you had.

    Yes, my dear, and I told you. I have a watch. And a handsome one it is, too. He drew the watch from his waistcoat pocket where it was already tucked away, a gold watch of generous proportions. He allowed it to dangle before her eyes on its heavy gold chain.

    Beautiful, beautiful! she exclaimed. How grand we shall be!

    She returned to the hassock, but her mother, laying the shawl aside, rose, steadied herself a moment by the arms of her chair. Hannah, my dear, let’s go and see if we can find a moon, she said.

    It was a game of early childhood. As she spoke, her mother’s voice was soft, low-pitched. Hannah Maria, used to its beauty, noticed an unaccustomed tremulousness tonight. We have a few minutes before dinner.

    Yes, Mother. Shall you need a wrap? With a pang she noted that her mother did not move as quickly as once she had on these expeditions. A proud hesitation had crept into her step. Tonight it was more pronounced.

    Hannah Maria ran ahead to the closet under the stair, while her mother waited, tall and regal even in that passive occupation.

    Together they went out onto the terrace. Hannah Maria closed the great oak door behind them. Outside it was damp and cold.

    Surely enough a small moon, veiled in mist, rode high. Yes, there is a moon, Mother, a new one! she exclaimed, but it looks as though we’re seeing it through tears. And then she could say no more, and her mother was silent too.

    It was very quiet as they stood in the September night, Hannah Maria struggling with a lump which strangled her voice. It was not her way to be silent. Down the road the Tilbys’ Great Dane barked, then was still. A cart rumbled down the lane beyond the hedge and clattered away into silence. Behind them on the old brick walls the ivy stirred and rustled softly in a vagrant breeze.

    Hannah Maria turned at the rustling and realized with aching throat that this scene, too, and this moment, she must manage to imprint on her mind forever; the old house like a fat H, the stone terrace along the front and the great stone jars on either side of the heavy oak door...And the

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